Tag Archives: resurrection

A Dying Church

The Easter Cross at the Table

I appreciate my friend Karakay Kovaly for pointing me to this excellent read by Mark Yaconelli about the state of church in the US and how a lot of faith communities are struggling to keep up with our fasted pace culture. One of the key paragraphs for me is this one:

Because, hidden beneath its anxiety to keep up with the culture, hidden beneath its grief and disorientation, there is a deeper problem: This church doesn’t know how beautiful it is. The people of this church have somehow been tricked into believing the lie that declining memberships, outdated hymns, prayers, and liturgies that use antiquated language equal some sort of spiritual failing. If this church would only embrace its sense of failure, it might be freed up to find that it holds great treasures.

I’m the first one to admit that the way the Table worships has its strengths and weaknesses. We don’t have the budget or focus to make a slick presentation. We get a little disorganized, have mics that go bad, or start a song in the wrong tempo from time to time. Often, it is the simplest and surprising of things that connect with people, not the elaborate theological constructs and experiments that we labor hours on. We are just people after all, who are doing our best to encounter and point to this Being beyond us who has given us a sense of hope and guidance in this life. More often than not, we over complicate everything.

Dying is scary, but one of those deep rivets that runs through our faith is that death is not final… just another beginning. Out of death, new life mysteriously emerges. That’s one of the stories of Easter. Even if you believe that Jesus probably didn’t come back to life, we still contend that this movement of people experienced something so unforgettable and life changing through this person that it has continued to this day. In the end, it’s just people, struggling, grasping, celebrating, hoping, and yearning for that new life to take deep root in their life and in the world all around.

For anyone who checks us out or joins the pub for an evening, I hope they see that first. When I look at our gathered crowd on a Sunday morn or around the table on a Tuesday night, it is what I see – a beautiful people, a beautiful church. I am thankful for the opportunity to serve such a group of folks and join in the process of dying to the brokenness of my life so that something whole and new emerges.


Being Open

Open Door

What does it mean to be open?

I’m reflecting well in advance of my sermon this Sunday, looking at Luke 24:26-48, another post-Resurrection story about the fearful disciples encountering Jesus in the midst of their wonder, confusion, and isolation. The key verse for me says that Jesus “opened” their minds to understanding and goes on to try to help them make sense of what just happened to their beloved teacher, now back from the dead. For whatever reason, that is resonating with me, so I’m starting there.

The word open is a friendly word to me, just because of my personality. I am a creative guy – I love art and new experiences. I like to explore possibilities, no matter what I do. So, being open means welcoming fresh energy and perspectives.

For the disciples post-Easter, they were likely not open. If anything, they might have been stuck between grief and hope. Their beloved teacher had just been put to death, but rumors were circulating that he was actually alive. They gathered back up and retreated to a locked room, perhaps to get their facts straight and try to figure out what was going on. The word “opened” thus is a stark contrast from their environment – an isolated, dark, secretive room away from prying eyes and outside forces.

It’s easy to assume that Jesus is just explaining everything for the disciples in plain fashion, but if you go on further in the scripture passage, he tells the disciples to wait and pray. So, Jesus isn’t doing the big reveal and wrapping up the story. The resurrection appears to be just the beginning – there is more to come. In a sense, Jesus is preparing the disciple for that next journey or possibility that was about to come. Maybe this is what it means that Jesus “opened” their minds.

I suppose my question for you all is this:

  • Do you see faith as an open or closed structure, flexible or rigid? Why?
  • Has there been any time in your life when you felt closed off from the outside world but then someone or something came in and opened you up to new possibilities? What was that like?
  • Does the resurrection make sense to you? How do you understand it today? Has that changed?

I welcome your responses below. Let’s think and reflect together.


Holy Week Pub!

Faith in the City is a cool pub ministry in East Dallas!

