I don’t think its Christ-like to
tell a gay person they are sinning. Sure they are, but idolatry is also a sin
and we all tend to be steeped in it. The point us are you offering them
something better? And are you living an example that shows you yourself believe
God is better than anything in this world? This is a kind of "if I were in
your shoes I would be able to give my sexuality and everything that comes with
it for God" moment, could we be honest? Can we also give the chance to
fall in love, to have sex, and to marry for God alone? If we can't show them
this resolve, this reality, this Joy we have, then we really don't have a right
to tell them its a sin, since we literally are committing the exact same sin
like the plank in our eye. Have we ourselves are willing to give up everything
in our lives for God, or are we just playing double standard just because we
are straight? So don't be like the guy who is telling someone to stop smoking
cuz its bad for their health and yet goes gambling and drinking every night.
Sincerity and love in your approach. Sincerity to show that you yourself am
fighting and overcoming all you own sins because God is good, and love to show
you truly want them to know God and know the Joy you have.
Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which we now stand. And we boast in the hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us. - Romans 5
Sunday, January 3, 2016
Why do we say we can't save others?
We always are quick to say "oh only God can save them." If we are
talking about our sinful nature then yes, God is the only one who can bring
salvation and heart change in a person. But if it’s hurt and burdens, then not
only we can help others, but are commanded by God to help others. As if the
Body of Christ wasn't established on mortal Earth to do just that? Especially
for the family members within that community. Sure, we may not be able to save
someone from cancer or monetary problems (though in scripture we are called to
sell our possessions to help others in need), we are emotional and relational
beings and can always help someone on that level. All it takes is patience and
giving of time and an ear. Then on the spiritual level we can definitely help
others. So don’t pray to God and say "i can help him/her, so i ask you to
do so." As if God does everything via divine intervention. Look at
scripture. Look at the Gospel of Jesus Christ? Wasn’t the reason He had to come
in person to save us the point, instead of saving our sins through divine
intervention? So as Christians aka Christ followers aka emulators of Christ, shouldn’t
we be helping and saving others? We got that ability and responsibility from
the Cross. So our prayer should be "God you have called us to help our
brothers, sisters, and neighbors, so give us the strength and capability to love,
for we are weak but wish to be strong." Let us truly believe in the
communion of the saints, and at the very least not give excuses nor misread the
clear message in scripture.
We enter salvation alone, but we always enjoy salvation corporately. In scripture, the "you" is almost always plural.
We enter salvation alone, but we always enjoy salvation corporately. In scripture, the "you" is almost always plural.
Remember, a faith based on feelings
is a very singular faith based on a very singular Gospel. If the Gospel you
believe in is not universal for all men, then it isn't the Gospel at all. Faith
is believing the Gospel is real, not that we feel it is real. Feeling and
knowing are two different things. We don't say "I know Jesus is real
because I got a feeling He is," we say we know Jesus because there is
testimony and evidence and transformation that points to Him being real. We
don't go up to our friends and say they are real to us because we feel them, we
say that because we built a relationship with them, and this is the same with
Jesus. Feelings then come into play in delighting in the fact we know Jesus and
He knows us.
The point of love is that it does
NOT come naturally. We are naturally self-seeking prideful individuals. Love asks
us to sacrifice, to put another above ourselves, to search deep for a strength
that doesn't belong to us. There is nothing humanly natural for someone to be
patient, to be kind, to be humble, to never get angry, to always trust, hope,
and persevere. Nothing at all. That is why love is profound, and most of the
world does not get it. They may understand the self-denial part, but will miss
the other part that there is inherently no love AT ALL in us.
Love is action. Love is hard work.
Love is utilizing energy from a source not of ourselves (or other people).
There are underlying laws governing
the behavior of man. One is that we function best when confined in a box, and
yet there is an underlying passion in the hearts of men to defy all established
laws and break out of that box. The irony is that it is a law in itself that we
desire to break laws. It’s our nature to be proud.
What are the two greatest
commandments in the Bible? Love God and love people. So if you believe and
trust in God's sovereignty and control for His kingdom, do you believe that
ministries that involve brothers and sisters being called to serve in
intellectual areas (doctors, lawyers, businessmen, professors), serving the
poor, or becoming fathers and mothers, and serving the local church, if these
ministries are done with a motivation of self-sacrificial love and in a
selfless manner following God's calling, don't these ministries have
equal if not greater importance than a ministry of missions in foreign
countries? Are these ministries not preaching the Gospel in a more glorifying
and Spirit-directed manner if they are truly under God's will? Remember what
the Gospel is before preaching it to others.
God can work and exist within many
cultures, but no culture can encompass all of God or His kingdom. The message
of Christ cannot be boxed. We are all part of the vast message of the Gospel.
But God has very specific and unique ministry for each of us. He gives us
specific tools, spiritual gifts, culture, sensitivities, friends, experiences,
and our own personal road to the Gospel. Just like each of CS Lewis' books
emulates a different angle of the Gospel (which is the same with every book of
the Bible), even within the stories each of the children find or meet Aslan a
different way. Lucy definitely came to Him differently than Edmund, and even
more different for Eustace. And Susan, who had the same experiences and
revelation of Aslan's glory, she still decided to seek her own glory and life.
Saturday, January 2, 2016
To forgive so we can be forgiven
http://www.webtoons.com/en/fantasy/tower-of-god/season-2-ep-21/viewer?title_no=95&episode_no=101
This has got to be the most biblical example of forgiveness from a non-biblical source EVER. Our world is way too similar to the Tower of God, and we are all waiting for the True King to come again and change and redeem it all!
