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Bible Study, Sermons, Uncategorized
The “How To Prevent Daddy Issues” Sermon Rewind
June 20, 2016 at 3:07 am 0
Yesterday's message was one of moderating and not moderating. For example, I originally had a bottom line that contrasted "diapers" and "Disney."  But over the last week, Disney became known for the alligator who snatched the two year old boy, and so it just didn't feel right.  I moderated it to a contrast of "routines" and "roller coasters." Also, the early part of the sermon included a quote from newspaper columnist Kelli Goff.  Yet when it came to delivery, I felt the quote needed more context than I could give it in a sermon.  In spoken form, it might have been too painful.  However, I am including it in this written form.  I moderated. Speaking of roller coasters, early on in the message I quoted one of my best friends in all the world & how he said that his father, sadly, treated fatherhood "as if it was all about money and roller coasters."  My friend had also seen an advance copy of the sermon. He sent me a text on Saturday night:  "I'm dreading hearing the sermon because some of the content will be hard for me to re-live, but I am so praying that people hear it and head it. Preach it!" I was alarmed by the word "dread" and so I texted back:  "Do I need to moderate it?" His reply:  "Hell no." With that encouragement, the message as a whole was not moderated. Here it is:  How To Prevent Daddy Issues.       --------------------------------------------------- I want to tell you, right here at the beginning, what it is I want to prevent today.  The crisis I want to start preventing so we can stop managing.  Ready?  OK: I want to prevent another generation of girls who look to recapture what they never got from dad by getting it from guy after guy after guy.  And I want to prevent another generation of guys who have no clue how to treat women well because they never saw a man do it up close and in person.  That’s it.  That’s all.  That’s what I want to prevent & how I want to wrap up Preventology.                 And some of you are like, “Oh, Talbot!  So heavy!  Where’s the joke?  Where’s the tennis story? Where’s the picture of you as the world’s dorkiest 12 year old?”  Or at least you’re thinking, “Can’t we take it a little easy on Father’s Day?  I barely got my dad to come in the first place and now you’re going all heavy & serious on us from the very beginning?”  Well, none of that to start.  Instead, this tall order and these high stakes of preventing so much of the acting out that comes in particular when dad drops out.                 Because I’ve never wanted to begin a message by shaking a collective group of people like I do today.  And the ones who I want to grab by the shoulders and give a good shake into awareness are 21st Century Fathers.  Now: I know Father’s Day is a day to celebrate many of the dads among us ­and also to grieve many of those who have departed from us – and we’ll do some of that in a little bit – but it is also a day to tell the truth.  A day to call to action.  And the truth is that almost every problem in the USA and in individual lives in this room circles back around to fathers who a) never married the mom of their child(ren); b) didn’t STAY married to her; or 3) though the family STAYED intact, dad was distant and unengaged.  Virtually every one.  That absence – physical, emotional, or both – creates a gaping wound that the next generation lives with.                 So you know what we’ve done?  We’ve seen the rise of celebrity single parenting.  Listen to this chilling piece by Kelli Goff:   Single Mom Celebrities A new study at McGill U in Montreal indicates that the absence of a father in a child’s life can have a negative impact on brain development.  The research was the first to link father absenteeism with social attributes and to correlate these with physical changes in the brain. Despite all this data, single parenting has emerged into a social and cultural norm in recent years, so much so that anyone who dares to cite the studies is accused of stigmatizing single parents & their children. First of all, stating facts is not stigmatizing.  Furthermore, poor decision making should be stigmatized.  Smokers are stigmatized because not smoking is a healthier choice.  So is the choice to create & raise children with two parents as opposed to one.   And this now crosses racial, economic, and religious lines, with churches like Good Shepherd very much effected.  I guess you could say that I am desperately wanting to prevent the fallout, the acting out, that comes when dads drop out.  And so it’s directed to dads today.                 And so many dads – either never married or divorced or detached – know this.  Intuitively.  They GET this.  And you know what do once they realize some missing out is going on; some damage is happening?  At least subconsciously?  They begin to compensate.  Like one of my best friends put it this way about his dad:              my own father treated Fatherhood like it was about money and rollercoasters. Seriously. That’s what he did when we saw him one time a year…bought us things and took us places. Looking back, he abdicated his role for his benefit at our expense. And we still pay for it.               Whoa.  Money & rollercoasters.  