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Saturday, June 30, 2007
Cousin Camp Day 1 This short clip is from the Cousin Camp Town Tour--- this is part of the block party Toby Mac get your groove on at the Crocketts House. Note to FARMStrongers-- Cousin Camp is becoming an annual affair at my house and completely hijacks the blog. If you aren't into the family reunion vacation genre, you might tune back in after next week when we will be getting back to some more regular fare. Cousin Camp Day 1 is now in the books. We started the day off with a pancake and sausage feast, followed by the Fruit of the Spirit Devotions. We hit Ichthus Park, the Luce Center Pool, Nicholasville Bowling Lanes, Main Street Hot Stone Pizza Party and a Concert in the Park--after which we had the Cousins Birthday Party and finally in the bed just moments ago. Today was Joy-Love Day. And yes, we could have used a good bit more of those two. Savannah won the Fruit award for the day. Jody-- ala main street-- a.k.a. my beautician, loaned us her golf cart for the week which has been lots of fun. funniest (but not so funny) moment of the day: Samuel (1.5) rares back with a wiffle ball bat and completely tees off on Chase's (2) head. He screamed bloody murder and then tackled him. Tiffani worked with the group to make iron on t-shirts for the week. Note the first one came out a little funny. stay tuned. Friday, June 29, 2007 Cousin Camp Cruzin We got cousin camp kicked off tonight with a cruise around town in the back of Omar A.'s pickup truck with some smooth tones from our new favorite-- Toby Mac. We stopped off at the Crocketts and did a little yard party. The photo is the cousins plus the crocketts. posted by John David Walt | at 6/29/2007 09:52:00 PM | 3 comments
Cousin Camp begins TODAY!!! My two sisters, Missie and Erica and four children (a.k.a. cousins) are en route to Kentucky as we blog. It's time for our annual Cousin Camp. Already it's been an adventure. One of the cousins is experiencing catastrophic constipation in the car, another's feet have contracted a stink that they say is utterly unberable and yet another of the young ones seems to have an uncontrollable cussing problem. (names withheld to protect the innocent). we could be in for another big week in Wilmore. stay tuned. posted by John David Walt | at 6/29/2007 05:33:00 PM | 0 comments Thursday, June 21, 2007 Cantalamessa on the Baptism of the Holy Spirit (photo: that's FARMStrong and friends-- brothers from the Holy Mother-- Father Raniero Cantalamessa and Matt Maher. Here's an inspiring comment from Fr. Cantalamessa on the Baptism of the Holy Spirit-- an oft misunderstood and misappropriated notion concerning the Holy Spirit. In my estimation, nothing is more needful of being normed in the life of a Christian than this reality. I will be interested in your thoughts out there, farmers. Through what aptly has come to be called the baptism in the Spirit, we experience the Holy Spirit, the Spirit's anointing in our prayer, power in our apostolic service, consolation in our trials, light upon the choices we make. More basic than any manifestation of the Spirit in the charisms, this is the first way we perceive the Holy spirit, as transforming us from within, giving us a desire to praise God and a taste for praise, leading us to discover a new joy in life, opening our mind to understand the Scripture, and above all teaching us to proclaim Jesus our "Lord." Or perhaps giving us courage to take on new and difficult tasks in the service of God and neighbor. What do we individually need to make it possible for each one of us to experience Pentecost in this way? First we need to ask the Father, consistently and persistently, to send us the Holy Spirit in the name of Jesus, and actually expect the Father to answer! We need expectant faith, a faith full of expectancy! Saint Bonaventure asks, to whom does the Holy Spirit come? And he answers, with his usual preciseness, "He comes to the ones who love him, who invite him, who eagerly await him." COME HOLY SPIRIT. still praying it???? Labels: Come Holy Spirit posted by John David Walt | at 6/21/2007 07:50:00 AM | 5 commentsSaturday, June 16, 2007 Ichthus 2007-- FARMStrong Fam up close with FARMStrong Cam ![]() We had a great time with Ichthus these last few nights. Chris and company spent the day and night with us yesterday. That's David, Mary Kathryn and friend Meredith Crockett. Also Chris and Mary K celebrating her 5th birthday. Had a great interview with he and Louie Giglio which should feature on FARMStrong soon. Tonight we went out to see Toby Mac-- which never disappoints. You won't