Category: Prayer

  • Rediscovering the Power of the Lord’s Prayer

    Rediscovering the Power of the Lord’s Prayer

    Rediscovering the Power of the Lord’s Prayer

    Prayer as Advent – God with Us

    While the Lord’s Prayer is ancient and familiar, three titles from Energion Publications invite readers to encounter it with fresh eyes. Whether you are looking for a radical spiritual wake-up call, a study on Christian character, or a guide connecting prayer to social justice, these books offer a path to diving deeper into the prayer of Jesus.

    Bold to Say

    Ignite your stalled engine and find power for a radical new start.

    Author: Dr. Geoffrey Lentz
    Focus: Spiritual Ignition and Radical Encounter

    If your prayer life feels stuck or routine, Bold To Say serves as a spiritual wake-up call. Dr. Geoffrey Lentz challenges readers to step out of “comfortable routines” and confront the “revolutionary nature” of this prayer. Rather than viewing the prayer as a simple recitation, this book presents it as a vehicle for surrender and transformation. It is designed for those seeking a bold encounter with a God who is described as both “transcendent and intimately present,” shaking up traditional views to reveal the prayerโ€™s “radical, even weird, power”.

    Ultimate Allegiance

    Orient yourself, choose your direction, ensuring your loyalty and character are aligned correctly with God and community.

    Author: Dr. Bob Cornwall
    Focus: Theology, Character, and Community Allegiance

    Ultimate Allegiance

    “Prayer changes things,” but Ultimate Allegiance asks how prayer changes us. Dr. Bob Cornwall explores how the Lord’s Prayer serves as a means to correct our relationship with the Creator and transform our relationships with one another. This book argues that prayer should ultimately transform “theology… into character and action”. By examining the major petitions of the prayer, Cornwall pushes readers to answer the ultimate question of where they place their loyalty.

    This book is designed specifically for small group or church studies, particularly when used with its related study guide.

    One World

    A map for navigating the specific terrain of the modern world, connecting the spiritual journey to the physical environment around us.

    Author: Bruce Epperly
    Focus: Process Theology, Social Justice, and Practical Application

    In One World, best-selling author Bruce Epperly presents the Lord’s Prayer as a “spiritual GPS” for the modern world. Writing from a process theology perspective, Epperly moves beyond the image of a distant ruler to introduce a “relational, open-spirited” God who is a “fellow sufferer who understands”. This book connects the prayer directly to contemporary issues, such as economic justice, environmental stewardship, and community healing, challenging readers to be “heavenly minded and earthly good”.

    โ€ข Key Features: As part of the Topical Line Drives series, it offers deep scholarship in a concise format. It includes practical spiritual exercises like the Examen and Lectio Divina, as well as a study guide for conversation.


