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Talbot Davis

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Top Five Tuesday — Top Five “Surprises” From New People At Good Shepherd
February 11, 2014 at 2:00 am 0
On Sunday night, I wrapped up Next Steps, a four week membership exploration class at Good Shepherd.

It was a large group of people -- attendance hovered around 50 people or so -- who came from a variety of religious and non-religious backgrounds.

At various points in the class, we discussed what about our church surprised them . . . meaning, in what ways do we as a congregation act contrary to the expectations of denomination, architecture, and location?  I love jotting the surprises down, and here are the top five from the last four weeks:

1.  You baptize by putting people all the way under!  We'd been going to Methodist churches for 40 years and had never seen that happen before.  Well . . . it is sort of biblical.



2.  When I walked in the first time, I was determined not to like it.  We aim to please!

3.  The first time I saw you lift up the bible and explain that it is a library and not a book, I knew this was the church for me.  The closest thing we have to a "weekly ritual" at Good Shepherd.  I pray it is a weekly theological statement of who we are and what we are about.

4.  You all acknowledge that there are skeptics in the congregation.  We honestly, genuinely believe there is no better place skeptics and cynics could spend some time on Sunday morning.

5.  I'd never been to a church with so many different kinds of people beforeTremendous!  Because you better get used to it . . . according to Revelation 7:9, that's what we'll be doing and who we'll be doing it with for all of eternity:


After this I looked, and there before me was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people and language, standing before the throne and before the Lamb. They were wearing white robes and were holding palm branches in their hands.
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Anatomy Of A Sermon
February 10, 2014 at 2:00 am 0
As some of you know, I've been looking forward to the launch of The Shadow Of A Doubt for a long time.  And I had special anticipation for the first message in the series, "Believe It And Not." 

I loved the story in question -- Mark 9:14-27.  I believe it contains one of the greatest admissions in Scripture:  I believe, Lord, help my unbelief!  I felt good about my interpretive work. 

And then, just when I couldn't be more excited, a friend from church named David Loy answered the poll question (you'll see that below) by writing a spoken word poem based on that story from Mark.  He didn't know I was using that passage for the sermon.

So of course, David ended up concluding the message by performing his poem from our platform while the band surrounded him with song.

Here's the rough transcript of the message followed by the text of the poem.

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I did a little experiment in getting ready for this series: I took an online poll. In that poll, I asked people what kind of doubts their faith brought up.  For those people who are Xns and those who are not Xns, I asked what doubts did they harbor about God, Jesus, the bible, faith, themselves.  I knew that I would get a lot of responses and I did.  Here’s some of what people wrote in:

Whenever a young life is taken, or stolen, especially in a violent manner.  I always ask Why? . . . if everything on earth belongs to God, including the children, why does he allow those things to happen?
I get to the point where I feel helpless . . . there are so many poor and suffering people . . . and I feel like we aren’t making a dent.
I doubted my faith and his love when I lost my best friend to cancer.
Wonder why some babies are born with deficiencies when they haven’t had a chance yet & the mother did all the right things during pregnancy.
Sometimes when prayer goes unanswered or the outcome is bad I doubt if praying makes a difference.
I don’t think there’s room on Facebook for all mine . . .

          And the ones that came in PRIVATELY were even more impactful and poignant.

            But the reason I did that survey, the reason I’m doing this series, is that I have them too. Doubts.  I live in doubt’s shadow. Is God real or am I perpetuating some kind of heavenly pyramid scheme on the poor people here?  And if he’s real, is he real for me?  If I can struggle to believe that he exists and all those smart atheists are wrong, what’s it like to believe that he exists for me?  Or: what happens to the souls of people who’ve never heard of Jesus?  Why did blood have to be shed for sins to be forgiven? What do we do with the reality of same sex attracted people and what the bible says about it? What about dinosaurs & Genesis?  Why did he allow acne, male pattern baldness, and HALITOSIS?  And I bet I’m not the only one who has ever considered these and other issues and through it all, in it all, you’ve wondered if it wouldn’t just be easier to stop believing (no matter what Journey sang).  Yeah, sometimes the distance between the kind of faith & confidence we have and the kind we wish we had is so great, has such a gap.  And in that gap, the shadow of doubt makes its home.

