Friday, July 31, 2009

12 Foundational Tenets of Emotionlly Healthy Spirituality

Adapted from Pete Scazzero...

These are further reflections on some theological underpinnings for what it means to integrate emotionally healthy spirituality into our lives.

  1. Theology- We must root our lives and churches in the living Jesus who is God Almighty as revealed in Scripture by the Holy Spirit. We take seriously the model of the early church fathers (e.g. Ignatius of Antioch, Athanasius, Cyril of Alexandria, Basil, Gregory the Great, Augustine, Iraneus and others) who were leaders of local churches or bishops, theologians who studied Scripture seriously as they engaged culture, and monastics who prayed their theology. They sought to live in communion with the Trinity. We are not CEO’s, psychologists, social workers or orators. Rather we seek to be men and women who lead our lives from deep, experiential knowledge of God’s Word.
  2. A Humble Spirit to Learn from the Whole Church – We affirm our evangelical roots and, at the same time, learn from the larger, global Church. We are part of a church family that goes back to Pentecost and the early church, anchoring ourselves in the Nicene Creed of 325 AD that reminds us, that we are part of “one, holy, catholic (i.e. universal) and apostolic church.” God calls us to advance His kingdom and be generous towards those streams in the church that are different from ours –- Mainline Protestant, Pentecostal et al.
  3. A Sense of Global Church History– EHS requires a basic understanding of church history. This includes the early heresies out of which our faith was forged (e.g. gnosticism), splits through church history (East and West in 1054 AD, the Reformation, Anglican, Protestantism), and the many hard lessons learned through history.
  4. Contemplative, Monastic Spirituality – The worldliness that dominates the church today parallels that of the Roman Empire in the 4th and 5th century. Following the example of Moses, Elijah, John the Baptism and Jesus, the desert fathers fled to the desert to seek God, we too must find our deserts in the midst of our business. We can learn a great deal from the contemplative, monastic tradition as we seek to remain firmly rooted as we engage the world with the gospel. In our day, we need to develop rhythms and a deep spirituality from which we can hear God clearly and identify the idols both around and in us.
  5. Integrity in Our Leadership – Church transformation and growth begins with our own integrity. As go the leaders, so goes the church. We must help one another, and our ministries to be truth tellers – to ourselves and others. It means a refusal to lie, exaggerate or use the ministry to bolster a false sense of self. We must also call one another to summon the courage to actually lead our people to maturity and fruitfulness regardless of the personal cost to us.
  6. Emotionally Healthy Practices – Leading a healthy community requires mastering new practices out of which people can now relate, in Christ, in a way different than their family of origin. Clean fighting, clarifying expectations, learning to speak clearly, directly, honestly and respectfully, listening fully like Christ, exploring beneath our icebergs, for example, are new skills we bring to our board, staff teams, small groups, and communities.
  7. The Marriage Covenant– Focusing on marriage as central to our spiritual formation is rarely talked about at seminaries or pastoral leadership conferences. This tragedy is unbiblical (1 Tim. 3:6-7) and an “elephant in the room” of our churches. If we as leaders cannot work out the power of the gospel in our own homes first, we will not be able to bring that power to our churches. For leaders who are married, this is our first priority after Christ. We receive this limit as God’s gift to us who are married. For this reason, a strong marriage and family ministry is a natural outgrowth for emotionally healthy churches.
  8. Sexuality – Discipleship in our sexuality is central to our following of Christ. Sexuality is no longer a side issue. Learning to commune and connect with our spouses, distinguishing sensuality and sexuality, and understanding sexuality as a pointer to our marriage with Christ that will culminate in union and oneness, are all examples of the kind of gifts we now bring into our homes and churches.
  9. Calling, Life and Work –A biblical theology eliminates the sacred/secular divide in our lives. Every Christian is called (not simply pastors and missionaries). That calling extends to every part of our lives, be it home, work, church, neighborhood, or our prayer life. Part of emotionally healthy spirituality leads to equipping our people in a theology of work. We equip and commission our people to create and shape for Christ in their workplace, push back the chaotic forces of the evil one, and build community in those places.
  10. Preaching and Teaching – The most important element for pastors/leaders to become better preachers is to continue working on our own spiritual formation. Our preaching now flows out of a contemplative life. We pray deeply over the Word we teach, now taking the time to allow truth to gestate and be birthed through us. This is a new way of leading the church, requiring study, time, reflection and, most importantly, a life of communion with God.
  11. Bringing Christ to Culture (Contextualization) — We are deeply committed to lead people to a deep, personal relationship with Jesus. Our challenge today is to adapt our structures and ways of doing church to best communicate Him in our rapidly changing culture. In a world of twitter, blogs, and YouTube, along with increased globalization, what will it mean for us to preach Jesus effectively in our generation? How can we be rooted in our rich, ancient past, while at the same time, break new ground in contextualizing the gospel in our cultures?
  12. Bridging Racial, Cultural, Economic and Gender Barriers – A critical issue for the church in the 21st century is the development of leadership and churches that can bridge racial, cultural and economic barriers. We seek to apply the power of the gospel, as seen in the book of Acts and Ephesians, to break down the dividing walls that continue to keep the 21st century church segregated by race, culture and class.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Christian Meditation

