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Thursday, March 28, 2013

The Lazarus Experiment - Forty Days of New Life



The Lazarus Experiment starts Easter Sunday!

Think how Lazarus would have felt about things after being brought back to life by Jesus. What would he have done differently? How would he have seen each new day? What kinds of changes would he have made?

Lazarus represents the new life that is found in Jesus Christ because of resurrection. If we've put our trust in Jesus, we have the same kind of new life Lazarus had. Jesus has pulled us out of death - out of the grave - and into abundant living.

Sometimes we don't live like it.

The Lazarus Experiment is a challenge to live life with the joy, the boldness, the courage, the perspective, the reality of newness. If you are up to the challenge, choose one thing to do each day that reflects the kind of living Lazarus would have done after coming out of the tomb. Do one thing every day for forty days, from Easter to Ascension Day, to celebrate deliberate, intentional, new life.

For some context and ideas, read this article about The Experiment in Plain Truth Magazine.

Join a group of intrepid adventurers who are living like Laz! We'll be sharing our ideas, feelings, reflections, and insights on Facebook. Look for us here: The Lazarus Experiment Facebook Group.

Visit us at Grace Christian Fellowship for face-to-face interaction each Sunday.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Here are the ways we prayed and listened during week one. Would you pray along? If you have thoughts, ideas, or impressions from your prayers, please leave them in a comment.

Directions for Prayer
  • Thank God for specific blessings and divine activity in Grace’s past.
  • Allow God to bring to your mind the specific unique character of Grace and give Him credit for His creation of our church.
  • Think through the ways God has used Grace to grow your faith and offer Him thanks.
  • Ask God for forgiveness for anything in Grace’s past that may be hindering us and ask for His help.
  • Thank God for specific people, leaders and friends and Godly servants, who have been important to your spiritual growth and the identity of our church.
Directions for Listening
  • What are the characteristics of Grace that identify us as a body?
  • Which of those characteristics are an indispensable part of who God has created us to be?
  • Grace will change because change is inevitable. God wants us to change for the better. But what things about Grace do you hope will never change?
  • How has Grace been different than other churches you have attended? What explains the difference?

Directions for Action
  • What can we do to ensure our unique identity as a body?
  • Pray that God would help us pursue our unique role in His kingdom.
  • Ask God to show you the things in our past, or in your past, that need to change for us/you to love Him better.
  • Ask God to show you how you can meet Him in His plans for Grace.


Sunday, January 1, 2012

Grace On Display

Danny M. and Phil F. both put themselves on a plate today and offered us all a taste of God's grace.

It's what I love about GraceStories: God, reflected through a window, a moment. You can read about God's grace in books, hear about it in sermons, study it in libraries and seminaries, even meditate on it in Scripture. But then grace comes right out and knocks you on your can through someone's story, it's like nothing else. It's evidence that it's real, right here, right now, among us.

You have a story, too. Just as powerful, just as grace-full. Someone--lots of someones--need to hear your story. It may be the only way grace will have a chance to floor them.

Thanks, Danny and Phil.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

And We're Off!

The Lazarus Experiment 2011 has launched!

Sixty-three people, forty days, forty choices, forty ways to celebrate new life.

If you're joining us here on the blog but not on Facebook, please chime in under "Comments" and let us know what you're doing.

We already have some great things happening. "I love you's" being said, relationships reconciled and begun, hiking, photos, and dreams being pursued. Not to mention the wasabi sauce.

This is going to be great. Thanks for participating.

Monday, April 18, 2011

The Lazarus Experiment

Sunday's almost here, and we're getting ready to start.

Last year we began to think through how Lazarus would have felt about life after being brought back to life by Jesus. What would he have done differently? How would he see each new day? What kinds of changes would he have made?

Lazarus represents the new life that is found in Jesus Christ because of resurrection. If we've put our trust in Jesus, we have the same kind of new life Lazarus had. Sometimes we don't live like it.

So, The Lazarus Experiment is a challenge to live life with the joy, the boldness, the courage, the perspective, the reality of newness. If you are up to the challenge, choose one thing to do each day that reflects the kind of living Lazarus would have done after coming out of the tomb.

For some context and ideas, read this article about last year's experiment in Plain Truth Magazine.

