Friday, 12 May 2017

Week one...grounded?


WEEK ONE: life after Mark West 2017



"Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus,because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit who gives life has set you free from the law of sin and death." (Rom 8:1-2)

   
     You’ve just come home from Mark West…all the amazing lessons you learned are greeted with the normalcy of waking up in your own bed and having to survive on your own food (ohhh, where is Ayako when you need her!!!)

     All the new amazing ideas about your life from meeting with Jesus are met with, as Romans 8:1-2 calls it, the “law of sin and death”. On Friday night’s Gala, we heard many friends share from the bottom of their hearts about the struggles of life and their struggle to cling on to Christ for a new life.

During your own private times at camp you may have reflected on the many challenges of your life :

Family challenges: unmet needs, unloving parents or siblings, past hurt, absence of family, abuse by family

Personal challenges: Questions of identity, questions of attraction and sexuality, internal struggles with Mental illness

      Just like we experienced at camp, and at the Gala in particular, its good and healthy to share our burdens vulnerably within the safety of God’s loving community. However, in our humanness, we can easily become the people who identify as the ones who struggle with….( fill-in-the blank). The gloomy clouds of emotions and wounds become the content of most of our conversations. These begin to dominate our mental and spiritual world, they become the lenses through which we see life.

So, if we can’t change the past, and we feel stuck in the muddy waters of present pain, how can we find the new kind of freedom in Christ that scripture repeatedly describes?

Romans 8 describes this seemingly ambiguous concept of “…the law of the Spirit who gives life…”

- In a recent sermon (listen here), my pastor Andy Perrett at Granville Chapel compared this stuckness of our lives to a massive jumbo jet sitting on the ground.

     When seen in one way, there’s no way this beast should fly. Its made of tons of steel and wires, then loaded with tones of people and cargo. While on the ground the plane is actually a very useless and cumbersome machine, which can only inhabit the protected grounds of an airport.

     However…when seen through the eyes of the engineers who designed it, the special shape of the wings and body, along with the powerful jet engines, are perfectly matched to give the massive jet a purpose far beyond the confines of its useless role in the airport. Once loaded, the skilled pilots light the engines and throttle forward. The speed of this specially shaped craft meets the rushing wind and it takes to the skies bound for any destination around the globe desired by the pilot. Flight is what the craft is designed for, and the thrust of the jet engines is the key to its flight. 

     This analogy fits nicely Paul’s image in Romans 8 of being stuck in sin and death, but then being lifted by the energy of God’s Spirit at work in us.
   
     In the decades after Jesus’ resurrection, the early church writers of the Bible were struggling to put into words to their experience of God’s Holy Spirit working among them. What they describe as “the power of the Spirit to give us life” can be compared to the thrust provided to lift a big jet. 

     As I mentioned at the beginning, the challenges of our life can leave us stuck and longing for a lift. My encouragement to you is that real change comes when we allow the Spirit to work in us with power. Ok, so we want this life of the Holy Spirit, but how do we access it? Especially if we’ve walked with Jesus for a long time, we’ve likely tried in many ways to overcome our struggles and walk in new ways. We’ve tried to apply the Bible teachings to live in God’s ways.

 Here are three suggestions as I think of Mark’s gospel and my experiences of putting this into practice.

1. REPENT
     Mark’s gospel invites us to REPENT.  In Mark 1 we discovered that repent means to :

change our mind + change our life

     The more we yield our mind and our life to Jesus, the more lift becomes available as his Spirit finds a home within us and begins redirecting our lives. I’m repeatedly amazed that when I quiet myself and am honest, Jesus though the Spirit is more than willing to nudge me towards repentance in very applicable ways. He prompts me to give up past anger, to say sorry to people I’ve hurt or who have hurt me, or to pick up a positive habit that I know is needed but I’ve been lazy to invest in. Just this Monday I responded to the Spirit’s nudge to engage in prayer and fasting for the day (a past practice that I had abandoned). When practiced, repentance becomes a refreshing daily pattern where new ways and fresh ideas flood our minds and lead to the life we’ve been chasing after.

2. Change your MIND

   Romans 1:5 is a helpful addition to this puzzle (The whole of Romans chapter 8 is worth your time to read)

“Those who live according to the flesh have their minds set on what the flesh desires; but those who live in accordance with the Spirit have their minds set on what the Spirit desires.”

     The emphasis here is on setting our minds in a new direction, specifically “on what the Spirit desires”. Just like learning any new thing, we need to fill our minds with new ideas and determine to let them change our old ideas. In my experience, this change of mind comes through the mysterious combination of my efforts and the Spirit’s filling. As I say YES and NO to various thoughts in my mind according to God’s word and the Spirit’s nudging, God’s new ideas take root in my mind and I feel changed. New joys and new desires grow like healthy plants bearing fruit in places where there was only weeds and hard soil.

 3. Community

     In Mark we see a community of people struggling after following Jesus. Our struggle gets seasoned with joy and hope as we walk in the Spirit with a community of others doing the same.  Scripture never teaches about individuals becoming spiritual super stars. That’s a modern, western pre-occupation that we may need to repent of (see step 1).


     In this life we are a journey through a land stuck between darkness and light. We walk with joy towards a known destination and the presence of God's Spirit is a seal of guarantee​ that we are on God's right path. 

We do this by setting our minds on spirits ways (our effort saying yes allows God's power to work). Joy and peace enter us. 



So Friends…
 Are you ready to “make straight paths” for God in your life, as John the Baptist preached?

  Are you ready to “repent and believe in the gospel” as Jesus preached?

Buckle up for take off and let God's Spirit begin lifting you off the runway and into the air to travel with him to new places of his life and wholeness