Saturday, December 24, 2016

Why Barnabas has become my hero and role model

I have been reading through the book of Acts this month with our student ministry team.  At the same time I read "Beyond the Local Church" by Sam Matcalf and started reading "The Permanent Revolution" by Hirsch and Catchim.  It has been a wild, but potent mix.  Honestly, I could not put down Metcalf's book - it was like taking a long drink of cold water in the middle of a desert.  (Both books address the idea of how apostles relate to and function within and alongside local churches today.  And, for those of us who resonate most with the function of apostle, prophet, or evangelist these books transport us from outsiders to integral in relation to the church in the west.)

God began speaking to me a week ago about Barnabas.  So, I tok a closer look at this leader who we tend to think of as Paul's side kick.  Here are a few observations I made (my complete study is also available):

Barnabas and Paul Study
December 23, 2016

1.     Acts 4:36:  Joseph is given the nickname “Barnabas” by the apostles – it means “son of encouragement” or “son of prophecy/exhortation”.  He was a Levite from Cyprus, and cousin of John Mark.
2.     Acts 8:27:  After Paul’s conversion Barnabas brought him to the apostles in Jerusalem and vouched for him (the apostles were afraid of Paul - the great persecutor of the early church).  He served as a relational bridge between Paul and the apostles due to his credibility among the established leadership in Jerusalem.
3.     Acts 11:19:  The disciples were driven out of Judea by persecution.  Some went to Antioch (300 miles north – a 15 day journey).  Antioch was the third largest city in the Roman Empire.  These disciples (men from Cyprus) told the Gentiles the good news about Jesus and many believed.  The apostles sent Barnabas to Antioch to give leadership to this movement of the Holy Spirit.  He encouraged them to “remain true to the Lord with all their hearts”.
4.     Acts 11:24:  Barnabas was “a good man, full of the Holy Spirit and faith”.  Through his ministry a great number believed.
5.     Acts 11:25:  Barnabas went to Tarsus to bring Paul back to Antioch (80 miles by sea).  The two of them met with the church and taught a great number of people for an entire year (one of Paul's longest assignments in a single location).

2 Reflections…

Barnabas was a bridge builder

As a Levite, Barnabas understood the prevailing religious culture (Jewish) from which the church was birthed.  However, he did not grow up in Jerusalem, but in Cyprus.  Growing up in the Diaspora, he also understood the prevailing Hellenistic culture that surrounded Israel.  And, he was the only one to appreciate and trust Paul’s conversion experience and took the risk to connect him to the apostles.  I have logged 35 years in the church – most of those years functioning within the established, traditional church.  Other than 2 – 3 years of angry cynicism, I have loved and respected the evangelical, established church, which represents my spiritual heritage.  Like Barnabas, I am positioned to function as a relational bridge connecting the new apostolic leaders and structures to the established church.  My hope is not only to open doors of support and encouragement for a new wine skin, but to speak prophetically (but graciously and with humility) back into the established church.  There is no win for the new wineskin without a corresponding win for the old wine skin – they both are the bride of Christ and should be honored for their history and promise of a better future (however, the parents will be called upon to sacrifice for their children and grandchildren).  I love the Missionary Church (the denomination I have most deeply connect with), but I am convinced that a new wine skin is needed for the Millennial generation.  Our historic Regions and Districts must primarily operate in accordance to their modalic nature – their leaders must prioritize conserving and maintaining their churches while at the same time equipping and exhorting their congregations to make disciples from the harvest (no simple task).  The needed creative energy and grace will flow back into the established center from the edges – from new and renewed apostolic imagination and the corresponding structures that grow from experimentation and Spirit-inspired apostolic leadership.  I am not gifted or called to dream up these new apostolic structures or to provide the tip of the spear in terms of the necessary apostolic leadership – but, like Barnabas, I am learning to recognize it when I see it.  And, also like Barnabas, I see the vacuum of apostolic leadership in the established church and am willing to sail to Tarsus to bring back Paul, lend him my credibility, give him a platform, and then step aside as his ministry expands.  I have embraced my role as one who comes alongside, a coach, a mentor, and an apostle who labors out of the limelight as I cultivate and invest in younger, emerging leaders.

Barnabas offered redemption for failed leaders

Barnabas was not willing to leave John Mark behind on their second journey, even though Paul adamantly refused to bring him.  In the past I believed this was because Barnabas was a “softy” and agreed with Paul’s “strategic” reasoning.  I have no interest in speculating who was right and who was wrong in this instance, but one thing I know: I am John Mark and I am grateful that God sent a Barnabas to invite me back into leadership.

In 2002 I left the ministry – vowing never to return.  Like John Mark I simply gave up.  It was too hard, the costs were too high, and my heart was growing sick with depression, anxiety, and resentment.  As our marriage faltered, I quit.  I went back to “Jerusalem” and ended up starting a painting business and hunting deer.  I checked out of “church” in every way possible without blowing up my family.  Sadly, from the sidelines we watched our church plant struggle and never fully recover from my untimely abandonment.  Today that church is no more.  Lighthouse Community Church died before her time.  May she rest in peace and may the seed that fell to the ground and died yet bear fruit…

I live with a sense of failure regarding that season of my life to this day.  God has – and continues to – redeem the pain and scar tissue left behind for so many, but it has been a long, arduous process.

A few years after my burn out and resignation God sent a Barnabas to me named Jim Keller.  He knew my story.  He knew of my failures and struggles.  But, instead of giving up on me quoting the mantra that “the best predictor of future performance is past performance” he invited me onto his team.  I was given a second chance, not as a pastor or church planter, but as a come alongside coach, mentor, and apostolic leader.  That was 12 years ago, and it was one of the three greatest turning points in my life and development as a leader in Christ’s church.  It is hard to say where I would be today if Jim hadn’t sought to redeem what was wounded and broken in my life and vouch for me – and the potential he saw buried beneath the rubble.  It brings me to tears thinking about it…

I want to be a Barnabas for those leaders who find themselves upon the scrap pile of ministry.  In fact, I have learned that brokenness is a prerequisite for the power of the Holy Spirit to be fully released in and through a leader’s life.  We are, in the final analysis, jars of clay and it is the unsurpassable glory of Christ living in and through our lives that matters.  And his glory is most visible through the cracks.  At best we are the woman at the well in John 4 going back into town telling people how Jesus met us in our brokenness and poured living water into our souls.  Could this be the Christ?  Come and see…