believe the video I captured with FARMStrong Cam. This next one is a bit longer--- but you must watch it to the end. posted by John David Walt | at 6/16/2007 11:11:00 PM | 7 comments Friday, June 15, 2007 Holy Spirit= THE Gift ![]() Anybody out there studying the Holy Spirit with me in these days after Pentecost? I am learning that at the same time He is my subject, He is also my teacher. I shared this brief story in my sermon the other day. "At my graduation from the seminary, I asked then President, Maxie Dunnam, to write a charge in my bible. At the top of the charge he wrote these words, John David, I charge you, to keep the gift of the Holy Spirit stirred up within you." In my reading today, Father Cantalamessa speaks of the Holy Spirit as the Most High Gift of God. He writes: For the present, it is enough that we keep in mind that the Holy Spirit infuses in us not only "the gift of God," but also the ability and the need to give ourselves. From the Spirit we "catch," so to say, the very qualities of what he is in himself. The Spirit is "self-giving," and in whomever he touches, the Spirit creates a dynamism that leads that one, in turn, to be a self-giving gift to others.... The very same observation must be made concerning "gift": Coming to us, the Holy Spirit not only brings us the gift of God, but also God's self-giving. The Holy spirit is in very truth the fountain of living water that, once received, "wells up to eternal life" (John 4:14), which is to say that it squirts up and splashes onto anyone who happens to be near. What are the implications of thinking of the Holy Spirit as THE gift. How might this enliven our awareness and embolden our faith. Remember, "faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see." (Hebrews 11:1). What does it look like to "keep the gift of the Holy Spirit stirred up with in you?" What practices evoke this reality? COME HOLY SPIRIT! ![]() photo: Mary Kathryn and my birthday date. Labels: Come Holy Spirit, passion year posted by John David Walt | at 6/15/2007 08:38:00 AM | 1 commentsThursday, June 14, 2007 Throngs converge on Wilmore, Kentucky for annual music festival ![]() Starts Today right here in our home town. posted by John David Walt | at 6/14/2007 04:35:00 PM | 0 comments Wednesday, June 13, 2007 Worship Central Interviews FARMStrong on Worship ![]() ![]() You can find the podcast interview between Tim Hughes, Al Gordon and myself here. Labels: worship posted by John David Walt | at 6/13/2007 01:49:00 PM | 3 comments
HAPPY BIRTHDAY MARY KATHRYN ![]() 5 years ago today someone completely new began. And we are so glad. More on the birthday week to come. Stay tuned. MK and I take our annual birthday date at noon today. I have a special surprise I brought her from Harrods in London. posted by John David Walt | at 6/13/2007 10:58:00 AM | 1 comments
We are the Champions. . . . . . . . OF THE WORLD!!! ![]() Orioles rise from the Dust to take T-Ball World Series!!!! ![]() ![]() Yes-- this past weekend, the Gardenside T-Ball Orioles came back from the dreaded LOSERS BRACKET to win the World Series of T-Ball in Lexington, Kentucky. We fell victim in the second round to a TRIPLE PLAY as we were about to beat the WhiteSox. We faced them in the finals where we had to beat them in an unprecedented double header. The real game was, of course, in getting five and six year olds to actually pay attention for the two plus hours it took to play the three inning games. The photo is of Grayson Crockett, Luke Lamb, Ty Lamb and our David, the four friends who helped carry the team to victory. posted by John David Walt | at 6/13/2007 07:58:00 AM | 0 comments Monday, June 11, 2007 Morning and What has Come Since ![]() My friend, David Harrity, has just published a very nice collection of poems entitled, Morning and What has come since. I just got my copy in the mail from finishline press. This one below spoke to me of the Holy Spirit. It's about the interaction of the wind, trees and everything else. Enjoy-- and order a copy of the book. We must encourage the poets in our midst as they steward the mysteries. Through the Window The wind is like a cradle rocking the trees; they swing as if tired, almost soft, like staffs parting the sea of space; they are a transom between what is heaven and what is less than heaven, catching rain, keeping our heads clean, writing on the belly of the sky. Labels: Come Holy Spirit posted by John David Walt | at 6/11/2007 10:22:00 AM | 2 commentsSaturday, June 09, 2007 Holy Spirit Reading ![]() In this season of Pentecost, I am reading Father Raniero Cantalamessa's "Come Creator Spirit: Meditations on the Veni