<body><script type="text/javascript"> function setAttributeOnload(object, attribute, val) { if(window.addEventListener) { window.addEventListener("load", function(){ object[attribute] = val; }, false); } else { window.attachEvent('onload', function(){ object[attribute] = val; }); } } </script> <iframe src="http://www.blogger.com/navbar.g?targetBlogID=12449549&amp;blogName=Vincent+C.+Donnachie&amp;publishMode=PUBLISH_MODE_BLOGSPOT&amp;navbarType=TAN&amp;layoutType=CLASSIC&amp;searchRoot=http%3A%2F%2Fvincedonnachie.blogspot.com%2Fsearch&amp;blogLocale=en_US&amp;homepageUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fvincedonnachie.blogspot.com%2F" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" height="30px" width="100%" id="navbar-iframe" allowtransparency="true" title="Blogger Navigation and Search"></iframe> <div></div>

Theme

New posts are up Monday - Friday on most weeks, with each day of the week having the various themes: Ministerial Mon. - Lessons and insights from the ministry front Teaching Tue. - Current thoughts from messages that I am preparing Whining Wed. - Complaints and rants about the way things are Thankful Thurs. - Things that I am truly thankful for in this world Forgotten Fri. - How to savor life, memories and relax.

Past Posts

Below you can find posts from the past. Grab a cup of coffee (or tea), stay and read a while. If anything makes you think, join the discussion by clicking on the number to the right of each title.

Archives

How to Think 3 - Humility Monday |

The first requirement to Think Well is to cultivate humility. Paul writes, "For by the grace given to me I say to everyone among you not to think of yourself more highly than you ought to think, but to think with sober judgment" (Ro 12:3)

Years ago, during a time of owning a residential/commercial cleaning business, I had one customer that I did not allow my employees to clean. The customer's name was Bea and I looked forward to being in her home. She was intellectually hospitable. She was elderly, she had lived a long educated life and she was one of the most open-minded people I have ever met. She still hungered for truth and beauty in life. She read and experienced more than I certainly had, yet she arrived at no conclusions. She was neither Republican, nor Democrat but only voted after careful consideration of all viewpoints. She consumed newspapers, books and NPR (National Public Radio) and as well, took much time for silence to think about what she was consuming. And although I was not sure of weather or not she was a Christian for years, as time went on, I learned how she often prayed to God, much more than I did. I can only hope that when I am her age, I will be as gracious and humble as she was.

It is so easy to get stuck in our molds and assumptions about what life has taught us. Yet Jesus said, after taking children into His arms, "...the kingdom of God belongs to such as these. I tell you the truth, anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it." (Mk 10:14-15) What was Jesus saying here? That we have faith of a child? Yes, certainly. But we miss His full meaning if we boil it down to one word, such as faith. Jesus was holding up as an example, the entire approach to life that a child has. Life has not yet taught them how to be bitter or judgmental. If they exist in a loving, safe environment, children are wide-eyed, eager to soak life in and learn from all that it has to offer them. These children do not instinctively see a small world, torn apart by violence and destruction caused by self-centeredness in which no magic exist and everything can be explained. Theirs is a world of mystery, trust and largeness that they cannot fully comprehend, nor would they desire to do so. What I hear Jesus saying to me as He holds these children in His arms, is "Vince, always be willing to un-learn what you are so sure about. Do not be comfortable in all of your assumptions and conclusions. God is big, you are small. His ways are not yours, His thoughts are not yours. Simply, trust Him and love Him."

We receive the Kingdom of God through posture more than we do knowledge. Any world religion or philosophy worth its weight in salt, embraces this fact: To truly grow, we must be willing to deconstruct what we think is truth. Zen Buddhist call this Beginner's Mind, and it is an attitude of openness that one must have even when studying at advanced levels. Everything must be approached as if it were the first time learning it. Paul writes "Knowledge puffs up... Anyone who claims to know something, does not yet have the necessary knowledge." (1 Co 8:2)

For me, all of this means that I am willing to ask myself some deconstructive questions. Questions like: If church never existed and I and a small group of people were the only Christians on the earth, based on the Bible alone, what would church look like?

By this question; first I am establishing the fact that the Bible is the ultimate authority and the source for direction. Secondly, I am attempting to strip away much of the contemporary cultural influences from what the Bible actually says about a subject such as church (if you would like more information about Emerging Church issues, you can hear me dialogue with a few other guys on 2 recent Doxas Dialos Podcasts: here and here).
Another question would be: If I, nor anyone I knew, ever read the Bible and no one taught me from it, no one read me stories from it, no one ever interpreted it to me and told me what it means...what would it say to me?

To ask these type of questions requires humility, time and a lot of prayerful introspection. It is not about the answers. It is the searching and the dependence upon God that is the point. Jesus was asked 183 question in the Gospels. He answered 3 directly. As I heard a priest, Richard Rohr, say about this, "He [Jesus], refuses to see himself as an answer giver or a problem solver and instead leads us to a place where we cannot be in control and therefore, God can be."

We simply do not know all there is to know yet about Him, about life, about human behavior or even one another. To Think Well, we have to start, and always remain, at the beginning.

How to Think 2 - What Thinking Well Is Not... Thursday |

In this entry, I wanted to state what I am not talking about by the term, thinking well.

I am not talking about doing well academically
By doing well academically, I mean the ability to process and regurgitate a given set of information. What is required for a person to do well in school is to give the “right” answers (the answers the teacher is looking for), at the right time (when the student is asked verbally or for a test). I don’t mean to diminish formal education; I think school is crucial. Without a degree, many doors in the workforce remain closed and the higher degree, the more doors begin to open. Still, in the world of academia, there is not a premium placed of developing one’s own ability to think as I mean here.

