Learn To Party for the Sake of Jesus

Not so long ago, I would never have written this:

Being able to have a good time at a *party is an essential skill for disciple makers to develop.

Yep.  If you are not good at it already, I strongly encourage you to learn to *party.

I say that as someone who is really not very good at *parties.  For most of my growing up years, I was really uncomfortable at *parties. I got a little better at it in college, but I am still learning to walk into a room of people, relax, and then have a good time at the *party.

So, what’s with the asterisk?  I’m excluding church parties.  I  have done church parties all my life.  But put me in a room where people are doing their best to relax and have fun in an uninhibited way, and I’m unsure of myself in that kind of environment.  Sometimes that can send the wrong message – but I have been getting better.  And if we want to make disciples like Jesus, we need to figure out how.

Maybe you know the story that begins in Matthew 9:9.  Jesus calls Levi (aka Matthew) to follow him – and Levi leaves his tax-collecting life immediately and begins to follow Jesus.  The first thing he does is throw a big *party for his fellow tax-gatherers and their unruly crowd of friends and he invites Jesus and his disciples.  In that gathering were people  people with loose morals, who drank too much, who cussed too much, and who told embarrassing jokes.   And Jesus and his disciples apparently knew how to be at ease at a party with people who party like that.  It became known.  It raised questions.  Some of the more respected religious people got upset.  But when they raised questions, Jesus put them in their place.  Read all about it in Matthew, Mark or Luke.  (Evidently the gospel writers sensed the importance of the occasion.)

Maybe you know the cliché:  “bad company corrupts good character.”  That’s not a Ben Franklin quote. That’s from the Word of God, the Bible, I Corinthians 15:33.   I don’t know how you define “bad company”, but evidently, they weren’t Levi’s party goers.  Apparently Jesus was not concerned they would corrupt.   Jesus was far more concerned about the corrupting influence of those respected religious folk.  Matthew 16:33 makes it clear: to beware of their teaching.

Their teaching encouraged religious people to be absolutely separate from Levi and his crowd.

It’s not too hard to see why Jesus disagreed.  We can’t keep what Jesus called “the second greatest commandment” which is to love our neighbor as we love ourselves, if we aren’t willing to be with neighbors at *parties.

Now, if we accept that Jesus is the example we are to follow when it comes to loving our neighbors and making disciples, then paying attention to how Jesus handled things at Levi’s *party can be very instructive.

Here are a few observations:

1) Jesus attended the *party and had a good time.  Our neighbors won’t be convinced we love them if we refuse to go to their parties or if we are in anyway awkward wet blankets needing accommodation.

2) Jesus attended *parties rather publically.  We should not try to convince our neighbors we love them if we are embarrassed to be seen at their party.

3) Jesus wasn’t worried about his reputation.  We can’t have fun at a *party if we are worried about our reputations being damaged in the least.

4) Jesus brought his disciples with him.  He wasn’t worried about their reputations, their safety, or that the *party might corrupt him or them.  If we are unduly concerned for the people we bring with us, that could make it hard for us to enjoy ourselves.

5)  Jesus had an answer for those religious types who criticized his party going ways.  We should recognize that we bring the presence of Christ when we show up at *parties.

6) But Jesus didn’t try to convince his critics of anything other than their hypocrisy.  He didn’t say, “come on to the *party and you’ll have fun.”  No.  He just gave them something to think about – and (though the text doesn’t say so) probably went back into the *party.

7) And this is huge!  Jesus was delighted to go.  He wanted to go because he liked being around Levi.  The best way to enjoy yourself at a *party is to actually like being around the people at the party.  And that can require an internal adjustment in the area of our hearts.

None of this is easy, though, if you are like me?  It is not easy for people who have always enjoyed relatively safe church parties.  I have a wife.  I have a family. I have kids.  Some people really cross the line at parties.  There are things I don’t want to have to deal with.  Maybe you feel the same way.

But if we want to see more people like Levi following Jesus, then, well, we know what to do, don’t we? We need to….

*party!

 

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Ideas for blessing your neighbors

We’re hoping to release a small conspiracy of blessing on March 13-14.   Wherever you are, you can participate.  Here are a few ideas in case you aren’t sure how to bless others.  The goal is to bless three people and eat with three others over that two day period.  Make sure that at least one of the people you bless and one of the people you eat with are not part of your usual group of friends.

Here you go:

  • Bake a dessert and deliver it.
  • Do you know someone who has their plate full?  Pressure wash a neighbor’s driveway.
  • Write an encouraging note or letter.
  • Buy someone a cup of coffee.
  • Invite a neighbor over to dinner just to get to know them better.
  • Think about something one of your neighbor does well, and tell them so.
  • Go out to dinner.  Get to know your servers name.  Leave a very generous tip with a short note that includes their name.
  • Buy a friend lunch.
  • Rake an older neighbor’s yard.
  • Organize a block party.
  • Deliver cookies to your neighbors just because.
  • Do you know someone who’s financially strapped.  Send them an anonymous gift card.
  • Initiate a friendship.
  • Hold the door for a stranger.
  • Recognize someone who’s doing a good job and tell them so.
  • Write a note to one of your kid’s teachers and tell them you appreciate the time they give to your kid’s education.
  • Call up an old friend.
  • Let someone know you are making a meal for them and deliver it.
  • Write a thank you to someone who made a difference in your life.

I bet you can come up with more ideas!

But the main thing is to remember to go do it!

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How a simple blessing changed my future

Bless someone.  What does that mean?  We believe blessing others is part of what it means to live missionally is to

Miriam-Webster’s online dictionary offers three definitions.

