Tuesday, December 20, 2016

How God Taught me to Give part 2

In my previous article I shared how people taught me to give. I experimented and tried to give as much as I could in that year. On my own, there are times when giving stems from a selfish heart. Other times, I preferred to be self-indulgent and spend on myself.
Some lessons I learnt from the experiment were that to make generosity a lifestyle, it had to be permeate your choices, daily and consciously.
2 Cor9:6-9
 The point is this: whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully. 7 Each one must give as he has decided in his heart, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver. 8 And God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that having all sufficiency in all things at all times, you may abound in every good work. 9 As it is written,
“He has distributed freely, he has given to the poor;
his righteousness endures forever.”

Oftentimes, this passaged has been used in several ways and many times it has caused discomfort in many hearers. Yet this passage is fundamental to our understanding of being in a generous lifestyle.
Being of good cheer
To be generous over the course of your life, there must be some way of doing it in a sustainable practical way. Avoid giving out of compulsion for God loves a cheerful giver. (2cor9:7). How then do we build cheer? Ps 37:3-7 gives us some clue. Trusting in Him, Delighting in Him and Committing our way to him. Spend time in the Lord and enjoy his presence (ie: Delighting). Let him fill your cheer and contemplate on His cross and his generous love that he was willing to die and save us.



Intentionality, Discipline, Consistency,
In the earlier part of 2 Cor 9, in verses 1-5, he told the more affluent Corinthian Christians to be prepared with a love-gift to honour and serve the poverty stricken Macedonian Christians. They were legendary in their selfless giving despite being in poverty. Our generousity-inclined lifestyle has to be an intentional choice. It must become a discipline to give often, consistently. For that, like every other aspect of our lives, we have to plan for it.


Stewarding and budgeting for this lifestyle:
In my city, there is an annual shopping marketing blitz called the Great Singapore Sale or affectionately known as GSS.
To really incorporate generousity into our lifestyle, we have to budget for it. Using GSS as a simple acronym, here is some ways to be generous often, and consistently.

G- Give
Decide on an amount or percentage of your monthly income & time that you hope to use to give. This is over and above your tithe. The new testament principle does not give a percentage but simply “be generous”. Find people around who will be blessed and ultimately be intentional that each gift is a worship and to let people know about Jesus.
S-Save
As stewards of God’s money, save to the glory of God. Saving is pragmatic, and will allow us to have a simple life, but also, save with the intention that if God calls you to begin your calling, you are able to begin immediately with the financial resources He allows you to steward.
S-Spend
Spend prudently as a wise steward, knowing that our resources are His and each endeavor with our finances is a testament to who Christ is in our lives.


So let our stewardship and lifestyle veer towards generousity but each step, delighting in God, delighting and being of good cheer, enjoying the process of giving as our daily worship to those in need, and people we meet.

How God Taught me To Give part 1


It’s Christmas Time! A time of gift exchanges,  reflection and catching up with old friends!


The past decade, as I entered adulthood in my late teens, I kept meeting inspiring people. People who were called full-time, missionaries, community workers, social workers, random people I met and spoke to, family members, colleagues, classmates, bosses, all kinds of people. They gave their life to various works, to various causes.

But the one thing that threaded my inspiration of them were their tireless generousity. Not all were Christian. In fact, some of my most generous friends are non-believers.

I wondered, what is it about their generousity that elicits inspiration? Why is selflessness so fantastically alluring? What differentiates Christian generousity from non-Christian generousity? Should it, or must it differ? I wanted to emulate that giving spirt and wanted to learn how to give.

