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Ready

Posted by Rob under Bikers' Church, Family, Spirituality

Well, I’m sitting in my office for the first time in 2010. While I’ve been back from my Rest Stop for almost a month now, I feel like I’m only now getting started. I believe that this year is going to be such a significant year in which God does some truly amazing things. As I stare at my two monitors, I’m reminded of what is truly important: my family and my faith.

My Family

This may be Brit’s last year living at home. In June, she’ll graduate from high school and in September, she’ll enter college. She’s applied at three different colleges, only one of them is here in Ottawa. Even if she gets into the Ottawa school, she may consider living on campus. Still, her first choice is one of the schools a few hours away.

Christina is growing up quickly and I love seeing her begin to focus more on her own areas of passion. In many ways, she is very much like her sister, but in other areas, she is clearly her own person. I love that. While Christina has already spent a year without her sister around (when Brit was in Costa Rica), it will still be different for her to experience teenage life without her big sister around as much.

Heather headed back to work this morning and will slowly get back into the swing of things. During the later part of 2009, she really saw her faith and her focus go to the next level, and I’m excited to see what will happen in her life in 2010. Much of the Extreme Faith theme for 2010 is a result of her, and I believe she will play in integral part in Bikers’ Church as we move forward.

Extreme Faith

Speaking of Bikers’ Church, I am truly excited about the theme we have for the year. This isn’t just a one month series, but a year long focus. What does it truly mean to live a life full of faith? What would happen if we lived each day believing in God’s ability to accomplish his will through us? What would it be like to have an authentic faith like that of the First Century Church?

I’m not sure I can fully answer those questions, yet. However, I look forward to the journey that the entire church will take over the course of the next twelve months. I truly believe it will change us dramatically.

And so, I sit here, looking at my monitors, asking God to lead me through this year. I feel inadequate. I feel unworthy of the task. Without God, we will fail. I will fail. But with God … well, all things are possible.

I’m ready. Are you?

Happy New Year!

It’s hard to believe it’s been ten years since Y2K. What a decade. Think about it, three of the most significant ways I communicate with people didn’t exist ten years ago. Twitter, Facebook, and WordPress.org blogs. Amazing.

But, this isn’t a post about the past decade, or even the past year.

This is a post about 2010. And, more specifically, two resolutions I’ve made for the upcoming year.

Normally, I don’t make resolutions. Never really have. But, this year, there are two things I feel strongly that I need to do, and I want to share them with you as a way of being publicly accountable. There’s something about making known a resolution. People can ask you how it’s going. In fact, I plan to share my progress with all of you, cause I know you care THAT much!

So, here they are:

1. Read the entire Bible

Yes, I’ve read through the entire Bible before. Probably a few times. But it’s been too long since I’ve done it just for me. In other words, not studying it for sermon material or for writing Oil Changes. But, just doing it for personal growth. So, I’m doing it this year. The entire Bible in 365 days.

I have a secret weapon I’m using in my quest to read through the Bible. It’s called YouVersion. If you haven’t discovered YouVersion yet, you need to. Go to their site and create an account. It is one of the best online Bible resources available. Not only can you read the Bible on your computer, you can also find all kinds of articles written for the various passages you’re reading. Heck, there might even be a few articles written by me.

YouVersion recently introduced Bible Reading Plans. I’ve used a reading plan in the past, and they are an excellent way to stay on track. What’s amazing about the YouVersion reading plans is they synchronize between your computer and your mobile phone. For me, that means I can follow my reading plan on my MacBook Pro or on my iPhone.

I’m going to use the Life Journal Reading Plan for 2010. Feel free to join me if you’d like. If you want to start with something a little less demanding, check out all their reading plans. Some cover just the Gospels, others involve only certain parts of the Bible. Some are for a full year, some are for only a month or two.

2. Forty Books

The other thing I plan on doing for 2010 is read a lot more books. There was a time when I was a huge reader. I probably still read more than the average person (I think I managed to read about 25 books in 2009), but I want to take in more variety of reading in 2010. So, 40 books it is. I wont write full reviews of all 40 books, but I will share what I’m reading and perhaps offer a few thoughts on some of the books. I’ll certainly highlight books that I think would benefit others.

Those who know me well, know that I value reading. Actually, I value learning. I just happen to learn through reading. I discovered books thanks to a mom who loved reading. Mom always – I mean always – had a book on the go. I love the fact that both my daughters love reading. Heather would love to read more, but she struggles with most books. So, she’s trying a new approach. She’s picked up a couple of audio books.

The point is not that everyone should have a book opened all the time. But everyone should have a goal to learn something all the time. Discover the insights of different people. Use books, blogs, audio and video podcasts.

How?

I know what you’re thinking: that’s cool for you. After all, you only work ONE day a week. You have time to do all this reading.

And, in a way, that’s true. Not the “work one day a week” part, but I do have the luxury of taking an hour here or there to read during the day. Although, to be honest, most of my reading is not done in the middle of the day. It’s done early in the morning or late at night. It’s done on the weekends. It’s done during my lunch.

In fact, one of the ways I plan on accomplishing my goal of reading both the Bible and other books is getting up earlier. I’m going to devote some time first thing in the morning, before anyone else is awake, to read. If I spend 30-60 minutes each morning reading, I will have no problem keeping my goal.

So, there you have it. It’s out here for all of you to see. Feel free to ask me how it’s going any time. If you

What about you? Any resolutions you’re making for 2010? Any of you want to join me in following a reading plan on YouVersion?

I’d love to read your thoughts in the comments section.

Three months ago today, I loaded up my bike and headed out on a twenty-five day road trip. (You can read about that trip by choosing the “Categories” tab on the right side and choosing “road trip”. Day one of the trip can be found here.) It was the start of a Rest Stop that I was blessed to have thanks to a forward thinking leadership team.

Today, I am sitting in my office for the first time since that Rest Stop began. I’m back. I’m ready to go. And, I want to share with you some of my thoughts about the past three months. I learned a number of things. About myself, my family, my calling, and the future. I think it would be fitting for me to share some of those thoughts with you.

Some mistakingly have referred to the past three months as a holiday. It really isn’t an accurate description of what went on for me. I did spend twenty five days on the road, and during that time, focused, for the most part, on relaxing. However, I also spent some of it meeting with other church planters with the hope of being inspired for new direction with Bikers’ Church. I devoted time while riding to hear from God about what he wanted with CCBC. And, since coming home from the road trip, I have spent most of my days working stuff that will eventually be implemented in the church. In other words, my days were not spent sitting around in my underwear pyjamas watching movies.

While I still did a number of things for CCBC, I was blessed to not have to follow my usual routine. I didn’t have to prepare messages each week or focus on the day to day stuff that I usually have on my plate with the church. As a result, I was able to see things from a different perspective and believe I’m energized to see God do new things at the church.

