Thursday, March 26, 2009

Weekly Inspiration

Dear Friends,

This Easter we will again dedicate ourselves to an intentional focus on living the life of prayer. We invite all to participate in the 24-hour prayer vigil, April 10 through 11, at Phoenix Light & Life Church. Our prayer team is serving us by carefully preparing the prayer chapel with "stations of prayer" that are designed to give us opportunities to open our hearts and minds to God's presence and guidance. We will celebrate an International Prayer & Praise gathering Saturday, April 11 from 4pm to 6pm featuring Prayer, The Word, Worship, Music, and Friendship with loving Christ-followers from around the globe! You are invited to participate in this life-changing, inspiring experience.

The Psalmist prayed, "Show me your ways, O LORD, teach me your paths; guide me in your truth and teach me, for you are God my Savior, and my hope is in you all day long" (Psalm 25:4-5). Our life flourishes when we're touched by the Holy Spirit during our times of opening to God in prayer. The presence and power of God are released into our reality in the experience of prayer. God shows us, teaches us, and guides us.

Last Wednesday night in our weekly adult Bible Study, a precious member of our church prayed for her pastor that God would bring people alongside him to "hold up his hands" as was done for Moses when he prayed on the hilltop for Joshua to defeat the Amalekites. This prayer strengthened my heart and encouraged me to follow Christ more fully into the life of God. Let's pray for each other!

When the early church was developing in the first century, 120 disciples prayed during the days between Jesus' ascension and the day of Pentecost (Acts 1:4). On the day when the Holy Spirit come with special power, a simple fisherman named Peter gave his testimony, and 3,000 people were converted!

In 1949 Billy Graham and his team held an evangelistic campaign in Los Angeles that reached thousands of people for Christ and lead to a new era of mass evangelism. Graham had conducted similar campaigns but with much smaller results. He later realized that the main difference between the L.A. crusade and all the others before it had been the intention and amount of prayer he and his people had invested in it.

John Wesley recognized the power of prayer when he said: "Give me 100 preachers who fear nothing but sin and desire nothing but God, and I care not a straw whether they be clergy or laymen, such alone will shake the gates of hell and set up the kingdom of Heaven on earth. God does nothing but in answer to prayer." Through prayer God makes the impossible possible. Through prayer, God focuses and greatly multiplies our efforts. C. H. Spurgeon said, "Whenever God determines to do a great work, He first sets His people to pray." Spurgeon had recognized that neither his sermons nor his good works accounted for the spiritual impact of his ministry.

Prayer changes us by drawing us closer to God's heart.

I feel convicted that God desires us to increase our intake of spiritual nourishment that comes through the experience of prayer. Will you join me in this exhilarating adventure of opening our lives and our church to God in prayer? God will bring us and our church revival and the joyful energy to reach the potential he has for us!

Joyfully in the mission of God!

Duff Gorle

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Finding Joy In the Mission

In pastoral ministry I've occasionally had the experience of a person coming to me with the message that they are feeling burned-out from doing too much. They generally describe how much pressure they are under through "over involvement" in church, on the job, and in the community. These precious ones usually state that they "just need to cut back."

I generally feel I am being cued to say to them, "I'm so sorry. Please feel free to drop your commitments at the church. We'll find someone else." And this is often the approach I've taken.

It's beginning to dawn on me that there might be a different approach that could sometimes be preferable. This would be a response that tells the person it might be a great mistake to keep quitting things. Such a response would not be because we desperately need the person to continue in their ministry role; quite frankly, that is not usually the case. Rather, it would be a recognition that quitting might simply add to the person's burden of guilt. They feel like an exhausted runner. They are fretting over dropping the messianic baton they have never actually been asked to carry.

Why is it that so many of us who claim to be disciples of Jesus are always tired, while others, who are still getting so much good work done, seem energized and are experiencing tremendous joy? Some Christian workers live in a cycle of perceived failure. They fail again and again in a game they should not be playing in the first place. This is the "playing Jesus" game.

Most of the mistakes we make in our commitments to compassionate service and mission-related work are rooted in a far more serious mistake we make about Jesus, namely, thinking of him in the past tense. The Gospels clearly tell us Jesus rose from the dead and ascended to the right hand of his Father, where he continues to intercede on our behalf. Jesus is no longer dead! He is still the Savior--and we are not.

Could it be that the followers of Jesus who find joy in the mission recognize that they aren't the ones getting it done? We are simply beholding and wondering at the salvation of Jesus, whom we see at work in every part of their lives.

We are never anything more than his witnesses. Any courtroom judge will clarify it is not the role of a witness to make things happen. Christ is alive and at work in this world! It is his mission and work to bring in a whole new kingdom. We are invited to actively participate, not through trying harder or learning more right answers or passing better legislation, only through prayer. Prayer places us where we can see and recognize Christ's activity in the world. We begin to see all the quiet miracles Jesus is creating. When the church prays, it puts the world back into the hands of our risen Savior.

