Jesus, the only real hope for the future of Canada & the World

At the Baptist General Conference of Canada’s Celebration 2024, I made the statement — in the context of challenging Canadian churches and church leaders to reach out to their neighbours —

“There is no ultimate Canadian. But if there were, it would be Jesus!”

Of course, the quintessential Canadian does not exist. People have been trying to define what a Canadian is for generations but all definitions seem to come up short.

Perhaps the best explanation for our inability to do so comes from Pierre Elliott Trudeau who made the statement:

“What could be more absurd than the concept of an ‘all-Canadian’ boy or girl? A society which emphasizes uniformity is one which creates intolerance and hate. A society which eulogizes the average citizen is one which breeds mediocrity. What the world should be seeking, and what in Canada we must continue to cherish, are not concepts of uniformity but human values: compassion, love, and understanding.”

This Canada Day, let’s talk about Jesus as the only real hope for the future of Canada & the World.

Jesus Identifies as the Great “I AM”

Exodus 3:13-14 — “Then Moses replied to God, ‘Suppose I go to the people of Israel and say to them, “The God of your ancestors has sent me to you,” and they ask me, “What is his name?” What should I tell them?’ “God answered Moses, ‘I AM WHO I AM.’”

Guess what? Jesus himself also used this same name to describe himself. We see this in John 8:12, 18, 24, 28, and 58. We know that that is exactly what Jesus was claiming because immediately after Jesus makes this statement they want to try to stone him to death for blasphemy.

Why is this important to Canada? Since the Scripture elsewhere describes Jesus as the light of the world and the King of kings, it makes sense that included within the world, and the other kings, is every other nation that has existed, exists today, and will exist in the future. If we’re looking for true leadership, if we’re looking for a true representation of what it means to live out the life of a citizen of our nations, we need to look no further than Jesus Christ. Jesus is the only real hope for the future of Canada and the world.

Jesus Knows When to Arrive — At Just the Right Time

The Bible is clear that Jesus arrival to the Earth was at exactly the right time. There are two ways we can look at time. One of them is Kronos time which is time as it flows from one minute to the next, from one hour to the next, from one day to the next, from one week to the next, from one year to the next, and so on. It flows inexorably towards the end. But there’s also a different kind of time that’s spoken of in the Bible and that is Kairos time. This means the right time.

Where this plays out in the Philippines is that I promise that I’m going to go to your birthday party and you’ve invited me several times and I’ve said, “Yes I’ll be there.” But then just as I’m about to leave for your birthday party, one of my relatives from the province arrives at my house and I need to entertain them. My plan to go to your birthday party is Kronos time. My plan to entertain my all-of-a-sudden houseguest is Kairos time.

Romans 5:6-8 — “When the time was right, while we were still weak human beings following our bad hearts and broken ways, the Chosen One died for us.”

2 Corinthians 6:2 — “At the right time I heard your cry…”

Galatians 4:4 — “But when the time was right, Creator sent his Son…”

Just as Jesus came at the right time for the people living in first century Palestine, living under the thumb of the Roman empire, Jesus also came for those who live today in Canada. Right from the beginning, it was God’s plan for the entire world to be saved. Jesus himself testifies to this in John 3:16-17, when he converses with Nicodemus in the middle of the night and he clarifies to Nicodemus that God sent his son to the entire world because of his love for that entire world. Guess what that world includes Canada!

Canada Needs Jesus

That means, as we extrapolate from Jesus, statement of God’s love for the world to our existence today that Canada needs Jesus just as much as the first century Palestinians needed Jesus. 

Canada needs Jesus because we as Canadians are enslaved by sin. Humanity was created with original righteousness, which then became slavery to sin after the incident in the Garden of Eden. This action affected all of Adam and Eve’s descendants — including present-day Canadians — their cultures, and even the physical world around them [I have written about that here]

Humanity’s story is one of repeated rebellion. From Adam and Eve to Noah, from Abraham’s family to Israel’s kings, Scripture records God’s faithfulness alongside humanity’s repeated failure. Canada is not unique in this respect. Like every nation, we need a Saviour.

It doesn’t get much better in the New Testament. Everyone trying to get it right whether it’s Jesus’ disciples, or the early churches — in whatever city you would like to choose. 

Canadians aren’t much better. In fact, in a recent survey, Evangelicalism was sometimes perceived to be more damaging than beneficial. Coupled with that is the church’s active participation in the Indian Residential School System and implications for us today. And looking inside the church itself we face questions such as How do we hang on to the next generation?

Christ Is the Quintessential Human

Oxford defines quintessential as: “representing the most perfect or typical example of a quality or class.”

the Scriptures are pretty clear that Jesus is a representative of humanity. This is clearly discussed in Paul’s epistle to the Romans. In chapter 5, he talks about these two atoms. He talks about Adam from the garden of Eden as being the first atom. And it’s because of this atom that sin came into the world and that laid to everyone having to die. Because while we were in Adam, we send. But then we also read about the second ad which is Christ. And it’s this Christ that brings salvation to the world — “If humanity died as the result of one person’s failure it is certainly true that God’s kindness and the gift given to the kindness of one person Jesus Christ have been showered on humanity.”

The first Adam represented humanity in the fall into slavery to sin and the second Adam, or Christ, represents humanity in their freedom from that slavery and their restoration back into a right relationship with God.

In some ways, this may be even saying that there are two quintessential humans both of them, Adams in somewhere and other. Adam being the first Representative of humanity at Christ being the second Representative of humanity, but the one who transforms that humanity into a redeemed and saved humanity.

As the Quintessential Human, Jesus Connects with Every Culture

If it’s indeed true that Jesus is the quintessential human that means that Jesus, as that quintessential human has something to say to every culture of the world. This means that just as Christ was able to enter the world of the Jewish man in the first century so too Christ can enter the world of the twenty-first century Canadian human. To be a representative of this quintessential person—to be the second Adam for us as Canadians.

And of course, this applies to every other culture of the world as well—

Filipino,

Vietnamese,

Georgian,

Russian,

Ukrainian,

Kurdish,

Azerbaijani,

and Iranian.

Jesus Clearly Connects the Here and Now with the Not Yet

If Jesus, as the quintessential human, can connect with every culture of the world, that means that he actively connect the hero now with the not yet. Philippians chapter 2 famously speaks about Jesus, leaving his life as a rumour of the universe, taking the form of the servant becoming obedient and showing us what it’s like to be a true human. But in that action, he also connects this world with the world to come.

When I was growing up, my primary understanding of salvation was, will I go to heaven when I die or will I go to hell? It was a primarily future post death scenario. I didn’t expect to experience the joys of salvation until after I had died.

The reality is that Salvation isn’t just something to wait for until after we die. In John 8:1–11, Jesus meets the accusers and the woman where they are and tries to connect them to the gospel through the things that he says. He encourages the accusers to reflect upon their own lives and sinfulness. He encourages the woman by reminding her that she no longer needs to be a slave to sin, but that she can find a new way of living.

In John 9:1–12, people assume the man is blind because of personal sin. Jesus says that’s not the way to look at this man’s problems. Rather blindness serves as a reminder that we too may be blind but it’s OK for us to approach the light of the world who can illuminate us and who can give us sight.

How can we move beyond the question “If you were to die tonight, do you know where you would go?” because I would suspect that this is no longer the primary relevant question for Canadians. People are more concerned about daily needs. How can the church move beyond merely presenting hope for the future by providing hope in the here and now?

A question instead is what does Jesus offer to Canadians in the hero now even as we wait for the not yet?

Jesus Offers Illumination

If Jesus is the quintessential human can connect with every culture of the world, and if he can connect the here and now with not yet, it also reveals that Jesus can offer illumination for us to see the path we must follow in our life. This illumination is not nearly offered to those who are Jesus followers. It’s also an offer that Jesus himself makes to everyone in the world who is seeking illumination. Who is seeking enlightenment. Who is seeking direction for the path set before them.

In John 8:12, Jesus says, “I AM the light shining on this dark world. The ones who walk with me will not stumble in the darkness but will have the light that gives them life.”

I think it’s significant that here is one of the instances in the New Testament when Jesus directly identifies himself with Yahweh, the God of the people of Israel, who first revealed himself by this name when he offered to freedom from Egypt. When Jesus said those words, I am, he was signalling to his listeners that that God of salvation from your history is here with you today and is offering you salvation here and now.

In the context of Canada, it leads us to ask some questions: 

How does Jesus illuminate Canada?

Is the church illuminating Canada too?

Does the church live out the values of the kingdom?

What happens if the church hasn’t been successful? Can reconciliation happen?

Jesus Speaks Truth in Culturally Relevant Ways

If Jesus is the quintessential human, if Jesus can connect with every culture in the world, if Jesus can connect the hear and now with the not yet, and if he offers illumination to the world, that means he also speaks truth in culturally relevant ways. Is able to take this universal truth and reality that God loves the world and to distil that down into ways that understandable applicable, relevant in each culture of the world.

John 8:17–18 — “Your tribal law tells you it takes the word of two people to know the truth. So then, I speak for MYSELF, and the Father speaks for me also.”

John 8:28–29 — “When you lift up the True Human Being on the cross, then you will know that I AM who I say I am…”

I’m sure Jesus could see his listeners getting agitated as he kept referring to himself with that name I am. But Jesus continues with that because he knows that those that that name is culturally significant to his listeners. He wants to get his message across. He wants to speak as the one with ultimate authority into the lives of those people living in Palestine in those early days. So we continue using this name I am. Of course we know that it’s true. We know that Jesus himself is the great I am.

Which leads to the next questions on Canada Day: 

How do Canadians determine the truth?

What truth does Jesus represent?

Does the church understand how to determine the truth?

For example, in the Philippines we:

  • Consult the Bible.
  • Negotiate with family.
  • Ask advice from experts.
  • Follow the teachings of various religious congregations.
  • Reflect on matters and draw our own conclusions.

Is this the same process that Canadians would follow or would there be something different from this? What’s clear is that determining truth is not always the easiest thing to do is it?

Jesus Says He Is the Only Option

If all the previous things are true. If Jesus is the quintessential human, if Jesus can connect with every culture in the world, if Jesus can connect the here and now with the not yet, if Jesus offers illumination to the world, and if Jesus speaks the truth and culturally relevant ways, that means that Jesus is pretty unique. Jesus stands alone. Jesus stands apart from all of the other people saying they have the answer.

And Canadians are looking for the answers aren’t they? In some ways there’s a vast divide perhaps not even one divide but several divides as people think about the best path forward for Canada. What’s the best way is it to look back at some of the values we remember from when we are child and try to return to those? Is it to question everything that we’ve experienced in the past to see the injustice that have happened and so come up with a new path moving forward? Is it a combination of the two? Is it something completely different? It’s complex isn’t it?

Jesus understood the complexity of this and embrace it. His claim was that he was the only option. We see this in John 8:23–24 — “You are from below and belong to the ways of this world. I am from above…”

That’s a rather cryptic way of him saying I’m the one you people need.

And this touches on a truth that we see through the whole length breath and depth of scripture. That is that the Gospel is political. God wants no rivals. He wants to be the one to rule. And that’s not because of some ego trip that God is on. No it simply because he rules with love he has our best interest at heart. He doesn’t want to condemn us, but wants to save us. Therefore, he is the only logical choice for who we want to rule our lives, our nation, and the physical world around us.

More questions than answers:

How does Jesus serve as the way for Canadians?

Does the church point a clear way to that Jesus?

Jesus Says He Is Ultimate Reality

In John 8:58, Jesus States is true identity in a way that was immediately understood by those who were listening to him, and in a way that clearly declared who he was claiming to be. His statement “I was there before Father of Many Nations was born—for I AM” so infuriated his listeners that they wanted to kill him because Jesus was claiming to be ultimate reality. His earlier uses of the phrase I am were just circling around the concept without coming out and stating explicitly who he felt he was.

There is no ultimate Canadian.

But if there were, it would be Jesus.

Questions for the Canadian Church

Why did God rescue Israel from Egypt? Exodus 2:23–25 gives us the exact reason — “After a long time passed, the king of Egypt died. The Israelites still groaned because they were slaves. So they cried out, and their cries for help went up to God. God heard their groaning, and he remembered his promise to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. God saw the Israelites being oppressed and was concerned about them.”

Did you noticed those four concepts? God heard their calls for help, God remembered his promises, God saw the oppression, and God was concerned about them. 

I think we can say the same thing about Canada. God hears, God remembers his promise, God sees oppression, and God is concerned about Canadians.

How does Jesus exemplify this for Canada?

What is Jesus hearing from Canadians?

What is Jesus remembering about his promises to Canadians?

What oppression does Jesus see in Canada?

What is Jesus concerned about for Canadians?

How do we—as Christ’s body—exemplify this for Canada?

For some reason, God and his wisdom shows humans to be the messengers, bearing the good news of Jesus Christ as a ruler, two live out and teach the values of his kingdom, to love him, and love their neighbors, and to testify to the truth. That means these actions of God in hearing, remembering, seeing, and being concerned are also our actions towards the world around us.

What are we hearing from Canadians?

What are we remembering about Jesus’ promises to Canadians?

What oppression are we seeing in Canada?

What are we concerned about for Canadians?

The Right Choice for Reaching Canada

At the end of all of this, we are forced to make a choice about who we think Jesus is. After Jesus made his claim to be the great I am the people listening to him had two choices. One choice was to pick up rocks and start throwing them at him. The other choice was to submit to him as the great I am.

I always love Mark 8 where Jesus conducts a poll among his disciples as to who they think he is. I don’t think Jesus was surprised by any of their answers, so perhaps he’s asking the question so that it’s a catalyst for their them to think about it.

Here is the account from Mark 8:29–30:

“‘But who do you say I am?’ he asked.

‘You are the Chosen One!’ Peter answered.”

From this point on we see something different in scripture I think. Whereas prior to this Jesus was always saying don’t tell a whole lot of people about what’s going on. But after this, he no longer warns them to be silent. In fact, he commands them to be noisy!

Acts 1:8 “Instead, set your hearts and minds on the Holy Spirit, who will give you strong medicine when he comes. You will then tell my story in Village of Peace, in all the Land of Promise and High Place, and then to the farthest parts of the earth—to all languages, tribes, and nations.”

