Author: Allan (Page 325 of 492)

Church As State

“Our citizenship is in heaven.” ~Philippians 3:20

The apostle Paul intentionally uses political language, the very Greek words from which we get our English words “politics” and “politicians,” to drive home a very important point to the little church in Philippi.

Our home is in heaven. Heaven is our homeland. And while we’re here on earth, we are a colony — a commonwealth — of heavenly citizens.

To confess that Jesus is Lord is to say Caesar is not. To claim citizenship in heaven is to declare our allegiance first and foremost to God’s Kingdom, not the Empire. The Kingdom to which we belong transcends all national borders. The Kingdom respects no geographical boundaries or distinctions of powers. As colonists living under the rule of our Christ, our top priorities rise high above any national thought, national pride, or national agenda. The Gospel of Jesus levels all of us into an eternal and international community of those who follow the Savior. And it’s his Kingdom that deserves — demands! — our undying allegiance.

If citizens of heaven do choose to engage in the politics of the United States or any other earthly country, we approach it, above all, from the standpoint of our relationship with God. Scripture tells us that Christians survive in a hostile environment not by legal proceedings against persecutors but by endurance; not by imposing a lifestyle on others through law but by living holy lives that compel others to watch us; not by destroying others with sound bites and emails but by respecting them even as we witness to the eternal truths of the Gospel.

Peace,

Allan

What “Sent” People Do

Today is Halloween and I’m wearing a Tony Romo jersey in the office. He’s the scariest quarterback in the NFL; I think it’s appropriate. If I’d had the time, I would have completed the outfit with eye black, a Cowboys cap on backwards, super dark glasses, and a seeing-eye dog.

Today is Wednesday. It’s a church night. What to do?

Well, I don’t know what your church is doing tonight, but here at Central we’re cancelling all of our Bible classes. We’re not doing anything here at the building. The doors are going to be locked and the lights will be out. But we’re not just canceling church; we’re taking church to the streets in order to better engage our community with the Gospel of Christ. Many people in our neighborhoods will be out in our streets and walking our sidewalks tonight. They’ll be walking right in front of our houses, in a lot of cases, even walking up to our doors to ring the bell. Most of the people in our neighborhoods who aren’t trick-or-treating are at least anticipating that their doorbells will be rung. They bought candy and set it by the door. They’re turning on their porch lights and getting ready. Most everybody in our city tonight will be in a receiving mood, expecting to interact with people in their neighborhoods, preparing to meet new people, to learn new things.

It seems like a really bad time for God’s people to be holed up by themselves in a building somewhere.

We’ve been asking our people at Central to not just skip church tonight, but to be creative in taking advantage of the mood this evening to interact with their neighbors. We’re urging our people to be intentional about engaging others with the love and grace of Jesus. Pray about it. Make a plan. Get others involved. Think outside your normal Halloween routines. Don’t just trick-or-treat with the kids. Don’t just hand out candy from your front door for three hours. Be creative and bless the people around you on purpose.

I spent about two hours last night stringing up orange and purple Halloween lights in our trees and along the front of our house. We’ve replaced the front porch light and the lamp post light in the front yard with creepy black bulbs. We’ll have funny Halloween music blasting from a CD player in the bushes. Carrie-Anne has already purchased ten gallons of hot apple cider and we’ve got 250 little styrofoam cups. We’ve moving all the backyard furniture, including our big fire pit, into the front. And we’re going to set up a little warming station at the corner of Oakhurst and Roxton.

I have no idea how this is going to work. I don’t know what will come of it. I’m hoping that after two or three years of this, we’ll come to be known as the house where people in our neighborhood can warm up by a fire and drink some cider while they’re trick-or-treating. I’m hoping we’ll meet a lot of people who will see our kind and gracious God in the ways we interact with them. I don’t know where this will lead. But our family will pray about it tonight during a rushed and early dinner, anticipating that our God certainly knows what to do with this. In faith, we’re giving this to him. And we trust that he will use our little neighborhood warming station for his purposes and to his eternal glory and praise.

Peace,

Allan

Ain’t Skeered

This billboard went up last week on the Canyon E-Way just north of 45th Street in Amarillo:

 

It’s an unabiguous, unapologetic scare tactic. The clear intent of this message, and ones like it that bombard us through every broadcast, internet, and print medium available, is to scare citizens into shifting the power to or keeping the power with one particular political party. Local TV stations use scare tactics to get us to tune in to their newscasts. You’ve seen the teasers during your prime time network shows: “Something in your kitchen is putting your family at great risk. We’ll have the full story tonight at 10:00!” Lots of businesses and professional services use scare tactics in their advertising. Apparently, it works. But it’s certainly the number one default mode of operation for political candidates and campaigns: scare the voters into doing what we want them to do; motivate the public by fear to act in our best interests.

You’ve seen and heard the ads. “If you vote for my opponent, our economic system will completely fail. If you vote for my opponent, you’ll be voting for more war. If I’m not elected, you can bet on more lost jobs, higher interest rates, and increased poverty. If you vote for my opponent, anarchy is right around the corner. So get out and vote for me for city council!”

