Archive - March, 2005

Sex Part 4/Sex, Christianity and Culture: Redeemed Potential

Finally, after attempting my first ever sermon series on sex, and surviving it, I would have to say that is was a much more enjoyable experience than I would have imagined. Enjoyable? Yes, because it was obvious from the student’s facial expressions, to the tears, to the comments afterwards, to the many emails that I received, that speaking on sex was a much needed subject. It’s a much needed subject, especially in our culture which is drowning in a distorted view of sexuality, and how God designed it to be.

The series began by looking at the overall picture of Sex, Christianity and Culture, and followed with posts focusing on “Created Goodness”, “Sinful Distortion” and “Redeemed Potential.” These are descriptions that I borrowed from late Christian ethicist, pastor, author, theologian, Lewis Smedes. Those seemed like appropriate, beautiful descriptions of the predicament we find ourselves in sexually. “Created Goodness”: Looking at how God designed sex, and brought man and woman together in the Genesis 1-2 account. “Sinful Distortion”: Looking at the ways we have taken the goodness of sex, and how God created it to be, and how we have taken it into sinful, destructive directions. “Redeemed Potential”: Looking at how we are all given the opportunity through God’s grace and mercy, to be forgiven, to be redeemed, and to move forward in our lives, out into a new direction.

So it is with that in mind that I finished my last sermon in this series, looking at that very issue of, “Redeemed Potential.”

The word “redeemed” is a very interesting word, especially in the Biblical sense. It’s a word that comes off the tongue very easily, very smooth, and it has a very nice and beautiful sound to it. “Redeemed.” “Redemption.” Sounds good. But thought it’s a word that sounds beautiful, it is very different underneath the surface. Underneath it’s a very gritty, and disturbing, and dirty word. Not dirty as in bad, but dirty as in not being clean. It’s a dirty process that brings about a beautiful result. What is beautiful to us, cost someone something. It cost God His Son Jesus Christ, and the cost was death. It’s a beautiful word, that was brought about by a bloody process.

It is a word that in the New Testament means to “buy back a slave or captive”, or making someone “free by payment of a ransom.” It means “to release.” Outside of the New Testament its meaning was very similar to the ancient Greeks, where it could mean “to be relieved of an occupation” or to “permit to leave a country.” It is the process by which one leaves a former state, and heads down the path into a new life, into something better. But as you can see, there is a cost. The cost is not on our part though which is the beautiful thing from our perspective. The cost, the ransom, the release, was paid for by someone else.

In the Bible you can see this word used in various contexts, whether its the words of Psalm 130:7, where the people sing about redemption as they ascent to the temple to worship. Or maybe it’s the words of Jesus in Luke 21:28, where he talks about the end times and the destruction of the temple, and the redemption that waits. Maybe it’s Paul’s words in Ephesians 1:7, where he talks about the redemption brought about by blood. The blood of Christ. Paul continues this theme somewhat in Colossians 1:14 talking about redemption and the forgiveness of sins. Or what about this haunting and beautiful image in Hebrews 9:12: “He entered once for all into the Holy Place, not with the blood of goats and calves, but with his own blood, thus obtaining eternal redemption.” Wow! And then there is this passage with which I think we can most often identify with, especially when our body, soul, mind and spirit has been wracked by sin. Romans 8:22-25, “We know that the whole creation has been groaning in labor pains until now; and not only the creation, but we ourselves, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly while we wait for adoption, the redemption of our bodies. For in hope we were saved. Now hope that is seen is not hope. For who hopes for what is seen? But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.”

When it comes to redemption in the sense we are talking about, the redemption of our sexual sin, there is not a specific word. Rather, redemption is a much larger word, one that covers all sin, sexual or not. It is a word that covers the whole messy process of our lives. It is the process that cleanses us from our pasts that are not pretty, whether we struggled with sexual sin (pornography, hooking-up, pre-marital sex, etc.). God’s redemption brings life out of the death that was consuming us while we were still yet slaves in bondage.

What does redemption look like then if you have failed sexually? Well, I think it can look like many differnet things. Or it can take on many different forms. There is no pattern, there is no step by step process, but I do think the Bible can bring some of these things to light.

