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10 Prayers to Pray in a Pandemic

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1. Father, help me to so honor you through my online presence and chosen words and spirit that people will see, hear and feel Jesus through everything I post.

2. Please help me, whenever I am tempted to focus on how I am being inconvenienced and poorly served, to instead think of how I might serve others.

3. Dear Lord, may I long to privately worship you as much as I long to return to publicly worshiping you.

4. I pray for my black brothers and sisters. I cannot imagine what this time is like for them, but I can pray for them. Father, forgive me for any and all racism, and help me to work for justice at every opportunity. I confess I do not often know what that means, so please, through my own efforts to learn and the power of the Holy Spirit to convict, lead me.

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4. I pray for my white brothers and sisters. Their eyes are opening, and I pray for full vision. Father, forgive me for any and all racism on my part, and keep me from any and all bitterness and resentment. Do not let the evil one gain any foothold in my spirit. Strengthen me to never tire as I work for justice in ways that continually honor you and lift up all of humanity.

5. I need you to give me financial faith that I do not have, obedience I do not want to give, and trust that does not come naturally.

6. I pray this to my God: I may not know the reasons for all that has happened, but I have faith in the One who does.

7. Father, I know how much I thirst for grace for my own life—help me to be quick to offer the same drink to others around me.

8. Somehow, someway, help me to rise above the seeds being sown all around me—seeds of fear, division and anger. Instead, somehow, someway, help me to plant trust, unity and love.

9. Dear God, I am online so much. I offer this Scripture as a prayer and plea to you: “I will set no worthless thing before my eyes…” (Psalm 101:3a, NASB)

*10. “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner.”

Sources

*Known as the “Jesus Prayer,” it dates back to at least the 5th century.

This article originally appeared here.

Arbitration Settled Between James MacDonald and Harvest Bible Chapel

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Former Harvest Bible Chapel Pastor James MacDonald has settled an arbitration with Harvest Bible Chapel who had removed him as senior pastor back in February 2019, according to The Roys Report. The arbitration concerned who owned MacDonald’s former broadcast ministry Walk in the Word. The terms of the arbitration are under a protective order.

Related to the arbitration on May 18, 2020, the Harvest Bible Chapel elders released an update that read as follows:

On May 16, 2019, we received a letter informing us that James MacDonald is pursuing arbitration with Harvest Bible Chapel through the Institute for Christian Conciliation. Arbitration is a method used to resolve disputes outside of the courts.  Essentially, it allows a group of arbitrators to listen to arguments presented by both parties and then the arbitrators decide how this issue will be settled. Both parties submit to the decision of the arbitrators as it is legally binding. This is not a lawsuit in a court of law, and James has not sued our church by taking this action. The issues of this claim primarily involve the termination of James MacDonald and the ownership of Walk in the Word.

As the leaders of this church, we are committing to communicating about this arbitration process as it progresses. There is no desire to keep this matter unnecessarily private. We expect this to take months, not weeks. The Elders and Church Leadership Team are united in their position that James MacDonald’s termination was with cause and that Walk in the Word is a ministry of Harvest Bible Chapel.

Pray for God to get the glory in this. He is in control. We are His servants.

Court documents recently filed by James MacDonald’s lawyer show that a settlement between Harvest Bible Chapel and MacDonald was reached.

The reached settlement is under a ‘Protective Order,’ according to the court documents filed. This means that neither party can discuss the settlement and that the results of matter must remain confidential. As of this report, Harvest Bible Chapel has not posted any announcement updates on their website nor made any other public announcement regarding the settlement.

James MacDonald’s Recent History

In January of 2019, MacDonald took an ‘indefinite sabbatical‘ from preaching and leadership from Harvest Bible Chapel, a church in Chicago of which he was one of the co-founders in 1988. The church started with 18 members and grew to over 12,000 members and seven campuses. It was named one of Outreach Magazine’s Fastest Growing Churches in America in 2015. MacDonald’s ‘indefinite sabbatical’ was taken as a result of allegations that started from former elders who released a letter charging him with “self-promotion…love of money…domineering and bullying…abusive speech…outbursts of anger…[and] making misleading statements.” In a report years later from investigative journalist Julie Roys published by World Magazine and testimonials from Chicago’s ‘shock jock’ Mancow Muller, Harvest Bible Chapel was forced to investigate the claims against their senior pastor. The church then dropped lawsuit they had filed against some of the former elders and Roys.

At the time MacDonald took the sabbatical, he said that he ‘wounded others without cause‘ due to his battling of injustice, hurt, anger and fear. He took full blame and said in a elder update to Harvest Bible Chapel members that he acknowledged that he hurt people in ‘certain relationships’. He said, “I have carried great shame about this pattern in certain relationships that can only be called sin. I am grieved that people I love have been hurt by me in ways they felt they could not express to me directly and have not been able to resolve. I blame only myself for this and want to devote my entire energy to understanding and addressing these recurring patterns.

Less than a month after MacDonald started his ‘indefinite sabbatical,’ the elders at Harvest Bible Chapel announced they were removing senior pastor James MacDonald from the church entirely. This was due to inappropriate recordings that were played on Mancow Muller‘s popular Chicago radio show at that time. A few months later, Muller accused MacDonald of attempting to hire a hitman to kill one of his rivals.

Moody Publishers and LifeWay stopped selling MacDonald’s books and materials associated with the author/pastor, shortly after the news of his removal had been announced.

Since being removed from Harvest Bible Chapel, MacDonald has sued former friend and popular Chicago radio host Mancow Muller for defamation, invasion of privacy, eavesdropping, and emotional distress. The lawsuit that seeks $50,000 in damages is still ongoing. MacDonald started a Home Church Network earlier this year that is targeted toward those who struggle to get to a church or to stay in a church, or to find a church with the teaching, worship and service opportunities that match your passions.” It was also reported in July of this year that his $1.6 million dollar residence in Elgin, Illinois was in danger of foreclosure.

From Genesis 1 to Revelation 22 in 90 Hours: Bible Reading Marathon Underway

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Despite some changes because of the coronavirus pandemic, the annual reading of God’s never-changing Word is currently taking place in America’s capital. The 31st Bible Reading Marathon, facilitated by the ministry Seedline International, began Saturday afternoon and will wrap up on Wednesday.

Every verse of Scripture is being read in a 90-hour span from the Faith & Liberty building in Washington, D.C., near the U.S. Supreme Court building. Politicians, pastors, and missionaries are participating in the event, which exhorts America “to return to God’s precepts.” 

Changes to the 2020 Bible Reading Marathon

Because of the pandemic, organizers moved the five-day event from spring to September. They also had to move it from the West Terrace of the U.S. Capitol, which is currently unavailable due to inauguration preparations.

Also new for 2020 are “virtual” participants, including missionaries serving in other countries. People unable to travel to Washington, D.C., could sign up for reading slots between 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. “We didn’t want to exclude anybody because of COVID,” says Keith Davidson, founder of Indiana-based Seedline International. Seedline, a Bible-distribution ministry, took the reins of the Bible Reading Marathon in 2019, when almost 500 readers participated. This year, Davidson estimates that 300 readers are involved, with about one-fourth doing so virtually.

“This read, especially this year, is needed across our country,” says Davidson. “I think our nation’s hope lies in the word of God. I think the Bible is our foundation and can give us that duration and give us hope to get back to where…America once was.”

In conjunction with the marathon, Seedline is providing Bibles in more than 100 languages to help people around the world participate in the readings.

Who’s Reading This Year

Among the readers for the 2020 Bible Reading Marathon are Oklahoma Senator James Lankford and the following members of Congress: Mo Brooks (Alabama), Jeffrey Duncan (South Carolina), Louie Gohmert (Texas), Vicky Hartzler (Missouri), Jody Hice (Georgia), and Cathy McMorris Rodgers (Washington).

Pastors reading Scripture this year include the Rev. Michael Hall (the marathon’s previous organizer), the Rev. Robert Turrill (CEO of Evangelical Church Alliance), and Pastor Charles Koo of the Chinese Community Church of Washington, D.C. Other prominent faith leaders taking part include Mat Staver of Liberty Counsel, Tim Goeglein of Focus on the Family, and Peggy Nienaber of Faith & Liberty DC.

The Bible Reading Marathon can be viewed on Facebook Live and YouTube.

On its website, Faith & Liberty DC notes, “If EVER Capitol Hill needed to resound with the Word of God, it is now! And that’s exactly what is going to happen! A national pandemic will NOT stop it! Bitter partisan bickering will NOT stop it! And, anarchists, rioters and protestors will NOT stop it!” The site continues, “While the US Capitol Bible Reading Marathon might look or sound a bit different this year, the powerful TRUTHS contained in the Sacred Text remain the same! And they still accomplish the purposes for which they are sent forth!”

Feucht: God Is Using the Virus to Revive a ‘Tame’ Church

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Political activist and Bethel worship leader Sean Feucht took his Let Us Worship movement to Colorado Springs Saturday following an event in Fort Collins, Colorado, the night before. Feucht said he believes that God is using the challenges Americans are facing due to COVID-19 to bring revival to the American church, which he suggested has gotten comfortable and “tame.”

