Becoming an Attentive & Responsive Community
Becoming an attentive and responsive community starts with individuals being attentive to Jesus and being responsive to the voice of the Holy Spirit, and then followed by God’s love meandering through every street and every corner of the neighbourhood moving towards the goal of connecting people with the Heavenly Father. Throughout the journey, each of us continues on learning to befriend with the stranger within oneself through contemplative prayers by shifting from our perception of scarcity to the new perception of abundance, in order to serve God and people as a community without borders.
1
Hello Stranger
There is an ancient Chinese proverb: “A person’s worst enemy is
oneself.” Regardless of the source, the statement is universally applicable to
all human beings. The enemy within oneself is our sins, where we fall short of
the glory of God. The fruit of the Spirit is “love, peace, joy, patience,
kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control”[1]. Is the fruit of the Spirit difficult to produce? To me, the
process is very challenging, but it is necessary for all Christians. The
transformation is a lifelong process. The process begins with honestly admitting
my sins (spiritual sickness), and humbly pleading for God’s healing. “The only
people who grow in truth are those who are humble and honest.”[2] I must honestly lay out any of my selfishness, impurity, jealousy,
bitterness, and hatred… etc in front of God. The purpose of doing so is definitely
not for self-accusation, because self-accusation is not from God but from the
anti-Christ. It is necessary for me to logistically label my sins in front of
Him, not that God did not know, in fact He knows more than what I could label. This
is for me to recognize and to know myself – getting to know the stranger in me.
I do not need to be anxious or afraid during the process when I dwell under
God’s unconditional love that Christ has already died for my sins. Now, it is
time for me to recognize my sins so that those sins of mine can be nailed onto
His cross, and cleansed by His precious blood; therefore, I am open to the
healing power of the Holy Spirit. “True religion is never about fear. It is
always moving beyond fear…the word ‘fear’ in both Psalms and Proverbs means the
awe that small children have for someone they honor and respect. It is not the
fear of being harmed, but the awe of reverence and honor for someone we look up
to and are devoted to… Fears and faith seem to be opposite to Jesus.”[3], as my spiritual director often reminds me of the Bible verse of
Mark 5:36b, “Jesus told him, 'Don’t be afraid; just believe.'” The reason “we
refuse to admit our weakness, our needs, our poverty because we are frightened
of rejection”[4]; however, God never rejected a true believer due to the fact His
love is unconditional, as the poet described in Psalm 51:17, “My sacrifice, O God, is a broken spirit; a
broken and contrite heart you, God, will not despise.”.
After we have recognized the enemy within us, instead of walking
away or shuffling it into a dark corner, we need to embrace it by pleading to our
Heavenly Father to forgive us through Christ. If we repent, we will be
forgiven. Because God has forgiven us, therefore we can forgive ourselves.
Hence, God restores our identities as His children, similar to the parable of
the prodigal/lost son. By the way, we are always His beloved children, and the
adverb “always” shows His love being unconditional. We could not do anything to
make God to hate us; only that God would become sad when we are not listening,
not trusting, or not responding to Him. When He is sad or upset, He can still
love because God is the almighty.
This “stranger within” does not only creep up once in our life time.
This “stranger within” can emerge anytime and anywhere in any ways, form or
shape. Our duty is to recognize this stranger as quickly as possible, and honestly
and humbly turn in this “stranger within” to God as soon as possible. Only
then, healing and comforting, which often require time, mysteriously come from
the triune God.
Being evangelists, we love the word “outreaching”, would the above
practice be growing overly inward and lacking a sense of outward growth? Jean Vanier stated: “We need to touch the
truth of who we are. It is then, as we grow gradually into the acceptance of
our wounds and fragility, that we grow into wholeness, and from that wholeness,
life begins to grow forth to others around us.”[5] Please accept my political apology, if quoting words from a Roman
Catholic theologian/humanitarian to answer a Protestant question is offensive! As
Protestants, I think it is about time for us to recognize our heritage, rather
than slamming onto the brake whenever we hit the name “Martin Luther” while
tracing the lineage of Christianity, without exploring further back into
history for the fact that we believe in the same triune God. In Protestant terms,
inductive Bible Study should not only scratch the surface of our mind through
observation, interpretation and application for the sake of comprehension and
behavioural correction , but also God’s word should “induct” our core (our
heart) to scan for and to burn up any of our impurities based on God’s
unconditional love.
2
“E.T. phone home?”
After recognizing and turning in the “stranger within” to God by
knowing Him, does it make me feel like an extra-terrestrial being? On one hand
sometimes I feel like E.T.; on the other hand, this world is our Father’s World,
therefore Christians are not E.T. beings on earth. Only because sin has entered
the world, therefore we feel like E.T., with longings of reconnecting with our
creator. We just need to be in touch with God often. Our “stranger within” needs
to phone home often, in order to have our wounds healed by Christ through the
work of the Holy Spirit. We need to continuously be aware that “Jesus was a
companion, an artist, a healer, and a mystic.”[6]
If one refuses to admit his/her weakness, our needs, and our
poverty, one will be continuously playing either a victim role or a tyranny
role for the rest of his/her life, respectively depleting community resources
or creating harms. The practice of contemplative prayer is like phoning home.