The Bottom Line

The bottom line is not a line of identity but a line of how far the good news extends. Can we say the message Jesus brings is good news for Canadians or not? Does Jesus have something to say to twenty-first-century Canadian lives? If Jesus brought God’s presence into a first-century Jewish community; If Jesus drew near to those in first-century Jewish society who were on the fringes; If Jesus was able to show his humility in a way that was understandable to first-century Jewish society; And if Jesus was able to proclaim good news to first-century Jewish society; 

That means that we can be God’s presence in twenty-first-century Canadian society. That means that we too can draw near to those in twenty-first-century Canadian society who are far from him. We too can show humility in twenty-first-century Canadian society. We too can proclaim good news in ways understandable to twenty-first-century Canadian society.

As a flawed human who is a slave to sin, I cannot be all that is needed for Canadians or any other national churches. I need to look to Jesus for that because only Jesus can truly be a human in any of these contexts.

So, when I say that Jesus is the quintessential Canadian, this is what I’m talking about: Jesus has a voice that Canadians need to hear today.

The one who is the Ultimate Reality is also the one who emptied himself. This is why Jesus can make himself known, be present, be powerless, and proclaim the good news in a way that is understandable to Canadians.

Photo by Hermes Rivera on Unsplash

Leaf Springs & Life: What a mechanic taught me about faith, cancer, & learning to live within my limits

“I guess sometimes the leaf springs flatten out and need to be replaced.”

My car had been riding low for quite some time and would occasionally bottom out when fully loaded. So I took it in to Pablo, my regular mechanic. His reply was not car-related but yet surprisingly still related to things in my own life.

“Actually, that’s true of everything in life, isn’t it?”

Pablo is a student of the bible and usually an appointment with him touches on some aspect of life and theology. He always finds ways to connect what he reads there to the real world around him. 

My initial reply was a cautious, “Yeah, I guess it is. A lot of things in life are like that,” but then I thought I would get right into the heart of the matter. “In fact, that’s true for me now. I’m sick, and I’ve realized that even with me, some things eventually need to be replaced.”

“Oh? What’s wrong with you?” He replied.

Since I had already committed myself, I continued on. “I have prostate cancer. They discovered it just over a month ago. It also seems to have affected my bones, kidneys, and bladder!”

“Well that certainly fills up your thoughts, then, doesn’t it?” he asked. 

“Yeah, it does.”

“Well, I think that as long as you’re ready, everything is okay — If you’re ready, there’s no fear. But if you’re not ready, then you’re afraid,” he said.

“Yeah, that’s true. I’ve spent some time reflecting on my life, and I’ve realized that I have no regrets and nothing I would want to change. I’m ready, and I have no fear of the future.”

What does it mean to be ready?

Yes, it’s true. I have prostate cancer that has metastasized into my bones, kidneys, and bladder. This was not something that I was expecting but it lead me to discover that what Pablo says is true — all of a sudden I came face to face with my own mortality and it did occupy my thoughts. My first thought was, “Am I ready to die?”

On Being Ready & Faith

My life’s leaf springs have flattened out. But where exactly is the problem? Perhaps I need more faith?

But as I reflect, I realise that I have no regrets. I have no doubts. I have a firm foundation. I have assurance.

I remain firmly convinced of the faith that began growing in me from a very young age at my parents knee. A faith that was strengthened through attending churches. A faith that was strengthened through participation in devotionals at our young peoples group. Faith that was strengthened through experiencing a different culture when I was in high school and trying to figure out how the Gospel fit into that. The faith that was strengthened through formal studies, both in university and in seminary. And a faith that I still hold today. That faith is very simply stated: Jesus is Lord, and God has raised him from the dead!

Don’t get me wrong. I’m not a stick in the mud. My faith has grown through those years as I have gotten deeper into God‘s word, as I have conversed with God’s people, as I’ve seen different perspective from the different people in my life, and as I have engaged with people who come from different faith communities. All of this has helped strengthen and deepen the faith that was first started as a seed so many years ago.

But it’s not something that I merely believe while waiting for the age to come. It is something I believe in my day to day life. God also has a task for me. I am called to proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ as ruler of the world. I am called to conform to and live out the values of his Kingdom. I am called to love God and love my neighbour. And I am called to bear witness to the truth.

As Pablo points out, this shapes all that follows.

But my problem isn’t lack of faith. So why, then, have my leaf springs collapsed?

On Being Ready & Buckets Lists

My leaf springs have flattened out. But where exactly is the problem? Maybe I have unfinished business?

When I first received a diagnosis of cancer, my mind immediately went to the end. I began asking myself, “Am I ready to depart this earthly vale and move on into whatever glory God has intended for me?” Very quickly, I came to the conclusion that, “Yes, I am.” I don’t actually have a long list of things I feel compelled to accomplish before that day comes — a bucket list, as it were.

As I reflect, I realize that as a young boy, I dreamed of becoming a hermit living in a log cabin in the bush. At other times, I dreamed of being a soldier or a missionary.

Looking back, I realize that God answered those dreams in ways I never would have anticipated. I never became a hermit, but I spent countless hours in the wilderness — and the wilderness remains one of the places where I feel closest to God. I never became a soldier (apart from a brief time in the NSaskR), but I learned something about commitment to a cause larger than myself. And I did become a missionary, though not in any form I could have imagined as a child. My childhood imaginings involved a missionary standing beside a large cooking pot containing an unfortunate victim — a horrible misrepresentation, but one that says something about the quality of missionary education available to me at the time!

As a child, our family regularly vacationed in the Rocky Mountains. In high school, I paddled hundreds of kilometres through the Churchill River system, sometimes in a group and sometimes solo. I have swum Otter Rapids wearing a life jacket. A few years ago, I went for a midnight swim in the Pacific Ocean with my son Daniel.

I have flown in planes ranging from a Piper Cub to a 747. I have driven Canada from Port Alberni to Quebec City and crossed large stretches of the United States by road. Ministry and teaching have taken me to Mexico, Japan, the Philippines, South Korea, Hong Kong, Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, Qatar, Georgia, and Brazil. I have ridden in a car along part of the Silk Road and tested how water drains from a sink in both hemispheres.

I was present for the birth of my two children, Emily and Daniel.

I got involved in the World Wide Web near the ground floor and developed one of the first 10,000 websites in the world. I have formally studied four languages — English, French, Ancient Greek, and Tagalog — and speak two of them fluently.

I have preached in more than a hundred churches across Canada and in several countries around the world. I have taught theology internationally and participated in planting three churches in two countries.

I have cooked over an open fire, fished from a canoe, and sat at night listening to loons call across the lake.

There are still things I think about doing, places I would like to see, books I would like to read, and people I would like to spend time with. But I don’t feel that I have been cheated out of life. God has already given me far more experiences than I ever expected to have.

So, yes, I am ready. Not because I have exhausted life, but because I do not feel that I have left life unlived.

Which raises a different question.

If I am not afraid of dying, and if I am not troubled by an unfinished bucket list, then why do I feel as though my leaf springs have collapsed?

On Being Ready & Ministry

My leaf springs have flattened out. But where exactly is the problem? Maybe there is no one left to continue my work?

Pingkian has been one of God’s greatest gifts to me.

When I arrived in Pingkian, I possessed a great deal of knowledge about ministry. I had studied it, taught it, preached about it, and thought deeply about it. I had been present when MMBC was planted, although at that stage I was mostly a kid along for the ride. Later, I helped plant New Hope Community Church in Canada, served on the pastoral staff there, learned to preach, and gained valuable experience in church ministry.

Yet much of my understanding remained theoretical.

When we first moved to the Philippines, we lived in Cubao and were somewhat isolated from the communities around us. Ministry happened at 670 EDSA. We travelled there, did ministry, and went home again.

Pingkian changed that.

For all my knowledge about community ministry, I had never truly learned how to immerse myself in a community. I remained, by nature, a shy and quiet person. In many ways, I was a reluctant pastor. It was the people of Pingkian who taught me what ministry really looks like.

The Riobuya family showed me what it means to have a vision for reaching an entire community.

The Laguda family showed me what it means to be family — not merely to attend church together, but to celebrate life together.

And I could go on much longer, but will have to limit myself to naming names: Ramil & Margie, Kandase, Clark Gonzales, Rose Ann, Kasavina, Kirvi, Kio Gonzales, Thess & Macmac Caparas, Elmer & Emily Belarmino, Marycris & Justin, Red Belarmino, John, Milarose, Marian, Johnuel Riobuya, Dion & Joy Umali, Warlito & Doris, Diane, Dorothy, Warren, Shi Laguda, Kyla Ferer, Edgar & Perlita, LJ, Kaikai Billones, Wency, Jordan, John Billones, Nonoy, Caloy & Liza Walet, Inis & Ging, Gigi, Sean Laguda, Helen Laguda, JR Laguda, Baste & Sandro Laguda, Aling Auring, Boboy & Tata, Angel Yumul, Adel & Elmer, Stephanie Obosa, Mel & Noel Aguilar, Aries & Faith Adrales, Lamberto, Thea, Taiga Demillo, Anisa, Derek Acaso, Gilbert Amistoso, Renz Nabor III, Cian Artates, Enting Nabor, Jessa & Prince Wyler Gulas-Gonzales, Kurt Kevin Suarez, Angela & Princess Satoquia, Rodsille Maurillo, Glayza C. Doctor, Yacymarie Cleofas, Christine & Khrishana Otadoy, Marvin & Ferl Cabtalan, Vince “Izhen” Nares, Margaret, Danica M. Ligayo, Angel Bang-oy, Edchell Montales, Ejay Mojemulta, Isaiah Luke Rivera, Justin & Jazzper Morada, Radam Toling, Alvin & Caloy Ragundiaz, Angel Tanedo, Jun Carl, Sharilaine, Sabrina, Ace, Jack, Nathaniel Onasa, Purificacion Onasa, Kaye, Danica Rosales, Fiona Eugenio, Zyrill Montanses, and Lani. 

What struck me most was that ministry in Pingkian was never driven primarily by pastors or programs. It grew because God stirred the hearts of ordinary people.

Women began ministering to women.

People became involved in helping mothers and newborn babies.

Volunteers gathered children through KidsNet.

Young people reached other young people through Friday nights, Saturday programs, ASCEND, 3verlasting, the Student Center, the gym, and countless informal conversations.

Men discipled men.

Families cared for families.

People prayed together, studied Scripture together, worked together, celebrated together, and grieved together.

Again and again I watched God place a burden on someone’s heart and then call them to act on it.

The remarkable thing is that I cannot take credit for any of it.

I did not start these ministries.

God did.

He worked in the hearts of His people and said, “This is what I want you to do.”

And they responded.

The people of Pingkian have done far more for me than I have ever done for them. I had always known academically and theologically that I was called to be the pastor of Pingkian as a community, but I didn’t really know what that looked like until I experienced Pingkian itself.

So it turns out that my collapsed leaf springs are not found in my ministry at Pingkian.

So what is it?

As I continued, my reflections, my thoughts naturally turned to the South East Asian Theological Schools. I have now been involved with SEATS longer than I have lived in the Philippines.

A few years ago, during an accreditation visit, one observation kept surfacing. The accrediting team was concerned that too much responsibility rested on too few people. They were right. Good governance requires clearer boundaries and a broader distribution of responsibility.

Yet I also realized something the accreditation process could never fully measure.

SEATS is a family.

We have certainly built a shared theological vision. Together we have wrestled with what it means for churches to proclaim Jesus Christ as King over every aspect of life, to love God and neighbour, to live out the values of God’s kingdom, and to bear faithful witness in society.

But far more importantly, we have been shaped by one another.

These days, several of us are walking through significant health challenges. Our conversations have naturally become less about programs and projects and more about life, mortality, and the faithfulness of God. Together we have committed ourselves to reflecting daily on Psalm 23 — not merely as a favourite passage, but as fellow travellers walking through the valley of the shadow of death.

Of course we think about the next generation who will carry this vision forward. We pray for them often. But we also recognize that God is still forming us. Even now, He is teaching us what it means to trust the Shepherd.

Looking back, I realize that much of what eventually became Pingkian Family Worship first took shape through SEATS. The way I preach, teach, and think about the church has been profoundly shaped by this community. My prayer is that many others will one day experience the same joy of discovering God’s heart for His church and His world.

So it turns out that my collapsed leaf springs are not found in SEATS.

So where are they?

On Being Ready & Those Left Behind

If my leaf springs had truly collapsed, surely I would see it first in my family.

But of course, one’s thoughts eventually turn toward those who would be left behind — especially the family here. They are understandably not quite as willing to accept the idea that I may be ready to move on. My mother said to me the other day that it may actually be easier for the person who is sick to accept these things than for those who are not. I suspect there is a good deal of truth in that.

If you were to ask me, I would say that my family is perfect.

That’s probably an exaggeration. Like every family, we’ve had our misunderstandings, disappointments, and failures. But when I look back over the years, I wouldn’t change a thing. God has given me exactly the family I needed.

We don’t fight with each other. We don’t really have differences of opinion. We have this bond in this unity that has been formed through a lifetime together. I’m not sure what the secret is. I don’t think that I came into this family thing with a great plan for what the future would look like I didn’t think too much of what it would mean to be a husband. I didn’t think too much of what it would mean to be a father. And I didn’t think too much about what kind of family discipleship program that I needed to implement as our family grew together.

But what I do know is that I would not be the man today if it were not for my family. From Eva, I learned what it means to consider somebody else other than myself in life. To be aware of how other people are feeling about things. To see love for neighbour exemplified through day-to-day experiences to learn what it means to be committed to one another day and day out, even after a lot of life’s experiences, including moving 10,000 km away to another part of the world.

Including experiencing joys and frustrations in church ministry.

Including experiencing wave after wave of culture stress — both in the Philippines and in Canada.

Including learning how to communicate and think in a different language than when the one we grew up in.

Including confronting how much our world has changed from the world that we grew up experiencing in Canada and how sometimes that leads to bumps with other people who have not experienced what we’ve experienced.

Through it all I’ve learned what commitment to a life partner, to a soulmate, to a to the best example of what it means to be a missionary.

I didn’t come into fatherhood with a great plan. I didn’t even know if I would know what to do as a father. I do remember being there for the birth of Emily and for Daniel I do remember how that first experience with them on this side of the womb started something that continues on today.

I’ve learned how to navigate what it means to change seven diapers in one day.

I’ve learned how to navigate what it means when your kids are more popular than the animals we were looking at in the zoo.

