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The Joy and Pain of Living in Community

Posted by Jim Thornber on March 17, 2013
Posted in: Christian Spirituality, Religion. Tagged: Assemblies of God, Christian Spirituality, Faith, God, Jesus, Religion, Spirituality. Leave a comment

For four years I was an Assemblies of God minister and a monk with the Brothers and Sisters of Charity in Eureka Springs, AR. The following is an excerpt from my book Taking Off My Comfortable Clothes. The chapter is called Living together alone (Community)

Thornber-Comfy Clothes CVR-R2Living with twenty or so people on three hundred acres of land in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas can actually feel more crowded than living in Southern California.

While California may seem crowded with its 37 million people, like many populous areas it can also be a lonely place to live. A multitude of neighbors does not mean there are plenty of intimate relationships taking place. I may wave at my neighbors when I seen them, but that does not necessarily mean I know them much beyond their first name.

However, living in a small monastic community means I cannot just wave at my brothers and sisters as I go about my assigned duties; I also eat, pray, work, travel, study, minister and worship with the same twenty people every day. Furthermore, just when I thought I could hide something from my fellow community members, I recall that the chapel service on Friday morning will include a time for confession. Great. Not only did someone see me chuck the uncooperative weed-eater twenty feet out the garage door, now I get to recount the scene and ask forgiveness before the entire community (more on that in a later chapter).

Living in a community is a bit like being part of a large family; you may get to run to your bedroom (or cell or hermitage) for a little time of peace and quiet, but eventually you must come out and, for better or worse, face the rest of the family. But this is a two way street-they must eventually come out and face you.

When you live alone in your hermitage-or house, apartment, loft or even Malibu summer home-it is easy to tell yourself that you are nice person with an abundance of redeeming qualities. You can sit alone, recall all your fine attributes and conclude that you are a good and righteous person, easy to get along with and full of patience, love and joy in the Holy Spirit. But the moment you step out your door and encounter another person, you soon discover whether your own press releases regarding your advanced spiritual maturity are real or imagined. For me, they were mostly imagined.

Monks At The Movies

One time a majority of the community was on a ministry trip to Des Moines (which means, appropriately, “Of The Monks”). We were staying in the home of one of the domestic members, spreading ourselves out all over the home just to find places to sleep. For some reason, the brothers mostly found themselves sleeping in the open places like the living room-this is where Brother Tim and I found ourselves-while the sisters had a more private quarters in the basement. I preferred the living room.

One of the carnal joys of a ministry trip was the opportunity to watch television. Although the Little Portion had a television, we didn’t get any channels and could only watch videos. But when we went to somebody’s home, we got to see what was REALLY going on in the world. We might even watch up to an hour or two of television a day!

One evening, four of us were up stairs watching television. A movie came on that only Sister B. had seen. Sister M. C. wanted to know what it was about, and Sister Betsy gave away the entire plot, including the ending. I HATE it when people do that. Filmmakers (usually) produce a movie intending it to be watched as a whole, telling a story that is deliberately trying to lead you somewhere. I believe the journey is part of the joy of watching a movie. With this attitude in mind, I quite naturally, in my most patient, humble and gently monastic way, went ballistic, telling Sister Betsy just what I thought of her. Sister Betsy’s reaction, quite naturally, was to leave the room in tears.

This was not my finest moment.

However, apologies are offered quickly in a community where people are intentional about making Jesus the Lord of every part of their lives-even over their movie watching habits and preferences. Forgiveness comes quickly also, because we know we are on the same team, with the same vision, goals and desires. We know that we cannot function as a part of Christ’s body if bitterness, anger and unforgiveness continue to haunt our relationships.

Like anybody else, we were quick to show our selfish sides, but we were also quick to apologize and let forgiveness reign. We knew if there were any tension between members of the ministry team, everyone else on the team would notice it, even if we tried to hide it. Therefore, we were quick to confront the issues that bothered us, honest about our apologies, and practiced letting an offending word or action quickly receive our forgiveness. It is a wonderful thing to walk in the lightness and freedom of a community of believers where love, acceptance and forgiveness reign free and true. Unfortunately, I’ve never found this level of intense love and forgiveness in any local church or parachurch organization I’ve been associated with. That is not to say it doesn’t exist, but that I haven’t seen it. I feel privileged to have been a part of a community like this, for it showed me how the body of Christ could be when Christ is truly at the head.