  • Response to "Prayer is Not Enough" Part 2

    In the first part of my response to Steve Kindleโ€™s article on the recent school shooting in Florida, I talked about some of the factors that make this issue so divisive and difficult even to the point that there is disagreement over the actual problem. Along those lines I would point out that since part one of my response we had another school shooting, this one in Maryland. However, rather than a large death toll, only two students were wounded before an armed officer was able to stop the shooter. This would argue against the concept of gun free zones.
    Beyond the political questions, however, Steve raised some questions about prayer and God that I would like to address. The first is his claim that โ€œPrayer is not enough.โ€ Here I agree. It is vital and important, but it is not enough. 1 John 3:18 says, โ€œLittle children, we must stop expressing love merely by our words and manner of speech; we must love also in action and in truth.โ€ We are to pray, but we must do more, we must act and what we do must actually be effective. Where our disagreement is, is over what actions would, or would not, be effective.
    Steve had 3 โ€œunanswered questions.โ€ The third I addressed last time. Here are the first two.
    1. If an angel could warn Joseph so Jesus could escape, why not have an angel kill Herod and let all escape? After all, an angel killed all the first-born sons of the pharaoh. Why not send an angel to kill all mass murderers? (Yes, I know, God works in mysterious ways.)
    This is a good question, and in its various forms we could ask that of any number of situations. Ultimately it comes down to the problem of evil, i.e., why does God allow it, which is the most difficult question that Christians face. We believe in a loving and all-powerful God, so why does He allow evil? There is no completely satisfying answer. We can go a long way towards an answer by pointing to freewill, but even with freewill problems remain.
    So again, I agree with Steve, at least to some extent that God works in mysterious ways. How could it be otherwise? To effectively judge the actions of another we must be in a position to understand the situation and alternatives as well or better than the one who made the decision. But how can we ever be in that position with an all-knowing God?
    Say the angel had killed Herod and let all escape. God certainly could have done that, but then what? There are things that seem good to us in our limited understanding, that ultimately turn out to be horrible. Neville Chamberlain thought he was doing good by avoiding war. Now we know that what he really did was allow Hitler to grow in power to the point that a vastly larger and more destructive war was inevitable. He tried to do good, but ultimately made things worse.
    Of course, one could argue, why doesnโ€™t God send an angel to kill all the Herods and Hitlers, would that solve the problem? Perhaps, but then we would be focused on those still left, and the evil they did. After all, it is possible that the Herods and Hitlers are only the worst, because God did remove those who would have been even worse than they were. If, on the other hand, God were to remove anyone who does evil, there would be no one left.
    We know that God allows freewill and thus evil. We also know that God has a plan. Ephesians 1:9-10 speaks of Godโ€™s โ€œplan that he set forth in the Messiah to usher in the fullness of the times and to bring together in the Messiah all things in heaven and on earth.โ€ How our freewill and Godโ€™s plan fit together is beyond our ability to understand, and least this side of eternity.
    2. Why do so many of our urgent prayers go ignored? Pastors, think of all the times you prayed over spouses whose marriage was falling apart, to no avail; think of all the parents you prayed with whose child needed relief from drugs, crime, etc., to no avail; think of all the times you prayed for God to heal only to learn of continued chronic illness or death? Just to mention a few. (I know, God says, โ€œNo.โ€)
    The answer to this question is strongly related to the first question. However, there is another factor here. To see this, turn the question around, what if every prayer was answered? Would that really be a good thing? Strange as it sounds Hollywood has dealt with this question in the movie Bruce Almighty. Have a problem with your spouse, just say a prayer and its fixed. Have a child in trouble, just say a prayer and its fixed. If you are sick, say a prayer and you are better.
    Put this way the problems become clear. Should we raise our kids giving them what ever they asked for? Of course not, and neither does God. In fact, if it did work this way, God would be more the Great Vending Machine in the Sky serving us, rather than the God to whom we seek a relationship with.
    So the question really is not why so few get answered (i.e, the way we want), but rather, why any get answered at all. They do because He is a merciful God.
    Finally, Steve writes, โ€œThe doctrine of the Sovereignty of God, which refers to God being in complete control as he directs all things, has to go. Sure, you may tell me that God allows humans their free will and therefore accepts, consequently, innocent deaths. If, then, the survival or not of the people at Stoneman Douglas is finally left to chance, then prayer is not a factor at all.โ€
    The problem with Steveโ€™s statement is that is assumes Godโ€™s actions are all or nothing. We do not know what God did that day. What we know is that that He did not completely stop the killer and that 17-people died and 16 were injured. Maybe He did nothing. Maybe He did a lot and many more would have died, but for His intervention. We simply do not know. Nor can we know why those 17 and not others.
    What I believe has to go, is not the Sovereignty of God, but the belief that we must be able to understand everything. As science has removed much of the mystery of nature, bringing it under the control of human understanding, the belief has developed that our understanding trumps everything. This is not really new. You can see it in all the various attempts to transform the nature of God into something we can understand, but now it has taken on a new importance.
    In many respects, science and reason are the new ultimate, and everything must conform to our current scientific understanding or be discarded. This view has many problems, particularly given the increasing blurring of the lines between science and agendas. But the biggest problem is that this is in and of itself an irrational position when it comes to God. It is impossible for the finite to understand the infinite, and to demand that he infinite fit the finite, is irrational. So yes, God does work in mysterious ways.
    One final comment; however right or wrong my understanding is here, I fully acknowledge the emptiness and futility of such explanations to those who are grieving. These are explanations of the head and completely ill suited to comfort the heart. Rabbi Harold Kushner, author of When Bad Things Happen to Good People, once said that when dealing with those who are grieving we should โ€œshow up and shut up.โ€ To this I would add, and pray.
    byย Elgin Hushbeck, Jr., Engineer, teacher, Christian apologist, and author ofย Preserving Democracy,ย What is Wrong with Social Justice?,ย Christianity: The Basics,ย A Short Critique of Climate Change,ย Christianity and Secularism, andย Evidence for the Bible.
     
