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Season’s Greetings

I don’t really want to get into a whole thing here, but can we all just relax on this “Merry Christmas” versus “Happy Holidays” thing? There is no war against Christmas. There is no threat in the United States to anybody’s freedom of religion or right to religious expression. Don’t get sucked in to the harmful hijacking of the Christian faith for national political purposes.

There are many American Christians who believe those who say  “Happy Holidays” are intentionally undermining Christianity and working to remove it from its rightful place as the dominant religion in the U.S. Many American Christians instruct their fellow believers to resist this movement, to fight back, by shouting “Merry Christmas” at every opportunity. We’re told to use the phrase as a weapon against the left-wing secularists and atheists and Muslims who are seeking to destroy our right to celebrate the birth of Jesus.

(Does anybody else find it ironic that those in the Churches of Christ who are making the most noise about this belong to a movement that, for most of its existence, purposefully ignored the Christ in Christmas? We refused to sing Joy to the World in December. We pridefully preached anything but the birth of Jesus on the Sunday before the 25th to prove some weird point that we were right about the season of Jesus’ birth, we were more biblically accurate, and we were not influenced by the culture to use religious words and displays to celebrate a pagan holiday.)

Is Christianity so fragile? Is our faith so feeble that when we are confronted with change that threatens our perceived power in a pluralistic and democratic society we respond with anger and defensiveness? True Christian faith is not frail. It doesn’t need to be propped up by a symbolic greeting snarled at every cashier and passerby  to assert dominance over other faiths. Or no faith.

The threat to Christianity is not saying “Happy Holidays” instead of “Merry Christmas.” The real threat to Christianity is people who claim to be Christian not acting like Christians.

Our faith is much better served by following the lead of our Lord Jesus: feeding the hungry and clothing the needy, visiting the sick and those in prison, welcoming the refugee and loving our enemies, forgiving and accepting and loving every single person our God puts in front of us. That vision of Christian faith is much more compelling to our pluralistic and democratic culture than the one that proclaims “Merry Christmas” as an act of defiance with a hint of aggression and arrogance.

We are a people who claim to be saved by grace, rescued by love. Why do we act like people who don’t see things the way we do will be saved by our contempt and confrontation and lines in the sand? Whatever you say should be said as a demonstration of kindness, warmth, peace, joy, acceptance, and love. Whatever you hear should be received with patience and understanding and peace. The world will be won when we act more like the infant Jesus who came here as a helpless and vulnerable baby, with no rights, to serve rather than to be served, to seek and save the lost with kindness and acceptance and joy.

Peace,

Allan

Giving the Jags Four Timeouts

The Cowboys are tanking. Right on schedule. It’s the middle of December, right?

There is so much to break down from the Cowboys’ come-from-ahead-loss in Jacksonville. It’s a long list of all the ways Dallas failed yesterday and the troubling trends that are becoming this team’s identity.

The once dominant Dallas defense gave up a season-high 34 points and a season-high 503 yards, only sacked Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence once, and gave up four touchdown passes. Jacksonville converted eight third-downs on the Cowboys defense. And, with a 17-point lead and only five minutes left in the third quarter, the Dallas defense allowed the Jags to score three touchdowns in nine minutes – 21 unanswered points! When the Jaguars got the ball with 1:01 on the clock, down three, with only one timeout, Dallas let them go 41-yards in seven plays, including two successful third down conversions, to kick the game-tying field goal that sent the contest into overtime.

We could also talk about Dak and his interceptions. The Cowboys quarterback has thrown multiple picks in three of their last five games and has the highest interception rate in the NFL. The walk-off pick-six that ended the game in overtime did bounce off receiver Noah Brown’s chest, but Dak threw it into double coverage. It doesn’t matter. Dak has thrown more picks than any QB since the midpoint of the season and the coaches and press have been talking about it with him for three weeks. Still, he threw two more interceptions yesterday. And they were huge.

What about blowing leads? Dallas’ last two losses have come with a 14-point lead in the fourth quarter in Green Bay and a 17-point lead late in the third yesterday.

What about the Colts game two weeks ago – holding only a two point lead heading into the fourth quarter against the most dysfunctional team in the NFL? What about the Texans game last week – trailing the NFL’s worst team all the way until their last drive of the day and needing an interception in the end zone to secure a three point win?

All of those things are worthy of their own post. But here’s the thing that needs to be talked about today. With a three point lead and only 1:28 to play in the game and the ball, Dallas only needed to get one first down to win. And they couldn’t do it. They ran on first down and Jacksonville burned their first timeout. The Cowboys ran on second down and the Jags called their second timeout. Then, on third and ten, Dak threw a bomb down the left sidelines that fell incomplete and stopped the clock. Jacksonville didn’t have to use their last timeout. Dallas handed Jacksonville an extra timeout. Gave it to them. A freebie. And the Cowboys punted.

Jacksonville needed to go forty-something yards to tie the game and they had one timeout still in their pockets. Mike McCarthy gave them that timeout. He should have run on third down and forced the Jags to call timeout. With no timeouts, Jacksonville’s offensive options are incredibly limited – no runs, and passes only to the sidelines. But with that extra timeout gifted to them by the Cowboys? The playbook is basically wide open. And it happened. The Jaguars marched 41-yards on seven plays, used that extra timeout to stop the clock, and kicked the game-tying field goal.

