liturgy, art, and culture

7.20.2010

An Epic Voyage



Last week the students of Piney Grove Baptist Church and myself were on a beach retreat in Garden City, SC. Not only was this trip blast, but it was also an amazing time of worship and renewal. During this week, many students decided to recommit themselves to the life Christ has called them too and two accepted this life for the first time. On Friday morning, I even had to privilege of baptizing one of these students in the Atlantic Ocean. Needless to say, this was a very successful trip and was something that I will never forget.

For the next few days, would like to share a little bit about the week by posting my message notes from the week. Our theme was "An Epic Voyage" and bottom line is that following Christ is the invitation to embark on just that, an epic voyage. Below is the title message.

Why An Epic Voyage?

Epic - a long poem narrating the deeds and adventures of heroic or legendary figures. A grand, romantic, monumental, and adventurous story.

I love stories! Whether they are in books, movies, or told by someone, stories shape the world in which we live. What kind of epic stories have you heard? What are your favorites?

The Odyssey. The Iliad. The Canterbury Tales. The Lord of The Rings. The Chronicles of Narnia. Harry Potter. Dare I say...Twilight...?

Voyage - a long journey involving travel by sea or in space. Traveling in or through the unknown, mysterious, or chaotic. An expedition, pilgrimage, or quest.

Think about the ocean. Its chaotic. Its unknown. Its violent and its beautiful. It draws people. It draws rugged sailors and sunbathers. It calls out to us. We want to be in it while at the same time we’re all a little scared of it.

The thing about a voyage however is that in order to have one, we must embrace and embark into the chaos. In every epic story, the main character is forced to do just this.

When Odysseus left his home little did he know that he was embarking on a chaotic yet heroic journey that would last many years. When Frodo agreed to protect and carry the ring to the fires of Mordor, he was beginning an epic and uncertain voyage. The same can be said of Lucy the first time she traveled through the wardrobe into Narnia and of Harry the first time the boarded the Hogwarts express.

All these characters have one thing is common: when their fate and calling was before them, they said yes regardless of the cost. Their future was unknown, they had no idea what they would be called on to do. They simply embarked on an epic voyage into the unknown, mysterious, and chaotic trusting that they were joining their lives with something much greater than themselves.

I believe that the day we decide to follow Jesus Christ, we decided to embark on the same type of epic voyage. That is what Christianity should be all about. Discovering the God given courage to follow Christ in an epic, romantic, monumental, and adventurous way. This is the type of Christianity that the Bible speaks of and I believe that it is the same that we are called to live today.

The Bible is God’s epic. It’s God’s epic story in and through and to humanity. The Bible is full of stories of people that chose to say yes to something greater than themselves and encounter the greatness of God in their lives.

Do you feel the greatness of God in your life? Do you feel like your commitment to follow Jesus has been an epic voyage? Have you ever even said yes to such a calling?

I think it is easy to keep our Christian lives pretty safe and calm. We go to church, go to small group, go on a mission trip, and we think that means we’ve got it all together. Sadly, this is the case with most of Christianity. This goes on while God is calling each and every one of us to lay down our comfortable lives, take up our own cross, and follow him at all cost. Each and every day God stands at the foot of our beds calling for us to journey with Him on an epic voyage of life in and through him.

We need to recapture what it means live an epic Christianity.

Before we can do this, we have to make a serious and courageous decision. We have to let ourselves go. We have to allow ourselves to be vulnerable. We have to lay down our own ideas about life, and God, and following Jesus and allow God to truly reveal Himself to us.

This can be scary, but its the first step in truly following God. Let the image of the ocean and a boat be your guide. We are the boat, and God is ocean and the wind and anything else that can have an impact on a vessel. If you want to embark on an epic voyage, you must first cut the cords that bind your boat to the dock.

“If you yourself do not cut the lines that tie you to the dock, God will have to use a storm to sever them and to send you out to sea. Put everything in your life afloat upon God, going out to sea on the great swelling tide of His purpose, and your eyes will be opened. If you believe in Jesus, you are not to spend all your time in the calm waters just inside the harbor, full of joy, but always tied to the dock. You have to get out past the harbor into the great depths of God, and begin to know things for yourself— begin to have spiritual discernment.” -Oswald Chambers

The lines that bind us to the dock can be a lot of things. Maybe its sin. It could be our plans, how we want our lives to go. It could be money, a relationship, and job. It could be our attitudes or bad feelings towards others. It could be fear. Whatever it is that keeps us tied to the dock, we must untie it if we are truly going to experience the greatness of God in our lives.

God loves us and has amazing plans for each of us. But we can’t get there if we’re still tied to the dock.

May you be brave enough to cut the cords that bind you to the dock, allow yourself to float out into the vastness of God’s grace and for the first time become serious about simply saying yes when Jesus says “Follow Me.”

Will you yourself to embark on an epic voyage?

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