Bought us things & took us places.              Some of you lived through this.             Some of you put your kids through this.             Some of you are living through this right now.    The bling.  The trips.  As if the bells and the whistles would somehow drown out the sounds of absence.  Moms are not immune, but dads seem especially vulnerable to the thinking that a bunch of EXPERIENCE will compensate for a lack of RELATIONSHIP.  And you know what the ultimate symbol of compensation is?  The Disney trip!  You give the custodial parent the week off, you assume center stage, and it is lights, camera, action.  And so many of you on both sides of that ledger – both the compensators and the compensated – have come to the sad awareness that you can never really make up for what you miss out on.      And in contrast to that strategy where dads compensate by dazzling, Deuteronomy 6:4-8 comes along and sounds so boring.  No snap, no crack, no pop:    Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one.[a] Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength. These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts. Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. Tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads.     And there it is. The kind of parenting – fathering in particular – that not only builds healthy kids but kids who (GULP!) find it easier to have what we would call a living relationship with Jesus Christ.  A better connection with their Father in heaven in large part because of what went on with their father on earth.  And look our boring it all is: talking, sitting, walking, lying down, getting up, reminding.  That’s it.  Where are the trips?  Where are the presents?  What about the bling?  What about the travelling sports teams?  What about Chuck E Cheese if you get a good report card?  No sizzle at all!  No Disney anywhere to be found.  Just the boring routine of every day living.     And then I realize:  Ah!  Those random, unplanned, routine encounters between parents and children?  They’re like this:  Hold Watermelon Seed.  It’s one day gonna be THIS!  (Watermelon, big)  Every small interaction is pregnant with purpose and rich in meaning!  It is in those massively small encounters of daily living that fatherhood really happens.  The supernaturally routine.  The divinely mundane.  Deut 6 is so boring it’s brilliant!  And then it hit me, Good Shepherd.  Fathers, fathers-to-be, and fathers-on-the-mend:  Fatherhood happens in the routine and not on the rollercoasters.  The bliss, not the bling.  The mundane not the spectacular.  The massively small, not the spectacularly fake.  More interacting & less entertaining.  REFRAIN     It kind of takes me back about 26 years when our daughter Taylor was just born and we lived in Kentucky.  And did you know newborns wake up in the middle of the night?  And for some odd reason, I thought it was a great privilege to be the one to get up at 2 a.m. and feed her.  And hold her.  And get to caress her cheek.  Or a few years later & the schedule worked out that I was the one to take 3 year old Riley to preschool.  And we’d listen to Big Tent Revival (THE Xn band of the early 90s!) and just go.  Nothing momentous happened either during that feeding or driving.  And they don’t remember it.  BUT THEY DO.  Subconsciously, they DO.  I was just a kid myself, didn’t know the power of the subconscious, but now I see the sort of massively small stuff, the kind of supernaturally routine stuff that was going on.  Fatherhood happens in the routine and not on the rollercoasters.     Or it’s like when I asked a couple of moms affiliated with our preschool what they think is involved in a good dad & you know how they answered?  “You know what’s sexy?” they said EVEN THOUGH THAT WAS NOT WAS NOT WAS NOT WHAT I ASKED!  “It’s sexy when the dad is the one who brings the pre-schooler in the morning.  Even if the child doesn’t match, just to know that dad got them ready, that means something.”  Never thought of it that way before!  Guys – wanna look good for your lady friend?  Then get the toddler to pre-school in the morning!  Chicka chicka bow wow!  Fatherhood happens in the routine and not on the rollercoasters.     You know how to flesh that out, dads?  Pay more attention to your marriage than to your kids.  Now:  fatherhood IS about that realization that God loads massively small gestures with supernatural meaning, that spontaneous conversation is always better than planned encounters . . . yet woven through all that is this: the marriage relationship is more important than the parenting one.  In fact, the key to a good parenting relationship is that it occurs within the context of a prevailing marital one.  Gosh, even if you are parents before marriage (it happens!  Not God’s design, I’m convinced, but we treat those situations with grace & truth, not with law & judgment), giving that little one a sense of stability and love is job one. And if you’re in that situation, we almost always opt for helping you bring your relationship into covenant agreement with God through marriage.     I know in our case, from a very young age our children took great security in realizing that with all my quirks, there IS NO ONE ELSE IN THE WORLD who could deal with me other than Julie.  So they knew early on: he’s so weird, so odd, that affairs & adultery sort off the table at the beginning!  