“What if maybe we’ve gotten just a little too safe?” asked Feucht, who said that while he believes the virus in itself is evil, he also thinks God is using it to “provoke the church.”

“I feel like maybe we just are called to return to the wildness,” said the worship leader. And that “return,” or revival, is exactly what he sees happening in the church in the U.S. right now: “I believe the enemy overplayed his hand. I believe there is a back half to 2020 that is going to get crazy…I just feel like there’s a spirit of vertical, audacious, radical praise that God is unlocking.” 

Let Us Worship in Colorado Springs 

Saturday’s Let Us Worship event took place at 10 a.m. in Memorial Park in downtown Colorado Springs. According to Feucht, it was the first of his “worship protests” he has held in the morning instead of the evening. “I didn’t know if people would show up,” he joked, saying that getting to worship in front of Colorado’s Front Range “is like a dream for me.” 

let us worship

During the event, Feucht led attendees in songs such as “Raise a Hallelujah,” “Way Maker,” and “I Am Free.” People sometimes ask why he is holding these outdoor worship gatherings, said Feucht, and in answer, he referenced Jesus’ “triumphal entry” into Jerusalem before his crucifixion. As people were crying out and rejoicing over Jesus, the religious leaders told him to tell the people to be quiet. Jesus responded, “If they keep quiet, the stones will cry out.”

“We bring worship into places of devastation,” said the worship leader. For 2,000 years, the church has worshipped “through persecution, through pandemic, through crisis,” he said. “It’s who we are. This is not political, this is biblical.” 

Feucht explained how the Let Us Worship movement started, saying that a few months ago, he was ready to leave California, which is sometimes a “tough place to live.” He had tried running for Congress but lost the primary for U.S. House California District 3 to incumbent John Garamendi. Then the governor of California issued an order banning churches from singing. “Not only our church is closed and we’re in the middle of a pandemic,” he said, “but our governor is telling us that we can’t sing! And I remember looking at my wife and I was like, is this still America?…And I felt like the Lord said, ‘You know what? Just take the party outside…Go to the Golden Gate Bridge, and begin to prophesy.’”

So he did, and that set off a “grassroots, wild, and undomesticated” movement that continued on to Huntington Beach, Portland, Seattle, and other locations throughout the U.S. Said Feucht, “I discovered that the church was beginning to get her sound back, her roar back. And I feel like that’s what God is doing in Colorado.”

“This is a courageous hour for the church of America, and I want to thank God for courageous leaders in Colorado Springs,” said the worship leader before asking the crowd to “give it up” for the city’s pastors.

Charles Stanley Stepping Down as Pastor of First Baptist Church Atlanta

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Dr. Charles Stanley has served First Baptist Church Atlanta for over 50 years. The 88-year-old pastor announced this Sunday that he is officially stepping down and handing over his position to Dr. Anthony George. However, he will remain visible in some capacity in the church as Pastor Emeritus. Stanley, who has often said he doesn’t believe in retirement, assured the congregation that he would not be idle in this next season of his life.

“As much as I love being your pastor, I know in my heart this season has come to an end,” Stanley told the congregation via a short video message on Sunday. Stanley made his comments following the message given by George. 

I’m Not Retiring, Stanley Says

Stanley told the congregation that it has been a difficult decision to step down as he loves the church. “I love all of you and I love all that God has done through our partnership together.” 

He admitted he initially resisted the call to come to First Baptist Church Atlanta, but now feels grateful that “God saw fit to allow me to serve as your pastor for more than 50 years.” Stanley thanked the congregation for “extending grace and mercy” to him and his family over the years—especially during difficult seasons. “I have few regrets and I have many wonderful memories.”

Stanley, who famously said he doesn’t believe in retirement, indicated he will focus his energy elsewhere. “I will focus the next season of my life on my opportunities at In Touch,” he said, referring to the ministry he started in 1977.  “I will continue to preach the Gospel as long as God allows,” Stanley added. In Touch Ministries distributes Stanley’s preaching via video, magazine, and radio to a global audience. According to the In Touch website, Stanley’s messages are broadcast “on more than 1,200 radio outlets, 130 television stations/networks, and language projects in more than 50 languages.”

Despite the fact that he won’t be preaching regularly or leading First Baptist Church Atlanta, Stanley says his goal remains the same: “To get the truth of the Gospel to as many people as possible as quickly as possible in the power of the Holy Spirit to the glory of God.” The veteran pastor is also confident in George’s ability to lead the church. “I have no doubt there are many great days ahead for the First Baptist Church of Atlanta.” 

New Pastor Praises Stanley’s Contributions to First Baptist Church Atlanta

Following Stanley’s video announcement, George thanked him for “being strong and of good courage through every battle you’ve had to fight, through every trial you’ve had to overcome.” George, who has served as the church’s associate pastor for eight years now, went on to praise the senior pastor for his decades-long service to the church and to express how much the congregation loves him:

Serving you as your assistant, Dr. Stanley, and serving this church as its associate pastor for these 8 and a half years has truly been the honor of a lifetime. It will be your legacy, sir, that is my standard. The standard that will inspire me to always do my best with God’s help for as long as God gives me to serve here…I can say with absolute confidence that there has never been a church anywhere, at any time in history, that loves its pastor more than First Baptist Atlanta loves Charles Stanley. We will forever love you and be indebted to you for your faithful service across 51 years.

Stanley moved from Florida to take an associate pastor position at First Baptist Atlanta in 1969. Two years later, Stanley took over as senior pastor of the church. In addition to serving the church, Stanley also held the position of President of the Southern Baptist Convention in 1984 and 1985.

On Sunday, he told the congregation that he was grateful that he and his wife, Anna, got to raise their two children, Pastor Andy Stanley of North Point Church in Alpharetta, Georgia and Becky Stanley Broderson, of Dallas, Texas, in the church. Anna Stanley passed away in 2014. 

“My hope is that the greatest days are still ahead,” Stanley said in conclusion. 


This article has been updated to correct an error. We originally referred to Dr. Anthony George as Dr. Anthony Joyce.

Chuck Swindoll: Avoiding Common Mistakes Pastors Make When Preparing to Preach God’s Word

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Chuck Swindoll is the founder and senior pastor–teacher of Stonebriar Community Church in Frisco, Texas. But Chuck’s listening audience extends far beyond a local church body, as Insight for Living airs on major Christian radio markets around the world. Chuck’s extensive writing ministry has also served the body of Christ worldwide, and his leadership as president and now chancellor of Dallas Theological Seminary has helped prepare and equip a new generation of men and women for ministry. Chuck and his wife, Cynthia, his partner in life and ministry, have four grown children, ten grandchildren, and six great-grandchildren.

Key Questions for Chuck Swindoll:

Where did your passion to proclaim the word of God begin?

We live in a day where there is so much great Bible teaching online. How important is it for people to study the Bible themselves?

For those of us who teach the word regularly, what are some common mistakes we need to avoid when we study Scripture?

Key Quotes from Chuck Swindoll:

“My contagious enthusiasm for spiritual things began probably at home.”

“He’s not hiding from us. He’s revealed his word; he’s revealed his will; it’s all there for you to discover.

“Richard Custer said, ‘Today we don’t need richer people; we don’t need more intelligent people; we certainly don’t need busier people; we need deeper people.’”

“I certainly do appreciate those that love the Lord and are teaching his word, but I learn the most when I dig in for myself.”

“Everybody living today faces something impossible…You know what? Not in the hands of God. And what a difference it makes when you realize ‘I can take what looks like an impossibility and give it to him.’”

“We’re all faced with a series of great opportunities brilliantly disguised as impossible situations.”

“What’s the rush? It’s not a question of how much did you get through the Bible, how much did the Bible get through you?”

“God took 1,500 years to record his word; used 40 different authors; 40 different writers to give us his word. And we let it collect dust?”

“Wycliffe put [the Bible] in English and went to the stake for it, because it was heretical…the reformers paid the price. Now we’ve got the Bible in our own language and what do we do? We rely on somebody else to feed us? Something’s wrong with that picture. No wonder we’re stunted in our spiritual growth.”

“We’re living in the 21st century, but the book was written in the first century and earlier. So build a bridge.”

“If you feed them well, you’ll never be fired. Sheep come where there’s great food.”

“I’m not amazing. I’m just a hard-working, disciplined, careful reader and preacher of the Scriptures. You can be that, too. Anyone can do that.”

[SUBSCRIBE] For more ChurchLeaders podcasts click here!

Links Mentioned by Chuck Swindoll in the Show:

Logos Bible software 

Searching the Scriptures 

Chuck Swindoll on ChurchLeaders:

Chuck Swindoll: Illustrating So People Will Listen

Don’t Burn Bridges

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Remember when Facebook was for sharing photos of your children and videos of otters holding hands? Me neither. Social media has become a battlefield of conflicting ideas. A minefield of potentially explosive issues. It has gone from a digital scrapbook to a digital equivalent of a dual. Every post seems to be about the defense of a person or idea and with those who disagree hurling horribly generalized caricatures of who they think you are based on what party they think you are a part of.

