Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Heavy Metal



My friend Drew Shafer has informed me
that the heavy metal band As I Lay Dying
sings and plays a song called “Upside-Down Kingdom.”

Metal is not my native genre,
but I was intrigued,
and wanted to share this with my upside-down friends.

Drew gave me the lyrics:

Upside Down Kingdom
by As I Lay Dying

Many choose to find their hope in the thoughts of afterlife
When there is none to be found here before we die.
So I understand the feeling of helplessness
When we are just taught to wait here
Wait here for death.

Wait here for death. Wait for this suffering to end.
Wait here for death. Wait here for death. Wait for this suffering to end.

We are not forgotten, 
for a kingdom is offered beyond that of golden streets.
We can represent now what will one day be complete.

Simplicity is not a curse
Where strength is humbled and the powerless rise.
And the powerless rise.
This is a kingdom born upside-down.
This is a kingdom where the broken are crowned.

Wait here for death. Wait here for death.
The “blessings” of excess are only a burden on us.

It's a broken system where we just wait for death.
It's a broken system where suffering can never end.

Simplicity is not a curse
Where strength is humbled and the powerless rise.
And the powerless rise.
This is a kingdom born upside-down.
This is a kingdom where the broken are crowned.
The broken are crowned.

If helplessness is our system 
then we're better off upside-down.

What do you think about this?

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Sermon - The Upside Down Kingdom




Luke 4:14-21 (The Message)
Genesis 39:1-23 (NIV)

(preached at three services of Brook Hill United Methodist Church, September 4, 2011)

Ten Sundays ago, I was in Nicaragua with four other men from Brook Hill Church. We had asked God to break our hearts for Nicaragua, and our hearts were breaking.

Team Nicaragua (as we called it) grew out of BH’s Tuesday early morning men’s group, and after two years of talking about it, we were finally there.

In five full days of ministry, we visited nine churches and preached at seven of them. We visited a prison and a jail to share Christ. We waded across a river to help with a feeding program at a village with several hundred free-range pigs. We visited a beautiful children’s home run by folks who used to live in Frederick.

Nicaragua is the second poorest country in the Western hemisphere, and our hearts were broken by the extreme poverty. On Wednesday night we stopped at a small supermarket. I noticed a woman standing on the front steps with a piece of paper in her hand. I asked Irving our translator to talk with her. She had a prescription for asthma medicine for her child, and the cost was less than two dollars. She was waiting for someone to see her need and to help her. So we paid for the prescription.

Our hearts were broken by the poverty, but we were also glad for the joy we saw on the faces of Nicaraguan believers.

It was wonderful to hear them sing as they worshiped, and to feel a spiritual kinship with them because we serve the same Savior and partake of the same Holy Spirit. The number of devoted Christians in Nicaragua is increasing rapidly, and much of that growth is seen in thousands of little neighborhood churches among the poor.

We donated almost $3000 in money and material to various churches: 3 piano keyboards; one P.A. system; $320 for two beautiful wooden doors and a window for a church building that still has a packed-earth floor; 120 Spanish language Bibles; $300 worth of soccer balls, softball equipment and toys for kids; 30 plastic chairs for seating in a church sanctuary; five mattresses for a pastor’s family to sleep on, and more.

In Nicaragua we were very aware that God is building His kingdom. He is building His kingdom among the poor and neglected peoples of the earth.

In fact, God is building His kingdom wherever people bow to the Lordship of Jesus, and take up their cross to follow Him. This is not some fantasy kingdom, or a kingdom that we enter after we die. This is the kingdom that Jesus announced when He quoted Isaiah (61:1-2): “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor, and freedom for the prisoners, and recovery of sight for the blind, to release the oppressed, to set the burdened and battered free, to announce ‘This is God’s year to act!’” [Luke 4:18-19 (NIV & The Message)]

This morning I want to think with you about God’s kingdom, and I want us to think about the Upside Down nature of that kingdom.

God’s kingdom is an Upside Down Kingdom. It operates under different rules than the nations of this world. There’s really something subversive about it.

Jesus said that in this kingdom the last will be first, and the first will be last.

He said that, to enter this kingdom, we must become as little children.

Jesus said that it’s very hard for a rich person to enter this kingdom.

He said that if I want to be great in this kingdom, I must become the servant of all.

