Wordless (male reflections on my wedding day)

Eight days ago everything changed.  Everything.  In what was with out a doubt the most overwhelming day of my life, in front of lifelong friends and family, and within the space of my home church community, I said yes and so did she.  I can’t begin to share here, or even scratch the surface really, of how intense the emotions and how both nerve-racking and sobering the stakes were that day.  All I can say is that I had tears behind my eyes for most of the night, and as my bride walked down the aisle it was as if a someone turned on a deafening noise that resonated in my being unlike anything I’ve heard before.  She was breath-taking.  She is breath-taking.  Always.  It was overwhelming.

Here are a few reflections on the experience both practical and abstract.

The waiting sucked.  After all the preparations were made and there was nothing more for me to do, I had to wait.  I waited as the girls got ready, did their hair, and got in their dresses.  While this was going on I was with the groomsmen trying to kill time after we got ready, which only took a few minutes.  I couldn’t help but over think everything.  All I wanted to do was see her, but instead I had hours of smiling for pictures, shaking hands, and stressing out about the gravity of the occasion.  As much as the waiting put my stomach in knots, I’m glad I had to go through it – it made the ecstatic relief of seeing her walk down the ailse all the more worthwhile.

Dressing up was fun.  So far in my line of work my uniforms have been ridiculously casual.  That said I really enjoyed picking out clothes, getting a hair cut, and looking my best.  What’s more, is that as much as I may have looked decent, the girls looked out of this world!  The Great Masters would have soiled their trousers if they could have seen how stunning the girls looked, especially the one I got to kiss on stage.

It’s tiring.  Nothing new there.  It didn’t take me long to feel like a politician as we constantly shook hands, gave hugs, and thanked people for being there.  The nice part about it all is that it was so sincere.  People genuinely blessed us with how authentically happy they were for us.  We could have spent days conversing with loved ones and celebrating the moment, but the limited time we had made it all the more exhausting.

It wasn’t for us.  As much as I thought the day would be for us, so we could be married and start living together, I was surprised how much our wedding was really for everyone else.  Communities need periodic reminders of what is important in life.  Things and themes like love, commitment, joy, beauty, and even the institution of marriage are often forgotten amidst the busy pace of most of our days.  One of the things I learned was how much this day actually meant more to others than it did to us.  It was encouraging to peoples spirit as it seemed to re-center them on what is at the heart of our lives.  Realizing this lesson was humbling, because this was not our goal, nor was it even on our radar.  Our wedding and weddings in general are our cultures’ way of passing on to the next generation a glimpse of what is at the core of society – the family.

It was awkward.  I suppose every social gathering has the potential to be a little awkward, but weddings carry an extra emotional attachment that can be both awkward and even hurtful.  Will close family make the trip to celebrate with us?  What will my friend think when they find out I didn’t include them in the bridal party?  How do I approach the person who didn’t get invited?  Will So-and-so run into their Ex?  Will Uncle Mohammed make a scene?  These are all questions that we encountered and reminded me that no event is above human nature.

Toasts/Speeches are awesome.  Unfortunately in our society we don’t often stop to tell people how we really feel.  How cool is it that for a moment a large crowd pauses to hear the words of a friend or family member as they give a toast to some one that means a great deal to them?!?  Maybe our toasts were extra special because they were for us, but I’m really starting to think that we should give more toasts. In addition to relationships there is so much in life to celebrate and drink to and it shouldn’t just happen at weddings.  Cheers!

It goes by so fast.  Holy crap it goes by quick. I’m sure everyone says that, but seriously, it does.  For the better part of a year we were looking forward to that day, and now it’s gone.  Just like that.  There just wasn’t enough time to talk to everyone we wanted to and soak up all that was going on.  Multiple times in the night I had to stop and take a breath to remind myself that it was my wedding day.  It’s too bad weddings can’t last a whole week or month – that would be sweet!  Unfortunately we’d probably go broke right quick.

