Saturday, November 22, 2014

Preferred Seating at the Lord's Table

The news has been filled this past week with controversies related to issues like immigration and racial tension in America. Political pundits passionately endorsed or railed against President Obama's new policy impacting undocumented residents in the United States. The whole country seems to be holding its collective breath in anticipation of the grand jury decision on the circumstances related to the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson.

Why is there so much debate and tension on these issues in our modern society? It seems that with all of the modern technology and information that we have, we should be able to get along better with one another. The problem is, though, that we still live in a present evil age. Jesus ushered in the kingdom of God, but our human existence is still infiltrated with sin and brokenness. As society advances, we can still hold hatred in our hearts. We still develop moral codes based on our own interpretations of how human beings should interact with one another. Often those moral codes end up separating people into "us" and "them." We tend to view people as "outsiders" and "insiders."

Life doesn't have to be lived that way, though. The kingdom of God is at hand. It is here. We have hope thanks to Jesus Christ. That is the transformational message of the gospel of Jesus Christ. We can be reconciled to God, and we can be reconciled to one another. There does not need to be an "us" and a "them." There is just "we" thanks to the scandalous amounts of grace that God is readily willing to give us. We can enjoy redeemed, joyful relationships with one another. There is no rich or poor, slave or free, black or white, liberal or conservative, or anything else in the kingdom of God.

Street Psalms authors Kris Rocke and Scott Dewey point out that, "When Jesus gives preferred seating to the hungry at the Jesus meal he isn't relegating the well fed to the cheap seats. He invites them to exactly the same seats - which as it happens, the rich find most difficult to accept. There is only one kind of seating at the Lord's table - preferred seating. Judas sits next to John. Friends sit next to enemies. We simply can't make sense of this when using the moral operating system of this world. It doesn't compute, which is why Jesus insists that we are being given a whole new operating system by the one who authors and perfects it." - Meals From Below

That's it. God is for all of us, regardless of the social norms that we might depend on to separate ourselves from one another. We all have preferred seating at the Lord's table because of what Jesus Christ did for us. As a pastor, this gives me hope. We all have hope, even when there is tension in our society. Christians should be leading the way in our society when it comes to issues like immigration or racial tension. We have the hope of Christ in us. I lead a multi-ethnic church and I live in a a primarily African-American neighborhood because I believe so strongly in the transformational power of the gospel of Jesus Christ. I write and speak about controversial topics because I believe that human beings can do better than our own flawed societal constructs. God's love wins out every time. 

Monday, November 10, 2014

A Party on the Margins

In Luke 14:12-24, Jesus tells a parable about a great banquet. Speaking to a group of powerful religious leaders, Jesus explains to them that they should not invite their powerful and rich friends to their party. Instead, "when you give a feast, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind, and you will be blessed, because they cannot repay you. For you will be repaid at the resurrection of the just." 

The concept of extending generosity and friendship to people on the margins of a city was a revolutionary concept to the original audience that Jesus was speaking with, and the concept remains revolutionary to modern Americans. The American Dream narrative that we live in encourages us to become as wealthy and influential as we can in the short lives that we lead. In our ambition to get to the top, we often have to step on people to get there. We distance ourselves from people living on the margins of society in order to advance ourselves. People did it back in Jesus' day, and people still do it today. It happens because we live in a present evil age, an age that is defined by sin and corruption even though Jesus ushered in the Kingdom of God. We could choose life by living in God's Story, but instead we choose death by finding our identity in the sinful desires of our own flesh, idolatry in the world, and temptations from our enemy.

The Kingdom of God looks like a big party with people living on the margins of our cities, small towns, and rural areas. If modern, influential American Christians really took Jesus' challenge seriously, we would abandon the emptiness of the upwardly mobile lifestyle and join the party with the poor, the crippled, the lame, and the blind. It's there that we will receive our blessings from the Lord, and those blessings will surely be eternal blessings that will remain forever. We find joy in life by giving away power and resources to the people who need it the most. 

