Archive for 2008

16 Dec 2008
Author: Nate Irvine | Filed under: God

Takin’ Out The Trash


(By Jonathan Tuabe) – “Still others, like seed sown among thorns, hear the word; but the worries of life, the deceitfulness of wealth and the desire for other things come in and choke the word, making it unfruitful.”

- Mark 4:18-19

This scripture really struck me as I was reading the Word recently. The quotation is of course from the Parable of the Sower which is well known, and often a subject addressed in sermons and devotionals. I guess the thing that really stood out me about Mark is the fact of how specifically Jesus addresses wealth and the desire for material gain as a main component of the “worries of life” which lead to being unfruitful. I think we usually infer that Jesus is pointing to the fact that the cares of this world being our focus lead the strangling of our faith. But really, I believe that he’s not making a statement concerning our faith, but rather our bearing of fruit. The plants being choked don’t necessarily die, they just don’t bear the fruit they were meant to. They don’t fulfill the purpose they were meant to. Being wealthy doesn’t necessarily need to have any effect on our “faith”, but it can have a huge effect on our fruitfulness. And we’re not called to just believing, but rather to serving our God.

“A good tree produces good fruit, and a bad tree produces bad fruit. A good tree can’t produce bad fruit, and a bad tree can’t produce good fruit. So every tree that does not produce good fruit is chopped down and thrown into the fire. Yes, just as you can identify a tree by its fruit, so you can identify people by their actions.”

- Matthew 7:17-20

We’re called to bear good fruit for the Kingdom, and in doing so, to point to our Heavenly Father and display the qualities which he has shown to us. Qualities like a love of mercy, a zeal for justice, rich compassion and love. But how often are we distracted by our wealth? Or our jobs? Or even our desire for more? And can we compare that to how often we see the Fruit of the Spirit displayed in our lives? And more importantly, how often others are seeing the Fruit of God’s Holy Spirit in us? Is there a disconnect there in your life?

I can clearly see in my own life how my wealth, and my desire for material things clouds my focus on “Your kingdom come” and gets in the way of my bearing of fruit. If gone unnoticed or ignored, it can become a trap for any of us.

I am reminded today that Jesus said, “Anyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice…” (Matt. 7:24).

I’m still just working through this in my life, but it seems clear to me that we are not judged solely on our belief. We must be working each day for His Kingdom, bearing fruit for His glory. Anything that becomes a hindrance must be cast off, be it sin, or maybe just too much stuff.

About the Author

irvine

Nate Irvine works as the Director of Youth Evangelism and Discipleship for the Metropolitan Division of The Salvation Army. He makes his home on the north side of Chicago, and attends the Irving Park Corps. Graduated from Trinity International University with a BA in Biblical Studies and a minor in Spanish in 2006, he lives to see God's Kingdom here on Earth, and The Salvation Army live true to it's calling. When he's not working, he can probably be found watching hulu, enjoying music, or just hanging out.

12 Dec 2008
Author: Nate Irvine | Filed under: God

On Humility


(By James Davisson) – Many of you who know me, and—I suppose—all of you who don’t, may not know that I struggle with Pride. Pride is one of the Seven Deadly Sins recognized by the very early church, and it’s pretty much the deadliest. It is for me, anyway.

There’s a tendency to conceive of Pride as just an unhealthy excess of self-esteem, and while that’s definitely part of it, I think there’s a bit more to it than that. I don’t have any real problem with self-esteem; I generally know my place, and know that I am a fallen creature, though still loved and valued by God.

I just never, ever want to be wrong about anything.

Ask pretty much anybody who’s been on a missions trip with me, or had to live with me in close quarters for a long time. Ask David Witthoff, who had to put up with my nonsense for a whole summer this year, in a hot, hot country with nothing to do but talk while you wait for it to be not-hot. Eventually it comes out: I’m a cool cucumber until someone flatly tells me I’m wrong about something I’m dead sure I’m right about. And I think just about everybody’s like this. And it’s Pride. And it’s Wrong.

Two questions come to mind: first, why are people like this? Second: why is it wrong?

Here’s why people think they’re right all the time. In my experience, you get strong opinions in two ways: by thinking really hard about the issues at hand, or by being told what to think by someone you respect and believe in. I find that most of my opinions come from option two, and most of the time I think they are from option one. At all events, these feel like great reasons to believe something strongly; and they are great reasons. Independent thought is great, and so is trusting those who are worthy of respect. But, while you might think that opinions from option two are a lot worse than those from option one, when you boil it down, they’re both opinions.