Celebrations rock.  Jesus described Heaven as a wedding party and his first miracle was providing a second round of booze at a first century Hebrew wedding reception.  At some point a friend of mine commented to me about just how much fun he was having and I brought this up.  “This is what Heaven is like man!” I said with a beer in hand.  Man it was fun.  Everyone was there.  There were so many people I deeply love in the room and an endless volume of memories to boot.  We danced, ate, remembered, prayed, drank, and danced some more.  If for now we can only catch a glimpse of what eternity can be like and the real thing will be that much more unimaginable, I’m definitely looking forward to the party that Jewish carpenter is going to throw when he welcomes his bride home for good.

It was worth the wait.  As a young Christian couple we worked hard to preserve certain parts of our relationships for after the vows, the rings, and the pronouncing.  In today’s world this seems bizarre, outdated, and stupid to many, but let me be clear:  it was worth it.  Unequivocally, undeniably, with out any doubt, worth it.  Looking back on how great our wedding, night, and honeymoon were I can’t imagine doing it any other way.  It was so fun, silly, and special.  I know I risk sounding pious, judgmental, un-PC, or even harsh by saying this, but I feel bad for those who choose not to wait and I hope those younger than us feel encouraged and compelled to fight the fight and wait for true love.  I just don’t want people to settle.  As a young male I know firsthand the pressures and confusion of our overly sexualized culture, and after reflecting on recent developments I’m confident and humbled that things transpired the way they did for us.

There is grief afterwards.  Some one I love told me once “to live well is to grieve well”, meaning that life is a long adventurous series of saying goodbye to temporary experiences and freedoms that cannot be relived.  On our wedding day we said goodbye to being single once and for all.  After all the tables are cleaned up and we’ve unwrapped all our gifts there is a sense of sadness as we move forward in life and the wedding becomes a memory.  We can’t go back.  All we can do now is celebrate and give thanks for the fact that we were able to enter into such a sacred space.  I don’t think I expected to feel so sad about the fact that it’s over.  I think that’s a good thing as it speaks to the level of joy that was had.  I also think that the sadness is a glimmer of heaven seeping through my consciousness as I’m reminded that I’m still here on earth.  So far that day was the closest I’ve come to what I imagine it to be like, if only it would have lasted longer!  Until that day when we are ushered onto the shimmering shores of the hereafter, and everyone we love is there to party forever, life will be a series of opportunities to bear witness to what our souls truly long for and reminders that we’re not there yet.


Saying Thank You/Goodbye to a Mentor

As my last post describes, this Summer I’m heading into a new season in life both professionally and geographically.  One of the most challenging things about leaving is knowing that the people I routinely see and spend time won’t be as frequently part of my life.  Over the last few years one of the most significant relationships I’ve developed has been with a counselor/mentor.  I’m totally going to miss spending time with him, learning from him, confiding in him, and seeing him as often as I’ve been blessed to.  Even though distance will soon separate our friendship, I’m confident that our relationship will continue none the less.  Below is a poem I wrote for him as a thank you / goodbye.

Beyond the Words

For Jim Matthews on my wedding.

7.2.11 – Chris Scott

Why is this unexpected friendship so important to me? 

Why is this relationship so life giving? 

Why do I feel so overwhelmingly blessed for these past few years, like I won the lottery, except even more?

 

Was it his gracious acceptance of a curious pondering?

As I struggled with my calling and identity,

I sought an ear with an older man,

he obliged,

 and we got Starbucks.

 

He opened up and held out his shadows,

He challenged me to seek counsel and guidance,

Everything changed that afternoon,

But that wasn’t it,

That isn’t what means so much to me

And bears eternal significance.

 

 

Was it his embrace and overwhelming handshake?

My friends and I often joke about how manly and yet how gracious is his grip.

“Have you shaken Jims hand yet? Holy Crap!”

No, that’s not it either. 

 

 

Was it all of those conversations about theology?

Trying to “know” and “un-know” God?

We talked heaven, hell, and mystery.

He shared from a place of romance,

Because God is still romancing him!

His faith has not grown stale,

No status quo.

God still speaks.

As much as I’ve learned, those lessons aren’t it either!

 

 

Is it his time? 

Weekly I entered his office to share thoughts, frustrations, and happenings,

He listened

And shared

And listened

And prayed.

