Pray for Hermano Juan

img_8914.jpgI'm writing this for your prayers and partly to share the complexities of El Salvador.  In our church there is a dear brother that attends faithfully.  He can be found ushering people in on Sundays, praying early on Saturday mornings, or serving his community in a variety of ways.  He lives about a mile from the church in a community that is largely controled by gangs, yet he is very involved with his neighbors. Yet, Juan struggles like so many I meet here in El Salvador to find real work.  He has a chronic back problem, and is unable to work a job that requires much manual labor, which for men is really the only type of work available in El Salvador.  So, for work, he walks a few miles a day looking through trash to find anything he can sell for recycling. 

When I first found out that this was his work, I was stunned.  Juan has a very clean appearance and demeanor.  I couldn't understand how this was the only work he could find.  Yet, the longer we fellowship in our church the more people we meet who just cannot find consistent work here in El Salvador.  I have since found out that Juan is not the only one in our congregation with this type of work.  Yet, you won't find them complaining.  Only praying a faithful prayer, asking for God's provision, for a new job, but with a trust that God will provide.

Juan is now helping lead an initiative from our church reaching kids in his community (photo above).  I am helping with some training, and our first meeting in Thursday night.  Please pray that God can use our church to bring healing to this part of San Salvador, and that God can use us to help men like Juan find opportunities to find the jobs they so greatly desire.

Tim Keller preaches about the gospel and our wealth

Tim Keller is a pastor in New York City. He has become a leading evangelical figure in planting churches in cities with the aim to live out the Kingdom of God.  In the message below, he gives a stirring explanation on God's heart for our wealth and the opportunities we have by giving.  Download the file below, and enjoy...

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Do I want an M & M Messiah?

I often struggle to articulate my understanding of God’s desire for us, as Christians, to walk alongside the poor and oppressed of our world without sounding negative. I’m sure that it is partly due to my inability, but also partly because it is such a convicting issue in the North American church that few really want to grapple with it. I don’t think that we should ever serve out of guilt (which I don’t believe to be authentic service anyhow), but out of a Biblical understanding of God’s heart for the world and a passionate love for Jesus Christ. Thus, when I find quality explanations of the Church’s mission, I want to pass them along.

The book, Churches that Make a Difference (edited by Ron Sider, Philip Olson, & Heidi Rolland Unruh) quotes Rev. Tom Theriault, a missions pastor from a church involved in holistic ministry, from his writing about the healthy tension between “inreach” and “outreach:”

I’ve gotten a lot of mileage from my M & M soap box…” More and More for Me and Mine Syndrome,” the “What-can-you-do-for-me-today,-God Gospel.” As in the time of Jesus, many are looking for an M & M Messiah, a savior who will deliver us from all manner of oppressions (and depressions and repressions and dysfunctions). As with Jesus’ contemporaries, we are frustrated, if not infuriated (Luke 4:30f), by a savior who is for the world. When He turns the “M & M’s” right-side-up and into “W-W’s” ….a “We are for the World” gospel, we have trouble.

To be sure, ours is a delivering God. But he delivers for a purpose. He delivers us out of our dead-end obsession with self and into the mainstream of His life-giving water that is destined for the nations (Rev. 22:2). We want a “sit-and-soak Savior,” One who fills our little hot tubs up with all kinds of soothing blessings. What we really have is a “Get up and GO God,” One who soothes and saves so that He can launch us out (the root of the word for “mission” is the same as for “missile”) into His Kingdom purposes to soothe and save the world. Hot tubs are great, but if you spend too much time in one you shrivel up and get sick. Same is true for the bath of blessings that our wonderful Savior provides for us. The blessings are meant to be fuel in our little rockets, rockets that have a trajectory set by the Word of God (Luke 4). If we stop with merely basking in the blessings of salvation, we, our families, our churches, will shrivel up and get sick. A body needs exercise, and so does the Body of Christ. The mission of Christ is the exercise regimen prescribed by the Ultimate Personal Trainer.

Bono Preaches at The National Prayer Breakfast

Why is Bono so concerned about the poor?  I know that it is pretty normal for very successful rock stars to resolve their mid life crises by finding a good cause to campaign. Yet, Bono has been on this kick for a while.  I admit to loving his music. I grew up on it.  I attended the U2 tour in Anaheim last year, and was blown away.  He gave time during the sets to the "One" campaign that he started.  He made some hints to his spirtituality (especially during "Yahweh"), but not enough to make any clear line to his faith in Jesus Christ.

