Making a Statement

Pray that these would be true in your life and in mine every day, and strive for them with everything you have.  It is worth the risk.

How It Should Be

Tim DeGroot knows what’s up with this blog post.  Simple and right to the point.  This is what I long for every week…if this isn’t our heart about church, we’re probably not aiming for the right things!  Jesus said to make disciples of all nations…when was the last time you envisioned an entire country being reborn in Christ and living in obedience to God?  We are called to do everything we can to make “nations of salvations.”

Dream big…because God is bigger!

ONE Lesson #4: Raising the Bar

With God behind us, we can do anything (Php 4:13).  But when our knowledge goes too far beyond our practice, our belief becomes a burden because we’re not giving God space to fulfill the promises of scripture in our lives.  It’s easy to acknowledge what God says to us and still live lives that never go beyond what we can do.  As Christians, we’ve got to keep each other accountable, and not just with struggles or responsibilities, but with our faith at its core as well.  If we want to step into God’s dreams for our lives, we have to challenge each other to live in ways that require both God’s sustenance and each other’s support (both are necessary…Lk 10:27).

While explaining how individual’s personal walks with God play a part in their unity as a team, the youth staff at NewSpring Church said that they hold people to a standard they can’t live up to without Jesus and each other.  Leaders especially need to have unity between each other that is so solid that every person’s quiet time is vital to the operation of the ministry.  Holding each other accountable in this way not only makes sure that what you’re doing is always based in, surrounded by, and covered with scripture…it also ensures that your personal time with God becomes not only for yourself, but for your teammates too!

Necessities

I cannot tell you how excited I am for tonight. It’s our first 24-7 service of the new school year, and the leadership team has been praying so much for God to show up in an incredible way…I believe that God is going to answer that prayer!  When our ministry (which is EVERY effort you make to share the gospel and show the love of Christ, not just church-related jobs or groups) is supported by prayer and passion, it becomes unstoppable.

If you are involved in ministry and you are not constantly praying for God to bless what you are doing, you need to do one of two things:
1) START praying about your ministry, because you cannot do anything of significance without the Holy Spirit backing you up; and when you pray for God to move where you are investing your time, it shows Him that you really do care about it and believe that He can do anything and everything to make it succeed;
2) STOP doing it, because if God is not involved in your ministry you are wasting your time.

We have to constantly be in a place of helplessness and total reliance on God to come in power and change people’s hearts…you received the grace of God from God, not from another person—that doesn’t change with your ministry!  You never received the ability to give that…people only receive God’s grace from God.

If you are not passionate about your ministry, you need to do one of two things (this might sound familiar):
1) START praying for God to change your heart about what He has called and anointed you to do, and begin putting every effort you can into serving and building up the people you serve with.  God doesn’t ever want us to do things begrudgingly, but sometimes we have to press on through a lack of motivation and passion as an act of faithfulness to what God has chosen us for.  IF you are truly doing what God has called you to do, obligation will shortly become obsession when it is backed by a sincere pursuit of God’s heart.
2) STOP doing it, because the world has enough people who dirty God’s reputation by doing ministry half-heartedly and showing through their actions that the kingdom of God is not worth pursuing excellence for.  God has chosen you for a purpose, and if you are not seeking and fulfilling that purpose because you have planted yourself somewhere else, you are not only missing out on a life of meaning and fulfillment that only comes from serving God as He calls you, but you are also keeping those you are currently serving from meeting with God in the way that He desires, because He has chosen someone else to do what you’re doing with the passion that you don’t have.

Every single one of us has a purpose in the kingdom of God, and to fulfill that purpose we need to continually seek God’s blessing and direction, and constantly be evaluating where we’re at and comparing it to where God wants us to be.  When we are where God wants us and passionate about being there, miracles happen!

ONE Lesson #2: Sports and Math

The vision that God gives us for our ministry to others is so vital to the life of that ministry.  Without God’s dream for our lives placed in our hearts, we will always burn out and lose focus.  But WITH God’s calling, we cannot STOP being on fire for it!

However…just because God gives you a vision doesn’t mean He gave everyone that same vision.  And sometimes it is really easy to try and force your vision onto others, because you think it’s right and it’s what God wants.  But you can only know what God has called YOU to do, not anyone else.  And forcing your vision onto others results in them burning out and losing focus, because you are not God, and He is the only one that can inspire people beyond their imaginations.  If you want someone else to be sold out on your vision, you’ve got to rely on the wind of the Holy Spirit to spread the fire in your heart to others – it cannot ever be forced on someone.  As Brad Cooper said, “Vision is caught, not taught.”

