| UPCOMING RELEASEChange Your Life with an Ancient PracticeBy Ed Gungor
 CBN.com  In his first release since the best-selling There is More to the   Secret, Ed Gungor calls the church back to authenticity and   community. His book, The Vow, invites readers to return to an ancient practice.  Over and over again in scripture Christians are encouraged to "make vows to   the Lord" (e.g., Psalm 76:11). Is it possible that making vows-- intentionally   inserting various Christian practices into our lives-- would have great value to   21st-century Christians? What if we thoughtfully and publicly articulated vows   before God and those we love? Would it help our lives take on the tone of the   eternal? Has something been lost in the openness of the 21st century? The answer   is yes!  Gungor recently discussed his book.  What does it mean to make a  vow?  Vows are promises made to God.  They may be certain special acts a person  decides to participate in, or ways in which he or she chooses to live for a  limited period of time (or for a lifetime).   They are simply our own love, transformed and directed towards God and  the cause of his Kingdom.  They emerge  from the free will (vows can never be forced on us), and because a vow is a  free-will promise, it is binding and so differs from a simple decision or  resolution to do or change something.  Because vows are made to God, they are considered very serious.   If Jesus wants us to  make vows, why is there so little instruction in the Bible regarding them? When I first began to unearth this whole vow-making  enterprise, I couldn’t help but wonder why both the Old and New Testaments only  mention vows without much in the way of specific instruction regarding  them.  In his book, Celebration of Discipline, Richard Foster makes the point that,  though the Bible addresses ancient practices like solitude and fasting, it  gives “almost no instruction about how to do them.”  He explains that the Bible doesn’t give  specific instructions because these practices “were so frequently practiced and  such a part of the general culture that the ‘how to’ was common  knowledge.”  It turns out the same holds  true for vow-making.  The fact that  Scripture does not give us specifics about vowing does not mean it is an  invalid practice anymore than the absence of directives on how to approach  fasting in the New Testament invalidates that practice.  The truth is, these things were so common in  the everyday experience of people during the time the New Testament was  written, they needed no specific instruction on the how or why they should fast  or vow—they just did it.  Why is the concept of making vows  such a radical idea in American culture? Vows are promises you make directly to God—we’re not talking  about New Year’s Resolutions here.  They  are promises from which there is no retreat.   They imitate the ancient warriors who burned their ships to cut off the  possibility to run from battle.  You are  committed when you enter a vow to God.   That is why they should not be entered into lightly. But most Americans are in trouble in the “keeping your word” department.  We are a flip-flop culture—you can have a  strong opinion about something one day and completely change your mind the  next.  And this is considered OK; nobody  bats an eye.  We are part of an  ideologically disposable and ever-changing society.  What is “odd” is for people to stand firm in  their convictions—that crowd is seen as “closed” and “narrow-minded.”  As a result, the average American feels he or  she can make commitments and then back out of them whenever they become too  hard to keep.  Even the marital vow has  become a pretty pale enterprise.  When a  vowing young couple says, “I promise to love and cherish you,” to each other,  they are really saying something more like, “I promise I will try.”  For many, the marriage vow comes with a  prenuptial “out” implied.  Our society  really doesn’t see a vow as something that is considered irrevocable.  We have lost  our capacity for integrity.               What are some specific examples  of vows people can make before God? There are so many.   Vowing is simply a way of going the extra mile, of loving God in ways  that go beyond necessity and requirement.   Obviously, simply obeying the direct commands of Scripture is not going  the extra mile.  For example, no one  should make a vow to avoid sin because God already commands us to avoid sin.   However, we may vow to  participate in things that support our obedience to direct commands.  For example, a dating couple might get to the  point where they keep slipping closer and closer to inappropriate physical  contact and they don’t want to fall into sin.   They cannot “vow” not to sin, but they can vow to keep themselves out of situations where sinning is easier (i.e. vow to only be “alone” in  public). Vow-making enables us to take our good intentions from landing on the back-burner.  It encourages us to conquer the fickle nature  of the will and actually do the  things that demonstrate our love and devotion to God.  There are several kinds of vows: vows of communion (our relationship with  Christ), community (our relationship with  one another in the believing community) and commission (our relationship to the world and the mission God has given us to reach  them with the claims of Christ).  As the  Holy Spirit leads each of us in the practice of making vows, we have endless  opportunities to express our love for God in the most individual and creative  ways.  In community vows, a group of  believers join together to make a promise before the Lord.  Most importantly, vows tend to be sacrificial  in nature.  Our commitment, whether to serving  in a homeless shelter, to fasting for lent or to practicing the spiritual  disciplines, will cost us something. Why do you think the practice of  making vows has the potential to make a significant impact on the world for the  cause of Christ? Vow-making brings influence.   It is both personally transformative and political.  Our union with the person of God never just  takes place in our hearts or personal space.   It influences situations, community, family, friendships, civic  work — everything.  Faith is pushed out of  the domain of thought.  Our choices  plunge us into real life and all the suffering and contradictions that occur  there, while remaining steady in our devotion.   This is a quest for influence.   This is how the typical mom with three kids still in diapers can  influence the world.  This is how the  high-school student, who is still trying to discover who she is and where she  fits in the world, can influence others for Jesus.  This is how the retired person struggling  with health issues or intensely caring for an elderly parent changes the world. It is evident that we are walking into a dark night of deep cultural  displacement as the church.  The ways we  used to influence the world are passing away.   The old symbols of safety (big church buildings, political power, Leave It to Beaver culture, etc.) are  becoming more and more a thing of the past.   What is needed in these coming days is a prophetic people, tethered to  the vision of the kingdom   of God through a lively  confession and a prophetic praxis—a vow-rich people.  By so living, we do a couple of things: 1) we  show that the kingdoms of our world are less than they think they are—we  “judge” them; and 2) we embody our salvation in real time in real circumstances—we  offer “salvation” to the kingdoms of the world.   We need to be, as Paul puts it in Philippians, a politeuma—a robust, lively “colony of heaven” situated right smack  in the middle of the chaos of pagan culture. When did you first discover the  concept of “vowing”?  Why devote an entire  book to an idea that, on the surface, seems pretty simple? Have you ever been hiking on a trail and noticed an old,  faint footpath wandering off the main trail deeper into the woods?  I love those.   I can hardly resist the temptation to explore.  Making vows has been one of those  less-traveled footpaths for me.  I came  to Christ in my teens and I’ve been on the God-trail for almost forty years  (I’m an official old guy).  About six  years ago I noticed this little path of vowing as I was casually reading  through the book of Acts.  Vow-making is  an old trail that was very familiar to the ancients who have gone before us,  but is virtually unknown for us moderns.   As I have wandered down this intriguing, empowering—sometimes  dangerous—path, I have seen that it is really leading somewhere.  I feel like vow-making is a misplaced gem  that, except in the lives of a relative few, has been “tucked away” for many  years.  It holds a key to authenticity  and community that could well spark a world-wide church movement.   The Vow releases in January 2008. Purchase your copy here.  
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