Jim Best blog archive part II

June 29, 2007

Living in Suburbia

Filed under: Current Affairs — jimlbest @ 10:36 pm

Taken from an excellent SOJO article called: Jesus of the Cul-de-sac

check it out here

Frankly, it looks like we can take our time doing so. The suburbs, now
home to more Americans than any other environs, aren’t going away
anytime soon. Whether we approach suburbia with judgment or apathy,
snobbery or envy, anger or accommodation, Christians concerned about
social justice would do well to consider what living in a suburban
nation might mean for their faith.

"You want to be really radically countercultural in the
suburbs?" asks Will Samson. "Go to your neighbors and church community
and tell them, ‘I think I’m going to live here until I die. I’m not
looking for other options.’" In a culture of mobility, in which
"upgrading"—of computers, houses, jobs, or spouses—is an assumed right,
simply staying put can be a witness, says Samson.

June 28, 2007

Worth Reading via Mike Bishop

Filed under: Eating An Elephant — jimlbest @ 11:25 am

Over the last 7 years I have challenged and stimulated by the writing of Mike Bishop. I first read/met him through articles he had written for an e-zine called Next Wave. A few years later I was able to meet Mike in person in Cincy at Vineyard Central. Pasted below is a post from Mike’s blog the Mustard Seed.

The Mustard Seed
Following the Voice

By Mike

“When Jesus announced the kingdom, the stories he told functioned like dramatic plays in search of actors. His hearers were invited to audition for parts in the kingdom. They had been eager for God’s drama to be staged and were waiting to find out what they would have to do when he did so. Now they were to discover. They were to become kingdom-people themselves. Jesus, following John the Baptist, was calling into being what he believed would be the true, renewed people of God.” – N.T. Wright, The Challenge of Jesus, pg. 43

Almost ten years ago, I began to hear echoes of Voice calling me into a life I really knew nothing about. At first, I thought the Voice was drawing me into a deeper experience of God and communion with him. Later, I was challenged to rethink my ideas about church – how the church was structured, pastoral leadership, and the utter lack of authentic community. But the Voice did not stop there. In fact, I began to see how my understanding of the gospel was entirely focused on death; that it was doing a decent job of making me feel secure that I would go to heaven when I died, but was woefully inadequate to prepare myself or others for life in the now.

However, the Voice was not just trying to improve my spiritual health, or help me plant a healthy church, or to have a better theology. All these things matter, but are not the essence of the call, the whisper of what I began to hear almost a decade ago. It is for this reason that I often get frustrated with discussions on the internet or among church leaders about the next new theological insight, or brilliant church model, or spiritual gimmick that is sweeping Christendom. Some of it is interesting; most of it bores me to tears. That is only because I have kept hearing the Voice all these years say the same thing over and over……Come, Follow Me.

When Jesus called the disciples with these words, they could not have possibly been able to comprehend the magnitude of their decision to actually respond. They were certainly aware that they would be alienating themselves from family members, walking away from jobs and the security of a day’s wage, and understood the hazards of joining anything that smelled of messianic aspirations. In truth, they were – quite literally – signing their own death warrants. However, they could not have expected that Jesus would throw them this curveball…that they were becoming the new Israel, God’s people reconstituted around Jesus and what he was about to do.

We often miss how God has placed us in a Grand Story, one that finds its source miles upstream in the mountains with Abraham, Issac, Jacob, Joseph, and Moses, then bursts out of the hills in the Promised Land; constricts to nothing more than a thin gully in Babylon, then somehow wanders its way into the valley through Jesus; widens to an earth-shaping river as the Gospel is proclaimed to the nations, and continues to move the earth today. We miss the enormity of our decision to follow Jesus. As if following Jesus was to be placed alongside deciding between Honda or Toyota for our next minivan, or if we should take that job in California. It just doesn’t mean anything to us Americans. Bonhoeffer was right in saying there is a cost to discipleship, but it isn’t just the cost that we have difficulty estimating. We radically underestimate the history behind our decision. When the gospel is reduced to your own personal salvation so you don’t go to hell when you die, why bother with history? “Who cares what happened before Jesus? That Old Testament is a good read in places, but honestly, why waste too much time there? Jesus’ blood is all we need!” Dallas Willard calls this vampire Christianity, and for good reason.

But the history of God’s people does matter, because the words “Come, Follow me” don’t make much sense without it. Follow who? A moralist teaching non-violence, self-denial, peace, and love? A bizarre lost-soul wandering the countryside spouting off nonsense about the end of the world? Or a superhuman god-man virtually nailing himself to the cross in order to ransom mankind from the bonds of sin and death, Hallelujah!