1) I think it’s a realization on our part that we can’t continue to live life or fight sin on our own. It’s a realization that we are fallen people and that there is a different way to live life. A life that God is offering us. I see this in the story of John 4, where Jesus confronts the Samaritan woman in her sin, and offers her “livng water.” He offers her a new way to live. But first of all he makes her aware of her sin, and that there is a better way. “Jesus said to her, ‘Go call your husband, and come back.’ The woman answered him, ‘I have no husband.’ Jesus said to her, ‘You are right in saying, ‘I have no husband’; for you have had five husbands, and the one you have now is not your husband. What you have said is true!” (John 4:16-18). Jesus gets to the point, pointing out her sin, but offering her a new life, a new way to live. I think we too must come to the realization of our sin, and choose the life that God has offered. Sometimes we realize it on our own. Sometimes it’s through our friends and family and other times God steps in and brings it to our attention.

2) It’s a conscious decision of accepting God’s grace and mercy, and leaving our life of sin. Sure we will still sin in our life, because we will not be perfect. But I think God is asking us to leave our intentional life of sin that we so often live and relish in. We know if we are in a sinful sexual relationship, and that we must get out. We know if we have the tendency to drink too much and get drunk. We know these things. We know these sins we must leave behind. To be offered a new life, a new way to live, also means completely leaving the life you have lived…behind you. In John 8:10-11, after Jesus helps the woman caught in adultery, he says to her: “Jesus straightened up and said to her, ‘Woman, where are they? Has no one condemned you?’ She said, ‘No one sir.’ And Jesus said, ‘Neither do I condemn you. Go your way, and from now on do not sin again.’” This is a beautiful story of redemption that calls us to go and sin no more.

3) Redemption, and being redeemed is always the process of choosing life over death. Time and time again throughout the New Testament, especially in the gospels, Jesus offers people a new life. Jesus even goes so far as to break some of the rules, commandments, and philosophies of the day in order to bring life to someone. Jesus heals a crippled man on the Sabbath (John 5), seeing the bigger picture, while the religious leaders around him only see the violation of the Sabbath. This is the God, the Jesus that we worship, who is always about the work of redeeming us.

Ultimately, I think redemption is a word best understood when it is in action. It is a word that I could translate, define and parse, but what good is a word like that unless it is in the process and work of people’s lives, and in the work of God. When we can get our eyes and hands around it, and get an image, or a glimpse of what it looks like, then we often have a better understanding of what that means to our lives.

I believe that those who have most strayed from God, are often the most capable, and most humble in understanding what true grace, true mercy, and true redemption means. We can be Christians who grow up in the church our whole life, throwing around words, very important words like redemption, without really knowing what they mean. Without really knowing the cost of those words. Without really knowing the grittiness and underbelly of what makes a word like redemption sound so beautiful. I think the parable of the prodigal son in Luke 15:11-32 is a story that can best communicate the meaning and the image of redemption. Someone like the prodigal son who has left everything, and who has strayed far from God; so far that he is living with the pigs; that is someone who really understands redemption. That is someone who knows what it means to be in far away lands, away from the Lord, but then to return, without questions, without judgment, but rather in a place of grace and love and mercy. We often do not get that. Maybe that’s why I keep a copy of Rembrandt’s Prodigal Son in my office. To remind me of what redemption looks like. Maybe that’s why I love reading Henri Nouwen’s book, The Return of the Prodigal Son: A Story of Homecoming.

Images can best often convey redemption and the act of redeeming better than words. Maybe it’s something like the movie Shawshank Redemption where we get a glimpse of a man who has been wrongly imprisoned, swim and climb his way through sewage, only to come out into the open and free. Or maybe it’s the scene from the movie, The Passion of the Christ, where Mary Magdalene is wiping up the blood of Jesus, while reflecting on her past, and how Jesus redeemed her from the crowd that was about to stone her. It is a moving scene, as she crawls up from the ground, while Jesus stretches out his hand to her. Redemption: This process, by through the blood of Jesus, He reaches down into our lowly and sinful state, and pulls us up into new life.

Or maybe it’s the beautiful scene in C.S. Lewis’, The Chronicle of Narnia. In the book, The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, there is a beautiful, and captivating scene in which the boy turned dragon, Eustace, is confronted by the lion Aslan, who is the God figure. In this scene Eustace recounts how he tried to strip off his layers of dragon skin, only to discover there were more layers than he could take off. It wasn’t until he allowed Aslan the lion, to pierce his skin with his sharp claws, and pull off layer after layer. It is a scene of redemption that only comes about when we submit to God, and allow Him into our lives to clean up the mess we have made.

