Saturday, March 30, 2013

What if.... we remembered every day?


Yesterday, I did something for the first time. Believe it or not I attended a church service on Good Friday for the first time. The two churches I have been part of for my 50 years never had a service on Good Friday! I don't really know why but it is a fact.

So yesterday I gathered with over 350 people and "celebrated" Good Friday. Central to the remembrance was the sacrament of communion.

As a group of Jesus followers we took part in a "sacred" act and that dates back to the last supper between Jesus and his closest friends.

The ritual of Communion has been part of my church attendance. But I have always felt that what I have experienced in my church life is at least only a part of what Jesus was alluding to when he suggested that we do this every time we met. I have always struggled to understand how we have got that to mean in the middle of a Sunday morning service.

It feels like we have done with communion what we do with most of our spiritual life. Removed it from our EVERYDAY life and relegated it to a once a week spiritual event.

Thankfully in reading a blog today by Mark Waltz which was originally written in 2005 I find I am not alone.

"This Friday a bunch of us will gather in church buildings to observe Christ's death. Good Friday. In our brief half hour service at noon at Granger Community Church, we'll pause to reflect on the Lord's Supper. It'll be a poignant and sacred moment. Rightly so, the church, years ago, began to practise the sacrament of communion corporately as they gathered for services.

Now, this sacred meal is shared in local churches weekly, monthly, quarterly, on special occasions throughout the year, not just on Good Friday. Some use wafers, others loaves of bread. Some us Welch's grape juice, others drink wine from a common cup.

But, I sometimes wonder, what if Jesus didn't just foresee the corporate sacrament?

What if Jesus looked at his disciples over a meal they'd shared often and suggested, "Every time you do this, that is, every time you eat together, every time you share bread and drink wine, remember me."

What if Jesus really hoped that two, three, four times a day we'd pick up a sandwich and remember? What if Jesus really hoped that several times a day, we'd "break bread" with a friend, a family member, a co-worker and we'd remember? Remember him. Often, every day, throughout the day.

What if every time we talked with our mouth half full to someone across the table, we made eye contact and remembered?

What if we remembered Jesus and the way he loved people, as we sat with other people over a meal?

What if we remembered Jesus and the way he sacrificed for people, as we hoped this time spent over a meal would be win somewhere down the road?

What if we remembered Jesus and the great price he paid for the relational connection we share over this meal?

What if?

I still look forward to the corporate sacrament of the Lord's Supper at our church. I believe it's a practise that honours him and inspires us. But since I eat every day, I want to build a habit of celebrating Jesus every time I taste a food I love, every time my thirst is quenched by drink.

Remember."

Friday, March 29, 2013

Terrible Friday = The Best Friday



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Thursday, March 14, 2013

50



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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

My eyes are opening....slowly!

Daniel Bashta - The Invisible


'The Invisible Journey'- spoken word from Daniel Bashta on Vimeo.

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Disaster i've swallowed a gnat!


I think that Seth Godin wrote the below post for me and maybe many more of my Christian brothers & sisters without even knowing it.

"There's always a defect, always a slow drip, somewhere. Every plan, every organisation, every venture has a glitch.

The question isn't, "is this perfect?" The question is, "will this get me there?"

Sometimes we make the mistake of ignoring the big leaks, the ones that threaten our journey.

More often, though, we're so busy fixing tiny leaks that we get distracted from the real goal, which is to go somewhere."

If anyone should get the big picture it is us. But we are world champions at taking the "gnat" issues and making them the world.

Jesus posted about this many years ago when talking to the world experts at this practise:

Blind guides! You strain your water so you won't accidentally swallow a gnat, but you swallow a camel! - Matt 23:24

So often we Christian's are so happy to pick up our Pharisee cousins mantle.

What "gnat" issue are you holding on to with pride that is really making you look a little bit daft in eternity's eyes?