R-E-P-E-N-T (Sunday’s Sermon Today- Gospel of Luke)

Jesus didn’t come to make your life better. Jesus came to make your life eternal.

(End sermon. Walk away…)

Jesus came preaching good news for the poor, the sinful, the left out, the forgotten about. Jesus came preaching good news for those who would listen.

Periodically, after pulling out different tricks of the parent trade, I’ll ask my children if they have their listening ears on? I want to know if they’re ready to hear the instructions, if they’re prepared to focus on what I need them to know.

In Luke 13, Jesus wants those who are listening to him to hear him loud and clear: Jesus says that everyone needs to repent to receive eternal life.

Jesus makes it sound so simple: REPENT and receive eternal life. You can almost see him spelling it out slowly, just to make sure they get it: R-E-P-E-N-T.

Get that right, and the whole of eternal life will open to you, Jesus says. What else do you all need to hear?

Jesus ties it to their specific popular culture, their present day goings on: he points out that the Galileans sacrificed to foreign idols, and those who had died in a construction accident in Siloam weren’t more or less guilty than anyone else. They died when someone’s sinful nature took over in one case; in the other, they died in an accident. Jesus is saying that it could have been anyone; these people didn’t die because they ‘deserved’ it.

But Jesus’ punchline isn’t about guilt – it’s about sin. “Unless you repent, you too will perish.” He tells a parable about a tree in a vineyard that wasn’t growing fruit. He says that the owner gives the gardener one more year to find fruit, and then he could cut it down. Sometime, the time runs out…

There’s the story of a  minister who waited in line to have his car filled with gas just before a long holiday weekend. The attendant worked quickly, but there were many cars ahead of him. Finally, the attendant motioned him toward a vacant pump. “Reverend,” said the young man, “I’m so sorry about the delay. It seems as if everyone waits until the last minute to get ready for a long trip.” The minister chuckled, “I know what you mean. It’s the same in my business.”

Jesus understands that it’s not a subject we necessarily take to heart everyday, that our day-to-day lives aren’t concerned with repentance. We’re just trying to move forward, trying to get our work done and our bills paid. We’re just trying to get by.

And Jesus shows up and says, “REPENT.” Jesus shows up and says that something drastic needs to happen. Something that’s bigger than an acknowledgement or a simple apology.

Seriously, we can apologize, or even say we’re sorry for how the other person received something, and no change occurs. But repentance? It’s something different.

A woman had just returned to her home from an evening of church services, when she was startled by an intruder. She caught the man in the act of robbing her home of its valuables and yelled: ‘Stop! Acts 2:38! [Acts 2:38 says, “Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ, for the forgiveness of your sins.”] The burglar stopped in his tracks. The woman calmly called the police and explained what she had done. As the officer cuffed the man to take him in, he asked the burglar: ‘Why did you just stand there? All the old lady did was yell a scripture to you.’ ‘Scripture?’ replied the burglar. ‘She said she had an Ax and Two 38s!’

That burglar was stopped in his tracks.

Completely static. He was no longer sinning, not moving forward or back. He was halfway to repentance – because the next step was to move in a different direction, back away from his sin.

Repentance is the U-turn. Repentance is not just recognizing you’re wrong, not just being sorry for what you’ve done or the damage you’ve caused; repentance is choosing to walk a different path by following Jesus.

Repentance requires recognizing that God’s way is better than your way.

Repentance requires believing that God has a plan for you that is better than what you were doing before.

Repentance, thanks to Jesus’ death on the cross and resurrection, acknowledges that we’re forgiven, but that our lives need to take a different route.

We know all about different routes, don’t we?

It’s the moment in the car when we’re traveling along the predetermined route, thanks to our GPS, and somehow, suddenly, we recognize that the little British voice on our GPS is telling us we’ve gone off track.

The little graphic is spinning and the text says “recalculating route.”

And then we make the next legal U-turn. To get back on track.

That’s what Jesus is calling his listeners to: to make a U-turn. To turn back to God. To follow the pattern of humanity since the creation of the first people, to turn away from our selfish, arrogant, self-serving, disobedient ways and embrace God.

Repenting means giving up our need to be the most important, our need to ridicule others, our need to get what we want at the expense of others…our belief that we can do this on our own.

