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Husband, Father, Minister and singer songwriter that gives his humble opinion and voice from his experience living in today's world. Life might just be crazier than you think.
Thursday, August 8, 2013
Tuesday, August 6, 2013
Do You Feel Powerful?
Summer time brings about one of my favorite season in ministry with that
being Vacation Bible School. I love VBS. I loved it as a child, I love it as an
adult, and I love it as a minister. Children, songs, snacks, decorations,
activates, the energy and excitement all crescendos and equals fun. It is a
time when all generations involved sort of take off the formalities of faith
and just have fun together. We get to tell and experience the stories of the
Bible and the stories of our faith with a renewed energy and perspective. We
get to come together with future generations to reveal to them in stories,
songs, and activities, the character and characteristics of God
As I got to speak to the children, the catch phrase was “God is strong.”
Whenever I said God is strong all the children and adults would stand up, flex,
and give me muscle arms and shout, “God is strong!” The literatures of our
faith, the ancient stories of our religion are filled with descriptions about
the power of God. David and Goliath, Daniel and the lion, three guys and a
furnace, are all stories about a powerful God. Strength is something that
always characterized the followers of God. Each character that followed God all
shared the same boldness, strength, and confidence. It made me ponder the
question of how many people today, outside of VBS would use the adjective
“powerful” when they think about God?
How many people who follow God would view themselves as powerful? While some
ministers tread on egotistic power or success, and may display a powerful
arrogance, for me, most times I feel the total opposite. I think of so many
times where I have been sacred. When I know God wants me to do something, say
something, take action, and I talk myself out of it. I know God is call-ing me
and I rationalized myself out of following God because I am scared. I read
volumes of stories about strong, fearless, conquerors for God and I want to be
like that but many times I am frozen in my own insecurities. I compare myself
to others, their gifts, their talents, and I drift down the river of “I’m not
that good.” I want to be powerful but not in the way our society wants power. I
want to stand confident, powerful, and courageous in God and with an
unquestionable faith of what He can do through me. I desire to be like those
characters from VBS who display the Spirit of God living inside them. I want to
navigate through life with the Spirit of a living God that has the power to
bring back life to the living. I want to be reminded of just whom I worship
each week, the powerful Creator who de-sires and wants only the very best for
me. I want to turn those insecurities into power. I want to live each day like
its VBS. Maybe it’s time we all begin to lessen our fears and listening once again
about the power of our God.
Peace, Love
and Happiness:
Tommy
Monday, July 15, 2013
Reflections and Reactions to the Verdict
While being a husband, father, and reverend I have been
asked by many my reaction to the recent verdict in the Zimmerman trail. My
intent is not to inflame, hurt, or debate but only to open up my own perspective
to enlightenment and change. My only initiative
is that we can move forward in a different course of action and dialogue that truly
listens to each other and not only a diatribe of our own views.
The verdict: Four African American and two Caucasian competent
women listened to the evidence presented by both parties and applied all evidence
to the law as instructed by the judge. When they received the evidence presented
to them, after they evaluated it and applied to the law as it was written. They
acquitted a Hispanic male. While the
verdict is not one many people had wanted I can’t not seem to find injustice in
the legal process itself. While the “stand your ground law” is flawed, the jury
did not allow their own emotions, race or gender to sway their decision. While
many people may be upset with the outcome, those six women had a very difficult
task and should be commended, not condemned, for their civil service. It is not a flawed justice system or an illegal
injustice just because the outcome did not justify our own needs or agenda.
While there will be ongoing debate about the actual facts of
what happened that night, the truth remains no one except Martin, Zimmerman and
God know exactly what happened. We cannot begin to project what was the intent of
the heart of Zimmerman or Martin. Martin could have been running for his life
as a scared child or he could have been disrespectful thug out to beat up a “white
ass cracker”. Zimmerman could have been
out to hunt down and kill someone he perceived as a thug criminal or he could have
truly feared for his life. People can speculate all they want but no one can possibly know the intent of either parties actions. All we know is the results of the
actions. The result was a young precious life was cut short because of fear.
I see the problem is bigger than one verdict and one trail.