The primary way God taught me to give was by example from family, people, from churches, from people I met, books I read the past decade since I was 18. The hodgepodge of generous stories taught me about the beauty of generousity and in turn taught, influenced, modelled and even mentored me no matter how long or how brief the interaction was… Here’s my tribute to the many teachers of generousity in my life:

Family
My mum’s family were 3rd generation Hainanese naturalized immigrants and her siblings are the Baby Boomer Generation, who grew up in 50s-60s Post-war Singapore. Since a child I was always amused, sometimes intrigued by how my mum and her numerous siblings exchange gifts almost on a weekly basis. Although my mum is the only believer in the family, I caught a glimpse of what Romans 12:10 looks like: “10 Love one another with brotherly affection. Outdo one another in showing honour.” This pattern was started by my late Grandma and interestingly, my sisters has also adapted my mum’s extravagant generousity despite their own struggles and various ailments. My cousins always remember my mum as the only aunt who gives and accepts them despite their life-choices.

Her giving was not confined to gifts but she used gifts as a tool to love.

If indeed our Christian family is indeed our true spiritual family, should we not live this lifestyle of “loving affectionately, and outdoing one another in showing honour” to those who are siblings in the faith? It must be our lifestyle.

Friends / People
I remember friends who painstakingly crafted, created random gifts for friends with such thoughtfulness and personalization, and I wonder why’d they do it? Many shares that it was a culture they’ve known all their lives. Their family elders modelled thoughtfulness and generousity to them as children and now they are doing so consistently.

I remember S, a very strong lady, who managed to get diverse gifts for each person at one evangelistic Christmas gathering, I asked her how she managed to get such a diverse and even personalized gift for the close to 100 participants that night. I was amazed as the gifts were not cheap! She told me each personalized gift was a prayer, but the gift buying did not happen just during the Christmas season, but she took time to buy various items throughout the year.

A consistent lifestyle it was, to be generous.

I remember my ex-colleagues of social workers, who were generous even when it hurts.
The team gave, loved, treated each other, cooked for each on such a regular basis it was a beautiful culture. The supervisors and senior management even remembered our birthdays individually and gave us good gifts on our birthdays. I cannot comprehend giving such love to 100 staff on such a regular basis. This, was on top of our daily work then, that involved being generous to our clients day by day. They went the extra mile for clients, getting them supplies from their own pocket, and sometimes after all these extra miles to only receive complaints when some clients get unhinged in stressful times. Yet they still go on.

I remember Mdm D, a Cambodian non-believer, who together with her husband, worked hard to grow their business, with the sole aim of helping her fellow countrymen. She provides numerous jobs, and even homes for her farm workers to raise their family. Being our host in Cambodia, she regularly stopped the bus to feed and clothe random beggars on the street. It was a lifestyle of generousity.

These people I met showed me the beauty of generousity and more importantly, how very possible it was to integrate generousity into our lives.


Churches and Christian Organisations
Peers, people and friends inspires us with individual generousity and thoughtful effort. But when a church or Christian organization do it corporately as a representative of Christ, the beauty is full.

I remember a church in Bangkok, Thailand, who hosted us Singaporeans as we jointly ran a camp for youths and young adults.

The Thai and Singaporean teams were almost the same age, young urban working adults in our mid twenties. Yet here were a team of our peers who modelled for us hospitality. Many took many days of leave and rented vans to drive us around. The lay pastor, a lady, let us stay in her home and gave us sufficient space to rest. Food being important to us South-East Asians, when they fed us, they fed us abundantly.  It was a high cost they were willing to bear. They set the standard for urban hospitality, and we pass on this legacy that when we have any opportunity to host foreign guests and teams. As best as we can.

I remember two Singapore churches who invited the wider body of Christians in the city for training conferences, one a 1000-member church, another a 100-member church. Both church families overwhelmed us with their corporate generousity and kept piling on us hospitality, gifts to the extreme. What they were doing were not just for the conference or training, but they were simply demonstrating what they do on a weekly basis. It was again, lifestyle generousity on a corporate scale. The larger church focused on their immediate community while the smaller church had only one ministry: street kids. What was amazing, was that the hospitality shown was not a messy, spontaneous show, but a intentional lifestyle originating from their leadership and administration.
If the Lord puts you in a position of leadership in an organization or church, will you be willing to model Christ’s generousity corporately?