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  • Prayer is Not Enough

    Prayer is Not Enough

    After the school shootings in Parkland, Florida, the political class issued its now familiar response, โ€œOur thoughts and prayers are with the victims and their families.โ€ Interestingly, the very people it was supposed to mollify were outraged, prompting the response of voice and sign, โ€œPrayer is not enough.โ€ And it surely is not enough.
    The well-known story of the Magiโ€™s visit to Herod is illuminating. It resulted in the deaths of all the male children aged two and under in Bethlehem and environs, because Herodโ€™s position as king was threatened by the news they brought about a โ€œKing of the Jewsโ€ being born there. Were it not for an angel warning Joseph in a dream to get out of town, Jesus would surely have been in that number.
    There are several issues that arise from this story that have implications for Parkland (and all the other mass shootings of innocents of late). Among these are that Herod feigned piety all the while he was plotting to save his throne; the politicians who offered prayers are often noted to be anything but pious (especially our president). The motivation for Herod was potential loss of political power; our political class today has the same motivation. While Jesus was spared, an unknown number of innocents were not; surely the pious families prayed for the protection of their children. Jesus was unable to return safely to Judea as long as Herod was alive; as long as the potential exists for mass extermination, no child will be safe in our schools.
    Prayer did not help the children of Bethlehem, nor the seventeen who died in Parkland. It will likely not help you or me in any threatening situation. No person is relieved of the vagaries or vicissitudes of life. As Ecclesiastes put it, โ€œTime and chance happen to all.โ€ When I hear, โ€œWhy me?โ€ (or my child, or my friendโ€ฆ), I am tempted to ask, โ€œWhy not you? Why are you to be relieved of misfortune that befall others? What makes you so special?โ€ Even Jesus did not escape the inevitability of tragedyโ€”an unjustified death on the cross.
    The answer to our present difficultyโ€”too many guns available for harmโ€”lies in the Herod story. As long a Herod was alive, Jesus was not safe and innocent people died. As long as we make guns readily available, no one is safe in America. Prayer will not change this unless you agree with this sentiment: โ€œPray as though everything depended on God, and act as if everything depended on you.โ€
    Unanswered questions:
    1. If an angel could warn Joseph so Jesus could escape, why not have an angel kill Herod and let all escape? After all, an angel killed all the first-born sons of the pharaoh. Why not send an angel to kill all mass murderers? (Yes, I know, God works in mysterious ways.)
    2. Why do so many of our urgent prayers go ignored? Pastors, think of all the times you prayed over spouses whose marriage was falling apart, to no avail; think of all the parents you prayed with whose child needed relief from drugs, crime, etc., to no avail; think of all the times you prayed for God to heal only to learn of continued chronic illness or death? Just to mention a few. (I know, God says, โ€œNo.โ€)
    3. Why does โ€œthe right to bear armsโ€ trump the right to live without fear of being murdered by one?
    The doctrine of the Sovereignty of God, which refers to God being in complete control as he directs all things, has to go. Sure, you may tell me that God allows humans their free will and therefore accepts, consequently, innocent deaths. If, then, the survival or not of the people at Stoneman Douglas is finally left to chance, then prayer is not a factor at all. Surely the solution is found somewhere between โ€œItโ€™s Godโ€™s will,โ€ and Chance.
    Perhaps a rabbi offers us a suitable explanation. How does God make a difference in our lives if he neither kills nor cures?

    โ€œGod inspires people to help other people who have been hurt by life, and by
    helping them, they protect them from the danger of feeling alone, abandoned, or judged. …
    God, who neither causes nor prevents tragedies, helps by inspiring people to help.โ€
    (Harold Kushner, When Bad Things Happen to Good People)

    God, we are told, began the creation of the world by bringing order out of chaos. This is the continuing reality of daily life in the cosmos. Ultimately, I believe that chaos will finally be fully ordered into Shalomโ€”perfect wholeness. In the meantime, we are caught in the squeeze between the two. The โ€œGod, who neither causes nor prevents tragedies,โ€ has not abandoned us to our fate, but calls us to assist in defeating the chaos of our world.
    The students and faculty of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School show us the way. We are to come together as a family, protect one another, expose the Herods of our world, and use nonviolent means (the ballot box and organized resistance) to overcome. But, please, if you think โ€œprayer is the answer,โ€ put your actions solidly behind your petitions.
    Rev. Steve Kindlea retired minister, conducts a variety of seminars in churches across the country. He is the author of Stewardship: God’s Way of Re-creating the WorldIf Your Child is GayMarriage Equality: Why Same-sex Marriage is Good for the Church and the Nation, and I’m Right and You’re Wrong.