I am not talking about doing well with memorization
I have always admired the ability some people have to remember dates and names. I love American history and can give you a sweeping overview of the Revolutionary and Civil Wars, but I could not tell you exact years, places or names. I am interested in the development of stories, but no matter how hard I try, I cannot retain the precise details for more than a few days if I do not use that knowledge. Luckily for me, the lack of a good memory does not impede on one’s ability to think well.

I am not talking about quickness
Our brains are filled with long rows of filing cabinets. Some are filled with facts, some are filled with common sense solutions, some are filled with anecdotes, and so on. My wife is one of those people that can run to the appropriate cabinet and pull out exactly the right file for any given moment in the blink of eye. My brother is like this as well. These are ones who normally score pretty high on IQ tests. They can combine good memorization skills and common sense skills, throw in a dose of wisdom and articulate it well, while I am still on my way to the first drawer, wondering if I am even at the right one. While the ability to quickly tap into the right information is a help in thinking well, to think well does not depend on how slow or quick your mind works.

So then, what do I mean by thinking well? We will get more into this over the next few entries, but for now I can tell you that thinking well requires: humility, yearning & silence.

As I mentioned in my previous entry; thinking is work. There is no way around this. But for those who take the time to fully embrace humility, yearning and silence in their quest for wisdom, a life of easy answers and reactionary living will loose all appeal and not even seem relatable any longer.

Take a moment before you move on from this blog, even now and ask God to give you a deeper well of wisdom. James 1:5 tells us “If any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to him.”

How to Think 1 - A Crisis of Non-Thinking Wednesday |

It has been so long my last entry. Thousands of emails and letters, even financial offers have come through – all to pull me back in, so here I am. You can breathe again. Your life will continue.
Actually, does anyone really read this thing? I humbly thank you (all 2 of you!), for taking any time out of your lives to read the thoughts of someone like me.
The next few entries are going to be a mini-series based on a subject I love: Thinking. Keep in mind that I do not speak of this subject as one who has mastered it. These are just some things that I have learned through the years in an attempt to do it better.
In this first entry, I am going to share a few thoughts about the present crisis of non-thinking.


““2% of the people think; 3% of the people think they think; and 95% would rather die than think.” -George Benard Shaw

To think well is not easy and so most people simply do not want to do the work.

We fill our minds with other people’s thoughts. And depending on our sociological background and our own psychological and spiritual makeup, we gravitate towards those thoughts that most resonate with us. We rarely unplug from the myriad of voices and deeply think about why we gravitate towards certain beliefs and if those beliefs really are true.

We become reactionary (responding from our emotions) as opposed to responsive (responding from a deeper place of wisdom). The result is simplistic thinking.

Dr. M. Scott Peck writes in his book The Road Less Traveled and Beyond, “Everywhere we turn, the evidence is astounding. Simplistic thinking has become so pandemic in society that it is considered normal and conventional wisdom…” (pg. 31)

If you are a non-fictional reader like me, you have probably thought to yourself as I have, “Why are there so few original writers our there? Is there anyone who can do more than just repackage other people’s thoughts into different looking boxes and give me an original thought that I can chew on for days or weeks to come? Truths that won’t just confirm what I already know, but that will, instead, shake up my presuppositions? That will actually cause me to grow in wisdom and in my own ability to think? ” Don’t misunderstand me, I am not hungry for new truths; rather, fuller truths is what I am after.

I am sure you would agree that God has created each of us as unique individuals. His design is to create a body of believers that are interdependent. Yet, in order for the body to function at its best, each member must grow in the awareness of what part they are (their original self). If you are created to be a foot, you must fully become that foot and not try to hold things as a hand does. The body cannot function this way. Now we know this is true in relation to spiritual gifts, but it also true in other aspects of our humanity. God forbid we all think the same thoughts, where is the iron sharpening iron in that?

When I was a child, my parents along with my 4 siblings and I took a month out of our lives, loaded up our camper and drove across the country. We went along the southern states on our way to California and along the northern states on the way back. I have distinct memories of the different feels in each state and in so many different towns. A teenager in Missouri dressed and spoke differently than a teenager in Arizona. Today, a teenager in Georgia dresses like a teenager in Washington, like a teenager in the Dominican Republic, like a teenager in Germany. Sure, many may try to be original, but the moment they have achieved it, it is packaged and sold as the next trend (watch a fascinating documentary about this online at:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/cool/view/ ).

It isn’t just in the world of fashion that unoriginality thrives, it is in books, magazines, TV shows, and much of our day to day lives.

Dallas Willard in his great book, The Divine Conspiracy, writes “the mantle of intellectual meaninglessness shrouds every aspect of our common life. Events, things, and “information” flood over us, overwhelming us, disorienting us with threats and possibilities we for the most part have no idea what to do about. Commercials, catch words, political slogans, and high-flying rumors clutter our mental and spiritual space. Our minds and bodies pick them up like a dark suit picks up lint.” (pg.9)

There is hope. We are free to develop into our own, most unique self, if we are willing to do the hard word of thinking well. If we are willing, as Paul wrote to “not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind” (Romans 12:2).

What kind of impression will you leave on this earth when you are gone? Will it be barely distinguishable from the myriads of others who never really lived? God has created our short breathe of an existence to make a contribution that only our individual lives can make. I have no idea what my own will be, but I pray it won’t be anyone else’s.

Other Sites Where Vince Is: