In 1996, my wife and I
joined the staff of a mission organization called Christian Associates. In 1998
we moved to Europe where we spent 12 years working as staff to help start new
churches in Spain. I finally resigned
from Christian Associates in 2014. My wife and I had spent 18 years on staff
with CA (as we call it) and 16 years in active ministry with them. That is a
significant chunk of time!
Flash forward to this
weekend and I can honestly say it is an interesting time for me. Oasis Madrid, one
of the churches we had the privilege of starting while living in Spain, is
celebrating its 10-year anniversary…and at the same time closing its doors.
That sentence is hard
for me to write.
Until now I have taken
great pride in telling people we started a church that is still going strong.
When I first heard some weeks ago that it was closing up, I was confused, sad, filled
with doubt and humiliation, frustrated and angry at turns.
On Sunday a group of
people who have been part of Oasis will gather to celebrate (in the words of
someone who is living there now) “10 years of Oasis Transforming Lives.” Because
I lack the time and money to attend (the celebration is being held in Madrid),
I wrote the following reflection in hopes that some who are there will be
encouraged.
Writing this felt like
I was writing a farewell letter…bittersweet, sad and hopeful all at once.
I share it here
because I hope it helps others in some way. I hope it reminds us that God is
good, he can be trusted, there is enough hope and grace for each new day. God’s
kingdom really is a wonderful place we can experience in the here and now.
Receive it.
Love,
Troy
………………………………………………………………..
transformation by
death
by troy cady
Christians have peculiar beliefs. Here are some examples:
God is one essence in three persons.
Jesus is fully human and fully God.
The Bible is God’s Word but it was
written by people.
Yes, Christianity is a faith of strange mystery. Christians do
have peculiar beliefs.
From a human standpoint, I think the most peculiar Christian
belief is that death can be transformed into something beautiful. In fact,
Christians believe that unless something
dies it isn’t transformed. In other words, transformation occurs not in spite of death but rather through death. In that sense, Christians
believe that death is good. This belief runs against every human instinct.
This was the very thing the first disciples could not
understand. Before Jesus’ death, Matthew’s gospel says: “From that time on
Jesus began to explain to his disciples that he must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things at the hands of the
elders, the chief priests and the teachers of the law, and that he must be killed…” (Matthew 16:21,
emphasis added).
After Jesus’ resurrection, the disciples on the road to
Emmaus wondered how it could be that the one they hoped was the redeemer of
Israel would be handed over to be crucified. (Luke 24:20-21) They could not
wrap their minds around the fact that the Messiah would need to suffer and die.
So, Jesus explained it to them. (Luke 23:27)
What was he explaining? Simply, what he had tried to tell
them before: that the Messiah must suffer and die …that the predicate of resurrection is
crucifixion. You never get one without the other. That is what their
eyes were opened to see.
Jesus told them this in a variety of ways. One word-picture
he used is particularly evocative: “Very truly I tell you, unless a kernel of
wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies,
it produces many seeds.” (John 12:24-25)
In the parable of the sower Jesus tells us how seeds make
more seeds by falling and dying. The parable is a story of a person who sows
seed on four types of soil. The first piece of ground is a hard path; the second
is rocky; the third is infested with thorns and the fourth is good, rich soil
that produces a crop “a hundred, sixty or thirty times what was sown.” (Matthew
13:8)
The Christian life is a fruitful life, but no fruit is
produced without a seed falling to the ground and dying. But if the seed falls
to the ground and dies, it breaks apart and there emerges the most wild,
fascinating thing imaginable---life that gives more life that gives more life. A
tree or plant grows from the seed that has broken apart and died. From that
tree or plant, more seeds are produced. When those new seeds fall to the ground
and die, more life emerges. In this way, life spreads in an uncontrollable fashion.
But
remember: this kind of wild life does not spread without those seeds falling
and dying. Something good only comes through something hard.
…………………………………………………..
I believe that Oasis is a story of life, life and more life…from
death, death and more death.
