Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Eating Sand

No Emma, don't eat the sand... Gosh that's so cute I need to take a picture. Stop eating the sand... Would you just pay attention I need to get one more for mommy. Don't chew on the rocks... Just tip your cup a little, that's it, got it.

I am often reminded of my childhood when eating sand and dirt was just part of playing outside. Do you remember the thrill of sliding through the mud and the freshly planted grass seed after a good hard rain. There was just nothing like it. What about jumping in every puddle you could find as your parents were trying to find a good spot for a summer picture. I even remember helping my younger brother ignore our parents when we were supposed to be "staying clean". Especially before church, it was a weekly ritual to see how much dirt, mud and grass we could get on our pants. The best was when we got in the car without my mother seeing we had trashed our clothes until we got out at the church. It was also fun to bring bugs and small animals in the car with us. I even remember helping my brother get a snake in the trunk once.

Now it would seem, with four little children, I am going to have to experience all of these events over again. I can't decide if it is a good thing or not. Until I can answer for sure I will just keep taking pictures so I can prove later to my children that they preferred eating sand to just about anything else. I will also remember the many times a little dirt added so much to a summer day.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Green Tomatoes

Is it fair the leaves are changing color already? My eggplant is only the size of golf balls and my tomatoes may never get to be ripe and red. I do enjoy the fall, but to see the green go out of my yard and from all around me is just depressing. I know it will soon be replaced by a thick white blanket of frozen water, but it just doesn't seem right. Where will my flowers go and will they come back next year? Sure, I could have house plants, but it just isn't the same. The green can be nice but it is the orange, red, blues and purples I long for in the dead of the winter. I suppose for now I will have to be content with what little time I have left before I have to hibernate with the rest of the town. Perhaps I should get my furnace checked and put the glass back into my doors and windows. Or maybe I will wait just a little longer. The sun is out today you know.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Complete my joy

In the second chapter of Philippians, Paul begins with an encouragement, perhaps a caution, to be united. "So if there is any encouragement in Christ, any comfort from love, any participation in the Spirit, any affection and sympathy, complete my joy by being of the same mind, having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind."

In our world today it is not fashionable to be united like this. We seek belonging and community, but we also seek to distinguish ourselves from others so we might get ahead and in doing so, display rivalry and conceit. Even when it looks like we are united because of some uniformity we find it isn't the case. Uniformity isn't what Paul is speaking about. In fact, Paul champions the necessity of the diversity of the body or the church and describes it as being of God's own design. This multi-ethnic, multi-gifted, multi-generational, multi-era church should be united and working together guided by Christ to be performing works of good will which edify not just the church but the world of lost people as well.

Perhaps, it is this understanding of unity Paul finds so joyful. Paul's appeal is forceful and tender. He longs for them to identify even the smallest amount of encouragement, love, fellowship and affectionate sympathy from the work of the gospel in their lives. For a man who has labored as hard and as long as Paul has, seeing the fruit of his labor brings joy into his heart. This fruit isn't produced by him, but happens were God produces it. What joy it must be and how encouraging it must be not just to Paul but for everyone who has worked so hard for the proclamation of the good news to see God changing and transforming the lives of people. Taking pagans and making a community of authentic believers in the living God.

Unified people do not all look the same, talk the same, enjoy the same things. Unified people are like minded in the mission, have the same love in them because they all believe in the giver and maker of love, and are of one spirit and one purpose. Paul continues to describe how we should live humbly and not look only at our own interest, but at the interests of others. It is this interdependent life Paul hopes to see. The type of life that hurts because we act intentionally and sacrificially. The type of life which reflects our confidence in the world to come and our place in it because of God's intentional sacrifice. The type of life which brings glory to our father in heaven. Let us not act out of 'rivalry and conceit, but in humility count others more significant than [ourselves]'.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Labor and Fruitfulness

As promised, the second installment of the book of Philippians. Chapter 1:12-30. Here we see Paul reporting news of his imprisonment, his hope for the gospel to be communicated and his feelings about some of the people preaching. This is also the section of Philippians were Paul tells them 'to live is Christ, and to die is gain'. This seems to be a difficult issue to Paul. He longs to be with Christ and yet his pastoral duties to the church at Philippi continue to fill his mind. Paul goes on to say, 'if I am to live in the flesh, that means fruitful labor for me'.

It is this labor I am particularly interested in, not just because Paul did continue to live, but because of his ongoing theme attached to it of fruitfulness. He was so certain his labor would be fruitful, he considered it the alternative to dying and being with Christ. I am not sure I always think my labor is fruitful. At the same time I know the answer isn't to try to produce fruit. Fruit is the natural manifestation of Christ in us. Paul's response of certainty no doubt, came from his having Christ in him, and the assurances and promises this relationship bring with it. Therefore, it doesn't surprise me when Paul encourages the Philippian believers to, 'let [their] manner of life be worthy of the gospel of Christ'. To let the way they live, the 'manner', be evidence of the gospel transforming and renewing their lives at all times. Whether the way they live is out in the open or not. There is no concern for the private and the public, because there should be no difference. This manner should be a sign of the salvation they have is Christ. It should be this way with us. In a world were the manner of the believer reflects the lives of the pagan and not the God who is in us. Let the Spirit develop in us courage for times of ease and of suffering to stand up for the gospel. To stand next to our brothers and sisters in the faith and be the body of Christ in the face of our opponents and circumstance. Let us engage the conflict and not shy away from evil, in our own bodies, in the body of Christ and in the world.