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Author: Jeff Kennon

I am the director of the Baptist Student Ministries at Texas Tech University. I am married to Paige, and have three children, Krista, Justin, and Josh.

Fuel For The Mind

The glory with which Jesus was glorified and the glory for which Jesus prayed for us is quite different from the kinds of glory that we are conditioned to want and admire. This glory is not conspicuous. It is not glamorous. It is not the glory that gets featured in glossy magazines or travel posters. It is not a glory noticed by fashion editors. It is not a glory that flatters our lusts and egos.

When we look up the glory in Jesus we find–are we ever ready for this?–obscurity, rejection and humiliation, incomprehension and misapprehension, a sacrificial life and an obedient death: the bright presence of God backlighting what the world despises or ignores.

Eugene Peterson, Christ Plays in Ten Thousand Places, p. 103



Photo by Janko Ferlič on Unsplash

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When Jesus Stopped!

For God so loved the world…that he stopped! In the Gospel of Mark, there is a story of a woman who had a blood issue (Mark 5:24-34). This “discharge of blood” had been a problem for her for 12 years or so. Most likely it was a hemorrhage which meant she would have also been considered “ceremonially unclean” (Leviticus 15:25-27) and therefore, would not have been permitted to participate in worship in the temple. And though she had exhausted all her resources, a cure could not be found. Bottom line, she felt hopeless!

She had heard of Jesus however. She had heard that he was healing people. So she began to think that if she could just get to Him, wholeness would come to her again. If she could, at the very least, just touch the bottom of his garment. If she could just grab a thread, then this 12-year malady would disappear.

So she goes after Jesus to get a touch. She probably thought no one would notice. And that’s most likely how she would have preferred it. The crowd was compacted around Jesus. Everyone was bumping into each other. No one would know. You can almost visualize her getting close behind Jesus and squeezing her arm through the crowd to brush her hand against Jesus’ cloak. That’s all she needed after all. Just a light touch.

Chances are, a small touch is all she got. But once again, that’s all she needed to be healed. One touch produced a miracle! She may have wanted to scream, but she didn’t want to draw attention to herself so she refrained. She may have even begun to weep. We don’t know what she did, but we do know what Jesus did. Her touch, though ever so small, made him stop. He realized something had happened and so he stopped, turned around, and began to ask who had touched him. Kind of a crazy question to ask in a crowd of people pressing around you. But this touch was different. It was a touch of faith. And Jesus knew it.

When Jesus turned around, this woman, now free from disease, came forward. She knew she was the cause of the abrupt halt. So, she fell in front of Jesus. And she did so in “fear and trembling.” After all, she was a woman and women were considered second class citizens in that culture. In addition, she knew that it was forbidden for someone like her, being deemed “ceremonially unclean” because of her disease, to touch a rabbi. Yet she confessed.

Now Jesus does what only Jesus can do at this point. Though the text does not say so, I think he takes her by the hand, helps her up and looks her in the eyes before he speaks most compassionately, “Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace, and be healed of your disease.” “Daughter!” He called her daughter. She’s not only physically healed, she’s now in the family.

Here’s the story of a desperate woman who sees her only hope of any healing coming from Jesus. As a result, she breaks a few social and religious customs and touches him. After all, she is desperate. And desperate people will do almost anything. They aren’t worried about rules or customs. They are at the bottom and have nothing to lose. When you are flat on your back and are without hope, there is nothing too extreme that you will not do to find relief.

This woman was as needy as you can get. And Jesus was her only hope. She knew he healed others so why not her? And Jesus came through in Jesus-like fashion. He healed! He restored! He stopped!

He stopped! With the crowd all around him while walking to a synagogue ruler’s house to heal a little girl, Jesus stopped. Jesus, who no doubt had many demands upon him and questions asked of him, stopped. Jesus, God in the flesh, the one in whom all things were created, stopped.

This is our God! This is our creator. He is personal. He is present. And he overlooks no one. We may feel we are just another cog in the wheel or just another face in the crowd, but Jesus stopped. He meets us where we are and  in whatever condition we find ourselves. As he comes to us and as we reach out to him, he does not parade by for Jesus has come to “seek and save that which was lost” (Luke 19:10).

For God so loved the world…that he stopped!

Photo by Fernando Venzano on Unsplash

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New Goals? New Habits? Making Progress?