Giving it Back to God

Posted by Jim Thornber on March 3, 2013
Posted in: Christian Spirituality. Tagged: Christian Spirituality, Faith, God, Jesus, Scripture, Spirituality, Worship. 1 Comment

“O LORD of Heaven’s Armies, if you will look upon my sorrow and answer my prayer and give me a son, then I will give him back to you.” – 1 Samuel 1:11

Hannah presenting Samuel to Eli, by Jan Victors, 1645

Hannah presenting Samuel to Eli, by Jan Victors, 1645

This prayer of Hannah, the mother of Samuel, is a big challenge to me because she is the picture of someone who wants something all her life, and when she gets it, she gives it away. Who does that? Not me, apparently, which is why God is on my case about this story.

Hannah is childless, which is a point of great fun and taunting by her family, but she bears it in stride. Then she tells the Lord that if He gives her a son, she’ll dedicate him back to God. And, unlike the guy on the plane that is going down who tells the Lord He’ll give him half his fortune if he survives, and then after it lands tells God if He wants it He can come get it, Hannah actually follows up on her promise.

Furthermore, Hannah doesn’t give up Samuel immediately. She actually waits until she weans Samuel, probably two or three years (1:26), before she takes him to Shiloh and leaves him there for Eli to raise.  If I was going to give something big to the Lord, like my firstborn son, I’d try to do it as quickly and painlessly as possible, the way Abraham got up and obeyed when told to sacrifice Isaac. I wouldn’t keep my promise around and get attached to it. But this is exactly what Hannah does. Continue Reading

Just Jesus

Posted by Jim Thornber on February 24, 2013
Posted in: Christian Spirituality, Religion. Tagged: Christian Spirituality, Church, Faith, God, Jesus, Religion, Spirituality. Leave a comment

 “If you knew the gift of God and who it is that asks you for a drink, you would have asked him and he would have given you living water.” – John 4:10

 cokeA few years back, there was a popular tee shirt that compared Jesus to a soft drink. It said, “Jesus: He’s the real thing.” It was cute, as far as it goes. Not life changing, but cute.

Then I actually heard a minister compare the life-giving water of Jesus to a can of Coke. He said Jesus was a pure relationship with God, while a Coke was a relationship with man-made additives. One was pure and one was religious. Well, he had my attention.

Water, as opposed to your favorite soft drink, is necessary for life. We must have water in order to live. We drink it and wash with it. Water is a lubricant, dispels heat and sustains life, supports digestion, makes things soft and aids in eliminating waste. All life on this planet needs water to live. Water is indispensable, and the need for water has been the force behind more than one war.

A soft drink, however, with all its fancy ingredients, is necessary for nothing. We cannot bathe in it, use it to brush our teeth or add it to our radiator to displace heat. You can’t water the lawn with it or use it wipe down a dirty table. A soft drink is mostly water with various additives, none of which is necessary for an efficient and effective life.

Here’s the part that bothers me. Instead of focusing my life on the pure, life-giving living water of Jesus, I’ve often focused too much of my time on the additives. And when we add stuff to Jesus, we limit His effectiveness. Continue Reading

Scriptures That Bother Me — Genesis 9:22

Posted by Jim Thornber on February 17, 2013
Posted in: Christian Spirituality, Scripture. Tagged: Christian Spirituality, Church, Faith, God, Jesus, Sin, Spirituality, Wine. 1 Comment

Exposing Myself In Public

“Ham . . . saw his father’s nakedness and told his two brothers outside”– Genesis 9:22

grapes-wine_00364861A while back I once worked for a company where the employees were very particular about their personal parking spaces. There were no signs stating whose spot was whose, but everyone that worked there long enough knew which spots were reserved for which employees.

I, of course, discovered this unspoken truth the hard way one day when I parked in someone’s spot. I wasn’t at work two minutes before I was told to go move my vehicle. This person was not about to walk the extra fifty feet to get in the building, and actually parked in the driveway until I removed my vehicle from “their” spot.

As I was thinking about telling some of my fellow employees about this situation (how this other individual made themselves look petty and small and how I took the noble road and moved my car) Genesis 9:22 came to mind – a Scripture, naturally, I’d just read the day before. Isn’t God interesting that way?

As I read the whole story, I believe the error Ham made was not that he saw his father naked (that was purely by accident), but that he told his brothers about it (that was purely by choice). There are many things we’ll see in life that will expose people. Lies, pain, pride, loss, vanity, fear, etc. – all these expose the naked truth about people. It turns out Noah acquired a taste for too much wine. Who wouldn’t want a drink after witnessing the destruction of almost every person on the planet? Why does this fact need to be spread? Why does Noah’s exposure need to be shared? It certainly wasn’t for the benefit of Noah, who was safely asleep in the comfort, if not the privacy, of his own tent.

