The Whole Gospel


Posted at 10:11 PM Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Topic categories: General, Spirituality, Theology, Wes Avram

Image by Padawan under Creative Commons license (creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/deed.en)

Is it personal or is it social?

The question rings through debates that have vexed much of the church over the past couple centuries. It’s been a debate over the message itself. What have we to say to those who ask? Which side are we on? Why is the other side so wrong about Jesus’ message?

But what if neither side is wrong, except in rejecting the other? What if it’s both, and there’s a big, wide, whole message to tell? What if the important question is not if the gospel is personal or social, but how it is personal and social?

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Bring the Past to the Present


Posted at 10:00 AM Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Topic categories: Music at PPC

Many individuals over the years have asked me what makes a good hymn — of course, both music and text. Melodies that last use a lot of stepwise movement, combined with the occasional leap of four or five notes. There is no better melody than “A Mighty Fortress Is Our God,” which opens with a drop of four notes and then runs back up the scale of that interval and then back down again — very easy to hear and very easy to sing. Not all melodies are created equal, and if a melody is weak and sentimental, we’ll enjoy it for awhile, but it won’t stick around.

But hymns that last also require good text that is multi-layered. I sang hymns like “A Mighty Fortress Is Our God” and “The Church’s One Foundation” for many years without realizing their scriptural basis. But once I began to study that scriptural underpinning, every phrase began to take on extra meaning because it echoed with the scriptural context of the phrase.

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Ash Wednesday


Posted at 4:21 PM Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Topic categories: General

Kathleen Norris is one of my favorite writers of faith. In her book, Amazing Grace: A Vocabulary of Faith, Norris writes about the experience of working with a class of grade school children who were writing their own psalms. Psalms are essentially poems on the human condition; the honest expression of our hopes, our fears, our anger, loss and search for God. Children are often better than adults at writing these kinds of things. They have an uncanny ability to speak the truth in ways that we adults hold back from doing. One little boy in Norris’ class wrote a psalm titled, “The Monster Who Was Sorry.” He begins by admitting he hates when his father yells at him; he gets so angry that he pushes his sister down the stairs, and then wrecks his room, and finally wrecks the whole town he lives in.

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Soup for Andre House


Posted at 2:03 PM Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Topic categories: Homelessness Issues, Mission

Every year on Super Bowl Sunday, the teens of our church participate in the Souper Bowl of Caring. Many people in the congregation support their effort by donating their loose change or cash to help fight hunger. Though you may have participated, you may not know much about how this initiative came into being, so I would like to fill you in and then also share with you the impact that our money has on our community.

As the youth group of a church in Columbia, S.C., gathered to watch the Super Bowl game, their youth director began their time with a prayer, “Lord, even as we enjoy the Super Bowl football game, help us be mindful of those without a bowl of soup to eat.” His prayer inspired the teens there that night. They decided why not use the Super Bowl weekend, when people are already gathering to have fun together, to also unify people to help feed the hungry.

Working with another local youth group, they went about collecting donations at their schools and churches and then donated every penny raised to local charities that address the hunger needs of their community. That first collection was in 1990, and since then over $81 million has been raised by teens around the country to help fight hunger in their own communities. The teens of PPC have been participating since 2003, and in that time they have raised over $11,000 that has all be donated to Andre House in order to help them feed hungry people in the valley, this year alone we raised $1,772.

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Digging Down and Rising Up


Posted at 9:53 PM Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Topic categories: General

Last week I had the privilege of presiding at the funeral of a gentleman whose life was, among other things, a testament to the sacredness of God in the dirt of everyday life.