This is Lent: what are you going to do about it? What do you need to give up, or pick up, put down or hold onto, to repent of your sin and follow Jesus?

Jesus is seeking out disciples, and repentance is the first step. But it’s because of the cross and the teachings of Jesus what this means: that an eternal relationship with God is possible. That forgiveness is possible. That real life in the here and now is possible.

Repentance – real change- can happen. But without God’s grace, our changing our mindset and current reality doesn’t change that we stand condemned and judged for what we’ve done. We can be sorry, we can change, but that doesn’t mean that we’re actually made right.

But God wasn’t done by calling for repentance – he was still working in Jesus.

Chris Shook tells a story of a grandfather, who found his grandson, Tanner, jumping up and down in his playpen, crying at the top of his voice. When Tanner saw his grandfather, he reached up his chubby little hands, crying, and said, “Out, Gramp, Out.” It was only natural for Gramp to reach down to life the boy out of his playpen. But as he was about to, Tanner’s mother stepped in and said, “No, Tanner, you’re being punished so you stay in.” The grandfather was at a loss to know what to do. The tears and chubby hands reached deep, but the mother’s firmness couldn’t be ignored. Here was love versus law. The grandfather couldnt take him out of the playpen, so he crawled in with him.

That’s what God is like – in our repentance, God sent Jesus to be God with us.

It’s awe-inspiring, really. It’s the kind of God-moment that inspired Swedish poet Carl Boberg to pen this verse of “How Great Thou Art”:

And when I think that God, his Son not sparing,
Sent him to die, I scarce can take it in,
That on the cross, my burden gladly bearing,
He bled and died to take away my sin.

We know what we’re like. We know the things we’ve thought and done and struggled for that were completely unworthy of Jesus. We know long to do right and what we fail to do. We know how our hearts are often so far short of what we want to be and do on Sundays.

And yet … God sent Jesus to be the response to our repentance. God sent Jesus so that when we repented it wasn’t just an action/reaction here on earth but an action with long-lasting impact in heaven.

If we would repent. If we would grasp onto the forgiveness already paid for on the cross by the death of Jesus.

Jesus died. You’re forgiven. Believe and repent, or not, it’s up to you. 

But you can’t just stop. You have to turn and accept. You have to believe that Jesus’ death and resurrection was God’s best option, for you.

R-E-P-E-N-T.

Now, some of you have been sitting there reading or hearing this, and you’ve lived a life a lot like mine.

You grew up in the church.

You’ve never done anything too crazy, like kill someone, steal thousands of dollars from some little old lady, etc. You’ve been coming to church for years, decades even, and the idea that you would need to repent seems pretty … crazy. I mean, we’re fine tuning, right? We’re not in need of actual, come-to-Jesus, pray-at-the-front repentance, are we?

When I was in seminary, I worked for a builder. A private, one-house-at-a-time house builder who hired me as his third extra set of hands. [Nothing teaches humility like being the third set of hands at anything: I was the fourth string! Football teams don’t even carry fourth string quarterbacks…] I didn’t know how to do anything, and I was useless on the roof. But I could hold a ladder, hammer a nail, carry heavy stuff. And when the number two guy was bitten by a brown recluse and his arm swelled up to four times as big as it should’ve been, I moved up to the three spot!

But this proved to be even more problematic: the builder showed us how to run the wires through the electrical sockets for the downstairs of the house. We dutifully wired all of the sockets while he ran errands, and after receiving his approval, we went home for the day. The next day, we were chagrined to discover that the building inspector had checked the sockets and found them all to be 1/8th of an inch short and the whole house needed to be rewired. The builder had instructed us incorrectly.

Groan.

Things progressed further and further toward “completion,” and it was soon time for walls and ceilings… and everything was off. The builder soon discovered that his foundation, laid in cement months before I started (thankfully!), was not quite square, but it had gone unnoticed. Now, the internal set-up of the house didn’t quite line-up, and each room would have be re-measured, and angles adjusted. The pattern of being off “just a little bit” had created a system of incorrect measurements, and the internal parts of the house, the “good enough” led to something that was ultimately far from good.

