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March 2008

March 07, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/247505887/misi


I was driving up Interstate 5 to northern California one day and I passed a Panera Bread truck. I love good bread - and Panera is good bread. In fact, I've never had anything there that wasn't good. My daughter loves their cinnamon crunch bagels. Their bagels are really good.

As I passed by this Panera Bread truck, I read on the side of the truck: "A Loaf of Bread in Every Arm." I thought to myself as I wrote it down, "Now that's a mission!" It's clear. It's memorable. It's measurable. It's inspiring. It's simple, yet comprehensive. I could picture it - everyone carrying a loaf of bread under their arm.

This caused me to ponder the mission of the church as I drove.
  • What is our mission?
  • What are we trying to accomplish?
  • What are we devoted to?
My wife is on the mailing list for Panera Bread. Today's email included this: Bread is our Passion, Soul and Expertise!
  • What is your passion?
  • What is your soul?
  • What is your expertise?
Paul states our mission clearly in his letters. He tells the church in Colossae, "We proclaim him admonishing and teaching everyone with all wisdom, so that we may present everyone perfect in Christ." (Col 1:28) There it is: EVERYONE perfect (or complete) in Christ! He adds, "To this end I labor, struggling with all his energy, which so powerfully works in me." (v29) This was certainly Paul's focus, passion, and I dare say, his expertise!

He writes to the church in Philippi, "That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father." (Phil 2:10-11). There it is: EVERY knee bowing and EVERY tongue confessing: Jesus is Lord!

That's the mission of the Church! That's why we are here! We're here to proclaim that Jesus Christ is Lord!
Until every knee bows!
Until every tongue confesses!


Wow! Practically speaking, am I declaring with my words that Jesus is Lord? Am I displaying in my life that Jesus is Lord! I have to confess that I've got some changes to make if I'm going to live true to this mission. This is not just about a slogan on the side of a truck, or on your website, or on the sign outside your church.

This is the Missional Challenge:
It's proclaiming that Jesus Christ is Lord to every man, woman and child in your neighborhood, in your workplace, in your village, town, or community--so that they can accept or reject Jesus as their Lord!
"Imagine what God could do in your neighborhood, town, city or state if every man, woman and child who lived there was repeatedly confronted with a clear and relevant witness to the love of Jesus Christ." The Infinity Alliance
Panera Bread encourages you to become a Bread Connoisseur. They provide specific ways to evaluate both crust and crumb using Sight, Smell, Sound, Touch and Taste. I can easily imagine myself becoming an "expert" at discerning good bread. Can I also imagine myself becoming an "expert" witness to the love of Jesus Christ to every man, woman and child who lives near me? Is that my passion, soul and expertise?

How about you?


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March 09, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/248227088/birt

I turned 43 today. Amazing.

It's been a good year. It's also been a challenging year.

A few days ago I was reading in Deuteronomy in my quiet time.
For the Lord your God has blessed you in all that you have done; He has known your wanderings through this great wilderness. These forty years the Lord God has been with you; you have not lacked a thing." (Deut 2:7)
As I reflected on my birthday this week, I was so grateful for the Lord's continued provision for me and my family. He has blessed us. He has been with us--especially in our transition from serving as pastor of Lake Hills to being a missionary with OC International. In the midst of financial challenges, in a wonderful sense, we have not lacked.--even when it feels like we are wandering in the wilderness right now.

The next day I read...
O Lord God, Thou has begun to show Thy servant Thy greatness and Thy strong hand; for what god is there in heaven or on earth who can do such works and mighty acts as Thine? (Deut 3:24)
Our God is so great! There is no one like Him! He has done great and marvelous things in my life! He is near when I call. I trust Him.

Then I read this great prayer in The Celtic Way of Evangelism by George G. Hunter, III. It's the most famous prayer, "St Patrick's Breastplate." Here's the part I liked...
I rise today
with the power of God to pilot me,
God's strength to sustain me,
God's wisdom to guide me,
God's eye to look ahead for me,
God's ear to hear me,
God's word to speak for me,
God's hand to protect me,
God's way before me,
God's shield to defend me:
-from snares of devils
-from evil temptations
-from nature's failings,
-from all who wish to harm me,
--far or near,
--alone and in a crowd.
One of the best things that happened this past year was writing my doctoral dissertation and graduating from Bakke Graduate University last June...



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March 10, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/248714092/show

Did you know that thousands of the world's refugees are tucked into the suburbs of Los Angeles?

Did you know that persecuted Christian in Iran are fleeing to Los Angeles to escape for their lives?

These refugees are invited guests of the United States. They live with "anchor" families until they're on their feet. The Interfaith Refugee and Immigration Services at an 80-year old Episcopal Church in Atwater Village runs one of five centers in LA county that assist refugees. Last year, 3, 241 refugees came to Los Angeles, according to an article in today's Daily News (Worlds Refugees Building New Lives in L.A.). Most are Iranian Christians and Jews who fled persecution under President Ahmadinejad's Islamic regime.
President Bush determined last year that 70,000 refugees from approved nations could enter the United States, although just 40,000 came. The numbers are smaller, in part, because the process is complex.
Debbie Decker, resource director for the center in Atwater Village, explains that these refugees sell everything when they come here: "What they can fit in two suitcases is what they have. They bring pictures, small things, their treasures."

Katrin Davoodi, a refugee from Iran explains, "It was hard, changing your country, your home, finding a good job. The problem in Iran wasn't money; the problem was religious persecution."

Jesus was an African Refugee

As I read this article, I thought of the numerous times I've heard Dr. Ray Bakke state that Jesus was an African refugee. Mary and Joseph fled their homeland to escape persecution. As I read of these refugees escaping persecution and coming to Los Angeles, I reflected on the reality that "the Christmas story is about an international immigrant" (A Theology as Big as the City, p 29).