Why did Ham find it necessary to share with others the shame he witnessed? Why do we? How many “prayer requests” are nothing more than Christians in Ham’s clothing exposing the nakedness of their neighbor’s shame? Who was really being exposed in this scene – Noah or Ham? Continue Reading

I’m Tired Of False Postive Confessions

Posted by Jim Thornber on February 10, 2013
Posted in: Christian Spirituality, Religion. Tagged: Christian Spirituality, Faith, God, Jesus, Liar, Religion, Spirituality. 8 Comments

“Whoever of you loves life and desires to see many good days, keep your tongue from evil and your lips from speaking lies” — Psalm 34:12-13

truth among the liesI don’t think I became a proficient liar until I became a dedicated disciple of Christ.

Before I became a dedicated disciple of Christ, if someone asked me what I thought about a subject, I’d tell them. I may have lacked diplomacy and discretion, and I know I needed to work on my social graces, but I was honest with my opinion. Now I think about what I say in order not to offend someone. Quite often I weigh truth against kindness, and kindness tends to win.

In other words, I lie.

The other night my wife and I were having a conversation with a friend who is dealing with a great amount of stress in her job. Barbara said, “Feel free to come over any time and just talk.”

Since I’m a pastor, I encouraged her. “Our home is a safe place for you to come and unload. Feel free to be yourself. Be angry, frustrated and hurt. Say the bad words you want and know it’s okay.”

At this point she laughed and said, “I don’t think a pastor ever encouraged me to cuss before!”

I said, “If you’re thinking the bad words then God already knows it. You might as well just be honest about your feelings. God isn’t scared of your vocabulary.”

She said, “It is so hard to be honest. When people ask me how I’m doing I’ve become good at saying, ‘Fine. I’m good.’ Even when I’m not.”

At this point I said, “It’s amazing how we have to become Christians in order to become good liars.” Continue Reading

I’m Just Like Moses. . . On A Bad Day!

Posted by Jim Thornber on February 6, 2013
Posted in: Christian Spirituality, Religion, Scripture. Tagged: Christian Spirituality, Church, Ecumenism, Faith, God, Jesus, Religion, Scripture, Spirituality. Leave a comment

Speak to that rock before their eyes and it will pour out its water. . . Then Moses raised his arm and struck the rock twice with his staff. Water gushed out, and the community and their livestock drank. Numbers 20:1-13

Moses Striking the Rock − Bacchiacca (Francesco Ubertini)

Moses Striking the Rock − Bacchiacca (Francesco Ubertini)

I was walking out of Lowe’s a few years back when I saw a man who had left our church some months earlier. Not long after he left I merged our fellowship with another church in town and we were in the midst of remodeling our joint facility. As I happily explained to this former member all the good things that were taking place, I was also thinking, “Aren’t you just a bit jealous that your leaving didn’t cause our church to fold? Aren’t you envious that we’re doing better since you left? Don’t you want to come see our progress and tell me just how fine a pastor I am?”

I wasn’t in my truck two seconds when the Lord told me what a selfish fool I’d just been, and I was reminded of the story of Moses and the rock.

Moses, by the direction of God, guided the grumbling Israelites into the Desert of Zin, where they camped at Kadesh. In other words, they were exactly where God wanted them. Upon finding themselves without water, they did the natural thing – they yelled at Moses. Moses in turn turns to God, who tells Moses, “Speak to the rock over there, and it will pour out its water” (Num. 20:8). You noticed, of course, that God said, “Speak to the rock.” Did you also notice that Moses turned and struck the rock not once, but twice?

God the All-Knowing was not at all surprised by the action of Moses and says, “Because you did not trust me enough to demonstrate my holiness to the people of Israel, you will not lead them into the land I am giving them!” God, of course, isn’t in the habit of sharing His glory with mere mortals (Isaiah 48:11).   Continue Reading

I Get To Love People

Posted by Jim Thornber on February 3, 2013
Posted in: Christian Spirituality, Church, Leadership. Tagged: Christian Spirituality, Church, God, Jesus, Leadership, Pastor, Spirituality. Leave a comment

accept-no-imitations1Earlier this week, I was reading Eugene Peterson’s book Under the Unpredictable Plant. In it he shares that someone once asked him his favorite part of being a pastor, and he answered, “The mess.” Yes, being a pastor is messy, which contributes to the creative side of allowing God to be God in situations that don’t always fall under the category, “Stuff I Learned in Seminary.”

