Favorite Photos

Isn’t is awesome, how good fruit trees bear good fruit?

We have a jaca tree in our yard. Jaca fruit is about the size of a watermelon. The fruit globules inside taste like bubble gum.

This lemon is growing beside our house.

This is a fancy kind of acerola, and the fruit tastes a little like gooseberries.

Kelly has still not seen her brother, except in a few photos. Silmara just got back with the good news that the baby is more robust every day and will soon come home.

Daily Spiritual Experiencesand Flourishing

Earlier this year, I included a survey about Daily Spiritual Experiences and Flourishing Among Two Age Groups in this email.

1. Both age groups responded similarly regarding Daily Spiritual Experiences and Flourishing.
2. The people who reported more Daily Spiritual Experiences reported more Flourishing. There was a strong correlation.

This is good news because it shows that for the 69 participants, older adults and young people have equal opportunities to flourish. Everyone has the same advantage and opportunity.

People willing to practice their faith flourish more.

I presented my scientific research virtually at the 10th International Conference on Opportunities and Challenges in Management, Economics, and Accounting in Europe. It was scientific because I used the scientific method.

Academics and thought leaders from Africa, North and South America, China, and the United Emirates presented their research.

I was surprised when the conference planners accepted my research about spirituality and flourishing alongside presentations about “Circular economy and green bonds in Europe” and “Assessing the financial risk of a shopping center.” It was a cross-culture experience for me, and as such, it was fun, and I’m glad it’s over. I am much more at home in the jail in Marabá, but like Apostle Paul, I am available for God to use among a variety of social strata. One of the most prestigious presenters, a professor doctor from South Africa, thanked me verbally in front of the others after my presentation, stating that it was in line with a growing trend in academic research that people do not make decisions solely on hard facts and data but also because of emotional and spiritual health.

For the conference brochure, click here.

To read the scientific paper I wrote on Daily Spiritual Experiences and Flourishing, click here.

What Works?

Imagine a church where people come to learn to work on their issues to the point where their unchurched colleagues ask them “What is happening? “Why are you less anxious than you used to be?” And their families ask them, “Why are you different than you used to be?, and “How can I learn to flourish like you?” And what if the individuals and families in your church felt a growing, burning desire to help their anxious friends and relatives learn how to connect with God, to learn to optimize their capacity for creativity, beauty, and relationships? To me, that sounds like a church planter’s dream. Maybe it’s your dream.

The world is full of anxious people wanting to find peace and wanting to do their part to create loving, thriving families. They want to learn to flourish now.

Christianity is interesting in that it is a trade of sorts. We give up our right to judge, despise, and manipulate people, and God gives us access to the Tree of Life. Often the price of loving everyone is too steep, especially when everything is going well. It is easy for our identity to be wrapped up in our sense of justice. But when the pain gets strong enough, we get desperate for relief, which is a good place to start. God often uses pain to move us from our comfort zones to something way better.


Jesus Offers Beauty for Ashes

Jesus said He fulfilled the Isaiah 61 prophecy (Lk 4:18-21).


The Spirit of the Sovereign LORD is upon me, 
      for the LORD has anointed me 
      to bring good news to the poor. 
    He has sent me to comfort the brokenhearted 
      and to proclaim that captives will be released 
      and prisoners will be freed. …
      he will give a crown of beauty for ashes,
    a joyous blessing instead of mourning, 
      festive praise instead of despair. 
    In their righteousness, they will be like great oaks 
      that the LORD has planted for his own glory (NLT, Is 61:1-3). 


Jesus ushered in Humanity 2.0. God’s plan has been unfolding since Adam and Eve were expelled from the Garden. Did you know that Jesus called Abel a prophet? Abel was the first prophet. He chose the Tree of Life.


“For this reason also the wisdom of God said, ‘I will send to them prophets and apostles, and some of them they will kill and some they will persecute, so that the blood of all the prophets, shed since the foundation of the world, may be charged against this generation, from the blood of Abel to the blood of Zechariah…” (NASB, Lk 11:49-51a).


The whole Old Testament is about Jesus.


“Now He said to them, ‘These are My words which I spoke to you while I was still with you, that all things which are written about Me in the Law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms must be fulfilled.’ Then He opened their minds to understand the Scriptures” (Lk 24:44-45).


Jesus continued from the Luke 11 scripture quoted above…


“Woe to you lawyers! For you have taken away the key of knowledge; you yourselves did not enter, and you hindered those who were entering.” (Lk 11:52).


QUESTION: What did the lawyers not enter?

The idea is that Jesus, who was God Himself, came to earth to show people how to spend time with God the Father and then live in a new reality.

Spending quality time with God is like entering the Garden of Eden to be refreshed at the Tree of Life and to drink enough Living Water to refresh all the people you influence.


