Saturday, December 18, 2010

Majesty (the Musings of a CB-er)

She kneels before the towering pile of branches, needles, and glistening apparel that screamed “Beautiful!” at the top of it's lungs. The room echoed it's silent heaves, laden with as much mirth and glee to rise a city from its knees. But to it, she does not turn an ear.

Ornaments dripping off of plastic pine with golden cord, crystalline lights shimmering eerily above the circlet of holly and red ribbon cascading at every corner. The shine of every cherub's eye and the point of every silver-studded star pierces the air, and everything is perfect.

Outside, oblivious to the green and gold and silver and stone, the salting 0f snow about the road- not too much to cause discomfort, but just enough to dust the world. Carolers toting semi-sweet notes, of good tidings and joy and mistletoe, their clasped gloved hands bright colored against the white backdrop of sow. Their rosy cheeks and perfect rows of teeth gaping wide to form the words only the pristine windows and snow-laden homefront are attentive enough to hear. But still she does not cast a single thought to the sight. The perfection of the scene, cast by dim lighted candles and the firelight's glow, was not by what her tears poured.

Her hands and knees ached, bend down beneath the curtain of evergreen, hands held out among the sharply wrapped presents of glorious color. Between her cupped palms stood tiny old trinkets; an old crowned man robed in gold, beside two kneeling in purple, extended hands bearing richly wrapped gifts. Three shepherds huddle opposite, upturned bearded chins holding awe and joy for the lifted angel hanging over the scene. It's wings shimmer under the worn old luster of gold paint, and his face was cracked from the many ill-kept tumbles from the tree.

A blue-wrapped maiden kneeling, eyes smiling with the little pink-painted line of mouth. Her husband's hand was laid lightly on her shoulder, their faces all turned towards the babe.

The small wood carved manger- painted straw sticking out from beneath a sleeping child, who's serene face beholds no thought to the wonderland he sits among. The towering tree, crackling fireplace, holly and the snow continue without notice to this tiny silent scene beneath it's boughs.

But she notices. Tears stream down her cheeks as her fingers tenderly touch the seemingly soft wooden cheeks of the tiny child. It was small, old, silent... broken. But it's depth of meaning weighed her heart heavier than all the majesty of her surroundings- in fact, this, instead, was her majesty. The Majesty.

The child. The shepherds. The mother. The angel.

The kings- who traveled miles and deserts following the dim point of light in the sky, certain for the Son of God at the end of their journey.

The father- who by an angel, was told to leave his country, his home, and move to Egypt, and by his faith, obeyed.

The stable- rugged, wretched, rancid... but into it's arms did the babe enter the world.

The city- by its night lights the family was turned aside, though she was griping in pain from labor... full to the brim with people who were called to their hometown to be counted by the Emperor.

The soldiers- who were ordered to witness the slaughter of hundreds of newborn children by their own hand, seeking out the single child who was named the King of the Jews.

The night- silent though it began, brought about the outpouring of such glorious chorus from the heavens that those who could hear ran in fear.

This was the majesty. This was the story. But little it stood beside the presents, wreaths, carolers and the mistletoe. But still she knelt, eyes glistening, for she knew. She knew the story. She knew the majesty. And the expressionless, voiceless trinkets held lovingly between her fingers sang a song louder than anything else in the room. For they were the Majesty of the season.

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Pride, Part 1 (The Musings of a CB-er)

Pride, Part 1 (The Musings of a CB-er)

First of all, I want to apologize for not keeping this up-to-date lately, it's been a rough couple of weeks, and I've just not been on track. Second of all, Im BACK and in full swing. Although I missed last night's CB Biblestudy (well, CB entirely) because of a performance for the choir I am in, I will track someone down who DID attend and find out what happened from them. :) Coming soon!

As for Daniel 4 and 5, it was interesting to notice that they were essentially about the same thing; PRIDE.

Have you ever heard the saying about pride being the foundation of all sin? When we sin, we are taking control of our own life, basically saying to God "I know better than you about what I need to do in my life, I know myself better than you do, and I know what's best for me. I am King, god of my own world." Wow.

I grew up using sin as a coping method. I think, in some way or another, we have all justified our wrong actions and thoughts in order to attempt to make them alright or better than they seem. Some of us might have been lying to ourselves about "white lies" and "small sins" that are "no big deal". Realizing that sin IS a big deal, more important that I am treating it to be, and more serious to God than I am perceiving it, convicts me where it hurts. When I sin, I am telling God that I am stronger than he is, smarter than he is... Pride.

In chapter four of the book of Daniel, Pride overtakes the King Nebuchadnezzar. The Lord warns him through Daniel about the consequences that will incur if King Nebuchadnezzar does not acknowledge God as Lord. "You will be driven away from people and will live with the wild animals; you will eat grass like cattle and be drenched with the dew of heaven. Seven times will pass by for you until you acknowledge that the Most High as sovereign... The command to leave the stump of the tree with its roots means that your kingdom will be restored to you when you acknowledge that Heaven rules." (Daniel 4:27, NIV) But King Nebuchadnezzar forgets this warning, because just twelve months later, he stands on the rooftop of his palace, saying "Is not this the great Babylon I have built as the royal residence, by my mighty power and for the glory of my majesty?" Such pride!

I know I forget the truth of the words "Be still, and know that I am God." God is God, not I. This has really rung true to me in the last couple of weeks- when Im struggling with pain and perseverance, relying on God's strength seems so much more out of reach. But doing this on my own strength is telling God I am stronger than he is. Lord! Im so sorry!

Friday, November 19, 2010

Quick Look at Daniel 3 (The Musings of a CB-er, with help from A.W.)

I want to send a shout out across the CB world to Andrew Webb, who drew up the most amazing notes of last CB's Biblestudy, which I missed, on Daniel 3.

I commence:

CB Daniel 3

~ Neb makes a god and orders everyone to worship it! or be cast into the furnace... (vss 1-7)

~Shad, Mi, and Ab (vss 8-12) say "no way!"

~Test of integrity..

~How do we respond today when we are tempted to worship false "gods"?
-gods of cheating, lying, self, drugs, stealing, etc

~Shad, Mi, and Ab were thrown in the furnace!
--> JESUS was there with them

~As we go through the "firey furnaces" (aka, trials and tribulations) of life, we know that we can withstand anything because Christ is right there with us!

~ God is protecting us and watching over us- look at the contrast between Shad, Mi, and Ab, and the mighty army men [who were killed when they were close to the furnace, because it was so hot]

~Know that as you live for God, people will notice it- you will stand out! Look at Neb's response! [He told his entire kingdom to acknowledge the God of the Israelites and praised God himself]

~ Live for God. Walk in integrity. Know that when you are thrown into the firey furnaces of trials and tribulations that JESUS is right there with you!

AMEN!



We love and appreciate you, too, Andrew! :) What more is there to say? Amen.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Church (The Musings of a CB-er)

Its that longing in the deepest parts of my body, mind and heart. I couldn't put my thumb on it until last night- that feeling of emptiness, that feeling of parched, starved, great vacancy within me that just overwhelmed me- and I just wanted to go to church.

I wanted to go to church. I just wanted to go to church. But it was Monday- and church wasn't coming for another six days. I had gone to church the day before, I had read my Bible, prayed and was still in intimate interaction with God. But yet I still felt empty. I wanted church. That communion with believers. That sharing of experiences and leaning upon eachother for strength.

I was emotionally and spiritually drained. After a long week of juggling school, work and the multiple visits from friends from family these past few days, I had to give up some of the time I usually spend in communion with the living saints. Namely CB. I thought I could do it- I'll just go to CB next week. I'll see them in school, I'll see them around, we'll talk.

I didn't realize how much CB really does for me until I couldn't go. It's Church. It's really Church! Sure we don't have a building, or a pastor, or elders, or an offering- but it's Church! There's no worship band, or standing and sitting, or hymnals or sound booths- but it's Church! We're church. And I missed it. I missed out on Church.