Surely Jesus understands the pain of refugees and cares for them. As followers of Jesus, how can we become aware of the refugees that may lives in our neighborhoods, communities and city? How can we show that we care? How can we bring them the love of Jesus?

Love Those Who are Aliens

Today I was reading in Deuteronomy 10 and I was struck by these verses:
For the Lord your God is God of gods and Lord of lords, the great God, mighty and awesome, who shows no partiality and accepts no bribes. He defends the cause of the fatherless and the widow, and loves the alien, giving him food and clothing. And you are to love those who are aliens, for you yourselves were aliens in Egypt. (Deut 10:17-19, italics mine)
I realize that I was never an alien in Egypt like the Israelites, but Peter refers to his readers as "aliens and strangers in the world" (1Pet 2:9) and Paul points out that "our citizenship is in heaven" (Phil 3:20). Since I am an alien who is just visiting this planet, and since I am a follower of the great God who "loves the alien, giving him food and clothing," shouldn't I be one who loves those who are aliens?

It seems right to love immigrants to America that are refugees, but shouldn't we also love those who are aliens?

This concept struck me today because we are faced with many undocumented (illegal) aliens here in Southern California. My heart has not been the same as the God of gods and Lord of lords toward those who are aliens. He loves the alien! I've been indifferent. I pray that God will soften my heart toward those who are aliens and that I will remember that I too am an alien here.

In a real sense, the Incarnation is about Jesus becoming an alien here on earth. As we seek to incarnate the gospel, what should be our posture and position toward aliens?


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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/249257274/life

It's easy to get sucked into the world of blogs. There is so much to read out there--and then you've got people like me posting something every day. If there are a few blogs that you read regularly, I suggest that you use a blog reader. I started using Bloglines and now I've switched to Google Reader. It's really easy to use. Just look for the RSS feed on a blog that has some really good posts and click on it. Then click on "Add to Google Reader." It's really easy to use.

You can also subscribe by email. All of my posts have a "Subscribe by Email" link on them. Just click on it and you will be able to receive each new post to my blog as an email the next morning. It's a convenient way to stay current with new posts if you don't want to use Google Reader or visit my blog directly.

If you read my blog frequently (or any other blog for that matter)--take the time to interact with what you are reading. If it's good or thought provoking, there are links that allow you to:
+ Post it on your Blog
+ Post in on Facebook
+ Email it to a Friend
+ Post a Link

However, it's more important that you take some time to think about what you are reading and how it impacts your life. I always try to include a few questions that will lead toward personal application. Recently, I encouraged my friend Louis to consider the following responses to help him continue to learn as he reads my blog:

First - ask yourself: so what?

Then - look for any of the following reactions...
  • "Ah ha!"
  • "On no!"
  • "Duh"
  • "Wow!"
  • "Hmmmm!"
Finally - determine 3-5 actions you need to take in the next two weeks--and let me (or someone) know what you plan to do.

If you are committed to being a lifelong learner, don't just read blogs and then forget what you've read. Let God teach you and transform you as you read.

I'd encourage you to prayerfully ask: "God, what do You want me to do in response to what I've read?"

Thoughts?


Keywords: Missional

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March 12, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/249939207/inca

What did Jesus do? Since incarnating the gospel is about being Jesus, believers have to be good followers of Jesus. They have to learn from Jesus. They have to imitate Him. To put it simply, incarnating the gospel is about doing what Jesus did.

To learn what Jesus did, you have to make the Gospels our primary text (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John). Alan Hirsch observes that Christians “so easily abandon Jesus. Our religion has become Paulism. We need to get back to Jesus. Jesus will teach about mission more than anyone else.” (Missio Intensive Conference, October 7, 2006)

Michael Frost sees that Christians are essentially “a group of people who have oriented their lives around Jesus.” (Missio Intensive Conference, October 7, 2006) Therefore, they must focus on following Jesus. Jesus invested His life in His disciples day after day, developing them into authentic followers. Christians never stop being His disciples. There is no next step. Following Jesus is every believer’s destiny.

As we follow Him, we seek to be like Him. If Christians follow really well, others in the surrounding culture will see Jesus. In simple terms, “if the heart of discipleship is to become like Jesus, then…we see that Jesus’s strategy is to get a whole lot of little versions of him infiltrating every nook and cranny of society by reproducing himself in and through his people in ever place throughout the world.” (Alan Hirsch, The Forgotten Ways, p 113)

Christians are those who visibly express Jesus through their lives as they follow Him. That is why Paul could write to the Corinthian church, “Follow my example, as I follow the example of Christ” (1 Cor 11:1). Followers embody the message of Jesus. They “incarnate” Jesus in their daily lives. They practice Jesus.

So what does it look like to practice Jesus? What practices should be embodied? How do you know when you are truly incarnational? You will look like Jesus. Love like Jesus. Serve like Jesus. Sacrifice like Jesus. Preach like Jesus. Endure. Care. Think. Lead. Submit. Pray. Bless. Give. And keep on doing it! Incarnating the gospel looks like Jesus!


Keywords: Missional

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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/250389727/murd



My friend Chris Fukunaga planted a village community in Long Beach, California. He was one of the presenters at our first Missional Leaders Summit in March 2006.

This weekend and next they are sponsoring an event that brings the arts and experience and the cross together. It's called the murder jesus project--and it will be held four times in a variety of venues (map).

I want to encourage you to check it out if you are in the area!

Also, please be praying for this project!