So back to repentance: are we making careful, decisive exploration of our souls? Are we considering what it means to follow Jesus day-to-day, or are we settling for the enemy of great, the “good enough”? Are we following Jesus, everyday? Are we repenting of our selfishness, our pride, our doubt, our social caving in?

Jesus is calling – he wants a life for us that is awesome and amazing. He doesn’t worry about respect but repentance and forgiveness. He doesn’t worry about tomorrow but tells us that today is graced to us and it is enough. He tells us that God’s way is the best way, in the big things and the little things.

Jesus is calling toward forgiveness and perfection that can only be found in him.

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The Captive: Voyeuristic Pursuits (Movie Review)

captiveAtom Egoyan’s film, The Captive, is creepy, not unlike the 2013 Denis Villeneuve thriller Prisoners. The film’s backdrop is snowy Ontario, starring Ryan Reynolds and Mireille Enos as Matthew and Tina as they barely hold onto reality for eight years after the kidnapping of their daughter, Cassandra. When hints of her existence become apparent to detectives Nicole and Jeffrey (Rosario Dawson and Scott Speedman), Matthew’s relentless hope becomes reality and he would do anything to track her down. Part-thriller, part-horror film, Egoyan toys with us but never quite punches the buttons to make this film absolutely soar.

We know from the opening scene that Kevin Durand’s Mika is evil, that the frustration Matthew feels is a reality only he knows: others hold him responsible for Cassandra’s disappearance but he’s not the one who took her. But that’s mixed with his tangible, patriarchal responsibility for her kidnapping- the guilt he feels for not protecting her. That’s where the film collides with Prisoners, and Law & Order: SVU. But Egoyan angles for something more.

The film skips around too much, from time to time and perspective to perspective. The primary cause of Mika’s sickness is the disturbing fascination with other peoples’ pain, and thus, he’s set up a way to keep Cassandra’s parents under watch so that money can be made off of watching their suffering. Cassandra herself has some kind of Stockholm syndrome, where she’s kept controlled by threats to others, and her own voice becomes a kind of siren song to other children, making her maleficent by corollary. Egoyan seems (like Open Windows) to be focused in on the way we’ve decided as a society that voyeurism is not only okay, but profitable. Whether it’s pornography, or violence, or sex, how have we gotten to the point where Sex Box is okay? I’m aware that the film hasn’t received much praise, but it seems more insightful than anyone is giving it credit for.

I didn’t enjoy it , and frankly, I wouldn’t watch it again, but it was smarter than I expected, and it definitely had more going on. When the final snowflakes fell, I was more wrapped up in it than I had previously thought, thanks to the subtle (?) clues that the film dropped for us along the way. If you did dig the focus in on Reynolds (more screen time than anything since Buried!), you’ll appreciate the extra alternate ending and maybe even the commentary. rating: rainy day it

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Longmire Season 3: Of Madness & Friendship (TV Review)

longmireThe third season of AMC’s adaptation of Craig Johnson’s novels about Sheriff Walt Longmire finds our protagonist, played by Robert Taylor, battling against forces outside of his control. Even more so than previous seasons, where he was moving forward case to case, this seasons finds Longmire’s ‘family’ fractured and bleeding. Henry (Lou Diamond Phillips) has been arrested for the murder of a drug dealer who may have killed Longmire’s wife; Branch (Bailey Chase) struggles with reality after being shot and left to die on the Indian reservation; Vic (Katee Sackhoff) and her husband are troubled by demons from her past. All in all, this is easily the most explosive season of the show yet, and bound to be enjoyed by all.

Longmire caught on in our house after its lead-in from the short-lived The Glades, an original story about a displaced Chicago detective in Miami. The modern-day Western works because of Taylor: sure Battlestar Galactica’s Sackhoff is solid, and the other actors fill out their parts well, but it’s all about Taylor. Craggy, sure-footed even in the midst of trauma, loyal to a fault, and incredibly humble (most of the time), he plays Longmire like a cross between John Wayne and Columbo. It’s fantastic just to watch him work.

Obviously, the struggle to wrap up who killed Longmire’s wife was a necessary burden for this season. Emotionally, it was charged to watch Henry suffer for protecting Longmire, and to watch the Native American dynamics play out between Henry and his various tribal antagonists. But it was just time to wrap up the murder mystery.