Happy New Year everyone!
This has got to be the most biblical example of forgiveness from a non-biblical source EVER. Our world is way too similar to the Tower of God, and we are all waiting for the True King to come again and change and redeem it all!
Happy New Year everyone!
Monday, November 23, 2015
Thursday, November 19, 2015
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
"This...this was who I used to be. Who am I now?"
There once was a time long ago where I was known by these traits (I
don't know where CAKEEEEE came from), Made by those who knew me then, they picked out what they saw in me that stood out. Reading those, I wonder if I glowed or something, like a saint. Now I am just known as "smart" or
"theologically knowledgeable," but rarely these words above. How did I even get to this point? How did I become like this? I want my old self back, the one who cared. One who sacrificed. One who was selfless. One who had a servant heart.
Tuesday, November 17, 2015
God is such a troll sometimes.
I swore to Him that I would not attend a specific church in Chicago, and He made me forget the name of the church and I ended up going there. Mind you, its only a branch of the church, and not the specific location, but its close enough.
We shall see why He made me do this, to confront my fears.
I swore to Him that I would not attend a specific church in Chicago, and He made me forget the name of the church and I ended up going there. Mind you, its only a branch of the church, and not the specific location, but its close enough.
We shall see why He made me do this, to confront my fears.
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Monday, November 9, 2015
So...
when did having a boyfriend/girlfriend equate to being blessed and joyful? When did that start becoming a thing? Or getting a job, or acing a test, or even having good weather? Go Biblegateway.com "blessed" or "joy" and see what shows up.
So if your boyfriend or girlfriend breaks up with you, are you all of the sudden less blessed or robbed of your joy? What happens in the future if your spouse passes away, or even worse, divorces you? Last time I checked, finding joy in worldly things is called idolatry, and being blessed only when God gives you what you want is called Prosperity Gospel which, by the way, is the worst false gospel to ever exist.
Today I got to hear the testimony of one of the associate pastors for my new church in Chicago, and his testimony is full of pain and broken-heartedness. Born blind in one eye, he often prayed as a child for it to be healed, to no avail. His parents often fought when he was younger, leading him to be depressed. At school he was the only asian, and so he had no friends and was bullied often. Even just recently his wife left him, leaving him shattered. But through all of this, God was always there for him. God told him that though he won't heal his eye, there is still healing for the spirit. God also redeemed his parents, helping his father come to Christ, and sent them to start an orphanage in China (and currently in seminary in Korea). To this day he is still able to say the sweetness and goodness of God is better than anything else. To him, being blessed and joyful is having Christ, and nothing else.
So let me say this: I am blessed because I know Christ. I have constant, everlasting Joy because Christ is in me.
Please, let's remind each other of this.
11 “Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me. 12 Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you.
when did having a boyfriend/girlfriend equate to being blessed and joyful? When did that start becoming a thing? Or getting a job, or acing a test, or even having good weather? Go Biblegateway.com "blessed" or "joy" and see what shows up.
So if your boyfriend or girlfriend breaks up with you, are you all of the sudden less blessed or robbed of your joy? What happens in the future if your spouse passes away, or even worse, divorces you? Last time I checked, finding joy in worldly things is called idolatry, and being blessed only when God gives you what you want is called Prosperity Gospel which, by the way, is the worst false gospel to ever exist.
Today I got to hear the testimony of one of the associate pastors for my new church in Chicago, and his testimony is full of pain and broken-heartedness. Born blind in one eye, he often prayed as a child for it to be healed, to no avail. His parents often fought when he was younger, leading him to be depressed. At school he was the only asian, and so he had no friends and was bullied often. Even just recently his wife left him, leaving him shattered. But through all of this, God was always there for him. God told him that though he won't heal his eye, there is still healing for the spirit. God also redeemed his parents, helping his father come to Christ, and sent them to start an orphanage in China (and currently in seminary in Korea). To this day he is still able to say the sweetness and goodness of God is better than anything else. To him, being blessed and joyful is having Christ, and nothing else.
So let me say this: I am blessed because I know Christ. I have constant, everlasting Joy because Christ is in me.
Please, let's remind each other of this.
He [Jesus] said:
3 “Blessed are the poor in spirit,
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
4 Blessed are those who mourn,
for they will be comforted.
5 Blessed are the meek,
for they will inherit the earth.
6 Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness,
for they will be filled.
7 Blessed are the merciful,
for they will be shown mercy.
8 Blessed are the pure in heart,
for they will see God.
9 Blessed are the peacemakers,
for they will be called children of God.
10 Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness,
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
4 Blessed are those who mourn,
for they will be comforted.
5 Blessed are the meek,
for they will inherit the earth.
6 Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness,
for they will be filled.
7 Blessed are the merciful,
for they will be shown mercy.
8 Blessed are the pure in heart,
for they will see God.
9 Blessed are the peacemakers,
for they will be called children of God.
10 Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness,
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Sunday, October 25, 2015
Resolve, with a pinch of joy and a dash of freedom
I want more of You in my life.
I want more of You at UIC.
I want more of You at Cornerstone and Beloved.
I want more of You in Chicago.
I want more of You in KC, Pittsburgh, and St. Louis.
I want more of You in all the nations.
(That escalated quickly)
Also I got to see my first shooting star out in the middle of a hay field on a pure Wisconsin night. Wasn't what I expected, as I thought it was a firework at first.
Wednesday, October 14, 2015
"While ton of Christians in the other parts of the world are wondering
about whether they will be persecuted tomorrow or not (or how will they
be persecuted), and here I am, sitting in a warm apartment, with a bowl
of food in front of me and worry about what if I cant find a job in
future, or if i could find a job that I want..."
