Socrates said, "An unexamined life is not worth living." This is my feeble attempt at examining my life.

Monday, June 29, 2015

Can You Disagree?

12:08 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

Over the last two weeks or so we have seen race and sexuality pushed into the center of the national conversation. Black churches are, quite literally, under attack. The Supreme Court has approved marriage for all sexual orientations. These are conversations that have layers and nuance. These are conversations that are gigantic.

I have one question for you as you enter into the fray: How do you respond to those who disagree with you?

I have a wonderful mix of friends from all races, religions, creeds, and orientations. I am so very grateful for that reality because it allows me to learn and understand people who are different from me. I grew up in a town where nearly everyone was the same. We were a pretty homogeneous group back in the day. Over the years, I have fallen in love with people who I used to be frightened of or who “creeped me out.” These relationships have absolutely and utterly transformed me.

Over the last four days I have watched as friends of mine who are thoughtful, kind, loving people have become mean, nasty, hate filled rage monsters. It doesn’t matter if they’re religious or non-religious. They invite a “conversation” and then the moment someone disagrees with them on anything, a switch flips.

My non-religious friends have taken to calling their religious friends bigots, hate-mongers, and idiots.

My religious friends refer to non-religious friends as evil, satan’s tools, and idiots. 

Apparently they agree that we’re all idiots.

In all of this, what is glaringly obvious is that both parties are speaking past one another. Neither one is willing to listen to the other. Both believe that they are absolutely right and the other is absolutely wrong. Neither seems to have the ability to actually learn from the other.

As I watch the hatred spew back and forth between the two parties, I wonder, is there another way? Is there a way where we can have meaningful, honest dialogue with people who are different from ourselves? The world is so small now. We are able to engage with so many different kinds of people. This reality should allow us to become learners and listeners, but instead, most of us simply become self-protective and seek to insulate ourselves within intellectual ghettos.

I think that at the root of all this is one thing, fear

We fear what we don’t know or understand. Instead of actually learning about the other we create caricatures of them in our minds. We read pundits who are from our ghetto and embrace their propaganda.

People inside of North Korea are largely in the dark about the world outside. They are fed constant propaganda from their government. During the Cold War, the US and USSSR did the same thing. They filled their people’s minds with propaganda about the other creating fear and mistrust.

Today, we readily embrace whatever is out there that agrees with us. We boil nuanced difficult issues into pithy quotes and use them as memes on Facebook.

We are, quite simply, mean.

I challenge you to look back over your Facebook or Twitter interactions and ask yourself, “How have I responded to those who disagree with me? Have I name-called? Have created caricatures? Have I chosen to be a learner or have I simply assumed what someone thinks or believes?”

I believe, in my heart of hearts, that we are better than we have shown over the last few days. I believe that my non-religious and religious friends have the capability of common decency. I believe that they can get out of their respective thought ghettos long enough to learn from one another and have a real conversation.

Will you?

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Yes! I know a number of leaders over the last six…

9:14 AM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

Yes! I know a number of leaders over the last six months who have nullified their life’s work. http://twitter.com/CoachLisle/sta…

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Sunday, June 28, 2015

They got the band back together and now their on a mission from God to get the hardware. #boom #beastmode

11:14 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

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Saturday, June 27, 2015

“In many of my circles asking questions is not rea…

1:30 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

“In many of my circles asking questions is not really a good thing. You’re…” — @danielmrose http://ift.tt/1cH6sGd http://t.co/tZjJqwUaQe

CIhcowxVEAAdURL

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So Much Noise

9:17 AM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

Since I’m a pastor I’m supposed write about the Supreme Court decision on marriage. I am supposed write about the Bible. I am supposed to tell you whether or not this is God’s will.

I’m not going to.

Why? There’s just too much noise.

Whatever your position on the issue you can find some authoritative blogger who supports your position. No matter your position you won’t be willing, nor are you able, to hear a counter argument to your position.

Why? There’s just too much noise.

Everywhere I look there are emotional responses. People are shouting and yelling, in celebration and in dejection. There is little reasonable dialogue happening. Even when people agree with one another, someone is looking for a fight. Why? Because assumptions are made and emotions are running high.

As I look around Facebook and Twitter I have been impressed with most of my friends on both sides of the issue. For the most part have been kind to one another and those who are different from them. I have also seen hate-filled words from people to one another, on both sides.

