Saturday, December 05, 2015

Looking back, moving forward

On this day one year ago, I stood beside a hospital bed, held my dad's hand, told him goodbye, and watched him take his last breath. It was a moment filled with emotions. Sadness. Relief. Pain. Peace.
Today, one year later, I look back at the journey I have taken. It has been a roller coaster ride of life changes and reflection. A time to look back at my past and look ahead to my future.
My dad's death has proven to be a pivotal moment in my life. It has both forced me and freed me to look at ways my family has influenced and impacted my life for the better and the worse. The death of my last direct ancestor means that the ink is dry for every story up the blood line. No more pages to write. No more plot twists. No more chapters. I am sure there are stories that remain untold, but none remain unwritten.

This realization has challenged me over this last year to consider the stories that were written and how that shapes the story that I write every day. This deep relfection on those stories cause me to face the demons of my past in way that I never have before, acknowledging there are unspoken parts of the story that have been passed down, in one way or another, from one generation to the next.
I'm not here to air my dirty laundry, but rather to acknowledge that I, like every one of you reading this, have some. Some demons are small and rather inconsequential. Others are unimaginable beasts. Most of us likely find our demons somewhere inbetween.

Death is a funny thing. It's finality is both a blessing and a curse. You can never have the conversations you wish you had engaged in. But you can also acknowledge the things you never thought you could face.
Are there things I wish I had said? Absolutely. But for some reason I never had the courage.
As there things I am glad I didn't say? Yes. And for the wisdom to keep my mouth shut I am glad.

We all grieve differently. Walking alongside others through grief over the last nearly 20 years has taught me that. But there is something about grieving that must be consistent. We must find ways to work through our grief. To process and heal and grow. No two people will take the same path to get there, but it is a journey we must take. Otherwise, the grief can become a toxin that poisons our soul.
But I am not just talking about death, but anything in life that brings about grief, a list longer than I can put here.

Suffering is a part of the human experience. It is unavoidable and we are all forced to face it. But it's how we face it that makes all the difference. We can either allow sufering to control us or we can embrace our suffering and find purpose and meaning in it. We can be the victim or we can do the difficult work of seeking to be the victor.
This is the lesson I have learned since my dad's death. It is the journey I continue a year after his passing. We must look back. We cannot avoid what has made us who we are. It is foolishness to ignore the stories that have impacted the strokes of the pen in our lives. But it is fatal to set up camp there.
Rather, we must look ahead at the blank pages that lie before us. While acknowledging the things that got us here, we must decide to pick up the pen and write a new page, a new chapter. It will often be difficult and unpleasant to write, but most stories don't come without conflict and pain and struggle. But those are the pages we have to write, the paths we have to take.

We are human, so grief will always be a part of our story, but it doesn't have to be the dominant plot line. Suffering can be the foundation upon which we write a better story. Will it be more complex than the fairybook stories we often grew up with? Absolutely! But that complexity brings a richness and depth that brings truer meaning and purpose to life.
No life is worthless or meaningless. But if we fail to face our demons, those dark turns in the story, we will often miss the richest opportunities to tell a better story filled with redemption and renewal. And those are the stories, no matter how messy, that reflect the true nature of the Kingdom.

shine!
Jason

Sunday, October 04, 2015

Slowing down

I have enjoyed watching my son take on the cello as a new instrument. He loves music and seems to be embracing this new adventure.
The other day as we were sitting at his lesson, his instructor was trying to teach him to use slower, longer bowing strokes. When he slowed down a little like his instructor asked, his cello produced a richer, more beautiful sound.
How many of us approach life like the way my son was playing his cello?

When we rush, our lives offen produce harsher, rougher notes. The music of our lives can lack the richness and beauty God intended.
Don't get me wrong, there are certainly times that life demands speed; moments where we must make quick decisions and act decisively.
But, more times than we realize, we move too fast, decide too quickly, and miss out on the richness of a slower, more deliberate life.

The great theologian Ferris Bueller once said, "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it." I think Ferris had a point. We can so get wrapped up in what we are trying to do that we miss what we are doing and what is going on around us.
This is a valuable lesson that I have been reminded of this summer as I have gotten back into riding my bike. When I go for a bike ride, I see things I would have missed driving my car. The sound of a gentle breeze. The motion of one God's creatures scurrying into a field. The majesty of a bird soaring above. The beauty of the sun breaking through the clouds.