I’ve learned what it means to have that protective fierceness that wants to keep my kids from harm, however slight it might be.

I’ve also learned what it means to see my children grow in wisdom and maturity. To see them grow into young people with a deep, heartfelt, genuine, pure conviction that Jesus is their king that they need to live out his values that they need to love God and love, neighbour, and that they need to testify to the truth that they have experienced.

So it turns out that my collapsed, leaf spring isn’t my family. So what is it?

On being ready, but the time has not yet come

As time progressed during my treatment, we discovered that there is hope. We heard account after account of others in the same situation who underwent treatment and continued living a long and full life. So it made me realise that maybe the end isn’t as near as I initially thought.

But then again, since I am still sick, my leaf springs are still collapsed and I need to deal with them.

But just because a leaf spring is broken, doesn’t mean everything is broken. While I may be ready to go at any time that may not in fact be what happens or even be the best option. All of this has also led me to ask: What does God want me to do with the rest of my life, however long or short that may be?

Even though I’ve lived a deeply blessed life and have had many wonderful experiences, are there things I should stop doing so I can devote myself more fully to other things? It has prompted a great deal of reflection.

Initially, when something like this happens, the response tends to remain somewhat intellectual. You have these abstract discussions about life and death and sickness and mortality.

I read a post by Al Hirsch the other day and he had this great summary of some of theologian Hans von Baltasar’s thoughts. The part the struck me was that life only gains meaning when we realise it’s finite nature. “They become, in that moment, irreducibly themselves: a unique person, with a unique mandate, standing before a finite and not merely a limited horizon…. A finite horizon … closes. And in closing, it forces the question of what was actually asked of this particular life, and whether the answer was given.”

How to live that finite life I wonder?

Maybe my collapsed leaf springs have to do with how I view life as a whole?

On Being Ready & The Finite Life 

Honestly, I’ve tended to live my life more as a human doing rather than a human being. Looking at my typical schedule shows a huge pile of things. I remember doing a report to one partnering church in Canada about some of the stuff that Eva and I were doing and immediately after that the worship pastor stood up and said, “You guys are too busy!” I don’t know if I really realized that, but it seems to me that busy-ness is a part of what I think is something that I need to be. I wonder if it stems from my long felt fear that I’m too lazy and so I need to show that I’m doing something. I remember when we first started sending reports into our Edmonton office. My initiation reports were always just a list of the things that I was doing so that people would know I am legitimately doing something here and I’m not slacking off!

But then the other day, I was sitting in the living room with Eva, and suddenly it struck me: I am actually sick.

Up until that moment, I think part of me still assumed this was temporary — that perhaps I simply wasn’t feeling well today, but tomorrow I would feel fine again. And of course, some days are better than others. But then I realized, “Wait a minute. I genuinely have an illness that has been diagnosed, and this illness is affecting my life.”

Being sick opens up a different reality because now all of a sudden I don’t have the energy to do everything and I need to pick and choose the things that I feel are important or not important to do. Making those decisions is very difficult. One of my doctors actually advised that I take and year and focus only on medical care — and that return to Canada for a part of that — but what does that even mean? I don’t understand those words.

Oddly enough, that realization has also become a legitimate invitation to continue becoming the kind of person God wants me to become. I no longer need to minimize things by telling myself, “Maybe tomorrow everything will simply return to normal,” because tomorrow may not, in fact, be normal.
I suppose that is simply part of the reality of being sick.

On Being Ready & Following the infinite Jesus — in light of my own finiteness.

Leaf springs are designed to carry the load of the vehicle but the fact that my car’s leaf springs have flattened out means that too much strain has been placed upon them over the years and they need rehabilitation. When thinking about my life — is it perhaps true that I have taken on weight that Jesus hasn’t asked me to carry?

Jesus bridges the gap — not me. He is both infinite and finite. I am exclusively finite. I was created for a purpose that may not include changing the whole world — but it may include changing a finite part of it.

There are a couple of passages that come to mind when I think about my situation.

At the end of John’s Gospel, Peter and Jesus are talking. Jesus is giving Peter his task — what Peter is to do after Jesus returns to heaven. Peter then asks an interesting question: “What about him?” Scholars are generally convinced he is referring to John, the author of the Gospel. In other words: “What about that guy?”

Jesus responds by saying, “If I want him to live until I come again, how does that concern you? Follow me!” (John‬ ‭21‬:‭22‬).

This tells me that each of us has a purpose. Each of us has a task. Each of us has some finite role to fulfill within this much greater infinite story. We do not have to answer all the world’s questions. We are not called to solve every problem. We do not even need to see the story through to the end. We simply need to fulfill the task God has given us.

God has given me a task, and He has given you a task as well. Sometimes those tasks may overlap; sometimes they may be very different.

There is another passage that comes to mind. In Hebrews 11, there is a long list of the pillars of our faith beginning with the very early ones: Abraham, Moses, Isaiah, and many others. The chapter reflects on the faith of Abraham, Moses, Isaiah, and so many others, and on the contribution each one made to God’s story. But at the end of the chapter, there is a fascinating statement. Even though these people were great examples of faith and powerful witnesses to God’s goodness, they still did not receive the fullness of what God had planned. Why? Because we too — you reading this, me writing this, the people around us — still have a part to contribute to God’s story.

This is actually part of the reason why I included such a long list of names in my testimony above. It’s because my experience in Pingkian reminds me of what the writer Hebrews describing here — people who are faithfully living out the task God has given to them in their daily lives.

That is why I believe the story from the beginning of Scripture to the end of Scripture is one continuous story, not one broken into disconnected segments.

So, the question I am confronted with when faced with my own mortality — when thinking about my finite role in an infinite story — is this: What is my contribution? What does God want me to do today? How does God want me to finish my life, whether that finish comes tomorrow, fifty years from now, or even beyond what I can imagine?

I have given this some thought. There are certain things that I’ve had on my to-do list for quite a while that I haven’t yet accomplished. I think the responsible thing to do is to prepare something that can be left behind. My initial thoughts went to the following:

For many years, I’ve had several writing projects sitting on the back burner. I’m working on a couple of book chapters exploring how the church engages society, and I’ve long wanted to turn my dissertation into a book. Perhaps now is the right time to move those projects to the forefront.

I’ve also thought about mentoring. Beyond my ongoing mentoring of Pastor Renz and Pastor Gibo, several of our younger leaders have expressed a desire to serve as pastors or in church ministry. Walking alongside them and helping prepare the next generation seems like a worthwhile investment of whatever time God gives me.

My colleagues and I have also spent many years helping shape SEATS into the school it is today. Naturally, we think often about the next generation. We want them to inherit something that is concrete. Perhaps this season is an invitation for me to devote more attention to some of the less glamorous administrative work that helps make that possible.

If this is true, then why does teaching always still pop up at the front of my mind? Can I still teach?

One of the unexpected joys of walking through this season has been reflecting on my life. As I think about Pingkian today, one thing brings me enormous joy. Almost none of the ministries that now flourish there began with me. KidsNet, youth ministry, women’s ministry, ASCEND, Young Stewards, the prayer meetings — all of these exist because God placed different burdens on different hearts.

All of these things exist because God didn’t call me to do the entire task but because he called each one of us to our own specific, unique task.

The wonderful thing is that everything doesn’t depend on me!

One of the great joys I have as I look beyond where we are today is realizing that God is in control. God is guiding what is happening in this church. And he will continue to be our guide in Pingkian in the future.

And that brings me both happiness and deep joy.

On Re-Arching My Leaf Springs

The leaf springs on my car have been re-arched. The old ones have been strengthened by a new addition. Now the car rides great and is ready for the next years of carrying the loads they were intended to bear. But as I mentioned at the beginning of this journey, when Pablo first mentioned my leaf springs, I thought we were talking about my car.

It turns out we weren’t.

Over the past weeks I have reflected on my faith, my bucket list, my ministry, my family, and my own mortality. One by one I discovered that none of these were actually the problem. If anything, they have been some of God’s greatest gifts to me.

Instead, what had slowly flattened over the years was something else.

Somewhere along the way, I had begun living more as a human doing than as a human being. I had quietly assumed responsibilities that were never mine to carry. I had forgotten that Jesus bridges the gap — not me. My role has never been to accomplish everything, solve everything, or finish everything. My role is simply to faithfully fulfill the finite task God has given me within His infinite story.

And to remember Jesus bridges the gap — not me.

Perhaps that is what it means to re-arch my leaf springs.

Not to stop serving.

Not to stop teaching.

Not to stop dreaming.

But to remember that I am finite, while Jesus is not.

Regardless of how long this journey turns out to be, there are blessings in travelling a little more slowly. I have begun to notice things I might otherwise have missed. I have more opportunity to stop and smell the roses, to enjoy the scenery, to sit with people instead of merely moving on to the next task. The journey itself begins to matter more than racing toward the destination.

Perhaps that is part of becoming more of a human being than merely a human doing.

And perhaps it’s a part of what it means to not carry the weight I wasn’t designed to carry?

So let me leave you with the same question Pablo unintentionally asked me:

Have your leaf springs flattened out?

Have you gradually taken on weight that Jesus never asked you to carry?

If they have, what might God be inviting you to restore?

Photo of my leaf springs at Pablo’s shop taken by me.

Orange is more than just a shirt: It’s a call to live the life Jesus wants us to live!

I’m wearing an orange shirt today. This is because September 30 in Canada is the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation aka Orange Shirt Day. One of the ways that this truth and reconciliation is remembered is through the wearing of an orange shirt. Even though I am far removed from Canada and haven’t lived there for any length of time for 26 years, the shirt that I put on today reminds me of two key aspects to what it means to be a follower of Jesus: Truth & Reconciliation.

I should point out before we continue that I do have skin in the game. One branch of my family has a long heritage of both First Nations and Metis peoples and I am a citizen of the Metis Nation of Saskatchewan. My Great-great-great grandfather, the Maškēkowak Rev. James Settee, spent his life ministering through Manitoba and Saskatchewan, introducing people to the good news of Jesus Christ and how that good news can help transform their lives.

If you’re a longtime reader of this blog, you’ll realize that these two words are a key aspect to how I think that we need to frame our lives and our engagement as Jesus followers. The whole framework — that we call the functional church — includes the Good News of Jesus Christ, the Values of God’s Kingdom, Loving God and Neighbour, and Truthtelling.

Orange Reminds Me of Truthtelling at Both the Political and Theological Levels

The first is through truthtelling. Jesus came not only to represent the truth, but to be the Truth. And part of this truth means we need to reflect on ourselves, on the way we think, and on the foundations we’ve built, and to find ways that God wants us to change these for the better. Unfortunately, in the history of Canada, Jesus’ followers have not always exhibited the kind of truth that Jesus would have us exhibit. (This is by no means limited to issues in Canada). One of the truths we need to face is that it’s difficult for us to tie up our political beliefs with our biblical beliefs. Sometimes we connect following Jesus to our adherence with a specific political party or political ideology. One of the truths that some of our founding fathers believed was that First Nations identity was bad and this needed to be changed into something good. Thus we have residential schools that were explicitly designed to “remove the Indian from the child.” This is all clearly documented in the reports of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and also in quotes like this:

When the school is on the reserve the child lives with its parents, who are savages; he is surrounded by savages, and though he may learn to read and write his habits, and training and mode of thought are Indian. He is simply a savage who can read and write. It has been strongly pressed on myself, as the head of the Department, that Indian children should be withdrawn as much as possible from the parental influence, and the only way to do that would be to put them in central training industrial schools where they will acquire the habits and modes of thought of white men.

John A. MacDonald, 1883

This was not merely a political failure; it was a theological one. These political ideas, in turn, fostered and were justified by a flawed theology. What do I mean by that? There are several theological flaws at play here.

Flawed Understanding of Politics and Theology

The first, of course, is that it represents a marriage between politics and theology where political theory is prioritised over theology rather than the other way around. All of life needs to be informed by scripture.

Where do we see this today? It happens when we assume a political party’s platform is synonymous with God’s will, or when we dismiss a fellow believer’s faith because they vote differently.

Humans Were Created Originally Righteous

The Bible clearly teaches us that humans were originally created good. It was only after a specific choice to rebel that sin entered into the world. I’ve written a little bit about that here. That means we cannot look at people from another part of the world who may have different cultures or different languages or different political structures or different technological levels, and say that somehow because they’re not as developed as we are, they’re not worthy of receiving the gospel of Jesus Christ on their own terms. The message of Jesus must be communicated in a way that is understandable to them. There is no command in scripture for us to transform other peoples’ cultures for them. In fact, each person in each culture is called to do their own internal transformation as their own minds are renewed.

Recognizing that truth is the foundation for repentance, healing, and reconciliation.

Imago Dei

The very first words after the creation story in Genesis 1:27 declare that all peoples on the earth are in the image of God.

“So God created humans in his image. In the image of God he created them. He created them male and female.”

The very truths of the Bible condemn the attempts of others to erase languages, traditions, and identities as not only cruel, but also as a denial of Scripture itself. The Good News of Jesus Christ is not an attempt to replace a lost image, but rather a call for all peoples to be reconciled to God and, in that process, to restore and renew their own cultures in Christ, purifying and elevating what aligns with God’s truth and rejecting what does not (Colossians 3:10; Ephesians 4:24).

The truth of the Bible is far from this idea and clearly teaches that the image of God was not erased by the Fall. Genesis 9:6 plainly states human life is sacred because people still bear God’s image. James 3:9 warns against cursing others because they still reflect God’s likeness. Paul describes men and women as God’s image-bearers in the present tense (1 Corinthians 11:7). The truth runs through the whole Bible: every person, every people, every culture carries this dignity.

One tragedy of the residential schools was deeply theological because of the idea that First Nations peoples were somehow less than fully human, or less than fully made in the image of God. This has been framed as “robbing communities and individuals of their cultural and spiritual identity.”

Heaven Will be Explicitly Multicultural

The truth of the matter is that God accepts people from every tribe, language, nation, and people in the world and each of these groups will be represented in heaven. There’s this great image from Revelation 7:9-10 that sees John open his eyes to the reality of the kingdom of God that contains all of these People.

