Monday, April 13, 2009

GODISNOWHERE

Christians actually celebrate Easter every Sunday. In fact, the resurrection is the reason Christian worship moved from the Sabbath (Saturday) to Sunday. Followers of Jesus wanted to make sure the reality of resurrection stayed front and center in our life together as the Body of Christ.

We celebrated that yesterday.
Here's the video we used to begin the service.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Sunday's Coming

I wonder what it must have felt like to not know Sunday was coming. These people had put all of their faith and hope in Jesus and he was now dead. Think about today what it must have felt like to not know that Jesus was going to come back to life the next day. 

Do you remember what it was like when you first heard about Him and the hope he brings to your life NOW? Do you remember the first time you heard about the living God, the one who suffered for you and then was raised from the dead?

Your invited to come and celebrate with us tomorrow at 10:45 at Trinity Church, as we remember and celebrate what Jesus' real message is!

Friday, April 10, 2009

A Light in the Darkness

7-7:45PM Tonight.
Join us tonight as we focus in on the night Jesus was killed and his disciples lost all hope and darkness was everywhere.

What did that feel like to have their only light in the darkness snuffed out?
It's a powerful service and a powerful way to prepare for the joy and hope of Easter.

Short.
Sweet.
Powerful.

Nursery is available through age 5. Kids age 6+ are invited to join us.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

A New Way to Live--Tonight Only!


7-7:30PM tonight only! (okay, that's a cheesy sales technique but...)
join us as we focus in on the last meal Jesus shared with his disciples and the new command he gave us.

Short.
Sweet.
Challenging.
Nursery is available through age 5. Kids age 6+ are invited to join us.
Pack the kiddos, the 'rents, the spousal unit, whoever, in the car and join us.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

entering his last days


We are in the middle of what most christians call "The Holy Week." Tomorrow night we will come together for a Maundy Thursday service and focus on the new mandate or command Jesus gave. On Friday, we will have a good Friday service and focus on what Jesus did on the cross. However, at theGathering tonight we are going to focus on a simple act Jesus did with his disciples during the last supper, litterally hours before suffering on the cross.
The evening meal was being served, and the devil had already prompted Judas
Iscariot, son of Simon, to betray Jesus. Jesus knew that the Father had put all
things under his power, and that he had come from God and was returning to God;
so he got up from the meal, took off his outer clothing, and wrapped a towel
around his waist. After that, he poured water into a basin and began to wash
his disciples' feet, drying them with the towel that was wrapped around him. -John 13:2-5
After he washes his disciples feet, he then tells them to wash one another's feet.
What does that look like for us roughly 2000 years later?
I believe to serve Jesus to the benefit of another, shows the deepest level of love and humility. So, how can you use your talents, resources, services and life to serve one another? Maybe it means:
mowing the yard of the single mom in your neighborhood (for free)
doing the thing in your office nobody wants to do
doing laundry for your wife
helping the family out that you know is struggling financially.
I don't believe it was an option that Jesus was giving us. I believe he mandates or commands us to Love God, Love People and to Serve One Another!

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Is That Really Possible?

We've been sending out verses from the Bible each day via twitter, and they've been a real help to me.

Like when the prophet Isaiah reminded me (after visiting a family who made the gut-wrencing decision to turn the life support off for their 6 month old) that "the Lord will swallow death forever."

Like the day I needed to be reminded by Paul that my humanity wasn't a challenge to God: "For as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made alive"

Or the day I needed to be reminded that love is to be the dominant reality of the way I interact with people: "Be devoted to one another in brotherly love."

I like being comforted and reminded of God's help and love through Scripture. They all seemed like (and were!) divine interventions in my day. God really does want to speak to me, to you.

But then the other day, Peter reminded me that Jesus "bore our sins in his body on the tree, so that we might die to sins and live for righteousness."

Hold the phone. God wants and expects me to live in way that overcomes the still broken parts of my life? That seems a bit much, right?

Do I believe that? Do you? Do you and I really believe (in biblical language, really believe means really live that way) that is true? That God can empower us to overcome our brokenness and sin?

Friday we'll celebrate the fact that Jesus came to do just that.
If we aren't living it, I would venture to say the only explanation is that we don't really believe Jesus. Ouch.

Here's how Dallas Willard says it:
"Anyone who is not a continual student of Jesus, and who nevertheless reads the great promises of the Bible as if they were for him or her, is like someone trying to cash a check on another person's account. At best, it succeeds only sporadically."

Monday, April 6, 2009

Is your God to Small?