Or the right relationships in life.
God, why did you put me here in comfortable America, and what am I supposed to do about it?
Awareness?
Prayer?
Action?
Drop everything and go somewhere dangerous for the Gospel?
Or humility and grace and love?
What is enough? Can I even do anything at all?
Or the right relationships in life.
God, why did you put me here in comfortable America, and what am I supposed to do about it?
Awareness?
Prayer?
Action?
Drop everything and go somewhere dangerous for the Gospel?
Or humility and grace and love?
What is enough? Can I even do anything at all?
Sunday, October 11, 2015
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
Sunday, September 27, 2015
Devo Post #12
9/21/15
Proverbs 28:27
Those who give to the poor will lack nothing,
but those who close their eyes to them receive many curses.
I need to keep persevering in doing devotions. Ugh.
How do I address the homeless of Chicago, given that each time I see one who is curled on the street or accosts me and/or my walking companions, I am reminded of this verse? How many curses have I received for rejecting almost all of these people? I know that there is a mental breakdown for most of these homeless men and women. They lost all inhibitors of shame. The suffer from a multitude of mental disorders that causes them to be afraid of society and thus lead them to not find jobs. I know that many of them are living in a dream like world, where the fabrics of fantasy and reality have been dissolved. I saw this first hand when a homeless person walked into the Church of the Beloved when Mike was giving the message of the day, and he would say what he believed to be the right things, like quoting Genesis 1 and saying Hallelujah, and singing some tune to his childhood when the guitar started playing. At that moment, I wonder if he was still with us in that room, or was he transported via music to some nice and happy memory, maybe with his family or friends, where he could be at peace? As I sat pondering that imagery, he got up and left. I wonder how many people were annoyed or at least uncomfortable when he arrived? Would that homeless man truly understand what we were offering if we asked him to stay at our congregation, to come again and again and be a part of the family? I wonder how many of us would offer him a place to stay, or at least encourage him to have meals with us? Or would we just tell ourselves he isn’t our problem? I know that he needs help, mental help, professional help, and that is something we cannot give him. But is the power of God weak to the point that us dental/medical/phd students would be quick to disregard the spiritual power and the ability of miracles to occur in front of us? I know I am always suspicious of miracles and cases of miraculous healing. I hate it when people attribute it to faith, as if we create the faith ourselves, and God sees how much faith we have and give us alleviation of our physical ailments. What about all the faithful people who God chose not to heal? Are they lacking in faith? To say that faith leads to physical healing is along the lines of the Prosperity Gospel. God even chooses to let the faithful die, die painfully and pathetically, to glorify His name. Can God not use physical suffering in His children to glorify His name too? Why do we not praise Him and remember Him for those, but only when He performs a miracle in conjunction to our commands do we give Him glory. It sounds like a complete reversal of roles, that God has to answer us when we demand miracles.
So back to the original question. How do I reach the homeless in Chicago, when I can barely keep myself afloat on $2000 a month, with no guarantees on future funding or even the guarantee I will be able to stay at UIC or Chicago past 1 year? What is the minimum or maximum I can do? What is my calling? How can I pray for them? How can I lead them truly to Christ, as many will use Christianity as a trick to get support, but not truly believe in Christ as both Savior and Lord. Many of them are so trapped in their fears and mental jails. I know of that well, because I have been trapped in a jail due to depression before. The many continuous nights of crying till no more tears come out. The days where I refused to leave the classroom to eat with other students in the high school cafeteria. The days where I stay up all night shaking and burning all over. 11 whole years, starting when that naive and innocent kid first tastes and realizes the cruelty and unfairness of this world. It is that moment when we realize our parents aren’t all powerful. It is similar to that moment when the African kid was forced to shoot his parents to mature from a boy to a child soldier, leaving behind playtime and toys to become a man and a murderer. Or when a young girl is raped for the first time. All too real is the cruelty and evil of this world we live in. Just remembering being betrayed still instantly tears me up too this day. I have never killed anyone, and though I’ve been molested before, I’ve never been raped, I think I can understand the rapid propulsion of the development and hardening of the victims of this world due to these kinds of circumstances. One’s experiences, one’s fears, one’s pain, one’s shame, one’s bitterness, one’s hatred are all powerful shackles that fetter just as permanently as caste iron bracers chained to a wall or weight. I know the correct answer is God/Jesus can break every chain, but how real is it for me? How real is it for these homeless people? At what point does Christianity stop becoming theoretical and philosophical and becomes real? We live in reality, not a dreamland. Very likely that reality is a nightmare.
There are no easy answers. I don’t know what I would say if someone came to me and told me he/she just killed someone, or he/she was just raped. In the same way, I don’t know how to truly approach the homeless with no understanding of the paths and hardships they’ve taken to end up in their fallen state. This is where we say “The power of the Gospel is enough.” I think it is too easy to scoff at those who say this, but at the same time it is too easy to say that and walk away as well. So the question is, is the power of the Gospel enough? How much of the responsibility is on us? How far do we have to break before God intervenes, if He does at all? How much of this is part of God’s master plan? Does that plan involve me dying, or those homeless men and women dying?
God, you gave us this command (200+ times in the Bible, which is about 180+ times more than you command us to preach the Gospel) but don’t give us the means or the heart or the community to accomplish it. What are you playing at? Where does a 26 year old taiwanese-american 1st year BioE PhD student lacking in experience, skills, spiritual gifts, resources, and energy fit into the picture?