As Christians, we have to guard against this. Some of the most scathing reprimands of scripture are towards those who can not control their tongues. In James 1 where we famously quote the passage that states “True religion is taking care of the widows and orphans.” This is a feel-good statement that is completely true and we love it. You know what it says in the verse right in front of it. James 1:26 If anyone thinks he is religious and does not bridle (control) his tongue but deceives his heart, this person’s religion is worthless.

Every sin that we commit is first a sin of the heart and second a sin of our mouth before it is a sin of our actions. Therefore what we think about, what we desire affects what we say. How we speak and what we type are pretty good indications of the state of our hearts.

Here is the bad news. None of us do this. Why? Because the Bible tells us our heart is desperately wicked. Kierkegaard called this the crooked timber of the heart. Our words will not change until our hearts have been transformed.

A preacher I respect greatly said this: “[James] calls for us to have a tamed tongue. And if we do, it’s evidence that we’re a Christian. And if we do, it’s evidence that we’re walking in obedience. And as you look at your life, beloved, if you see those things coming out of your mouth that ought not to come, you need to confess it as sin and turn from it. And how you react to those times when bitter water comes out of the sweet fountain is the key to your spiritual strength, the key to your spiritual effect and power.”

Our speech will not change until our hearts are transformed. Here is the good news: That is what God does best. He takes our hearts of stone and gives us a new heart with new desires and new words. Will we still slip in our speech online and offline? Yes. Should we strive to grow in the grace that God provides and be more kind in what we say think and do? Yes. This is a work God does and we join with him growing in his likeness day by day.

Here are a few things I am trying to do better when engaging people online.

  1. Ask more questions and make fewer statements – Look to learn not only prove a point.
  2. Delete more comments than you publish – If you know me, you would say there is no way you do this I have read what you have published online. I delete A LOT of comments, and so should you.
  3. Clarify when you don’t understand don’t assume you understand – This is essential offline as well as online. Communication doesn’t happen when two people speak. It occurs when two people speak, and there is understanding.
  4. If you know the person in real life call or text them to have an honest conversation about something you don’t understand – Use online disagreement to build bridges, not burn them. Talking in person builds bridges torching someone’s wall burns bridges.
  5. Take regular breaks from social media – I regularly take breaks to keep from becoming an angry, anxious, annoying person. You need to take more breaks than you do.
  6. Try to verify if a story is true before you share it – This is becoming more and more difficult to do even some fact-checking sites have become politicized. Try to use original sources, give away credit, and use common sense. If a story sounds like something, your craziest friends often say it’s probably not true.
  7. Try and stay friends with people who think differently than you. The mute button may be your friend at times, so use it. – Try not to burn bridges. Sometimes you will have to mute people online so you can stay friends offline, and that’s ok. Offline friends are more important than online friends.
  8. Know when to walk away, know when to run – Sometimes comments get ugly fast. Don’t go there. Walk away.
  9. When you overstep, and you will apologize without expecting them to apologize in return – If you only follow one of these pointers, let it be this one. I had to use it this week. I had to text a friend and apologize for what I said it was too strong and didn’t convey what I wanted to say because it was not seasoned with grace.

We all need God’s help to control our speech so that our thoughts, words, and actions convey the grace that is ours in Christ. What you say and what you type will signal to a watching world a heart that has been transformed by grace. May this be more and more true of us every day.

This article about don’t burn bridges originally appeared here.

Look Death in the Face

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It’s the one area of human life where there is no discrimination or bias whatsoever. It might also be the only time where everyone agrees and acts similarly.

It’s the harsh and inescapable reality of death.

Today someone is at a hospital bedside watching the life drain from a loved one. Today someone will get that horrible call that a close friend has suddenly died. Today someone will receive the news that they don’t have long to live.

I vividly remember my dad slipping in and out of a coma. I knew the end was around the corner, and although I sat there in silence, I was screaming inside. I wanted to hear his voice one more time. I wanted him to be tender, to be my dad one final time. I wanted him to get up and hug me one last time.

People say that death is normal, but this moment was unprecedented. I never felt more unprepared, and I never wanted something to end more than those horrible few hours. As I watched my dad’s life slip away, I couldn’t help thinking, “This is not the way it’s supposed to be!”

Death feels so fundamentally unnatural because it is unnatural. Yes, death is the inevitable end to all things now, but it was not part of the original plan.

God created Adam and Eve to be forever beings. He placed them in a lush garden where life was to give way to life on into eternity. Then death entered the world when Adam and Eve treasured what was on the other side of God’s boundaries more than they did the beauty of life forever with God.

Death is dreadful, but it can be a gift and a teacher. It forces you to face the impermanence of the world around you and its inability to fulfill you. Jesus said, “Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal” (Matthew 6:19).

Death and decay can open your eyes, inform your heart, and give you hope. Yes, you will still feel the sting and pain of loss, but its power to paralyze you will be broken when you understand that you cannot be robbed of life by something that was not designed to give you life.

(Alternatively, if you deny this reality, you will look for life in dying things—and that never works.)

God’s plan is not for you to get as much as you can out of life and then die. Your Father will lovingly allow you to experience death and decay so that you will be liberated from your bondage to the creation and begin to find rest in the power, presence, and love of the Creator.

Look Death In The Face

Only when you accept the terrible news of death can you begin to find hope in the good news of life—a life that begins in the here and now and lasts forever.

The way to experience abundant life today is to face the inescapable reality of death that will come tomorrow. When you look death in the face, you become wise, and ultimately it can provide you with peace.

God bless,

Paul David Tripp

REFLECTION QUESTIONS ON LOOKING DEATH IN THE FACE

1. When was the last time you experienced the death of a loved one? Why was it so painful?

2. When was the last time you experienced the death of a dream or the decay of an idol? How did you respond?

3. What are some of your current favorite treasures on earth? List the variety of ways that they can be destroyed or stolen.

4. Have you been previously robbed of life by something that was not designed to give you life? What lessons did you learn? Did this liberate you from your bondage to the creation in any way?

5. Do you know someone afraid of dying? What are they most afraid of? How can you use this entry gate as a way to share the gospel message with them?

This content about look death in the face was originally posted by Paul Tripp on www.paultripp.com

Are You a Kidult?: The Importance of Childlike Faith

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I’m not always up on the current slang, so here’s a new word that stuck out to me: kidult.  I saw it on a breakfast cereal ad promising that the adult in you will like the nutrition and the kid in you will like the flavor.  Kidult is actually listed on dictionary.com!  Defined as an adult interested in forms of entertainment intended for children.  Hey, I’m 32 and I’ve been known to watch Phineas and Ferb when there’s nothing suitable on TV. :)

A lot of time in children’s ministry is spent training children to mature.  And I firmly believe it’s a Biblical mandate!  We are warned in Hebrews 5:12-14 that we should grow to the point where we are able to teach others and not require someone to teach us the first principles of God’s Word again.  Milk is for infants we’re told and solid food for full grown men.  Yes, our job is to train up a generation that will go out and train another generation.  We don’t want students who sit in high chairs crying for more milk.

We are also told to become like a child to enter the Kingdom of heaven or to be great (Matthew 18:3-4).  We’re called to grow up and yet preserve our childlike faith.  How do we teach kids to mature and at the same time not lose the childlike qualities that Jesus praised?  Bible commentaries mention key characteristics of little children and they don’t mean childish.  Here are a few…

1. Trusting.  Trust comes naturally to children.  As time passes and we experience disappointment or broken promises, we start to lose that childlike trust.  Trust is the assured reliance on the character, ability, strength and truth of God.  “Every word of God is tried and purified; He is a shield to those who trust and take refuge in Him,” Proverbs 30:5. We should foster this quality in our students.  If students can trust our word, it’s easier for them to trust God’s Word.  For ways to cultivate an environment of trust, you can read this article.

2. Lowly.  Lowly describes a position of humility.  I believe we all start in this position; before the temptation to be proud of one’s own achievements sets in.  Matthew 23:12 says, “Whoever exalts himself will be humbled and whoever humbles himself will be exalted.”  Humility matters.  Jesus humbled himself – as a baby and later at the cross – for us.  He knew better and could do better than anyone else on earth, but He never acted proud.  Any “I’m better than you” attitude should be curbed in favor of a humble, lowly attitude in our students.

3. Loving.  Loving means showing love or great care.  It can also mean tenderhearted.  Dr. Caroline Leaf, a Christian cognitive neuroscientist, says that our brains are wired for love and through life we learn fear.  God programmed us to love!  To be loving comes naturally to kids.  Is your classroom a safe place of love?  Do we call children by name?  Do we let them share from their heart?  I’ve been amazed at some of the innocent, tenderhearted things kids say when I give them an opportunity to share a testimony.