Yesterday, Scott gave a great challenge about How we view God.  For many people, the way they view God is not the God of the bible.  It was great to end the service with people breaking tiles with their wrong view of God written on them.  So...what is or was your view of God? What is your picture of God? Leave a comment on here and share with the community what you wrote on your tile if you were at the service on Sunday.

If you want to read more about this idea of, "your god is to small," check out one of these books:

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Is it about You or Him?


I love this quote from Donald Miller in Blue Like Jazz.  He says, 
I was a fundamental Christian once. It lasted a summer. I was in that same phase of trying to discipline myself to “behave” as if I loved light and not “behave” as if I loved darkness. I used to get really ticked about preachers who talked too much about grace, because they tempted me to not be disciplined. I figured what people needed was a kick in the butt, and if I failed at godliness it was because those around me weren’t trying hard enough. Blue Like Jazz, 79

I often wonder if people are stuck in the idea that Christianity or their walk with Jesus is just something they do..."if I just try hard enough" or "if I just stay away from those people or those places".  I wonder if we have forgotten that it is all about Jesus and what he has done for us and what the Spirit does in us.  I pray that through this week of remembering His last week, we will understand that it is about Him and not You!

Friday, April 3, 2009

Join Us

In a few days we'll be entering the time of year often known as Holy Week--the week Jesus was betrayed, crucified and buried in a borrowed tomb.

Along with millions of Christians around the world, we'll be having several services this next week designed to help each of us enter into the anguish and triumph of Jesus' last days as we look forward to Easter.
Consider yourself invited. Now share the love and invite a friend.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Start at Home

We're in a bit of an economic slump (in case you hadn't heard), with lots of finger pointing going on about who is to blame.

It's so much easier to blame someone else than to "start at home" and look inside to how I've contributed to the problem. While that's particularly true with the economic situation we're in, it applies to every aspect of life. It's part of what Lent does--it keeps us honest and reveals the degree to which we've contributed to our own problem.

If we can't honestly figure out where we are, we can't take any real steps forward in our relationship with God and we end up resorting to a veneer of spirituality and religiosity.

Gordon MacDonald suggests asking these questions (about the economic downturn...but they apply to any area of life).
Have I lived beyond my personal means?
Have I incurred irresponsible debt?
Have I lived indulgently, a lifestyle directed more by culture than by the influence of Christ?
Has my life's purpose been more about acquiring stuff than living a life of generosity and compassion?

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Where, O death is your sting?


I attended a funeral today and I have to say I struggle at funerals. Almost every funeral I have gone to, no matter how well I know the person that is placed before us, I have a difficult time. I have been trying to process this today and here are a few thoughts:

1. I want my life to be about something! I don't want to live and then die and have a few people stand up and talk about how I was funny or nice or whatever. I want my life to be about something. I want my life to represent Christ and his kingdom. Am I doing that?

2. I think about those people I am close to that don't have a relationship with Jesus! I am forced to think about the what ifs? What if my friend never comes to know Him before he dies. Am I playing my part is God redeeming people's lives?

3. I am forced to be reminded that life is short! We waste so much time on some things that really don't matter and miss out on some of the important things. I want to be the best husband, best dad, best person I can be today. What do I need to do to accomplish that?

I always leave thankful that Jesus came to rescue me and to make a way for me to live in eternity with him. I am not really afraid of what is next, but maybe I am afraid of what is NOW! May you and I be who God has called us to be today, not just holding on until the "man upstairs calls us home."

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

An Upside Down Kingdom

Many people have described the Kingdom of God that Jesus preached as an "upside down kingdom." In other words, God's reign overturns and subverts every other reign.

Pretty radical when you think about it and not at all the tame, religious, non-world shaking thing that most people think of when they think of Christianity.

In the upside down Kingdom...

The rich became poor, so the poor could become rich.
The foolish confound the wise.
The weak are strong, the strong are weak.
Life comes from death, clinging to life brings death.
The proud are humbled, the humbled are exalted.
The last will be first, the first will be last.

What needs to be overturned in your life for God's reign to fully come in your life?

Monday, March 30, 2009

Amazing Woman

I can't read enough about Mother Theresa. When I think about somebody who attempted to live their life like Jesus, she is the first person I think of. She spent time with those who nobody else cared about. She touched those nobody else would touch. She loved those nobody else loved. This prayer is one that she would often pray and is one of my favorite prayers. It is my prayer for myself and my prayer for you:

Dear Jesus, help us to spread Your fragrance everywhere we go. Flood our souls with Your spirit and life. Penetrate and possess our whole being, so utterly, That our lives may only be a radiance of Yours. Shine through us, and be so in us, That every soul we come in contact with may feel Your presence in our soul. Let them look up and see no longer us, but only Jesus! Stay with us, and then we shall begin to shine as You shine; So to shine as to be a light to others. The light O Jesus will be all from You, none of it will be ours; It will be You, shining on others through us. Let us thus praise You without preaching, not by words but by our example, By the catching force, the sympathetic influence of what we do, The evident fullness of the love our hearts bear to You. Amen.