I feel strengthened after CB, it energizes me, it gives me LIFE. Why? Because of the shoulder-against-shoulder ministry and simple worship of God. Because we bring all of who we are into the light and say- this is truly who I am, and all I am- can you use me? Because we're a motley crew of college-agers, and yet we believe of ourselves, that we are NOT too young to do something for the kingdom at hand... Christ is our identity, and service is just the outpouring of that.

I just want to go to church. This week I'm going to be spending my time with the worship music cranked up, my Bible on my lap, and my hands lifted up. But on Saturday I'm going to get up, dust myself off, and go to church.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Thief (The Musings of a CB-er)



I am a thief, I am a murderer
Walking up this lonely hill
What have I done? I don't remember
No one knows just how I feel
and I know that my time is coming soon.
It's been so long. Oh, such a long time
Since I've lived with peace and rest
Now I am here, my destination
guess things work for the best
and I know that my time is coming soon
Who is this man? This man beside me

They call the King of the Jews
They don't believe that He's the Messiah
But, somehow I know it's true.
And they laugh at Him in mockery,
and beat Him till he bleeds
They nail Him to the rugged cross,
and raise Him, they raise Him up next to me
My time has come, I'm slowly fading
I deserve what I receive

Jesus when You are in Your kingdom
Could You please remember me
and He looks at me still holding on
the tears fall from His eyes
He says I tell the truth
Today, you will live with Me in paradise
and I know that my time is coming soon
and I know paradise is coming soon.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

I Have Anemia (Josh Tikka)

I have Anemia. Anemia is a disease. It is an iron deficiency in the blood. I didn't know I had anemia until a year and a half ago when I almost passed out during a track work out, I got really tired, fell to the ground, and thought I would never get up. Anemia is most common in runners, girls, and vegetarians. I'm a runner and a vegetarian.
If you don't know what iron does, it is basically responsible for bringing oxygen through your blood to your brain. It's important, and praise God you have enough… and not too much… like that little girl who stole from those bears.
It's not that bad being anemic, just headaching some times, and exhausting often. It's can be really difficult to maintain energy and focus.
Saturday night I was talking to my man K. My man K has hemochromatosis (or a different iron-related blood deficiency that does essentially the same thang). Hemochromatosis is a disease. It is an iron deficiency in the blood. He didn't know he had hemochromatosis until several decades ago (a few decades after he should have known). Hemochromatosis is a hereditary disease. No one in his family has it (that he is aware of). Too much iron can lead to liver, heart, and pancreas failure. It's very serious. His condition is a lot worse than mine. Mine will probably never progress to where his is at.
Red meat has a lot of iron. So does blueberries. Some cereals do as well. When I got tested for anemia, I was told that I was about 2-4 points away from being anemic. They didn't know I was a strict track runner who was taking an iron pill a day. That pill was keeping me from keeling over. It was my iron supply. I jacked up the dosage, piled on the blueberries and got nit-picky with my cereals. It worked out, I didn’t come close to passing out again and I'm doing ok.
My man K, he and his family didn't know about his blood disease for a long time. His was a hefty meat eating family. Steak and Steak for dinner. Red meat all the way. Eat more and pile on the iron. His family didn't know, he didn't know. He got real sick a lot. He still gets sick a lot. It's largely caught up with him. His stomach hurts, his bones hurt, he has deep circles under his eyes and he is fighting a battle without the weapons he needs to win.
I am blessed to have the luxury of being able to ethically eat as a vegetarian. I am blessed to have the luxury to function normally with anemia. I am blessed to have the luxury of being able to eat what I want with little taste difference with some intolerance to lactose.

My man K is not so lucky. Neither are our friends who desire to be vegetarian (more than you'd think), who are suffering from anemia, low potassium, diabetic (hugely prevalent), hemochromatic... We eat too much and starve ourselves; we're glutens with the time and money to appease our vanity. My man K has the iron I need, but I have the luxuries my man K needs... If we could give each other part of each others diseases... If I could lay some of my anemia on him, and take up some of his hemochromatosis, we would balance out and be healthy, our luxuries wouldn't amount to much, because we would have what we needed in bearing each other's burdens...

My friend Baba told me the other day, "We live like kings." I try not to forget that. It's a blessing, but needs to be taken seriously. How do we share in each other's diseases, and how do we see our own diseases' cures' in the hands of each other, and the least likely.
If my man K and I were to exchange part of our disease, we would no longer need temporary fixes, pills, luxuries, and health check-ups etc., because our cure would not be temporary, but permanent. I need our friends who are both on and off the street. I need them. All my friends have my breath, the oxygen for my blood; the iron in my vein is hidden in the blood of my friend. Who will shed their blood for me? Who will give their blood to my man K?
One already has...

grace & peace
-josh

Monday, November 8, 2010

Daniel 2, Or, Overwhelmed (The Musings of a CB-er)

Let me just say on behalf of all CB that Andrew Webb did an amazing job walking us through Daniel 2 at Biblestudy! We were immensly blessed and beholden at his insight and passion as we take each step through this otherwise hard passage and put it to work in our lives. Praise the Lord for Andrew!

Daniel 2 opens us up to a whole 'nother scene, unfolding from the beginning chapter, introducing us to the world and the lives of Daniel and his companions, who set themselves apart in search of the will and the righteousness of God. In this second chapter, the king of Babylon, where the Jews are exiled (King Nebuchadnezzar- pronounced (mouthful): Neb- uh- kuh- nez- er) has a dream.

Now in the land of the Babylonians during this day, they believed communion with their gods came in the form of communicating through spirits, through witchcraft and sorcery, through astrology and mysticism, through prophecy and oracles, and through dreams.

It says in Daniel 2:1-3 "In the second year of his reign, Nebuchadnezzar had dreams; his mind was troubled and he could not sleep[. So the king summoned the magicians, enchanters, sorcerers, and astrologers to tell him what he had dreamed. When they came in and stood before the king, he said to them, "I have had a dream that troubles me and I want to know what it means.""

He then commands his wise men to tell him the dreams FIRST, so that he knows that they have the ability to interpret it. This they could not do, saying, "There is not a man on earth who can do what the king asks! No king, however great and mighty, has ever asked such a thing of any magician or enchanter or astrologer. What the king asks is too difficult. No one can reveal it to the king except the gods, and they do not live among men."

This made the king so angry that he ordered the execution of all the wise men, including Daniel and his companions, who were away in their own cities. When the men who were to execute Daniel came to him to kill him, he asked them why he was being executed. When they told him about the dream the king had, and how the wise men couldn't interpret it. And then Daniel went to the king, and asked for time, so that he could interpret the dream for him.

When I look on these words, I will admit my imagination goes wild. I have a vivid imagination- I can picture it like a movie screen: A writhing dream awaking the king at night, pulling him into a troubled sweat... he calls for his wise men in the middle of the night, and they come running, their padded foot-falls echoing in the great arches of the palace corridors. The Royal Chambers are dim, with tall, thick candles standing lit over a scribes table and chair, the king pacing before it in his long purple and burgandy robe draped over his night shirt, his bare feet clasping the cold ground in firm, determined steps.

He turns to his wise men, the ones he had put above all others to give him the words and the will of the gods, and his heart is too troubled to rely in their mortality. This dream was too vivid, too real, too painfully close for him to merely trust in their judgement- what if they lied to him? What if they were frauds? What if they twisted the words of the gods to make themselves sound better? These questions pounded against his sweat-slick temple. He devised a quick plan, as he pivoted on his sole, and tilted his head up to their quizzical stares.

But they could not do the thing he asked of them. They were all frauds, the whole lot of them! How dare they parade their lowly, haggard selves before the king, claiming to know the right and the understanding of the gods! He grabbed the base of the man-sized candle and threw it after their heels, as they scattered. They were all to die.

But there was one, one who was not present in this, although he is a wise man. The men who were to execute him came up the steps and pounded on his door. He opened it, and when they siezed him, he asked them "Why?!".

When they told him, he pleaded with them to let him see the king. When they released him, he went before the king and bowed low. "Let your servant have time to interpret your dream, my king," He replied. The king waved his hand, desperate and curious enough to allow his fury to subside. What could this one man do that the others could not?

