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August 11th, 2010

A popular criticism of Christianity has been that it is “the opium of the people.” That’s a powerful metaphor and even a few movies about drug addiction puts you in touch with the criticism — the image being one of people who are out of touch with reality and incapable of getting there.

The Christian faith is, however, precisely about getting in touch with reality. It is about confronting and confessing our spiritual weaknesses. It is about surrendering the false selves we use to protect our egos. And the central assumption behind the on-going conversion and change in our lives is predicated on the kind of honesty that you cannot exercise when you are stoned, zoned out, or in denial.

If Jesus had been using modern language, he might have told his hearers, “if the shoe fits, wear it.” Transformation begins with anything but opium.

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August 10th, 2010

Among the things that undermine many marriages, one of the unnamed corrosives is the set of assumptions we bring to the relationship.

Men, for example, often assume that if they are effective wage earners, then their only responsibilities revolve around sex and the car battery. They set aside responsibility for nurturing intimacy, helping with domestic tasks, and child rearing.

I have even heard men talk about the “deals” they have struck with their wives in the effort to define what they will and won’t do. The language is telling and if you are dating someone who uses that kind of language, run, don’t walk — unless you are more interested in mergers and on-going turf wars.

You can’t nurture Intimacy by drawing lines and defining responsibilities. You can only nurture it by sharing vulnerably and freely with someone else.

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August 9th, 2010

Not everything that defeats us is a sin. Not in the way we typically think of sin at any rate: a willful disregard for the will of God.
Some of what slows and inhibits our spiritual growth is deeply rooted in experiences that obscure the freedom we were meant to enjoy. The way we were reared, the family dynamics that shaped the way we are in the world.

The challenge is remembering that our lives are an integrated whole. We are not simply souls, but emotions, bodies, life histories. To find healing it is important to know this. Otherwise, we run the risk of being defeated by forces and patterns in our lives that we do not recognize as having a fundamentally spiritual dimension.

For example, a life long desire to be loved and honored by someone who owed us love and respect may make us brittle, dependent, grasping, desperate, or angry. Any of those feelings can inhibit the growth of freedom in our lives.
Find a place to tell God your story, open the whole of it to healing, and find the God-given freedom out of which you were intended to live.

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August 9th, 2010

I’ve noticed that our dog does not have an off switch. She will eat endlessly. Open the pantry door and she shows interest, even if she has just eaten.

We can’t have everything we want and if we managed to get it, it would not necessarily serve our best interests spiritually.

Balance is not about deprivation. Balance is about availability — our availability to God and to others. And, by contrast, uncontrolled self-indulgence undermines our availability.

That is why gluttony is considered a deadly sin. It isn’t the impact it has on our bodies or our psyches. It is the way it undermines our ability to be available to God — and the way in which it elevates our indulgences to the level of a god.

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August 8th, 2010

One writer notes that at West Point they teach students that all successful military campaigns depend upon “command intent” — the goal toward which an army’s efforts are finally directed, the one thing they are fighting to achieve.

Battle plans are fine, they observe, but after the first shot is fired, such plans are either greatly modified or abandoned.

The same is true of our spiritual lives. We may make any number of plans, but if we are not guided by a command intent, it is almost impossible to stay centered.

Far too often our spiritual well being is deeply tied to what we have planned. So, when illness, unemployment, loss, or simply a different sequence of events intervenes, many of us are “undone” by the vagaries of life.

That’s when it is important to live by a command intent: I will seek intimacy with Jesus and walk with him, come what may.

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August 6th, 2010

My evangelical friends say that when God closes one door, he opens another. My Catholic friends say that when God closes a door, Mary kicks out a window. Another friend observes, “It is what it is.” And not long ago, I heard another person say that when God closes one door, he opens another, but it’s hell in the hallways.

It’s important to know what you think God does, or doesn’t do. Some people trade a God that they can worship for a sense of security, attributing things to God that make them feel better about where they are, but which imply that God does things for which we would imprison or institutionalize a human being.

That’s a high price to pay for security. And what always worries me about that kind of thinking is that sooner or later, people who attribute evil to God will come to hate God as well. It can be hard to rethink God once a set of concepts have shaped what you believe.

I don’t believe that God inflicts us or does us harm. I do believe that come what may, God is with us.

The apostle Paul was a veteran of closing and opening doors and, in another, era might have described his own life as a revolving door. But he was clear about one thing: in good and bad times, he belonged to Jesus. And that, it seems to me, is the only place to stand.

In and out of doors — or even in the hell of hallways — Jesus is with us.

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August 6th, 2010

What happens when we are here and now, for God?

Third, when you are present to God you will live with freedom.

How many of us journey well into adulthood wrestling with a desire to be loved and accepted? Free to live courageously into the people we were born to be? Secure in our gifts? At peace?

All of us, I suspect. We are waiting for someone to give us permission, someone to love us, someone to say I honor you, adore you, love you.

When that doesn’t happen, we often assume that it doesn’t because somehow God refuses to do it. As real as that conviction may seem, however, nothing could be further from truth.

God loves us in order to give life back to us. If we miss that gift, if we give ourselves to obsessions that rob us of life in the present — it won’t be because God did not want to give us life. It will because we were not alive enough to God in the present to receive what God wanted to give us.