And when they heard each of us speak only what was positive and what gave life ABOUT THE OTHER, again, it built all kinds of security and stability.  We didn’t plan a trip to Carowinds or McDonald’s to discuss . . . it flowed from everyday life.  Fatherhood happens in the routine and not on the rollercoasters.     And as important as all this is on Father’s Day for fathers & sons, let me remind you what you probably already know.  There’s something about daughters.  If she does not get love, affirmation, healthy physical touch from you, she will start a fruitless search for it elsewhere.  It’s not intentional.  It’s buried deep into the subconscious.  And people come to me or a more conventional therapist and in the course of personal work realize:  I’m bouncing from relationship to relationship because of what I didn’t get from dad.  That’s so what I want to prevent today.  I want to prevent that scar tissue that develops before young women ultimately find a healthy guy or, better yet, a living relationship with Jesus. Or both.  Dads: hold her. Affirm her. Rescue her.  Don’t abandon her.  Fatherhood happens in the routine and not on the rollercoasters.   Now . . . I know I’m talking to a lot of guys are a bit older and who in some sense have already blown it.  I’m also talking to kids of all ages who are already having to endure that.  To the dads:  you can’t make it up.  All you can do is start over.  Don’t compensate with bling.  Start over seeking to be a blessing.  Not with spectacle.  Don’t repeat the “rollercoasters and money” cycle I shared with you early.  As you start over, it’s just you.  Living into the divinely mundane, the supernaturally routine, the massively small steps that restore and recapture those most vital of relationships.   And if you’re the wounded one, and your dad re-enters to try to restore, will you allow it?  As long as your physical and even sexual self is safe, will you allow it?  Not with a blindly naïve “it’s OK, that’s in the past” but with a spiritually mature “that happened, I’m still coping, but restoration is always better than lifelong alienation.”  Will you even allow him to try?   And back to Deuteronomy.  Did you notice something?  When dads get it right, what is the result?  Not self-esteem.  Instead, self-awareness.  The kind of self-awareness that allows great God-confidence.  That when a dad (and moms too) realize and live out REFRAIN, what will result is children who become adults who know and trust and believe in the God who has already spoken approval and life over them.  It’s kind of funny … we have a young woman in our church who is a top-notch, high-impact volunteer with our kids’ ministry.  A living relationship with Jesus Christ that is so contagious, the kids in her group can’t help but catch.  And the great thing is, I know where that kind of faith started.   Because I’ve known her since she was 11 months old. In the way her life & mine have intersected, she grew up in the Monroe church.  And I saw dad in those early years invested and involved in the lives of his girls not with the Disney but in the diapers.  Not the spectacle but the mundane.  Not making up but leaning in.  He just sort of got this . . . I think because his dad had done the same with him.  As his daughter became a young adult, she moved this way, got connected here, and loves Jesus well.  And having a rare glimpse of lifelong context, I know exactly where it came from.    Fatherhood happens in the routine and not on the rollercoasters.   So dads today: I just want you embracing REFRAIN so that the boys & girls you’re raising today will be the hell-busting, Gospel-sharing, life-giving leaders of tomorrow.            
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Bible Study, Preaching, Sermons, Uncategorized
The “Making Sure Your Tongue Doesn’t Tie You Up” Sermon Rewind
June 13, 2016 at 3:37 am 0
I'm not going to lie. I liked yesterday's message a lot. I liked the set up for the sermon -- a song by Don Henley & Trish Yearwood called Words Can Break Your Heart.  Don and Trisha weren't with us in person, mind you, but their roles were filled more than capably by Chris Macedo and April Geiger. I liked the follow up to the sermon -- April Geiger leading an absolutely stunning version Lauren Daigle's "How Can It Be."  I liked a story I got to tell about one of my foibles as an employee of the United States Tennis Association. I liked the bottom line, inspired by something I saw on John Piper's Desiring God site (yes,  Methodist quoting and loving Rev. Dr. Piper.  Usually.)    In fact, we liked that bottom line so much that  we printed up & laminated cards for the congregation to pick up, post on social media, and then take with them to work.  And we gave every last one of them away.  Here's the card and the bottom line that we found so compelling:   Gossip card      
