This week representatives elected from Methodist churches around the world began meeting for General Conference. This happens every 4 years and provides a forum for debating changes to our structure, processes, and stands on social issues. We expect a lot of debate around faith and homosexuality. I anticipate several likely outcomes.
Read MoreNext week I’m speaking at our church’s MOMSnext group on the topic of “fierce flourishing.” I feel unqualified. Each day I face a mountain of uncompleted items on my to-do list. It often grows and rarely shrinks. My reality isn’t what I think of when I think of flourishing. However, in preparing to speak I’ve remembered some words of Jesus and discovered a simple practice with the power to transform my stress over unfinished to-do items.
Read MoreI had just signed up for my first ever seminary class. I took a seat on a bench next to the registration building and wondered how this new college experience would compare to being an undergraduate engineering student. Two young women walked by and stopped to talk to me. “Girls talking to me – that’s different than engineering school,” I thought. As the conversation wound down, one of them said, “You’d be cool if you just smoked.”
Read MoreTwo hawks in my neighborhood have chosen, of all things, the cross at the top of a steeple as their base of operations for preying. No, not praying. Preying.
Whether neighborhood birds or terrorists in Belgium, predators have no qualms about using tools of faith to further violence. On this Friday before Easter, however, we remember that Jesus turned the tables. He used a notorious tool of violence, the cross, to further faith. Jesus prayed from the cross. He prayed, “Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing.” That action represented a pattern in Jesus’ life that can give us hope and direction in a world still filled with violence.
Read MoreIn the book of Exodus Moses investigates a burning bush and hears the voice of God say, “the place where you are standing is holy ground” (Exodus 3:5). I went to Israel hoping I’d have a holy-ground moment. I did, but I didn’t expect that the most significant spiritual moment of my trip would take place on the holy ground of my hotel room.
Read MoreChristians often strive to tear down walls that separate people. Recently, though, I visited a church that had an elaborate wall at the front of its worship space, separating the congregation from a symbolic holier place where the priests hang out. Initially offended by this wall, I gained a new appreciation for it when I learned how it’s used every Sunday during worship services.
Read MoreIn northern Israel you can visit Armageddon, the site of the final battle of good against evil. After arriving there last month, one of our group threw up – probably a fitting response to any situation that feels like the end of the world. But what do you do next When things are falling apart, what guidance does our faith give us for how to respond?
Read MoreI recently visited the Jordan River with members of our church. The river separates Israel from the country of Jordan, and the road leading to the river has minefields on both sides. Standing in the water between the minefields I found a spot of hope.
Read MoreWhen I went to the Holy Land I expected to find many churches and monuments celebrating significant events in Biblical history. However, I didn’t expect to find a church and other buildings celebrating temptation and failure.
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