Through contemplative prayer, we get to know oneself and God. “To know God is
to live in God and to let God live in us so that our hearts beat in unison, so
that we have the same desire… yearnings… priorities as God. This personal
experience of the love of God for ourselves gives us a new inner strength; this
is the presence of the Holy Spirit dwelling in us and working through us.”[7] However, this is not “spiritual capitalism”[8], as we are not “focusing on attainment and achievement” for making
us into superior beings, because such expectation “keeps us from the truly
transformative experience called grace”[9]. Richard Rohr’s definition
of “contemplative prayer, is not a way of thinking… not a way of talking; it
finally moves beyond words into silence. It moves into the mystery that is too
deep for words.”[10] There are no calculation and dualism in contemplative prayer, but
to learn embracing and surrendering. To me, this sounds like the technical term
“online”, our connection with God is always online, that our phone is always
online, like teenagers that their mobile phones are always either online
texting or calling. We need to have similar passion, though more spiritual less
flesh, of always being online with God. Furthermore, this online praying business
is beyond words. That is a “stance”[11] of living in awareness of, trusting on, and delighting about the
presence of God. It is like what God told the elder son of the prodigal/lost
son parable in Luke 15:31a, “‘My son,’ the father said, ‘you are always with me…’”.
Our Heavenly Father has already reaffirmed His promise to us through
incarnation - “Emmanuel”. We need this intimacy with our Heavenly Father
through Christ because of what Jesus said in John 15 about “The
Vine and the Branches”.
Unceasing “prayer is the ultimate empowerment of the people of God,
[not laws and guilt which often disempowered us and make us live in
insufficiency and doubt]… prayer gives us a sense of abundance and
connectedness.”[12]; therefore, we can start learning to love (giving) because “contemplation
recognizes the God-self, the Christ-self of abundance and security.”[13]
3
Moving from Real Scarcity to True
Abundance
By befriending with the “stranger within”, and unceasingly phoning
home - having continuous dialogues with our Heavenly Father in the name of
Jesus Christ, there is a possibility for us to gradually start migrating from a
world of scarcity to the world of abundance, by faith.
In the secular world, we always view the world under scarcity
because of our sins that we have already assumed that we need to hoard
resources through our might and our power. Neither this is a modern problem,
nor an issue from the invention of money. The concept of scarcity entered Eve
when the snake tempted her on eating from the tree of knowledge that she would
be like God, out of the desire of gaining wisdom, she ate and she gave it to
her husband and he ate as well. She saw the scarcity of wisdom, so they ate the
forbidden fruit. Scarcity being the fundamental economic (both material and
spiritual – in fact they are inseparable) reality begins in Adam and Eve’s time
when they ate the forbidden fruit from the tree of knowledge. The chart of economic
supply and demand is always skewed in humans’ perceptive because of our
limitation and our not trusting, after the fall of mankind, since sin has entered
the world. God’s chart of supply and demand in a perfect world is linear, in
which the definition of “demand” in His Kingdom is about our desires/longings
becoming in unison with His under His grace and mercy, along with Peace and
Joy.
Having said that the fear of scarcity comes from our original sin,
on my second thought, perhaps Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove’s comment on “money's power worked to convince people that scarcity is the
fundamental economic reality”[14] is an accurate reflection of today’s world as our possessions are
indexed by monetary value. People’s default value is scarcity. Scarcity becomes
real when everybody hoards and/or acts abusively. What is real does not imply
what is true. The situation of scarcity could become real due to deception, but
truth never lives under deception. For example, recently, an elderly person told
me that he “really” worried the government was going to legislate that only
elders with a saving less than a certain amount could receive funds from the
old age security system. I asked him, “Why can’t people use up the existing
resources before asking for more?” This is an example on the point of view
about scarcity, as the government never announced that elders cannot apply for
their old age security later on, after using up their savings.
When I was reading the book “New Monasticism” written by Jonathan
Wilson-Hartgrove, I felt a strong sense of communism or socialism, and the only
difference was the presence of God in “New Monasticism”. To my understanding,
“New Monasticism” is similar to socialism viewpoint with God among the people. Communism
did not work out well in East Germany and China. Although China still labels
its mono-governing unit as the communist party, everyone knows that the system
has been degenerated into extreme capitalism, along with the corruptive side-effects
of bribery. Anything going to the extreme ends up rebounding. Regardless
whether it is Communism, Socialism, or Capitalism, as long as any system
forbids God in its picture, our sinful nature pervades, and then the concept of
scarcity conquers the people’s mind. Even if people didn’t see scarcity to
begin with, any movement without God would become like a hippie movement, inundated
with street drugs, in order to hypnotize resulting pain and sadness after their
awakenings. Hippie’s counter-cultural movements swayed and diverged because God
was missing from their centre, lacking of “let go, let God” mechanism. Only
when we have God in our hearts, we may able to relearn His abundance by
trusting Him as our provider. However, the reality is that the back and forth shifting
between scarcity and abundance continues because the devil has not been thrown
into the pit yet. Again, what is real does not equal to what is true. The truth
is that Christ is the victor, as Jonathan R. Wilson described it in his book of
“God So Loved the World”. When we dwell in God’s love, we naturally share our
materials and thriving towards socialism. This is how I understand the concept
of “New Monasticism” (reallocation, redistribution, and reconciliation)[15] by Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove, which is based on God’s love that we
can share.
