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Brian McLaren Responds to Session 10

Much of my life and ministry have been profoundly influenced and shaped by Bill Hybels and Brian McLaren. Bill Hybels inspired in me an Acts 2 vision for what the church is supposed to be that has haunted and blessed me since my very first day of ministry almost fifteen years ago. Brian McLaren's words and example have helped me understand the radical shifts our world is undergoing and have given me hope that a new kind of Christian can do a new kind of good in the world -- and somehow, none of that is new. 

I love that in the Kingdom, leaders as different as Bill Hybels and Brian McLaren are brothers and co-laborers. Don’t miss Brian’s upcoming Everything Must Change Tour next year, and don’t miss his thoughtful response to Bill’s unforgettable session here:

Bill Hybels’ closing session on inspiration was beautifully book-ended by an inspiring father-son team, Patrick John and Patrick Henry Hughes, and Kirk Franklin's unparalleled musical inspiration. Even by satellite or download, the energy and emotion in the room in South Barrington were palpable.

During Bill's talk, I kept thinking of Nehemiah's powerful words (8:10), "The joy of the Lord is your strength." Simple words, but amazingly powerful. What Bill called motivation and inspiration could, I think, also be rendered as joy. And the ten practices by which Bill has been able to sustain his own motivation for over thirty years (no small accomplishment!) could be seen as facets of practicing joy: the joy of knowing God, the joy of being called by God and gifted by God, the joy of being surrounded with a cloud of witnesses (Hebrews 12:1-2) -- inspiring people past and present, the joy of creatureliness (acknowledging that we have a body which requires exercise, which responds to its environment, which benefits from recreation, and so on).

Last year was the one-hundredth anniversary of the Azusa Street Revival that launched the Pentecostal movement, which most would agree is the single most important spiritual phenomenon since the Reformation. Putting weaknesses of the movement aside (after all, the very best religious movements have plenty of weaknesses), I think we could agree that Pentecostals know what Nehemiah was talking about. There is the strength of Pentecostal joy that many of us have seen in slums and squatter areas, in storefront churches in disadvantaged urban areas, and in megachurches in the suburbs too: it is the strength of joy that enables us to prevail against the odds and rise above the obstacles and endure the suffering -- including the special suffering that often comes to those who lead.

Isn't it fascinating that joy is commanded again and again in Scripture (for example, Philippians 4:4)? This is a way, I think, of telling us that joy can in fact be practiced, and that realization was the heart of Bill's message. If you're a leader, like David you have to learn to "encourage yourself in the Lord." You have to learn to practice joy.

Let me offer several short reflections on four specific points in Bill's talk, relating them to this command to rejoice in the Lord always (and again, I say, rejoice!).