Keywords: Missional

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March 14, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/251196184/oc-i

I am a missionary with OC International--a global ministry of international missionary teams. There are more than 400 OC missionaries seeking to come alongside the national church to partner together in fulfilling the Great Commission.

In the spring of 1952, Dick Hillis and his team developed a whole-nation strategy and joined hands with the Oriental Missionary Society (OMS) to preach the gospel in every village on the island of Formosa before the communists could take over. From there, the ministry expanded to the Philippines and then beyond Asia to Latin America, Africa, Europe and the Middle East.

Currently, OC missionaries are impacting over 65 countries throughout the world! We believe that whole nations can be reached for Christ.

OUR VISION: Healthy churches working together to disciple all nations

Our Mission: To mobilize godly and effective church leaders to disciple all nations

Our Strategy: Using research, motivation, and training, we mobilize Christian leaders to disciple their nations and beyond

Our Values: Team, Family, Partnership, Multiplication, Servanthood, Freedom to Innovate (learn more)

We work in teams. Our missionaries live close together, make ministry and financial decisions together, support each other emotionally and spiritually, and are accountable to one another.

We work with and within the local church. We believe our job is to work with the church and help it to be what God calls it to be. This is displayed as...
  • We minister to the unreached through equipping and mobilizing Christians
  • We plant churches by training indigenous church planters
  • We are involved in youth ministry by equipping youth leaders
We call this multiplying ourselves in others. As a result, and by the grace of God, we have a widespread influence.

I serve on one of our newest teams here in the United States. Our team exists to help churches renew their vision and impact their community and world for Christ. My focus is assisting church leaders to start and strengthen new churches! You can explore our ministries and meet our team here.

Please pray for us as we seek to complete our support raising and anticipate moving to Seattle in August 2008. (Opportunities to contribute)

Together we can change the world!


Keywords: Missional

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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/251780390/miss

Christianity is about Jesus! And it is about “being Jesus” to everyone everywhere!

Christians are those who have been sent on mission by Jesus to be Jesus!

In Acts 1:8, Jesus tells His closest followers, “But you shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be My witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and even to the remotest part of the earth.” The mission of Jesus does not begin at the ends of the earth or the other side of the planet. It started in Jerusalem, which is right where they were.

For believers today, the mission of Jesus starts right where you are. The Church does not exist primarily to gather together; rather it exists as those who are sent out with the mission and message of Jesus; as those who are sent to be His witnesses.
Mission is not merely an activity of the church. It is the very heartbeat and work of God. It is in the very being of God that the basis for the missionary enterprise is found. God is a sending God, with a desire to see humankind and creation reconciled, redeemed, and healed. The missional church, then, is a sent church. It is a going church, a movement of God through His people, sent to bring healing to a broken world. (Frost and Hirsch, The Shaping of Things to Come, p 18)
In Isaiah 6, Isaiah has a vision of the Lord and sees Him “sitting on a throne, lofty and exalted.” In verse 8, He hears the voice of the Lord asking, “Whom should I send as a messenger to my people? Who will go for us?” And Isaiah said, “Lord, I'll go! Send me.” This commitment to volunteer should be the response of every believer: “I’ll go! Send me.”

In Luke 9:2 we read, “He sent them out to proclaim the kingdom of God.” In John 20:21, Jesus told His disciples, “Peace be with you. As the Father has sent Me, so I send you.” Just as the Father sent Jesus, Jesus sends His followers to be witnesses. He sends them to make disciples who make disciples who make disciples.

In Acts 13, God sends two of the leaders of the church in Antioch to leave their current ministry context to expand their missionary activity by proclaiming the gospel and starting churches in other geographic communities.

“And while they were ministering to the Lord and fasting, the Holy Spirit said, 'Set apart for Me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have called them'” (Acts 13:2). To set apart means to dedicate for a special purpose.

The Spirit directed the team of leaders, while they were worshiping and fasting, to set apart for Him Barnabas and Saul. The verb “set apart” is seen three times in Saul’s life: 1) at his birth he was separated to God (Gal 1:15–16 ); 2) at his conversion he was set apart for the gospel (Rom 1:1); and 3) in Antioch he was separated for a specific mission (Acts 13:2).

The Spirit made known His will to these leaders so that they had neither doubt nor uncertainty in their minds: “the Holy Spirit said.” G. Campbell Morgan points out in his commentary on Acts that “this is not the picture of a church choosing men for the doing of a particular work” and it “is not the picture of a church discussing the fitness of men for the doing of any particular work.” He admits, “There is a sense in which it would be perfectly accurate to say that the church had no voice in the selection of these men. The choice was not left to the church. The choice was based upon a prior fact in the activity of the Spirit.”

The Holy Spirit had called them to this work: “for the work to which I have called them” (Acts 13:2; emphasis added). We do not know any details of how or when they were called, but it is clear from this text that Saul and Barnabus were to be set apart for this specific mission. The Spirit was sending them together in community to a new geographic region to proclaim the gospel and start new churches. He was sending them under His authority; the church was submitting to the direction of the Spirit by obeying His instruction.

Many churches use this passage to teach that the local church is the one who sends out missionaries. Clearly this passage is not teaching that the local church was a “Sending Church,” rather the Holy Spirit was the one who sends. The local church releases those whom the Spirit sends.

In verse 4, it says, “So, being sent out by the Holy Spirit, they went down to Seleucia and from there they sailed to Cyprus.” Luke does not say that they were sent by the church; they were sent by the Spirit. The Spirit does the sending.

Morgan notes that the end of verse 3, the phrase “they sent them away” in the NASB is a “faulty translation.” Just reading the English text, you might naturally assume that the same word is used at the end of verse 3 and at the beginning of verse 4 for “sent,” but they are two different words.