What would it look like in your contect to spread His fragrance? What is it in your life that others see and see Jesus? What example can you be to your children or your spouse? What would happen if when people come in contact with us 'they feel His presence'. Oh how I long for that!



Sunday, March 29, 2009

Ask Yourself this question every morning and night until Easter

One Question: What must I let go of to have an undivided heart for God?

"'Even now,' declares the LORD, 'return to me with all your heart, with fasting and weeping and mourning.'
13 Rend your heart and not your garments. Return to the LORD your God, for he is gracious and compassionate, slow to anger and abounding in love, and he relents from sending calamity.
14 Who knows? He may turn and have pity and leave behind a blessing--grain offerings and drink offerings for the LORD your God.
15 Blow the trumpet in Zion, declare a holy fast, call a sacred assembly.
16 Gather the people, consecrate the assembly; bring together the elders, gather the children, those nursing at the breast. Let the bridegroom leave his room and the bride her chamber.
17 Let the priests, who minister before the LORD, weep between the temple porch and the altar. Let them say, 'Spare your people, O LORD. Do not make your inheritance an object of scorn, a byword among the nations. Why should they say among the peoples, 'Where is their God?''
Joel 2:12-17 (NIV)

HT: Rob Wegner

Friday, March 27, 2009

Living In His Story


This is a painting done by the artist David Arms and it depicts God's Story.  He describes it like this:

"God’s Story comes to us as a redemptive drama in four parts.
Creation—when everything was as God meant it to be.
Fall—the tragic intrusion of sin and death, resulting in the pervasive brokenness of all people and everything God has made.
Redemption—God’s astonishing promise to redeem his fallen image-bearers and creation through the grace-full work of his Son, Jesus Christ.
Consummation—the magnificent fulfillment of God’s plan to gather and cherish a people forever, and to live with them in a more-than-restored world, called “the new heaven and new earth.”

My question for you is kind of a difficult one.  ARE YOU LIVING IN HIS STORY?  Do you believe that God is the one who has or can rescue you?  Do you believe he is the one that can redeem your past?  Do you believe that there is a hope for you today? Not only are you living in his story, but do you believe you are a character in his story? 

Many of us believe we are in our own story.  That we are really alone in the game of life and if we just try hard enough or just catch a few breaks, then good things will happen.  I have come to find out for myself that this doesn't work.

So, will you choose to live in your own story or will you find yourself in God's story?  


Thursday, March 26, 2009

The Kingdom of God

Our culture isn't set up as a kingdom, so Jesus' phrase "the Kingdom of God" sounds a bit foreign to our ears. But we do understand leadership and administration. For example, every four years, we elect a man (at least until this point) who instantly becomes the most powerful person in the world. His "reign" extends over what happens in much of the world.

Jesus meant this and more when he talked and prayed about God's kingdom coming. The Kingdom of God was his basic message. And it's what the early Christians meant when they said "Jesus is Lord."

Here's a clear and and concise description of the Kingdom of God by Mike Breen:
"God is in charge.
He loves you and is near to you.
What would you like him to do for you?"

Jesus communicated that message over and over, because he knew it was true and knew that people's lives would be radically altered when they lived into it's truth.

Stop and think about it. If that message is true, what does that mean for the biggest challenge you are facing right now?

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Telling the Truth to Yourself

By this point in any Lenten fast, you begin to realize--through the discipline of fasting--that something has more of a hold on you than you thought. And you have to face the truth:
Why?

Why do you like angry words?
Why do you eat more than you need?
Why do you zone out in front of the TV for hours a night?
Why do you obsessively check your email/Facebook/Twitter/etc?


You realize that there is more going--to use my own fast as an example--than "just" a sweet tooth. There is a deeper hunger, longing, ache that to this point you've downplayed or outright ignored. And so, if you want to grow from the experience and see your life become more like Jesus' luminary existence, you must face the truth.

Thomas a Kempis said that if we are to become like Jesus Christ, we must learn to love the truth no matter where it comes from. A difficult thing, to be sure.

So what is the truth telling you?

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

When you understand this....It all changes!

