Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Growing in God's Grace

By Donna Winchell

 


 


When I was a child I always thought of Lent as a time to choose something to give up like candy and sweets, and to abide by the practice of eating meatless meals every Friday. Boy could my mom come up with some of the weirdest meatless meals, but I’ll save those stories for another time. I honestly never considered the deeper meaning of what we were doing. That by giving up meat we were honoring Christ who sacrificed his flesh on a Friday – Good Friday. My abstinence from candy and meat was really a form of penance and a way to turn away from sin and to turn back to God.

There is something rewarding about abstinence and self-denial during Lent – giving up something allows us to make a tangible sacrifice to the Lord. I love that and won’t be changing the practice from my childhood; but I also plan to use Lent for building my relationship with God, so I can cultivate that relationship far beyond the next six weeks of Lent. I want to become a better human being, to know God more and not just know about God. In 2021, I want to use this season to grow more deeply in God’s grace. I must do some searching in my mind and heart to see what is needed to move in that direction. I need God’s help to do that.

 “Search me, God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.” (Psalm 139:23-24).

Lent calls us to a self-examination that reflects upon our need for God. To do this we need to honestly answer some tough questions. I invite you to join with me in this self-examination if you also desire to build your relationship with God this Lent.

Starting with prayer we need to ask our Heavenly Father to show us areas in life that are counter to His desire for us as we consider the following questions:

 ·         Am I consciously or unconsciously creating the impression that I am a better person than I really am; In other words, am I a hypocrite?

·         Am I honest in all acts or words, or do I exaggerate?

·         Do I confidentially pass on to another what was told to me in confidence? Can I be trusted?

·         Am I a slave to dress, friends, work or habits?

·         Am I self-conscious, self-pitying, or self-justifying?

·         Did the Bible live in me today?

·         Do I give it time to speak to me each day?

·         Am I enjoying prayer?

·         When did I last speak to somebody else with the object of trying to win that person for Christ?

·         Am I making contacts with other people and using them for the Master’s Glory?

·         Do I pray about the money I spend?

·         Do I get to bed on time and get up on time?

·         Do I disobey God in anything?

·         Do I insist upon doing something for which my conscience is uneasy?

·         Am I delegated in any part of my life? Am I jealous, impure, critical, irritable, touchy or distrustful?

·         How do I spend my spare time?

·         Am I proud?

·         Do I thank God I am not as other people, especially as the Pharisees who despised the publican?

·         Is there anybody whom I fear, dislike, disown, criticize, hold a resentment toward or disregard? If so, what am I doing about it?

·         Do I grumble or complain constantly?

·         Is Christ real to me?

                               Taken from Wesleyan Heritage HQL-9826, p.24


Sisters and brothers in Christ, through this self-examination may we gain the perspective that God desires us to have; and to use this Lenten season to grow more deeply in God’s grace.

 

Tuesday, February 23, 2021

About Celebrities & Living Small: A Lent to Repent & Live in the Universe of Jesus

By Ann Voskamp, submitted by Brooke Momblow

My mother lives round the corner from a graveyard, and when I drive by in the falling white of a winter night, I look at headstones in snow and it’s true:

Celebrity or saint, scoundrel or steward, there’s a plot of dirt waiting for us all just the sameAshes to ashes, dust to dust, is the way of all of us.

On a Wednesday in February, the Wednesday where we bow and humbly wear our mortality with a smudge of soot, I think of the Body of Christ hurting in all the ways, as I set out our Lenten Wreath. Set out the carved wooden silhouette of Jesus who carried the weight of the cross, the whole aching span of history, on His back.

Honestly, on the Shrove Sunday before Ash Wednesday, I leaned up against a window sill and wept, sick of the cult of personality, sick of supremacy (of anyone over anyone), sick of celebrity, sick of sin, sick of hypocrisy, sick of me. I am the very chief among sinners, the one who says with Chesterton: “What’s wrong with the world? Dear World, I am.”