  1. Bill told a story about the torture of futility -- moving piles of dirt from here to there, and then back here again. He contrasted futility with the joy of knowing our calling. This joy, I think, is the original joy of creation: the joy of being co-laborers with God, colleagues in God's ongoing creative project. In a real sense, the joy that motivates God in creating the universe, in guiding its unfolding each new day, in showering it with possibilities and inviting the whole universe to move according to God's good pleasure … this is a joy into which we can enter, whether we're a stay-at-home-mom, a high school math teacher, a filmmaker, a business executive, or a pastor. We enter into God's creative joy through our unique calling. Hallelujah!
  2. Bill spoke in several different ways about exposing ourselves to people with contagious joy. I thought of the Proverb (13:20) that talks about carefully choosing our companions because that choice helps form our identity. Whether it's the colleagues we hire, the historic heroes we learn about through biographies, the speakers and artists we encounter at special events (like the Summit), the EIP's (exceptionally inspiring people) we go out of our way to be with ... the choice to be around joyful people is a choice to become a joyful person. I am thinking now (I hope you'll do the same) of the people in my life who bring me joy, and I'm thanking God.
  3. Three of Bill's practices for maintaining inspiration and motivation relate to our humanity: exercise, environment, and recreation (items 7, 8, and 9). It's so easy for us to forget that God made us with bodies that need exercise and sleep and nutritious food (and the ability to say no to still more tortilla chips, my personal dietary nemesis). It's so easy to forget that God also made water and mountains and songbirds and snow and coral reefs and beaches and forests -- as Paul says, "all things richly to enjoy" (1 Timothy 6:17) -- and that our joy will be less if we don't take time to experience these God-given joy enhancers. This, by the way, is something Bill has modeled so positively through the years -- his love of boating has given so many of us more permission to be human beings with hobbies and interests instead of human doings with nothing but duties and to-do lists.
  4. Bill concluded his review of joy-practices by emphasizing the importance of personal spiritual disciplines, and I was struck by the reason he implied for these disciplines. They aren't a kind of "I'm holier than average" score card for Bill, but instead, they're a way for him to hear the voice of God, to stay sensitive to the promptings of the Holy Spirit. He recounted a story of a recent touch by the Spirit (after picking up a stomach bug in India, and consequently being sick in an Australian hotel room). The disciplines, he implied, are valuable in large part because they help make space in our hearts for God to draw near to us and let us know we are "sought after," beloved, accepted, known. This is a joy that neither Bill nor any of us can completely describe because it "passes understanding." As the Psalm says (Psalm 16:11): "You show me the path of life. In your presence there is fullness of joy; In your right hand are pleasures forevermore."

Many of us are tempted to rewrite Nehemiah's words:
In success and achievement is our strength.
In knowledge and superior understanding is our strength.
In correctness and argumentative ability is our strength.
In conflict avoidance and playing it safe is our strength.
In financial prosperity and security is our strength.

But none of these is an improvement on the original: The joy of the Lord is our strength. May we savor the God-given power of joy, inspiration, motivation. It is the motion that fuels e-motion and puts us into motion. Thank God for the infusion of joy that so many have experienced through The Leadership Summit 2007.

Published 11 August 2007 07:27 PM by Ray Pelletier
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Comments

