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Hope For The Hopeless

*Praying that each one of you has an amazing Easter Weekend.  The following post is a bit longer than normal, but I got a feeling it contains a reminder that some of your desperately need this weekend.

The other day I stood in line at my local coffee house. I was in a curious mood and just watched the four or five people in front of me as we stood in this unusually slow line. Their body language and facial expressions said it all. There were hands on the hips expressing disgust at the current inconvenience, some were rolling their eyes as they glanced up momentarily from texting on their cell phone, and there was the predictable looking at the watch and then looking at the line and then looking back at the watch.

Most of us do not like waiting for anything.  We live in a day of fast everything and waiting for anything seems like a major inconvenience.  I must confess, I don’t like waiting either.  I don’t like standing in line for my favorite cup of coffee, flipping though magazines in the waiting room of the doctor’s office and I sure don’t like waiting in traffic.  And if I can just be honest with you, I don’t like waiting on God either.

Lewis Smedes described waiting like this: “Waiting is our destiny. As creatures who cannot by themselves bring about what they hope for, we wait in the darkness for a flame we cannot light.  We wait in fear for a happy ending that we cannot write. We wait for a ‘not yet’ that feels like a ‘not ever.’”

This is what we often see in the anatomy of hope. There is an event that takes place that sucks the life out of you.   Something goes horribly wrong:

A dream dies.

A relationship ends.

A job dissipates.

A desire is crushed.

You’re left there standing, waiting, paralyzed by hopelessness.    You start to wonder…

Did God forget his promises?

Does God know?

Does God care?

Luke 23:44-49 44 It was about noon, and the whole land became dark until three o’clock in the afternoon, 45 because the sun did not shine. The curtain in the Temple was torn in two. 46 Jesus cried out in a loud voice, “Father, I give you my life.” After Jesus said this, he died.

47 When the army officer there saw what happened, he praised God, saying, “Surely this was a good man!”

48 When all the people who had gathered there to watch saw what happened, they returned home, beating their chests because they were so sad. 49 But those who were close friends of Jesus, including the women who had followed him from Galilee, stood at a distance and watched.

Notice how Jesus’ closest followers reacted.  The gospel account says they “stood at a distance and watched.”

Have you ever been so hopeless you couldn’t do a thing?  You couldn’t get mad or fight or even cry?  Have you ever felt so hopeless you didn’t have the energy or passion to even get ticked off?

I believe this is the emotional state of Jesus’ followers.  Nothing seems to be happening.  They feel hopeless, as if they’re completely alone.

Now, we know the end of this story.  We know that God was, in fact, doing his best work yet.  But there would be a waiting period.

It was Friday, remember, when Jesus was crucified.  But the paralyzing hopelessness the disciples experienced continued to intensify as they moved into Saturday.

I think it’s interesting that we don’t talk a lot about Saturday in the church.  We spend a lot of time talking about Good Friday, which of course we should.  This is the day redemption happened through the shedding of Christ’s blood.  It’s a very important day.

Nobody would argue that Easter Sunday is a day of celebration.  We celebrate that Jesus conquered death so that we can have life.  It doesn’t get any better than Easter Sunday.

But we don’t hear a lot about Saturday do we?   Saturday seems like a day when nothing is happening.  In reality, it’s a day of a whole lot questioning, doubting, wondering, and definitely waiting— a day of helplessness and hopelessness.  It’s a day when we begin to wonder if God is asleep at the wheel or simply powerless to do anything our about our current problems.

While we don’t spend a lot of time talking about Saturday, I think so much of our life here on this earth is lived out feeling somewhat trapped in “Saturday.”  I’m trying to get to a place in my life where I can embrace “Saturday.”  I’m trying to get to a place where I can view it as a type of preparation for what I believe God might be doing in my life.

You may currently be in the midst of a horrible, out-of-control situation.  You feel as if God is not there, that there’s nothing that can be done.

But here is the message of the gospel for you while you’re stuck in your helpless, hopeless Saturday life: God does his best work in hopeless situations.

We worship a God who specializes in resurrections.  He specializes in hopeless situations.  After all, at Easter, we celebrate the fact that he conquered death— the ultimate hopeless situation— so you could have life.

His followers were dejected and dismal and hopeless— and then Jesus rose from the dead.  God did the impossible and in a matter of hours the disciples journeyed from hopeless to hope-filled; from powerless to powerful.  They saw him risen and everything changed.  The story of our salvation was born out of extraordinary uncertainty.  But that’s the way hope works.

And no, that doesn’t take away your cancer.

That doesn’t erase the bankruptcy you’re in the midst of.

That doesn’t heal your broken relationship.

That doesn’t replace your shattered dream.

