Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Bringing Revolution

As with many of my blog posts, this one has been rolling around in my head for a while. I’m finally getting it down on “paper” – well, paper being the white space of a Word document at least….. ;-)

There are two songs that I can’t help but place in juxtaposition in my mind when I listen to them. They’re very different, but my overly analytical intellect makes a connection {which may or may not make sense to anyone else…}

So – the two songs are “Radioactive” by Imagine Dragons (which I got introduced to by Lindsey Stirling :D) and “God’s Not Dead” by Newsboys.

Both talk about revolution (“It's a revolution, I suppose” and “bring a revolution somehow” respectively). They also refer to another similar theme: the Imagine Dragons frontman said “Radioactive” is “a song about having an awakening,” while “God’s Not Dead” refers to “shak[ing] the ground / With the sound of revival.”

But while the songs may be trying to address the same topic, I believe they do so coming from quite different angles. “Radioactive” describes a post-apocalyptic world, one of “ash and dust” and “breathing in the chemicals.” A picture of a world which has been decimated and killed by radiation. The singer can “feel it in my bones / Enough to make my systems blow.” Yet the song promises that this is a “new age.”

“God’s Not Dead,” on the other hand, centers around the living power of God (unsurprisingly) and it starts with the love which brings the dead to life. This song tells the story of hope and revival based on resurrection power. So the songs seem to have opposite starting points and to make progress in opposite directions.

In both songs, the singer can feel a difference in himself. In the former, he is declared to be “waking up” and finding himself “radioactive.” In the latter, God is discovered “living on the inside / roaring like a lion.” Both hint that this inner change can either precipitate or indicate a change in the environment as well.

Hopefully I’m making at least a little sense and you can see where I’m coming from….I’m not really sure how to put it in words….but I guess it’s just that “Radioactive” seems to be trying to ignore the truth. The singer seems to think being radioactive is a great thing, but we know that radiation is poison – that it is an agent of death, not life. It makes sense from a worldly perspective – if all you’ve got is what’s dealt to you, you may as well see it in as positive a light as possible.

But I’m not looking at it from a worldly perspective. I know that even when I was dead – even when the poison of sin had pervaded my body like radiation – that even then God stepped in and brought resurrection. We aren’t stuck in whatever situation we find ourselves. Instead, God is alive and He brings hope and freedom and the victory to overcome the world.

So that’s what I’ve been mulling over whenever I hear either of these songs. Which source do you draw on? Do you try to make the best of a bad circumstance on your own? Or do you recognize the redemption which God offers? If the latter, do you take the time to share that? Does the love which has set you free spread from your life to others?

“Let heaven roar and fire fall
Come shake the ground
With the sound of revival.
My God's not dead
He's surely alive….”

Saturday, July 6, 2013

The Man Who Lived Twice

One of my classes last semester focused on reading American poetry with our University's president. It was only a one-hour, honors colloquium class, which basically means it was just for fun. At the end of the semester, our final was to write a poem imitating one of the authors we had read. I chose T.S. Eliot, specifically his Christmas poem "Journey of the Magi."

I hope you enjoy this artistic attempt. And if you want to know a bit more about my imitation, I did also write a 4-page paper explaining it! Let me know if you're interested.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I was falling, falling, falling,
As in the dream, which always ends
With the crashing realization of lying in bed.
But the jolt never came:
Instead, a gentle slowing, drifting down like a feather
Until darkness turned to soft light and I found myself
Reclining at a feast table with him.
Instinctively I knew: here was my forefather,
Abraham, the great friend of God.
Surrounded by beauty and comfort and rest we lay
No need to end or hurry away.
The smells of the food and the décor of flowers
Flooded my nose with a glorious melody of scents.
So much better this than my last conscious memory:
Of heat and fever burning me up,
Of pain all around aching in every limb,
Of concern on my sisters’ faces, and of hushed whispers
Of the darkness closing in, blacker than any unlit room;
And then the fall, and finding myself here
I could stay forever.