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
Christian Links
I made this page both to have an online record of the links I've collected over the years on various topics (not very well organized, I will find time later to do so), since I almost lost them all in the latest hard drive crash, but also as a resource for other Christians, non-believers, and friends alike. I hope this page helps people, even if only a little.
Some links (like the Resurgence ones) no longer work.
Also don't focus too much on the "controversial" section or you might wanna bang your head on something.
Enjoy!
Christian Links
Sunday, August 16, 2015
I am Loved
So many people visiting me despite moving to a new city. I am glad, as I'm a people person, I don't do well moving to new places and having to make new friends and to support them.
K, A, and R decided to visit me in Chicago. It was fun going up and down the Magnificent Mile with them. I guess the best part was when we were on the seventh floor of the parking garage of the Navy Pier. We were looking out at the Chicago skyline when I touched a spider web with my left hand. There was no spider but I decided to check around to make sure. Only a foot away from my right hand was a black widow spider. Then we started to notice more. Many black widow spiders lined the walls and air conditioning units. Moment ruined. It was this time of valley of shadow and death where K decided to pray for me, that I would find a new fellowship, that I could come to like Chicago, and that I would strive towards God and find His plan for me in the city. It was a truly wonderful experience. I had to crawl back to the elevator as the inside of the seventh floor was also plagued with many spiders hanging from the ceiling and walls. Still, worth it.
More and more people are coming to visit me too. Had I made such a difference in other people's lives? Aren't I just known as the "knowledgeable one?" Or am I someone, something more?
I am loved, even if I lie to myself that I don't have what others have. F*** social media.
Wow even more people are visiting me. First Joe from GCF, then Chris from KC, even Kelly has decided to visit (though the trip is probably mostly to visit his GF, at least this time it won't be an accidental third wheeling, and I believe his sincerity). Can't wait for Val to visit too.
K, A, and R decided to visit me in Chicago. It was fun going up and down the Magnificent Mile with them. I guess the best part was when we were on the seventh floor of the parking garage of the Navy Pier. We were looking out at the Chicago skyline when I touched a spider web with my left hand. There was no spider but I decided to check around to make sure. Only a foot away from my right hand was a black widow spider. Then we started to notice more. Many black widow spiders lined the walls and air conditioning units. Moment ruined. It was this time of valley of shadow and death where K decided to pray for me, that I would find a new fellowship, that I could come to like Chicago, and that I would strive towards God and find His plan for me in the city. It was a truly wonderful experience. I had to crawl back to the elevator as the inside of the seventh floor was also plagued with many spiders hanging from the ceiling and walls. Still, worth it.
More and more people are coming to visit me too. Had I made such a difference in other people's lives? Aren't I just known as the "knowledgeable one?" Or am I someone, something more?
I am loved, even if I lie to myself that I don't have what others have. F*** social media.
Wow even more people are visiting me. First Joe from GCF, then Chris from KC, even Kelly has decided to visit (though the trip is probably mostly to visit his GF, at least this time it won't be an accidental third wheeling, and I believe his sincerity). Can't wait for Val to visit too.
Thursday, July 9, 2015
Devo Post #11
7/9/15
1 John 3:16
This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. And we ought to lay down our lives for our brothers and sisters.
Well, almost everyone knows that John 3:16 says, but what happens when you at a 1 before that scripture reference? Adding that 1 actually doesn’t seem to change the Gospel message, but take it a bit further, like taking Love a bit further. Now it turns the message of the Gospel from what Jesus did for us to what we do in response to that love, and that is to love those who are part of our family.
I know all of us secretly (or not so secretly) desire others to treat us with this kind of sacrificial love. We always cry out “why isn’t the body like this? See in scripture it's so clear!” I know I am guilty of this with my former ACF, and my outcry was probably well deserved, but for now I am going to give up my desire and right to this. Instead, I will keep this verse close to my heart and live it out its directive in an “away” fashion. That means I am the one who should lay my life down for others, even if they don’t want to or don’t yet have the capability to do so for me or for other people. I will set the example, not by my own strength, but by the love Christ is pouring into me from the Cross. I know its hard, and sometimes its fleeting, but I got to have the resolve to do it. Thats what it means to be Christian, to have faith especially in times of negative emotions. Wasn’t that the point of these big terms in the Bible? Faith, Hope, Peace, Joy, and Love are there specifically to counteract the negative emotions and feelings of lost souls like me, and they are doubly reinforced by the positive emotions and feelings we feel. But they are not dictated by emotions at all, but they are fruit poured into us through the Gospel (the Cross and Christ), through the Holy Spirit, and through the power of God. These sources are all one and the same, and yet as different as the triune nature of God. So mystery. Wow. Much awesome.
Friday, June 12, 2015
Joy
What did Paul mean when he talked
endlessly about Joy (I'm going to caps it)? What did the Psalms mean about Joy?
What did author of Hebrews mean in chapter 12? There can be a joy in eating
cheesecake: I eat it, I delight in it, I take pleasure in it, but is this the
same joy as the Joy we obtain from the Holy Spirit/Cross/Jesus Christ/God that
will last for all eternity? What is “true” Joy? Can we fact check things with
scripture? Otherwise there is no standard and anyone’s definition is fair game.
