Friday, June 25, 2010

Are we there yet?

“Are we there yet?” As a joke, my kids usually say that the moment we leave the driveway for a big trip. So cute. We want things now. We are suckers for get rich quick schemes because we don’t want to do the hard work. We would rather take the pill to shed 15lbs off in one week rather than the slow, steady, and wiser 3lbs a week with diet and exercise. Slow and steady does win the race, but we don’t have the patience. This is especially true for our walk with Christ. We are not there yet. And like the child who has no idea how long it takes to drive 1200 miles, we ask Jesus, “Are we there yet? This is hard. How about taking a break at the next rest stop? Or better yet, let’s check in at a nice hotel with a pool and finish the journey later.”

At Zion, we like to use the term “Christ follower” instead of “Christian.” It’s just a more descriptive word in our culture. I like it. It describes who I am and what I am doing (we also could use the term “disciple” too). So when I say I’m a Christ follower, I should mean that I will go where ever he goes and obey where ever he tells me. Much of the task is joyful and exciting. Sometimes, there are the long trips that take long hours that stretch into long days, months, even years. He has work he wants to do in me. And, he has work he wants me to do (Eph. 2:10). I like what the Apostle Paul said as he looked at his life journey. He wrote in Phil. 3:13-14, “Brothers, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.” So, one of the great heroes of the New Testatment says, “I’m not there yet.”

Paul would often meld two ideas into one and make them inseparatable. He says there is one thing he does, but he lists two items. He takes them together like ham & eggs. He forgets the past and strains forward. That’s what a Christ follower does. We forget not only our past failures but our successes too. We also strain forward. Where does Jesus want us to go? Forward. How hard to we try? Strain. Yes, I know, it’s a work of the Holy Spirit. But following Christ is not passive like sitting in the back seat of the car.

Are we there yet? No, but watch out for the comfortable hotel stops. We can, however, keep straining forward no matter what. It’s what a Christ follower does. It’s what a disciple does.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

ZPV June 2010 Prayer letter


June 16, 2010
Dear Zion of Petroleum Valley Prayer Partners,
In high school, I attended a youth group that often had games and competitions. One week, we wanted to see who could eat the most bananas…blindfolded. Three of us went up front, but after the first banana, the other two guys were excused. I continued to allow bananas crammed in my mouth to the cheering crowd, “They’re catching up…keep going, Joe! Don’t let them beat you!” Little did I know I raced against no one. I swallowed large bites without chewing. But, when the blindfold came off, I saw it was all a game. It seemed real, but I made a herculean effort for nothing.


Why am I telling you this? When Christ-followers and churches talk about “discipleship,” it is really just a game. Performing. Educating. Doing. Busying. Often, we are about activities that are profitable, but sometimes we do not want to see the less comfortable side of following Christ. Just give me a Bible study and some good works to do, and I’m ok with that. As one author wrote, “We really just want a few friends and a sermon.” Being and making disciples is becoming like Jesus. Often, that road is not just hard, but it requires deep soul work well beyond the shell.
Zion has started probing into discipleship and what it means to follow Jesus. What does it mean to be a disciple? What does it mean to make disciples? God continues to solidify the answers in our minds and hearts. Clearly, the blindfold has come off, and we reject playing of the game. I do NOT mean that we have been failing at all. But, God is at work.


So, this makes our prayer list shorter than other months but not short in significance.
• Pray for all three of our Zion campuses (Zion of Jefferson County opens 10/10/10!) that we would continue to grow and be disciple making campuses.
• Last Sunday, we challenged our folks to listen to God for their Mt. Carmel moment (Read 1 Kings 18). Disciples follow Jesus to places where God just has to show up. We cannot rely upon ourselves.
• In July, we start an eight week series on discipleship.


There are other activities and ministries at Zion of Petroleum Valley worthy of prayer (Zone56, life groups, youth activities/outreach, camps, and Family Fun Fest). You can learn more about them on www.zionlife.com. But, for this month, please pray for this exciting time at Zion to focus on what Jesus left us to do, “Go, make disciples…”
Thanks!

Pastor Joe
Zion of Petroleum Valley

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Lesson from the cat


I have a cat. This shocks some of you who’ve known me for years. I generally don’t like cats, but I like Jazzy (aka, Fat Jazzy, Jasmine). I like Jazz because she is feisty…when she’s not napping. She likes me too. She’ll come up and say hello wanting her ears scratched (again, when she’s not napping). But, my previous history of cat teasing just has to come out. So, Jazz will be sleeping, and I poke her or tug on her whiskers. She gives me the I-really-hate-you-sometimes look but does nothing. Then, Jazz reaches her limit. The claws come out, she grabs my hand, and bites me. That’s kitty for, “Knock it off, jerk!” It is not in Jazz’ nature to put up with it forever or retreat. She will fight back.

Don’t strip any gears on this subject change, but if we want to advance the Jesus’ kingdom, become more like Christ, spread the mission, free the prisoners, and be filled with the Spirit (add your own cliché here), we will face opposition. Like Jazzy, Satan will fight back. The world will fight back. Our own flesh will fight back. None of those things are passive. In other words, there will be costs.

So, do we bag it? Will it be too hard? Stay comfortable? No way. We just cannot be surprised when it comes. Watch out for it. When we pull on Satan’s whiskers (or worse), he will respond with shocking ferocity. Since the world hates Jesus, it will hate his followers. Let’s go for it, but we cannot be surprised by opposition.