No matter what you have done, or how you have lived your life, you have never run far away enough that God has left you. And if you don’t know Christ, maybe now is the time to know Him. When people come to me and say that their life is too messed up, that there is no possible way that God would take them back, I just have to say to them. Have you read the Bible? Have you seen the lives of the people in the Bible, lives that God took, and redeemed, and whom He used to serve Him. What about the Apostle Paul, who we find in Acts 8 murdering and persecuting Christians, and who in Chapter 9, God gets a hold of, and redeems.

Redemption. A beautiful word that rolls off the tongue. But a word that cost God greatly.

For more information on these topics, link to the previous blogs below, as well as linking to the articles on the right side of this page under current sermon information.

Sex, Christianity and Culture: Created Goodness, Sinful Distortion and Redeemed Potential

Sex Part 1: Sex, Christianity and Culture

Sex Part 2: Sex, Christianity and Culture: Created Goodness

Sex Part 3: Sex, Christianity and Culture: Sinful Distortion

Hooking Up

Hooking Up-USA Today

The Quest Talent Show……

One of the privileges I have as the college pastor at Bel Air is the opportunity to serve with students on various mission trips throughout the world. This year, we are planning to send approximately 25-35 students to four different countries. I am leading a spring break trip with eight students to Mexico City to team up with one of our partners, Partners in Hope. We also have a month trip this summer going to Malaysia with our partner, Frontiers, as well as a two month trip to Turkey with our partner, Caleb Project. And last, we have a trip going to Kenya with our Bel Air worship team.

But to send all these students out on trips we have to raise a lot of money, anywhere from $1200–$2,500 per student, depending on the trip. In order to help raise money and offset the cost, the students in our ministry are hosting a college student talent show, this weekend at 7:30pm in Evans Chapel on the campus of Bel Air Presbyterian Church. The cost of the tickets for the show are $5, and all proceeds will go to mission support.

This is a very funny, and talented bunch of college students, so if you are in the Los Angeles area, and want to come out and check the show, we would love to have you.

For a sample of some of their humor, check out their Napoleon Dynamite video they created for our Mammoth Ski Trip.

David Crowder and Sunsets and Sushi…Great new worship album!

For those of you who know me, I think that David Crowder and the David Crowder Band are best Christian worship band today. They continue to push the boundaries, and experiment musically in ways that no other Christian artist has. That’s probably evident by the fact that you can walk into any worship service and a good majority of the songs are written by David Crowder.

Check out their new album, Sunsets and Sushi, which is a musical experiment of sorts. It’s basically a re-mix of their songs, in what I would call a clash between David Crowder and someone like the Postal Service, among many others. They seem to be the only band who not only dominates the Christian worship music genre, but is able to push their sounds out into the secular culture. What other band is able to fill up a local club and bar venue in the heart of Hollywood like the David Crowder Band did last year. What a stunner that was to the club management and workers, especially to the bartenders who couldn’t figure out why they weren’t selling many drinks, but instead had to watch a few thousand crazy Christians raise their hands in worship all night.

The David Crowder Band has also collaborated with drummer Zach Lind of the great band Jimmy Eat World.

So if you love worship music, especially music that is continually maturing, growing, and pushing the musical envelope, than pick up their new album, and be sure to pick up David’s new book, Praise Habit: Finding God in Sunsets and Sushi. Apparently he likes sushi and sunsets a lot. I must ask him about this.

Tonight: Last Sermon on Sex in this Four Part Series

First of all…one does not know how dependent they are on technology and the internet, until your internet connection is down for more than a day. That’s what is going on at our church…thank goodness for Starbucks and T Mobile.

Tonight is my last talk in the series, “Sex, Christianity and Culture: Created Goodness, Sinful Distortion and Redeemed Potential.” Tonight I will be looking at the topic of redeemed potential, a word ethicist and Fuller professor Lewis Smedes used. How does God redeem our pasts, and bring healing and renewal, especially when we have failed sexually.

Stay tuned for an article, notes and resources on this sermon tomorrow afternoon. As well as an upcoming overview of the whole series.

Follow Up on the Pope…Hugh Hewitt…The Media, Old and New…And the Church

Hugh Hewitt recently wrote an article for the Daily Standard, Fides et Internetum, in which he looks at and responds to the words of Pope John Paul II, and his letter on tecnhology and the media. This letter from the Pope, along with Hugh’s article set off a firestorm of debate and talk in my own circles as we are all wrestling with the benefits of technology, while struggling with some of the pitfalls.