You might find it interesting to know that shortly after
Oasis was born it died, in a very real sense. Some of you reading this may know
that originally Oasis was part of another church we started in the suburbs of Madrid
called Mountainview. Mountainview began in 2002 and by 2004 we referred to
Mountainview’s ministry in the city center as “Mountainview’s Oasis” while the ministry
in the suburbs was called “Mountainview’s Frontier.”
Our strategy was to grow Mountainview through multiplying
leaders who multiplied community groups who multiplied congregations. Our vision was so much greater than just
Mountainview and Oasis. We envisioned more leaders and more community groups
and more congregations, all over the greater Madrid area and throughout Spain. Just
as we had established monthly gatherings of community groups for worship,
teaching and fellowship, so I had envisioned that when the work spread to other
parts of Spain we would host an annual retreat wherein all the congregations
that were planted throughout Spain would gather for celebration and support.
At any rate, this reproductive ethos is how we ended up with
a cluster of folks in the city center and a cluster in the suburbs. But over
time it became difficult to sustain both, given many factors. So, we had a
difficult choice to make: which one would die?
At the time staff members Kelly and April Crull were living
in the city and Oasis was really their primary area of leadership. That is when
they did something amazing: they let Oasis die. I remember the meeting well. We
were seated out on the back porch of our colleague’s home (Richard and Riekje
Wallace). With their eyes filled with tears, Kelly and April both said they
were willing to let go of Oasis for the sake of Mountainview overall.
Shortly after that, the Crulls moved to Valencia where April
studied peacemaking. They left Madrid convinced that Mountainview’s Oasis
ministry in the city would no longer exist. That was in spring/summer of 2005.
Oasis had died before it was even born “officially” in 2006!
Here is how the rebirth happened: through more death.
Towards the end of August 2005 (at CA’s staff conference), me and my family
were asked by CA’s leadership to hand over leadership of Mountainview in the
suburbs to Richard and Riekje while we moved into the city to work with the
small band of Mountainview folks who were living there. At that time, there
were only about a dozen or so folks in the city who had been connected to
Mountainview.
I remember being angry at CA’s suggestion. I had been
dreaming of leading Mountainview since before we landed in Madrid. Really, it
was 2001 that the first ideas for Mountainview were developed (in fact, in the
spring of 2001 we thought of the name Mountainview before we even lived in
Madrid.) Mountainview had been on my heart for more than four years at this
point. We had invested blood, sweat and tears in it. So when CA said, “Let it
go” I was pissed.
“How dare they ask that!” I thought. “It’s not fair! I
shouldn’t be asked to give up my baby!”
I spoke with a good friend named Hud McWilliams about these
feelings. Some of you know Hud. He used to be on staff with Christian
Associates and is a psychologist. I pulled Hud aside, convinced he would
understand my feelings and validate my thinking. I was sure he would see the
lunacy of what CA proposed we do.
Instead, Hud poked me in some sore spots and asked some hard
questions. As I spoke with him, I began to see he was not going to see it my
way. This frustrated me once again. Instead of finding comfort from Hud, I
found more annoying questions and observations.
Hud could see I was getting frustrated and, in his gentle
yet strong way, challenged me to just calm down and let go of the outcome.
With that in mind, I spoke to my wife about it. We were in
our room at the staff conference; Kelly Wills and the Crulls were there. As we envisioned what would be possible if we
let go of Mountainview, Heather and I had a peace about it. We had discussed
the options and at a certain moment we just looked at each other and said,
“Well…what do you think? Should we do it?”
We both said a simple, “Yes.” And with that…it was decided.
I remember Kelly Crull asking, “Wait. So…you just decided
right now you’ll do it?”
Heather and I looked at each other and said, “Yeah.”
And Kelly said something like: “Holy crap! I can’t believe
you just decided like that!”
I think we could decide like that because the seed had
already fallen and our hearts had already broken. With that breaking, new life
could emerge—and that is a good thing.