So many cherished times.

 

He was there when I hated my job,

When my habits and indulgences got the best of me,

When my grandmother and great grandmother died,

When I got drunk with my dad,

When I broke up with my first girlfriend,

When a friend drowned,

When I loved my job,

When I fell in love,

When I got a college diploma,

When I got engaged,
When I traveled the world,

When the confusing cloud of ministry was thick he was there,

When I didn’t understand God,

When I cried at the thought of leaving my friends and family,

And as I embark on marriage,

He’s been there for so much.

 

Was it any one of those memories?

No, it’s more.

 

 

I’ll never forget the first time he prayed and said my name.

“Dear Father, may Chris sense your smile on his life.”

I can’t begin to describe the deep chasm of thirst that this life giving statement quenched. 

A man,

older than I, wiser than I,

and more weathered than I,

and still drawn to grace,

Looked on me with adoration, concern, and acceptance.

It was as if my soul had been longing for a spiritual Father

To bring light to my struggles,

And rally me on towards Christ.

 

There was no agenda,

no responsibilities or projects to complete,

Just intimacy,
Just God’s mercy.

Spoken from his heart,

Like it was real,

Like he experienced it first hand.

 

 

It is his love,

The truth of his posture towards me,

He cares about me,

He thinks I’m the man.

 

This pillar in my life is like stone,

More than the thoughts,

The time,

The prayers,

The laughter,

The forgiveness,

The wisdom,

And more than the words,

What means so much to me is the fact that Jim loved me.

I did not merit his affection,

I didn’t even pay for it.

 

Jim, thank you.

Thank you for sharing with me your journey,

And bearing witness to mine.

Thank you for letting me touch your scars,

And share with you mine.

This was the place where we were the same,

Where it wasn’t you or I,

But Christ who stepped into our shadows,

And invited us to his bright embrace.

Dear CrossWinds and STUFF Family,

It’s official.  This Summer I’m getting married and moving into a new season.  I’ll also be leaving my position at CrossWinds Church.  Leaving a ministry job is, to say the least, different than leaving any other type of job.  It’s heartbreaking and exciting, delicate and severe, nerve-wracking and liberating all at the same time.  The hard part is that I’m leaving my friends and family – people and relationships that I’ve loved more than I can describe.  The freeing part is that we’re being forced to trust God.  Trust that he will take care of his church and trust that he will provide for us.  I’ve cried many a tear and had numerous sleepless nights mulling over and reflecting on all that my departure means.  What it means for students, what it means for my family, and what it means me personally.  As a Pastor, I’m leaving the people I’m called to love and trusting them into God’s care – something that is much easier said than done.  As a man, I’m leaving the place that brought me so much.  I hope and pray I can leave well and offer a goodbye worthy of how important this place has been to me and how grateful I am.

Here is a copy of my “official” goodbye letter:

May, 2011

Dear CrossWinds and STUFF Family,

It is with joyful excitement and tearful sadness that I am writing this letter.  This will be my last school year as Middle School Director at CrossWinds ChurchAs you may know, this Summer I’m getting married to the beautiful Alie Renton, truly, a blessing that I’m undeserving of.  As Alie and I prayed about what was next for us and where God might be leading us, we saw doors open in Southern California.  Alie, a licensed nurse, was offered a position at Cedars Sinai Hospital in Hollywood, and I was accepted to Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena.  While the possibility of pursuing ministry further and getting a seminary education greatly excites me, it also deeply saddens me because moving to Southern California means that Alie and I will be leaving our friends, family, and CrossWinds.  After countless conversations, prayers, and advice, Alie and I feel strongly that Southern California is indeed where God is calling us.  We’ll be moving down after the wedding in July.

For me this decision was tremendously difficult.  CrossWinds has been my church home for the past 14 years.  The memories, lessons, experiences, and friendships that God has blessed me with will be cherished for the rest of my life.  My time as the Middle School Pastor has grown me in so many ways that I cannot possibly begin to catalog.  For those things and so much more, I just wanted to say thank you.  Thank you to all the students who I was able to encourage and pastor, you are beautiful.  Thank you to all of our staff who helped love our students, you are inspiring.  Thank you to the families who supported our program and made it was it is.  And thank you CrossWinds for providing me the opportunity to be a part of something so special.  I am truly proud of the program and the relationships that I’ve been blessed to be a part of and I can’t possibly articulate just how grateful I am.