What did the church really do? They released Paul and Barnabus. What did the Spirit do? He sent them. “The church could release them, set them free, by caring for all other obligations, by taking responsibility for all that they would need.” (Morgan, p 312) But the Spirit is the One who sends believers out on mission!

And today, it is the Spirit of God that is sending every believer to proclaim the gospel in community with other Christians to our culture, our neighborhoods, and our workplaces. Churches today need to embrace their role as “sent ones.”
It is not about the Church sending workers; it is about the Church being sent!

Christians are those who have been sent by God with the gospel to their culture. Every one of us is sent on mission with the Holy Spirit’s power! And we are sent in community with other believers! When you commit to follow Jesus, you are saying, “Count me in! I am here on this earth to partner together with other Christians who are radically devoted to pursuing Christ’s mission of saving the world!” What could be better than that?


Keywords: Missional

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March 15, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/252267785/miss

Count Ludwig Nikolaus von Zinzendorf is a preeminent example of the convergence between prayer and missiology. He allowed some refugees from Moravia to establish a village on his land in southeast Germany.
They were fleeing the Counter-Reformation, having been bitterly persecuted for their beliefs in salvation by faith, the authority of Scripture and the priesthood of all believers. That was in 1722, but by 1727 they were almost ready to kill each other! Zinzendorf, aged 27, basically said, “Enough of this.” He got them all together one day in a little church building in neighboring Berthelsdorf, and he challenged them to covenant themselves as a community to Christ. There were apologies and repentance.

Something extraordinary happened: The Moravians began to organize themselves to pray in a persevering, disciplined way; they prayed in shifts. Suddenly that entire village became a transformed community of prayer, a community experimenting with some radical models of social structure and of economics that were neither communist nor capitalist. They continually “kept watch” in this way for more than a hundred years. And there was undoubtedly a missional heartbeat to this extraordinary prayer meeting, because within five years the Moravians at Herrnhut had begun sending out missionaries—missionaries who catalyzed the great missions thrust of the Reformation. (Pete Greig, “The Missiology of Prayer,” in Practitioners, p 53-54)
Great movements of God are always birthed in prayer. As E.M. Bounds observed in his classic book, Power Through Prayer,
What the Church needs today is not more machinery or better, not new organizations or more and novel methods, but men who the Holy Ghost can use—men of prayer, men mighty in prayer. The Holy Ghost does not flow through methods, but through men. He does not come on machinery, but on men. He does not anoint plans, but men—men of prayer. (p 12)
To fuel missional movements, the Church needs to spend time in prayer. Intercession for harvest workers is the foundational prerequisite. “Most of the church has plugged into the relational side of prayer, enjoying communication with their heavenly Father. To foster a multiplication movement and bring in the harvest, we must tune in more intentionally to the working side of prayer … Help is urgently needed for intercessors to do their work.” (Bob Logan, Be Fruitful and Multiply, p 40)

On a recent visit with my friend Paul Kaak, his watch beeped at 10:02 am. Suddenly, his son Elijah stopped what he was doing and wanted to pray. He led us in prayer for the harvest and that God would send laborers into the harvest field. Paul explained that every day at 10:02 his watch beeps as a reminder to pray for harvest workers based on Jesus words in Luke 10:2 “And He was saying to them, ‘The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few; therefore beseech the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into His harvest.’” (Catch Luke 10:2b Virus!) No matter what Paul is doing every day at 10:02 am, whether teaching a class or spending time with family, he stops and prays. Imagine if more believers would adopt a pattern of praying daily for God to send laborers.

Tom Nebel in his book Big Dreams in Small Places (p 106) suggests some great ways for increasing intercession for missional activity and church planting:
  • intercession teams
  • monthly prayer letters
  • e-mail prayer notices
  • regional concerts of prayer for church planting
  • occasional 24-hour prayer initiatives
  • prayer walking
  • the mobilization of retirees who are serious about prayer
  • organized prayer “strike teams” to welcome the arrival of new church planters
  • prayer calendars
  • creative prayer reminders
A prayer movement must precede any missional movement.


Keywords: Missional

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March 17, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/252832049/func

What makes a team effective in ministry? I asked that question this morning to our missions class at church. Here a few important keys:
  • Caring for one another
  • Humility
  • Trust
  • Fit
Each of these qualities is necessary. Without a commitment to one another, built on humility and trust, conflicts will hinder the teams effectiveness. It is also important to value each person’s contribution or "fit."

“FIT” is about identifying and appreciating each others strengths and weaknesses. It's understanding the "chemistry" that exists between the team members.
“A good team fit requires an attitude of Partnership. Every team member must respect the other players. They must desire to contribute to the team, and they must come to expect a contribution from every other person. Above all, they must learn to trust each other. It is trust that makes it possible for them to rely on one another. It allows them to make up for each other’s weaknesses instead of trying to exploit them. It enables one team member to say to the other, “You go ahead and do this task because you are better at it than I am,” without shame or manipulation. Trust allows team member to begin working as a single unit, to begin accomplishing the things that together they recognize as important.” John Maxwell
For your team to be effective, you must understand your own strengths and weaknesses, as well as those of others on your team. Key to your effectiveness is often diversity! Our differences make the team more effective; yet our differences also cause tension.

“For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother's womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well. My frame was not hidden from you when I was made in the secret place; when I was woven together in the depths of the earth.” Psalm 139:13-15

“For we are God's workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.” Ephesians 2:10

Beware of overestimating your own importance and disdaining those you perceive as less gifted and significant. (Romans 12:3-8) A team is not one member, but many. Understanding and valuing the uniqueness and contribution of each member is critical to becoming an effective team. (1 Corinthians 12:14-27)

TEAM is a chosen value within OC International, and I am privileged to serve together on the U.S. Ministries team. We are learning how to appreciate the strengths and contributions of each of our team members.