Holy Week is like the central week of the Christian year (next to Christmas). We worship in different ways, beginning with palm branches being waved in an ad hoc parade, reflecting on the final teaching of the prophet Jesus, sharing something a little bit like the Passover meal (or remembrance of), reflect on the deep darkness of the cross on Friday, and then celebrate new life breaking into our world on Easter morn. It’s a dizzying week. Some folks just go from palms to Easter, but that seems a little too easy when you recognize how Jesus got an up close picture of humanity’s own tendency towards cruelty and hate in those days in between. It wasn’t like the whole week was just an extended drum roll to the big reveal on Sunday morning. Jesus confronted the powers of domination and oppression of his day and seemed to lose, scattering his most trusted followers in defeat. And yet, at the last minute, Something Extraordinary Happened.

Maybe those different kinds of worship opportunities aren’t your thing. Maybe beer and conversation is. That’s why we’ll be hosting a special Holy Week Pub at Bryan Street Tavern on Tuesday evening, 7:30-9:30 PM, discussing whether or not Jesus knew he was going to be crucified. Did God want Jesus to be crucified? Did he have to die in such a way? Why did Jesus ask God in the hours before his death, “God, please take this cup from me”? Heavy questions. Was Jesus on a direct path of confrontation to the powers who were willing to crush him like they did to so many other rebels before? Or was this some divinely ordered, cosmic event? Or both? Or neither?

The conversation should be great. The cold beverages will be great. The pizza will be delicious. We even have free childcare at the church, so you will know your kids are having a good time while you are too. Register on our little Facebook event page to let us know you are coming.


From the Pub: questions about Jesus’ words on the cross

Breathing Under Water by Richard Rohr

At the pub, we reflected on the question from Banned Questions about Jesus – why did Jesus say “My God, My God, why have you forsaken me” on the cross? What did it mean? Did Jesus feel separated from God in that moment? And can Jesus, who is supposed to be God, even be separated from… himself? What?

The challenge of understanding a concept like the Trinity, a God who knows the same despair that we humans can feel, a Christ who knows what it is like to be abandoned – these were some of the themes lifted up last night.

I couldn’t remember a quote that highlighted my own thoughts on this question. It’s from the book, Breathing Under Water, by Richard Rohr.

“Religion is lived by people who are afraid of hell. Spirituality is lived by people who have been through hell.”

I find some hope in the fact that Jesus, according to the Gospels of Matthew and Mark, lived deeply into his humanity. It was not just a sliver of his existence and life. God was fully human, experiencing the deep feelings of loss and confusion and separation that can often cloud our human lives. The deeper the isolation, one of our participants said last night, the more meaningful the cross and the resurrection.


Is Easter all about heaven?

Hi, I'm Nathan, and I'm being attacked by a bear.Tonight, as our pub group chewed on questions of heaven and hell, I got to thinking – is Easter all about heaven?

Easter is typically a day for apologetics, the defense or explanation of faith. Lots of people darken the doors of church even if they don’t show up for the rest of year, so that might make sense. The common themes of Easter are good ones – resurrection, new life, promises, angels, victory over death, come from behind victories, and heaven. The basic modern story of the Christian faith is repeated – believe in Jesus, and experience eternal life.

Of course, in this new postmodern or post-postmodern world (whatever all that means), some of those basic assumptions are being questioned. Like – what do we really know about heaven? What do we really know about hell? Are some of those ideas really grounded in scripture? Is being a Christian really all about eternal life?

I guess I am sort of thinking out loud here, but I might suggest some alternatives to deepen our understanding of Easter.

For example, while I have not read it, I love the title of Rob Bell’s new book, Love Wins. What a cool couple of words to summarize Easter! Yes, Jesus conquered death, but in the bigger picture, God’s love overcame all obstacles… and won.

Dr. Dan Moseley, retired professor from Christian Theological Seminary, preached an amazing Easter sermon at National City Christian Church a few years back about lingering in our pain, using the examples of Mary and Peter returning to the tomb after the death of Jesus. As they acknowledged that pain, as they vented it, new life suddenly emerged. Their eyes were opened.

Or finally, Easter as an event that calls us to reorder our lives. If death is not the final arbiter, if evil’s power becomes muted in the presence of God, and if life emerges even out of the deep pain and chaos of our lives, then how do we live differently? Isn’t the world turned upside down?

Wow. Deep thoughts, late on a Tuesday.

I think you may hear some of that this coming Sunday at Easter, as we all struggle to hear and respond to Resurrection happening in our lives and world, every single day.


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