Category: Church

  • VIDEO: Five years in Under Two Minutes

    Did you know my husband is a crazy creative videographer? He is.

    With our recent move to Nashville, he updated his demo reel with footage, editing, animation, directing and other awesome creative videographer things over the last five years…from non-profit work internationally, to commercials, to dance and music videos…well, just take two hot minutes and check out some of his work.

    And if you’re ever looking for that creative guy…he’s your man.

  • Truth (and Grace) in Consequences

    My husband once taught a message to our church back in Davenport on the idea of the “two camps” we have in Christianity:

    • The Glory of God
    • The Grace of God

    Usually, because of things past and present, we find ourselves with our tents pitched in one of the other. Generally, more conservative, reformed types live in the Glory of God camp, where God is very big and we are very small. On the extreme, this camp is “letter of the law” in their theology.  The Grace of God camp is generally where the more progressive, post-Christian, less conservative people live. The extreme in this camp is that truth is colored by culture and that continual, habitual sin is, well, okay…because there’s always enough grace, right?

    Yes, there always is enough grace. So much grace that a man died on a cross for it all. Yes, there are many things in the Bible that are clearly true, and there are many things that aren’t so clearly true.

    Camping, caravaning

    The problem, Tim says, is when we do camp in one side or another, never venturing out or engaging with the other camp. Life is full of constant wandering and the world is big. We should explore it with the Holy Spirit and the things illuminated to be true to us as our guide.

    Maybe it’s just me, my own introspection into my heart, or the blogs I read, or the people I follow on social media, or the conversations I overhear when I choose to write over coffee and not my kitchen table, but I sense a shift in culture. I used to think most of us lived on a midline, or even perhaps too far into conservatism. Now, however, I kind of see a lot of people expressing a truth-is-relative, no consequences world.

    We think we are living more free in our grace, but I think we may be living under an illusion that our actions don’t have a cost because we aren’t the direct beneficiaries of it.

    I know the Apostle Paul says everything is permissible and not beneficial, but not everything is wise.

    I’ve found myself asking questions of my own behavior lately, in light of Titus 2.

    Could what I say call in to question my faith? Could someone criticize me for using this word or that word, even though I don’t see a problem with it?

    Could what I do – what I eat, drink or how I spend my time cause another person to see a relationship with Christ as something that doesn’t really make me any different?

    Am I taking my faith seriously enough that I recognize the cost of grace for me and the need for grace for others?

    I am realizing my actions, big and small, have very significant consequences. That in order to live the Gospel, using words or not, I actually need to live the Gospel.

    I need to live a life of dying to myself, dying to my perceptions, and surrendering the “I’m entitled this behavior because of grace!” attitude I can have. Because the truth is we’re not entitled to anything except believing and receiving the grace given to us.

    Is a life of quiet faith the one that speaks the loudest?

     

     

  • What’s One Thing You Would Tell Your Pastor?

    Church

    If there was one thing you could tell the people who are leading our churches…

    what would it be?

  • My New Book Title: Lean on Me

    So, for the last long while, I’ve been writing my third book. A month after I turned in the rough draft to my publisher, we still didn’t have a title. I asked my editor Adria to suggest a few after she read it. In one of her emails, the word Leaning came up.

    Slightly in jest and slightly serious, I wrote back, what about Lean on Me?

    She responded and said she actually considered that, but dismissed it, not sure if it was too cheesy or not.

    I loved it. I searched for the lyrics of yes, that old song Lean on Me, and realized it conveys so much the heart of the book.

    Sometimes in our lives
    We all have pain, we all have sorrow
    But if we are wise
    We know that there’s always tomorrow

    Lean on me when you’re not strong
    And I’ll be your friend, I’ll help you carry on
    For it won’t be long
    ‘Til I’m gonna need somebody to lean on

    Please, swallow your pride
    If I have things you need to borrow
    For no one can fill those of your needs
    That you won’t let show

    You just call on me, brother, when you need a hand
    We all need somebody to lean on
    I just might have a problem that you’ll understand
    We all need somebody to lean on

    Lean on me when you’re not strong
    And I’ll be your friend, I’ll help you carry on
    For it won’t be long
    ‘Til I’m gonna need somebody to lean on

    You just call on me, brother, when you need a hand
    We all need somebody to lean on
    I just might have a problem that you’ll understand
    We all need somebody to lean on

    If there is a load
    You have to bear that you can’t carry
    I’m right up the road, I’ll share your load
    If you just call me…

    Coming to pages and eReader screens September 2014:

    Lean On Me: The Value of Intentional, Vulnerable, and Consistent Community.

