The real thing!

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There really is a SPLATTER team!

Yesterday night I went to the “changing of the name” ceremony for our local cadets branch.  The cadets stood on parade for over an hour.  Literally stood – with two sit-down/stand-up breaks of about 15 seconds each.  As the evening progressed they began to look weary.  Some wavered!

And then, from just outside the edge of the squadron, two parents wandered into the ranks. They checked on a cadet.  Just to make sure they were alright.

Their mission?   “We are the splatter patrol – we keep them from splattering all over the floor!”

Around the table!

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Two pastors joined me for coffee this morning.  OK, so they had coffee and I had my tea.   We talked of fixing houses, prayer and fasting, cruises and Christ.

Someone once said fellowship is a discipline of the spirit.  I’m inclined to agree.  I have to put myself out.  Out where vulnerabiltiy, honesty and integrity are all tested.

At the same time, there is a benefit!  I need other people around the table with me.  Somehow others re-in-spire (put breath back into me).  And in a society where life can creep away from you faster than a prairie breeze, you sometimes need to catch a breath of fresh air from someone else!

The SPLAT team

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All stages of spiritual growth have their potholes. 

I just want to be prepared for them before they appear! 

Maybe we need a Spiritual Pothole Loss Apprehension Team (SPLAT)!  They would go around making sure they inform us of upcoming potholes.  The team would have Prophets, Apostles, Leaders and Spiritual directors (PALS) to help us out.  Decision Enhancement Nobles Of Magnitudinally Immense Nobility And Totally Intense Organizational Nature (DENOMINATION) would oversee the project.

Anything else we need to add???

Contemplating Contemplation

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In the 1970’s Richard Foster’s Celebration Of Discipline was all the rage in Christian Education circles – especially at the undergraduate level. 

This book was a first for many evangelicals – an attempt to expose people to spiritual disciplines.  At the time, many critics called this type of approach a “works” salvation –  “Do all these things and you will come to know God.”  They saw the emphasis was on the doing – and not much on God’s part – his grace – in all this.  Too bad many of the critics did not read Foster’s book well.  For an even better explanation of the relation of spiritual disciplines to salvation by grace, a more recent tome called “The Spirit of the Disciplines” by Dallas Willard is open for examination.

Tucked in this text was an approach to prayer and spirituality that was “contemplative”.  I could picutre myself like the statue of the thinker, sitting with elbow on knee and head propped on our hand.  Totally engrossed in the thinking process, trying to call up something out of the nothingness in my head!

“You’re opening yourself to the devil!”  was the cry of the critics.  “If you empty yourselves, what fills the space.” 

A very valid criticism.  For years I have sought to fill my mind with the mind of Christ by reading scripture.  By seeking to understand the scriptures.  By asking others about the Scriptures.  By seeking for the Holy Spirit to interpret and apply the scriptures. 

Now, when I come to the question of contemplative prayer and spirituality, I do not fear an empty mind.  I fear more that I will have decided beforehand an answer to a pryaer request, or what God should be talking to me about.  I fear that I will become self-absorbed in prayer and not be open to a “still, small voice”.