Daniel stood, shakingly leaning against the wall of his home for support. What was he to do? Surely he could not learn the king's dream AND interpret it in one night!? There was a quiet knock on the door, and he mustered his strength to clambor over to it and let his friends in- Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah. He told them, his voice trembling, what the king had said, and urged them to bow with him before their LORD, the God of Israel, for mercy concerning the mystery of the king's dream.

Tears of pain and fear overwhelmed their eyes and they kneeled in prayer. As they cried out to God together they felt a washing over them the peace of heart and clarity of mind that could come from no other but their Almighty. That night they slept in trust that, somehow, someway, their God had it under control.

I can picture Daniel opening his eyes and throwing back the covers of his bed, gasping aloud at his delight. In the night the Lord had revealed to him the dream! Could this be true? Was he fooling himself? Nonetheless, he would trust the Lord. Daniel threw his hands up to the heavens and opened his mouth, words of praise, of delight, of thankfulness to the Lord flowing out in heaps. His friends awoke and celebrated with him, their eyes lifted to the Lord- for it is only He who could do such a miracle.

Daniel is eager to see the king, and the king is eager to see Daniel. "No wise man, enchanter, magician, or diviner can explain to the king the mystery he has asked about, but there is a God in heaven who reveals myseteries." Daniel replies, and he goes on to explain the dream and interpret it, according to what the Lord had told him.

When I percieve and think about the things that Daniel had to go through, I am convicted of how little I follow his footsteps. Andrew was explaining that the first things that Daniel does when he is faced by Death is gather around him his friends and petition the Lord. Have you ever been asked the question, "What would you do if you knew you would die tomorrow?" What do we answer?

Daniel threw himself on his knees with his friends and prayed to the Lord. That's ultimate trust. That's ultimate surrender. That's EPIC.

When I am faced by adversity, Daniel is a great role model. We as the body of Christ need to realize that 1) We CAN NEVER do it on our own! and 2) The power of prayer and petitioning of the Lord WORKS!

Andrew said, "This week, probably more than any other week that I know, I had more people asking me for help, for prayer, saying 'Andrew, I have this problem, Andrew, I have this pain...', almost to being overwhelmed. It's in those times, when we speak to eachother about those things, and we come to our knees about those things, that we truely make a difference. We NEED EACHOTHER."

Yes Lord! Once again, my prayer for this week is for Him to make us into Daniels! That we may band together, praying with eachther in the hard times, building eachother up and working against the enemy as a fortress- Lord! Yes, Lord!

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

The-One-Who-Jumps-And-Claps (The Musings of a CB-er)

The first time I saw Josh Tikka, all I could think at first is TALL. Me, being a mere 5'2", this is understandable- but hardly relevant. The second thought was more important, and it did not come until long after. LONG after.

If you haven't known Josh for very long, it's easy to get caught up in the crazy ideas, random facial expressions, and the lack of respect for personal space. He throws himself off of things, climbs buildings just because he can, and the rabbit-trails he causes people to chase in conversations merely scrape the microscopic surface of the long bucket-list of things that describe him.

But what do you get, once you crack that crazy, jumping-and-clapping shell? Although I haven't known Tikka for very long, I dare to venture into a small break from the usual blog post to shed some light on one of CB's leaders.

There have been a few incidents where I have chanced to see Tikka at his finest; where all fun and games aside, his heart and passion for life and the Lord have come out beyond all else.

The first was an incident I have spoken about before in part- that one Saturday CB night, when he came before me and asked me if I could speak to Brandi, a girl who had attended the Biblestudy with her boyfriend. Josh had witnessed her boyfriend acting abusively towards Brandi, and it had moved him to talk to me; perhaps I could speak words of value and change into her heart, telling her that she had more significance than what her boyfriend was giving her, that she could break free from that, and that God loved her.

Although I was too preoccupied with my own nervousness to notice beyond a glance at Josh's visible passionate and righteous anger, I can think back on it now and be moved.

It says in Proverbs 31:8 to "Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, for the rights of all who are in need." Believe it or not, it's hard for me to speak up. It's not my first instinct to go and confront someone if I see something wrong, and it's easier for me to ignore injustice than to face it head on. Josh not only saw something that need changing, he did everything within his power to change it. It's so easy for us to see things that we don't like, it's harder to actually DO something to CHANGE them.

Two weeks ago, when we dove into Daniel 1, I saw the second opportunity to see Tikka at his finest. Re-reading the attributes of Daniel and his colleagues, I chuckle slightly to myself. A motley band of college-aged brats from all places from the nation grouped together in a foreign land, doing things so different they stand out? Refusing to conform to the normalties of their drinking/partying/drugging/permiscuous generation, but setting themselves apart to seek the work of the Lord- EVEN their WEEKENDS??!! Surely this doesn't sound like our very own CB man-boys, does it?

And yet we see Josh, Andrew, Pat, John... all of them, week after week, when they COULD be doing something else- homework, hanging out with someONE else, doing someTHING else, someWHERE else- and yet they are here in the dirt and the grime, and they LOVE it!? Should we not follow the Daniels of our day and do the same?

You don't know how many times my heart breaks for my generation and the generations behind us- their depravity, hopelessness and lack of meaning... wandering around in search of somewhere to call home and something to belong to, but in all, never finding it because there is no one to lead them to it.

My heart burns because of them! Although I am not even about to say that Josh, Andrew or any of them, or any of us, or any one at all is in any way perfect or close to it- I will say that leaders like this are rare and men who are leaders like this rarer still. And just like in the rest of the book, Daniel and his friends suffer persecution because of their actions, our Josh and the rest will suffer as well. Satan HATES what they are doing! I urge you to keep our Daniels in prayer!

Thirdly, most recently, we (meaning a group of CB-ers and their friends) were walking home from Misseo Dei's Halloween Party, almost to the Blue Line stop where we Moody-ers were going to take the train home to school, a mutual friend of ours named Brian, a forty-something year-old man who was ex-military and walked like it insisted we stop so we could wait for Andrew, who had ran back in search of a lost jacket.

Being on the slightly crazy side, Josh has been the recipient of many of Brian's scoldings. Climbing on state-owned buildings, swinging on the overhead railings of CTA platforms and racing up the down-escalator are just a few of the reasons Tikka and Webb much-merit the echoing scolds of our beloved CB-Dad, Brian. But however ridiculous the reasoning Brian has for why they should behave, and however innocent the goings-on that resulted in the rant, I've never seen them roll their eyes, or laugh Brian off and walk away, or be disrespectful in any way.

Here is no different. While I told Brian "It's okay, he's a big boy- Every day you complain that Andrew takes too long, and we should leave him behind... NOW you want to wait for him?", Josh turned around and caused me to bite my tongue. I don't remember his exact words, but I do remember that it was filled with much more loving-respect for the older man than my own words.

It's so easy to get in the mentality here in college that everyone is your peer. I am filled with sorrow that I have fallen into the immaturity of no longer treating my elders with respect every single time, and am no different than my generation in that way. It says in James "If anyone considers himself faithful and yet does not keep a tight rein on his tongue, he deceives himself and his faith is worthless." WOW. Lord!

This little post was not to put Josh on a pedastle in any way, or praise him for things he has not done. (No, he isn't paying me to write these words, either.) I just felt like so many times we peer into the worlds of others through tainted windows and then conclude we know them.

It's so easy to see the one standing before us (or jumping and clapping before us) and assume the best or worst. I try so hard to see people for who they really are, find something and then assume the rest... or even worse- see something worth while in someone, and fail to tell them.

So easily, as we are doing ministry with people, we only see them from one side. Human beings are multi-faceted, and although we admit there are many many many MANY faults, there are things in the people around us that move us so greatly that it causes us to change the way we do things, the way we think things, the way we feel things. As I move through the CB-ers in the next few months, I encourage you:

~To keep these people in your prayers; for Satan hates what they are doing and who they are, and are deep in the field of battle against the enemy.

