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Transformation Blog: Readings from Learning to Live and Love Like Jesus

 

 

Into the Generous Life (Telling the Story of God XI)

Brandon Cook

The Generous Life is about giving, and giving is not contingent on whether you are rich or poor; it’s about a posture. Giving our money, regardless of the amount, is about a posture of trust that opens us to the Reign of God as we live with open hands. Just as giving our money is trusting God with our financial life, so giving our time and energy is trusting God with our physical life. And forgiveness is trusting Jesus with our emotional life, just as gratitude is trusting God with our future. Telling the story of God, as outlined above, is about trusting God with our own story.

Let us live into this life of generosity, for that is the invitation of our discipleship. If we will, then we can grow into the very compassion of God. Indeed, compassion is the expression of God’s generosity through us. Discipleship is growing in our capacity, in Jesus’ name, to live and love like Jesus. If we live in unhurriedness, we can live The Generous Life, being present in all of the moments where God is at work around us. After all, He is always at work, creating encounters—even encounters through us—of the life of God.

We get to tell the story of the God who adopts the unsorted and the unworthy. The God who transforms us to become ambassadors and outposts of the kingdom of God. The God who teaches us to live in abundant life, for the sake of the world. May that God so fill and empower us that hearts burn, as on the Emmaus Road, that the world would indeed be made new, to God’s glory and to our joy.

For all of these readings in one place, order my book 'Learning to Live and Love Like Jesus.'

Introducing Jesus (Telling the Story of God X)

Brandon Cook

With a posture of making present the Reign of God by loving the person in front of us, we are free to simply introduce who we know Jesus to be and to share our story about how we’ve come to know him and what the Scripture says about him.

I’m always excited to introduce people to my wife, Becca. She’s simply a beautiful human being. When people meet her, I don’t have an agenda for them. It would be weird if I demanded that they like or accept or receive her the way that I do, or the way I think they should. Of course, I do want them to accept her—she’s wonderful. But that decision is ultimately up to them. In a similar way, we can’t create agendas about how anyone needs to respond to our story or to Jesus. We leave all that to the Holy Spirit. Our goal is to love, not to convert.

At the same time, love is boldness. The people we love need the authenticity of our courage. Not only do they need us to courageously share our stories and ask about theirs, but there may also be times when someone asks us some equivalent of the question, “What must I do to be saved?” We must be prepared to state the Scriptural paradigm clearly, without mincing words. Coming to Jesus consistently takes this form: repent, confess and believe, and follow.[1] Whether someone’s coming to Jesus for the first time or the seven hundredth time, the pattern is the same.

When you explain the Gospel story, you invite people into this Scriptural pattern: come to Jesus by turning from death, confessing what you have screwed up and missed, being honest about your weakness, knowing that God’s grace and love finds us in our brokenness and humility. Receive God’s mercy and then follow Him, knowing that He will make you whole. Open your soul to Him, so that you may be continually transformed, and seek to love as He does. You cannot do it on your own, but He will teach you.

There is an edge and an urgency to this reality, and love boldly puts a fine point on it. There is a cost to following Jesus. Transformation will be required, and even as Jesus invites us, he challenges us. But the reward is great—it is the saving of our souls, adopted, redeemed, participating with God in the renewal of all things.

For all of these readings in one place, order my book 'Learning to Live and Love Like Jesus.'

[1] See, for example Mark 1:14-20.

Jesus Tells the Story: 3 Simple Principles (Telling the Story of God IX)

Brandon Cook

There are three simple ideas that Jesus models on the Emmaus Road: Jesus goes first, Jesus shares his story, and Jesus knows the Scripture. For us, then, a model emerges: Go first, share your story, know the Scripture.

Go First

Going first means, simply, that Jesus approaches the men. He doesn’t avoid them. As an introvert, this challenges me, as I am very happy to go last or not at all. And there are times when this is exactly right and called for: we can’t be “on” all the time. You can’t say authentically say “yes” until you have learned to say “no.” But we also have to be aware of the moments where the Spirit is leading us to step forward. Jesus apparently had this awareness, as he engages these men on the road rather than throwing his cloak over his head and casting his eyes to the ground. He “goes first.” I heard this simple phrase from a pastor in Texas, whom I’ll quote at length:

I think it’s up to you in any responsibility to be the one who acts first. Love requires that I act first. So when I’m at the cocktail party, rather than waiting for you to come to me, I’ll go up and say, “Hello,” and introduce myself. And that changes the dynamic. We all know people who walk into situations like that—who either say “hello” to other people and that makes me feel differently toward them. I like people who like me! And so do you and so does everyone else. We like people who seem to like us. So ninety-nine out of a hundred times when you act first with grace and courtesy toward somebody, it changes the way they feel about you.