With that being said, every single person that is involved in one particular ministry MUST be sold on the vision.  When two people are working together but have different goals, it will cause a split.  So many different ministries fall apart because not everyone is sold on one vision, and end up trying to steer it in multiple directions.  “The vision must be identical or it’s ‘double vision,’ which is the same as ‘division,’” Perry Noble said.  When we have double vision, we can’t see straight, depth perception is gone, focus is impossible, and nothing is accomplished.  When we have division, things simply keep getting smaller and smaller, and there are remainders (that in ministry end up being people who need God to speak through you) that we push off to the side.  If we want our ministry to succeed, we have to all be clearly seeing the same goals, be in agreement on how God wants us to get there, and be absolutely zeroed in on our purpose…and when that happens, God makes things bigger and BIGGER and BIGGER and instead of leaving people behind in our hurry to accomplish our own individual passions (see 2 Samuel 4:4 for a Scriptural example) God continually brings people to us so that they can see and be a part of the unifying power of Jesus.

I’m an Opportunist

First off, check out my friend Tim DeGroot’s new blog here. He has taught me so much and I am blessed to be able to serve with him in ministry, and I have no doubt that you will benefit from what he has to say.

Second:
I have prayed so much in my life for God to give me opportunities to serve Him, and to share the gospel, and to make a difference, etc.  I pray for God to give me opportunities a lot.  And while we do need God to provide us with opportunities (because otherwise none would come to us), we also need to remember that we cannot do anything with those opportunities unless God moves.

So I think that more often than asking God to give US opportunities, we need to do everything we can to give HIM opportunities.  Because if God doesn’t move, nothing significant will ever happen.  Ever.  And we need to continually give God room to move if we want what we’re doing to be significant.  Miracles do not happen if risk is not involved.  And while waiting for God’s direction is INCREDIBLY important, if we know what God’s heart is about something, we can’t wait for God to move before we do.  Sometimes we have to prove our faithfulness by giving the Spirit room to work, instead of making Him push you out of the way.

Note: We ALWAYS know what God’s heart is about the lost.  He wants us to be fishers of men, to go and make disciples of all nations, and to unapologetically preach the good news to all who listen.  We never have an excuse to avoid doing this!

We need to give God opportunities to move so that something eternal can happen, instead of asking Him to give us opportunities to do something that without Him is worthless anyway!

ONE Lesson #1: Possessed

I recently attended the ONE conference at NewSpring Church for senior pastors, youth pastors, and children’s pastors and man, did God speak to me there!  I’m going to do a series of blogs on some of the things the Holy Spirit revealed to my heart, starting with this:

Because my friends and fellow leaders are such visionaries and big dreamers, a common topic of conversation is how big other churches are, how many people attend different conferences, and even how much growth is happening in different ministries of the same church.  This is an awesome way to encourage one another and get bigger vision for where God may be leading us (after all, Ephesians 3:20 says He can do “immeasurably more than we can ask or imagine”), but it can also be dangerous, because it’s really easy to start comparing churches and ministries.  When we start comparing “ours” to “theirs,” we lose sight of God’s Kingdom because we are obsessing over our own kingdoms.

This can lead to “strategic evangelism,” in which ideas are pitched and people are talked to and ministries are promoted in such a way that one ministry (yours, if you’re the one doing this) should get everyone, and other ministries shouldn’t get anyone.  Selfishness, greed, manipulation, and lying go on all the time under the banners of revelation (“God told me He wants MY church to be the biggest”), calling (“God called ME to be a successful minister, so I should succeed”), and other common church words.  BUT…

God wants HIS Church to be the biggest – the body of Christ, the Kingdom of God, the Church (with a capital C), not the church (with a lowercase c).  And God may have called you to be a minister, and He may bless your ministry to appear successful, but HE is the one succeeding, HE is the one who should be famous, and without HIM your ministry and/or church would be a building filled with dead people condemned to hell – YOURSELF INCLUDED – and everything that’s done there God would see as filthy rags.

We can’t ever take possession of the things God has blessed us with; that includes leadership ability, lots or few people attending your ministry, a big or little building, one or eight services.  And we can’t ever become jealous of that church being bigger than this church, because we are all part of the body of Christ, serving different purposes in different places so that the gospel can be preached to everybody!