Isn’t it good to know that we Christians are immune to the scare tactics? Isn’t it comforting to know that we serve an almighty and loving King and that we belong to an eternal Kingdom that can never fall? Isn’t it a wonderful truth that we aren’t afraid of anything?

“For you did not receive a spirit that makes you a slave again to fear, but you received the Spirit of sonship.” ~Romans 8:15

One week from tonight, there may be a brand new “leader of the free world.” Or, perhaps, the “leader of the free world” will be the same guy it’s been for the past four years. I have no idea who’s going to win and you don’t, either. I don’t know how in the world either candidate can accomplish anything that’s going to make that big a difference economically or morally or medically. I don’t know how either party can solve the United States’ epidemic problems with crime and violence and ignorance and poverty and divorce and abortion and addiction and war. I don’t know how either side can fix much of anything.

But I do know this. I do know one thing. We are children of YHWH, the almighty and eternal God. We serve a God who raises up and tears down nations to use them for his glory. We serve a God who brings earthly rulers to power and uses them for his purposes. We serve a compassionate and merciful God who reigns sovereign today over the entire universe he created. And as his people, we do not place our trust in political parties. As his children, we do not seek our security in partisan candidates. We trust in the name of the Lord our God!

Though the earth explodes and the heavens crumble, we trust in the Lord our God. Our God is “the great King over all the earth.”

“God reigns over the nations; God is seated on his holy throne.
The kings of the earth belong to God; he is greatly exalted.”
~Psalm 47

Peace,

Allan

Renewed Day by Day

I keep giving Terry Rush the credit when I quote his wonderful insights from 2 Corinthians 4:16:

“Inwardly, we are being renewed day by day.”

God’s Holy Spirit is making us new every day. Our Lord is re-inventing us, re-energizing us, re-charging us every day. Terry looks at this verse and says, “We’re all in the youth group!” We’re being made younger every day. We have no excuses for acting old and worn out. We’re being renewed every day!

Terry is going to die long before I do. And when he does, I’m going to go all the way and steal his “We’re all in the youth group!” line and make it my own.

The annual Fall Festival here at Central is the one night when most of us really do act like we’re all a bunch of little kids. Sneed Hall was jam packed Wednesday evening with more than 500-people — some in costume, some not in costume, some I couldn’t tell — at least half of whom I don’t think are members of our congregation. We judged pumpkin carvings, sang Karaoke, ate hot dogs and nachos and cotton candy, and donned huge blowup suits to battle one another in an inflated boxing ring. The littlest kids threw bean bags and skipped through the cakewalk while the older ones changed tires with an air wrench and twirled hula hoops.

What I love most about the Fall Festival is the way our older members at Central jump right into the fray. Our older members are dressing up and running the booths. Chasing runaway footballs and applying stick-on tattoos, passing out candy and fudging the masking tape line on the floor just a tiny bit so the little girl in the princess suit can win a prize. Fall Festival is always for the kids; the food and the booths and the music and all the activities are designed for the children. But I get such a kick out of the way our older members seem to be having just as much fun as our kids. Our older people are down on the floor with the kids, high-fiving the kids, complimenting and encouraging the kids. And they’re grinning from ear to ear. I didn’t know some of these people were capable of smiling, much less these great big gut laughs! But we get them in a room full of children, and it just happens.

