Journey Community Church  

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Lent, Round Two

By Joe Chambers

It's Lent again, which reminds me that a year has passed. My inaugural Lent experience was one year ago. I didn't participate, really. I just hung out and observed. Somewhere there's a digital archive holding the blog of my experience, which concluded with my hope that in the coming year I would be more inclined to join in.

Sad though it may be, I felt less inclined this year than last. It's slightly pathetic. There are a few reasons why I resist partaking in Lent. One is that I hate the idea of fostering a sense of depression just to make the joy of Easter more abundant. Today has enough troubles as it is, why drive myself to despair with self-inflicted difficulties?

The greater reason though, is that over the last year my level of spirituality has plummeted to new lows. I say this not so much as a lament, but more as an honest statement of fact. I could proceed to list my reasons, whether to repent or justify myself, but I'll refrain. Basically, in this season of my life (hooray for seasons), I find most spiritual disciplines annoying. Lent included. I guess I'm at a point where I question all the ideas of being "closer" to God due to any actions I would take. Right now I feel God to be more mysterious, and honestly, more distant/unknowable than ever before.

Still, in spite of my reluctance, I am a sucker for peer pressure. When everyone at church started talking about it, I felt like I should join in regardless of my misgivings. There's also the small fact that my girlfriend took up the Lenten discipline of reading the Bible daily. This is her first time to ever read it. She's already finished Mark, and has started on Genesis. When she first informed me of her plans, the repressed evangelical in my head began tearing his robes with guilt. And how did I atone for my shortcomings?

I decided to make a point to attempt to work out three times a week.
. . .Thus far I've managed to make it to the gym about 5 times, which puts me about 7 workouts behind schedule. This is the point where I could concede defeat, and reinforce my anti-liturgical tendencies by feeling guilty. Instead of that, it seems proper to wrap this up by stating what I'm learning:

First, it seems that lack of discipline in life-in-general precludes any chance of benefiting from specific spiritual disciplines. I haven't made it to the gym because I haven't managed to be efficient with school, and therefore I'm always playing catch-up with the time I would otherwise dedicate to everything from working out to praying.

Second, and most importantly, Easter is merely the extension of Lent. The problem we get ourselves into is thinking that Jesus' selflessness in his march toward the cross was something he conceded to do reluctantly. I don't get the idea Jesus was particularly excited about the prospect of dying by torture, but it seems that he was so compelled in his way in life that the threat of death was something he merely disregarded.

In other words, the joy of Easter is only an extension of the joy of Lent. Jesus' life, even in the shadow of his death, was not characterized by a bitter, muttering consent for the trials he would endure. It was an joyful extension of his faith in a loving God, even in the shadow of a cross. That same joy is continuous through his death into his resurrection. If Lent is depressing to us, then I hardly find it believable that Easter will manage to cheer us up. Our attitudes toward the trials of Lent extend into the dawn of Easter.

Thus, my difficulties in finding any enthusiasm for this time of the year can be traced back to the fact that it seems whether I add something for Lent, or take something away, it seems that life will be characterized by more of the same. Easter then is mediocre at best, and Lent a sequence of drudgery that precedes it. Obviously, it doesn't have to be that way. Realizations are seeds of change for the days to come. So, maybe, hopefully, Lenten realizations can transform heavy obligations into ways of rest.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

In a Place of Waiting

Written By Scott Childress...



This Lenten season is very personal for me - and the ideas of journeying, geography, movement and change hit even closer with what I have experienced in the past year.
 
In May of 2008 the church that I had pastored for seven years dissolved.  We moved from our home of 13 years in Virginia and came out to Dallas sight unseen. We have no family here, no deep friendships and (at the time of the move) no job.
 
Since coming here it has been a roller coaster of situations and emotions. The spiritual upheaval (that I had thought I had worked past) started all over again and I began questioning even my questions. Some mornings I woke up an atheist and would go to bed a believer - sometimes the other way around.
 
