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Christmas Eve Reflections

December 24, 2015 By admin 1 Comment

Photo credit: Snowflakes at Christmas (license)
Photo credit: Snowflakes at Christmas (license)

A couple weeks ago, my nine-year-old daughter approached my wife with grave seriousness. The two went upstairs to our bedroom so my daughter could be ensured privacy as she opened up about something that had been weighing heavily on her heart.

“Sometimes I think Santa isn’t real. I don’t understand why he doesn’t get gifts for you and dad.”

And so began “the talk.”

In our house, we’ve never attempted to make an airtight case for Santa Claus. We mostly asked questions and allowed our kids to navigate it and come to their own conclusions.

The Santa bubble was burst many years ago for my son, but since then even he has allowed his sister to navigate it herself. I’ll never forget the year a Wii showed up under the tree. In his exuberant excitement, my son jumped over to me to say thanks, but he quickly caught himself. Not wanting to devastate his sister’s understanding of Santa, he made sure his back was to her and quietly mouthed “Thank you.”

Over the last year or so, my daughter started piecing things together. Boxes in the basement from Amazon that are strangely similar in size and shape to presents under the tree. Catalogs showing up in the mail shortly after Christmas from companies whose products had shown up on Christmas morning.

And the list goes on.

In short, the reality of what my daughter was experiencing didn’t match up with her understanding of Santa Claus.

My daughter went on to talk about the conflict she was faced with because some of her friends do believe in Santa Claus and some don’t.  My wife’s response was brilliant – something I would never have thought of and one small example of why she’s amazing. I was intrigued as she relayed the story.

“Your friends who don’t believe in Santa Claus? They’re right.”

My heart sank a bit.

“And your friends who do believe in Santa Claus? They’re right, too.”

My face contorted in a bit of confusion.

“There was a man named St. Nicholas who lived a very long time ago and who was very generous…”

A very brief explanation followed of how a real man with a reputation of being very generous eventually morphed into a man who flies through the skies in a sleigh pulled by reindeer to deliver presents to children across the globe.

My daughter was surprisingly content with the whole thing, now able to embrace the truth and spirit of what it all stands for without having to wrestle through the fact that her experiences – and her ever-maturing gut instincts – don’t line up with what’s “supposed” to be true.

I can’t imagine how things would ultimately shake out if we told our daughter that she needed to defend her position or attempt to show others with differing ideas why they’re wrong. Or if we told her that she needed to hold unwaveringly to a belief in flying reindeer. Or if she felt the need to put her friendships on the line by drawing lines in the sand.

I can’t help but reflect on the parallels to my years in the evangelical world, where positions are defended, beliefs do need to be unwavering, and lines are drawn in the sand.

As I sit here across the room from a beautifully decorated Christmas tree with nicely wrapped packages around it, I think about the birth of Jesus. I think about his radical teachings about God, inclusion, and unconditional love, all of which challenged the religious system of the day.

And then I think about the modern institution of Christianity and how the core message of Jesus is often enveloped in so much dogma that many people feel suffocated.

And I desperately wish the church would get better at loosening the grip, allowing people to breathe, and trusting that things are going to be okay.

Tonight, for the first time in many years, my wife and I won’t be putting milk and cookies out for Santa or a carrot out for the reindeer. It might be a little sad that our daughter no longer believes in Santa, but our experience of Christmas will be no less rich and meaningful.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Christianity, Church, Faith, Jesus

Radical Generosity

September 16, 2015 By admin Leave a Comment

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Photo credit: IMG_2579(license)

A long time ago in what certainly feels like a galaxy far, far away, I was talking to a pastor of a vibrant, young church and somehow the topic of money came up.  He told me that when the offering bags got passed on Sunday mornings, he really wanted to announce, “Put money in if you can and take money out if you need it.”

He hadn’t ever actually done it; his faith wasn’t quite there.  Regardless, the very idea really challenged me.  Just let someone reach in and take money?

I was used to giving money to church. I was also used to giving money to help meet people’s needs.

But I wasn’t used to the church giving its money to help meet needs.

That’s something I actually saw very little of.

Aside from the obligatory costs of facilities and salaries, money was primarily used to start new churches, hire interns to help convert more people, and put on events meant to bring new people into the fold.

Photo credit: ”target=”_blank”>Hell Judgment(license)
Photo credit: Hell Judgment(license)

The argument was that we were meeting people’s eternal needs.  Clearly, saving people’s souls from a post-mortem lake of fire was the most responsible use of funds.  And for anyone on the fence about that, there were frequent reminders that Jesus said the poor would always be among us.

So reaching into a bag and taking money out appeared to undermine the most important need.  Never mind the fact that it seemed simply irresponsible.  What if the person taking the money wasn’t truly in need?

Even though every rational part of me fought against this idea, something deep inside tugged at my heart.  It’s as though a still, small voice was saying it was the right thing to do.  And yet, I never thought I’d experience it.

Flash forward about 12 years.  To when I did experience it.  Quite unexpectedly.

A church practicing radical generosity – at the corporate level, though I hate to use that terminology – with no strings attached.  No hoops to jump through.  No case to be made.  No panel required to deem whether a given need is legitimate or the recipient worthy.

Radical generosity where the bottom line is “We’re trusting God.”

It leaves me unsure how to respond.

Just like years before when presented with the idea of taking money from the offering bag, the rigid, Type-A part of me wants to say “No!  That’s irresponsible!  What if people take advantage? ”

But there’s another part of me – the part that gets goose bumps – that screams “Yes!”  What an incredible display of unconditional love.  Of trusting God.  Of faith.

And yet, this is unlike anything I’ve ever experienced.

I’m not going to make blanket statements about radical generosity vs. tight purse strings, as if one was clearly right and one was clearly wrong.  The issue of money and church is a complicated one.

But, regardless of right vs. wrong or responsible vs. irresponsible, I began to ponder how the money situation can be a thought-provoking and powerful reflection of the perspectives we hold on God’s love.

Do we believe God’s love is abundant, generous, and available to everyone with no strings attached and regardless of how ugly a person’s situation might be at any given point in time?  Does God’s love transcend circumstances and boundaries?  Does it reach through the muck and mire to embrace us right where we are?

Or is it tightly controlled and monitored, a contractual agreement of sorts where it’s doled out in its fullness only if a figurative application has been properly submitted with satisfactory answers to essay questions (think “conversion”) and as long as the recipient remains a member in good standing?

I’ve spent most of my life in the second camp, even though I didn’t consciously realize it.  I would’ve probably argued otherwise.

In fact, it’s only when confronted with starkly different experiences – the mere idea of a pastor who wants to tell people to reach in and take money from an offering bag and ultimately the sucker punch of a church that actually practices that level of trust and abundant generosity – that I even began to consider that there are two camps.

And for the first time ever, I started to reflect on the irony of having spent much of my life in churches that are far from generous even though they’re made up of generous people.

It’s an incredibly awkward dichotomy.

But I’m thrilled to be leaning into this new experience and allowing it to re-shape my understanding of God and of what’s holy and divine.

And in the process, hopefully I can rise to the challenge of adopting a true heart of radical generosity myself.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Christianity, Church, Generosity, God, Money

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