What a joy it is when our older people embrace our younger kids with the love and grace of Jesus. And what a blessing to see that love and grace returned ten-fold to those who give it.

~~~~~~~~~~

Speaking of Terry Rush, the Memorial Road Church of Christ in Tulsa has announced the lineup of keynote speakers for the upcoming Tulsa Workshop in March that includes author Francis Chan. Internationally influential pastor and preacher, New York Times best selling author, keynote speaker at the Tulsa Workshop. Now Chan’s life’s work is complete.

Peace,

Allan

Battle of Bell Street

The cold front arrived at 3:25 this morning. I know because the acorns falling from the oak tree on the west side of the house and slamming into and rolling off the wooden shingles above our bedroom sounded like an apocolyptic hailstorm. It’s cold today. The temperatures and the north winds are both in the upper 30s. We’re going to freeze at the football game tonight.

Amarillo High and Randall play at Bivins tonight in the Battle of Bell Street. The only two undefeated teams in District 3-4A, separated geographically by just five miles along Bell, have never been in the same district. In fact, they’ve only faced each other a total of six times in football, the last time in 2009. What a way to renew the rivalry! The Raiders are coming off back-to-back ten win seasons and third round playoff appearances. The Sandies boast the best running game in the region and a serious defense. Randall’s offense, quarterbacked by Central’s own Collin Bowen, can both run and throw with the best in the area. The district championship is on the line tonight, and the two teams are worthy of the matchup.

I feel like half of our church is going to be at the game this evening. It’s definitely a community event just because of the caliber of the teams involved and what’s at stake. But half the skill position players for Randall are Central kids while Amarillo boasts our Blake Borger at starting right guard and half our youth group in the student body.

Z Z Top is actually playing at the downtown Amarillo Civic Center tonight. I love Z Z Top. But this is the game everyone’s had circled on the calendar since mid summer. And the two teams have lived up to expectations. We’re going to freeze tonight. But I wouldn’t miss it for the world.

Blow, Sand, Blow!

Allan

(AHS beat Randall 35-28 in OT. Collin and Logan almost won the game for the Raiders by themselves — Logan had 162 yards on five long catches. But Collin had a tipped pass intercepted on Randall’s first drive in OT which led to the Sandies’ winning score, a four yard run by Josh Woods. Click here to read some game summaries.)

A Grateful Look Back

I come not to bury my faith tradition, but to praise it.

I had the great pleasure while out in Kilgore last week of spending an afternoon with my Uncle Gerald. He’s the family historian. He’s the story teller. He’s the one who remembers. Uncle Gerald is the one with the funny home movies of all us cousins as little kids, squinting into the bright glare of the camera’s light. He’s the one with the silly songs and the made-up terms that celebrate and describe everything from our schools and neighborhoods to dirty diapers and hand-me-down clothes. He had the Howdy Doody doll. We shot each other with cap guns when I was little. He’s the one who named some of my favorite stuffed animals. He reminds me today that “we were white-trash, we just didn’t know it.” I love my Uncle Gerald.

Last Tuesday he took me to one of his favorite sandwich shops on the historic strip in Kilgore, just a block behind the famous “World’s Richest Acre.” In between quoting lines to each other from It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World and meeting the unending line of people who know and respect my uncle in Kilgore, we talked about our family and our faith heritage.

And it was good.

We talked about my grandmother walking  my then 3-year-old dad down Buckner Boulevard in 1945 to the Pleasant Grove Church of Christ in Dallas. We gratefully recalled her single-minded fidelity to her Lord and his Church while receiving very little, if any, support from my granddaddy at the time. We talked about her involvement with the Pleasant Grove Church as it moved to its present location on Conner Drive in the ’50s and her commitment to the congregation’s mission to evangelize Southeast Dallas with the Gospel. She attended every worship assembly and participated in every Bible class. She cooked for the church fellowships: banana pudding in that big blue bowl! She taught my dad and my uncle and aunt about God’s love for them in Jesus. She instilled in them the value of Bible study and prayer. She modeled a consistent portrait of learning and living in Christ. She was always craving more knowledge, more study, more God. Uncle Gerald remembered last week that, after a lengthy Bible Class series on the Holy Spirit, my grandmother summarized, “The only thing I learned about the Holy Spirit is that it’s a person.”

My grandmother raised my dad and uncle and aunt in the Pleasant Grove Church of Christ. My mom and dad, in turn, raised me and my sisters and brother in the same Pleasant Grove Church of Christ. And I’m so grateful. I’m so very thankful.

I’m thankful for the faithfulness of the people at Pleasant Grove to my family and me. I praise God for the encouragement I received at Pleasant Grove, for the opportunities I had to grow and learn and serve there, and for the unconditional Christ-like love I received there. I’m grateful to Inez Smithey and Kayla Casebolt for making me learn memory verses. I thank God for Tillie Prosser who taught me how to read Scripture and lead singing. I’m so grateful for Jim Martin who encouraged me to be a preacher. Aaron Welch would ask me five minutes before the services began, “Old man, would you help us on the table this morning?” and I felt so honored. Paul Barron made me feel like the smartest kid in the world. Don and Liz Connor spoiled me. Glen and Becky Burroughs drove us across DFW to Summer Youth Series. The people of that church gave me Bibles and good advice; they employed me in the summers and taught me in the falls; they prayed for me and blessed me. The Pleasant Grove Church of Christ threw Carrie-Anne and me a wedding shower 24 years ago.

The Christian faith was passed on to me in and by that congregation of God’s people. And I love them for it.

I admit, there was a time not too many years ago when I talked about the Pleasant Grove congregation in derisive terms. I showed very little appreciation for what God had planted in me through those people. Honestly, I think my faith is different today — I know my theology is! — than what was taught me then. My personal understanding today of God’s matchless love and grace is not the same as it was believed and proclaimed by the preachers and teachers there. No, ma’am. The ways I think about God’s Kingdom and talk about Christ’s salvation wouldn’t fly at P-Grove.

But that’s OK. It’s fine.

My grandmother walked down Buckner Boulevard in 1945 to take my dad to church because she believed God loved her and wanted to redeem her and her kids through Jesus. She believed she and her children needed to give their lives to Christ and join a group of people who were committed to sharing God’s salvation with the rest of the world. I thank God for that. My grandmother and my dad were faithful to what our God started in them there. By his grace, he brought me, through them, to where my family and I are today. That’s better than OK. It’s more than just fine. It’s an amazing and divine act of loyalty and love.

Thank you, Uncle Gerald, for reminding me of my faith heritage. Thank you, dad, for your unwavering commitment to our King and his eternal Church. And thank you, Pleasant Grove Church of Christ, for your eagerness to believe in a little boy with a bowl haircut and a Roger Staubach jersey. And to pass on the faith.

Peace,

Allan

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