I wont go into a lot of detail about the things I learned during this Rest Stop, because the bulk of my messages in 2010 will focus on those discoveries. From the first series in January through the end of December next year, we will be challenged as a church to go to the next level of effectiveness. I am convinced that God has great things in store for Bikers’ Church, and we’re going to pin the throttle and see where it takes us.

Having said that, there are a few personal things I’d like to share with you now.

First, my relationship with God and the calling he has given me must be a priority for me. More so that at any time in the past. As a pastor, it’s too easy for my spirituality to become mechanical routine static dull less than what it should be. That has to change. It is changing. I have found myself rediscovering worship. Whether it’s in the car or sitting at home, I enjoy putting on a great worship CD and allowing my heart to reconnect with God. It’s wonderful. I need to devote more time to growing with God. It means not allowing myself to get distracted by the things that will pull me away from that connection. It means devoting more time to focusing on the things that I am called to do rather than the many things that others expect me to do.

Second, my relationship with my family is vital. Heather and I have rediscovered each other during this time. As many of you know, she has been off work due to a concussion she suffered in a car accident. While the headaches and dizziness she has experienced during this time is certainly not fun, having her home during my Rest Stop has been an unexpected bonus. In the nineteen years we’ve been married, we have never been able to enjoy this much time together. While there have been times in the past when Heather has been able to serve along side me in ministry, the sacrifices we’ve made to plant a church has required her to work full time. As a result, she has not been engaged in leadership at CCBC the way she’d like to. Over the past few months, we’ve been able to sit and dream together, talking vision and praying for direction. She’s an amazing woman and I love her deeply. I needed this time to be reminded of that. I’ve also been able to enjoy more time with the girls, often driving them to school or hanging out with them during certain activities. It’s been a true blessing for me.

I believe God is up to something at Bikers’ Church. As I shared with the leadership team this past Saturday night, I truly believe it is going to be a season of faith for us. We must learn to walk by faith and not by sight (2 Corinthians 5:7). I’m ready to do that, and my heart is to lead each of us on a faith journey.

Bikers’ Church family, I encourage you. Take time over the next few weeks to prepare your heart. Ask God to use you, speak to you, direct you. In January, we begin a new chapter in the life of our church. And I’m excited about what will be written on the pages of this next chapter.

See you all on Thursday night.

In my last post, I shared about the process to becoming a member of a motorcycle club. As a result of that process, membership is incredibly important and something that is taken very seriously. Guys are proud of their club. In fact, in some cases, their love for the club overshadows everything else.

This time, I want to talk about the sense of family found in most motorcycle clubs. Again, if you haven’t done so, please read the second post in this series, where I explain what I mean by motorcycle clubs. It will help those who might disagree with some of what I will say below.

Family

One thing you will discover with most clubs is a strong sense of family. They truly see the other members as brothers (and sisters). They will do anything for one another. Anything. If a brother is in need, his club is there. It’s one of the things I love the most about clubs.

A club stands together. No matter what. Even if a member is in the wrong, they will stand with him. If a member acts like an idiot in public and finds himself in trouble as a result, his brothers will be right there beside him in the middle of the trouble. That doesn’t mean they will condone the behaviour. Often the club will address the behaviour of the member and make it clear that it’s not acceptable. However, that meeting will take place privately. Publicly, you will simply see people who stand together.

Lessons for the Church

I can’t speak for most churches, but I want Bikers’ Church to function in that way. In fact, it’s been a priority of ours since day one. When someone becomes a member of Bikers’ Church, there are expectations on them. We expect them to treat other members like family. To stand together. To defend one another.

We believe this so strongly that there have been a few times when we have challenged a person who broke this fundamental principle. We challenge those who publicly criticize another member. We take issue with those who treat another member with a lack of respect. We expect our members to stand together. To defend one another. If there’s an issue, we’ll deal with it. But it will be done privately, among those who are affected.

I remember a few years ago one of our guys breaking down a few hours from Ottawa. One phone call and he was looked after. Another member headed to meet him with his truck. It didn’t matter what else was going on. A brother was in trouble and others rose up. I could tell story after story that demonstrates this sense of family.

I think of my family growing up. There was my older brother and my younger sister. There were times when we would get frustrated with each other about one thing or another. I might criticize one of my siblings to my mom. But if someone outside my family attacked my brother or sister, I would rise up to defend them regardless of the validity of the attack. You simply do not go after my family without going through me.

Gossip and Murmuring

I don’t believe there is anything more damaging to a church than gossip or murmuring (groups of people whispering, complaining, and bad mouthing someone). Nothing drives me more crazy. I do everything I can to keep gossipers off the leadership team at Bikers’ Church. I don’t want them around. As far as I’m concerned, they’re dangerous.

When I hear of people within Bikers’ Church who are murmuring, I do what I can to address it. Among our leadership, we have a policy. If someone approaches a leader to criticize another member of the church, the leader is expected to interrupt the person and say something along the following lines: “Tell you what, if you have an issue with that person, then we should address it. Let’s call them and arrange a meeting between the three of us. You can share your criticism directly to them, and I’ll help mediate the issue for you.” It’s amazing how often people don’t want to go to that step. Why? Because they really aren’t trying to resolve an issue, they’re just looking to complain.

Conclusion

Look, I realize that even in the best of motorcycle clubs, there are times when this sense of family falls short. Let’s face it, even in the best of families, the ideal sometimes fails. The point I’m trying to make is that for the most part, that sense of family is celebrated in the club scene. It’s something many churches could learn.

In my last post, I explained what I meant by the terms Church and Motorcycle Clubs (M.C.). Now, I want to dive into some of the specific things that I believe we can learn from each other.

I want to start with membership.

First, let me explain how one becomes a member of a typical motorcycle club. In most cases, it’s not an easier process. Before a club allows you to where their patch (also known as “colours” or “cut”), they want to make sure you fully understand the philosophy behind the club. Membership is something that is earned. The process is rarely easy. But in the end, I believe it’s one of the main reasons that most club guys value their membership above almost everything else. I know many guys who will refuse to take off their patch no matter who asks them to do so. It is their most prized possession.

There are a number of stages to club membership. It begins with a Hangaround stage. A Hangaround has no real status in the club. He is simply someone who, well … hangs around … at club events. He might hang out at the club house or participate in bike runs sponsored by the club. However, he isn’t unnoticed by the club. If someone in the club views the Hangaround as potential club material, he may be invited to move on to the next stage.