“Jesus answered and said to her, ‘Everyone who drinks of this water will thirst again; but whoever drinks of the water that I will give him shall never thirst; but the water that I will give him will become in him a well of water springing up to eternal life’” (Jn 4:13-14).


The lawyers knew about getting into the Garden to the Tree of Life. They had the key to knowledge. Why wouldn’t they go in if they were that close? The story’s context was that they preferred to stand in judgment over Jesus for not being ceremoniously clean. He hadn’t washed his hands before lunch (Lk 11:37-38). The lawyers appeared holy. They correctly even tithed from the mint leaves that grew on the bushes by their homes (v. 42). But Luke makes sure his readers don’t miss how Jesus was correct in His evaluation of the lawyer’s character issues. The masks came off. “After He spoke, the scribes and the Pharisees began to be very hostile…” (v. 23).


Church-planting?

The church leaders in Jesus’ day had drifted into following rules as a way to God’s presence. Tithing mint was a good thing, but the requirements to eat at the Tree of Life are more stringent.

How can we help others experience the Tree of Life? How can we engage people in a way so their unchurched community wants in? And in a way that they feel empowered to help their people?

The way forward is not by trying harder but by trying differently. Hard work doesn’t get people into the Kingdom any more today than in Jesus’ time. Although doing nothing is not helpful either. The challenge is in learning to do the right things.

I learned to prioritize time with God as my first activity every day.

Centering Prayer

For me, Centering Prayer has been a game-changer. I spend 30 minutes every morning quietly with God, often at the Tree of Life. Spending time with Jesus means bringing every thought captive to Him. God gave us a great brain. It wants to race around helping us get the most out of life. During Centering Prayer we take control of it and teach it to focus on God. We do not listen to the Accuser, the Victim, the Manipulator, or the Over-Achiever that wants to build a Tower of Babel. Instead, we sit with God, under the Tree of Life and look around at all the other good trees in the Garden. The first command to humans was to enjoy the fruit of all those other good trees except that one that is in a hole surrounded by slippery slopes. When we learn to stay away from that one, the rest are available. Our brain, of course, wants to help us, so we ask for God’s help, by His Holy Spirit, to help us carve new neural pathways. It’s hard work and takes supernational help. The old thought highways are so familiar and comfortable. The problem is, we don’t want those destinations. We want to live as fully equipped humans 2.0, actively waiting for Jesus’ return.

I also continued my normal daily spiritual activities like: 

  • reading the Bible each year,
  • asking for impossible things like 1,000 churches and the jail crowd,
  • and opportunities to be God’s person to serve my people, all of them,
  • practicing gratefulness by speaking grateful words out loud many times per day,
  • expecting God to actively direct my steps,
  • enjoying everything as much as possible,
  • including, for me, studying.

The impossible dreams, for me, serve as a magnetic North on my compass. God can change that whenever He chooses, but until then I have a direction and I know how I’ll spend my discretional time, thoughts, and creative energy.

For Centering Prayer to work, we cannot have bitterness, unforgiveness, or negative triggers. When they come, we acknowledge them, repent, ask forgiveness, and expect God will show us how to love everyone as we love Him. This leads to a whole new capacity for flourishing in all seasons.

Flourishing is superior to well-being because people can flourish even in times of chaos. During the pandemic season, some people flourished. I flourished.

NOTE: If you are too busy for a significant time with God every morning, acknowledge it. Keep it in mind. Ask God to do whatever it takes so you have live 2.0. Tell Him that no matter what, you’re in. Repeat the prayer until it becomes real in your spirit. Give it some time, and see what happens. The path will likely be unexpected and have painful stretches, but in the end, by playing the long game, you will never regret your prayer and commitment.

I would love to hear your thoughts…

Favorite Photos

I am so grateful for the colorful skies! This scene was in the East as the sun was setting in the West. The skies are so awesome. Pre-pandemic, when I could minister in the jail, I used to get locked in with the guys that were behind five padlocked doors and gates. There was a small hole in the roof in that cell, so things got wet when it rained, and sometimes the moon passed into view. Everyone would state their highlight of lowlight each week, and one cowboy who, if I remember right, got drunk and killed someone just got transferred to this cell. In his previous cell, he had no view of the sky, but here, when he could see the moon, it was a major highlight. A MAJOR highlight. Can you imagine going from living outdoors as a cowboy to getting locked in a cell for six months with no view of the sky and nothing to do or read? I cannot imagine it, but I know the sky is awesome, and we are richer for pondering how awesome it is and what it demonstrates to us about God.

These two ladies will still be having this same conversation 60 years from now, with different people but the same topics.

Brazil Novo Church Planting

1. In 1994, Northview Church in Abbotsford sent a team to come and help in Brazil. We hosted them, and they did some work projects and special services. The pastor of the small church we attended was Timoteo. He was from a farming and fishing community in the Amazon Basin. The tiny church had a few benches that didn’t lean back. The Northview team brought some musical instruments, which they left with the church.