Creator." It is his commentary on the ancient hymn by the same title. This is a brilliant, masterful and very accessible work. What I love about Father C. is that he is simultaneously theological and poetic and thoroughly immersed in the Word of God. I'll try to flow out some quotes and thoughts in the coming weeks. For starters-- here' the hymn. It would be a good prayer to get lost in. Come, Creator Spirit, visit the minds of those who are yours; fill with heavenly grace the hearts that you have made. You who are named the Paraclete, gift of God most high, living fountain, fire, love and anointing for the soul. You are sevenfold in your gifts, you are finger of God's right hand, you, the Father's solemn promise putting words upon our lips. Kindle a light in our senses, pour love into our hearts, infirmities of this body of ours overcoming with strength secure. The enemy drive from us away, peace then give without delay; with you as guide to lead the way we avoid all cause of harm. Grant we may know the Father through you, and come to know the Son as well, and may we always cling in faith to you, the Spirit of them both. Amen. Labels: Come Holy Spirit, passion year, quotes, theology posted by John David Walt | at 6/09/2007 12:54:00 PM | 3 commentsWednesday, June 06, 2007 In case you were looking for a shorter post. My friend, Josh, sent me this quote enclosed in a letter yesterday. It's fantastic. This, then, is our desert: to live facing despair, but not to consent. To trample it down under hope in the cross. To wage war against despair unceasingly. That war is our wilderness. If we wage it courageously, we will find Christ at our side. Thomas Merton. Thoughts in Solitude. Labels: quotes posted by John David Walt | at 6/06/2007 04:30:00 PM | 0 comments
Come Holy Spirit (my sermon for today's Chapel) ![]() COME HOLY SPIRIT. June 6, 2007. Summer Chapel Session I. Asbury Theological Seminary. Wilmore, Kentucky. John David Walt, Jr. copyright In the Church calendar—which I prefer to call the Passion Year, we are living in the days following Pentecost. The great irony for me is the way the calendar speaks of these days. On the one hand, there is this extravagant celebration of the day of Pentecost—the mighty wind blows, the fire falls down, the Gospel is miraculously proclaimed in other languages followed by extraordinary signs and wonders all over the place. Now on the other hand—the calendar almost immediately seems to shut down the party and declare a season called. . . . . . anyone know???? Yes, ordinary time. If there is one thing the season after Pentecost is not, it is ordinary. And perhaps this is the great problem of the Church. We think of Pentecost primarily as a historical event rather than a present reality. When it comes to the Holy Spirit we have sound doctrine, but weak practice. There are four primary realities in the Christian life—four fundamentals if you will. They are the Word, the Spirit, the person and the community. The place where we see these realities come into perfection of focus is in—you guessed it—the life of Jesus Christ of Nazareth. God the Father sent the Spirit to the young virgin Mary who himself conceived in her the Son. The Holy Spirit was with Jesus profoundly throughout every day of his childhood and youth and yet one day he comes to the Jordan River and everything seems to change. He goes under the water and we see this apparition, this manifestation that looks like a dove, descending and landing on him. It’s the Holy Spirit. But wasn’t he already full of the Holy Spirit. How does that work? Was all that just for show? Or did the one who was full of the Holy Spirit just become even more full. Super-charged! Stoked! Enflamed! A more biblical option: anointed. I love how his early witnesses spoke of him: This from Acts 10. 37You know what has happened throughout Judea, beginning in Galilee after the baptism that John preached— 38how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and power, and how he went around doing good and healing all who were under the power of the devil, because God was with him. I love how Luke, the writer of the Acts of the Holy Spirit, also known as the book of Acts, recounts the work of the Holy Spirit in his Gospel account. After his baptism, we read, “Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, returned from the Jordan and was led by the Spirit in the desert, where for forty days he was tempted by the devil. 