But then came the voice
Like a blast on the shofar, clarion and loud
“Lazarus, come forth,” the call was for me.
Abraham nodded: “The Master calls, His voice you must obey.”
Suddenly I found myself again floating away
I came to in the dark, my nose pricked now
By the fading smell of an old body.
Wrapped tight, I could barely move
Shrouded as I was, a cloth over my face;
Yet the summons had come and I must go.
I heard their gasps as I felt the light change
From the dim tomb cave to the bright outdoors
Martha, Mary, unwrapping me, holding me tight
Scores of people: friends, neighbors; startled, withdrawing
And there He stood, His face wet with tears.

So He returned me to the Life I used to live;
But nothing now is the same.
Rabbis don’t know what to do with me
No rules are there for one brought from Death to Life.
People come and stare and stare
And all I can remember is the feeling of peace;
I long for that peace. And now,
Now the chief priests want Him dead. Him,
And me also; we threaten their authority.
I know not what He thinks
Though I do feel from Him a special kind of pity;
Yet for me, Death holds no more fear
They can kill me if they want, I’ve already died
I would be glad to live that truer Life again.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Jan. 23 CQI - Developing a Spiritual Rule (Webb S.1, Pt.1)


Our reading for that day came from a booklet written by Christopher Webb and printed by Renovare.

Claim 1: Webb takes the six streams of Christian tradition from Foster and makes them into categories for the shaping of a rule of life. He says, “as our passions and character are aligned with those of Jesus, so we increasingly become intentional about expressing each of these aspects of his life in our walk with him” (pg. 7). I took Integrated Theology last semester, and we read parts of Foster’s Streams of Living Water to cover the spiritual formation section. Foster seemed to be much more focused on providing a  descriptive look at these six areas, while Webb is seeking to turn them into a prescriptive guide for creating Christ-likeness in our lives. I don’t know if I just don’t remember correctly or if this was actually the case with Foster. At any rate, while I really enjoyed reading Foster’s book (particularly the Sacramental section), I can’t say it changed anything in my life. I’m hoping Webb will be otherwise.

Claim 2: Gradual change is more effective than sudden shifts. As Webb writes, “You are far more likely to successfully build a modest rhythm of prayer into your day than to utterly reorganize your life around hours of devotion” (pg. 9). He later provides an example of this by discussing how his almost simplistic rule of life has “had a profound impact on every important area” of his life (p. 13). I can certainly see the wisdom and common sense in Webb’s statement. But I don’t like having to keep working at something. I am much more of a pendulum person. My tendency is to attempt making a drastic change, get it all taken care of, and have it done–crossed off my checklist! I don’t naturally like being in a gradual process.

Question 1: Given Mulholland’s definition of spiritual formation (the part about “for the sake of others”), why is it that the monastic desert fathers tend to be so revered? Their idea of holy living frequently lacked the horizontal plane of interaction. They often tried as hard as they could to never be around people, though that was typically a difficult task because people would try to flock to them. Webb describes Anthony’s life – he tried “to strip away every distraction this world had to offer so he could seek God with his whole heart” (pg. 4). Clearly, that sounds like a noble and good ambition. And his commitment was admirable. But what happened to “for the sake of others”? From later parts of the chapter, Webb clearly believes in being in relationship with other people. But when I read this early bit on Anthony it just made me wonder why it is that we tend to put monastics on such a pedestal? If we look at it holistically, they were, in some ways, trying to be very selfish in their holiness. I am certainly prone to do the same as an introvert – so it’s a good reminder to me to be aware of that.

Insight 1: “Every day we live is like a miniature picture of our whole life…” (pg. 4). This was a really important point for me to hear. As I mentioned in class, what I actually do with my time is frequently quite different than what I would say my Rule of Life is. I need to remember and to seek to live out the fact that my daily, moment by moment choices are what shapes who I am in fact.