While I couldn’t stand Branch (in part due to his relationship with his father, played by Gerald McRaney), this season made him sympathetic. He couldn’t really be as crazy as they wanted to make him appear… could he? In the end, that made for a wildly rewarding, emotional payoff for the third season. And leads into the fourth season destined for Netflix. Start with the beginning but, I give it a rating: borrow it

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Da Vinci’s Demons Complete Second Season: Chasing The Future (TV Review)

Starz is blasting the home media market this week with two offerings: the first volume of Outlander (Diana Gabaldon’s novel-turned-adaptation) and the second season of Da Vinci’s Demons on Blu-ray/DVD. In the first, Claire Fraser/Randall travels through time to 18th century Scotland; in the second, Leonardo da Vinci (Tom Riley), uses his medicinal and technological prowess to fight off the advances of Count Riario (Blake Ritson) and assist the Medicis, in the midst of court intrigue and outright violence.

Da Vinci’s Demons is a period piece that carries the court intrigue of Outlander or Game of Thrones with the wily technology-out-of-time of Hell on Wheels or Murdoch Mysteries. Sure, it’s on Starz so it’s a bit more violent and sexual than what you’d find on network or cable, but it’s significantly better than some of the other shows of its general ilk (like Black Sails). But it also lends itself to some more creative power thanks to the input of the likes of David S. Goyer.

I’m not going to lie: there are times that DD confuses me. There are a wealth of characters that come and go, and about seventeen side stories at once, making keeping up with GoT seem like a cakewalk. But it’s still intriguing to see the religious tie-in that comes with the times, and Da Vinci’s search for the Book of Leaves. And the science, like the first episode’s bloodletting/transfusion makes The Princess Bride’s version look like the joke it is…

Da Vinci’s Demons is splashy, sometimes convoluted, but almost always awesome to look at. It’s an interesting character study of Da Vinci himself, but the split story lines often fail to allow him, the most interesting character on the show, to get enough time to develop from episode to episode. Still, it’s a fun ride.

Fans of the show will appreciate “The Journey Begins” recap, as well as the behind-the-scenes take on creating and developing the ‘other continent’ in “Creating The New World.” I’d still strongly encourage you to unpack the first season just to get urged to who is who… Rating: borrow it

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NFL Films’ Super Bowl XLIX Champions New England Patriots (Movie Review)

Do you remember when the Seattle Seahawks had Super Bowl XLIX wrapped up after Jermaine Kearse’s acrobatic (lucky?) catch, maximizing his athletic control and preparation? Or how about when the media had quarterback Tom Brady categorized as “over the hill” or merely “ordinary” after the New England Patriots’ blowout loss to the Kansas City Chiefs on Monday Night Football?

Pats fans like this one remember, and the chuckles make this year sweet enough.

But even sweeter, fans of the dynasty from New England will hold sweet how the (Malcolm) Butler did it in the end zone with a pick, and how the season could not be marred by accusations of Deflategate or the Aaron Hernandez trial. We’ll remember how the Patriots came back from historic odds to take down their rivals, the Baltimore Ravens; how they dismantled Andrew Luck for the second time this season, in the AFC Championship; how they battled Richard Sherman and all of the talk leading up to the final game.

Thanks to Cinedigm and NFL Fans, those memories can be played out on your big screen, high def TV with the Super Bowl XLIX Champions: New England Patriots Blu-ray available March 3rd. Complete with a run-through of the regular season and playoffs, the feature will allow you to relive the most exciting and memorable moments of the season. But because many of those are already replaying in your head, this collection boasts a host of extras:

-“Belichick Revealed” with Melissa Stark [Just don’t expect that he’ll say much]

-“The Gronk Interview” with Andrea Kremer [he’s more than a party animal]

-“Tom Brady- The Fire Inside” [It’s powerful to see his father critique his son’s competitiveness… There’s also the Kurt Warner interview with Brady.]

-“Gronkology” [A funny look at what a “Gronk” is… and how misunderstood that is]

And a host of other special features that make this a must-own for Patriots fans. As one myself, I’ll say rating: buy it!

