Ticked off, frustrated and trying to get something done…

Ticked off, frustrated and trying to get something done..

its not my kid’s fault…

but she has needs and

I am the one that must accommodate.

Arriving at the decision to adjust and temporarily

suspend my needs, wants, and preferences required thinking.

Acting badly and full of impatience was just natural.

Serving with a happy heart

required grace and consideration of how good God has been to us.

Obviously that’s God’s will.

I’m thankful for these verses:

Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.  Romans 12:2

Here’s the disciple life:

Under the influence of God’s Spirit and His Word,

we are commissioned to sort out (test & approve) what God’s will is.

In this process of making decisions we begin to

discern the will of God for each of us and for our community.

Sorting (testing, thinking and considering) is messier than most of us desire.

In some decisions God’s way seems obvious.

In some decisions God’s way seems obscure.

In all we have this grace: we may discern what

is good, acceptable, and perfect.

Incoming students…are so vain

“Well hello class of 2017.  Here’s a dose of reality.  You are not as good as you think you are.”

Hmmm… I’m not sure that is going to increase enrolment.

However, narcissism is on the rise.

Our society is full of itself.  In an essay for The Tyee, Shannon Rupp notes that is not just a boomer phenomenon.  We are teaching each other that thinking highly of ourselves is the key to success.  Our narcissism is actually harming everyone.  She writes,

I side with the psychologists who say garden-variety narcissism — as opposed to the dangerous personality disorder — is a learned behaviour and it can be unlearned. For this I advise the sort of rigorous teaching once found in the confines of small newspapers. I recall an editor who treated all flummery with suspicion and even greeted praise from readers with this advice: “If your mother says she loves your work, look to see what she’s trying to sell you.”

Much like spelling, these skills are being lost. Twenge recently analyzed the data from the American Freshman Survey, which has been done since 1966, and found a 30 per cent increase in narcissism scores since 1979. Naturally, the youngsters had boundless enthusiasm for their own abilities, all unjustified. For example, they considered themselves excellent writers while producing test scores significantly lower than the more modest cohorts of the 1960s. They harboured big hopes of wealth and fame, although they studied half as much as their predecessors.

“What’s really become prevalent over the last two decades is the idea that being highly self-confident — loving yourself, believing in yourself — is the key to success,” Twenge told the Daily Mail. “Now the interesting thing about that belief is it’s widely held, it’s very deeply held, and it’s also untrue.”

She says that with a touching sincerity, as if anyone cares about truth. Or even believes it exists.

If the prescription for evolving out of the Age of Narcissism is ensuring that children have a realistic view of the world and their place within it — as so many psychologists say — then it’s a lost cause. Who exactly do they expect to be introducing such foreign concepts as truth when grammy is busy coaching the fake friends for grampy’s funeral?

Hmmm.  Question Period.

What is going to give us a realistic view of the world and our place within it?

Who is going to give us a realistic view of the world and our place within it?

What will we do when the people around us are also bankrupt and raging because we are unable to prop them up?

What is the trajectory for a people who are so attached to their ideas and products that to criticize ideas and products is to diminish them?

Who will tell us to “accept correction without falling apart?”

Are we so fragile that failure will crush us?

 

Non-Conformist

Industry standards require conformity.

I learned this morning that Robert Zildjian the founder of Sabian Cymbals died this week.  He was 89 years old.  Zildjian and Sabian cymbals have been used by bands and orchestras for years.  The process used by the family business was a closely guarded secret discovered by Avedis, an Armenian alchemist of the 17th century.  Seeking to turn bronze into gold, Avedis found a way to combine copper, silver and tin into ingots that could be beaten into a thin disc of metal.  We’ve been enjoying their cymbals ever since!  Last year over 900,000 Sabian Cymbals were shipped around the world.

You can be sure each cymbal conformed to a standard!  And that’s a good thing.

Conform.

In God’s view of us He sees that we are under pressure to conform to the world.  And that is not a good thing.

Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.  Romans 12:2

Conformed.  Pushed into the world’s pattern, mold, shape.  This is especially problematic when held up to the pattern of Jesus Christ.  We are to conform to Jesus.

By God’s grace, culture and societal standards can benefit us with much that is good and leans toward the values of the Kingdom of God.  However, culture and society do not completely embody God’s vision for us in relationship to Him, each other, ourselves, and the stuff of earth.  When we are animated by the Gospel we will discover that the Word of God creates resistance in us toward the shaping pressure of the world.  Then we become

non-conformists.

 

Avoid the God App

It’s tempting to treat God like an app.

Just download God and go to the app when you need Him.

One app among many.  Problems?  Just ask God what to do so you can be blessed.

The Gospel is different.

Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, 

to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God—

this is your true and proper worship.” Romans 12:1

When we treat God like an app we move directly to morality and abandon grace.

“What does God want me to do?”

Do “x” so God will give you “y.”

Avoid the God App, it will corrupt genuine Gospel faith.

The Gospel gives us a relationship, not an app of convenience.

“…in view of God’s mercy…”

Connecting faith to real life starts with a view of the cross.

Jesus took our place that we might enjoy His place with the Father.

Sin would take its toll from us — killing us slowly with guilt, shame, and fear.

But mercifully He took our guilt that we might have a share in His innocence,

our shame that we might have a share in His honour,

our fear that we might have a share in His peace.

Now through Jesus we are connected to One from whom and through whom

and for whom all things are!  (Romans 11:36)

What an awesome God we have!

The inconvenient but joyful way to live as one loved by Jesus is

is to make His mercy our starting place.

The impulse to know God

Signal – Response.

The impulse to know God.

I wonder if its a reflexive action?

But I know the impulse to know God can be denied.  It can be ignored.  It can be covered up.

Just like the impulse to pick my nose in public.

Signal – Response.

Is God signaling to us?

He’s called the “Great I AM,” the same “yesterday, today, and tomorrow,”

The Alpha and Omega — the beginning and the end.

When I read the Scripture’s story I hear Him signalling.

The signals to know God are coming from Him and they are all around us.

And every once in a while we may say honestly with Philip, a man who spent several years with Jesus,

“Lord, show us the Father, and we will be satisfied.”

Are you satisfied with Jesus’ answer?

9Jesus replied, “Have I been with you all this time, Philip, and yet you still don’t know who I am? Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father! So why are you asking me to show him to you? 10Don’t you believe that I am in the Father and the Father is in me? The words I speak are not my own, but my Father who lives in me does his work through me. 11Just believe that I am in the Father and the Father is in me. Or at least believe because of the work you have seen me do.  John 14:9-11