For me I believe Psalm 16:11 is one of the key verses in
understanding Joy (my favorite verse about Joy). For me, it helps me to imagine
Joy as an essence, a metaphysical thing so to speak, you obtain the very second
you know God, and it continues to grow and be produced from your heart that
moment on. It is there when you take part in anything regarding the Lord, such
as being in the Lord’s presence, walking in faith, and seeing the fruit that is
produced in His kingdom. The act/verb usage of rejoicing is affirming this
fact. You can feel Joy, because since it is a thing it is radiating happiness
and enjoyment (heheh) like a hot coal (or the thermal stone from Don’t
Starve…play with me), and can be stifled by sin but never lost as long as you
have the Holy Spirit (depending on your theology it can never be lost), since
the Holy Spirit is the conduit for the source of Joy which is the Cross (hence
why it is a fruit of the Spirit). That is why there are times you think you
cannot feel or see Joy, though it may be there.
There are many details and nuances to Joy as it is described in
Scripture and by theologians, so it is hard to wrap it all together. It part of
the contentment in God. It is part of the desire/longing to be with God and
see/hear God. Like all these big Biblical words we commonly use, like Worship,
Praise, Love, Hope, Truth, Peace, Salvation, Faith, they are all related and
intricately tied together. There is Joy when we persevere under our Faith
(James 1). We find Joy in the Peace we obtain when we truly Hope in the Day of
the Lord (Romans 5, 12, 15). I believe that is what it means when Jesus says
our Joy is made complete when the Bride and the Bridegroom are united. Because
it is then when we will be in the full presence of God, with all the saints
together praising and worshipping our Lord with one single voice.
At the end of the day, we want to know what God’s definition of
all these big terms are, the “true” definition. Only a collective grasp of the
all of them simultaneously can we truly being to understand any one of them.
And this grasp/understanding is a work of God, a continuous work that is far
from complete in any of us, especially me. I truly believe that these answers
are found only in the Word of God, and only by the power of the Holy Spirit can
simple text on a page become alive and breathed into us and revealed to us as
described in 1 Corinthians 2. Now time to define all the other terminologies,
oh and a better understanding of who the Holy Spirit is in my life. Oh joy.
Psalm 16:11
You make known to me the path of life;
you will fill me with joy in your
presence,
with eternal pleasures at your right hand.
John 3:29
The bride belongs to the bridegroom. The friend who attends the
bridegroom waits and listens for him, and is full of joy when he hears the
bridegroom’s voice. That joy is mine, and it is now complete.
John 15:11
I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and that your
joy may be complete.
Philippians 2:1-2
Therefore if you have any encouragement from being united with
Christ, if any comfort from his love, if any common sharing in the Spirit, if
any tenderness and compassion, 2 then make my joy complete by being
like-minded, having the same love, being one in spirit and of one mind.
Hebrews 12:1-2
Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of
witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily
entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, 2
fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith. For the joy set
before him he endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right
hand of the throne of God.
Romans 5:2
Through him we have also obtained access by faith into this grace
in which we stand, and we rejoice in hope of the glory of God.
Romans 12:12
Rejoice in hope, be patient in tribulation, be constant in prayer.
Romans 15:13
May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust
in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.
James 1:1-2
Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face
trials of many kinds, 3 because you know that the testing of your faith
produces perseverance
More Notes/Points:
There are multiple Greek words for
different types of joy. One for happiness (ashar), one for circumstantial joy
commonly used in the OT and early NT (chara) to describe an emotion, one for
eternal joy (chara) used in the NT describing having Christ. I think it is
important to pay attention to this, just as one would pay attention to which
greek word for "love" is used in context. Joy is separate from both
happiness and pleasure (hedon) in scripture.
I like to think of joy as an essence,
a metaphysical object. The Bible always characterizes joy as a fruit of the
spirit, like how a tree bears fruit, the HS bears joy in our lives. Even in
scripture the verb usage is commonly "produced", not
"felt." From this fruit called joy we do feel and experience
happiness and gladness. Joy produces happiness. As John Piper puts it,
"hope bears the fruit of joy," giving both hope and joy objectivity.
I can accept the other definition that
joy is a extreme or special version of happiness, one that is deeper, more
"rooted," spiritual instead of being just emotional/physiological/ hormonal/psychological
(though it can have/induce aspects in these areas). We have to remember that
joy is mentioned 28 times in the NT in correlation with suffering, persecution,
and sorrow, and is even magnified during these seasons. The point is that joy
remains even when happiness and gladness disappear. Do you think Christ was
happy when He was shedding tears of blood on Gethsemane? Or when He was nailed
on the Cross? Do you think Paul was happy when he was whipped or starved or had
the thorn? Christians aren't masochists, we are joyful.
It is very clear in scripture that Joy
is something that starts to exist and only exists when one receives the HS.
Biblical joy is not something that non-believers have and/or can
experience. Again, very clear in the context of scripture and biblical
theology. Just like common grace, there is probably some form of common joy,
but it is not on the same level of joy one has because they know Christ.
Yes one can point to the singular
event of Christ on the Cross as the source of our joy, you cannot forget that
the consequences of that event covers all time, before and after, and that the
joy set before Christ was with God and was a part of God since before the
beginning. I don't think its fair to call joy circumstantial, but something
that flows from an eternal and constant source as referred in the Psalms, just
as I don't think its fair to call the Gospel circumstantial. God's presence and
glory that brings joy into our lives has never wavered or changed. Same with
Christ's kingship and glory.
Sunday, June 7, 2015
Saturday, June 6, 2015
Musings at 4am at night
I remember a conversation with one of my friends and alumni from Washu BME program. He said that only people who are weak and love wallowing in their weakness go to Christian fellowships (on campus). He pointed out that everyone there was very insecure, and meetings and such were basically pity parties. Those who graduated out of the fellowship end up still insecure, confused about life and what to do and where to go, and are generally less successful than those who refuse to end up in one of those fellowships. He pointed to the Christians who said they were Christian but opted to miss small group, large group, prayer meetings, and even church in exchange for studying and networking. Those are the successful ones.