I have written something to our congregation. That’s my responsibility as their pastor. I don’t have to speak into the noise. I really want to, but that would be for me and it wouldn’t be helpful. I would get a lot of clicks and some good traffic.

I suppose it’s ironic that I’m writing a post about not writing a post. Perhaps that’s adding to the noise too. What I hope it to be, is an invitation to a conversation. I would love to have a conversation with you. You can reach me on Twitter or Facebook. Let’s talk about it. If you’re in the area, let’s grab a coffee or a beer.

Perhaps if our conversations were in person, there’d be just a bit less noise.

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Friday, June 26, 2015

Not Pastoral

9:37 AM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

My beer mug at The Corner says, “The Rev” on it. I have come to realize that I’m not very “pastoral”, I’m not even sure what that really means. I have some pretty rough corners. I tease my kids. My poor wife will probably get arthritis in her neck from the daily head shaking that goes on.

My emotions run high. I laugh a lot, I get angry, and I don’t hide them very well. They pass relatively quickly, so I don’t brood, that’s a positive, I guess. But none of that is very “pastoral”.

I’m not soft spoken. If we had a church building we wouldn’t need to worry about church mice because I’m just too loud. I’m a loud talker. Which is great for public speaking but not so good for those intimate “pastoral” moments you’re supposed to have with people.

I’m pretty sarcastic and see irony everywhere. While these things are wonderful for my own amusement, I think they confuse people when they realize I’m a pastor. You see, pastors are supposed to be serious, especially us “Presbyterians.”

I really like to learn. I am fascinated by other people and their lives and stories. I suppose that’s “pastoral.” I love studying the Bible and worshiping and helping other people grow in their faith, so that’s “pastoral”, I think.

I’m not real “judgy”, so that goes against the culture’s perception of who I am as a pastor. We’re either supposed to be real “judgy” or we’re supposed to be really eccentric über liberals. I’m not either of those.

I’m finding that there are three really important principles that I need to keep focusing on. I have to be committed to truth seeking and communicating. I have to be committed to grace. I have to be committed to faith. If I can do those three things I can love well.

As I look back over the last 20 years of being a committed follower of Jesus, I think I can say that I’ve grown in loving well. I think that’s a good thing.

Maybe being “pastoral” doesn’t really matter all that much. I’m beginning to think that learning to love well may be the higher calling. I think I’m starting to grasp what Paul was saying in 1 Corinthians 13…

If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. And if I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. If I give away all I have, and if I deliver up my body to be burned, but have not love, I gain nothing. (1 Corinthians 13:1-3 ESV)

At least I hope I am.

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Thursday, June 25, 2015

RT @greglaurie: If you want a successful Christian…

10:15 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

RT @greglaurie: If you want a successful Christian life, Jesus said to deny yourself and to lose yourself, not to go “find” yourself.

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Wednesday, June 24, 2015

My Privilege

5:51 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

There are so many things that I take for granted. Every morning I go out to my driveway and I take it for granted that it will start. I take it for granted that my electricity will turn on and that the water will run in my faucets. Those are big things. I also take for granted lots of small things.

Up until yesterday I took it for granted that I could go play baseball on an empty ball diamond with my son.

My son had been working out with his baseball coach at a ball field for a couple of weeks. That is, until yesterday. Before yesterday it was just my son, his coach, and myself. Two of the three of us are white. Yesterday, Ethan was joined by a number of other kids and dads.

Ethan and I were the only white people.

For an hour the boys were working on fly balls and ground balls. They were running and working hard. It was fun to watch the boys learning and improving their skills. They were being challenged to become better.

Then a guy who had been up to the field the day before drove up. He got out of his vehicle and called over Ethan’s coach. His coach was asked, “Why aren’t those boys playing at their own fields? You need to leave now.”

We packed up and headed down the street to another field. As the boys got back to work one of the other dads said, “You know, if more of these boys were your skin tone we’d still be playing over on the nice field.”

“White privilege.” Something that I’ve heard about. It’s something that I’ve intellectually understood.

What I’ve now realized is that privilege is like water for a fish. Privilege is not something, that those of us who have it, are aware of. It’s in the air we breathe. You don’t see it, feel it, or realize it until you’re with someone who doesn’t have it.