    It’s a story of a girl who learned a lot about needing community and being community and the beautiful themes woven within. It’s a story of how God used likely and unlikely people to communicate His love and hope. It’s a story of crisis and redemption.

    It’s a story for all of us and I can’t wait to share more with you as we continue developing it and the resources around it.

    Thank you. Thank you for reading. For believing in me. For being with me on this journey. For letting me lean on you to rest for a while, and for leaning on me and trusting me.

  • Nashville is Luminous

    I have lived in Nashville twice for the sum total of four years.

    In three weeks, The Mister and I will be living there again; this time in Franklin. Again.

    In my stints away from Music City, I lived in the LA area for a few months — then, back to Nashville. In 2012, I committed to a year of school in Michigan and planned to return after that year was over.

    Love entered the scene with balloons and marching bands and fireworks and a sparkly diamond and my days of being single ended on a beach in Hawaii.

    I’ve now lived in the Davenport, Iowa area for eight months and the sights, sounds, food and the kind souls in the South have called us back.

    After living in a lot of places in my thirty-three years of life, I have no doubt Nashville is one of the most creative, thoughtful, community-focused places…ever. And one of the things I’m looking forward to next spring is the LuminousProject.

    Sadly, I missed the very first LP when I moved away, but I poured over the Tweets and photos my friends were posting.

    Wait…wait…wait…What is the Luminous Project, anyway? Maybe I should answer that first.

    LuminousProject is a contemplative movement and space for our souls to catch up to our bodies.

    (I can hear my mom saying, “Well doesn’t that sound all hippy-dippy?”)

    Front-LuminousBlk-lum14

    Look. We all need to rest. We need not to just see art, but experience it. We need not to just hear music, but feel it. We need not to just sit with people, but be with them.

    Go to LuminousProject and you’ll hear from Makoto Fujimura, Glenn Packiam, Blaine Hogan and David Dark. You’ll take in ll Sons & Daughters, The Brilliance, Robbie Seay Band, Glenn Packiam, Daniel Bashta, Derek Webb, Anthony Skinner and Stu G. You’ll find space in sacred spaces led by Ian Morgan Cron, as well as curated environments throughout the building for prayer, creative art and other personal expressions of worship and centering.

    It is not often I endorse things on my blog or through my social media channels, so when I do, know it is something I fully stand behind and participate in.

    Check out the LuminousProject. Register now (prices are lowest now, but the space is also extremely limited). And let me know if I can count on seeing you there.

     

  • Get a Free eBook!

    Click here and get my free eBook Interlude in addition to updates on Mad Church Disease and my next book release. You’ll get freebies, exclusive info & opportunities before anyone else!

    Anne-Jackson-Anne-Miller-eBook

     

  • ANNOUNCEMENT: The Revised and Updated Re-Release of Mad Church Disease (+ more!)

    Backstory: In 2005, because of the decisions she made to overwork herself and stay busy “doing” things for God and not “being” with Him, in combination with being in a toxic church environment, a girl named Anne found herself in the hospital for  a week, a battery of tests tried to determine why there was so much inflammation in her digestive system.

    It wasn’t just that. She gained forty pounds in the two years she was serving in the church full time. She was having panic attacks and acid reflux and was on a diet of espresso and sleeping pills just so she could wake up and go to sleep each and every day.

    After the hospital visit, she quit her job, got counseling, and set out on a mission to help anyone serving in ministry stay healthy – volunteers, staff, and friends of those who serve.

    That girl was me.

    Anne Jackson Anne Marie Miller Mad Church Disease
    This was the first time I saw my book Mad Church Disease in a store – Borders on West End in Nashville! It was a cool moment!

    In 2009, the book Mad Church Disease: Overcoming the Burnout Epidemic released through a traditional publisher.

    In February 2013, I found out from a  bookstore that when he tried to replenish his stock of Mad Church Disease, the order came back with the error: OUT OF PRINT. Because of whatever happens in the publishing world, they chose not to reprint it after there were none left which meant I never had a chance to buy any. Except for audio, eBook and used copies, they were literally all gone. And those are slowly disappearing too.

    This came with no warning from the publisher. After many emails and many hours studying the original contract, I learned this “Out of Print” scare was really a blessing in disguise. Why?

    Because now, I have all the rights to every format. Now, I can update it with so, so, so much I have learned from listening to others and in my own walk. I can make study guides for it and offer staff assessments and…well, the possibilities are endless!

    (Plus I get to put my sweet new name on it: Anne Marie Miller.)

    mad-church-revisedSince I am wrapping up writing Book #3, I will spend this summer re-writing, revising, updating, scheming, praying over and for this new book.