The problem, in short, is this: we are—as I said before, of myself—fallen creatures. With fallen reason. This means that we are stuck knowing only in part what God knows in full. However hard we think, we are still never going to get it all right. Check out this scripture:

(Forgive me for talking so long before getting to scripture. I like the sound of my own authorial voice, I guess. Pride, see?)

Matthew 21:28-32 (NRSV)
28
‘What do you think? A man had two sons; he went to the first and said, “Son, go and work in the vineyard today.” 29He answered, “I will not”; but later he changed his mind and went. 30The father went to the second and said the same; and he answered, “I will go, sir”; but he did not go. 31Which of the two did the will of his father?’ They said, ‘The first.’ Jesus said to them, ‘Truly I tell you, the tax-collectors and the prostitutes are going into the kingdom of God ahead of you.

This gospel passage reminds us of our conversion from the way of sin: we Christians are all the brother who, when asked to go work in the vineyard, replied ‘I will not,’ but later changed his mind and went to work in the field; we are all ‘the tax-collectors and the prostitutes . . . going into the kingdom of God;’ we are all sinners made whole by the death and resurrection of Christ.

A steadfast refusal to admit even the possibility that someone who disagrees with you is right is a sin. In placing your opinion, which you got from fallen reason, totally above someone else’s, you put yourself above them. You forget that we are all sinners, and that none of us can know fully. You commit the sin of Pride.

Last question, then: what do I do instead?

Thomas à Kempis said: ‘A true and humble estimate of oneself is the highest and most valuable of all lessons. To take no account oneself, but always to think well and highly of others is the highest wisdom and perfection.’ When you get into an argument—about, pretty much anything, mind including interpretations of any fine point of scripture (I’m talking to you, people on both sides of the predestination debate. And the abortion debate. And the gay rights debate. Seriously.)—take no account of yourself. Consider the other person better than yourself. Argue peacefully, and respectfully. In my experience, there is no greater preserver of friendships than the skill of disagreeing civilly—agreeing to disagree.

Let me leave you with a short anecdote. Yes, it’s from the Facebook. A friend of mine posted two items on election night. He started by choosing some hurtful words to express his opinion; words which questioned the Christianity of those who held the opposite view. But later that night, he turned around, and he promised to continue to pray for the President of the United States, no matter who he turned out to be. Please, take his example; pray for those who disagree with you. Remind yourself that you are like them. And take up the humble example of Christ,

“who, though he was in the form of God,
did not regard equality with God
as something to be exploited, but emptied himself,
taking the form of a slave,
being born in human likeness.” (Philippians 2:6-7

About the Author

irvine

Nate Irvine works as the Director of Youth Evangelism and Discipleship for the Metropolitan Division of The Salvation Army. He makes his home on the north side of Chicago, and attends the Irving Park Corps. Graduated from Trinity International University with a BA in Biblical Studies and a minor in Spanish in 2006, he lives to see God's Kingdom here on Earth, and The Salvation Army live true to it's calling. When he's not working, he can probably be found watching hulu, enjoying music, or just hanging out.

3 Dec 2008
Author: Nate Irvine | Filed under: Social Justice

This Is Your Home, And This Is Your People


(By Andres Villatoro) – On April 28, 2007, 68,000 people gathered in 15 major cities across the United States to remind U.S. and world leaders that there are over 1.5 million people displaced in Northern Uganda;1.5 million people who have been kicked out from their homes and villages by foreigners and through war. I know a couple of us had the privilege of participating in this great event in Chicago and Hallelujah! We did something because we were shocked. Everyone who knew about it was shocked that such injustice was happening in Africa and was so determined to let it be known that we spent a whole night in cardboard boxes to show our protest. What I find ironic about this event, however, is that in these major cities, including our Chicago, almost the same thing is happening not too far away from where these protests were happening. We hear less about people being forced out of their homes and communities by outsiders in America. It is happening though.

City programs call it Urban renewal but it can also be called gentrification. Gentrification is when middle to upper class people, all of sudden, want to live in the city again. The government, in order to get more money out of land, goes into existing communities that are often poor or old and fixes them up, putting a Starbucks here, or luxury condos there. Rents go up and people are indirectly forced to sell their home and are left to go find another place to live because they could never afford to live in the neighborhood they once called home. This is happening everywhere, even in Chicago neighborhoods like Humboldt Park and Pilsen. Not only does gentrification kick people out of their homes and their communities (which is everything some of these people have ever known), but it also kicks out social services for the poor, which in turn forces the poor to leave because of lack of resources. This has affected The Salvation Army, being a social services organization, too. The Evangeline Booth lodge, for example, is a family homeless shelter owned by the army. It is located on the north side of Chicago and has recently been given a lot of pressure to move out of the area because the now rich neighborhood does not want them there. They do not want the homeless or the poor walking around their streets. It is on our front doorstops people. Look around you.