Stop.
Listen.
Look.
Be still.
Be present...



There is something about slowing down that allows us to savor the small things in life.
There are times that I eat quickly and times I chew slowly, enjoying every little flavor. At restaurants where I buy an expensive meal with quality meat, I find myself taking a little more time and enjoying every bite.
I think I need to be like that more often with life.
Don't we all?

Take time this week to slow down. Do one less thing. Play one less video game. Watch one less TV show.
Take a walk, even if it's just around the block.
Read a book.
Sit outside for ten minutes enjoying nature.

You may not "get anything done," but I think you might gain a better appreciation for what you have and feel refreshed.
I have heard it said that a lumberjack who spends seven hours cutting and one hour sharpening his saw cuts down more wood than one who spends all eight hours cutting. Maybe if we would take a little time to rest and slow down then our work would be more productive and enjoyable.

Whether it's a cello bow, a lumberjack's saw, or a busy life, going slower may be just what we need to reveal a little more beauty in our lives.


shine!
Jason

Sunday, September 27, 2015

A moment in time

The future. The past. The present.

One grows ever closer.
One keeps growing.
One is always a moment in time.

Every breath I take, the future remains ahead of me. It arrives, but never completely.
Every moment I live, the past gains another entry, and the minutes spent grows again.
Every minute I'm here, the present stands with me, a change to think something, do something, be someone.

So what will I do with this breath, this moment, this minute?

I can choose to something amazing or I can choose to waste this moment. Amazing doesn't necessarily mean doing something big or staying busy. Amazing means something of significance. It could be doing nothing, basking in the moment the sun rises above the horizon or watching a bird soar above. It could be something small and simple, like offering a smile or a kind word. Or it could be something big, a new job, a grand adventure.

But life is made of amazing moments. The past can only be filled with with what you do in a million presents. And the future is a new opportunity, every day, to create something new with the present that you receive.

There was a moment on a Sunday morning years ago where something amazing happened, and not just normal amazing.

Where there had been hope, there was despair.
Where there had been excitement, there was fear.
Death lingered in the air. Dreams were buried in a tomb.

But then, on a Sunday morning, everything changed. An empty tomb.  Resurrection.

Isn't that the business that God is in, making all things new?
Bringing life to moments that are engulfed by death.
Bringing hope to situations that are drowning in defeat.

Not every day will bring something as amazing as a Jesus' resurrection, but every day can be a chance for new life. New beginnings. New hope.

We must learn from the past, look to the future, and make decisions in the present where we partner with God to create something amazing. It will seldom be easy, but most things worth having are. We must lean on his wisdom, trust in his grace, and dwell in his love. We will still blow it sometimes, but isn't that what the cross is really about? The story of God's completed, but yet ongoing work to bring dead things to life, hope breaking through to make all things new.


shine!
Jason

Monday, September 07, 2015

Black and white

My dad loved black and white movies. Not just the actors, plots, and dialogue. Dad loved the art form.
In the middle of a scene, Dad would ask, "Did you see that?"
"See what?" I would ask.
"See the way the director used that shading to affect the mood."
It wasn't the black or the white that gave the movies "color" most of the time, it was the shades in between.

Isn't life like that, too?

So often we want to make life about the black and white. The absolutes. Do this. Don't do that.
The longer I live, I am realizing that most of life happens in the gray areas. Most of the depth and beauty in life is found in the multitude of shades.

Yes, we need black and white. Without them, there is no gray. But they are not all there is to life.

Gray areas are the thin spaces, places where we can more fully embrace our creativity, our freedom, and our imagination.
But there is risk in the gray. We can mess up. We don't have clearcut "rules". There are no simple answers. But that's the beauty of gray.
We need to be able to mess up, to get it wrong. We need to rely on God to sustain us when we feel unable and show us mercy when we screw up. That's what grace is all about.

Living in a world of just black and white is pretending we have all of the answers.
Living in a world of gray admits that we don't know everything.

Jesus was confronted by some black and white people, the religious leaders who measured their success by following the rules. They asked the disciples why Jesus was eating with sinners, people they called scum.

