April 2006

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months of building from scratch… massive learning curves… miraculous provision of missionary support… attempting the impossible (for me anyway) at every turn… blood, sweat and more tears than I care to confess to…  did I mention the panic attacks?

It’s happening.  One of the dreams for the young adult ministry I started in November takes a tentative step into reality this Friday, April 28th at 7:30pm.  This is when we stretch beyond ourselves as a group that has been getting to know each other and starting to grow together… and invite the young adults in the neighbourhood around us in to “The Mix” for a taste of the life and community we enjoy.  2000 flyers went out.  Did some more inviting this week.  Still some miracles needed by Friday.  Send up a prayer for us.

I first became aware of Shane Claiborne through a Christianity Today article last Fall… the same issue that my random obscure church got mentioned in.  ;)

So I picked up his book, The Irresistable Revolution last Monday (along with Velvet Elvis - which I read in half a day - The Irresistable Revolution took me a few days longer).

I did my best to disagree with, disregard, reject, write off and rationalize away 90% of the book (I’m exagerrating) but even if your successful at that the remaining 10% is still more than enough to mess you up.

I really need to process the implications of what I’ve read so I won’t dive into it right now but I’m curious if anybody out there has read it and what your thoughts/reactions were?

Love it or hate it, I would suggest this required reading for every mystic

nooc

p.s.  Part of what made it so dangerous was how it reminds you of the danger of the MOST dangerous book.

My Own Personal Easter

2 weeks ago I worked a 72.5 hour week at church. Some of you… perhaps who don’t work at a church… may be thinking that’s nuts. Some of you… perhaps who do work at a church… may be thinking “suck it up princess… that’s a slow week!”.

Well for me it was too much… sort of. After the 8 hour day on Saturday to end the week I was exhausted but felt like I had survived. I was wrong. Sunday morning the awareness and the effect came. I hadn’t just given out alot… I had given out everything. All the light, hope, energy, passion… everything good in me… gone. I wasn’t just empty… the void was in the negative… a vacuum.

Emotionally, mentally, physically I sank into darkness. Yet I can’t regret it. Because I discovered He still whispers there… and it’s so magnified and echoing and teeth-rattling when there’s none of “you” left inside to absorb/redirect/distort/slow it’s vibration. And I began to recognize another sound I haven’t heard in awhile. My roar. It’s different now. It’s changed from this experience. It’s a little less tame… a little more savage… a little more tender. It scares me a bit but I think I like how it sounds.

I can’t regret the rawness because of how real it made me feel and the brutally honest thoughts it produced… thoughts unhindered by the common desire to “think positively”.

I can’t regret it because it took me to a new and scary level of deadness. This put me in the resurrection position… perhaps the spiritual equivalent of the fetal position… the potential of it is tangible and He has already begun drawing me into newness.

About this same time I had a thought that I hadn’t had before… Jesus had to die… but He didn’t have to rise again. There could be no forgiveness without the shedding of blood. The Lamb had to be sacrificed. The penalty had to be paid. “It is finished”. And it was. Everything was fulfilled. You theologians please feel free to prove me wrong but in that moment I couldn’t think of any legal requirement to rise again… save the obvious fact that Jesus said He would. But there was nothing pending, nothing outstanding, nothing undone. Our salvation was complete. So what was the point of rising again?

Fear not… I’m not slipping into heresy… the reasons for, and benefits of, the resurrection of the Christ are myriad. But have you ever thought them through before from the perspective of the apparent lack of a technical need for Christ to rise again?

I am. And God seems to be more showing me then telling me. Through my own current state of deadness and the process of resurrection He is working in me.

Through a supernatural moment in one of our Easter services when He thinned the veil between the spiritual and the physical for a brief moment that I might glimpse the “one song”. For a moment I could “see” the song as well as hear it. The tune of the parking attendants and ushers, the melody of actors and techies, the lilt of every coffee server and toilet scrubber in our church all coalescing with His voice to form one visible sound, one eye-pleasing harmony. The song of His way. His being. His purpose. His agenda.

The song of His work of reconciliation and restoration through Riverwood. Played by the instruments of every common act of service and sacrifice made by so many within my Riverwood family. And in that moment was a wordless and very personal invitation from Him for me to join in again. To raise my voice in the One Song again. To sing. Not so much because I’m needed… but because I am wanted.

This was my Easter.

Do you feel the darkness tremble
When all the saints join in one song
And all the streams flow as one river
To wash away our brokenness

~Martin Smith

hey vox’ers, (voxians? voxites?)

In my weekly cafe ministry to young adults (which is going amazing/hardest thing I’ve ever done, btw - sorry I never update) I am doing several events called “cafe of the dead“.  (first one is this Friday)

Essentially we (hopefully) will be wrestling through the concept of what it means and what it looks like to die to ourselves and live for Him, 2 Corinth 4:10, etc.  The core element of the evening will be an intensive look at passages from the bible that relate to this.  Other possible elements of these evenings will be looking at other references, historical examples, people’s stories, prayers that are almost too dangerous to pray, etc.

Where you come in

I thought it might be interesting for my young adults (and for me) to hear from you whom I refer to as my blog family on these matters.

I am looking for anyone out there who feels they might have something to say on this, and has access to a vid camera, to do a few minutes (or more) of video of yourself giving us your two cents worth.  Essentially a video podcast kind of idea.  Send me the file or link and we’ll incorporate it into our cafe of the dead.

Format

Give a greeting to me (Greg) and Stir (our young adults here at Riverwood).

Introduce yourself, tell us where you’re from and what you do.

Talk for as long or as little as you want about dying to self/risk/giving it all etc.  It could be some comments on relevant scripture, it could be your own story of wrestling with the concept of dying to self, it could simply be your gut feeling on the topic.  If you had 5 minutes to try and influence and inspire a group of young adults… what would you say?  What keeps you up at night?  Maybe it’s not even directly related to our topic but has something to do with risk, adventure and sacrifice as followers of Jesus.  Say it and see what happens!

Timeline:  It would be great to have at least one by this Friday, April 7th but I understand this is short notice.  Future cafes of the dead are the first Friday in May and the first Friday in June.

Thanks for considering this.

Greg

edit: bump

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