Author: Allan (Page 37 of 486)

On the Move with Jesus

One of the difficulties with trying to get closer and closer to Jesus is that he is always on the move. Just when you think you’re there, right when you believe you’ve achieved nearness to Christ, he moves on you.

He jumps to be with those other people on that other side of town. Surprising.  He slides over to the homeless shelter. Didn’t see that coming. He’s eating with the registered sex offender, he’s praying with the Presbyterian, he’s laughing with the Democrat, he’s hugging the prostitute, he’s preaching at the prison, he’s helping a family of immigrants.

It’s uncomfortable. It’s unexpected. Different. New. Edgy. Scandalous. Hard.

It’s exciting. It’s exhilarating. Refreshing. Life-giving. Wonderful. Beautiful. Glorious.

It’s Gospel.

The closer you get to Jesus, the more you think like Jesus and act like Jesus, the more you’ll begin to see people and places the way Jesus sees them. The more you’ll love and serve those people and places. The more you’ll react and respond like Christ and the less you’ll care about your own reputation or status. The more you’ll let your guard down to be with the people in the places where our Lord spends his most important time. The more you’ll gladly follow Jesus “outside the city gates” where your friends would never expect you to go.

Get closer to Jesus. Keep following him closer and closer. And see if it doesn’t change everything.

Peace,

Allan

What’s in a Name?

Shakespeare’s Juliet asked, “What’s in a name? That which we call a rose, by any other name would smell as sweet.” A skunk, if we called it something else, would still stink. My first name gets misspelled all the time and my last name always gets mispronounced. No big deal, right? It’s just a name–it doesn’t have anything to do with who I am.

Well, sometimes a name is much more than just what you call somebody. Sometimes a name is everything.

“This is what the sovereign Lord says: ‘It is not for your sake, O house of Israel, that I am going to do these things, but for the sake of my holy name… I will show the holiness of my great name… Then the nations will know that I am the Lord.'” ~Ezekiel 36:22-23

God’s name is not what he’s called; it’s who he is. Throughout the Scriptures, when God announces his name to his people, he says it is compassion and grace, loyalty and patience, love and faithfulness. God says, “This is my name. This is who I am. And this is why I am saving you.”

It’s got nothing to do with your good deeds or any merits you bring to the table. You and I are saved because of the eternal nature and character of our God. Who God is. His name. We are saved because God is loving and faithful and gracious. That’s his name.

And it absolutely means everything.

Peace,

Allan

Sooner Born and Bred

“Sooner born and Sooner bred, and when I die I’ll be Sooner dead.”

Paul Dennis died yesterday. And the above line, which is one of his all-time favorites, makes me smile even as I’m typing through the tears.

The first real conversation I had with Paul was in 2007 on a Saturday morning in his living room about an hour after his son had been killed in a terrible car accident. I was the brand new preacher at Legacy–I had only been a preacher, period, for a couple of months–when I received a call at home from somebody at church, telling me that Paul and Jean’s son had been killed. So, I went. And it was horrible. I managed to say a couple of things that I thought sounded spiritual and comforting and I worded some kind of lame prayer, I’m sure. But mostly I just sat there and listened as they cried. I hugged them. I told them I loved them. I tried to act like I had it all together.

We bonded together during that tragedy, that Saturday morning and as we talked and prayed together often in the days and weeks to follow. But that initial bond, forged in disaster and grief, was strengthened for eternity over the next almost five years.

Paul and Jean Dennis sat directly behind us every single Sunday during our time at the Legacy Church. Even now I can still hear Paul’s deep resonating baritone voice singing those church songs into my ears. Into my heart and my soul. He sang with such abandon. He sang with gratitude and joy, he sang with purpose. He had his favorites, and you could tell by the change in volume and gusto from the row right behind us. But he liked all of them.

Paul is a people person. Loud. Boisterous. Full of energy and life. Always joking. Lots of puns. Always laughing and trying to make others laugh.