40 days later, we read, “Jesus returned to Galilee in the power of the Spirit, and news about him spread through the whole countryside.” Next he goes to the hometown Synagogue in Nazareth and he reads this text: “The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to release the oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.” So far so good. But now this: “Then he rolled up the scroll, gave it back to the [acolyte] and sat down.” Luke tells us “The eyes of everyone in the synagogue were fastened on him, and he began by saying to them, “Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing.” The Word become flesh—in the Person of the Son by the power of the Spirit dwelling in the midst of the community. You see, if we want to learn about the Holy Spirit, we must turn to Jesus. I love how Father Raniero Cantalamessa calls Jesus “the great Poet of the Spirit). And yet if we really want to learn and understand Jesus we must turn to the Holy Spirit. After the Scripture reading, Jesus then proceeds to preach a six sentence sermon after which the the people promptly escort him to the cliff to throw him off. Watch what happens next. Isaiah 61 happens—He casts out a demon (in the synagogue), rebukes the fever in Peter’s Mother-in-Law, Healed everyone who was sick in the fishing village of Capernaum, begins to build his own community of disciples, cleanses a leper with a touch of his hand, forgives the sins of a paralytic and empowers him to walk, recruits a tax collector, rebukes the religious establishment, preaches the most famous sermon in the history of the world, heals a Roman Soldier’s servant from a distance of 10 miles, raises a widow’s son from the dead, eats with sinners, calms a raging thunderstorm with a three words, casts hundreds of demons out of one man into a large herd of pigs, heals a woman bleeding sick for twelve years through the touch of his clothing, raises a twelve year old girl from the dead, Feeds ten or twelve thousand people with five loaves and two fishes, and has a small group meeting with Moses and Elijah. All this and we aren’t even half way through the Gospel. We come to Chapter 11— where finally his disciples begin to ask him how this works. 5Then he said to them, "Suppose one of you has a friend, and he goes to him at midnight and says, 'Friend, lend me three loaves of bread, 6because a friend of mine on a journey has come to me, and I have nothing to set before him.' 7"Then the one inside answers, 'Don't bother me. The door is already locked, and my children are with me in bed. I can't get up and give you anything.' 8I tell you, though he will not get up and give him the bread because he is his friend, yet because of the man's boldness[e] he will get up and give him as much as he needs. 9"So I say to you: Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. 10For everyone who asks receives; he who seeks finds; and to him who knocks, the door will be opened. 11"Which of you fathers, if your son asks for[f] a fish, will give him a snake instead? 12Or if he asks for an egg, will give him a scorpion? 13If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!" I’m not a Holy Spirit scholar, but I am an avid student and while I have much yet to learn, I have learned a few things already. (As an aside, here’s some free advice and encouragement. Give yourself to serious, immersive study of the Holy Spirit while you are here. My own practice is to focus in an immersive way on the Holy Spirit in the summer months in what for me is a season of Pentecost. This time I’m reading Fr. Raniero Cantalamessa’s Come Creator Spirit, a fantastic commentary on the ancient hymn to the Holy Spirit.) There is a mysterious sense in which the Holy Spirit can be with you completely and yet there is still room for more. Let me test this learning on you: The Holy Spirit has limitless capacity and at the same time you have limitless capacity for the Holy Spirit. As I wrote that sentence, I wondered if I had just committed heresy. I called my mentor and resident theologian on the Holy Spirit, Maxie Dunnam. I read him the claim—“the Holy Spirit has limitless capacity and at the same time you have limitless capacity for the Holy Spirit.” There was a long pause. I cringed. Maxie spoke in his authoritative voice, “That’s absolutely true!” The big mistake we make with respect to the Holy Spirit is in the way we think of him like an it and consequently speak in the terms of transaction and commodity. The Spirit is not a substance or a force-field. He is a person who moves like the power of the wind and with the intimacy of breath. And though he is with us, he can always be more with us. Though we are filled with him we can always be fuller. “If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in Heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!” Let