Sitting at the frayed edge of a Lent in a hurting world, preparing to repent and follow Jesus, the Antithetical Celebrity, through the next 40 days, toward an altar to surrender all, I reach over and pick up that cruciform silhouette of cruciform Jesus and I just keep returning to what this last year has ignited in me:

I no longer just believe in Jesus, I live in Jesus and He is not some optional addendum to my life but my only atmosphere to stay alive and I repent of all the days of living in the Universe of Self, instead of living in the Universe of Christ. If you exit the Universe of Self to live in the Universe of Christ where Jesus is your every breath, you never stop saying it with every breath:

Don’t follow me.

Don’t follow anybody but the Perfect One who had to take on a body.  

Don’t follow anybody made of flesh, because flesh will fail & fall.

Follow Jesus alone, who alone can save.

When the church exits the Universe of Self to live in the Universe of Christ, we repent of our idols and our celebrities, repent of our ways that are Babel’s ways, repent of our addiction to pedestals and golden calfs and grind them all down to dust because we know that which we are made of.

All celebrity has a responsibility to tear down pedestals,
And all of us have a responsibility to not build any pedestals.

All of us: Tear down our pedestals with daily transparency and vulnerability, lest we fall with pride. We limp bruised. We keep turning, and turning around, turning and repenting from the Universe of Self and Celebrity, to turn toward the Universe of Christ that operates with an entirely counter-mentality:

Celebrity has platforms to grow brands, Christianity has altars to come and die.

Celebrity seeks visibility. Christianity seeks self-invisiblity so only Christ is visible though everything.

Celebrity rises to be untouchable. Christianity kneels low to pour out for those mistreated as untouchables.

Celebrity may have all the blue checks, but someday we will all tremble and stand before God for a character check, and the only hope for any of us will be the Scarlet Grace of Christ.

We, the church, repent of raising up celebrities instead of celebrating in our Maker who made all equally in the image of God.

We turn from our idolizing ways to care more about the marginalized and poverty-stricken and the sacrificing ways of God.

We, the church, repent of the way we have done church instead of humbly being the church.

We turn from our dependence on microphones and big lights to share the message, and turn toward serving in micro ways and being the light, by sharing all that we have so that our very lives become the stronger message.

We, the church, repent: Personal sin never stays personal; personal sin grows into horizontal cancer. That only shrinks when it’s brought to the Light, and we stay in the Light, breathe in the Light, live in the Light.

We repent: The root of all kinds of evil in the world is entitlement in our hearts.

We repent: Never let any hypocrisy of a leader hinder any of your intimacy with God.

We repent in sack cloth and ashes, turn to witness God raise beauty from even these ashes.

On the cusp of Lent, we turn and return again to the season where a year ago, the world came face to face with the pandemic of COVID. And maybe a limping year later, we enter this Lent walking more of the humble Way of Jesus:

Mega church has become micro church, microphones and platforms have given way to micro-communities that are spiritually formational and, in these strange days are we becoming more of what Jesus has always modeled:

Small is the real great. Local is where it’s at. Micro ministry reaps macro growth. Local and small is the greatest of all. Because: Ministry is not about going big or go home. In ministry — going big can blow up your home in Christ.

We repent: Travel itineraries with little accountability can lead to great misery. Go Big at the peril of your own soul. The Jesus Way of Ministry turns to walk another way: Go small to Go Home.

Just look at the Way of Jesus.

This is why we repent and turn, to turn and look to the Way of Jesus, to the face of Jesus.

We bow and bend and enter Lent and whisper:

Ashes to ashes, dust to dust, we live in the Universe of Jesus, where the hand of God sculpts bits of soil into souls, where the breath of God kisses dust to life, where we do more than believe in Jesus, we breathe in Jesus, we live in Jesus.

There are headstones in graveyards round the corner. But we repent and keep company with Jesus, through our days, through Lent, through to the end, more than only believing in Him, but actually living in Him, in the Universe of Christ — where even dust can resurrect.