Archive for the ‘ Mission ’ Category

What Did God Teach You Through “Neighborhood?”

March has been an incredible month for North Side as we have gone through the series, “Who Are the People in Your Neighborhood?”

Last night in my C-Group, we got real honest about the successes and the failures that we had experienced over the last month reaching out to people who need Jesus.  While we all had things to share that we could have done better, I was so humbled to hear my guys talk about what they had done.  The Holy Spirit prompted, they responded in obedience.  I can’t imagine a greater group of guys to do life with.

We talked at length about how when we enter into spiritual conversations, God has already been at work long before we speak.  Whether it is someone’s praying grandmother, someone who has sown seed before hand, or the Holy Spirit convicting that person concerning sin, we are not starting with no foundation.  God has been on the move in that person’s life.

Great series on evangelism, but our group committed to each other that this would not just be a fad that passes as we move into another series.  We will be checking in with each other regularly concerning to whom we are reaching out.

Hope you learned a ton too!

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2 Evangelism Extremes

Our C-Group had a great conversation about intentionality concerning sharing our faith last night.  Amanda and I continued to talk about it last night.  I thought I would share with you 2 evangelistic extremes that may not be the best models:

In college, I saw two extremes of the outreach.  The first extreme was the Holy Roller.  I went to a Christian college.  I saw plenty of these Holy Rollers.  Someone is a Holy Roller if he shares evangelistic information devoid of any love for the person.  He loves to proclaim pre-packaged spiritual presentations without any attention to the person to whom he is conversing.  He is the kind of person who can make snide, careless comments about the possibility of others’ eternal separation from God and not even blink an eye.  He has an arsenal of intense gospel tracts armed with flames, pitchforks, and demons (oh my!) ready to drop them off to every waiter accompanied with a lame tip.

The second extreme was the Silent Witness.  The Silent Witness seems to be an oxymoron, but those that hold to this evangelistic model do not think so.  This person honestly hopes that by just living a “good” Christian life, people will notice their uniqueness, and they will be questioned concerning “What’s different with you?”  Rarely, does this transaction take place.  But for the sake of not “turning anyone off,” the Silent Witnesses never get intentional about sharing their faith.

Somewhere in between these two dangerous models has to be a healthy medium.  If you really are concerned about another’s relationship with Jesus, then you must care about finding a balanced approach of being both intentional and relational.  In my experience, I believe that more people are Silent Witnesses than Holy Rollers.  In fact, many decided to go the silent route due to a bad experience with a Holy Roller.

Maybe here’s a healthy alternative:

4Pray that I may proclaim it clearly, as I should. 5Be wise in the way you act toward outsiders; make the most of every opportunity. 6Let your conversation be always full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone. -Colossians 4:4-6

How do you think we can balance being intentional and being relational?

-Excerpt from Freshman 15

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Who Are the People in Your Neighborhood?

This Sunday, we are starting a brand new series at North Side called “Who Are the People in Your Neighborhood?”  The heart of this new series is a call for personal evangelism. We want our people to live the lifestyle of a missionary in their daily lives. Specifically, we want our people to be attentive and intentional about connecting with the people around them. We want them to live with their eyes wide open to the spiritual condition and needs of those in their own neighborhood. This series will seek to challenge our members to pay attention to the opportunities around them to point people to God.

We get the new Compass on Sunday which has this series and the next, “30 Days to Live.”  We pray this month of March leading up to Easter will be a month where our church starts to bleed evangelism.  If you are like me, this topic is one that causes shame in my life because I never feel like I am bold enough.  I never feel like I am sharing enough.  We are praying that we put aside our inadequacies and start praying that the Holy Spirit give us the boldness and power that Jesus promised (Acts 1:8).

Hope to see you there!

