In 1968 Jerry Snell opened a door in the hallway outside our first hour chemistry class. He invited me into what I discovered was a darkroom. Soon I was on the school newspaper and annual staff as a photographer. Later I learned that Jerry was a Lutheran who was planning to become a pastor. A few years later I was not only a Lutheran, but I was heading off to seminary to become a Lutheran pastor, too. Jerry followed a year later and served as a pastor in Missouri until his untimely heart attack and death. I thank God for Jerry and enjoy photography still today – not to mention rejoicing in having served as a Lutheran pastor in congregations in Utah, Colorado, Arkansas and Texas. I’ve retired now and serve part time as a Congregational Support Specialist for the Texas District of the LCMS. I also provide coaching and leadership training through various PLI cohorts and with individual congregations and organizations.
David Bahn is a follower of Jesus Christ, husband to Diane, father and grandfather. He is an avid amateur photographer. His photo website is “Flowers by God Photos by David” He also publishes a devotional blog DavidBahn-Reflections.com.
He and Diane live in Cypress Texas and enjoy visiting their grandchildren who live in the United States and Germany.
He graduated from Concordia Theological Seminary in 1979, and earned a Doctor of Ministry degree from Fuller Theological Seminary in 1991.
Diane, his wife, is now retired from PLI (PLIleadership.org). They have offered presentations on Marriage and Ministry Partnership, Leadership, Changing Your Congregation’s Culture, and Missional Living. They look are working with PLI International training pastors and wives of the ELVD Diocese of the Lutheran Church of Tanzania.
David’s personal mission statement is “Leading people to realize Jesus’ calling and plans for their lives.”
What does it look like to be abundantly alive? Certainly a garden of blooming flowers express such a concept. They bloom with beautiful colors. They delight the eye. They invite our lingering observation. They grow. But even beautiful flowers soon die.
There is something beyond beauty, exuberant expressions, and outward appearance that marks someone as truly alive. While these may be worthy manifestations of life, there must be something deeper that sustains us when the outward appearances give way. Just as the flowers fade and the grass withers, so too, our lives don’t always express an exuberance and abundance that says we are alive.
In the Old Testament book of Ecclesiastes, the Preacher writes:
I have seen the business that God has given to the children of man to be busy with. 11 He has made everything beautiful in its time. Also, he has put eternity into man’s heart, yet so that he cannot find out what God has done from the beginning to the end. 12 I perceived that there is nothing better for them than to be joyful and to do good as long as they live; 13 also that everyone should eat and drink and take pleasure in all his toil—this is God’s gift to man. Ecclesiastes 3:10-13
To be truly alive means that we go beyond the flashy shows of vitality that may hide a deeper sense of loss and sadness. To be abundantly alive requires a deeper sense of eternity that God has put into our hearts. It requires that we recognize the beauty of each moment “in its time”. To be truly alive means that we receive and rejoice in the gifts of God: food and drink, toil and rest, joy and faithfulness.
Jesus came to give us life in abundance. He connected that with serving God and our neighbor. So add to the list above: having a heart for God’s calling in your life, honoring God, and serving your neighbor. Then your life will bloom with abundant vitality. And that is a beautiful thing, by the grace of God.
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