Archive for June, 2008

18
Jun

as a tiger thinks in his heart

The Bible has something very interesting to say in Proverbs 23:7 - "For as a man thinks in his heart, so is he." (NKJV)

Monday afternoon I was with my other parents (Jenny’s) in San Marcos taking a small respite after a long morning to watch the US Open Golf Tournament reach its dramatic conclusion. If your not familiar with it, Tiger Woods and Rocco Mediate tied for the first four rounds and needed a fifth on Monday to crown this year’s champion. I don’t often watch sports, but I would have to say that the 30 minutes I watched was probably some of the best sports I have ever seen. Back and forth the two players went, with amazing shots under huge pressure. 24,000 came out to watch those two lone players battle it out, and with great grace they did, Tiger Woods finally emerging victorious.

As I sat there with Jen and her parents, a commercial came on from Nike. First let me say that I am a huge fan of Nike commercials, I think they are (for what I’ve seen) very well done. This one featured old video clips of Tiger Woods and his father Earl Woods. In the voice-over, Earl Woods, who has since passed from this life, talked about how he would coach his son in his youth. He talked about various techniques he would use to keep Tiger focused, and how he would constantly challenge him to be better. There was one statement, however, that really hit me - at first it struck me as ridiculous.

Earl said, "I would tell Tiger - ‘Tiger, I promise you you’ll never meet another person that is as mentally tough as you the rest of your life’." What? Can you imagine making that statement to anyone, much less your own son? How can anybody know that? The statement seems ludicrous.

But to this day - the legitimacy of that statement has rung true. Time after time, the man Tiger Woods has overcome in countless pressure situations to become arguably one of the greatest golfers, if not one of the greatest athletes, of all time. And how does he have it in him?

Simple - he has always believed what his father told him. And so he has thought in his heart, so he is.

How did Earl Woods know what to say over his son? He most likely didn’t. He just believed in him and developed what was in him with words of affirmation and life. The power of life and death are in the tongue, and Tiger’s father spoke into him identity, encouragement, and strength - and his success today is due to the simple fact that he has believed it. Of course, there are long hours of practice and performance, but none of those would even be possible nor worthwhile if it weren’t for his Father’s words to spur him on in good times and bad.

Oh that we as the church would believe what our Father says about us. Its’ the only way for us to be what He’s purposed us to be. Simple? Not really. Powerful? We had better believe it.

16
Jun

simple, yet profoundly glorious

The other week I heard a local (B/CS) pastor say the following: "I am getting sick of this ‘new theology’ that proclaims that God sent Jesus to die on the cross only to fulfill ‘His glory’. I’m telling you today they are missing it! Jesus didn’t die on the cross to make God look bigger, He died on the cross because HE LOVED US." As you can imagine, I reached back for an extra something on my amen for that!

Curious that the pastor used the term ‘new theology’ when describing this. After pondering it through, and searching the scriptures, I’ve concluded that he is absolutely right - it is a new theology. The old theology, that of the apostles and Christ Himself, was that Jesus died on the cross because "God so loved the world" (John 3:16). And as the people of God rightly cry out in Psalm 79:9 "Help us, O God of our salvation, for the glory of your Name; deliver us, and atone for our sins, for your name’s sake!", we arrive at the crucial question - does God ‘use’ love to arrive at His glory or is His glory His love itself?

This may sound like splitting theological hairs, but the logical conclusions of each leave us in profoundly different places with the very character of God. In the first, love is merely the card God plays to checkmate His opponent, sin and death, that he may arrive at his final and most basic motive, His own glory. I would suggest this completely misreads the heart of God, and in fact, the very definition of what ‘Glory’ means. The second conclusion, that God’s glory is His great love and that His love is His glory, gives us the understanding that God does not have love as a tool to use for His glory sake - but that He, in of Himself, is LOVE! (1 John 4:8) Therefore, any revealing of His glory is the revelation of who He in of Himself is, that is - Love. If the ultimate manifestation of God Almighty is at the cross, then the simple, yet profoundly glorious revelation is that God is love.

"And this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His son to be the propitiation for our sins." (1 John 4:10)

"In this case the god of this world has blinded the minds of unbelievers, to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God." (2 Cor. 4:4)

Jesus is the image of God, revealing the gospel of God, which is the gospel of glory. Jesus, being the fullness of the God-head bodily (Col. 2:9) is the revelation of the character of God. His sacrificial life and death reveal the most glorious but simple truth, that God is love!

Even a babe in Christ understands this, so why don’t some of our theologians?