Mentors
I am blessed to know two great men who have taken the past decade of their lives to listen to countless hours of our cries for help, counselled us late into the night, and was intentional about teaching us the bible several times a week no matter how fatigued they are. They showed us generousity of love in longsuffering-ness. The older mentor was actually the mentor of the younger mentor for more than 25 years! They taught me how to give, nurture, build love over a long, long period of time. They showed me how sowing and discipling is never a once-off 6-month programme, but life on life over a lifetime.

Are we willing to be this generous in our longsuffering to build up the present youth and children?


Books
If there is one book on generousity, it must be “No Greater Love” Mother Teresa. In there, the late great Mother Teresa (now St. Teresa) pens her thoughts and reflections from her several decades of work among the slums in Kolkata. In there she transparently shares her trials, and her struggles to even be generous day by day. One refrain she writes often, is the passage in Matthew 25:40, where King Jesus says, “Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.” Mother Teresa reflects that each act must be a worship to Jesus. Her love for Christ is true and devoted and she writes about Jesus throughout the book, how His love His generousity enables her to do the work even when she does not want to.

She challenges her readers to “give till it hurts, and give till it hurts no more”

Experiment on your own
Despite having all these people in my life, the most difficult is still to live out this generous lifestyle. I can learn all I want and end up never doing, or never intending to do. In 2014, I attempted to try to incline towards giving often. I realized how much of a taker I am rather than a giver. It was a very hard time to change life-long inclinations.
Only the knowledge that God was generous and he wants to use us to be his generous representatives here on earth.

In that year, I found myself vacillating towards all kinds of extremes.

There were days when I did not want to give at all, and I became self-indulgent and ‘gave’ to myself. Other times I gave out of selfish motives.

These are times we realise that our hearts truly need Christ’s cross and we truly need to be saved.
What began as an experiment to try be more generous revealed how much a taker I am.

When we begin to comprehend the amazing grace Christ truly gave all for us, we begin to comprehend that we are called to be on His mission to exhibit his generousity. Read on how poor Macedonia gave abundantly in 2 Cor 8-9, which was the guiding passage on generousity.

Love & The Daddy Heart of God

In 1 Corinthians 13 Paul expounded in his famous treatise of the ‘more excellent way’: Love. 1 Cor 13:3 “ If I give away all I have, and if I deliver up my body to be burned, but have not love, I gain nothing.” That even if we give away everything, but do it not out of Christ’s love, we gain nothing.

Nothing.

Our generousity must be an outflow from Christ love to us, and also an intentional message about our Daddy God’s love.



You might wonder, “I am no Mother Teresa”, “I am not rich”, “I am not in some noble helping professional”. The life models of the several peoples who showed me about their generous giving life were from all walks of life, very poor to very rich. It is a consistent intentional lifestyle to be generous.  

Christian generousity must and should differ from what everyone else does. We have a message of a very rich king who emptied himself and became poor, died rose again, so we can be adopted to His family and allow Him to demonstrate His living life in us.

 A well-known pastor in my city-state wrote extensively about the God of the How Much More. In Matthew 7:11 “how much more will your Father who is in heaven give good things to those who ask him!”

Get to know your Daddy God intimately. And as his child, we live out the identity he given us: Child of God. And from there we reflect our Daddy’s generousity to all.















Thursday, October 20, 2016

6 things about forgiveness




Wrote this piece for ODB YMI.org

This is its raw unedited form.....