As soon as a decision was made I notified the Student Ministry Pastor, Mike Mason, and Executive Pastor, Chris Coli.  While they were both sad to see me go, they understood and were completely supportive of Alie and I.  For the last few months we’ve been conducting a nationwide search for the next Middle School Director.  In the last few weeks we’ve offered the position to our top choice.  We’re excited for you to meet Les Lederman, a Moody Bible College student (Chicago), who’s tremendously talented, experienced, and passionate about student ministry.  Les and I will be working side by side for a few weeks as he gets acclimated with CrossWinds and STUFF.  Additionally, our amazing team of interns and volunteers will do an awesome job during the transition.  Would you please offer your total support of both Les and STUFF as we move forward to what God has next?

Over the next few weeks I will be spending a lot of time with students, parents, and leaders expressing my gratitude for their friendships.  If you’d like to grab coffee or if you have any questions about what’s next for STUFF or myself I’d be glad to chat. Feel free to email, facebook, or call me.

Again, as sad as I am to say goodbye, I’m also deeply confident that God has something amazing in store for the future of CrossWinds and STUFF.

Sincerely,

Chris Scott

CrossWinds Church / Middle School Pastor
925 560 3849

cscott@crosswindschurch.org
www.jrhighstuff.com

EPHESIANS 2:10

Just like that it ends/begins?

Today something happened.  I don’t quite understand it yet, but I definitely feel it. An uncomfortable unsettling of my life as I have known it.  Something has shifted deep inside the core and there is no going back.  Today I packed up my converted garage apartment marking the final weeks of this season and my life  as; a resident of Dublin, a house mate with the Masons, a close-by son/nephew/grandson, a frequenter of the Hopyard/Peets/BART/A’s games/Main Street, a Pastor and congregant at CrossWinds Church, and a single man among countless other things.  I cannot begin to describe how important this place is to me and how deeply my love of this community runs.

It seems like just yesterday that I came to STUFF with some friends and really enjoyed it, so much that I kept coming back.  After a few years I started volunteering for Nick, and before I knew it he offered me an internship.  This is the place my faith came alive and this is place I learned ministry.

I remember how exciting it was to have sleep overs with my friends back then, we’d stay up all night playing video games or talking about girls.  Over time our friendships grew; we were band mates, room mates, team mates, co-dreamers/travelers/adventurers, and kingdom partners.  This is the place I learned what it meant to be brothers.

I will not soon forget the look on everyone’s face as we said goodbye to grandma.  It hasn’t been an easy year as both Great-Grandma, and Grandma passed on into the hereafter, bringing our family intimately close with both the frailty of life, and one another.  This place is where I was born and raised, and where I learned to reflect on what it means to have a family, be a brother, and be a son.

The fog was thick and lights illuminated the moisture in the air as I knelt down and began to nervously speak.  Nicknames and memories floated from my voice as I proclaimed my love and asked that sacred and holy question.  This is the place I learned to love and be loved.

As heavy as the feeling of “good bye” weighs on my spirit tonight, my heart’s scales are equally burdened by a certain mysterious “hello”.  I do not believe that any of these memories are final, or that I could turn back and relive them over and over again, rather, my sense is that as this time in this place comes to a close, tomorrow will still be yet ahead, forthcoming.  The unknown of unmade memories, friendships, careers, and families, as breathtaking a thought as they may be, are also utterly terrifying.  When it comes down to it, I am a believer that as blessed as I have been in my life thus far, my deepest intimacy with God and the richest lessons and challenges lay ahead, uncharted.

