Tag Archives: spirituality

The Theology of Willie Nelson

I’m excited to announce our big pub night for this month – the Theology of Willie Nelson. Our guest is Dr. Bob Shelton, former president of Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary, who will be sharing stories of Willie, music, and spirituality from his time living in Austin. Bob is an awesome guy and may answer some of our questions about faith and culture.

The Theology of Willie Nelson pub night

Click the link above to RSVP on Facebook. Childcare will be provided for free at the church. There is no charge for this event.

Heads up – this will be my last pub night with our wonderful group as my family and I head off to beautiful Washington DC. So, let’s make it a good one.

Also, shout out to talented artist, Anna Bleker, for her image on the little informal flyer above.


Do bad things really happen in threes?

Not sure what this is, but it doesn't look good.

I keep hearing from co-workers, friends, and neighbors that bad things happen in threes. For example, here in Dallas, you could easily count the following three as bad:

Dallas Mavericks get swept in the opening round of the playoffs. Except this was not really a big surprise, I guess. Anybody who had seen this Mavericks team play this season figured that they wouldn’t make it very far without some lucky breaks. The lucky breaks did not come.

The new Museum Tower is destroying the beautiful works of art at the Nasher Sculpture Center. This is really bad to be honest. This is a product of poor planning and investment. The Arts District in Dallas is an area of real growth and energy for Dallas. Why crush it with a super sun multiplying, heat ray tower of doom?

GCB got cancelled. Okay, maybe this isn’t bad either. I didn’t watch GCB, but television without a series based on events in or around Dallas isn’t really tv. Oh wait, I almost forgot about the Dallas remake coming. Crisis averted.

I am not being completely serious, although #2 above is something that should be swiftly dealt with, even if it means closing down construction. The truth is… there are always bad things happening in our fair city. Whether it is the realization that we put too many Dallas teens in adult jails, attempted kidnappings on a highway, some sort of alleged high school sex club in Prosper, or an ex-priest who hired someone to kill a young man who he may have once sexually abused, you don’t have to dig to deep to discover all the unfortunate, disappointing things happening in our city.

I’m not trying to bring a downer to your day, but I am trying to poke a hole in the myth that bad things happening to people is rare or just a short term reality.

Rabbi Kushner wrote a book called – “Why Do Bad Things Happen to Good People”. One of my church members, Rev. Ron Somers-Clark, pointed out the better title would have been – “Why Do Bad Things Happen to People”.

Point is – it’s part of life to go through periods of struggle, sometimes randomly, often without reason or purpose.

Sometimes, we can find growth and meaning in our bad days. That’s great. Often, bad times do not last forever, though occasionally they last for years.

Our challenge as people who are on a spiritual journey is not to understand such bad things as an aberration, like they are always easily prevented, but to see them as part of the fullness of life. God has given us the capacity to love and be loved. Therefore, when our world is disrupted by unloving, horrific, or uncomfortable events, we recognize that we may lose things we care about. As Mitchell and Anderson put it in All Our Losses, All Our Griefs, “to be a follower of Christ is to love life and to value people and things that God has given to us in such a way that losing them brings sadness.”

What we do with our grief and pain from the losses that we experience makes all the difference. Often, we need to find a comforting community to heal. Other times, we feel called to step out in prophetic action, working for justice for those who have been wronged. We may use our voice to call for change or advocate for those who have been left behind. These are all responses which help us accept the unfortunate dips, bumps, and pits of living but move us into action to join with God’s plan for renewal and reconciliation of our world.

What do you think? Does your understanding of life and of God include room for these bad things that can happen, sometimes without meaning? How do you accept them and yet move forward in some way? I’d love to see your response below.


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.


Wholeness Group

Addiction & Grace by Gerald May

Tonight, we are organizing our first gathering of a new wholeness group here at the church. This is a new small group that is about encouraging participants on a journey to wholeness, especially a sense of spiritual health. It’s not a recovery group, but we expect to have some folks in the church and our neighborhood participate who struggle with addiction of various kinds, know family members and friends who have battled such challenges, or need a place of support and encouragement. We will read Gerald May’s Addiction and Grace together as food for thought and reflection. Everyone is welcome to join us for this first meeting at 6:30 PM in the Disciples Room.

Shoot me an email if you have questions.


Breaking Bread

Can eating with someone be a political or spiritual act?

I’ve tried to give up eating at fast food restaurants, for instance, because I’m not sure it really lines up with what I believe about our world. Eating at a fast food restaurant isn’t necessarily bad, but you make trade offs. You gain convenience and a low price for a system that can pay people very low wages and cheapen the price of food. Plus, fast food restaurants are intended for quick transactions – they are not always good locations for community and conversation.

Eating at a locally owned business isn’t necessarily good either. How do they treat their workers? What kind of values do they espouse? I’m not suggesting you interview your restaurant, like the sketch above from season one of Portlandia, but even something like eating ends up saying something about who we are and what we value. Our actions help shape the community we live in.

Jesus knew how eating was more than just an isolated bit of consumption. He used eating to make big points about who God was interested in. Sitting down and dining with tax collectors, people with skin diseases, and outcasts was a way for him to share his values. Jesus had come for the sick, not the healthy.

Jesus’ actions also permeated the movement that would follow after him. Early Christians and on throughout the centuries continue to celebrate agape feasts, the Lord’s supper, and community meals. Sure, everyone has to eat, but those meals took on different significance as they became ways to point to a new kind of community, where young and old, poor and rich, woman and man, outcasts and accepted sat as equals and tasted God’s abundant love.

My dream is that our politicians and our community leaders would sit down to meals like that more often. My hope is that churches, like the Table, might rediscover this mealtime as a way to build bridges and relationship with folks who seem different from one another. My desire is that we all see how we eat, when we eat, and what we eat as part of our spirituality, as part of who we are.

Heads up – tonight at East Dallas Christian Church, we celebrate Maundy Thursday, remembering Jesus’ last supper with his disciples through song, word, and food. Come join us. 6:30 PM in the Great Hall.


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