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Thursday, January 21, 2010

How's Your Inner Life?

for The Hanford Sentinel

Our culture is focused on all things external. It is all about what you look like, what you are doing and what you own. It asks questions like, "Are you beautiful? Are you thin? How big is your paycheck? and, by the way, What do you drive?"

The people that we read about in magazines and watch on television are the beautiful ones who are often ridiculously wealthy and morally bankrupt. We are entertained by their antics—we want to know who is sleeping with who this month, who's the latest to drunkenly crash their Mercedes into a telephone pole and how much money was spent on that lavish new mansion, Italian sports car or over-the-top party.

At one moment we marvel at their lack of common sense, and the next we applaud their commitment to the latest charity fad. And rather then stop and ask ourselves whether this overemphasis on all things shallow and superficial is problematic, we simply excuse our worship at the altar of the cult of personality with a glib, "It's just entertainment."

And it is entertainment. It is packaged in glossy magazines with racy covers, in highly edited and stylized pop culture news programs and in continuously updated websites the likes of TMZ, Popeater and Perezhilton. I have nothing against entertainment, but I think we would be wise to note that a culture's forms of entertainment are indicative of the state of its inner life and potentially of its future (think Rome and the Coliseum).

The problem with our culture's focus on the superficial is that it ignores the importance of the inner life. You might be the most beautiful person in the world (and have the People magazine article to prove it) but that says nothing about whether or not you are a good person. A good person is one who has developed virtues like patience, self-control, forgiveness and servanthood. Rare are the magazine covers given to people who have developed these qualities.

Jesus said "Do not fear those who kill the body but are unable to kill the soul; but rather fear Him who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell." He said this to underline that the body is not the most important thing in life. Chiseled abs are not the key to heaven's gates. It is the soul we should be the most concerned about.

Your soul is the only thing you get to take with you when you die. You will carry with you what you have allowed your soul to become. Will your soul be full of anxiety or peace? Will it be fearful or faith-filled? Will it be bitter and condemning or contented and forgiving? You get to decide the kind of soul you have.

The challenge is that developing your soul takes work. A good soul does not happen by accident. You do not develop a healthy soul by passively consuming whatever entertainment comes easily to hand. You have to cooperate with Father God and choose to be loving, be patient and be content.

I must warn you, choosing to do these things means going against the current of our culture. It will not be easy. But it will be well worth it.

This weekend, the pastors of Kings County would love to encourage you to make the right decisions and develop your inner life. Why don't you swim against the current and start paying attention to your soul?

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

New Year Course Correction

For The Hanford Sentinel

On days when it works, technology is wonderful. I carry in my pocket a phone that not only can place a call to anyone, anywhere in the world, but it can surf the internet, give me a list of the lunch options within a mile radius of where I stand and fill my ears with the sweet sounds of whatever music best fits my mood. My favorite feature is the GPS. If I want to know how to get from where I am to where I need to go, I have a virtual guide that leads me step by step.

It is wonderful to have such clear guidance. The GPS does all the work for me. It knows where I am at all times. I simply sit back and obey what it commands. Of course, if my battery goes dead, my life is held hostage and my location suddenly disappears from the virtual map. I am powerless before this abject electronic terrorism.

And while GPS is a wonderful tool for our daily point-to-point travels, it is of little use in the journey of life. We cannot type in our desired destination and have a nice female voice whisper in our ear, "Turn right in 300 yards." Life's journey is, at least from our perspective, not quite so precise.

Much like the captain of a ship 200 years ago, we chart a course, select a heading and venture out into the open waters of daily life. A few tools were essential for the ocean journey. For the ship's captain, these tools were a chart demonstrating the major landmarks, a leadline to evaluate the depth of the water, a magnetic compass to indicate general direction, and a sextant to determine the ship's latitude (when a clear sighting of the sun was available). Knowing exactly where you were in your journey was next to impossible, but it was also not essential. The most important thing was to be sure that you were moving in the right direction!

Our tools are different in their makeup but similar in their function. Our chart is God's Word that gives us the landmarks of life. Our leadline is our close relationships that help us know when we are in danger of running aground. Our compass is the Holy Spirit who guides us in all truth and keeps us moving in the right direction. And our sextant is the regular evaluation we must do to determine the "position" of our lives. We do so by getting our eyes on the Father and allowing Him to speak to us about where we are and where we need to go from here.

This is not an exact science, this is life. We often make the mistake of overestimating the importance of today and underestimating the importance of a month or a year. We get focused on "this moment" when we need to remember that God is working on the big picture. We anxiously worry and wonder why we can't hear God tell us what the exact next step is, when He really is more interested in the direction we are going over a long period of time.

So as we move into the new year, let me encourage you to pause for journey evaluation and course correction. Get your eyes on the Father and ask Him what He thinks about the direction of your life. Take a look at your chart and make sure that you are heading for the right landmarks and that you are not going to run aground and make a shipwreck of your life.

One of the best ways to get perspective on your life is to get in God's house and into His presence. The pastors of Kings County would love to help you chart His course in your life. Don't wait too long to do it though, because you will hit stormy waters and will need to know you are headed in the right direction!

Friday, January 8, 2010

How to Leave Your Church

Tim Stevens over at Leading Smart has a great blog entry on how to leave your church. I've often wondered why people don't feel any obligation to talk to the pastor or someone in leadership before bidding adieu.

Check it out.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Mossy Foot Christmas Letter

"When the boy pulled up his pant leg, I gasped, shocked by the horrific sight of a gaping hole extending about six inches in length and two inches in width, fully exposing his dead, broken leg bone. The stench was nauseating. A swarm of flies immediately descended on the oozing, infected wound."

Continue reading the rest of the Christmas letter from the Mossy Foot project.

WARNING: You might be challenged to look at your life a little differently.

Visit Mossy Foot Project here.