~To learn more about the people around you, remembering that there are more to us than meets the eye- and you might be changed by them! As iron sharpens iron, so one man sharpens another. As we rub shoulders in ministry here at CB, let us also sharpen eachother!

~And thirdly to remember that we ARE NOT INSIGNIFICANT! However many our faults, however inadequate we feel at times, the Lord can use us for things great or small- from reminding a little latina to respect her elders, to becoming a Daniel in this modern-Babylonian world!

In all things, Lord, I praise you for giving me such great leaders and lessons as these, and with them, I pray that we LEARN from them and CHANGE from them! AMEN! :)

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Quick Halloween Prayer~ :) (The Musings of a CB-er)


Chicago's Beloved went all out Halloween style last night! :)

It was so much fun seeing you all out there on the streets doing the Lord's work this week! I'm praising the Lord for you, every single day.

In the business of this coming week, I pray that our God keep you safe, keep our friends safe and warm as the November weather is just around the corner, and that his will and love would be revealed to the people around us in everything we do.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Daniel 1, Or The Little Things (The Musings of a CB-er)

It's hard to believe it's the start of a whole 'nother week today. God has been doing some amazing things- and here's some pictures to prove it!

Here's where you come in: If you have any stories or pictures from other routes, or ANYTHING at all, I want it! So far I've only been able to speak from Lower Wacker's point of view, but I KNOW that God's working miraculously everywhere else, I just need to hear it!

If you have anything to contribute, send them my way: chicagosbeloved@gmail.com !


This week at CB we started going through Daniel. Josh (The One Who Jumps and Claps) explained alittle how Daniel and his friends, exiled in Babylon, were determined to obey God's commands even in a foreign country. They were set apart, and they acted like it. We talked alittle about why it was a big deal to live differently day-in and day-out, in the little things- whether it be in Daniel's time, or in the twenty-first century.



In return, it says in chapter 1, verse 17 and 19-20: "To these four young men, God gave knowledge and understanding of all kinds of literature and learning. And Daniel could understand visions and dreams of all kinds... The king talked with them, and he found none equal to Daniel, Hanananiah, Mischael, and Azariah; so they entered the king's service. In every matter of wisdom and understanding about which the king questioned them, he found them ten times better than all the magicians and enchanters in his whole kingdom."



Hearing that, how much they were rewarded by God- wisdom, understanding, knowledge, the ability to interpret dreams- you would think they did some huge, impactful, life-or-death thing. In reality, it's almost directly the opposite. "Daniel then said to the guard whom the chief official had appointed over Daniel, Hananiah, Mischael, and Azariah, 'Please test your servants for ten days: Give us nothing but vegetables to eat and water to drink. Then compare our appearance with that of the young men who eat the royal food, and treat your servants in accordance with what you see.' So he agreed to this and tested them for ten days." [Daniel 1:11-14]



To me, this seems like (let me just say it) foolishness. They're in a foreign country, the country they have been defeated by and their people are oppressed under. These guys have been dragged out of their homeland and put into the PALACE- a priveledge! When I read this, I was amazed at their boldness. Pick your battles, Daniel! Don't try to rock the boat so soon... it's just food- what's the big deal?



But in reality, it was a big deal. It was a big deal to GOD. There were atleast three things wrong with the food of the Babylonians, especially the meat of the king.


1. Because they ate unclean beasts, which were forbidden by the Jewish law.

2. Because they ate, as did the heathens in general, beasts which had been strangled, or not properly blooded.

3. Because the animals that were eaten were first offered as victims to their gods.

Daniel put God's law first, even in the small things.



As for me, I struggle with honesty. I've said this a million, billion, trillion times... but there comes a time when the saying stops and the doing begins. Confessing "I am a liar" does little but reveal the problem. Although a good first step- a first step only.

And it's not the big things I lie about- it's the small things. That I'm working on some homework when I'm mostly on facebook. That I studied for a test when I hadn't. That I've been somewhere or done something just so the conversation will continue. A fudge in the details of a story to make it more interesting. Why do I do this? I try to justify them with the argument- It's not a big deal, they're just little things. Little things? Big things to God?

I would be the one who'd be eating the royal food in Daniel. It's the one thing to WANT to do the right, bold, courageous, gutsy things... I'd shrug, say "Sounds awesome, I wish-" but then shovel another bite into my mouth.

The little things MATTER! It's those things the people we're with see. It's those things that will determine whether you're real and authentic, or you're just a talking-not-walking Christ-claimer.

The little things matter They can hurt people or help people; tear them down or build them up. Danile did the right thing down to the food he ate. HE did it because it mattered to God- and that was important to him.

When did that fail to be important to us?

Josh, in closing, reminded us about the Columbine, where the shooters put a gun to the head of a seventeen-year-old girl and asked her if she was a Christian. When she said yes, they killed her.

"If we're honest, most of us would say yes if faced by that shooter. Most Christians will say yes in the big things. But what about the little ones? Whether it be getting out of our depressions and finally accepting the hope of God, or doing the things we NEED to do to CHANGE, or saying "no" to something we always say "yes" to-"


The little things are the things that make us or break us. It's the thing that labels us "Liars" or "Compulsive Truth-Tellers", "Christ-Claimers" or "Christ-followers", "Attempters" or "Victors"...


I WANT TO BE A DANIEL!

Friday, October 22, 2010

You are worth MORE than that! (The Musings of a CB-er)

I stood cold against the wind, though I tried to hide it. My navy blue and golden-rod yellow University of Michigan sweatshirt was the warmest non-coat item I had in my closet, and it still didn't suffice. Katie Koopmann, my right-hand girl it seems at times, stood beside me, laughing at some random joke that I had just retorted, or some random dance I had just danced. I was hyper, perhaps from the cold, and restless. The concrete ground reached out from the tips of our shoed toes out and around us. A couple of other girls completed our circle, but beyond us stood more circles and squares and lines and oblong shapes of people.



Josh, the tall, blonde, one-who-jumps-and-claps, was making his way through the groups of people towards us. His face bore a worried, frusterated, intense look, and when he reached us, he looked at me and said "Can I talk to you for a second?"



My heart stopped. Whenever I heard those words, from anybody, it usually means I was in trouble. What had I done this time, that I merited a talking-to? Josh was the proclaimed (or self-proclaimed) leader of the Biblestudy we put on in our homeless ministry called Chicago's Beloved. Today we had been a little late from our routes, where every week we walk down a street, handing out sandwiches and just hanging out with the homeless brothers and sisters who live there, so biblestudy was cut short. After Biblestudy, we cross the street to this little stretch of concrete under a great, stadium-dome looking building called the Thompson Center where another ministry serves chili. People from all over come to have some chili and some conversation. As my heart raced through my mind, in search of anything that I might have said or done that merited Josh's face and tone, the laughing and dialogue of the people standing around us rang in my ears. "Sure." I said.



"I want you to talk to someone..." He then went on to say that he had witnessed a guy from our Biblestudy being abusive to his girlfriend just a few moments before. Although he didn't want to confront him directly, for fear of antagonizing the guy into a fight, he was frusterated and worried about the girl. He asked me if I would talk to her discreetly; let her know that she was worth more than how her boyfriend was treating her, and that she was not bound to him. That she was valuable, and didnt have to deal with that abuse anymore. And that perhaps my own story's relevance would cause her to listen.



As I nodded in mock confidence, my fingers felt numb. Why me? I was scared. I didn't think I could do it. I wasn't ready. As he walked away, those doubting, scared thoughts sifted through my mind. I prayed to God, turned to Katie and asked for her to pray for me, too, and dove in.



Walking over to them casually seemed like the most awkward, obvious thing I had ever done in my life. Every second I anticipated for them to turn to me and say "I know what you're up to and we won't have any of it!" But that never came. I asked them how their week was and the answer was "Not that good." Subject of conversation, okay I can do this. Taking a breath to ask why, the guy interrupted me. "Do you have some change? We gotta get on the train, I gotta job interview tomorrow."