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How are you like when you are angry? Do you immediately lash out at people around you? Others of us are the type that silently absorbs it in, calm on the surface, but deep inside, a sparkplug activating the whole mechanism of hatred whirring, accelerating. Some others, numb themselves then when it gets too much, inflict self-hurt or run to their solace of their addictions.
Think, then, were there relationships that were burned up because of anger? Shipwrecked because one party was bitter?
Do you have outstanding, unresolved conflicts? There will definitely be a high chance that unforgiveness is lurking in those storms.
Unforgiveness, I suspect, is no stranger to many of us. We grew up with whole families of relatives that are cut-off from the rest of family because of unforgiveness. We know of former romantic lovers who became bitter nemeses, trying to outdo the other in tarnishing the other’s reputation. We know of former co-workers or business partners all out to undermine each other because of unforgiveness.
We probably have deep hatred for others as well! Enviously wishing our sibling wasn’t so capable that we have to live in their shadow; having had our family say hurtful words to us when we were little; being in a family where one member was an addict, abuser, disabled or chronically ill where we were sinned against or neglected or made the scapegoat unfairly.
I lived in a family where bitterness and unforgiveness were the order of things It took me my whole life of 28 years to forgive them. I observed that. Bitterness and Unforgiveness are strange burdens to bear:

i)                    Bitterness and unforgiveness feel awful but is almost impossible to let go
Isn’t it strange that we hate to be bitter (after all it’s the same word as the most repugnant taste!), but strangely, we find the need to be near it. It feels like it sucks our energy and “like rottenness to our bones (prov17:22)”
To confront a bitter person and to tell him/her to forgive immediately, it would be met with stiff opposition or hostility. Why so? If bitterness and unforgiveness is as unpleasant as it is, why is it so hard to let go of?

ii)                   Bitterness and unforgiveness is a choice.
There was once a mother who scolded her young son for harbouring a grudge against his sister. Rudely he retorted “If it’s so easy, why don’t you forgive your own brother?”. Shocked at his impetuousness, the mother reacted and exclaimed “Never! Do you know what he did to me?” The child then asked, “then how will you expect me to forgive sister?”

Rude and hurtful as the child’s response to his mother, he was simply mimicking what he observed – that bitterness and unforgiveness is a choice. Unconsciously or consciously, we choose to mete out unforgiveness as a form of ‘just punishment’ on the offender. Someone has sinned against me, they must pay, they must be punished.
Unfortunately, bitterness and unforgiveness is a punishment meted on others but becomes a poison to oneself.

iii)                 Bitterness and unforgiveness is fatal.
It clogs up your strength to live, it snuffs the life out of your soul, it drains you emotionally, and it brings your mental fitness to illness. Bitterness and unforgiveness, are weeds that choke up the whole physical, intellectual, emotional, spiritual systems. However, we, knowingly or unknowingly, nurture and fertilize these weeds. In putting our time and energy to choose bitterness over forgiveness, we feed these weeds which ends up choking us. In extreme cases, bitterness and unforgiveness literally end up fatal, with loss of life. “Then desire when it has conceived gives birth to sin, and sin when it is fully grown brings forth death. - James 1:15”



Who then, do you have a grudge against?

Who can’t you forgive?

Forgiveness is the radical message that Jesus preached. His message jarred against the prevailing worldview then, as now. Vengefulness is the order of the day. But Jesus modelled to the end and even his lifewas poured out to show the impact forgiveness has on the world.

The only response to bitterness is to obey this very message Jesus died for. Forgive. In my journey of forgiving, here are some observations and lessons to aid us in our forgiving:


A)      Forgiveness is not difficult, it's impossible.

In my whole life of bitterness, I heard countless sermons, read books, attended camps and conferences, have been gently or firmly told to release forgiveness. I couldn’t and didn't want to. Not that it was less awful for me, but I simply couldn't imagine where forgiveness was the order of the day. There were feeble attempts over the years, and it would last 5 hours then come back with a vengeance.

Forgiveness is not difficult, it's impossible.

And it required supernatural means to enable a supernatural outcome. If you find yourself butter and unable to forgive, humble yourself under His mighty hand… And cast your worries to Him for He cares for you (1Pet5:6-7). Remember that unforgiveness is a sin and a baggage that only the Holy Spirit in you can enable. Rely on Him while surrendering your inability to be forgiving, daily.

