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Talbot Davis

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When A Gorgeous Song Highlights Glorious Theology
October 2, 2013 at 5:58 am 0
I spoke last night at CharlotteONE, a city-wide gathering of 20s and 30s who meet every Tuesday night in the sanctuary of the First United Methodist Church.

My presentation highlighted what Good Shepherd has done through the years to rescue and restore victims of international and domestic sex trafficking (for examples, check here and here), and was part of a evening-wide focus on the subject of slavery, freedom, and justice.

Yet the closing song -- and one line in particular from it -- was the standout moment for me.  We together sang a new-to-me Hillsong tune called Only Jesus that is a poignant mix of passion, beauty, and truth.  Here it is:


But one line from Only Jesus stopped me in my tracks, brought me to my knees, and filled me with tears . . . because singing theology is much more powerful than merely reading it:

You stand alone; I stand amazed.

And I realized:  that's the story of the Transfiguration!  

I'll show you what I mean.  In the Transfiguration scene (Matthew 17:1-9), Jesus takes Peter, James, and John to a mountaintop and promptly turns himself inside out.  The three get to see his glory in all its brilliant, blinding light.  

And then Moses and Elijah appear on the scene, talking with Jesus. That's when Peter decides he'd like to make this particular moutaintop experience a permanent one, and asks Jesus if he can put up shelters for the one Messiah and the two long-dead Israelite heroes.  Jesus never answers the question.

Instead, a voice declaring the Father's pleasure in the Son comes from heaven, and the scene abruptly closes with Jesus giving instructions to Peter, James, and John to keep silent about the entire incident.

And much scholarly effort has gone into understanding the role of Moses and Elijah in the story. Why did they appear?  To give Hebrew endorsement to Jesus?  To give a foreshadow of the resurrection?  To fulfill prophecy about the Christ?

I believe that while all of those suggestions may contain hints of the truth, none of them are the real reason for the appearance of Moses and Elijah in the Transfiguration scene.

The real reason they appear . . . is so they could disappear.  Look how the scene closes:

"When they (Peter, James, and John) looked up, they saw no one but Jesus.

Meaning, Moses and Elijah have entered the stage so they could exit the stage so that Jesus could have center stage.  Alone.

He stands alone; we stand amazed.

Jesus' position on that mountain -- alone -- served to remind Peter, James, and John that Jesus was not simply another in a line of Hebrew prophets.  He wasn't merely a great man.  He wasn't godly in the same sense as Elijah and Moses.

See, Jesus isn't godlyHe is God.

That's why he stands alone on the mountain in Matthew 17.  That's why he reigns above all pretenders to his throne today.  It took a new song to bring it home to me more powerfully than ever.

He stands alone.  We stand amazed.

So sing on.
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Top Five Tuesday — Top Five Phrases That Don’t Mean What They Sound Like They Mean . . .
October 1, 2013 at 1:00 am 3
As you might imagine, in my line of work I end up having a lot of conversations with people.

Some in social gatherings, others in the hallways at church, others while at the hospital, and still others while in counseling sessions.

And over time, I have learned that certain phrases in the English language don't really mean what they sound like they mean.  They sometimes mean quite the opposite -- whether the speaker is aware of it or not.

So here goes:  the top five phrases where the meaning is something quite different from the vocabulary.

1.  When people say, "to make a long story short . . . "  they don't.  Get ready to set a spell.

2.  When people preface something with "with all due respect" what follows will likely have very little respect.

3.  When Southerners tell you "bless your heart" they are really asking, "did you really just do something that dumb?"

4.  When people punctuate their spoken sentences with "do you know what I mean?"  or "know what I'm sayin'?" they DON'T want you to answer them with either "yes" or "no."  They simply want you allow them to keep talking.

5.  When people conclude a conversation with "come see us," don't.  It's just a polite way of saying, "nice talking to you but I need to go now." 
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A Sermon I Wanted You To See . . .
September 30, 2013 at 1:00 am 2
I woke up in the middle of Saturday night (or was it early Sunday morning?) with a mortifying thought:  this sermon needs to be one they can see.

