Brian Hofmeister :: Blog :: Archives

April 2008

April 03, 2008

http://root48.wordpress.com/2008/04/03/redemption-gallery/ 

Redemption is kind of tough to package - too profound to philosophize, too emotional to outline, too costly to market.  We tend to rely on the arts to give to expression to that which fails our words, and that is what my art does with redemption.  

I recently posted my artwork on the root48 site, and invite you to view it here.

Keywords: Art, Artwork, Oil Painting, Redemption

Posted by Brian Hofmeister | 0 comment(s)

April 14, 2008

http://root48.wordpress.com/2008/04/08/offensive-prayer/ 

Offensive prayer adds passion to expectancy.  If the prayer really means something to you, passion or agony will be present.  A deep ache that cannot rest until it is satisfied. 

Fasting begins to take place not because we disciplined ourselves to do so, but rather that our want for the prayer was so singular that we forgot our want for food. 

The prayer offense is more than conversation, more than request; the prayer offensive makes demands.  So assured that what we pray for needs to happen; we have to audacity to makes demands of God.  Convinced that our prayers have not a trace of self, but rather that we have come by the authority of Jesus to present to plan of Jesus.  It is his bidding we represent, thus we ask with force well beyond on our place as men.  In a state of prayer we have left behind all that is self.  We stand before the Father as Jesus.  At that moment in time we reside in the spirit world, driven by the Holy Spirit, actualizing that which Jesus put in motion and plans to secure. 

Keywords: Jesus, Prayer, Theology

Posted by Brian Hofmeister | 0 comment(s)

April 29, 2008

http://root48.wordpress.com/2008/04/29/discipleship-the-big-issues/ 

As I finish my weekly checklist of Christian activities, I often wonder if any of it made me look more like Jesus.  I connect with a small group, serve with a ministry team, attend a Sunday service, and maintain personal devotion time - all of this helps me learn and grow, but I sense the need for a comprehensive plan whereby I, and others around me, become better disciples of Jesus.  It kind of feels like church structures are hoping that discipleship just happens on its own somewhere in the immersion of church activities.  

We need a plan.  We have to do more than hope discipleship happens.  No commission from Jesus was more clear than to make disciples.  Discipleship is the most fundamental unit of the Kingdom of Jesus - if we cannot reproduce a disciple, we cannot do anything else for the Kingdom.  With a plethora of activities and the absence of planning, I fear our lives will do little more than wander in the direction of Jesus, never reaching the destination he intends. 

Over the course of this week, I will post a daily blog on well known discipleship models.  I invite you to explore, evaluate, and recreate these models by posting your comments as we work together toward a discipleship plan for our churches.  I recommend subscribing to email updates to stay up on the latest posts. 

Here are a few overarching questions/observations for you to comment on and get us started.

  1. Do we need a Model?  It sounds rather holy when people say that all we need is Jesus, all we need is love, or all we need is the Bible.  However, I believe that stewardship of the resources and goals Jesus has proscribed to us requires an intentional plan, and therefore in all probability, a structure/model to maintain that intentionality.
  2. Can one Model work for Everyone?  In other words, should a church focus their efforts on one discipleship plan or an open a buffet line of options?  I’m personally leaning toward one focused plan within any given church, yet we also have to find a way to foster creativity and flexibility so as not to suck the life out of it.  We also have to question here whether a standard curriculum/workbook helps or hurts us.
  3. Can Discipleship be Measured?  It is going to get really frustrating if we have no way to measure progress toward the end destination, but I’m still not sure how.  I’d like to think that we can focus life in Jesus toward three-five key directions, and then establish mile-markers of maturity in each of those directions.
  4. Action Orientation. No questions here, just statement.  For too long we have assumed that learning more will translate to doing more. Any discipleship plan that educates more than activates is worthless.  Faith is something you act on more than think on.

Posted by Brian Hofmeister | 1 comment(s)

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