These are some resolutions I wrote in 2009 during a class that lasted longer than my attention span. I find them useful to reread.
Resolved: To never err on the side of caution where God has called me to take a risk
Resolved: to not speak poorly of others behind their back, and to only do so to their face when I believe will bring some good to them.
Resolved: to not let the personality or appearance of someone cause me hesitation in sharing the gospel with them.
Resolved: to try, as best as I can, to love all people.
Resolved: to weigh the profit of any task against its importance in eternity.
Resolved: to live, as well as I can, with my own mortality in mind.
Resolved: to never open my mouth in prayer if my motive is a selfish one.
Resolved: if (or rather, when) I fail any one of these resolutions, I will not doubt the great forgiveness found in the grace of God.
Resolved: to never treat the greatness of God as common place.
Resolved: to never waste emotions on inanimate objects or unchangeable
circumstances.
Resolved: to go through my possessions often and see if there is anything which I would be ashamed to hold before the eyes of God.
Resolved: to pair actions with my beliefs.
Resolved: to consider I may be wrong before any disagreement damages a relationship.
Resolved: when I am confronted with my own error, I will not value my pride over the recognition of truth.
Resolved: to never, as well as I can, trade something which is best for something which is merely good.
Resolved: to read this list often, act on what I've written, and add to it when I can.
Resolved: To not let nameless, vague, irrational fears cause me hesitation in following through in God's will.
To love everyone. Regardless:
of their response
of their personality
of their race
of their usefulness to me
of their offences against me or anyone else
of their possibility of change
of the possibility of repayment
of their character
of how annoying they are
of how incompatible we are
of whether or not they ever know how much I've done for them
of how I feel
of who else loves them
of how long it takes
of how capable of love I feel
of how many times they've failed
of who knows
Monday, January 28, 2013
Thoughts on Morality
It seems to me that Christians ought to be the ones on the
front lines of many more causes than we currently are, and perhaps less vocal
about some of the issues that we are most marked for. This seems to not only be true in our current
culture, but it seems to be historically true.
I know it is very easy to judge those who came before us for
their moral inadequacies, but morality does not exist in retrospect. Morality does not exist in future intentions
either. Morality exists in that liminal
space between our minds and our hands – what we know and what we do about
it. It may be that the concept of
stewardship that is so prevalent in the New Testament also applies to the
knowledge we receive. If we have been
given much, we are expected to allocate that knowledge in a way that “turns a
profit,” so to speak. So rather than saying
of previous generations that they were the height of hypocrisy for not seeing
what we so clearly see, we ought to wonder why we do not see what we ought to
see. Certainly, we would not want our
future generations to call us hypocrites for the multitude of paradoxes we are
guilty of. What if in thirty years, the inhumane
practice of factory farming animals and the inhumane treatment of animals in
testing cosmetics were so looked down upon that our entire generation despised
us for not doing more to stop it? What
if our future generations judged us for doing this to the ocean?
Or that there are approximately 27 million people in slavery in the world, and that every year there are 1 million children exploited for
the commercial sex trade. And even with
all this, the people who claim to be not only made in the image of God, but are
meant to be ambassadors of Jesus are more known for intolerance and judgment
than championing the causes of the oppressed.
I promise you, if the world saw a culture that fought harder
for the poor than our government does, and fought more for justice than our
courts do, and fought harder for freedom than our constitution does, the world
would fall in love with the same Jesus we did.
Medicare, the broken foster care system, failed governmental run ecological
systems – all of these things exist to the shame of the Christian church. Why is the world fighting harder to take care
of the poor than we are? If true
morality exists between what you know and what you do about it, then I
challenge you – what are you going to do about it?
Friday, January 25, 2013
That Nameless Quality
It would seem that after all the study of what character is and how it should be cultivated, every possible character quality would have a definite name. But I have one to add that I have yet to find a name for.
I have breakfast with a group of men every Tuesday morning at 6:00am. Each of these men are significantly older than I am - almost any one of them could be my father. One of the reasons I need this time for my own growth as a person, is that each of them has this nameless quality that sits on the tip of my tongue, but avoids being pinned down with a single word.
Let me describe it.
There seems to be a kind of restedness that comes with living a long and full life - A kind of settled wisdom. It is the kind of settled wisdom that comes from having spent many years walking with God and having been forgiven of many faults and having seen provision in many ways, having been very, very wrong and still loved in spite of it. It's the kind of calmness that says "I've seen this before...yeah...it's gonna be okay." It's the peace that comes with experience. It's the assurance that comes with having seen a lot.
It's like anxiety and worry have given way to faith and peace. If there is a word for this, I do not know it. But this realization tells me that language is running as fast as it can to keep up with the depths of our pursuit of God, and that it is not doing well.