  Most of us in this place don’t have to go back very far in our memory banks to remember a time when your tongues got you in trouble.  That thing you said, that confidence you shared, that off-color or slightly bigoted joke you repeated and THAT GOT HEARD by just the wrong person, that difficulty you faced when a friend heard that you’d been talking about her behind her back.  It’s just so common, the way our tongues tie us all up.   I may have told you before of the time when I was in the tennis business (after college & before seminary) and we had an eccentric boss in our office.  And I ended up sending a national mailing out without her permission, and it inadvertently had some stuff in it that she didn’t want in it, and she got in some trouble for it, and so she TOOK ME OUTSIDE THE BUILDING to . . . process?  Discuss? VENT! . . . with me.  And after going on a long venting, she closed with “And I know you’ve been talking about me.”  And I HAD.  I’d been gossiping ABOUT her & someone with whom I’d been sharing went behind my back and told her!  They gossiped about me and how I was gossiping about her!  But I was busted.  Tongue tied me up, I got written up, it was a mess.     I just know I’m not alone.  Some of you have had careers derailed, friendships ended, family scarred, all because of the wrong things getting said to the wrong people at the wrong times.  And beyond that, here’s something else I know:  many of you have been part of churches that were eaten alive from the inside out – like an infestation of termites – by gossip.  I’m not telling you anything you don’t know, just reminding you of some things you may have forgotten.  And letting you know that, speaking of church-y gossip, fewer groups dig in with such delight as Methodist preachers. About each other, our hierarchy, our churches, the whole deal.  And the assumption for most of us is that when our tongues tie us up, ESPECIALLY through gossip, then it is a HORIZONTAL situation.  We think that it is one of those sins, struggles, situations that is essentially mano a mano; we know the Lord has spoken on it, but that it’s not up to us to apply it more rigorously in our lives.     And so at this stage you will likely expect me to give a message that says essentially, “don’t gossip” at work or home or church.  After all, the pattern in the OT book of Proverbs – our Preventology guidebook – underscores that.  Take a look:    A gossip betrays a confidence, but a trustworthy person keeps a secret. (11:13) The mouths of fools are their undoing, and their lips are a snare to their very lives. (18:7) A perverse person stirs up conflict, and a gossip separates close friends. (16:28) Whoever would foster love covers over an offense, but whoever repeats the matter separates close friends. (17:9) A gossip betrays a confidence; so avoid anyone who talks too much. (20:19)   Whew!  That’s  a list!  We spend a lot of time on the more “spectacular” sins but Proverbs seems to have this one pretty high on the list.  And in the middle of a culture in which GOSSIP COLUMNISTS are celebrities, in which OK! & page 6 of the NYT are must reads, in which there is so much peddling in conjecture & innuendo, where preachers like few things more than trading in dirt-disguised-as-prayer-requests . . . Proverbs relentlessly and repeatedly warns of the folly of gossip.  And the wisdom of discretionAgain, it seems as if this is a horizontal issue – people to people – and we’re told not to do because it’s bad and we’ll get caught.     But then, just when I think I’ve got this thing figured out – even if I am reluctant to obey completely – I saw something and put it together with some NT verses that I know and the result was that it absolutely rocked my world when it comes to gossip.  Move it from a slap on the wrist – DON’T! (until next time!) to the throne of heaven.  It pointed out the folly of looking at it from a horizontal perspective..  Look at Hebrews 7:25:   Therefore he is able to save completely[a] those who come to God through him, because he always lives to intercede for them.   And now Romans 8:34:   Who then is the one who condemns? No one. Christ Jesus who died—more than that, who was raised to life—is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us.    And now I John 2:1:   My dear children, I write this to you so that you will not sin. But if anybody does sin, we have an advocate with the Father—Jesus Christ, the Righteous One.   I love them all but the last one in particular!!  If we sin, if we mess up, if we do something we don’t want anyone else to know about!, if we’re full of shame and self-loathing, what happens?  Jesus tattles on us?  Jesus spreads the news?  It’s Jesus’ new version of the gospel?  No!  No!  We have an advocate – an attorney, arguing our case.  Pleading with the Father on our behalf.  Telling the Father what is best and right and true-est about us.  Praying for us, articulating for us, putting forth the best defense that we are not that which is done in the shadows; we are fundamentally children of the light.     It’s almost like the friend I have who when I in times of despair share that I want to leave the faith says to me in a quiet voice, “but what’s truest about you is that you don’t.  What’s alive inside you is the life of Jesus.  You’ve just temporarily covered it up with junk.”  So true!  That’s what it’s like.  That’s our Advocate!  Not spreading the worst behind our back!  Proclaiming our best on the throne of grace!  Now: F & S are equal, exactly how this happens I don’t know, I just take great comfort from knowing it DOES.  He’s not just my Lord and my Savior, he’s my Advocate when he could be my tattletale!     And when I realized that’s Jesus’ ongoing activity – the NT tells us so THREE TIMES! – then everything about gossip as a vertical issue and not a horizontal one made sense.  