I have always taken it for granted that my son and I could play baseball on an empty field. Yesterday I realized that assumption was based in my privilege. This is something small.

You know what? There are big things. I don’t worry about much when I leave the house. I don’t really think too much about law enforcement. People don’t pay much attention to me.

Privilege is real. I need to see it more. I need to help my kids see it. They need to be aware of it and they need to be strong enough to stand for their friends when it happens.

So do I.

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Monday, June 22, 2015

Presbyterian, Thank God.

3:24 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

Another prominent pastor has fallen. His sin exposed to all the world to see. Media outlets are having a field day. Other pastors are having a field day. Christians devouring one another on social media is entertainment for the throngs of non-Christians who point to the lack of mercy as even more evidence against the gospel.

It sure is thrilling to deep dive into the seedy details of a person’s life and failings. We are able to say, “Boy, I’m better than that guy.” We look at their theology to see if the errors they have made opened the door to such sin. We celebrate that their brand of Christianity might finally be exposed and our brand of Christianity be lifted up.

The responses to pastors falling make me sad. I am sadder still when I evaluate my own heart and know the ways I have done this too. I am sickened as I think about things I’ve said or thought about others who have fallen.

Yet, it is in these moments that I’m reminded again at the beauty of the structure of Presbyterianism.

Presbyterian pastors are not members of their local church. They are members of a regional body called, “Presbytery.” We are to be active participants in Presbytery in the same way that church members are to be active participants in their local congregations. The reasons are the same, so that the pastors may be known, cared for, and have the opportunity to experience church discipline.

Over the years of being a Presbyterian minister I have witnessed discipline happen more than I would like at Presbytery. It’s never a good thing when we enter into executive session and the guests are excused. It’s uncomfortable and typically heart wrenching. When light shines onto darkness it is initially painful.

What happens next is fantastic. A group of Elders comes around the person for the goal of restoring them. The end of discipline is not to inflict judgment but to bring about restoration.

I love that.

I love that we have a process in place that:

  1. Recognizes and assumes that pastors are imperfect, sinful, broken people in need of restorative grace.
  2. Seeks to bring that restoration in the context of community and not through punitive judgement.

I know that other denominations have their ways as well and I am sure they are just as beautiful.

The system of discipline within my tribe makes me hopeful for pastors who have fallen. It makes me hopeful that they will be restored. It makes me hopeful that their families might be saved.

Our system isn’t perfect. There many times that I’m beyond frustrated with our denomination. There are many times when I wonder why I’m connected to it.

However, on days like today, I say, “Presbyterian, Thank God.”

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Sunday, June 21, 2015

Saturday, June 20, 2015

Hanging with the most brilliantest, cutest, fiercest, kind, and wonderful daughter a guy could have.

5:58 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

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Wednesday, June 17, 2015

My office today was Harper Woods High School’s bas…

4:58 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

My office today was Harper Woods High School’s baseball field. I worked on Sunday’s passage, E worked on baseball. I love my life!

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Evidence of awesome. I love having Mimi live with us. Our kids are making memories that will stay with them forever.

2:04 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Story

4:31 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

One of the things that I like about living in a post-modern culture is the emphasis on story. Every person’s life is a story that is being written as they live. Communities are primarily seen as vehicles by which to share the stories of the past, the present, and dream of new stories for the future.

What story is your life telling?

That’s a question that we live with day in and day out. What is my story? What is your story? What is their story? What is our story?

Stories, stories, stories. I love hearing them, I love telling them.

There is an aspect of story that out culture doesn’t consider. That is, how does my story or your story fit into the larger narrative that surrounds us, if there is one. In other words, how do all these stories connect, intersect, and have meaning?

The Christian believes that there is a grand narrative, the story that God has been writing throughout the course of human history. This narrative follows a basic structure: creation, fall, redemption, consummation.

As individuals our lives follow this same structure, over and over again. As we engage with others we have to grasp the reality that their lives are following the same story arc. We are able to to connect our stories when take time to find out where others are at in their narrative. We find meaning in our stories and other’s stories as we connect them to God’s grand narrative.

Where are you living right now? What are you experiencing? Where are you at on the narrative arc?

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Monday, June 15, 2015

Authority

9:35 AM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

I was studying Luke 20 in preparation for worship yesterday. It’s a passage that isn’t totally unfamiliar. It starts with a simple request of Jesus by the religious leaders,

“Tell us by what authority you do these things, or who it is that gave you this authority.”