For me I see the problem is fear. Our society
has produced an environment where fear has created one armed person to volunteer
to patrol the streets out of fear someone might take something or harm someone
else. One young man is fighting for his life out of fear of the first man. We
live in a society where hundreds of young people have died on the streets of
Chicago, Detroit, Miami, and Memphis and many other cities since this one death
occurred. I am not at all trying not to say the Martin family is not hurting or
his death was not a tragedy. Just that it is repeated daily, with other
families hurting that don’t have media or political attention. No parent should
have to bury their child. When it because the norm, we have failed miserably as
a society. Sadly enough in many places in our nation it has already become the
norm.
So how do we combat this fear? I'm not sure but I don’t pretend it will
be easy or comfortable. I do believe Jesus had the right answer that is by love. Love is easy to say but hard to do. We must be open and willing to love everyone. Those like us and those we deem
strangers. We must begin to view everyone as a child of God. Every life lost is
not a loss of one specific race, religion, political view but a lost to us as a
society. We need to understand that when we begin to love like Jesus teaches us
to love, then we automatically becomes less fearful of one another. Laws can be
fixed that is the easiest part, laws we already have in place can be enforced, but
if we look at the reason why a teenage boy would rather risk jail and carry a
gun just so he can feel safe. We must
begin to address the fear that is ruining us and dividing us as a society that proclaims
freedom, opportunity, and unity.
We need to begin to realize each of us place a self-imposed
value system of who we feel God should punish and that God should give a second
chance too and we call it justice. The simple fact is we only use the injustice
card when we don’t get the outcome we wanted. The trail may or may not have had
the outcome you think was justice, however if we don’t attempt to love and address this fear we all know deep
down is there, we have failed all generations to come. Will it be
uncomfortable? Yes. Will it take great effort? you bet. Will we hear things we
might not want to hear? Of course. But we only react because we don’t approve
of the verdict then we have failed all children. If we can do that, look beyond a verdict and
into the future of all children then maybe we all can find some redemption in
this tragedy. I think we all can agree that we would all like less fear in our
life for our children to feel safe and secure. My prayer is that each of us can view the
stranger in the dark not as a treat, not as something to be feared, but as a precious
child of God.
Monday, May 6, 2013
My Minister Mother
I have come
to realize that the most influential ministers are those not found in a pulpit
but maybe found right under one’s own roof. I have realized the person who was
responsible for ministering to me, giving me wise counsel and my spiritual
mentor has been the one who has been there through every season of my life. That
person was not my seminary professor, youth leader growing up, colleague or bestselling
author. Sometimes God gives you a good minister for your church but in unique
circumstances God gives you a great minister underneath your own roof.
My mother grew up on a cotton farm in Tennessee, one of many brothers and
sisters. By today’s standards you could call them poor, but with determination
and resolve her large family survived. While as a child and teenager she had
high dreams and aspirations in life. As her journey would have it life would
not produce her original career goals but would be that of a mother and
homemaker.
Most ministers describe their path into ministry as a calling. A calling as
interrupted as someone listening to the voice of God, allowing God to determine
your path in life, and following that path with purpose, vigor and perseverance
as you honor God along the way.
My mother’s calling and ministry was being a Mother. She served God by
serving and sacrificing for her family.
Until this day I never realized my mother was my minister growing up.
While she was a charter member of her home church and served as president of
her Sunday school class, even refusing official leadership roles; her
presences, attitude, words, character, and compassion brings skin to the gospel
of Jesus Christ.
So as a minister and father, I have been reflecting on exactly how she
did it. What is her secret? How could I emulate some of what she do into my
life? Here are just a few. I have realized
she has always been a better mother than I have been a son. She prayed for me a lot. She trusted in God
and believed that her prayers would be heard. When making bad decisions in my
life, she made me feel like I made a bad decision not that I was a bad person.
She lived the true meaning of forgiveness.
She never ever spoke a bad or negative word about anyone. And always
hoped for the best even in the worst. She swatted my backside when it needed to
be swatted, bandaged my physical and emotional boo boo’s, dried my tears, took
my temperature when I was sick or when life was getting me down. She fed me
meals when I was hungry and prayers when I was spiritual malnourished. She led
by example, never force. She allowed me to find my own path in life and in
God’s calling. As I grew older, she always coached from the sideline, never
interfering, and always rooting for me.