To see the abundance of the Father’s world is not from our
might and our power, but to receive through the Holy Spirit. The hymn “This is my Father’s world” helps us to understand. The process of experiencing His abundance requires
faith in the triune God. Faith is a lifelong building project, with continuous
dialogues and interaction with God.
4
To serve without boarders
While being healed by God and starting to see His abundance, we can
learn to practice becoming an attentive and responsive community. I respect and
admire church pastors, as they have put in much effort to endorse all programs
running simultaneously according to schedule, while caring for the flock.
Besides church pastors, do we need community/workplace pastors outside the
church? From the books that I have read, there are many reasons that people
resist church, which I concur as these are really happening in the world from
my personal observation as a layperson. Some of the examples from the books are:
- ‘Gandhi
couldn’t see value in a message that had no hope or power for the here and
now, and later stated, “I like your Christ, I do not like your Christians.
Your Christians are so unlike your Christ.”’[16]
- ‘“Jesus
is cool, it’s just that they have f***ed with Jesus. I mean, Christianity
was at its best when it was secret and hidden and you could die for it.”’[17]
- ‘… maybe
why we clerics prefer laws and guilt (which often disempower us and make
us live in insufficiency and doubt)’[18]
The role of community/workplace
pastors is to reach those who have misconception about the Gospel. Sometimes
community/workplace pastors need to work undercover in order to be in touch
with many of our church phobia friends in the community and in the market place.
“The ‘quiet revolution’ of God's kingdom doesn't spring up big and tall,
parading its supremacy over all the other kingdoms of the earth. Instead, it
spreads underground. It thrives beneath the surface. When you whack some little
piece off, it just spreads somewhere else. And in the end, God's kingdom wins.”[19] Therefore, community/workplace pastors are necessary to live among
the people and to grow together with the community/coworkers in order to attend
their needs and be responsive on liberating them from sins by the work of the
Holy Spirit through Jesus Christ, whenever there are any individuals in the
community/market desiring God to enter his/her life. Community/workplace pastors
are to work agilely inside and outside of the church boarders.
“The dirt of life in the here
and now provides the nutrients to cultivate a life with God. We also need
exposure to the energy of the Spirit of God surrounding us. Jesus demonstrated
a life that was grounded in humanity and struggle and open to the energy and
breath of God. We find him in the marketplace caring for the needs of people
and on the mountainside connecting with the eternal Father. His life was an
example of dynamic unity and synergy between the pursuit to love God and
everything that God has made. And this is the life we are being invited into.”[20]
To collaborate and to work towards God’s Kingdom are not from
our might and our power, but to receive through the Holy Spirit, as stated in Zachariah
4:6 that “This is the word of the Lord
to Zerubbabel: ‘Not by might nor by power, but by my Spirit,’ says the Lord
Almighty.”
[1] The Holy Bible, Galatians
5:22-23
[2] Richard Rohr, Everything
Belongs (p.103), The Crossroad Publishing Company.
[3] Richard Rohr, Everything
Belongs (p.87-88), The Crossroad Publishing Company.
[4] Jean Vanier, Befriending
the Stranger (p.16-17), William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
[5] Jean Vanier, Befriending
the Stranger (p.61), William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
[6] Mark Scandrette, Soul
Graffiti: Making a Life in the Way of Jesus (Kindle Loc 433-435), Jossey-Bass.
[7] Jean Vanier, Befriending
the Stranger (p.30), William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
[8] Richard Rohr, Everything
Belongs (p.28), The Crossroad Publishing Company.
[9] Ibid, (p.28)
[10] Ibid, (p.126)
[11] Ibid, (p.29).
[12] Ibid, (p.125).
[13] Ibid, (p.67).
[14] Jonathan
Wilson-Hartgrove, New Monasticism: What It Has to Say to Today’s Church (Kindle
Loc 485), Brazos Press.
[15] Lesson #18 - Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove
(New Monasticism), http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUs0ojx-pM8
[16] Mark Scandrette, Soul
Graffiti: Making a Life in the Way of Jesus (Kindle Loc 503), Jossey-Bass.
[17] Mark Scandrette, Soul
Graffiti: Making a Life in the Way of Jesus (Kindle Loc 722), Jossey-Bass.
[18] Richard Rohr, Everything
Belongs (p.125), The Crossroad Publishing Company.
[19] Jonathan
Wilson-Hartgrove, New Monasticism: What It Has to Say to Today’s Church (Kindle
Loc 302), Brazos Press.
[20] Mark Scandrette, Soul
Graffiti: Making a Life in the Way of Jesus (Kindle Loc 2562), Jossey-Bass.
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