As a community of faith we have a vision of learning how to love. An essential part of the journey includes quieting our anxious hearts before God and learning how to listen for the voice of God. As I have shared several times, we are learning how to listen for the voice of God calling us his beloved (from Henri Nouwen). Once we grow accustomed to hearing God's affirming words and infused grace, we begin to call forth the belovedness in other people. So, contemplative spirituality is an important key. Christian meditation is closely associated to contemplative spirituality. This makes many conservative Christians nervous because it's thought to engage the mindless repetition of words (or one word) that Jesus spoke against in Matthew 6:7. I see Christian meditation launching point into the presence of God. The Lord's prayer happens to be divided up into separate phases that are perfect to meditate on. Also, consider these passages from the book of Psalms that speak to the need/benefits of Christian meditation: Psalm 1:2; 4:4; 27:4; 39:3; 48:9; 63:6; 77:6, 12; 119:15, 23, 27, 48, 52, 78, 97, 99, 117, 148; 143:5; 145:5. (Click here to go to a Bible Gateway list.)

Recently I went back and re-read one of the first books that came my way as a newbie Christ-follower in 1974. The book has become a Christian classic -- Knowing God by J.I. Packer. Packer's theology is reformed (i.e., conservative) and yet he talks easily about the need for Christian meditation. Take a look at the following excerpts:

How can we turn our knowledge about God into knowledge of God?

The rule for doing this is demanding, but simple. It is that we turn each truth that we learn about God into a matter for meditation before God, leading to prayer and praise to God.

Meditation is a lost art today, a Christian people suffer grievously from their ignorance of the practice. Meditation is the activity of calling to mind, and thinking over, and dwelling on, and applying to oneself, the various things that one knows about the works and ways and purposes and promises of God. It is the activity of holy thought, consciously performed in the presence of God, under the eye of God, by the help of God, as a means of communion with God. Its purpose is to clear one’s mental and spiritual vision of God, and to let His truth make its full and proper impact on ones mind and heart. It is a matter of talking to oneself about God, and oneself; it is indeed, often a matter of arguing with oneself, reasoning oneself out of moods of doubt and unbelief into a clear apprehension of God’s power and grace. Its effect is ever to humble us, as we contemplate God’s greatness and glory, and our own littleness and sinfulness, and to encourage and reassure us -- ‘comfort’ us, in the old, strong, Bible sense of the word -- as we contemplate the unsearchable riches of divine mercy displayed in the Lord Jesus Christ. These were the points stressed by Spurgeon in the passage which we quoted in the beginning, and they are true. And it is as we enter more and more deeply into this experience of being humbled and exalted that our knowledge of God increases, and with it our peace, our strength, and our joy. God help us, them to put our knowledge about God to this use, that we all may in truth ‘know the Lord.’ (pgs 18-19).

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