Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Expectations

Some thoughts from Advent a few years ago... seemed like an appropriate re-post :)

Expectations.
What are they?

There is so much here. One's expectations can make or break your experience.
What you expect sets the tone for how you receive. 

As Christians its easy to expect much, and if you aren't careful you will spend your entire time chasing your own expectations. But perhaps the sole role of the Christian is to expect Jesus, in a real tangible way.
The problem happens when we find ourselves expecting what Jesus is "supposed" to be doing for us; rather than expected Jesus Himself. Jesus has promised Himself, He has given Himself. We love Jesus, and so expect Him, yet in doing so we hold no expectations from Him.
We simply Hope in the Love He has already shown.

This Christmas season, what are your expectations?  

Friday, November 7, 2014

Impact Teams Algorithm Revealed

I'm a part of the... um... 

What is our Impact team called again?

There is nothing better than finding your place in the world of our ever evolving Impact teams. 

If anyone has truly learned something about their strengths, gifts, place of life and where they fit in to Impact, then we have been at least partially successful over the past almost year of trying to figure out how to make Impact teams active, sustainable and thriving. 

However, there remains a gap in communicating about our teams...

Namely... the team names.


So this blog is for you... you people who don't know the name of your group.

Struggle no more, here they are:



Creation Team (think create, build & beauty)

Aesthetics/Sustainability/Building
 Ryan Arnett (Building)*, Justin Croft (Sustainability)*, Kayla Steward (Aesthetics)*, Zach Pond, Christopher Fryman, Harrison Wall, Cobi Ferguson, Eli Hamilton, Caleb Haynes, Paul Blalock 





Garden Team (think grow)

Gardening/Engaging Community Involvement/Garden Kickoff Event
This team is only a team from March-August (6 months) - this team is currently serving in other capacities.




Welcome Team (think inviting & hospitality)

Community Events/Giving Tree/Marketing
 Trey Davis (Trees)*, Josh Smith (Events)*, Emily Haynes  (Marketing)*, Leloni Hamilton, Amanda Badley, Tim Gragg, Brandon Rarig*,  Nathan Badley  





Outreach Team (think heaven on earth & sweetness)

Meals/Neighbors/Cards/Baskets/Health-checks
 Deirdre Arnett*, Melanie Pond*, Taren Ferguson, Chasity Blalock , Hilary Fryman, Jenn Drake Croft, Tanae Badley, Lorainne Gragg, Chelsea Davis*, Rachel Bell     



If you don't see your name, I need to see you! 

Friday, July 25, 2014

Impact Team Goals (May, June, July)


Aesthetics 3 Month Goals: 
  • Finish existing walking path
  • Repair picnic tables, clean and restain
  • Weed and re-mulch paths
Aesthetics Goals (Long-term)
  • Firewood station
  • Herb garden 
  • Create an enclosed storage space
  • Permanent tree hanging banner
  • Green houses
  • Signage
  • Mailbox
  • Flowers
  • Dog run
  • Build additional recycling stations


Visiting Neighbors and Neighborhood Hospitality 3 Month Goals:
  • Monthly grief support basket for neighbors who have lost loved ones
  • Give neighbors leftover food each week
  • Be deliberate about listening to neighbors and finding ways to support them
  • Supply nook for basket supplies

Community Events/Trees/Marketing 3 Month Goals:
  • Developing a garden logo
  • Plant three more trees and get all signs up
  • Get signs up for trees already planted
  • Host community events 1 each month in the summer - brainstorm ideas for interesting additions to the events
  • Maintain consistency in all marketing across all platforms

Garden Goals 3 Month Goals
  • Consistency in gardening and community presence
  • Participation from the community
  • Rigging up a clothesline for growing vines upright
  • Distributing produce baskets in the community
  • Figuring out a system to let neighbors know when produce is ripe and ready

Sustainability Impact Team 3 Month Goals: 
  • Build out bottom part of recycling container to collect batteries and other future items that aren't picked up by normal recycling. 
  • Add educational pieces about sustainability to garden newsletter
  • Host 1 community trash pickup in the next 2 months
  • Create composting education magnets to give out

Heaven and Hospitality

What do you get when you combine community grown, homemade salsa, water balloons, neighbors and a garden cat? July's Community Potluck. Click here to see images.