That next stage is the Prospect stage. In most clubs, you don’t ask to prospect, you’re invited to do so. If a club member thinks you might be a good fit for the club, he’ll “sponsor” you. As a prospect, you are at the bidding of all the members of the club. You work hard. You do whatever you are asked to do. Your the guy who is washing the floors, carrying food and drinks to the club parties, running errands for club members. The primary job of a prospect is to learn. He follows behind the members, watching them, learning from them. Many clubs have a rule that prospects are to stay quiet at public events. Speak only when instructed to do so by a member. In other words, stay in the background, work like a dog, and learn the ropes. The prospect stage can last anywhere from six months to a few years. Some never move past this stage. Some quite because they find being a prospect demeaning. It’s usually easy to spot a prospect in a club environment. He may be wearing a patch that clearly states he is a prospect. Or, he may be wearing part of the clubs colours (usually the club logo (or emblem) and one rocker (the rockers are the top and bottom patches. One usually states the name of the club, the other usually has the city or state the club resides in).

After a period of time, if the prospect’s sponsor (the guy who originally invited him to join the club) feels the prospect has earned it, a vote will be held by the members of the club. Most clubs require a unanimous vote in order to approve a prospect for membership. The vote is always private and no prospects attend the meeting where the vote is held. If approved, the prospect is granted full membership into the club.

When a prospect becomes a full member, most clubs hold a party to celebrate. After all, it’s a big deal for both the prospect and the club. They are telling this guy that he has worked hard, has proven his value, and is now part of a very close group of friends. He’s family. He now enjoys all the rights and privileges of membership.

Can a person ever move down the “ladder” from member to prospect. Absolutely. There are a few reasons why a member can be put back to prospect status, but I’ll explain those reasons in a later post.

Lessons Learned

So, what can the Church learn from the membership process of a Motorcycle Club? I believe a lot. However, there are a few challenges we must face when we compare the two.

First, most churches strive to be inclusive. In other words, churches want everyone to feel welcome. M.C.s don’t carry that same desire. While they want to be friendly with most people, M.C.s are very exclusive. Members are seen very differently than non-members.

In a lot of churches, there has been a movement away from membership. Again, it’s done out of a desire to make everyone feel welcome. But I think in the end, it hurts one of the very key principles that membership offers: value to the church. You see, in a club, members will do just about anything for the club because they have poured a lot of “blood, sweat, and tears” into the club. It’s difficult to have that same value in a local church if there isn’t an effort required to be part of any area of the church.

At Bikers’ Church, one of our key values is that you belong just by showing up. We want every person who walks through our doors to feel he/she is a part of the Bikers’ Church family. It’s important to us. However, that doesn’t mean that every person who comes through the doors at Bikers’ Church can dictate the direction of the church. Just because you attend a few weeks doesn’t mean you get to have a say in the philosophy of the church.

From the very beginning we felt it was important to have a membership. To be a member at Bikers’ Church, you are required to take a course that goes over the history of Bikers’ Church. It tells the story of how we began and why we do what we do. It explains our foundational beliefs and the core values that make us Bikers’ Church. If, after the course is completed, you want to become a member, then you are required to sign a paper committing to living out the core values. Membership is only valid for the calendar year, and every person, including staff, are required to make a fresh commitment each January. Each membership form is reviewed by the Servant Leadership Team (Church Board). Those approved are acknowledged during a service.

Even so, I’m not convinced that we value membership at Bikers’ Church enough. I wonder if there should be a minimum waiting period before one can become a member. We don’t require someone to be a member in order to serve in certain areas of the church, however we do ask people to attend a minimum of six months before they serve in any area (such as behind the bar, running a video camera, etc.). We want people to have a basic understanding of why we do what we do before they get involved in an area within the church.

I think membership should be something that we value much higher. It should be celebrated. Not so that we make a clear separation from members and non-members. I do believe that you can still make everyone feel like they belong and still celebrate those who commit fully to being part of the church family.

When you become a member of a motorcycle club, you are proud of that connection. It’s easy to spot a club member. They are almost always wearing their patch. They bike often has club images on it. Even their cars usually have club stickers. Heck, I’ve seen club members who even plaster the front door of their house with club logos. They get tattoos with the club’s name. They boast about their club to others. It would crush a lot of them to ever lose their membership within the club.

How many churches can boast that? Now, I do admit that Bikers’ Church has that kind of “loyalty.” Most of the members have a CCBC sticker somewhere on their motorcycle. Most wear Bikers’ Church t-shirts or sport the church’s logo patch on their vest. I don’t think anyone has tattooed the church’s logo on their bodies, but it wont surprise me if someone does.

I realize that there are many reasons why we don’t emphasize church membership the same way a club does. I understand that the focus of most churches is to life up the name of Jesus not the name of the church. What matters most is that God is honoured and glorified, not Bikers’ Church.

Still, I wonder if there’s something we could learn about how we view our local church from the way a club member views his club.

You turn. Comments?

Note: This is part two of a series of posts. To read the previous post, go here.

I thought it would be good to explain a few things before I actually dive into specific areas that I think these two groups could learn from each other. After all, when you use words like Church or Motorcycle Club (M.C.) you cover a lot of diverse areas. There are so many different ideas of what is meant by Church. The same is true when it comes to Motorcycle Clubs. So, let me take a few minutes and explain what I mean with both terms.

The Church

When it comes to Church, I am speaking of an institution that is made up of people who consider themselves followers of Jesus Christ. I am not talking about a specific denomination or style of worship. The Church is an incredibly diverse subculture. As such, it can be very difficult to define. Many critics of the Church argue that one of the primary problems of the Church is it’s lack of respect for various cultures. They argue that the Church strives to force people of different cultures into specific molds. Timothy Keller, in his book, The Reason For God, argues that nothing could be further from the truth.

Christianity … allegedly forces people from diverse cultures into a single iron mold. It is seen as an enemy of pluralism and multiculturalism. In reality, Christianity has been more adaptive of diverse cultures than secularism and many other worldviews….Christianity was first dominated by Jews and centered in Jerusalem. Later it was dominated by Hellenists and centered in the Mediterranean. Later the faith was received by the barbarians of Northern Europe and Christianity came to be dominated by western Europeans and then North Americans. Today most Christians in the world live in Africa, Latin America, and Asia. Christianity soon will be centered in the southern and eastern hemispheres. (pp 40-41)

When I use the term Church it can be very difficult to generalize. How the Church functions in North America can be very different than in Asia or Latin America. So, let me be clear that since my experience with the Church is limited to Canadian Evangelicalism, I will be talking about the Church in that context. I’m sure that most of my criticisms and suggestions can fit nicely into any part of the North American Protestant Church, but I wont assume such.

Also, please note that when I use the lower case church, I am referring to a local body of Christ followers. For the most part, it will be Bikers’ Church that I am referring to. The Capital “C” Church is the larger context of the Global Church.

Motorcycle Clubs

In many ways, we face the same challenge when we talk about Motorcycle Clubs. After all, there are a lot of different types of motorcycle groups. There are Clubs, Associations, One Percenters, Affiliations, and groups that simply rally around a specific cause. In some cases, these groups have very little expectations or rules that dictate the behaviour and expectations of their adherents. Some have formal memberships, some do not. In some cases, it’s as simple as going to a website and ordering a “patch.” For other groups, membership takes years and requires a number of steps that the potential member must pass. Some groups have hundreds of members in one location, while others limit the size of each “chapter” to a few dozen at most. Even Wikipedia’s definition of a Motorcycle Club is unbelievably general: A motorcycle club is a group of individuals whose primary interest and activities involve motorcycles. No kidding.