“After this I saw a great crowd of people, too many to count, from every nation, tribe, clan, and language. They were standing before the seat of honor and before the Lamb, dressed in pure white regalia, holding palm tree branches in their hands. They lifted their voices and shouted, ‘The power to set us free and make us whole belongs to the Great Spirit who sits upon the seat of honor, and to the Lamb!’” Book of the Great Revealing 7:9-10

The truth is that we need to work towards a more intentional welcoming of people from all nations into God’s Kingdom, not as peoples whose cultures have been stripped away in favour of our own, but as peoples whose cultures express God’s goodness and love. Maybe these new perspectives will reveal to us that our own culture is flawed and in need of transformation. Unfortunately, for many, this is a very scary prospect because it means that we all need to admit our flaws and work towards repentance and restoration. The culture that we may want to protect; the way of life that we may want to preserve may in fact not be worth protecting or preserving because of their built-in flaws. Maybe instead of preservation we need to work towards growth.

This isn’t just a historical error. We see it when we dismiss other cultures as “unreached” because they lack Western infrastructure, or when we implicitly value some lives over others based on nationality, wealth, or social status.

Wearing Orange not only reminds me of my commitment to truth, it also reminds me of something else.

Orange Reminds Me Of Reconciliation

The second word that this orange shirt I’m wearing reminds me of is reconciliation. There is good news, even in light of the fact that we have made mistakes in the past there is good news because God is working to reconcile us to himself. He has even indicated that Jesus followers are to be agents of this reconciliation. We are to find ways to connect to God with people and people with God. We are to find ways to bring Hope to a world that is hopeless. We must find ways to help others be lifted up as they journey towards God.

But as I was reminded today, in conversation with my Spiritual Director Len Thompson, we may not always see the fruit that we are looking forward to. Len reminded me of Hebrews 11 and 12 where all of these great heroes of our faith worked very hard to establish God’s Kingdom here on earth, but they did not yet experience that kingdom during their own lifetimes. Each had a contribution to make to establishing the Kingdom but the establishment of that Kingdom supersedes any one lifetime or era. What’s especially significant for us today — as pointed out by Andrew Walls — is that we too are waiting to see that Kingdom established! This not only means that you and I each have our own contribution to make, it also means that our contributions are essential!

The legacy of this theological failure isn’t confined to history books. It echoes in the ongoing trauma of survivors, the systemic inequalities Indigenous people still face, and in our own complacency. So, what’s the next step for us, right now?

What’s the next step?

So, today, feel free to wear an orange shirt. But it’s not merely enough to just wear an orange shirt. We are called to be truth-tellers and reconcilers today, and this historical example shows us what happens when we fail that call. Here’s how we can live it out now.

  • How can I apply the truth of God to my life? To my society’s life? To my use of the land?
  • How can I be an agent of reconciliation today? Encourage individuals to return to a right relationship with God? Reshape my society so that it has a proper relationship with God? Improve my relationship with the land in a way that God desires?

Will you join me in being a truth teller? Will you join me in being an agent of reconciliation?

If Orange Shirt Day is painful for you, help is available. Call the 24-hour national Indian Residential Schools Crisis Line: 1 (800) 721-0066.

I’m Only Human, After All: A Journey Back to our Authentic Selves

“I’m only human.” We’ve all said it or heard it. It’s the universal excuse for our limitations and our failures. But what if we’ve gotten it all wrong? What if that phrase isn’t an apology, but a declaration of our greatest purpose? What if being ‘only human’ is actually the whole point of God’s plan?

There is a narrative popular today that views humans as a blight on the earth. This narrative focuses on the bad things that humans do, including environmental degradation, wars, religious conflict, etc. It’s almost as if we’re to believe that humans shouldn’t even exist on the face of the Earth.

A popular example of this, at least from my generation, is the very first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation where Q puts humanity on trial for all of the bad things that they’ve done. In some ways, the rest of the series is an attempt to address the issues that Q raises.

I was watching Building the Band last night, and in one of the songs they sang was “Human.” The chorus of it goes, “I’m only human after all.” The singers found it powerful because it framed ‘being human’ as an excuse for their limitations and failures — a sentiment I think we all understand. 

But the song got me thinking about being “only human after all” and I realized that scripture has a different understanding of what that means. Scripture doesn’t put it in a negative light. To be human is not to be a curse upon the world, but to be a blessing.

What makes me say this? At the very, very beginning of scripture, God creates humans in his image (Ge 1:27). So that means that humans are a significant part of creation. Nothing else is described as being created in his image. Only humans. Humans are also placed into the garden to oversee it, to care for it (Ge 2:15). Adam names all the animals in the world. And humans have a very significant role to play in the care of the earth.

Even after sin enters and messes everything up — and enslaves humans, structures, and the physical world — humans continue trying to free themselves from sin (more on that here). Ultimately, Jesus provides that freedom through his death, sacrifice, and resurrection so that we too might be dead to sin and raised to new life in Christ (Ro 6:1-11; 1Pe 2:24). But to be human is not a bad thing. Jesus did come from heaven to earth, lived here for 30 years, taught, made disciples, and trained a group of humans — both male and female — to carry on His mission. Then, after three years of ministry, He left. He went back to heaven and said, “I’m leaving you all here with a task to make disciples of all nations” (Mt 28:19-20).

To be human is to be somebody significant, to be someone whom God has created specifically to carry out and fulfill his mission here on Earth, and that is the mission of reconciliation with him (2Co 5:18-20), to glorify him, to praise him. In their original, created design, humans are not bad; humans are good. 

An Alternative Perspective

At this point, I should point out that there is an alternative perspective to the common science fiction trope that humans are a blight on the universe. There’s a series of Reddit posts that are expanded upon in several TikTok videos that take the form of fanfiction and describe a future where aliens have invaded the world but can’t defeat the humans because of human resourcefulness, because of their idiosyncrasies, and because of their ability to embrace multiple forms of truth at one time. In fact, these fanfic renditions are closer to the truth than we might think.

But there is a Problem

So how do we live up to this potential? How do we overcome this sin problem that is so pervasive it often becomes the defining feature of humanity? (Ro 3:23). How can we do what God wants us to do here on earth? 

The frustrating reality is that sin clearly messes things up. It’s the issue that each of us has had to grapple with for our entire existence. It’s so pervasive and its impact is felt so much in our entire world that sometimes sin becomes the defining feature of what it means to be a human. And yet, God still maintains humans as an essential part of his plan for the salvation of the world. Please note that I’m not saying that humans save themselves (Ep 2:8-9) but that God incorporates humans into his plan as key agents. We’ve already touched on the Great Commission. Humans have even had a significant role in deciding how this Great Commission is carried out as we see in Acts 11, where there was a jump made from Jewish followers of Jesus towards Gentiles who had no natural connection to Jesus. Beyond that we are identified as agents of reconciliation (2Co 5:18-20). Even beyond that we are part of the long list of witnesses in Hebrews that have a contribution to make to the story of the good news. And ultimately, we will share together in the celebration of God’s victory in heaven in the end of time (Re 19:1-10).

To step into this role, we must discuss a little bit about the choices we can to make as humans. James talks about this in chapter 4. 

Pagbabalik-loob, or Returning to our Authentic Selves

But before we get to that, we have to understand a Filipino concept that has a significant role to play in our discussion. Ka Jose de Mesa has pointed out that the English word translated “conversion” has a variety of meanings in different languages. For example, in Greek, it’s “Metanoia,” which talks about a changing of the mind. Conversion itself talks about a complete refurbishment. In the Philippines, we have pagbabalik-loob which indicates a return to our authentic self. This authentic self is what we see in Genesis 1, where God is happy with the world he has created. Humans have been created in his image, both male and female, and there are no problems. This is the authentic self that we need to return to. There has not been any impact of sin in the lives of humans at this point, and when we harken back to the way things could be when we dream about a better world, we dream about returning to this time before the entry of sin and death into the world. In a nutshell, it means that when we become Jesus’ followers, we start our journey back towards that original innocent condition. 

James’ Steps on Returning To Our Authentic Selves

James (4:7-9) describes a series of steps that help us return.

The first step is to “Submit to God.” This is the ultimate act of humility because it’s where we recognize His authority. As I have said elsewhere, the Gospel is a political statement. It’s a choice we make to either follow other humans as our leader, or to truly follow Jesus as our leader.

Next is to “Resist the Devil and he will flee.” For me, this is one of the most amazing statements made in scripture because typically when we think of the devil, we think of somebody that we’re supposed to be afraid of. Somebody with horns and a fork tail and a trident. Somebody who is the epitome of evil, but yet the only thing we need to do is to resist him and then he’ll just take off? That’s a pretty powerful statement. Ultimately it’s to actively reject the world’s value system. Just before you read about the fruits of the spirit in Galatians 5 we see a list of things that are not so good things that are to be avoided. Resisting the devil is avoiding these things. While the devil is a real, personal being, his primary attack isn’t as a monster we wrestle face-to-face. Rather, he most often works by laying down a set of values that are opposed to the values of God. So the way to resist that is to oppose those worldly values. The key to resisting is to look at the list and find the things that jump out as being difficult to do. Those are the things need to focus on. We don’t need to focus on the other stuff because we’ve already got that covered.

It’s not simply enough to resist the devil and he will flee. We also need to “Draw near to God and he will draw near to us.” How then can we return to God? There are two ways of doing this. First of all we can work on the fruits of the spirit in our lives. Making sure that these things come out making sure that our lives are known as bearing these different fruit. In the same way with the negative values when we come to the fruits of the spirit, we look at those things that jump out at us as perhaps being difficult to do in those of the things we focus on.

There’s a second aspect to drawing near to God and that is to keep connection with Christ’s body here on earth. We is this body? It’s the church. We need to stay connected to the church.

James asks us to “Cleanse our hands.” Purify yourself from being double-minded—trying to serve two masters. The fact that even though I may now be far from God, all it takes for me to return is to wash my hands. This is a hopeful statement because I am not eternally separated but I have an opportunity to return.

Finally, James calls on us to “Be sorrowful, mourn, and weep.” Just as the woman who washed Jesus feet with her tears and dried them with her hair , we too must get to the point where we feel the weight of our broken relationship with God so we can appreciate His blessings. There is a weight to the evil in our world. Without a true understanding of this evil, without feeling the weight of that evil, without being brought tears because of our failure to truly do what God wants us to do, we haven’t truly repented.

So, Now That We’ve Returned, What’s the Next Step?

The narrative is set. The world says we are a blight. God says we are a blessing. The fanfics get it half-right—humans are resourceful and resilient. But the full truth is even better: We are redeemed and repurposed.

Our next step is to live like we believe God’s story. Your humanity is not a liability; it is your qualification for the mission. You are perfectly placed in your family, your job, and your city to be an agent of reconciliation.

Therefore, our call to action is this: Embrace our operational mandate. This is our opportunity:

· It is our opportunity to not only declare that Jesus is our leader, but to practice it, submitting every decision — big and small — to His authority.

· It is our opportunity to not only declare the values of His kingdom, but to practice them, actively rejecting the world’s values of greed, pride, and conflict in favor of love, joy, and peace.

· It is our opportunity to not only declare the command to love God and love our neighbor, but to practice it, making it the practical, daily outpouring of our faith.

· It is our opportunity to not only declare God’s goodness, but to practically live it out, allowing our personal experiences of His grace to become a testament that blesses others.

This is how we step into our potential. This is how we trade the excuse of “I’m only human” for the declaration of “I am made human, for God’s glory.”

Go now, and live into that truth.

Image by Shoeib Abolhassani on Unsplash

The Divine Imprint: How God’s Design Outlasted the Soviet Plan

At first glance, the grey concrete Soviet block-era high rises across the street from me. Lifeless, uniform, and uninteresting. There’s no sense of individuality, just one window after another after another after another. Lifeless. Uninteresting. Uniform. Bland. Blah.

I have heard of places like this all of my life. Places designed to crush a human soul. But despite the cloudy, rainy skies that are covering this town — that I’m only just visiting for the first time — there is not a sense of dismalness here but a sense of life.

They were designed and implemented by a philosophy that says all humans should be the same with no one rising up and no one lower down. But equal. Egalitarian. Balanced. The same.

And the philosophers can’t be faulted for their good intentions. They wanted to eliminate discrimination and inequality, and they sought to use something as simple as a domestic domicile in order to do that. The home is where our heart is after all, and if we can modify the home, it might also modify our heart. But just as evil has enslaved our hearts and has enslaved our natural world so too it has enslaved our concept of domicile. So rather than merely pushing us and nudging us in the right direction, the evil that enslaved these buildings has eliminated all sense of individuality and diversity and joy.

But then I look closer and I realize in this later end of their life, these solidly poured concrete structures do exhibit life. I can see on the end of the buildings, the inlaid fancy designs in the concrete that show arches and curves and nibs and bumps and nubs; that show some sense of style. And as I look towards the neighbouring buildings, I realized that they’re not entirely uniform, but each has its own distinct features. Is each of these minor details and differences evidence of resistance on the part of the original designers and architects?

And now, at this time, probably at least 50 years since they were built, there’s a sense of individuality. People have changed their balconies. People have applied paint. People have installed air conditioners, people have installed new windows. And you realize that these buildings that were designed to be uniform and lifeless and proletarian have now become something else entirely: a place where life can continue, a place where people must not merely subsist, but survive and thrive. A place people can call their own and they can say, “Oh, I have some differences.” “I have some preferences.” “I have some changes.” “I like things to be the way they are.” “I like the light gray. I like cream.” “I like dark gray and brighter cream color.” “I like white.” “I like to have aluminum windows.” “I like tiles.” “I like air conditioning.” “I like fancy railings.” “I like plain cement.” “I like reflective windows.” “I like clear windows.” “I like brown windows.” “I like white windows.” “I don’t like windows at all and I want to brick them up.”

But these personalisations aren’t intended to infringe upon other’s spaces — in spite of the difficulty of painting the exterior wall on the sixth floor or the 10th floor people’s individual spaces remain clearly demarcated. The only infringement upon the neighbors is through the sense of sight, but there’s an idea that this sense of sight is meant to be influenced in a positive way rather than a negative way.

And then there’s the signs of life. These aren’t just inanimate concrete structures, but inanimate concrete structures that house life. A string of laundry left out too long, now soaked by rain. Five lights of a chandelier seen through one window; another window ajar where a face looked out moments before; and families emerging from the streets in between these buildings, heading somewhere. Revealing their diverse senses of fashion in their attire and in the vehicles they drive.