In an article on TEAM within OC, veteran missionary Bill Keyes (my father-in-law) identifies ten common principles that normally manifest themselves. While no team is perfect, these are identifiable pillars in all mature teams.

A mature team has:
  1. a clear understanding of its purposes and goals
  2. a flexibility in selecting its procedures as it works toward its goals
  3. a high degree of communication and understanding among its members
  4. an ability to initiate and carry on effective decision making
  5. an appropriate balance between group productivity and the satisfaction of individual needs
  6. a leader that does not dominate, nor do any of the members; yet a leader’s primary role is servant-leadership.
  7. a high degree of cohesiveness (oneness) but not to the point of stifling individual freedom
  8. an intelligent use of its deferring abilities and gifting
  9. a capacity to be objective about reviewing its own process and progress
  10. a heightened level of spiritual authenticity and humility
Bill recognizes that working in teams comes with both advantages (strengths) and disadvantages (weaknesses).
Strength of team:

OC has asked this question on many occasions. Allowing the fields to answer, the replies reflect the following: “Team” offers (a) the development of multiple gifts; (b) one team member benefiting from the others; (c) caring for and sharing of one another’s burdens/needs, (d) greater accountability; (e) a context for spiritual growth; (f) a natural blending of temperaments; (g) more innovation/creativity; (h) an ability to accomplish more synergistically; (i) a louder/more visible voice before the church – in country; (j) a greater ability to fill in for one another as needed; (k) a context to be ‘family’ for adults and children; (l) a capacity to accomplish more in less time; (m) added wisdom as God blesses the multitude of counselors; (n) a stronger factor for retention in team.

Weaknesses in team:

OC has also asked this question. Again the fields respond: “Team”: (a) produces an environment for jealousies, feelings of inferiority, competition; (b) creates greater risks for misunderstanding – proportionate to the numbers within a team; (c) may produce greater sensitivity to correction, confrontation; (d) produces more inconvenience – demands that are often difficult to comply with; (e) does bring together people who may be opposites in character and temperament which creates special challenges; (f) brings together people who see and think differently; (g) can generate values and priorities that may clash; (h) demonstrates that there are differing ways to process issues; (i) can cause conflict amidst varying cultural values and attitudes toward time and ways to deal with conflict. (j) manifests strongly that one style of leadership does not serve all, etc.
One of the reasons why I joined OC International to serve as a missionary was because of OC's commitment to TEAM. We don't just talk about it, we live it!

For these qualities within team to be achieved, Bill suggests these seemingly non-negotiables. These are, but not limited to:
  • Geographical proximity – a certain reasonable proximity of distance so that each team member regularly connects and relates with each other.
  • Regular meeting times together for business, prayer and fellowship.
  • Periodic review of accomplishments, progress, concerns and issues done in full team sessions.
  • Established and understood practices and behaviors within the team that foster growth and harmony.
  • A spirit of accountability, mentorship and servant leadership.
  • An awareness that “team” is a means to the end and not the end in itself.
  • A realization that one’s team is part of something bigger so that it serves yet even a great purpose – that of OC and the Body of Christ.

“For by the grace given me I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the measure of faith God has given you. Just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function, so in Christ we who are many form one body, and each member belongs to all the others.” Romans 12:3-5



Keywords: Missional

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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/253138834/who-

Growing up, we celebrated St. Patrick's Day by wearing green so we wouldn't get pinched by our friends at school. Nobody ever explained to me who he was and what he did. So, this morning as we ate a "green" breakfast, I told my kids about St. Patrick. Here are three things you should know about him...

1. Patrick was a Christian. He was raised in a Christian family. His grandfather was a priest and he had acquired some Christian teaching. However, he ridiculed the clergy, and in the company of other "alienated" and "ungoverned" youth, he lived toward the wild side.
When Patrick was sixteen, a band of Celtic pirates from Ireland invaded the region; they captured Patrick and other young men, forced them onto a ship, sailed to Ireland, and sold them into slavery. The pirates sold Patrick to a prosperous tribal chief and druid named Miliuc (Miliuc moccu Boin), who put Patrick to work herding cattle.

During his years of enslavement, Patrick experienced three profound changes. First, the periods when Patrick was isolated in the wilderness herding cattle connected him with what theologians call the "natural revelation" of God. He sensed with the winds, the seasons, the creatures, and the nights under the stars the presence of God; he identified this presence with the Triune God he had learned about in the catechism. In his (more or less) autobiographical "Declaration" Patrick tells us
After I had arrived in Ireland, I found myself pasturing flocks daily, and I prayed a number of times each day. More and more the love and fear of God came to me, and faith grew and my spirit was exercised, until I was praying up to a hundred times every day and in the night nearly as often.

Patrick became a devout Christian, and the change was obvious to his captors.

Second, Patrick changed in another way during the periods he spent with his captors in their settlement. he came to understand the Irish Celtic people, and their language and culture, with the kind of intuitive profundity that is usually possible only, as in Patrick's case, from the "underside."

Third, Patrick came to love his captors, to identify with them, and to hope for their reconciliation to God. One day, he would feel they were his people.
2. Patrick was a missionary. After six years, Patrick escaped and returned to England. He trained to become a priest, immersing himself in the scriptures. At the age of 48,after serving for years as a faithful priest in England, Patrick experienced a dream where his former captors in Ireland cried out, "We appeal to you, holy servant boy, to come and walk among us. When he awoke the next morning, he interpreted this dream as his "Macedonian Call" to take Christianity's gospel to the Celtic peoples of Ireland.
Patrick's mission to Ireland was to be such an unprecedented undertaking that it is impossible to understate its magnitude and significance. Why? Because the Irish Celtic peoples were "barbarians."