She always put her own needs, wants, and desires second behind the ones
she loves. She is a source of calm and security in times in uncertainty. She
always knows the exact thing to say at the exact appropriate time. She always
listened more than she lectured. She exhibited a sense or core values that were
infused in each of her children and grandchildren.
While my mother was never ordained, went to seminary, or stood in the
pulpit to preach the gospel, she lived the true mission of Jesus Christ. She
lives with a meek authority only that could come from above, with a grace and
compassion that is unique and inspiring. Through her servant hood and
sacrifice, she exhibited, taught, and made disciples of Jesus Christ. Looking
back on my life, I can see God’s hand working through her to prepare me to do
what I do. I have learned that the legacy we leave in others is more valuable
than the things we accomplish today. I am overwhelmed at the blessing she is in
my life and so many others. I know that this is not normal and that I am one
lucky guy. When I search my conscious for a depiction of Jesus, I see my
mother. In the eyes of our world my mother was not a successful woman, but in
the eyes of God, she truly is a Big Momma. I am grateful and proud to say my Mother;
everyone’s Big Momma is my minister.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
One Question That Can Change Your Family
In
part one of Future Family we established that you cannot pick your family, you
cannot change the past, and that there are no good examples of a healthy family
in the Old Testament. We discovered how Jesus sets a very high bar or ideal
what the perfect family looks like, then there is the reality of what our
family is. Therefore there is always tension between the ideal and the real. We
live in a culture that wants us to get rid of the tension by wanting to
normalize everything so it changes the rules.
We
live in a culture that wants to give everyone a participation trophy. Kids get a trophy, reward, for basically
doing nothing. First place and last place are treated equally, that's not
sporting competition. We think we are helping our children and the reality is
the children know they are meaningless. They know they got them for doing
nothing, they know they didn’t win, and they just throw them away.
Now that my little rant is over with, we also
said each of us what the ideal for our children despite of the tension. Jesus
makes this tension, rises the bar and says when you live in this tension
between perfect and real, when thing called life hits, you’ll fall short and I
will forgive you, love you, but I don’t ever want you to give up on the ideal
or perfect. Jesus says I never ever want
you to give up on the pursuit of ideal when it comes to you family, your faith
and your relationships.
If we give up on trying for the perfect we
will lose. You may be thinking sure but dude you don’t know my family. That’s
true but I don’t want you to lose sight of the high standard God wants us to
shot for. We said there are no good examples of family in the Old Testament and
we said the New Testaments when it speaks of family basically says: wives submit
to your husbands, men love your wives, children obey your parents, and parents
don’t exasperate your children.
One
of the most controversial, politically incorrect, most misused, misunderstood,
bible verse when it comes to family is Ephesians 5:22 What we need to
understand is that Jesus on his time on planet earth more than anything else
talked, preached, and taught about the principles of love. He said it’s the
greatest commandment. Jesus said love is the driving force behind everything.
Peter and Paul mission was to figure out how to take the teachings and
principles of love Jesus taught us and apply them to this new concept of
family. It had never been done before. In a time when whoever holds the power
makes the rules. Some could say it is like that today. But before Jesus, it was
Rome, before that it was the Greeks, before that it was Egypt and Pharaoh.
Before Jesus whoever had the power dictated what was right and what was wrong.
Jesus comes along and turns it upside down. He says actually if you have power
you are to use to it help the powerless and that you should lever your power
for all the people. Brand new idea that Peter and Paul says how can we take
this concept of love and power and apply it to the family. So Paul takes this
idea or principle about love and breaks it down for the whole family. When we
hear these verses we need to remember that this is a general vital principle
directed towards everyone but Paul address women, then men, then children, then
parents.
Ephesians 21& 22: 21 Submit
to one another out of
reverence for Christ.
22 Wives, submit yourselves
to your own husbands as you
do to the Lord.
