In my last post I spoke of the first of two areas of attention to which I believe the Holy Spirit beckons me in these early days of 2009. It is the ministry of mentoring. Each follower of Jesus needs at least one person who serves as a discipleship guide, and each follower needs to offer such guidance to others. The second area involves grace. This concept, based in the Greek word charis, means a gift that is unearned, undeserved, unanticipated, yet freely given. Grace describes what God offers us in and through Jesus the Christ.
While I served a church in the Kansas City area, our church's program minister was Paula Smith, who now pastors the Mount Washington United Methodist Church in Independence, Missouri. She developed a mentor training program for disciples in our congregation. In that program, she created a unique way for people to experience giving and receiving grace. On a hot summer's weekday evening she took the training group to the baseball complex in our community. In groups of two she gave us coolers filled with iced down bottles of water. Paula told us to move into the crowds of spectators and players and give the water away. No explanations, no expectations - just give people water; no strings attached. It was an amazing experience. Potential recipients were hesitant at first; even distrustful. People couldn't believe that they were receiving something free, without some catch. Once they realized what was happening, it was as if we made their day, with nothing more than a cheap bottle of water.
This taught us how foreign grace is to our lives and our world. Everything costs something. The other shoe always drops somewhere. Grace happens so seldom that people can't believe it when it comes in the form of something as simple as a bottle of cold water. How can we who are communities of Jesus-followers bathe people in grace? People don't need to hear about grace in a sermon, sing about grace in a song, talk about grace in a small group or Bible study, or read about grace in the latest vogue Christian book. People need to experience grace! How could we immerse people in a direct encounter with grace?
Many people are involved in movements such as Cursillo in Christianity, Camino in Christianity or The Walk to Emmaus. These are impacting "grace-bathing" experiences. I've had a chance to be involved in all three since 1990, and I've seen lives transformed through them. As valuable as they are, they involve a four-day commitment apart from one's local church. How can we offer grace directly to any seeker invited to experience our congregations? How can every guest be a recipient of a "grace day"?
I think this is vital to disciple making. What do you think? I'll see you around the next bend in the river.
Raking Leaves
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Fall is here. The sun is moving towards the edge of the frame where, in
just a few weeks it will hit the bumper rail and start back towards the
other side...
2 years ago
1 comment:
"You deserve some grace today!" No, that's not quite it....."Have it your way, grace!" No, still not it,.. "I'd like to buy the world some grace and live in peaceful harmony.... Hmmm, it seems that no matter how we try to make grace fit our world, it just doesn't fit the rational, logical, systematic form we live in. Your free water story is so true, we really don't know how to take grace, and as your story shows, practicing it, giving it is the way we can understand it or recognize it when it comes to us!
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