J.R. Briggs

Attempting to behold the miracle long enough without falling asleep

  • Archive of "Faith" Category

    USAToday: Most religious groups in USA have lost ground

    March 9, 2009 // 3 Comments »

    This morning’s USAToday published a groundbreaking article on religion in America. The study is incredibly comprehensive (check out the charts, graphs, videos and interviews).

    These are interesting religious times in America. As I officiated a funeral yesterday, communicating hope and comfort to a roomful of people unacquainted with God, I was reminded of the peculiar era we find ourselves in as a country. If there ever was a time where we needed churches thinking differently, courageously and contextually it is now.

    What are your thoughts?

    Are you concerned?

    It is old news?

    How should we respond appropriately?

    Posted in Culture, Faith, Life, Media, Scripture

    doubt :: night summary

    February 25, 2009 // 5 Comments »

    “Be merciful to those who doubt…” (Jude 22)

    Last night we had a great time at doubt :: night. We wanted to provide some intention to the evening – but little structure (we were more interested in creating space for conversation rather than host a program) and the evening seemed to flow well. It was so energizing. I love being around courageous questioners…

    Last night, almost 40 people showed up at the bar that we had rented for an intentional, but laid-back conversation regarding our doubts and questions about life, faith, Jesus, church, God and the Bible. It was a great group of people – and a comfortable size group, too. Lots of good, healthy discussion. There were about ten people who showed up that I did not know and/or who were not professing followers of Christ.

    My friend Brian, who I met several months ago at a Starbucks and who has a New Age worldview showed up. He emailed me today and told me that he loved it, he wants to come back and to “keep up the good work.”

    It was a healthy mix of people – men and women, 40-somethings and college students. Believers. Doubters. Christian Universalists. New Agers. Agnostics.

    We got several great questions. Some raised their hands and shared, others wished to remain anonymous and write them out on index cards and turn them in. We didn’t get through all the questions (we didn’t expect to) but we had some good ones:

    • Who determines where truth resides when comparing the Bible to the Koran?
    • Why do bad things happen to good people?
    • What about the non-Christians I know who live better moral lives than other Christians? Why should Christians go to heaven if others are more kind, compassionate and loving?
    • How could a good God send people to hell?
    • How do we know that there is a heaven and a hell?
    • Today’s research seems to prove certain events in the Bible didn’t happen as described. Is that a problem for the belief in the credibility of the Bible?
    • Where is God?
    • Are our choices predetermined ahead of time?
    • Who determines who goes to heaven?
    • What about homosexuals?
    • Can I consider myself a Christian if I question most things about it?
    • How do we get to the point of having faith in the first place?
    • Why are church leaders of all denominations choosing parts of the Bible to take literally and not others (example: women preaching, homosexuals, etc)?

    Great, great questions that are worth the time and thought and energy to wrestle with.

    At the end of the evening I asked people if this was worth doing again and if so, how often. Once a year? Once a quarter? Once every other month? Once a month? I was surprised by the amount of people who strongly desired to see doubt :: night occur once a month. So, it looks like we’ll be hosting another event some time in March. Stay tuned.

    Before we started I met a guy named Dominick – a self described Italian ex-Catholic nihilist. I invited him to the event, telling him it would start in about twenty minutes in the side room if he wanted to join us. He told us that we wouldn’t want someone like him because he doubts that God exists. I told him that doubt :: night was hosted for people like him. He said that I didn’t understand him: he actually tries to convince people to doubt God and the Bible. And I said, all the more reason for him to join us for the event!

    He didn’t join us, but he caught me afterward and asked how it went and what questions were asked. He told me he was intoxicated. For the next 45 minutes he talked my ear off about philosophy, religion and nihilism – the belief that there really isn’t anything to live for. You just die and that’s it. “Kinda like television,” he said. “When you turn it off, its done.” He told me he had read the Bible from cover to cover, as well as the Satanic Bible – and he highly recommended that I read the Satanic Bible because it had some interesting insights in it! He told me this is the first time that he had talked to a Christian about his nihilistic worldview without being judged and was interested in talking some more. We swapped numbers and will be hanging out some time in the near future.

    Being around skeptics and questioners, doubters and cynics is something that excites me. It was refreshing to have a roomful of people admit their doubts and want to wrestle with them like Jacob did with God on the banks of the Jabbock River in Genesis. The entire evening I was reminded of a few characters in Scripture who doubted God. Job, who was obedient but doubted often. David, who wrote many of the Psalms. Some praising God for his goodness…and oftentimes the next psalm wondering where God is and if He even cares. (This being a man that God said was after His own heart!) The father in the book of Mark who had a sick son who asked Jesus to heal him and said to Jesus: “I believe; help me overcome my unbelief!”

