Community Stories
These short stories either follow what Spring Church is focusing on in a particular season, like Christmas or Easter, or they take culturally relevant topics and frame them through a Biblical lens. You can look through our entire category of over 7 years of stories using the dropdown.
Who Will Disciple You?
8 minute read
Let me ask you a personal question: Is your mother-in-law a bitter person? (Feel free to substitute “mother-in-law” with mother, father, spouse, child, sister, brother, or anyone else who is a part of your family.)
Introducing Ruth
8 minute read
History is going to remember where we were standing this year.
Juneteenth
(2 minute read)
Last week somebody mentioned Juneteenth, and I realized that I don’t have a clue what Juneteenth is about. I’ve grown up hearing about it, it’s on my electronic calendar, and it’s always been around me. Yet, all I knew was, “It’s a holiday for African-Americans.”
How do we braid justice into our everyday lives?
3 minute read (plus videos)
Old Testament prophets consistently talk about how pandemics, pestilences, and plagues make visible sins that are easily hidden, and the sin of racism in America has certainly been visible in the last few weeks.
Hearing from African-Americans in the Church
Resource Library - Blog itself <5 min read
This week I’d like to listen to the African-American voice right now. Several of the folks at Spring Church contributed their favorite articles, videos and podcasts to this blog post.
What if My Pentecost Life and my Normal Life is the Same Life?
7 minute read
Pentecost has often been a peculiar day for me. I love the story of how the third member of the Trinity is sent: I love the fire, and wind, and the Church preaching in a miraculous foreign language. I love reading the book of Acts like a script for a movie, and I love how this story reminds us every year about how the Holy Spirit is still with the Church today.
Soccer with five-year-olds
Few things illustrate an integrated life like youth soccer, and I love how youth soccer illustrates how much I have to learn from the youth.
My Normal Life and my Great Commission Life are the Same (Part 3)
Iain’s observation, which helped me walk away from an unhealthy separation of my Great Commission life from my Normal Life, was that mentoring is something that happens best within the context of friendship. And we embodied mentorship and friendship in a way that became more clear to me. We had both, at the same time.
My Normal Life and my Great Commission Life are the same Life (Part 2)
I loved all the conversations and prayers and moments of realizing that Denise was right: discipleship begins in the home. But discerning what to do next is another matter entirely.
My Normal Life and my Great Commission Life are the same Life (Part 1)
What if the Great Commission included all these dirty diapers? What if the Great Commission is about this family, and this giant pile of laundry, and our neighbors, and the people at work, and our small group, and church? Why do we have to stop our Normal Life, go do some amazing Great Commission Thing somewhere far away, and then come back to our Normal Life?
I Miss Eating With You
Our pursuit of food has shaped the evolution of our sensory apparatus—the very tools through which we, as a species, perceive the world. The choices we make every day about food selection, preparation, and consumption lie at the foundation of our identities and relationships and affinities. As the Italian historian Massimo Montanari succinctly put it, food is culture.
Entering the Easter Story
The season of Lent is an annual reminder of all the things Jesus doesn’t do, and I need it every year, because every year I lose sight of how Jesus doesn’t conquer my problems, or me, or the things I think are my enemy.
Love One Another Thursday
Today we’re going to compare news headlines from The New York Times and Fox News, because today is Love One Another Thursday.
You might be more familiar with the Latin name for today: Maundy Thursday. Back when the Church used Latin all the time, “Maundy” was the shorthand title for “Maundatus Novum,” which is Latin for “New Commandment.” What is the “new commandment” to which this Thursday points?
Today is Palm Sunday
Today is Palm Sunday, the day when we remember how God’s people were so focused on what they WANTED God to do for them, that it kept them from seeing what God was ACTUALLY DOING with them.
You Are Not Alone
I wrote these prayers for my diverse group of friends, scattered around the globe, to help us all remember that we are not alone, and to help us walk through this season together and with Jesus who loves us and keeps us. Also, candidly, writing these prayers also helps me reflect on the joys and the struggles of the last two weeks, to help me remain connected to the incredible emotional rollercoaster of this pandemic.
Would anyone come to a 6:15am Bible Study?
“Would anyone come to a 6:15 am Bible study?” was the question we asked ourselves in September. 7 months later….
Two Timely Questions
Before we go any further down this road of change, of uncertainty, of worry and turmoil, let’s pause and reflect on our very recent past.
Learning how to lament together in the Hospital
Americans, on the whole, don’t know how to lament together very well.
In fact, odds are good that, as you read that last sentence, you thought, “Lament. That’s a weird word. I wonder what Matt means by ‘lament’.” Well, thank you for asking. I mean the actual basic definition: To mourn aloud. Americans don’t often mourn aloud together, particularly in ways that are helpful to the aloud mourners and their friends.