Invite your friends on Facebook

Just for fun:

Also, I am thrilled that my dear friends Josh and Tasha Via will be leading us in worship this Sunday.  I led worship with them in college, got to lead worship at their wedding, and they are just all around some of my favorite people in the world.  They will be leading for this weekend’s Disciple Now and I couldn’t pass up on them leading us on Sunday.  You do not want to miss it!

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What Eli Has Already Taught His Dad

Eli is still weeks away from coming home, yet he has already taught me, his father, so much.  If you didn’t get to catch his story, you can do so here.  The short version is God has called Amanda and I to adopt an orphan from Ethiopia who has some special needs.  Due to severe malnourishment, he has some delayed milestones.

When we thought through possibilities, we became overwhelmed.  When we prayed through opportunities, we became peaceful.  Amanda had been praying to meet the needs of a child that was even more overlooked than other orphans.  I wasn’t there yet.  My line of reasoning was such: “If we don’t accept the child matched with us, that child will wind up on a waiting list.  We don’t know what we are getting into with a waiting child.”

Everything changed when we heard about Eli.

When we began to talk to ourselves, other people, and professionals in their respective fields, I realized something about myself and most people: We all want to see the needs of the world met, yet we rarely want them met through our own hands.

Every one with whom we talked was concerned over Eli’s state.  If you see his pictures in the orphanage, your heart literally breaks in two.  The look in his eyes cries hopelessness.  Anyone who heard his story or saw his pictures became brokenhearted.  His parents died so early.  He hasn’t had enough to eat.  His life has been absent of stability.  Everyone felt pity for him.

But no one wanted responsibility for him.

I have to admit, I would have slept better at night if someone would have told me, “Don’t worry about Eli, someone else has agreed to take care of him.”  I would have uttered a sigh of relief, felt better about the world, and gone about my merry way.

Why?  Because I honestly want him to have a better life, but I didn’t want my life affected in the process.  I would feel better if he was taken care of just as long as it didn’t affect my comfort.  We want peace on earth without it disrupting our lives.  We don’t want to take risks.  We want to help someone without getting dirty.  Meet the needs of the world at arm’s lengths.

Eli has taught me so much already.  He is pushing me to be more like Christ.  I can’t just hurt for the needs of others, I need to hurt with the needs of others.  My hands must begin to match up with my heart.  I want to see the needs of the world met, yet I rarely want them met through my own hands.

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Does God Hate Haiti?

If you are like me, the pictures on the news are still too much to bear.  With questions abounding and people making statements concerning God’s judgment or God’s absence, I wanted to address some of those comments.  As soon as I wanted to, I read Southern Seminary’s president, Dr. Al Mohler’s response, and I can’t think of a more complete way to put it.  Allow this to encourage you today:

The images streaming in from Haiti look like scenes from Dante’s Inferno. The scale of the calamity is unprecedented. In many ways, Haiti has almost ceased to exist.

The earthquake that will forever change that nation came as subterranean plates shifted about six miles under the surface of the earth, along a fault line that had threatened trouble for centuries. But no one saw a quake of this magnitude coming. The 7.0 quake came like a nightmare, with the city of Port-au-Prince crumbling, entire villages collapsing, bodies flying in the air and crushed under mountains of debris. Orphanages, churches, markets, homes, and government buildings all collapsed. Civil government has virtually ceased to function. Without power, communication has been cut off and rescue efforts are seriously hampered. Bodies are piling up, hope is running out, and help, though on the way, will not arrive in time for many victims.

Even as boots are finally hitting the ground and relief efforts are reaching the island, estimates of the death toll range as high as 500,000. Given the mountainous terrain and densely populated villages that had been hanging along the fault line, entire villages may have disappeared. The Western Hemisphere’s most impoverished nation has experienced a catastrophe that appears almost apocalyptic.

In truth, it is hard not to describe the earthquake as a disaster of biblical proportions. It certainly looks as if the wrath of God has fallen upon the Caribbean nation. Add to this the fact that Haiti is well known for its history of religious syncretism — mixing elements of various faiths, including occult practices. The nation is known for voodoo, sorcery, and a Catholic tradition that has been greatly influenced by the occult.