I shook my head. GOD what are you doing? I screamed in my head. Will she listen to me if I give her money? Are you asking me to buy them a train ticket? I dont know what to do!



"I just need some change. I gotta get on the train..."



How will I get the chance to talk to her alone if he's right there practically hanging on to her, his arm wrapped protectively around her? LORD I need help! I shook my head again. "Sorry, I dont-"



"Do you have a phone I could borrow, then?" He asked again. I nodded, pulling out my trusty purple phone and handing it to him. "Use it as long as you need. I have unlimited everything." (Praise the Lord for Metro PCS!)



He smiled slightly, grabbed the phone and walked away to sit down, leaving his girlfriend behind. I swallowed. What now?



"Y-you wanna get in line for chili?" I asked.



She shrugged and nodded. Anthony, a friend of her boyfriend's, walked over with us, picking up a conversation with her. My heart sank. LORD, I dont know what to DO!



In line, Anthony turned to me. "So, what's your story?"



NO. NO. What do you want me to do, Lord? Tell the truth? This wasn't supposed to be personal. I can't relate with these people... their stories are probably worse than mine. They probably think I'm just this white chick that has had everything alright with her life. They'll never take me seriously. Say something SAY SOMETHING.



So I blurted out whatever my mind could think of. With each word my heart grew heavier and heavier, and my throat grew tighter and tighter. The truth wasn't shocking enough, I needed more shocking. The truth wasn't painful enough... I needed more pain. The reality isn't drastic enough... I need more drastic. How was she going to listen to the things I needed to say to her if I didn't relate with her? I've only tasted the pain she's gone through. I'm inadequate, Lord, IM INADEQUATE!



After I stopped talking, Anthony gave me a hug. "Yeah, God is good." He said. "You keep it up. God loves us no matter where we are."



I swallowed and averted my eyes. I was supposed to be helping this girl, and I was lying to her. How is that helping? I just wanted to walk away, my guilt almost heavier than the words that slipped into my ears "How can God use someone like me? I'm a liar. In the process of trying to help someone, I've lied to them. Who am I to do that?!"



Anthony patted me on the back once more before walking away. It was just her and I. I swallowed again.



"What's your name again?" I asked.



"Brandy." She answered. "BABE! BABE! Come over here!" She yelled at her boyfriend. My heart sank lower. I had missed my chance. "Babe!"



"WHAT?!" He yelled back. He scowled at her and started yelling at her, calling her names and telling her to leave him alone, my phone still pressed against his ear.



She closed her mouth. "Why does he gotta be so mean?" she whispered under her breath.



"You know you dont have to stay with him. You're worth more than that." I said quietly. "I've been there. It's not worth it, it's not worth it."



She didnt say anything at first. Then she pursed her lips. "We just been together for so long..."



"I know, I been there. It doesn't matter if you're with them for four years, four months, or four days, you dont have to put up with that."



"He's got good days and then he's got bad days..."



"Why dont you want all good days though?" I trailed off. Maybe I had said too much, too quickly. She didn't respond, and moved down the line alittle more, quiet. We stood there for a split-second, saying nothing, and then she looked away and walked back towards her boyfriend. They left a couple moments later.



Looking back, I rejoice that the Lord gave me the opportunity to speak into Brandy's life, if for a second, but I grieve because of my sin. I realize that stretching the truth was not distrusting God's power to move her spirit, instead of the power my own story. And even though I eventually had the chance to say the words I was to say, I could not fully rejoice in the Lord's providence and miracles, from getting the boyfriend away for awhile, to giving me a moment to say the words "You are worth more than that." It hurt me. Lord, I need help with this telling the truth thing. Honesty... why do I hate it? Why do I think the story you've written for me is not as good as the one I've written for myself?


This post started out as a "Praise the Lord for His miracles", and turned into a "I confess, Lord, my sins." I am struggling with this, not because I love to lie, but because I hate the truth of my life. My pain- I dont want to feel it. My experiences- I dont want to admit. My sin- I pretend it doesnt exist. And although I am not a compulsive liar who says whatever anyone wants to hear just to get ahead, I am NOT a compulsive truth-teller. I WANT to be! LORD I WANT to be!



Would you guys pray for both Brandy and I, one for her abusive relationship with her boyfriend, the other for her abusive relationship with herself? Why dont I just let myself be free? Why dont I just walk away? Why do I have to lie- I dont have to! It hurts me, causes me so much pain, ruins my friendships and builds walls in my relationship with God. It hinders me from being all of myself, it turns me into a cowering, angry, scared, little girl. I need to pull myself aside and tell myself those words "YOU ARE WORTH MORE THAN THAT!"



I am worth more than that!

Meeting Me (The Musings of a CB-er)

I was afraid to ask what I knew I should ask. The words were on the tip of my tongue, but they were stalled by the fear that God would actually give me what I was asking for, and I was scared of that. I stood there a moment, and looked at my feet. What did the words "break my heart" mean to the Lord? How would that feel? Did I want to know?


I was already straining myself by going to this ministry every week- seeking out the faces of people I could relate to was different for me; my first instinct is to flee. My mouth kept captive the words of the still-born prayer, and I searched my heart for some strength. Every week I am faced with the same thoughts and feelings- of dread, of pain, of protest... why did I go? Why didn't I just stay at home? Why didn't I just say no for this week... said "Ill catch you guys next week"... what was so significant, so powerful about this week, every week, that Satan was going to such lengths to keep me from wanting this?


"This" was the homeless ministry I partook in every Saturday afternoon. Every week I stood alone out in the little courtyard in the middle of campus, sometimes a half-hour, even an hour early, wondering if I should go. The others usually filter in around three thirty, and every second before that time I battle with the desire to just slip away and go back upstairs to my apartment, like I was never there.


The breeze pushed the trees around a little as I mounted some strength, and let the words "Lord, break my heart for these people" fall out of my mouth and into the air. As soon as they were free I felt drained. I wondered what great thing God was preparing for me- I almost hoped that the wind had swept my prayer out of his hearing, or perhaps he was occupied on some other, greater task, and won't notice the little prayer that I had let up.


People were scarce, inevitably working on papers or homework or something- not even aware of the little me standing out amongst the island of grass and trees in the sea of concrete between the buildings. I liked it that way, and hated it that way- but I was used to it, my heart had been so hard for so long. I walked around life like a brick wall, too afraid to absorb love or fear or anything remotely emotional... I didn't know if I had the strength, or I knew I didn't and was afraid to admit it. I was terrified of being invisible, yet longed for it, and in that moment, I felt like I was.


The chill was growing as the others approached. I put on my best happy face and tried to match eveyone's mounting anticipation and excitement. A couple holding hands walked past, oblivious to the motley group that left campus in the middle of the Saturday afternoon to partake in another world... hopping on the Brown Line like it was the vortex to another dimension. And as I readied myself to enter that world again, I couldn't help but feel a little fear- fear of the unknown, fear of the known... afraid that it would be as intense as last week, and afraid of my prayer for a broken heart. Who prays for a broken heart? I trembled.


Linked arms with the only other girl in the group, named Sarah, I pushed the fear aside. I tried not to think about anything in particular, and went along with the conversation, keeping my legs moving in time and in step with hers. I found myself standing amongst a score of people, all joined hands and bowing their heads, some from other campuses around the city, some from high schools and some too old or too young for either. The glass windows and doors of the entrance of Oglivie, the train station that graciously accommodated nearly thirty boisterous, laughing, praying, random Christians brought a weird glow onto the tops of our heads. Security guards looked on silently, and uniformed soldiers stood outside, waiting for loved ones, or a taxi, their suitcases leaning against their legs.


Josh, the leader of the group, raised his hand above the heads and we quieted. He was tall and hard to miss, eclectic and smiling lopsidedly, he announced the routes and asked for group leaders. Grocery bags and garbage bags of sandwiches stood against the display window of the expensive clothing store, the well-dressed mannequins posing idly before bottles of water and backpacks, and college students preparing themselves for the long walk. I stood silent on the outskirts of the circle, waiting for the group to Lower Wacker to assemble.


