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Jul
13

Two of your friend groups meet. Scary?

Posted by rrindfuss    0 Comment(s)    Add a Comment  comment-icon.png

Our church staff is learning about the Enneagram, a tool that helps people understand the motivations behind their actions. We learned that some people's desire to be well thought of by others leads them to present themselves very differently depending upon the group they're in. It could be scary if two of their friend groups met, because they couldn't meet both group's expectations. The Bible gives us two stories of people that changed themselves for those around them and some clues as to when it's spiritually healthy to do that and when it's not.

In the book of Genesis, we meet two siblings, Jacob and Esau. Their father lives in a culture that favors the eldest son, and he continues the tradition by favoring Esau and planning to give him a special blessing. Their mother favors Jacob and convinces him to pretend to be his older brother and trick her poorly-sighted husband into giving Jacob the blessing.

In the New Testament, 1 Corinthians 9:19-23 relates these words of the apostle, Paul:

For though I am free with respect to all, I have made myself a slave to all, so that I might win more of them. To the Jews I became as a Jew, in order to win Jews. To those under the law I became as one under the law (though I myself am not under the law) so that I might win those under the law. To those outside the law I became as one outside the law (though I am not free from God’s law but am under Christ’s law) so that I might win those outside the law. To the weak I became weak, so that I might win the weak. I have become all things to all people, that I might by all means save some. I do it all for the sake of the gospel, so that I may share in its blessings.

Christians generally consider Jacob's behavior as something to avoid and Paul's as something to emulate. Drawing on these stories, here are two questions that might help discern when it's spiritually healthy to change how we present ourselves to others and when it's not:

  • Is the "you" others see still you? – Jacob presented himself as a completely different person. Paul drew on different past experiences to find common ground with different people. For example, Paul had lived as a strict adherent to Jewish law and used that experience to relate to Jews. He had also lived as a Christian under Christ's law and used that experience to relate to non-Jews.
     
  • Do others know the full you? – Jacob only showed his father what he wanted him to see. Paul wrote a letter (the scripture I quoted) publicly to share the full range of his personality and experiences.
     
  • Who benefits? – Jacob sought to benefit himself. Paul sought to benefit God and others: "I do it all for the sake of the gospel, so that I may share in its blessings."

Adapting to those around me in a spiritually healthy way means sharing part of me that will connect rather than inventing a new me, seeking to bless others rather than to manipulate them, and sharing the "full" me with everyone.

This Sunday at Access we'll look at how crafting an image for others shows up all around us and imagine what might ensue if we showed who we really are. Join us Sunday for "Picking Your Avatar," the next sermon in our series, Games We Play.

See you Sunday!
Rich


Rich Rindfuss
Access Pastor
First United Methodist Church Richardson 

Jul
07

There is a way to do this...

Posted by jklossner    0 Comment(s)    Add a Comment  comment-icon.png

Any time I begin playing a game there are two things I want to know: how do you win the game? And what’s the best strategy to get there? It’s a pretty uncomplicated method when playing games and yes, the narrow focus brings out my competitive nature. Similar to a magic trick or a puzzle, I want to know how it’s done.  This insight can be eye opening and gratifying. It can be like getting to be behind the scenes, seeing the full picture, or having a VIP pass. On the other side, the lack of knowing how something works often leaves me so frustrated and discouraged. 

My faith at times has felt like a game where I don’t know the strategy. In times of questioning or moments of stagnation where I long to be closer to God, I find myself asking ‘how?’ repeatedly. How do I move forward? What is the next step? Is there a way to do this? The quick answer here is yes, but the strategy takes a lot longer, it looks a lot different and it is both more challenging and strengthening than I expected.

This strategy is one that starts with the premise that growing in our faith has much less to do with finding success as it does processing our failure. It’s the sort of strategy that takes a willingness to see our weaknesses and limitations so that we might seek wisdom and strength beyond our own. In Richard Rohr’s book “Falling Upward” he says “if there is such thing as human perfection, it seems to emerge precisely from how we handle the imperfection that is everywhere, especially our own.”

Transformation and change may not come from adding something, but instead, by letting something fall away. Paul in a letter to the church in Corinth said it this way: And He has said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for power is perfected in weakness.” Most gladly, therefore, I will rather boast, about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may dwell in me. 10 Therefore I am well content with weaknesses, with insults, with distresses, with persecutions, with difficulties, for Christ’s sake; for when I am weak, then I am strong. 2 Corinthians 12:9-11

Paul’s words certainly teach us something about God’s grace. How much more might we see God’s grace at work, receive it, and give it to others if we saw how much we are in need of this grace? I find relief in knowing that the same longing I have to be in deeper relationship with God is a longing that God has for me as well. I see God’s love and pursuit of me when I see my need for the grace that is so freely given to me. Instead of staying stagnated and frustrated, there is a way to do this: we can join God in God’s own desire for our deepening and growth. 