When I speak about Motorcycle Club, I am talking very specifically about those groups that follow a very clear set of rules and expectations. Generally speaking, these rules and expectations can be found in just about any group that has a three piece patch. Most of these clubs also have a small patch with the words M.C. on it. While all outlaw clubs (One Percenters) will follow these rules in some fashion, the rules are not limited to these clubs. There are many Christian clubs, family related clubs, sobriety clubs, law enforcement clubs, to name a few, that also follow the general rules of an M.C. As well, there are groups who choose not to use the M.C. label (Motorcycle Ministries (M.M.), for example) who often follow the same expectations. You can see the challenge one faces when endeavouring to write about Motorcycle Clubs.

While this may seem over simplified, I believe there are a general set of rules and expectations that one assumes have been met and are being followed when they see a biker wearing an M.C. patch. It is from this list of expectations that I will draw on some ideas that I think the Church could learn.

Misunderstood

Now that we’ve made that all clear as mud, let me talk about an area that both groups have in common. Both are very misunderstood by those outside of their groups.

I believe both groups are often misrepresented by the Media. Now, I’m not a “let’s blame everything on the media” type of guy, but the reality is, both groups are often thrown in with the “radicals” of their respective groups. Call it lazy reporting. Call it misinformed sources. Call it bias. Whatever the reason, the fact is that most of the time, M.C.s are labeled as gangs. In fact, often a Motorcycle Club is actually referred to as a Motorcycle Gang. I’ve seen Christian and Sobriety M.C.s referred to as “gangs.”

The reality is most M.C.s are made up of law-abiding people. In fact, many have zero tolerance for any type of illegal activity among club members. Are the members of some clubs actively involved in criminal activity? Sure. But they are the exception, not the norm. In fact, there’s a reason why some Clubs wear an additional patch with “1%er” on it. Most do not, and almost all of the ones that do not wear the “1%er” patch have zero interest in illegal activity. The debate of questionable behaviour within “1%er” Clubs is best left for another time. Although it’s an interesting debate to say the least.

At the same time, the Church is often labeled because of the behaviour of a few. The majority of Christ followers strongly believe that their role is to make a difference in the lives of their family, friends, and the people of their community. They’re not mean-spirited, judgmental, or bigoted. They don’t hate certain groups. They love God. They love Jesus. They strive to live a life that would represent Jesus to others. Yes, there is a small group of “fanatics” who do stupid things. They carry signs that speak of God’s hatred for certain groups. They justify their behaviour because they believe the end result is what truly matters, even if the behaviour is contrary to everything Jesus taught. However, I believe that this group is a very small group – perhaps the Church’s “1%ers.”

I love what Keller says about Christian fanatics in The Reason For God:

Think of people you consider fanatical. They’re overbearing, self-righteous, opinionated, insensitive, and harsh. Why? It’s not because they are too Christian but because they are not Christian enough. They are fanatically zealous and courageous, but they are not fanatically humble, sensitive, loving, empathetic, forgiving, or understanding – as Christ was….What strikes us as overly fanatical is actually a failure to be fully committed to Christ and his gospel.

How very true.

Reasons for the Misunderstanding

As I already said, I’m not a “blame everything on the media” kind of guy. I think there are a couple of other reasons why both these groups are so misunderstood by the general public. Motorcycle Clubs are designed to keep people at a distance. Let’s face it, grab a bunch of big guys with long hair and beards, dirty jeans, leather jackets and loud Harleys and you’re going to intimidate some people. And, for most Club members, that’s just fine with them. If someone is intimidated by you, they are less likely to bother you. Most club members like being left alone. They are part of a group because they’ve connected with others. They are quite happy just hanging with their brothers, and the less you bother them, the better. Bikers like having a bravado or machismo that keeps others at a distance.

I love the video of a well known Christian motorcycle group that shows a bunch of the members pulling over to help a lady in a broken down car. She’s sitting inside with the doors locked, refusing to unlock the door or roll down the window. The guys show her their patch which clearly identifies them as Christians, and yet she remains frightened. It’s no surprise if you were looking at the situation through her eyes! Even today, although I’m not a part of an M.C., if I’m riding in a pack of bikes, we intimidate those around us. Cars generally move over when they see ten or fifteen bikes pulling up behind them.

Most Motorcycle Clubs have little interest in changing this perception. They want to be seen as tough and intimidating. Yes, I’m speaking generally here, and there are a few exceptions. For the most part club members have little interest in changing this misunderstanding.

The misunderstanding that the Church faces is different. Most Christ followers do not want to be viewed in the same light as the fanatics. The challenge for them is how to change the public perception without coming across as self-serving. You see, a Christ follower focuses on doing things quietly, behind the scenes. Most are not wanting recognition for the good that they do. That’s not why they do it. Christ followers serve their communities because they believe God wants them to do just that. They don’t do it so that people will applaud them.

So, how does the Church change this public misunderstanding. To be honest, I don’t think they need to worry about it. I believe that when Christ followers focus their attention on loving their family, friends and neighbours, they will achieve more than any “media campaign” could ever do. I believe that Bikers’ Church has proven this. I have heard or read of many times when a biker in Ottawa has criticized Bikers’ Church by lumping us in with “all churches” only to be corrected by another member of the motorcycle community. Often, the person doing the correcting will say something like, “I’m not a part of Bikers’ Church, but they are good people and they are nothing like what you are describing.” I believe the more we do good within the motorcycle community, the less we’ll have to explain public misunderstandings about the church.

Alright, there you have it: one way that the Church and M.C.s are the same is the misunderstanding both experience within the general public. However, the reasons and response can be somewhat different.

Next time, I’ll start to focus in on some of the specific expectations that you find in an M.C. and what the Church could learn from them.

Feel free to share your comments.

Yeah, I know. Having the Church in the same title as the M.C. seems like a strange thing to do. In the words of my friend Kelly would say, it’s a juxtaposition! Just how do these two groups fit together?

I’ve been doing a lot of thinking about both these subjects. My thoughts about the Church are focused mainly on a church called Capital City Bikers’ Church. My church. It’s filled with some amazing people. People I love dearly. Many of them I haven’t seen in a few months while I’m on this three month break. But that doesn’t mean I haven’t been thinking of them. I’ve been contemplating the many areas of Bikers’ Church, considering ways we can improve and strengthen what we do. I’ve been asking God to give some clear direction for the future of Bikers’ Church. I believe he is doing just that.

