Archive for the ‘History’ category

The Men Who Would Not be Pastor: Moses

October 21st, 2008

Many many years ago, I found myself searching for a new church. I sent out dozens of applications, had a plethora of interviews and exchanged hundreds of emails. Time and again, something with this whole process kept bothering me, but I could not put my finger on it. A hallmark moment came as I sat and talked with a search team from a particular church back East. I still don’t know that I can explain that moment with total clarity, so using a little creative writing and humor, I thought I would take you through a tour of the Scripture to look at some of the men who would never make it through the pastoral search process.

Dear Moses,

We have been working hard to find the right man for our church. We have put in a lot of hours and looked over all that you sent in. While we feel you are a qualified man, we just don’t think you are a good match for our needs. We wanted to share with you some of our thoughts in hopes that it will help you find a better fit.

We listened to your sermon tapes and while the content was very good, we felt that your stuttering problem was a hurdle we just could not overcome. Our people are accustomed to really quality preaching, and we feel that your lack of polish and clarity would distract from their ability to listen to you week in and week out. Our people need more than good content to learn. We really need an entertaining and dynamic speaker who can connect us to God’s Word.

While we trust that God has called you, we also understand that you have resisted God’s leading at key points along the way. We want a guy who is passionate about doing this ministry and who will never question God’s call on his life. We also understand that your wife does not totally support your calling and has acted out against you on at least one occasion. These doubts you have both demonstrated over time give us pause about your potential effectiveness as a leader.

You seem to have some good people skills Moses, and everyone says that you have a certain glow about you that really reflects God’s presence. However, we also found in talking with some of your references that you have struggled with some anger problems. It was reported to us that you once threw down, and broke, some important Church property when you saw your congregation doing some bad things. This is clearly not the way to handle those kinds of situations and we really need a pastor who is always in control of himself in tough situations because our people really do a lot of sinning.

Probably most disturbing of all is your clear lack of leadership ability. While we appreciate the difficulties of leading a mega-church with millions of followers, we were not impressed with the many instances of rebellion under your tenure. We understand that in one case of embezzlement, you forced the congregation to make a public declaration of whose side they were on and then you struck down all those who disagreed with your policies. We agree that keeping high moral standards is important, but your methods seem a bit harsh and unloving. In addition, your lack of vision seems to have kept the people wandering about for the past 40 years. Our people tend to be a bit stubborn so we really need a leader who has demonstrated more skill in guiding his congregation.

Thank you for considering us as a potential match to your call and we hope you find the right congregation that will better match your gifts and experience.

Thanks,
The Search Team

——- Other Applicants Rejected by the Church ——-
——- Related Posts ——-
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Will you believe them?

October 17th, 2008

I received an email today with a cartoon attached reminding people about the German Holocaust. I wanted to share that cartoon with you today, but first let me set the stage for why this is important during our election season.

When a nation is in turmoil, political extremists rise to power using populist ideology. The IHR provides some context.
“We have the power. Now our gigantic work begins.”

Those were Hitler’s words on the night of January 30, 1933, as cheering crowds surged past him, for five long hours, beneath the windows of the Chancellery in Berlin.

His political struggle had lasted 14 years. He himself was 43, that is, physically and intellectually at the peak of his powers. He had won over millions of Germans and organized them into Germany’s largest and most dynamic political party, a party girded by a human rampart of hundreds of thousands of storm troopers, three fourths of them members of the working class. He had been extremely shrewd. All but toying with his adversaries, Hitler had, one after another, vanquished them all.

At a time when our American economy is in trouble, and many people are suffering, we should remember that we are not the first nation to suffer.
Today, it’s easy to assume that Germans have always been well-fed and even plump. But the Germans Hitler inherited were virtual skeletons.

During the preceding years, a score of “democratic” governments had come and gone, often in utter confusion. Instead of alleviating the people’s misery, they had increased it, due to their own instability: it was impossible for them to pursue any given plan for more than a year or two. Germany had arrived at a dead end. In just a few years there had been 224,000 suicides – a horrifying figure, bespeaking a state of misery even more horrifying.

By the beginning of 1933, the misery of the German people was virtually universal. At least six million unemployed and hungry workers roamed aimlessly through the streets, receiving a pitiful unemployment benefit of less than 42 marks per month. Many of those out of work had families to feed, so that altogether some 20 million Germans, a third of the country’s population, were reduced to trying to survive on about 40 pfennigs per person per day.

In America, we face our own period of social angst. Our politicians have sold out the people for power, naked voter fraud has gone unchecked, and religious leaders have traded the Gospel for politics. America is not far from the corruption of the Weimar Republic that put Germany in a downward spiral that none thought they could survive.

Their situation on January 30, 1933, was tragic. Like the rest of Germany’s working class, they had been betrayed by their political leaders, reduced to the alternatives of miserable wages, paltry and uncertain benefit payments, or the outright humiliation of begging.