Shortly after that, we joined with the large group of CA folks
for another plenary session. During our time of singing together they played a
(now old) song with these words:
When
all around is fading
And
nothing seems to last
When
each day is filled with sorrow
Still
I know with all my heart
He's
got the whole world in His hands
He's
got the whole world in His hands
I
fear no evil for you are with me
Strong
to deliver; mighty to save
He's
got the whole world in His hands
I remember bawling my eyes out all through that song. The
assurance of God’s guidance filled me with joy and deep, childlike trust. “Everything will be alright,” I thought. “Things fade, but God has the whole world in
his hands.”
So, in the fall of 2005 we planned the transition to
(re)start Oasis and from January 2006 until the summer we gathered the small
group of people in the city to discern fresh vision for Oasis. Thus, Oasis as
we had come to know it was born—but it took two deaths before there was
life. In the spring of 2006, I remember
speaking with Kelly and April (after they had moved to Valencia) and they
commented how ironic it was that a year ago they had laid Oasis to rest and
thought there would never be a ministry in the city, but now God had
resurrected it.
Even then, the experience of leading Oasis felt like dying
and rising again and again. I am grateful to those who were part of Oasis…for
your patience with me as I sometimes stumbled and fumbled my way through
pastoring the church and leading the team. On more than one occasion I blew it
and came down hard on folks whom I felt needed to go deeper in their life with
Christ.
I remember a few instances in particular. The first instance
happened after one of our Easter retreats: I had abused my role as pastor and
was intent on “proving a point” to some individuals. Fortunately, the team
asked me questions in our team meeting and through their gentle observations and
quiet listening I came to see that I had done wrong. I had to apologize and ask
forgiveness not just to certain individuals but also to the church.
I remember the night I confessed my sin openly with the
church, the sin of abusing my position, the sin of acting rashly in anger…The
meeting was in the student lounge of St. Louis University and we were having
communion that night. The whole church was relieved to hear their pastor say,
“I’m a sinner. Forgive me.” More tear-filled confession by Oasis folks
immediately followed. The service took an unexpected turn and we just shared
with one another our frailty and weakness, our helplessness. The confession was
raw and honest yet grace abounded in excess of the sin confessed.
What we were witnessing was the seeds of faith being blown
by the wind of the Spirit, souls falling to the ground pleading mercy. As each
heart broke open, new life emerged that is still bearing fruit to this day.
But the process of dying and resurrecting is never over. Towards
the end of our time in Madrid there were two other “deaths” I had to undergo.
The first was another confession I had to make to someone in the midst of our
Easter retreat. I had spoken harshly to a woman at the Easter retreat and had
to ask her forgiveness. “How could I have been so stupid!” I thought. “Forgive
me. I’m an idiot,” I said to her.
That was Easter Sunday morning. The theme that year was
“Hope” and that is when I realized I wasn’t alone in my stupidity. “The
disciples were all idiots, too,” I thought. “We’re all just idiots, really.
That’s what the resurrection is for. Jesus rose for idiots. We needn’t wallow
in despair. There is hope when we see how stupid we are.” So I decided to
change my Easter talk. I called it: “Hope is for Idiots.” What a relief it was to
admit I don’t have it all together. We don’t have to have it all together! Jesus has it all together for us—and that is the point.
The second death towards the end of our time involved the
birth of Decoupage, a ministry that emerged from Oasis…In the fall of 2008 it
became apparent that it would be good for Oasis to commission a group of people
to start a new church in Spanish. At the time I thought of it as another one of
the Oasis “congregations” we had envisioned. After all, the new project would
come out of our strategy to multiply leaders and community groups. This
multiplication would involve crossing over into the Spanish language, but I
envisioned we would figure out how to link the two ministries closely under the
Oasis “umbrella”.
