Category Archives: discipleship

Keep It Simple Stupid

One of the great gifts of vacation, time away or time apart is that it brings you back to the what’s really important. Step out of the multiple projects and commitments and just stand back and you begin to get back to the things that matter most and remember that those things are pretty simple.

It is one of the gifts of our family cottage. It used to be more rustic than it is today. It has entered the age with Wi-Fi and a Nintendo Wii.  Even so, it is an hour from the city, 6 miles off the nearest paved road, back in the bush. There life boils down to family, friends, nature, good food and drink. The essentials. It is a beautifully simple rhythm of life.

As you look around, you are reminded of that great wisdom of the ages: keep it simple, stupid. Keep your attention on what matters, the basics, because the basics will not fail you.

This saying and the acronym, KISS, is said to have been coined by a man named Clarence Johnson, lead engineer at the Lockheed Skunk Works, the creators of sophisticated spy planes.

The story goes that Johnson once handed a team of design engineers (the people that make the planes) a handful of tools, with the challenge that any jet aircraft they were designing must be repairable by an average mechanic in the field under combat conditions with only these limited tools. And so, ‘stupid’ here doesn’t refer to his engineers, but to the relationship between the way things break and the sophistication available to fix them.

In short: the design of things and, thus, the means of their repair must be simple enough for the average person, here – average engineer – to fix. Continue reading


The roaring lion

Baptist Hill Road

Our Bible readings for today are kind of all over the map.  The Gospel reading is a prayer that Jesus spoke the night before he was arrested.  The reading from Acts is about the ascension of Jesus into heaven forty days later.  The psalm is a praise song to God, who makes the earth quake and rides the clouds.  So there’s pathos, and mystery, and glory, and praise in these readings….  But what the Spirit drew my attention to this week was not any of those.  It was this line from the First Letter of Peter:  “Like a roaring lion your adversary the devil prowls around, looking for someone to devour.”

What an image!  Is it just me, or can you practically feel the lion’s hot breath on your neck?  When I read that sentence, I could see the sharp teeth.  I could hear the roar that starts deep inside the lion and echoes through her hungry body and out into the wilderness…like a sound without a sound.  That’s the devil, looking to devour us.

Why did the writer of this letter—probably not Peter, but we’ll call him Peter–tell these poor struggling churches that Satan was stalking them like a ferocious lion?  Would you consider that good pastoral care? Continue reading


Theology Smack Down, or, Becoming What We Are

It’s not often that a Bible commentary can make you laugh out loud.  Believe me, I know.  But this week, one did.  It was this Critical and Historical Commentary on Matthew 1-7 written by Ulrich Luz with this drab black and grey cover.

You can see here that there is absolutely no indication that humor exists within these pages.  It screams serious and boring.  And yet, there is at least one moment of levity.  It comes when he’s writing about Martin Luther’s interpretation of our Gospel from Matthew.

He writes, “Luther was unable to do justice to the text because of his opposition to works righteousness.  In order to vindicate the text Luther suggests that it does not speak so much of the works of love…but ‘rather principally…of stressing faith and showing how to strengthen and preserve it.”  And here’s the kicker: “It is not possible to misunderstand the text more thoroughly.  I am not aware of any interpretation in the early and medieval church” that supports this interpretation.

What he have here is a little theological smack down. In short, Luz says, Luther was so committed to his own idea that we are saved by God’s grace alone and not by works (by anything that we do) that he just could not get his head and heart around this text.  Basically and bluntly Luz says that Luther was dead wrong.  The funny part here is that Luther finally gets a does of his own medicine.  For, Luther himself was notorious for telling people off when he thought they were wrong (which was often) and he did it with the same kind of cutting self-assured pronouncements.

But I can see Luther’s quandry here. Continue reading


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