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The Bible Says What? Creation (Genesis 1-2) #1

I bought another pop-culture-take-on-the-Bible book. Like my addiction to Coke, I just can’t help myself. But it is written by another, non-practicing author, who brings great insights and applications but isn’t a Christian. So, I wondered what it would look like for a Christian, an everyday guy, to read through the whole book and write about it. The whole Bible, even the crazy, “did they just say that?” aspects. And this idea was born…

What if I did that? I doubt it would go here…

life of brian

But it might not be exactly what you or I expect right now. Still, I think I’m going to start … in the beginning. I won’t read a commentary on a tricky passage, I’ll do my best to make it apply to real life, and we’ll see what happens. Who knows, maybe you (or I) will be surprised.

Genesis 1-2: Two Versions of the Creation Story

“In the beginning” is pretty basic, right? You start stories at the beginning, but in this case, there’s nothing and there’s God. Not a whole lot going on, except the creative power of God. Over and over through Genesis 1, God makes something by speaking it into existence and it is so. And God calls each created thing “good.” [Now, my New Testament-reading brain reminds me that John 1:1-2 says, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning.” That would lead me into an understanding of at least a two-person God (God and the “Word”). It would also make me wonder about what the Word of God is… but that’s probably getting ahead of myself.)]

godcreatedmanGod makes humankind in the image of God, here, too. That can be pretty confusing if we’re going to read the whole thing literally, but here’s a quick disclaimer: I don’t. I think God uses the narrative of Genesis’ creation elements to reveal the characteristics of how the Judeo-Christian faith began, but I am not sold on there being a specific man named Adam and woman named Eve in Genesis 2. Might there have been? Sure. But this was an oral tradition, an explanatory myth (not like a fake story but an overarching understanding of something predating the written history).

If I can interpret the first chapter that way, then it frees me up to ‘not sweat’ that Genesis 1 and 2 share similar characteristics but don’t line-up word for word. [It’s like comparing and contrasting the synoptic Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke, but there I go getting ahead of myself…] In Genesis 2, God forms ‘man’ out of the dust and breathes the breath of life into him. Does it matter if you see humanity as in God’s image or filled with the breath of life? Either way, God’s involvement in the creation and life of humanity is essential and utterly important; there is something of God in humanity’s origins, either way. That fundamentally shapes what we think of ourselves – we start off good (even if we will see sin’s entry in Genesis 3). We are innately, originally, intended for good. And that gives me hope.

One final word, before I call this one a wrap. There’s something beautiful about the fact that “no suitable helper” was found for Adam and so God used a rib to make the woman. If God had created another from-dust creature to be Adam’s helper, then the two from-dust creations would’ve had plenty in common with God (spirit breathed into them) but nothing with each other. Because God had initially created Adam and then took the woman’s rib from Adam, she becomes “of God’s spirit” and “of Adam.” They are connected horizontally and vertically, setting up the way that community in God’s terms is with God and with each other.

We’re barely skimming the surface here, but in just two chapters, we’ve seen how God created us with God’s own spirit and for good, and then established how we are meant for love with God and with each other. Pretty awesome stuff for just “in the beginning” indeed.

What do you see with fresh eyes? What still makes you go “yeah, but..”?

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Kingsman The Secret Service: Seeing What Others Don’t (Movie Review)

KingsmanMatthew Vaughn (Kick-Ass, X-Men: First Class, Layer Cake) has taken Mark Millar’s graphic novel The Secret Service and turned it artfully into an artful send-up of the James Bond movies, and a social commentary on plenty of the issues that plague the world today. Kingsman: The Secret Service has its fair share of explosive moments and explosively offensive ones, but all in all, it’s an entertaining blast of a film for those in Oscar artsy fatigue.

Manners maketh the man.–Harry Hart quoting William Homan

Like Timur Bekmambetov’s Wanted (another Millar title), Kingsman follows the exploits of a novice, the rogue street kid Eggsy (Taron Egerton), as he learns at the feet of gentleman spy, Harry Hart (Colin Firth). But the main theme there isn’t all that Vaughn follows: there are the beautifully slowed-down fight scenes a la Guy Ritchie, and the colorful, nearly animated color shots of action and lavish backdrops. Eggsy enters a Hunger Games-like training under the watchful eye of Merlin (Mark Strong, excellent as an Alfred-like mentor), following in the footsteps of his own father who died years earlier in the service. Meanwhile, the megalomaniac Valentine (Samuel L. Jackson, complete with lisp and a New York Yankees cap) and his henchman, Gazelle (Sofia Boutella) are plotting world population reduction. It’s a Bond-like storyline, complete with a fitting baddie.

