Category: Luke (Page 13 of 24)

It Will

PrayerSunsetThe sleepy friend in Jesus’ story in Luke 11 doesn’t want to help out his neighbor. “Don’t bother me,” he says. “Are you crazy? My kids are asleep!” The way this guy responds to the late night knocking is what makes this story so real. All of us who’ve ever spent two hours wrestling with the kids to finally get them to sleep can relate.

He doesn’t want to be disturbed. He doesn’t want to get up. The only reason he does is so he can get some peace and quiet. “I’m not giving you the bread because I love you; I’m giving you the bread so you’ll go away and leave me alone.”

Yes, this story is about prayer. But God is not the grumpy guy in bed. The guy in bed is a human. That’s why we can relate to him so easily and maybe almost feel sorry for him. The story is an exercise in contrast. Jesus is telling us, “Look, this is your experience when you’re asking for something you need from a neighbor; but this is not what happens when you ask God for something you need.”

If you, even though you’re evil and sinful and selfish; if you, even in all your failures and sins and shortcomings; if you know how to give good gifts, how much more your Father in heaven? If this grumpy guy in bed finally got up and responded, how much more your Father in heaven? We can trust that God cares for us and that he hears us and that he will answer us when we pray.

“I say to you: Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you.”

Your prayers will be heard and answered. Jesus repeats the same promise three times. He says almost the exact same thing three times, so distinctly: it will, it will, it will.

Why, Lord?

Because that’s how things work in the Kingdom of God. That’s how my Father operates.

“For everyone who asks, receives; everyone who seeks finds; everyone who knocks, the door is opened.”

That’s the rule.

Jesus speaks so unconditionally here. It’s so clear. Let’s not ever water this down with our human understandings. When Jesus tells us things this clearly, let’s not distort it with our own wisdom. Let’s believe him. And if questions and difficulties come up — if it ever feels like God’s not answering or not listening to our prayers — let’s keep trusting these promises. God is taking care of the questions and difficulties. Our job is to fully accept and hold on to his word. And keep praying. He’ll answer.

Peace,

Allan

Daily Bread

“Give us each day our daily bread.”
“Lend me three loaves of bread.”
“If your son asks for bread…”

BreadChoicesIn Luke 11, Jesus gives his disciples a model prayer, a short story about prayer, and some comments that tie the prayer and the story to us. And we don’t have to read too hard to hear that Jesus is talking about our most basic, most fundamental needs. He’s talking about bread. Daily bread. What I need every single day to survive. Bread. Like our ancestors in the desert, if God doesn’t give us the bread today, we are going to die. And we have no choice but to go to bed tonight depending on God to provide that same bread tomorrow.

This attitude of complete dependence on God for everything calls for us to acknowledge that we are poor. We are needy. We are totally dependent on the Father for every breath we take and every bite we eat. Every molecule of air and every drop of water is a gracious gift of our God’s provision.

Look closely at the prayer Jesus gives us. He tells us to pray for our daily food, for forgiveness from sin, and for protection from evil. WE don’t make any of that happen. Only our God in his mercy grants us these gifts. There is no moment of any day, no minute of any hour, that we are not depending on God.

But we don’t act like it.

It’s hard to pray for food when my belly is full, my fridge is packed, my pantry is stuffed, the supermarket is open 24-hours, and I get paid this Friday. I need God for lots of things, but I don’t need him for food. I’ve got that covered.

It’s hard to pray for forgiveness when I’m so much better than most of the people at work or on my street. I’m no saint, but I haven’t killed anybody. Besides, I’m usually the one being wronged! I need God for lots of things, but I don’t need him for forgiveness. I’m pretty good.

It’s hard to pray for protection from evil when I feel so safe. I would never cheat on my taxes or my wife, I would never steal from my boss or sell drugs. I’m not in danger. Of course, I don’t have a complete handle on my greed or lust or anger, but I can deal with it OK. I need God for lots of things, but not protection from evil. I’m not going to slip.

We don’t pray for rain because we’ve heard the forecast: there’s not any. We don’t pray for healing because we’ve seen the MRI: I’m not sick. We don’t pray for peace because we’ve got our 401(k)s: I can live comfortably until I’m 103!