To me this conversation really stuck out, even a year later.
It is true. I was part of a really insecure and in some ways toxic fellowship.
Everyone wanted to be taken care of, and there wasn’t enough juice to go
around. Almost
everyone in that fellowship are all kind of stuck today, while everyone who
left the fellowship are all in more successful spots in life, at least by the
world’s standards. 4 years later, I am still kind of stuck. Do I pursue something where I
can be successful? Does this mean I am pursuing wordliness? Success in the eyes
of man? When I look at the InterCP SMs (1-2 year missions into dangerous countries),
or even people going on short term ones, I think to myself whether to admire
them and join them, or to think they are stupid for throwing their lives away
like that. Yes, when they go long-term like that, they end up coming back to
the States with no money, no work experience, and for some no education (a lot
of them quitting med school or even college in hope of pursuing God’s mission
into the nations). From the traditional asian-american standard, that is
stupid. But is it really stupid if I truly believe I am a Christian and believe
God is sovereign and will take care of them? Maybe I may also be called to go?
And what if I am called to go (barring all the conflicting theology surrounding
missions), but am too afraid of dying or falling behind all my peers from
Washu/KC/CMU? Is this considered loving the world, pursuing an “easier” life
compared to other Christians, especially when I don’t feel a special calling to
do PhD or go into biotech field?
Back to the fellowship. Yes, I do believe that brokenness
brings people to God. Hurt people are more likely to seek God because the world
have beaten into them that they are worthless. It is like the quote “God helps
those who admit they can’t help themselves” (contrary to the un-biblical quote “God
helps those who help themselves”). So yeah, I remember my time as a leader in
ACF at Washu, many atheists who came into ACF were those seeking friendship,
seeking help, seeking some kind of hope because their world was falling apart.
But once they come in, they stay pitiful. I again would know because I also
suffered intense depression in ACF, especially while trying to serve and take
care of everyone under the constant pressure the BME workload entails. Those
were not fun times. I almost lost sight of God, but whether or not you are an
Armenian or a Calvinist, at least both can believe God does not let go when you
fall away or am hurt so much. Again to quote, when I hit rock bottom, I hit the
solid rock of God.
In my time at Washu, I saw more Christians leave the faith
than those who accept it. To be honest, it can make almost anyone lose heart.
The statistics that say 9 out of 10 Christians walk away from their childhood
faith was unfolding right before my eyes. Again people will and have said that
those never truly believed, and that may be true, it still really painful to
see. Even now I am trying my best to be a good friend and hopefully a good
witness to those I personally brought to faith, personally discipled, and eventually
hurt/betrayed/let down because I was a failure as a leader. The whole lot of
us, stuck in our sadness and hurt and insecurity and somehow never seem to gain
confidence even after becoming a Christian or finding a bunch of other
Christians. No wonder the atheists and former believers call us weak.
Where do we find our confidence then when we are hurting and
wallowing in our brokenness? Why did so many people leave? Why do I keep on
finding the same thoughts, same trends, same hidden daggers embedded in the
hearts and minds of my friends at CMU? And here I was, older yet still naïve person
going into a new undergraduate fellowship (my 4th one), believing at
first sight that this was a strong fellowship that cannot fail to take care of
their own and point them heavenward. I am, seriously, a fellowship that doesn’t
secretly promote success over Christ is a new thing for me. But as I got to
know more people, hear more stories, I guess I realized that even here the
cruelty of the world still takes its toll on people. How do I help instill
confidence in them? How do I help them? Can I help them? Can’t Jesus Christ
help them? Wasn’t that the point…of being a Christian?
What does it even mean to be a Christian? Doesn’t it mean we believe Jesus Christ is our Lord and Savior and that the Holy Spirit now works within us, creating a new heart/being in us? I think…for most of my friends, the biggest kicker is the doubts. Doubts of where we should be going (like me). Doubts of whether God is still working (or ever worked) in our lives. Doubts that prayer actually has an effect on our lives or even brings us closer to God. Doubts that we can change or help or save even one person in this world. Doubts on even whether the Bible is reliable or infallible or the inspired Word of God. It is hard, but we should never take the easy way out. Sometimes I have to wake in the morning and ask myself do I really believe in a man who called himself Jesus Christ, and he was the incarnation of God as man in the flesh who died and rose from the dead to save mankind from sin? When I say yes, it takes a little of the burden off of my doubting heart. Then I can continue to ask if God is still working in my life and growing me, using me, healing me from my bitterness and guilt and anxiety of the future. If I believe in Jesus, then I should try (sometimes it seems like Christians are forbidden to use the word “try” because it is never by human effort but God that things work out) to believe in the promises he preached about. And if I believe the promises and the reality of Christ, then I should probably believe the Bible is the real deal, the truly inspired Word of God that Jesus believed in and everyone else believed in. Without that book, there is no Jesus. And without Jesus, well then life kind of just sucks cuz there won’t be any hope in this world. The bully and the powerful will always win.