            Which is so much where this father we’re going to look at from Mark 9 makes his home.  This is one of my favorite stories in with one of the greatest lines in the whole library.  Look at how it starts in 9:14-15:
14 When they came to the other disciples, they saw a large crowd around them and the teachers of the law arguing with them. 15 As soon as all the people saw Jesus, they were overwhelmed with wonder and ran to greet him.
Who is “they” here?  Jesus, Peter, James, and John.  Where have they been?  Up on a mountain where Jesus was, as church people say, transfigured.  He turned inside out, revealed the brilliant, blinding light residing inside him, and through a series of events up there demonstrates to the awestruck PJJ that he is not godly; he is God.  And so they descend from that literal mountaintop experience & it’s apparent from the “overwhelmed with wonder” that some of that radiant glory is still resting on him.  But circle back to 9:14; what does he find his followers doing?  Arguing.  So while the A Team of PJJ went up on the mtn for the light show, the B Team (what else would you call the one that includes Judas?) stay back & get in a religious fight. About what?

            Look at 9:17-18 where a man, the dad we’re looking at today, jumps up & tells Jesus the source of the fight:
17 A man in the crowd answered, “Teacher, I brought you my son, who is possessed by a spirit that has robbed him of speech. 18 Whenever it seizes him, it throws him to the ground. He foams at the mouth, gnashes his teeth and becomes rigid. I asked your disciples to drive out the spirit, but they could not.”
Note all the violent verbs there: seizes, throws, foams, gnashes.  Mark knows what he is doing here; he is consciously setting up this incredible conflict between the forces of light & life & the force of darkness & death. The verbs clue us into it.  And the man’s son is the victim of the violence – it sounds to modern ears like epilepsy though Mk and the crowd attribute it to demonic powers.  Whatever, we KNOW it stems from a life-stealing force.
And for years, Dad has had a front row seat to his son’s trauma.  He has sat & watched helplessly as seizure after seizure has ripped at the little boy.  Violent, body crushing, soul quenching seizures.  That’s where dad’s been living for a long time.  Some of you know a least a little bit of what that’s like.  You have felt the sheer powerlessness of watching a child suffer when there’s nothing you can do to prevent it.  Or you’ve seen a spouse or a parent waste slowly but surely away.  It’s a place you’ve lived.  And this dad in Mark 9, in an act of great faith, brings his son to Jesus for healing. Except when he arrives, where’s Jesus?  On the mountain with the A team.  And so the B team attempts to heal the boy . . . with B team results. 

That’s when Jesus, in one of his harshest statements anywhere in the gospels, gives this rebuke:
19 “You unbelieving generation,” Jesus replied, “how long shall I stay with you? How long shall I put up with you? Bring the boy to me.”
His frustration there is both with his disciples and with the simple fact that his time left on earth is limited and it’s an urgent task to get everyone up to speed on who he is and what he is about.  So look at 9:20:
20 So they brought him. When the spirit saw Jesus, it immediately threw the boy into a convulsion. He fell to the ground and rolled around, foaming at the mouth.
Violent verbs all over again: threw, fell, rolled, foamed, convulsing.  All that serves to heighten the conflict between the kingdoms; there is a battle raging between the Life Giver and the life stealer, and poor dad is stuck in the middle of the war zone.  These words are not by accident!  They elevate the contest between the radiant and the repugnant.  And Jesus asks: “how long?” and the answer is so sad: “From childhood.”  Father & son have been living for years at Ground Zero!  And again, some of you know what that’s like. You’ve watched children suffer or at the other end of life you’ve been there when parents slowly, slowly slid away and even if it wasn’t painful, it was traumatic.  And get this: whether it’s a violent battleground or a more subtle one, these are the arenas where doubt and its shadows so easily dwell.  And you can sit right there with it.  If God is, why am I?  Or if God is GOOD, why are we?  It’s  a place where some of you are living now & a lot of you have lived before.

Then, in 9:22, dad meekly asks Jesus to help “if” he can:
22 “It has often thrown him into fire or water to kill him. But if you can do anything, take pity on us and help us.”
And that sets Jesus off again to the point that what he says next appears to put a lot of power & authority in dad’s hands:
23 “‘If you can’?” said Jesus. “Everything is possible for one who believes.”
Now: you take that verse out of context and it’s like Jesus is saying “believe harder, pray longer, dig deeper and all your dreams will come true!  Your level of belief determines my level of involvement!”  Except that’s not how the story works in context. 
Because here’s 9:24, the heart of it all, the center of the story & this message:
24 Immediately the boy’s father exclaimed, “I do believe; help me overcome my unbelief!”
I love it!  I have faith and no faith. I trust and I don’t. I’m with Jesus and I’m not.  All at the same time!  I’m right handed and I’m left handed.  I’m a D and an R. Red state & blue state.  Tea Party & progressive.  Methodist & Baptist.  ALL AT THE SAME TIME.  Ambivalent, ambiguous, real.  Double minded and so very human.  So very me.  Love it, love it, love it.
Remember WHERE dad is.  In the vortex of a battle between life giver and life stealer and life stealer is a lot more obvious in the moment. I honestly think dad has post-demonic stress syndrome.  I believe in Jesus until I don’t anymore.  It’s all a question of locale.  I know he is good; I just don’t know he’s good to me. I believe in God; I disbelieve in me.  You’re the same way.  You know this dad. You’ve been this dad. Believe. And not.