    I hope and pray that we learn to be more courageous with our questions and we continue to build relationships with the doubters and the skeptics and the cynics who are intrigued by Jesus, but turned off by what they have seen in other Christians and churches.

    Posted in Faith

    Rethinking the Christian Approach to Hell

    January 12, 2009 // 15 Comments »

    Ever seen people picketing on the street corner holding a sign with something about hell written on it?

    I remember a time a few years ago in Colorado Springs when I saw a "Christian" who was picketing, holding a sign that said, Burn in Hell
    Sinners
    as he yelled venomous messages of hatred to passersby on the
    street, justifying it by saying that the prophets of old spoke of
    destruction and ruin and so should we.
    "Aren't we to call people to repentance?" he shot back at me when I had asked him why he was doing this and if he thought it was effective.
    "Hell is about repentance!" he said confidently.
    This is why the world knows more about what Christianity is against than what it is for.

    Ever done a study on the word "hell" in the Scriptures? The past few weeks I've been doing a word study on it.

    I'm not sure why I have never done a word study on hell before. Maybe its because I've always believed in the fact that there is a hell – ultimately believing that it is eternal separation from the presence of God Almighty. But I've also been embarrassed by the ways that Christians have abused, misinterpreted and misrepresented hell.

    As I was doing this study I had the image of this picketer in my mind's eye.
    What I found during this study surprised me.
    Here's what I found…

    Euphemism for Hell: Sometimes when Jesus taught he used a euphemism for hell, which he
    described as a place where there is "weeping and gnashing of teeth."
    Jesus used that euphemism six times in Matthew (8:12; 13:42, 50; 22:13;
    24:51 and 25:30) and one time in Luke (13:28). Each of those times were
    when he was telling stories – and almost entirely when speaking to his
    disciples.

    One of the biblical words for hell is gahenna, which refers to the
    Hinnom Valley just outside of the city walls in Jerusalem. When I
    studied for a semester in Israel I spent many an afternoon running
    around barefoot in the lush grass playing Ultimate Frisbee with other
    students.It's a beautiful park today, but thousands of years ago it was an awful place. Absolutely awful.

    The Hinnom Valley was said to be a place where trash and refuse was
    taken outside of the city and where there were fires burning at all
    times. It was also at this place where pagans went and sacrificed their
    infant children in this valley to the gods, specfically the god Molech
    as an act of worship – a detestable place! Shouts and screams and
    shrieks would come from this valley, as one would only imagine in
    seeing and hearing infants sacrificed and thrown into fire by their own
    parents!Historians recorded that wild animals would wander around eating the remains. It was said that these wild animals would gnash their teeth together as they would wander around looking for food.

    A place of fire…where there is weeping…and gnashing of teeth. The Valley of (ben) Hinnom. Check out these references to the Hinnom Valley in the Old Testament. When Jesus used the phrase "weeping and gnashing of teeth" it would have drudged up horrific images in the minds of those Jewish listeners who knew exactly what he was referring to… Jesus intended to make a graphic, detestable point that turned the stomachs of those who were in earshot.

    Other words for hell: In addition to the Hinnom Valley or gahenna, there are other words that have been used for hell. One is the Old Testament word sheol (translated in the Revised Version as "lowest pit," "pit" or "grave" and found many times in Genesis, Isaiah, Ezekiel, Deuteronomy and the Psalms). Another word used for hell has been hades.

    Explicit mention of hell in the New Testament: Explicitly, hell is mentioned only fourteen times in the Bible [twelve times by Jesus in the gospels - Matthew (7), Mark (3), Luke (2) - and once in both James and 2 Peter].

    Here is the context around each of those fourteen references of hell:

    -Mt 5:22, 29, 30: Jesus is teaching to a religious crowd
    -Mt 10:28: Jesus is teaching the disciples
    -Mt 18:9: he teaches the disciples again
    -Mt 23:15, 33: the famous "Woe Chapter" – Jesus rips the Pharisees a new one.
    -Mk 9:43, 45, 47: Jesus speaks again to his disciples by way of intruction
    -Luke 12: he's speaking to the disciples and a religious crowd
    -Luke 16: uses narrative to address the Pharisees' complaint
    -James 3:6 speaks of hell by talking about the destructive nature of the tongue
    -In 2 Peter 2:4 Peter addresses false teachers in this section.

    Reflections on the explicit mention of hell: Here are some conclusions that can be drawn from the passages I just listed.