What I hear all the time is
usually by men who say, “Look right there, the Bible says wives submit to your
husbands.” I usually respond with, first
read verse 21 again. Then 22 it says wives. Paul is talking to the wives, he
ain’t talking to men, and you need to pay attention later on. Verse 21: Submit to one another out of
reverence for Christ. Submit to one another, out of reverence for Christ. Paul first is talking to everyone. The
overall principle of love, for every follower of Jesus, every church goer,
every family member, the overall principle that everyone should follow is to
submit to one another. Paul breaks it
down to each family member but everyone is to submit. It is called mutual
submission. It is mutual submission not out of reverence to one another,
because let’s be honest, sometime our family members, sometimes we are not
worth being revered or honored.
So
what does submission mean? To submit means I am going
to leverage my power, leverage my time, leverage my gifts, and leverage my
money for your benefit. Whiter I am the father, mother, husband, wife, child,
Aunt, Uncle, grand parent, great grandparent, cousin, I am going to look for
ways to help you with your burden out of my reverence to Christ. Because that
is what Jesus did for me. Jesus died for us; Jesus made us his number one
priority. In the upper room that night, when Jesus realized he possessed all
the power of God, he washed their feet. That was his example of the submission.
In
my opinion this is the single most powerful dynamic principle there is. When a
family, congregation, neighborhood, when someone says, I’m going to loan you my
power, my influence, my time, my money, my experience, my education for your
benefit. When everyone begins to do that, it is the most dynamic powerful
principle that will do amazing things. It was modeled for us by Jesus. But we
live in the real world where we have this humanistic desire to control things. The
message and concept of mutual submission is I am here for you don’t matter
where I am in the family but I am here to leverage all I have and all I am for
your benefit. No one in this family is more important than anyone else.
So
you want happiness, peace, joy, love and good times in your family? It’s all
about mutual submission. It comes down to one simple question. You can change
your whole family dynamics with six simple words. “What can I do to help?”
If everyone in your family asks this simple
question to everyone else once a day, you would not imagine how things will
change. It is saying I am offering all I am for all you need. I am loaning you
me.
If you ask this question, it
will always prevent the conversation from going negative. Life is busy, but to
pause and say I am here for you how can I help means everything. When we ask
most of the time, the person will say, nothing. That is ok because by asking
this simple question you are saying loudly, I am aware of your burden. I am
aware you are stressed. I am not trying to interfere but if there is anything I
can do to lessen your load, your burden a bit, I’m here. It will transform your
family.
So why don’t we ask
this simple question? One word: fear. Especially kids because you will be out raking leaves or washing the car. We fear that someone is going to take advantage of us. We fear they will say Yes and it will take us away from what we want to do. But remember the last part: out of reverence of Christ.” Jesus looked down at this planet earth full of pain, suffering, brokenness, shame and regret and said, “What can I do to help?” . The father said, “you don’t want to know.” Jesus replied, “No! What can I do to help?” God said, “It will cost you your life.” Jesus said, “I can do that.” God says, “you will have to go down there and put every single persons needs and wants before yours.” Jesus said, “I can do that.” So Paul says out of reverence, honor, love, appreciation of Jesus Christ open up your time, talents, money, education, experiences for someone else. Yes, they may take advantage of us, yes we may not get everything done we want to get done, but welcome to becoming followers of Jesus. Because Jesus did that for you and 99.9% of the time, when you do that for a family member, it will not cost you your life just a little time, little money, little energy, little sweat, and a little frustration. We fear this but the thing this question threatens is the key to having a great family. Do you know what makes great families? Do you know what makes happy families? Asking this question, even with fear, says I am trading a me for an us. You know what it would do to your heart and soul if everyone or someone in your family asked, “what can I do to help?” You know how it would make you feel and you have the same potential to make them feel that same way but you don’t because you are selfish. Selfish meaning you will never give all you are to the family because your definition of a happy family is if I can just get everyone to do exactly what I want them to do, I’ll be happy. No you won’t. You’ll be large and in change but you will not be happy. When you ask this question it forces you to lean into the family instead of pulling away. Because if it is only a one way street and people lean in, ask the question, you don’t reciprocate, you pull away, they will pull away. Everyone will pull away and you have something but it won’t be a family.
