Youth Quake – The Final Day

 
We survived!
 
The last morning was spent in worship and praise as well as a final message from the main speaker Duffy Robbins. He was very engaging and provided a powerful memorable message summed up in three simple statements:
 
1. God has a plan
 
2. Humanity has a problem
 
3. The choice is up to you
 
Much work was being done by the Spirit not only amongst our youth but also myself and the leaders. The fallout will be interesting (good way). We ate lunch, piled onto the bus, prayed REALLY hard for the trip home and hit the road. It was a trip filled with laughter, fun, practical jokes, sleep, frustration and good old fashioned fellowship. Friendships were made, renewed and strengthened.
 
Pics to come! Thanks for your prayers!

Youth Quake

 
February 24

Youth Quake – Day 2

After a night’s sleep that could not have been described as restful we awoke in time to just miss breakfast. Well – some of us. The morning worship was awesome and we will never forget the lunchtime ribwiches.Kelsey has gone to get the new-Improved bus and there will be much rejoicing! Nobody has been injured too badly yet. All is well. more to come later.
 
 

Youth Quake -Day 1

Well – what an eventful day! We started out this morning at 6 am with 28 people and a church bus. Despite all the weather warnings it was clear sailing all the way. We stopped for inumerable pee breaks and made it to Weybern (sp?) Saskatchewan in time for lunch. I made several smug remarks about how well the bus was running feeling quite good about the decision to bring our bus. So of course less than 2 hours from Briercrest the bracket holding the brake assist belt broke which led to the cable snapping and a bus full of stranded youth. Well God is amazing. He could’ve replaced the bolts but that’s not typically His style and it wouldn’t have given us the chance to see Him at work in His children (which is where He really shines). We were on the road for 3 minutes when some guys pull over and call Weybern school board to send a bus which comes in about 15 minutes to bring the youth to the mall. Meanwhile Briercrest sent a bus and the youth made it in time. Kelsey & I had the bus towed to Ford and the repairs are simple. It will be good as new tomorrow & Ford loaned us a car till we pick it up! God is great! The youth had a good "unplanned" adventure! The event has been great so far.Music, worship, prayer, etc! Late night ahead.More tomorrow.Gotta go – I just tapped this post out on my Axim & the hand has cramped. Plus, I am logged into an unsecure signal from across the street. Night!

I am (a member of the) Legion

 
Well – it’s official, as of yesterday I have been accepted as a full member of the Royal Canadian Legion Morden branch #011. My primary reason for joining is to honor the memory of my grandfather (and other veterans). I also believe that Remembrance Day is a critical observance and the Legion is the primary reason we in Canada continue to observe it.
 
Very exciting. It makes me feel old for some reason. 😉 Well – maybe I am.
 
Cheers!
 
 

Bei Cun (why do i suddenly want breakfast?)

 
As I read Philip Jenkins The New Faces of Christianity I am struck by how much of a compendium of African and Asian Christian theology and writing it is. Those who know me know that I have lamented the fact that the West is in sore need of broader Biblical perspective than it’s European and North American heritage offers (as great as this heritage is). The greater part of the body of Christ today seems to be made up of African and Asian Christians and hence one would expect it would be wise to see how God is revealing Himself to them (keep the hermeneutic spiral moving upward as it were).
 
Anyhow in reading Jenkins I have noted his reference of Chinese novelist and screenplay writer Bei Cun, considered a leading Chinese avate-guard writer. Jenkins writes of Bei Cun’s surprising conversion to Christianity in 1992 (I suppose surprising because these days "smart" liberals simply don’t convert to Christianity having evolved beyond it [SARCASM ALERT]) and of his subsequent work of fiction entitled The Marriage of Zhang Sheng which is somewhat biographical.
 
So I go to Amazon.ca to add Bei Cun to my Wishlist (God is going to have to dramatically extend my life if I am to get to everything on the list or else grant me access in Heaven) and what do I find? The great and all-powerful Amazon does not have any reference to Bei Cun at all. Nothing. This seemingly limitless bookstore of the e-ther apprently has some limits.
 
Well – if someone out there finds a source to purchase the works of Bei Cun (particularly the book referenced above) let me know.

Bridge to Terabithia

 
Well – we took the kids to see Bridge to Terabithia today and I expected a reasonably exciting, Narnia-esque fantasy adventure. What I got instead was a brutally powerful, emotional story that left me trying to catch my breath when I left.
 
Now – I am a sucker for emotional movies but don’t tell anyone because I have to keep up my he-man macho persona. There is so much depth to this film which explores the friendship between two middle school kids (guy and girl). I was so completely caught off guard by how emotional the movie was that it is hard even now to recall some of the details.
 
It really is hard to review this film since I never read the book (which I will be reading). I will simply say you should see the film because it touches on some incredible themes and emotions and you will leave the theatre better for the experience if not a little drained.
 