At the same time, my mind has been on the biker culture. There’s a bunch of reasons for that. In an older post, I shared about some friends (the aforementioned Kelly and her man Jase) who experienced a major fire at their bike shop. After talking with a couple of bikers (Mike & Fred), I decided to set up a way for people to donate to help these bikers. I was amazed at how many people rose to the occasion. Total strangers donated. It was is amazing.

Another reason for why I’m spending a lot of time thinking about the M.C. (Motorcycle Club) culture is the time I spent with a friend during my road trip. His passion and love for his patch was very evident to me. Whether he continues in his club or not, he reminded me again of the dedication required to be part of a true M.C.

Finally, I find myself thinking a lot about M.C. culture because I’m addicted to the television show Sons of Anarchy. Without question, it is the most well written, character driven drama on TV right now. Every episode keeps me captivated and once I’m done watching, I find myself drawn to the culture. Not the gun-running, illegal activity of the culture, but the no-holds-family-first passion that M.C. members have for each other.

Before we started Bikers’ Church, we actually established a Christian M.C. here in Ottawa. We did it right. The club followed all the typical rules of any M.C. I was very excited about the club. Once the church got going, I found myself struggling with trying to do both. Specifically, I struggled with the need for a church to be inclusive while a club is, by nature, exclusive. In the end, we decided to shut down the M.C. in order to put all our efforts into the church. I still believe it was the right decision.

During the club days, I remember many pastors asking me about the process for becoming a member. Hangaround, Prospect, dues, regulations were all words that pastors found fascinating. Over and over, I heard statements like, “If only I could implement the same process in the church.” “If we put the same expectations on a church member that a club does on one of their members, we’d accomplish so much more in the church.” There’s so much truth in their thoughts.

And so, over the next few blog posts, I want to share my perspective on what the Church can learn from the M.C. culture. And, perhaps I’ll even toss in a few thougths about what the M.C. culture can learn from the Church. I think you’ll be surprised at how many ways these two groups can imitate one another.

More to come. Click here to read part two.

Comments?

During the past week, I’ve been sharing a few of my older talks. Last time, I shared a messaged about forgiveness. I want to follow that up with this message: why forgive?

I hope it speaks to you.

Last time we I made a very important statement regarding grace:

The gospel of grace begins and ends with forgiveness

We talked about the fact that God expects us to forgive. In fact, He more than expects it … He commands us to forgive.

God linked our willingness to forgive others to His ability to forgive us. He did it in the Lord’s prayer when He told us to pray: “Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors” – or “Extend grace to us in the same measure as we extend grace to others.

But, as we learned last time, forgiveness is an act of faith. It’s truly believing that God is a better judge than you are. By forgiving, you are trusting God to deal with the situation better than yourself.

We also tried to be honest: Forgiveness is not easy. It’s not just a matter of saying, “Oh well, I forgive you.”

The idea of forgiveness goes against everything in us. When I feel wronged, I can come up with a hundred reasons why not to forgive: He needs to learn a lesson. I don’t want to encourage irresponsible behaviour. I’ll let her stew for a while; it will do her good. She needs to learn that actions have consequences. I was the wronged party – it’s not up to me to make the first move. How can I forgive when he’s not even sorry? When I finally decide to forgive, it’s like a leap from sound argument to mushy sentiment.

So why forgive?

Well, we already discussed the first reason: God commands us to forgive.

Another reason to forgive is only forgiveness can stop the cycle of blame and pain, breaking the chain of ungrace. In the Bible, the most common Greek word for forgiveness means, literally, to release, to hurl away, to free yourself.
The word resentment describes what happens when the cycle of ungrace continues. It means, literally, to “feel again”: resentment clings to the past, relives it over and over, picks each fresh scab so that the wound never heals.

Forgiveness offers a way out of the cycle. It doesn’t settle the questions of fairness and blame – it fact, it often evades those questions – but it allows for a fresh start.

You see, forgiveness is not just for the guilty person. It also frees the innocent party. When you forgive, you release yourself. As one author put it: “The first and often the only person to be healed by forgiveness is the person who does the forgiveness … When we genuinely forgive, we set a prisoner free and then discover that the prisoner we set free was us.”

A third reason to forgive is that forgiveness loosens the stranglehold of guilt in the perpetrator.

Let me read you a few stories from Yancey’s book to explain:

In 1993 a Ku Klux Klansman named Henry Alexander made a confession to his wife. In 1957 he and several other Klansmen had pulled a black truck driver from his cab, marched him to a deserted bridge high above a swift river, and made him jump, screaming, to his death. Alexander was charged with the crime in 1976-it took nearly twenty years to bring him to trial-pled innocent and was acquitted by a white jury. For thirty-six years he insisted on his innocence, until the day in 1993 when he confessed the truth to his wife. “I don’t even know what God has planned for me. I don’t even know how to pray for myself,” he told her. A few days later, he died.

Alexander’s wife wrote a letter of apology to the black man’s widow, a letter subsequently printed in The New York Times. “Henry lived a lie all his life,- and he made me live it too,” she wrote. For all those years she had believed her husband’s protestations of innocence. He showed no outward sign of remorse until the last days of his life, too late to attempt public restitution. Yet he could not carry the terrible secret of guilt to his grave. After thirty-six years of fierce denial, he still needed the release only forgiveness could provide.

Another member of the Ku Klux Klan, the Grand Dragon Larry Trapp of Lincoln, Nebraska, made national headlines in 1992 when he renounced his hatred, tore down his Nazi flags, and destroyed his many cartons of hate literature. As Kathryn Watterson recounts in the book Not by the Sword, Trapp had been won over by the forgiving love of a Jewish cantor and his family. Though Trapp had sent them vile pamphlets mocking big-nosed Jews and denying the Holocaust, though he had threatened violence in phone calls made to their home, though he had targeted their synagogue for bombing, the cantor’s family consistently responded with compassion and concern. Diabetic since childhood, Trapp was confined to a wheelchair and rapidly going blind; the cantor’s family invited Trapp into their home to care for him. “They showed me such love that I couldn’t help but love them back,” Trapp later said. He spent his last months of life seeking forgiveness from Jewish groups, the NAACP, and the many individuals he had hated.

Forgiveness is not the same as a pardon: you may forgive one who wronged you and still insist on a just punishment for that wrong. However, forgiveness will release its healing power both in you and in the person who wronged you.

Reginald Denny, the truck driver assaulted during the riots in South Central Los Angeles, demonstrated this power of grace. The entire nation watched the helicopter video of two men smashing his truck window with a brick, hauling him from a cab, then beating him with a broken bottle and kicking him until the side of his face caved in. In court, his tormentors were belligerent and unrepentant, yielding no ground. With worldwide media looking on, Reginald Denny, his face still swollen and misshapen, shook off the protests of his lawyers, made his way over to the mothers of the two defendants, hugged them, and told them he forgave them. The mothers embraced Denny, one declaring, “I love you.”