4. Forgiving.  Think about it; who is better at holding grudges?  Kids or adults?  Can we all break out in song right now, “Let it go, let it go…!”  Am I the only one who needs that reminder?!  Being willing and able to forgive comes more naturally to children.  Ephesians 4:32, “And be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God in Christ forgave you.”  We should never outgrow a forgiving nature.

As I look at these characteristics of childlike faith, I can’t help but see Jesus.  What a perfect balance He is of maturity and childlike faith!  I want to impress these qualities on my class; on myself.  I want to be a kidult.  I want to train up kidults.  And my definition of kidult is those who have put away childish things, but never lose their childlike faith.  

10 Characteristics of a Church on Mission

The Tension to Be on Mission

The church in every generation is called to bring the good news of the kingdom into a spiritual encounter with the aspirations and challenges of that culture where it resides. Simply, believers are on a mission from God in their respective communities. To engage today’s culture with the Gospel requires the formation of a Gospel community – the church of Jesus Christ – to be a visible representation, witness, and engaging instrument of the sovereign outreaching hand of God in our culture. In many churches, this may require a new vision, new ways of thinking, and new patterns of behavior (Matt. 9:16-17). This means pre-believers are encouraged to be included in the context of all of the church functions as they make small steps toward Christ (Luke 19:10).

Since we are in Christ, we have a missionary identity. We are adopted into a missionary family. We serve a missionary God. Mission becomes part of our identity, because our Father is a missionary God and we resemble Him as a child of God. So the church is a missionary church, with missionary people, that do missionary things. It is who we are, and it is also what we do. Mission is not something we tack on to the list of options as a Christian. To be Christian is to be on mission. It’s who we are, and it is what we do.

Ten Characteristics of a Missional Church

1.  The missional church is committed to the authoritative, infallible, inerrant, inspired Scriptures (2 Tim. 3:14-17; Acts 2:42).

The authority of all missionary work is founded in the truth that God has a clear word to communicate to the world. The Bible’s authoritative word—not just the casual observance and even religious obeisance—guides the missional church toward understanding the person and work of Jesus throughout all of Scripture (Luke 24:44).

Although this is admittedly a unique description of missional, it cannot be an assumed reality. I think the distinguishing difference between emergent and emerging is the view of the Bible. I no longer use the words, but to clarify, a missional (emerging) church is motivated by the words of God to proclaim the timeless Gospel in a timely method. David Garrison said the one thing that keeps the reproduction of churches from fragmenting into a thousand heresies like a crack splintering across a car windshield is the authority of God’s word. Garrison believes this is one of the characteristics of every church planting movement.

2.  Understands the centrality of the Gospel expressed in all aspects of a person’s life (1 Cor. 15:1-4; 2:2; Gal. 6:14)

In Galatians 2:14, Paul deals with Peter’s racial pride and cowardice by saying their “conduct was not in step with the truth of the Gospel.” The Christian life is a process of renewing every dimension of our life—spiritual, psychological, corporate, social—by thinking, hoping, and living out the implications of the Gospel. The Gospel is to be applied to every area of thinking, feeling, relating, working, and behaving. The missional church is not dependant on programs or methods, but rather by the transforming power of the Gospel. GOCN began with the indicator of a missional church as one that proclaims the Gospel audibly and visibly. “Being Gospel-centered means being both word-centered and mission-centered,” says Steve Timmis, Director of Acts 29 Western Europe. The Gospel is not separated from the authority and effectiveness of the Word and is not devoid of practicing the Gospel through mission living. It was Newbigin who described the local congregation as ‘the hermeneutic of the gospel.’ Newbigin’s idea is very simple: people understand the Gospel by looking at the people of God. It is the church in time and space – the local church – that expresses the Gospel and interprets it within its own cultural setting.

Through the Gospel, He rescues us from a life of self-serving mission to participate in a life of God-serving, Christ-glorifying mission. We are remade into missional people by the redeeming work of the Spirit and the Son.

3.  Gatherings are characterized by God-centered worship, preaching of the Gospel, prayer, Lord’s Supper by penitent souls, and baptism as a response to the Gospel (John 4:23-24). 

Worship is the central act by which the community corporately celebrates with joy and thanksgiving both God’s presence and promised future.[5]  A missional church worships God in an authentic way, as we worship a Savior who left us here to be captured by His love and pursue His mission through His redemption. The missional church encourages what Tim Keller calls “evangelistic worship”—making worship comprehensible to unbelievers leading to commitment.

Principles for Public Missional Worship

Bob Kauflin reminds us the principles for public missional worship. “Paul challenges the Corinthians to take unbelievers into account when they gather. He insists that they keep the unbeliever in mind as they exercise spiritual gifts (1 Corinthians 14:23-25)…Whether it’s raised hands, formal liturgies, or unspoken standards, we need to see them through the eyes of an unbeliever.” Kauflin suggests that to significantly impact the unbelievers in a worship gathering, the following should be present:

  1. Authentic passion – enthusiastic expression outwardly what is happening inwardly.
  2. Love – overwhelming unbelievers with genuine love (John 17:21).
  3. The Gospel – clearly proclaimed and faithfully applied in an understandable way.

Why Preaching is Suffering in the Church

Preaching is central to the missional church worship experience. The Reformers were convinced that the heart of true biblical worship was the preaching of the Word of God. Al Mohler said that preaching is suffering a loss in today’s church due to six factors.

  1. Lack of confidence in the power of the [spoken and written] word – failing to realize the transformative power of the word communicated orally and literarily.
  2. Infatuation with technology – over-dependence on graphics, images, film clips, and technological wizardry.
  3. Embarrassment before the biblical text – lacking confidence in the Bible’s authority.
  4. Emptying of biblical content – failing to teach the actual text of Scripture and resorting to pithy points.
  5. Focus on felt needs – anthrocentric preaching as opposed to theocentric preaching.
  6. Absence of the Gospel – turning texts into literary articles, practical steps, or morals to follow without any clear presentation of sin, redemption, and reconciliation.

Preaching of the word has life-transforming power producing repentance, restitution, confession, reconciliation, comfort, joy, encouragement, wisdom as well as indignation, anger, and offense by the stubborn hearted person. The missional church seeks to make disciples with Spirit-empowered preaching of God’s truth or as Martyn Lloyd Jones said, “Preaching is theology coming through a man that is on fire. John Piper described preaching. He said 1) the goal of preaching is the glory of God. 2) The ground of preaching is the cross of Christ, and 3) the gift of preaching is the power of the Holy Spirit.

The missional worship gathering additionally incorporates public reading of Scripture, prayer for the glory of God to be expressed through the suffering body and community, and response to the Spirit of God and the word of God expressed demonstrably with undefined regularity through baptism and communion. Although the worship gathering is not primarily for us, the body is instructed how to participate in the diverse liturgy as committed followers of Jesus.

Elements of Authentic Worship

The missional church experiences authentic worship by beginning with a true vision of the living God (Isaiah 6:1-8).

  1. We must first see God, as He is—our great King and Judge sitting upon a throne, lofty and exalted (Isaiah 6:1-4).
  2. Secondly, authentic worship leads to confession of sin both individually and corporately (Isaiah 6:5). We address our sin, admit our uncleanness, and seek His mercy and grace.
  3. The third place where authentic worship leads us is proclamation of the Gospel (Isaiah 6:6-7). As we realize our utter sinfulness, the missional church proclaims the redemption of sin through the work of Jesus on the cross—where we glory.
  4. Lastly, a missional church experiences authentic worship with a response (Isaiah 6:8). By excluding the cross, the blood atonement, the sacrifice, and the cost of sin, our worship is horribly weakened, and as a result, our missionary involvement will be stifled.

4.  A missional church understands it has been sent by God as missionaries in their own culture (Matt. 4:19; John 20:21; Acts 16:20; 17:6) to make disciples of all peoples (Matt. 28:18-20; Acts 1:8). 

The missional church is more than a gathering of people with a missions program (considering itself “mission’s minded”) or that has a financial commitment to mission works or a missions committee. The missional church is vested in God’s mission to a specific place, people, and a particular time in history (Acts 17:15). Mark Driscoll said, “If the Gospel is the seed of God’s powerful work in our lives and world, then the culture is the soil into which it is planted.” He further adds, “Understanding the soil helps the missional church know which weeds of moral sin and theological error will need to be pulled up so as not to choke out the growth of the Gospel and church.”

The Challenge of Gospel Contextualization

Missionary to India Lesslie Newbigin stated that contextualization has been discussed among those involved in foreign missions for years as a necessary means to proclaiming the Gospel into the language and culture in a way to “make sense” to those whom the Gospel is being addressed. Newbigin’s point is that we now face the same challenge of contextualization in our post-Christian Western world—our neighbors, friends, co-workers, and even family. The irony is that our older churches that applauded the non-compromised contextualization of the Gospel by the foreign missionaries that they sent with prayers and money are the same churches that now struggle with that missionary approach in our Western culture with peoples from diverse ethnicities, languages, religions, socio-economic backgrounds, and ages.

We redemptively engage peoples and cultures by sharing, showing, and embodying Christ in our context. This includes evangelism, cultural engagement, counseling, empathy, and celebration. It’s bringing the renewing power of the whole Gospel into the whole city through the whole church. It is not realigning our Bible to the culture, but by God’s grace, realigning the culture to the Bible.

