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Tag: time

Where did the time go?

Alarm Clock

We all have the same number of seconds in a day, 86,400 to be exact. Yet for must of us it feels like there are never enough. Of course there are those people we know who seem to have discovered a secret bank from which they can draw upon additional seconds when they need them. The people annoy me. Jay Akkerman in the article Making Time Stand Strong: Spiritual Formation Day by Day, shares a powerful insight about how we spend our time: “In December 2009, Nielsen reported that ‘Americans consume media at a record pace–140 hrs of TV, 27 hrs of Internet, 3 hrs of mobile video each month,’ which means than on average, Americans now spend as much time in front of their screens as they do at work” (108). Ouch!

What would happen if for one week you were to take an audit of your time, recording how each hour of the days were spent? What would you discover? Would the way you are spending your time be consistent with what you say is most important to you?

Blessings,
Pastor Stephen

 

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Article published in the book Spiritual Formation: A Wesleyan Paradigm edited by Diane Leclerc and Mark A. Maddix. Kansas City: Beacon Hill Press, 2011.

Are we there yet?

Dear Friends,

The question, “Are we there yet?” has become the stuff of legends. No family vacation could ever be considered complete without the chorus rising from the bowels of the passenger compartment: A place where reason and tranquility will never be found. On a recent road trip the following conversation took place in our car:

Child: “Are we there yet?”
Me: “Are we still driving?”
Child: “Yes.”
Me: “Then we are not there yet.”
(One minute thirteen second pause)
Child: “Are we there yet?”
Me: turns on radio . . . loud

I would bang my head on the steering wheel, but that would probably cause the airbag to deploy. If you have never had the pleasure of this yourself this video will be an inspiration to you:

Are we there yet?

“Are we there yet?” is not just a question asked on during moments of too much family closeness. It is a question we all ask in our spiritual lives.

Having a clear vision and clear call does not eliminate the times in the dessert, the times of preparation. Maxie Dunham, former President of Asbury Theological Seminary is quoted by David McKenna (another former President) as saying, “Whether we experience the desert as a geophysical fact is not important. That we experience it as the reality of being along with ourselves and God — questioning, clarifying, testing, committing, and cleansing — is absolutely necessary” (59). Being in the desert is an “Are we there yet?” moment.

When we read of Saul’s (later called Paul) conversion we tend to focus on the events occurring on the Damascus Road. We miss the other conversion; the conversion which took place in the desert.

Paul’s professional and academic credentials to preach were without question. The call and mission of his life was clear. Jesus said to the prophet Ananias, “Go! This man is my chosen instrument to proclaim my name to the Gentiles and their kings and to the people of Israel. I will show him how much he must suffer for my name” (Acts 9:15-16, NIV). Even so Paul was sent to the desert for three years.

Read what Paul wrote to the people of Galatia about his call and his conversion:

“But when God, who set me apart from my mother’s womb and called me by his grace, was pleased to reveal his Son in me so that I might preach him among the Gentiles, my immediate response was not to consult any human being. I did not go up to Jerusalem to see those who were apostles before I was, but I went into Arabia. Later I returned to Damascus. Then after three years, I went up to Jerusalem to get acquainted with [Peter] and stayed with him fifteen days” (Galatians 1:15-18, NIV).

“It took three years for [Paul] to reverse all systems, crucify all past desires, and let his mind become the mind of Christ” (McKenna 59).

Have you been to the desert? Where is God still working on you? Where do you find yourself asking “Are we there yet?” The truth is, as much as we may wish it to be otherwise, the answer may likely be “no.”

Blessings,
Stephen

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McKenna, David L.. Christ-centered leadership: the incarnational difference. Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2013. Prin

 

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