Tuesday, August 9, 2016

What I love about The Vineyard - The Theology of the Kingdom of God

John Wimber, the founder of the Vineyard Movement, used to liken the Kingdom of God to the D-Day invasion of Normandy.  When the allies took the beach in Normandy, Europe had effectively been taken for the allies, defeat of the axis powers was assured, and it was just a matter of time before the war was truly over.  However there was a time between the inauguration of this reality on D-Day and the consummation of this reality on V.E. Day (Victory in Europe).  Though the war had been effectivley won on D-Day the time between the inauguration of that victory and its consumation was the bloodiest period of WWII.  This is analgous to the church's present reality.

Jesus, through his life, death, and resurrection has planted the flag of the rule and reign of God firmly on the earth.  Victory is assured.  One day what is true on heaven will be true on earth because of the work of Jesus.  However, we live in a time between the cross, God's decisive victory through Jesus, and the Kingdom's final consummation where all things will have been set right through Jesus at his second coming.  In the Vineyard we call this the "already" and the "not yet".

There are times when we literally see heaven touching earth and we get a picture of what life will be like when the rule and reign of God is fully realized.  This video from the Vineyard Church in Cincinnati I think illustrates what I'm trying to say:



When we experience the "already" of the Kingdom we get a taste of what its like to live under the rule and reign of Jesus.  When Jesus reigns in all his fullness those who are forgotten are remembered, the sick are healed, those who are oppressed by darkness discover the light.  The poor are cared for, generosity flows freely, goodness, beauty, and life fill the earth or at least the place where we are experiencing the taste of Christ's Kingdom.  It's those times when we know God's victory is coming, where faith becomes reality.  I love the already!

Yet the "already" is not what we always experience.  There are times when it seems like our prayers fall flat.  When we pray for the sick and they remain sick.  When racism, materialism, consumerism are revealed to be present even in the church.  It's the "not yet"  The church lives within the tension of the "already" and the "not-yet" of the Kingdom of God.  This is the tension we live in.  The Kingdom of Darkness is fighting like a cornered animal for another day of existence and it plays for keeps.

The work of the church is to serve the Kingdom of Darkness notice that its days are numbered by undoing its works through the power of the Holy Spirit like Jesus.  Where we see sickness we minister healing, where we see racism we model reconciliation and inclusion, where we see injustice we bring justice.

This is what Vineyard Bryan/College Station will be about.  Giving our community tastes of the "already" in the midst of the "not-yet" so that people will look forward to the day when Jesus rule is all and all!

Listen to how our National Director, Phil Strout, puts it







What I love about The Vineyard - The Theology of the Kingdom of God

John Wimber, the founder of the Vineyard Movement, used to liken the Kingdom of God to the D-Day invasion of Normandy.  When the allies took the beach in Normandy, Europe had effectively been taken for the allies, defeat of the axis powers was assured, and it was just a matter of time before the war was truly over.  However there was a time between the inauguration of this reality on D-Day and the consummation of this reality on V.E. Day (Victory in Europe).  Though the war had been effectivley won on D-Day the time between the inauguration of that victory and its consumation was the bloodiest period of WWII.  This is analgous to the church's present reality.

Jesus, through his life, death, and resurrection has planted the flag of the rule and reign of God firmly on the earth.  Victory is assured.  One day what is true on heaven will be true on earth because of the work of Jesus.  However, we live in a time between the cross, God's decisive victory through Jesus, and the Kingdom's final consummation where all things will have been set right through Jesus at his second coming.  In the Vineyard we call this the "already" and the "not yet".

There are times when we literally see heaven touching earth and we get a picture of what life will be like when the rule and reign of God is fully realized.  This video from the Vineyard Church in Cincinnati I think illustrates what I'm trying to say:



When we experience the "already" of the Kingdom we get a taste of what its like to live under the rule and reign of Jesus.  When Jesus reigns in all his fullness those who are forgotten are remembered, the sick are healed, those who are oppressed by darkness discover the light.  The poor are cared for, generosity flows freely, goodness, beauty, and life fill the earth or at least the place where we are experiencing the taste of Christ's Kingdom.  It's those times when we know God's victory is coming, where faith becomes reality.  I love the already!

Yet the "already" is not what we always experience.  There are times when it seems like our prayers fall flat.  When we pray for the sick and they remain sick.  When racism, materialism, consumerism are revealed to be present even in the church.  It's the "not yet"  The church lives within the tension of the "already" and the "not-yet" of the Kingdom of God.  This is the tension we live in.  The Kingdom of Darkness is fighting like a cornered animal for another day of existence and it plays for keeps.

The work of the church is to serve the Kingdom of Darkness notice that its days are numbered by undoing its works through the power of the Holy Spirit like Jesus.  Where we see sickness we minister healing, where we see racism we model reconciliation and inclusion, where we see injustice we bring justice.

This is what Vineyard Bryan/College Station will be about.  Giving our community tastes of the "already" in the midst of the "not-yet" so that people will look forward to the day when Jesus rule is all and all!

Listen to how our National Director, Phil Strout, puts it







Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Things I love about the Vineyard - Jesus is King!



When I was eighteen years old my best friend convinced me to be a part of a small bible study.  In that study we learned about Jesus.  We learned about his life, his teachings, the miracles he did, how he was Israel's true king and the world's true Lord.  I learned about how he was the fulfilment of the hope of the prophets from the Old Testament.  I learned that in some mysterious and powerful way his death upon the cross reconciled me to God and provided forgiveness for my sins. That through his resurrection he destroyed deaths grip and that now he setting all things to right through his reconciling love.

I learned that because Jesus is King, I needed to make a decision to bow my knee and pledge myself to him and his Kingdom.  I learned that pledge came through faith and that faith looks like trust and obedience.