Cameron Jorgenson, Ph.D. student at Baylor, whose interest are in the area of art, culture and moral formation, just posted a great article on this topic. It is a must read for everyone, especially if you are a user of technology. And it is especially important if you are a Christian and use technology. Cameron is someone you will be hearing more from in the future, as I believe he will be one of our great writers and thinkers.

Check out his post, “Breaking the Silence” at Summa Aesthetica

Are you really open for God to do something new in your life? Or do you already have your whole life planned out?

That is the question I have been asking myself recently. Maybe it is coming off our conversations about trying to discern the will of God, or maybe it is because God is really moving, and trying to get me to be open to His direction in my life.

Ultimately, I believe that God is constantly speaking to us, but we tend to tune Him out most of the time, because what He is asking us to do, does not fit our idea, or our model, or our plan of what we have for our life.

What if God is asking you go quit your job, and to step out in faith, into a new line of work. Would you be open?

What if God was telling you that you would remain in your town for the next ten years because He has work for you, and things He wants you to accomplish. Would you be open?

What if God was telling you that this relationship you were in was not the right one, for whatever reason. Would you be open?

What if God was telling you that there was some place He wanted you to go, and some job to take, but it meant less money, and it meant a new start away from family and friends. Would you be open?

I am going to go ahead and answer no for most of you. Because I think that when it comes down to it, most of us our scared to death that the ideal that we have set up for our life may not come true. And so we would rather tune out God, and plot and plan for our life to look like we have always wanted it to, rather than listening to the direction of God. We would rather settle for just plain life, than life abundantly which Christ has brought us (John 10:10). C. S. Lewis puts it this way:

“We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in the slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by an offer of a holiday at sea.”

It may not be sex, or drink, or ambition for you, but I think the principle is the same. We are basically half-hearted creatures who are really afraid to step out into faith, so we would rather settle for the humdrum of the life that we have created for ourself. I think that it is no coincidence that Lewis’s character for God in the Chronicles of Narnia series is a lion. A lion who time and time again can not promise the creature he comes across that he will not hurt them, or scare them, or devour them. Rather when asked if he is safe by a trembling Lucy, she only gets the response, “Safe! Of course he’s not safe. But he’s good!”

We worship and live for a God who is not safe. A God who asks us daily to pick up our crosses, die to ourselves, our dreams, our plans, our ideas…and simply, to follow Him (Luke 9:23-27). In fact, look at the exchange between Jesus and those who want to take care of their plans, their things before they follow Him: Luke 9:57-62:

57As they were walking along the road, a man said to him, “I will follow you wherever you go.”

58Jesus replied, “Foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay his head.”

59He said to another man, “Follow me.” But the man replied, “Lord, first let me go and bury my father.”

60Jesus said to him, “Let the dead bury their own dead, but you go and proclaim the kingdom of God.”

61Still another said, “I will follow you, Lord; but first let me go back and say good bye to my family.”

62Jesus replied, “No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for service in the kingdom of God.”

What plans do you have, or what plans have you made for your life that are keeping you from following God?

Why does this topic interest me? Because I believe that God is always speaking to us, and that the Holy Spirit is trying to do a new thing in our lives. But most of us don’t listen to this leading of the Holy Spirit because we have no prior experience of this new thing…it is completely new…it has never been done before in your life. We are unique people, each with different stories, and we have all come to Christ in unique and different ways. We worship a good and creative God who wants to work in your life, and bring about change, and redemption and transformation, but that requires Him doing something new. Somthing that you have no prior understanding, or mental construct for. What you do have is something similar to the respose that was given to Lucy regarding Aslan. “Safe! Of course he’s not safe. But he’s good!”

This has been something that I have been thinking about ever since I saw the movie, “What The Bleep Do We Know?” (Yes, that’s what it is really called). The movie is about quantem physics, and how research in that field is giving us greater understanding of how we perceive the world around us. Researchers in this field tell us that we do not always perceive things because we have no prior construct for them happening. We have no experience that gives us knowledge of what we are seeing. They give the example of a story relating to the landing of the Nina, Pinta, and Santa Maria on North America. Apparently, according to the movie, one of the Indians who was the leader, was not able to actually see, or perceive the ships approaching land. He could see the affects of the ships causing waves on the shore, but he could not see the ships, because he had no prior understanding, or prior experience of what ships looked like. It wasn’t until days later, that the ships finally came into view, though they had been there for days. Now, who knows if this is exact fact, but it does raise a valid point:

What if God is trying to do a new thing in your life right now, but you are unable to see, or discern it, because you have no experience, or construct for what that would look like? Or what if God is wanting to do something new in the future, but you have no prior knowledge, or any concept of what that would look like? Would you be open? Or is your mind, and your life, so mapped out already, that even God wanting to do something new in your life would not move you from your position and ideas?

