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Showing posts from 2021

Over-Spiritualizing the Mundane

  WOW!  It’s been a few minutes since I’ve last written.  Lots of life has been happening! I passed the Bar exam, I got my law license, I got a promotion at work, I got preapproved for a mortgage, started looking at properties, I adopted a kitten, I had a celebration with family and friends to beautifully turn the page on a wonderful, long, and tedious past several years as I made my way through law school. I’ve always been a person who is intentional about experiencing life...as it’s happening -- as it unfolds.  Sometimes, that means fully confronting terrifying circumstances or emotionally draining situations or uncomfortable conversations. BUT that also includes times of excitement, joy, fellowship, and blessing.  Which means: don’t count on me to take photos during birthdays, vacations, weddings, graduations, etc. LOL! For example, last year I took a long weekend trip to Michigan to celebrate the wedding of one of my dear college roommates. It was several da...

A pair of bible-colored glasses.

  I’ve heard it called many things: knowledge, common sense, “my truth”, confidence, intellect, expertise… In the end, it boils down to one idea: how can I analyze and compartmentalize my life, circumstances, and experiences, to best explain my humanity -- my identity -- my purpose? Christians are known for boxing up neat little packages of tools and idioms for the purpose of living a better Christian life and dub it the “Christian Worldview”.   I attended and graduated from a Christian college in Ohio.  A part of every course of study was a built-in biblical studies minor; six semester-long courses.  The courses were Christian Life & Thought, Spiritual Formation, Old Testament, New Testament, Christian Worldview Development, and Christian Worldview Integration.  All were focused on one thing -- how to equip graduates with a foundational Christian Worldview by which they will engage money, sex, politics, non-believers, the workplace, etc. Don’t get me w...

He persists in our disobedience.

  Have you ever wondered what God does when we disobey?  Often, the thought pattern turns on what He will do with me, in a predictable selfish sense.  But have you ever wondered what He does despite our disobedience? Over the past several days, I have been reading, re-reading, picking apart, and meditating on the book and story of Jonah.  Jonah’s story always captivated me as a child and continues to do so into adulthood.  I’m not really sure why.  I guess it is because his journey is incredibly relatable.  God asks him to do something, Jonah knows the expectation, yet he decides he knows better and defies Him like a grumpy, hormonal, ungrateful teenager.  *Queue phrases like “duh!”, “as if!”, “whatever!” -- complete with an eye roll and slouchy-stomping to your room.*  You get the idea… There are countless examples of God punishing (or in Christian-ese: “lovingly correcting with a strong hand”) His people: wandering in the desert for decades...

Full Stop.

  Full Stop. -- otherwise known as a period -- It is defined as a punctuation mark used to end a sentence or an abbreviation.  “Punctuation.”  It kind of has a spark to it.  Having taken German for my high school foreign language requirement, I like the emphasis that the translated word has “Punkt”!  It conveys a sort of action; sharp and quick.  It emotes a deliberate interruption. * * * To better practice intentional prayer, I have made it a point over the last couple of months to actively pray as I go throughout the day.  Sometimes I pray in my car while I drive.  Other times I pray when I lay in bed at night (honestly, it’s a form of meditation for me). I pray when I get ready for work in the morning.  I pray as I vacuum...fold laundry...make dinner… Often the prayers are quick and a couple of sentences. This discipline engages the Spirit regularly and openly.  I have a tendency to fall into the trap of beckoning and inviting the...

Thorns are 100% real.

  “A thorn in the flesh.” A New Testament quip.  A convenient ribbon to tie up struggles of the Christian life and attribute it to Satan himself.  Or, in the alternative, a phrase that is dismissed as a benign statement of Paul who was using hyperbole. Or perhaps a mental anguish, by all accounts “deserved”, as a perverted penance for his past. Or maybe it was God’s way of telling Paul “Check yo’self before you wreck yo’self!” “So to keep me from becoming conceited...a thorn was given me in the flesh, a messenger of Satan to harrass me...Three times I pleaded with the Lord about this, that it should leave me. But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’” -- 2nd Corinthians 12:7-9 But let me tell you: This passage is all too real for me, today, in the 21st Century.   A little preface: In our church community we practice the idea of oikos (no not the greek yogurt).  Oikos is a greek word translated to “househo...

Converting Hearing to Doing

  We sit in church and listen to a sermon. We drive in our cars and listen to a podcast. We chat with friends and listen to stories of God’s faithfulness. We gather around a table and listen to the bible study video of the week. We flip through Instagram and listen to soundbits of encouragement from a preacher. I can attest to the necessity of hearing and being drenched in the Word.  Hearing and reading is integral to our walk with God.  How else do we sharpen our sword?  (Remember those “sword drills” from Christian elementary school or Awana or Sunday School??  To be perfectly honest, I sucked at those. I’ve gotten better only after having gone to a Christian college and getting a Biblical Studies minor, but still.  The struggle is real.)  The Word of God is indeed a weapon in the arsenal of a Christian.    “Blessed be the LORD, my rock, who trains my hands for war, and my fingers for battle; he is my steadfast love and my fortress, my...