Favorite quote:
 
At one point in the story main character Leslie has just been to church (maybe for the first time) and remarks that her friend Jess and his sister May Belle have to believe in Jesus but don’t like the story of his death and resurrection. Then she says "I don’t have to believe it and I think it’s beautiful".
 
I think this quote illustrates some of the baggage (our own and other’s expectations) we bring with us when we are brought to Christ, whether we like it or not, as opposed to the insight of one who encounters Him as if by accident. Leslie can see the beauty of Christ’s sacrifice because it is presented to her unadorned by family expectations, tradition, and cultural bias…she is simply a young girl recognizing the significance of sacrifice and resurrection.
 
Powerful movie.

Young & Old

 
ever wonder if you are old trying to be young or young trying to be old? didn’t think so. more when I figure out where this thought came from.

Books = Excitement!!!

 
Some people get excited about going to a rave or a party; some about a hockey or football game; still others about the latest clothing fad…me – I get excited by books. I love books. I cannot say enough about books. It is not simply the knowledge and new worlds they contain but the feel of a book. Simply by picking up a book I can tell you whether it was printed on quality, acid-free paper or stuff thats one step from being tree bark and will degrade in two years. I love the feel of a book. I love turning the pages and I love the smell of old books that have weathered the storm of ages. Anyhow – you get the idea.
 
What brings on this gushing love letter to the cultural phenomenon that is "the book"? Well – I finally got a book I have been waiting on for quite a while now – it is the Africa Bible Commentary, edited by Tokunboh Adeyemo. A comprehensive commentary on the Bible written entirely by African theologians. All credit to Johnathan Snowball, esteemed missionary to Africa, who enlightened me to its existence.
 
For obvious reasons we in North America receive pretty much 100 percent of our theological content from North American (primarily US) and European sources (scholars, pastors, theologians). While I was in seminary the only non-North American/European content I was exposed to was the following:
 
– Early church writings which were almost exclusively African or Middle-eastern in origin (Desert Fathers, Augustine etc.)
– Justo Gonzalez’s History of Christianity (He’s Cuban but living and writing from the US)
– The Bible
 
Of course many people forget that the Bible is a God-inspired work written by middle-eastern men. It was amazing that through three years of seminary any exposure to non-North American, non-European content was largely up to the student.
 
God is doing significant things in what some call "the global south" (Africa, Asia, Latin/South America). If one were to look at the body of Christ from a demographic perspective one would find that the vast majority of it is made up of people from the global south. The growth of the church is happening primarily in the global south as well. The largest Christian church in the world is in Seoul, South Korea.
 
I am excited about hearing what my godly brothers and sisters in Christ from the global south are saying about God and more importantly, what God is saying to them about Himself.
 
Along with the Africa Bible Commentary I also received The New Faces of Christianity: Believing the Bible in the Global South by Philip Jenkins.
 
Very exciting!
 

Sad is

 
sad is a great open field
gold-brown in sunset
lonely brick school
background sentinel
 
sad is late-summer play-yard
empty at 5:47 pm
save one
 
sad is gray rail tracks
under gray rail skies
Nov. 26th afternoon
 
Sad is cold, cluttered cubicle
$lave, $lave, $lave
while California calls
 
sad is a bus seat
wheels rolling toward
the old home
 
sad is cold awareness
something missing
courage not gone
’cause it never was
 
sad is a bony-cold vapour
driven away
by the blinding morning sun
when the shadows are long
a stretching retreat
away from the light
 

Authority in the Church

 
I appreciated the recent pastoral letter from Alliance president Franklin Pyles that I received his permission to reprint it here. Here it is:
 
================================
 

Pastoral Letter
The Alliance Family of Churches
Franklin Pyles, President

AUTHORITY IN THE CHURCH: The Pastor’s Authority and the Authority of the Word of God

 Dear Workers:

   The church had a pastor who preached in what the younger elders considered to be an older fashion – holiness from perhaps a legalistic slant, rather hard hitting salvation messages and, well, that was about it. So they told him that they wanted to play a part in the choice of sermon topics. He told them no. When I interviewed an elder said: since we are elders, God speaks to us about what the pastor should preach about. I was asked if I agreed with that. Do you? I didn’t then; I don’t now.

  What is the authority of the pastor over his teaching of the Word of God?

  Let’s begin by stating the obvious. The Word of God has absolute authority. We are not to ever think that the authority of the Word is overridden by a message of God through another medium. Paul says that if an angel from heaven preaches another gospel let him be accursed[1]. No voice, no revelation trumps the Word. Nor do circumstances of life which might be interpreted as revelation through divine providence. How many have fallen into sin because they convinced themselves that God had arranged for this other man or other woman to come into their life. We should be clear; this is the broad road that leads to destruction.