God’s kingdom is an Upside Down Kingdom. It’s a kingdom where forgiveness is extended 70 times 7 – 490 times.

It’s a kingdom where thieves and prostitutes and broken people are welcomed in from the streets to sit at the King’s table. I want to be a part of that kind of kingdom!

God’s kingdom is an Upside Down Kingdom. Jesus said this kingdom is like a pearl of great price – it’s worth selling all you have to obtain it.

He said it’s like a mustard seed – so small that you ignore it until it grows to become the biggest plant in the garden.

We get a glimpse of the Upside Down Kingdom in the life of Joseph, the son of Jacob, in the book of Genesis. Here was a young man hated by his brothers, sold to slave-traders who brought him down to Egypt.

(Genesis 39) 2 The LORD was with Joseph so that he prospered, and he lived in the house of his Egyptian master. 3 When his master saw that the LORD was with him and that the LORD gave him success in everything he did4 Joseph found favor in his eyes and became his attendant. Potiphar put him in charge of his household, and he entrusted to his care everything he owned. 5 From the time he put him in charge of his household and of all that he owned, the LORD blessed the household of the Egyptian because of Joseph. The blessing of the LORD was on everything Potiphar had, both in the house and in the field. 6 So Potiphar left everything he had in Joseph’s care; with Joseph in charge, he did not concern himself with anything except the food he ate…

God prospered Joseph and gave him success. But it’s a very strange, upside-down kind of success. As far as his family knew, he was dead. Joseph was obeying God in a place hidden from almost everybody. Only the people in Potiphar’s house knew of him at all.

Some of you may be in a similar place today. You are faithful to God in a hidden place where no one seems to notice. I want to encourage you – God sees your faithfulness. He is with you, and He calls you successful as you serve Him there.

Then Joseph’s situation goes from bad to worse. He’s falsely accused of sexual assault and thrown into prison. Again, what kind of success is this?

 (Genesis 39) 20 Joseph’s master took him and put him in prison... But while Joseph was there in the prison, 21 the LORD was with him; he showed him kindness and granted him favor in the eyes of the prison warden22 …the warden put Joseph in charge of all those held in the prison, and he was made responsible for all that was done there. 23 The warden paid no attention to anything under Joseph’s care, because the LORD was with Joseph and gave him success in whatever he did.

This doesn’t really look like success: Joseph is still a slave, and now he’s in prison. He is even more hidden from view than he was before.

Some of God’s most faithful people labor all their lives in hidden places. There is no earthly glory where they serve.

We met some of them in Nicaragua. We met Roberto, a faithful man who has now started three different churches. He’s in his mid-40s and has never had a bank account. If his parishioners can find work, they earn a dollar or two a day. He will never be seen as successful by the Trumps and Kardassians of the world. But God is with him. God sees him, and calls him a success.

As followers of Jesus, we are citizens of this kingdom. It’s a spiritual kingdom, and it takes awhile to get our bearings in this upside down world. God wants to reproduce the character of Jesus in us. He wants to change our way of thinking. He wants to change our attitudes. He wants to live within our spirits, changing our very nature so that we are available to iHimmHim and useful for His kingdom purposes.

How will we learn to live as God’s people in this Upside Down World? We need all the help we can get!

God has provided a powerful blueprint for us in the life of Jesus. And the Holy Spirit of God is our living and active teacher. Jesus said that the Holy Spirit would lead us into all truth. It will help us if we take some time at the beginning of every day to listen to what God’s Spirit is saying to us…

Right now I’m working on GENEROSITY. I’m a miser by birth, but I want to be a generous man. God has given me several friends who model generosity well.

My friend Chris tells me about a man: when he eats at a restaurant, the amount of his tip for the waitress is the same amount as his meal.

And my friend Dan tells me about a young couple: every time they go to buy groceries,
they buy an equal amount of groceries to give away. That challenges me! This young couple is also saving money to buy a house. Their plan is to buy 2 houses, and give one away to a needy family.

This is one example of the kind of radical living that God may call us to when we really take up our crosses and begin to follow Jesus. Are you ready for it? God help us!

Each Sunday, we pray the Lord’s Prayer together. There’s a phrase from it that I want us to pray together right now, as we think about the place God has for us in His kingdom: “Your kingdom come, Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven!”