Mission is a characteristic of God.

Mission is a characteristic of God. He’s a sending God. He sends His Son and sends His Spirit to renew the world. The Son sends His believers by the authority of God as He was sent. So mission doesn’t start and end with us. It starts and ends with God.

“I have given them your word, and the world has hated them because they are not of the world, just as I am not of the world. I do not ask that you take them out of the world, but that you keep them from the evil one. They are not of the world, just as I am not of the world. Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth. As you sent me into the world, so I have sent them into the world. And for their sake I consecrate myself, that they also may be sanctified in truth.” (John 17:14-19)

5.  Boldly & intentionally promotes the Gospel through making disciples and church planting globally through collaborative expressions of mercy and generosity

A missional church is not simply focused on the growth of neither the single local church nor its continued physical presence in the community. Its goal is to make disciples of all nations (Matt. 28:18-20). When a church focuses on its own promotion, it has a tendency to use disciples to build a church, resulting in resentment. Conversely, a church that focuses on making disciples will use the corporate church to promote the Gospel to as many people as possible—both local and global, or what Dr. Bob Roberts refers to as glocal transformation. A missional church sees church planting as the outworking of mission in a community. Its mission work is the establishing of churches glocally. When our mission mindset is to promote the building of churches in multiple contexts, we are more prone to collaborative work with other churches and with a heart of generosity for the advancement of the Gospel in all nations.

6.  A missional church is dependent upon the Holy Spirit to empower and lead believers as agents for evangelizing and making disciples (Acts 1:8; Luke 4:1, 14, 18).

The life of Jesus was empowered, led, and directed by the Holy Spirit. To be dependant upon the Holy Spirit means to live like Jesus as opposed to some strange mystical experience. Jesus gave the Great Commission, as we commonly know it, and He included the prerequisite of Spirit-empowerment to accomplish it. In Luke’s Gospel, for example, Jesus explains the Gospel to His disciples and tells them that as witnesses of His resurrection, they are to proclaim it to others. But He told them to stay in the city until they were clothed with power from on high (Luke 24:49). Jesus promised that He would empower the church through His Holy Spirit as they make disciples (cf. Acts 1:8). “The promise of God’s presence often accompanied His call to service in the Old Testament (e.g. Ex. 3:12; Josh. 1:5); it is not so much a cozy reassurance as a necessary equipment for mission.”

The Great Comforter
The Great Commission comes equipped with the Great Comforter. This promise is fulfilled by the provision of the Holy Spirit—the missionary Spirit sent to witness to the coming of the Kingdom of God (John 13-17; Acts 2:17). Lesslie Newbigin again offers some succinct instruction for us here. “Mission first of all belongs to the Spirit who is sent by Jesus and the church is taken up into that work…Mission flows in the following way: the Father sends the Son; the Son sends the Church and equips it with the Spirit to enable it to carry out its mission…God does not cease to participate in the missionary enterprise with the sending of Jesus. He does not initiate mission with the sending of Jesus and then leave the missionary work to be carried on by a human institution that followed the pattern of Christ without the help of the Spirit.” Newbigin continues, “The active agent of mission is a power that rules, guides, and goes before the church: the free, sovereign, living power of the Spirit of God. Mission is not just something that the church does; it is something that is done by the Spirit, who is Himself the witness.”

A missional church can effectively reflect the power of the Gospel (Romans 1:6) as it depends on the Spirit of God to empower the body for evangelism, discipleship, and Gospel proclamation rather than depending on big events or buildings or programs or methods utilized elsewhere to draw unbelievers to an event. The Apostle Paul explained to the church situated in the pagan, sinful city of Thessalonica that this “Gospel came to you not only in word, but also in power and in the Holy Spirit and with full conviction” (1 Thes. 1:5; cf. 1 Peter 1:12). Paul was saying, “I did the speaking, but it was not I. I was used by the Holy Spirit to accomplish the work He intended.”

Some churches put their emphasis on the studying of the Word. While important that we feed our souls, these are typically the intellectual theologians that spend great hours reading and studying in often arguing the finer points of doctrine resulting in pride of knowledge but rarely conversions. Other churches put a majority of their emphasis on the Holy Spirit and are often more interested in an experience than the authoritative Word. The Holy Spirit uses the Word and the Spirit of truth for understanding. A missional church proclaims the truth with boldness through dependence on the power of the Holy Spirit (Acts 4:29-33).

7.  Missional churches utilize relationships and sacrificial love as the expressions of love to others in their journey toward faith (Matt. 5:13-16, John 15:12-17, 1 John 4:19-21).

“Christ wants to create ‘a people,’ not merely isolated individuals who believe in Him.” A disciple is a Spirit-empowered follower of Jesus who is united with a Gospel community on mission for all peoples for the glory of God. A recent book by Dan Kimball entitled, “They Like Jesus but Not the Church” is illustrative of our culture’s skepticism with churches and Christians. The culture is not seeing Jesus in the church, and frankly, Christians are not seeing Jesus in the church and are not motivated to engage in authentic Gospel community because they have little reference for it outside of the Bible’s descriptions (Acts 2:42-45; 4:31-35).

God is a missionary God, and God’s primary missionary method is His covenant people. Mankind was made in the image of the triune God. God created us in that image as persons-in-community to be the means by which He would reveal His glory. As a result of sin, we grasp for isolation from God and His church. When the local church allows this proclivity for seclusion, these image bearers of God fall short of His glory.

The missional church moves out across the nations as a movement of people empowered and sent by Jesus while drawing people through its common life as a God-glorifying movement of believers and unbelievers alike back to Jesus. Steve Timmis writes, “Our identity as human beings is found in community. Our identity as Christians is found in Christ’s new community. And our mission takes place through communities of light.”

What community looks like is unique in every setting, just as every family is unique because there are a lot of variables and moving parts. But the family/community works out the details of their common mission because they are equally committed to each other and to their mission as Christ followers. Those in community do not act in isolation, but rather sacrifice their schedules, time, money, conveniences, and individuality to serve the need. It is foreign to us that the believers in the first church sold their possessions and with singleness of heart gave to those in need. This deep unity and collaboration among the first church ignited the Gospel proclamation that turned the world upside down.

The book of Acts describes the Christian community in multiple ways that may lead to even greater deeds than are described in this canonical record.

  1. Self-sacrifice
  2. Commitment to relationships
  3. Pursuit of unity among the community of believers
  4. Goal of a common mission
  5. Deep love

8.  The goal of a missional church is to walk in community with others as Jesus pursues them in His own way and timing (1 Cor. 9:20-23).

This Gospel community includes believers and unbelievers. Jesus was criticized for including non-believers in community.

“The Son of Man came eating and drinking, and they say, ‘Look at him! A glutton and a drunkard, a friend of tax collectors and sinners!’” (Matt. 11:19)

Judas was a part of the disciples even as Jesus spoke about letting the tares grow up with the wheat (Matt. 13:24-30; cf. 1 Cor. 2:19). He spoke to the woman at the well when no one else would dare (John 4). Our interaction with unbelievers is not for the saving of mankind or for the building up of our church, but rather for the glory of God.

The witness of Jesus to the lost woman of Samaria can be summarized in the following way and provides for us a basis for our friendship with sinners.

  1. Intentional – He was compelled to go through Samaria when others walked miles out of the way to avoid it (John 4:4).
  2. Conversational – He addressed a common need: water (4:7).
  3. Respectful – Contrary to culture, this male Jew spoke kindly to this disgraceful woman (4:7).
  4. Directional – He directed the conversation away from her perceived issue back to the Gospel (4:10-15; 19-24).
  5. Convictional – He adequately addressed her sin without rubbing her nose in it (4:16-18).
  6. Confrontational – He confronted her with the truth of who He was (4:26).
  7. Missional – He met her on her turf and brought the Gospel to bear in her life, and she became the missional evangelist in Samaria (4:28-30).
  8. Attitudinal – To the broken people, He showed compassion. To the religious people, He demonstrated unacceptance of their self-righteousness. To those who followed Him, He expected nothing less than absolute surrender.

Look over the list of eight ways Jesus approached this woman and examine your heart to see if you interact with lost people in a similar manner.

9.  A missional church is a hands-on training ground for missionary training (Acts 4:13, 31-35).

His mission is nothing short of the redemption of peoples and cultures, the renewal of all creation for His own glory. God’s great, burdensome, and glorious mission is the renewal of all creation! God, in His mercy, has invited us to participate in His mission.

The community of believers provides opportunities, and they practice hospitality for living out the Gospel in word and deed with one another. Church leaders must set the pace for pursuing the mission of Jesus. As Jack Miller noted, churches become “religious cushions” that tranquilize the guilt-ridden person with the religious warmth of its liturgy. Jack said the contributors of these religious cushion churches are the following:

  • Quiet acceptance of churchly dullness as normative
  • Fear of extinction
  • Extreme sensitivity to the negative opinions
  • Demand for comfort – a nice church with a nice pastor preaching a nice sermon about a nice Jesus
  • Unrestrained Gossip

Members of a missional church are expected to serve on the frontlines of the mission. The missionary emphasis of the body overtakes the self-serving individual, and they either hide, escape, or they get trained in living life as a missionary across the street, across the seas, and across the socio-economic, ethnic, religious, and political boundaries.