He was an “insurance man” and in so many ways a gentleman. He loved to wear a coat and tie. But he was also an outdoorsman, an avid hiker in Arizona and around the country. He also appreciated the value of manual labor. Digging in the dirt. Moving stuff around. His son recalled being a partner in a tree stump-moving project. He and his dad would tinker around in the backyard digging up and moving around trees stumps — sometimes the same tree stump more than once. There was something therapeutic about digging in the dirt, the sweat, and the physicality.
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SBNR . . . RBNS


Posted at 11:00 AM Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Topic categories: General, Spirituality, Theology, Wes Avram

My friend Lillian Daniel is a United Church of Christ pastor outside of Chicago. She’s good with an acerbic quip, and she excels at giving words to a disposition. She’s been writing for the Huffington Post lately. Last September she wrote a short piece, bursting out with her private frustration with what’s now acronymed SBNR (“Spiritual but not religious”) talk. Her post, “Spiritual But Not Religious? Please Stop Boring Me,” went “viral.” It got comments and criticisms from all over the place. She struck the proverbial nerve. Here’s the first and last paragraph of her short post:

On airplanes, I dread the conversation with the person who finds out I am a minister and wants to use the flight time to explain to me that he is “spiritual but not religious.” Such a person will always share this as if it is some kind of daring insight, unique to him, bold in its rebellion against the religious status quo.
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How’s That Resolution Coming?


Posted at 1:00 AM Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Topic categories: General, Spirituality

Three plus weeks into the New Year. A time when the gym isn’t quite so crowded, the sale on Slim Fast gives way to one on huge cinnamon rolls and many folks don’t want to step on the scale anymore. The promises to spend less or listen more or not worry so much are but a distant memory for many…

Keeping a resolution takes DISCIPLINE. I’ve heard it said that it takes about 30 days to build a new habit or routine. Want to floss more regularly? Do it everyday for a month and it will be a habit. Determined to take those vitamins? Put a reminder on the calendar – or refrigerator – or phone – for at least 30 days and it will become part of your daily routine. Even the radio station I listen to is encouraging listeners to listen to only their style of music (hopefully their music station, I’m sure) for 30 days confident that those who do so will be regular customers.
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Mountain Top Experience


Posted at 11:09 AM Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Topic categories: General

It is safe to say that I have the best job at PPC. Others may debate it, but I am convinced. I just returned from a three day trip with our high school students to Durango, Colo., for our annual ski trip. I am not a skier or a snowboarder, so it isn’t the perks like a weekend of skiing that steals the title for me, but it is the company. Our teens continually show me what being the church is all about. I have been truly blessed to be a part of their lives, and I am confident that Brandon would second that. I know that many of you haven’t had the opportunity to get to know them personally and to be intimately involved in their lives, so let me give you a glimpse of who they are and what their vision of the church is, it truly is inspiring and humbling.

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Around the Blogosphere: Rachel Held Evans and More


Posted at 1:35 PM Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Topic categories: General

If you don’t yet know about Rachel Held Evans, here’s your chance.

In her late 20s, Rachel is an award-winning author, speaker, blogger whose reflections on faith and life have been featured in interviews everywhere from the NPR to the London Times to Oprah. Her first book, Evolving in Monkey Town (Zondervan, 2010), explores the relationship between faith and doubt and recounts the challenges of asking tough questions about Christianity in the context of the Bible Belt. This past October, Rachel finished a yearlong experiment in “biblical womanhood” in which she attempted to follow all of the Bible’s instructions for women as literally as possible. That experiment will be documented in a book published in 2012.
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Ideals in Christian Giving


Posted at 2:52 PM Friday, January 6, 2012
Topic categories: General, Spirituality, Theology, Wes Avram

Been thinking about giving of late. End of the year sort of thing for most pastors, as we watch in wonder and gratitude as our people give love and money to both the church and to many important causes. Giving at Pinnacle has been generous. I shouldn’t be surprised. This congregation is full of wonderfully generous folk.

In a world of development experts, fund raising techniques, endless analyses of giving trends, “benevolence” mindedness, financial anxiety, economic uncertainty, and more, there is no shortage of talk about Christian giving. As I think about this myself I want to offer up four historic principles, or ideas, about Christian giving that have shaped a Reformed Christian understanding of stewardship over the years. They begin with the simple idea that our call to stewardship as believers is a call to tend to the whole of our lives in ways responsive to the gift of life that God has given us. They go on from there to describe four ideas that might seem a bit counter-cultural today.
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