As I thought about this same question, my quick answer was, “I get to love people on my own terms.”

I’ve worked with more than one pastor who felt the need to micro-manage his staff so they’d behave in ways that he was comfortable with. Regardless of their gifts, talents, backgrounds and personalities, these pastors made sure their staff understood what was and was not acceptable in the ways they spoke to and related with people. I had a sense they were trying to make me into a mini version of themselves, and something in me always rebelled. They wanted to control my sense of humor, what passages of Scripture I could teach on, how I could speak to people and what stories about my life I could tell. In spite of my unique gifts, talents and skills, they seemed determined to make me in their image. Needless to say, I didn’t last under their leadership.

This manipulation went beyond the basic and necessary training a good leader engages in when teaching the staff the vision, mission and culture of this particular local church. They seemed to think if the church members saw a staff person as more loving and forgiving, more personable and likeable, more capable of handling God’s Word and feeding the spiritual appetites of the congregants, then there would be competition on the team. Instead of working together as companions in the Kingdom, these pastors often viewed others with a wary eye, watching for any sign their staff might be better pastors than they were. I walked many a year in different churches not with the hopeful challenge of, “What would Jesus do?” but with the fearful question, “Would the pastor approve of this?”

Now I’m the pastor, and I get to love people on my own terms, not on the terms of a leader who is more afraid of his reputation than in promoting the Kingdom. Continue Reading

Rejoicing with my Enemy

Posted by Jim Thornber on January 27, 2013
Posted in: Christian Spirituality, Religion, Scripture. Tagged: Christian Spirituality, Church, Faith, God, Jesus, Religion, Spirituality. 2 Comments

 “Rejoice with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn” – Romans 12:15

ACTS-Title-SlideI’m teaching through the book of Acts at church and I noticed that wherever Paul and Barnabas preached, they always encountered opposition and persecution. It’s as if preaching and persecution go hand in hand.  When people reject the goodness of God’s love and the sacrifice of His Son for their sins, a natural response is to persecute the preacher.

In Acts 13 and 14, Paul and Barnabas brought a message of hope to a variety of people – religious Jews and pagan Gentiles – but not everyone was pleased with what they heard. Not only were people divided in their belief of Paul’s message, some of them got so stirred up they forced the Apostles to flee from city to city. After going to Lystra, a group of Jews from Antioch and Iconium stirred up the crowd and stoned Paul, leaving him for dead. In response to this, Paul gets up and heads back into the city. I’d probably be headed to the hospital first and then to my lawyer.

Christians have become so soft in American we think we’re being persecuted because we can’t have the Ten Commandments on the walls of our school classrooms. We’re not being persecuted. We’ve just become so comfortable with Christian morals and values being the main way of thinking in America that we don’t know what to do when people disagree with us. Christians have practiced loving those who love us for so long we don’t know how to respond to those who persecute us. Continue Reading

Lessons from a Feral Cat — The End

Posted by Jim Thornber on January 20, 2013
Posted in: Christian Spirituality. Tagged: Cats, Christian Spirituality, Church, Faith, God, Religion, Spirituality. 6 Comments

Looking Through the Window

Over time, Gato became a legend among our family, friends and co-workers. Barbara’s sister came out to see us and brought a blanket she made for Gato. While she was with us she also bought a little cat pillow for him to sleep on and she put the blanket on that. Gato ignored it.

When Barbara had the ladies over to our house for a women’s study on Sunday nights, Gato would often sit on the porch and look inside. The former owners of our house were amazed that we could now pet him, and we even took pictures of him with and included those pictures in cards we sent to our family. We got used to having Gato around worried about him when he showed up with a chunk of hair missing from his scalp or a bloody spot on his leg, which happened frequently.

Now I just I keep looking out the window, but he is no longer there. Multiple times a day I walk to the window that looks out onto our front porch, hoping once more to see that familiar face patiently waiting for me to come out. But Gato is no longer there.

Judges 5:28 says, “From the window Sisera’s mother looked out. Through the window she watched for his return, saying, ‘Why is his chariot so long in coming? Why don’t we hear the sound of chariot wheels?’” Sisera was never going to return home because he was killed in battle by a woman, but his mother didn’t know that yet. She just kept looking out the window. And looking.