Jesus’ story says we have to realize and embrace our poverty, our neediness. When we pray from a position of wealth, all we do is ask God for what we want instead of what we need. And we use prayer to just raise our standard of living.

Father, give me each day my daily bread. God, forgive me for the unkind words I used with a sister just this morning. Lord, please lead me this very hour so that I walk with you in faithfulness. Praying this way is how we hold on to God, how we press on with God, how we wait for God. It’s how we.do.not.let.go.

But very few of us wake up in the morning as hungry for God as we are for corn flakes or eggs and sausage.

Peace,

Allan

Concerning the Ruling Again

I felt good about Sunday. We were launching a new sermon series on the parables of Jesus from the Travel Narrative in Luke 10-19 and were beginning with the Good Samaritan: “Love God and love neighbor.” The timing was good. Providential, probably. The text seemed to work really well with what was happening in our society over the weekend and with what most of our people were bringing in their brains to our assembly.

I told our congregation here at Central a lot of what I had written here Friday morning. I made it very clear that our church believes, teaches, and upholds that homosexual practices are against the will of God. Not the urge, not the temptation, not even the orientation — the willful conduct is outside the limits of God’s purposes for his created people in the same ways it’s wrong when any of us gives in to conduct that is beyond the limits of God’s intent. But I also was very clear that all people are deeply loved by God and that Jesus died and was raised for the sins of the homosexual just as he was for the sins of all people. So Central is going to be over-the-top loving to everybody. We’re going to treat homosexuals with respect and dignity and we’re going to show them mercy and compassion and forgiveness and grace.

I left out completely the part I wrote in this space Friday about not seeing the Supreme Court’s actions as persecution of Christians or an attack on the Church. I do believe what I wrote in that paragraph Friday. Very much. It just didn’t need to be a main point on Sunday. Instead, I talked a little bit about fear. I asked our people to please not be afraid. The Kingdom of God has nothing to fear and plenty to gain right now. For more than four thousand years God’s people have always wrestled with how to be faithful when the culture changes. That’s one of the main themes of Scripture. I don’t see this as being much different. We will be faithful and, knowing our Lord, he will advance his Kingdom in ways that will surely surprise us. So don’t be afraid. Or angry. Scripture and history tells us this is normal. It’s expected.

I closed my comments with an appeal to negotiate this uncharted present and future in the name and manner of Jesus. I asked that we commit to upholding Christian principles with truth and grace, speaking and acting in ways that can never be labeled mean or hateful.

And then we prayed. We acknowledged to our God the fallen condition of his world, we confessed our own sins as a church, and we begged for his mercies so that we could be his light of mercy and salvation.

And it was good.

I had already written the sermon before the high court’s ruling Friday. But I added a couple of things Sunday to include gays and lesbians in Jesus’ definition of neighbor. In Luke 10, the lawyer’s question to Christ assumed distinctions among the people we meet: some of them we are demanded by God to love and some of them we are not demanded by God to love. Jesus’ story says there are no distinctions. We are called to love God and love neighbor, which means helping anyone in need. Anyone. So, in a list of people who are just like us and people who are nothing like us, people who live across the street and people who live on the other side of the boulevard, people who are dirt poor and people who are crazy rich, I mentioned “and the guy who’s flying his rainbow flag in front of his house this weekend.”

Jesus’ story says we are the unlikely neighbor rendering aid to people who don’t expect to see us coming. So, after mentioning our “4 Amarillo” week of service projects and after explaining our partnership with “Heal the City” free clinic, I also mentioned that “we’re going to welcome gays and lesbians into our worship assemblies with love and compassion and we’re going to eat with members of the LGBT community around our Lord’s Table in mercy and grace. And we will have conversations. And we will listen. And we will help. And it will all seem so very unlikely. And so Gospel.”

