
Wednesday evening at First Presbyterian Church of Brandon turned out to be the perfect entry point into our observance of Lent.
I stood in the front of the church, playing prelude music on my acoustic guitar, and watched as so many faithful people made their way into the sanctuary; worshippers taking a deviation from their Wednesday routines to spend intentional time in the presence of God and to make the commitment to walk the dusty road to Jerusalem with Jesus.
On one side of the church a crowd of teens gathered to show their solidarity with the 8th grade youth who have signed up for confirmation classes. Rebekah gave each of them a Bible and read the scripture she had picked out as their companion for the journey. Ten young people, ten unique passages.

STANDING IN LOVE WITH JESUS: Confirmation is often put down by those who value other valid traditions, such as “The Decision,” or a stylized emotional “moment” followed by baptism by immersion.
But such judgment is simply ignorance and narrow-mindedness talking. Fact is, the confirmation experience our young people are engaging isn’t a series of irrelevant, stuffy lectures – rather it’s a week-by-week faith journey between Ash Wednesday and Pentecost, full with instruction and prayer and discussion and projects and study and meetings with their mentors.
Confirmation is a road-less-traveled, much like the observance of Lent, and it concludes with the invitation to follow Jesus and make a public declaration of faith. Not every young person will be ready to say “Yes” to Jesus and join the church when the classes are completed; there is a decision to be made and it’s a decision that’s every bit as significant as an invitation to “Raise your hand, come to the front, and pray the sinner’s prayer.”
I HAVE DECIDED: In fact, thinking about this journey of faith I’m inviting my readers to take through these six-weeks of Lent, there’s a decision waiting for all of us and it comes on a day-to-day schedule.
One day, responding to the “anti-confirmation” skepticism of a man who questioned, derisively, “You probably couldn’t tell me the exact time and place you made the decision to follow Jesus..,” Rebekah famously replied, “I asked Jesus into my life at around 7:00 this morning, just about the time Derek brought me my first cup of coffee. I’ve been asking Jesus into my life every day for decades, and I plan on making the decision to follow Jesus, daily, every new morning I’m blessed to draw breath.”
So what’s your decision? – DEREK

Great blog… be sure to send it to Kelly P.
Love you
Every time I get queried about Infant Baptism, and get the ‘you can’t tell the time you gave your life to Jesus’, I just beam and tell them that that is the general idea. I was raised following Jesus. I suspect many of my friends who made ‘a decision’ at the ages of 5, 6, 7, 8, etc. had already long since been following Jesus, but because their parents told them they had to make ‘a decision’ they ‘made’ one, and couldn’t imagine making any other decision (so the decision point is moot.)
great explanation, Tim.
great article. each new day, confessing and ‘confirming’ my renewed dependence and reliance on the Life of Jesus to be manifest in my own. -mike
Hey there Derek.
Lately you have touched on many issues that I am engaged in up here in NC. I guess it is that theme or thread thing going on. And I just had to comment on this one. In Sunday school, we have been talking a lot about how we folks think that we are the ones in charge, that we call the shots. And we discussed this same question tossed around by some Christians: “when were you saved or when did you accept Christ?” Well the class decided our answer was now going to be “before the foundation of the world.” (See Ephesians 1: 3 &4. My new favorite verse right now!) So silly, silly humans, it seems that really God picks us.
Hope you are all well. We are.
TTFN,
Stormy