"God doesn't want or expect you to get it together before you come along, because you can't get it together until you come along"

Anne Lamott in Plan B Further Thoughts on Faith

Monday, March 23, 2009

Video and Book from Sunday

The video we showed yesterday during the service:
"God of the Moon and Stars" by Kees Kraayenoord






The book mentioned during the sermon.
The Prodigal God, by Tim Keller
(The link to the books website also contains links to a sermon series Tim Keller preached on The Prodigal God if you want to explore further)

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Overcoming Obstacles



I often tell myself that I don't know if God could really do that (feel in the that for yourself) with me. I can find pretty good excuses:

I don't have the resources.
I don't know the right people.
I can't speak well.
I am young.

What if we really believed that God could use us...that he even WANTS to use us?

In Chicago I learned about a man named Wayne Gordon who began a church in the Lawndale Community. He had to overcome many things to accomplish what he felt God was calling him to do: a change in jobs, his family thought he was crazy, at the time it was the 15th poorest neighborhood in the United States, he was white and the community was 90% black and 5% Hispanic. It would have been easier for him to do something different but following Jesus isn't about just doing what is easy!

We are a little over half way through the season of lent. What is God teaching you or challenging you with? Will you respond or will you give excuses.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Knowing God starts by admitting this (especially if you are religious)

"All of us have become like one who is unclean, and all our righteous acts are like filthy rags; we all shrivel up like a leaf, and like the wind our sins sweep us away."

Isaiah 64:6

Friday, March 20, 2009

Getting out of the Christian Ghetto

This caught me off guard the other day and reminded me why we followers of Jesus lack so much cultural credibility.


For $69.99, I could buy this crown of thorns.



If I could only spare a dollar or two, I could have these Scripture mints or these chocolates with a Scripture verse printed on the packaging.



I will resist the incredibly powerful urge to publish the name of this "christian" store (believe me the urge is almost overpowering) and will only shake my head in disbelief.

This is the commodification of faith, not the practice of it. This is turning followers of Jesus into a market segment, not empowering them to be the Body of Christ--the literal hands and feet of Jesus to a broken world--in the world.

When we frequent these places, we go deeper into the bowels of a Christian ghetto of our own making and miss our calling to be the light of the world--a light set on a stand for the whole world to see.

Don't miss your calling.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Tim Keller on Why People like Jesus but not the Church

"Religiously observant people were offended by Jesus, but those estranged from religion and moral observance were intrigued and attracted to him. We see this throughout the New Testament accounts of Jesus's life. In every case where Jesus meets a religious person and a sexual outcast (as in Luke 7) or a religious person and a racial outcast (as in John 3-4) or a religious person and a political outcast (as in Luke 19), the outcast is the one who connects with Jesus and the elder-brother type does not. Jesus says to the respectable religious leaders "the tax collectors and the prostitutes enter the kingdom before you" (Matthew 21:31).

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

The Church has left the building

Early this week, I (Scott) spent a little time with the Junior Highers from Trinity's student ministry. They're in Chicago this week working with the Center for Student Missions, an organization that does good work in Jesus' name in several of the largest cities in America.

I can tell from being with the students that they are out of their comfort zone.

I was with them while they served at a Soup Kitchen in North Chicago. I had Hudson (he's 4) with me...and to watch the multiple families with kids Hudson's age sit around the table and eat their (only?) meal there together was more than a little sobering.
They are encountering this kind of world jarring imagery every day this week.
And that's good.

Good because what they are doing is fundamental to following Jesus. Here's why: Unless you want to stay the same, not grow, not be challenged, not have your horizons expanded, have a shrinking heart, love God less, love your neighbor less...your comfort zone has to be challenged.

When you allow your comfort zone to be challenged, your heart begins to beat with life. Your pace quickens. Your eyes open to new things. Your ears hear new sounds. You begin, like the founder of World Vision prayed "to have your heart broken by the things that break God's heart." You enter into a new world.

There are all kinds of way to challenge your comfort zone.
Give something up for Lent.
Take an off-the-wall idea to invest $1, $2 or $5 in blessing someone and run with it.
Open your mind to Scripture on a regular basis.
Get to know your neighbor beyond "Nice weather, huh?"
Go on a mission trip.
Go into the city and instead of saying "thank God I don't live here!" prayerfully see the realities and problems there.

