As I watched my Facebook and Twitter feeds erupt over the weekend, I found myself grieving for our country. It seems so clear to me that our great adversary, Satan, continues to tighten his grip around our collective throats. The rage, hate, and vitriol is shocking. The name-calling and character assassination is appalling. We appear locked in perpetual adolescence, unable to see beyond our own emotions. In the midst of it all, I have found myself asking, "How would Jesus respond to this situation?"
Dispatches from the Front: Djibouti
Senite has the most beautiful smile. Her joy as she speaks is palpable. She laughs when she talks about being put in prison with her husband. She constantly interrupts herself to give praise to God for His faithfulness. She speaks of persecution and beatings and threats as if these thing are normal, which they are in her context. Her passion to share Christ is contagious and convicting.
Dispatch from the Front: Uganda
Pastor Silvest is an amazing Ugandan pastor who has planted nine churches (and counting) in his country. Humble. Soft-spoken. He speaks of God with a deep voice and an even deeper faith. He has been beaten several times. He has had his home robbed. His family threatened. Early in his ministry, his only means of transportation (a bicycle) was stolen so he walked from church to church to preach on Sundays.
Dispatch from the Front: South Sudan
Anarchy. Civil War. Unspeakable tragedy. Lawlessness. Suffering. Drought. Famine. Disease. Death. These are the conditions under which the Kingdom of God is growing in South Sudan. 150,000 new believers in the last ten years. 180 new church plants. 77 indigenous church planters risking their lives for the sake of the gospel. Through these incredible men and women, the Kingdom of God is growing through miracles, signs, and wonders. And I get the pleasure of spending a week with them. Like Elisha of old, I find myself wanting a double portion of their spirit.
God and Politics: Abortion
Every single human being who has ever been born has carried with them - in their bodies, minds, and spirits - the image of their Creator. As such, we do not draw our primary worth from our utility. From what value we add to society. From what we can produce or achieve. Our value is not extrinsic but intrinsic because we have been endowed by our Creator with a worth we cannot begin to measure.
Post-Election Spiritual Practices: Love Without Strings
"Ain't free will a bitch?" I was walking with one of my favorite theology professors through campus one day and his comment totally caught me off guard. First, because I had never heard the man cuss before. Second, because we were talking about how hard it is to love our enemies like Jesus commanded.
WE: U-Turn
Practicing Hope - Daily Time with God
I meet a lot of people in my line of work. They come from all different places and walks of life. They are all over the map spiritually. And almost all of them have a hunger down deep for more of God. They want to experience God. They want to know God. They believe on some level that life is incomplete without a relationship with God.
Finding the Center
The Prayer of a Drowning Man
Following Jesus
We have to stay alert as weeds spring up threatening to choke off the new life that's emerging in us through Christ. And it's not enough just to clear the ground of our old vices, we have to plant new virtues as well. We have to be intentional about sowing seeds of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. That way, we will reap a harvest of godliness over the course of a lifetime.
The Dangers of Pride
"The highest wisdom is to navigate one's course - with contempt of the World as your chart - towards the Heavenly Port." So says a fourteenth century Augustinian monk named Thomas in his classic work, The Imitation of Christ. It's a book about the danger of vanity. Pride. Arrogance. "If you're not humble, you make the Trinity nervous..." he writes in another place in the same work with tongue firmly planted in cheek.
Intergenerational Ministry
But here's the real truth. We can die on a lot of hills in the church. Most of which simply aren't worth it. This is one hill worth dying on. This is one battle worth fighting. Study after study shows that the most effective evangelism takes place when one generation reaches another with the good news of the gospel. When one generation makes it their aim, their goal, their passion to pass on the faith to the next generation. Parents to kids. Grandparents to grandkids. All so that, as one generation is "gathered to their fathers", there remains another generation to take their place.
Purpose
God either gets it all or He gets nothing. He doesn't leave us the choice to accessorize our life with a little Jesus. As if I can live my life the way I choose and "season" it from time to time with some Jesus. Like He's there to give my life a little spiritual flavor. God is not some spice. Some condiment. Some add-on to life. He is the Life.
First...Jesus
I am simply a guy who got ambushed by Jesus over twenty years ago on the campus of the University of Colorado. And I am still working out the details. It's a lifelong process. You don't learn it in school. You don't naturally fall into it in life. Putting Jesus first requires an almost relentless intentionality that is not easy.
Heart Check
Today I go for my annual heart check. I'll spend about a week on the treadmill. Stress test. EKG. The whole work up. My doctor will meet me in a place called Gojo in a country called Ethiopia which is literally on the other side of the world. He won't be gentle...Why do I do this? Because of something Jesus once said to me. "I came not to be served but to serve and to give my life as a ransom for many."
Real Life in Real Community
Her name is Wanda. She is an older lady who is living in the later stages of dementia. She loves horses and it seems like the only memories left to her are of the horseshows she attended when she was younger. Each Sunday she dresses up in her western style clothes, puts on her makeup, and comes to worship with her caregiver.
Truth vs. Lies
We live in constant danger. Bombarded by messages through mainstream and social media. So much information is being thrown at us on a daily basis, it is hard to separate truth from lie. Fantasy from reality. So much of how we think about life or think about the people in our lives or even think about ourselves is shaped far more profoundly by our culture than by the truth God has revealed in the Bible.
Caring for the Caregivers
In the midst of a crisis, the caregivers are often forgotten. Not only by the community they serve but even in their own minds. They will tell themselves they should be stronger. That their struggles are not as bad as those they serve. That they can get through it. That things will get better once the ordeal is over. This gets compounded by the image of strength they project to those around them.