...The Irish context of that period, however, provided some strategic advantages for Patrick's mission. Ireland was populated by about 150 tuaths-extended tribes-each tribe fiercely loyal to its tribal king. Ireland's total population numbered between 200,000 and 500,000 people. By Patrick's time, all of the tribes spoke the same language that Patrick had learned while a slave, and they now shared more or less the same culture, so Patrick understood them.

Indeed, the fact that Patrick understood the people and their language, their issues, and their ways, serves as the most strategically significant single insight that was to drive the wider expansion of Celtic Christianity, and stands as perhaps our greatest single learning from this movement. There is no shortcut to understanding the people. When you understand the people, you will often know what to say and do, and how. When the people know that the Christians understand them, they infer that maybe the High God understands them too.
As God blessed, the Irish people responded in faith to the presentation of the gospel of the cross. Patrick and his missionary band began planting churches and for 28 years, he continued proclaiming the gospel until his death in A.D. 460. An ancient document called the "Annals of the Four Masters" reports that Patrick's mission planted about 700 churches, and that Patrick ordained perhaps 1000 priests. Within his lifetime, 30 to 40 (or more) of Ireland's 150 tribes became substantially Christian.

3. Patrick started a missionary movement. Irish Christianity spread remarkably in the generations following Patrick's death. While we don't have written records from this period, here's what is clear:
First, the available evidence suggests that Patrick's movement blanketed the Island: "In Ireland alone, there are more than 6,000 place names containing the element Cill-the old Gaelic word for church." Second, Irish Christianity was geographically beyond the reach of Rome's ability to shape and control, so a distinctively Celtic approach to "doing church" and living the Christian life emerged.

What would a visitor from Rome have noticed about Celtic Christianity that was "different"? The visitor would have observed more of a movement than an institution, ...a movement featuring laity in ministry more than clergy.
The missionary movement that Patrick started spread and multiplied churches which continued to send teams into settlements to multiply churches and introduce people to faith in Jesus Christ. In two or three generations, all of Ireland had become substantially Christian. Within a century after Patrick's death, Irish Celtic Christians were lifting their eyes to see harvests beyond Ireland. They continued to multiply churches, sending out apostolic teams.
An Irish apostle named Columbanus, with entourage, departed for Europe in A.D. 600 to launch a Celtic Christian mission to the continent. he may not have been the first Irish apostle to Europe, "but he as certainly the pioneer who inspired the mass exodus later." ...In the next fifteen years, Columbanus founded monastic communities in (what is now) France, Switzerland, and Italy; and in time his people founded a vast network of sixty or more monastic communities, learned a dozen or more languages and cultures, engaged peoples, planted churches, and launched a significant movement among the barbarian peoples of Europe, particularly in (what is now) France, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, Germany, and Italy.
I was fascinated to discover how Patrick's missionary endeavors transformed a nation. (I'm thankful for George Hunter's classic book The Celtic Way of Evangelism. All quotes are from this book.)

However you may "celebrate" St. Patrick's day, prayerfully consider how God can use you to take the gospel message together in community with other Christians to those in the culture around you!


Keywords: Missional

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March 19, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/254077430/miss


The MCWD Church Multiplication Team has as its mission to facilitate a church multiplication movement in each region of the Western District through . . .
  • Articulating a shared vision for multiplying disciples, leaders, small groups and churches
  • Mobilizing prayer support in each region focused on multiplying churches
  • Creating an enduring church planting culture
  • Embracing new expressions of church
  • Attracting and recruiting potential church planters from outside our movement
  • Determining focus communities for starting new churches – including inner-city and cross-cultural opportunities
  • Emphasizing spiritual formation in the life of potential church planters
  • Assisting each local church in developing leadership farm systems and training emerging leaders (becoming a church multiplication center)
  • Providing a shared pool of resources to help in the process (district website)
  • Assessing potential church planters through behavioral interviews and other useful tools
  • Affirming the character, call and competency of church planters
  • Training church planting teams in their “embryo” state (Launch Team Retreats)
  • Bringing the planters together for support, prayer, encouragement and fun! (annual gathering)
  • Assigning coaches to strategically empower church planters (developing a coaching movement)
  • Developing funding strategies for new churches
  • Approving church planting projects and financial commitments
  • Evaluating progress and effectiveness of church plants (NCD)
  • Coaching parent churches to multiply and rewarding appropriately
  • Anticipating lives to be changed through new churches
  • Celebrating the successes and failures in church multiplication
If you are preparing to start a new church or already involved in starting a new church in California, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, New Mexico or Colorado--and you'd like to partner with us, let me know!


Keywords: Missional

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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/254693328/mcwd

Over the past seven years, the Missionary Church Western District has been intentional about starting new churches. The MCWD includes six states: California, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, New Mexico and Colorado.

I discovered that Google Maps has a very creative tool that allows you to create your own maps. Here's a link to a map of the MCWD Church Plants since 2001.

Windsor Community Church
2001: Started by Mountain View Community Church in Fort Collins. Willie O'Burke and about 70 people launched this new work!

Lake Pleasant Community Church

2002: This church was started as a daughter church from Northwest Community Church by Pastor John Amandola. They worship at Sunrise Mountain High School in Peoria.

Living Oaks Community Church
2004: LOCC was started by Pastor Doug Posey. They are committed to preaching God's truth, contemporary worship, and small groups ministry.