I do not know what effect that scene had on the surly defendants, sitting in handcuffs not far away. But I do know that forgiveness, and only forgiveness, can begin the thaw in the guilty party.

Rebecca’s story a powerful illustration of forgiveness and the power of grace.

She had married a pastor who had some renown as a retreat leader. It became apparent, however, that her husband had a dark side. He dabbled in pornography, and on his trips to other cities he solicited prostitutes. Sometimes he asked Rebecca for forgiveness, sometimes he did not. In time, he left her for another woman, Julianne.

Rebecca told us how painful it was for her, a pastor’s wife, to suffer this humiliation. Some church members who had respected her husband treated her as if his sexual straying had been her fault. Devastated, she found herself pulling away from human contact, unable to trust another person. She could never put her husband out of mind because they had children and she had to make regular contact with him in order to arrange his visitation privileges.

Rebecca had the increasing sense that unless she forgave her former husband, a hard lump of revenge would be passed on to their children. For months she prayed. At first her prayers seemed as vengeful as some of the Psalms: she asked God to give her ex-husband “what he deserved.” Finally she came to the place of letting God, not herself, determine “what he deserved.”

One night Rebecca called her ex-husband and said, in a shaky, strained voice, “I want you to know that I forgive you for what you’ve done to me. And I forgive Julianne too.” He laughed off her apology, unwilling to admit he had done anything wrong. Despite his rebuff, that conversation helped Rebecca get past her bitter feelings.

A few years later Rebecca got a hysterical phone call from Julianne, the woman who had “stolen” her husband. She had been attending a ministerial conference with him in Minneapolis, and he had left the hotel room to go for a walk. A few hours passed, then Julianne heard from the police: her husband had been picked up for soliciting a prostitute.

On the phone with Rebecca, Julianne was sobbing. “I never believed you,” she said. “I kept telling myself that even if what you said was true, he had changed. And now this. I feel so ashamed, and hurt, and guilty. I have no one on earth who can understand. Then I remembered the night when you said you forgave us. I thought maybe you could understand what I’m going through. It’s a terrible thing to ask, I know, but could I come talk to you?”

Somehow Rebecca found the courage to invite Julianne over that same evening. They sat in her living room, cried together, shared stories of betrayal, and in the end prayed together. Julianne now points to that night as the time when she became a Christian.

“For a long time, I had felt foolish about forgiving my husband,” Rebecca said. “But that night I realized the fruit of forgiveness. Julianne was right. I could understand what she was going through. And because I had been there too, I could be on her side, instead of her enemy. We both had been betrayed by the same man. Now it was up to me to teach her how to overcome the hatred and revenge and guilt she was feeling.”

Conclusion

Forgiveness is never easy. And yet, it’s necessary.

Comments?

Last time, I shared the introduction talk from the series, “What’s So Amazing About Grace?” I received a number of emails and comments and so I’ve decided to share the next talk in that series. A talk about learning to forgive others. I hope it challenges and encourages you.

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Let me begin by quoting Philip Yancey again:

In 1898 Daisy was born into a working-class Chicago family, the eighth child of ten. The father barely earned enough to feed them all, and after he took up drinking, money got much scarcer. Daisy, closing in on her hundredth birthday as I write this, shudders when she talks about those days. Her father was a “mean drunk,” she says. Daisy used to cower in the corner, sobbing, as he kicked her baby brother and sister across the linoleum floor. She hated him with all her heart.

One day the father declared that he wanted his wife out of the house by noon. All ten kids crowded around their mother, clinging to her skirt and crying, “No, don’t go!” But their father did not back down. Holding on to her brothers and sisters for support, Daisy watched through the bay window as her mother walked down the sidewalk, shoulders a droop, a suitcase in each hand, growing smaller and smaller until finally she disappeared from view.

Some of the children eventually rejoined their mother, and some went to live with other relatives. It fell to Daisy to stay with her father. She grew up with a hard knot of bitterness inside her, a tumor of hatred over what he had done to the family. All the kids dropped out of school early in order to take jobs or join the Army, and then one by one they moved away to other towns. They got married, started families, and tried to put the past behind them. The father vanished-no one knew where and no one cared.

Many years later, to everyone’s surprise, the father resurfaced. He had guttered out, he said. Drunk and cold, he had wandered into a Salvation Army rescue mission one night. To earn a meal ticket he first had to attend a worship service. When the speaker asked if anyone wanted to accept Jesus, he thought it only polite to go forward along with some of the other drunks. He was more surprised than anybody when the “sinner’s prayer” actually worked. The demons inside him quieted down. He sobered up. He began studying the Bible and praying. For the first time in his life he felt loved and accepted. He felt clean.

And now, he told his children, he was looking them up one by one to ask for forgiveness. He couldn’t defend anything that had happened. He couldn’t make it right. But he was sorry, more sorry than they could possibly imagine.

The children, now middle-aged and with families of their own, were initially skeptical. Some doubted his sincerity, expecting him to fall off the wagon at any moment. Others figured he would soon ask for money. Neither happened, and in time the father won them over, all except Daisy.

Long ago Daisy had vowed never to speak to her father- “that man” she called him-again. Her father’s reappearance rattled her badly, and old memories of his drunken rages came flooding back as she lay in bed at night. “He can’t undo all that just by saying ‘I’m sorry,’” Daisy insisted. She wanted no part of him.

The father may have given up drinking, but alcohol had damaged his liver beyond repair. He got very sick, and for the last five years of his life he lived with one of his daughters, Daisy’s sister. They lived, in fact, eight houses down the street from Daisy, on the very same row-house block. Keeping her vow, Daisy never once stopped in to visit her dying father, even though she passed by his house whenever she went grocery shopping or caught a bus.

Daisy did consent to let her own children visit their grandfather. Nearing the end, the father saw a little girl come to his door and step inside. “Oh, Daisy, Daisy, you’ve come to me at last,” he cried, gathering her in his arms. The adults in the room didn’t have the heart to tell him the girl was not Daisy, but her daughter Margaret. He was hallucinating grace.

All her life Daisy determined to be unlike her father, and indeed she never touched a drop of alcohol. Yet she ruled her own family with a milder form of the tyranny she had grown up under. She would lie on a couch with a rubber ice pack on her head and scream at the kids to “Shut up!”

“Why did I ever have you stupid kids anyway?” she would yell. “You’ve ruined my life!” The Great Depression had hit, and each child was one more mouth to feed. She had six in all, rearing them in the two-bedroom row house she lives in to this day. In such close quarters, they seemed always underfoot. Some nights she gave them all whippings just to make a point: she knew they’d done wrong even if she hadn’t caught them.

Hard as steel, Daisy never apologized and never forgave. Her daughter Margaret remembers as a child coming in tears to apologize for something she’d done. Daisy responded with a parental Catch-22: “You can’t possibly be sorry! If you were really sorry, you wouldn’t have done it in the first place.”

