Monday, May 11, 2020

Church is functioning, not perfect community . . .

Paul’s statement of the local (or located) church’s reality is a universally relevant declaration of the church’s nature as community:
  • “You will know how people ought to conduct themselves in God's household, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and foundation of the truth” (1 Timothy 3:15).
As community, the church is not merely the repository of correct doctrines, and exemplar of divinely desired human behaviors, it is a family of incarnation, interaction, and fallibility. She does not only hold to Spirit and scripture revealed truth, she realizes truth through interactive relationships which build up the life of Christ within an environment of community.
  • “Speaking the truth in love, we will in all things grow up into him who is the Head, that is, Christ. From him the whole body, joined and held together by every supporting ligament, grows and builds itself up in love, as each part does its work” (Ephesians 4:15-16.).
Church is functioning, not perfect community—being perfected, yes; perfected, not yet folks! How can I say that? Easy, I’m still in it, and so are you . . . cheers - JD


Thursday, February 20, 2020

Don’t confine your worship . . .

Life is too short to not seek to love, worship and respond to God in all life situations.  Don’t confine your worship of “enjoying God” to services or rituals … worship God anywhere. 

  • As we get older we need to shift the focus from hard work to God-work. 
  • Slow down, enjoy God; some things in life are really not that important.  
  • However, giving time for God and His goodness is not one of the aspects of any "cut-down list”.  

He’s not saying less church, he’s saying – more God in the common places of life. 

Don’t forget how close God is . . . 


Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Ruminating on the first day of 2020 . . .

Today’s the first of January 2020 . . .
The other day, (aka - last year), I read and ruminated on a  short-chapter entitled “Of Putting Up with Others Faults” in Thomas A’Kempis’ “Imitation of Christ”....
Passing on my rumination . . .
I have the capacity to prosecute in others what I cannot overcome in myself. 

As fallen humans, within ourselves we neglect strengths and defend our self-unchallenged weaknesses  

I hear A’Kempis speaking to me of patience as an alternative to intolerant negligence.  A patience that allows God’s processes, within others and me to, “have its perfect work”. 

Through patience I give others freedom to live, and myself – freedom to change; or at best endure! – JD




*Thomas À Kempis, 1373-1471 a Christian theologian, probable author of Imitatio Christi (Imitation of Christ); a devotional book that, with the exception of the Bible, has been considered the most influential work in Christian literature . . .

Saturday, June 23, 2018

Behaving like a Baptist: Ruminating on Rumination

Preamble

My lifelong or long-life ecclesiastical journey twice passed through Baptist faith community. 

Those two journey-legs were separated by thirty-three years of living and serving within a Pentecostal faith community; I “came home” in 1997 . . .
 
Oh, BTW – for a couple of years in the late 1980’s, I went to seminary . . . a Pentecostal student at a Baptist seminary in Denver, Colorado . . .

Prepare to think with me

One day, seeming out-of-the-blue one of my seminary Profs stated; “Baptists ruminate . . . ”

“Interesting . . . ?”

Thinking his statement over, chewing reflectively, crystallising the impact of his words, and summarising their focused implications, I mumbled to myself; “shock, horror I’m still a Baptist inside, the default-behaviour is still inside me! I’m not an allegedly intelligent Pentecostal, I’m still a Baptist" . . .

Yes, we Baptists ruminate . . .

We read, listen, think, summarise, interact, and respond to ideas, perspectives, and communication from Biblical sources (aka preaching). Local and broader church forums are often characterised by debate or its 21st century equivalent, reflection. We Baptists are a community of believers who don’t quickly embrace or subscribe to belief(s) without process. Our default-process is rumination.  The practice of turning a matter over and over in the mind, chewing the “cognitive-cud” by reflecting mulling over and over again; we don’t merely think, we think about our thinking. Rumination is a “vital-as” personal and communal custom in mission-centred Baptistic life; it is the fuel-source for the practices of debate and reflection. We’re a people of Scripture and Spirit. Through rumination, debate and reflection we can relationally-process Word and Spirit into missional action and lifelong discipleship.