Why is this an interesting topic to me, and relevant to us as Christians? Because we belong to a history of people whom God has stepped into their lives and asked them to step out in faith, as He did something new, something they had never experienced.

For example:

What about Abram? Or who we know better as Abraham. Listen to these words: “Now the LORD said to Abram, ‘Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the land that I will show you’” (Genesis 12:1). I’m sure that is not the news that Abram wanted for his life, especially at his old age. But the LORD came to him and asked him to leave his relatives, and his home, and to move out, and follow the LORD wherever he led. That is not something we can truly appreciate or respect in hindsight. What a radical moving of the LORD to come to Abram, asking him to leave everything. We love the story, but we have the luxury of history to view it from. What if the LORD asked this of you?

What about the disciples, and those who followed Christ? The fascinating thing that I find about these early followers is how critical we are of them sometimes, and how we think we would do things differently if we were in their position. That only if we had the opportunity to be with Christ in the flesh, then life would make sense, and we would follow Him. Oh, really? The word “anastasis” is the Greek word for resurrection in the New Testament. It is a word that is given new meaning in the New Testament. Outside of the New Testament, the word can be attested to in some of the early writings of the Greeks, but it is never used in context of someone actually rising from the dead. Rather, it is used as more of a statement that one cannot rise from the dead. But in the New Testament, we have this new concept, this new experience of reality in the event of the resurrection. “Anastasis” is given new meaning in the New Testament. That of someone actually rising from the dead. Something that never happened. It is something that we take for granted for sure. How easy it is for us to ridicule the disciples for their unbelief, or to criticize Thomas because he wanted actual proof of Christ’s resurrection. But how else were they to perceive something that had never been done before. The resurrection is the breaking in of God into history, and giving us a completely new way to live, a new path to follow. John 20:1-30 is a beautiful story of what follows when Christ does something new. Disciples run and hide, and lock themselves into a room. Mary is astounded and confused and heartbroken. Thomas wants more evidence. They are like us. When God comes into our lives, and wants to do something new, asking us to step out into faith, and possibly leave those things behind that keep us from following Him, we have the same reactions. We run and hide, and lock ourselves away. Maybe we even pout and kick and scream like a child. Maybe we don’t understand, but we have the faith of Mary who knew something was going on beyond what she could see, or perceive. Maybe we are like Thomas, wanting more proof.

So my question to you is: Are you really willing to follow God wherever he may take you? Or have you mapped out your life so much, that any change in that plan will freak you out, and cause you to not want to listen to Christ? Are you open to the leading of the Holy Spirit?

Our God is a God of renewal, transformation, redemption, and much more. But to truly follow Him, we must be open to the new ways that He wants to act in our lives. We must be open to His leading. We must be willing to be obedient, though we may not understand, nor know where He is taking us. Following God is not an easy task, nor was it ever meant to be. In the closing chapter of John 21, Jesus has some strong words and instructions for Peter. “‘Very truly, I tell you, when you were younger, you used to fasten your own belt and to go wherever you wished. But when you grow old, you will stretch out your hands, and someone else will fasten a belt around you and take you where you do not wish to go.’ (He said this to indicate the kind of death by which he would glorify God.) After this he said, ‘Follow me’” (John 21:18-19). Following God is letting go of our plans and our life, and letting Him lead us…often to places where we do not want to go. This is a life long task.

The theologian and missionary Leslie Newbigin in his book, Truth to Tell, says this about the resurrection:

“The resurrection cannot be fitted into any
view of the world except one of which it is
itself a total starting point, because the
resurrection is a validation of a protest
against everything that there is…The cross
is the ultimate protest against things as they
are, in the name of what ought to be…the
world as it is is not God’s last word.”

God wants to do something in your life, and He went as far as sending His Son to die on the cross, so that that work could be accomplished. For us as Christians, the resurrection is our orienting point in life. It is in that event that we oriented to the work of Christ, and it is out of that event that we also too, lay down our dreams, plans, ideas, and maybe even our phsyical lives…to follow Him.

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