A Village Community

2005: Started by Chris Fukunaga, this church currently meets at Creative Design Lab on Sunday mornings at 11 am.

Casa De Dios
2005: Pastor Toby Lazo has started this new hispanic church that is focused on disciplemaking and small groups.

As You Are Church

2006: This church was restarted under the leadreship of Pastor Chris Stevens.

Crossway Chapel of Greeley

2006: Willie and Lisa O'Burke and about thirty people from Windsor Community Church started this dynamic church that is reaching people for Christ!

Father's Heart
2006: Pastor John Phipps started this new work which is reaching out to families who have children with disabilities. They are currently meeting on Saturday nights at the Brethren Church of Tucson.

Iglesia El Gigante es Jesucristo
2006: This is a Spanish language church started by Pastor Walter Herrera.

Fellowship Connection Church
2007: Now meeting at the Gilbert Community Center, this church was started by Pastor Mike Clack.

Sojourn-a church without walls
2008: This church is in its early formation stage under the leadership of Pastor Louis DeLuca.

The Harbor
2008: Pastor Sam Gallucci is in the process of rebirthing this growing church. They will be relocating to Oxnard.


Keywords: Missional

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March 20, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/255314335/miss

Missional initiatives are all about incarnating the message of the cross together in community to those in the culture around us. That's the "Missional Challenge" - to exegete the culture in order to communicate the gospel effectively.

On Sunday night, I drove to Viento y Agua (a coffee house in Long Beach). I was amazed by the murder jesus project - a collaborative effort presented by nine individuals who believe that they contributed to the murder of Jesus Christ. This was a genuine missional initiative.

Each person told their story in a creative and meaningful way using a variety of media: art, music, drama, dance, video, poetry, and story.

Here's what Jon presented: The Ocean Sighed



Jon told me the story describes the pain and loss of relationship, yet the hope of redemption and peace. You can still see and hear the stories this Sunday (March 23) at the Creative Design Lab (11 am) or the Long Beach Playhouse (5 pm). For more information click here.

If you are in the Long Beach area, check out A Village Community!


Keywords: Missional

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March 22, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/255903971/for-

John Piper does an excellent job answering this question in a sermon from May 26, 1996:

“But we do see Him who has been made for a little while lower than the angels, namely, Jesus, because of the suffering of death crowned with glory and honor, that by the grace of God He might taste death for everyone.” Hebrews 2:9

For Those He Came to Save

Yesterday I marched for Jesus along with thousands of others in the Twin Cities and with millions of others around the world. As I turned from Nicollet Mall onto Sixth Street we were singing the second stanza of "Crown Him With Many Crowns." I am probably the only one who was thinking at that moment of this morning's message. The title of the message this morning is, "For Whom Did Jesus Taste Death?" The second verse of "Crown Him with Many Crowns" goes like this:

Crown Him the Lord of life,
Who triumphed o'er the grave.
Who rose victorious in the strife
For those He came to save.

His glories now we sing,
Who died and rose on high.
Who died eternal life to bring,
And lives that death may die.

He triumphed over the grave and rose victorious in the strife for those he came to save. "For those he came to save." These words seem to signal that the writer of this hymn believes that Christ had a design to really save a particular group of people by his death. He triumphed over the grave for those he came to save. It sounds like there are some he came to save, and that for these the grave is defeated and eternal life is given.

For Everybody?

So my question this morning is this: "For whom did Jesus taste death?" Ask 100 evangelical Christians in America that question and 95 will probably say, "Everybody." And there is something healthy about that answer—and something unhealthy. What's healthy about it is that it is not cliquish or elitist or sectarian. It has an eye on the world. It wants others to enjoy the forgiveness of sins that believers enjoy. It is not narrow and confined in its affections.

It tries to express the Biblical truth that God so loved the world that he gave his only Son that whoever believes might not perish but have eternal life (John 3:16). It is healthy and right to believe that everyone who has faith—no matter what race or education or intelligence or social class or former religion—everyone who puts faith in Jesus Christ is justified and accepted with God on the basis of Jesus' shed blood. It's healthy and right to believe that no one can say, "I really want to be saved by believing Jesus, but I can't be because he did not die for me." No one can say that. There is no one who truly believes for whom Jesus did not taste death.

There are lots of reasons why this answer (that Jesus tasted death for everyone) is a sign of spiritual health. One of the most obvious reasons is right here in our text, Hebrews 2:9: But we do see Him who has been made for a little while lower than the angels, namely, Jesus, because of the suffering of death crowned with glory and honor, that by the grace of God He might taste death for everyone.

The answer that 95% of evangelicals would give is a healthy sign of desire to say what the Bible says.

But to say what the Bible says and to mean what the Bible means are not necessarily the same thing. Which is why I said that there is something unhealthy about answering the question "For whom did Jesus taste death?" by simply saying "everybody." What's unhealthy about it is not, first, that it's wrong. It might not be wrong. It depends on what you mean by saying that. What's unhealthy is that it stops short of asking what Jesus really accomplished when he died. It assumes that we all know what he accomplished and that this he accomplished for everybody in the same way. That is not healthy, because it is not true. My guess is that most of those 95% who say Jesus died for everybody would have a hard time explaining just what it is that the death of Jesus really, actually accomplished for everybody—especially what it accomplished for those who refuse to believe and go to hell.

Then Why Is Not Everyone Saved?

In other words, it's unhealthy to say that Jesus tasted death for everyone and not to know what Jesus really accomplished by dying. Suppose you say to me, "I believe that Jesus died for everyone," and I respond, "Then why is not everyone saved?" Your answer probably would be, "Because you have to receive the gift of salvation; you have to believe in Christ in order for his death to count for you." I agree, but then I say, "So you believe that Christ died for people who reject him and go to hell in the same way that he died for those who accept him and go to heaven?" You say, "Yes, the difference is the faith of those who go to heaven. Faith connects you with the benefits of the death of Jesus."

