Press On

“Rachel, you watch Ugly Betty?”
“No, Daniel, I was talking about AUNTIE Betty.”

“Violent video games aren’t bad! It’s proven that people who play them actually make better soldiers in the army.”

“James 1:16 says Do not be deceived, my brothers. The lesson I learn from that is: don’t trust ANYBODY.”

Welcome to Jr. High Sunday School. Such are the things you’d hear if you were to step in to my little class. My hope in teaching is to make the Bible interesting and God relevant to the youth so they learn truths that solidify their faith foundation.

Sometimes though, I wonder if I am making any progress. Are they hearing anything??

But if the God we are learning about IS real, then He is not just a subject of study, but is actively at work in my life and theirs. Though there are no dramatic life changes, fruit growth-spurts, or mini-revivals every Sunday, I know that the teens are in the hands of a living God who does transform lives.

My job is to persevere even when it feels like I’m just plodding along without visible results. I need to be faithful and keep plugging at it each week.

Serving God and following Jesus daily is not usually glamorous or revolutionary. Living like God is real is often simply obeying and being faithful to what you’re given – it is made of persistence and consistence.

And it will be rewarding.

“And let us not lose heart in doing good, for in due time we will reap if we do not grow weary.” (Galatians 6:9)

Debate People

I recently participated in an online debate with an atheist. It’s rather long, but you can read it here if you wish. It was a profitable experience and when I have time, I would like to do it again.

I used to think of “debates” as unfriendly and unproductive, kind of like a war where neither side is going to win. But this time, I did the debate not for the purpose of convincing someone I was right, but for the purposes of learning to communicate better, and building relationships. I used to think that debates would destroy relationships, but I found out that is not true. Bad debates destroy relationships; but good debates build relationships. Neither I nor the other guy were able to convince each other of anything in the debate, but I found some areas where I need to learn to talk more clearly, and I also gained new familiarity and respect for atheists as people.

In America, we’re noticing that people who disagree with each other are having more and more difficulty talking with each other about the thing they disagree on. People have less and less desire to talk honestly with others who disagree with them. People are less and less convincible. This is terrible. In the introduction to his book, The Reason for God, Tim Keller, Pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City, puts it this way:

Those who believe in God and Christianity are out to “impose their beliefs on the rest of us” and “turn back the clock” to a less enlightened time. Those who don’t believe are “enemies of truth” and “purveyors of relativism and permissiveness.” We don’t reason with the other side; we only denounce.

We need to talk with people who disagree with us, be willing to learn from them, and be nice about it.

like?

One of the questions that our motto brings up is why we use the word “like.” “God is real– why live as if He’s real?”

We racked our brains for other ideas, but nothing else seemed to convey the all-important concept that our lives should reflect the reality of Christ.

So we looked up the word “like” in the dictionary. Among its many colloquial definitions (which included “as if”) was the basic definition “having the same characteristics; similar; equal.” That’s it. As Christians, the way we live should proclaim to the world that GOD IS REAL! That is how we should live.

So until one of you comes up with a better way to convey this motto, we will embrace the word “like.”

Now go… live like God is real.