We had asked Kelly and April to consider serving as leaders
of the new project. They graciously agreed and I was excited in part because it
would mean Oasis would be multiplying her impact. But after praying and
thinking for some time, Kelly and April came back to the team with a vision
that was clearly distinct from the vision of Oasis. They didn’t want to plant a
Spanish Oasis Madrid, after all.
You can likely guess my reaction. To be sure, I listened and
tried to appreciate their ideas but I felt frustrated that their plans did not
match up with mine!
As I let go of how I wanted things to turn out, however, I
began to see that God’s way was better. I remember sitting down with the Crulls
in Plaza Dos de Mayo asking their forgiveness for my attempts to fit a square
peg into a round hole. That little bit of brokenness, that death to a dream,
was necessary to truly give freedom to Kelly and April to lead in a way that
was obedient to the Spirit in them. To be sure, the Spirit will have his way
with or without our cooperation but it sure makes life better when we let our
plans go and respond to God’s invitation to join him in his plan.
Because of that, I believe Decoupage is another story of
life from death. I believe Kelly and April can tell you themselves how
Decoupage’s own story reflects this theme. Similarly, I believe Amy and the
team in Valencia can tell you how their story reflects this theme. And, don’t
forget, with Kelly and April’s move to the north there is another story of life
and death to be told. That is what I see happening here. Because a seed falls
and dies, more life grows and that life will bear more seed that will fall and
die and grow…to fall and die and grow some more.
When all is said and done the vision of a multiplying
ministry is happening all over Spain, after all…just not in the way we had
planned—and that is a good thing! In fact, because of lives transformed by even
a short amount of time at Oasis the vision of a vibrant, reproductive
expression of what it means to be church is spreading to other parts of the
world, including Latin America (through former Oasis folks). But the truth is:
this is not primarily because of Oasis’ ministry “strategy” but rather because
of the Spirit of Jesus calling and sending, calling and sending, calling and
sending. The story isn’t a story of Oasis; it’s a story of Jesus—and Oasis just
got to be a small part of that.
……………………………………………..
Which brings me to today…The funny thing is: I am still
learning this theme of life-by-death today.
We never finally get it all at once that we don’t truly “get
it”, do we? The Christian life is a life of repeated dying and rising again.
Just when we think we are doing fine, the Spirit reveals to us one more area
that needs to be crucified. When we become aware of our need, it stings at
first. It always hurts, no matter how many times you’ve died inside, no matter
how many times your heart has been broken. But the good news is: death does not
have the last word. Resurrection is the end of the story, new life will spring
up again and again and again if we will let it.
That is the trick: letting it happen, being open to it.
To let something die so that it can be born again is to be the good soil
wherein the seed produces a crop thirty, sixty or even a hundred times what was
sown. Too often, however, we are more like the hard path wherein we become
embittered by God’s call to die to self. The rocky soil yields a similar result
wherein the process of dying to self only goes so far; when the going gets
tough, we lack the strength to go deeper in Christ. Our roots are shallow; we
have a taste of the crucified life but it is more like being struck once on the
cheek and then striking back instead of turning the other cheek and laying down
to be nailed to the cross with Christ. The thorny soil is perhaps more common wherein
we let the desire for money, fame or power choke out the life of God which is
the death of self. In the thorny soil we put our own comfort first. We have the
appearance of growing strong, tall and deep but because we do not tend to the
weeds we will eventually wither with little or no lasting fruit borne of the
process.
Oh, that we would be the good soil—open and ready to let the
seeds fall and die deep inside, that we would allow the dream of what could be
to break so that God can show us that his dreams are so much greater than ours!
That is the hard part: the openness to be broken, to let our dreams die so
God’s desires may flourish in us. And then to trust that, in God’s good time,
what God wants to grow in us and through us will flourish without our incessant
striving and wishing the crop were different than what it is…to trust that the
soil only needs to practice being receptive, patient, drinking in the living
water and the light of Christ, risen anew each morning…to trust that God
wants to make our lives fruitful and abundant even more than we want it.
