How Should We Then Live in This Apostolic Age? (Part Two)

How Should We Then Live in This Apostolic Age? (Part Two)

Last month we reflected on the sad news that Christendom is dying—that is, the culture, systems, and institutions that develop when Christianity is the dominant worldview. Now, we are moving into a new apostolic age, an age where the cultural vision of reality is opposed to Christianity. We want to live wisely in this new age. How shall we do this?

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Christendom Versus Apostolic Age (Part One)

Christendom Versus Apostolic Age (Part One)

Recently David Takle urged me to watch a series of sermons that were based on the book “From Christendom to Apostolic Mission: Pastoral Strategies for an Apostolic Age.” I watched the first sermon then switched to the book. It was eye opening. It explained the shifting season we are living in.

It begins with these words, “Every human society possesses . . . a moral and spiritual imaginative vision . . . that is largely taken for granted. It is a way of seeing things.” The entire society embraces this vision whether they know it or not. Once it is settled, it becomes over time, unconscious. When a new vision challenges the old, the original vision will be “reconstituted or overthrown and another overarching vision takes its place.” Our vision “is the basis of our action,” though “for the majority the ruling vision is never examined, because it is not known to exist”. To most people it seems self-evident”.

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Five Ways to Accelerate Your Spiritual and Emotional Growth in 2022: Spend Time Interacting with Jesus

Five Ways to Accelerate Your Spiritual and Emotional Growth in 2022: Spend Time Interacting with Jesus

In our final blog, in this series, I want to encourage you to spend more time interacting with God. Rather than talk about the importance of this practice, I am giving you a spiritual exercise that will help you do the very thing I am urging you to do. It is from a new book, Living Fearless by Jamie Winship.

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Ten Things I Learned While Studying Racial Reconciliation by Dan Van Ness

Ten Things I Learned While Studying Racial Reconciliation by Dan Van Ness

I recently participated in a 12-week Study on racial history, healing, and reconciliation. It was sponsored by the Racial Reconciliation Group (RRG), an informal collection of people initially made up of members of churches in the Northern Virginia area, but with the pandemic forcing them to use Zoom, increasingly from churches across the country. There were roughly the same number of Black people and white people participating.

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Five Ways to Accelerate Your Spiritual and Emotional Growth in 2022: Quieting

Today’s blog post is the fourth in our series on five ways to accelerate your spiritual and emotional growth in 2022.

In April, we talked about ruthlessly eradicating hurry from our lives. In March, I wrote about learning to recognize when we are triggered. In February, I suggested that we add a spiritual practice to our daily routines.

Today we are going to talk about quieting—the practice of purposefully lowering our energy levels so we can calm and be still. This can take many forms. It can be as simple as relaxing our bodies and being still before the Lord—waiting on him in peace. It can be a pause after a high energy activity or conversation. Our pause can be less than a minute or several days as we move into the practice of solitude. It is a huge subject that I will only touch on here. The best way to learn the value of quieting is to experience it.

I was in my fifties before I realized that life would be enriched by learning to quiet. I learned this from my Life Model friends, who taught that we are made to live in rhythms of high energy joy and low energy quiet, or shalom. This is because our brains need times of quiet. And so did my spiritual life.

Just recently, in reading Dallas Willard’s A Divine Conspiracy, I learned that solitude and silence help us “escape the patterns of epidermal responses". By this he means, our automatic responses, the way we react to the world around us. What we are talking about, at its core, is letting go of “our habit of constantly managing things, and being in control, or thinking we are". It is letting go of our cultural tendency to rush through life, for this tendency “is a huge hindrance to the life that God has for us.”

This is because God “will not compete for our attention”. He wants to be wanted. Most of us are so caught up in being productive every single moment that we don’t know what it is like to simply stop. Where do we begin? Willard writes that our, “automatic, epidural responses [can be] broken by solitude and silence—[because they] break the pell-mell rush through life and create a kind of inner space that permits people to become aware of what they are doing and what they are about to do”. This opens the door to change, so that fight, flight, and freeze do not kick-in immediately every time we are rubbed the wrong way.

As we’ve talked about before, it does not work to simply say, “I’m going to try harder to slow down.” What does work is to become the kind of person that knows how to quiet and is aware when a moment of quiet is needed. A person like my friend Linda, who in the middle of a conversation will notice that she needs a break before she even starts to become overwhelmed.

How do we become the kind of person who notices and values quiet? We practice on ordinary days, when, quite frankly, it does not seem important. Instead of filling up our unscheduled moments, we steal away and do nothing. That is right. Nothing. Willard writes that it is vital to develop “the capacity to do nothing,” and describes this capacity as “one of the greatest spiritual achievements”.

