Thursday, May 28, 2015

The Three Stages of Christian Life for Teachers and Mentors

The Three R's/ Three modalities of Christian life 


There are three stages of teaching or mentoring our life in Jesus that cross all theological and church lines.

I use the three R's, like reading, writing and arithmetic to make it easily accessible. Our living spiritual framework usually centers in these three area's: Revival, Renewal, and Restoration.

These are not closed systems or steps we attain, they are spiritual lifestyles of our life in God.

Revival


Revival is our coming alive to God in all its aspects...coming to Jesus, awakening to the Body of Christ, the Presence of God, and the Scriptures jump off the page.

This is the stage of our foundational teaching and mentoring.

As we move 'higher up and further in' as C.S Lewis puts it, we will cycle through this stage throughout our Christian life. The problem arises when we remain here. We become stagnant and life becomes a stage where we perform.

Mentoring To The Trade: The Tradesman

Institutionally, this is usually the realm of the evangelist, the teacher, and the preacher.

Again, Revival is where we come alive to God, 'just as I am'. This is where we awaken and accept Jesus as our Lord, and this is a process as well as an event. This is where we seriously enter our journey of faith.

Now here's the downside: 


We can be taught to the test, mentored the rules instead of awakening us to more.

We can be led to become good Church people, good labors for the church system.

With every good intention, we can be 'guilted' into staying in revival mode. That happens when it's all our mentors know. We are encouraged to live lives of perpetual revival, running from fire to fire.

As it's usually taught and mentored, revival becomes an outside-in approach and it's usually steeped in the Responsibility of Man ie holiness.

Spiritually, To stay here is to live on the margins of the spiritual life God has provided for us to live out of in Jesus. Let's jump into more of God into more of you and me.




Sunday, May 24, 2015

How Contemplation Fights Legalism



Contemplation is one of the best way's I've found that fights legalism. It does this by bringing the focus of our experience into knowing and abiding in Jesus in the present moment.  Here, instead of a goal to be obtained, our abundant life becomes a joy to be relished.

By removing attainment out of the equation, spiritual pride is nullified, and surrender becomes our modus operandi.

Through Jesus death and resurrection, God has in essence removed the human element out of the process and what's left for us is to work out what God has worked within us. 

Thursday, May 14, 2015

On Prayer, Presence and Abiding

We tend to confuse the issue of prayer when we narrow it down to merely speaking words. The concept behind phrases like, "I'll consider it prayerfully," denotes the deeper meaning of prayer.

This is why many of us who are moving into a whole life, a Jesus life rather than a 'church life,' use terms like meditation and contemplation, to denote the deeper aspects of prayer.

God wants to love us more than anything else. The deepest and most intimate form of love is our co-dwelling presence with him.

Christ is in us and we are in him, but are we aware of it? Where is the awareness of our presence focused? Is our presence asleep as our old self, as our old broken fallen man 'runs the show'?

These are things we learn through meditation and contemplation.

My goal, and I'm intentional about it, is to come into the living abiding presence of God.

Now if I have to start all over a thousand times a day, that's O.K. It's a journey, this spiritual life, not getting it down perfect. It's not a performance. I leave the perfection up to God. I have little experience in just how perfect, perfect can be.

My goal is to bring this broken mess of a man into the presence of God. And that takes the grace, mercy and forgiveness of God through Jesus.

Now Jesus tells us to 'abide in the vine', and that takes presence.

Where is your presence dwelling right now? It can be sorting through your past, or caught up in your future. Some of it may be dealing with your past, worrying about your future, and be here at the same time. But until you bring 'the light', or focus of your awareness right here into this moment, until your awareness is fully here, you aren't ready to pray, much less to 'enter in'. You're working out of a fractured self until you gather yourself up and just be present. This is the beginning of wholeness.

This is what our daily spiritual practice is all about. To wake us up and plug us in. Make it simple or make it complex. This is my goal, my awaken awareness of presence. How else could we enter into God's presence? while part of us is somewhere else? How else could we walk or live in the Holy Spirit? It's spiritual life, abundant life, eternal life we're dealing with here. Let's avail ourselves of God's gift.