The city, which is the historical centre of Georgia, abounds in religious imagery! Crosses appear at street corners. Churches dot the mountain tops. Even the national flag with its five crosses, denotes the five wounds of Christ on the cross. I wonder how these religious ideas have impacted this Soviet Block community that I’m looking at? How deeply has the truth behind those images and icons transformed the people who live within these blocks? This is a profoundly, starkly Christian nation. How has that Christianity worked at chipping away the years of negative political philosophy that formerly controlled this place?

As the legend goes, the Georgians were the last ones in line to receive a land from God. According to the story, they were too busy partying and didn’t make it on time. When they finally arrived and came face-to-face with God, he said “I have no land left because you guys are late.” In response, they happen to mention part of their celebration included a toast it to God himself. God‘s response of, “Since you have toasted me then I have a piece of land here that I was reserving for myself. I would like to give it to you instead” reveals a deep-seated Georgian understanding that even the very land that they live in is blessed by God.

It makes one wonder why humans decided to reshape this perfect landscape into the form of concrete apartments. And I also wonder how the deep embedded Christianity of Georgia made it resistant to Soviet philosophy? Was there truly no hope that this philosophy would take hold and thrive? Was it inevitable that Jesus and his influence on not only people’s individual lives but also on their national life would make them inherently resistant to other philosophies?

Is the metal cross, bell, and icon planted at the foot of one of these buildings, a sign of this pervading hope in the divine? Is this a more recent addition or does its presence here today signify this religious attitude’s continual presence in the hearts of the people here?

Somehow the human desire for uniqueness and beauty and colour and life emerges, even though the original plan meant to suppress and hold this back. It reminds me that there’s always hope for a better future and that when God created us, he created us with the ability to not be satisfied with the way people want us to be, but to live and thrive, and enjoy life.

Turns out people are the same after all aren’t they? They like to have beauty and joy and colour and variety and diversity.

Who would’ve imagined?

Following up on BGCC Celebration 2024: How Jose de Mesa’s Hermeneutics of Appreciation provides a practical way for Canadian churches to engage society

In May 2024, I had the privilege of speaking at the BGC Canada Celebration in Calgary. Because the theme of the conference centred on Mordecai’s words to Esther “for such a time as this,” one of the sessions I gave was basically laying out the framework that SEATS has been developing for the past 20 years on how the church can engage society “in such a time as this.” The session covered two aspects. The first aspect was the theology of evils, which I’ve written about many times on this blog. The other aspect looked at the functional church, which we see as essential to our identity in the church and society. 

The session was more of a download, laying everything out in a long, complex, complicated system. I apologise if it was a little bit inaccessible because of that. I also wasn’t as clear in stating it during my talk, but I think that Canada is now a mission field and as Jesus’ followers we need to approach it as such.

This reality was made clear by many other presentations at the conference that talked about ways Canadians perceive the world. The Evangelical Fellowship of Canada’s Rick Hiemstra was very clear in providing statistics and surveys to help us understand the way Canadians think. And all of these reinforce the idea that Canada is a Mission field.

What does it mean to say that Canada is a Mission field?

Before we go further, I want to highlight that current missions theory sees all parts of the world as the “mission field.” Yet, we often still think of missions as someone leaving their own home to go to another place.

I understand that there are two ways we could define “Canada is a mission field.” One way is “the world is coming to Canada so they’re at our doorstep so we can present the gospel to them.” And this certainly may be true.

BGC Canada addressed this about 30 years ago when we formed GLOBAL Ministries. The tagline at the time was “across the street, around the world.” This was a recognition that people are coming to Canada, which presents an opportunity for us to reach out to them wherever they might be. Eva and I were privileged to be selected for that team at the very beginning and are grateful to continue serving in Southeast Asia. We also know that many of you also are finding ways to reach “across the street” as well as “around the world.” We’re happy to be together on the same team in doing this!

The problem is this is only half the story. It is true that Canadian missionaries have had a tremendous impact on the world as they followed God‘s call to bring the message of his good news around the world. But there’s more to the story.

The other way of defining “Canada is a mission field” is by recognising that new immigrants to Canada are bringing their Christian faith to a place that is no longer Christian. I particularly enjoy the fact this includes Filipinos. For many years now the Philippines has been the number one source of new Canadians. One way this impacts Canada is by Filipino Christians coming to work in Canada, moving to small towns with dying churches, and injecting new life into those churches. Alison Marshall from Brandon University has written a lot on this specific subject.

So what are the implications of “Canada is a mission field”?

Given the fact that Canada is now a Mission field I thought it important to discuss some ways we can think about this. What can I do as I live in my Canadian community, pastor my Canadian Church, and dream about reaching Canada for Christ? How can I tweak the perceptions I have about the world and about Canada and about the gospel so that they can become more understandable to one another? What are some practical ways that the Canadian church can engage society?

It may also mean that the way we’ve traditionally done things may not work anymore. We may need to think about what the church will look like in the next generations.

If Canada is a mission field, we need to approach Canada as if it’s a place we do not understand or we’re not familiar with. We’re unaware of the culture. We’re unaware of the language. We’re unaware of the practices. This means we must come in with a fresh mind asking, “How can we help the people of this place connect with God on an understandable level?“ And “How will my journey with these people help me draw closer to God, myself?”

(I should mention as an aside that while the immediate context of my talk was Canada, since I was invited to a Canadian conference, these principles apply to any culture around the world. So those who are thinking about doing missions in it any other country can figure out ways to make these relevant to their new context as well.)

Jose de Mesa’s Hermeneutics of Appreciation is a usable framework for Canadian churches wanting to go “across the street.”

What comes to mind immediately is Jose de Mesa’s hermeneutics of appreciation as a framework for how the church can engage society. (I have already written a bit on de Mesa’s ideas, here.) de Mesa developed this framework in the 1970s. He was a contemporary of other Filipino academics who collectively realised that the Western-based systems of history, psychology, and anthropology were inadequate in describing the Philippine situation. They worked at reconstructing these ideas using the Philippine context as a base. Jose de Mesa approached the area of theology in the same way.

De Mesa’s insights into how Christianity entered the Philippines is helpful for us as we think about how the church of Jesus Christ can re-enter Canadian society. He developed a hermeneutic of appreciation for use when Jesus’ followers from one culture approach people from another. I thought it might be useful to see how his four hermeneutical steps may apply to the church in Canada today with the hope that this may serve as a model for us to use in the church today.

It’s important for us to remember at this point that de Mesa was largely reacting to issues he observed as a cultural insider to how the gospel was and is understood in the Philippines — his approach is in direct opposition to a hermeneutic of suspicion. It’s also important to realize that de Mesa writes as a deeply devoted Christian who sees Jesus as his Saviour and the Saviour of his nation. But having said that, it’s important to realize that there is a critique in this hermeneutic – a critique that’s useful in helping us understand our own ways of approaching others with the gospel.

Attitude #1 Presume the cultural element or aspect under consideration to be positive (at least in intent) until proven otherwise.

A lot of the stuff we do in churches is cultural, even though we assume it’s biblical. I guess what I’m trying to say is that there is sometimes a blending of how we interpret the Bible with how we view the world. What sometimes happens as we go somewhere else and see how other people live is that we immediately assume that they are doing things for all the wrong reasons. We understand that sin enslaves the entire world and we assume that those who have not yet heard about Jesus Christ are also slaves themselves. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that everything that everyone does is done for bad reasons.

Sometimes these things are just different cultural preferences. I remember reading Peace Child by Don Richardson. You may have read the book or seen the movie. It’s a powerful example of how a missionary to New Guinea found a redemptive analogy within his mountain tribe. Richardson’s thesis is that every culture contains what he calls redemptive analogies. Richardson even goes through and illustrates other examples of redemptive analogies that he has found in other times and in other parts of the world. More on this below.

Richardson‘s theology incorporates the ideas that “all have sinned fall short of the glory of God” with the idea that “God has placed eternity in the hearts of humans.” He ties the two together by saying that God has hidden clues in each society and culture that help people move from sinners towards eternity.

We won’t find Redemptive analogies if we approach a culture from the idea that we are right and they are wrong — if we approach another culture with the idea that these are all pagan people with no connection with God and that we are the first voice of God that people have heard. This is actually against what scripture teaches. Typically theology refers to two types of revelation: One of them is general revelation where God makes himself known to all people through means not limited by language — including emotion, conscience, and will (Ps 19:1-2; Job 12:7-10; De 8:18; Pr 16:9; Pr 20:27; Ge 3:7-8). The other is special revelation where God makes himself known specifically through his word — both Living and written (Is 53:5-6; Mic 5:2; De 6:6-7; Ps 119:105).

Popular advice states that we should avoid two topics of discussion in life: religion and politics. Why is that? Because we tend to argue and fight over them don’t we? To apply de Mesa’s framework here we would need to seek understanding of the Other rather than to push the rightness of our own belief. This is scary, isn’t it? Because we must relinquish  power in order to do that. But yet it’s only through vulnerability that we can connect with others in the world around us, isn’t it? 

Presuming that the culture element is positive rather than negative also acknowledges the fact that God is already at work in an among that culture, and some of the things that God has revealed to them may come out through the culture.

Attitude #2 Be aware of your own cultural presuppositions and adopt the insider’s point of view. 

Sometimes when it comes to presenting the gospel we take an exclusivistic approach. An exclusivistic approach means that we know what’s right and nobody else does. We need to present the gospel to Them. This leads us to approach people as if They are wrong and We are right. That’s because the exclusivistic approach is the approach of the Outsider.

I had a conversation the other day with a close friend and colleague is also a pastor. We were discussing preaching and the role of the preacher in the message. We reminded ourselves that the first audience of any sermon is the preacher themself. But there’s also an aspect in the Bible where through the prophets God tells people that they are wrong. The key to remember is that the prophets also recognize themselves as being wrong too. For example, Isaiah says “every word that passes through my lips is sinful,” indicating his desire to be disqualified from this ministry. In the same way, we too as preachers need to recognize our own complicity in sin. Other people are not the only sinners in the world. We, too, are included in that. So when we approach the subject of sin and repentance, we need to approach it in an inclusivistic way. Meaning rather than saying, “You are all a bunch of sinners and need to repent,” we say, “We are all sinners and we all need to repent.” There’s an inclusive aspect to the Gospel.

This is what de Mesa is talking about in his “Be aware of your own cultural presuppositions and adopt the insider’s point of view”

So we use inclusivistic language — words like us and we — and find ways how we too need to hear God’s gospel in the situation. We also assume that God has been at work in the world before we arrive with his message. Back to Richardson’s redemptive analogies. He describes examples such as the peace child of his tribe in New Guinea, and the banana tree/book among other tribes. He even mentions Paul’s recognition of the Athenian “altar to the unknown God” as an example. Bruce Olsen, in his autobiographical Bruchko, describes waiting five years before finding the culturally-appropriate way to present Jesus to his tribe in Colombia. These redemptive analogies provide bridges into a culture to help them understand the goodness of who God is and help introduce them to his special revelation for all humans.

What redemptive analogies do we find around us? What ways has God prepared Canadians to understand and accept the good news? What artifacts in Canadian cultures bridge us to God?

For example, Canadians have a deep connection to the land. This includes First Nations, Inuit, Metis, and Settler cultures (I should point out here that I have family connections with each of these four groups). It’s important to realize that there’s a word that’s sometimes translated land in the Bible and other times translated as earth. But connection to the earth is often among disputed among Christians, isn’t it? I remember a younger me pushing against the idea of creation care because it seemed like it was worshiping nature rather than worshiping God. I thought that as humans we were supposed to “subdue” creation. However, connection to land is one of the key aspects of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Not only is that a main part of ancient Israel‘s connection with him, but it also emerges when others are trying to understand God. It’s especially significant in God‘s conversations with Job where God clarifies and reveals himself to Job through the land. Perhaps understanding this connection with the land or earth is a redemptive analogy for Canadians.

Another example for Canadians may be our internationally-acknowledged kindness. Kindness appears to be under attack today. I’ve seen pushback against the concept of empathy and also against being a “nice man.” In fact, I engaged in a short dialogue on X with someone the other day who was advocating that men should no longer be “nice.” However, kindness is a key part of the gospel of Jesus Christ. For example, the reason that we are saved is because God showed his kindness to us. And the evidence of the fact we are saved includes, among other things, kindness towards others. Perhaps kindness is another redemptive analogy for Canadians. 

Can you think of any more redemptive analogies for Canadians or even for your own culture?

Attitude #3 Go beyond cultural stereotypes.

When I was in Grade 5 at Lorne Haselton School in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, the Gideons came and presented each of us with a New Testament, including the Psalms and Proverbs. I remember mine was red. Afterwards, at recess, we were discussing these New Testaments, and one of my classmates came up to me to talk about it, and I blurted out to him, “What are you gonna do, rip it up?” And he had this look of confusion on his face. I think about that interaction a lot and wonder, “What was it that caused me to assume that my classmates who didn’t go to church would just be interested in ripping up the Bible?” Well, I think it’s because there was a cultural presupposition when I was growing up that the world was divided into Believers and Unbelievers. Believers did everything God wanted them to do, and Unbelievers did nothing that God wanted them to do. And so, I assumed that a Unbeliever receiving a New Testament would just be interested in getting rid of it because it was something good. Of course, looking back on this and on my Grade 5 self, I realize that I was deeply mistaken and that my cultural presuppositions towards those who were not-yet-Christians were wrong.

One of the key influences in my life was Les Goertz’ book, The Not-Yet-Christian. Goertz approaches the issue with the understanding that people are on a journey towards God. People who come from a point of being originally righteous in Genesis 1, but subsequently slaves to sin, are on a journey back towards that original identity. The idea of looking at someone as a not-yet-Christian reminds us of the hope that at some point someone’s relationship with God will become better — even as my own relationship with God hopefully becomes better over time.

Attitude #4 Use the vernacular as a key to understanding the culture in its own terms. 

I took my first ancient Greek class in university. It was actually Attic Greek. I did this in anticipation of attending Canadian Baptist Seminary after I graduated. (I had heard horror stories of crash Greek and wanted to avoid that experience.) When I got to seminary I was able to skip crash Greek and go straight into Greek exegesis. One of the things I remember learning in studying Greek was that there was a lot of belief that we could find the specific meaning of each of these words. And so we used various grammatical forms, we looked at various words, and determined various definitions for them. But a couple of cracks appeared in the picture as I was studying Greek. One of them was that we weren’t actually defining the words we were translating. Rather, we were giving them glosses. A gloss is a something shiny that looks good and helps us think that we understand something but hides something deeper and non-understandable beneath it. A number of years later in my career, I moved to the Philippines and learned Tagalog — a language I now use to conduct most of my daily affairs. And what I learned was that there is no such thing as a simple transition from one language to another. All translation is betrayal simply because there is no one-to-one relationship between languages! Some languages don’t have the words used in other languages, which often makes it difficult to transmit ideas from one language to another.