  • Introducing Reiki Healing Touch as Prayer with Your Hands

    Spirituality takes many forms โ€“ silence, breath prayer, visualization, and healing touch. Authentic spirituality embraces the body as well as spirit and mind. When you experience healing touch, your spirit is also transformed. Our cells and souls experience healing when Godโ€™s energy flows in and through us.
    In addition to my daily practices of centering prayer, prayerful walking, and breath prayer, I have practiced a form of healing touch, known as Reiki. Reiki has become an essential part of my prayer life and a way that I can reach out to others in a loving way. When I practice Reiki, whether hands-on or at a distance, I embody Jesusโ€™ healing ministry in the twenty-first century.
    Reiki, or universal energy, has its origins in the healing work of Mikao Usui, whose mystical experiences enabled him to discover a way to mediate divine healing energy. The origins of Reiki are uncertain: some narratives maintain that Usui was a Christian who sought to recover the healings of Jesus for the modern world; others believe that Usui was a Buddhist and that his connection with Christianity was intended to make Reiki more palatable to Westerners in the wake of World War II. Regardless of its origins, Reiki healing energy is as old as creation. I believe Reiki joins East and West in the quest for a holistic spirituality for our time. It is the same energy that flowed from Jesus to cure a woman who had been suffering from a hemorrhage for twelve years. (Mark 5:25-34) My recently-published text, The Energy of Love: Reiki and Christian Healing integrates Christian healing and Reiki healing touch. I wrote this to enable pastors and laypersons to join their spiritual lives as Christians with their personal practice of Reiki.
    Reiki is โ€œstill touchโ€ or hands-on healing, similar to the liturgical practice of โ€œlaying on of hands.โ€ When I lay hands on a person in the spirit of Reiki, the healing energy of the universe, revealed in Jesusโ€™ healing ministry, is awakened in myself and others. While Reiki practitioners speak of the energy flowing from one person to another, the energy of love, Godโ€™s healing energy, is present in all things. Godโ€™s healing energy is the reality in which โ€œwe live and move and have our being.โ€ (Acts 17:28) Moving through all things, it can be focused to promote the well-being of ourselves and others.
    Jesus once said โ€œI am the vine and you are the branchesโ€ฆ.connected to me, you will bear much fruit.โ€ (John 15:1-9) Jesus transformed persons by his touch and we can be Godโ€™s partners through divine energy, mediated through Reiki healing touch. When I practice Reiki, I experience Godโ€™s energy flowing in and through me, bringing wholeness to myself and others.
    In addition to hands-on Reiki, I give Reiki from a distance. In the spirit of โ€œquantum entanglement,โ€ distant Reiki witnesses to the interconnectedness of God and all life in the body of Christ. I share Godโ€™s healing energy with persons across the globe to aid their healing in mind, body, spirit, and relationship. Reiki connects us, as members of the โ€œdivine vine,โ€ regardless of how far away we may be. Godโ€™s energy of love flows through us and all things, giving birth to whole persons and whole communities.
    In the hospital setting, Reiki provides comfort, reassurance, and connection, and enhances the patientโ€™s sense of well-being. Reiki often reduces the side effects of medical interventions and promotes the well-being of those who receive treatments. I regularly give Reiki healing touch to persons receiving chemotherapy treatments as a way of promoting healing and reducing the symptoms of chemotherapy.
    Reiki is a way of life. I give myself a Reiki treatment as a daily practice in order to promote feelings of wholeness, peace, and physical well-being. When I give myself a Reiki treatment, I feel myself connected to Godโ€™s ever-present healing energy.
    Reiki has an ethical side. Persons who are attuned to Reiki make a commitment to use their bodies โ€“ and their hands – only in healing ways. Those who practice Reiki commit themselves to practicing peace and being Godโ€™s partners in healing the earth.
    As a spirit-centered Christian, I believe wherever there is truth and healing, God is its source. God heals through prayer, liturgical laying on of hands, and anointing with oil; and God also heals through Reiki healing touch.
    (If you are beginning a reiki healing group at your church, I commend to you both The Energy of Love: Reiki and Christian Healingย and Reiki Healing Touch and the Way of Jesus. If you have questions, please contact me at drbruceepperly@aol.com.)
    Dr. Bruce G. Epperly, pastor, professor, retreat leader, and Energion author of The Energy of Love: Reiki and Christian Healing,ย Healing Marks: Healing and Spirituality in Markโ€™s Gospel,ย Process Theology: Embracing Adventure with God,ย Galatians: A Participatory Study Guide,ย Angels, Mysteries, and Miracles,ย Finding God in Suffering: A Journey with Jobย and more.

  • Edward W.H. Vick: Doubt

    by Dr. Edward W.H. Vick, retired professor, philosopher, and author of Philosophy for Believers, From Inspiration to Understanding: Reading the Bible Seriously and Faithfully, History and Christian Faith, and more!
     