Because I saw this and instantly knew it to be true.  Here it is:  Gossip is the opposite of how the Son speaks to the Father about you.  Oh yes.  Jesus doesn’t trade in our dirt.  He testifies to our dignity.  That’s what he is doing for me now. As I am preaching!  And for you!  As you are listening!     And you put those kind of pieces together and realize that gossip isn’t horizontal, it’s vertical, it has everything to do with our connection to God, our ability to receive grace, and the conviction that everyone we meet is someone for whom Christ died. Gossip is the opposite of how the Son speaks to the Father about you.  It raises the stakes tremendously.     I suppose all that is why when you DO gossip, that research has shown that people associate the negative characteristics you are gossiping about WITH YOU.  Like if you are yakking about – or, better, dishing some delicious morsel of gossip out in the guise of a prayer request – about someone’s dishonesty or laziness then in the mind of the person you are sharing with (SUBCONSCIOUSLY) they think of YOU as the lazy liar.  I guess when you diminish the imago Dei of others, what gets tarnished is our own.     You know, don’t you, how talking about people is ultimately both cowardly and divisive.  Wasn’t that interesting in the Proverbs passages?  How gossip separates friends & divides brothers.  It’s as if the Proverbs author has spent time in your office, right?  In our churches, true?  I remember that time in Monroe, 20 years ago now, that some new attendees stopped coming.  They had been invited by their next door neighbor, liked what they saw, were getting plugged in, and then BOOM.  Nothing.  So I called.  (Hey – don’t even THINK of slacking off or you’ll get the dreaded Talbot call!)  And when I called, they said they’d stopped because their neighbor – the one who invited them in the first place, a woman who was SWEET AS MOLASSES TO ME! – had been talking about me.  Something about how I wanted the church to grow and liked modern music.  And this couple was like “we’ve got enough drama in our lives, we don’t need to be adding to it from church.”  Mind you, the sweet as molasses woman had never said a thing to me other than I love you, pastor; you’re just what we need, preacher.  First I’d heard of it!     And to be on the receiving end, and to see what it did to the cause of Christ, is just deadly.  It’s why nothing in gossip is merely horizontal; it’s inherently vertical, and it’s why talking about is an act of cowardice that results in division.  Ah, but talking to is an act of courage that leads to unity.  Awkward unity, but unity nonetheless.  Imagine if sweet as molasses had scheduled an in person conversation with me.  It’s awkward, it’s difficult . . . but I’m not blindsided and the church is not compromised.  In those difficult conversations where you talk TO rather than ABOUT, then you live into the reality the gossip and ITS ABSENCE it vertical, not horizontal. Gossip is the opposite of how the Son speaks to the Father about you.      Which is why the ability to restrain what you could report, to withhold what you could announce, to shut up when you could share (!) is just priceless.  Look at Proverbs 10:19: Sin is not ended by multiplying words, but the prudent hold their tongues   Doh!  Stop elbowing each other!  If you think this verse is about you, it is.  I love what Sam Rayburn said, “no one has a finder command of the English language than the person who keeps his mouth shut. (AV).”  If you doubt that, ask yourself:  have you gotten in more trouble for what you DID say or what you DIDN’T say?     So: what?  How?  How, concretely, can you and I translate the verticality of Gossip is the opposite of how the Son speaks to the Father about you.  into real life?  Here are a couple of down to earth, practical ideas:  
  1. We have a laminated card with today’s bottom line for you.  Take it.  Post it.  Take a photo of it and put it on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.  (And anything else they invented that I don’t know about.)  Leave it on the elliptical at the Y, the treadmill at Club Fitness.  Keep it before so that when you are tempted to open your mouth and trade in dirt, you remember that Jesus is opening his mouth and testifying dignity.  Let that reminder shut you up.
  2. And . . . just what is Jesus saying to the Father about you? How is he your Advocate?  Oh, he is replacing gossip with honor.  He is treating you NOT like a fiddle (ho hum) but like a Stradivarius (Ohhhhh!).  He evidently finds every good thing about you – including that you gave him your life – and reminds the father of it.  How often are you trading in “good” gossip – which we’d just call honor?  How often do you, unprompted and even unneeded, brag on someone else.  That’s how the Son brags on you.
  Because I suppose my dream for this church and the ppl in it would be like that family who devoted every Sunday to what they called a “Sabbath For The Tongue.”  Meaning, no one could criticize anyone else in the family all day Sunday.  So they didn’t.   You know what happened?  All the neighborhood kids started coming over to the house on that day.  Because when honor replaces gossip, when dignity replaces dirty, when Jesus testifies when he could be a tattletale, everyone wants a part.          