On April 19, 1987 drunk and lost in the back of a subdivision I bent my knee and declared Jesus to be my king.  Since then I have made more mistakes than I care to think about.  Sometimes I've been a good representative of Jesus, sometimes a poor one, but something at the deepest level shifted in my life on that date and Jesus is my King.  I have never regretted following him and every time I've followed his lead it has brought richness, love, and depth into my life.  My faith is in Jesus.

Since that time I've learned the gospel, the kingship of Jesus, is more all encompassing than I could have ever imagined.  I will never plumb it's depths or fully understand it's mysteries.  But at the Vineyard Church of Bryan/College Station all we do will center on Jesus.  It will center on his kingship realized in our lives.  This will be a place where we proclaim that Jesus is King and lovingly challenge all those who come within our influence to know the rule and reign of Jesus and his Kingdom.

I bent my knee on April 19th, 1987 and have remained his servant for the last 29 years.  My prayer is that the Vineyard Church of Bryan/College Station will help many others discover that Jesus is king as well.

I love that in the Vineyard Movement Jesus is worshipped as king.

Speaking of worship here is one of my favorites!

Monday, July 18, 2016

Beauty for Ashes



I have a friend, Jamie Stilson, who pastors the Cape Coral Vineyard in southern Florida, who wrote a book called the Power of Ugly.  Jamie shares that Jesus can take ugly things, and through his grace, make them beautiful.  I believe that is true with all my heart.  I think God does that with the difficult times in our lives.  I think he can do that with people, with marriages and families, with cities and nations.  I think God loves to take the ugly, apply his grace, and make it beautiful.

When I think of God transforming the ugly to beauty in my own life, I think about learning to see, and make space for, the beautiful and transcendent in my everyday life and routine. We all know that our daily schedules can get pretty ugly.  It is so easy to let the busyness of ordinary daily life crowd out the joy, beauty, and peace of being in relationship with Jesus.  The beauty of God can be bursting out all around us yet we are to absorbed by the pressures of the day to notice it.

Life will always have its pressures and stresses.  Life will always be full of things we have to do. Life will always throw us loops that can interfere with our sense of peace.  The real key to experiencing God's peace is to allow ourselves to be filled with the presence of the Holy Spirit during the ordinary routines of life so that which seems profane (ordinary), can become sacred.  That which feels ugly can reveal its beauty.  That which feels God-absent can show itself to be God-filled.

The Jewish people and the early Christians were great Sabbath keepers.  Think about Sabbath for a second.  We have a God, who when describing what the created order is like builds in a vacation every week.  A time for rest, peace, and thoughtfulness.  What does that teach us about God and his character?

The church for many years had a liturgy for daily living.  When the faithful awoke they spent a little time in prayer, when they broke for lunch they spent a little time in prayer, before they went to bed they spent a little time in prayer.  In many places these hours of prayer were experienced in community.  Now this can become religious activity (a duty we perform to try to be more excepted by God) which is the spiritual kiss of death, but if instead of seeing it as a duty we see it as an opportunity, an opportunity to experience Sabbath during our day, little vacations from the ordinary pressures of life where we can discover God's peace and beauty, then Sabbath becomes a well of life flowing from God to us.

Doesn't Sabbath sound beautiful and appealing?

What if the church made it's central mission to help people experience the beauty of a relationship with Jesus by teaching people how to reconnect with the rest and peace of God?  What if they made their central mission helping people get to know the Lord of the Sabbath; the king of rest, of peace, and of wholeness.

Jesus said, “Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”  (Mt 11:28–30).

What if those words are actually true?  What if that truly is God's nature?


Thursday, July 14, 2016

What a Wild Several Months!!


Almost 17 years ago I planted the Chattanooga Vineyard and it is easy to forget what it's like to pioneer a new church.  Let me fill you in on some of the exciting things that have happened.


  1. We left Chattanooga the week before Christmas and arrived in Houston in time to have Christmas in Texas for the first time in 16 years.
  2. I enrolled at Texas A&M to begin finishing my degree that I had left undone for nearly 30 years.  I took 12 hours and made a 4.0.  I now have about 19 hours until I'm finished!  Being able to sit and learn, to get to know A&M again and meet lots of new friends was WONDERFUL.  I got up everyday feeling like I needed to pinch myself.  Who gets to do this? My college-aged friends do not take this time for granted!  Learning for learning's sake is a precious gift!
  3. Kellie got a job teaching at the Brazos School and is finishing her certification to teach in Texas.
  4. Though we have made less money than we have since the time I was in my early twenties (try a 40K hit to your income, it smarts) God has provided.  Our dear friends Jon and Denise Bowden allowed us to live on their farm/vineyard in Anderson Texas.  It was a truly wonderful time and getting to hang out with Jon and Denise on the weekends was soul-restoring after nearly 17 years of ministry.  The property was amazing and I can tell you the stars at night are big and bright deep in the heart of Texas.
  5. Anderson was about 40 miles from Bryan/College Station so for the last 5 months we've commuted.  This last week both the Peils and Anderles moved into the Bryan/College Station area. We are renting a little 1920's bungalow style house three blocks from downtown Bryan, and the Peils got a great place near College Station High School in College Station.  Everyone (the Peils and Anderles) is in and out during July but we should get into a rhythm starting in August.
  6. In August we will begin bringing people together and setting the culture of the church that will be the The Vineyard Church of Bryan/College Station. 
  7. There are so many things that I am so excited about when it comes to my relationship with Jesus and what it means to live in Christ-centered community.  I will be posting about those things a little bit each week.
Here's how you can help.  Pray that our core team develops a unified vision and culture for the church.  As always, we can use your financial support.  You can give to the pioneering work of The Vineyard in Bryan/College Station by clicking donate.  Thanks we appreciate your support and prayers!