Maybe it's best that it doesn't have a name. Maybe, like the character quality itself, it is best to be experienced, rather than discussed. Maybe language will always fall short of the depths of the human soul. If so, that gives me great hope for the human soul.
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
Thoughts on Jesus and my Heart
*This idea, and most of its development, is due to Quinten
Miller, in a conversation we had over breakfast this morning.
The Christian idea that Jesus lives in your heart has always
troubled me. I know that it is meant to
be poetic, and representative, and spiritually speaking, but still, it has
always sat funny in my mind. Allow me to
be a bit critical for a moment – it has always seemed that if Jesus could fit
in my heart, he is a very small Jesus, because my heart seems like a small
place. When I imagine the scene of Jesus
moving into my heart, I imagine it looks something like this.
Me: “Hi Jesus, come on in…oh, you didn’t need to wipe your
feet, but thanks anyway. Woah, it got
pretty cramped in here, didn’t it? Lemme
just…no, well if you…yeah, I’ll stand here and put my arm liiiike this…so then
you have room to sit down on that corner right there. There.
Comfortable? No? Sorry about that. Can I get you something to drink? Oh, I can’t quite get to the sink…oh, you
brought living water? That was nice of
you. Well. This is….cozy…..*long pause*…..so…..you’re
here for eternity huh? …know any games?
To really understand the poetics of what happens when the
idea of Jesus living inside us, we need to broaden our understanding of what our
internal selves are. Imagine the space
you are in right now. Move out to the
building you are in and imagine the whole aerial view. Picture the city block. Move out again to the side of town. Move out again the whole city with its
surrounding cities. Move out again to
the view of the state as a whole. The
country. The hemisphere. The world.
Move out again to the solar system.
The galaxy. You can’t even make
out the speck that is the world you live on at this point. Move out again where our galaxy is a small
part within the surrounding galaxies, and further and further out.
This is not simply an exercise in the grandiose or the awe
inspiring or the sublime. Come back to
the room you are occupying right now.
Zoom in on your chest cavity.
Zoom in again on your lungs and internal organs. Zoom in to the fluid that surrounds and
maintains the environment that keeps you breathing without any conscious
thought on your part. Zoom in again on
the droplets of fluid that keep you alive.
Zoom in again on the molecules that comprise that drop, and the smaller
elements that comprise those molecules.
Even closer at the atoms that make up those elements.
There is an infinity in both directions – outward and
inward. Socially speaking, we could give
our lives and energies to developing the external infinity, the impact we can
have on others or the affect we can have on the world. We can put up a front of caring or empathy or
a façade of love, and neglect the infinity that is our internal selves. How many pastors or ministers have given
their lives to ministry, only to wreck their marriages and compromise their
integrity? What good is it to give your
life for a cause, when you have neglected the infinite inward self that makes
up your soul?
I now have a new understanding of what it means for Jesus to
be inside my heart. Here is what it
looks like:
Fog is rolling in from somewhere in front of me. It is quiet and dark where I’m standing. I take one step and the sound of my foot goes
out into the darkness and seems to never stop.
There are no markers for me to get my bearings, and there is so little
light I can hardly see past the fog that my breath makes. It’s cold.
I shout. Jesus is supposed to be
here somewhere. I wave my hands around
in a circle trying to feel for anything.
Suddenly, Jesus is next to me.
Jesus: “Hi Stephen.”
Me: “Hello Jesus.”
Jesus: “Do you know what I want to do in here?”
Me: “Live, I guess?
There’s more room in here I think, you’re welcome to set up camp
wherever you like…”
Jesus: “Live? Yeah,
sure, we’re going to live, but what I’m really looking forward to, is turning
everything you see into something.”
Me: “What are you going to turn it into?”
Jesus: “A garden.”
Friday, January 4, 2013
Intelligence vs Imagination
Victor Hugo once said that intelligence it's your wife, while imagination is your mistress. I disagree, though not simply on moral grounds. I disagree with the disassociation between how we ought to think and how we prefer to think. Hugo's metaphor has in it a dutiful mode of seeing the world, and a more enjoyable, exciting, pleasing mode. I have not found this distinction to be true in my life. I find they are, indeed, separate things, and certainly one is more exciting than the other, but I find I require them both. One is not a pleasure any more than the other is a duty.
So here is many edit of Hugo's sentiment: intelligence is the ground we stand on, imagination is the air we breathe. I would no more think that I could build a city on air, than think I could breathe dirt. But I find I need them both to live. The ground allows me to build, the air allows me to fly.
So here is many edit of Hugo's sentiment: intelligence is the ground we stand on, imagination is the air we breathe. I would no more think that I could build a city on air, than think I could breathe dirt. But I find I need them both to live. The ground allows me to build, the air allows me to fly.
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