    Sorrowing Old Man by Vincent Van Gogh
    Sorrowing Old Man by Vincent Van Gogh

    How utterly disheartening it is when you are in the thick of serious questions and doubts to be told that you should not be questioning and doubting. If youโ€™re in the middle of a storm, itโ€™s no help to be told that you should not be there. What you then need is a helping hand, a sharing mind. And the more important the questions are to you, the more urgent will be your desire for clarity, proper consideration, and decision.
    When we were children we did not have to be taught to accept what our parents and teachers said. There was no other alternative but to accept. They were there first. But we grow up and we learn more than we knew as children. We begin to have the problem of sorting out the answers we learned and even the questions we should now be asking. This produces more questions and, most likely, confusion and frustration. No one who thinks at all gets through this stage of life without doubting.
    At this stage, the people who think they know every answer, or worse still, every question, are the ones who may be able to help us the least. People who have gone through an experience similar to ours a long time ago, and who have now found working answers to their questions, may have forgotten how hard-won their conclusions and attitudes were. Itโ€™s easy once youโ€™ve found a working answer to problems which were once important to us and forget or overlook the process of struggle that led up to our present positions. It is easy then to be unsympathetic. That happens when once has become very certain of the answer one has attained.
    There is, of course, a very different attitude. Having experienced a struggle, more or less intense, to achieve oneโ€™s present position, one can then reflect on that process. It becomes obvious on reflection that others who have achieved some certainty through the process of doubting have also had tensions, struggles, opposition. Realizing that is often the case, one may be ready to be sympathetic to them, and willing to give support and help as it is needed.
    Those who have not gone through what we go through in this period simply live in a different world from us, and speak to us in a language which does not connect. We hear the words and see the concern. We know their affection and appreciate it. Yet sometimes the very finality and placidity with which we are told what they believe what their new attitudes and positions are disarms us. Their position differs from ours and is considered unsatisfactory. It may even, if we are deeply troubled by dogmatism, lead us to reject not only the answer that but also the very quest in which we are participating. It may even lead top alienation. Fortunately sometimes respect and even affection can survive the emergence of drastic differences of belief. This is a gesture of despair, but quite an understandable one.
    To those who have difficulty finding people who will treat their questions seriously and with understanding, I say: โ€˜Do not be put off from the quest for truth and for life. Keep asking. Keep searching. And try, meanwhile, to be loving. If you donโ€™ t appear to be understood, then turn the tables by trying, as far as possible, to be understanding.โ€™
    It might help if I made an explicit distinction for you to think about. It is one thing to ask questions about what faith means. It is another thing to give up the faith.
    Because you have questions about the faith does not mean at all that you are giving up the faith. Do not let anybody persuade you that it does. If you are alert you will have serious questions. If your faith is vital and healthy, it will give rise to inquiry, to careful thought, to examination of answers you did not question as a child. One of the emancipating discoveries you can make is that Christian faith is big enough to permit the believer to live with questions, and to go on living with questions.
    To some questions there simply is no intellectually satisfying answer. For example, I have yet to read an intellectually satisfying answer to the problem of suffering. Indeed I do not believe that one is possible. There will always be room to doubt the goodness of God. I believe that God is good. But my faith in God does not depend upon the answer to this problem being satisfying to my mind. This does not mean of course that I shouldnโ€™t seek the very best explanation I can get.
    While to some questions there is no finally satisfying answer, there is an answer to the mystery of life–the answer of faith in Jesus as Lord. When Jesus is found, then the process of inquiry and of questioning is put into a context where it has both significance and direction.
    Life is not Godโ€™s reward for cleverness in solving problems. It is a gift he offers us because we need it. When we accept and live out of the grace he gives, joy is larger than frustration.
    How do you mark off what is beyond doubt from what you may doubt, and what you must doubt, what is indubitable from what may be doubted? Why do you not doubt if you feel you should? There is no virtue in resolving, โ€˜I will not doubtโ€™. you maintain a belief because no alternative has yet been offered to you or come to your attention. You have asked questions and may be in the process of finding answers that provide you with satisfaction. Questioning is not doubting, but it is often a pathway that leads us to revise our understanding, to revise our beliefs. But you maintain a belief or set of beliefs because it is comfortable to be accepted by other believers. You may forget that life and understanding become richer as new perspectives emerge. But guidance is often needed even if it is not sought.

    We have distinguished faith from belief. We distinguish โ€˜the faithโ€™ from beliefs held with in its context. Because you have questions about the faith does not mean that you are giving up the faith. Do not let anybody persuade you that it does. If you are alert you will have serious questions. If your faith is vital and healthy, it will give rise to inquiry, to careful thought, to examination of answers you did not question as a child, or have not questioned since. One of the emancipating discoveries you can make is that Christian faith is big enough to permit the believer to live with questions, and to go on living with questions.

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  • William P. Tuck: What Makes You Angry?

    by William Powell Tuck, retired parish pastor, professor, and author ofย Lord, I Keep Getting a Busy Signal: Reaching for a Better Spiritual Connection,ย The Church Under the Cross,ย A Positive Word for Christian Lamenting: Funeral Homilies, and more!

    Dr TuckToo many times in life we are angry for wrong or minor reasons. But sometimes there are times that we should be angry. Not to be angry at some times or in certain situations is a sin. If you and I can be surrounded by poverty, disease, hunger, sexual abuse, racism, crime and other abuses and not be angry enough to want to change these conditions, then something is wrong with us. This anger is not over some personal or petty concern but about someone elseโ€™s needs. This kind of anger can express love and genuine concern.

    The Church cannot be silent in the face of world problems but has a responsibility and a commission to be the transforming element within the world. The Church is to be the salt, the light, the leaven to change mankind. A newspaper columnist once remarked after a group in his community had a cleanup of crime in his city: โ€œAny group of honest men, when they get mad enough, can drive out crime and make an awful lot of trouble for the criminals.โ€ Anger is appropriate at this kind of behavior!