10.  Godly, biblically qualified elders lead a missional church (1 Timothy 3; Titus 1; Eph. 4).

While most descriptions of a missional church do not include this characteristic, I don’t think it is possible to maintain a missional emphasis without what Jack Miller calls “pacesetting pastors” who continually remind the body of the mission for which Jesus has called us and the Holy Spirit has empowered us to pursue until the return of Jesus.

Titus was commissioned by Paul to establish the churches with qualified elders in Crete to rebuke false teachers, teach sound doctrine, establish godly homes, preach the Gospel of grace, do good works, confront rebellion, and multiply followers of Jesus. The key to straightening out the crooked churches in Crete was the establishing of qualified elders to guide the rest of the body toward the Gospel.

Elders are to be above reproach in every area of their life. The Gospel will never take root in the body until it takes root in the leaders’ lives. Spurgeon writes, “Brothers, I beseech you, keep the old Gospel, and let your souls be filled with it, and then may you be set on fire with it!” A church will never be missional until its elders live missional lives in front of their followers.

The real value of an elder in a missional church is the equipping of non-vocational leaders to lead and share responsibility for the mission and for the discipling of new believers (Eph. 4:11-12). Reproducing churches unleash the whole body to exercise their gifts (1 Cor. 12:8-10) and encourage them to lead others on mission to proclaim the Gospel in new ways and new places in the community. New believers are incorporated quickly in the mission and receive on-the-job training through an organic mentorship rather than top-down control.

Missional or Biblical?

Looking over the description of a missional church, one understands this word to be equated with the pattern set forth in the Bible. The church established by the Apostles was a church on mission. It was missional. It seems that the evangelical church just needed a new word like missional to describe the “Biblical church.”

12 Veteran Tips for Worship Leaders

I’ve been leading worship as my primary job for almost 15 years.

Every once in a while I like to remind myself of a few things.

1. If you lead regularly in front of thousands, lead regularly in front of 10 or less.

2. If you are leading worship at a church for the first time, don’t you dare spend your time in the green room. 

3. If you are leading worship at a church for the 100th time, don’t you dare spend your time in the green room

4. When preparing for your Sunday, work just as hard as what you will say between songs as what you sing during them.

5. First timers and new believers actually WANT to be told what to do. Career Christians HATE being told what to do. So…Tell them all what to do.

6. Learn to lead without using an instrument.

7. If one of your pastors tells you that you are too fat to sing on stage, truthfully, you probably need to lose some weight. And you probably need to go to another church where they let fat and skinny people sing on stage.

8. Watch your sets back on video. Every one of them.

9. Just because you are a worship leader does not mean you are a song writer.

10. Just because you are a song writer does not mean you are a worship leader.

11. Ask the people who attend your church what songs they like to sing and sing those songs.

12. Don’t try to be Joel Houston, Chris Tomlin, or Kim Walker. We already have one of them.  We now need one of you.

Mel Gibson Criticized for New Film About Jews

thank you notes for children’s ministry volunteers

The Religion News Service tells the story this week of Mel Gibson’s new film project and the criticism he’s receiving from the Jewish community. Gibson’s film will feature the life story of Judah Maccabee, called one of the greatest warriors in Jewish history and the inspiration for the celebration of Hanukkah. But despite Gibson’s past box office successes with period films such as The Passion of the Christ and Braveheart, it was an alcohol-induced rant in 2006 where Gibson supposedly said “Jews were responsible for all the wars in the world” that worries Jewish leaders. Abraham Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League led a charge against Gibson with The Passion, saying Gibson has “no respect or sensitivity” for Jewish history and has no business making a film about an icon in their culture. CNN quoted Rabbi Marvin Hier of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles as saying it was “preposterous” for Gibson to make the film. “Casting him as a director or star of Judah Maccabee is like casting Bernie Madoff to be the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission,” Hier said.

Gibson himself explained his interest in the film to the Hollywood Reporter, saying he first read the story as a teen and sees “inherently cinematic” aspects to it. And Rabbi Irwin Kula of the National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership in New York spent time with Gibson discussing the project and has decided that “Gibson has the incredible opportunity to tell the Hanukkah story to half a billion people…He wants to do this with real truthfulness to historical fact. He’s talking to Jewish academics and reading Jewish literature on this, so he’s telling it from inside the Jewish narrative.” Kula even added, “Many Jews who are criticizing him now will look at the movie and feel pride.”

 

Monday is for Missiology: Some Thoughts on Contextualization

“How can they hear?” might be the most appropriate question related to contextualizing gospel communication. Those who would respond to the gospel must have some basic understanding of what they are being asked to consider. Understanding something of the environment in which the original action took place and how the gospel impacts the conditions of their own setting is essential for a person to respond to the gospel message. It is not what the gospel means to them, but what the gospel means for them, as it is the objective, real work of the Son of God. This is something that Paul understood clearly. When the Apostle stated his willingness to become “like” a Gentile, express weakness or much more, the purpose was so that his hearers could grasp the implications of the gospel where and “when” they were.

I have said it many times, but it always seems to bear repeating– contextualization is not watering down the message. In fact, it is exactly the opposite. To contextualize the gospel means removing cultural and linguistic impediments to the gospel presentation so that only the offense of the cross remains. It is not removing the offensive parts of the gospel; it is using the appropriate means in each culture to clarify exactly who Jesus was, what He did, why He did it, and the implications that flow from it. Oftentimes, it is unclear communication (and a lack of contextualization) that contributes to some rejecting something they do not understand. If the feet of those who bring the gospel are beautiful upon the hills, it is at least partly due to the fact that those who hear the gospel understand and appreciate its life transforming truth. This often occurs through critical contextualization.

Christan contextualization has to include and understanding of the work of Jesus, in His incarnation, life and teaching. Incarnated as a first century, Palestinian Jew, Jesus was so thoroughly a part of His culture than, when being betrayed by Judas, He had to be identified by a kiss. He didn’t levitate above the earth or have a perpetual light emanating from Him. He came to earth fully man. He ate the same foods as the disciples, walked the same roads, grew tired, slept and prayed. His teaching consisted of familiar to the people in his context: farmers, widows, fields, crops, money and heaven. Jesus didn’t merely bring heaven to earth; He taught about it in earth’s terms from a very specific cultural environment.

Paul followed this method. Whether Athenian philosophers, the libation or heathen poets, he used culturally familiar and appropriate markers as bridges to cross, communicating and clarifying the gospel’s truth. Being weak meant that he humbled himself to bring the gospel to those society viewed as weak. To the strong, he presented his credentials of apostleship to garner a hearing. Before Jews, he refrained from legally offensive behavior. Before Gentiles, he exercised his freedom in Christ. In whatever situation he found himself, he used whatever way possible to bring and communicate a clear gospel to as many as possible, even if only a few responded. He did not allow context to become a barrier to the gospel; he even used cultural cues as a bridge for effective gospel communication.

So, contextualization matters because clear gospel communication matters. Feel free to weigh in with your thoughts in the comments.

—————————–

If you are interested in more, here is a lengthy series I did on the issue of contextualization.

What is culture, and why does it matter?
The Need to Contend and Contextualize
Knowing and Making Known the Gospel
Untangling Cultural Engagement
Indigenization
Loving and Hating the World
The Contextualization Spectrum
Ruining and Recovering Relevance

Why You Should Not Do Youth Ministry Alone

thank you notes for children’s ministry volunteers

Youth ministry was never meant to be done alone.

OK, now that the overly dramatic opening statement is out of the way – here’s where we’re headed with today’s article: If you are doing youth ministry alone, you will fail. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but you will, because it simply can’t be done (Umm…that was even more dramatic than the opening…but true.).

ou can try. Many valiant youth workers before you have. They work a 40+ hour workweek and do a pretty good job of full-time youth pastor on top of that. Or you are the full-time youth worker and not married yet, so piling it on feels good; even the right thing to do. Or you’re discovering the joys of being a new parent while juggling part-time barista and part-time youth worker. Whatever your situation, know that it can’t be done alone for long.

Ask any veteran youth worker – seriously, go ahead at your next network gathering or local youth pastor meeting. You’ll be hard-pressed to find one who has lasted by doing it alone.

Don’t. Do. Youth Ministry.  Alone. Here’s why:

You are a prime target for discouragement

There’s nothing worse than being down … unless you’re down and alone. Honestly, it is a dangerous place for you to live for very long. In the ups and downs of youth worker life, discouragement can rear its ugly head quickly and drag you down (and possibly out). We are better together, and at some point you’re going to need someone to help pick you back up, brush you off and tell you to get back to work. Surround yourself with people who will encourage you.