  1. to make holy by saying a special prayer.
  2. to ask God to care for and protect someone or something
  3. to provide (a place or a person) with something good or desirable.

Not a bad set of definitions.  It’s that third one I want to focus on.  When I studied biblical Greek, I learned two Greek words for bless/blessing.  One was eulogia – which has to do with offering praise.  When people give eulogies at funerals, they are supposed to offer up “good words” of praise about the deceased.   But the was makarios.  It has a connotation of having divine favor, or having God on your side.  And it felt like having surprisingly good luck.  In the Bible, it meant that God had done something for you.  To bless someone like that means you need to do something good for them for the sake of Jesus.

So bless someone.  Let God direct you to do something for another human being that will make them feel lucky.  Such small acts can change someone’s future.   And I have a story…

Back in the early 1920s, my grandfather, Reed Alexander, was a subsistence corn farmer near Athens, Georgia.  In that time and place, there generally just enough to survive.  You could eat the corn and set aside enough to plant again the next year.  He was married to my grandmother.  They had two kids and very limited opportunity.  The family could make it, but there was not much of a future.  But that was when a very simple blessing changed all of that.

A friend had moved to Barberton, Ohio and found work.  The blessing amounted to sending a post-card with four words on it.  It was postmarked from Barberton and it said, “Reed, they’s jobs here.”  No signature.  Just a postmark and four words.  When my grandfather received that postcard, he figured out a way to get a job and bring his family with him to Barberton.  My dad and one of my uncles were born there.  And the experience opened Reed’s eyes to possibilities he probably had not considered before, such as the value of enterprise and education.

In 1929, he returned with his family to Georgia.  It was the Great Depression.  Jobs were going away everywhere.  But he returned a different man.  In Barberton, he’d learned a few things.  When they returned, he and my grandmother negotiated with a family friend for a place to live in Oconee Heights – at the time, it was a village near Athens.  He started a store with a gas station there and raised four boys, Pete, Robert, Charles, and George.  He made sure they got an education.  Tragically, Pete was killed in the war.  But Robert, Charles, and George went to college and eventually earned advanced degrees.  Each became ordained as a Presbyterian pastor.  The blessing grew.  The stories of the lives they blessed would be too many to tell – but I’ll share one.

Charles and his wife Ellen became a missionaries in Brazil and worked in the slums in the city of Forteleza.  Their mission included  practicing evangelism, starting churches, educating kids, and doing what they could to address the pressing physical needs in that city.  When his sending denomination (the Presbyterian Church U.S.) handed over responsibility for all missions to the Brazilian church, they recalled my Uncle, saying his work there was over.  But he decided to stay in Brazil and find ways to support himself.   Over time, he developed a self-sustaining ministry in Brazil which included a farm in the interior to provide employment, to grow food to feed the hungry in the city, and to make bricks to build facilities for the churches he’d helped to start.   He also invested heavily in educating the kids.  He sent two exceptionally bright students to be educated in the US.  I met one of them – a guy named Evandro.  He went to Georgia Tech – a pretty good school.  Evandro returned to Brazil, married, and had two daughters.  And those two daughters are now medical doctors.

So get this: there are people in Brazil today who are receiving skilled medical care and it has something to do with a guy remembering a friend back in Georgia and deciding to send a four word post-card.hpart of that legacy – a legacy of education, service, and hopefulness.  My life and  the lives of many others have been shaped by a simple blessing.

Maybe that blessing could have come through someone else – but today I bless (eulogia) the memory of the man through whom great blessing (makarios) has come.

Allow God to work through you today and bless someone.

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Missional Living Micro Post: Love Your…

Which of these did Jesus say?

  1. Love one another.
  2. Love your family.
  3. Love your friends.
  4. Love the stranger.
  5. Love the weak.
  6. Love the strong.
  7. Love the poor.
  8. Love the rich.
  9. Love your neighbor.
  10. Love your enemy.
  11. Love the people.
  12. Love your boss.
  13. Love your co-workers.
  14. Love your city.
  15. Love the people who cross your path.

If you answered 1, 9, and 10, you know your Bible.   But if you know that Jesus meant all ten (and then some), you know your Lord.

And some things to think about.

  1. Love always takes initiative.  Don’t be passive.
  2. There’s only so much of you to go around, so you can’t actively love everyone.
  3. Start with the people around you because God put you there.

Our Wednesday night huddle is working through (slowly) a book called The Art of Neighboring by Jay Pathak and Dave Runyon.   It is a straightforward book about making an intentional commitment to keep the command to love our neighbors – our literal neighbors.  It is helping us also to seek persons of peace.  They may be, literally, closer than we think.

More to the point though, if we were to do this simple-difficult thing that Jesus told us to do – if we were to love our neighbors – it will make a huge difference in the world.  It would go along way toward giving us Jesus followers some credibility.  And we’d probably find life!

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Worship Gathering This Saturday

Jesus Christ wants his followers to have the most amazing life.  Most people – even non-believers- would readily agree that Jesus Christ knew how to live.  So when Jesus says, “Do this and you will live,” it is a very good idea to pay close attention.  This Saturday, we will consider the direct link between life and loving our neighbors.  Don’t miss this one.

When: Saturday 6:30.

Where: The St. Johns room at Faith Community Church (3450 CR210, 32259)

Scripture and Message: Luke 10:25-37 – It’s About Really Living!

Special stuff: Hear what God is doing on the First Coast at Seamark Ranch.  And we’re looking forward to meeting Dan and Carrie Flynn who will be leading us in song.

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