The
key word is mutual. If you want control and don’t reciprocate, they will pull
away, become disconnected, resentful, and miserable and will leave either
emotionally or physically because you don’t get happiness out of controlling
the people around you. You get happy when you loan yourself out to people like
Jesus did for you. Happy is not control.
Jesus said the more power you have, the more you should be asking the question,
“what can I do to help?” because we want people leaning in not pulling away.
Wither we are talking about our biological family or our
faith family ask this question at the appropriate time. Don’t come out of the
bathroom 30 minutes later after all the dishes are done and the kitchen is
clean up and ask, “What can I do to help?”
It’s never going to be ideal but the more we ask the better timing we
will have.
Here
is some tension. If you want to witness my head exploding, wither it is with
you my faith family or my biological family, I say this out of tension, are
individuals who offer their criticism, who offer their critique, who freely
offer their opinion and suggestion but do not offer their assistance. Do you
know why this upsets me so because not only is it disrespectful and hurtful
because you have acknowledged that you see me struggling but instead of
offering help you critics my struggles.
There is nothing more
dehumanizing in the world but more importantly there is nothing farther from
the teachings of Jesus.
The
last thing you must, must, allow someone who offers to help, to help.
Those of us who want to be
in control, we don’t want help. When no one helps, we can then stomp off to our
reservation for our own pity party. But
when someone leans in, over comes their fear, embrace it, except it, and
understand you are allowing them the privilege of serving you in honor of
Christ.Say
it out loud: “What can I do to help?”
Say to those in your family,
even if at first you don’t mean it. Because when you want to ask it the least,
is when you need to ask it the most…
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Future Family:Ideally Speaking the Perfect Family?
Today we kick off a brand
new and exciting sermon series Future Family. I’m excited because in case you didn't know before I was called into ministry I worked as a counselor for at
risk kids in many different settings. In counseling, it is obvious that an
individual’s family of origin is vital in the development of character, affects
all our relationships, defines our character, and sets the trajectory for
success and failure in our life. So I’m excited because I personally get to mix
my past experience and education with my current calling to serve Christ. This sermon series has many challenges. First
is the word “family” is diverse and is not emotionally neutral. Every family is
different. There are no two families alike. The second challenge is the fact
remains the words “father” and “mother” is not emotional neutral words. You
hear those words and immediately they spark emotion either good or not so
good. But we do have two commonalities.
First everyone came from a family and that when it comes to our family of
origin; we had no choice in the matter. You can pick your friends, you can pick
your spouse, but you can’t pick you family. In middle school I can remember
wanting to pick my friends family over mine. Mine wasn't bad just their family
was just cooler and had a ski boat. Second thing we all have in common is there
seems to always come a point in your life when you realize that no one you are
biologically related too is as smart as you. You realize that if everyone would just listen
to you, everything could be worked out: stop drinking as much; you might stay
out of jail. Take a bath; you might actually meet someone who will date you.
Even with the challenges and commonalities we tackle this because regardless of
the debate going on today about same sex marriages and families, if you look at
all non politically funded research the same sex parent is the most influential
force, most powered force, over a child, so what we do or don’t do today
affects the future family.
So when we take a social
aspect and look at it through the lens of scripture you will find that in the
Old Testament there is not one example of a healthy, vibrant family we can set
as the bar to emulate. The first
homicide was two brothers, Cain & Able. First recorded civil war in Israel
was David against his own son. Jesus parents lost him for three days when he
was young. As we start this series it is important we understand that when the
Apostle Paul took the teachings of Jesus to the Greek world, the idea of family
was so new and so strange because never up until that time had any society or
culture adopted them yet. We hear it and say, duh, that sounds so old fashion. We
will hear words that to us seem outdated because in our culture we have come to
except them but to them it was progressive thinking, new, and foreign. We say
that’s so out dated, but to them it was strange, brand new way of thinking and
acting especially when it comes to women and children. We forget that this New
Testament society was one where women held lesser value than livestock. They wouldn't name their children until they were in their teens because they were
not sure if they would survive. Parents would leave their inheritances to other
people’s children if they thought their children were not responsible
enough. So when Jesus would pause and
say, “let the children come to me” we say oh how cute. But those there at the
time would say, “are you kidding me” let a child of lesser value take the spot
of an adult. The Apostle Paul elevates
the status of women and children. Here is what is true today. In a society that
follows a Christian world view women and children have fared better. In a
society that has not embraced a Christian biblical world view women and
children have suffered and have less value or rights. I know that some
religious nuts have used the biblical text for their own twisted view on women and
children for their own personal gain but if we take a honest look at the New
Testament it open the door to a new world view. What Paul was preaching was not
only mind boggling it gave women and children hope. It gave them value. Jesus
died on the cross for all men, women, and children and they became equal citizens
in the Kingdom of God when women and children were not citizens of any country.