    I won’t lie – when I first heard from the bookstore manager that it was out of print, I was angry. Not because of anything monetary, but because several times a week I hear from someone that says this book truly helped them.

    This message is NOT one that can be pulled from the shelves and I vowed to fight tooth-and-nail to make that happen.

    I didn’t happen in the way I imagined it, but it happend in the way it was meant to be.

    In the fall, after my new website launches, the next “big thing” will be the re-release of Mad Church Disease (and its many helpful counterparts).

    For instance…

    • The updated book (eBook or print)
    • An updated study guide
    • A staff or team assessment tool for leaders
    • Coaching options
    • Web classes
    • Private consultations
    • Church workshops
    • Retreats

    With the launch of the new website and all that is and has changed, I want to be sure to keep in touch with those who want to hear about what this new release has to offer. It would mean the world to me if you’d let me have your email address (I won’t do anything with it other than to keep in touch).

    With that, for everyone who is subscribed before the re-launch of Mad Church Disease, I promise you not only will you be the first to know, you’ll be the first to have a chance to get it – and a few other things – for free. That won’t be a public offering.

    You can sign up below! (*if you have a pop-up or ad block extension, it may not work. if that’s the case, click here and it will go to the form).

    Any questions? I’m all ears.

    Subscribe to get updates & get my free eBook “Interlude” today!


  • My New Book

    For the last six months (or three years, depending on who you ask), I’ve been working on my third book. At first, it was going to be about riding my bike across the country and learning lessons in community along the way. But then some not-so-great life stuff happened and I needed a respite. A year later, I thought it was going to be about how to live in the present moment. That idea didn’t work out so well because I learned along the way I was doing too darn good at running from the present moment.

    But then my editor said to not think about it for six months. Don’t talk to him about it for six months. Do nothing about it for six months.

    I’m so glad God has put smart people in my life.

    During that six months, I was able to take a breath and look back at what was making my heart beat. What was the one message I had to tell? That I’ve lived, am living, and will always live and love?

    We landed it. I’ve been working on it since.

    Presently, it is very much in the [Crappy] First Draft* situation. But at the end of this month, I get to turn this [C]FD in to Thomas Nelson and in about ten months or so, you’ll be able to buy it.

    People have asked me what it’s about…and I wish I had a title for it (for some reason, that part just hasn’t illuminated itself to us) so, in a nut shell (as it sits now, which is both subject and likely to change in the editing process):

    It’s about vulnerability in relationships, particularly those with other believers. It’s going beyond the word “community” and talks how to figure out how you relate to others, and themes of vulnerable and committed relationships. It offers characteristics for both when you “need a person” and for when you need to “be the person” as we carry each other through life.

    I’d love to hear any feedback you have – questions you have about relationships, good experiences, lessons learned, what you feel you need when it comes to having functioning healthy community in the Body of Christ. Feel free to leave it in the comments below or on Twitter or Facebook!

    Thanks for hanging in the interlude with me the past three years!

    *[C]FD is my PG13 translation of an Anne Lamott expression.

     

  • Is There Joy in Holding on to Grief?


    Screen Shot 2013-05-15 at 10.02.03 AM
    On July 3, 2012, eight days before my friend Jay Williams turned 32 years old, he was buried in Lebanon Cemetery in Plains, Georgia. The air was still and thick with southern humidity, and sweat collected in the small of my back under the layers of my black dress. My friends and I stood on the brittle grass of the cemetery, waiting in line to say goodbye to Jay one last time. We dodged the sun by shuffling in and out of each other’s shadows and swatted at clouds of gnats with paper fans provided by the local funeral home.


    In the summer of 2010, Jay, myself, and 15 other people rode our bicycles from San Diego to Myrtle Beach, raising money and awareness for an organization that empowers people to fight the HIV/AIDS and water crises in Africa. Jay was the first cyclist to arrive at the church that would send us off. As I pulled into the church parking lot in San Diego, I saw a short, skinny guy with a tan wearing a straw cowboy hat riding his red bicycle in circles. Was he one of the team cyclists? Or some vagabond traveler who perhaps illegally acquired a nice road bike? Was he drunk? He looked so happy—too happy.

    DSCN1269Quickly, we learned he was one of our teammates. While the rest of us worried if our gear would hold up or how we’d survive cycling nine hours a day in 110-degree weather, Jay was content to cycle the 3000 miles we traveled cross-country in Teva sandals, occasionally strapping a milk jug of water to the back of his bike so he wouldn’t have to stop. Even without clipping into pedals or using recovery drinks (he preferred chocolate milk), Jay was the strongest on our team. He wasn’t competitive, though; he’d stop and help someone change out a blown tube or, in his South Georgia accent, would cheer up a teammate having an unpleasant day.