Insight 2: As a recovering practitioner of Christian legalism, I greatly appreciated the way in which he differentiated between commands/regulations and the guiding principle of the quest for a regula vita which he advocates (pg. 5). It’s like he said. If we want to shape our life to a particular pattern, it is very helpful to have a ruler to guide our pencil. Without it, our shape is much more likely to not match what we had in mind. BOTH flexibility AND guidelines – a balance that is so much fun to try to maintain for an extreme perfectionist just barely beginning to recover, like me!

Jan. 21 CQI - Into the Image of Christ, For the Sake of Others (Mul. Ch. 3-4)


Claim 1: Mulholland argues that the culture around us tries to fit us all into the same mold, and that the image of Christ does not treat us that way. “It is only in Christ that we find our individuality,” he wrote (pg. 34). I don’t know quite why this strikes me as a new idea. It makes sense that the God who created each one of us uniquely with an individual set of gifts and talents would want us to develop in that. Maybe my thought process wasn’t consciously reaching that conclusion because of the tendency to attempt to follow set formulas for spiritual formation. Or maybe because it seems as though Christ would have one image to which we must all conform. But instead, “We become compassionate persons in an infinite variety of models. We love and serve like Jesus in unique ways” (pg. 34).

Claim 2: God does not force that process of transformation upon us. This is one of those things that we’ve all heard is true, and Mulholland simply reiterates it. It’s also something I often wish weren’t true. I wish God would knock the fleshly me out of the way and just fix me up the way I ought to be. But instead, He asks us to surrender to Him, calling us to join Him in partnership with His work in our lives. This is part of the individuality thing. God is not trying to make all of us into cookie cutter versions of Himself. Instead, He takes individual people through a process, based partly on their willingness to offer “a consecration, a release of ourselves to God at each point of our unlikeness to Christ” (pg. 38).

Question 1: What are the ways in which I am practically carrying out the transformation of Christ in my life? I am to be looking more like Him in my relationships with others, as Mulholland said (pg. 42). It’s so much easier to focus on my inner self and to simply hold onto everything I’m learning and experiencing. But that’s not why it has been entrusted to me! I am to carry it further out to others – how am I to measure and practice that without it becoming a rote, legalistic practice? Well, that’s partly dependent on whether or not I am allowing God’s love to fill and overflow from my life. Because when I am truly participating in Christ’s love, I won’t be able to help but share it with others.

Insight 1: God picks the places of our life that our unlike Christ to work on (pg. 37) and furthermore, these parts of us are not some sort of parasite that must simply be plucked off the surface…they are a deeply embedded part of who we are (pg. 38). Both of these things make perfect sense – it’s just that we don’t typically think of it that way, probably because it’s prone to be discouraging. We don’t like that God picks our worst places to be most heavily at work. This is probably in part because we want to be able to think we are doing a pretty fair job of it on our own, with just a touch of helpfulness now and then. But the fact is that the problem is far too deeply engrained within us for us to ever be able to root out the problem on our own. Taking up our cross requires death because we must daily die to ourselves in order to become more like Christ (pg. 38).

Insight 2: God doesn’t just call us to some theoretical learning about being like Christ. He calls us to live it out through the practice of loving other people (pg. 43). I think this would definitely be a potential weakness of the monastic movement. By being so cut off from all the other people in the world, they can be acting in a very selfish manner. They are entirely focused on themselves and being changed inside. But if that is never carried out in the real world by interacting with those who need to receive God’s love, it is purposeless. God does not desire a relationship with us merely so that we attain some sort of perfection, but so that we can bring Him glory by living out His love in relationship with others!