I think it is great that as Christians we understand that the world does need desperate help, and Displace ME was a great way to show how passionate we are about justice and about our desire to help Uganda. However, if you are going to be interested in justice and helping the world, don’t just do it because your friends think it’s cool or because it’s the cool Christian, or cool Salvationist, thing to do. It is our duty. “Dear friends, you must NEVER GET TIRED OF DOING RIGHT” (1 Thes 3.13). May your passion and your heart break over what you see out your front door as well as what you hear about elsewhere. Let us not forget our brothers and sisters here at home, for they need help as much as anyone else does. Learn more about gentrification and pray about it please. The next few years are crucial to many cities as to how they will handle so many changes so fast. Remember, this is your home and this is your people.

About the Author

irvine

Nate Irvine works as the Director of Youth Evangelism and Discipleship for the Metropolitan Division of The Salvation Army. He makes his home on the north side of Chicago, and attends the Irving Park Corps. Graduated from Trinity International University with a BA in Biblical Studies and a minor in Spanish in 2006, he lives to see God's Kingdom here on Earth, and The Salvation Army live true to it's calling. When he's not working, he can probably be found watching hulu, enjoying music, or just hanging out.

2 Dec 2008
Author: Amanda Keene | Filed under: Social Justice

Sell All You Have And Give To The Poor


(By Amanda Keene) – In his book, The Irresistible Revolution: Living as an Ordinary Radical, Shane Claiborne quotes the Danish philosopher/theologian Soren Kierkegaard: “The Bible is very easy to understand. But we Christians are a bunch of scheming swindlers. We pretend to be unable to understand it because we know very well that the minute we understand, we are obliged to act accordingly.” This quote resonates with the internal struggle in which I have found myself entangled. This Thanksgiving, as I’m writing this article, I have found myself thinking about this quote and applying it to the culture we find ourselves in today.

Let’s take a look at Matthew 19; a passage that I think we all struggle with on some level. Basically, a man comes up to Jesus and asks him what good thing he must do to get to heaven. Jesus says to obey the commandments: do not murder, do not commit adultery, do not steal and so on. The young man had kept these commandments and still wondered what else he lacked. Jesus answered, “If you want to be perfect, go, sell your possessions and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me.” Verse 22 then says “When the young man heard this, he went away sad, because he had great wealth.” As Christians, we know what Jesus is saying here: sell your possessions and give to the poor. He said it simply so that we would understand, yet how is this played out in our lives?

This leads me to the internal struggle I was talking about earlier…what is my role? Am I selling all of my possessions and giving to the poor? Well, no. What does it look like to even do that? I am not sure. Tomorrow is “Black Friday,” which is the biggest shopping day of the year. Our society has become consumer driven, and the culture we have formed tells us that we need to have the I-Pods, the most up to date cell phones, and the most recent fashions. People will start off the Christmas season by buying present after present for loved ones and spending hundreds, or even thousands, of dollars in order to bring Christmas cheer. Does this fit with the words of Jesus? I have a hard time believing that it does, but I will be the first to admit that I don’t know what that means. Looking at my life in the context of this consumer driven society, I know that I need to readjust my way of thinking, re-prioritize what is important in my life and really meditate on Jesus’ words to all of us. Maybe instead of spending money on our friends and family, we can spend quality time with them. Maybe instead of buying tons of presents, we can give the money to those who really need it.

I pose these questions in order to inspire some thinking: Are we going to be those Christians who pretend to not understand the words that Jesus spoke just because we don’t want to take action and apply them to our lives? Are we going to be like the young man who chose to not follow Jesus’ words because he couldn’t part with the wealth that didn’t really belong to him in the first place? What does this mean for our lives? What does it look like to sell our possessions and give to the poor? It’s a lot to think about, but let’s think about it, talk about it and then act on it together as we move toward the Christmas season.

About the Author

akeene

Amanda Keene works as the Social Services Ministry Director at the Joliet Corps in the Metropolitan Division of The Salvation Army and as the Youth Director at the Mt.Greenwood/Blue Island corps. She lives in Blue Island with her wonderful roommate Rebecca. She graduated from Trinity Christian College with a Bachelor's Degree in Social Work and has a strong passion for loving people and spreading God's truth. When she's not working, she can be found hosting a dance party at her house with her friends, hanging with the youth group kids, or spending time with her beautiful niece!