While a Bond film has never made me question whether or not Bond would live, I was new enough to Millar’s Secret Service to have moments of doubt about who would survive from the Kingsmen. In fact, like Game of Thrones, Vaughn shows a significant disregard for holding onto anything nostalgic that you might expect: everyone, unlike Stallone, is expendable. But it’s the mashup of funny and dangerous that make the film wildly entertaining.

If you’re aware enough of world population, global warming, or rampant cellphone use, then Valentine’s proclamations have a bit (come on, he’s batty!) of truth to them. His use of a Westboro Baptist Church-like cult as the testing point for his sim-card mind control will frustrate some, but it’s social commentary in itself about the violence proclaimed in the name of Jesus. [The fact that he ‘unleashes’ humanity’s closeted violence makes for some interesting brain fodder, too: are we all inclined to that hate naturally or is it something that we’re supposed to fight in each of us?] If you’ve seen a Bond movie, you know some of the situations are ridiculous, like Bond-and-villain repartee or sexual situations (all of which Vaughn mocks). If you’ve watched a movie and wanted the stakes to actually feel higher, then this is the film for you. But it’s got a heart, too.

There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self.– Harry Hart quoting Ernest Hemingway

Early on, Hart and Eggsy have a conversation about what Eggsy can do with the rest of his life, and why he’s wasting so much potential. [For the record, there’s a bit of commentary here about a young man growing up without a father figure.] Eggsy asks what Hart sees, and Hart sees a young man who wants to make a difference and do good. It’s not something anyone had ever seen in Eggsy but Hart did. In I Samuel 16:7, Samuel is wrestling with finding the man God wants to be the next king of Israel, and God says, “Do not consider his appearance or his height, for I have rejected him. The LORD does not look at the things people look at. People look at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart.” In Kingsman, after all of the gags, social commentary, and R-rated exploits, there’s a story about recognizing that you can’t judge a book by its cover (or at least its cockeyed hat and rough boy posturing). Eggsy’s journey to the man he could be makes this story better than its contemporaries in spoof/action flicks.

Kingsman: The Secret Service won’t be for everyone but I thought it was laugh out loud funny, and genuinely exciting. rating: buy it!

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Don’t Worry, Be Joyful (Sunday’s Sermon Today- Gospel of Luke)

Fresh out of business school, the young man answered a want ad for an accountant. Now he was being interviewed by a very nervous man who ran a small business that he had started himself.

“I need someone with an accounting degree,” the man said. “But mainly, I’m looking for someone to do my worrying for me.”

“Excuse me?” the accountant said.

“I worry about a lot of things,” the man said. “But I don’t want to have to worry about money. Your job will be to take all the money worries off my back.”

“I see,” the accountant said. “And how much does the job pay?”

“I’ll start you at eighty thousand.”

“Eighty thousand dollars!” the accountant exclaimed. “How can such a small business afford a sum like that?”

“That,” the owner said, “is your first worry.”

Ah, yes, money and worry go hand and hand, don’t they? We all would love to pay someone to bear our worries for us, but the thing is, we don’t need to pay someone: Jesus points out that God wants us to be worry free.

Jesus is asked to settle an inheritance claim in Luke 12, but he knows this is a systemic problem of greed within his culture. He tells the crowd that “life doesn’t consist of an abundance of possessions” and then tells the story of the rich man whose ground provided an excellent – abundant – harvest. It doesn’t say whether he just got lucky, or whether the hard work he had labored over paid off. But it says that he had so much harvest that he couldn’t keep it all with the buildings that he already had. He had more than enough.

So, he decided to destroy the barns he already had and build bigger ones – the American dream, right? And then he would sit back, and not work, just living it up in one great party. And that drove God to say, “Tonight, you’re judged and you’re going to die- because you wanted to keep it all for yourself.”