I had gone down Lower Wacker the week before, and the sights hit me like a ton of bricks. It dipped down, steady orange lights illuminating the road before us, cement columns holding the concrete ceiling in place. The rustle of the plastic bags and the footsteps of our shoes across the concrete tunnel's floor echoed eerily against the walls. The occasional rush past of a car or a truck or a semi pushed a sheet of air against us, and even the air bounced against the wall and came careening back.


We hop one of the barriers and walk around another. Behind lies two men, their blankets pulled closely to their neck and ears, their bodies thin and shivering. The stench is unbearable at first, but we push through it and set the brown paper bag that holds the sandwich and a bag of chips, and a bottled water next to them. One of them, named Roc, glares at us and yells at us to get on our way, but the other is silent, smiling and nodding slightly. A little further lies a family, their cardboard box wall separating their little make-shift home from the dirty ground. Their shoes sat neatly on the border of their area, and she gives us a smile, recognizing us from last week.


As we moved on to the next, and the next, the little piles of clothing and blankets moving to reveal a different, new face, each one unique from the last. I couldn't help but be silent, my usual boisterous, out-loud self quieted as I was shown again and again the reality of life. Any where else I wouldn't have stopped to think that these were real people... real people. And my hard heart, void of emotion, couldn't handle that reality.


I held some sort of hidden pride inside. I remember wondering where I would be able to sleep, when I would eat, where would I be able to take a shower so I would look like a normal person. I never pushed a grocery cart around, never carried my things in a garbage bag, never slept in an alley... a back pack is no garbage bag, under the overhang of Target is no alley. Inside... inside I felt empty. I was only given a small taste of homelessness a year and a half ago, far away in Michigan. Here, on the streets of Chicago, it was different. I was different. I've eaten, I'm warm, I have people who care about me, I have some place to sleep. And as I walked before the dim lighting of Lower Wacker, the bag of sandwiches hitting against my leg at every step, I told myself that I couldn't relate with these people. They were real people, yes, but some form of destitute that required emotions and understanding still too far out of reach.


We took the stairs up out of Lower Wacker and hour or so later, a little late for the biblestudy we attended every week and had invited some of the people to. I was breathing a sigh of relief, happy somewhat, that it was over. We walked down the street, just talking and laughing, exchanging stories, when we passed her.


She was standing on the corner of Randolf and Michigan, her big brown eyes filled with unspilt tears, a little paper sign in her hands, her lips pursed shut. "I left my abusive boyfriend for a battered women's shelter that was scarier. Help me get home." was what it basically said. She wore a green shirt that did no damage against the wind, and her brown hair was pulled back into a half pony-tail. She looked... normal. I looked at her, and my heart broke. In her eyes, I saw me.


There stood me, a mere year and a half ago- maybe not holding a sign, maybe not standing on the corner of Randolf and Michigan, but there I was, no where to go, no where to stay, no one to love me. There was me, standing cold against the wind, and wishing there were people in the world who cared enough to send me somewhere I could call home.


As the members of our group listened to her story, I could hardly hear her words over the cracking of my heart in my ears. She was normal- I was normal. She was normal. I pulled off my sweatshirt and handed it to her. She was normal... why was this so hard to understand? Why does it keep running through my mind? When someone hears homeless, they think of the residents of Lower Wacker, not this girl, not me. They think garbage bags and alleys... not backpacks and Target. They think dirty and smelly, not clean and done up. They think sitting on the side of the street, not a normal girl with make-up on, holding onto a sheet of paper with dear life, hoping and praying that someone, somewhere would understand that just because she wasn't dirty or smelly doesn't mean her story isn't validated.


Over the screams of the city I laid my hand on her and cried out to God for her- keep her safe, Lord, keep her warm... give her not a doubt in her mind that you love her. Take care of her, Lord, take care of Kelly.


I didn't have to wonder what she was thinking- I didn't have to wonder what she was praying for. I remember screaming those same words, asking him "LORD, why don't you love me? Lord! Why don't you care? I'm out here cold and unhappy and broken and bleeding and homeless, why aren't you taking care of me?! Where are you Lord?! Why don't you love me?" And as I remembered those words, and I gave her a hug, walking away was almost too hard to bear. The few dollars we had on us seemed so small compared to the pain and the need she had. I walked across the intersection holding my head, remembering that place, the wind pushing the chill around my now-bare arms. I went faster, hoping that the group following behind me wouldn't see my bitter tears as I wept. I wept. I never cry... I never feel. And yet I wept.


Lord! Lord! I didn't ask to be faced by my brokenness. I didn't ask to be given a mirror- I didn't want to see my own pain. But yet, that's what happened. I had spent so much time and effort and heart ache trying to forget who I was, what i had come from, what I was feeling... I didn't want to know. I didn't want to feel it. I was afraid to. And yet here I was, faced with another me... Kelly... Kelly.


As I wept, my group caught up with me and one of the girls, named Anilysa, put her hand on me and cried with me. A complete stranger, we had only known eachother for the short time I have been here, walking with me in silence. And when she asked me what was wrong, I had nothing else to say but "I just met me!" The reality was so sharp, so vivid, so close, that I could grasp it, and it cut me.

Monday, August 23, 2010

"Homeless Ministry?" (Tim Meyer)

When people ask what we at Chicago's Beloved do, most of the people I know involved, some good friends, some just acquaintances, refer to it as a homeless ministry. "What are you guys taking the train down to Chicago for?" "Homeless ministry" what most people I know i CB would reply. I know it's hard to think of something that accurately describes what we do, but I don't think "homeless ministry" is the right term. I don't hang out in Chicago every Saturday to minister to homeless people. I do it because I love the people there and want to the spread the love of JESUS and I believe that the best way for someone to know the love of JESUS is not to be told of it but to feel it from another human being. We need to be less concerned with street evangelism and more concerned with just loving people, whether they or homeless or not homeless. The reason we focus on the homeless is because they are some of the people needing love the most. Why do we give out sandwiches and water and clothes and all that kind of stuff? Not as some form of charity but because these are our brothers and sisters in CHRIST! We view the people we are "ministering" to as a project, not as a member of our family. We should love them not because they are poor and people will think we are good people if we help the poor, but because we are not going to walk by our brother or sister when they are hungry or cold or suffering and ignore them. Do understand, I am by no way saying that I am not guilty of that. Too often I am too concerned with what I am doing, how I am feeling, and while it is important to be mindful of yourself, we must not become narcissists who love only to be loved in return. I don't know how well this message will sit with a lot of people but it's something that has been on my mind for months now. For those of you regularly involved at CB, I would like you think about your motivations, before CB, during CB, and after CB. Thank you.

May the LORD bless you with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places,

Tim

Friends & Visitors (Josh Tikka)

This past Saturday I learned how to play Dominoes. It was fabulous! My friend Van taught me how to play. I learn a lot from our friends on the street. Most of their lessons are very political, dealing with race, local police, or the faulty Chicago shelter/ transit systems. Sometimes our conversations and their lessons are about their lives too, I really appreciate those. But this was a really great experience (not that others aren't). He (my friend Van) taught me something that only a friend could, dominoes, something with no ulterior motive or political drive, or anything else. Something that didn’t benefit him at all.

There were plenty of other, better, domino players there for him to have a legitimate game with but he chose to sit down with me for over an hour and a half and teach me. There was not even a single motion of pride as he placed domino next to domino, letting me win more than I should have, so that I could better learn the game, and more importantly learn to love it (who likes learning something new when they find out they suck at it?). He was kind and patient every step of the way, teaching me strategy, and guiding my decisions. I love Van.

We had talked several months ago about depression, sin, guilt, and the salvation given us in Christ, and how in Him we have been freed from our depravation. I love Van. When we talked then we struck a mutual chord, a bond formed between us, as two broken men stepped out into the light of admittance and sought the light of grace together. Very different people feeling very similar things, needing the very same person, the only person that could set them free. Van taught me how to play dominoes; Van shared with me a simple joy. I love Van.