Way to go Junior Highers. Thanks for setting the example.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Ouch

"Jesus got a hearing from people who had lost all hope from religion. And that’s the difference between Jesus and me."
--Don Bryant

Monday, March 16, 2009

A "LANGUAGE" Barrier


I, (Kyle) am currently in Chicago on our "Embrace" mission trip with several Jr. High students.  We are staying in a neighborhood in the northern part of Chicago called Albany Park.  It is the most diverse area in Chicago with 1 in 2 residents being born outside of the United States.   As you drive around, you are constantly seeing stores and restaurants with a language you don't understand.  There is an immediate barrier, simply because you don't understand the language.

As we continue the series, "losing my religion," we are hoping that some barriers are being broken down for you and your thoughts/relationship with Jesus.  So, ask yourself if there is something that has kept you from passionately pursuing the ways of Jesus?  Or do you speak to others in a way that puts up barriers for them and their relationship with him?  Is there some barrier between you and the truth?

I pray that you will begin to seek who Jesus really is and what he is really about.  That you will break through any barriers there are and find Him.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Looking Ahead

The Losing My Religion series is building some steam.

Here's where we're headed:
3/22 - Religion: The Enemy of the Gospel
3/29 - Why Jesus is so Popular
4/5 - Your God is too Small
4/12 - Jesus' real message

Plus, to prepare your mind and heart for Easter (Sunday, April 12),
you can join us for two very unique services that will help you walk through Jesus' last few days before he was killed.

Thursday, April 9 @ 7PM, a 30 minute service called Maunday Thursday where we recall the mandate (maundatum is the Latin word for "mandate") Jesus gave his disciples the Thursday night before he was killed to "love one another as I have loved you."

Friday, April 10 @ 7PM, a 45 minute Good Friday service that revisits the pain and sorrow the disciples must have felt when they realized that Jesus' plan had apparently failed. It's an incredibly moving experience.

Kids are invited to join us (no childcare either night).

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Friday, March 13, 2009

"Bless Someone" Friday

Maybe you still have your $1, $2 or $5 bill that was given out on Sunday. Read Jesus' parable about the men given 1, 2 or 5 talents we talked about here (btw, "talent" didn't refer to the fact that they could play the trumpet or juggle--it was a unit of money.)

maybe you're still turning it over in your mind (like I am) how you can possibly use an amount that small to bless someone.

I've already heard stories of families in need being given help, of the money turning into more money for someone going through hard times. I even heard about how a pair of socks moved someone to tears. All very moving stories. All inspired. And all the people who told their stories were moved telling them. They were glad they were given the impetus to think outside themselves.

This is what being a blessing always results in. You discover that giving is way better than receiving. Paradoxically, you end up getting more than you give.

So what are you doing with your money? Tell us your story.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Compassion as a Lifestyle

Last year 13 artists (time hughes, martin smith, matt redman, toby mac, chris tomlin, and more) got together and began doing something different than normal, putting together a CD where all the proceeds would go to help fight poverty. The thing I love is they are using their gifts and talents to make a difference. It has become a part of their lifestyle! What if we quit thinking of "compassion" as something we do and begin thinking about it as something we are. We are called to be compassionate...to be compassionate is to be human.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

How Good is God?

What are the things that keep you from getting closer to God? This quote from Bill Hybels rang my bell. I think he's dead-on.
Often what keeps a person who is "close to Christ" from becoming "Christ-centered" is that, at a deep level, he or she doubts the goodness of God: "I don't know if God is good enough to put together a plan for my future that's better than the one I can put together for myself." We're asking people to bet the farm on the goodness of God.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

2.7 billion people




The average Haitian citizen has $1.39 to spend each day, in India the average is $1.23. The statistics show that around 2.7 billion people live on less than $2 per day. You possibly received a small amount of money this past Sunday if you are a part of the Trinity family. You may still be asking yourself, what am I really supposed to do with only $1?

We are extremely rich here in the United States. OK....maybe you don't live in a super fancy home or drive a super fancy car, but most of you do have a car! And the majority of you reading this will sleep in a bed under a roof tonight. Heck...your on a computer reading this blog! We are rich.

So...what will you do with your 'measly' dollar or few dollars. Will you tell yourself, "I can't do anything with a dollar!" Or will you really begin to look at how the rest of the world lives and do something with it.

They say it only cost $1 to provide clean water to one person for one year.
They say it only cost about $1 a day to provide the basic needs for a child in a developing country.
They say that it only cost $1 to provide the needed medicine to immunize a child (which if they don't receive it will probably die before the age of 5).

You say it's only a $1!

Monday, March 9, 2009

$1

"I've been around. And boy do I have some stories. Like the time I was the only tip on a $75 bill left by an senior vice president because he didn't like the service he got from his waitress. She was tired, worn out from taking care of her new baby and just wasn't on her "A" game that night. So the cheapo left just me and none of my friends. Zero compassion that man. I was glad to be out of his hands.

