Thursday, May 29, 2014

LSPS Reflections - It's In Our DNA

Thursday Reflections from LSPS - Part I

The Holy Spirit is at work! Of this I am sure.

Thursday morning’s lecture/discussion was inspiring. Not in a way that wants me to take what I have learned, box it up and take it home, and try to apply it exactly as it was taught - which is a model I see fail often.

I have been inspired in a way that gets me to think deep about the patterns I am hearing in the lectures and reflect on patterns I encounter in my own community.

This reflection will be in two parts. Otherwise I think it will become a lengthy essay.

This is the first movement of reflection. It connects an event from Tuesday evening that I did not write about with a pattern of ministry that came up in this mornings discussion. The pattern is something I have been reflecting on for while, but have not written on extensively. 

We had the opportunity on Tuesday evening to experience a performance by a 5th generation descendent of the battle of the Alamo. Laura Esparza, is the descendent of Gregorio Esparza, a Tejano man who fought for the revolution against Santa Anna, but desired to keep Texas as a part of the Mexican Republic. Her great, great, great, great, grandmother Ana and her four children were five of 18 Tejano survivors of the battle of the Alamo - something you didn’t read about in Texas history books until recently. 

Her family had fought for the Mexican Republic - the original cause of the battle and the Texas revolution. Until Houston and company declared independence from Mexico on March 2, 1836, the fight was a revolution against Santa Anna’s dictatorship and not a fight for freedom. This is part of hearing the story with the Hispanic “accent” - hearing another perspective of the story (the reflection on "accents" can be read here). But I digress.
 

Laura Esparza told us about her family passing down the story of her ancestors from generation to generation. They shared the story as if they were still in the sacristy during the battle. When she was writing the story of her great, great, great, great grandfather and her family, one of her inspirations was to think - “what if my DNA remembers what it was like at the battle…” If her ancestors were there, then her “DNA” was at the battle. The battle was a part of her legacy. A part of her identity. The battle is a part of who she is today.

This idea really hit home for me.

Our lives as followers of Jesus can be understood through this lens. We who have been baptized into Christ carry “Christian” DNA. As followers of Jesus we have his legacy as part of our legacy. His life and ministry, his death and resurrection, are part of our story. Our DNA as Jesus followers takes us back to the healings, the feedings, the table, the cross, the tomb, and the commissioning to spread the good news and baptize.

Our DNA as Jesus' followers takes us back to the story of the church in Acts. We remember, through telling the story of Acts, the first Pentecost and the model of ministry that came through the Holy Spirit. Acts 2:42 tells us that “The believers devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of the bread and prayers.”

This model of ministry is in our DNA. We do not have to reinvent the wheel. We already do these things... We spend time in the scriptures. We spend time at the table - both during the Lord’s Supper and during shared meals in our homes and community. We spend time in fellowship. We spend time in prayer. This is a cross-cultural, multilingual, movement driven by the Holy Spirit. It’s literally in our blood as followers of Jesus.
It will still work in our current time and context.

This DNA remembers the story of Acts 15, of that first great church council meeting that discussed Paul’s mission of sharing the good news of Jesus Christ with the gentiles. It was a heated meeting - go back and read it! At the end of the day, through much discussion and disagreement, tension and prayer, the group decided Paul should continue his call to the Gentiles. The Holy Spirit was moving in the early church and its leaders. Though they could not all agree, they decided that God was at work. They could have very well said - “We trust that God is at work. Paul, your mission to spread the good news among the Gentiles scares us - they are not like us (the Jewish people). But we affirm God’s working through you. Go in peace - Share the good news!” (Acts 10:22.5 - you have to read between the lines!) 



This is integral to our lives today. We may not always agree on what God is doing, there may be tension, but we can affirm that God is at work. God has plans that we cannot comprehend. We are just called to follow where the Spirit leads - where God is already at work. Our DNA as followers of Jesus remembers this - and calls us to follow the same movement.

There is more to come!

La Paz de Cristo,
Travis 


Thursday's Reflection, Part II - "Living Memories and Building Relationships.

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