Earlier this year Bono was invited to the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington D.C.  He was given considerable time, and he made a plea for poor, sick, and oppressed.  His foundation was Scripture.  Take the time to read.  The texts he uses are solid, and challenges us to ask why it is taking a rock star from Europe to shake up Washington to seek its soul in serving the poor. Read here: Bono's Message.

A Brief Encounter w/ Brian Mclaren

This week Brian Mclaren spoke to a group of local pastors and development workers at the World Vision headquarters here in El Salvador. Traveling with Rene Padilla he is currently on a 7 country Latin American tour discussing his perspectives on the church and the theology of the “Kingdom of God.” I attended partly to hear Rene (whose daughter Ruth is renting her home to us) whom I greatly respect and to hear Brian up close and personal. I’ve heard the debates that rage between those “in” the emergent church movement and those who distance themselves from them. I was intrigued to understand what Brian would have to say to those of us focused on working on behalf of the poor in El Salvador.

Brian spoke through a translator, and I found him to be very humble and approachable. I have heard words like “proud” and “full of himself” from his critics, and I was ready to be offended. Yet, as he spoke I was disarmed by his apparent love for people, especially the poor, and a sense that he really does carry a deep conviction for the gospel. In his presentation, he offered critiques of the U.S. church, and laid out his theological arguments for why it’s in such bad shape. They were comprised from a patchwork of theorists and contextualized by remnants of “Liberation Theology.” He asked us to define the gospel, and gave his answer referring to Jesus’ description of it in scripture when He said that the Kingdom of God was at hand. Brian asked why in today’s churches we don’t pray more for the Kingdom of God to reign on earth if this is what Jesus asked us to pray. He continued with some scathing critiques of the Church’s abuses of theology, people, and power throughout history. He asked why today’s church seemingly cares little for the poor, supports the rich and powerful, abuses the environment, and gives large cheers when thousands die in the middle east. He asked why are we not striving to be disciples who follow in Christ’s footsteps and bring healing to the world that Jesus loves (John 3:16). Most of his critiques held water. I was listening.

Yet, by the end of the session I felt uncomfortable. Not exactly sure, I thought about what seemed off. Questions began from the audience, and it hit me, “How does Brian define salvation?” So I raised my hand and asked. He responded that mine was the core question, and he gave an elaborate explanation to the current Church’s errant focus on individual salvation that is detached from Christ’s heart to save the whole world. He drew a chart and said that instead of first looking at the individual we need to start with Jesus’ desire to save the world. Then he ended by saying that salvation is God’s desire to save the whole world and we are invited to join Him.

I approached him during the break, and he was extremely polite and kind. I asked him about the controversy that surrounds him, to which he acknowledged by saying, “Many think of me as a devil.” I shared that I felt that it was his description of salvation that seems to cause so much division. He didn’t’ seem to disagree, but we had not the time to launch into a long theological discussion. He asked me about our work, and was encouraged to hear about what God is doing in rural churches here in El Salvador. We shook hands and he encouraged me by saying, “Keep up the good work.” I walked away feeling as if Brian was one of the good guys in ministry.

I’ve reflected over the last couple days on my encounter with Brian. In many ways I’m saddened by the fact that the description He gave for salvation seemed to fall short. I feel strongly that without a clear articulation of redemption through the work of the Cross of Christ, there is no salvation, no chance for the Kingdom of God to be lived out on earth. Yet, I can’t stop thinking about the questions that Brian raised in his session. I feel that they are questions that can lead us to repentance as a Church and motivate us to live out the Kingdom of God here on earth, and that to do so does not have to come at the cost of diluting the unbelievable work of Jesus at Calvary. Here are a summary of Brian’s most provocative questions in my best words. Up for discussion…..

  • Have we adopted a gospel of escapism that encourages “Christians” to care less about the world because they are focused on getting on to heaven in the clouds?
  • If the gospel being preached leads people to care less about the poor, injustice, war, racism, consumerism, the environment, is it heresy? Would Jesus want us to ever care less because we “accepted” Him so we could go to heaven?
  • Does the church as a whole defend its actions against the Bible or is it being transformed by it? Are we learning to be good Christians without letting the commands of Scripture get too close, because if they did our lives would be ruined?
  • Does Jesus really love the whole world, as stated in John 3:16? If he does, do we?
  • Are we being formed into the likeness of Christ as Christians today, or are we performing what Dallas Willard (in The Divine Conspiracy) calls “sin management”?
  • Before criticizing the move to contextualize the gospel to a post modern world, are we aware of how the gospel has been corrupted by the capitalistic values of the modern world?
  • Are we making disciples as commanded in Matthew 28, or are we trying to build kingdoms of our own in today’s churches?

Pete