I find God sharing with me simple joys all over this city. I love this city. I saw my friend Saint, and asked him how he was doing. He's an old black man with a white beard and a fierce defense mechanism that is usually left unmanned in light kindness or friendship. We talked about Las Vegas. He's from Vegas. He wants to go back to Vegas. He hates Chicago. I love this city. He comes here to visit family; we're not family, not technically. He comes here before and after it gets cold out. He's been here for two-ish years/ months (I can't remember). He stays for several months to several years at a time (that I can remember). He doesn't like it when it gets cold out. Neither do I. He hates this city. I love this city.

Saint is a gambling man. I am not. But I have gambled, I won $20 in a day once. Last day of work summer '08. I don't know how much he has won or lost. I can't imagine his luck has lasted him with his particular predicate though. I'm glad I stopped while I was ahead. I hope he has too, but I know he likes to gamble. I don't know if he's addicted to it, or if he just likes it like I like my morning Sponge-bob (I'm not addicted to T.V., but I like my morning Sponge-bob).

Saint lives at the PGM (Pacific Garden Mission). He doesn't mind it. Some people hate it. Most that I've talked to actually. Which is odd, because the founders and administrators (from my experiences with them, and from hearing stories about them) are amazing people. I think it's the model mixed with poor sermons and several highly circulated accounts and testimonies of prejudice, crime, and less delightful activities that give it a poor reputation among the guys on the street. But I liked Saint's attitude a lot, actually. A lot.

"I'm just a visitor," Saint told me, "I'm not here permanently. So I don't need to be too picky or worried. Ya know? It's just a time in my life and it will pass. This ain't my home, so I don't have to worry about it."

I love this city, but I don't look at it as home. I find my home in a game of dominoes with Van and over a conversation of shared memories with Saint. I find my home with one broken man helping me piece together the shards of my broken past, and I find my home no where where there is a here. My home is in heaven, first and foremost (though I may not always act like that). So I don't need to be too picky or worried, ya know? This life will pass away no matter what, and when it does, I'll [FINALLY] be home. I love this city, and I'm a visitor here. I won't be in Chicago forever, neither will Van or Saint, but we're here now, and if visitors both physically and spiritually, how much more time, then, must we invest in one another to make this unruly street corner our lavish home? Home is not where the heart is. Home is in Christ alone, and his people bring us closer to it.

When Christ emptied himself on the cross, he was but a visitor on Earth, a visitor among visitors. He knew greater than all of us, "The son of man has no place to rest his head". Let me encourage you towards something: Jesus was not Spiritually homeless, he was but a visitor. He had no place to rest his head- he had no physical home. But he could rest in the promise and assurance of the Lord. I entreat you to follow our Lord, and realize with Van our brokenness, with Saint our impermanence wherever you are, and help each other, build off each other, and play with each other, in bringing ourselves closer to the game of completion, to the home whom we call by name, to the place that we shall fully know, even as we are fully known.

1 Samuel 12:22- "For the sake of his great name the LORD will not reject his people, because the LORD was pleased to make you his own." Do not fear when you are broken, tired, lost, confused. We are all visitors, make the most of where this place, beautifully made out for you, and don't for a second loose heart for these other travelers along the way. I love Van. I love Saint. I love this city.

Grace & Peace

-josh

Monday, July 19, 2010

Dominos (Josh Tikka)

"15 left"

"Man, better wash your dishes with that."

"See what's happenin' here?"

"No, not really...” But I loved it, so it didn’t matter.

Jersey and P. played dominoes across from each other after the chili people left. I was getting to know two friends-old friends to them, new friends with me.

Dominoes is a very interesting sport. I watched and watched and listened and listened and either I am an idiot (which I am) or they are not the best educators (which they aren't), but the more I watched, the more I was enamored with the mystery behind the seemingly shifting and impossible rules of dominoes. Sometimes they seemed so simple, and other times: near-magical.

They held several white-dotted black chips close to them, blank side facing their opponent, and dotted side facing their chest. They placed their “bones” on the concrete ledge we sat on in train formation, with dot numbers matching to dot numbers.

"Ok, so right now you count up the ends. You see, you got 4, 4, and there's 6, and two 5s. Bone yard is near empty, so I'm finna empty him."

"...ok"

I looked on in awe of these two mystics trash talking and playing a simple simple game, to epic epic proportions. It was so intense. I couldn't keep up with the game or the trash talk, but something about their acceptance, and willingness to teach me, let alone be with me, kept me intrigued in their puzzling black and white riddle game

Tim came over to me and asked if they were teaching me dominoes. He told me that his grandma and her friends in Texas loved dominoes and played intense games with each other.

I walked away from that experienced totally encouraged and not wanting to leave at all. I could have watched them play for hours. I mean I had a bag of trail mix, "Man, here's the goal of dominoes," a comfortable seat, "you gotta," two hilarious older guys, "get your bones," and a night filled with "and" fresh air. I would love to finish that quote off if I knew the rest of what he said. But I don't. I forgot. Shame really. But I remember both of them, their personalities, their laughs, their styles; them.

I wanted to tell that full story, with every word they told me. One guy asked how old I was. "20", I said. He chuckled and told me he was 51, then said, "Just keep breathin' in, and breathin' out and you'll get here too. You didn't have nuthin' more to do with it when you were born and you won't have nuthin' more to do with it when you get here neither." I really liked that. I can't capture that conversation any more than I can capture them, probably less that talk than them even.

On the car ride back I got to know one of the other CB regulars better. I loved it. We opened up to some things we have been struggling with and dealing with emotionally and spiritually lately. It showed me how much better it is to engage than withdraw, and to expose your "bones" to the people with you, than to draw the dots that pattern our lives close to us, shielding our numbers, and flaunting blank space. People aren't always our enemies. And often they can help us place our best pieces at the right spots, and affirm us into knowing that we aren't the only ones stuck with a crappy domino.

I don't mean to sound cliche, but I have been learning a lot about friendship, openness, and judgmentalism. And the importance of friendship within CB is bar none, we are a community of friends that disregards all our discrepancies, hypocrisies, and offensiveness, so that we can show are true "bones" to one in another, in hopes and faith that Christ will unite us past our differences, difficulties, and challenges, to bring us into a deeper, fuller, and greater revelation of grace, God, and each other. I want to be more like those two men, who would patiently entertain and encourage me into the mysteries of dominoes, for the sheer joy of the game, each other, and me. Me! I’m annoying! But they kept encouraging and enjoying me. What is this?

I want to expose my bones, show people what I would otherwise try to hide, try to build with people instead of against them, bring them into the joys of my community and teach them the beautiful mysteries of the gospel that unites my friendships, and rejoice over them as a person uniquely and beautifully made to fit perfectly into the gospel culture of openness, acceptance, and rejoicing.

Thank you all for coming with to the City, and I praise God for the friendships He has orchestrated to constantly shape and define me and CB into the beautifully patterned domino train that we are and that we continue to grow into being.


Josh Tikka

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Hard To Love (Tim Meyer)

This is my first post on here. I really like this blog, I really don't know if anyone reads it but I feel like a good step to really making it a part of CB is for people besides Josh to do entries. I don't know if this really has any inspiration or good stories, it's just something I've been thinking about a lot lately. That being said, I'll begin.

