Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Hurry and Come Down!

I just found out that today is Squirrel Appreciation Day.  I didn’t know until moments ago that this happens every January 21st.  I am SO EXCITED to know that there is a day set aside to enjoy and appreciate my neighborhood squirrels.  Should have known something special was happening by the way our dog took out after one of those little creatures early this morning! 

I think of squirrels and trees together, and this afternoon, that’s making me think of Zacchaeus. Vertically challenged, Zacchaeus, as the story goes in Luke 19:1-10, climbs a sycamore tree to see Jesus as he passes through town.  Jesus notices this guy, calls him by name, and invites himself over to his house.  Everybody complains about it.  Zacchaeus could have stayed up in that tree and not accepted Jesus’ invitation.  Plenty of people do.  It’s much easier to go on with our lives and continue with our own agendas than to allow Jesus to invite himself over to our house to stay.

Zacchaeus decides to come down from the tree and because of this encounter with Jesus, his life is changed.  So my question today is this:  Are we up the tree still waiting for Jesus to walk by and transform the world OR are we in a true relationship with Jesus that transforms our lives and calls us to change the world?

We’re all a little like Zacchaeus, trying to see Jesus from a distance – often getting ourselves up into trees and needing Jesus to come by and call us back down to earth, back down to an honest relationship with him. People who decide to stay in the trees look down upon the world – our global community – and wait for Jesus to return – to enter Jericho again – in order to bring forth the Kingdom of God.  They say, “The world is in such turmoil.  I can’t do anything about it.”  I personally think it’s up to us to bring forth the Kingdom of God.

If we’ve come down from our tree and are in true relationship with Jesus, we see what is happening in the world around us and know our voices and actions can make a difference.  When we take our role as United Methodist Christians in a global society seriously, we can’t sit in our trees and wait for someone else to fix things.  We’re called to be advocates for social justice.  We question things that are happening in our world. When Jesus calls us into relationship with our neighbors around the world, we are called to act on behalf of all God’s children.  When we come down from the branches of the trees, we are called to compassion.  

When we come down from the trees, we realize a life dedicated to Christ is more than just 1 hour on Sunday morning.  The church is all of us, growing and learning through worship and discipleship, prayer, Bible study, and fellowship. When we come down from the trees, we realize the church isn’t made up of only 1 person – one leader, one staff person, one ministry.  In order to be the church God intends for us to be, we all have to be involved – to offer our service, our presence – no matter what our age or ability level. 

Zacchaeus accepted Jesus’ invitation to come down from the tree and be in relationship with him.  And Zacchaeus was changed. Are we different because Jesus has called us down from the trees? When we accept the invitation to share a meal with Jesus, are we really ready to admit that our way of acting as Christ’s followers in the world isn’t always what it should be and try in the days ahead to respond differently?

Jesus still says, “Hurry and come down; for I must stay at your house today” and always.  How will you respond? 

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Photos and Faithfulness

I spent a good part of last night looking at pictures of the new baby in our family with my mother – on my iPhone, using the 23Snaps application…not the box of old black and whites along with original Polaroids that I used to sit and go through with her.  How many photo collections do you have – whether in a scrapbook, on your computer, in Snapfish publications, in phone or tablet apps, or on Facebook? There are lots of choices for photo albums these days. Do you ever look through the pictures, remembering the people and events that shaped your life? 
 
Contemporary Christian singer, Steve Green released an album in 1988 dedicated to his parents called Find Us Faithful. Green and his six siblings spent much of their early lives in Argentina where their parents were missionaries.  On a mission trip to South America, he heard part of a song that Jon Mohr was working on. The refrain states:

“May all who come behind us find us faithful
May the fire of our devotion light their way
May the footprints that we leave
Lead them to believe
And the lives we live inspire them to obey
Oh may all who come behind us find us faithful.”

I have sung this song several times and am struck each time by the line: “May the footprints that we leave - lead them to believe - and the lives we live inspire them to obey.”

Whose footprints have led you to this point in your faith journey? Who are the witnesses in your life?  Who has shared their stories and lives with you, making a difference in the person you have become?  Who has shown you by word and action what it means to be a disciple of Jesus for the transformation of the world? There are so many people whose footprints are etched forever on my heart. They make up the photographs in my photo album of faith.

January 9th marks the 53rd anniversary of my birth.  It seems that with each passing year, I ask myself more and more about the footprints that I am leaving on this earth. 
  • Who will say that I have been a witness to them? 
  • Who will look back over their lives and say it was because of me that they know Jesus? 
  • Who will say years from now that I was faithful to the Gospel message and made a difference in their lives? 
  • Who will say that my life mattered – not because of the possessions I gained, the degrees I earned, or the job I held – but because I touched them in a powerful way by my actions and witness as a Christian?
  • Who will have my picture in their album of faith?
  • Who will have your picture in their album?

“May the footprints that we leave
Lead them to believe
And the lives we live inspire them to obey
Oh may all who come behind us find us faithful.”