Wednesday, March 19, 2008

This Thursday and Friday Only

You have the opportunity this Thursday evening or Friday during the day to experience the Prayer Path.

Pause for a moment and consider your surroundings. What do you hear? The hum of the fan on your computer? Coworkers talking? It doesn't feel much like Holy Week.

As you read this, there is a labrynth set up at Crosspointe. A prayer path. A chance to pull away and let go of all of the things that run through the mind.

Stress. Worry. Guilt. Fear. The grocery list. Did I remember to feed the dog? (Yeah. They all get equal billing in my brain.)

Three years ago when I went through it, I wasn't sure what to expect.

We walked in. Took off our shoes. Twelve stations. A headset with a CD. I pushed "play."

Nothing prepared me for what God did in me. I didn't even know I had stuff to let go of. By the time I had completed the twelve stations, Easter suddenly seemed so real. I'm not talking about the historical event of it. I'm talking about changes in my soul. There's so much stuff that we carry with us every day. (Way more than the grocery list and the dogs.) The prayer path was an opportunity to let that stuff go. A time for Jesus Christ to be real and present in my soul.

As a blog post, this falls short in describing the beauty of it. There are a few more spots left if you want to go through it. E-mail Kylie and David and grab one.

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

More

We began our new series Sunday entitled ONE. The tag line to this series is that you and I were never meant to be little kings and queens ruling our tiny little kingdom of ONE. As our band so beautifully rocked for us on Sunday, "we were meant to live for so much more." This desire to be part of something bigger and more profound than our own existence was instilled in us by God. Unfortunately, we often settle to live within our own little kingdoms and never experience the transcendent life that God offers. What holds you back from pursuing more in your life? Why do we tend to settle for less when God offers us so much more?

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Life by the Moment

We spoke this morning about the importance of living life by the moment. Each of has millions if not billions of moments in our lives. Among those moments are those few life-changing moments. Wouldn't it be wonderful if we could learn to identify the life-changing moments from the ordinary moments? How would our lives be different if we were able to do just that? What challenge do you face as try to treat every moment of our lives as the gift they are from God?

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Maximum Potential

Our focus today was on the final part of our vision statement: Thru imaginative design create relational learning environments and strategic missional partnerships to move everyone toward their full potential in Christ. In order to reach our full potential in Christ we must have a concentrated focus in our lives. A focus on recapturing our passion, a focus on owning the process and a focus on moving from stewing to doing. Which of those focuses is most difficult for you and why? Which is the simplist and why?

Monday, February 04, 2008

Multisensory Communion

What are your thoughts on yesterday's multisensory communion gathering?

Monday, January 28, 2008

Taking Another Look

After God created the first man, God quickly concluded, “It is not good that the man should be alone” (Genesis 2:18). Have you ever wondered what exactly was that aloneness? After all, even before Eve, Adam wasn’t the only being in the garden. There were the animals and God himself was there. God must have meant that the man should not be the only one of his species. Adam needed someone to identify with in his humanity.

But here's the wrinkle. We commonly read these words as though God meant "It is not good for the man to be lonely." The biblical translators steer us here by substituting the word "man" where the text originally says "him." Hearing it that way justifies our pursuit of friendships and partners to quell our loneliness. And in a sense, we're right. We were not created for a solitary existence. I wonder if the translators haven't done us a disservice in their translation that causes us to miss part of the impact of what God said. What if what God meant was that it was not good for him, for God himself, for the man to be the only one. It does not suit God's purposes for a person to exist in isolation from others.

How might this alternate interpretation change how we view relationships and relational learning environments? What is your gut response to what you learned on Sunday?



Monday, January 21, 2008

Imagination and the Imago Dei

Week three of our pure, fresh and simple approach to church centered on the first three words of our vision statement, "Thru imaginative design create relational learning environments and strategic missional partnerships to move everyone toward their full potential in Christ." My approach was simple: support the idea from the Scriptures and tie it to our mission of loving God, loving others and living out loud.

We are imaginative because creativity is part of the Imago Dei (image of God) in each of us. Just as God named and then separated as part of the creation process, so Adam named and separated the animals. It was perhaps the first right brain, left brain activity. Right brain (creative) naming the animals and left brain (analytical) separating things like the 52,000 different beetles God created into categories.

The beautiful tie to our mission statement is that in the Great Commandment we are told to love God with all of our heart, our soul and our mind. The word Jesus used for mind is often translated imagination. It refers directly to the right side of our brain rather than the left side (a different word in the original language.

I'm interested in your reaction to what you heard? How do you respond to imaginative ministry design? Is it exciting to you, terrify you or something in between? How might it play into your desire to invest and invite people to join our faith journey?

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

P=MV2

This past Sunday, Pastor Dave shared a simple equation...or not so simple if physics isn't your thing:

P = MV2; momentum equals mass times velocity squared.

Momentum is what gives us impact; in our case, impact within our community.

Mass refers not to size or volume, but rather weight and density. One of our BHAG's is to double our worship attendance; not for the sake of increasing our volume/size, but to give more weight to what we do, to create a greater impact.

Velocity, as Pastor Dave shared, is speed with direction. In our case the direction is our vision statement:

Thru imaginative design create relational learning environments and strategic Missional partnerships to lead everyone to their full potential in Christ.

So the question of the week is: If our vision provides the direction for velocity, what provides the speed?

Thoughts anyone?

Monday, January 07, 2008

Pure, Fresh and Simple

Pure, fresh and simple are in. AquaFina knows this. Papa John’s knows this. Apple knows this. Today I shared with you how Jesus set the example of how the church should be pure, fresh, and simple. He condensed all of the law and the work of the church into two statements: the Great Commandment, and the Great Commission. These are reflected in our mission statement: “To move everyone toward loving God, loving others and living out loud.” In reflecting on the mission statement, which do you feel will be the most difficult for you in 2008: loving God, loving others, or living out loud (fulfilling the Great Commission).?

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

An Exciting Conclusion

We concluded our SeeWorld series this week as we examined the fourth and final chapter of Jonah. In it, we find Jonah's unlikely response to Nineveh's repentance found in chapter three. Jonah just wants to die! He reveals for us his fear from the very beginning - that God would be as merciful to the people of Nineveh as he has been to Jonah and his fellow Israelites. Jonah is not comfortable with that fact.

What makes you uncomfortable about the Gospel? What gives you comfort when the city around us continues to move farther and farther from God? What can we do to move beyond our comfort zones and see the city the way that God sees the city?