Personally, I feel closest to God when I'm spending time with homeless friends in East Liberty or vulnerable youth in Homewood. These are people with whom the Holy Spirit has given me a passion to build relationships. I still have a lot of hardness in my heart, and I miss out on opportunities all the time, but I am making progress and God is transforming my heart to care for people in need. What about you? Who are the people on the margins where you live? Is God calling you to throw a party?

Thursday, October 16, 2014

A Generational Legacy

I'm working on writing a sermon this afternoon. I dove into the Bible, which prompted me to want to dive into my biblical commentaries. I pulled out an old gem of a commentary that was printed in 1929 which had somehow made its way to the bookshelf in my office. Curious about how I had come across this particular commentary, I opened to the beginning of the book to find the following inscription:


If you can't read the words very well, the handwritten inscription in the commentary says, "Kirk McCabe, December 25, 1961 from Papa & G'ma." My great grandparents gave the book to my dad as a Christmas present when he was 16 years old. My dad held onto it for years, and he gave it to me earlier this year when he was giving away some of his theological books to his kids. I didn't know at the time that this particular book had been given to him by his grandparents... I had originally wanted it because I love old books. Yes, I'm nerdy like that.

I got to reflecting on what this revelation meant. My great grandparents were followers of Jesus Christ, and they instilled their faith in their own children, and, as this gift represents, they wanted their grandchildren to follow Jesus. My mom and dad in turn desired for me and my sisters to follow Christ. We are all serving the Lord, and I am so excited that my daughters are both followers of Jesus Christ. In fact, my daughters gave me the Bible that is open behind the commentary in the picture (that's Kyra and Sierra in the photo on my desk).

It struck me that this is a great example of building a powerful legacy. Faith in Jesus Christ is the most important legacy that one generation can leave for the next generation. It's important to pray for our children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. We can be creative with the gifts that we give, in terms of giving things that lead children closer to Jesus Christ. We can model stewardship and generosity. We can live by biblical principles. God's transformational power and love can transcend time and generations. Our short lives on this earth matter. My family is living proof of that. I'm so thankful that my great-grandparents chose to leave a Christian legacy to the generations that followed after them. 

Friday, October 3, 2014

Urban Ministry and My Mother In Law

My mother-in-law, Sandy, visited us here in Pittsburgh for the past week. I really like Sandy, so it's never a problem when she's in town. She just kind of immerses herself in whatever our family is doing. It makes me laugh, though, to think about what she immerses herself in when she jumps in with our family. We have a very strange lifestyle. Living out incarnational leadership in a complex, urban environment like Homewood can lead to a bizarre life. We love it, but it's very unpredictable. God could literally bring any person or any circumstance across my family's path at pretty much any given time.

I asked Sandy what she thought of her visit, and she described how "interesting" it is to spend time with us here in Pittsburgh. She really is quite a trooper, and she's learned to be open to anything. As I look back on the week, I reflect on the stream of humanity that made it's way into the McCabe house in Homewood for after school snacks, to jump on our trampoline, to share meals with us, or for impromptu counseling sessions on our front porch or in the back yard. One neighbor kid hit another neighbor kid in the face with a rock. There was blood and there was conflict, and the whole dramatic scenario of neighbors and relatives in conflict with one another somehow made its way to our home. We visited our neighbor's home to catch up with him and to play with his little pit bull puppies. Kyra read books to Kindergarten students at the elementary school next to us. I spent time in the school catching up with LAMP mentors and mentees. We took walks in the neighborhood. We are fully present in a place that most people try to avoid at all costs. It's where God has called our family to plant ourselves.

Our little piece of property has somehow turned into a community center. We love it. It's challenging, but we love it. Somehow we are able to live out the gospel of Jesus Christ in the midst of the chaos. But, we don't just live in Homewood and hang out with our neighbors. God gave me the opportunity to preach a sermon about the mission of Jesus in the heart of East Liberty at North Way East End. We were a part of launching student ministry for middle school and high school students throughout the East End. Julie had multiple Bible studies with women throughout the city. I got to connect with lots of different kinds of people through my work as a pastor, ranging from homeless people to business leaders and faith leaders and many different types of people. One of the best parts of being a pastor in an urban environment is that I am able to build relationships with such a diverse range of people. It's fun. Challenging, but fun.