Over and over again I realize that this is the question of our age.

Our neighborhood has a pool. It’s a great place for families to go hang out and have fun. However, there is a group of teens from a different neighborhood that jump the fence and use the pool. When they are asked to present their key, the response is simple, “Who are you? I don’t have to do that.” This is an authority question.

Most of the major issues in our culture center on the question of authority. “Who are you to tell me that…”

If you don’t want someone to tell what to do or how to do something you first seek to undercut their authority. We do this in numerous ways. We do it by name calling or belittling. We attempt to undercut authority by showing that we’re more authoritative than the other. We might use credentials or question credentials (see the birth certificate questions surround President Obama).

When we encounter an idea or a position that comes into conflict with our own notions of what is true and real, we can either change or try to argue away the conflict. The easiest way to remove the conflict is to simply determine that the other person holds not authority in the subject and then we can simply ignore them.

Authority is hard to put your fingers around. Christians, for the last few decades, have been working tirelessly to prove the reliability and historicity of the Bible. That’s all well and good, we’ve done a pretty good job showing that what we have today is what was written originally. The arguments are pretty solid (whether one wants to embrace the historical research goes to the authority question). At the end of the day that research and work doesn’t mean a whole lot. Because at the end of the day a reliable text without authority is meaningless.

What is your authority? Who is your authority? Where do you look to find authority?

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Sunday, June 14, 2015

I want to introduce you to Cyber Dust, a private way to communicate with friends. Download and add me as danielmrose. #DustMe http://ift.tt/1C6YOMf

4:01 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

Friday, June 12, 2015

RT @CoachLisle: GREAT PLAYERS will put the extra t…

3:56 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

RT @CoachLisle: GREAT PLAYERS will put the extra time in. GREAT TEAMMATES will bring other teammates with them. GREAT FRIENDS won’t accept excuses.

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Thursday, June 11, 2015

Pastor, coach!

8:36 AM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

Last night I coached first base for my son’s Little League team. It got me thinking about coaching. Over the years he has had some great coaches. They all bring something different to the table. Each of them has had a different, yet very important, role to play in his development. Coach John taught him to love the game. Coach Eric gave him the confidence to play against the best. Coach Ryan is teaching him what it takes to take his game to the next level. I am so grateful for all these men.

I am learning that the role of the Pastor is primarily that of a coach. We often think of the pastor as teacher, but that’s not really accurate. Teachers are primarily responsible for information transfer. The really good teachers help their students apply the information to “real life”, but it is their ability to transfer information that is most important.

In the West we have turned pastors into teachers. The ability of the pastor to transfer biblical information has been celebrated as the highest level of achievement for the pastor. It is as if every person in the congregation will need to pass an ordination exam to be an active participant on the new earth. They won’t. 

When we launched the Antioch Movement a couple of years ago we wanted to see rapid multiplication. My desire was for us to launch multiple missional communities in rapid succession.

It’s a great idea.

It really sounds awesome.

It’s how the church ought to be.

What I’m learning is that for this to be a reality I have to up my “coach game”. To be sure, I’m a player/coach like the old baseball managers. If we’re going to see true multiplication happen then I have be a coach first.

My primary job is not that of teacher. Information transfer doesn’t get missional communities launched. Coaching does. 

I think about a person in our congregation who attempted to launch something recently. I passed on really good information about what to do. I was supportive. But, I didn’t coach them. I didn’t come alongside them very well and help them through the process. I was a cheerleader, but not a coach. Coaching requires much more engagement, a significant amount of accountability, and a dash of “I’m here to help.”

I’ve been a player most of my life. That’s what missionaries and number two guys in the church are. They are players, the head guy is the coach. The transition from player to coach is hard. Maybe recognition is the first step.

Isn’t it funny the things you think about when you’re coaching first base?

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Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Pastor, Get Real

10:27 AM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

The life of the pastor can be a lonely one. When you’re a construction worker or a teacher or a lawyer, people generally understand what you do. When you’re a pastor people generally find out this truth and fear you. They try to be on their best behavior or they simply ignore you. They also put you on a pedestal, as if you’re some sort of moral guru. Being a pastor is a weird existence.