It’s 2019! Happy New Year! I hope it’s not too late to wish such merriment. So as this year has been morphing into full-bloom, I made a discovery. I did not post anything on this site in 2018. It’s not that I didn’t have goals or desires to do so. In fact, if you dust off my last post, I admitted that I was trying to find some type of rhythm to my blogging/writing life. My goal? To obviously get into some type of schedule. My results? I’d rather not talk about them.

Now don’t judge me too quickly. I’m sure most of you have set goals and not completed them. Or must I remind you of your own past resolutions to exercise, eat healthy, read your Bible daily, etc…. I’m not saying you didn’t do these things, I hope you did. But it’s not easy! I feel the pain of those who struggle in reaching a goal, but want to encourage you to think about goals a bit differently. So what am I trying to say in the first post So what am I getting at with this first post in over 18 months?

During my renewed fervor to begin writing on this site again, I began reading Atomic Habits by James Clear. It’s a book in which he not only relies upon research, but upon his personal experience as well. He conclude the following in regards to reaching goals…

  • If you want better results, then forget about setting goals. Focus on your system instead
  • You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems.

Clear is not saying we shouldn’t have goals. They are crucial in helping determine the direction we need to head. But if you want to make progress, for him, it’s all about daily habits. For example, if I want to read 10 books this year, that won’t happen unless I develop a habit of reading a certain amount of minutes each day. Clear gives quite a bit more info in his book about the value of habits and how to develop them. I suggest you pick up a copy of his book.

So I do have a goal for writing and sharing content this coming year. But more importantly, I am working on developing some daily habits. I hope those who read some of the content on this site will benefit from them. And if you wish, feel free to ask me how it’s going!

Before I wrap up this confessional-like post, I would be amiss if I didn’t ask you about your goals or resolutions for the coming year? If you are already struggling with them, that’s ok! However, I suggest you begin to think about making some daily habits. It’s one thing to say you’re going to begin praying for your co-workers this year, and quite another to make it a habit of praying for them each day before you turn your car off and enter the office.

I pray you press on! And like I’m doing with this blog, don’t think too grandiose. Think simply! Start small. For me and this blog, this means two posts a week. One will be something I’ve composed (not too long) and another will be a quote from something I’m reading.

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Finding A Rhythm

I realize it’s been a while since I have posted anything. I know this a major taboo in blogging.  It’s not that I haven’t written anything, just haven’t made it public.

I guess I’m still trying to find my rhythm. When to post? How much? You would think I would have found my groove by now since I have had this blog site up for a couple of years now. But obviously, I’m a bit slow.

As I think about trying to get back on some sort of schedule, whether that be posting something once a week or prayerfully not, once a year, I am reminded of something I heard from Cleophus J. LaRue, professor of Homiletics at Princeton Theological Seminary. In regards to standing up and preaching, he said, “Are you up because you have something to say? Or are you up because you have to say something?”

I hope that as I occasionally write, and as I preach and teach as well, that I am doing so out of an overflow of being intimate with God. Granted, I know there are times that I put words on a page and stand up and teach just because that is what is expected, and I understand the importance of discipline in doing so. However, I pray that I will “crawl into the cranium of God to a acquire the Word of God and crawl of of the cranium of God to deliver the message (whether writing of speaking) wither fervor and conviction because of being in an intimate relationship with God” (Doctrine That Dances, p. 109).

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Building A Cathedral!

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Life is pretty daily! I know that might sound funny, but it is. And ministering and serving others is the same way. It’s very daily. As unspiritual as it might sound, ministry can be very ordinary. In our culture of excitement, we expect our discipling of others to always be magical. We imagine angels singing behind us in our daily praying for others. And yet most times, it’s just standard ritual.

Therefore, in the midst of ministry that is every day in nature, it can become easy to lose sight of the bigger picture. In the day to day service and the sharing of our lives with those around us, we can forget why we do what we do. We can lose sight of the forrest for the trees, so to speak.

I recently read about a story of two stonecutters. Each was asked what they were doing. One responds, “I am cutting stone in a perfectly square shape.” The other responds, “I am building a cathedral.”

Personally, I sometimes forget the bigger picture. I fail to remember that it’s larger than just “cutting stone in a perfectly square shape.” It’s about building a kingdom. It’s about being a part of something grander than myself though the task at the time might appear routine. The weekly meeting of a friend for prayer or the washing of the dishes for my family (see Theology of Washing Dishes) are in the larger scheme of things, “building a cathedral.”