Now, this is big or small. In the neighborhood, are you the first one that introduces yourself to somebody you don’t know? Even in a marriage, you’ve had a fight: When are you the one who turns first and says, “I was wrong, I’m sorry. Will you forgive me?” Or a father to a child, “I was wrong, will you forgive me?” That will radically change the dynamic, because almost always are people waiting for you to act first. Love goes first.

Now here’s the hard part: It’s a risk… It’s a risk, which is why we don’t do it. It takes a risk for you to reach out first and see how a person’s going to act… You might be rejected, you might get the cold shoulder. But it’s a risk worth taking, because it can change that relationship… The reason I think it works is because I believe that’s what God is like: Love is always the thing that goes first. God reaches out to us first, which is why even on a small level at the grocery store, at the cocktail party, when I do it, I think it has the power to change things. Three simple words that can change any relationship: Love goes first.[1]

Jesus goes first. It’s a challenge, and it takes courage, but he is our model and that is our invitation.

Share Your Story

Second, Jesus tells his story. But notice that he first creates space by hearing and holding the stories of the men before him. From this place, he is able to tell his story in a way that invites them to experience God. Jesus thus reveals a truth: both listening and talking can be ways of giving.

Indeed, sharing our story is a way to be generous. Sharing our story is an invitation for someone to listen and consider without your having to prove anything. When we share in this way, without an agenda, it gives others permission to share their story openly and honestly, which creates a space that God can visit.

I was once in a training with my friend Jean and a man asked her, “Tell me why you believe. How can you prove that Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life?” Jean simply said, “I can’t prove a thing, but that’s what I believe and that’s what I’ve experienced. My experience is that in Jesus there is life.” Her experience and her confidence were compelling, even though, as she said, she couldn’t prove a thing. I don’t know if it made that man’s heart burn, but it certainly did mine. The inexorable thing about a story is that it becomes a living, breathing apologetic, against which there is little argument. People may think you’re a liar or that you’re deluded, but they’re still left with the weight of your conviction and the reality of your presence. 

“Telling your story” simply means being honest and forthright about how you have experienced Jesus—the good, the bad, and the ugly. [2] You don’t have to fake anything or gussy it up. Just share your story of how you have experienced him.

What is your experience with Jesus, then? Pause and write down three ways in which you have experienced Jesus, past and present. What was life like before encountering him? How is life different now? How have you still struggled after meeting him? Consider these questions and then put words to part of your story.

It may sound quite simple: “I don’t know, man. I’ve been addicted to getting through life by buying things and, you know, over-eating food that makes me feel better, even if I’m miserable after. But I’m experiencing that Jesus is enough for my soul on some deep level that frees me from addiction and from needing those other things.” When we are honest in this way—when we tell our story without glossing it up—we create space for both ourselves and the person in front of us to be human. This always creates space for God.

Know the Scripture

Finally, “know the Scripture” reflects the simple fact that Jesus has clearly studied the Scripture. He doesn’t have a scroll which he pulls out; “Hey guys, hold on, let me read through Isaiah 53 real quick.” He doesn’t have a pocket Bible. But he has Scripture in his heart, so that he’s able to bring it forth. As we discussed in ‘Chapter 11: Scripture,’ let us set our hearts to soak in Scripture, that Scripture would be in us.[3]


For all of these readings in one place, order my book 'Learning to Live and Love Like Jesus.'

[1] From a local news interview with Andrew Forrest, which I have slightly edited for diction. http://www.wfaa.com/entertainment/television/programs/good-morning-texas/soulful-stoop-munger-place-churchs-rev-andrew-forrest/224681060 [February 18, 2017].

[2] Stolen from my friend Alex Absalom, from a sermon given at Long Beach Christian Fellowship.

[3] Again, to be prepared to tell the Gospel story, you might consider memorizing I Corinthians 15:4 as a starting point.