Life Together has moved!

I am thrilled to announce that Life Together has moved
to its new home at our redesigned website at

http://graceslo.org/lifetogether


Thanks for clicking over, giving it a look
and telling me what you think.


Please update your blogrolls.


Do you know?


This shocking billboard, sponsored by American Athiests, showed up this season at the entrance to the Lincoln Tunnel in New York.

You may not think its a myth, but do you know how to converse with someone who does?

Every Thursday morning at 6:00 AM, 30 men and I have been grappling with how to do that using Tim Keller's The Reason for God as a guide.

(I wish I could get every person in our church to thoughtfully read this book from cover to cover!)

In chapter 9, entitled "The Knowledge of God", Keller argues that any discussion of human rights (and everyone argues for human rights) is based on an assumed knowledge of God. . . .

All of nature is based on violence. Yet we inescapably believe it is wrong for stronger human individuals or groups to kill weaker ones. If violence is totally natural, why would it be wrong for strong humans to trample weak ones? There is no basis for moral obligation unless we argue that nature is in some part unnatural. We can't know that nature is broken in some way unless there is some supernatural standard of normalcy apart from nature by which we can judge right and wrong. That means there would have to be heaven or God or some kind of divine order outside of nature in order to make that judgment.

There is only one way out of this conundrum. We can pick up the Biblical account of things and see if it explains our moral sense better that a secular view. If the world was made by a God of peace, justice and love, then that is why we know that violence, oppression, and hate are wrong. If the world is fallen, broken, and needs to be redeemed, that explains the violence and disorder we see.

If you believe human rights are a reality, then it makes much more sense that God exists than that he does not. If you insist on a secular view of the world and yet you continue to pronounce some things right and wrong, then I hope you see the deep disharmony between the world your intellect has devised and the real world (and God) that your heart knows exists. This leads to a crucial question. If a premise ("There is no God") leads to a conclusion you know isn't true ("Napalming babies is culturally relative) then why not change the premise?

Man, I dig that! We've somehow got to learn to have conversations like this with folks we know and love.

7 reasons to RSVP for GraceSLO events online

We've just enabled folks to RSVP for select events on our newly redesigned website. For example, currently you can RSVP for these events. . .

Night of Caroling on Sunday, December 19

Men's Huddle on Saturday, January 15

Here are 7 reasons we're committed to this new process and why we think you should register online for these events now and all future events, when given the opportunity:

  1. It saves money. It's one less piece of paper our administrative assistants have to handle and transfer to a spreadsheet. When you RSVP online, it drops your registration right into a spreadsheet. That saves time, which, in turn, saves money. The wonder of google docs.

  2. It's convenient. You can register anytime, 24 hours, 7 days a week. You don't have to take the time to find a sign-up table or remember to stick your tab in an offering bag.

  3. It cuts down on worship service clutter. It potentially cuts down on the need to say "rip off your tab, fill it out now and put it in the offering bag or take it to a "welcome center". At times, we actually altar the arrangement of the service, so folks can hear the announcement and then can stick the tab in the bag as it comes around.

  4. It cuts down on courtyard clutter. That courtyard square footage is precious real estate. We want as much room for comfortable movement and face to face fellowship as possible. Sign-up tables clutter up the courtyard and make it tough to move around.

  5. It's informative. It allows you to see and experience the wealth of other helpful information on the website, so you better know what's going and feel more connected.

  6. It's helpful for our planning. Boy it's helpful to know in advance who is coming to what. It allows us to plan and prepare better. It allows us to do what we do with excellence and not be anxious about the unknowns as an events gets close.

  7. Its fun. You're likely on the web all the time anyway. On our end, it's like magic. You probably don't think so, but we definitely do. It's so easy to make happen and it just works. It's exciting and encouraging to see people RSVPing, engaging and getting involved.

So, thanks for coming along with us as we experiment with this new technology.

revamped graceslo.org website now live

The big news of the day is that our new website is now live at http://graceslo.org. Check it out!

We think the site is going to be useful for our life together. Our vision is that the site becomes the hub of our communication as a church family.

Here are 3 new features our Ministry Staff is really excited about and we think you might be too. . . .