B)      Forgiveness is easier in a safe, healing-friendly environment.

Diane Langberg wrote in her book ‘Suffering and the Heart of God: How Trauma Destroys and Christ Restores’ that, from her years of clinical psychology and therapy, she was consulted with a question on how a woman living with her relentlessly violent husband, can't seem to get over the trauma of his abuse. She wrote,”You cannot ‘get over’  something still happening.” Giving the example of going through a severe bout of flu, with high fever, chills, sniffling nose, you will do all you can to prevent it getting worse, fighting it, enduring it, protecting yourself, awaiting the symptoms to pass so that you begin the recovery work and regain strength. So it is when your bitterness stems from a traumatic, abusive, violating way and still ongoing.

If the sin done against you is as such, consider tweaking your lifestyle so that you have the safety and stability to give forgiveness away. It may include living separately, or other action that enhances your safety. In that safe space when it is no longer ongoing, it will be easier to begin the forgiving process.

C)      Forgiveness is separate from boundary-enforcement.

Likewise, there are consequences when mistakes are done. A person who repeatedly said hurtful words can expect that those he offended will withdraw their friendship for a time. Someone who is perpetually making use of his friends for personal gain, must expect that fewer friends will want to interact with him if they deem that he drains energy or time from them. Similarly, in the right order of things, there are times when we must heal and also allow the natural consequences to be doled out, for a season. As a father disciplines his children, certain times there are consequences to a person’s actions. And forgive simultaneously.

What then, if my bitterness stems from someone who has harmed me or committed a crime in the process? Forgive, you must. But if a crime has been committed, you can also call the police or the appropriate authority in your country or locality. Do remember not to do it out of vengeance or revenge-seeking. Consequences is an effect when boundaries have been crossed and trampled over. Yes you can forgive and call the police.



D)      Forgiveness is a day by day choice.

Aren’t there times we attempt to forgive, but when some memory or trigger jolts us, we feel the wounds all over again? Forgiveness is a constant, conscious, daily choice. Each time we are tempted to withhold forgiveness and choose bitterness, surrender again and let His Spirit in you enable and empower you again to forgive. Lord help us daily!

E)      Forgiveness is best done in a community.

The sin of unforgiveness and bitterness, like all sin, takes root deeply and festers when we are isolated. Plug yourself in to community, let your trusted leaders know you are struggling and dealing with this sin, receive Christ’s forgiveness again and day by day, walk in Christ praying for first, the desire to forgive, then, the empowering to forgive, and then the action to forgive. Break bitterness as soon as you can! “Do not let the sun go down in your anger (Eph 4:26)”.

F)       Forgiven people forgive .
The greatest way, and I  fact, the only way is to believe God, that through Christ we take on the identity of “forgiven” and by Him, we live out that identity. Indeed, if we do not truly believe this truth, how are we to forgive, it being an impossible task by our own strength except, thru the Holy Spirit guiding in us, the life of Christ living through us and the Heavenly Father’s love. So the way to forgive is to experience the forgiveness of God. A saying is common in the social work/ counselling that hurt people hurt people. Why don’t we start believing that forgiven people forgive.

LAt the end of the day, bitterness and unforgiveness lead to a lesser, snuffed-life  and immense pain. While a choice, we must remember the cross. Where the Lord chose to pay the ultimate price, his life, as a choice forgiving us all.

The following shows where inspiration for this article is from. Encourage you to read them as they are fantastic for you own journey to forgiveness
·         http://www.desiringgod.org/messages/battling-the-unbelief-of-bitterness Battling the unbelief of  bitterness by John Piper
·         http://markdriscoll.org/sermons/i-am-forgiven/ I Am Forgiven by Mark Driscoll
·         ‘Suffering and the Heart of God: How Trauma Destroys and Christ Restores’ by Diane langbud