    -when Jesus spoke about hell he used it mostly to teach and instruct (nine times he used it to teach as a rabbi to his disciples) not to rebuke or call people to repentance.
    -he uses it in story format when talking to the religious experts
    -He was most emotional around the religious. The only time he talks about hell when ripping on people was with the most religious people in the land – the Pharisees.
    And finally – catch this – Jesus never mentions hell to those who are irreligious.
    Not once. Yeah, seriously. Look it up.

    Not to the women caught in adultery, nor the woman at the well. Not the lepers. Not to Zacchaeus nor the other oppressive tax collectors eating at his house. Not to the man who cut himself, lived in a cave and was demon-possessed. Jesus spoke about hell only around those who are religious; those who thought they had their act together, who were striving to have all of their religious ducks in a row, who dotted their spiritual i's, who carefully minded their moral p's and q's.

    Which has some seriously implications for those of us who are attempting to follow in the ways – and The Way – of Jesus and raises many questions regarding how we speak of hell to those who are far from God.

    Makes me want to say to the picketing guy on the street who thinks he is doing something that honors God: put your sign away.

    All this makes me believe that we might need to rethink our approach to hell.
    Do I believe there is a hell?

    Of course.

    Do I think we need to be soft on repentance or we need to shy away from it because its politically incorrect?

    No, but I do think that we need to understand our context and communicate the message of Jesus that gives a clear and accurate portrayal of who he was – with compassion and truthfulness.

    But do I believe that as Christians that we need to rethink our approach to this topic?

    Hell yes.

    Posted in Faith

    A Prayer by Erwin McManus

    January 9, 2009 // 1 Comment »

    A friend sent me this prayer (thx Loren) recently and is worth sharing.

    "Lord, I need a dream worth giving my life to.
    I need a life worth
    waking up to each morning.
    I need a mission bigger than me.
    I want to
    believe for not only me, but also for this world.
    Amen."

    Posted in Faith

    Give Me a Story

    January 5, 2009 // 1 Comment »

    I've mentioned this poem before, but its worth posting again at the start of this new year.
    Uber-blogger Andrew Jones wrote this poem at a conference in 2001.
    Each time I read it I am challenged by the implications of the Story of God and Man and the weighty responsibility to not only be missionaries in our context, but also effective storytellers of the gospel in our culture.

    Give Me A Story
    you want a statement to sum up the mission of God
    go ahead
    find your statement
    make one up to help you
    feel secure inside your safety cage of words
    belted in by cords of cliches
    locked up by logos lifted from sunday school memories

    but give me a story
    give my friends a story
    so that they are not sentenced to meaningless lives

    dont give me a story that I can easily believe in
    give me a script that I struggle to understand
    that stretches my faith,
    that demands life insurance
    give me a story that will rip me from my career
    and pummel me into a quest beyond my capabilities
    i need something worth dying for
    i have most of my life left to give
    but I need a story worthy of my investment

    give me a story that I can touch
    and smell
    a story with real people
    a story with a face.
    a story with my face
    my role
    my place
    my script
    because I am
    preselected to be a player
    in this story that rolls its plot out in front of me
    likearunawaycarpetunravellingfasterthanicanrun
    in more directions than I can predict
    in more colors than I can comprehend
    a story that woos out my potential
    and calls me
    out of myself
    to be who I really am

    give me A story
    give me THE story
    give me MY story

    tell me that God is bigger than you
    BIGGER than your statements of ink
    BIGGER than your powerpoint animations
    than your projections of numbers
    that make you impressed
    but that make God stoop

    give me a story that
    makes me gloriously
    a l i v e
    to the purpose of God
    makes me run without breath to keep up with His spirit
    and at the same time
    inviting me to
    dance slowly
    erotically
    with
    God
    in an
    end
    les
    s

    m
    o
    m
    e
    n
    t

    of warm passion
    nesting me in peace
    and safety

    tell me the story in new words
    so that I dont trip over lame phrases of impotence
    so that my mind does not vanillarize
    over trivial expressions
    used mindlessly by millions
    who use words to steal mystery
    from a transcendent God
    who speaks freshly
    with new mercies every morning
    !surprises!
    that awaken me from sleep mode
    that spark in me new thoughts
    dreams of impossible feats
    daring adventures
    miracles of the Almighty
    performed by the hands
    and prayers
    of backstreet
    backstage
    people
    in goodwill rags

    you want a statement?

    go ahead
    i dare ya
    double-dare ya
    to box up The Omnipotent
    to catch the Spirit of God
    to nail the Son
    on a cross-word puzzle

    go ahead and try
    but I wont hold my breath
    and you wont hold the mission of God on a bumper sticker

    Posted in Faith

    By Faith…in 2008

    December 29, 2008 // No Comments »

    Each year, the week between Christmas and New Years means I do a lot of Year-in-Review thinking.
    I'm so grateful for all that God has done in my personal life as well as through The Renew Community.