She needed milk for her baby, and since it was a bad night, I and a couple of friends were all she could spare to buy just enough milk to get her baby through the weekend. I felt sorry for her.

And then I was part of the change to a chain-smoking addict, where I promptly entered several rounds of passage in the drug underbelly of a nice suburb. You won't believe whose hands I went through and what I saw. Nightclubs, parties, addicts, addicts and more addicts. They like me a lot. It was a bit crazy for me. Thought I'd even be torn in two several times.

Made a few rounds as the fodder for CD purchases at Best Buy (I'm preferential to U2). Bought a few rolls of toilet paper. Even spent a bit of time in the tip jar at a Starbucks.

But then that barista deposited me in her bank, which is where a church leader came in and picked me up. Some ridiculous idea that came up to give me away and tell people that I have a power to do some good. I kind of like that. Noble and all.

So now I and a bunch of my friends are in the hands of people who finally understand me. Get what I was created for. To add to someone's value instead of trying to buy it. To grow their dignity instead of purchasing it. To make them feel their worth instead making them feel like they don't matter.

I kind of like that."

Sunday, March 8, 2009

"The Church Just Wants My Money"

Today was our second week in the series, Losing my religion.  Scott gave a great message on how we don't just want your money, but to do what God is wanting to do in us and through us it does take money.  

We ended the morning by giving away money.  Each person came down and took an envelope from a money tree and in it was either, $1, $2 or $5.  (matthew 25:14-20

The challenge is to take that money and invest it in something or someone.  

If you are a part of the Trinity family please post on here and let us know what you did with the money. 
If you are just stopping by the blog today, how will you use what God has blessed you with for his Kingdom?  

We are also going to begin Financial Peace University in the spring.  If you would like to be a part of that class please email : trinitychurch@sbcglobal.net and sign up soon. 

I hope as we continue through this series, you are beginning to lose your religion and learn what it means to have a relationship with Jesus.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

A Sick Day

The blog had to call in sick due to the unwanted presence of the influenza virus.
Proof that technology is still no match for biology.

Friday, March 6, 2009

Love In Action


Today is Friday and I can hear the screams and cheers.  I want to remind you that today is the day we are challenging you to bless someone.  This can be something very simple and small.  

Mother Theresa said,

"We can do no great things, only small things with great love.  It is not how much you do but how much love you put into doing it."

So, today be a blessing.
  
Go visit and elderly person in your neighborhood.  

Give the single mom on your street flowers. 

Write a note to someone who needs to be encouraged.  

To bless someone doesn't always mean using money, but whatever you do today may you do it with great love.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

A Prayer

"Every day I see again that only you can teach me to pray, only you can set my heart at rest, only you can let me dwell in your presence. No book, no idea, no concept or theory will ever bring me close to you unless you yourself are the one who lets these instruments become the way to you.

But Lord, let me at least remain open to your initiative; let me wait patiently and attentively for that hour when you will come and break through all the walls I have erected. Teach me, O Lord, to pray."
Amen
.

Henri Nouwen, A Cry for Mercy

Scott

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

what is your barrier?

I went to Hazelwood West High School today to pick up a student for lunch. As I drove down the path to enter the school parking lot, this is what was sitting and waiting for me. As I pulled up, they signaled for me to roll down my window. They asked me a couple of questions: Why I was there? And what my name was? They then proceeded to write down my tag number as I drove into the parking lot. Now I understand the reasons for this. And I understand that to be able to pick up a student, I had to make it through a few barriers.

I believe that if we are honest with ourselves in this time of Lent and examining our lives, there may be a few things that are keeping us from passionately following Jesus. A few barriers.

Doubts
Fears
A sin we feel like we can't tell anyone about
Pride
Fact that we really don't understand what it means to follow Jesus
Bad Expectations of the Church
Religion

I hope that you will choose to face these things in the coming weeks. That you wouldn't allow anything to get the way of you following Jesus with everything you have. That you would be able to look back and see the barriers you had to make it through to find the real Jesus. What are the barriers that have been in your life or are in your life now?

Kyle



Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Temptation

When you intentionally give up a habit/activity/behavior for a period of time like Lent, you very quickly find out that habit/activity/behavior stares at you like one of those weird paintings where the eyes seem to follow you around the room. You can't seem to get away from your desire to do that thing.

What you discover in short order is that that thing actually has power over you.