“Do you want to control a move of God, or do you want to unleash it?” -Perry Noble

“You Chose Wisely…”

“In him we were also chosen, having been predestined according to the plan of him who works out everything in conformity with the purpose of his will…”
Ephesians 1:11

“Therefore, as God’s chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience.”
Colossians 3:12

“For we know, brothers loved by God, that he has chosen you…”
1 Thessalonians 1:4

“But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light.”
1 Peter 2:9

God does not simply ALLOW people into His kingdom.  There is no one who is part of the body of Christ who wasn’t expected, or who God had to make room for.  Each one of us is CHOSEN, and each one of us has a PURPOSE in the Kingdom.  God had (and always will have!) a REASON for choosing you.  And even if it feels like there is no visible or tangible evidence of God’s purpose or reason in choosing you, remember…sometimes the INvisible and the INtangible things are the most POWERFUL, and serve in the ways closest to the spiritual workings of the Holy Spirit.

Live your life with confidence that there is something God has chosen YOU, over everyone else in the world, to do, and that you are an important and vital part of the body of Christ, because…

God does not choose poorly!

Sunday school Alumni

Very rarely do I hear any pastors preach from the most common Bible stories anymore – those stories are apparently only suitable to Sunday school.  I am just as guilty of this, I am incredibly disinclined to speak on the teachings found in stories like Jonah and the Ark, the fall, or David and Goliath.  Why is that? Is it perhaps because these stories seem childish to us, because they were taugh to us when we were children?  Is it maybe because these stories seem old, and there is nothing more to be drawn from them than what has been already?  Do these stories seem to simple, with not enough deep insight to wring out of non-descript verses?  Are they too plain?

I think that they are not too plain – they are too clear.  While the “moral of the story” seems obvious to us, it is for that reason that we avoid it; we don’t want to make the sacrifices those characters made, we don’t want to give up what they gave for the sake of the kingdom, we don’t want to have to face the trials that they faced (which we KNOW are in our lives, but hope that they might go away if they’re ignored).

These “most popular” Bible stories may seem childish, old, and simple.  Yet we need faith like a child (Lk 18:16), we need to be reminded of what we know more often than we need to be taught something new (1Ch 16:12), and devotion to Christ is a simple and pure thing (2Co 11:3).

It’s the Simple Things

Just as we can do “no great things, only small things with great love,” so is it also with evil.The temptation to murder is not what causes a man to murder, it is the temptation to annoyance, to a quick comment of disdain, to a thought of anger, that brings a man to kill.We do not enter into tyranny because of the tyrant, but because of the disrespectful child.

As the evil one has been defeated, he can no longer wage war upon us—but like a scattered force living in a jungle, small ambushes and guerilla tactics are continuously at hand for those of us walking through a world in which we know Heaven is above, but are only able to catch glimpses of it through the thick canopy. It is not great evil that we are afflicted with, but small evil: that which finds its way into the cracks of our character, growing hardly noticeable thread-like roots beneath a slab of concrete, and over years and years causing the sidewalk to split and crumble and be overrun with vegetation. Now it is hardly noticeable as a sidewalk. It appears to the passer-by that by some strange occurrence, chunks of cement have been left among a bed of weeds; it seems that it is the cement that is out of place.

Jesus speaks of a seed that is sown among different types of soil. There is perhaps another sower, another type of seed, that tries to take root in the soil yielding harvest. Trees do not come from above and mash themselves into the ground, they grow from small beginnings beneath the soil and become something huge and immovable. So it is with temptation: it is not the great and terrible things we see causing mass ruin that we should concern ourselves with, it is the small things. “Murder is no better than cards if cards can do the trick,” as C.S. Lewis explains in The Screwtape Letters.

Though some may say that we do not need to concern ourselves with the small things in our life, if only the big things seem aligned—how much it is the opposite! For we see small and big with the world’s eyes: our actions, possessions, and experiences. But the eyes of heaven see only one’s heart, one’s motive, one’s true thoughts and desires. How can a thirty-story building stand if the first floor’s beams are weak? In the same way, we must be on the watch for the beginnings of temptation, the smallest deterrence from the Way, if we want to avoid great calamity. As Shane Claiborne says, “the tempter’s best lie is 99% true,” and it is this that we must be most on guard for.