            Which is why Jesus’ response here is such a big deal. Now: he has just saidin 9:23 that you gotta believe to get everything, right?  So this believing and not dad shouldn’t get anything, right? Except remember the scene: this is a battle for authority. Radiant vs. repugnant. Life giver vs. life stealer.  Jesus has to show who is the true authority.  So 9:25-27 he heals the boy:
25 When Jesus saw that a crowd was running to the scene, he rebuked the impure spirit. “You deaf and mute spirit,” he said, “I command you, come out of him and never enter him again.”
26 The spirit shrieked, convulsed him violently and came out. The boy looked so much like a corpse that many said, “He’s dead.” 27 But Jesus took him by the hand and lifted him to his feet, and he stood up.

 
Look at that 9:26 – they thought the boy was dead.  Why?  So Jesus could demonstrate he has authority over death!  So he could foreshadow the resurrection!  An appetizer for Easter! Mark’s no dummy!  Words matter!  And so the dad – who is us, remember – doesn’t get punished for his doubts, he gets blessed for his honesty about them.  That tells me:  if you are honest about where you are, Jesus is faithful to show who he is.

 See: dad here is like “I’m not going to pretend, not going to hide, not going to dress it up. I’m on the fence about you Jesus.  Just putting it out there.  I wish I believed more, but I’ve seen too much.  Can you handle it?”  And something in that resonates with Jesus.  He takes the morsel of uncertain faith and blesses it. It’s clear he prefers honest doubt over pretend faith.  His own followers – remember the fighting B teamers? – were doing a lot of pretending and not much truth telling.  That’s why dad here gets the blessing and his disciples get the talking to. 

            Listen: if you’ve never doubted, you’ve only half believed.  Your doubts are not your enemy.  Pretending is. Think about it: what’s the name of the chosen people?  Right! Israel.  And what does that name mean?  One who struggles with God.  The chosen ones are the wrestling ones!  The Lord loves the struggler and has no patience with the pretender.  He wants your honesty, your questions, your uncertainty.  He can handle all of it. He’d much rather you question him than ignore him.  I’m not recommending this doubt as a place to live permanently, but if you find yourself there from time to time, don’t be frightened.  Remember your salvation depends on the cross and not your feeling.  His declaration and not your emotion.  If you are honest about where you are, Jesus is faithful to show who he is.

            You know why I’m so OK with seasons of doubt?  Because no doubt ever diminished Jesus’ authority.  He didn’t need dad’s permission to heal the boy.  He healed the boy in spite of dad’s uncertainty.  Mark includes the story in his bio of Jesus and in doing so highlights dad’s uncertainty to elevate Jesus authority.  His sovereignty.  He really has that much authority over life.  Over death.  Over life after death.  Believe it. And not.

            So: can you? Will you?  Will you be as honest as the guy who said to me in a text message “I’m pretty disappointed with God right now?”  Because there is something in that raw honesty, that refusal to pretend, that stirs something up in Jesus.  It opens up the pathway for his authority to be known and made evident.  He’d much rather the ambidextrous of I believe, help my unbelief! to the fake I’m good even when you’re not.  It’s a new way to pray to him, a new level of honesty with him, but it’s a way we see people doing throughout the Psalms.  I love when people say to me, "Oh, you can't question God?"  I'm always like, "You ever read the bible?  Remember Israel? Strugglers with God?  Check it out:
Psalm 13:1-2
How long, Lord? Will you forget me forever?
    How long will you hide your face from me?
How long must I wrestle with my thoughts
    and day after day have sorrow in my heart?
    How long will my enemy triumph over me?
Psalm 88:13-14
But I cry to you for help, Lord;
    in the morning my prayer comes before you.
14 Why, Lord, do you reject me and hide your face from me?
Imagine what it would be like if we had a church full of people who were so close to God they could question him like that!  Who were willing to say, this is where I am right now. But I’m going to keep bringing, keep praying, even keep trusting … til you show me who you are.
 