Sons and Fathers

I’m reading a book on masculine spirituality by Richard Rohr that a mentor gave to me and it’s got me thinking a lot about what it means to be a man in todays world.  What are the lessons about the male experience that need to be learned?  What is really of real importance?  My observations have been that todays men hold maleness in our ability to be tough, to champ up, to keep fighting, and to maintain the battle.  Most men hold some value of success as a virtue to be esteemed, the question is what is success?  I think it’s been largely defined as material wealth, pecking order achievement, and life long hard work.  A man who looks back on a life of those things feels satisfaction and fulfillment, but is that all there is?

When it comes to the specific lessons fathers may instruct their sons about it usually has to do with being outwardly strong and enduring life’s challenges without much attention or thought surrounding spiritual or philosophical strength.  To me spiritual strength is not about doing more religion, but about inwardly and outwardly being attentive to the very nature of life.  That no matter how much a man does, says, earns, sows, endures, conquers, or accomplishes in his years, it will all go away; none of it was really of any value.  So spiritual strength is the masculine pursuit of what in life may carry true meaning.  What is the most important lesson a father can bestow onto his beloved son?  Spiritual masculinity, working hard at honestly exploring the complexities of being male here and now against the backdrop of life’s fleeting nature.  The awareness that the physical things in this life, though of value and necessity, are not the most urgent.  The pursuit of the deeper, the true, and divine reality are the most manly of hills to die on.  In the end all we are, even our very bodies will fade away – is there anything that lasts?   So many men have died without experiencing the riches of a masculine spirituality, and why?  Because of a haunting fear that they will lose what they have already conquered, the physical, temporal corner-offices and sports cars.  Ironically, they sought to hold onto things they could not keep, and in so doing, surrendered the very essence of eternity.  Their focus was limited, their perspective stunted.   If I should be so blessed as to be a father of a son.

There is a Devil here
Behind the eyes of your fear
Fighting to keep you in your place
So that you’ll never win this race

And it goes on and on
This Battles never won
Wounds will carry you
The songs of the fighting men

There is a victory
For all who choose to seek
What cannot be bought or sold
But is worth your very soul

You will reach your ends
And all your gods will fall
Just like your failing health
But they told you to soldier on

War will take your life
Days will disappear
Grace is all that’s left
Hallelujah

From Perch to Flight

In the moment it takes

A bird to perch

Then take to flight

She left this life


Surrounded by the embrace

Of her Groom and those she nursed

We spoke our love

As best we could


Our Lords Prayer

Our Holy Tears

We give thanks

We say goodbye


To each of us

A gift she gave


A loving wife

A caring mom

A precious grandma

A faithful friend

The memories

Though they may vary

Will still remain

We’ll forever carry


Summers in the Sierras

Road trips to the Pacific

A honeymoon for lovers

On the banks of the Russian

A Haunted Hotel

A village named Dickens

And thanksgiving dinners


From Colorado to California

From a Mountain Village

To a city by the bay

Eighty-two years of cherished time

What a blessing

What a gift

She will not be forgotten in our minds

With each new day and each new year

For who we are and where we’ve been

She shaped our hearts and changed our lives


Into our God we trust her soul

As a bird takes flight and begins to soar

Towards the heavens, towards distant shores

Goodbye and Thanks

Forever more.

From the Archives

I don’t really like journaling.  In theory it sounds appealing, but it takes so much work!  Ever since I graduated high school, and my youth pastor gave me a journal as a graduation gift, I’ve been struggling through the discipline of logging my life, prayers, dreams, failures, and experiences.  I hardly ever look back on them.  But today, as I’m preparing to take a team back to Myanmar, I came across this entry.  It was my second year going to Myanmar, and really the start of what would be a foundational part of who I am.  Within a matter of days, and on my Christmas break from Junior College, I embarked on a trip to Myanmar that would change the course of my life.  Miraculously money was provided, visa’s were granted, flights were obtained and I found myself in the jungles of a South-East-Asian nation Baptizing brand new Christians 50+ years older than me.  What was I thinking?  I should have been home playing XBox like a normal college kid.  Here is the passage I wrote on the plane ride over:

“Thursday or Friday Jan 6, 2005

Over the Pacific Ocean hopefully being led by the creator of everything to tell people how much he loves them.  Some of this goes back to the vision I had a while ago about a circle of flames going out from South Vietnam to all of Asia.  December 26 of 2004 ended with the worst natural disaster of my lifetime and the question came to my mind…. What am I going to do with my life?  Hang out and chill in my cool apt. with my roommates and amazing job that I love and all the comforts of the richest society that ever was or go exclaim, learn, and offer hope and something more to life —> a relationship with the creator who loves us so much he would come and suffer for me.. so that I don’t have to.