# Kerry said on 11 August, 2007 11:38 PM
Thank you so much for this blog--my first time using one! This has been my 2nd Summit. and I've been "processing" Bill's final talk because I think it's the best starting point for planning and praying about my action plan post-Summit. The single greatest challenge for me as a Christian has been to remain faithfully engaged in the practice of spiritual disciplines. I have to agree like McLaren, I was struck by the reasons Hybels gives for practicing them—reasons that were not (1) cliché (2) burdensome or (3) guilt-inducing. The way he presented it tugged at my heart and just made me want to jump right in there and reorder my life (time will tell)! What Hybels implies, as McLaren points out, is that these disciplines yield something incredibly sweet—simply having God SPEAK to ME! What an exciting reason to engage in the practice of prayer & bible study, God just might speak to me! I often forget how exciting it is to hear from God as in Jer 33:2-3 "This is what the LORD says, he who made the earth, the LORD who formed it and established it—the LORD is his name: 'Call to me and I will answer you and tell you great and unsearchable things you do not know.' WOW! The God of all creation desires to speak intimately to me! Just amazing!
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# Paul Gauche said on 14 August, 2007 12:54 PM
08:10:07:5:00 PM I could tell that the Holy Spirit was doing something in my soul on Friday afternoon. From the moment the Leadership Summit began, stuff was churning inside me. I’m calling them “promptings.” By Friday afternoon, after a day and a half of great inspiring sessions, John Ortberg's teaching from the Book of Esther finally settled me deeply into scripture. That was so refreshing! And then Bill's amazing interview with Richard Curtis reminded me again that God often calls us to do things that are so big only God can accomplish them. Well, okay then, let’s go! All kinds of clarity about several different ministry issues started to come together—started to get crystallized for me between 2:00 and 5:00 on Friday afternoon. I was deeply moved...again. I’ve attended many Leadership Summits going way back to first time I came to Willow years ago, when after the first day I went back to my hotel room and just wept. Why? Because I was all by myself! I remember getting down on my face on the motel room floor (I think I used a towel!) and pleading with God to help me figure out a way to get “one more person to come with me next year.” How would I possibly convince the leaders to let me do that? The next year I brought 10 leaders with me. God’s that big! We drove all the way from Minneapolis. Every time I attend a Leadership Summit, ministry gets clearer. Every time I attend a Leadership Summit, God stirs. Every time I attend a Leadership Summit, it’s as if the Holy Spirit has a one-on-one with me that won’t stop. It happened again on Friday when an image came to me that I couldn’t shake. I was acquainted with a family many years ago whose father—in his early forties—was a Navy pilot. This young pilot was stationed at NAS Whidbey Island and on one particular night was preparing to fly maneuvers. He was sitting at one end of the runway in the cockpit of his jet—and A-4 Skyhawk, going through the preflight checklist before takeoff. He’d flipped every switch, tweaked every dial, turned every knob that needed to be flipped, tweaked and turned and was finally cleared for take-off. The plane sat on the runway with its breaks locked just on this side of that enormous burst of fuel, courage, thrust and lift that we call takeoff. The plane was at a standstill—it just sat there idling. The tower radioed the pilot, but there was no response. Finally, someone got in a vehicle and raced to the idling jet, climbed up to the cockpit and found the pilot—this young man in his early forties, a young man with a wife and family, hopes and dreams, goals and desires slumped over the controls of the A-4. He was seconds from takeoff. He was moments from going from a complete standstill to 11,220 pounds of thrust in to the night sky; he was ready to transition from a dead stop to 674 miles an hour. And he was dead of a heart attack. I am now 50 years old. I’ve been in ministry serving Christ in the lives of people for more than half of that. This is the greatest thrill ride I’ve ever been on. Every day is better than the next. For the most part, every conversation I have, every class I teach, every message I deliver, every meeting I attend, every plan I make, every song I sing, every life I touch, every challenge I face, every follower I lead—it’s more thrilling than the last. And I’ve got a lot left in me—a lot! That’s what I was reminded of Friday afternoon through John Ortberg, Richard Curtis and Bill Hybels. The image of slumping over in the cockpit of a jet called ‘ministry’ just terrified me! I’ve got a ton left in me! And I don’t want to get to the front end of the runway today, tomorrow or the next day—or any day soon and flip, tweak and turn all the switches, dials and knobs only to slump over in the cockpit. So I’m re-upping, right now. I’ve got a ton left in me and I’m going to risk different, pray different, trust different, preach different, sing different, teach different, converse different, lead different —I’m going to believe different because God is not finished with me yet and his jet in me this jet is ready for take-off. I am grateful for the awesome opportunity to hear God speak deep truth, transformational change and effective conviction into my soul on a Friday afternoon. Sunday’s coming. It’s time to fly!
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# Russ Hutto said on 16 August, 2007 02:59 PM
This was a very motivating talk for me. As the last session, it was becoming tough for me to sit still, but because I want to be a better Christ follower and servant-leader, I buckled down and turned on my listening ears! This blog has been extremely useful for me in "processing" all this great information out too. I've been able to review the hilights of each session while going over my own notes and it's been effective in cementing some of the applicable concepts into my mind and heart. God's Best, Russ
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# Kristen Aikman said on 16 August, 2007 08:32 PM

Hello Russ!  I am so glad this blog and site has been helpful to you in processing the Summit.  Appreciate your feedback.  We really wanted to create a place just for that!  Thanks!

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# John said on 18 August, 2007 09:51 PM
"Brian McLaren's words and example have helped me understand the radical shifts our world is undergoing and have given me hope that a new kind of Christian can do a new kind of good in the world -- and somehow, none of that is new." New kind of Christan? New kind of good? If Christ does not change why would Christians or Christianity change and what new type of good is it that Christ wants to do?
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# Lynnette said on 18 September, 2007 03:52 PM
Does anybody know if the video clip that Bill used in the last session of Easter Sunday when the people walked through the Resurrection Doors is available?
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