Friday, December 23, 2011

Discipleship Letters 109-110

Discipleship Letter 109                                              Oct. 24th, 2010
The tabernacle is the movable place of worship representing God’s presence with His people; the temple, the stationary place of worship representing God’s presence with His people. Jesus became flesh and “tabernacled” among us (Jn. 1:14). The tabernacle is replaced by the temple; the temple, by Jesus as the tabernacle; Jesus, by the Spirit as the temple of God’s people. In the Bible, we see that God is a mobile God. God said, “I have not lived in a house since the day I brought up the people of Israel from Egypt to this day, but I have been moving about in a tent for my dwelling” (2 Sam. 7:6).
God traveled along with Israel. In the desert, God’s pillar of cloud signified the presence of God in the place where there was no sign of progress. In the desert, did Israel progress or regress? Could God regress because of Israel’s regression? Perhaps when God determined to travel with Israel, His primary concern was not progression, but formation. It was in the desert they were instructed to build the tent of meeting. From there, God spoke to them (Lev. 1:1-2).
John Calvin viewed that the world is “the Promised Land—that is to say, the Promised Land can be found wherever the Word is preached.” In the desert, God is “a moveable pulpit.” “Where the Word of God is preached, heard and practiced, there is the Promised Land. There, in fact, is heaven on earth.” [Herman J. Selderhuis, John Calvin: A Pilgrim’s Life. Translated by Albert Gootjes (Downers Grove: IVP Academic; Nottingham: Inter-Varsity Press, 2009), p. 43.]
In the desert Israel learned to focus not on the journey, but the formation. Geographically, Israel might be at the point of stagnation. However, it was at this point of their journey they learned to listen to God’s Word and to turn the desert into the Promised Land.
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Discipleship Letter 110                                              Oct. 31st, 2010
“We writers are not Nouns, he [C. S. Lewis] used to say. We are mere adjectives serving the great Noun of truth” [Philip Yancey, What Good is God? In Search of a Faith that Matters (New York: FaithWords, 2010), p. 100.].
Pastors are not Nouns. We are mere adjectives pointing the congregants to the great Noun named God. In pastoral works, it seems that I am always at the center of attention: I teach. I preach. I open and end with prayers. I hold the church keys. But I am a mere adjective. In other words, I am always on a periphery and yet with pastoral functions. I am on the side to protect the center from being invaded with false doctrinal teachings and relative moral standards. Once the center is invaded, the congregants become vague regarding with Christian belief and living. I am on the side to make sure that the congregants are in tune with the center. However, once again, I am not and should not be the center even though I want to.
Who wants to be the attachment instead of the centerpiece? It’s a hard fact we must swallow. It’s life. “Clowns are not in the center of the events. They appear between the great acts, fumble and fall, and make us smile again after the tensions created by the heroes we came to admire. The clowns don’t have it together, they do not succeed in what they try to do, they are awkward, out of balance, and left-handed, but…they are on our side. We respond to them not with admiration but with sympathy, not with amazement but with understanding, not with tension but with a smile…The clowns remind us with a tear and a smile that we share the same human weaknesses” [Henri Nouwen, Clowning in Rome: Reflections on Solitude, Celibacy, Prayer, and Contemplation (New York: Image, 1979), p. 3.].

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