When you hear you are not valued or a citizens here in Rome but you are in
God’s kingdom that is a huge life giving hopeful statement. That breathes life
into a culture. So what seems old
fashioned to us is new and mind boggling and most importantly brought hope to
those in that 1st century.
Paul says in light of the gospel here
is how a family should work.
Colossians 3:18-19 18
Wives, submit yourselves to your husbands, as is fitting in the Lord.19
Husbands, love your wives and do not be harsh with them. (NIV)
Why would he say something like this? Women
hear this and go submit, yeah right. Men hear this today and are like, “yeah I
don’t really know what submit means but I could go for that.” Both genders only
hear “wives - submit” and it doesn't move from there. Paul addresses this because men in that
culture were hash with their dogs, cattle, and they were harsh with their wives
because she was not much more valuable. Paul says you are not to own, take
advantage of, or process your wife, you are to love, value, respect your wife.
We view this as an old fashion idea but their viewed it differently because it
elevated the status of women.
Colossians 3:20 & 21:
20 Children, obey your parents in
everything, for this pleases the Lord. Parents here this and sort of elbow
their children right now. Did you hear what he said? Paul God’s apostle says
you got to OBEY in everything… If you want to be good with Jesus you have to
obey me in everything… But wait. The
next verse says…
21 Fathers, do not embitter your
children, or they will become discouraged. Another word here for embitter is
exasperate. For me this is the one I fail the most. It is when we say something
to our children, we are trying to be helpful, trying to be comforting or
hopeful and somehow in the process we place a weight on them that causes them
to be discouraged. You every noticed that one parent can say something to a
child, good bad or indifference and it can seem to weigh like 50 lbs and another
parent can say the exact same thing to that child and it seems to weigh like
500 lbs. It’s not equal Let’s just admit it, there are some situations and some
children that one parents influence weighs more than the other. Does this mean
the child loves or favors one parent over the other? No! When Paul addresses
fathers here he is saying men you tend to treat children and women like animals
so stop it. We must be careful of the way we speak to our children. I have so
many bad examples where I've failed on this. I say something stupid, I
desperate want to take it back, but I can’t. Even if what I have said was true,
it has crushed the spirit of my child. A parent told me how tough it was to
make it in the music business, how barely anyone makes it, how much talent you
have to have, how much luck you needed. All of that is true but I believed him
so I didn't give it my very best because my spirit was crushed.
Peter says to be
considerate of your wives, take into consideration how your wife feelings.
Today men are like you sound like Oprah, the men of that time were saying “you
got to be kidding.” “Be considerate of
the feelings of my wife. I wife I didn't even choose, the wife my parents
bartered for so I got the marry the middle daughter of our neighbor because my
parents made a good deal on some livestock, be considerate of the way she
feels, no one was concerned about how I felt. You want me to treat them with
respect.”
So if we look only at a Biblical view
it looks like this: Husbands love your wife and be considerate, wives submit to
your husbands, children obey your parents, and parents don’t embitter or
exasperated your children.
This brings us to tension
of what we will be covering over the next several weeks. No one has come from
the ideal family or perfect family. Since no one has come from the perfect
family it is therefore impossible for you to create the prefect family. The
ideal family does not exist because there is always a gap between the ideal and
the real. There is real, there is ideal and there is tension between the two.
Jesus understood and lived in this tension. Jesus constantly pointed to the
kingdom of God and what that meant. Jesus always held up a very high standard.