  1. A full GraceSLO calendar of Upcoming Events organized by ministry with everything you need to know on an daily basis.

  2. Online event sign-up and registration. Go ahead and register for the upcoming Night of Caroling on December 19 RIGHT HERE. We're even going to try and do some Winter Growth Group enrollment

  3. A sermon Resource Library that is browseable by date, Scripture, series and speaker. (By topic is coming soon.)

We owe GraceSLO congregant, Aaron Barker and his company, Tap Consulting (tapconsulting.com), a huge thanks for their hard work, incredible insight and amazing expertise. Aaron has been a joy to work with. If you know him, thank him when you see him.

Paula Phillips, Christina Carroll, Debbie Johnston, and Trevor Miller have also been working like crazy to get the site ready. Many thanks to them as well.

The plan is to move Life Together within to the site after the first of the year. Stay tuned.

Hope you like the site. If you'd like to send some encouraging or constructive feedback, send it directly to me at tim@graceslo.org. I'd love to hear your thoughts.




He shall reign

My wife sent me this with the tag line . . .

"Why we shouldn't get rid of choirs : )"

She's right, as usual. Tell me if you're heart isn't warmed and your eyes aren't just a little wet by the time you get to the end of it.



Its a known fact in our home that I love Handel's Messiah. My kids blessed me by playing it as we were getting ready for the day on the Monday after thanksgiving.

Christmas is here. Christ is come. He shall reign. Let your heart rejoice today.

Orphan Sunday

November 7 is Orphan Sunday. The care of orphans, foster kids and adoption . . . . these are really sanctity of life issues, and therefore, issues of great concern to us as the people of God.

I'm looking forward to interviewing Jim & Kathy Smith, on Sunday, about their recent trip to an orphanage in Honduras.

To spur our thinking on these issues here are a couple of helpful resources. The first is a Wall Street Journal column entitled "Adoption Season for Evangelicals" that highlights the movement toward adoption that is happening across the evangelical landscape and our church.

It's a great, thought provoking article. . . . so good that I don't want to make you click. Here it is in its entirety . . .

The Wall Street Journal

Adoption Season for Evangelicals

A biblical mandate to help children, especially those in foster care.


By NAOMI S. RILEY

Last Saturday at Grace Chapel in Denver, Focus on the Family (in collaboration with the Colorado Department of Human Services) hosted an information session for parents interested in adopting children out of the foster-care system. More than 150 families were represented and 55 of those have already begun the process. It was a successful and fitting end for the summer of 2010, which turned into a season of adoption for evangelicals.

In May, megachurch pastor Rick Warren held a "civil forum" on the subject. An audience of 800 attended and thousands more watched the webcast from their homes. "Orphans and vulnerable children are not a cause," said Warren. "They are a biblical and social mandate we can't ignore. A country half the size of the U.S—that's how many orphans there are in the world. We're not talking about a small problem."

Adoption was the cover story of Christianity Today in July. It included a feature by Russell Moore, dean of the School of Theology at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, in which he described in heart-wrenching terms the circumstances of his own adoption of two brothers from a Russian orphanage.

Mr. Moore, the author of a book called "Adopted for Life: The Priority of Adoption for Christian Families and Churches," has become a sort of go-to person for evangelicals on the issue of adoption. In trying to explain why Christians have a particular duty to adopt, he told me that "every one of us who follows Christ was adopted into an already existing family."

Which is to say that unlike Judaism or Islam, faiths that one is born into, Christianity requires each member to have an individual relationship with Christ. And so, in that sense, it is as if each Christian is adopted.

Yet it is the efforts of Focus on the Family, a group which has previously been most known for its political involvement on issues like abortion and gay marriage, that have produced the most striking results so far. The group announced two years ago that it would be devoting a considerable amount of its resources to a new initiative called "Wait No More." Focus is partnering with different state governments—six so far—to reduce the number of children on foster-care roles.

In Colorado alone, Focus has moved about 500 of the 800 kids in foster care into permanent homes over the course of less than two years. The group has had success helping infertile couples desperate for families, but also in placing children with couples who are older, some of whose children have already grown up and left home.

The Focus efforts are particularly interesting because foster kids are typically not young, and often have emotional or even physical problems as a result of a lack of prenatal care, or neglectful birth or foster parents. Sometimes they can only be adopted with siblings, and so a family must take on two or more children at the same time.

Foster children are also likely to be of a different race from their new adoptive parents. As more and more evangelical churches take up the cause of adoption on a large scale, their congregations have begun to look like the multiracial sea of faces that Christian leaders often talk about wanting. But it does involve parents giving up on having children who look like them.