What does it even mean to be a Christian? Doesn’t it mean we believe Jesus Christ is our Lord and Savior and that the Holy Spirit now works within us, creating a new heart/being in us? I think…for most of my friends, the biggest kicker is the doubts. Doubts of where we should be going (like me). Doubts of whether God is still working (or ever worked) in our lives. Doubts that prayer actually has an effect on our lives or even brings us closer to God. Doubts that we can change or help or save even one person in this world. Doubts on even whether the Bible is reliable or infallible or the inspired Word of God. It is hard, but we should never take the easy way out. Sometimes I have to wake in the morning and ask myself do I really believe in a man who called himself Jesus Christ, and he was the incarnation of God as man in the flesh who died and rose from the dead to save mankind from sin? When I say yes, it takes a little of the burden off of my doubting heart. Then I can continue to ask if God is still working in my life and growing me, using me, healing me from my bitterness and guilt and anxiety of the future. If I believe in Jesus, then I should try (sometimes it seems like Christians are forbidden to use the word “try” because it is never by human effort but God that things work out) to believe in the promises he preached about. And if I believe the promises and the reality of Christ, then I should probably believe the Bible is the real deal, the truly inspired Word of God that Jesus believed in and everyone else believed in. Without that book, there is no Jesus. And without Jesus, well then life kind of just sucks cuz there won’t be any hope in this world. The bully and the powerful will always win.
But of course it is easy to say all of this, and much harder
to show all of this Gospel stuff to the whole fellowship and get them to “take
heart.” So hard. It probably takes more silent actions of love, the ear to hear
someone’s pains, the shoulder for crying on, and the long nights sharing and
truly caring. Again with the whole “try” thing, we can’t try to make things
better because we all know we are powerless. Powerless to help someone out of
their sorrow when they undergo a breakup, lose a loved one, or watch their
dreams collapse into dust. If we are honest with ourselves, then we all know
that we are powerless to help ourselves, even if that fact shows up once in a
blue moon for the successful peeps. It is all God, time and time again. This
fact alone should erase all doubt that comes from not “feeling” God or God’s
presence. The fact that broken people get healed is proof enough for me. I know
it because I went from someone who physically tore his lungs his junior year
after coughing for 4 months straight, from someone who almost committed suicide
after Relay for Life, and broke furniture/plates/even his computer his senior
year because people were actively ignoring him and his hurt because they feared
to get their hands dirty and didn’t want to be there for a brother. I went from
the guy who cried all night before his graduation because others rejected
fellowship with him because they believed in the compatibility of friendship
and not in unconditional love. I went from that mess who hated God and hit that
deep bottom, where I was physically, mentally, and spiritually broken, into who
I am now: someone who has scars but awaits Him who takes all scars away. 4
years later, I still have a long way to go, but that’s the path of
sanctification right? And of course, sanctification just means being made more
like Christ, more holy, more righteous, more perfect, something that will never
happen in this lifetime but is promised at the Day of the Lord.
I don’t really know why I am writing this at 4am, but maybe
I am happy and sad at the same time after coming back to Kansas City. I am
truly happy to find a group of close and loving friends here in Kansas City. We
are different, so different that only the grace of God could I have met them
(at Windermere 4 years ago) and actually became their friend. It is funny that
DOTA has played a larger part in fellowship than almost any other means God
could have used. For others it can be making or listening to music, or playing
basketball, or cooking. But God used DOTA in this instance and I will never
doubt that fact that God can use a video game, something so childish and
worldly, for His glory and for my redemption. Of course we went much deeper than that, sharing so many memories those 2 years. Now I’m the only one who still sometimes play, for the sake of fellowship (I try). The last 2 days were wonderful. I
don’t think I’ve been hugged that many times before in 2 days. Hugs after not
seeing each other for what…5 months? Hugs after meals and movies too? Wow.
Eating Canto Chinese food was good too, because that’s all Kansas City has and
we do it good here. I wish I can always be there for these guys, but I know
that I need to trust God that he is helping them grow. Helping all of us find
our paths, ones that lead to Him and to love of things in this world. I know
this is the one aspect my KC friends have the hardest time letting go, as it is
also the one aspect in my life that is the hardest to let go. To me it is easy
for me to give my time, my money, my resources to care and love people. It is
really hard for me to let go my desires in this world up to God: a
semi-comfortable and stable career path and a wife. Just like what J.C. prodded
me with, if I truly believe in looking heavenward and to be with God, then why
am I so hung up on these things? As if I die now and end up before God, I would
demand him to send me back because I never got to be a husband or a dad? As if
I wouldn’t be happy and content just to be in His presence? But, honestly, I
struggle most with this, with letting go, with wanting to plan my life even
though God (literally) YOLOs my life for me because He wants His "purpose to prevail."
It is hard to not think about wordliness for me. I also don't want a "normal" Christianity (as shown here: http://adam4d.com/normal-christianity/). I want real Christianity that walks with the only real God. And I want to show the guys here in Kansas City that real God, but I really don't know how. No one wants to keep being told "you need to know the Gospel" or "you need to focus on the Day of the Lord" or "Jesus would/wouldn't do that." That is easy mode, and its not the right mode. To help clarify what my old ACF fellowship (and my new one), I bring up something I heard last weekend from Pastor Dan Song (the irony that the one time I go to Pastor Lester's church, he would be the guest speaker for that Sunday service). He made a distinction between transparency and vulnerability within the Christian worldview. I know they tend to be interchangeable words, so I hope you focus on the message and not with nuances. Transparency is when we reveal our sins, our secrets, our brokenness to each other, but there is still that thin glass wall that separates us from others. This is what I see in fellowship. Vulnerability is transparency without that glass wall, where others can stick their hands into your guts and touch all the grit and nasty in our lives, so they can help clean and heal you. I believe that it is Biblical to do so (there are no verses that says your walk must be alone, but way too many that directly or indirectly points to God using people for your growth and sanctification). So we all need to shift from transparency to vulnerability, and I know this is hard. I myself am guilty of this, more so than the next person over. I know I don't want to, especially being older, life has made me harder, more jaded, more likely to avoid sticky situations to protect myself. With everything I've been through, I should have given up. But I didn't, and its probably (most likely) due to God's Grace. I never gave up on people, and I hope I will always be there to help and care for people even knowing that I have no ability or strength to do so.
