Good Week

It’s been a good week. I was able to get a lot of things done that needed to be done. I had a series of very encouraging meetings regarding the shape of future ministry efforts at Garnett. I finished up a mini-series on hospitality this morning that I thought went pretty well. This week I’m on study leave so I’ll be out of the office and in the books at an undisclosed location.

In the last few months, my leadership role at Garnett has expanded significantly. I was trained to write sermons, not necessarily lead a church staff. Everyday, I realize how much I have to learn about leadership. It looks like I’m about sign on with a leadership coach who will give me some guidance. I’m looking forward to the journey. It’s been a long time since I’ve experienced this kind of challenge. I’m really enjoying it and hopefully I’m experiencing a bit of growth because of it.

Sermonspice.com

sermonspice.com

Fat Tuesday

Today I’m eating everything in sight.

Tomorrow I’ll be saying goodbye to candy and bread until Easter.

Contemplating Luke

Here’s what we’re doing in the Wednesday night class I teach.

We begin with about ten minutes of introductory conversation/teaching. This usually has something to do with contemplative prayer or “lectio divina.” It’s part history lesson and part instruction.

Then we spend fifteen minutes in contemplative prayer/silence. I turn down the lights and we sit in silence as a group.

Then I read a chapter from the Gospel of Luke. I read it very slowly, paying attention to every phrase. I encourage the class to listen to the text being read, not follow along with me in their Bibles. Last Wednesday it took me nearly fifteen minutes to read Luke 7.

Then we spend the final minutes of class discussing what we heard in the text. This may happen in small groups or we may do it together as a class. The question I ask is “What did you hear in tonight’s text?” As the conversation develops I begin to sharpen the focus of the question to “Did you hear a Word in this text directed to you personally?”

Then we finish with a prayer.

So far the feedback from the class has been extremely positive. The silence has been hard. We sometimes find ourselves talking about the text in ways that are meant to distract us from whatever claim the text might be making on us personally. For the most part, this experience is being received as a welcome change to the usual Bible class format.

The reason I’ve taken the class in this direction is because I came to the conclusion last fall that all that was really happening in my class was a transfer of information. I was co-teaching a class on “How to Read the Bible for All It’s Worth” and it was obvious to me that while the class found the material interesting, something was missing. So we’re trying something different.

In no way am I wanting to abandon the sound Bible study principles I was taught in seminary. I’m just acknowledging that faithfully practicing and even teaching those principles is not enough. It’s good to study the Bible and I spend plenty of time doing that. On Wednesday nights, we’re giving Scripture some time to study us.

Larry King

Did you catch the gang on Larry King Live? The Lahayes were, well, they were the Lahayes. No real surprises there. King badgered them a bit and they didn’t come across as the sharpest apocalyptic fundies in the land. Maybe it was because they were in studio with King, but I thought they were given more talk-time than the others.

Franklin Graham kept saying the same thing over and over again no matter what the question was. “Jesus came to save us from our sins.” (Not that there’s anything wrong with that message.) He gets the “That’s my story and I’m sticking to it” award.

T. D. Jakes handled himself very well. I appreciated everything he had to say. He came across as thoughtful and compassionate.

Brian McLaren didn’t get as much talk-time as the others. A couple of times all he could do was echo what Jakes had already eloquently stated. I wish he would have been given a chance to chime in on the “end-times/anti-christ” segment. I doubt he appreciated being lumped in with those who think the end of the world is only one common currency away.