And, yeah, I know, none of this is going to be easy. This is going to be very difficult. This is going to take a whole lot longer than some of our people think it should and it’s going to be way too much too fast for many others. I heard from many people in their 20s and 30s on Sunday who appreciated so much our position as it was articulated. A young woman who was visiting our church from another city approached me, along with her husband, with tears in her eyes, so thankful for our grace and truth stand. Others in that same younger age range texted me and emailed me Sunday in gratitude for helping them sort out their feelings and forming a Gospel game plan with their gay and lesbian friends. A few people who are older than me began almost immediately asking questions about the details of how we’re going to do this, maybe a little concerned about our level of interaction or acceptance. I don’t know yet how we’re going to handle every single situation. We won’t be able to predict every situation or how our people are going to respond to those unforeseen circumstances.

Only two things are certain. We will not condone behavior we believe is a willful practice of a lifestyle that goes against God’s will. We won’t sanction by word or deed homosexual individuals or couples who are engaging in ongoing sinful conduct. But, at the same time, we will not turn them away from our building or our gatherings. We will love all people with truth and grace. That’s our commitment. And it might get messy. We might struggle with this. But it is our call and our duty as servants of our King.

Overall, I feel the same way I felt right after we unveiled to the church our partnership with the downtown Baptist, Methodist, and Presbyterian churches two years ago. I sensed great appreciation and even relief from our church family. Liberation. Freedom. I think on Sunday we provided our people with a theology and a language for something most of them have felt for a very long time, but just didn’t know how to articulate.

The hard work of loving and teaching, of grace and truth, is still ahead of us. May we enter into this work with complete abandon, trusting our God to advance his Kingdom to his eternal glory and praise.

Peace,

Allan

What Can I Do For You?

The Holy One of Israel came to this earth not to be served but to serve and to give his life for others. He came to seek and save what was lost. He took the very form of a servant. Our Lord never did anything for himself. He lived and died to meet the needs of others.

At the end of Luke 18, Jesus is purposefully walking to his death. He’s almost to Jerusalem and the cross. And he comes upon a blind man sitting by the roadside begging. Jesus looks at him and says, “What do you want me to do for you?” Jesus — full of the Holy Spirit, empowered by Almighty God, living in perfect harmony with God’s original promise and God’s perfect plan — says, “What do you want me to do for you?”

Just a few verses earlier, Jesus had been surrounded by a bunch of little kids. “Let them come to me,” he says, “in all their sticky handed and runny nosed glory! Do not hinder them! Let them come!” And they’re climbing all over him as he touches them and hugs them, engages them and blesses them.

One chapter earlier, Jesus engages and heals and blesses ten Samaritan lepers. In Luke 14 Jesus interrupts his own dinner in the home of a popular Pharisee to heal another man of a terrible disease. One chapter before that he lays his hands on a crippled woman and sets her free.

We get it, right? We’re not surprised when, after all this serving and healing and blessing, Jesus gets to the end of the road and asks one more time, “What can I do for you?”

This world is broken. It’s messed up. You are broken. You are. You know you are. I am messed up. I am. I know I am. We are all broken. And we see in Jesus our God’s faithful promise to deliver justice to the marginalized and oppressed, to bring healing to the sick and dying, to restore community to the lonely and isolated, and to bless those separated from God with true joy and connection. And belonging. And peace.

Peace,

Allan

Among You

“The Kingdom of God does not come with your careful observation, nor will people say, ‘Here it is,’ or ‘There it is,’ because the Kingdom of God is among you.” ~Luke 17:21

The Kingdom of God is not just about Christ’s power on earth. The Kingdom of God is about God’s empowerment of ordinary men and women to be agents of his eternal reign. Not everybody can see it because it’s carried out by a weak little band of disciples. It’s expressed in a single act of forgiveness by a wounded man. It’s realized in a single act of kindness by a little old lady. It’s accomplished in the worship and service rendered by a church in Amarillo.

To talk about conquering power and ruling the world in these tiny little terms might seem silly — as silly as a great tree growing out of a mustard seed. But we see it. You and I have been blessed to see that God in Christ uses these incredibly small things to miraculously grow his eternal Kingdom.