The Story matters, because unless we see how we fit as actors in his Kingdom drama, all this blabbering about church and discipleship and mission are an absurd waste of time. Without the proper context, we are simply messing around with church models and preparing for a good death. I don’t imagine the disciples would have been very excited if Jesus told them, “Come, follow me…so we can sit around in the upper room arguing about eschatology and the interpretation of Daniel 7.”

The Way of Jesus has been gnawing at me lately, like a hunger that comes on you suddenly when you’ve been preoccupied working on a project. Something tells me, you must stop and eat, but I keep right on working. Peter, James, John, and their buds did not keep working…they left their nets, or their tax collector booth, or their cushy, religious institutional job…and followed. They did not, as we will not, fully comprehend their decision. But they held nothing back, and as their Master once said, “No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for service in the kingdom of God.”

Gee whiz, that’s not a comfortable thought for a Tuesday afternoon.

June 26, 2007

Local company helps find use for old tires

Filed under: Current Affairs — jimlbest @ 10:34 pm


O/E Article here

Summer Reading

Filed under: Books — jimlbest @ 10:04 pm

I just finished an excellent book called, Sub-Merge, by John Hayes. It is about the missional order called, Inner-Change, which does incarnational ministry among urban poor. It is a very good read. It has a nice balance of stories and rational/philosophy.

an audio clip of me reading a small portion here (click on June 26th phone call to listen)

More info can be found below-

author bio

book blog

inner-change site

catching up

Filed under: personal — jimlbest @ 12:06 pm

I had a good trip to California last week, but I had to jump right into things as soon s I came back.

Work has been very busy because we are having a “changing of the gaurd”. Old Sr. Priest moving out new Sr. Priest moving in. So there has been a lot of extra moving of furniture, boxes, offices, etc … as everthing is being juggled around. Temperatures at work have been crazy high as well with the weather. When I have not been moving things around I have been re-surfacing classrooms floors, which is a hot nasty job in and of itself. Yesterday I was really feeling the effects of not eating and drinking enough yesterday after work. So today I am eating a lot of fresh fruit and drinking lots of water.

Saturday was JJ’s all-star game for his softball league. He had a great time and did really well! He got a nice battle scar on his knee making an out at homeplate while he was playing pitcher. Pictures of the game are in a previous post.

This weekend was also busy because of my wedding schedule. Thursday night I had a rehearsal in Dearborn at The Henry Ford Museum. Friday afternoon I had a rehearsal at Wellers in Saline and a wedding ceremony in Dearborn at 7:00. Saturday was then the ceremony in Saline at 3:00. Plus I had a call on my way home from Saline to book another wedding for September.

Saturday night for dinner we took the kids out to Ci Ci’s Pizza to celebrate there end of the year report cards. All three of the kids did eceptionally well with their final marks as they say it in Canada. :)

Yesterday was not without it difficulties either. My main brake line ruptured going to the rear brakes on my little Mazda pick up truck. Syndie had to drive me to work and missed her morning walk. Then I spent my lunch hour meeting a tow truck to haul it to Harris Service Center at the corner of Cherry Hill and Newburgh. By 5:30 I received a call telling me what the damages would be but it would not be ready till Tuesday. Later around 7:45 they called and said it was ready to pick up.

June 23, 2007

JJ’s All star Game 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — jimlbest @ 12:59 pm

  JJ’s All star Game 2007 009 
  Originally uploaded by jimmy_best.

Here is a picture of JJ up at bat for his softball all-star game. This at bat resulted in a nice hit to right field.

JJ’s All star Game 2007

JJ’s All star Game 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — jimlbest @ 12:59 pm

  JJ’s All star Game 2007 009 
  Originally uploaded by jimmy_best.

Here is a picture of JJ up at bat for his softball all-star game. This at bat resulted in a nice hit to right field.

JJ’s All star Game 2007

June 21, 2007

Cali Pics In Web Album

Filed under: Travel — jimlbest @ 9:51 pm

June 19, 2007

Good time in sun here in Cali

Filed under: personal — jimlbest @ 7:10 pm

My time here in California is drawing to a close. I have had an awesome time hanging with Rob and his family and doing some sight-seeing here in  Northern  California. The best part I think was the trip to San Francisco. We went to an A’s game, time in San Francisco, Muir Beach, and Muir Woods. Tomorrow I leave Rob’s house at 4:15 am to be on my flight back to MI. The time away has been great but I am ready to go back. I will post photos once I am back home.

June 15, 2007

I’m here…

Filed under: personal — jimlbest @ 2:13 pm

I have arrived safe and sound here in Sac-Town aka Sacramento! I had no problems with the flight out. It was my first time to fly Frontier Airlines and I would have no problem doing it again. They had a real cool feature in the plan were I could see real time stats of our location, speed, and elavation as I flew west from Detroit Metro. The weather here is hot!! but no humidity. By 9:00 am this morning it was already 95. No super big plans for today. Just chilling.

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