Gigatt Blog:

Christ is the craftsmen, we are His tools. Let's take the limits off of Him and allow ourselves to be used to produce miracles.

Hip Hop and You Don’t Stop

 

So I was on the bus, watching their television, drooling because that’s what you do when you’re on the bus and staring blankly at the sparkly screen flashing before you on your way to some stop.  Suddenly, a clip flashed of some break dancers and it got me thinking…which is a good alternative to drooling.  The clip compelled me to reflect on the video I’d just watched the day before covering graffiti techniques (I’ve never been into spray art, but the tutorial video “G4: Graffiti Techniques,” may have won me over.)   I thought about how the two different expressions related.

Hip-hop culture has been distilled down to pants, rap and rear-shakin’ dancing.  But, genuine hip-hop heads have expressed that that’s not how it started.  Hip-Hop was not a gimmick or an image, but a lifestyle.

I’d been steadily seeking in my heart the right way to approach the vision that God’s shared with me of a Christ-centered art renaissance and, just then, it dawned on me that that was the response.

Because, worship is not a 9-5 thing.  It’s not something you wear and take-off.  It’s not a song that lifts you up out of a bad moment.  It is the way you look at the world, the way you live in that world.  The way you interact with people, the way you love, the way you hurt, the way you heal.  It is life, and it is that culture that our work will reflect.

 ”so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the saints, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God.” Eph. 4:17-19 NIV

January 27, 2008 Posted by Quoleshna | Soapbox/Rants, Society/Culture, Spiritual Snippet | , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Can you handle the truth?

You shall know the truth, and the truth shall set you free — John 8:32

“You can’t handle the truth.” – Jack Nicholson in A Few Good Men.

A little imagery to remind you of that scene in A Few Good Men.

Tonite in Saturday Night Redefined — Pastor Brad Reed speaks about how we react and respond to people who because of trust in our maturity, trust in our Christianity, choose to be transparent and talk about their struggles. More often than not, he expresses, we talk over other people, using their vulnerability as a way to propel as to a platform, a higher moral standpoint. We overuse our moral ascendancy. Pastor Brad spoke about the adulterous woman in the bible, an inch away from being stoned to death by townspeople. Jesus says, “Whoever is without sin, cast the first stone.” This behavior is probably strange to us contemporary Christians. How can their consciences handle stoning a woman to death? Yet we probably don’t realize, that in the little word daggers we throw infront or behind the back of people we judge, those we deem unworthy in our mind, that we still do this in the modern day. We do not receive the truth about other people in love and balance truth with grace. Pastor Brad says that we should be nets to each other, catching each other when we fall.

Do we really believe that truth sets us free? Or do we stifle the truth and live in the illusion of being “perfect” all the time? Or maybe, like Tom Cruise in “A Few Good Men” we can’t handle the truth.

As I listen to the sermon, a lot of things go through my head – the many times I may have unknowingly shut down a trusting heart because I could not bear to listen quietly. Can we really handle the truth? We are sometimes like a gingerbread house -sweet on the outside, but it so easily crumbles with truth and transparency. We hide our own struggles and suppress them, and drown out out desperate cries with a great big Hallelujah! Some Christians cope by living a double life — having the Sunday self and the weekday self. And because we struggle ourselves, we cannot even bear to lend a listening ear, or words of wisdom or a helping hand to those who decide they will be vulnerable with us and pour out their struggles. The church should be a place of transparency, a place where we can be honest with ourselves, and have that honesty received with grace. It is not to say that we won’t rebuke our Christian brother or sister when we need to — “Better is open rebuke Than love that is concealed.” Proverbs 27:5. Only we must do it out of love, and not out of empty criticism. “If I have all faith so as to remove mountains,
but have not love, I am nothing.” 1 Cor 13. Sometimes, I don’t even have the words to say. When I don’t — I offer prayer, and it often helps a lot.

I am deeply convicted by this. I once asked of a friend — “Is it right that he has to be so transparent? Should he tell me everything?” I realized that I should have not been so concerned with protecting myself and my feelings, I should have put the other person first and see it as an opportunity to be used by God. I should have listened with my heart and not with my mind. I should have reacted with the words that Jesus would say, and the quietness that Jesus had. If we only listen with the peace that passes understanding, then we will truly understand and be able to help.

I realize that we should not be so concerned with the “garment” being squeaky clean. Stains are not always pretty – but they are real. We should gently help the person get the stain out — the entire garment doesn’t have to be thrown away.

January 27, 2008 Posted by Abby C | Event, Reflections, Spiritual Snippet | , , , , , | 1 Comment