I learned early on in my career as a pastor in the local church that you have to be wise about who you share your heart with. You can’t really be totally open and honest with folks. You really can’t wear your heart on your sleeve. As a pastor you must protect the people from your brokenness. You have to keep your pain hidden from them or they will sense weakness, failure, and probably begin the process of replacing you with someone else.

What is best, we are told, is to develop a group of close friends outside the community of faith where you serve so you have a place to be real and open. Pastors are told to make sure that they keep up the appearance of strength and perfection when they are at the church. You are the representative of God and God’s representatives can’t be flawed.

Most of what I’ve written in the second and third paragraph have never been openly communicated to me. Well, other than this, “…you have to be wise about who you share your heart with. You can’t really be totally open and honest with folks. You really can’t wear your heart on your sleeve.” The rest is inferred, felt, and assumed.

Recently, I have thought about all of this. I’ve begun to question the wisdom of such “sage” advice. I’ve come to a conclusion:

IT’S ALL WRONG.

That’s right. This advice is total crap. As my 13-year-old son would say, “It’s booty!”

This wisdom is taken from the business world, from CEO types in a dog eat dog environment. The Church is supposed to be different. 

I’m slowly unlearning the necessity for pastoral walls. I am learning to trust the community of believers with my heart. I am finding that being a pastor doesn’t need to be a lonely existence. It can be one filled with great joy and happiness. It can be one where the community that I serve can be as life giving for me as it is for those I serve. The congregation of which I am a part can be healing and helpful too. It is a safe place to share my brokenness and be gospeled by people who love me.

Pastor friends, I want to challenge you to set aside the secular business model of church and embrace the gospel approach. Open your heart to the people of your congregation. Don’t hide out of fear. Let the Church in. Allow them to love you and care for you. It’s OK to show them weakness. It’s good to be known by your community of faith.

Over the last few months being a pastor has become less lonely. Over the last few months I am more and more at ease letting people in the congregation into my life. I am hiding less and less. As I do, the joy of my calling as a pastor has increased exponentially. The risk is greater but it is worth it.

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Monday, June 8, 2015

Sunday, June 7, 2015

RT @CoachVogt31: Love college playoff baseball. S…

9:07 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

RT @CoachVogt31: Love college playoff baseball. So many small details perfected. If you want to be the best, play against and/or watch the best.

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Libby is teaching Mimi how to play new games on the iPad. These are my favorite moments of Mom living here. Those little times of snuggles, cuddles, and quiet giggling between her, Libby, and Ethan.

8:34 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

Saturday, June 6, 2015

DO IT!

8:54 AM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

It was the beginning of the second semester of my freshman year at Central Michigan University. I was at a gathering of the Campus Crusade for Christ movement and the “staff guy”, Scott, pulled me aside to talk. We talked about something called Summer Project. I had no idea what it was. It sounded pretty scary.

It was 10 weeks in North Myrtle Beach, SC. That sounded way better than spending my summer in Waterford, MI. The kicker was that I had to raise all the money to go there. $1200! How could I ever possibly come up with that money? I had no idea. It sounded pretty scary.

My roommates helped me fold, stuff, and seal envelopes. God raised more than $1200.

At the beginning of June I jumped in my truck with two other college students and we drove to North Myrtle Beach. Thus began the single most important summer of my life.

When I look back on that time in my life, I still can’t believe I went. I was a momma’s boy. I loved being home. I loved spending time with a handful of close friends. I was expecting to sell cars and make a lot of money that summer for my Dad. I was planning on reconnecting with a girl that I had broken up with during the school year. I had plans, big plans for my summer. But, instead I went to South Carolina to spend the summer learning about Jesus. What was I thinking?

That summer my life was changed. I was completely transformed. Everything changed. In sci-fi terms, I jumped timelines.

I really started following Jesus that summer. I met my beloved bride that summer. I heard the call to full-time ministry that summer. Everything changed.

That was 20 years ago this summer.

As I reflect on all of this, the single phrase that pops in my head is, “Just Do It!”

DO IT!

GO DO IT!

Whatever it is that you’re thinking about, praying about, step out in faith and go do it. Don’t hesitate. Go. If you’re a college student and considering a summer project, GO! If you’re considering going abroad, GO! Are you thinking about inviting your neighbor to a bible study? DO IT! Maybe you’re thinking about applying for that dream job, DO IT!