If all of the above is true, then maybe we should rejoice more in the routine of ministry that is a part of the life and place we daily inhabit.  I realize this is hard to do living in a world that continues to wait for the next big thing, but we must try. I love the words of Christopher Ash as he writes that “the best kinds of ministry are, more often than not, long term and low key.”

So it’s true that “we are cutting stones into squares.” Ministry can be, and really is, routine and ordinary. And yet we must never forget that we are a part of something much bigger. The writer of Hebrews tells us that those who came before us, though not sure of how it would all work out, were looking to something greater. Though our ancestors in the faith died “not having received the things promised,” they continued on for they were “desiring a better country, that is, a heavenly one” (Hebrews 11:13-16).

We need to realize that we might be planting shade trees that we will never sit under. We might never see the finished product, but we  must trust that anything that we do for God is not wasted, no matter how small we think it might be. So today, let’s delight in making some square stones knowing that in reality, we are building a cathedral.

 

 

 

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What Personality Is Needed For Ministry?

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What personality is needed for ministry? Interesting question isn’t it? Personally, I don’t really like it. And I’m not sure I’ve ever heard someone ask it aloud with such clarity, but I do know it’s on people’s minds. Therefore, I  think it’s a question that should be addressed. Here’s why.

First of all, I think there are those who think they don’t have what it takes for ministry. Whether one is considering ministry as a vocation or just beginning to understand the role of ministry that all Christ-followers have, there can be a tendency to believe that we might not have the right personality for the job. This is especially true in regards to evangelism. There’s no way you can be an introvert and be an evangelist, right?

When I was younger and began thinking about entering ministry as a vocational choice, one concern I had was whether or not I could be like the pastors and other church staff I knew. I didn’t really seem to fit the mold (or so I thought). Over the past several years, I have had several conversations with others who felt the same. Specifically, they were youth ministers who felt they weren’t the cool, fun-loving, athletic-type person needed.

Second, I think this question needs to be addressed because of my understanding that God uses all people. In fact, throughout history, He has seemed to use the most unlikely. We need to beat this truth into our heads. Consider the words of Paul to the church in Corinth: Not many of you were wise according to worldly standards, not many were powerful, not many were of noble birth. But God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong; God chose what is low and despised in the world, even things that are not, to bring to nothing things that are (1 Cor. 1:26-28).

The ones that God chooses “are not just ‘have-nots'”, writes James K. A. Smith, “they’re ‘are-nots!’ And yet they are chosen and commissioned as God’s image bearers, God’s princesses and princes who are empowered to be witnesses of a coming kingdom and charged with the renewal of the world.”

So what personality is needed for ministry? Well, simply put, it is the personality that you have been gifted with. You might think you are too quiet and shy. Or you might think that you are too loud. But regardless, you should know that “you were made just as you are so that you can [minister] to a particular people” (see Get Real by John S. Leonard). No doubt there might be times when you have to speak up in spite of your shyness and listen instead of always talking, but make no mistake about it, you have the personality needed for God to use.

When Paul counters the argument among the Corinthians of whom they thought was best to follow, whether it be him or Apollos or someone else, Paul made it clear that they were being worldly in their thinking. Paul writes, What then is Apollos? What is Paul? Servants through whom you believed, as the Lord assigned to each. I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth. So neither he who plants nor he who waters is anything, but only God who gives the growth. He who plants and he who waters are one, and each will receive his wages according to his labor. For we are God’s fellow workers (1 Cor. 3:5-9).

God chooses to use all personalities and giftings so therefore, we should rejoice in all as each are given for the purpose of making Him known. So whether you are introverted or extroverted, you have the personality needed. Thank God for it and serve others with it.

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Quote Of The Week

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Don’t settle for the false heaven of a “successful ministry.” Because real success is faithfulness. Big church or small church, growing church or declining church, well-known church or obscure church—all churches are epic successes full of the eternal, invincible quality of the kingdom of God when they treasure Jesus’ gospel and follow him. Jesus did not give the keys of the kingdom with the ability to bind and loose on both sides of the veil only to those who’d reached a certain attendance benchmark. So do well, pursue excellence, and stay faithful. God will give you what you ought to have according to his wisdom and riches.

Jared C. Wilson

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