When Jesus heard this, he said, "Healthy people don’t need a doctor—sick people do." Then he added, "Now go and learn the meaning of this Scripture: 'I want you to show mercy, not offer sacrifices.' For I have come to call not those who think they are righteous, but those who know they are sinners." (Matthew 9:12-13 NLT)

Jesus is not looking for people to live black or white lives, but to embrace the gray, to acknoweldge they are not good enough or wise enough to get it all right. He is seeking people to follow him and find the beauty in life. This is not a license to do wrong or disobey, but rather a call to live beyond our abilities and trust in God to give us strength when we are weak and provide riches (not necessarily in ther form of money) when we are poor; to do for us what we cannot do for ourselves.

Will we blow it? Absolutely.
Will we get it right? Sometimes.
Will God be there? Always.

It's that last answer that frees us to enjoy the beauty in the gray areas of life that terrify those who try to live in only black or white.

Dad was right, when we keep our eyes open, there is great beauty to be found in gray.

shine!
Jason

Saturday, August 29, 2015

Be yourself...like everyone else?

The other morning I was on the elliptical at the gym. My normal routine is to listen to music on my headphones, my eyes bouncing from television to television taking in the morning news and sports updates.
The other morning, a car commercial caught my attention. It included the following quote from Oscar Wilde.. "Be yourself. Everyone else is already taken." Great quote. Not sure about the application.

This is the story of our age. Be yourself, just like everyone else. Be unique, dress like everyone else. Show your individuality, do what everyone else does.
It's an honest struggle. Most of us want to be individuals, but we want to fit in. We desire to find our own voice, our own place in the world, but want want to be a part of a group.

Figuring out who we are boils down to two approaches. We can find a group and then find ourselves based much on that group's identity. Or we can find our identity and then discover relationships where we can thrive. The reality is that life is a give and take of both.
But as we grow and mature, I believe we must rely more on the latter and less on the former. When we are young, we rely on our parents, our family, and our close friends to help shape who we are. But as we gain wisdom and understanding, we should make the shift to finding who God has made us to be and look for communities where we can most fully embrace our uniqueness.

Imagine if a trumpet player showed up to try out for a string quartet. How would he fit in? Would he be able to fully use his gifts to bless others? Would he even be able to play the music written for the quartet?
But imagine the same trumpet player walking into a bar where a jazz band was having a jam session. He could walk onto the stage and let his abilities shine. He could play his heart out and join in to add something wonderful to the music that was already being played. He would add his own unique notes to the beauty.

We all need to figure out what our "instrument" is. We need to find our voice, our special wiring. As we do that, we can find a place to play that will not only allow us to be all we can be, but also provide us the greatest opportunity to bless others and add something amazing.
The apostle Paul wrote, “For we are God’s masterpiece. He has created us anew in Christ Jesus, so we can do the good things he planned for us long ago.” (Ephesians 2:10 NLT)
We are God's masterpiece, but each of us has to find the place where we best fit.

Let's not settle for being ourselves like everyone else. Even in the church I see this struggle to be like everyone else. If you are a Christian, you have to look like THIS. If you don't fit in the box, then you may not belong.
I believe the opposite is true. There is room in the Kingdom for plenty of diversity. God can use engineers and artists. Public speakers and introverts. Conformists and rebels. Successful people and those who struggle.
God is not looking for a group of people who have it all together. He is an assembling an unlikely, messy family of diverse people who are discovering who they were made to be and how they can work together to bring redemption and restoration to a broken world.
The church doesn't need a group of people who are themselves like everyone else. The church needs a group of people who are themselves, unlike everyone else.

I believe that too often, the church settles for comfort over community, conformity over compassion.

We should all strive to look like Christ, but we don't need to look like each other. If God worked through the liar Abraham, the deceiver Isaac, the coward Moses, the lunk Samson, the adulterer and murder David, the impatient Peter, the terrorist Saul, and many other imperfect people, should we question who God can work through today?
Each person listed above was a life-long work in progress. They all had their moments or failure. They each contributed to God's mission in their own, imperfect way.

Let's strive not to point fingers, but to extend hands. Let's reach out rather than stepping back. Let's embrace each person's unique story so that together we can be a part of God's incredible project of making all things new.


shine!
Jason

Sunday, August 23, 2015

Freedom to soar

When I disobeyed as a child, I would often find myself sitting in a chair or my backside encountering an accelerating wooden spoon. My parents were seeking to mold me and shape me, to teach me right from wrong. They were preparing for me for that day when I would become an adult and live the life I was made to live.
The longer I live, the more I realize that our journey with God is much the same. When we are young in our faith, the law exists to instruct us, mold us, and shape us. It prepares our hearts for a lifetime of living the life we were made to live.