    Some voices are saying that the Church has become too tame and comfortable to challenge the evils of our society. If the Church, however, can recapture its birthright, it will sense the creative and redemptive power with its body. As T. S. Eliot wrote, โ€œIn the juvenescence of the year, comes Christ the Tiger.โ€ From this Christ the Church, his body, receives the explosive power to turn the world upside down. A tamed, comfortable Church will not change the world but a Church which has seen โ€œChrist the Tigerโ€ can. May the prayer of E. Stanley Jones become your prayer and mine. โ€œO Christ of the whip and the flashing eye, give us an inward hurt at the wrong done to others, but save us from personal resentments, for they destroy us. Amen.โ€

    Religious history rings with those who care enough to be angry at the right time. Moses was angry at the enslavement of the children of Israel in Egypt. Elijah was angry at the prophets of Baal and the idolatry which they practiced in Israel. John the Baptist was angry at the distortion of religion by the Jewish leaders. Jesus was angry with the abuse of those who charged worshippers large prices for their sacrificial animals. Paul was angry at those who wanted to confine the gospel to the Jews. Luther was angry at the corruption in the established church. John Wesley was angry at the practice of religion in the Church of England. There are times when anger needs to be directed toward particular situations or problems, if we are to find a solution.

    Several years ago the Chrysler Corporation former Chairman, Lee Iacocca, addressed the graduating class at the University of Michigan. Time Magazine reported his address in its June 20, 1983 issue. Among other things he told the students that day, he made the following observations: โ€œI want you to get mad about the current state of affairs. I want you to get so mad that you kick your elders in their figurative posteriors and move America off dead center. Our nation was born when 56 patriots got mad enough to sign the Declaration of Independence. We put a man on the moon because Sputnik made us mad at being No. 2 in space. Getting mad in a constructive way is good for the soul — and for the country.โ€ There are constructive ways where anger can be beneficial. We need to discover those areas and ways.

    One of my favorite heroes from the Civil War is Robert E. Lee. After the Civil War, Lee was in Lexington, Virginia, where he had gone to be president of a small college called Washington University. One day he was sitting on his porch in his rocking chair with his crutches by his side. Some men from the Louisiana Lottery came to see him and offered him a proposition. Lee couldnโ€™t believe what they had said, so he asked them to repeat it. They said that they didnโ€™t want anything from him except to use his name. In using his name, they told him that they would make him rich. Lee stood up in his chair and thundered: โ€œGentlemen, I lost my home in the war. I lost my fortune in the war. I lost everything in the war except my name. My name is not for sale, and if you fellows donโ€™t get out of here Iโ€™ll break this crutch over your heads.โ€

    Sometimes anger needs to be directed in a positive way. The apostle Paul has said, โ€œBe angry and sin not.โ€ Phillips has translated that verse, โ€œNever go to bed angry–donโ€™t give the devil that sort of foothold.โ€ Paul wrote in the latter part of this same chapter the following words: โ€œHave done with spite and passion, all angry shouting and cursing, and bad feeling of every kind. Be generous to one another, tender-hearted, forgiving one another as God in Christ forgave you.โ€ (Ephesians 4:31-32). What makes you angry? There should be some things that do. But on other occasions, you need to keep your anger under control. We are measured by what makes us angry.

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  • Prayer and the Nation

    The Jesus ManifestoOur Tuesday night hangout was actually recorded around 1 pm central time yesterday. I had a great conversation about prayer, especially prayer in a time of crisis and prayer for our nation with Dr. David Moffett-Moore. What good does prayer do? How does prayer relate to action? You may be surprised at some or Dave’s answers to my questions.