The summer of 1995 transformed my life because I obeyed one simple, little, command, “GO!”

Will you?

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Friday, June 5, 2015

Game day! Thanks to Todd Waller – Realtor for the…

4:12 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

Game day! Thanks to Todd Waller – Realtor for the sponsorship! (@ Canton Sports Center, Victory Park in Canton, MI) http://ift.tt/1GdgKdh

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RT @BaseballQuotes1: It’s a very simple game. Some…

11:27 AM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

RT @BaseballQuotes1: It’s a very simple game. Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose. Sometimes it rains. -Bull Durham http://t.co/2XWXKeFael

CGvucKPW0AAJlCc

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Consider launching a Doubt on Tap in your neighbor…

10:23 AM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

Consider launching a Doubt on Tap in your neighborhood. We need more people having conversation about things that matter. Interested?

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Why I Ask Questions

9:37 AM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

In many of my circles asking questions is not really a good thing. You’re supposed to have all the answers, especially as a pastor. We are supposed to know everything. We are supposed to be the ones that can tell people the right answer.

The famous pastors, typically, are the ones who:

  • …are spineless with bad theology.
  • …are mean spirited good theology.

When I was younger, less mature (I hope), I knew everything. I had all the answers. I knew what was biblical. The guys that I mentored would mock my stock phrase, “…because it’s biblical.” Give me a topic, any topic, and I could tell you Jesus’ mind on the matter.

I am older now, more mature (I hope), I don’t know everything. I don’t have all the answers. I think I know what the Bible has to say about things. Give me a topic, any topic, and I am willing to listen and learn what other people have to say, I think I can discern those thoughts against what the Bible has to say, but less and less am I willing to speak Jesus’ mind (that said there are some things that I he was pretty clear about).

More than ever I want to walk faithfully in the footsteps of Jesus. I want to know what he thinks and what he wants from us. I want to know what I’m supposed to do and how I’m supposed to lead his people. More than ever I want my life to reflect Jesus’ life. As a pastor, I deeply desire to be able to authentically look at the people in my congregation, and say, “Imitate me as I imitate Jesus.”

So, I ask questions. I wonder at the depth of humanity. I choose to be amazed by the beauty of the image of God in humanity. I choose to be shocked at the depth of brokenness in humanity. I make a choice to extend grace, mercy, forgiveness, and trust for the redemption of those in my life who desperately need it. More and more, I choose to be quiet before God and try hard to hear his voice. Less and less I speak in his presence.

I ask questions and I mean them. I am fascinated by the stories of people and who they are. Those that reject God out of hand raise in me an insatiable curiosity. Those that believe in God with blind faith stir in me question after question.

Some people see my asking questions as something that shouldn’t be done. They want me to “say something” and give an opinion, that is biblical, on everything. That simply isn’t going happen. This humanity that God has fashioned in his image is too deep, too layered, and too interesting for that kind of thing.

These days, I feel like a young child exploring the world for the first time. I wake up and look around this world and I am in constant wonder.

The post Why I Ask Questions appeared first on The Journal by Daniel M. Rose. It was written by Daniel M. Rose.



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Thursday, June 4, 2015

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

The Gay Marriage Conversation

1:01 PM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

I am fascinated by the gay marriage conversation. I don’t care where you land on the issue. I’m really not interested in the positions that people hold. I’m pretty sure I can guess where just about everyone lands. What is really interesting, what is really fascinating, is the nature of the conversation itself.

Today on the radio the sports station was discussing Caitlyn Jenner receiving the Arthur Ashe Courage Award at the Espys tomorrow night. It highlighted again, for me, how interesting the nature of this conversation really is.

No matter where one lands on the issue, they are passionate about their position. Their position comes from God or comes from humanity or comes from love, and it is RIGHT.

I have good friends that land on both sides of the issue. We’ve talked about it at Doubt on Tap and even there, the same question rose in my mind. That is, is it OK for people to hold different positions? Is it OK for someone to think that gay marriage is right? Is it OK for someone to think that gay marriage is wrong? Or, does everyone have to agree and the other position has no right to disagree?

Can a business person have personal beliefs, one way or the other? Are they allowed to hold a position that differs from the mainstream even if they choose to serve everyone regardless of the customer’s belief? Were they ever allowed to?

