After watching it a few times, I started hearing it against a beat of some kind. So I played around with it in iMovie for awhile and ended up with this… True & Better (The REMIX)… a 2 minute collision of TRUTH & THUMP. Keller goes street. Word to your mother.
I saw this for the first time when Randy Elrodtweeted about it this morning, and it had me cracking up!
Julian Smith is hilarious! And for those who can’t find the humor here, Julian takes a knee to quell any concern or dissent over his motives. Actually, I just wanted to use the words “quell” and “dissent”. I win! At any rate, lighten up, relax and laugh. After all, it done been blessed!
Have you ever had a dream shattered? Been disappointed? Had your hopes dashed? Had more questions than answers? Had to let go of your plans? Had the bottom fall out of your life? Had a broken heart? Of course you have. You know how I know? Because the blood is running warm in your veins. First time author and Nashville, TN area pastorPete Wilson has just released his first book, “Plan B” (Thomas Nelson) and he has a message for you: “you are not alone!”
I’m going to be honest with you. I read much of “Plan B” through tears. I’ve shared various parts of my story here over the past couple months, and it would be an understatement to say that I am right in the center of my own “Plan B” situation. As I have been walking out my own “Plan B”, learning to let go of my plans and dreams for myself and embrace the story God is writing for me, I have wrestled hard with the questions… “why”, “when”, “how”, “what if”, “why not”, “now what”, etc. If it were possible for a book to be a life soundtrack, “Plan B” would be mine. If that sounds like I’m telling your story, then this book is for you.
Reading “Plan B” has been at times confirmation, at times cathartic and at other times a road map. There were moments when I felt like it was a checklist, where I could look back at the milestones in my own journey and match them to the heart-process Pete described in the book. Other moments, it was such a release for my heart, giving me permission to feel the way I feel and understand that the way I feel doesn’t intimidate God. Then there were moments when I re-read, highlighted and collected wisdom like a squirrel gathering nuts for the winter, knowing that I would need it again very soon.
Pete’s conversational tone and writing style make you feel like you’re just talking with a good friend about working through the nuts and bolts of life. When he talks, in chapter 6, about how “our faith must rest on God’s identity and not necessarily his activity”, it challenged me to look back over my life and remember the times when my heart was so swayed by what I thought God should be doing instead of being anchored in who God is. Ultimately, our “Plan B” is most often actually God’s “Plan A”, once He has dealt with our expectations and entitlement… what we think we deserve.
Is it possible you don’t really want God? Is it possible you just want what you think God can give you?
I’ve seen some criticism of “Plan B”, stating that while the book boldly poses a lofty question, “What do you do when God doesn’t show up the way you thought He would?”, it doesn’t deliver when it’s time for the answer. I take issue what that argument and propose that perhaps a significant misstep of much of today’s Christianity is that when it comes to offering answers, it often over-promises but under-delivers. Life is not full of answers, and neither is faith. But you know what both ARE full of? Questions.
Is it possible that we have become so accustomed to the bait-and-switch of modern evangelicalism, where the false promise of answers are dangled like a carrot before the cross, that we are afraid of actually living with the questions? Have we been so long seduced by 3-piece suit-wearing, name-it-and-claim-it Jesus pitch-men who write checks with their words that life can’t cash that our hearts are unable to fathom a God who is to be found in the balance… in the tension… in the questions?
In one of my favorite quotes from “Plan B”, Pete addresses this, saying:
Instead of an answer, God offers us something better. He offers us a solution. He offers us the cross.
While Pete reassures us of the finality of the cross as the ultimate solution, he also honestly confesses that does not relieve us, as believers, of both the opportunity and obligation to live by faith… to live with the questions.
Even as I write this and “Plan B” hits store shelves, Nashville has been hit with a historic flood that has left many people homeless, displaced, grasping for hope, asking the hard questions, suddenly and unexpectedly living their own “Plan B”.
You won’t find “5 steps to your breakthrough” or “12 ways to successful living” here. But what you will find is someone who is confident that God sits on the throne, but who also isn’t afraid to say that sometimes life still just sucks. Is “Plan B” going to give you your answers? Maybe not. But it will give you permission to ask the questions. And sometimes, that’s all your heart needs.
It has been close to a year since I have blogged with any kind of consistency. Since then, a lot has happened.
About a year ago, I experienced what writers and storytellers call an “inciting event.” According to Suite 101, an inciting event is:
…the moment or plot point in a script that kicks the story into motion. It occurs after the set up or exposition and everything that follows the inciting incident should be a result of the inciting incident. It is where a story really begins.
It is that moment in the script where the protagonist’s world is turned upside down and he/she must then set about resolving the change in circumstances that the incident has brought about. It is generally a clear and defined moment that is easily identifiable.
Characters don’t change without being forced to change. An inciting incident is the event in a movie that causes upheaval in the protagonist life. The protagonist, then, naturally seeks to return to stability. And in order to do that, he HAS to solve his new problem.
While we may tend to prefer comfortable, warm and fuzzy feel-good stories, those kind of stories can tend to be long on emotion but short on depth. Ever the master story-teller, God specializes in character development. It was in that spirit that God used this particular inciting event in my life to peel back the layers of my heart and show me what was really there. It was not great and consequently, I was broken.
It was during this time that I was introduced to the ministry of Timothy Keller, pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City, and particularly his teachings on idolatry in our hearts and culture. Between his messages on idolatry, followed by the October ’09 release of his book “Counterfeit Gods”, which digs much deeper into the heart of idolatry, God pretty much wrecked my life and my heart. The past few months in particular have brought with them a systematic deconstructing of so much stuff that I had given inordinate place in my heart to.
“The human heart is indeed a factory that mass-produces idols.”
Wow. That’s why. Every single day I am learning to be more and more aware and in tune with what my heart is prone to, choosing to lay those things at the cross and looking to Christ as my ultimate source of worth, acceptance and identity.
This has been, and continues to be, a massive heart and life shift for me which is actively reshaping just about everything I’ve known or understood about sin, salvation and grace. In fact, this is reshaping how I see and process, well, just about everything.
“I will give you a new heart, and I will put a new spirit in you. I will take out your stony, stubborn heart and give you a tender, responsive heart.” – Ezekiel 36:26
This is the single most painful yet beautiful experience I’ve ever walked through. I have changed… a lot. I have let go… of a lot. I’ve been learning a lot and I’ve been unlearning a lot. I’ve been experiencing what it means to let go and also what it means to pursue. I am still very much in the middle of this journey, but I’ve finally come to a place where I’m ready to talk about it to more than just my core group of close friends who have been walking through this with me.
I’m passionate about my faith, about life and about culture, and how all those things intersect. So, this blog will be some sort of a collision of all those things.