That is a challenge to myself and it is also God’s challenge
to each of us. Practice being the good
soil and do not worry or grieve too much when something dies. In the end, it is
cause for celebration because in Christ God redeems that which dies, causing it
to rise again, transformed and even better than it was before.
Who knows what will spring up because of this death? Who
knows what future deaths and resurrections await? There are many more to come.
Look for it. Welcome the process of death and resurrection. Be open to it, be
the good soil. Do not become hardened. Do not spurn hardship. Do not become
encumbered in the lust for power and fame. Be the good soil.
………………………………………..
I mention all this by way of reminding myself to practice
being the good soil. So, here is a recent confession. Here is something that is
dying and rising in me lately.
I am still learning to crucify pride. When I first learned
Oasis was closing its doors I was upset because I felt like a failure. What
made me so upset was not so much that I had failed at something but rather that
the failure was public. People would
now know that I had worked on starting a church that failed. Sure, it was
around for ten years—and that is not for nothing—but at the end of the day I
tried and failed and I am responsible for that. I would no longer be able to
say to people, “I helped plant a church that is still going strong!” In short,
I have had to let go of my pride to deal with the grief of Oasis dying.
But I am grateful for this death, too. Because when
something dies new life emerges. The new life does not look the same as
the old life, and that is good. I marvel at what has happened since 2010 at
Oasis. Already there have been deaths and resurrections, even before this
“final” death. And this latest death will surely bear fruit that none of us
expect.
Always remember: in God’s kingdom nothing dies that isn’t replaced by
something even greater than that which died. That is why death has no
power in God’s kingdom. Stripped of its sting, Christians need no longer fear
death. To die is to be reborn. Death is an ending that is also a beginning.
Death gives way to life.
So, I wonder, what new uncontrollable life is waiting for you, for all
of us? What wonderful, wild and beautiful life will spring up? Wait for it and
be responsive to God’s work. Look for it and, even when the smallest
green leaf breaks through the soil, celebrate it with a feast of
firstfruits. The new life is a promise of a greater harvest to come, a reminder that
God will be faithful to tend the trackless fields of his dominion.
Do not try to mold and shape what God is doing too much. It
is better to let God have his way. Celebrate the countless seeds that are being
planted right now. They are breaking apart and something glorious and new will
emerge. This is God’s church, not ours: he has been faithful to grow it for a
season but now a new time has come. Welcome this new season. I am celebrating
with you all today not because of what has been, but because of what will be.
I encourage you in these next days to pray, asking God: “Father, what
new work are you doing in me? What needs to die so your life can spring up new
and fresh in the soil of my heart?” Look for what will be, friends, and keep on
hoping.
I love you,
Troy
3 comments:
Thank you. I needed to read this today, especially as Patrick and I are experiencing the year of subtraction, which looks curiously like crucifixion at times.
Hey Troy! Nicely written! You've always been a model of a leader who leads with a developmental bias to me - that's why I wanted to come work with you -- but you left :-( Seriously, you have invested so much in people and that bias has rubbed off on others. I'm with you in the mix of emotions as to some degree I picked up the torch and have had similar feelings of failure, frustration, questions, anger. It's hard. It's true emotion mixed with truly sinful pride too. I'm eager to see what God will do, though I'm truly sad these days about it. On the pride/flesh side, I wish we could truly grow up, but alas, we won't be grown up until we ironically die in this physical life. Hopefully we will have been growing up along the way so that this dying is merely taking a step from this life to the rest of eternity with our beloved Lord-- something I know Deela modeled for us well.
I would add that Communitas' church plant in Valencia has much to do with Oasis as the majority of the team were invested in by you and other Oasis leaders. Another new life out of it. There's many other stories people have shared on the event as well.
Lord please bring life to this apparent death. And, may your Spirit keep bring life to our mortal bodies!
Grateful to be your friend and companion in this journey!
Peace!
al
Thanks Troy, Maybe you could think oF Evangel and pray for us along these lines.
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