And then - long-ignored marriage issues began to surface. In some ways the pressures of being a pastor, along with the insane expectations of the congregation, had helped us to continue this charade of happiness. But eventually the truth finds you, doesn't it?
 
We are now both in therapy, trying to re-learn what it means to be a husband and a wife. I want to tell you everything is going to work out fine, and I hope it does. I just wish that I could have dealt with one issue at a time, instead of trying to figure out where I am with God, the world AND my wife.
 
I feel like I am IN Lent right now...I am IN this place of waiting (and suffering to some degree).
 
I realize these feelings aren't unusual. I think that many of the folks who attend Journey have experienced the disorientation that can come from major shifts in world-view and perspective, and while I think this is a common theme that brings us together, I think that most of us have had this sense that something was never quite right all along. It was as if there was always something slightly "off" about what we had been told was true.
 
So maybe that's the point of this post.
 
I hope I don't come across as self-absorbed. I also hope you don't read this and feel uncomfortable at the honesty. I hope that you DO feel a little less alone. We are all in this together.
 
And Easter Sunday is coming.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Halfway there

A quote for you as we reach the halfway mark on our journey toward Easter:

"The pilgrim sets forth, tethered to the past by unseen bonds of memory, yet cloaked in hope, afoot in sandlas of determination, trudging toward something new."
-Denise Levertov

May our pilgrim sandals move us with hope and determination to Easter morning, where we celebrate the One who is making all things new.

Monday, March 09, 2009

Some Pics from the Journey Retreat 09

We had fun as you can clearly see...












Lenten Journey

Written by Derek Koehl


As I was contemplating this Lenten season within the current context of my life and the world around me, I came across the following views of Sandra Tsing Loh in an article in The Atlantic.

It will be interesting to see, now that the [financial] apocalypse has arrived, how various modes of American status-striving will be rejiggered, particularly those predicated on amassing large amounts of debt. […] Surely now the honestly eco-conscious will lead a bold return to—gasp!—tap water. (Because what’s worse for the environment than drinking water … out of plastic bottles … flown in from Fiji?) As Starbucks stores close around us, what’s more nostalgically amusing than Folgers Crystals? […] As Borders stores shutter, perhaps we’ll see a reflowering of public libraries. In any case, unable to secure those astronomical loans, more [of us] will have to start rubbing shoulders with The Other, living in truly mixed neighborhoods, next door to such noncreative types as Kohl’s-shopping back-office workers and actual not-yet-ready-for-their-close-up-in-Yoga-Journal immigrants. […]life will be all about the hearth, the candlelight, the guitar (and not a vintage Les Paul).

I hear in these words a description of a less consumer-oriented life—a life less defined by urban “affluent hipdom”. A simpler life often described within Journey as radical contentment and generosity (RCG).
This year, as with past years, I embrace Lenten season practices—one a putting down that daily calls my awareness towards Good Friday and the other a taking up that calls my attention outward toward those walking through life around me. I also determine a taking up that extends, far beyond this Lenten experience. I purpose to take up ever more of the RCG way in my life. Embodied in RCG are attitudes toward a way of thinking, acting, and relating that stands in contrast to the consumerist pull in whatever manifestation it appears. I purpose an orientation toward others and a posture of sharing rather than acquiring. In an ever more simple way of living I seek the space to contain expanding complexities in the relationships that I form with all the lives that surround me.
This is what I seek during this Lenten journey. As it draws to an end, having found in the seeking, I will stand in the twilight of Good Friday looking with hope not just toward the coming Easter sunrise, but also a continued better way of being.

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Journey Retreat 09



Join us this Saturday, March 7th for the Journey retreat! We will meet at a retreat center in Richardson from 10-5 for a day of fellowship including games, music, silence and reflection, sharing our stories, and, of course, kickball!! Snacks, drinks and lunch will be provided. Activities are planned for children as well, so bring them out to be part of the fun! Sign up by Friday to give us a head count, and bring $20 to cover the costs. See you there!

Location: Springhill Retreat Center: 3991 E. Renner Road Richardson, TX 75082