I often find myself imagining the number of times we have stood before Jesus with our hands too full to receive life, protesting, “But Lord, I have my bitterness, my anger, my shame, my fear, my guilt. I don’t have hands that are free enough to receive the gift of new life.” And Jesus, responds, “Put them down. Put down the ugly, limiting, death-dealing emotions and future expecations that trap you and own you — and open your hands.”

You may feel that there is too much history for you to be free of the past. You may say that the future is too complicated and scary for you to live with freedom in the present. But the truth is, if it is God whose reading of our lives finally matters, then there is never so much history that we cannot turn to God, the future is never so complicated that we cannot be present to God. The cold cases, the barns, the woulda-coulda-shoulda do not need to pronounce a verdict on our lives. All we need to say is…

“I am here, I am yours, my hands are free.”

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August 4th, 2010

What happens when we are here and now, for God?

The second thing that happens when you are present to God is that your perspective changes.

The world of woulda-coulda-shoulda is a series of lies: The lie that we can control life’s outcome. The lie that all there is tomorrow. The lie that yesterday will never go away and we can’t be forgiven. When you believe those lies you live in the past or the future, but you never live in the present and you never find grace.

The devil will tell you anything to keep you from being present to God, because in the present you will learn that God loves you better than you love yourself. In the present you will learn that grace and forgiveness erases the past and rewrites the future. An alcoholic finds forgiveness for the past, gives himself to God, climbs out of the bottle that controls his life, and lives to be there for his family. A mother surrenders her shame, finds God’s forgiveness for her own past, and avoids projecting that shame on her daughter. A father finds a way to forgive his father for the past and frees his children from yet another cycle of violence because he discovers that he doesn’t need to punish his sons for the anger he feels about the way he was raised. Shed your fears about the future, trust God, and you give your children a world view marked by abundance and generosity, instead of fear and grasping.

Life isn’t always simple. The average black and white photo is filled with shades of gray that don’t catch our eye. But it’s the contrasts that make the images standout. When we give ourselves to God a handful of things change and a different picture emerges — a picture marked by hope.

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August 4th, 2010

What happens when we are here and now, for God?

First, your life opens to God.

I love it when people say that they don’t worship anything. Really? The people I know who don’t worship anything always worship something. They just aren’t aware of it and what they usually worship doesn’t merit that kind of devotion. Worship doesn’t consist of just overtly religious activity, it comes from Middle English and it refers to anything you reverence or respect with a life-defining devotion.

Some people are enthralled to something in their past. Their hair, their high school football record, the professional plans they made that did or didn’t materialize, or the relationships that they wanted that did or did not work out. They live in the past, they are trapped by the past, and it often won’t let go of their present. In the recent economic downturn I have found myself counseling an ever larger number of people who are trapped by grief over the worlds they had devoted themselves to that are dead and gone. Companies that they thought would be there forever; work worlds that have shrunk or disappeared. Other people devote their lives to the future that may or may not ever materialize: a 401 K, retirement, a home in Florida, (or if you live in Texas) a home in Montana.

Even the people who aren’t living in the past or the future are usually not really here, even if they are in the now. They are on their phones, instant messaging people who aren’t here but somewhere else in another time zone or following someone else’s life — Lady Gaga, Lindsay Lohan, or someone else who is famous for being well publicized.

What is interesting about people who find something other than God to worship is that they rarely make a difference or if they do, they make a difference because they are obsessed in some way. I was listening to a special the other night about Ted Williams who became a famous baseball player, then became a famous baseball playing wartime pilot, and then became famous for being cryogenically frozen when he died. But it’s difficult to know what a difference that made to the world.

On the other hand, think of Mother Theresa, Nelson Mandela, Desmond Tutu, Thomas More, Martin Luther King, and a long list of other people —- what do they have in common? They know God and God knows them and that knowledge took them into the world in a way that changed their world.

As important as it is to be responsible, do you know anybody who made a difference in the lives of other people because they planned for retirement, carried a burden of guilt through their lives, worried about the future, or fretted over the past? I doubt it. But those are the gods that a lot of us serve by living in the world of woulda-coulda-shoulda.

Ask God to be present with you now and everything changes. If not in a history-making way, it may be in a way that touches those you love: A child that registers your love; someone you care enough to mentor; someone struggling that you encourage.

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August 2nd, 2010

Yesterday I said that living in the world of woulda-coulda-shoulda is a spiritual issue. Why?

Live in the past, live in the future, and you will never live for God. After I pay for the house, I will pay attention to my prayer life. After I raise the children, I will pay attention to my spiritual growth. After I retire, I will seek spiritual freedom.

That’s the problem with the rich man. The problem isn’t that he has things or that he owns stuff. The problem isn’t that he has plans build a barn to hold his stuff. The problem is that he is so preoccupied with getting, keeping, and preserving what he has that he isn’t present to God at all. He is living without an awareness of God’s presence.

That’s the difference between the teaching of Jesus and Zen Buddhism. The Gospel story isn’t just about being present; and it isn’t about self-mastery. This isn’t about carpe diem — “seize the day, boys, seize the day.” It’s not even about mortality or judgment. It’s about being here and now for God, with God, and aware of God.

What happens when we do that? Three things. The first tomorrow.