What is my life going to be remembered as?
So now I’m on this plane headed for this crazy place most people at home have never heard of.  What can I offer them Lord?  My Father, My Savior, I give you my time to your service here and there.  Help me be willing to talk to anyone.
Guide me Jesus.

—–

Still on plane:  Here’s a thought about school and stuff and doing the training.  How many times do I have to read the Bible, it tell me to abandon everything, and actually follow?  Do I have to read it for 4 years, then I’ll really know it?

My question for myself is whether I really believe what the Bible says, if I do I’ve got a lot of life to give. “

——————————-

So now I find myself going back and being challenged to live out the mystery of faith once more.  It was the faith that I once had that forged our connection to Myanmar in the first place.  I’m humbled to think about the things God has done because of the Myanmar trip in Myanmar, in those who have gone with me, and in me.

No Longer Here, Not There Yet

Have you ever had the feeling of being in between? Like something big is coming down the pipeline but it’s not quite arrived. At the same time you’re so anticipating what’s next that you’re not fully present where you’re standing?  This feels like a normal theme to my life lately, but I wonder if it’s just the normal rhythm of being human.  I feel like a sailor who’s been trained to steer ships through the seas but I’m stuck at the marina just watching, and imagining the wind, waves, and ways of the ocean.  I’ve left home, finished my apprenticeship and I’m ready to go, I’m just not going yet.  I’ve let go of who I was for who I’m going to be, I’m just not not there yet.  I’m not here anymore, but I’m not there either.

This feeling isn’t unfamiliar.  It seems we’re all in a proverbial transition from one thing to the next.  We move from one town to the next, graduate college, begin new relationships, transfer jobs, all with the hopes of quenching some unquenchable dream. For me this year I’m newly engaged, and recently graduated.  I’ve held the same job for a while now and I can’t help but dreaming about what’s next.  I can’t wait to live with the girl I love and actually be married, not just dating or engaged.  I can’t wait to be seen as an adult in my job and not just the kid, I long to be taken seriously.  I can’t wait to move out of the temporary space I live in and have a home of my own.  I can’t help but wonder, envision, and pursue the open seas that I haven’t yet traversed.   I think deep down I’m looking for a home.  I think underneath it all I’m desperate for a stable identity, to be done working towards something that is always just beyond my reach.

But here’s the thing.  Within all this perpetual movement I can’t help but wonder:

Is this movement and transition in fact the home I’ve been searching for?

Is life really about the journey – am I too focused on the destination that I’m missing God’s faithfulness in the in between?

Will I ever actually arrive at what’s next?

I’m no longer here but I’m not there yet
Where are you in the midst of the cloud that I’m in?
Two oceans open up before me
But I can’t seem to leave the shore I’m on

As I say goodbye to what has been home
There are no new walls to hang these memories
Who I’ve been and who I am not yet are there
When will I settle in my new skin?

This is what you get when you live like this
Hearts of stone can’t melt in the cool of day
May my flesh die as I learn to trust
What I can’t see in this Winter of our love

There will be a home
For my soul on God’s eternal shores
Where I will hang my memories
Then I will see how you were always there

Spiritual Theology

This is my final book review for my Pastoral Licensing.