Mike McCarthy’s game mismanagement and clock abuse is what you get when Jerry Wayne is your owner. There’s a reason they call it “running out the clock.” You don’t get a lead late in the fourth quarter and say, “Now we need to pass out the clock to win.” You run out the clock. You force your opponent to use all their timeouts. This one’s on McCarthy. And the owner who hired him.

The Cowboys are backing into the playoffs again. Yesterday’s loss eliminated their long-shot chances at winning the NFC East, but New York’s win over Washington pushed the Cowboys into a Wild Card position with three games to go.

Dallas will host the 13-1 Philadelphia Eagles on Christmas Eve. Jalen Hurts will do whatever he wants.

The last two Cowboys games are on the road, against the Titans who are desperate for a playoff spot, and in Washington where they might still be in the hunt for a postseason berth. Both those opponents will probably be playing for something meaningful. There’s a chance Dallas goes into their playoff game at Tampa Bay or at San Francisco on a four-game losing streak. The Cowboys could very realistically lose three of their last four. At best, they’ll be 2-2 in their last four before the playoffs.

With a tired and banged up defense, a quarterback who’s losing his identity and the confidence of his teammates, and a coach named Mike McCarthy.

At least Cowboys fans aren’t surprised.

Peace,

Allan

Sunday at GCR

Our GCR children’s minister sent me this picture of our Whitney yesterday reading to the kids at Children’s Worship.

This is Whitney’s life. Her passion and her identity. Being a ten-year cashier at United Market Street and a five-tool volunteer in our children’s ministry. We are so grateful to Kristin and Ashlee for using Whitney in creative ways here. And we praise God for what he is doing in and through our first born daughter.

Advent #4 Love

Several of our high school Seniors will deliver our Advent readings and light the fourth candle at our GCR Church tomorrow morning. This is the script:

LOVE
Today we light the fourth candle of Advent, the candle that represents love.
We remember the eternal love of our Heavenly Father who sent his Son to restore us and all of creation.
We remember the sacrificial love of Christ Jesus who left his home in glory to save us from our sins.
And the selfless love we share with one another as a result of the redeeming work of Christ.
Today we resolve to receive our Lord’s love and to share it with the whole world in the light of the new creation.

1 John 4:9-12

Proclaiming with our Lives

Proclamation springs from the experience of a changed life. And it cannot be doubted or denied. Transformed lives just explode with testimony. Our lives must be different, obviously different, if we’re going to effectively proclaim the lordship of Jesus. And that will not happen without the Holy Spirit.

Part of the disconnect for us is our nominal discipleship, our Sunday-only Christianity. Our problem is that our churches are only asking you to come to services, write a check, be friendly, and don’t cuss. Well, you don’t need the Holy Spirit to do that! You don’t need to be a Christian to do that!

If you won’t get out of your comfort zone, why would you need the Comforter?

Peace,

Allan

Proclaiming in Community

The New Testament shows us the Holy Spirit of God creating a brand new community of people – all people, all languages, all nations – brought to perfect unity under the lordship of the risen Jesus. On the Day of Pentecost, those filled with the Holy Spirit quote from the prophet Joel to explain what’s happening: “I will pour  out my Spirit on all people and everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.”

“Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. The promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off – for all whom the Lord our God will call.” ~Acts 2:38-39

The Holy Spirit breaks down barriers between people, he destroys the walls between all people, and brings us together in Christ. In Ephesians 2, it’s mainly about the hard feelings and the differences that keep Jews and Gentiles separate and divided. But those hard feelings and differences have all been demolished by God in Christ.

“In Christ Jesus, you who once were far away have been brought near through the blood of Christ. He himself is our peace… [He] has destroyed the barrier, the dividing wall of hostility… His purpose was to create peace… to reconcile all of us to God through the cross, by which he put to death their hostility. He came and preached peace to you who were far away and peace to those who were near. For through him we all have access to the Father by one Spirit.” ~Ephesians 2:13-18

The Berlin Wall was erected by the Soviets to separate East and West Berlin. In Bethlehem, there’s a 27-foot high wall that divides the Palestinians from the Israelis. There’s a wall on the Texas border intended to keep Mexicans and Central Americans out of the United States. We know all about walls. Not all of them are physical. There are social walls and racial walls. There are gender barriers and economic barriers. We’re divided by politics and language, we’re segregated by ethnicity and education. But the blood of Jesus brings all of us together and the Spirit of God holds us together so that our unity in all the diversity becomes an undeniable proclamation of the power of the Prince of Peace.

“You are all children of God through faith in Christ Jesus, for all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.” ~Galatians 3:26-28

We have to practice this tearing down of walls, we must be dedicated to demolishing the things that separate us. We must do the very, very hard work of reconciliation because it’s such a vital component of the Church’s proclamation. 2 Corinthians 5 says God has given us the ministry of reconciliation. Peter slipped up one time in Antioch, remember? He was under some social pressures there and he stopped eating with the Gentile Christians. He wouldn’t associate with Gentiles in public. And Paul called him on it. He told him he wasn’t acting “in line with the truth of the Gospel.” He wasn’t living the Story.

If the biggest and most imposing barriers in history have all been eliminated by Jesus – national / ethnic, social / class, gender – then what other barriers can be justified? If all the walls have been abolished at the cross, who are we to erect new ones? Or to maintain the ones others have erected? If all people are created in the image of God, if God’s purpose is reconciliation and unity, if we are to love even our enemies, if Jesus took all  the world’s hostility into himself to destroy it, on what grounds can we justify any walls at all?

Peace,

Allan

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