Scary stuff, right there. Most of us want more than we have. Whether it’s a case of more stuff, better stuff, more money, easier money, we struggle, claw, sweat, worry, and work for more, more, more. It wasn’t God’s judgment that the man shouldn’t reap more, but he was judged for how he used it – or rather, his lack of using it for the greater good.

This rich man worried about how to keep, a rather selfish, individualistic word, instead of how to share. He wasn’t worried about his daily bread; he was worried about his bread twenty-five years from now.

This man was worried about himself, not about those around him who had less, even not enough. He lacked satisfaction, he lacked humility.

But Jesus doesn’t tell the parable as a means of judgment; it’s a warning, a teaching moment, and he’s sharing it with his disciples so that they’ll get it. Because he continues with further lessons on worry that still seem applicable today:

Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat; or about your body, what you will wear. For life is more than food, and the body more than clothes….Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to your life?”

“For the pagan world runs after [what they will have], and your Father knows that you need them. But seek his kingdom, and these things will be given to you as well.”

“Do not be afraid, for your Father has been pleased to give you the kingdom. Sell your possessions and give to the poor. Provide purses for yourselves that will not wear out, a treasure in heaven that will never fail, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.

I have a tendency to worry about things – but I’ve learned that there are ways around it. Of course, you can worry about worrying … but what good will that do?

Scientists have shown that worrying about what might happen can cause your body to overwork itself; you can develop high anxiety, unrealistic fear, hypersensitivity to criticism. Worrying will interfere with eating, sleeping, relationships, task completion, and even lead to various addictions.

Worrying sounds as dangerous to your health as just about anything else!

Seek God’s kingdom, Jesus says. Focus on what God wants for your life, and you’ll have everything you need. Don’t be afraid, Jesus says, like the angels to Joseph, Mary, and the shepherds, because God wants the best for you — there’s good news here.

And Jesus lays out how exactly we seek God’s kingdom: give away what we have and open our hearts up to what God wants. It’s much easier when our heart isn’t about stuff and is about people, it’s much easier not to worry and instead find joy when we’re focused on God’s kingdom and what God wants for our lives.

It’s much easier when we focus on others (God included) and less about us.

I’ve told the story before, so forgive me, but I was ready to bail on college… just a few days into my freshman year. I kept hoping it would get better, but one day I called home, telling my mother I was ready to come home, that I wasn’t happy, that I wasn’t fitting in, that I didn’t have any friends.

My mom’s response? She asked me how much I was thinking about other people? She reminded me that in high school I had focused more on helping others – and that I’d been at peace, that I’d had joy. It was a spiritual … comeuppance. (One of several I’ve received from my mother over the years.)

Lately, I’ve been getting another spiritual comeuppance, from Brant Hansen’s book, Unoffendable. I’m still in the first few chapters, but Hansen asks us to consider how much time we spend being offended, assuming we’re better or more important than we really are. Like the man who thinks he needs more barns rather than sharing his wealth, we think we have the right to anger – another thing stealing our joy – when someone doesn’t do the way things we would do them, or their opinion doesn’t agree with ours, or they take the parking space we thought we’d get, or [fill in the blank].

But if we’re going to be like Jesus, then we should be… unoffendable. We’re here to love and to grow; judging and evaluation and all of that is from God, not from us. Because all of us have sinned and fall short of God’s glory. All of us lack the ability to be like God without God’s grace to grow us into being more like Jesus.

But worry, anxiety, and anger make it all about us and not about God, the source of all things good.

I wonder how today we could find focus outside of ourselves. On who God would have us focus.

Maybe you need to pray the Lord’s Prayer everyday and really live into it, “thy kingdom come”.

Maybe you need to commit to spending time in silence every day during Lent, listening to the whisper of the Holy Spirit.

Maybe you need to surrender an action that causes you to be farther from God, or another person, like an addiction.

Maybe you need to take up the burden of someone else – and help them fight through it, knowing that God loves and cares about them, too.

I wonder – not just a good Christmas word – I wonder, what it would look like if we lived into this dream of God’s kingdom as a reality that Jesus believed in.

I wonder what would happen if we heard God speak – and heard the cries of the needy in our community – and listened.