Further complicating things is that we often think of text as relating to words and thus the term vernacular as relating to the spoken language specific to a certain context. However, Hanks tells is that text goes beyond merely written word and looks at the systems and structures of a society. “… text can be taken … to designate any configuration of signs that is coherently interpretable by some community of users.”

There’s a current program for Missionary Kids or Third-culture kids when they end up coming to Canada at the end of their schooling and whatever country they grew up in. One of the aspects of this Reboot program is introducing these young people to Canadian culture. This includes introduction to the vernacular, where they learn such things as the true meaning of the phrase, “Netflix and chill” — a term that when interpreted at face value is NOT correct.

In some ways it appears that the church in Canada has lost its grasp of the vernacular. Why do I say this? A year or two ago there was an Angus Reid poll that came out where one of the surprising findings was that — at least among a certain segment of Canadian society — the church is viewed as “damaging to society.” Which is odd, isn’t it? After all, the message the church isn’t one of danger, but love and salvation and a God who wants a relationship and wants the oppressed to be freed and wants the blind to see and wants to lame to walk and wants the prisoners to be set free. So then how come, all of a sudden, there is this idea that the church is something that’s damaging to society? It may be because we’ve lost a grasp of the vernacular.

Now some people are going to complain and say, “My church isn’t like that.” I realize that and I agree with you. However, in the mind of people outside the church, they label us ALL as Christians — in the same way that we label people outside the church as Pagans. There is a little understanding of the nuanced denominationalism that we understand as Insiders. We are all guilty of generalising when it comes to identifying others. Lila Abu-Lughod says some good stuff about generalization and advocates for focussing on particularities instead. But that’s a conversation for another day.

What I’m saying is here is that if our basic core message is misunderstood, it’s probably for one of two reasons: Either we’re not getting it right, or we’re not making it understandable in the vernacular of the day.

What’s the next Step?

What’s your take on this? Does the Canadian church have some work to do in the future? Are there redemptive analogies that would be beneficial for helping the church engage society?

Whether you agree, disagree, or have a fresh perspective, drop a comment and let’s discuss!

If you enjoyed this post, why not share it with your network? Remember, sharing is what friends do!

Photo by Matheus Viana on Pexels.

The ultimate question of the gospel is this: Is it a treasure to be buried & protected? or is it a fortune to be enjoyed & spent?

This is the ultimate question of the gospel: Is the good news a treasure to be buried and protected? or do is it a fortune to be enjoyed and spent?

Treasure has always fascinated us, hasn’t it? People spend a lifetime searching for buried treasure. We grew up hearing stories of pirate treasure that was buried. And there’s that show on the History Channel where they’ve been looking for this “buried treasure” for how many seasons? And of course, they’re never going to find anything because there’s nothing there. This is largely because pirates didn’t actually bury their treasure, did they? What did they do with it? They spent it! Because that’s what treasure is for.

The Gospel is a Treasure

It’s the same way with the Gospel. Sometimes we can get into the mindset that we’re in danger of losing the treasure that God has given us. We need to protect this treasure because there’s encroachment. There’s a war against the Gospel. There’s a war against culture. There’s an invasion of the enemy into our territory. We need to protect it and preserve it and bury it to make sure that it doesn’t disappear.

When we seek to protect what we hold sacred, it’s natural to build systems in theology that feel like vaults—thick walls to bury the treasure of the Gospel where no one can corrupt it. We form coalitions, draft statements, and amplify voices that align with our convictions, stacking stones around what we’ve deemed too precious to risk. Yet in this earnest effort, there’s a tension: We critique culture’s definitions of sin while rarely pausing to examine how our own understanding might be shaped by the very cultural lenses we claim to transcend. It’s easy to conflate vigilance with faithfulness, to mistake burying the treasure for keeping it safe. But what if the Gospel is less a hoard to be guarded and more a fortune to be spent—a currency of grace meant to circulate in the marketplace of human pain and longing? In our zeal to protect, do we risk forgetting that the church’s foundation isn’t ours to fortify? After all, the same Jesus who calls us to discernment assures us the “gates of hell will not prevail.” What if our buried treasure is meant to be dug up, traded, and multiplied—not as a possession to control, but as a gift that grows only when given away?

The thing about treasure is that it maintains its value regardless of the conditions surrounding it. If we read through the stories in the Bible, we realize that there is no need to protect the gospel of Jesus Christ, is there? It does not need protecting. It’s a treasure that’s intended to be spent.

What does Jesus say about the treasure? It’s like a man who finds a treasure buried in a field, and he goes off and spends everything he has to buy that field so the treasure can become his, or a person who finds a precious pearl and sells everything he has so that he can own that treasure so that it can be used, or a woman who loses a coin and expends all her efforts so she can find that coin, or a father who loses his son and spends all his time waiting for that son to return only to have his other son leave — but that’s a story for another day.

Jesus, the treasure, and the fortune.

Jesus confronted this head-on in the mind of Nicodemus, didn’t he? Nicodemus approached him at night and wanted to know what the truth was. And so Jesus says this is what the truth is: God loves the world. This rocked Nicodemus to his core because Nicodemus didn’t believe that the treasure was for the entire world, but that the treasure was only for him and his people. But Jesus said to him, know this: the treasure is for everyone in the world. We need to give it to everyone. Everyone needs to enjoy this fortune. Everyone needs to spend it. Because it’s for everyone in the entire world.

Jesus didn’t just talk about this, he exemplified it. He broke down the barriers between people that existed within his own culture. He also broke down barriers between his culture and other cultures. And of course, finally he commanded his disciples to bring this message to the four corners of the world.

How can I spend the fortune rather than protecting it?

Treasure is meant to be celebrated. There are three stories in Luke that talk about treasure that I mentioned above. One of them is a lost coin. One of them is a lost sheep. One of them is a couple of lost sons. What is common among all those stories is that when the lost is found, there’s a celebration! A party! Juicy steaks! Great drinks! Music and dancing! Neighbours! Celebration!

What’s also common in the stories is that every effort is expended in order to find that treasure so that the celebration can happen.

How am I looking for a hidden treasure? How am I living out the values of the Kingdom of God in my daily life? How am I proclaiming the fact that Jesus Christ is the only solution to the problems in my life, the problems in society around me, and the problems that the natural world itself faces? How am I loving my neighbor as I love myself, which means how am I letting them share in the treasure that I have? And what am I doing to call out the problems that we have in our personal lives, the problems that we have in society around us, and the problems that are brought upon us by the natural forces around us?

And beyond the search for hidden treasure, how can I learn to extravagantly spend the fortune that I already have? So how can I spend my fortune?

There is no greater treasure in the world. We’ve all heard lots of promises haven’t we? Promises of hope for the future. Every election that comes up, in every country, at every level of government, is a promise for a better future. But does that better future ever come about? Not really. The only way that a better future comes out is if the future is based upon the kingdom and values of Jesus Christ and is led by Jesus himself. That’s a treasure worth seeking, isn’t it?

The treasure has great values. And it’s a value that has no price tag. It’s priceless. There’s a famous credit card commercial that talks about the cost of various things but then if you spend your money using that credit card to buy those things, in the end, it leads to something that cannot be charged to a card — something that’s priceless. And that is the value that the Kingdom of God provides to us. It allows us to live lives as people who are transformed. Rather than all the things that we complain about in the world today, we have an opportunity to change that. We have an opportunity to it to express through a variety of values that are priceless. We can love. We can have joy. We can Work for peace. We can have patience. We can be kind. We can be gentle. We can be good. We can be faithful. And we can take charge of ourselves and have control of ourselves. A world that has people who live these values each day is a world that is a priceless treasure.

The treasure helps meet needs. It’s a treasure that’s relevant to the days-in-and-days-out of life. Jesus’ emphasis on healing the sick and raising the dead, his endless teachings on the proper use of finances, his advocacy for the kingdom of God, and his attention and interest in the downtrodden and those on the margins shows that the good news is a treasure that leads to peace and order for our society, to a righteous nation, to public justice, and to economic sufficiency.

The treasure is tangible. It’s just not a story that we hear that makes us feel good. There is actual experience involved in this. We’ve all experienced that haven’t we? I mean the Bible is pretty clear about that. We’ve experienced the understanding that there is a higher power. We’ve all experienced receiving the things that we need in a timely matter. We’ve all, in the midst of darkness and struggle, received hope and kept on keeping on. This is a tangible, real treasure.

So What?

What does the treasure look like for you? How are you experiencing God‘s goodness in your life today? Why not record your thoughts about this in the comments below?

And remember, sharing is what friends do. 

Between Rust and Radiance: Catching God’s Voice on the Waves

We waited several hours for the ferry to arrive. Soon upon its docking, it disgorged its contents: A bus, several 10-wheeler trucks, a few cars, some motorcycles, and then 250 people carrying luggage, bags, pushing carts, holding babies, returning home for some much needed vacation — their journey towards rest and relaxation nearing it’s end. 

Soon it was our time to embark for our return. We found our spot — comfy, cushy seats that seemed to be stuck on ‘Recline.’ An opportunity to sit back and enjoy the ride. Looking out through the windows, a wondrous revelation of God’s creation. A small gap between two rope-tied tarpaulins, just above a rusty railing. An imperfect vehicle used as a lens into a wondrous world. Waiting and wondering: Who else will join our journey home?

Turns out it’s kids. A young family. Mother and father lovingly spending this journey with their kids. Their kids that are noisy. Their kids that run around. Their kids that play. Joining me on my seat. Looking straight into my eyes with no shame. Exploring the outside. Having snacks. Enjoying their toys. A reminder of a lost innocence right here in our midst. 

The leisurely advance of the ferry over the waves allows me to immerse myself in the world around, and to reflect on what God is saying to me today through his creation that groans and speaks and reveals.

There has to be brightness doesn’t there? I mean a brightness brighter than the sun?Sparkling, listening, shining reflecting, colorful, kaleidoscope divided into planes. Shades of blue. Azure. Shiny. Faded. Solid. Liquid. Light. 

There has to be darkness doesn’t there? I mean a darkness darker than the blackest night? Inhibiting my senses. Developing. Overwhelming. Deadening.

But then there has to be both doesn’t there — a blending of darkness and light? Which tells me that neither is right or wrong. But they are complements. Partners. Joined together. After all if we only have one or the other, we can perceive or define nothing can we? They work together … 

… Sometimes forming a line as straight as straight can be with no variation. Sometimes forming a different line giving shape to the imagination as I try to compare what I see to what I know. Other times forming fuzzy fluffy, faded, blurry lines, and then no lines at all and finally distinction connects to imagination.

It’s a very big big big big picture — bigger than my own understanding. But it’s also the smallest picture you can imagine — detail with no end. The big picture made up of so many small tiny details, each one of them just as interesting and fascinating as the next. I could spend a lifetime exploring everything I can see just in the glimpse between the ship’s tarpaulin awnings, looking off into the distance … could spend time studying oceans and waves, and how the light shines on them and how they break in the gentle breeze. I could look at the islands beyond, exploring the beaches around them, working the way up through the lowlands into the highlands to the peaks of the mountains.

I could then look at the clouds and wonder where they come from, where they go, how they’re formed, what their purpose is. Ethereal turning to concrete. Is rain coming or not? Is it a storm or not? The sun not only perceives them, but adds to their wonder,  picking them out — giving shapes through lights and darknesses and colours at sunfall. 

And then, beyond that I can look to the sky that goes on seemingly … infinitely …. Taking me farther than I can even imagine. And realising, finally, indefinitely, that all of this is just a small part of all that exists and a small part in relation to who God is.

If I wanted to create — create! Haha! As if that word can apply to me! Perhaps ‘jury rig’ is more apropos — something as wonderful, I’d need to use what has already been made. I can’t do it on my own. I must explore and scrounge and scrape and gather and collect. I must experiment and question and discover. And finally fabricate. And then the glory of whatever it is that I make it’s only there because of the glory that reflects God through his creation. 

Even if I were to take a part of myself — that I could argue I’ve had some role in making — I still couldn’t do anything with it. Everything I do merely an imitation of what I perceive and a poor one at that.

The railing, serving the valuable purpose of keeping me safely on board, is also a reminder that all I see around me is marked by sin. Not because it’s a barrier, but because it is pitted and gouged by rust — rust that helps prevent even the barrier from doing its job of being a barrier. It’s the rust that’s a reminder that all that I see is enslaved. Trapped. Just a shadow of its former self. 

What would it have been like in its pristine, pure, unsullied, rust-free, unsinful state? I can’t even imagine.

I have rust in my life too. Sometimes it gets chipped away. Other times it gets painted over. But its constant presence is a reminder of not only the realities of the world, but also how the processes of nature can be strong-armed towards being evil. 

‘It’s OK to take care of myself isn’t it?’ Perhaps not if someone else needs taking care of, too. 

‘It’s OK to build a wall around myself isn’t it?’ But not if people around me are feeling unloved, too. 

‘It’s OK to walk the easy path isn’t it?’ But not if the difficult path bears more fruit. 

‘It’s OK to just do just enough to get by isn’t it?’ But not if there’s an opportunity to have something deeper and more fulfilling — a genuine relationship rather than dimensionless status quo. 

Paint covers and looks nice for a while, but eventually the rust emerges again. Much better to get a chipping gun and let it do its work at excising the rust from my life. Rat-tat-tat-tat-tat. And the chipping gun has many settings. The tried and tested word of God. The seemingly timeless doctrines of my faith. The instruction and advice of significant people in my life. My family’s loving guidance. And my own reflections that identify those rusty parts that need to be chipped away.

In spite of it all, I remain safe here floating on top of the waves, safe in a rusty ship, outfitted with lifejackets, lifesavers, and lifeboats ensuring that any perceived danger is kept at a distance as I live my life and try to do the tasks that God has in store for me today. Even this marred world inhabited by marred people can still do things that bring glory to the pure and perfect God above. And perhaps even more amazing than that, he permits us to do this and even guides our steps as we journey along, allowing the wonder of the creation around us to draw us back to himself. And when we arrive back with him, we experience the ultimate rest and relaxation. 