me close with the admonition that we must grow in our practice of Pentecost. It starts with a very simple prayer. It’s perhaps the most powerful prayer of the Church. You know it. COME HOLY SPIRIT! Write it on your doorpost, bind it to your wrist, write it on your forehead, doodle it in all your textbooks and notebooks, on bathroom walls, . . . . . . you get the point. COME HOLY SPIRIT! At my graduation from the seminary, I asked then President, Maxie Dunnam, to write a charge in my bible. At the top of the charge he wrote these words, John David, I charge you, to keep the gift of the Holy Spirit stirred up within you. I am learning to pray this prayer at all times in all places, COME HOLY SPIRIT! It’s like setting the sail on a ship. It’s like taking a deep breath. You will find yourself this summer in hospitals full of sick people desperate for healing, with grieving families desperate for comfort, among lost people desperate for salvation, with demonized people desperate for deliverance, with hungry people desperate for food, with religious people desperate for control, with rich people seemingly desparate for no apparent reason. Learn to whisper the prayer, sing the prayer, shout the prayer, to signal the ascended Lord in the heavens with the prayer—COME HOLY SPIRIT. Nowhere is this prayer more necessary and needful than in the home with the family. As we crossed over the celebration of Pentecost this year, our family learned the fruit of the Spirit. At each meal we begin by chanting, “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness and self control.” And then with exuberance we pray, “COME HOLY SPIRIT!” This is the prayer at the heart of the prayer at the heart of the Church—the Great Thanksgiving. We call it the Epiclesis: “Come Holy Spirit and be poured out on us gathered here and on these gifts of bread and wine and make them be for us the Body of Christ that we may be for the World the Body of Christ redeemed by his blood. Come Holy Spirit and make us one with Christ and one with each other in ministry to all the World until Christ comes in final victory and we feast at his heavenly banquet. Labels: Come Holy Spirit, passion year, theology posted by John David Walt | at 6/06/2007 01:12:00 PM | 2 commentsSunday, June 03, 2007 The Wood Between the Worlds-- a.k.a Seminary ![]() This summer David and I are reading the Chronicles of Narnia for the first time. We started at the beginning with "The Magician's Nephew." Tonight as we were making our way through chapter 3 "The wood between the worlds," a piece of the dialogue really captured my attention. Polly and Digory are two of the main characters and they find themselves in a mystical place of being neither lost nor found. They want to get back home and something more familiar and yet they want to explore this enchanted place. The "pools" they speak of are apparently the doorways into and out of this place. What's the matter?" said Polly. "I've just had a really wonderful idea," said Digory. "What are all the other pools?" "How do you mean?" "Why, if we can get back to our own world by jumping into this pool, mightn't we get somewhere else by jumping into one of the others? Supposing there was a world at the bottom of every pool." "But I thought we were already in your Uncle Andrew's Other World or Other Place or whatever he called it. Didn't you say--" "Oh bother Uncle Andrew," interrupted Digory. "I don't believe he knows anything about it. He never had the pluck to come here himself. He only talked of one Other world. But suppose there were dozens?" "You mean, this wood might be only one of them?" "No, I don't believe this wood is a world at all. I think it's just a sort of in-between place." Polly looked puzzled. "Don't you see?" said Digory. "No, do listen. Think of our tunnel under the slates at home. It isn't a room in any of the houses. In a way, it isn't really part of any of the houses. But once you're in the tunnel you can go along it and come out into any of the houses in the row. Mightn't this wood be the same?--a place that isn't in any of the worlds, but once you've found that place you can get into them all." This exchange in some ways captures something of the season of seminary for me. It describes that rarefied, liminal place where so much transformation happens. Only seminary seems to be less and less and less that kind of place anymore. Thoughts about why? and if it even matters? Photo: That's the FARMStrong Fam a few weeks back at the Beach between the Worlds. posted by John David Walt | at 6/03/2007 09:48:00 PM | 14 comments
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