Archives For Lent

“Calling his disciples to him, Jesus said, ‘Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put more into the treasury than all the others. They all gave out of their wealth; but she, out of her poverty, put in everything‚Äîall she had to live on.’”

This morning, during a group lectio divina meditation on this Scripture, the line the Holy Spirit highlighted for me was this: “She, out of her poverty…”

As we sat with this passage, the question that came up for me was “Where is MY poverty?… And what would it look like to give out of it?”

I suspect that too often, in our context, we are overly-focused on giftedness. We want people to know their gifts (and ours) and, in a sense, to operate out of their “riches.” When it becomes clear that someone is good at something, or has resources in a particular area, we want them to begin serving, giving, worshiping God with that. And so the musician who plays well is encouraged to play for God. When it becomes clear someone can speak and communicate well, we encourage her to use that gift for God and for us. The good graphic designer is pressed into using that gift for the community, the natural leader to lead, the one with the gift of hospitality to be hospitable. And there’s nothing wrong with that. God has given those gifts to us for a reason.

But giving out of our gifts, out of the riches of what we do well and willingly is easy. Maybe too easy, in many ways.

In sitting with the question of where my poverty lays, I realized- we all have areas within ourselves of relative riches and relative poverty. And God wants it all. He created us, bought us at great cost to Himself, and desires that we give to Him our whole selves- that our worship of, devotion to, service of Him be wholistic.

But I wonder if, like us, God tends to smile at certain gifts more than others- not that He doesn’t take delight in all service, all worship honestly given, but…
In the same way we value the hand-made gift, the hand-written note, the thing that shows effort and thought, I wonder if God sees gifts given out of our riches a little differently than gifts given out of our poverty? The easy gift of operating out of our strength vs the harder gift of having to dig deep into our less-comfortable and less competent places.

For me I know I am very comfortable in certain areas of ministry and less so in others.

And as I sat today, meditating on this, I became convinced that God wants me to worship Him not simply out of my surplus- to give to Him what costs me little because I have so much of it, or am good at it. He does want those things- but perhaps what is more worshipful of Him, more forming for me, and ultimately maybe even better for others is when I take stock of the areas where I am poor and decide to give God everything I have there- to step out, and as an act of worship, do what is less comfortable, less likely to end with the positive ego-enhancing feedback we all so love.

God, this Lenten season, may I learn to value my poverty more than my giftedness- my weakness more than my strength. Because it is in my weakness that Your strength and grace are shown and bring me to maturity.

Asking too much of Google…

bob —  February 25, 2009

Some things, you just shouldn't need to google…

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Lent E-Cards

bob —  February 25, 2009

Nice…

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(ht brian goff)

Lent 2009

bob —  February 25, 2009

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Lots of people talking about Lent- what it means to them, struggling to get it to mean something to them, struggling with the whole idea of giving things up… Why give up bad things for Lent? If they're bad- give them up period. Why give up good things for Lent (like Facebook community, etc)- if they are good, why give them up? 

While I have no inclination to pretend expertise here, let me just tell you how I approach Lent, and hope it's helpful for you.

I'm someone who is prone to unthinking attachment. 

I jump onto and into things without doing much "counting the cost." Start watching a new show? Cool. Dive into Facebook? Straight ahead. Get a phone with 24-7 access to email, internet, IMs and texts? YES! I subscribe, indulge, sign up and sign on without much intentionality or forethought. 

And that gets me in trouble. 

Because while I would love to do a million things well, I just can't. And my family and ministry as well as my own soul and its care are what suffers when I say "yes, yes, yes…" and never say no. 

So what is Lent about for me? 

Learning to say no. It's about detaching from many of the things I have attached to unthinkingly, not because they aren't valuable or are necessarily bad for me, but so that I can look at my life, assess what my real priorities are and begin, when this period is over, to reattach to certain things more thoughtfully. And perhaps, leave some things behind that I'm probably better off without. 

Lent is about repentance (changing your mind). I guess I really don't NEED a carmel macchiotto a day, do I? I guess I can't follow 6-10 TV shows- maybe only 2-3. I guess this money would be better off going to the poor, and that time better off going to my family…

At a certain point during the next month (I'm doing some graduated fasting for Lent), I'll even unplug from Facebook and Twitter… why? Why unplug from community

Because I'm recognizing that community always carries a cost and I want to *know* what it is with social media. Am I so connected to old high school friends and internet e-friends that I'm missing out on the relationships right next to me- friends, relatives, my kids etc? How much of my relational bandwidth is going to social media? Do I talk less to my wife because I talk so much to you? I won't really know unless I take a step back and live without it a bit… 

I used to read books. I used to read a lot of books. I don't do that much anymore. Why? Well, before blogs, email, the Drudge Report, Facebook, Twitter, Hulu and the rest, I think I had a lot more time. 

What would it be like to have that time again? What good could I do?

I really, really want to know. 

"I expect to pass through this world but once. Any good thing, therefore, that I can do or any kindness I can show to any fellow human being let me do it now. Let me not defer nor neglect it, for I shall not pass this way again."

Stephen Grellet, 1773-1855, Quaker Minister