In Matthew 13:44-46 Jesus shares twin word pictures to describe the value of the Kingdom of God (Kingdom of Heaven). We might call these particular parables “value images” as Jesus tells us that living “a kingdom of God way of life” is like a tenet farmer finding a treasure hidden in a field, or a merchant discovering a pearl of great price. In each situation the finder of these objects is so overtaken by them that he sells all he owns in order to have them. It’s this “all in” behavior that gives me pause with the parables, causing me to ask, “What do we so value in life that makes us willing to cash in everything else?” Continue reading
Category Archives: Christian Faith
What Do You Value?
Filed under Christian Faith, Ministry, Uncategorized
Change
This week at First Baptist – Columbus, IN we will be taking up the topic of change in a couple of ways. Our “Men of Faith” bible study group begins a new study titled “New Wineskins: Faith’s Great Paradigm Shifts”. This is a study based on some of the biggest changes recorded in the Bible and how persons responded to them. As our group discusses the biblical paradigm shifts we will also talk about change elements common to life today. (Men of Faith meets on Fridays at 6:15 a.m. in Columbus, IN at the Four Seasons Retirement Community dining room.)
Then, this coming Sunday I’ll be preaching on the topic “The Cost of Change” based on Joshua 5. This is a text about God’s people emerging from a liminal period (the Exodus wandering) to a more settled state in preparing to inhabit the Promised Land. The chapter is filled with change issues and costs, and yet God, through Joshua, equips the people to meet the change in a hopeful manner. Continue reading
Filed under Christian Faith, Ministry, Uncategorized
On Being Rooted
Today on my Monday ride (Monday’s being a day off when I try and take a longer cycling ride) I enjoyed seeing the beauty of some of Bartholomew County’s farmland in full summer season. The corn is growing and beans likewise. Most of the wheat has been cut and straw baled, with a couple of double crop bean fields noticed. One farmer was disking up a field that was yielding the sweet smell of fresh earth as I rode past – life in the country!
With such a firsthand view of these scenes my mind kept falling back to the importance of being grounded or rooted in life and faith. I’m a country boy at heart, raised to appreciate the land and the resources it provides. I’ve also come to understand there is a spirituality of land and place that God often uses to get our attention and draw us close. Continue reading
Filed under Christian Faith, Cycling, Spiritual Formation, Uncategorized
Community
Last Sunday as we gathered for worship at First Baptist Church – Columbus I noted at least nine persons in our midst who’d not been able to attend in some time. These individuals, couples and households, each have overcome something (either that very day, or over the past days, weeks or months) that kept them from worship with our faith community. It may have been bereavement (the difficulty of going to worship for the first time as a widowed person), or an ongoing illness or health struggle (that makes mornings especially difficult), or a “come back” from a life threatening scenario. For the purpose of this post the specifics of what these persons are dealing with is secondary to the fact that they were able to come – seeking to be in community with fellow Christ followers for worship on a Sunday morning. I know that my spirit was lifted just seeing their individual and collective faces amidst the congregation.
Community matters – it makes a difference – it is important. But community is a largely undervalued aspect of the Christ-following experience in middle class America. Continue reading
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When Life Goes Pop . . .
. . . because someday it will!
It was bound to happen sometime. I’ve had my new road bike a month or so and been out on about a dozen rides. I saw the troublesome looking rock as I rode through the mud and debris that was trailing out from the construction site, but too late. I could not avoid it, and sure enough, pop! There went the back tire tube. That was deflating. 
But that’s life, isn’t it? Live long enough and compile enough life experience and some time some place things are going to go “pop!” It’s not a matter of if, but when. It may be nothing more than an inner tube, but it may be something way more . . that lab report you’ve been waiting on; that call at 2 a.m. (nothing good ever happens that time of day); that “pop!” to your smooth ride through life’s current chapter. What do you do when life goes pop? Continue reading
Filed under Christian Faith, Cycling