14
Jun

the boy and the tree

There once lived a boy who found a tree in which was all his delight. Good thing, because the tree was especially fond of him as well. The tree was hidden in a grove that looked ordinary on the outside, but was hiding this unique treasure on the inside. Bold yet inviting, the tree received regular visitors, some who found it on their own and some who were told about it by the boy.

The boy didn’t mind sharing his secret about the tree, he had found it to be so enjoyable that he firstly couldn’t keep it to himself, and second, the tree seemed to have so much to give that he knew he wouldn’t receive any less with more people around. Each time at the tree was a little different, finding new patterns in the bark, crevices leading to the plummeting roots below. Looking up was always a joy, as the branches seemed to go far up and out of sight, and he would constantly wonder how many there were and, of course, if he would ever be able to climb them.

The boy was a natural climber, schooled by the tree itself, and the boy had spent enough time by the tree to learn some secrets to getting up. The boy wasn’t the tallest or most athletic in his class, but somehow when he came to the tree he was able to swing himself up just fine. Climbing was an added joy because when he first did so he realized that the tree was bearing fruit! Exuberant, he lunged toward what looked like an apple and nearly fell off entirely. He learned to be more and more careful in his joy to reach out for the fruit, and eventually (through practice) became so good at getting the fruit that his friends would ask him to get certain fruit for them to take home. That was his joy of course, because it meant more and more climbing. Until one day.

Until one day - a terrible storm visited the valley where he lived, and the wind shook the tree so violently that several of the branches were broken off entirely. This didn’t phase the tree in the least bit, but some of the branches that fell happened to be the very ones that the boy was so skilled at climbing. One of the lower branches, the one he always used to swing up toward the second branch that no one could reach any other way, was gone. There it lay, on the ground, still looking strong - but, slowly losing its color as it had its security to the tree. The boy knew from science class that the roots were no longer able to feed that branch with its’ life and that it could no longer bear fruit. Therefore, if he was going to get fruit from the tree, he would have to get it from a different branch.

That was the most troubling part of all, getting to those different branches meant finding new ways to climb. The boy was so used to running full speed into that tree, swinging up his favorite branch and landing just high enough to reach the fruit and climb even higher to other yet unexplored areas of sheer joy and fulfillment. The fruit he would usually bring down would indeed bring joy to others, but he wasn’t as concerned about that as he was about merely getting it for himself. What would he do?

He knew he had to set about learning how to climb the tree in a different way, new angles to reach new branches to reach, of course, new fruit. Everyone had to do this, he knew that. No one knew how to climb the tree right away and everyone had to learn new ways to climb it, especially as they grew. Even though the boy knew this, he was still very sad. Though he wanted to think, plan, and scheme new ways to climb the tree and dream about the fruit he would find there, his mind kept wandering back to the sadness he felt and not being able to swing up the tree like he was used to.

This process proved difficult indeed. Though the boy still enjoyed the tree very much, he felt more bruised and battered than ever trying to jump, claw, and swing - but mostly ended up on his back or knees. There was one particular branch he just knew he would be able to reach, but it seemed just beyond his height. He tried and tried, just almost getting success, but never being able to hang on for more than a few seconds or so. As a boy who again was not the tallest in his class, he wished he could simply grow an inch or two so that he could reach that branch and back up the tree to the fruit. Oh how he longed for the fruit again! And who knew? Perhaps the different route up would lead him to greater tasting fruit and different panoramas of the valley below?! He just had to get up that tree!

Alas, day after day the boy tried with little gain. The boy couldn’t contain his frustration even to his best friend, the girl. After telling her over and over again that he wished he could grow just a few inches taller so that he could reach that branch, she finally told him in her nonchalant, frustrating yet insightful way, she said "You know, you can enjoy the tree in other ways besides climbing it. Why don’t you just sit down against it and enjoy its shade?" Sit against the tree and enjoy its shade?! The boy was in no small way peeved at the statement. How could he enjoy the tree at its base when he had climbed and seen higher heights! Who wants to sit at the base when all that wonder is accessible just a few rungs up?

But it wasn’t anymore, and that was the problem. He just wasn’t tall enough yet! And the fruit, oh how tasty it was! Surely it would help him grow - oh how he loved that tree. In his half-angered half-grieved state, the boy ran to the tree as fast as he could, and, almost on purpose, threw himself down back against the tree.

He didn’t mean to slam it that hard, and it kind of stung his back. It was the expression of his frustration with himself and the tree, and the lack of fruit he had taste…PLOP!

The shaking of the tree has loosened the fruit, bouncing off the branches the boy would one day climb, and landed right on the boy’s head.

He sat back against the tree, a tear rolling down his cheek, and bit into the fruit.