Thanks to everyone who came out to offer hospitality, and specifically those who did the work to pull off this event. 

We saw a lot of beautiful and diverse faces. 

This is truly a way we see the Kingdom of Heaven breaking into our lives, our city and our world. 

When we offer hospitality and invite our neighbors to the table we get more than we give:

... We gain a deeper understanding of those that live next door.
... The bonds for a community are built up.
... A sense of pride is gained for the place we live.
... God's vision of 'love for neighbor' has an opportunity to be experienced.


Monday, July 7, 2014

Headed for the Vineyard

But what do you think? A man had two sons. He went to the first and said, ‘My son, go, work in the vineyard today.’ 29 “He answered, ‘I don’t want to!’ Yet later he changed his mind and went. 30 Then the man went to the other and said the same thing.
“‘I will, sir,’ he answered. But he didn’t go.
31 “Which of the two did his father’s will?”
“The first,” they said.
Jesus said to them, “I assure you: Tax collectors and prostitutes are entering the kingdom of God before you!

-Matthew 21:28-31 (HCSB)
Jesus says this to a group of chief priests and elders… Apparently it doesn’t matter under what title you’re going by… how religious you think you are… but the Kingdom of Heaven is filled with people who have Heard and Responded… who Go and Do...
Its almost funny how much we love to say "yes" to things. Saying yes to someone or some project almost makes you feel powerful or important, or perhaps you're just too compassionate for your own good, or maybe you just never learned how to say "no"....
We live in a world of "YES's!" And the yes becomes glorified! Ironically praised despite whether or not we go to the vineyard. Actually it's a surprise when someone does go.
I mean who really believes the promises of those diet plans or politicians?
Or that friend who says they'll call you sometime... the classic "we'll get together soon!"?
"YES!"
What does it mean that God calls us to be part of a kingdom that exists out of a different framework? To be a people who radically goes into the vineyard?

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Thanksgiving Barriers

So let’s be honest. Living lives of gratitude sounds great, but really there are a lot of barriers to living life with a heart of gratitude.


For one thing, being able to feel thankful is closely tied to our ability to perceive fairness in the world.

If we look at the world and compare our lot with others who have more, we will develop a sense of the world being unfair, we start to move into envy and bitterness and gratitude becomes difficult.
Alternately, if we look at the suffering of people in the world it becomes difficult to thank God for the good things in our lives. We get the, ‘How can we praise God for this beautiful day when there was an earthquake in El Salvador yesterday? Syndrome’ We may feel that if we are committed to justice and seeing an end to suffering we must be very serious about it, and we can’t be thankful about something as trivial as a nice day.


Secondly, gratitude is tied to our expectations of the world and it seems wrong to lower our expectations.

In the church, we sometimes yearn for the idea community and when you are looking at an ideal, it is hard to be satisfied with what you have. As though contentment was synonymous with not having drive or vision, we might decide that being discontent with were we are is the righteous stance. 


Sometimes, we are the giver, who didn’t get gratitude in the way we expected.

This makes a situation difficult. Even though we didn’t give out of desire for repayment, when our gifts are not recognized our relationship and contributions are not validated. Saying thanks is often an expression of respect for the relationship. When thanks is withheld or not given in the appropriate supply, a person can feel as though their relationship is not valued.
Therefore, it becomes difficult to continue to give out of generosity. When no one expresses recognition of all that you do behind the scenes, your giving can become begrudged instead of coming from a heart of generosity and joy.


Sometimes, to express gratitude implies consenting to a relationship that we are not sure we are ready for or want.