If you are thinking, yes but how; keep reading and ruminate with me . .

Try this passage for size . . . 

1 Corinthians 1:26-31 (MSG)

“Take a good look, friends, at who you were when you got called into this life. I don’t see many of “the brightest and the best” among you, not many influential, not many from high-society families. Isn’t it obvious that God deliberately chose men and women that the culture overlooks and exploits and abuses, chose these “nobodies” to expose the hollow pretensions of the “somebodies”? That makes it quite clear that none of you can get by with blowing your own horn before God. Everything that we have—right thinking and right living, a clean slate and a fresh start—comes from God by way of Jesus Christ. That’s why we have the saying, “If you’re going to blow a horn, blow a trumpet for God.” 

  • Got some emerging thought and understanding from the text???? 
  • Some "ruminant fruit"????
  • Why not post it as a "one-liner" in the comments box . . . 


Sunday, November 26, 2017

Chewing with Qoheleth and the Caterpillar

Lately I've been watching the progress of this year's crop of "our swan plant's temporary residents" -- so snapped them this morning . . . 

they are living, and continuously eating while in a trans-formative journey . . . 

just like us humans, who according to Qoheleth* in his wisdom-observations defines that eating, drinking and getting on with living is good within the trans-formative struggle called "life" . . . 

As I "chew-my-way-through life" do I live-life as intuitive, instinctive, or instructive . . . OR????















*The Book Ecclesiastes is presented as an autobiography of "Kohelet" (or "Qoheleth")



Sunday, October 29, 2017

Fear of the Lord—Positive yet serious

Recently I read and reflected on the chapter entitled “Of Heartful Remorse” in Thomas A’Kempis’ “Imitation of Christ” – passing on my reflection . . .
The phrase “fear of the Lord” is positive language, positive through serious. 
When I consider the phrase through the term “holy awe”, its meaning becomes even more clearly focused.  
The question of positive response to the Lord by holding Him in holy awe is best understood “the Awesome of the heavens above is still awesome when He is within my life and experience”. 
 In this inner-knowledge my repentances, cryings and commitments to change, flow as “heartfelt remorse without regret, for they are grace from the awesome God – my Lord”.

As I re-read the above, I’m moving from reflecting to rumination – JD J

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Election Day Saturday - Sunday the Sun will rise

New Zealand's national election day on Saturday won’t go away—it will occur and merge into the country’s national history. The sun will rise on Sunday, just an hour earlier.* Both events call for some considered action on one’s part. The first, decide to vote and vote your decisions. Secondly, change the time of any household clock or device that isn’t smart enough to do so for itself. Life will actively continue.
BTW the sun won’t actually rise at any time different to that which is normally does. My changing of clocks and devices, doesn’t rearrange universal reality—we live in an ordered universe. Neither will my voting; though both actions affect the rhythms in personal and national life.
“Election season”—a bit like “Duck season’s” limited, loud, and intense activity—now officially over, leaves us with questions and perspectives for living in the light of day. We live in a-time-of-questioning, not just through it. Some questions are common to daily life. Such questions either orient, or reorient us—their voice calling us to fresh considered action. For Jesus and His disciples questions worked that way in John 9:1-4 . . .
Passing by, they saw a man blind from birth . . . 
His disciples asked him: “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents that he was born blind?”
 “Neither this man nor his parents sinned—this came about so that God’s works might be displayed in him . . .   Jesus answered . . .
We must do the works of him who sent me while it is day . . .  Night is coming when no one can work . . . 
As long as I am in the world, I am the light of the world.”
Our questions, often framed as alternative answers close us up to considering a different perspective of life and societal problems; Jesus answers “our or” with “His neither-nor”. He reorients to working together in the light He is in the world in which we are.
It’s daylight using time . . .

* NZ's Summertime daylight saving time commences 24/09/2017