Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Kingdom Inhabitants: Part 2


Janny and I were coming home late and had to stop at a gas station near our house in Santa Cruz. As I pumped gas, a gentleman with a covetous beard rode up to me on his bike and asked for some money. I offered to buy him some food, so with a muffin and warm coffee now in his hands we began a rich conversation. He told me his name was Lyle and that he had lost his job in construction, which resulted in him being homeless for over a year. He shared about his past travels and relationships with hope and nostalgia, but would then come back to the somber reality of sleeping under a tarp night after night. After about 10 minutes, I said goodbye and he left me with a hearty smile of gratitude.

Challenged and inspired by my renewed understanding of the Kingdom of God and its "unlikely" inhabitants(which I spoke of in my last post), I tried to live my daily life with an open eye to the face of Jesus as seen through the poor. With this said, I had the opportunity to share a meal and conversation with a variety of folks, but I kept running into Lyle. A few weeks after our initial conversation and at the same gas station, Lyle and I were able to share an extensive conversation over a cup of coffee. I had grown to admire his resolve and optimism in the midst of a painful story. Needing to get home, I asked if we could continue over lunch the next day at a local taqueria. I told him there was no pressure, but that I would be there at 12pm either way. I understood, but sitting at a table in the taqueria anxious to continue our conversation, was disappointed when he never showed up.

Towards the end of last year, I started volunteering @ the Homeless Service Center; which has a food pantry, homeless family housing and serves up to 400 meals everyday. Not knowing exactly what was needed, my friend Michael and I decided to just show up and offer our help in any capacity. With dozens of homeless folks milling around the dining area, I connected with a full time volunteer named Rick. His first response was a combination of confusion and gratitude at my willingness to serve. Rick was homeless and now is able to live in an apartment on campus as compensation for his working full time for the center. After floating around and sharing conversation with my new friends for an hour, I was introduced to “Al the Chef” who wasted no time equipping me with a hair net, plastic gloves and instructions in how to run the food line. For the next couple of hours, Michael and I had the unforgettable honor of serving each one of the 100+ faces of Jesus a warm meal, accompanied by a heaping portion of love articulated through our huge grins.

It became clear that this would be the only meal of the day for many of our new friends. For that reason alone, this meal/place symbolized life. It wasn’t only the nourishment of the food, but the warmth and care that our friends desired. There weren’t many volunteers, but each one treated the homeless folks with dignity, love and mutual respect. As I witnessed these dynamics and served each meal with a smile, the humanity of each person was being realized. If even for only a short time, we were all equals without the dividing lines of society. Heaven was crashing into earth and the Kingdom of God was at hand.

Which leads me back to my friend Lyle...

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Kingdom Inhabitants: Part 1



This is a very insightful video that I had watched before, but that Nathan George reminded me of. Click here to watch.


This is "kinda" a follow up from Red Can post...

I recently listened to a great sermon on finances from Nathan George, founder of Trade as One. He began by asking how many of us had had a shower in the last week. He said that those of us who had are rich and that 4 of the 6 billion people on earth hadn't been so fortunate. I got up late for work yesterday and didn't get my DAILY shower. I felt gross all day and my hair was kinda sticking up like Alfalfa...

Last semester I took a class @ Fuller Seminary titled, Jesus and the Gospel of the Kingdom of God. My professor, Daniel Kirk(who wrote this book)had us read PLENTY of commentary on the Synoptic Gospels(Matt., Mark, Luke)outside of class, but in his lectures he never picked one up. He read straight out of the Greek Bible and translated to us as naturally as I read the english versions. The humanity of Jesus came alive and the Kingdom He inaugurated took a hauntingly (maybe I'll explain why I use that word later) tangible form. So much of the WORDS and DEEDS of Jesus centered around His interaction and justice for the "least of these (Matt. 25)." Jesus' face was illumined in the face of the stranger, the hungry, the prisoner and the homeless. Yes, Jesus spent alot of time preaching this Kingdom to the wealthy and highly religious, but He embodied this Kingdom through His deeds and interactions with those who inhabited it...the poor(Luke 6).

I can live a life with multiple degrees of separation from these inhabitants of the Kingdom of God. I sleep in a warm bed with a heating blanket, they sleep under a tarp with a newspaper. I eat fresh produce, they eat my leftovers. My possessions rest in cabinets and closets, theirs rests on their backs. It's a strange tension...should I feel bad for having what I do. No, I think I should feel thankful, but in order to be fully thankful, I am finding I must have an understanding and heart for those who don't. Not just a "oh that sucks for them" kind of understanding, but a "how can I learn from your story and be part of its healing" understanding. As I mentioned in my "Red Can" post, I believe it is often my "blessings" in the form of material excess that sometimes keep me from full participation in the Kingdom of God(Matt.19:24)...

So by serving, learning from and hanging out with these Kingdom Inhabitants, does the Gospel Jesus came to proclaim through WORD and DEED come to life?

This is what Dr. Kirk challenged me to unpack and what leads me to my friend Lyle...

Monday, February 1, 2010

Relevant or Peculiar?

Hmmm...This is an interesting article about a Super Bowl advertisement contest that a California mega church may win. I have really appreciated what the pastor of this church has said and written (I have carried his teaching Bible around for a day after he forgot it on stage @ a local festival, before hand delivering it), but I'm not sure what kind of faith we are working to represent in this one. Would be interested to hear your thoughts.

As Shaine Claiborne would say(and I paraphrase), "Jesus didn't call Christians to be relevant...He called them to be peculiar."