 

Spiritual Theology

By far the most substantive read of the Pastoral Licensing process, Simon Chan’s Spiritual Theology is an in depth (understatement) look at the Christian askesis, or practical Christian spirituality.  While at first my experience in reading this book was a little bland and challenging, I gradually grew an appreciation for his unique insight that differed from any book I’ve read thus far.  Chan, Professor at Trinity Graduate School in Singapore, offered a well rounded and developed perspective as an Asian theologian.  Over the three-hundred-plus-page work, Chan attempts to consolidate the tremendously broad subject of Evangelical Christian Spirituality into one book.  Chan, being an Asian Christian has a unique perspective on what that at times can feel like a disjointed and scattered, religion.  By outlining basic theological principles and doctrine, Chan develops a structured explanation of what an Evangelical Christian believes and does, while at the same time offering various critiques of contemporary Christianity.  Both the foundational theology and the outsider’s perspective on the Church were things I found tremendously compelling, especially as Western, Evangelically employed, insider.  For me, Chan’s voice felt both fresh, in that I’m not used to hearing such bold and grounded arguments against some of our modern practices, and overdue in that he was able to articulate sentiment I resonate, if not agree with.

On the topics of Theology, basic Doctrine, and the Christian life, Chan writes like a heavyweight.  Throughout the course of the book Chan lays out a systematic description of God, Sin, and the church all with the hopes of an application found in the practical Christian life.  He easily sites both historic and scriptural backings for his descriptions in a way that is applicable to his narrative.  When Chan describes the Trinity, what he calls “basic distinctive of Christian Spirituality” (55) he not only painted a broad understanding of both the Father, Spirit, and Son but also the implications of this knowledge to a persons spirituality.  In similar fashion Chan describes prayer, the community of Saints, and various spiritual disciplines, concluding with the “fulfillment” (239) of spiritual theology, Spiritual Directing.  The foundational and developed systematic picture of Christian Spirituality that Chan describes is helpful to anyone in ministry.  I deeply appreciated the sound backing Chan offered that served as a reminder for why we do what we do, as well as provided a solid framework to who’s shoulders contemporary ministers are standing on and how we got to be where we are today, in both our practices and beliefs.  In terms of Chan’s specific theology, even though he is connected to the Assemblies of God denomination, it appears that he is an Evangelical Moderate.  He draws from different traditions outside and inside of the Protestant umbrella, always seeking historical and scriptural paradigms while at the same time being open to healthy movements of the Spirit.

The critique Chan gave that most struck a chord with me was his dynamic and forward attack on individualistic, self-help Christianity.  In the chapter The Church as the Community of Saints, he writes “The purpose of Christian formation is not developing a better self image, achieving self-fulfillment or finding self-affirmation; nor is the development of individualistic qualities that make singularly outstanding saints.  Rather, it is developing certain qualities that enable us to live responsibly within the community we have been baptized into.” (103).  While some of Chan’s descriptions are broad and open ended, when it comes to the Church, he is straightforward and simple.  He strongly believes that our consumer based, feel-good-show that’s constantly trying to compete with culture to stay relevant is incorrect and hurting the Body.   He suggests that Christians are meant to take church and being apart of the community seriously, something he feels our modern culture has failed to do with our non-committal approach. He argues that our performance driven programs have created a Christian culture where congregants go from church to church seeking the next best show or spiritual high, something that is devastating to our spiritual development; “The continuing movement of Christians from church to church observed in urban contexts reflects a lack of ecclesial covenantal faithfulness… The spiritual life of an individual will always remain in flux if there are no stable structures of church…” (233). Chan beats the drum of “covenantal relationship to the church” numerous times throughout the book with one of my favorite quotes coming out of the chapter The Rule of Life. He writes “Our personal inner life is more closely tied to the life of the church than we realize.  The first step in ascetical discipline is to learn the “technique of going to church.”  But here is where modern church has failed its children. By constantly changing its format of worship to make the service more interesting the church is not helping them develop the rhythm necessary for their own personal discipline.  Mother church, like many a modern parent, finds it easier to yield to the whims of her spoiled children than to maintain unpopular but necessary discipline” (197).

Chan’s belief that we need to communicate a “covenantal relationship” to the church instead of an open ended one hits close to home for me in the context I am currently doing church.  My home church was designed to be as open as possible to all, and hopes to be as understandable to outsiders as it can be, things that I deeply believe in and support.  Often described as being a “seeker” church we have always strived to create a non-threatening environment, something that churches has been perceived as guilty of in the past.  While this is virtuous and is the very spiritual environment I found faith in, I’m not convinced it’s always healthy.  Let me explain.

