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The Beauty of Grace Is That It Makes Life Not Fair
One of my all time favorite bands is Relient K, a Christian punk-pop band that got its start in the late 90s and is still around today. My favorite song of theirs, "Be My Escape" (released in 2004), is about how God wants to set us free when we feel trapped, often in prisons of our own making. There's a line in the second verse that has shaped my faith more than almost any other song I know. And this life sentence that I'm serving I admit that I'm every bit deserving But the

Daniel Lee
4 days ago4 min read
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When Fair Isn't the Point: The Parable of the Vineyard Workers
based on the sermon preached by Lucas Johnson as part of our Plot Twist Series. The main text is Matthew 20:1-16 You ever build something with a hundred little parts, the kind of thing that comes with three types of screws and each one only fits in a certain spot? Up close it looks right. Then you step back and something's off. That's what this parable did to me for years. On first read, it seems simple enough. But the more I sat with it, compared it to other passages, and th

Lucas Johnson
6 days ago5 min read
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Being a Fool Never Feels Like Being a Fool
Fifteen years ago, Kathryn Schulz gave one of the most quietly devastating TED Talks I've ever watched. It's called "On Being Wrong," and the whole talk hinges on one question: what does it feel like to be wrong? Her answer: it feels like being right. That idea has stuck with me for years, and I've come back to it again and again, including when I studied the Parables of Lost Things in Luke 15 (being lost can feel like you're on the right path). But I think it applies just as

Daniel Lee
Jul 86 min read
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The Fools Collection
Back in high school, my friends and I discovered a website called despair.com. If you've never seen it, they make "demotivational" posters, the opposite of those cheesy office posters with a mountain range and a word like PERSEVERANCE underneath it. Despair.com's version of that, under a picture of a struggling penguin, reads: "Until you spread your wings, you'll have no idea how far you can walk." Another one of my favorites is called 'Mistakes.' It says, "It could be that t

Daniel Lee
Jul 65 min read
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Lying in the Ditch: What the Good Samaritan Teaches Us About Giving and Receiving Love
The Parable of the Man Who Fell Among Robbers, better known as the Good Samaritan, is one of the all-time great stories. When rabbis and Bible scholars speak about "turning the diamond," this is one story we can turn over and over, seeing something new from every angle. That's why it has stood the test of time and still changes hearts and minds today. So let's look at this story from a few different angles. We can learn about receiving help from a would-be villain, about seei

Daniel Lee
Jul 15 min read
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Love Unlimited: How One Story Can Change the World
Luke 10:25-37 Something happened during the World Cup that I haven't been able to stop thinking about. A man from Japan ate at a Mexican restaurant for the first time. Before he even ordered, chips and salsa appeared at his table, free and unannounced. He stopped the waiter and said, "We have not yet earned these." The waiter just shrugged. They come with the table. He posted about it online, and what he wrote stopped me cold. He said that in his culture, "hospitality is a de

Daniel Lee
Jun 295 min read
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Two Sons, Both Lost: What the Parables of Luke 15 Are Really Telling Us
I believe Luke 15 contains one of the greatest stories ever told. We usually call it the Parable of the Prodigal Son, but that title doesn't quite do it justice. Tim Keller wrote an entire book titled Prodigal God, making the case that the Father is the truly prodigal one. The word "prodigal" means wasteful or extravagant, reckless spending. Keller suggests the Father, in dividing his inheritance and giving whatever the younger son asked, is the reckless one. And that's the k

Daniel Lee
Jun 245 min read
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Are You Lost? (You Might Not Even Know It)
Here's a question that sounds simple but isn't: what does it feel like to be lost? Most of us jump straight to helpless or frustrated. But that's not quite right. Being lost doesn't feel like being lost. It feels like you're going the right direction. It feels like everything's fine. You think you're on track. I know this from personal experience. I've been lost in a church building, a Walmart, a mall in New Orleans, the streets of Rome, and the roads outside Glacier National

Daniel Lee
Jun 225 min read
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The Thrill of the Find (And Why the Kingdom Is Worth It)
Something strange happens in our brains when we make a purchase. The pleasure chemical dopamine spikes whenever we're on the hunt. Whether you're browsing Amazon or sifting through used records at the thrift store, we get a rush, a sensation of excitement. It's the thrill of the search, left over from our hunter-gatherer days. Then, once we have found what we're looking for, those pleasure chemicals kick into overdrive. Our heart rates increase. We feel a sense of euphoria. T

Daniel Lee
Jun 104 min read
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The Best Deal You'll Ever Make
In 1986, a man named Roy Whetstine walked into a rock show in Arizona with a collector's eye and a little bit of luck. Sorting through a Tupperware container of stones, he spotted one, about the size of a small potato, dull and a little scuffed up. The seller wasn't impressed with it either. "I'll tell you what," the seller said, "I'll let you have it for $10. It's not as pretty as the others." Roy said yes. He knew what he was looking at. When he cleaned it up and took it to

Daniel Lee
Jun 85 min read
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What's Actually Your Job? (Lessons from the Sower and Isaiah)
A look at what the church is and isn't called to do As a pastor, and previously as a youth minister, I have done plenty of things beyond my job description. I've cleaned toilets, cooked meals, and dried out flooded basements. I've helped people move, assembled furniture, given rides. One Sunday morning I had to wrangle a bat out of the church building (not Tulip Street). I don't say any of this to brag, believe me. But I've never once seen "bat removal as needed" listed on a

Daniel Lee
Jun 37 min read
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Sow What? Understanding the Parable of the Sower
From Mark 4:1-20 We've grown up with these stories. Maybe you heard them in Sunday school, colored pictures of them, or watched the VeggieTales version. But here's what Dallas Willard wrote in his book on the parables of Jesus: "Jesus was the brightest man and the most capable and creative teacher who has ever lived. Please don't let anyone make a simpleton of him." These aren't children's tales. These aren't Aesop's fables. They are something far richer and stranger and more

Daniel Lee
Jun 15 min read
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