Trinity Sunday – John 16:5-15

After trying other things for a couple of years, I’ve just started using the St. James Daily Devotional Guide again. This was the mainstay of my devotional reading and prayers for several years before that. It’s a simple Bible reading plan that’s easy to follow and adapt you your schedule. It’s sensitive to the liturgical church year, which I appreciate.

Today is Trinity Sunday and in the Gospel reading in John 16:5-15 Jesus draws our attention to the importance of an all-too-often discomfiting and (therefore) neglected member of the Trinity: The Holy Spirit. We may have a familiar image of God as Father and creator of the universe. His human incarnation we know as Jesus Christ in the Gospels. But the Holy Spirit is harder to conceptualize. The other two images are easier for us to manipulate, control and keep at a distance in accordance with our own desires. The Holy Spirit is dynamic, unpredictable, uncontrollable. Our relationship with a distant Father figure or a flesh and blood historical person can be “kept in its place” at our end. But who can escape the presence of a Spirit or avoid a confrontation with him?

Jesus says that it is to his disciples’ benefit that he go away because the coming of the Helper, the Holy Spirit, allows us to relate to God in a much less limited way. This is good for us whether it makes us feel comfortable or not. Indeed, Jesus says that the Holy Spirit’s coming will make many people uncomfortable. What to make of vv. 8-10, where Jesus tells us so? The three ways and reasons that Jesus gives for the discomfiting nature of the Holy Spirit all seem to have to do with the separation between God and his creatures. As the Holy Spirit, God comes alive in the very lives of those who serve him. We Christians ought to be the evidence that helps others to believe and repent of their sin, displaying in our own lives God’s goodness and love, and exposing by contrast all evil for what it it is.

God is not content to be distant, controlled or ignored by those who call themselves by his name. The Holy Spirit guides us into all truth. He doesn’t let us get comfortable with our own self deceptions. He is the very essence of any real and alive relationship with God. We best not ignore him, even if his work makes us uneasy at times, because he is the only way that all that belongs to the Father and the Son comes to us.

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50

I turned 50 years old a couple of weeks ago. My friends at work bought me lunch. I took this past week off from work to celebrate and spend time with friends and family. My parents came out to visit for a week. My daughter Jessica and son-in-law Lucas drove in for the weekend. My son Bryan was home from college. My brother John, who lives in Arizona, surprised me by popping in one morning for breakfast and staying for a few days. We had great fun playing games, riding bikes, watching movies and playing tennis. Mary Beth’s parents came down for dinner on Sunday. Then lots of very nice people surprisingly showed up at what I thought would be a small cookout in my back yard. Good thing we had plenty of food ☺. My wife, Mary Beth, who planned all this, is a truly wonderful woman. Thanks, everyone! It’s such a great blessing to have family and friends like you!

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“Nothing matters; everything matters.”

I’ve recently finished another quarter at ATS and I have no classes until October so I hope to be writing more here between now and then. This quarter I took the senior seminar in spiritual formation. This class consisted of discussion, reading four modern spiritual classics, some reflective writing on those books, and a project. My project was to design and lead a men’s retreat inspired by the spiritual exercises of Ignatius of Loyola. Five other guys from the Friday morning men’s group and I spent a weekend at Salt Fork State Park and had some very good discussion, prayer, meditation and fellowship. I enjoyed it very much and the other guys seemed to like it too. I couldn’t have asked for a better group. For about three years now, I’ve had the great blessing of meeting with this group of men for study and prayer. They’ve been a tremendous encouragement and help to me. Continue reading

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Mapping New Testament Social Networks

The ESV Blog has an interesting visualization of the textual relationship between people mentioned in the same chapter of the New Testament. It was done using IBM’s Many Eyes data visualization tool. Check out those links for more information.

A network diagram showing co-occurrences in the New Testament with Jesus as the hub.

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Lower Lights Ministries

On Thursday night I attended a mentor orientation meeting for Project AIM (Achieving Independence through Mentoring), a new project being started by Lower Lights Ministries in Franklinton on the near west side of Columbus. The meeting was at Bellows Avenue Church of the Nazarene, which serves as the headquarters for Lower Lights. There were 7 prospective mentors for Project AIM at the meeting. I was the only man. They could use more volunteers, especially men.

Project AIM is designed to help families break the cycle of poverty by assigning teams of mentors to help them achieve their goals. The goals are defined by the families themselves and could be things like buying a home or car, getting a job, going back to school etc. Mentors provide encouragement and practical help in reaching those goals. Lower Lights is in the first stages of a pilot program for Project AIM. This seems like a very good time to get in on the “ground floor” of a ministry that can make an important difference in people’s lives. Two families from the church have been selected for the pilot. There will be 2 or 3 more training sessions for mentors before we actually meet the families. Then we will have a few get-togethers with the families to get to know one another before the mentoring process begins. Mentors will spend four-to-six hours a month with their family.

The projects and ministry of Lower Lights seem very well organized and led by competent and caring Christian people who have a strong desire to serve Christ and the community. This seems like a very good place to be. Information about Lower Lights Ministries and Project AIM can be found on their web site (http://www.lowerlights.org). Contact them or me if you are interested to get more details.

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Emergent Christian Spirituality

In my 19 December posting, I said that I would post a copy of the integrative paper I wrote for my class on Emergent Christian Spirituality at Ashland Seminary. Well there it is. Comments are welcome. The only remark with which I would like to preface the paper here is that, in spite of the reservations that I express about Rob Bell’s book Velvet Elvis, I like the book very much and found almost everything else he said in the book very helpful and agreeable.

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History Written By the Winners?

A recent conversation with a coworker about my seminary studies of history brought to mind the cliché “History is written by the winners.” I think this was the point he was trying to make with me without saying it in so many words and, of course, it got me thinking…

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Advent 2006

Some very nice people at Bethel Church are working on an Advent devotional calendar for 2007 and asked me to write something for one of the days. This reflection on what was probably the saddest, and best, Christmas that I have ever had is my contribution. I’m looking forward to seeing what the others have written.

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Faith and Doubt at Ground Zero

I missed its first airing on PBS so, at my brother’s suggestion, I recently checked out a video tape of the Frontline special “Faith and Doubt at Ground Zero” from the public library and watched it. I’ve seen other programs related to the events of 11 September 2001, but this one is particularly interesting to me because it deals with the role that religion played in those events and in the lives of those who were most effected by them. Questions that many Americans considered abstract, theoretical or of little relevance suddenly became very real and important on that day. This presentation is very well done and is worth watching and thinking about. So I’ve been thinking about it since watching it. I’ve thought quite a bit about the questions it raises before that Sept. 11 and in the years since. Continue reading

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Break

There’s nothing quite like the feeling that goes with sending your last paper off in e-mail and saying, “I’m done” with another quarter at Ashland Seminary. That was early Friday morning for me. I was exhausted. I’ve finished two more courses in my seminary education, both very interesting and challenging.
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