Random Lesson #3 – How much prayer and energy have I put in waiting for people to return to God or the church? Or me? What is it about a stray cat that has left me with a larger empty space in my day than some of the people I no longer see? I asked this before but the question still haunts me, “Is my heart that big and that small at the same time?” Yes, it appears to be. Like most people who are honest with themselves, I find I’m both better and worse than I imagined. I’m kinder than I thought I would be to a creature that could do nothing for me. All the joy and sense of accomplishment with Gato was of my own making – He was just the catalyst who received nothing in return except a full belly. He didn’t even want a place to sleep.

At the same time, I’m colder to people who treat me no differently than Gato did. I’ve encouraged them, invited them to join us in our journey with God and asked them to participate in our life together as a church, only to have them disappear one day without a trace and without a word. I don’t look for their return and give them less thought than I do a feral cat.

And I certainly don’t write an article about them.

Finally, I can only wonder how many times I have I left God waiting at the window for my return. He created me, fed me, nurtured me and provided me with everything I need to live a great life. Still, I’ve run off and done my own thing, taking my own sweet time in coming home.

I’ve often planned my future without consulting Him, leaving Him alone as I orchestrate my life without His input. I’ve ignored His teaching and traded God’s love for Jim’s selfishness when people no longer agreed with me or hurt my feelings. In a hundred different ways I’ve replaced the perfect love of Jesus with the selfish agenda of Jim, only to hurt people and leave God alone at the window. And then I realized that is it me who is really alone. God is safe and comfortable and waiting for my return.

It’s been two weeks since we’ve seen Gato. We haven’t removed his bowl from the porch, even though the food is gone and the water is mostly dried up. His little bed and blanket is still in the corner, but the only thing using it are a couple of stray leaves.

After all Barbara and I have been through with Gato over the past year, we have no plans to get another cat. It was never our intention to have a cat, or more accurately, to allow a cat have us. The whole thing just fell into our lives, so we made room for one particular cat who taught us some lessons we’ll never forget.

In many different ways Gato was a victory for us – a victory of patience, of trust, of the joy of making a little difference in the life of a cat who, without knowing it, made a bigger difference in us.

I wonder how long I’ll keep looking out that window.

Gato

Lessons from a Feral Cat — Part 3

Posted by Jim Thornber on January 19, 2013
Posted in: Christian Spirituality. Tagged: Cats, Christian Spirituality, Faith, God, Religion, Spirituality. 2 Comments

The First Touch

I wasn’t satisfied with just feeding Gato. I wanted more. So the next time I put my plate down I bent over, put my elbows on my knees and hung my hands over the plate. If Gato wanted to eat he was going to have to get close to my hands. Naturally, when he saw me hunched over his plate he was cautious, but he came forward anyway. As he started to eat I brushed my hand across his ear. He flinched and drew back but didn’t leave. Instead, he came back for more.

Now Barbara got into the act. One day she took some canned salmon onto the porch, sat down and waited for Gato. It didn’t take too long before Gato was eager to approach her for some salmon. But now Barbara upped the ante in our game of cards – she held some salmon, making Gato eat it out of her hand if he wanted it. And he did. And she petted him in the process. Every once in a while Gato would get a hold of more finger than fish, but he was so gentle that he never bit down. When we held the food in the palm of our hands, he always took it delicately. He’d even lick our fingers to get that last bit of fishy flavor we had to offer. But when the salmon was gone, so was he.

And it only took nine months to pet Gato.

I eventually got into a morning habit of saving an extra bit of egg yolk from my breakfast and giving it to Gato. I’d take my coffee and my plate and sit cross-legged on the porch with hands on both sides of the plate. Sometimes I’d hold out a piece of egg and he’d come right up and take it from my hand. Other times while Gato ate the eggs off my plate I’d pet his head and back. He’d squirm around to the right and then to the left, and then he’d hunch way down, pulling his ears as close to his body as he could in hopes of ducking under my touch, but he kept coming back for more. Some mornings I felt like I was pushing my limits with Gato, so I’d just set the plate on the porch and say to him, “There you go. I won’t torture you this morning by petting you. I’ll let you eat in peace.” He never showed much appreciation for my gift, but he did clean the plate well.

Let’s be truthful. Gato didn’t come back to the porch because he enjoyed our presence and wanted to be touched. He came back for more food. He endured our touch to get what he wanted.

Random Lesson #2 – Everyone endures something negative to obtain what they really want. Continue Reading

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