Why are we afraid to love? I should rephrase that. Why are we afraid to love the people who are hard to love? For you are involved in CB you can probably think of quite a few examples of people you have met who you would consider hard to love. Even for people who are not involved with CB probably know someone who whenever you see that person you're reaction isn't to run up and give them a hug. I know I have those people in my life. But why is that? To paraphrase JESUS (and by that I mean I'm too lazy to actually look up a verse) "Love everyone, all the time, no exceptions". Is it human nature that we just can't love everyone? I think about that every time I walk through Lower Wacker or down Adams Street and talk to a drunk guy who's using all his money on alcohol. Or the guy or girl who takes a sandwich bag and complain about what kind of chips are in there. Or the person who swindles and manipulates you into trusting believing in them and providing them with financial support only to find out that they are just taking you for a ride. I can go on and on. And for me at least I find these people really hard to love most of the time. And I hate this. I want to love everyone. I don't want to discriminate, giving all my love and attention and care to those who are kind to me. That's such a worldly view of love. In the world, love is a reciprocal thing. I love you, you love me, vice versa. But that's not the kind of love JESUS talks about or has for us. JESUS loves us DESPITE what we do, not BECAUSE of what we do. Shouldn't we do the same? A lot of us know those bracelets, necklaces, etc. that say WWJD (What Would JESUS Do) on them. How many of us actually even try to live like JESUS? I want to. You know what? I'm going to fail miserably because I cannot even come close to the glory of GOD. But should we let the fact that we can't do something 100% keep us from trying? I don't want to be content living like the rest of the world. I want people to see me and know something is up. That something about me is different from another random 17 year old they see walking down the street. I don't know what yall think about this, usually when I just spit something out without consulting anyone I'm told that what I said (or in this case wrote) is hypocritical, theologically unsound, blasphemous, you get the picture. I hope not in this case. We will see I suppose. I want to live my life in this simple way that Shane Claiborne laid out in The Irresistible Revolution. Six words. Love GOD. Love people. Follow JESUS. Could it really be that simple?

May the LORD bless you with every spiritual blessing in the Heavenly places,

Tim Meyer

Sunday, June 20, 2010

How different are we? (josh tikka)

So I was walking down Lower Wacker with Lindsey and her mom, and we were talking about a friend of ours who we just talked to. Lindsey had spent most of last weekend in prayer and conversation with and for our friend, and we had just left a short, slightly awkward, one-sided conversation, wherein our friend was hesitant to say anything of any real importance or significance. This friend of ours has been struggling to get a state I.D. lately and Lindsey gave our friend all the information and resources needed for getting one. Our friend had a week to do it. And they didn't, they were busy, without having done anything...

As we walked away, we wondered why. Why do our friends sometimes refuse or reject our help?

I started getting introspective (as I do too often) and came to a point of realization, I reject, resist, and refuse the help of others just as much as any one friend on the street. I become awkward around people who know I need their help, and I get bitter to those I see as "better off" than myself. I get angry at people who I think have no right to think they are better than me, without having any proof to suggest they actually think they are better than me. I see advances to help as flaunting superiority, and I view grace towards me as a deficiency highlighter.

Why do (not always, but sometimes) our friends on the street resist and reject our loving, genuine and sincere (not always, sometimes) advances to help them and see them as better off? Well, why do our friends in the suburbs refuse the same support when they are struggling with work-aholism? Bad parenting? Failing relationships? Pornography addiction? Anorexia? Pride, bitterness, jealousy, etc. etc. etc. etc.

Maybe it's not just a “homeless person thing”. Maybe it's not their pride that holds them back. Maybe it's all of our pride. I feel as though (form my limited and narrow scope) that CB has taught me something vital about the state of humanity: people are prideful, bitter, and presumptive, and it's our weaknesses and flaws that we don't want admitted or exposed that often repress us more than anyone or anything else. To quote Barbara Brown Taylor, "If I had to name my disability, I would call it an unwillingness to fall ... This reluctance signals the mistrust of the central truth of the Christian gospel: life springs from death, not only at the last but also in the many little deaths along the way. When everything you count on for protection has failed, the Divine Presence does not fail. The hands are still there -- not promising to rescue, not promising to intervene -- promising only to hold you no matter how far you fall."

I wonder if the serious implications of refusing our help to our friends who are left cold, hungry, and un-sheltered on the street can be realized for us. Surely these things aren’t proportional in the physical realm. But what about in the emotional, spiritual, and social realms? I would argue, and have experienced, spiritual, emotional, and social wasting-homelessness, if you will (the absence of comfort, protection, safety, and joy)- due to my own inability to help myself out of jams that partly I, partly the world, partly others were responsible for, but that I, fully, denied the reality or importance of, out of laziness and a denial of my own fallibility.

As Lindsey her mom and I walked on, I saw an old, and dear friend whom I haven't heard from since Pat and I had seen him in Wacker months and months and months ago. Last we saw him he was trying to get out to Wayside. We tried to help, he got arrested. We didn't really hear from him since then (that I can recall). Out of the blue he shows up, broken, desperate, hurting, and wants to go back to Wayside. My prayer is that he doesn't let the flaw of not trusting in God's ability, willingness and desire to transform our brokenness into His glory, get in the way of allowing God to transform his brokenness, into HIS glory.

2 Timothy 2:11-13. “Here is a trustworthy saying: If we died with him, we will also live with him; if we endure, we will also reign with him. we disown him, he will also disown us; 
if we are faithless, he will remain faithful, 
for he cannot disown himself.”

Even when our pride causes us to be faithless to our Father who promises that our humility, faith, and repentance will result in our good and His glory, “He will remain faithful for HE cannot disown Himself”.


-josh tikka

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

WHAT'S THIS BLOG FOR?!

Well, as I have already done the first post, I might as well introduce what it's for:
whatever...
Basically, the different individual leaders will post their musings, lessons, learnings, and advice from CB. They will vary I'm sure and we'll see how it all works out.
The person who writes that particular entry ill sign the top and bottom, and the in between stuff will be written by them.
Tim Meyer is basically running the design layout and other technical stuff that no one should have enough time for (thanks Tim!) and that's how we role!
Hope you enjoy reading, and check this out for the time being: Thanks Zach!

-Josh Tikka

How Amazing People Destroy Stereotypes, Build up the Church, and Glorify God- (Josh Tikka)

Like our friend Stunt (the names have been and will be changed until I figure out how I feel about putting people's real names in), whose story I don't want to share with people who don't know it, but it is a mix of pain, mistakes, bad fortune, and perseverance all bundled together for enough warmth to get through the winter (what the what?). Stunt came out of nowhere Saturday night, and brought his big brother, (I forget his name). I got to talk with his big brother for about 20 minutes. It was amazing. He gave me a lot of simple, simple wisdom, (stay humble, stay close to God, don't get ahead of yourself, etc., etc.). His openness really made my night. He had a rough past with a lot of mistakes and more regrets. But he has a few kids, and from the sound of it, they are all doing great, and somehow, most of them attribute it to their father.
He would ask them, how is it that they were able to grow and mature and become real men and women despite his behavior and poor example. They would tell him, "you always taught us, and always told us how to live, and how to love, and we learned from you even though you weren't learning from yourself."
That kind of amazes me. The grace God showed on his family, to not grow resentful or bitter towards him or God for talking the talk without walking the walk.
It reminds me of Fish, an ordained minister, fiery preacher, and humble servant. An addict nonetheless, and a liar who consistently runs from all forms of friendship and fellowship to ensure his high. When he's around though, he cries in repentance. Is stone cold silent in conviction, and one of the most encouraging men we meet out on the street. He's one of my best friends, and I know that's not something that would be reciprocated. I've learned more from him than most pastors I've met, and his knowledge of the scriptures is remarkable. But his love of the world, and addiction holds him back so much. It's terrifying and encouraging to see.

I was just thinking about that this past saturday- Stunt's brother, and Fish are proof that God uses us, and loves us, and seeks us, regardless of our past mistakes, present sins, and future sufferings.
I want to have those eye's, the eyes God has. I've met a lot of people the past two years doing this. And I had met a lot of people before doing this too. I don't think it's that the people changed and are now more deserving of my amazement or love, but I think that it's God changed me. I see (both from the homeless dudes on the street, and just my weirdo friends who come with) that all life is a gift, and all life is a joy. It is beautiful, and I want to cherish every laugh, whisper, lesson, story, adventure, and mistake, and look at the person not as a semblance of what they have or have done- but as Christ sees them: greater than himself. I guess my prayer for us, or at least myself right now is, that we would have eyes to see the absolute, unmistakeable beauty and joy in all people at all places through all times.
I wonder how different my life, and CB's community would look like with those eyes.

This is a kind of a vague, strange, highly conceptual and less story-like entry, but I'm a little tired don't really know what this blog is supposed to look or sound like any ways...

-Josh Tikka