You are a prime target for temptation

It seems like the enemy has his big guns aimed at people in ministry, and being on the front lines, all by yourself makes you an easy target!. We could list amazing people, full of potential, who sacrificed their future because they intentionally placed themselves in a solitary and vulnerable position. Don’t be a fool and think you’re stronger … no one is. Surround yourself with people who will protect you.

You are missing the point of leadership

If there was a “church leadership 101” course, building a team of volunteers would be at the top of the syllabus. If you’re a leader … LEAD people! Gather together some like-hearted people and together point students to Jesus. Surround yourself with people who get youth ministry and buy into the vision God has given you.

Remember, even the Lone Ranger had Tonto!  

Josh Griffin is the High School Pastor at Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, CA and the author of 99 Thoughts for Youth Workers. He has served in youth ministry for 15 years. Visit Josh Griffin at www.morethandodgeball.com

Kurt Johnston
has been involved in junior high ministry since 1988 and is currently the junior high pastor at Saddleback Church in Southern California. He’s the author of Controlled Chaos: Making Sense of Junior High Ministry and Go Team! He loves providing resources for junior high ministry almost as much as he loves junior highers themselves. Visit Kurt Johnston at www.simplyyouthministry.com/

Why Millennials, X-ers, Boomers and Busters Need Each Other

thank you notes for children’s ministry volunteers

There is so much conversation lately about Millennials and the church. Seems every blogger has addressed this subject from one angle or another.

After reading the blogs and counterblogs, it seems to me that the crux of the matter involves two things:

a) a vast exaggeration of what generations think of each other, as if everyone born in a certain time period automatically approaches their faith the same way

b) the inability or unwillingness of various people groups, generations, to listen to each other well.

The former has been addressed at length already. But I’m not sure the latter problem—listening—is discussed enough.

As a thirty-something, I’m right at the edge of Generation X and looking behind me at Millennials. I consider myself a Millennial in many respects, though I disagree with some of the characterization of this generation, and even the overuse of the term.

What worries me the most about this conversation, as a pastor, is the sense of tribalism, this idea of “my generation is going to stick together and fight for our rights in church life” that goes against the ethos of body life in Christ.

The church should be multigenerational.

Young listening to old, old listening to young, all followers of Christ working out their salvation in fear and trembling.

So, at the risk of adding another tired voice to the pile of opinions on this subject, I offer five ways that generations (Millenials, Gen X-ers, Boomers, Busters and any other group not given a clever name) can listen and grow in Christ together:

1. Younger Leaders Should Find Several Older Leaders as Mentors.

For youngish leaders like me, we should recognize our wisdom deficit. We have much to learn from wise, older leaders who have gone before us.

I’m grateful to have in my life several older pastors who pour into me wisdom and knowledge and, at times, rebuke. I love to drink from the rich fountain of their experiences.

Not only do I come away with workable ideas for my own leadership, I recognize the value of the way a previous generation dealt with issues. I learn the stories.

The best way to set up a relationship like this is to simply ask. You’d be surprised how many seasoned pastors or lay leaders would love to sit down for coffee and chat. You don’t need a curriculum or a structure, just a couple hours of uninterrupted time together.

The way I do it is simple. If there is someone I’d love to learn from, I call or email and say something like, “Hey, I’d love to go out for coffee or lunch or something and pick your brain on some things.” Easy. You don’t even have to say the word, “mentor.”

I have found that the most valuable wisdom I’ve gleaned is through casual conversations, by me asking probing questions about a person’s life and ministry. What’s surprising is that you will find older and younger generations have a lot more in common than you think.

7 Affirming Things Leaders Should Say All the Time

Recently, I shared 7 questions every leader should use often. It opened some good discussion around the post. It also made me think there was a similar set of 7 affirming phrases leaders should consider using frequently. These are not questions, but statements.

One of the goals of a leader should be to encourage, strengthen, and challenge a team to continually improve. Almost as an affirming cheerleader rousing the crowd at a game, the leader uses his or her influence to bring out the best in others.

How do leaders do that? One way is by the questions and statements we make as leaders. This post is an extension of that thought.

Here are 7 affirming phrases leaders should memorize and use often:

  1. I believe in you.
  2. You are an asset to this team.
  3. Let me know how I can help you.
  4. You are doing a great job.
  5. I need your help.
  6. I want to help you reach your personal goals.
  7. You are making a difference here.

You may not be able to use these phrases every day. You shouldn’t overuse them. They need to be genuine, heartfelt, and honest. That may not even happen every week. But as often as you can, slip a few of these into your memory bank and pull them out where appropriate. It will help you build a better team.

What affirming phrases would you add?

What is the Emergent Church Movement Doing Today? (Part 2)

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As I began to update myself on these men in the liberal emergent group (again, I have read their books, listened to them live and online and talked with them in person), I was struck by something obvious.  I wrestled with where they were coming from – where their “roots” were located or where their foundation was placed in their theology, because I sensed something was off according to what I understood the Bible to say.

I felt this way when reading Rob Bell’s books, Velvet Elvis and Love Wins (I blogged about it here).  I have felt it when reading other books by these men in the emergent church.  They like to “deconstruct” everything about Christian Theology and Praxis (evaluation of practice).  They like conversations, not debates.  In general, they are disillusioned by the institutional church (and some have hurt in their past causing them to react).  They like all things related to love and at times to disagree might not seem loving to them.  Tolerance is a value for this group with no one having the keys to Truth leading to accountability.  Evangelism is not a value at all (as evidenced by no reports of people coming to a saving faith in Christ).  They are all smart men.  Many of them have advanced degrees and name names of theologians and philosophers they have studied or written about in their books (the average lay person has never heard of these men they are referencing).

Are you ready for the obvious thing I discovered?  Forgive me for being slow on this.  I discovered that the liberal branch of the emergent church group (Brian McLaren, Rob Bell, Leonard Sweet, Doug Pagitt and Tony Jones to name a few) is starting from a liberal theological foundation.  There it is.  But what do I mean by liberal theological foundation?

Let me explain with directness…

Most in the liberal emergent camp are either professing Panentheists or their theology is informed by this belief.  If you listen and read carefully and with discernment, you will discover that they ascribe to a god who not only created the world, but “personally exists, interpenetrates every part of nature and timelessly extends beyond it.”  In other words, the whole is IN God (like the universe is one of his body parts) and he is in everything (like he is as small as an ant).  To be fair, this is not Pantheism that believes that God and the universe are the same thing and thus there is no personal God.  They believe in a relational God, but that he is literally connected to everything including plants, animals, stars and people of all religions.  Thus everyone has a “spark of the divine” inside waiting to come out.

Panentheism is imbedded and inner-twined with Mysticism, Hinduism, Manichaeism, Buddhism, Sikhism, Kabbalism, Bahai Faith, Native American Beliefs and the New Age Movement.  Oh, and Gnosticism.  Do you remember which false teachers the Apostle Paul was attacking most of the time?…yes, the Gnostics.  Just read the links I have provided above with each belief system and look closely at how they are all connected with panentheism.

Why is this important?  

Because most panentheists believe in what is called Process Theology and Universalism (i.e. Love Wins by Bell and A New Kind of Christianity by McLaren).  These books are steeped with Process Theology and Universalism because Bell and McLaren are panentheists.

Keep reading…

In Process Theology (PT) the only constant is change including a changing God.  In their thinking, God is changing with the universe that he is tied to, thus he is changing and adapting.  PTers holds that God is not omnipotent (all powerful), but is limited.  Limited by what, I wonder?  He is GOD!  PTers emphasis experiences over order.  Thus, feelings seem to be more important than Absolute Truth (which does not exist for them).  They believe God has always been connected to one world or another even before the earth was created.  This sounds like Morman Theology.  PTers hold to the idea that God is connected and working in all religions of the world, not just Christianity.  Finally, the strict Process Theology folks which most of the liberal emergent leaders ascribe do not believe Jesus Christ was God, but just “the divine word in human form.”  Thus, he was not 100% God and 100% human at the same time when He walked the earth.
Maybe you can see how universalism fits into the Process Theology system of thought.  If everything is in God and if God changes and everything will be aliened with him in the end then when it all is said and done we will all be saved for eternity.  There is no need for the Atoning Sacrifice of Jesus on the cross because God is already “in” us, no matter what religion we are.  McLaren calls the Atoning Sacrifice of Christ  “cosmic child abuse.”  We just need to get more in touch with where God already is located, according to this camp of theological thought.  This fits with Panenthiesm, Process Theology and Universalism.  This is scary.
Tony Jones, a founding leader and strong voice and writer for the emergent movement wrote this in a blog, “Being a panentheist, I believe that God indwells all of creation, so I usually don’t draw hard lines between things human and things spiritual.”
Rob Bell, in his “Everything is Spiritual” speaking tour emphasized beliefs in Panenthiesm.  He said, “The universe at it’s core is unpredictable.  The best we can come up with is it has some kind of relationship with energy.  This energy gives everything it’s existence.”  In “Everything is Spiritual”, Rob Bell tries to use Physics to make the point for what really is Panenthiesm (and parts of the New Age Movement), but a Quantum Physics Professor from Australia, Dr. Frank Stootman wrote a paper refuting Bell’s use of Physics in his speaking tour (Read here).  In other words, Bell was making some things up about his use of Physics, but he spoke with such authority on these matters.