Haiti’s history is a catalog of political disasters, one after the other. In one account of the nation’s fight for independence from the French in the late 18th century, representatives of the nation are said to have made a pact with the Devil to throw off the French. According to this account, the Haitians considered the French as Catholics and wanted to side with whomever would oppose the French. Thus, some would use that tradition to explain all that has marked the tragedy of Haitian history — including now the earthquake of January 12, 2010.

Does God hate Haiti? That is the conclusion reached by many, who point to the earthquake as a sign of God’s direct and observable judgment.

God does judge the nations — all of them — and God will judge the nations. His judgment is perfect and his justice is sure. He rules over all the nations and his sovereign will is demonstrated in the rising and falling of nations and empires and peoples. Every molecule of matter obeys his command, and the earthquakes reveal his reign — as do the tides of relief and assistance flowing into Haiti right now.

A faithful Christian cannot accept the claim that God is a bystander in world events. The Bible clearly claims the sovereign rule of God over all his creation, all of the time. We have no right to claim that God was surprised by the earthquake in Haiti, or to allow that God could not have prevented it from happening.

God’s rule over creation involves both direct and indirect acts, but his rule is constant. The universe, even after the consequences of the Fall, still demonstrates the character of God in all its dimensions, objects, and occurrences. And yet, we have no right to claim that we know why a disaster like the earthquake in Haiti happened at just that place and at just that moment.

The arrogance of human presumption is a real and present danger. We can trace the effects of a drunk driver to a car accident, but we cannot trace the effects of voodoo to an earthquake — at least not so directly. Will God judge Haiti for its spiritual darkness? Of course. Is the judgment of God something we can claim to understand in this sense — in the present? No, we are not given that knowledge. Jesus himself warned his disciples against this kind of presumption.

Why did no earthquake shake Nazi Germany? Why did no tsunami swallow up the killing fields of Cambodia? Why did Hurricane Katrina destroy far more evangelical churches than casinos? Why do so many murderous dictators live to old age while many missionaries die young?

Does God hate Haiti? God hates sin, and will punish both individual sinners and nations. But that means that every individual and every nation will be found guilty when measured by the standard of God’s perfect righteousness. God does hate sin, but if God merely hated Haiti, there would be no missionaries there; there would be no aid streaming to the nation; there would be no rescue efforts — there would be no hope.

The earthquake in Haiti, like every other earthly disaster, reminds us that creation groans under the weight of sin and the judgment of God. This is true for every cell in our bodies, even as it is for the crust of the earth at every point on the globe. The entire cosmos awaits the revelation of the glory of the coming Lord. Creation cries out for the hope of the New Creation.

In other words, the earthquake reminds us that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is the only real message of hope. The cross of Christ declares that Jesus loves Haiti — and the Haitian people are the objects of his love. Christ would have us show the Haitian nation his love, and share his Gospel. In the midst of this unspeakable tragedy, Christ would have us rush to aid the suffering people of Haiti, and rush to tell the Haitian people of his love, his cross, and salvation in his name alone.

Everything about the tragedy in Haiti points to our need for redemption. This tragedy may lead to a new openness to the Gospel among the Haitian people. That will be to the glory of God. In the meantime, Christ’s people must do everything we can to alleviate the suffering, bind up the wounded, and comfort the grieving. If Christ’s people are called to do this, how can we say that God hates Haiti?

If you have any doubts about this, take your Bible and turn to John 3:16. For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. That is God’s message to Haiti.

Give

And a final word from Travis: it’s easy for people to question God’s not doing anything about this earthquake, but what have you done about it?  Do something.

There are many great organizations for you to give to in order to help, and we have been contacted by some of you wondering how you could assist.  As a church, we are recommending that you give to the Southern Baptist Convention through the North American Mission Board Haiti Earthquake Relief.

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