St. John introduces us to Jesus by stating: "All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being" (John 1:3). St. Paul describes Jesus in similar terms: "In him all things in heaven and on earth were created....In him all things hold together" (Colossians 1:16-17). Jesus started all the work, and it is still being done by him. "The one who began a good work among you," Paul reminds us, "will bring it to completion by the day of Jesus Christ" (Philippians 1:6).

The challenge in the Christian life is not to do less, but to see the risen Jesus at work in every aspect of our living and serving!

Prayerfully finding joy in the mission!

Duff Gorle

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Entering Through A Narrow Door

Dear Friends,

Jesus always invites us to the place where he is, but, as he warned his first disciples, the door leading into this holy place is narrow (see Luke 13:24). Jesus explained that "it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God" (Luke 18:25).

The problem with being rich is that we have too many things in our hands and so much weight on our backs that we become bent over from the burden of it all. Because the door into the holy place is so narrow, we must let go of everything--absolutely everything--in order to slip through.

You may not feel you are rich, but think about it for a moment.
--RELATIONSHIPS. Some of us are rich in relationships, but there is no group ticket into the holy place. We must release our identities as daughters, sons, friends, lovers in order to enter the lonely place of solitude where the Holy Spirit makes us the beloved of Jesus' Father.
--WISDOM. Many of us are rich in wisdom; some in theological knowledge. To enter the holy place, according to St. Paul, we must drop all of our "wisdom" and become "fools" (1 Corinthians 1:27). This is a clear warning to which we must resist trying to add a little sophistication.
--POWER. Some of us are powerful. We must become weak--the strong must become frail.
--SUCCESS. The successful must drop every achievement until we are no greater than those the world regards as failures.
--ANGER & HURT. Some of us are rich in the abundance of anger and hurt that we nurture and continually carry with us. Those who are limping through life will have to let go of anger, hurt, fear, skepticism and sin.
--RIGHTEOUSNESS. Even our righteousness--especially our righteousness--must fall from our hands. None of it will fit through the narrow door.

At last, stripped of everything, we can encounter Jesus and his invitation to come to the holy place where living water is waiting for us. Nothing is holy apart from Jesus.

Why does it cost so much to enter his holy place? Because we cannot see that the place is holy until we see Jesus there. If there is anything in our hands or on our back, it will distract us from seeing our Savior. Once we see the Savior, we will then see that all the things we have dropped are now in his hands, which, of course, is the best place for them to be.

"Nothing in my hands I bring; simply to Your cross I cling."

On the adventure together!

Duff Gorle

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Weekly Inspiration

Dear Friends on this great Adventure!

The theological basis for your and my spirituality is when we cry "Abba! Father!" St. Paul claims that when we do this, "it is the Spirit bearing witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then heirs, heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ" (Romans 8:15-17).

In Christian spirituality, the starting place is not our own thirst for God, but God's loving decision to enfold us into his family. While our decision to receive the grace of God that establishes our relationship with him is essential, the gospel does not begin with any of our decisions.

Most of us can remember saying to someone, "I love you." It seemed like time stopped as we waited for a response. Only one response would be the right one. In saying these words, we put ourselves in a vulnerable position. We hoped to hear in reply, "I love you too." Through the work of Christ and the Spirit, the Father has taken the initiative to tell us that he loves us. The theological term for this initiative is "prevenient grace." God's grace precedes and anticipates our faith in his love for us. We cannot even claim to love God apart from first discovering how much he loves us.

When we see the love of God demonstrated in the cross of Jesus Christ, our response is a deep, life-changing gratitude. We gain a new identity as beloved sons and daughters with whom God is also well pleased.

St. Paul told the believers at Rome, "Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your minds, so that you may discern what is the will of God--what is good and acceptable and perfect" (Romans 12:2). The Greek word "syschematizo" translated as "conformed" is in the middle voice, which signifies something we do to ourselves. Through our own efforts we are able only to conform to the imperfect loves of the world. The Greek word "metamorphoo" translated as "transformed" is in the passive voice, which signifies something that happens to us. As our minds are renewed by remembering God's love for us, the Spirit changes our lives. By God's grace, we start to look like God's will--good and acceptable and perfect. In other words, we begin to look more like Jesus Christ.

By the grace of God we are now his children, so, when we revert back to our old addictions to sin, the Spirit reminds us, "No, no, that's not how you act in this family." Once we discover that by grace we have been brought home, we find it irresistible to make the changes that align us with the values and culture of our new family. We will never make these changes by trying hard to get life right on our own. Only God's love is powerful enough to change our lives.

In the home of our Heavenly Father we learn how to give our lives to something greater than a self-absorbed, shallow, empty, dry and thirsty existence. When we come to see what God has done for us in sacrificing his Son because he loves us, and what he has done and continues to do through the ministry of the Holy Spirit, then everything about our lives begins to change. Changing our lives is as easy as falling in love!

Your Friend,

Duff Gorle