  Further, the Word of God has authority over the church. This is particularly relevant in the light of those who see the surrounding culture as setting forth truth, because truth is not understood as steadfast and eternal. Hence, the culture sets the boundaries for conduct both inside and outside the church, and the Word of God is a source of comment on it.

   However, the Bible must always be interpreted, for it is true that there is no such thing as a non-interpreted text. This is where the authority of the pastor comes into play, for the question, who gets to interpret, and according to what standard, rushes to centre stage.

  It is true that as Protestants we believe that the priesthood of all believers not only means that every Christian may confess his or her sins to God and receive forgiveness, but that every Christian has access to the Word and can understand the Word directly. This is called the perspicacity of the Word. However, we also recognize that the interpretation of the Bible requires skill. And we recognize that all actions of interpretation begin with some theological and cultural assumptions that the interpreter may not wholly recognize as assumptions. Hence, while every Christian has access to the Word, Christians are best served when they are taught the skills of interpretation, given proper theological assumptions, and to the extent possible have cultural assumptions elucidated..

  Enter the pastor. A major part of the ministry of every pastor is to equip the flock so that every person is able to open the Word of God and to eat its sweet honey. While doing that, the pastor must also guard the flock from all the poison that is being set on nearby tables. He does this by growing up the people in wisdom and understanding as he preaches and teaches the Word.[2]

   To do this properly, the Pastor must walk a fine line. On the one hand, the possibility of personal error must be admitted. And it must be recognized that the pastor also continues to grow in skill and understanding. Even more, it is frequently the case that one or more people in the congregation know more about the passage than the pastor. At the same time, the pastor must stand firmly on this ground, God has set a teacher in this local church, and that teacher, while fallible, is this pastor.

  This means that on the whole, in the aggregate, not all opinions are equal. The pastor’s opinion is the one which is to be respected.

  Respected and obeyed. Here, at last, we get to the rub. Authority and obedience. Because the pastor’s ability to interpret the Word is fallible, the pastor must first be very careful about what he claims is a word which must be obeyed. This means two things. The pastor needs to study and the pastor needs to listen to what other teachers in the wider church are saying. As well, the pastor should be doing a reality check, for good interpretations bring forth good, not rotten or hurtful, fruit in real life.

  The congregation has a right to do the same thing. This is one of the reasons there are denominations, to hold pastors accountable for their teaching.

Should a pastor begin to teach that which is false, it is right, proper and good for denominational leaders to immediately step in and bring whatever correction is needed, and here there is also real authority.  To be forthright, in all teaching our workers are accountable to the wider Alliance family of churches, which authority is embodied in the District Superintendent.

  Further, on issues that are currently being discussed, the denomination has a right to take a stand, and instruct its pastors to take the same stand. Thus, as an example, we in the C&MA have just taken a stand on the meaning of marriage.

  Having said that, having given these very important disclaimers, it is important to also state that, when the pastor is preaching from the Word and presenting a truthful interpretation, that interpretation is to be obeyed. Jesus said: “teaching them to obey all that I commanded,”[3] not teaching the people to consider what Jesus commanded as one good option among several, or even teaching that what Jesus commanded is in fact the pragmatically best option. No, the pastor is to present teaching that calls forth the kind of obedience that obeys instead of following the lusts of the flesh[4], that obeys when it is painful or costly to obey[5], that obeys in the face of death.

  And who decides what teaching is to be presented as a clear call for the congregation to follow?   The pastor.  The pastor is to seek the Spirit, search the Word, use all solid interpretative methods and consider denominational accountability, then open the book to the people. When the book is opened, the people should be eager to hear, for the things they are hearing are the oracles of God, the message of the Holy Spirit to them in this moment, in this context.

  Brothers and sisters in ministry as you open the Bible, preaching and teaching in various program venues, do not look upon it as just your thoughts. Honor the teaching, even though it comes from your mouth. Remember, this moment was ordained by God; it is how Christ determined to defeat Satan and mature these people. It is a holy moment, and the words that you are speaking are holy words. And remember to obey them yourself.

   Your very real friend,

  Franklin Pyles, President

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada


[1] Galatians 1:8

[2] An example is the way so many of our pastors wisely not only answered The DaVinci Code but seized the opportunity to speak to the wider community about the truth of Christ’s birth, life, death and resurrection.

 [3] Matthew 28:20

[4] Colossians 3:5

[5] Psalm 15:4

Can You Keep a Secret?

 
Ok, Itsy’s birthday is coming up and I REALLY want to get her a coral (pink) Nintendo DS with Nintendogs as a game. I feel it is safe to write this here because she doesn’t read my blog (don’t tell her – I trust you..).
 
A while back the boys each got a Gameboy. Well – they NEVER use them. They may as well be paperweights. But Itsy! Itsy loves them (they could be called Gamegirls). When she uses them she plays Dora the Explorer, Hello Kitty or Lilo & Stitch (sometime SpongeBob). So I know she would love Nintendogs on the DS.