All of this makes the growing evangelical interest in adoption seem particularly countercultural. With the widespread availability of artificial reproductive technologies such as in-vitro fertilization, many couples who previously would have chosen adoption can now use surrogates, donor sperm or donor eggs to have a baby who shares their DNA (or whose DNA they have carefully chosen), and whose prenatal care they can closely monitor. Taking a child as he or she comes to you may be a difficult choice for some parents to make these days.

The contemporary cultural message that we can have complete control over our children goes beyond making sure our babies are healthy and our children are given good moral direction. We take yoga classes with our infants, we attach GPS devices to children's backpacks and we call our kids in college on a daily, if not hourly, basis. There is no doubt that the world can seem a more dangerous place, with too many other influences, particularly new media, trying to exert control over our children. Now that Americans are having fewer children, we fret more over each one, too.

But how much control can we have? A Christianity Today cover story earlier this year on "The Myth of the Perfect Parent" discussed the sense many religious parents have that they've failed if their child strays from the church. Given this backdrop and the wider cultural messages about parenting, one wonders how these evangelical adoptive parents overcome their own desire for control, bring a stranger into their home, and then take responsibility for raising him.

The most persuasive explanation comes from the author of that article, Leslie Leyland Fields, who exhorts her readers: "We are not sovereign over our children—only God is. Children are not tomatoes to stake out or mules to train, nor are they numbers to plug into an equation. They are full human beings wondrously and fearfully made. Parenting, like all tasks under the sun, is intended as an endeavor of love, risk, perseverance, and, above all, faith."

Ms. Riley is an affiliate scholar at the Institute for American Values.




The second resource is a 7 minute video put together by Todd and Jill Talley made for use by the adoption agency they went through in adopting their Daniel from Ethiopia.



Adoption Advocates International encourages each of the families adopting through their agency to give back and do something to spread the word about adoption and the plight of the orphan. The Talleys took that request seriously. One of the primary goals of this video is to communicate the need to find homes for older orphans. And while the intent of the video is to promote Ethiopian adoption in particular, this goal of promoting the adoption of orphans, esp. older ones, is one that our Grace Adoption and Foster Care Team is looking to encourage, regardless of whether it is through international channels, foster care, foster adoption or private domestic adoption.

The next two Sundays, November 7 and 14, during the 10:45 hour in the Founder's Hall, the Grace Adoption & Foster Care Team is hosting a pair courses for those interested.

November 7 will focus Foster Care, Foster Adoption

November 14 will focus on International Adoption
I've been encouraged by the many in our church who have responded to the call to adoption. I'm praying that God will stir the hearts of others.

Retreat

Here's a pic of our Elders and Min Staff in deep discussion and contemplation last weekend at our retreat . . .


It was a pleasure to have Jeff Mundorf, Todd Talley and Steve Leonard also join us for our time. Each of these guys is somewhere along in the elder candidate process. Wayne Brown was ill.

Great fellowship but too much heavy business and not enough personal sharing. I give thanks for these men . . . our plurality, our diversity and our unity.

Culture of Poverty

Fascinating New York Times Article on the sources and causes of poverty. . . .

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/18/us/18poverty.html?_r=1&pagewanted=print


Implications for ministry are many. . . . there are no simple fixes . . . We have to think long view and generationally. . . we need to look deeper at structures, values and family systems. . . .the Gospel speaks to all these issues, and, therefore is the only real and true fix.

The Gospel challenges and speaks to every culture, valuing and embodying each cultures strenths and, while, at the same time, exposing and transforming each culture's sin and weaknesses.

How can we address, with the Gospel, the pockets of our community where a culture of poverty persists?

Joshua Harris on Covenant Membership



Sunday Slide Deck: Guard the Treasure

Here's the slidedeck from Sunday's message on 2 Timothy 1:11-18 entitled "Guard the Treasure". Hope its useful to somebody . . .






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about

  • Life Together is the ongoing contemplation of our life together at Grace Church, San Luis Obispo, through the eyes of current Lead Pastor Tim Theule. 
  • Tim and his wife, Susie, are the delighted parents of four great kids, Sage (16), Eden (14), Zeke (10) and Haaken (7).  They have lived here on the Central Coast of California since early 2003. 

  • The title "Life Together" is borrowed from Dietrich Bonhoeffer's excellent little book concerning the joys and challenges of real Christian community, which bears the same title.

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