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Bible Study, Sermons
When A Church Has Horsepower
June 8, 2016 at 3:27 am 0
Do you remember those scenes in old Western movies in which a stagecoach raced across the American plain?   Stagecoach While we are grateful for the modern system of interstate highways, the stagecoach's image is nevertheless one of romance, energy, and alignment.  All that beauty and speed captured in all those animals -- and they were all headed in the same direction at the same time. You may consider me a slow learner, but I only recently discovered that the horsepower advertised in today's cars is based on a formula derived from . . . you guessed it . . . horse power. And there are times when churches have horsepower as well. Times when churches harness all their energy and all their muscle and head in the same direction with intentionality and alignment. For some churches, it happens during a capital campaign. For others it's during a Fifty Day Spiritual Adventure. For still others it's during an emphasis like Forty Days Of Purpose, Forty Days Of Prayer, or Forty Days of Love. At Good Shepherd, we often call these special seasons our Radical Impact Projects which you can read about here and here. How does such programming happen and such horsepower emerge from within the life of a church? This:  when sermons, small groups, students, and children are all digging into the same Scripture and the same subject matter.  In lessons and activities developed on an age appropriate basis, whole congregations become propulsive with power when all their sub-groupings are headed in the same direction at the same time. One of the earliest times we "caught" this truth was on our first ever "Grace" Sunday in 2012.  We offered a grace-based salvation message at all three worship gatherings, in our student ministries, and in our children's ministry settings.  The results were truly breathtaking, as over 100 people across all environments made saving decisions for Jesus Christ. Community Christian Church in suburban Chicago has summarized its approach in The Big Idea. While Good Shepherd gives more latitude to its LifeGroup and family ministries most of the year, there is a level of unparalleled excitement when we harness all our horses to head precisely in the same direction.  That's one of the reasons our current Preventology series has the buzz that it does: the entire congregation is reading the same Scripture each day (in this case, a chapter from Proverbs per day) and praying the same prayers.  That focused devotion and harnessed energy is vital to increasing a church's horsepower. All that is why I'm so excited about Solve, recently released by Abingdon Press.  We were able to turn a sermon series on Nehemiah into much more than a series of sermons.  It instead became a Radical Impact Project in which people moved on what they were moved by, and fed the city of Charlotte with a record-setting outpouring of food. I believe Solve can be an ideal church-wide project in the months to come.  You can order your copies here. And then watch as all the horsepower of your church gets directed not to pointing out problems but to pinpointing solutions. Sign up for my sermon tips newsletter and get additional sermon tips, information, and updates.  
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Sermons, Uncategorized
Top Five Tuesday — Top Five Elements Of A Good Wedding Ceremony
June 7, 2016 at 3:51 am 0
Maybe it's because my own 32nd anniversary is coming up on Thursday. Maybe it's because I have a spate of weddings over the next few months. Maybe it's because that spate includes that of my own son & his fiance. But I've been thinking about what makes a good wedding ceremony recently. What separates the holy from the hokey?  The transcendent from the trite?  What makes it worthy of worship rather than suitable for the WE network? There are many answers (including, well, it helps if the wedding party DOESN'T show up drunk) but here are five:   1. A couple that has spent more time and energy preparing for the marriage than they have planning the wedding.  Enough said.   2.  An opportunity for the community to participate.  When the pastor asks the father of the bride, "Who gives this woman to be married?" it's a sacred question.  But in these days of complicated family dynamics, I have often found it better -- and ultimately more meaningful -- to turn to the congregation and ask, "Who gives their blessing to this couple."  The resounding "We do!" grants a collective, communal affirmation every couple needs.   3.  A marriage charge that is specific, customized, and not based on I Corinthians 13.    I have a brief marriage charge in every wedding at which I preside.  And I am always astounded at the number of people who approach me afterwards and say they have never heard something like that.  Apparently, a good many clergy read through a ritual and offer no Scripturally-based marriage counsel.  A wedding is a marvelous time for people to overhear the Gospel if you combine subtlety and truth.   4.  Vows that are grounded in God and not in the couple.  One of my seminary professors told us not to allow couples to write their own vows.  So I don't.  Instead, I let the couple know they are reciting vows in union with couples who have gone before them for hundreds of years.   5.  A mixture of mirth and majesty.  With an anxious couple, overwhelmed parents, and empowered wedding planners, things can get heated and heavy.  That's why a wedding ceremony that has moments of wit and a feeling of casual grace goes a long way to helping people enjoy a wedding rather than merely endure it.   Are you a pastor or preacher who is interested in receiving tips and inspiration for sermons? Sign up for my newsletter and get tips, information, and updates.
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Bible Study, Sermons
The “How To Prevent The Coming Economic Collapse” Sermon Rewind
June 6, 2016 at 3:22 am 1
I had a few things I wanted to accomplish with Week 4 of Preventology:
  1. Let people know that no national economic collapse happens without a lot of individual collapses preceding it;
  2. Let them know that they are not victims of forces beyond their control;
  3. Let them know that by taking measures to live by biblical principles in the financial arena, they can prevent their own collapse;
  4. And ultimately let them know that we at Good Shepherd can "trickle up" to prevent collapses all around us.  In other words, we can save the country.