Sandy is gaining an appreciation for the calling that the Lord has given our family, and the more she visits the more she participates in that calling. That's kind of the point of following Jesus, though, and she definitely understands that. When we follow Jesus, we must be open to radically and passionately participate in whatever Jesus might ask us to do to advance his kingdom at any given moment. We must embrace risk and unpredictability in order to fully experience the joy that Jesus has for us when we sell out to God's purposes in God's mission. It's hard sometimes, but this type of living presents amazing opportunities to experience profound purpose and meaning in life. It's messy. It doesn't make any rational sense. And it's right where God wants my family to be right now. I wouldn't want it any other way. 

Thursday, October 2, 2014

The Excitement of New Mentoring Matches

I stopped by Faison School in Homewood today at lunch time, and I happened to arrive on a day when two new school-based mentees were being matched with mentors from North Way Christian Community. The L.A.M.P. program has been going strong in Homewood, now in its ninth year. Several hundred children have been matched with mentors from L.A.M.P. partner churches over the past nine years. However, I have to say that it never gets old watching new matches get going. Adults and kids kind of enter into the relationships with excitement and often apprehension, but after months and years together the fledgling mentoring matches often turn into life long friendships. The mentoring relationships are transformational.

So, hats off to the new mentors who are spending several hours of every week with some of Pittsburgh's shining starts, the children who are living and attending schools in Homewood. Mentoring is an adventure. It truly is a journey. But, the outcomes are incredible. I can't wait to see what happens with the mentoring matches that were made today. Individual lives will be better, the public school system will be better, the neighborhood will be better, families will be better, and the city of Pittsburgh will be better... all because of the impact that L.A.M.P. mentors are able to make. 

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Prayer for Homewood

This morning I gathered to pray for the city of Pittsburgh, and for the Homewood neighborhood in particular, with a group of Christian leaders from many different parts of the city. The group included people who live in Homewood and are active at empowering residents at the grass roots level, and powerful leaders who are working at the systemic levels of economics, politics, and church denominations to steward their influence on behalf of vulnerable people in our city.

We gathered together to pray because we know that God is always on a mission to redeem every person and every place in our city, and he chooses to work through his church to accomplish his purposes. That is our calling as followers of Jesus Christ in this particular city at this particular time. We prayed for the common good of our city, for increasing levels of shalom, and for God to continue to move in mighty ways in our midst.

There is something empowering about prayer. No matter how much evil exists in this world, prayer reminds us that God's Kingdom is here now and that we can experience the love of God in profound ways. Prayer strengthens our faith which gives us hope in the midst of struggles. God is doing an amazing work in Homewood and in the city of Pittsburgh. Christians are leading the way in a process of transformation that is underway. It's an exciting movement to be a part of. 

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Good News

Jesus is a really big deal. Jesus is amazing. Jesus is what it's all about. I shared that Good News with a lot of people over this past week. I shared that news because I have become reconciled with God through Jesus Christ, and I'm now passionate about seeing other people become reconciled with God through Jesus Christ.

I don't share the Good News in harsh ways, though. I do my best to share the Good News through authentic relationships with people that God brings across my path. And, God brings a lot of different people across my path. This week God has allowed me to have amazing conversations with a couple young men who are successful financial planners living in affluent urban neighborhoods, a pharmacist, a homeless man who is clearly currently off of his medications, a high school student at a local alternative school, a kid from our neighborhood, and many other different people.

I am thankful for each of the opportunities to point people toward Jesus. Sometimes I use words to do that, and sometimes I use actions. The point is to share about and demonstrate the love of Christ according the the promptings of the Holy Spirit. The process requires discernment, but pointing people to the profound love of Jesus Christ is one of my main purposes, not only as a pastor, but as a human being. The gospel of Jesus Christ is Good News.