This Sunday we start a new sermon series called “The Games We Play.” We will be looking at how we find ourselves playing games in the workplace, in interpersonal relationships, and even in our spiritual lives. These games don’t always lead us to a place where we are more Christ-like.

As we go into this series, I want to invite you to maybe take a different strategy for growing in your faith. Instead of looking at what could be added, look for something in your life that could fall away.  Call it self-examining, or confession, but there is a way to find growth that is strengthening through our weaknesses. My hope and prayer for you and me this week is that God stretches us to see just how amazing grace is.

See you Sunday! 

-Julie 

Jun
30

Popsicles, Persistence, and Possibility

Posted by eric    0 Comment(s)    Add a Comment  comment-icon.png

Nostalgia kicks in at the thought of having a red, white, and blue popsicle on the fourth of July. It is ingrained into my thoughts around Independence Day in the same way that fireworks, hotdogs, and pool parties find their place in this time of year. There is nostalgia in that popsicle tastes of eagerness and optimism. Somewhere in the middle of all the festivities I am engulfed in the boldness and bravery that this country was founded on. What a story we have of independence that is rooted in the idea of persistence and possibility. We don’t often think about how extravagant and daring this idea was: the possibility of freedom that sparked dreams and hopes, and the persistence to bravely pursue such a possibility. 

Both persistence and possibility are ideas deeply rooted in our faith as well. Psalm 34:14 says to “do good, seek peace, and go after it.” This scripture is a pressing declaration that in all that we do as Christ followers, we are called to action. After seeing Wonder Woman a few weeks ago, I went back and read some of the old comic books. She is certainly a different sort of super hero. Her strength seems to be embodied by this pressing idea that responsive action is deeply rooted in compassion and empathy. She repeats the phrase “we cannot stand by” over and over again right before she springs into action. Wonder Woman has me wondering what our relationship to God and one another might look like if that was our mentality. What if we met situations and problems we see with a simple, but crucial persistence? Maybe not to save the world, but to do something out of a place of compassion and empathy. Maybe even ‘do good, seek peace and go after it.’ Call me optimistic, but it seems possible. 

A beloved pastor of my home church, Tom Graves, wrote a prayer for Independence Day. In this prayer he says “May the possibility of peace and the gift of life give us the courage we need to live like Christians in America.” The core tenant of our Christian faith revolves around the life-centered and life-giving belief in resurrection. We believe that new life is possible, for ourselves, for each other, for our country, and for our world. Even in the most difficult moments of our lives God offers us possibility. Possibility of rebuilding, redeeming, reconciling, and restoring. The same words that Jesus spoke to his disciples are words to live by for us today, “with God, all things are possible.” (Matthew 19.26

I hope you have a wonderful celebration of Independence Day next Tuesday in all the various ways (hopefully with a red, white and blue popsicle). As we taste, see, and hear the signs and celebrations of freedom, may it push us to new possibilities and the persistence to “do good, seek peace and go after it.” 

Below is the full prayer for Independence day from Rev. Tom Graves. I hope it is a blessing to you as it has been to me. 

God of our fathers and mothers, we thank you for this land we call home, and for those whose vision and wisdom made freedom a cherished blessing for our time.

We confess that we take our citizenship for granted. We stake our claim to its countless privileges but resist its responsibilities. We like to remember the sacrifices of those who began the American Revolution, but we fail to see the urgent need for new dedication in our own lives to the continuing revolution in our midst.

Help us to see our nation as an unfinished creation that needs our love and devotion as well as our intelligence and hard work.

Deliver us from words or deeds that turn the ideal of liberty and justice for all into the vulgarity of liberty and justice for some.

May the hope for our community and our nation be that we become the kind of society where every person knows you and has the opportunity to be all that they can possibly be.

Enable us to see that this kind of hope will never become a reality until we become brothers and sisters by conscious effort and mature patience. Transform our Fourth of July festivities into a celebration of the common life we have been given.

Make our brightest fireworks be those of indignation and holy wrath at blindness and bigotry toward any person or community of persons.

Translate the patriotism we espouse into deeds of constructive citizenship, and make the flag we fly, a banner of joy to be a part of a nation that could be this weary world’s best sign of hope.

May the possibility of peace and the gift of life give us the courage we need to live like Christians in America.

Through Jesus Christ our Lord, who loved his land, but never more than its people.

Amen.

Julie