August 2012 Top Posts

August was a HUGE month for the blog.  Even though I did not blog that often due to the busyness of my schedule, records were still set!  During the month of August the blog was visited 4354 times!  That is more that the previous 6 months COMBINED (4335)!

A GIGANTIC thank you for reading, supporting and sharing!!!

Here are the top five posts from the month of August

  1. The Problem With The Chick-Fil-A Debate
    • My thoughts about the “Chick-Fil-A Appreciation Day”
  2. Robots, Arrogance and the Gospel
    • This is an oldie but a goodie… people are still receiving robo-calls from Prophet Mannesh and they are googling the number…
  3. When Did We Stop Caring for People?
    • My thoughts on the amount of press “Chick-Fil-A Appreciation Day” received verses the amount of reaction people gave to Sikh temple shooting in Wisconsin.
  4. And You Wonder Why People Aren’t Christians: Part VII
    • A church cancels a wedding due to race
  5. Opening Ceremonies = Acceptance?
    • What can  we learn from the Opening Ceremonies?

Thank you again for supporting me and I hope to post more in the coming future!

In Christ,

Rev. Evan

 

Mission Trips For The 21st Century

Here is my latest article for the Orange County Record.


When I was in High School I had the opportunity to travel to Washington, D.C. and New York City.  This was no ordinary trip; it was not a family vacation or a school sponsored trip, rather it was a mission trip hosted by my denomination, the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ).  High School students from Oklahoma and Texas met in Dallas to begin our adventure.  The theme of the trip was “Poverty and Homelessness in the Big City.”  During our trip we were going to meet with people and organizations that had devoted their lives to the cause of serving the poor and the homeless in DC and New York City.  This was no ordinary mission trip; it was something that I still remember clearly to this day.

During our week long journey, we served meals to people from all walks of life; we talked with them about their life, listen to their stories of hurt, pain and even struggle with addictions.  Coming from a medium sized town, I was not exposed to the homelessness on the scale that I witnessed in New York City.   Sure I knew that they more than likely existed but it wasn’t something that I thought about.  Because of this trip, I became more aware of the people in my city that needed assistance.

Now that it is the summer, churches are gearing up (or already have) for mission trips.  Generally the appeal of mission trips to go different places to see a different part of the country or even the world.  Mission trips, especially for youth and young adults, are essential when it comes to faith development.  These experiences, memories, discussions and connections provide a foundation for what is means to be a follower of Christ in the 21st century.  Seeds of faith are planted as a result of these trips.

In 2007, I was blessed to go to the continent of Africa, more specifically the country of Malawi.  I was there for about two weeks, touring the country, visiting with local missionaries and church leaders.  I saw people who lived in one of the poorest countries in the world cling to their faith in God.  At one of the churches I visited, one of the leaders showed us an area in the back of the church.  It was a small room but it was filled with bags of corn, wheat and flour.  It was recently harvest time and the members of the church donated ten percent of their crops to the church so that the church could use it to serve other people.  When the group I was traveling with return to the United States we had conversations about our experiences.  Many of us agreed that we went to Malawi to find a way to help the people in that country with some need that had rather it was water or sanitation, but all returned changed.  The people of Malawi through their generosity and bold faith in spite of what was going on in their life transformed us; we were not the same people when we returned.  Our hearts were filled with the goodness of the people, our souls were renewed by the faith that was expressed and our eyes were opened to a culture and people full of life and devotion.

Mission trips in their inception were started by people who wanted to share the message of Christ to those who had not heard it before.  Missionaries would risk their lives going into areas where the story of Christ had not been told before.  But now, mission trips have evolved.  There are not areas where the gospel has not been spread to, there not places were missionaries have not already been, so what are the point of mission trips now?

Mission trips have the power to impact those attending the trip just as much as those who are being served.  These trips have a way of exposing us to things that we rather not see or talk about.  If we are going to be followers of Christ in the 21st century then the idea of mission trips has to change.  The idea of swooping into a place and announcing that you have all the answers is not what people are looking for.  Anyone can build a house with Habitat for Humanity or even feed the homeless.  The focus of the mission trip should be on what God is doing the world and how we as followers of God can join in.  Missionaries of old believed they were bringing God to the people, but now the mind set should be finding God where we go, knowing that God as been there for a while now.

On most of the mission trips I have been on it wasn’t always the big service projects that made the most impact.  It might have been a nightly devotion or story of why a homeless shelter was started.  So as many churches send their members off to serve others, let us remember that God has been on this voyage long before we arrived, let us be open to the transformation that is possible when we open ourselves up to what God is doing and has already done.

“What Does Your Church Believe?”: Part II- Freedom of Belief

This is the second installment of my “What Does Your Church Believe?” series. Last week I discussed the notion of open communion and the importance of it in DOC theology (click here for Part I). This week we will look at “Freedom of Belief.”

Back in the 19th Century when the what is now know as the Disciples of Christ was beginning to form as a movement, one of the pillars that many lifted up was the notion of freedom of belief. Our founders came out of a Presbyterian background. While there is nothing wrong with being Presbyterian, the founders did not like the use of creeds in worship and as tools for believing the ‘right’ types of things. Over time the motto of the Disciples of Christ became “no creed, but Christ.” This means that we are called as followers of Christ to seek out a relationship with God in a way that is meaningful for ourselves, just as long as we center our beliefs on that idea that Jesus Christ is Lord and Savior.

We all come from different backgrounds, life experiences, socio-economic status, generations and education levels. We are NOT going to interpret the same thing even though we are reading the exact same passage. Some passages that were meaningful to us five years ago do not mean as much today. I like to give this example. My daughter, Violet, was born on February 1. On January 31, passages in the Bible that mentioned parenting, God as a loving parent, or that the people of Israel were God’s children, it not mean as much to me as they did when I read them on February 2.

Now if there was just one interpretation, who would get to decide which was “correct?” Would the Catholic interpretation be favored over the Baptist interpretation? Would the Presbyterians be “more correct” than the Methodists? As you can see this would cause major dissention between the denominations (and there is already enough of that to go around.)

Does Freedom of Belief mean you can believe whatever you want? In sense no. When reading the scriptures one has to remember the original intent of the book or passage one is reading; we can’t make the Bible “say” something that it never was intended to ‘say’ in the first place. The Disciples of Christ sum it up by stating “Persons are free to follow their consciences guided by the Holy Spirit, study and prayer, and are expected to extend that freedom to others.” The key here is extending grace and acceptance to others. We may not all believe the same things, we may all see something different when it comes to the Bible, but if we are grounded in the one essential of faith, Jesus Christ, then everything else is secondary.

In Christ,

Rev. Evan