Monday, June 15, 2009

kiss me goodbye I'm defying gravity

- Wicked

After reflecting on my last post I realized that I did not quite hit what it was that has been bothering me the last couple weeks.

It is true that I find the habits I formed at Calvin to be more difficult to maintain in Jamestown. But to be more specific I just spent a year immersed in being an RA. I was focused so much on how to be a servant to my dorm community and how to model a good Christian faith that it really rubbed off on the way I lived my life. Coming back home, where I no longer had the responsibility of being a model or servant for anyone in particular I didn't. I automatically became more focused on doing what made me happy or fulfilled for the time being.

And that is what the problem is. Partially due to past baggage, and my previous experiences living at home and without the concrete understanding of what God wants me to do to serve him where I am at, I have become more selfish. I realized this more clearly when I was talking to a friend of mine at church. We were talking about why we find it difficult to go to our home church. We both had found other churches we enjoyed going to much more and felt partially guilty for not wanting to go to the church our parents attend even though both of us are members.

This made me think, what is it about this church that I don't like compared to Mars Hill, the church I attend when I am at Calvin. Well one obvious thing that sticks out is the fact that Rob Bell is the pastor at Mars Hill, but I realized that its not just Rob Bell. The problem was, my church in Jamestown, Zion Covenant Church, has gone through four pastors since I have graduated from high school. The pastor we have now seems great, but I leave not particularly empowered to change the world. Whereas, at Mars Hill, usually when I go I feel recharged to do something and change the world I live in.

Here's the difference, Mars Hill because of its size and resources is capable of making big dents in fixing the worlds problems, one of the great blessings of a large church body. But what about Zion? My parents talk about ministry Zion could do, but because of it's location in half commercial half middle class homes, nothing exceptional stands out to me. There isn't much Zion can do to reach out to its neighbors that it isn't already doing.

Yet, Pastor Rick pointed out this Sunday that one of the ways the kingdom of God is realized on earth is by its church taking care of one another. I realize now that that is the biggest ministry that our church needs to focus on right now is how to take care of one another. After a huge fiasco over opinions about our pastoral staff a huge rift was created in our church and we have been working for about five years to mend that. Most of that time I have spent in college away from the problem, which is why I forgot how important it was. Moreover, after realizing how awful Christians can treat one another within the same church I kind of wanted to remove myself from the situation. I was very angry and upset to realize that Christians would treat each other in such an un-Christian and hurtful way.

Therefore, I cannot expect Zion to re-charge and empower me the way Mars Hill does because it is a completely different place with different people and problems. Instead of focusing on how Zion can serve me I need to think about how I can serve the people of Zion, where I am now. It has been an interesting shift to go from having tons of responsibility and having a feeling of purpose in day to day life to complete vacation. I still have not figured out what God wants me to do this summer. I feel pretty hopeless in Jamestown because there are much less opportunities to serve my community, as well as less drive to do so because it is harder to see the potential for change in Jamestown. We shall see how this summer turns out.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

when will the bubble pop?

Whenever I return from college I forget how much of a bubble Calvin is. Life at a Christian school is not normal life. It may be normal life for those of us who attend because we choose to go to a Christian school for a reason. However, when I return home I remember how much more unique my life at school is.

My college experience has been amazing and life changing, and I wouldn't trade it for the world but it is not typical. It really is amazing to me how being a Christian is so counter cultural. I never really thought of it that way in high school partially because I never read through the gospels in their entirety and partially because I worked hard to fit into the culture of my school.

Yet, I am more aware now how different my life at college is from what my life was like in high school. It is hard to mesh those together, when I am home I tend to slip back into who I was in high school because that is who everyone expects me to be. I mean when I sit back and think about things and have conversations with people it is obvious my ideas and opinions have changed, but I tend to slip into the same habits.

I went to a wedding this past Sunday that was really great. Eric and Alanna are two of the most thoughtful, passionate Christians I know and their wedding reflected that. Yet, it didn't seem to fit in what I feel Jamestown is. Jamestown to me is not a place that I associate with spiritual growth. I think more of maintaining my faith or watching it stagnate. I don't feel moved to action.

What I came to realize is that how I live my life in general is extremely different in Grand Rapids, versus being in Jamestown. In Grand Rapids I am comfortable talking and expressing my faith because the majority of people around me expect it or agree. Whereas, in Jamestown, I feel like I have to be more secular. I have church friends in Jamestown but I am not that close with them. My closer friends generally don't go to church on Sunday. At school, it is almost the complete opposite; it's pretty much assumed that everyone goes to church.

At school I feel like it is easier to live my faith because the majority of my friends are encouraging me to to so. My faith at home was always based much more on guilt of what I am not doing instead of learning and growing. The question that remains is how will my life be different when I am not at school? When I am not at home? When I finally have my own house in the potentially new city I find myself in after I graduate?

Monday, June 1, 2009

what a wedding

check out our second edition to jen and my summer vlog series!

It was an epically cute wedding. Eric and Alanna Landin set the bar pretty high. The wedding was at Zion Covenant Church and the reception was at Camp Mission Meadows.

Check it out!