Sunday, January 20, 2013

Jan. 16 CQI - Methods of spiritual formation (Mul. Prologue-Ch. 2)

Claim 1: Mulholland is already making me uncomfortable even before I get to the first chapter. Not because I don’t agree with what he is saying, but because I can see the truth of it—Truth that would be easier to ignore. In the prologue and later in chapter 2, Mulholland points out that we as humans like to be the ones in charge of our lives, including our spiritual formation. We see it as a “static possession,” attainable by “the acquisition of information techniques” (pg. 12). We seek to control everything about it – when we can “set the limits on its pace and its direction” we don’t mind it too much – but being willing to hand that control completely over to God is outside of our comfort zone (pg. 26). As Mulholland says, “The hidden premise behind all of this is the unquestioned assumption that we alone are in control of our spirituality” (pg. 12). Even though my head knows to instantly fire back “that’s not true!” it is still how I have tended to live my life.

Claim 2: Later, Mulholland makes another point that I hadn’t necessarily thought much about before. He points out that “the process of spiritual shaping is a primal reality of human existence” (pg. 23). That means that even unbelievers are practicing spiritual formation. This makes sense, but it’s just not something we think about much. We always view spiritual formation as moving toward God, and something Christians do. But Mulholland’s right – there’s the other side of it. As Christ said, “Whoever is not with Me is against Me” (Matt. 12:30). There is no middle ground of spirituality. We’re going forward or backward on the road of life.

Question 1: In chapter 1, Mulholland discusses the fact that God often works in ways we cannot see – that even what we believe are the dry times of our lives are actually fields of preparation for a spiritual “quantum leap,” that God’s grace is steadily performing His will within us (pg. 22). I can certainly see evidence of that in my life. During high school and the first three semesters of college, my relationship with God felt very dry and dark. In the past two years, however, He has blessed me with the ability to see and feel Him at work in me. But the question I thought of while reading this section was not a very fun one. Am I willing to go through another dry spell if that is part of God’s plan for me? I’ve been in a honeymoon stage for a long time—not constant of course, but underlying none the less. It feels as though I could never go back to that dark place. But what if that’s what God required at some point to continue His sanctifying process in my life? Would I accept that?

Question 2: The other similar question I had related to Mulholland’s discussion of Jesus’ temptation, and how our culture places so much value on what we do rather than the “quality of our being” (pg. 28). As a senior, I’m almost constantly bombarded with that horrid question, “So what are you going to do when you graduate?” God’s been bringing me on a journey to where I am ok with not knowing right now. I do know that I belong to Him and that He’ll guide me. I guess the question is just more of a prayer. Will I continue to be willing to accept the fact that what God has for me may look completely different than what the world sees as success? I have often focused on what I do as the measure for how I feel about myself. How can I make choices which put my personal primary emphasis back on who Christ is making me to be instead?

Insight 1: Back in chapter 1, Mulholland discussed the way that people practically speaking try to be in charge of their own spirituality. He talked about trying to “create the atmosphere for the ‘right’ spiritual moment” (pg. 20) or trying to look back to a growth spurt and “reproduce the setting” to repeat the feeling (pg. 21). Over the past couple of years I’ve come to dislike “mountain top experiences,” I think for a similar reason. While I always appreciate the mountaintop when I’m there, it’s always more of an emptiness when it ends – a letdown. Life can’t be made of all high points. We can’t always be in a spiritual euphoria. Like Moses, we have to come down off of the mountain top. And then, if that amazing experience is going to actually mean anything, we have to make choices in our everyday life which are consistent with the lessons we learned up higher. It’s not easy…

"Here I Am" - A Spiritual Biography

In high school, I would have told you that in some senses I’ve always been a Christian. I have spent most of my life in an almost exclusively Christian environment. It took me some time, however, before I began to take personal ownership of my faith, allowing God be at work in my life instead of me making my life perfect for God. Due to my personality and the way I grew up, my early spirituality was based a lot on theological knowledge and not much on religious experience.