With those rather humble goals, I landed at this bottom line, inspired by both Andy Stanley & Dave Ramsey: Live beneath your means so you can give beyond your measure.   ---------------------------------------------------------------------   Just in case you came to church in a relatively good mood and NOT feeling like you could drink some Anti-Freeze, please allow me to reverse all that.  Ready to be depressed?  Great!  Here ya go: it’s the world debut of a specially prepared montage of books, notices, and memes about the UPCOMING ECONOMIC COLLAPSE. (AV) Aren’t you glad for that?  Aren’t you just like, “can we just end it now, please?”  According to these reports, it could happen in 2016.  Unless it doesn’t.  May 2017.  Or maybe . . . thinking back, we had 1929, we had 2008, so maybe we’re good for another 70 years or so!                And it is genuinely fascinating to me the ways people prepare for it.  Some make sure they’ve got plenty of weaponry, sure that a lack of resources is going to lead to an abundance of violence.  Others stock up on food and toilet paper (AV).  There are even some televangelists selling MREs so that people can get ready, stock up on food in Jesus’ name that I assume they’ll share with their family and no one else.  In Jesus’ name.  It reminds me of when I was a kid and all these people had bomb shelters in their houses to protect from nuclear fallout; today it’s to prepare for an economic one.  And that approach may well be fine, but look at what it assumes:  that a collapse is GOING TO HAPPEN.  And that as individuals we are POWERLESS to do anything about it.  It is inevitable, it will be dramatic, it is at least going to be a reprise of 2008 & you oughta just take care of your own.     But what’s the name of this series?  Prepare-ology?  No!  Preventology!  We at this church are much less interested in managing crises than we are in preventing them!  Because I have this crazy idea.  What if, what if, what if we could prevent a collapse from ever happening in the first place?  What if we took a portion of the energy we spend preparing and we re-direct it into preventing?  Now: I’m not a politician.  I’m not an economist.  I’m just a pastor.  And though this may seem like a large church to you, it’s hardly the largest in CLT or even in Methodism.  We’re a min-mega, OK?  But what if enough of us could start something HERE and we prevented our OWN financial collapses and then we caused a ripple, a cascade, a movement and all this financial preventioneering went viral?  That’s something worth pursuing!     What if we took care of the one person we can take care of and influence – OURSELVES – and enough preventing went on here that it just became the best kind of contagious?  Not sure if have enough person-power to prevent a Global event, but if enough of us prevent our OWN collapses, then it just might . . . trickle UP.     And the Master Plan of Prevention, the book of Proverbs, offers a remarkably simple pattern for avoiding your own collapse; for navigating on the personal level what so many say is inevitable on the national level.  Now:  when most of us think of the best way to ensure financial health, we figure it will come from: (AV)  A. More Money or B.  A LOT More Money.  But that’s actually a great illusion.  Financial health actually has relatively little to do with wealth and rather a lot do with habits.  I’m talking about the kind of financial health that is God-centered, God-saturated, and God-honoring.  That kind of health that understands what God has revealed about money and takes disciplined joy at lining up with that.  Because believe me:  God is interested in your money.  Very interested.  He really is.  Why?  Because it’s all his to begin with.     There are two sections in particular in Proverbs that will move us to financial preventology.  Look at 22:7:   The rich rule over the poor,     and the borrower is slave to the lender.   Uh oh.  The lender/borrower language is literally the language of slave and master.  Which some of you know all too well.  Hear me:  whether you are just starting out, in the middle of a mess, or even sitting comfortably in retirement, debt is a deal.  A deal breaker.  Some of you have credit card debt, others have student loan debt, others have new car debt, and still others have all three.  Because the world is divided into two kinds of people: those who PAY interest and those who MAKE interest.  And there are a lot more PAY-ERS of interest than MAKE-ers of it.  So if you are part of the majority who pay more interest than you make, here is the likely reason:  you are financing a LIFESTYLE just a little bit ahead of what you can truly afford.  Just a little.  Until a little turns into a lot.     Because here’s what debt and the lifestyle it finances is like:  (AV?)  A worm to a catfish.  Cheese to a mouse.  Trap to a bear.  It entices you to believe you can’t live without stuff – again, just ahead of what you can truly afford – to the tune of 18% interest a year.  Talk about a trap!  Not long ago, I was helping a guy who is getting back on his feet set up a checking account.  And the institution was trying to convince him to sign up for a program w/ his new debit card that the more you use it, the more points you earn.  If you’ve been out of that environment for awhile, it sounds like new technology and a good deal.  But what it really was was trying to get my friend to use that card more than he needed to or could afford.  Because plastic is not real, swiping is not the same as spending – UNTIL IT IS! – and it’s a very clever way to market.  And to get under-resourced folks in over their heads.  He didn’t sign up.  Deception to get my friend to live just ahead of, just beyond his capability, resource-wise.  Some of you are still digging out of just the same kind of enticement.     So Proverbs’ financial preventology begins with the notion that if you’re not in debt, avoid it, if you’re in it, plan your way out of it.  It’s why I do in fact love that Dave Ramsey guy on the radio every night and what I love most is the Debt Free Scream (YouTube one, please!) The phrase where a paid off house is the new BMW is just classic.  So debt is an 18% annual trap that has its roots in our desire to borrow from TOMORROW just enough to live just a little beyond what we can honestly afford.  And so Proverbs’ financial preventology certainly begins there – and we’ll circle back around to it – but it also involves something else before we land.     And this other place is so good.  Take a look at 11:24-25:   One person gives freely, yet gains even more;     another withholds unduly, but comes to poverty.