For example Jesus was asked about adultery. Everyone knew adultery was when a
man had sex with anyone was not his wife was adultery. Jesus said yes that is
true but if you even look at a woman in lust, that too is adultery. He took a
standard and raised the bar. So what do we do when we miss this higher
standard? Jesus says as the standard gets higher my grace and forgiveness grows
deeper and your acceptance becomes broader. Jesus refused to condemn those who
feel short. Jesus never ever condemns.
The questions remains are we willing
to face an ideal that will never become a reality when it comes to our family?
Are we tempted to lose sight of the ideal to feel better about where we
actually are? Are we willing to embrace an ideal or lower our expectations when
it comes to our family?
Jesus was comfortable with tension.
Turn with me to Matthew 19:3-8 as we
look at family and this tension.
Matthew 19:3-6: 3 Some Pharisees came to him to test him. They asked, “Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for any and every reason?”
4 “Haven’t you read,” he replied, “that at the beginning the Creator ‘made them male and female,’[a] 5 and said, ‘For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh’[b]? 6 So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate.”
We must understand that divorce during
that century was nothing like divorce today. If a man wanted to divorce his
wife, there was no attorney, he just publicly said, “I divorce you, I divorce
you, I divorce you” that was it. If you were a woman, so sad too bad, she could
not under any circumstance get out of the marriage. Jesus says, “let me take you back to the beginning, when things were perfect, when
they were exactly the way God created it.” Tension. Jesus said I will take
you back to the ideal and place it up to the real. I am not sure what to do with the tension.
Jesus says a marriage is when God puts tow people together they are made one.
You are trying to un one what God has made one.
Verse:
7-9
7 “Why then,” they asked, “did Moses command that a man give his wife a certificate of divorce and send her away?”
8 Jesus replied, “Moses permitted you to divorce your wives because your hearts were hard. But it was not this way from the beginning. 9 I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, and marries another woman commits adultery.”
They came to test Jesus, now they want
information and ask then why Did Moses say divorce was ok? Jesus said in the
beginning divorce was not in the plan. In the ideal divorce is not in the plan.
But I fully understand in marriages there are deal breakers: addictions, abuse,
manipulation, infidelity, abandonment. But what Jesus is saying, what I am saying is
divorce is not ideal. When I meet people they want the other person to change,
get healthy, be responsible, love, caring compassionate they don’t go into a
marriage with the ideal being it will end in divorce. So ok Jesus what are you
and this faith community going to do with all these divorce people in our community?
We are going to love them. What are we going to do? Jesus said I am going to
give my life for them. So Jesus is it a law or not a law. Jesus said yes.
As we explore further in this sermon
series we must be accustomed to this kind of tension. It is not to make anyone
feel bad or condemn you or input guilt about your past. We hope in the weeks
ahead to look at the reality in which we live and function today and the
tension between that and the ideal, the perfect way God intended it to be.
So where are we? Are we willing to
strive for the ideal or just redefine our reality so we feel better about
ourselves? I have worked with youth who
were sexually, physically, and emotionally abused by a parent and thought that
was normal and that all parents did those things to their children. They had no
concept of the ideal so they had redefined their reality by redefining the role
of a parent. When they did that you can see why they became abusers themselves.
When it comes to our
family are we going to use God’s ideal to be our target we aim for. Will God’s
ideal be the thing that guides or calibrates our compass or am I going to
change the rules and expectations so I feel better about where I am?
Let’s be honest. If we as followers of
Jesus don’t change the rules and consistently fail to reach the ideal, we will
begin to feel bad about ourselves. We will begin to condemn our own actions.
Jesus doesn't want us to feel that way. Every single one of us falls short, we
all deal with the pain and regret that goes along with that tension. But God
grace is bigger than that. God doesn't want us to feel that way. When we begin
to change the rules we lose. We loose with our family, we lose in our
relationships, and we lose in our faith.