His love for OU football was complete and as rabid as anything I’ve ever experienced. We argued and joked about his Sooners all the time. He faithfully kept up with every recruiting class, every tweaked knee in a practice, every rumor, every statistic, every down of every game, and all the history. When I put together my Top 20 College Football Poll for this blog in 2008, Paul was the first guy I called to participate. His bias for OU and his hatred of UT came through in his weekly rankings, but it was always done in good fun.

More than all that, I love Paul Dennis for being a personal and continuous encouragement to me while I was preaching at Legacy. I was blessed by God to sit directly in front of Paul and Jean for those five years. Every single Sunday, without exception, during the song before the sermon, Paul would reach over with those massive and strong hands of his, place them on my shoulders, and say something like, “Go get ’em!” or “Preach the Word, brother” or “God bless you, Allan.” Every Sunday. And he wouldn’t leave the building without telling me something about the lesson. Something he learned. Something he needed to hear. A question about a text or a point. A related thought or memory prompted by something I had said. And a “Thank you.” Always a “Thank you.” Paul went out of his way to tell me often that I was doing a good job, usually at the moments when I seriously doubted whether I was. Our gracious God put Paul and Jean directly behind me at that Legacy Church because I needed them. I needed their kindness and generosity. I needed Jean’s sweet spirit and gentle faith. And I needed Paul’s encouragement.

Carrie-Anne and I both cried last night when we heard that Paul had died. We sat on the couch together, remembering Paul’s unmistakable voice and his unwavering faith and his consistent encouragement. Laughing and crying. Thanking God for this faithful servant of his and grateful that we were at the same church at the same time. I am a better preacher and a better Christian because of Paul Dennis.

May our gracious Lord bless Jean with his divine comfort and peace. May our God receive his servant Paul into his faithful arms. And may Paul handle it well on that resurrection day of glory when he learns that OU hats are not allowed in heaven.

Peace,

Allan

Peace Pout

The terrible news scrolled across the bottom of my TV screen at just before 8:00 Saturday morning. Aerosmith has canceled their re-scheduled “Peace Out” farewell tour because Steven Tyler’s throat has not recovered from his fractured larynx.

It’s not surprising. My family and I have said for months now that a 78-year-old man who fractures his larynx  while singing / screaming like Steven Tyler probably doesn’t recover enough to do it again. We bought the tickets last summer for the tour which was supposed to start in September last year. Then, just a couple of shows in, Tyler’s vocal cords began bleeding and everything was put on hold. Postponed. Stay tuned. When Tyler gets well, we’ll do this last tour.

We held onto our tickets and to some cautious hope.

The band announced a new schedule in March–all the same venues, most of the same dates. He’s back! It’s happening! We did some research and wound up trading our seats at AAC in Dallas for better spots in Tulsa for the concert November 12. Even then, we kept telling each other, “We’ll believe it when we see it.” When Carrie-Anne and I visited Valerie and David in Tulsa in May, we drove right by the BOK Center downtown and I exclaimed, “We’re going to be there! We’re going to be inside that building listening to Aerosmith!” Valerie took her eyes off the road just long enough to look at me and say, “Dad. We don’t know.”

Now we do. It’s over. Ticketmaster has already refunded our money. It’s not happening.

Aerosmith says they are retired from touring. They might make some new music together in studio someday, but their concert days are over. And it’s terribly sad. I am so lucky to have seen them live at least half a dozen times: at a couple of Texxas Jams, at Reunion Arena in Dallas and the Erwin Center in Austin, and once with Carrie-Anne and Whitney at Starplex. But I was unable to make good on my promise to take Valerie and Carley to see these favorite and iconic rockers. Huge regret. I’m so sorry, girls.

We will always have the songs. We will continue to rock out to the classics like “Walk This Way” and “Sweet Emotion” and “Dream On,” we’ll still find creative ways to hijack the lyrics in “Just Push Play” (what do you say, Carley Renae, Chick-fil-A), we’ll never forget that Carley and Collin walked out of the chapel at the end of their wedding to “Under My Skin,” we’ll smile at the memories of Whitney singing/speaking all the words to “Hole in My Soul” in her sweet alto, and we’ll all sing at the top of our lungs when “What It Takes” or “Jaded” comes on anytime anywhere.