I felt like I had a good exegesis of Ephesians 3:14-21 leading to a good point -- God's supply far exceeds our demand -- all resulting in a good conclusion: where the church, like Paul in 3:20-21, would stop talking and would instead start singing.

All that was missing was a good visual; a way for people not only to hear the message but to see it as well.

Because the bottom line -- God's supply far exceeds our demand -- lent itself especially well to a vividly visual comparison.

For example, I could have said that while we ask for a thimble full of water:

God's supply is more like an ocean:



Of course, it would have been difficult to get an ocean into our Worship Center.

Or I could have said that we request but a single rose:

While God's supply is more on the order of an elaborate, expansive bouquet:

The problem with these kind of visual comparisons, however, is that I thought of them at 3 a.m. Sunday morning!  Too late, really, to do anything meaningful or thoughtful.

So I went with the message as is (or "as was"!).  We did have an interesting reading of the Ephesian text itself, recorded by a friend with a lovely Australian accent and projected onto the screens so that the church would be surrounded with those matchless words.

And I had some personal encounters with that passage as well as some spoken analogies to the ways we demand too little from God of the things that really matter: Scripture comprehension, passionate prayer, and influence in sharing faith.  Those are the kinds of areas of life in which God's supply (or power, grace, and change) far exceeds our demand.

So the challenge to the church:  increase your demand for the things that endure.

At the end -- as I stopped yammering and we started singing a la Paul in 3:20-21 -- the response was quite beautiful, with people filling our altar area "demanding" more of God in their lives.

I just hope that the next time I get the inspiration for something visual and tactile to bring a sermon home that it happens before 3 a.m. Sunday morning.

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X-Ray, Week Three — Satisfaction
September 27, 2013 at 1:00 am 0

We've had the diagnosis.

We've explored dislocation.

Now it's time to unpack satisfaction.  And some surprising findings on how people view their own spiritual lives.

Along the way, we'll have an encounter with one of the most glorious peaks of the bible:  Ephesians 3:14-21.

Sunday.

8:30.  10.  11:30.

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The Large Impact Of Small Changes
September 26, 2013 at 1:00 am 1
As many of you know who have been partnering with us in the X-Ray series, we at Good Shepherd did a self-survey during a Sunday morning in April.

And while the survey revealed much to be celebrated, it also highlighted one area of significant concern: the gap between worship attendance and participation in LifeGroups.  While all churches have some gap in those numbers, our gap is wider than most congregations our size and our style.

Those of us on staff and on the Board have known of the survey results since well before the current series.  So even before the sermons began addressing the matter head-on, we instituted a number of subtle yet marked changes.

Such as:

  • Using the welcome time to highlight not only the Connection Card in our program but the "Contact Me About LifeGroups" tab included on it.
  • Ensuring that the LifeGroups booth is well staffed and well stocked throughout Sunday morning.
  • Turning every event into a step.  For example, our MarriedLife Live event in August (a sellout with 54 couples showing up!) was also a step into LifeGroups.  That night we recruited for a new Sunday morning LifeGroup focusing on the issues married couples face.  The group now has 10-12 couples who gather together for prayer, study, and conversation each Sunday morning.
  • Making the membership process itself a step into LifeGroups as the most recent Next Step class has continued meeting, just without meIt has become a Wednesday night LifeGroup.
  • Inspired by a preacher of no small skill, I designed and delivered a Sunday "small groups" messaged that had a "problem-solution" format.  I've never done that with a message on community life before.  But it led to the refrain of "Dislocation breeds infancy; Relocation generates growth."
  • Improving the process for our most recent LifeGroup Launch event.  Discipleship pastor Chris Thayer imported and adapted several ideas from neighboring congregations into our Sept. 22 launch event and the result was five new LifeGroups started and six existing LifeGroups filled with new members.       

The process is not complete and the results are not final

Yet since we embraced these small changes, we've had a 25% increase in the number of Good Shepherd LifeGroups just in the last six weeks.

Small changes.  Large -- life-giving -- impact.
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