Lately I’ve been a little burnt out of selling and promoting our most current youth group activity or trip.  It often feels that in my current position as a youth leader I’m constantly trying to convince kids they need to come to things. At one point recently I realized that most of my conversations with students are centered on explaining to them how cool our next program or event is going to be, and trying to get them to attend instead of asking them how they are doing, or encouraging them in their personal or spiritual growth. Part of this is because of our numbers based gage of ministry health, and part of it is because students, parents, and families have not developed a “covenantal relationship” with the community.  Over time we’ve enabled a spirit of entitlement with regards to church that forces ministers to constantly have to convince congregants to show up.  As this pattern continued, our services risk becoming a commercial for our next event, and we become “persuasive experts” at getting people to show up.  While there is nothing wrong with making announcements or asking people to come to the next event, it should not be the total focus of a church community.  If we create our program to be one big advertisement for ourselves we forego any sort of covenantal relationship.  People start forgetting what the church has to offer them and start perceiving that the church is privileged to have them attend.  I can’t help but feel fake when our focus is on “selling”.  Is it not true that the church community has value based on what it is intrinsically, the fellowship of believers, the primary vessel of the Word, tradition, and sacraments, the redemptive force of healing, reconciliation, justice and love of God Almighty?   Usually it feels like our congregants have no understanding of their urgent need for the church community and its value in their lives.  Sometimes I wonder if this is not the direct result of church leaders becoming more like salesmen of the gospel rather than awe-struck stewards of it.  Presently it seems that most church goers are mostly apathetic about their relationship with the church, and those that have any semblance of passion for the church are a rarity.  What if more people had what Chan describes as a “covenantal relationship” with the church?  What type of community would we be?  How do we develop this?

Reading this book provided me the chance to reflect on this process of pastoral licensing as it was my final requirement.  In total I started reading, shadowing, and writing over a year ago.  It’s been a tremendously edifying challenge as I’ve developed my own opinions and ideas of how Church is doing.  Chan’s book was written in a way that communicated his own personal reflection on his many years of ministry.  His global perspective reminded me that God is sovereign over all of the churches that have ever been and ever will be.  It also gave me the chance to apply some new spiritual practices and disciplines to my own spirituality.  It was a fitting way to finish the process as a newfound passion for the Church has grown inside of me.  I can’t help but be excited for what the Church will look like in the days and years to come, and how God will use me.

 

 

 

It all started here…

Have you ever belonged to a place?  An room, park, cabin, house, or community that meant more to you than just space to occupy?  For me, no place has shaped and influenced me more than my church, CrossWinds.  I still remember the first time I stepped inside our converted warehouse for that Ska concert some 12 years ago.  I was an awkward middle school kid longing for acceptance and guidance.  What happened to me as I returned each week for youth group and Sunday service since then has forever changed my life.  I found faith, developed profound relationships, embarked on global adventures, learned music, and came full circle from student to leader as I followed a call to Ministry.  I’ll always be grateful, will always celebrate, and will always remember how God used that place and those people in my life.

Now, after years of countless conversations, games, meetings, bagels, videos, trips, camps, sermons, small groups, clean ups, and all-nighters I’ve begun to ponder what might be next.  Nothing is certain, other than when and if I ever leave this place – it will be both a tremendously sad and challenging goodbye.

 

Somewhere in this place
I was safe
Somewhere in this place
You were home

There was a boy who needed time
And all I could give I gave away
A broken story was his life
Why did it all come crashing down?

There was a girl who needed hope
Her daddy was all but abandoning
If only she sensed your smiling gaze
As you revel in her worth

Hold me desire
In between the worlds
Of Beauty and Desire
Burning in me

There was a place for all our kids
Where they could escape what troubled them
A place filled with laughter and with love
And I was father to all of them

Hold me desire
Between the worlds
Of home and the frontier
Inside of me

The world is a maze and I can’t find my way
Your voice is a cloud and I can’t make it out
My heart is a mystery veiled underneath
My desire

Somewhere in this place
I was safe
Somewhere in this place
You were home