    I'll post some personal highlights in a little while (stay tuned), but check out this post on the Renew site as we look back on 2008 with gratitude before we look ahead to 2009 with great excitement.

    God has been so good.
    soli deo gloria.

    Posted in Faith

    Advent Readings: Week 4

    December 22, 2008 // No Comments »

    Hutchinson-advent

    We now enter into our final week of our Advent preparation. Continue to read along with us as we prepare our hearts for Christ coming to earth!

    Monday 12/22: John 1:19-23; Phil 4:4-7
    Tuesday 12/23: John 3:27-30; Isaiah 40:9-11
    Wednesday 12/24: John 5:36-39
    Thursday 12/25: Isaiah 51:3-5
    Friday 12/26: Psalm 2:1-9
    Saturday 12/27: Isaiah 9:2-3, 6

    Posted in Faith

    A Christmas Gift for Mohammed

    December 19, 2008 // 5 Comments »

    On Wednesday I went to go drop off my Christmas present for Mohammed at the mosque.
    It was a difficult task (what do you give a Muslim from Bangladesh who doesn't have much and has never celebrated Christmas before?) but found a great clay vase/pot/bowl at a fantastic international fair trade store called Ten Thousand Villages. The artisan who made it was from Bangladesh. In his native language the artisan carved his story around the rim of the bowl.  I thought it would be perfect – something small and simple to remind him of home and of our friendship.

    I carried my (poorly) wrapped box in the mosque (gift-wrapping is one of my spiritual un-gifts) and went into his office. He was very appreciative when he opened it.
    Then he said, "What is this for?"

    I told him it was a Christmas gift.

    He put down the gift down and said, "Can you tell me what Christmas is? Is Christmas a religious holiday in America? What is it about?"

    For a second I thought, Is he pulling my leg? I mean, I know he's Muslim but who doesn't know what Christmas is in America??

    But he was dead serious.

    I told him about Christ's birth, the greatest gift God gave the world and how we give gifts to each other as a reminder of the gift of Jesus that was given to us. I told him its a big deal for Christians, but its been perverted and skewed to become a secular commercial holiday for many people. But it is a very significant time of remembrance and celebration for followers of Jesus.

    I said that Christmas is the bookend to Easter – one we celebrate his birth, the other his death.
    He looked at me with a puzzled look on his face.

    "What do you mean that you celebrate Jesus' death?" he asked.

    Then I asked him: "Do you know what Easter is?"
    Nope.

    "Do you know what the cross is?"
    Nope.

    "Do you know what the Resurrection is?"
    Nope.

    "Do you know what grace is?"
    Nope.

    "Have you ever heard of the word 'gospel'?"
    Nope.

    So, for the next ten minutes I shared the gospel story with Mohammed and he told me he had never heard anything like that before.
    He, of course, had heard about the prophet Jesus, but didn't know his story.

    I'm sitting there thinking, I live about one mile from Mohammed and this guy didn't know the story of the gospel, or what Christmas was about or the significance of Easter!

    I am reminded – and amazed – at how much the world needs to hear the story of the Gospel this Christmas. The opportunities are out there, if we have eyes to see them.

    Posted in Faith

    Advent Readings: Week 3

    December 15, 2008 // No Comments »

    Annunciation

    We enter into Week 3 of Advent in preparation of the coming of the Christ child.

    Monday 12/15: Matthew 11:7-10
    Tuesday 12/16: 1 Cor 4:1-5
    Wednesday 12/17: Matthew 11:11-15
    Thursday 12/18: 2 Peter 1:19-21; Luke 3:2-6
    Friday 12/19: 1 Peter 1:8-11,13
    Saturday 12/20: Psalm 50:1-6

    Posted in Faith

    Advent Readings: Week 2

    December 8, 2008 // 1 Comment »

    Advent II

    As we participate in selected Advent readings together here are the passages for this week:

    Monday 12/8: Luke 21:25-28; Psalm 40:1-5
    Tuesday 12/9: Romans 15:4, 13
    Wednesday 12/10: Luke 12:35-40
    Thursday 12/11: Hebrews 10:37-39
    Friday 12/12: Luke 17:20-25
    Saturday 12/13: James 5:7-10

    Posted in Faith