Rob Bell also has preached many messages which affirm his belief in “Process Theology”(i.e. he calls it Narrative Theology) and Panenthiesm at Mars Hill Church in Michigan.  Read closely the Doctrinal Statement of MHC.  

A sermon from 2010 by Bell was critiqued by former New Age Spirituality sisters (Read here) and Chris Rosebrough of Fighting For the Faith (Listen hereaffirming Bell’s belief in Panenthiestic Universalism.  In this sermon Bell “proof texts” Paul’s writings not continuing from chapter 1 to 2 to 3, but stops to make a point that is not there.  Paul is building a case.  Ephesians 2:1 starts with the Greek word for “and”…  Paul is telling his listeners (and us) that they were “dead in their sins.”  Bell does not share that we were “children of wrath” and needed “grace” to make us alive in Christ.  It is by “grace through faith that we are saved,” Paul says in Ephesians 2.  Full Biblical context is important, but Bell fails to present the Bible in it’s fullness with the whole story with the author’s intended purpose (this is just the way good hermeneutics works).  Instead, Bell argues that we are to “center ourselves” in line with Mystics, Hindus, Buddhists and New Age thinking.

Bell goes onto speak about taking the Gospel to other places misinterpreting Paul’s words in Colossians.  He argues that Jesus is present with all people already.  “We don’t take Jesus to them,” Bell says with lots of sarcasm.  They already have Jesus.  “We just need to name Jesus for these people,” Bell says.  This is thoroughly unbiblical.  People are under the “wrath of God” because of their sins against Him (Romans 3:23, 6:23).  Someone needs to tell them that Jesus Christ is the Savior of the world because they do not know who Jesus is.  Paul did this over and over again in his letters (see Acts 10:14-15).  We are called to proclaim repentance and the forgiveness of sins (Ephesians 2), but Bell does not talk about sin, depravity, wrath, separation from God and the need for grace, and forgiveness to put us back in right relationship with God.  Bell shares a dangerous mystical spiritual teaching of just being “woken up to Jesus already there for you” and he says, “the church is the gathering of people who gather around this presence and power…church is the fullness of the one who fills everything in every way.”  This is a dangerous view of Jesus that the Bible does not share and hits the bull’s eye of the panenthiesm target.

But there is more…

Shane Hipps, Bell’s right hand man at MHC preached a sermon last year saying, we find ourselves in a ‘this not that’ mindset with religions.  Some are in and some are out is what we are tempted to do, but everyone already has Jesus.  Hipps emphasizes Jesus being part of “all things” and “being big enough.”  Really?  Is Jesus in the depravity of man?  Did Jesus die for nothing?  Did Paul sacrifice his life for little cause?  No.  Jesus is not this mystical force or power literally present in all things.  That is a Panentheism view with a sprinkle of mysticism which is not the real Jesus at all.  There is the Biblical Jesus (100% man-100% God) and there are false “jesus'”.  We reject the false teaching of the day and grab the Truth that God presents in the Biblical Scriptures (in context).  This is why Paul took the Gospel while suffering to the world, because they needed to be rescued from the “wrath of God.”  I could continue on this destructive sermon… 

One more on Rob Bell.  

He and Shane Hipps, preached a sermon saying that all religions are valid (Listen here) because they have an underlined belief in Panenthiestic Universalism.  Hipps says about John 1, “John is connecting and unifying the Greeks and Jews together saying there is one thing that unifies you.  His name is Jesus.  John is unifying their religions getting us past the diverse religions of the world.  It is not a bad thing to believe in a different religion.  Hipps says, “To loose your religious identity is like loosing your sail at sea.”  We all need this sail.  The Spirit does not need religion, but people need religious structures.  Some sails are built better than other sails.  Some religions are better equipped to catch God.  “Don’t confuse the sail with the Spirit,” Hipps says.  “Just because our sail is Jesus does not mean other religions are wrong. We all just need to experience this wind of the Spirit.” Hipps is telling the congregation at Mars Hill Church that the Gospel writer, John is saying all religions are okay because they are not God. The kicker comes when he says, “As long as Osama Bin Laden has breath, he has a spark of the Divine.”  Really?  What about the depravity of Bin Laden?  What about the wrath of God against Ben Laden (just like me before I believed in Jesus as my Savior)  If he said that Bin Laden was made in the image of God, I would say, “Yes”, but to say, “a spark of the Divine,” in the context of Mars Hill Church, other teachings of Rob Bell and books from these men, this does not sit right because it is absolutely wrong in every way.  It is built on a Panenthiestic Universalism of Process Theology, not Historic Orthodox Biblical Theology.

But what do you think?

 
One more to come…

6 Reasons I Don’t Usually Begin With Greetings, Announcements, or Small Talk When Preaching

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Let me start with a caveat: I don’t intend to demean with this post any faithful pastor and preacher whose approach differs from mine. I realize we can differ on this conclusion and still serve well together, so I pray you’ll trust my heart here.

My point in this post is instead to talk about a change in my ministry. Within the past year or so, I’ve made an intentional effort to avoid anything but getting into the Word of God when I first stand to preach – and here’s why:

  1. In general, we too often don’t use our time wisely in preaching. I’m not one who argues for a set sermon length (though I have written previously about the danger of preaching too long), but I do argue we must be wise stewards of our time. The Word must take first place, from beginning to end of the sermon.
  2. Good worship through song should prepare us to hear the Word—so we need to move directly there. The congregation that has had their appetite whetted for His message through strong God-centered praise worship isn’t much interested in other things at that point.
  3. I know our supernatural enemy will do everything he can to divert attention from the proclaimed Word. He’s sly, and I don’t want to help him any by not focusing on the Word as soon as I have the attention of hearers.
  4. Sometimes our opening lines are more designed to settle our own nerves in the pulpit, and there are better ways to do that than not get to the Word quickly. That’s one of the reasons I often start a sermon with a personal illustration that leads directly into the Word. I can calm my nerves and turn to the Word at the same time.
  5. There are other places in the service to do greetings, announcements, etc. I freely admit that finding that best place is a matter of debate, but I’m sure the beginning of the sermon is not it. You can, in fact, build announcements into a sermon as a matter of application: e.g., “If you want to work on understanding your place in this church as 1 Corinthians 12 describes it, we invite you to join us for this training in two weeks.” The application is fresh and relevant, and the announcement comes out of exposition of the Word.
  6. Ideally, the folks in my church will so want to hear the Word that they themselves don’t like any interruption—well-meaning though it may be intended—between worship in song and worship via preaching. I’ve seen that kind of hunger in other parts of the world, and I long to see it growing in North American churches as well.

Again, I don’t claim this is the only way to begin a preaching time, but I think it’s worth considering. What are your thoughts?

This article originally appeared here.

How to Deal with the Chronically Offended

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I know a guy in the Midwest who is offended by everything.  Whatever someone does for him, he’s upset that it wasn’t something better.  He’s out of a job right now and wears it on his sleeve.  Talks about it obsessively and is upset everyone else has a job.  You naturally want to help people in need, but I’m talking about people who just won’t stop complaining – not matter what you do.  We get a group together to go out to eat, and he rips us because he doesn’t have any money.  We invite him to a movie, and he’s mad because he’s not “rich.”  All he talks about is how life isn’t fair, but the truth is he’s made a lot of poor decisions that have landed him in this exact spot.  Plus, the jerky attitude doesn’t help.

You may know someone like that in your office or family.  You hate being around him because he simply makes life miserable for everyone.  I’m not a psychologist, but I can tell you this – he’s not mad at you; he’s mad at himself.  Every time he sees you, he’s looking into a mirror and seeing his own shortcomings.  So stop apologizing just to be nice.  Be honest.  Don’t be critical, but don’t be a doormat either.  That just enables him or her.  Here are some things to refocus on:

First of all, “poor” is a state of mind as much as a financial condition.  Broadcasting that you’re out of a job and being mad at others who have one doesn’t fix it – it just drives away the very people who could help.

Second – be gracious.  Always be gracious.  It’s not everyone else’s fault that you’re struggling.  Plus, lighten up and you’ll be amazed at the number of people who’ll want to help.

Last – change your attitude.  Placing the blame everywhere else but on you won’t solve the problem.  It doesn’t matter whether it’s your fault or not – you’re the only one who can make change happen.  Own it.  Man up.  Once people see that attitude change, they’ll be lining up to help….

Lastly, if you know a chronic complainer that won’t stop, then stop paying them attention.  After being stung by a vicious attack by a member of Parliament, Winston Churchill was asked why he did not respond.  He replied: “If I respected him, I would care about his opinion, but I don’t, so I won’t.  

Even when it’s a family member, there comes a time when responding only enables their bad behavior.  Know when to ignore it and move on.  Do you have a chronic complainer in your life?  

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