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Soli Deo Gloria

Jesus gave everything to the glory of God alone. Reformers defined such a purpose with the mantra "Soli Deo gloria." Jesus was perfect, yet people hated Him. Those who should have loved Him turned against Him and away from Him. He was on a mission and did not get sidetracked by peripheral resistance. Jesus seems to confront sin and be silent otherwise in the face of His opposition. He doesn’t seem to be a big complainer, gossiper, or worrier! He views everything in light of the will of His Father; nothing he does strays from His commitment to glorify the Father. It gives me needed peace to know that my life mission as an imitator of Jesus is soli Deo gloria. I must remember this to dismiss renegade thoughts such as “I wonder what she is saying about me” and “I don’t think he likes me.” It simplifies, clarifies, mobilizes. Soli Deo gloria means that I’m giving the best I can to bring Him glory. The thought and prayer of it helps me to work hard, to fight through difficul...

Streamlined

It's better to do a few things highly effectively than "survive" an over-committed schedule. We've made 2018 the year to streamline. Jesus is made known when we are marked by life and purpose rather than a perpetuated crisis mode. Life and purpose rightly point people to the One who has overcome the world. I am learning to set boundaries and say "no" - even to several good things - so that the things that I have been called to do might be done effectively: Worship leading (Shoreway or downtown weekly and Faith weekly) Preaching & teaching (Shoreway every other week, downtown every other month, & second hour every week) Discipleship/mentorship relationships (including appointments Tuesdays & Thursdays) Man Time (and for my wife, Girls' Night) "Yes" is easily and often said, in ministry or otherwise. I've got worship nights, City Life clubs, social events, and at an unfortunate distance, friends - not to mention gainful e...

Entitlement and Me

I'm growing familiar with one the greatest weaknesses of our society, especially in its next generation: entitlement. It's the idea that we indisputably deserve something we didn't earn. Not only does it produce weak families, plunging motivation levels, dim futures, etc., entitlement has emerged as a major barrier to belief and sanctification because it runs in direct contrast to the gospel. The Bible says that we only deserve the death we did earn, but Jesus came to give us something didn't deserve. The only thing we're entitled to is death (Romans 6:23). Entitlement shackles us from understanding and embracing grace (getting something we don't deserve, Jesus' perfect life and death in our place) and the gratitude living which follows. That's what makes the Jesus follower different; he or she is marked by gratitude rather than entitlement! This was our message at our Shoreway Thankstaking, an event for our teens and their families in early December. It...

We Are a Nation of Worshipers

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I recently preached on worship. Without question, it's what I've studied most both in seminary and real life. An average weekend has me leading worship in three services! However, leading up to the sermon, I found myself struggling to put an effective presentation of worship before a group of unbelieving teens. They have no relationship with Jesus, and they aren't about to worship someone they don't know. I had the foreboding sense that this message would be perceived as if I were speaking in a foreign language. It didn't all click until several days later when I in realized the transcendent truth that we are a nation of worshipers, every one of us. Sometimes we fail to see it, but do keep an eye out for the worshipers flooding streets, arenas, prisons, Twitter and Facebook feeds, the news, and just about everywhere else you look. I see people who value WWE wrestlers above all else, honor them by constantly speaking of them, and serve them with their time and money;...

Transition

It seems to be a time of serious transition. CityView has been downtown for nearly 8 years with a central Sunday service in the Wyndham Hotel. In recent weeks, hotel ownership has changed hands and increased its price point. We can expect to pay nearly quadruple what we are paying now to continue meeting in the hotel in the new year. In the last month, the leadership team has been meeting up regularly on the square near the hotel to pray.  While we are talking to God, I can hear the group of homeless bantering behind us talking. A lady walks by screaming "The devil, he won!" Drugs, crazy, and/or demon-possessed. People are constantly coming with their stories and asking for money and cigarettes. While we meet, people from church filter through the square. Downtown is crazy, but I'm convinced that God wants His church to stay there and thrive in the midst of it. The Eldacrew is surrounding the church in prayer Wednesday night and Saturday afternoon. Maybe we became to...

Unconscious Incorrect

If our will to make worshippers ceases to be an act of worship, then we've only served to hit the mark on idolatry.

Show Some Faith

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MLK said "There can be no deep disappointment where there is not deep love." Julia and I got to take fourteen teens to the Banished retreat at Camp Patmos, seven guys and seven girls. The truth is that most of them have no relationship with Jesus, even after we’ve walked and talked Jesus with them for more than a year! Saturday night, I took the guys deep into the woods at night, lit a torch I had hidden out there, and told them a story. “On a dark night in Lake Erie, two ships collided. Some heard the cries ‘To the life boat! The life boat!’ but believed that they were safer in the ship. They perished. Others heard and even believed the life boat could save, but they were afraid to jump out into the darkness. They, too, perished. Lastly, there were a few who heard, believed, and jumped. Only they were saved by the life boat. Which group would you say believed?” Obviously those on the ship, torn and unwilling to move, did not have saving faith in the life boat. I am disa...