If reality is not good why is Jesus’s
ideal the best way forward? Here is what I have experienced. Wither they were a
follower of Jesus or not, I have never ever met a father or met a mother that
wanted divorce for their children. They
may wanted desperately for one of both parties to change, get healthy, plug
into the relationships, be monogamous, to feel safe, but not one desired a divorce for their
children. In fact those who have faced the pain, loneliness, isolation,
desperation and the hopelessness of divorce are the ones that want a healthy
successful marriage for their children more than anything else in the world. No
matter their view of scripture, no matter their world view, there is something
inside of all of us that refuses to lose sight of the ideal when it comes to our
kids and grandchildren. I have yet to meet a single mother who wishes, dreams,
or wants their child to be a single parent. We all want something ideal for our
children.
In reality when we hold up
Jesus’ ideal, our society, our media, our culture, the messages in film and
music will say that’s so old fashion we need to change the rules. But for us
that follows Jesus we need to say, “That may worked for you but we are keeping
the ideal.” We will live in this tension you are creating. We will mess up, we
will fall short, but we will not change the rules so we can just feel better
about our roles as husbands and wives. I’m willing to live in the tension
between the reality and the ideal Jesus gave us.
So as we move forward in
this series I will be giving some practical advice. If I offend you or your
current situation it is not my intention so please let us move forward with
grace and forgiveness because the odds are I will say something stupid. But my
prayer is that we can embrace this tension to do and be better because the
future of our families depend on it.
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
“Me, Elvis & Jesus”
“Me, Elvis & Jesus”
I was born and raised in the Holy
Land of Rockin Roll, Memphis Tennessee. Growing up we found our city identity as
the hometown of Elvis Vernon Presley. While a new generation has no reference
to exactly who Elvis was and what he meant to music, they identify with another
hometown guy Justin Timberlake. I am the perfect age to have appreciated both.
There was a phenomenon with both these men and maybe it was with all hometown
celebrities but as you would travel around town you would hear of “Elvis
sightings” or “Justin Timberlake sightings”.
You could walk into a restaurant
and there would be a sort of electricity in the air and people would quickly
tell you, Justin Timberlake was in here or Elvis ate here on time.
This week after the crescendo to
Easter, we sort of go on with Spring never looking back. In a somber moment I
honestly wish those of us who follow Jesus were more like Elvis fans. Unless
you have witnessed it yourself, you cannot imagine that 35 years after his death
hundreds of thousands of fans gather from all over the world to light a candle,
listen to his music, and to share with one another how Elvis’s music touched
their lives. It is literally breath taking to witness a sea of strangers of
different ages, different ethnicities, and different social classes all coming
together as one to share in the Elvis experience. While 99% of the people
believe that Elvis is physically dead there are 1% that still believes Elvis
faked his own death and is living in a retirement home in Michigan. But if you
experience Elvis Death Week in Memphis you will clearly see that Elvis is not
dead. Yes, he died on August 16, 1977 but his presence is very much still alive.
There are hundreds of Elvis impersonators, people still listen to his music,
tour his house, and share their Elvis experience with anyone who will listen.
The fans of Elvis have a devotion, sincerity, compassion, commitment, commonality,
and resolve that I wish we had for
Jesus. I am not saying Elvis was
like Jesus, but what if after Easter we followers of Jesus emulated the fans of
Elvis. What if we didn’t care about age, social class, denominations, and
ethnicities and gathered to share our experiences with Jesus. I want to share with
the next generation my Jesus experiences and sightings. Wonder what our community
would look like if we told how Jesus affected our life with the same zeal. What
if we worshipped with the same electricity to celebrate God’s love for us with
the same intensity as if Jesus was in the building? What would our relationship
with Christ be like if we loved others in the same fanaticism as Elvis fans? Elvis
said early in his career, "Music and religion are similar--because both
should make you wanna move." I believe EP was right. The gospel is a living,
vibrant force that should make us wants to get out and move, move around in the
world, move towards each other in love and compassion, move towards bringing others
into the kingdom. I don’t want to be Thomas (please
overlook the irony) who waited for proof. I want to join with others who have
devotion, sincerity, compassion, commitment, and resolve to be a fan of Jesus.
I want a religion that makes me wanna move. I don’t want to stop the momentum
of Easter, ever. I want a savior that makes me wanna put on a sequin jump suit
and sing. I want to believe in a Jesus that lives. I want to live like Jesus is
alive and is in the building…
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