Surprise! You've grown quite fond of junk food (what I happen to be giving up)/sweets/angry words/TV, or whatever it is you've decided to do without. In fact, you might even experience long periods where you find yourself thinking about that thing. Wanting it. Longing for it. Contemplating what it will be like when you get to have it/do it again (I'm not saying I've already planned a trip to Crown Candy Kitchen, but there may or may not be a date in my calendar).

This is crucial moment. Fasting, Richard Foster says, is the one practice that, more than any other, reveals the things that control us. Jesus--the smartest man who ever lived--understood this and encouraged regular fasting.

Giving something up for Lent isn't an exercise in spiritual muscularity, it's an exercise in humility. We find out that we are weak, that we need help, and that we can't do this alone.
We need God.
We need a community to support us.
We need to admit that we need help.

The photo is from Baskin-Robbins--for me a true Lenten den of iniquity--and if my family hadn't been in the car, I think my car may have automatically gone through the drive-thru.

What is your Lenten sacrifice teaching you?

Scott

Monday, March 2, 2009

Do I really?

I love this art from a blog I read called the Plow.

It causes me to ask myself a few questions:

Who is it difficult for me to love?

When I think of God loving me, do I see myself as someone that is also unlovable at times? Yet, in the midst of my messedupness, he still loves me!

Jesus said in the sermon on the mount, "But I tell you: Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you." During this time of lent; this time of examining your life...who in your life do you need to love more, show more compassion for, invest in more? Ask yourself if you really love people, or do you just love those that love you?

Kyle

Sunday, March 1, 2009

What are You Giving Up?

I'm giving up junk food. As in non-nutritive dense, non-food, food.

Since moving to the STL, in the interest of time I've developed a habit of eating what's quick, easy...and bad for me. I've always had a sweet tooth, but it hasn't been good for the last two months.

5 days in and I'm already feeling the cravings for junk (funny how we train our bodies to want what's bad for us). What really kills is that I discovered Old Town Donuts and I already miss them.

What about you? Add a comment and we'll create a running log of the things people are giving up for Lent.
--Scott

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Least of these






Scott made me aware of this video the other day and I want to make you aware of it as well. We often forget that there are people who live like this. I have a three year old daughter and watching this video brings me to tears thinking about my own daughter and what if this was her. But if I understand His kingdom, it should bring me to tears to see a little one living a life like this. So today you have a choice, do you watch this video and say that is really sad and do nothing about it or do you watch this video and try and figure out a way to make a difference.

Shane Claiborne in "Becoming the Answer to Our Prayers" says this,

"Prayer is not so much about convincing God to do what we want God to do as it is about convincing ourselves to do what God wants us to do."

So here are a few ideas:
Sponsor a child through one of these organizations.

World Vision

Compassion

Save the Children

Maybe you would even think about volunteering at a local boys or girls club or being a mentor at a local elementary school.

How will you invest in His kingdom? In a day of not having a good return on our investments in the stock market, this is an investment that works!

Kyle

Friday, February 27, 2009

Be a Blessing Machine


In Genesis 12, God tells Abram as part of their partnership, "...all peoples on earth will be blessed through you."

If you know the Biblical story, you know this is the point at which God entrusts his plan to bless the whole earth to a single person.
Pretty risky on God's part, right? What if Abram doesn't succeed?

At the very least, this highlights the fact that God is a risk-taker. He'll apparently roll the dice on just about anyone. What's more, God seems to trust us more than we trust ourselves...because behind it, God knows God's own ability to transform a person into a blessing machine.

So if you've ever been blessed, it is the result of God's partnership with one man.

God's risk paid off.

As friends of Jesus, we now we stand in the same line of that promise God made to Abram. We are to carry on the work of blessing-machine-ness. It's the point and purpose of our lives. Here's what it means to bless someone:
To do something good with no expectation of a return.

So your job today: be a blessing machine.
Leave a comment if you'd like to share your story of blessing another person.
--Scott

Thursday, February 26, 2009

A Total Surrender

I don't know if you are like me, but I really don't like being denied. If there is somewhere I want to go or something I want to have, I don't like to hear the word, NO! Guys, if you can think back to the first time you asked a girl out on a date, the fear of being denied was there (I am thankful I never herd no...hope you believe that).

We are now in day two in the Lent Season. We are encouraging you to give up something until Easter Sunday to remind yourself of the sacrifice Jesus made on the cross. If you have already messed up, don't give up! Get back on track and do the best that you can. This is a very tangible thing to do, a way to help us in our journey with Christ. Today, I want you to think about your life as a whole. If you have decided to follow Christ or when you do, there comes a moment when you say my life is no longer my own. There comes a point when you surrender your plans, your future, your past, your life! Oswald Chambers wrote this in "The Place of Help" in 1935:

'Submission does not mean that I submit to the power of God because I must. A stoic submits without passion, that is slavery; a saint sees God's will and submits to it with a passionate love, and in his daily life exhibits his love to God to Whom he has submitted.'

