What to do about Halloween?

What to do about Halloween?

Halloween is this week and, in my mind, it is unique among North American cultural traditions. The history of the holiday is mixed to say the least and aspects definitely cary dark undertones of death and evil. But the trick-or-treat tradition also creates an amazing missional opportunity with many of our neighbours visiting our house. What is the best way to respond?

To help with some ideas, I've collected some of the best halloween articles I've come across.

What Christians Should Know About Halloween: Justin Holcomb looks into the history of both Halloween and the Christian response. 

When Halloween Demands a Gospel Response (video): This isn't just a Halloween video but Jeff Vanderstelt discusses a gospel worldview in approach to our neighbourhoods and applies it to Trick-or-Treating.

Should Christians take part in Halloween: Mike McKinley looks to 1 Corinthians 8 to try and answer the question.

Halloween is For Mission: 5 ways to consider your how to be missional on Oct. 31st.

Halloween:Trick, Treat or Mission: Jo Saxton reflects on the difference between the holiday in the U.K. and the U.S. and the difficulty of her family participating

12 Simple Ways to Be on Mission the Halloween: Jeff Vanderstelt (from the previous video) fleshes out at a few different strategies for the holiday. Our home group is using the idea of handing out hot chocolate to parents as a way of building relationships in our neighbourhood.

Why I Still Celebrate Halloween: My own reflections from several years ago.

50 ways to be on mission "As you go"

50 ways to be on mission "As you go"

Last Sunday we talked about be called to be on mission "as we go" - meaning that we are a part of what God is doing in the world in the everyday things of life. As an attempt to put some legs on that, here is a list of how to approach things you probably do everyday already in a way that helps you "live sent". This list isn't meant to shame you. It also isn't meant to burden you. You aren't expected to do everything on this list - I certainly don't. What it is meant to do is give you a few ideas of how you can be on mission in the ordinary rhythms of life.

  1. When standing in line or watching children, talk to people around you. It is amazing how often you can see the same person once you have gotten to know them a bit.

  2. Find ways to spend more time in your front yard or public areas of your building.

  3. Take your kids to the same park at roughly the same time on school days (most parks have “regulars”)

  4. Don’t let fences stop neighbourly relationships (click here for tips)

  5. Join in a neighbourhood block party. Or start one.

  6. As often as possible, get your groceries from the same store on the same day of the week (and talk to your teller)

  7. Once you get to know a teller, go through their till whenever possible, even if that means choosing the longer line.

  8. When possible, keep your blinds open (here is why)

  9. Stick around at soccer practice, ballet lessons or swimming. Watch your kids and get to know their teammates parents.

  10. Consider volunteering or coaching your kids programs.

  11. Remember, any action can be an occasion for a quick chat with your neighbour – even taking out the garbage or checking the mail at the same time (and the more quick chats you have, the more likely you develop a real relationship)

  12. Make an effort to attend strata events and social gatherings. If there aren’t any, see if there is interest in starting some.

  13. If arranging playdates for your kids, invite the parents

  14. Meditate on how to live out 1 Corinthians 9:19-23 is lived out in your context.

  15. Pray with your kids before you drop them off at school – it helps reframe your mindset as both them and you prepare to interact with others.

  16. Speaking of dropping off the kids. Do it. In person. Pick them up to. Get there a bit early and keep your phone in your pocket.

  17. When hosting birthday parties for kids, make opportunity for parents to join for all or part of it.

  18. Learn to listen. When in a conversation, listen for ways that you can show love to someone.

  19. If you have a freezer, try to have a freezer meal stored for quick help for a friend in need.

  20. Don’t be afraid to use the Dunbar Heights meals ministry to help a friend who just had a baby, moved or is in medical need

  21. If you frequent a coffee shop or restaurant a lot, tip well and talk to the staff.

  22. Don’t be afraid to re-introduce yourself to someone and ask their name again.

  23. Try and host someone in your place once-a-week for a meal, for dessert or just for tea.

  24.  Find someone who likes a show you are enthralled with and invite them to watch it with you.

  25. Never watch a hockey game by yourself.

  26. Champion or join a cause that will bring your neighbourhood together.

  27. Buy a good snow shovel. When it snows, do your neighbors sidewalk too.

  28. If you're renting, do what you can to maintain shared outside areas.

  29. Deliver your rent cheque in person (maybe add bonus cookies).

  30. Utilize Facebook but never divorce it from real life relationships.

  31.  If you find out someone has a need, don’t ask how you can help, tell them how you will help. (like this)

  32. Sign up to do a charity run or bike and canvass your friends for support (which reminds me, Ride for Refuge in support of New Hope Community Services refugee house is Oct. 3rd)

  33. Talk about things that matter to you.

  34. If someone is showing interest in what you believe, offer to study the Bible with them.

  35. Hand out hot chocolate for the parents on Halloween.

  36. Volunteer for PAC or strata council.

  37. When you get together with work friends, invite some church friends.

  38. When you get together with church friends, invite some work friends.

  39. Join a crafting group or a book club.

  40. Extroverts tend to have many more shallow friendships. Introverts tend to have fewer, deeper friendships. Don’t try to be someone you aren’t. But do try to open your friendship circle or deepen your relationships a bit.