My mom used to say to my brother’s and I, “What’s good for the goose is good for the gander.” Is it in this case?

For instance, Charlie Hedbo openly mocked Muhammad and was blown up. The magazine was heralded as heroic for its anti-Islamic “humor.” What if Charlie Hedbo had been openly mocking Bruce Jenner’s transformation to Caitlyn Jenner? Would they still be heroic? When Neil Degrasse Tyson mocks Christians it’s OK. But when a Christian mocks him it’s usually considered bad form. Why?

The nature of the conversation is so very interesting. Have we come full circle in culture where we now have begun to embrace absolute rights and wrongs? Are non-religious and religious people both allowed to have a position and have their position heard in the public square with open minds?

This conversation is one of many. The title of this post could have been “The Race Conversation: Baltimore” or “The Creation Conversation” or “The Abortion Conversation.”

After hosting Doubt on Tap conversations for almost two years it is the nature of conversation about the tough issues that interests me even more than the content of the conversation.

The post The Gay Marriage Conversation appeared first on The Journal by Daniel M. Rose. It was written by Daniel M. Rose.



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RT @PastorTullian: People who know they are not go…

9:24 AM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

RT @PastorTullian: People who know they are not good make the best messengers of grace because they are desperately aware of their own need for it.

The post RT @PastorTullian: People who know they are not go… appeared first on The Journal by Daniel M. Rose. It was written by Daniel M. Rose.



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The Need for Change

8:42 AM Posted by Daniel Rose , No comments

As a parent there is one question, nay, one word, that may grate my soul like none other. It is a simple word, only three letters long. Yet, it can drive a man, or woman, to the brink of insanity in an instant.

“WHY!?”

Yeah, that’s the one. “Why?” BECAUSE! OK! GEESH!!!

There may be no more important question that has ever been asked. It is the question that our kids ask because they want to know how the world works beyond what they see. “Why?” drives us to look at more than the five senses. It moves us into deep places that cause us to really struggle with meaning and purpose.

“Why?” is that one word, that one question, that if not answered leaves us looking around at one another struggling to know what it is that we are supposed to do. If we can answer that one question then we can know our calling and go get something done. It drives us. Our “why” gets us out of bed in the morning. It enables to us to “attack the day with an enthusiasm unknown to man.”

As I think about the need for the Church to change I am struck by that same simple little question, “Why?”

We need to change because the world around us has changed. Yes, whether you want to admit it or not, the world has changed. In the US in particular the culture is no longer driven by Christendom. It has not been for some time. We can either wring our hands about it, start a culture war, or begin to live out the subversive gospel. People don’t bring their kids “back to church” any more. They see no need to get some “religion” into them. Besides, the Church is seen to be amoral at best or immoral at worst. This is similar to how the Church was viewed by the Roman Empire before Constantine.

We need to change because we have become drunk on power and prestige. Since the time of Constantine the Church has slowly become intoxicated with its own power structures and cultural prestige. At one time it was a source of progressive transformation in culture, the sciences, and technology (read a history book, no seriously, unlike the common contemporary myth, history tells a different tale).  Now the Church fears all three. It is scared and running to hide and everyone knows it. We, for the most part, are seeking to hold on to our seat at the head of the table, even though Jesus warns against such action. The Church has, for so long, been the power player in politics and culture that we have forgotten the subversive nature of our Servant King and his kingdom.

We need to change because we need to get back to being who we are: A royal priesthood, ambassadors for Christ proclaiming his excellencies. When we live this out, followers of Jesus become amazing artists, musicians, scientists, inventors, writers, business people, leaders, and everything else under the sun. When we live this out we become most truly human. We learn to live and love with passion and fervor. We become a people that are both immanent and transcendent. In recent times we have sought the wisdom of the CEO and CMO instead of the King of Kings. We have pursued “church growth” instead of “multiplication.” We have become content with “nickles and noses” as opposed to discipleship and transformation.

Last night my family had Chinese take out. My son’s fortune cookie read, “If you keep doing the same thing you’re going to get what you have always gotten.” I’m done with doing the same thing. I don’t want what we’ve always gotten. I want something more.

I really want us to become a people of the prayer.

Our Father in heaven,
hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors.
And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.

The post The Need for Change appeared first on The Journal by Daniel M. Rose. It was written by Daniel M. Rose.



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