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Building On Jesus

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You and I will disagree.

Most people think this is a problem. I disagree.

First of all, I disagree with myself sometimes. You may think that’s impossible, but as a growing human being, I change my mind sometimes. I think that’s healthy.

Other times, Future Me disagrees with Present Me. Or, sometimes Present Me disagrees with Past Me. So if I argue with myself, I’m bound to disagree with a completely different human being from time to time.

The question isn’t whether we disagree. The question is what we do with the disagreement.

Some disagreement comes from one or more of us not being submitted to Jesus. The fix for that is for both of us to submit to Christ in whatever area.

But a lot of disagreements come from the fact that we’re human. We’ll approach things differently. It’s bound to happen. In those places, the fix is for us to accept one another as Christ has accepted us. Remember: God has accepted Communists, Trump supporters, terrorists, homosexuals, and housewives when they’ve repented and turned to Jesus. His very first disciples contained a tax collector and a zealot who wanted to overthrow the Romans because of taxation!

The point is that Christ calls men and women from different backgrounds. He also calls us to accept believers who agree with us on Jesus but disagree with us on other issues.  This requires us to sacrifice and put others before ourselves.  The only way a body can continue in this very diverse situation is if the unity that they have is in Jesus.

For no one can lay any foundation other than the one we already have—Jesus Christ.

1 Corinthians 3:11

And if you and I disagree about something, even about spiritual matters, but we are both following the real Jesus and seeking to understand and obey the Bible, then I can put up with you disagreeing with me.  I hope you can put up with me disagreeing with you.

I write these words about you and me. But if you’ve been paying attention, they’re not just about you and me. They’re about how much we are all willing to lay down our lives in order to build the body of Christ on its one foundation—Jesus.

Focus

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Lately I’ve been thinking about the concept of “focus.”

In my job, I’ve largely come to the conclusion that I’m paid to focus. I have skills that I’ve learned over time, sure. But at the end of the day most of those skills can be taught to someone else. Really I’m paid to make sure that someone pays attention to the particular part of my company that I’ve been assigned to watch.

In your job, I’m sure you’re paid to focus as well. You might have a different kind of focus than my job requires, a different emphasis or skill set, but I’m guessing your job wants you to stay focused on whatever it is you’re put in charge of.  Because of the different pressures on the economy, anything that can be automated will. That leaves focus (and creativity, which requires a particular kind of focus) as one of the main assets we have in the workforce.

But focus isn’t just a topic to discuss in business or economics. The battle for our focus is happening all around us.  If you think about it, in the West we have less menial tasks than ever before. You would think that would mean we have more ability to focus on things that are important. But with a decrease of of menial tasks brought on by technology, we actually have an increase of new things competing for our attention. There are countless blogs, podcasts, radio stations- the list goes on. It’s counter-intuitive, but the progress that in theory has given us more time to focus has also given us more to focus on.

Nowhere is this more true than our walks with the Lord.  More than ever, technology that makes our lives easier (and I’m mainly talking about our smart phones here) also distracts us more from spending time with Jesus. It’s now easier than ever to be reading your Bible (Youversion, anyone?) and flip over to Facebook real quick to see how many likes you’re getting.

This is dangerous because we become what we focus on. The Apostle John tells us when Jesus appears we will become like Him because we will see Him as He is (1 John 3:2). Jesus tells us the pure in heart (those that focus on purity) will see God (Matthew 5:8). David tells us in the Psalms that the one who looks to God as a deliverer becomes radiant (Psalm 34:5). I could go on. You become like what you are giving attention to.

That said, are you becoming more and more like our culture? Or are you becoming radiant like God is?

The difference, my friends, might be in what you’re focusing on.

Maybe it’s time for a new focus.

Photo Credit: Focus* by Michael Dales

* I did crop a few things. 😉

The Wisdom of Twitter on Apostolic Christianity

Twitter Icon

One of the things I love about social media is the ability to crowd source information on topics that the books haven’t even been written on yet.  Case in point: The last few weeks I’ve been writing about apostolic Christianity and it’s implications for the church.  In the midst of writing a new post, I searched twitter for the phrase “apostolic Christianity” and came across a host of people I’ve never met tweeting about apostolic Christianity.

Now, if you follow me on Twitter (which you really should, if you’re not, you’re only getting part of the story), you’ve seen my little (re)Tweet storm about apostolic Christianity. But for those of you who haven’t, below you’ll find a list of gems I found searching Twitter about apostolic Christianity.  And for those of you who are on Twitter, stroll on over to my Twitter page, follow me, and let me know you’re following from the blog.

Apostolic Christianity Series


Photo Credit: Twitter Icon by Jurgen Appelo