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  • YOU ARE GODโ€™S POEM

    by Nancy Petrey

    Habitation of HoneyAfter my book, Habitation of Honey: Poems and Songs, was published this May, I continued to write poems, and they came in quick succession. God would inspire me with a thought or a verse from Scripture, and the words would flow out in rhythm and rhyme. Writing a poem or a song is more fun and easier than writing prose. The advantage of poetry is that it isnโ€™t complicated, it takes less time, and it encapsulates truth that can fly like an arrow to the heart.
    I wrote a poem, โ€œHis Shaft of Light,โ€ as a poetic response to the shooting in the AME church in Charleston, South Carolina, and the subsequent controversy about the Confederate flag. Here is an excerpt of that poem:
    Ramping up the rhetoric, accusations rife,
    Doing all they can to get you into strife.
    Please donโ€™t take the bait, and let your temper flare.
    Behind it all is Satan, of whom youโ€™re not aware
    Principalities and powers, fanning flames of hate,
    People rush to judgment, but God calls out to wait.
    Pause and say a prayer to the One Who sees it all.
    Be a source of healing, be ready at His call
    .โ€ฆ.
    Look for opportunities to be His shaft of light,
    When anger smokes and voices rage,
    His Spirit scatters night.
    Warfare is our portion, so itโ€™s best that we obey
    Our Commander, the Messiah โ€“ He will lead the way.
    The next morning I awoke with a big question mark in my soul. Was this poem really from God or just my own โ€œtakeโ€ on the situation? I asked the Lord and then turned at random in the Bible to see if He would answer with a certain verse. It so happened I opened at Ephesians 2, and my eye fell on the little boxed-in section at the top right of the page, โ€œWord Wealth,โ€ with the definition of the Greek word for โ€œworkmanshipโ€ from the 10th verse: โ€œFor we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them.โ€
    This is what I read: โ€œPoiema (poy-ay-mah): from the verb poiea, โ€˜to make.โ€™ (Compare โ€˜poemโ€™ and โ€˜poetry.โ€™)โ€ OH! I GASPED! It was obvious God was speaking to me! I held the Bible to my chest and began to worship and thank Him for answering my question and convincing me that my poem was indeed from Him! Then I read on: โ€œPoiema emphasizes God as the Master Designer, the universe as His creation and the redeemed believer as His NEW creation (Eph. 2:10). Before conversion our lives had no rhyme or reason. Conversion brought us balance, symmetry, and order. WE ARE GODโ€™S POEM, HIS WORK OF ART.โ€[1] Wow! Just to think that I am Godโ€™s work of art, His poem!
    Satan had tried to squelch my creative endeavor, but God graciously affirmed me as a poet. I was scheduled to speak at a womenโ€™s meeting a month later, and I shared my testimony about how God spoke to me in the midst of my doubts. Then I recited a new poem God had given me from Ephesians 2:10 just for this group of women, โ€œGodโ€™s Poem.โ€ Here is an excerpt:
    โ€ฆ
    Put on His whole armor, quote His word out loud,
    You are Godโ€™s poem, of you Heโ€™s very proud.
    Maidens on the march, publishing His word,[2]
    As you speak in love, know that youโ€™ll be heard.
    God wants a multitude, a wedding is His goal โ€“
    Jesus and His bride, His poem to unfold.
    โ€ฆ
    All my poems and songs in my book, Habitation of Honey, are based on Scripture. The recurring theme is the destiny of the Church as the Bride of Christ, her highest calling. I think of these poems as helping to prepare the way for the return of the Lord. John the Baptist did that the first time the Messiah came to earth. Remember, he ate locusts and wild honey in the wilderness. To be ready for the Bridegroom, the Bride needs to continually eat the honey โ€“ read and study the Scripture. These scriptural poems and songs can serve as daily devotionals. They are varied, some calling for action, some extolling the awesomeness of God in creation, and some contemplative. I need this one, โ€œSit Quietlyโ€ (an excerpt):
    As the butterfly flitting from flower to flower,
    Youโ€™ve tasted the nectar in this worldโ€™s hour.
    Your wings have shimmered with light from above,
    But I would tuck you under my wing, little dove.
    Youโ€™ll never want to fly away,
    Nestled by Me, youโ€™ll want to stay.
    You will hear my heart, if you lie very still,
    And youโ€™ll have my power working in your willโ€ฆ
    There are seasons in life, and youโ€™ve run the race,
    But nothing is better than seeing My face.
    Sit quietly now, look up at My smile.
    Iโ€™ve been gazing at you a long, long while.
    What kind of poem is God making of your life? What truth is He displaying through His workmanship in your life? What facet of His beauty, power, and love is He showing forth in the poetry of your life? You are Godโ€™s poem! Rejoice!

    [1] Jack W. Hayford, Gen. Ed., Spirit-Filled Life Bible (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, New King James Version, 1991), p. 1789.
    [2] Psalm 68:11 โ€“ โ€œThe Lord gave the word, great was the company [feminine noun] of those who proclaimed it.โ€


    Order Habitation of Honey: Poems and Songs here: https://energiondirect.info/christian-living/habitation-of-honey
  • Felix culpa: โ€œa good mistakeโ€

