I Am Because You Are I Am
As a tie-in to the last post:
I just saw a group of daycare kids walking down the street "attached" to a bright, lime-green rope. I don't know how common this "chain gang" daycare travel method is, but everytime I see it I smile (you have an adult at the front and one in the rear - and then this long line of kids holding on to a rope - sometimes with straps over their wrists "attaching" them to the rope). Of course, there's nothing like a bunch of little kids to make me smile. And then I thought, "Sandpeople travel in single file to hide their numbers..." Man, I am a geek.
But...
Here's what also struck me.
Last week's Gospel reading in the lectionary was the parable of the lost sheep and the parable of the lost coin and on the GBOD website Taylor Burton Edwards asked some pretty pointed questions:
So who has gotten lost where the people of your congregation live and work? How do people in your congregation treat these people? Who is out looking for them? Who is staying away from them? Why? How might not looking for the lost actually impoverish you?
One of the things that is shaping my theology and my missiology right now is how interconnected we are. There's an African proverb (that I might have shared here before) that says, "I am because we are." Hillary Rodham Clinton's book a decade ago drew on the premise "It takes a village to raise a child."
So, "How might not looking for the lost actually impoverish you?" Here's something I said on Sunday,
When Lori and the girls go to Blairsville to visit the inlaws without me, there's an empty place inside me the whole time they are gone. I am less because they are not here with me.
And that's true, I think, with the Church. If this is the Body of Christ, and if God's true desire is that everyone would come to faith in Christ - repent - be born again - join the Kingdom of God - then this Body is missing an awful lot of parts - this family is missing too many brothers, sisters and cousins - this kingdom is missing too many citizens.
And so I DO find the term "the lost" to be appropriate in this context - all around me there are people who do not know Jesus. And I am less - and WE are less - without them.
There are a whole bunch of loops on that daycare rope without any hands in them.
Spent too many days devising many ways trying to escape you
Where first you cut me loose and The places that
I’ve carried You, I wouldn’t take a dog
I just saw a group of daycare kids walking down the street "attached" to a bright, lime-green rope. I don't know how common this "chain gang" daycare travel method is, but everytime I see it I smile (you have an adult at the front and one in the rear - and then this long line of kids holding on to a rope - sometimes with straps over their wrists "attaching" them to the rope). Of course, there's nothing like a bunch of little kids to make me smile. And then I thought, "Sandpeople travel in single file to hide their numbers..." Man, I am a geek.
But...
Here's what also struck me.
Last week's Gospel reading in the lectionary was the parable of the lost sheep and the parable of the lost coin and on the GBOD website Taylor Burton Edwards asked some pretty pointed questions:
So who has gotten lost where the people of your congregation live and work? How do people in your congregation treat these people? Who is out looking for them? Who is staying away from them? Why? How might not looking for the lost actually impoverish you?
One of the things that is shaping my theology and my missiology right now is how interconnected we are. There's an African proverb (that I might have shared here before) that says, "I am because we are." Hillary Rodham Clinton's book a decade ago drew on the premise "It takes a village to raise a child."
So, "How might not looking for the lost actually impoverish you?" Here's something I said on Sunday,
When Lori and the girls go to Blairsville to visit the inlaws without me, there's an empty place inside me the whole time they are gone. I am less because they are not here with me.
And that's true, I think, with the Church. If this is the Body of Christ, and if God's true desire is that everyone would come to faith in Christ - repent - be born again - join the Kingdom of God - then this Body is missing an awful lot of parts - this family is missing too many brothers, sisters and cousins - this kingdom is missing too many citizens.
And so I DO find the term "the lost" to be appropriate in this context - all around me there are people who do not know Jesus. And I am less - and WE are less - without them.
There are a whole bunch of loops on that daycare rope without any hands in them.
And, the African proverb tells only half the story, right? What is the greatest commandment?
Love God with all that you are. "I am because You are I AM."
Second: love your neighbor as yourself. "I am because we are."
I AM
The Waiting
Walking out alone
The night fits like a stone inside a boot heel
Hot and cold winds blow
And no one is here to know the way I feel
The corner I once knew brings me in to view again
So I could stay out late, find new bones to break
But then I’d be dragging home admitting
I am because You are I am
I recognize clearly I see
I am because You are I am
I am in You and You are in me
Spent too many days devising many ways trying to escape you
Played too many roles
Dug too many holes just big enough to fall in to
And I could linger here, hoping to disappear in excuses
Come morning’s shining face I’d be crawling to the place I call home
I am because You are I am
I am because You are I am
I recognize clearly I see
I am because You are I am
I am in You and You are in me
Where first you cut me loose and The places that
I’ve carried You, I wouldn’t take a dog
Stop and calmly think of that
Tear this church down to it’s cornerstone
And build it up again, build me up again.
I am because You are I am
I am because You are I am
I recognize clearly I see
I am because You are I am
I am in You and You are in me
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