Tag Archives: compassion

It’s tough being a neighbor

Protests in response to the killings of Ambassador Chris Stevens

It’s been a tough couple of days with the killing of Ambassador Chris Stevens and other Americans at the consulate in Libya.

My prayers and the prayers of our community go out to those families suffering, including Libyan security forces who died trying to protect the embassy and other facilities.

I also join with many around the world who continue to cry out for peace and justice.

Jesus called us to “love our neighbors as ourselves”. Sometimes, that charge seems annoying, like when our friend, mentor, or pastor reminds us to have compassion and patience with our next door neighbor who plays music too loud in the evening or shares different political views than our own. But that charge seems impossible when we consider the people we share this planet with – a diverse assortment of folks with different religious, political, and cultural values.

How the heck can we be a neighbor to them?

Our world is interconnected now in some exciting and challenging ways. While we often turn our attention to local problems and needs, we understand that there is a global dimension to everything we do. I’m not sure if Jesus knew that we would understand the idea of a neighbor in such a large sense, but it is the way we our world has changed.

Ultimately, it’s never easy to live in community with people who are very different from you. That is why we bond in cultures, subcultures, churches, clubs, and so on. Rubbing elbows with people outside of our groups leads to anxiety and discomfort, but it also gives us opportunity to learn and grow. Gerald May in Addiction & Grace suggests one of the best ways to respond to this kind of complexity is the contemplative route – “the simple and courageous attempt to bear as much as one can of reality just as it is”.

Reckoning with reality, not easy to do at all, means that we refuse to stereotype, that we seek to understand, that we don’t dismiss the deep challenges and problems of our world, and that we don’t deny our own misgivings and pain in the process.

In other words, we try to figure out how to live together.

In the end, while we disagree on a lot of stuff, it’s also true that we share much in common. With God, there is always hope. For those who seek violence, there are more that seek peace. For those that respond in rage and anger, there are those who bind up wounds and care for the stranger in their midst.

May God guide us in that goal and grant us patience, humility, and compassion. May we know our neighbors as people. May we seek peace, even when it hurts. May those who take up violence find their paths thwarted. May we yearn and cry out and work for a better world.

That’s my prayer anyway. Peace to you all!


Mission Update

I shot a quick and simple video with Greg and Jules, two of our leaders of the Table community, about their upcoming Honduras mission trip. It’s a short conversation about what moved them during their last trip and what they are anticipating in the upcoming return trip. Part of their focus is learning how to organize mission experiences like these, so that we can lead our own team in future years. I hope you join me and the rest of the Table community as we keep them in our prayers next week and on.

BTW, our video session almost got interrupted, so apologies for my goofy face about halfway through. Next time, I’ll remember to put the “quiet please, video taping in progress” sign up on the conference room door.


It’s not about right belief.

When I was thirsty, when did you give me drink?

I am really thankful that a lot of the ways in which our culture understands faith is changing.

In the book Missional Spirituality, authors Roger Helland and Leonard Hjalmarson point out that the Christian faith you find in many churches is an excarnational practice. What does that mean? Excarnational faith is one that lives mostly in the brain, rather than the body. It’s understanding the religious life as being about knowing the right things and believing in the right stuff. Even in our many seminaries, religious education, though certainly a great tool, teaches church leaders how to write and research and study theology.

While the intellectual understanding of one’s faith tradition is great, without practice it is irrelevant.

Unfortunately, true change rarely begins in the mind.

Sure, believing the right thing can be important. But the true test is whether or not it is lived out. If “loving your neighbor as yourself” is what you believe as one of Jesus’ core teachings, how are you living it out each day? How is your faith community providing opportunities to love neighbors that you may not even know or may be very different than you? I feel like our culture is getting tired of hearing about “right belief” and is ready to see more faith that is lived out.

True spirituality is about embodying God to the world, to be part of God’s physical expression of love to the world.

I’d rather be wrong in my belief and help someone in need then be right and do nothing.


Stand by me

I’m thankful to be surrounded my a loving wife, beautiful kids, a great family, and many friends who stand by me during tough moments of my life. I know there are many in this world who do not have that support… or don’t get it from the people who are supposed to give it. Some folks do find that support in a church, but churches can abuse people too. I long for a world where everybody has that oasis, a place to be loved and connected regardless of who they are and where they were born.

The playing for change songs are great and provide this image of a common language by which all humans can communicate. We have plenty of old songs, new songs, and songs yet to be written that can help us vision and live into a world where our lamentations and dreams mingle together. A world where it don’t matter the money you have, the education you have, the mistakes you’ve made, or even the religion you follow – someone is there to stand with you.

Do you dream of that kind of world too? May we pray for it and live for it… together.


More on Tornado Relief Efforts

Janie Autz, our Director of Outreach on staff here, shared this news with me via email:

Katherine Turner, our Outreach Chair, and her daughter, Savannah (who will be baptized here on Sunday), have been volunteering in Forney today with one of the churches offering relief to families who have been displaced from their homes due to the tornadoes.  Katherine says at this point they are not in need of any additional donated goods.  But, families could really use  gifts cards for restaurants… i.e. Subway, Chili’s, Pizza Hut, Dickie’s BBQ, Wendy’s, Chic-Fil-A, etc.

We will have baskets placed around the church on Easter Sunday if you would like to help.  Losing everything you have, staying in a motel, and having to eat all your meals out is very expensive for one person, much less a family.  Helping these families on Easter Sunday would truly be a “Resurrection Sunday” for them as well as each of us.

Katherine is our Outreach Chair and will deliver your gifts to the church in Forney on Monday who is coordinating relief efforts with the families.

Get to it, Table peeps. Bring a gift card and bless someone devastated by the recent storms this Sunday.


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