One night in February of 2000 (age 9.5), our family read a devotional based on 1 Peter 2:24, “He Himself bore our sins in His body on the tree.” I recognized for the first time the weight of my sin and the great cost of Christ’s redemption. I started crying. I had previously prayed a prayer of repentance, as many young Christian kids do (I don’t remember it), but that night my dad read Acts 2:38 to me. In that moment, I felt a call to respond by being baptized, which I did a couple months later.

In 2002, my life changed (age 12). Our family decided to teach at a Chinese university for a year. I loved our time in China. While there, I witnessed the other foreign teachers worshipping and experiencing God in a different way than I had ever known. Somehow, God became more real to me there, and I learned experientially that He wanted to be involved in our lives.

In September 2003 (age 13), we were starting to get settled back into our normal lives – new job, new house. But within a month that fairytale blew up in a complex explosion that is still painful to me. Long story short, there was an ugly church split. My dad also lost his job, and was severely under-employed for two years. I ended up holding onto bitterness and anger toward Dad and God.

Last night, as I was thinking about that period of my life, I realized I expected God to fix it all. I believed He could, and would. When things got worse instead of better, I unconsciously began to doubt and question God’s goodness, I guess. I had never before seen sin and evil so wreck a community of believers. I don’t know exactly how to explain the correlation, but it created some sort of break down in my relationship with God. That, combined with the need I’ve felt all my life to earn love and favor by making sure I meet people's expectations, developed in me a twisted picture of spirituality.

I had tons of head knowledge about God, and from the outside I looked like a really good Christian kid. But inside, I was a mess. I trusted no one, no one felt safe. I wasn’t willing to admit the brokenness inside. There were numerous nights when I would cry in my room, not understanding why I felt the way I did. I was so hungry for a relationship with God, like I had tasted in China. But I could never feel Him – He seemed distant and I knew that couldn’t be His fault, so it must be because of sin in my life. I just wanted to die and be done with having to fight to have a right relationship with Him. That is the overarching memory of my spiritual journey between 2003 and 2009 – pain and unfulfilled hunger.

Coming to JBU (August 2009) was the best thing that ever happened to me. God knew exactly where I needed to be for Him to do His work in my life. Through a variety of new worship experiences, He started breaking outside of the careful boxes I had packed Him into. Then on January 25, 2011, He changed everything. By His grace alone, I finally came to truly know that I didn’t need to earn His approval because He gave it freely as a gift. He revealed His overwhelming love, and He reoriented my whole life.

Since that day two years ago, there have still been plenty of ups and downs. But always underlying has been a deeper, more real knowledge God accepts me. That He loves me no matter what. That His call is to trust, not to understand; to accept grace, not to work to deserve it. And though my spiritual life is still very much a journey, I now know that He is at work and that He will not leave me alone. He is faithful, and He works in His time and His ways. Praise be to His name, Amen.

{To read more about my more recent spiritual learning, start here and read more at my spiritual blog.}

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Jan. 14 CQI - Personality's role in spirituality (Mul. ch. 5-6)


Claim 1: Mulholland argues (p. 50) that individual Christians are unable to achieve holistic spiritual health on their own, apart from active participation in the corporate body of Christ. This makes perfect sense to me logically, but as a super strong introvert, I tend to attempt just that – to look for everything I need within myself rather than being willing to rely on the (sometimes undependable) help of others. If I open myself up to relying on others, I am no longer in complete control (oh, there comes the judgment part!! [see "question 1" below]), and that is not comfortable for me.

Claim 2: People tend to begin viewing their personal preferences as the best or only way of going about things (p. 55; ch. 6). This is definitely true of me…. I think it is partly because people like me don’t want to admit our own weaknesses. If we recognize the value in other ways of doing things, it could potentially open the door to needing to be willing to be flexible in how we typically act and make choices. And that’s not always fun! Which leads right into the whole shadow thing he talks about.