We know that with the coming of Jesus, the old world is losing its grip and a new world is being born. Rome’s rule is coming to an end — for people who thought too highly of the Roman Empire, that was unsettling news. The U.S.A.’s rule is coming to an end — that’s unsettling news for people who think too highly of the American Empire. But it’s true. The Kingdom of God has come and it is coming. Among us. And King Jesus says, “Give up your agenda and take up mine!” Or, to actually quote him:

“The time has come! The Kingdom of God is here! Repent and believe the good news!” ~Mark 1:15

God’s purposes have already been accomplished in Christ. What remains is the unfolding of what’s already been established. So, repent. Repent. Change your life. The realities of the Kingdom of God among us demand it. It’s not feeling differently in your heart; it’s living differently on the ground. The Kingdom of God is not a new religion or a fuzzy spiritual experience or even a plan for personal salvation. The Kingdom of God is about the whole world at last becoming what God has always intended it to be. A whole new world where mourners are always comforted and the hungry are always filled.

So, our lives have to be changed. It’s not just conversion, it’s discipleship; not just individual faith, but Christian unity; not merely forgiveness of sins, but a brand new creation! Jesus’ challenge is not, “How can I have a more meaningful life?” It’s “How can I get my life aligned with God’s will for the world?”

The way Jesus acted, the way he thought, the way he behaved is not how we get into the Kingdom. It’s not “Behave this way and perform all this really well and someday you’ll be worthy to enter the Kingdom of God.” No! Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection says that God’s Kingdom has come to us and is coming among us. Right here, right now, today! So, wake up and live in the light of these new facts of life!

Sometimes we’ll hear people say, “Forgiveness is noble, up to a point, as long as you’re realistic about its limits.” Or, “Prayer can be powerful, but sometimes you just have to face the facts.” Hey, for those of us who have been given the eyes to see the coming of God’s Kingdom, God’s promised victory is an accomplished fact! It is the true reality!

So, we must live it right now. Not like the world lives — no, just the opposite. Like Jesus lives. Unconditional love, unlimited forgiveness, sacrificial service, never violence or threat, always peace and joy. Not so that we’re doormats for the world. No, that’s living and thinking in the wrong reality, the reality that’s being conquered and taken over, fading away. We live in mercy and love actually as a way of taking charge of the world in the name and manner of our Lord, joining the revolution, living in and practicing the great turnaround toward the ultimate reality that one day will be trumpeted as:

“The kingdom of the world has become the Kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ,
and he will reign for ever and ever!” ~Revelation 11:15

Confidence to live every day like Jesus in the world he rules comes from conviction. The problem is, we’re not convinced of the truth of our own good news. We’re too inattentive, too distracted. What Jesus shows us about the Kingdom of God should dramatically impact us. We must give attention to his rule. We must be defined by it. We must solve our problems by applying it.

We think the church is a place that puts on services. Please, come on! God is sovereign and Jesus is Lord and the Holy Spirit lives among us and the powers of the world are in big trouble! This is the truth! This is the reality! And we are called to re-order everything to live into it.

Peace,

Allan

For the Sake of Relationship

Jesus came to save for the sake of relationship. All of salvation history is motivated by God’s desire to restore relationship with the men and women he created and loves. I think we see this in just about every paragraph of the Gospels. But my eyes have been opened only recently to see this aspect of salvation in the reasons Jesus heals.

Our Lord tells the disciples of John the Baptist to pay attention to what’s happening in the world now that Jesus has come:

“The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is preached to the poor.” ~Luke 7:22

(By the way, Jesus puts preaching in the same category as healing the blind and raising the dead? Did you notice that? I notice that every time.)

Let me remind you that a man with leprosy was not allowed in the temple. If you were blind or lame, if you were deaf or mute, if you were bleeding, if you had a skin disease, you could not enter the temple. You could not approach the presence of God. You couldn’t worship God in his holiest place with his holy people. To those afflicted with these imperfections, the presence of God was off limits. Relationship with God and relationship with his people was impossible.

But when Jesus heals them…

See, Jesus is doing much more than just restoring sight to the blind and causing the crippled to walk. Jesus is allowing these people he touched to get past the bouncers at the temple doors. He makes it possible to approach God. That’s why Jesus saves: for relationship. They were unable to come to God, so God in Christ comes to them.

Jesus is Emmanuel. God with us. With all our sins and mixed motivations and limitations, we can’t come to God. That’s why God comes to us. That’s why he heals us. He makes us clean and whole, he gives us his own righteousness so we can bask in his holy presence. Jesus saves for the sake of relationship.

Peace,

Allan

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