I have heard many such stories of ungrace from Margaret, whom I know well. All her life she determined to be different from her mother, Daisy. But Margaret’s life had its own tragedies, some large and some small, and as her four children entered their teenage years she felt she was losing control of them. She too wanted to lie on the couch with an ice pack and scream, “Shut up!” She too wanted to whip them just to make a point or maybe to release some of the tension coiled inside her.

Her son Michael, who turned sixteen in the 1960s, especially got under her skin. He listened to rock and roll, wore “granny glasses,” let his hair grow long. Margaret kicked him out of the house when she caught him smoking pot, and he moved into a hippie commune. She continued to threaten and scold him. She reported him to a judge. She wrote him out of her will. She tried everything she could think of, and nothing got through to Michael. The words she flung up against him fell back, useless, until finally one day in a fit of anger she said, “I never want to see you again as long as I live.” That was twenty-six years ago and she has not seen him since.

Michael is also my close friend. Several times during those twenty-six years I have attempted some sort of reconciliation between the two, and each time I confront again the terrible power of ungrace. When I asked Margaret if she regretted anything she had said to her son, if she’d like to take anything back, she turned on me in a flash of hot rage as if I were Michael himself. “I don’t know why God didn’t take him long ago, for all the things he’s done!” she said, with a wild, scary look in her eye.

Her brazen fury caught me off guard. I stared at her for a minute: her hands clenched, her face florid, tiny muscles twitching around her eyes. “Do you mean you wish your own son was dead?” I asked at last. She never answered.

Michael emerged from the sixties mellower, his mind dulled by LSD. He moved to Hawaii, lived with a woman, left her, tried another, left her, and then got married. “Sue is the real thing,” he told me when I visited him once. “This one will last.”

It did not last. I remember a phone conversation with Michael, interrupted by the annoying technological feature known as “call waiting.” The line clicked and Michael said, “Excuse me a second,” then left me holding a silent phone receiver for at least four minutes. He apologized when he came back on. His mood had darkened. “It was Sue,” he said. “We’re settling some of the last financial issues of the divorce.”

“I didn’t know you still had contact with Sue,” I said, making conversation.

“I don’t!” he cut in, using almost the same tone I had heard from his mother, Margaret. “I hope I never see her again as long as I live!”

We both stayed silent for a long time. We had just been talking about Margaret, and although I said nothing it seemed to me that Michael had recognized in his own voice the tone of his mother, which was actually the tone of her mother, tracing all the way back to what happened in a Chicago row house nearly a century ago.

Like a spiritual defect encoded in the family DNA, ungrace gets passed on in an unbroken chain.

Ungrace does its work quietly and lethally, like a poisonous, undetectable gas. A father dies unforgiven. A mother who once carried a child in her own body does not speak to that child for half its life. The toxin steals on, from generation to generation.

Margaret is a devout Christian who studies the Bible every day, and once I spoke to her about the parable of the Prodigal Son. “What do you do with that parable?” I asked. “Do you hear its message of forgiveness?”

She had obviously thought about the matter, for without hesitation she replied that the parable appears in Luke 15 as the third in a series of three: lost coin, lost sheep, lost son. She said the whole point of the Prodigal Son is to demonstrate how human beings differ from inanimate objects (coins) and from animals (sheep). “People have free will,” she said. “They have to be morally responsible. That boy had to come crawling back on his knees. He had to repent. That was Jesus’ point.”

That was not Jesus’ point, Margaret. All three stories emphasize the finder’s joy. True, the prodigal returned home of his own free will, but clearly the central focus of the story is the father’s outrageous love: “But while he was still a long way off, his father saw him and was filled with compassion for him; he ran to his son, threw his arms around him and kissed him.” When the son tries to repent, the father interrupts his prepared speech in order to get the celebration under way.

Last week, the focus was on Grace.

The opposite of Grace is ungrace

What is ungrace?

Ungrace = Unforgiveness

The gospel of grace begins and ends with forgiveness

Jesus saw forgiveness as so vital that He linked it to God in the Lord’s Prayer:

Matthew 6:15: Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors.

Paraphrase: “Show us grace the same way we show grace to others.”

There’s a cool little verse tucked away in Romans 12. The Apostle Paul writes things like: Hate evil, Be joyful, Live in harmony, Do not be conceited – the list goes on and on. Then appears this verse: Do not take revenge, my friends, but leave room for God’s wrath, for it is written: ‘It is mine to avenge, I will repay,’ says the Lord.

FORGIVENESS IS AN ACT OF FAITH

By forgiving another, I am trusting that God is a better justice-maker than I am. By forgiving, I release my own right to get even and leave all issues of fairness for God to work out. I leave in God’s hands the scales that must balance justice and mercy.

Forgiveness is not a natural act – it’s hard to do – just forgive someone. Even when we are in the wrong, we want to earn our forgiveness … not just receive it.
Matthew 5:23-24: Therefore, if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there in front of the altar. First go and be reconciled to your brother, then come and offer your gift.

How serious to most Christians treat that verse?

Forgiveness is an act of faith.

Once again, I welcome your comments and thoughts on this post.

If you’d like to read more about this subject, here are some passages from the Bible

2 Samuel 11:1-27
2 Samuel 12:1-25
Psalm 51
Psalm 32
Colossians 3:1-17

I’m posting some of the talks that I’ve given at Bikers’ Church in hopes that they are an encouragement to you. This talk was the introduction to a series I did called What’s So Amazing About Grace? Without a doubt, it’s my favourite subject. Like many of the talks I do, this one is based on a book by Philip Yancey.

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Grace.

It’s a simple word. Philip Yancey, who has written over a dozen books and finds the study of words very fascinating, calls the word grace “the last best word.”

Every English usage of the word retains some of the glory of the original. Words like graceful, gratified, congratulated, gracious, gratuity, ingrate, disgrace, somehow hold on to the original meaning of the word grace.

The entire Gospel message can be summed up in that one word. Everything the Church is supposed to stand for can be simplified to that one word.

And yet, isn’t it strange that sometimes the hardest place to find grace is within the church, an institution founded to proclaim, in Paul’s words, “the gospel of God’s grace.”

The Greek root word for grace is the word charis which holds a verb that means, “I rejoice, I am glad.” And yet rejoicing and gladness are not necessarily the first images that come to mind when people think of the church.

Yancey tells the story of a prostitute that I want to read for you tonight.

I told a story in my book The Jesus I Never Knew, a true story that long afterward continued to haunt me. I heard it from a friend who works with the down-and-out in Chicago:

A prostitute came to me in wretched straits, homeless, sick, unable to buy food for her two-year-old daughter. Through sobs and tears, she told me she had been renting out her daughter- two years old!-to men interested in kinky sex. She made more renting out her daughter for an hour than she could earn on her own in a night. She had to do it, she said, to support her own drug habit. I could hardly bear hearing her sordid story. For one thing, it made me legally liable-I’m required to report cases of child abuse. I had no idea what to say to this woman.

