[RadCast] On Loving Our Enemies:::

We’ve been conditioned to take sides. There is no exclusivity in loving one another — all of us are called (commanded) to love even our enemies, both in word and action. Tertullian said “It is unique to Christians to love those who hate them.” Luke 6:32-36

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[RadCast] Status & Ambition

Social media makes us weirdly hungry for status (we update our status, right??) Let’s use our Monday ambition to take the role of a servant, because Jesus says so. Mark 9:33-35.

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[RadCast] Life building w/ Jesus :::

Why do we cut corners in building our lives? It’s easier.
Who’s doing the building — is it me or the Lord? It’s both.
(Matthew 7:24-27 & Psalm 127:1)

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[RadCast] Go to Church & Be the Church :::

There are so many things to stop us from gathering as followers of Jesus. The big barriers — sin, guilt, hopelessness — have been broken down by Jesus. All that’s left is our own decision (Hebrews 10:19-25).

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CoronaLanguage, Spiritual Formation, and Bland Optimism

An article I read about CoronaVirus fatigue has a great line in it, which I shall quote:

“It’s difficult when you think you have a light at the other end of the tunnel to look forward to, and then all of a sudden you realize it’s a train.”

I like how words sound and flow. I am elated when I hear a quality phrase that says in a nutshell what so many of us can easily relate to. Just as a picture is worth a thousand words, so this compact little sentence, uttered by a fellow named Gabe Rice, says it all.

Of course, Rice is talking about the whole “hunker down for a week or so and we’ll get the curve flattened” thing that we heard and mostly obeyed in March. Now, nearly five months later, we’re still hunkered down. OR we hunkered up (is that right?) and then hunkered down again when the virus did what viruses do and spread sickness and death.

There is a necessary element to getting through an ordeal, and it’s this: we have to call it what it is, even if that means we say it’s bad. Our cultural affluence tilts us toward two things that really mess up this process. First, we greatly dislike bad experiences. We avoid them or call them out with expectation of correction. The tools at our fingertips include Yelp! reviews, hammering corporations on Twitter, and Karening. I should point out that my beloved mother-in-law is named Karen and is not a Karen, in fact, she is the antithesis.

Second, we hesitate to be negative. If we are negative, pessimistic, or brutally honest, something in us bristles, which harkens back to our aversion to bad experiences. Perhaps I speak only autobiographically here, but I can tell you that, as a leader, I find myself working really hard to find the upshot, lest I be labeled a complainer, a pessimist, or anything but a “positive thinker”. This is often evidenced at a table full of leaders, where one person defines reality in negative yet honest terms, and then another at the meeting says something about looking at the positive side. The folks at the table will typically resound far more with the positive, which functions as a collective sigh of relief. Thank goodness we weren’t negative and uncomfortable for too long. Thank you for rescuing us with optimism. It sure is what it is! Great point!

Then Gabe, a fellow who lives in Arizona and who hunkered down/up/down, comes along and says something that we can resonate with. And I don’t feel the need to rescue or however what he said, because I’m learning to spend time in a harsh reality without pushing the morphine button of bland optimism. It may not be enjoyable, but it is most certainly necessary for our own endurance. Whenever Jesus talked about his crucifixion, he didn’t gloss over the bad stuff. He said it, felt it, and didn’t even live through it. “My God, my God, I don’t mean to complain, but why have you forsaken me? I know, I know: it is what it is” (Psalm 22, amplified optimism translation).

Indeed. It is like the light at the end of the tunnel has become a train. Well said.

Let’s just sit with that for a while and see what gets formed in us.

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[RadCast] On Political Disagreement:::

Is it possible to disagree and still be united as a church? I think so. I hope so (Romans 14:1-4). http://www.radamdavidson.com

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[RadCast] Healing, Expectation, Promise :::

I’ve been stirring on this all weekend. Curious to hear your thoughts (Matthew 8:14-17). Share if you want.

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[RadCast] The Weight of Sin :::

In Romans 7, Paul expresses the frustration we all feel about ourselves — “I don’t understand what I do!” Sin is the problem. It separates us, creating a barrier and weighing us down. The most frustrating part (for me, at least) is that I can’t fix it by myself. But God has not left us to ourselves… (Romans 7:15-19, Hebrews 12:1-2a).

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[RadCast] Social Media Tips from the Psalms :::

David writes “I said to myself, ‘I will watch what I do and not sin in what I say…'” A fine goal, but impossible without the Holy Spirit. http://www.radamdavidson.com

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[RadCast] His commands are not burdensome :::

Following Jesus doesn’t weigh us down, it turns our weakness into strength. Our daily weights are lightened by the strength-giving way of carrying the cross of Christ (1 John 5:3-5).

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