When Willard was asked, “What do you do? he replied, “Nothing at all. “

We can enjoy things in solitude and silence, he says, but “don’t try to. Just be there. “

One of the most significant encounters I have had with God happened during a silent retreat on October 20, 2021. I sensed God nudging me to come away with him, and I told Sam that I was planning to do it the next day, a Sunday. I asked him if it was OK if I left him alone. He was willing, so I dress warmly and took my journal, my Bible, and a pen and went to Meadowlark Park where I found a quiet bench in the middle of a grassy hill that sloped down to the lake. There were no paths or benches near me. I was reading scripture and began to see a courtroom. The Trinity sat on regal thrones. There was a small galley. I recognized my parents, my mom in the third row, my dad further back. They waved, but I had no thought of going to them. To my surprise, the people who were being judged were people who had harmed me. One by one the Lord brought them forward and said, “This person betrayed you. Or this person harassed you.” Then the Lord asked, “Do you remember?” In each case, I remembered. I sometimes offered a few words, but it was a holy place, not a place where one said much. Then I was asked, “Do you forgive them?” I’ve always found it hard to forgive but, in that holy place, I felt so thoroughly seen and heard and understood. I know that the Trinity had seen it all, even the parts that I did not see. Knowing that it mattered to them, that they had taken account, made it easy to forgive. And so, I did. Each person one at a time.

At one point I expressed surprise that the Trinity was judging people who were still alive, but they quickly responded, “If we did not judge the world, it would devolve into chaos and darkness.” In an instant I realized that it is the conviction of the Holy Spirit that keeps us from destroying each other, that draws us into their light, and that empowers us to do good when temptation is nigh.

Why do I write about this? To help you recognize the great value of silence and solitude and to encourage you to set aside time to experience what God has for you in the stillness.

Willard writes, in our evil world “God intrudes, gently and in many ways, but especially in the person of Jesus Christ. It is he who stands for love, as no one else has ever done, and pays the price for it. His crucifixion is the all-time high watermark of love on earth. While we were still helpless, at the right time Christ died for the ungodly.” (Romans 5:6)

May you be blessed to know the reality of these words in your own life today.

Dallas Willard quotes are from his book, The Divine Conspiracy.

Dallas Willard, The Divine Conspiracy: Rediscovering Our Hidden Life in God, (New York, HarperCollins Publishers, 1997), 392-394

Five Ways to Accelerate Your Spiritual and Emotional Growth in 2022: Ruthlessly Eradicate Hurry from Your Life

Five Ways to Accelerate Your Spiritual and Emotional Growth in 2022: Ruthlessly Eradicate Hurry from Your Life

Yep. You read that right. “Ruthlessly eradicate hurry from your life.” This pithy quote is a favorite of mine from the inestimable Dallas Willard. Hurry is a towering barrier to the life God has for us. Sadly, many of us, in the words of Richard Foster, quoting Thomas Kelly, “We live so much of our lives in ‘an intolerable scramble of panting feverishness.’”. Some of us are perpetually in a hurry. We might even think that hurrying is good, because in our perception, when we hurry, we can squeeze in one more thing. And isn’t that the object of life, to get more done? To accomplish more?

Well, no. It is not. We are creatures made by God to love and to be loved.

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Five Ways to Accelerate Your Spiritual Growth in 2022: Learn to Recognize When You Are Triggered

Five Ways to Accelerate Your Spiritual Growth in 2022: Learn to Recognize When You Are Triggered

It is no fun being triggered, but there is something far worse: Being triggered and not knowing that you are triggered. Being blind to triggers can end friendships and marriages and cause great suffering for both you and the ones you love. This is because if you don’t recognize that some of your upset is your stuff, you won’t see that there is something you can do about it.

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Five Ways to Accelerate Your Spiritual and Emotional Growth in 2022: Adding a Spiritual Exercise

Five Ways to Accelerate Your Spiritual and Emotional Growth in 2022: Adding a Spiritual Exercise

It is hard to change, especially as we age. We tend to get in a rut and stay there. However, there are things we can do to keep our brains active and flexible. One of them is to increase cognitive effort by doing something new at work or home, such as learning a new skill. In today’s blog, I am going to describe three spiritual practices that you can add to your daily rhythms that will help you grow spiritually as well as help your brain by giving you a new skill to master in 2022.

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I Want to be a Community Elder

I Want to be a Community Elder

At the beginning of each new year, our Healing Center International community habitually looks to see where God has been at work over the past year and asks him what he desires for us and where he is inviting us to join him in the coming year. Not only as a community habit, but also as a personal habit, I began seeking God and interacting with him on his dreams and desires for me for this coming year. Unexpectedly to me—not to him—I found I had a desire to become a community elder, a community guide.

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