25 A generous person will prosper;     whoever refreshes others will be refreshed.

  It’s a really simple generosity reminder.  And I say reminder because God has hard-wired all of us to generosity.  What is the most famous bible verse?  God so loved the world he _______.  Right!  Gave.  So God’s fundamental nature is giving.  And you’re made in his image . . . which VOILA! means your natural inclination is towards generosity as well.  It’s just that some of you have never heard that and others of you have had layers of lies piled on top of it, but my job today is to remind you of who are you: a giver.  Whew! That was easy.     Because I so believe that when you give, God ensures that you have.  He just does.  It’s counter-intuitive, it doesn’t make sense, but I fundamentally believe that God sends advance blessings and advance provision.  I so remember that the very first summer Julie and I were married (32 years ago now!) a family member heard that we were going to start our married lives as tithers.  And this person warned us saying, “You can’t do that! You’ll never know when you’ll need that money!”  Well, that person missed the point.  Because we’ve given at that level and beyond, we haven’t needed.  And none of it was ours to begin with.  So we’ve never missed what was never ours.  So that life experience, this basic reminder from Proverbs 11 and you put the two elements together and it’s clear that the balance of debt and generosity is at the heart of financial health.  That treating both seriously and strategically is absolutely vital to prevent your own meltdown so that other meltdowns get prevented and next thing you know, we’ve saved the whole country.     Because here you go:  Live beneath your means so you can give beyond your measure.  See the “can I afford it?” is the wrong question.  There’s a lot of stuff you probably can afford – especially if you finance it – but that doesn’t mean you can or you should.  Because financial health is a matter of arranging your life under God’s banner and God’s principles with the realization that has you consciously live on less you can just as consciously give on more.  It’s discipline not just for the sake of retirement (thought that’s not bad) but for the sake of generosity.  It’s why the nicest millionaires you’ll ever meet are the ones who live next door, drive an old car, and invest anonymously in eternity.  Live beneath your means so you can give beyond your measure.      Where do you need to clean up the past?  Debt reduction?  Downsizing your place?  Rightsizing your car?  Do you know if you’re vulnerable to those calls like the ones I always get from Nissan?  We can LOWER YOUR PAYMENTS AND PUT YOU IN A NEW CAR!  Can I have a new house while I’m at it?  But no they can’t.  You can’t go lower than zero!  Don’t base decisions on monthly payments but on whether you’re serving the money or it is serving you.  And . . . if you are single or single again, do you have the kind of debt load that should you get married would be a most unpleasant surprise for your new mate?  Oh, don’t hold it close to the vest.  That kind of “reveal” never goes well.     Or maybe your past is clean and clear but it’s your future that needs attention.  And that’s not the gov’s job, not your company’s job, it’s your job.  I love those parents who teach their kids that when they have $10, they really have $8.  One dollar goes to God and one dollar goes to savings.  It’s the kind of math that should never change!  Talk about REFRAIN.  I just want you to make a decision, not as an event but as a process, so that you live on less so you can give on more.  Live beneath your means so you can give beyond your measure.      Because that giving pattern?  It’s the ultimate liberator.  I try to appeal to your better nature, to your design and not your duty, to remind you that generosity is part of your DNA. But I also have to couple that with what Chris Macedo told me:  You know, at some point you just have to do it because you’re supposed to.  It’s called obedience.  Doh!  Not very romantic . . . but true.  But as someone who tithed from 22 on and has been able to increase that % substantially through the years I want you to know that I share the view of the guy who said: “I don’t believe in tithing.  But it’s a good place to start.”  So it is.  And when you balance your life out by withholding from this pile so you can sow extravagantly in this pile – a pile that molds eternity – as a happy consequence you will have the kind of steady, God-honoring financial plan that prevents your own economic meltdown.  And maybe, just maybe, that of a whole lot of other people as well.  REFRAIN   The sermon finished with this video interview with the Hoffmans:   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kwc7IevNHkU&feature=youtu.be      
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