    As we got to know Jay, we learned he was in a skiing accident when he was a teenager. After extensive surgery that caused his abdominal muscles to be separated and required him to lose a kidney, he was back on the slopes the next winter. Considering the doctors told him he’d be lucky to walk again, this was only one small miracle in Jay’s life. Jay was brave. Jay was humble. It seemed like Jay was invincible. He quickly and quietly became everybody’s unlikely hero.

    After the tour ended, each cyclist returned to his or her respective hometown. Jay made an effort to stay in touch with each of us, scattered as we were.

    1photoAfter tornadoes ripped through the south in spring 2011, I volunteered at a benefit concert in Birmingham, Alabama. Jay drove four hours from Plains, Georgia, to help me sell T-shirts for two hours. Then he drove four hours back so he could be at his job on time the next morning. This wasn’t atypical. This was Jay. By day, he worked in his father’s peanut factory and by night, secretly repaired friends’ houses when they were on vacation. He loved Jesus, and to everyone who knew him, he never had to say a word to prove it. His actions proved this love beyond any shadow of doubt.

    On June 29, 2012, when the team received the news that Jay fell two stories and was fighting for his life, none of us could believe it. Twenty-four hours later, Jay passed away due to the trauma caused by his fall.

    Sadly, Jay was not the first of my friends to pass last year. Two others have unexpectedly died: one in a tragic hiking accident in Japan and another after an arduous battle with cancer. I began to wonder if, as a 33-year-old, death simply becomes a more frequent notification or if last year has been an anomaly. Thinking on these things, my chest tightens and my breathing becomes shallow and quick. I’m faced with the reality of my own transience now; death has been speaking into my consciousness more repeatedly than usual.

    Most of the cycling team was able to make it to Georgia for Jay’s funeral. We stayed in two guest homes on a farm in the tiny town of Ellaville. None of us knew the family who owned the farm before we arrived. They heard we were coming, and they opened their doors. They loved Jay, and they loved Jesus, and because of this, they loved us.photo

    Alone in one of the houses while waiting for our ride to the visitation, I sat in the living room with the book I was reading. After attempting to understand the same sentence four times, I gave up and stared off into the smoke-stained fireplace in front of me, listening to the sounds that filled the house: water dripping from the kitchen faucet, songs of crickets and the rustle of leaves as squirrels jumped around in the heavy woods. In my hasty packing, I forgot to bring a pen. I searched the cottage and found a pencil and scribbled in the back of my book:

    When someone in our periphery dies, it gives our spirits pause. A moment of silence. But when someone close—a kindred spirit—passes, our reality becomes surreality. We float through a new and different kind of time and space, and our bodies feel the loss of a bright soul that no longer walks with us. The air, the sounds, the light … all is different when someone departs. When they became part of us, they implanted a small piece of their spirit in our own. And when they leave, there is such pain from the empty space that spirit used to fill. This is grief.

    During the days of Jay’s visitation and funeral, grief was loud. It was in the eyes of the 200 people who lined up in the heat to say goodbye to him and console his parents and his girlfriend. It spoke into the quiet moments in conversations as we spoke of Jay’s memory. It was in the tears of his friends as they touched his casket before it was lowered.

    However, as loud as grief was, joy was louder. It seems incredibly trite to write those words; it feels as cliché as saying, “He’s in a better place now” or “God just wanted one of his angels home.” But joy outsang grief, and its notes ring just as beautifully today as they did last year. Joy sings of a life lived bravely and with love. Joy sings of friendships created and renewed. Joy sings of every minute someone spent with Jay. In the moments where grief is raw and bleeding, joy reaches in with peace and hope. It is not intrusive or overpowering. It is constant and gently comforts our sorrow. In the space this mercy offered us, we could mourn and celebrate.

    July 12, 2012 marks the day Jay was buried. New concerns and mundane tasks seem to lessen the time I think of his death. Distractions threaten to numb the sensitivity to life and community and love I experienced so intensely almost a year ago. It’s effortless to let death, grief, and the overwhelming joy it paradoxically brings move away from our hearts. Our culture demands we must get over it—life goes on—but with intentional determination, maybe we have an alternative choice.

    Yes, we must accept life and death, just as we must accept grief and joy. There is a season for all things. But instead of moving on from the things death awakens in us, perhaps we embrace them. Perhaps we choose to keep the mark a life leaves on our heart unhealed and open and, by doing so, we create space for others to experience the legacy of love and joy a departed friend leaves behind.

    Can there, in fact, be joy in holding on to grief?