As it says at the end of the official statement from the band, we will play their music loud, now and always.

Peace,

Allan

Words Never Before Uttered

I said something at the Major League Baseball trade deadline on Tuesday that I have never said one time in my life. Ever. As the Texas Rangers traded for reliever Andrew Chafin, I said these seven words out loud: “We don’t need pitching! We need hitting!”

Those words have never once been uttered by a Rangers fan.

Never.

Being a lifelong Rangers fan has resulted in my being confounded in countless and surprising ways. But nothing ever like this. The team’s putrid offense this year makes zero sense. It’s beyond baffling in every conceivable way. This is essentially the same lineup that murdered MLB pitching last year on its way to our first ever World Series title. Other than switching Wyatt Langford in for the injured Evan Carter (Josh Smith is doing everything Josh Jung did at third base last season), these are the same guys who crushed everything offensively last year. This season, we can’t hit our way out of a paper sack! What is this?

Yesterday was mind-numbingly disappointing. The Rangers managed a lone run against Michael McGreevy who was making his rookie major league debut. He went seven innings. No rookie has gone seven innings in his debut this year and given up only one run. Texas lost 10-1.

Yesterday was the fourth time in the past five games the Rangers have scored fewer than four runs. But that’s where they’ve been all year. The Rangers have scored three or less runs in 54 of 109 games this year. They did that just 64 times all of last season, out of 162 games.

We need hitters.

As a Rangers fan, this is a weird place to be.

Peace,

Allan

MISD at GCR

Our church campus has been overrun by more than 350 new teachers, coaches, mentors, bus drivers, and counselors the past two days as the Midland School District held its new teacher orientation at GCR. And we’ve been honored to host them.

All our ministers and church staff, along with a dozen or so terrific GCR volunteers, were on hand each morning to welcome the new instructors with open doors, handshakes and high fives, and well wishes for the new school year. We served coffee and flavored teas, helped give directions and instructions before and in between training sessions, and tried to be as friendly and helpful as we could be as they begin their new jobs with our local school district.

Why would we do something like this at GCR? Why would we go to the trouble and expense of hosting something like this for MISD and its new teachers?

Of the 350 new teachers, let’s assume that between 1/3 and 1/2 of them are brand new to our community. I personally met folks yesterday and today who just moved to Midland from San Antonio and Austin, from South Texas and New Mexico, and from as far away as Wyoming. There might be almost 200 people here, and their families, who are living in Midland for the very first time. Trying to find the grocery store and the movie theater, hunting for a doctor and a dentist, looking for a church. Is there a better way to get that many brand new people to your community inside your church building?

More than that, all 350 of these people have something really important in common: they are all in transition. Regardless of whether they just moved here or they’ve lived here all their lives, they are all beginning brand new jobs in new places with new people. They’re all making adjustments in their lives, forming new habits, re-thinking old assumptions, and probably reordering their priorities. It’s during these times of transition that God’s Holy Spirit can sneak into a person’s soul and whisper something important. Our Lord can find a little crack during these transition moments and do something monumental with a person. And when that happens–next week or next year–I’ll know that new teacher met some great ministers and had a really good experience at GCR.

When God’s Spirit finally prompts someone to start looking for better connections with him and his people, maybe they’ll remember that GCR seemed like a place and a people where that could happen.

Finally, why wouldn’t a Christian church want to bless and encourage a big group of teachers who are committing to our local schools and our local kids? Why wouldn’t disciples of Jesus be first in line to help our local school district? Better public education benefits kids and families and it makes our entire community better in dozens of different ways. So, yeah, we’re all in!

Thank you to those who held doors and poured coffee and tea and said, “Room 201 is in the gym” about a million times.

And thank you to Dr. Howard and MISD for allowing us the honor of hosting your awesome teachers for their orientation. GCR wishes y’all the very best of an amazing school year!

Peace,

Allan

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