We'll be sharing our ideas, feelings, reflections, and insights here, and on Facebook. Look for us there in Groups under The Lazarus Experiment. Join us at Grace Christian Fellowship for face-to-face interaction each Sunday.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

"Let Your Yes Be Yes" or Not

Interesting article on Slate regarding the discrepancy between the number of Americans who say they attend church and the number who actually do. What does this mean about us?

Walking Santa, Talking Christ

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Lazarus, Revisited

At the conclusion of The Lazarus Experiment, I said there would be more coming from me. It’s taken a while, but here it is.

All along the forty days, one thing kept impressing itself in my head. It’s not strange that it did, because this one theme has dogged my life. It’s always been lingering around the edges, always haunting the inner life. In fact, I have proof of the longevity of this particular mind-shadow.

I’ve posted this picture around before. It’s me at seven years old, sitting atop my brand new birthday bike. But, while she was organizing our photos this summer, Linda took out the picture and looked at the back of it. In my mother’s handwriting:

Ronnie – Looking a little chubby.

Nope. Never looked at the back. Never caught that before. Explains a lot.

So lay me out on the proverbial psych couch and let us regress!

Not really. I’m not one for digging at excuses like scabs, seeing if I can make them bleed enough to build my self-pity and garner sympathy for my oozing wounds. I’m not going to blame anyone, or cast my problems out onto the relational landscape to see where they stick. It just is what it is.

A struggle with—weight, diet, exercise, health, overeating, imbalance, emotional eating, obesity—there are so many names for the thing. For as long as I can remember, this cloud has hovered over my head.

The Lazarus Experiment forced us to ask how we live life—second life. We posed the question: What kind of things would Lazarus have done differently once Jesus called him out of the tomb and the mummy wraps were pulled away? What Would Lazarus Do?

From day one of the experiment I knew this: Lazarus would not live with this cloud. He would not live a life that was not healthy. We don’t know what killed him off, but if it was anything that was within his own personal control, you’ve got to believe that on the next go-round, on the other side of the grave, on the resurrection rebound, he would not have continued on the same weary-worn path.

If Lazarus died because of lung cancer after a lifetime of smoking, for instance, I just can’t see him asking for a cig once the grave clothes were unwound. If he kicked off because of a venereal disease, I’m thinking he would change his wanton ways after he heard Jesus say, “Come forth!” Getting another swing at life would change your perspective, I think, and motivate life change.

Add to that the realization that Jesus did this, for you, alone, to his glory, and the will to change becomes even stronger. The idea of Lazarus falling at the feet of Jesus, worshiping him for proclaiming victory over death—YOUR DEATH—seems like the motivational equivalent of a power boost button in a car racing video game. Move over, Mario! Luigi’s coming on strong!

It just kept hitting me, over and over, that Lazarus would not have stayed obese if he’d died of a heart attack or diabetes.

Now—I also believe this: Lazarus would have lived life to the full. He would have loved and learned and labored and leisured like he never had before.  He would not give up bagels. He would eat cake and ice cream. In fact, I’ve got to believe that one of the first things he did was sit down to a steak, medium rare, and onion rings.

OK. Maybe not onion rings. Maybe asparagus instead. And that’s just my point. Lazarus would have a new awareness of how to enjoy the miraculous gift of life in every way. Including health.

So, for many reasons, now is the time.

I’ve done it before. Twenty years ago, when Linda and I and three of our four kids pulled into Royal Oak, Michigan, I had just completed six months of NutriSystem and lost nearly 100 pounds. In those two decades since, I have found all of them, and enough new ones to bring me to a new personal record.

I was 35 years old then. Now I’m 55. It’s going to be different.

Lazarus would do it with grace. He would do it with the awareness of his value to Jesus. He would do it with a joy that comes from facing into the mouth of death and hearing your name called by the giver of life. It would be—fun.

I am fully aware that all of you will have advice for me. I appreciate your help. I know that you want me to succeed. I know the secret of weight loss: take in less than you burn off. Easy as pie. OK—easy as a cucumber. But the truth is I’m not after losing, I’m after living. Health gained, not pounds lost.

I also know that now you’re all in on this. So if you see me at a potluck with a mound of calories enough for a week, you can say something. Or if you invite me to lunch, steer me away from the buffet. You can steal the cream cheese off my tray, or slap the donut out of my hands. I know you’re watching me.

But now let me turn the tables on you: If you want to live your life like you mean it, like you are purchased out of the grave by grace, what would you never do again?  How can I help you? How can I hold you to it?