2. In 2022, our daughter Bella and her husband Tim moved to the basement suite of Ditch and Janice, one of the guys we met from that Northview outreach. We remain connected to several people from that team almost 30 years ago.

3. Pastor Timoteo moved to Brasil Novo, a small city on the Transamazon Highway, because the previous pastor, Ademir, died in the pandemic.

4. This week, Timoteo sent me photos of the church they are planting out of Brasil Novo.

5. Seeing local people raising resources and helping build their own church building feels right to me. When they build their own church congregations develop muscle memory to pray, act, and do things with resources they get from Him. It’s freeing.

Timoteo was our pastor in 1994, and we’re still working together.
He is now the pastor of the Brasil Novo church, about nine hours East of us,
and planting churches in the surrounding region.

Toward Flourishing

I was stunned by a drawing that compared the Garden of Eden to the Tabernacle.

Thanks to Tim Mackie, who copied it from a book by Michel Morales. Click here.


The Garden of Eden

  • The Tree of Life is in the Center of the Garden.
  • You have to pass the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil.
  • The River of God flows from the Garden and provides life to the regions of Assyria, Egypt, and Babylon.
  • Adam and Eve are expelled, and cherubims guard the entrance.

The Tabernacle

  • The priests get to go back in past the cherubim to get to the Holy of Holies.
  • They represent the people.
  • Inside the temple is garden imagery.
  • The children of Israel were to be a blessing to the whole world (Gen. 12:1-3).

The Kingdom of God

  • Jesus ushered in the Kingdom of God when the veil to the Holy of Holies was ripped open (Matt. 27:51).
  • The idea is that all believers have access to God’s presence and then go and be good news/life/fragrant to a hurting world (1 Pet. 2:9).
  • The curtain was ripped open. The cherubim will let us back to God’s presence…
  • …But the Tree of Testing still exists.

The Tree of Testing Can Still Keep You Out

  • Jesus was clear that the Tree of Testing still exists.         

“For if you forgive others for their transgressions, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive others, then your Father will not forgive your transgressions” (Matt. 6:14-15).


Then Peter came and said to Him, “Lord, how often shall my brother sin against me and I forgive him? Up to seven times?”
Jesus said to him, “I do not say to you, up to seven times, but up to seventy times seven. For this reason the kingdom of heaven may be compared to a king who wished to settle accounts…. And his lord, moved with anger, handed him over to the torturers until he should repay all that was owed him. My heavenly Father will also do the same to you, if each of you does not forgive his brother from your heart.” (Matt. 18:21-35).


How to Forgive From the Heart

Note: If you feel vulnerable or overpowered, please get professional help. This counsel is for healthy people who got stuck or want to help their friends.

1. How did Jesus react to people? Sometimes He served. Sometimes he lets others help Him. Sometimes, He went away by Himself; other times, He got angry and set things in order. While the emotional behavior varied (adapting, distance, and anger), Jesus always loved people because God is love (1 John 4:7-8).

2. On our journey to heaven, many people (everyone?) will come into situations where they feel forgotten, betrayed, scorned, shunned, or cheated at a level they never dreamed possible. The Tree of Temptation in the Garden just got real. We can choose to judge others or leave judgment to God. This does not mean being quiet and submitting to what feels wrong. We seek to obey God in each situation while loving and staying close to our people.

3. About ten years ago, I hit a wall. A businessman friend at Marie’s Restaurant in Abbotsford asked me, “You’re not going to let this be an anchor for you, are you?” The way the question was asked caused me to reply, “No, of course not.” But it did, in fact, become an anchor until I learned to forgive from the heart. It took a few years. The forgiveness and the desire to let God be the judge started as a decision, but it all took a few years to drop from my head to my heart. The first time is the hardest; once you have muscle memory, it gets easier. Except God’s tests get more challenging, depending on the level of leadership calling.


MY SON, DO NOT REGARD LIGHTLY THE DISCIPLINE OF THE LORD,
NOR FAINT WHEN YOU ARE REPROVED BY HIM;
FOR THOSE WHOM THE LORD LOVES HE DISCIPLINES,
AND HE SCOURGES EVERY SON WHOM HE RECEIVES.” (Heb. 12:5b-6).


4. I would way sooner eat freely from the Tree of Life and become a Tree of Life for my people than die slowly in the arid wasteland outside the Garden (Psalm 1).

5. I have flourished at a new level for years, starting in 2017, throughout the pandemic, and in an ever-increasing capacity. I can feel my capacity for thriving increasing.

Your Thoughts?

What is your experience with being anchored outside the Garden to free access to the Tree of Life and Flourishing?