    by Kent Ira Groff

    Table Talk coverSometimes you can reflect on a failed project or a dumb little thing you did last weekโ€”in light of St. Augustineโ€™s concept of felix culpa. Often itโ€™s translated, โ€œhappy fault or fortunate fault,โ€ referring to the fault/fall of Adam and Eve, which becomes the occasion for each of us to realize the โ€œgrace in the gritโ€ as each of us leaves the garden our own less than perfect lives. I like to translate it โ€œa good mistake.โ€
    Only retroactively do we see good coming out of a failed experiment. But even to frame failure as an โ€œexperimentโ€ begins to redeem it. Thomas Edison could say he didnโ€™t fail, but found 1,000 ways how not to make the light bulb. Proactively, what we can do is pray to notice flecks of grace in the gaff or the goofโ€”that it can become a good mistake.
    โ€œDrops of experienceโ€ are never wasted, according to mathematician philosopher Alfred North Whitehead. When you lose computer data on new members or drive two hours to a hospital to visit a cancer patient who was just discharged or eke away hours learning new technology for a website, tell yourself: All that time I spent praying for new members or for folks with cancer or for our congregation to connect with tech generations.
    Hereโ€™s a really good mistake. In September 1928 Alexander Fleming returned to the laboratory of St. Maryโ€™s Hospital in London after being on holiday for a couple of weeks. He discovered Petri dishes that his students mistakenly left in an incubator had formed mold in the dank atmosphere. Fleming noticedโ€”and noticing is the miracle of any genuine discoveryโ€”that the mold had killed a ring of bacteria. Flemingโ€™s surprise discovery of penicillin is a real life story of how a good mistake created the gift of healing for generations. His vacation led to his vocation.
    Micromanaging. The need to control people and situations is one of the demonic expressions of perfectionism. At the root of the demon of micromanaging lies a secret fear of shame: I donโ€™t want anotherโ€™s half-botched job to reflect poorly on my own self-competence. Another demon behind micromanaging is failing to trust in God by not trusting people.
    Humility in a strange way is actually spiritual self-confidence: confidence that you can celebrate the gifts of others, rather than belittle them, while at the same time claiming your own. Itโ€™s a God-confidence that there are enough gifts for both your neighbor and you to claim your potential for the good of the cosmos, without exploiting or belittling each other. And thatโ€™s a good definition of Greek telios: matureโ€”even though not perfect.
    Spiritual Practice: โ€œLet It Beโ€ Listen to the Beatlesโ€™ song โ€œLet It Beโ€ (on iTunes or CD). โ€œMother Maryโ€ refers to Paul McCartneyโ€™s dream of his mother, who died when he was fourteen. The title also can be heard as a subtle take on Maryโ€™s response when the angel Gabriel announced she would bear a childโ€”seemingly impossible: โ€œLet it be to me according to your wordโ€ (Luke 1:38). As you hear โ€œLet it beโ€ฆโ€ in your mind imagine letting go of an issue that you canโ€™t control, or accepting a challenge that may want to โ€œbirthโ€ itself in you.


     

  • How can we develop a real discipline of prayer when God seems silent?

    by William Powell Tuck

    Throughout my life I have sought to commune with God. I have undertaken this endeavor in many places. I have found moments of contemplation in quiet, small, white-framed country churches, in large traditional or contemporary-designed urban churches, in ancient Gothic cathedrals in Europe, in a Quaker Meeting House, in tent meetings, by lakes, rivers, creeks or sea shores, on secluded wooden mountainsides, on top of an extinct volcano, on white and black sand beaches, by campfires at night, before a blazing fire in my own den, in my study, on park benches, walking through multicolored hillsides in the fall, pausing beside a snow blanketed field, beside waterfalls, jogging along roadsides, following the path of saints from the past, secluding myself from others, fasting, finding an oasis of quiet in a noisy city and immersing myself in its stillness, and in many other ways. In many and varied modes, I have looked for ways to meditate. I have seldom found this desire so easily met or the place and conditions ideal. I have often been embarrassed to admit that praying has not come so easily or naturally to me.
    I thought for a long time that this was simply a reflection on my personality or background. I soon discovered, however, in my Christian pilgrimage that most persons I know struggled with the same difficulty. Too many laypersons were content to have their pastor do their praying for them on Sunday morning. Prayer was not their โ€œthing.โ€ In our busy, modern world, prayer seems so remote, old-fashioned, and impractical. โ€œLeave prayer to the professional holy men and women. We have real work to do,โ€ they say.
    Yet, I have heard ministers complain because laypersons interrupt their time for praying and give them so much busy work they have that they have little time to pray. One minister I know got in trouble with his church because he refused to give up the time he had set aside for prayer to attend a denominational breakfast meeting. He considered his prayer time so important that he would not let anything change it, even a denominational church meeting.
    On the other hand, I have heard lay persons express dismay that their minister was not a praying person and refused to offer them any spiritual guidance. I have also known many devoted ministers and laypersons who have longed to deepen their spiritual life. My spiritual life has been enriched by both laypersons and ministers. I know one layman who arises each morning at 5:30 a. m. and prays and meditates for an hour. He has continued this practice for twenty-five years. I know a minister who sets aside several hours a day for quiet a reflection. Are these persons exceptions? I am afraid they are.
    I am convinced that one reason that more laypersons and ministers do not spend more time in meditation is not because these persons do not love God or the Christ-like way, but they lack spiritual discipline to aid them in their religious journey. My book, Lord, I Keep Getting a Busy Signal, is one pilgrimโ€™s suggestions on what has been meaningful to him. I have not tried to offer more than a brief sketch to throw some light on the path. I do not believe that our habits of superficial prayer time will ever change until we take seriously the necessity for spiritual disciplines.


    Order Lord, I Keep Getting a Busy Signal here: https://energiondirect.info/ministry/lord-i-keep-getting-a-busy-signal
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