  41. Go on holidays with a neighbourhood family.

  42. Volunteer at the community centre or school.

  43. Stop to offer a ride to someone you know at a bus stop.

  44. Keep an eye out for moving vans in your neighbourhood and lend a hand to a new neighbour moving in (also, bring pie).

  45. Keep meditating on the gospel and learning what makes it “Good News” in your life. Then talk about that.

  46. Practice talking about what makes the gospel “Good News” in your life with your kids and Christians friends. This builds a habbit that carries over to other relationships.

  47. Mediate on how to show a 1 Corinthians 11 love in our friendships.

  48. Take the kids or the dog out for evening walks. Stop often to talk.

  49. Host a board game or movie night.

  50. Remember that making someone a Christian is not the end goal. That can turn people into projects. Bringing renewal means that we are loving them and showing them how the gospel changes our life. Having them to respond to that is a hope, but not a pretext for our relationship.

I'm on the Ashley Madison List

I'm on the Ashley Madison List

I’m on the Ashley Madison list. Well, not really, but I’m on God’s Ashley Madison list. I am, you are, we all are. The Bible will often point to adultery and marital unfaithfulness as a picture of idolatry and our unfaithfulness to God. So, for example, God asks His prophet Hosea to marry a prostitute to demonstrate how God continued to call His people back to Himself even through their unfaithfulness.

At first blush, this association of adultery and idolatry seems strange. But think of what motivated many of the people who paid money to a website to help them cheat on their spouse. Many were looking for excitement, or fulfillment or even affirmation or love from someone else. Most, because they no longer felt that from the one who, in their mind, was supposed to fulfill that role for them.

And this is where we see the parallel of adultery and idolatry. You se, idolatry is not simply bowing before blocks of wood or stone carved as beasts or men – idolatry is seeking in created things what can only ultimately be found in God. As both our Creator and our Saviour, God alone can ultimately provide purpose, fulfillment, acceptance, love and even excitement. These are things our souls crave. And we can find them in bits and pieces in other people and in other places but the full brunt of them can only be found in God through Christ. So, for instance, if I think it is my wife’s job to “complete” me, to give me purpose or complete fulfillment, not only will she fail and let me down, but the weight of that will destroy her. Perhaps reeling from that I find fulfillment in something more destructive, or perhaps not. But either way, I’m signing up on Ashley Madison, I’m cheating (as it were) on God by looking to find things that only He can provide and that is only His right to provide in other places. And this is ultimately destructive to us.

Tuesday High-5 (March 3)

Tuesday High-5 (March 3)

What time is it? It's Top-5 Tuesday time. Here are 5 articles/videos that caught my attention this week.

The Story Behind "Rejoicing in Lament" - J. Todd Billings talks about the struggles that led to his book "Rejoicing in Lament" and how a rock-solid faith in the goodness of God encourages lament.

The Whole Foods Movement and the Developing World: Organic, whole foods, anti-GMO. Amy Medina, an American working with Reach Tanzania in Tanzania, share her thoughts on how North America's new food revolution affects the third world. My favourite paragraph:

Sometimes, I wonder if Americans forget that we used to be a Developing Country.  I wonder how many Americans realize that DDT is what eliminated malaria from the United States.  Yet then the Developed World banned its use, and now millions of Africans still die from malaria every year.  I think of the story in On the Banks of Plum Creek, when swarms of grasshoppers regularly decimated thousands of acres of American crops.  Yet that doesn't happen any more.  Why?  Pesticides.

How Churches Can Protect the Poor Against Predatory Lending: The story of how one church is helping battle against predatory lending without leaving the poor unable to access loans and, in doing so, bringing renewal to their city.

The Gospel in an Age of Public Shame: A particularly poignant article for our time and place form Christianity Today editor Andy Crouch. How does the gospel relate to the honour/shame rubric that is increasingly taking hold in our culture (and is intrinsic in Asian cultures). Not only does this article deal with the theological question but also shows how a Twitter troll takedown provides an opportunity for gospel witness.

Communities on Mission (video): From the Austin Stone church, the stories of three "home groups" who have taken the idea to be a renewing force in their local neighbourhoods to heart. Each group is different and approaches their mission in a different way. The commonality? They each are providing a context to reach their friends and neighbours with the gospel by being on mission as a community.