Germany’s industries, once renowned everywhere in the world, were no longer prosperous, despite the millions of marks in gratuities that the financial magnates felt obliged to pour into the coffers of the parties in power before each election in order to secure their cooperation. For 14 years the well-blinkered conservatives and Christian democrats of the political center had been feeding at the trough just as greedily as their adversaries of the left…

To all appearances, the incumbents who had been elected were there forever. They received fat salaries (a Reichstag deputy got ten times what the average worker earned), and permitted themselves generous supplementary incomes in the form of favors provided by interested clients. A number of Socialist Reichstag deputies representing Berlin, for example, had arranged for their wives to receive sumptuous fur coats from certain Jewish financiers.

The promise of healing and national unity helped propel Hitler to power.

“It will be the pride of my life,” Hitler said upon becoming Chancellor, “if I can say at the end of my days that I won back the German worker and restored him to his rightful place in the Reich.” He meant that he intended not merely to put men back to work, but to make sure that the worker acquired not just rights, but prestige as well, within the national community…

“The people,” Hitler declared, “were not put here on earth for the sake of the economy, and the economy doesn’t exist for the sake of capital. On the contrary, capital is meant to serve the economy, and the economy in turn to serve the people.”…

Four years in power to plan, create and make decisions. Politically, it was a revolution: Hitler’s first revolution. And completely democratic, as had been every stage of his rise. His initial triumph had come through the support of the electorate. Similarly, sweeping authority to govern was granted him through a vote of more than two-thirds of the Reichtag’s deputies, elected by universal suffrage.

This was in accord with a basic principle of Hitler’s: no power without the freely given approval of the people. He used to say: “If you can win mastery over the people only by imposing the power of the state, you’d better figure on a nine o’clock curfew.”

Hitler came to power in a democracy, he put people back to work, he increased workers wages, he fed the starving people and gave them hope when all seemed hopeless.

From the first months of 1933, his accomplishments were public fact, for all to see. Before end of the year, unemployment in Germany had fallen from more than 6,000,000 to 3,374,000. Thus, 2,627,000 jobs had been created since the previous February, when Hitler began his “gigantic task!” A simple question: Who in Europe ever achieved similar results in so short a time?

More than two and a half million working-class homes once again knew bread and joy; more than ten million men, women and children of the working class, after years of want, had regained their vigor, and had been returned to the national community.

Hitler’s popularity took on some astonishing, indeed comical, aspects. “A brand of canned herring,” Joachim Fest relates, “was called ‘Good Adolf.’ Coin banks were made in the form of SA caps. Bicarbonate of soda was recommended with the advertising slogan ‘My Struggle (Mein Kampf) against flatulence’! Pictures of Hitler appeared on neckties, handkerchiefs, pocket mirrors, and the swastika decorated ash trays and beer mugs, or served as an advertisement for a brand of margarine.”

But faith in men and powerful centralized government to save us does not end well. Hitler did great works and helped many millions, and to that end he justified the means.

  • To spread the wealth, Hitler eradicated 6 million Jews (roughly 2/3 of Europe’s Jewish population).
  • To solve crime, Hitler killed 250,000 Romanian Gypsies.
  • To save the nation, Hitler killed 1.5 million children
  • To keep the peace, Hitler killed 20 million Russians
  • To preserve his power, Hitler targeted for death the homosexuals, communists, political dissidents, slavs, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Protestant pastors and Catholic priests who opposed him, black people, and the mentally and physically disabled.

This is the historical context for the cartoon I wanted to share with you today (please click the cartoon to enlarge and read).

In the coming election, men and women will encourage you to believe that only they can bring hope. Politicians will convince you that the sacrifice of freedom and the power of government is the only solution. Men of guile, will convince you that the greater good can only be accomplished at the forced-sacrifice of individual.

On November 4, 2008, will you believe and put your faith in these men and women?


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Spirit-Led NOT "spiritual"

September 18th, 2008

In my other blog, “Promise of the Father” I share this lesson from history that it crucial for our church today so I wanted to share it here as well.

The post-enlightenment philosophies that have dominated the Christian faith of the last hundred years have led us, and our world, to seek out a form of godliness, but not necessarily God Himself. So much of our Christian faith is focused around seeking the “spiritual” experiences that bring a feeling of happiness, but these have left us with a faith devoid of relationship. We must extract our faith from this destructive impersonal doctrine of spirituality and seek instead the Spirit Himself. We must get past the desire for emotional experience centered upon the human heart, and seek the passion of faith centered squarely on the person of God our Father, His Holy Son and the Spirit of Promise.

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Remembering 9 11

September 11th, 2008

I remember my wife waking me up that fateful morning seven years ago and telling me that a plane had hit a building in New York. I thought it was a joke, or maybe just a mistaake… but never did I think it was a terrorist attack that would claim more than 3,000 lives in the World Trade Centers alone. I watched in disbelief as the second plane struck… then a third into the Pentagon… and then a final plane crashed in Pennsylvania as heroes fought back against the Islamic terrorist-hijackers (click the image below to see the animation).
The video below reminds me of the sights and the sounds and the tension I felt on that horrible day.Watch for it….


Where were you when the the planes hit? Do you remember?


I encourage everyone reading to share your thoughts, prayers, and memories here on this blog and with friends…

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