One of the greatest struggles we seem to have as followers of Christ is moving from law-based living to grace-based living. From what the apostle Paul wrote a few thousand years ago, this problem doesn't seem to be new...

“So Christ has truly set us free. Now make sure that you stay free, and don’t get tied up again in slavery to the law. Listen! I, Paul, tell you this: If you are counting on circumcision to make you right with God, then Christ will be of no benefit to you. I’ll say it again. If you are trying to find favor with God by being circumcised, you must obey every regulation in the whole law of Moses. For if you are trying to make yourselves right with God by keeping the law, you have been cut off from Christ! You have fallen away from God’s grace. But we who live by the Spirit eagerly wait to receive by faith the righteousness God has promised to us. For when we place our faith in Christ Jesus, there is no benefit in being circumcised or being uncircumcised. What is important is faith expressing itself in love.” (Galatians 5:1-6 NLT)

When we continue to live trying to follow the law, we will limit our ability to grow in Christ. If we still live trying to check boxes and follow rules, we will be burdened down by our focus on performance. When we discover the freedom of grace to be who God made us to be, we will be uplifted by the freedom to soar.
As I reflect on my recent zip line experience, I remember the freeing feeling when I trusted my equipment and my guide and stepped off that platform. I was terrified when I took that first step, but as I flew through the trees, 100 feet above the ground, I experienced joy and freedom.
Grace is like that. We cannot continue to stand on the ground and allow the fear to keep us from living with reckless abandon. Grace allows us to leave our mistakes in the past and live for the future. We can never forget where we have been, there are always lessons to learn so we don't repeat past failures. But with grace, the past is passed and the future lies before us.
As Paul says in the passage above, and I am paraphrasing, continuing to live by keeping the law is life taking, but living in the freedom of grace is life giving. When we can express our faith in love rather than extinguishing our faith by working even harder to obey the law, we will discover what is truly important.

I continue to wrestle with this struggle on a daily basis, but I am learning to let go. My performance can never be good enough, but when I let go, trust God, and focus on the future, I will be able to live through my failures and use them to become a better, albeit flawed person who can enbody the power of the gospel for those around me.


shine!
Jason

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Hope wins

Today, I was blessed to officiate the wedding of a very special young woman. Here are some of the words I shared today...

Hope wins. That is this day in a nutshell.
I cannot tell you how excited and honored I am to be a part of this special day.
I remember seven years ago when we would sit and talk and you told me this day would never come. Well, here we are.
I never had a daughter, but if I did, I would be proud to have one like you. Through the ups and downs, good times and bad, you have survived and now you are thriving. You are a champion and today you receive one of the greatest rewards from all your efforts.
This is not the end of the journey, but it is certainly the start of a new, amazing chapter.
Alex, I know that you know what a precious gift you have in Rachel. I know that you know the road she has traveled and the journey she has made. Protect her. Care for her, Love her. I know Rachel well enough to know she will do the same in return.
Now I know you are not the religious type and I promised Rachel this ceremony wouldn't have a boring sermon, but you know I had to slip something in here, right?

In Revelation, the apostle John attempts to describe a vision from God. While there are a lot of strange visions that John tries to describes (I actually think you would enjoy the strangeness), at the end he describes a vision that explains the return of Jesus Christ...
“Then I saw “a new heaven and a new earth,” for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea. I saw the Holy City, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride beautifully dressed for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people, and he will dwell with them. They will be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their God. ‘He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death’ or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.” He who was seated on the throne said, “I am making everything new!” Then he said, “Write this down, for these words are trustworthy and true.””
Revelation 21:1-5 NIV
Making all things new. This has been your story.
While the tears, the crying, and the pain are not gone, I can see that they are less than they used to be.
While I do believe that there will come a day when Jesus will return and make all things new, I also believe that he is already in the process of doing this now. The Kingdom of God is not yet here, but aleady breaking in. God is already starting to make things new.
And you, Rachel and Alex, are a part of that work that God is doing. Today, you are taking another step in both of your lives of making something new, something beautiful.
It will not always be easy. It will not always be fun. But is life ever that way?
What you are doing today is starting a new chapter. Making a new commitment. Starting a new journey, together. Today, hope wins.