Question 1: How much of me is the way it is because of how I was raised? Who am I really? (p. 62) I know I’m a super strong “I” and a strong “J,” but it is much harder for me to figure out if I’m an N/S or an F/T. I can see myself going both ways on both of them, and from some of the reading we did in this chapter I would keep flip flopping on what I think my natural self likes most. It’s hard to figure out how much of the way I practically approach these two is nature vs. nurture. (see below for more on this)

Insight 1: From the description on pg. 52, I had put myself down as an F because of the “need to please others” bit, even though my test results from the night before had put me as a T. But then I got to pg. 58, and his description of thinking people’s tendency to be “more ‘theological,’ more analytical and structural in their spirituality” fit me….well…to a “T.” As I’m sure I’ll talk about in my “Here I am” paper for Wednesday, my relationship with God in high school was definitely “slight[ing] the affective, emotional aspects of [my] relationship with God,” even though I felt a deep need and hunger for that. It’s like I was missing something and didn’t know how to fill the void I felt (see also pg. 60).

Insight 2: The “disintegration” of my one-sided spirituality between my thinking and feeling tendencies definitely led to some stagnation (pg. 63), as mentioned above. I was a super good kid – I memorized multiple whole books of the Bible for Bible Quizzing, knew a lot of the “right answers” about theology, read my Bible cover to cover when I was 11-12 years old, etc. But it was all a façade – It covered up a heart that was so hungry for a real relationship. I was dying of starvation for the feelings of love. I knew with my head that God loved me. The thinking side of me had that box clearly checked off. But I guess I was trying to sweep the feeling cravings under the rug – like I didn’t think that’s what a relationship with God was supposed to/could include. Until that day when God in His GRACE unexplainedly reached down and began pouring out His love into my life – but you’ll have to wait until Wednesday to read more about that.  :D
Anyway, going back up to the question I had earlier….I think a big part of this whole issue was that I was raised in a very conservative family that was not at all comfortable with the more charismatic practices of Christianity. The active, personal experience of God’s love and presence was mostly lacking from my life before I came to college. I think that’s because the kind of experiences I’ve had since are kind of scary to people who are trying to fit God into a system of boxes. It doesn’t feel safe to have emotional, affective experiences. And so we avoided them. There are still times I’m not sure what to do with certain things about charismatic practices. But I just keep praying to God that He would guide me into what is true of HIM – that my spirituality would not try to keep Him in some artificial box, but also that I would not start practicing in ways that are not true to His character. Sometimes all I can do is trust Him to be faithful to not allow a heart yearning for Him to go astray.

Capstone Seminar in Christian Life


I've never kept this blog as updated as I intended to (that's the story of the life of all my poor blogs...). But now that I'm in my last semester, I think I have a class in which I actually care deeply enough about what it is that I'm writing to post it so others can read it and perhaps be helped or blessed.

At John Brown University, "Capstone Seminar in Christian Life" is a senior-level course which all students are required to take. It is the bookend at the end of our college experience which is supposed to prepare us to be launched into the world.

I got credit for it by taking an honors course which integrates two upper division core requirements into one, two-semester class. But it naturally wasn't exactly the same. Then last fall I got to know Dr. Burch a little bit through working in the Biblical Studies Division (I also heard him speak at the student retreat in September), and I really wanted to take a class with him. It's hard to explain why - he just comes across as a very caring, very intelligent, but very down-to-earth guy. 

This semester he is teaching Capstone, and I had a few extra hours lying around in my last semester, so I decided to audit the class. Last Wednesday we had our first day, and I have never been more excited about a class in my life. Dr. Burch is going to be providing an opportunity for us to carefully and intentionally examine our spiritual lives and the journey we have been on and to look toward where we want/need to go. He's going to be having us do a lot of reflection, and I love that kind of stuff.

Anyhow, nearly every class period we will be turning in what he calls CQI's (Claims, Questions, Insights) over the reading for that day. Our reading will primarily come from Invitation to a Journey: A Road Map for Spiritual Formation by Robert Mulholland. And I am hoping/planning to post those on here. We'll see how it goes :)