But it can remind you that while life is uncertain, God is not. While our power is limited, God is limitless.  While our hope is fragile, God himself is hope.

Your world may feel chaotic, especially when you’re stuck in a Saturday struggling hopelessly and waiting desperately.

But no doubt about it, God is still in control. And one way or another, Sunday will dawn.

God Behind Bars

Did you know there are close to three million prisoners in the United States right now and that population is growing at a compounded rate of well over 2 percent a year? What will the future bring?

Introducing God Behind Bars

This ministry is the real deal and if you’ve been looking for something to support, get involved with or pray for, you definitely want to check this out.

God’s prompting of the founder, Jake Bodine, and the skyrocketing number of incarcerated men and women in the United States has led directly to the creation of this one of a kind prison ministry.

Here are some of the features of what makes God Behind Bars unique:

  • Unique four-step strategy that will allow a person to have full life change instead of some life change.
  • Partner with churches and faith-based organizations to stream live, dynamic, high-quality worship experiences into prisons all over the world.
  • Online campus called “Church With Inmates” that allows the families of prisoners to see and experience the same service that their loved one is watching from inside the prison.
  • Intentional about family reunification through outreach ministries such as their promising new children’s ministry “Project 22”, a ministry focused on providing children of inmates with a safe place to live and restoring the child and parents relationship through biblical principals.
  • Next-generation aftercare program that pledges to walk with and care for each former prisoner who completes the three prerequisite steps. Among some things that will be provided initially by the ministry are temporary living quarters, groceries, gas, a cell phone, clothes, employment training and placement.

This video tells the story of God Behind Bars. To get involved or learn more, click on one of the links below.

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No More “Under God” In Pledge Of Allegiance

I don’t know if you’ve heard the big debate, but the phrase “Under God” was apparently missing from the Pledge of Allegiance in NBC’s broadcast of the US Open Golf Tournament this past Sunday.

While there hasn’t been a full explanation on the motivation for nixing God from the Nation’s Pledge NBC (the network which aired the tournament) has said it is “Sorry if anyone was offended.” Twitter and Facebook immediately started to erupt with pleads to boycott NBC for their censorship.

Is anyone really surprised that a major American television network would ‘censor’ and remove the mention of God?

How important is keeping the phrase “Under God”  in chronicling America’s History?

Is this the sort of thing we, as Christians, should get really fired up about?

Let’s go ahead and open this can of worms…your thoughts?

Heaven Is For Real?

Yesterday we launched our new series entitled “Glimpse: Exploring Heaven, Hell & What’s Next.”

As part of the first week we showed an interview I did with Todd Burpo and his son, Colton. Todd wrote the crazy popular book “Heaven Is For Real.”

Regardless of what you think about the book, I love the way it gets us thinking and talking about eternity.

I truly believe we don’t desire heaven more because we have a hard time imagining it.

I’ve been getting super excited about our annual summer vacation to the beach which will be happening in a month or so.

I’m so desiring it because I can imagine it.

I can close my eyes and hear the waves crashing in.

I can sense the wind blowing across my face.

I can feel the sand in between my toes.

I can picture my kids playing in the sand….several miles away from my comfy chair. :)

Bottom Line: You can only desire what you can imagine.

When you imagine heaven what’s one of the things you most look forward to?

 

Never Give Up

Yesterday I wasn’t teaching at Cross Point so I got the opportunity to go around and visit several of our other campuses.

All of our Cross Point campuses were doing baptisms which made it especially sweet.

One of my favorite people I met yesterday was a 71 year old woman out at the Dickson campus who was baptized. She was invited to Cross Point back in December and has been there ever since. I had to take a picture with her right after she took the plunge. It was difficult to hold back the tears as it took several minutes to safely lower Ann into the water for baptism. There was nothing convenient about her decision to follow through with this moment. And yet the joy on her face as pastor Willy Maxwell immersed her was unmistakable.

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A Computer Takeover?

I read this article the other day in Time Magazine. Still not sure what I think, so I thought I would get your opinion. The author is basically saying that it’s inevitable for computers to eventually take over civilization. Here’s a portion of what he had to say:

Computers are getting faster. Everybody knows that. Also, computers are getting faster faster — that is, the rate at which they’re getting faster is increasing.

True? True.

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Is The Cross Offensive?

I’ve spent some time this week processing things from my 12 day trip to India. Takes a while to unpack everything emotionally from a trip like that.  One of the biggest surprises looking back on the trip was the openness of the Indian people to the message of the Gospel.

While this was my third trip to India, this was the first trip where I had the opportunity to do a lot of preaching in different places. Each time we held a service we were in a place that was 95% Hindu or Muslim.

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