What glimpses of God’s grace have you discovered through life’s ‘rusty’ moments? Share your story below and let’s encourage one another on this journey toward renewal.

Between Rust and Radiance: Catching God’s Voice on the Waves first appeared on michaeljfast.com

BCBC Improving your Serve – Abide to Thrive: Exploring the Church’s Identity in Christ & its Outward Function in the World

I recently had a chance to speak at the British Columbia Baptist Conference’s annual equipping session entitled Improving Your Serve. The theme this year was Abide to Thrive. In the seminar and subsequent reflection and discussion sessions, we reflected on how understanding our church identity informs community actions. We also considered how the good news, kingdom values, serving others, and truthtelling shape our identity. Then we explored where churches may need to realign their focus to be more present in today’s cultural conversations. All in all, we examined how abiding in Christ can lead to a more fruitful and impactful presence in the world.

If you missed the seminar, a video version of my talk can be found here, and a livestream here, but for those who are interested in getting the text of what I said here it is in its complete form.

Personal Story

When I was a kid, joining the church wasn’t just a formality – it was a process with theological requirements. Part of that process involved sharing my testimony. First, I had to present it to the church board. Once they approved, I had to stand before the entire congregation. Both groups had to vote before I could officially become a member. 

I remember envying those who had dramatic testimonies – stories – of being saved from lives of obvious, even salacious sin. My story wasn’t like that. It felt ordinary. I hadn’t strayed far or hit rock bottom. I didn’t have a before-and-after moment that felt remarkable. 

For a long time, I wrestled with the idea that my testimony wasn’t enough – that it didn’t measure up. But more recently, I’ve been struck by Connie Duarte’s words: ‘We are not called to be believers but disciples.’

That statement has challenged and reshaped how I see my journey of faith. It’s not merely about believing the right things or about meeting theological checklists. Nor is it about the level of initial transformation from darkness to light. Rather, it’s about abiding in Christ every day – submitting to Him, walking with Him, and letting His life flow through mine – journeying with him on a lifetime of being transformed. Being a disciple isn’t about how dramatic my testimony is; it’s about how deeply I abide. 

This shift in understanding has led me to see the gospel – and my place in it – in a whole new way. The gospel isn’t just something to believe; it’s something to live out daily. And abiding in Christ, particularly in His proclamation is at the heart of that.

The Vine Metaphor: A Living Metaphor

The title of our seminar is Improving Your Serve: Abiding to Thrive. When discussing the concept of abiding, there’s no better passage for us to examine than John 15. Here Jesus talks about us being the branches and he’s the vine. There’s lots and lots of rich imagery in this metaphor that we will spend some time looking at today. But if we want to get down to brass tacks, the basic message of this story is that whether we like it or not our lives are organically bound up in God’s and in each other’s – I like the fact that Jesus’ use of an organic example here shows that abiding is dynamic, not static. Adding to that, a vine is communal rather than singular: Fruit comes in clusters, and not in isolation; Pruning is necessary for the entire plant to both grow and produce fruit.

It’s this organic story of connection, care, growth, and production that’s a fabulous story of our identity. But we often stop here and say, “Okay, I can live my life now in satisfaction because I’m connected, and I’m identified with who I am.” Once we identify ourselves, we remain satisfied with that identity.

Identity is important. Let’s look at the church, for example – especially since that’s why we have gathered today. In the church we have a series of things that identify us for who we are.

Debie Thomas, in her Into the Mess and Other Jesus Stories: Reflections on the Life of Christ, says, “If God is the vine grower, Jesus is the vine, and we are the branches, what should we do? We have only one task: to abide. To tarry, to stay, to cling, to remain, to depend, to rely, to persevere, to commit. To hang in there for the long haul. To make ourselves at home.”  

Our seminar is entitled Improving Your Serve. And each of these three words in the title are significant for today’s conversation. That’s why, when speaking of identity, we will begin with the centre word: “Your.” So, let’s get into the nitty gritty of John 15!

ABIDING AS IDENTITY

The story starts with Jesus declaring “I AM.” This is God’s identity word – the name he uses when he introduces himself. Jesus’ ultimate identity, and we see this throughout the book of John, is his constant referral back to who he really is. He uses the technical term “I AM” to indicate that he is declaring that he is the same as the God who saved Israel from Egypt.

What’s interesting to note in John 15 is that Jesus does not simply say, “I AM.” Much like God’s declaration of who he was to Moses at the burning bush was not simply saying, “This is who I AM, period.” Jesus identifies himself as “I AM the vine.” I AM is connected to his creation – which is really how God initially identified himself in Exodus isn’t it? God made himself known to Moses at the burning bush, in response to hearing cries for help from his people!

YHWH exists for more to happen than mere existence – he exists also to save humans! We, too, are called to make this same movement from one thing to the next. And this progression starts with identity – Who are we? Who is God? – but then moves into ideas of purpose. It moves from merely being a vine and branches towards bearing fruit.

1. Worship as Identity

For example, we all engage in worship of some kind or another.  Every now and then we decide, “Hey, let’s worship without singing,” Matt Redman-style, but in all reality, singing forms the core of how we see worship. There’s all of this kind of stuff that we do that helps us identify who we are and the kind of church we are – and all of those things are music-related: Are we going to sing praise and worship songs? Are we going to sing from the hymn book? Are we going to use instruments? Are we not going to use instruments? Is there going to be a worship team in a band on the front or is it just going to be a guy in a toque playing a guitar with a candle burning? Years ago, at Missions Fest one church advertised “a massive wall of sound.”

All of that to say that sometimes rather than identifying ourselves as those who worship, we instead identify ourselves as those who worship this way.  

2. Word as Identity

We also identify ourselves through how we approach the Word of God. The Word of God – is it a significant part of our time when we gather, isn’t it?

Sermons, children’s songs such as “read your bible pray every day, and you’ll grow, grow, grow,” bible verses hanging on the church wall, arguments over bible translations, etc.

One of the churches I serve in the Philippines thought long and hard and eventually came up with the name, Metro Manila Bible Community – because for us as Bible believing Christians, the Bible is our sole source for faith and conduct. So much so that it becomes our identity.

But word is more than these things.

But then again, we often attach identity to the length of sermon – or bible translation used, or the place where the sermon is preached from, or whether or not we read through the bible in a year or not – rather than the fact there is a bible.

3. Sacrament as Identity

We have a third identifying mark. I have used the word “sacrament” here but some of you may be squirming in your seats because we generally avoid using that word. We say, “No, no, no, we’re Baptists. We don’t have sacraments; we have ordinances!”

In the long run, it doesn’t really matter what word we use. Rather what’s important is that we do have these things that are a significant part of how we identify ourselves. It’s right in there in our name: We are the BC Baptist Conference. Other groups don’t centralize baptism as much as we do, but rather they centralize the Lord supper. As members of BCBC, both of these are fairly intense processes for us.

I already told you my baptism story. There was a similar process when I wanted to participate in the Lord’s Supper. Mind you I didn’t have to convince the board. Rather, before I could take Lord’s Supper, I had to convince my dad that I understood what was happening so that I wouldn’t “partake in an unworthy manner.”

It’s different in the Philippines. Here children go through First Communion where they’re formally introduced into the rite. Why all the process? Because we have these things that we identify as being important, so much so they identify us with who we are.

4. System as Identity

A fourth identifying feature is system. I actually struggled with what word to use here. We could use governance. We could use discipline. We could use polity. But regardless, it’s the way we make sure that everything is orderly in our worship and our organization. How do we organize ourselves? We all have some kind of organizing system – whether we’re organized to attend church at a specific time, whether we’re organized into having a corporate worship and then a small discipleship or small group or Bible study, whether we have a Sunday school, whether we have a board of trustees or board of elders or board of directors, whether we have a pastoral team or not whether we agree that pastors are only male or can they also be female – all of this stuff is part of our discipline. It’s our way of addressing what’s in 1 Corinthians 12 to having an orderly experience and that’s also how we identify ourselves.

And of course we joke about this, right? Whenever you have two Baptists, you have three opinions!  Maybe we have an organizing system but maybe it’s not always that great.

ABIDING AS THRIVING

Now that we’ve looked at identity, let’s come back to abiding. Sometimes when we think about abiding, we think about abiding as identity – I’m connected to the Father, I’m connected to the vine – who is Jesus – because I’m one of the branches connected to this vine and I’m happy with that. But if we take the vine motif to its very end as Jesus does in his passage, we realize that this vine motif is more than merely identity and there’s this transition that happens as we transition from “being” to “doing.”

If we return to our title – Improving Your Serve – we’ve moved beyond Your to the Serve portion of the conversation.

When I was younger, we tried to avoid talking about doing largely because of Bible verses that say things like “We are saved by faith not by works.” We internalised this so much that when we came to other verses that seemed to value good works – such as James’ “faith without works is dead” – we struggled.

Another struggle with is avoidance of doing checklists as followers of Jesus Christ. And we have lots of checklists don’t we. When I was a kid, it was “Don’t drink, don’t smoke, don’t chew, or go with them that do.” Another checklist might be

  1. go to church every Sunday – & invite your friends,
  2. read your Bible and pray every day,
  3. share the gospel with whoever comes across your path,
  4. be involved in the church through other things, such as teaching a Sunday school class or singing in the choir.

We even found biblical support for this. We looked at the story of Mary and Martha, and we interpreted Jesus words to imply that we should simply be sitting at the feet of Jesus and not be so busy doing the things that need to be done.

There’s a pushback against checklists in part because we don’t want to turn our relationship with Jesus into some kind of a cosmic game of Good Manners and Right Conduct. We’re looking for something more authentic than that. We’re looking for something more organic than that.

What we realize is that these checklists are in fact ways for us to engage in discipleship. We are confronted by two questions: How can we be disciples of Jesus Christ? Is it possible to be disciples of Jesus Christ without doing the things Jesus Christ wanted us to do?

This adds a different nuance to the checklist. Instead of checking off things on the list we evaluate each situation we came to in life. You may have heard of this phrase that has actually appeared over the past hundred years of the church at least – It was illustrated by an acronym WWJD? meaning What would Jesus do? It was a question we asked ourselves when confronted with a situation we needed to evaluate. An area perhaps that wasn’t directly spoken about in scripture but was an area where we needed a make a decision. With no to pull out of scripture to serve as our guideline, we rather tried to understand the mind of Christ and applied that our situations.

The story of the vine and the branches has some troubling features to It. It talks about a gardener. It talks of being proved. And it talks about bearing fruit. These things are troubling to us because it seems to imply there are actions associated with our abiding. There’s an expectation of care, discipline, & fruitfulness.

Which is why Jesus spoke about this as a gardener-vine-branches-fruit process. It helps us understand this as something that’s natural and organic rather than something that’s forced and required.

Debie Thomas again:

“But ‘abide’ is a tricky word. Passive on the one hand, and active on the other. To abide is to stay rooted in place. But it is also to grow and change. It’s a vulnerable-making verb: if we abide, we’ll get pruned. It’s a risky verb: if we abide, we’ll bear fruit that others will see and taste. It’s a humbling verb: if we abide, we’ll have to accept nourishment that is not of our own making. It’s a communal verb; if we abide, we will have to coexist with our fellow branches.”

Gardening is all about growing a garden that produces delicious fruits. There are so many different kinds of fruits, and they come from all sorts of plants. Right now, I can see a bunch of fruits hanging from the trees outside my window. Some of them are picked for their leaves and used in soups, while others are eaten right off the tree, like coconuts, mangoes, avocados, and papayas. And let’s not forget the beautiful gardens themselves! We love looking at them, which is why there’s a magazine called Better Homes and Gardens. It shows off all these amazing gardens and tells us what makes them so special.

The parable of the talents tells of one of the servants who hid his money in the ground because he fundamentally misunderstood his master’s desires. The purpose of investment is the same as the purpose for a garden – to bear fruit. Do you know you do if you have money? Invest it. Do you know what you do if you have a garden? You prune and cultivate it, so it bears fruit. Do you know what you do if you have a family? You want the outcome of your kids’ lives to be better than your own.

So, what about the church? Do we know what we do if we have a church? We have seen what the church is. Now let’s look at what the church is all about. This means moving beyond checklists and identity and transitioning into thriving and fruitfulness. What does thriving and fruitfulness look like as the church abides in the vine? This is an important question because without asking this, we tend to focus on checklists and end up making statements such as, “Oh you’re not a part of us because you don’t keep the right lists you haven’t done everything haven’t checked everything off enough.” It leads to us creating lists that we argue about – lists to determine whether someone is in or out or not. But what Jesus really wants us to do in the church is to bear fruit. This is because fruit bearing is a natural outpouring, the organic result of what we do. As Jesus followers we bear fruit.  

How do we get to that thriving point because mere identity is not thriving unless there’s fruit that is borne. It means while we keep our identifying features – while worship God in spirit and in truth, while we focus on the word as the sole standard of faith and conduct, while we continue to see the significance of the sacraments in our lives, and while we continue to maintain orderly worship – we also go beyond that and ask ourselves, “How does all of this help me bear fruit?”

A. From Worship towards Promulgating Kingdom Values to Those Outside the Church’s Four Walls.

The first level of this interconnectedness is with the vine himself. Verse 1 says, “I am the vine, my Father is the vinedresser,” and a few verses later, “remain in me, as I remain in you.” There’s a mutuality to our connection with God and with the other parts of the vine. None of these branches grow in isolation from either the vine or the other branches; together they bear fruit.

The values of the kingdom are so important that we should share them with others. We want to worship God and live according to these values, but we also realize that they’re not just personal; they’re values we incorporate into our lives and should share with the world. We enjoy being one with God, imitating Christ, and being Jesus-followers. But how do we connect with others? Understanding kingdom values, bearing fruit, and being part of the vine requires a shift from individual to communal understanding. True worship creates genuine community through mutual transformation in Christ’s presence. Christ’s work in us produces fruit, which isn’t just food but a seed that sprouts and bears new vines and plants, spreading around the world.

The most explicit description of these values is found in the fruit of the Spirit and includes love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. The fact that they are fruit means they are obvious in the lives of Jesus’ followers.

We can work at revealing the joys of the kingdom of God to people outside of our faith community through active participation with like-minded faith communities, active cooperation with like-minded groups, and active accountability in both the religious and secular world. All this is typified with the Christian attitude of unity in matters essential, liberty in matters non-essential, and charity in all other matters.

