Nearly Converted

April 29th, 2010
I almost got converted at the old Majestic Theater in downtown Brownsville when I was a high school. Can’t remember how I came to be there, but it was a special screening of The Cross and the Switchblade, a true-life movie about a gang leader, Nicky Cruz, who gives his life to Jesus and becomes an evangelist. Erik “Ponch” Estrada plays Cruz, and Pat Boone plays the preacher who leads him to Christ. When the movie ended, someone walked to the front of the theater, talked for a few minutes, and then invited us to come forward and, like Nicky, repent and give our lives to Jesus. So I’m sitting there in the dark with all these other teenagers when I...

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A Lifelong Process

April 29th, 2010
I have no idea when my “conversion” took place. Like most of us who are lifelong Episcopalians, I was baptized as an infant and have more or less gone to church my entire life – sometimes regularly for years and sometimes not at all.  From what I can tell, that part of my story is not unique. Another part of my story is not unique. My “faith” has grown over time as friends have given themselves generously to disciple me in the ways of Christ and to help me recognize those special moments when God’s life-giving power breaks into the present time. Through my friends’ careful planting, watering, pruning, fertilizing, and nurturing, my once ever-so-tiny mustard seed of “faith” has grown...

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Marked as Christ’s Own

April 29th, 2010
What happens in baptism? Is it the great conversion moment of our lives? The Rev. Jay George, church planter for the congregation of Grace Church in San Antonio, Texas, thinks that’s only part of it.  One of the really exciting things about planting a new church is that you get to make up traditions as you go along. There is no one to say, “We’ve always done it that way,” because the “we” is only about six people and “always” only goes back to last Thursday. A new tradition we’ve started at Grace Church centers around baptism. When we have a baptism we add something at the end. After everyone has been dunked and sealed, while my thumb is still slick with...

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Living the Questions

April 29th, 2010
The poet Rilke, in his book Letters to a Young Poet, is famously quoted: “I beg you . . . to have patience with everything unresolved in your heart and try to love the questions themselves as if they were locked doors or books written in a very foreign language.”  This quote has followed me over the years, showing up at times when I least expect it and often when I am answer-hunting the most.  When it appears I am always infuriated: “What, again?” Today, a little interior snicker comes with it:  “Yep, again,” and I know it’s time for me to get out of the way, to let go and trust.  A spirituality of questioning is a tough pill to swallow.  I want...

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Bp. Lillibridge’s Christmas video message

December 22nd, 2009
We have just put up our first video Christmas message from Bp. Gary Lillibridge. Go to the homepage at www.dwtx.org  and click on the Bishop's Christmas Message. Blessings to you all this joyful season, The Communications Department Episcopal Diocese of West Texas Read More »