When we accept a gift without repayment we are in a way, indebted to the relationship and the continuation of the relationship. Repayment implies that you don’t want to continue or deepen a relationship with someone, that you’re operating under an exchange for services relationship.


However, when gratitude is at work without all of these difficulties, it happens like this:

When you are given a gift that cannot be repaid, only acknowledged, you become invested into the community’s future endeavors, which ultimately strengthens relational bonds.

It reminds me of something Jennifer said to me one time. She said, “I know I can’t repay what has been given to me, but I know I will have the opportunity in the future to give back.




Concepts and wording in places are borrowed from Christine Pohl’s book, Living Into Community

Monday, April 21, 2014

Trust and Desire

"O Lord, who else or what else can I desire but you? You are my Lord, Lord of my heart, mind, and soul. You know me through and through. In and through you everything that is finds its origin and goal. You embrace all that exists and care for it with divine love and compassion. Why, then, do I keep expecting happiness and satisfaction outside of you? Why do I keep relating to you as one of my many relationships, instead of my only relationship, in which all other ones are grounded? Why do I keep looking for popularity, respect from others, success, acclaim, and sensual pleasures? Why, Lord, is it so hard for me to make you the only one? Why do I keep hesitating to surrender myself totally to you?
Help me, O Lord, to let my old self die, to let die the thousand big and small ways in which I am still building up my false self and trying to cling to my false desires. Let me be reborn in you and see through you the world in the right way, so that all my actions, words, and thought can become a hymn of praise to you.
I need your loving grace to travel on this hard road that leads to the death of my old self and to a new life in and for you. I know and trust that this is the road to freedom.
Lord, dispel my mistrust and help me become a trusting friend. Amen."
- From A Cry for Mercy by Henri Nouwen

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Ashes, Dust and Failure

Last night Brad Daugherty from Blakemore Church of the Nazarene gave a great message for the Ash Wednesday service. He challenged us to recognize that it is not 'in-spite-of' our frailty, weakness and mortality that Christ is made present, but rather it is a much higher calling. A recognition that it is 'within' our frailty, weakness and mortality that Christ is revealed. 

It is a humble place to stand. 
This is where we find ourselves in the season of lent. 

On these 40 days that represent Christ's 40 days of fasting in the desert. 
On these 40 days leading up to Easter.


We recognize that:
From dust we came, and to dust we shall return
We serve a Savior that was crucified and dead
We are weak and frail, completely and utterly unable to be who and what we should

AND... that that is where Christ comes and becomes present to us and in us.

IN our weakness
IN our frailty 
IN our finite mortality

Try accepting that for Lent.

Friday, February 28, 2014

Over-Consumers Anonymous

As we've lately been discussing our relationship as the people of God with Money... questions that continue to linger for us, as people who live in the consuming culture that we do, center on:
Do we live out of more or less than we really need?... Than we are created for?


So then, some good things for us to reflect on is our relationship to these things that we so readily consume... Here are some questions to scratch your head about:  :)

May we always be people who live out of Love and Fear in the presence of a Holy God, who is faithful to give us what we need.


Food and Drink: How much food and drink is enough? Am I consuming more or less food and drink than my body needs? Or am I consuming just the right amount?

Clothing: How many clothes are enough? Do I have more or less clothes than I need?

Housing: How much space do I need? Do I have more or less space than I need?

Transportation: How much car and airline travel do I need? Do I travel more or less than I need?

Consumer goods: How much stuff (books, electronics, furniture, cars, bicycles, etc.) do I need? Do I have more or less stuff than I need?

Entertainment: How much entertainment do I need? Do I have more or less entertainment than I need?

Follow up questions to answer:
What are the personal costs of consuming more or less than I need?
How is the world (other people) affected by my choices?
Is this an area of life where I may actually benefit from having less?
What might it look like for me to practice contentment and voluntary simplicity with this issue?