B. From Word towards Proclaiming Jesus Christ’s Role as Shepherd-Lord to Those Outside the Church’s Four Walls.

One could be forgiven for assuming when reading v7 – “If you remain in me and my words remain in you” – that this means that all we need to do is remain connected to Christ. He’s with us and we are with him. But the story doesn’t stop there because in the very next verse, we read “you will bear much fruit.”

There is good news – we are connected to Christ – but that good news extends beyond the salvation moment, and into our lives as followers of Jesus Christ.

The Good News of Jesus Christ is that Jesus Christ is not only our Savior. He is also the Lord Jesus Christ. Jesus connects him with humanity, Christ connects him with being God’s plan for the salvation of all peoples, and Lord connects him with being the one in charge of the universe – the One ultimately responsible for ensuring we have peace and order, economic sufficiency, public justice, and national righteousness. We know he was responsible for this because of the way he introduced himself to the world laid out his terms of engagement with humanity. And what are these terms of engagement? We see them in Luke 4:18-19:

“The Spirit of the Lord is with me. He has anointed me to tell the Good News to the poor. He has sent meto announce forgiveness to the prisoners of sin and the restoring of sight to the blind, to forgive those who have been shattered by sin, to announce the year of the Lord’s favor.”

To see the gospel being limited to merely the salvation moment is to do it a disservice. While the salvation moment holds significance, it is not confined to that single event. Traditionally, the gospel has been understood as a one-way transaction, flowing from those who possess knowledge to those who lack it. However, the gospel transcends this notion and becomes a shared journey among all who seek the fulfillment of this message. Our journey through salvation extends beyond that, encompassing discipleship and a deeper commitment to following Jesus. We are not merely labeled as “Jesus people,” but as “Jesus followers,” embodying the essence of our faith.

If Jesus terms of engagement includes these things – if his presentation of what the good news is is described in this way – then we too must engage in more than merely the salvation moment but rather join into the salvation journey with our neighbors.

We see that in the book of Acts. In the city of Antioch the followers of Jesus were first called Christians. Now I don’t want to talk about Greek, but I’m going to talk about Greek. The word Christian is a grammatical construction in Greek; it’s a diminutive form of the word Christ. That means when people saw those who proclaimed Jesus walking around them, they identified them as being “little Christs.” There was something about these people that move beyond merely Jesus people, but people who followed Jesus and imitated him so much so that they became little Christs themselves.

I am reminded of Oscar Romero’s 1978 sermon where he says,

A community is a family that believes; it is a group where each member accepts God and feels strengthened by the others. In their moments of weakness, they help one another and love one another; they shed the light of their faith as an example for others. When that happens, the preachers no longer need to preach because there are Christians whose very lives have become a form of preaching.

Even though we have this authentic identity as Bible followers, this authentic identity leads us to proclaim the truths that we find in the bible. This is because, to abide is to remain connected for the purpose of bearing fruit. The thriving is bearing fruit through being connected to the vine.

Practically, this could look like declaring the Good News of Jesus Christ to all people. We declare Jesus as Lord and Saviour of our community and we recognise His central role in transforming the world through intentional evangelism, communicated effectively in a culturally relevant way by people who have themselves experienced the transforming power of God.

C. From Sacrament towards Serving God and Serving Those Outside the Church’s Four Walls.

If the sacrament is a way to be reminded of grace in our lives, how can we be grace to our community through this natural outflowing from sacrament to serving God, neighbor, and others?

In verses 4 and 5, the importance of connection is highlighted, saying that “no branch can bear fruit by itself” and “bears much fruit.” This shows how our relationship with the vine and the natural flow of that union into producing fruit are connected.

This connection starts fruit bearing, but it also means we can’t stop bearing fruit when we’re with the vine. This is because being with the vine naturally leads to the showing of fruit.

If we follow the vine and bear fruit, it changes us. Other people who follow the same path and bear fruit also have rituals that set them apart. Our rituals help us reflect, mourn, confess, and be restored. This reality, shown in our organization and how we’re run, can sometimes make us feel like we’re not in the world. But we need to move beyond these rituals and live a real life where we actively serve, love God, and love our neighbors as we love ourselves.

Sometimes, this emphasis on the daily details can be reduced to a checklist, focusing only on feeding, distributing, and doing enough. But the real meaning is being a real presence in our world.

Our connection to Christ is the foundation of this journey. By copying His example, we don’t necessarily mean sacrificing ourselves like Jesus did on the cross. Instead, we try to keep His life and teachings. Jesus was really interested in the everyday things of life, which is why He used parables, healed the sick, fed the hungry, clothed the naked, and comforted the grieving.

Practically, this could look like showing the love of God to people both inside and outside of our faith community though acts of mercy, relief rehab and development. We will be engaging in educational ministry services such as establishing schools of all levels. We will be delivering free medical-dental clinics. We will be conducting livelihood programs for the poor of our communities.

D. From Systems towards Testifying to Our Experience with the Truth to Those Outside the Church’s Four Walls.

The story starts with the Father’s role as a gardener, but it goes beyond that. We see that the whole purpose of the gardener is for us to show ourselves to be his disciples. This is evident from the beginning, where we read, “He cuts off… he prunes” all the way to the end, where we read, “showing yourselves to be my disciples.”

We’ve been so caught up in defining ourselves and setting rules that we’ve forgotten why we’re doing it. We need to go beyond just having clear terms and start living out our faith. Our goal is to become disciples of Jesus Christ, not just to have a well-defined identity.

The church has a problem: we’ve pulled away from engaging with the world. And guess what? That’s actually changed the world and made it more secular. We’ve been so caught up in the rules and systems of our churches that we’ve forgotten about the world around us. But Jesus’ story of the vine and branches is a wake-up call for us. It’s a reminder that we’re meant to be part of the world, not separate from it. We’re Christ’s body, and the gardener is taking care of us. We’re connected to the vine, so we can re-engage with the world from a place of authenticity. And when we do, our witness and our call to truth come from a genuine connection to Christ. That means we can connect with others on a deeper level and share our faith in a meaningful way.

Practically, this could look like being prophetic voice by engaging society with biblical truth through participation in public advocacy, social justice, value transformation, promotion of freedom, engagement in the public square, involvement in marketplaces, and the transformation of public perception through education, evangelism, church planting, intercessory prayer, and discipleship.

Momentary Conclusions.

The brilliance of the vine metaphor lies in its ability to portray fruit bearing as organic and natural, rather than programmatic. Identity isn’t merely a state of being; it’s not just about being connected to the vine, which would imply that our identity is solely determined by that connection. The very purpose of a vine, as well as all plants, animals, and organic processes in the world, is to bear fruit – and their identities are tied in with the fruit they bear. Therefore, our identity cannot be reduced to a mere connection with “being” – there must also be a “doing.”

However, it’s crucial to emphasize that this “doing” is not merely a means to an end; it’s organic and natural. It’s an inherent expression of our connection to the vine. Bearing fruit is an essential aspect of the nature of a vine. Without this bearing of fruit, there’s a sense of incompleteness, as our being is intrinsically linked to our actions. This is the essence of the Thrive aspect of our topic for today.

Where are we headed with all this? What does it mean for us in the BCBC as we strive to Improve our Serve, and Abide and Thrive? We must not only assert our identity but also become present wherever we are. We are integral to what we engage with, as Jesus became one with the world when he descended from heaven in Philippians 2. By this, he declared his intertwined future with the world’s. Similarly, our future is connected to the world’s. How can we unite our futures to connect with God? It’s a call to re-enter cultural spaces and engage authentically with the world as we strive to abide but thrive.

Debie Thomas, again:

“If only we would consent to see reality as it truly is. ‘I am the vine,’ Jesus tells his disciples. ‘You are the branches.’ It’s a done deal. Whether we like it or not, our lives are bound up in God’s and in each other’s. The only true life we will live in this world is the life we consent to live in relationship, messy and entangled though it might be. The only fruit worth sharing with the world is the fruit we’ll produce together.”

So, we’ve covered two of the three words in the name of our seminar improving your serve. We talked about Your which is our identity, we’ve talk about Serve, which means the responsibility we have to wear fruit, and now we get to the Improving part.

We’ve prepared a series of questions that you can discuss and there’s a panel discussion as well after this to help us as we think about how we can move onto the next step and Improve our serve.

So, from Quezon City, Philippines, this is Michael Fast greeting you a Magandang Araw! God bless you.

Debie Thomas, Into the Mess and Other Jesus Stories: Reflections on the Life of Christ (Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2022), 144-146. 
Óscar Romero, “The Church: A Communion of Life, Love, and Truth for the World’s Salvation,” homily, October 29, 1978.

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The National Day for Truth & Reconciliation: A time to ask the age old question when confronted by collective wrongdoing, “What must we do?”

The turmoil that started was of a cross-cultural nature. Visitors from far and wide had come to the city to celebrate one of their most important religious rituals. All of a sudden one morning they woke up to a familiar sound — it was the sound of their languages is being spoken in the streets! And while this may not have been unusual at first — there were a lot of visitors after all — when they looked out to see what was going on they realise that these men who were speaking their language were not native speakers but locals. And as they listened on they realise that the message that these men were telling was very significant. 

These listeners had come from 15 different nations to Jerusalem to celebrate the Passover — a time to remember God’s salvation for their people when he led the out of Egypt. These locals speaking their own languages were talking about somebody named “Jesus” and connecting Jesus into both their people’s history and theology. Not their individual histories but the history of their people as a group and how they had been connected with God and how they are related to God. Eventually, according to the speakers, this Jesus guy had bad things happen to him. He was crucified. And the speakers accused these visitors of being complicit in that!

I’m sure at this point some people said, “I wasn’t around here then don’t blame that for me.” But others of them asked the question, “What then shall we do?”

Here is how the First Nations translation puts it:

“When they heard this, the words pierced their hearts like a long knife. With troubled hearts they lifted their voices to Stands on the Rock and all the message bearers. ‘Fellow Tribal Members,’ they said, ‘tell us what we must do.’” The Good Story Continues (Acts) 2:37

I think it’s interesting that the word used here is “we.” They didn’t ask, “What can I, individually, do?” but rather, “What can we, collectively, do?” They immediately recognised that they were complicit in the actions of both their ancestors and their coreligionists in the crucifixion of Jesus. Their response wasn’t, “Hey don’t blame me — I wasn’t there!” It was instead, “Oh no. You are right. So what can we do now? How can we make this right?”

Today on the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation we recognise the Truth that we are complicit in things that we shouldn’t have been as a church. And we ask the question, “What must we do for Reconciliation to happen?”

How can we make this right?

In the past couple of weeks, I’ve heard feedback on how reconciliation is only between us and God and that reconciliation between people can only happen in the context of Jesus. Connected with this is the idea that since an apology has already been given people need to just move on and stop being victims. As a follower of Jesus, I wholeheartedly agree that Jesus is at the core of all reconciliation. But for me I like to emphasise that fact that I cannot have true reconciliation with God if I do not have reconciliation with my neighbour. That’s one of the reasons why Jesus pairs “Love the Lord your God” with “Love your neighbour.” I also firmly believe that apology without repentance is of little value.

I’ve also seen references by some people that “If only we could return to the Canada of old everything would be better.” The problem with that is that it’s not a statement that we really want to be true because it doesn’t recognise the truth nor does it foster reconciliation. Many people did not experience goodness in the Canada of old. So when they reflect and look back it’s not with nostalgia but with pain. It’s only a series of bad memories and experiences.

I have heard a couple of apologies and land acknowledgements this week related to how institutions deal with Truth and Reconciliation — one from the Canadian Medical Association and the other from First Baptist Church of Vancouver.

What I appreciate about these two apologies/acknowledgements is the fact that they — like the visitors to Jerusalem at Pentecost — recognise our complicity in the evils of the past. I really appreciated what the First Baptist Church of Vancouver said. Here’s part of their statement:

“The truth is that we as the church can be quick to take collective credit for the good that those who came before us have done in Christ’s name: Schools, hospitals, orphanages, fighting for the abolition of slavery. But we can be equally quick to attribute bad behaviour to bad apples, dragging our feet when it comes to owning the things that others have done. 

“In Christ’s name, we downplay our history, the history where police helped Indian agents forcibly remove 150,000 indigenous children from their homes and communities where many were physically and sexually abused or deliberately malnourished under the guise of nutritional experiments where needles were stuck in their tongues to keep them from speaking their own language as those who came before us sought to ‘Kill the Indian in the child.’

“And in ‘killing the Indian in the child,’ they removed the values that have been shared with us by Chief Joe Norris when we went through this process with Darryl. Family values, trust, respect, integrity, love, forgiveness and responsibility. When we ask our indigenous neighbours to forgive before we’ve owned our part, or turn a blind eye in a deaf ear to the downstream effects that persist into the present day, we sin collectively by dishonouring God’s image bearers.”

The Canadian Medical Association also acknowledges complicity in the past when it says, “We acknowledge there are ripple effects on future generations. We take ownership of the CMA’s history, and we are committed to righting our wrongs and rebuilding our relationship on a foundation of trust, accountability and reciprocity.” Canadian Medical Association Apology

You notice that both groups point out that we’re very willing to embrace what we see as the good things that our ancestors have done and say, “Look at all the good stuff the Church/society has done.” But when it comes down to the bad things that the church has done, we are less than willing to accept that as being our responsibility or to take credit for that as well. And I think that’s where it’s important for us to actively engage in Truth and Reconciliation.

Moving forward in light of our complicity

So what can we do? I think we need to be guided by those who heard the message in Acts 2. Like them we must …

  1. Accept complicity.
  2. Ask “What must we do?”
  3. Listen to the answer.
  4. Change the way we think and act. As it says in Acts 2:41 “The ones who believed the words of Stands on the Rock became a part of Creator’s new sacred family and participated in the purification ceremony. About three thousand people were added to the family on that day!”

Now I realise that all of this seems pretty clear to me but you may be reading thinking that there are huge holes in what I have just said. If so, please let me know in the comments below!

Help is available. Call the 24-hour national Indian Residential Schools Crisis Line: 1-866-925-4419. 

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Scripture quotations are reproduced from First Nations Version: An Indigenous Translation of the New Testament, copyright © 2021 by Rain Ministries, Inc. Used by permission of Inter Varsity Press All rights reserved worldwide. www.ivpress.com