I wonder what would happen, if we lived a life not of worry but of joy. Joy in action…

This Lent, in the words of St. Francis of Assissi: “May God bless you with the discomfort at easy answers, half-truths and superficial relationships, so that you may live deep within your heart. May God bless you with anger at injustice, oppression, and the exploitation of people, so that you may work for justice, freedom, and peace. May God bless you with tears to shed for those who suffer from pain, rejection and starvation, so that you may reach out your hand to comfort them and to turn their pain into joy. And may God bless you with enough foolishness to believe you can make a difference in the world, so that you can do what others claim cannot be done.

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The Overnighters: Dealing With The Aftermath (Movie Review)

Director Jesse Stone delivered a masterpiece with his documentary, The Overnighters. When I discussed the story of Pastor Jay Reinke with him in November, he hinted at a post script interview with Reinke after the film had been edited. Now, with the film on DVD and digital download, you can unpack the story of Reinke and see what he had to say after the explosive revelation at the end of the film.

In The Overnighters, Reinke serves a church in North Dakota that becomes the lighting rod for an issue of hospitality and church generosity. Hundreds of people flock to the Concordia Lutheran Church, not because of the church itself but because of the way that Reinke welcomes the homeless, those souls seeking work in the oil fields who can’t find a place to stay elsewhere.

Reinke’s story is full of grace: he sees an opportunity to be the hands and feet of Jesus by welcoming in a stranger and caring for the needy. He challenges his church to grow. But Reinke’s story is a cautionary tale, too, because he takes it too far, he crosses too many boundaries, breaks through barriers intended for his own well-being. How, and why, should be left for the masterful work of Moss’ story as told here, but let’s be clear: you’re going to want to see this wrap-up postscript here, too.

I’ve recommended this film to those who love Jesus, who love a documentary, who pastor churches. I’ve recommended it to those who wrestle with church policy questions and the way to live out how to be more like Jesus in the world. But I found the post script interview to confirm what I’d thought all along: that Reinke’s desire to help others heal their brokenness was an honest response to his desire to see his brokenness healed, and any mistakes he’s made were the result of the sin we all succumb to in our fallen humanity.

Grace still exists though, and it works for Reinke. Watching the documentary and its final words, I can only hope Reinke finds peace, like what he offered to so many other people, for himself.

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Horrible Bosses 2: Now They’re Their Own Bosses (Movie Review)

In the original film, Nick (Jason Sudeikis), Kurt (Jason Bateman), and Dale (Charlie Day) worked together in a comedic Strangers on a Train scenario where they would kill off each other’s Horrible Bosses. In the sequel, their Shower Buddy idea is going nowhere, and they set out to kidnap Rex (Chris Pine), the son of a businessman who has double-crossed them (Christoph Waltz). It leads to the same sorts of laughs as the first (maybe even a few more of them) as the threesome settles in to their relationships without maintaining much of a backstory.

Seth Anders has written or directed some seriously films of varying comedic genius, depending on your definition of funny: Mr. Popper’s PenguinsWe’re the MillersDumb & Dumber To. But here, he takes John Francis Daley’s (BonesFreaks & Geeks) and shows exactly how difficult it is to overcome yourselves and any desire you have to go out on your own in business and in life. The film itself shows more of a streamlined plot after Pine’s Rex fakes his own kidnapping while these three stooges are trying to plan his kidnapping than the tri-part original, and it makes for a stronger backbone for a film that has less ‘one-offs’ and more conceptual ideas.

Somehow, regardless of how brutally stupid and ridiculous this film is, there’s something earnestly funny about Sudeikis, Bateman, and Day. [Disclaimer: I went to high school with Day and never knew he was this funny.] They genuinely seem to like each other in interviews, and it carries over to their rapport here. While they’d have enough comedic juice to carry most movies, Pine is the wild card who delivers. He’s not Captain Kirk, or Jack Ryan, but instead a tortured son who longs to be loved by his rich father who snaps when life gets too hard: he’s so over the top that he steals the scenes he’s in.

Overall, this isn’t great, but fans of the three main folks, or of the actors of tidbit cameo roles (Jennifer Aniston, Jamie Foxx) will dig the special features like “Endless Laughter Guaranteed” or “Off the Cuff: One-Liners You Didn’t See” where we get more of these funny people (sort of) off camera. Even so, I’ll have to leave this somewhere below spectacular. rating: rainy day it

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