It is hard to not think about wordliness for me. I also don't want a "normal" Christianity (as shown here: http://adam4d.com/normal-christianity/). I want real Christianity that walks with the only real God. And I want to show the guys here in Kansas City that real God, but I really don't know how. No one wants to keep being told "you need to know the Gospel" or "you need to focus on the Day of the Lord" or "Jesus would/wouldn't do that." That is easy mode, and its not the right mode. To help clarify what my old ACF fellowship (and my new one), I bring up something I heard last weekend from Pastor Dan Song (the irony that the one time I go to Pastor Lester's church, he would be the guest speaker for that Sunday service). He made a distinction between transparency and vulnerability within the Christian worldview. I know they tend to be interchangeable words, so I hope you focus on the message and not with nuances. Transparency is when we reveal our sins, our secrets, our brokenness to each other, but there is still that thin glass wall that separates us from others. This is what I see in fellowship. Vulnerability is transparency without that glass wall, where others can stick their hands into your guts and touch all the grit and nasty in our lives, so they can help clean and heal you. I believe that it is Biblical to do so (there are no verses that says your walk must be alone, but way too many that directly or indirectly points to God using people for your growth and sanctification). So we all need to shift from transparency to vulnerability, and I know this is hard. I myself am guilty of this, more so than the next person over. I know I don't want to, especially being older, life has made me harder, more jaded, more likely to avoid sticky situations to protect myself. With everything I've been through, I should have given up. But I didn't, and its probably (most likely) due to God's Grace. I never gave up on people, and I hope I will always be there to help and care for people even knowing that I have no ability or strength to do so.
I want to stay in Kansas City. I want to stay in Pittsburgh.
But I’m a big enough boy now to know that wherever I go, God will throw me into
a group of guys, maybe guys who will sharpen me and disciple me, maybe guys
whom I can take care and be accountable of. Maybe even a girl, who knows. Maybe
it will be where I die young (oh no not my futility of life speech again/almost
wanted to use the word “early” but there is no such thing as “early” death,
only an “on time” death). I wrestle so much with deciding to get a PhD or not,
but like my GCF friend J.S. says, it really isn’t about being faithful in these
big one-time decisions (like choosing a school, a job, or even a spouse), but
being faithful in the small things during our daily lives. That is because
during these times is when the actions reflect our heart and where our fruit is
born. I don’t know if I should be here in Kansas City right now or in Chicago
in the fall. I will try (darn it) to give these things glory to God, and keep
those SMs and my brothers and sisters who are proclaiming the Gospel in
unreached and/or dangerous nations in my heart. Part of me still wants to go…and
the other (larger) part is just a fruit smoothie, all confused and nutrients
oxidizing. I really don’t know man…trust in God. Christ is enough for me. The
only thing that counts is faith expressed in love (mah theme verse for 2015). I’m
just throwing stuff at the end here.
Ah, I wish I took care of more people. I wish I was there more often when people were hurting. Did I lead the guys enough in Pittsburgh? Did I support enough people, greet enough people, preach the Gospel enough? Was I a role model? Did I leave more scars this time around? Did I spend enough time outside of lab, outside of my work, outside of my apartment, outside of my comfort zone? Worst of all, was I unconditional? These are my regrets this time around, but I know they are moot, just need to keep telling myself that. I feel like Pittsburgh and another undergraduate ACF was God giving me a second shot. I am more healed this time around, and I have a flawed but loving group of guys from back home to keep me going. Yes, going the graduate school route will mean less time with fellowship. I know there are very few Christians doing their PhD (because of before mentioned problems with undergraduate fellowships and Christians being called to the mission field). Maybe, just maybe, there is a niche here for me as a witness and steward. Who knows. God knows.
Ah...I just want to keep people in my prayers more (which means I should pray just a little bit more/idk why people think I have a strong prayer life, I do not). Truly, truly? Truly I believe God is working in all my friends, my brothers and sisters, here in Kansas City, those in Pittsburgh, the ones from St. Louis, and those spread out across the world. It is always hard to believe, but today I believe it.
Ah, I wish I took care of more people. I wish I was there more often when people were hurting. Did I lead the guys enough in Pittsburgh? Did I support enough people, greet enough people, preach the Gospel enough? Was I a role model? Did I leave more scars this time around? Did I spend enough time outside of lab, outside of my work, outside of my apartment, outside of my comfort zone? Worst of all, was I unconditional? These are my regrets this time around, but I know they are moot, just need to keep telling myself that. I feel like Pittsburgh and another undergraduate ACF was God giving me a second shot. I am more healed this time around, and I have a flawed but loving group of guys from back home to keep me going. Yes, going the graduate school route will mean less time with fellowship. I know there are very few Christians doing their PhD (because of before mentioned problems with undergraduate fellowships and Christians being called to the mission field). Maybe, just maybe, there is a niche here for me as a witness and steward. Who knows. God knows.
Ah...I just want to keep people in my prayers more (which means I should pray just a little bit more/idk why people think I have a strong prayer life, I do not). Truly, truly? Truly I believe God is working in all my friends, my brothers and sisters, here in Kansas City, those in Pittsburgh, the ones from St. Louis, and those spread out across the world. It is always hard to believe, but today I believe it.
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