David then took the stage and here's the poem he wrote & recited:




Inside out
He stood on the mount
Two sides of the same coin
Belief and doubt
In the valley below
Spinning and flipping
And thrashing about
The convulsions of the boy
Transfiguring in my mind
The father of the boy – is me!
And I am he at the same time
Oh if I could only believe
I say it with my tongue
And before it is out
I am tossed about
In my own self doubt
“Help me overcome my unbelief”
Before it turns again –
To grief
It’s not heads OR tails
I now understand
Its heads AND tails
That is part of the plan
To grow deeper in faith
By a doubting man
Not the actions of Him
But the reactions of me
Standing in the middle
Between doubt and belief
One side to fall
One side to stand
Getting stronger each time
I land on believe
 

CONTINUE READING ...
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The Shadow Of A Doubt Launch — Believe It And Not
February 7, 2014 at 2:00 am 0
I am really looking forward to this new series The Shadow Of A Doubt.

I like the series title.

I like the series graphics.

I like the way it follows up on Defining Moments.

I like the worship art that we have supporting the sermons.

I like the title of this week's sermon:  Believe It And Not.

I like the first Scripture of the series:  Mark 9:14-29.

And I like the series promo & sermon bumper.

The">http://vimeo.com/85835736">The Shadow Of A Doubt Promo
from GSUMChttp://vimeo.com/gsumc">GSUMC> on Vimeo.https://vimeo.com">Vimeo.>
Sunday.

8:30.  10.  11:30.

Bring your doubts and your friends with you.
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An Evening With A Dozen Teenagers
February 6, 2014 at 6:26 am 0
I spent a couple of hours last evening with a remarkable collection of teenagers.

They were part of our HalfWay House ministry, which meets at the Zoar Road Outreach Center each Wednesday night.

Under the expert leadership of Devin Tharp, the students opened Scripture, re-discovered their identity in Christ, and shared in small groups which of the passages best described them.  And they let me join in their reindeer games.

Then came the highlight of the evening in which Devin led us in an exercise of mutual encouragement.  It involved folding paper, writing notes, engaging other folks in the circle, and careful consideration of who we see others in the group "becoming." 

I'd never seen it done before, and I have to say it was one of the most spiritually moving evenings of my life.

I was able to write to one student that he will be "the next generation's James-Michael Smith," to another student that she would be one of the brightest lights for Jesus on planet earth, and to another that he is becoming "an overcomer for Christ."

And they wrote the same kinds of things to me.  Here's what it looked like at the end:


And then Devin concluded the evening by reading I Thessalonians 5:11 to us:

Therefore, encourage one another and build each other up, just as in fact you are doing.

We didn't have to study that verse because we had just lived it.


 
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From An Evangelical Church To An Evangelistic One
February 5, 2014 at 2:00 am 2
Good Shepherd has always been an evangelical church.

By that I mean that from its inception, the church has taken a strong stand on the core doctrines of Christianity's good news (that's literally was the evangel is -- good news) such as:

* the divinity of Christ,
* the inspiration of the Scriptures,
* the reality of heaven and hell, and
* the confidence that our risen Lord is also our returning King.

Though there is currently debate on exactly who gets to use the term evangelical, historically speaking, that commitment to ancient doctrine has distinguished churches like Good Shepherd from more progressive ones.

(Irony note before I move to the point of the blog: those churches who are the least progressive on doctrine (like us) are often the most progressive on worship style, while churches who have doctrinal flexibility often have a liturgical style that was born in a much earlier era.  That assertion is not true in every case, of course, but hits the mark more often than not.)

Anyway, so we are evangelical.

But we haven't always been evangelistic.  Meaning, we haven't always been adept at mobilizing, inspiring, and equipping the people of this church to share the good news of Jesus in loving, winsome ways with folks in their sphere of influence.

We have often thought "if we have the right programs, they'll come!" or "if it's just the right sermon series, all kinds of not-yet-believers will show up!" 

While standing on the content of the good news, we were many times hesitant to send out a gathering of good news bearers.

Yet something changed with the Defining Moments series we just completed.  We exhorted. We demonstrated.  We provided resources -- "movie" tickets AND the DVD itself.  We reminded people that they are the best good news sharers because they know their friends and neighbors as they really are.  I usually get the "filtered" or "religious" versions of people.

And the results of moving from evangelical to evangelistic?  Numerically shocking and deeply rewarding.

Maybe it was a defining moment for the life of this church as a whole.

Where we don't just take a stand on the good news.  We take a walk with it as well.
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