Jesus said in Luke 9:

"If anyone wishes to come after me, he must deny himselfand take up his cross daily and follow me.For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it,but whoever loses his life for my sake will save it.What profit is there for one to gain the whole worldyet lose or forfeit himself?"

So today, be reminded that your surrender to God is not just denying yourself certain things, but a surrender with passionate love to the one who gave it all. That following Christ isn't just about making sure you don't do certain things and you do certain things. That denying yourself is a daily thing and is sometimes even hard. But after you experience the life he gives when you give it all away, you understand that it is good. May your life reflect the one who gave himself completely for you.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Ash Wednesday

Today is meant to be a reminder of our mortality.

That's not something we really like, especially in our culture. We abhor aging and death. In fact, we'd rather not talk about it.

There are any number of products we can use, buy, try that attempt to keep us from realizing "the thousands natural shocks flesh is heir to", to quote Shakespeare.

As a culture, we've managed to convince ourselves that if we do things like
detox,
tighten our abs,
buy a juicer,
then we just might actually be able to avoid our mortality.

Doing those things may make us healthier (a very good thing), but they won't keep away the inevitable. We have to confront death in order to live life.

So tonight @ 7PM, we'll receive ashes on our foreheads with the words "from dust you came, to dust you will return." It will be a reminder that our lives are here for a brief moment. And that if our moment is to count in any real way, we need to be caught up in Something bigger than us. And in doing that, we'll again put our hope in the God who raises the dead.

Here are some sobering words from William Law in his 18th Century classic: A Serious Call to a Devout and Holy Life . Try this tonight as you go to sleep:

BlockquoteRepresent to your imagination that your bed is your grave; that all things are ready for your interment; that you are to have no more to do with this world; and that it will be owing to God's great mercy if you ever see the light of the sun again...Then commit yourself to sleep as one that is to have no more opportunities of doing good, but is to awake among spirits that are separate from the body and waiting for the judgment of the great last day.

Such solemn resignation of yourself into the hands of God every evening, and parting with all the world as if you were never to see it any more--and all this in the silence and darkness of night--is a practice that will soon have excellent effects upon your spirit. For this time of the night is exceeding proper for such prayers and meditations. The likeness which sleep and darkness have to death will contribute very much to make about it more deep and affecting.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Live on Wednesday, Feb 25

On Wednesday, Feb 25, our daily blog will be live.


Check back then for short daily content by our pastors, Kyle Rainbolt & Scott Marshall.

Tools available to you during Lent

Daily Scripture Readings. To have the daily scripture sent to your phone as a cell phone text message, send a text to 40404 with the message: follow stltrinity You'll receive the daily scripture each day by text message. Please note: Your standard text message rates will apply! If there is a Scripture that grabs you, but you can't remember it, you can see all the previous daily Scriptures compiled anytime here.

Ash Wednesday service. Wednesday, February 25 from 7:00-7:45 in the Sanctuary.

Stop-doing/Start-doing tool. A simple way to deepen your own relationship with God.

Sermon Series: Losing My Religion. Scott Marshall and Kyle Rainbolt will be exploring why so many people like Jesus...but don't like the church. While we're examining our personal lives, we'll be examining our corporate life as the Body of Christ. Ghandi said it like this:

"I like your Christ, I do not like your Christians. your Christians are so unlike your Christ."




We'll be asking the question: Is he right about us today?




This daily blog.

Stop Doing/Start Doing Tool

Stop Doing Something

During Lent (the 40 days between Ash Wednesday and Easter Sunday), many people find it helpful to give something up.
Sweets
TV
Going to bed late
Maybe even something much more destructive
Maybe something very enjoyable

The purpose is twofold:
1 - It often reveals how something we consider small and trivial has snaked its way into the fiber of our soul and begun to control us.
2 - To remember Jesus' sacrifice. It may seem trite to give up sweets when comparing it to the fact that Jesus gave up his life, but it is a spiritual discipline. Giving it up hopefully prepares you to be willing to give your entire life up to God.

Start Doing
Each Friday, do something good for someone who crosses your path. Your goal: be a blessing machine.
Buy their coffee or lunch.
Let them cut in front of you in traffic.
Get their mail.
Pay for their gas.
Do an errand for them.

Here's the catch. Don't do it for someone already a part of the Trinity family or in your family.

Every Friday, bless someone.