At last I asked if she had ever thought of going to a church for help. I will never forget the look of pure, naive shock that crossed her face. “Church!” she cried. “Why would I ever go there? I was already feeling terrible about myself. They’d just make me feel worse.”

What struck me about my friend’s story is that women much like this prostitute fled toward Jesus, not away from him. The worse a person felt about herself, the more likely she saw Jesus as a refuge. Has the church lost that gift? Evidently the down-and-out, who flocked to Jesus when he lived on earth, no longer feel welcome among his followers. What has happened?

What comes to mind when you think of the word “grace”?

A counselor, David Seamands, summed up his career this way:

Many years ago I was driven to the conclusion that the two major causes of most emotional problems among evangelical Christians are these: the failure to understand, receive, and live out God’s unconditional grace and forgiveness; and the failure to give out that unconditional love, forgiveness, and grace to other people. … We read, we hear, we believe a good theology of grace. But that’s not the way we live. The good news of the Gospel of grace has not penetrated the level of our emotions.

Do you agree with his statement?

Let me share a powerful story that Yancey gives to define grace. Something that you can take and consider during the week.

A young girl grows up on a cherry orchard just above Traverse City, Michigan. Her parents, a bit old-fashioned, tend to overreact to her nose ring, the music she listens to, and the length of her skirts. They ground her a few times, and she seethes inside. “I hate you!” she screams at her father when he knocks on the door of her room after an argument, and that night she acts on a plan she has mentally rehearsed scores of times. She runs away.

She has visited Detroit only once before, on a bus trip with her church youth group to watch the Tigers play. Because newspapers in Traverse City report in lurid detail the gangs, the drugs, and the violence in downtown Detroit, she concludes that is probably the last place her parents will look for her. California, maybe, or Florida, but not Detroit.

Her second day there she meets a man who drives the biggest car she’s ever seen. He offers her a ride, buys her lunch, arranges a place for her to stay. He gives her some pills that make her feel better than she’s ever felt before. She was right all along, she decides: her parents were keeping her from all the fun.

The good life continues for a month, two months, a year. The man with the big car-she calls him “Boss”-teaches her a few things that men like. Since she’s underage, men pay a premium for her. She lives in a penthouse, and orders room service whenever she wants. Occasionally she thinks about the folks back home, but their lives now seem so boring that she can hardly believe she grew up there.

She has a brief scare when she sees her picture printed on the back of a milk carton with the headline “Have you seen this child?” But by now she has blond hair, and with all the makeup and body-piercing jewelry she wears, nobody would mistake her for a child. Besides, most of her friends are runaways, and nobody squeals in Detroit.

After a year the first sallow signs of illness appear, and it amazes her how fast the boss turns mean. “These days, we can’t mess around,” he growls, and before she knows it she’s out on the street without a penny to her name. She still turns a couple of tricks a night, but they don’t pay much, and all the money goes to support her habit. When winter blows in she finds herself sleeping on metal grates outside the big department stores. “Sleeping” is the wrong word-a teenage girl at night in downtown Detroit can never relax her guard. Dark bands circle her eyes. Her cough worsens.

One night as she lies awake listening for footsteps, all of a sudden everything about her life looks different. She no longer feels like a woman of the world. She feels like a little girl, lost in a cold and frightening city. She begins to whimper. Her pockets are empty and she’s hungry. She needs a fix. She pulls her legs tight underneath her and shivers under the newspapers she’s piled atop her coat. Something jolts a synapse of memory and a single image fills her mind: of May in Traverse City, when a million cherry trees bloom at once, with her golden retriever dashing through the rows and rows of blossomy trees in chase of a tennis ball.

God, why did I leave, she says to herself, and pain stabs at her heart. My dog back home eats better than I do now. She’s sobbing, and she knows in a flash that more than anything else in the world she wants to go home.

Three straight phone calls, three straight connections with the answering machine. She hangs up without leaving a message the first two times, but the third time she says, “Dad, Mom, it’s me. I was wondering about maybe coming home. I’m catching a bus up your way, and it’ll get there about midnight tomorrow. If you’re not there, well, I guess I’ll just stay on the bus until it hits Canada.”

It takes about seven hours for a bus to make all the stops between Detroit and Traverse City, and during that time she realizes the flaws in her plan. What if her parents are out of town and miss the message? Shouldn’t she have waited another day or so until she could talk to them? And even if they are home, they probably wrote her off as dead long ago. She should have given them some time to overcome the shock.

Her thoughts bounce back and forth between those worries and the speech she is preparing for her father. “Dad, I’m sorry. I know I was wrong. It’s not your fault; it’s all mine. Dad, can you forgive me?” She says the words over and over, her throat tightening even as she rehearses them. She hasn’t apologized to anyone in years.

The bus has been driving with lights on since Bay City. Tiny snowflakes hit the pavement rubbed worn by thousands of tires, and the asphalt steams. She’s forgotten how dark it gets at night out here. A deer darts across the road and the bus swerves. Every so often, a billboard. A sign posting the mileage to Traverse City. Oh, God.

When the bus finally rolls into the station, its air brakes hissing in protest, the driver announces in a crackly voice over the microphone, “Fifteen minutes, folks. That’s all we have here.” Fifteen minutes to decide her life. She checks herself in a compact mirror, smoothes her hair, and licks the lipstick off her teeth. She looks at the tobacco stains on her fingertips, and wonders if her parents will notice. If they’re there. She walks into the terminal not knowing what to expect.

Not one of the thousand scenes that have played out in her mind prepare her for what she sees. There, in the concrete-walls-and-plastic-chairs bus terminal in Traverse City, Michigan, stands a group of forty brothers and sisters and great-aunts and uncles and cousins and a grandmother and great-grandmother to boot. They’re all wearing goofy party hats and blowing noise-makers, and taped across the entire wall of the terminal is a computer-generated banner that reads “Welcome home!”

Out of the crowd of well-wishers breaks her dad. She stares out through the tears quivering in her eyes like hot mercury and begins the memorized speech, “Dad, I’m sorry. I know …”

He interrupts her. “Hush, child. We’ve got no time for that. No time for apologies. You’ll be late for the party. A banquet’s waiting for you at home.”

Grace. Do we truly understand the word? Do we truly understand what’s so amazing about grace?

We have a statement here at Bikers’ Church that we live by:
There is nothing you can do to make God love you more. There is nothing we can do to make God love you less.

Why do we struggle with God’s grace so much? Why do we struggle with extending that grace to others?

They are great questions. Feel free to offer your thoughts in the comments section below.

If you’d like to read some passages on grace, check out the following:

Nehemiah 9:16-18; Proverbs 3:34; Jonah 2:6-9
John 1:1-18
Acts 4:32-34; Acts 11:19-24
Romans 3:21-31
2 Corinthians 5:16-6:2