A Messy Message

This weekend was very rewarding. Probably the highlights for me were:

  1. two students telling me on Sunday afternoon and evening that they felt a calling to ministry, and
  2. having the opportunity to share at “big church” on Sunday morning. What fun!

The message Sunday borrowed heavily from one of my favorite books of all time, Messy Spirituality, by Mike Yaconelli (see previous post) and a message that I heard Jay Bakker preach several year’s back that was inspired by the same book. You can currently hear Sunday’s message (or download the mp3) in it’s entirety at destiny4square.org/sermons.htm.

Here are some highlighted thoughts from the message, which provoked a lot of discussion this week, btw — thanks Mike and Jay

  • it’s scary when we put expectations on people to clean up before they ever even enter our church doors… too many people don’t feel like they’re “good enough” and therefore will never come. makes me think about the “love chapter” in Corinthians 13: “…love does not demand it’s own way.”
  • we’re “guilty by association” on this one… was Jesus intimidating? If so, it was because He loved so much; otherwise, He probably just intimidated religious people (smile)
  • we’ve got to remember that Jesus was very good at forgetting… namely people’s sin, which is “as far as the East is from the West”! let’s offer hope before coming at people with holy “to-do” lists…
  • we need God-breathed moments, rhema words, and prophetic insight more than comfy programing and rigid service orders…
  • God was really good with people relationally; He spent a lot of time hanging with people at their house and at the dinner table, communicating one on one and with the crowds… maybe we should too, instead of cold-turkey “here’s a tract” or “knock-knock and go” tactics…
  • I’m not talking about watering down the truth or not standing up for truth… I’m talking about being able to “sit with the prostitutes and tax collectors.” Do you think Jesus’ spirit was “grieved” when He sat at the dinner table? Were they listening to Christian soft pop? Maybe the biggest question is “Will you be strong enough to go wherever Jesus calls you to go?”
  • don’t try to be anybody’s savior… you do the possible and let God do the impossible… I can’t free someone from addictions and bondages, but I know someone who can…
  • beware of balance! when it comes to loving people, we don’t need more balance; we need more people who are recklessly abandoned to God — no matter what the cost…
  • love is at the top of it all… it’s dangerous when we kick people out of church and make them feel like we’ve “dealt with them”. Healthy people don’t need a doctor; sick people do… and we will never fulfill our calling as a church until we learn to love unconditionally…

0 thoughts on “A Messy Message

  1. Thinking in Progress | Jason Salamun » Messy Messages

    […] these quotes from his message and then click here and say […]

  2. Elliott

    Awesome message, Shawn!

  3. Shawn M.

    Thanks, Elliot. (blushes) You’re too kind!

  4. Mark Hollingsworth

    Good job, especially with visuals.

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