There are several problems here. I will only mention one. And I dwell on this because, if this is what you believe, then you are missing out on the depths of covenant love that God has for you in Christ by understanding it to be the same as the love he has for those who reject him. And you are, in one serious way, "neglecting your great salvation," which, we saw in Hebrews 2:3, we must not do. There is a greatness about being loved with Calvary love that you will never know if you believe that those in hell were loved and died-for the same way you were.

It would be as though a wife insisted that her husband loved and sacrificed for her no differently than he loves and sacrifices for all the women in the world. But in fact Paul, the apostle, says in Ephesians 5:25-27: Christ loved the church and gave Himself up for her; that He might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word, that He might present to Himself the church in all her glory, having no spot or wrinkle or any such thing; but that she should be holy and blameless.

That's what we mean when we say he died for the church, his bride. In other words there is a precious and unfathomable covenant love between Christ and his bride, that moved him to die for her. The death of Jesus is for the bride of Christ in a different way than it is for those who perish.

Here's the problem with saying Christ died for all the same way he died for his bride. If Christ died for the sins of those who are finally lost, the same way he died for the sins of those who are finally saved, then what are the lost being punished for? Were their sins covered and canceled by the blood of Jesus or not? We Christians say, "Christ died for our sins" (1 Corinthians 15:3). And we mean that his death paid the debt those sins created. His death removed the wrath of God from me. His death lifted the curse of the law from me. His death purchased heaven for me. It really accomplished those things!

But what would it mean to say of an unbeliever in hell that Christ died for his sins? Would we mean that the debt for his sins was paid? If so, why is he paying again in hell? Would we mean that the wrath of God was removed? If so, why is the wrath of God being poured out on him in punishment for sins? Would we mean that the curse of the law was lifted? If so, why is he bearing his curse in the lake of fire?

One possible answer is this: one might say that the only reason people go to hell is because of the sin of rejecting Jesus, not because of all the other sins of their life. But that is not true. The Bible teaches that the wrath of God is coming on the world, not just because of its rejection of Jesus, but because of its many sins that are not forgiven. For example, in Colossians 3:5-6, Paul refers to "immorality, impurity, passion, evil desire, and greed," and then says, "On account of these things the wrath of God will come." So people who reject Jesus really will be punished for their specific sins, not just for rejecting Jesus.

In What Sense Did Jesus Taste Death for a Person in Hell?

So, we go back to the problem: in what sense did Christ taste death for their sins? If they are still guilty for their sins and still suffer punishment for their sins, what happened on the cross for their sins? Perhaps someone would use an analogy. You might say, Christ purchased their ticket to heaven, and offered it to them freely, but they refused to take it, and that is why they went to hell. And you would be partly right: Christ does offer his forgiveness freely to all, and any who receives it as the treasure it is will be saved by the death of Jesus. But the problem with the analogy is that the purchase of the ticket to heaven is, in reality, the canceling of sins. But what we have seen is that those who refuse the ticket are punished for their sins, not just for refusing the ticket. And so what meaning does it have to say that their sins were canceled? Their sins are going to bring them to destruction and keep them from heaven; so their sins were not really canceled in the cross, and therefore the ticket was not purchased.

The ticket for heaven which Jesus obtained for me by his blood is the wiping out of all my sins, covering them, bearing them in his own body, so that they can never bring me to ruin—can never be brought up against me again—never. That's what happened when he died for me. Hebrews 10:14 says, "By one offering He has perfected for all time those who are sanctified." Perfected before God for all time, by the offering his life! That's what it means that he died for me. Hebrews 9:28 says, "Christ also, [was] offered once to bear the sins of many." He bore my sins. He really bore them (See Isaiah 53:4-6). He really suffered for them. They cannot and they will not fall on my head in judgment.

If you say to me then, that at the cross Christ only accomplished for me what he accomplished for those who will suffer hell for their sins, then you strip the death of Jesus of its actual effective accomplishment on my behalf, and leave me with what?—An atonement that has lost its precious assuring power that my sins were really covered and the curse was really lifted and the wrath of God was really removed. That's a high price to pay in order to say that Christ tasted death for everyone in the same way.

I don't think that the Bible commands us or, in fact, lets us say that Christ died for everybody in the same way. And the context of Hebrews 2:9 is a good place to show that the death of Christ had a special design or aim for God's chosen people that it did not have for others.

What does "Everyone" mean?

At the end of verse 9 the writer says, "By the grace of God [Christ] tasted death for everyone." The question here is whether "everyone" refers to every human without distinction, or whether it refers to everyone within a certain group. As when I say at staff lunch, "Is everyone present?" I don't mean everyone in the world. I mean everyone in the group I have in mind. What is the group that the writer has in mind: all of humanity without any distinction, or some other group?

Let's let him answer as we trace his thought in the next verses. Verse 10 is the support for verse 9: Christ tasted death for everyone "for it was fitting for him, for whom are all things, and through whom are all things, in bringing many sons to glory, to perfect the author of their salvation through sufferings." In other words, immediately after saying that by the grace of God Christ tasted death for everyone, the writer explains that God's design in this suffering of Christ was to "bring many sons to glory." So verses 9 and 10 go together like this: Christ tasted death for everyone, because it seemed fitting to God that the way to lead his children to glory was through the suffering and death of Christ.

This means that the "everyone" of verse 9 probably refers to everyone of the sons being led to glory in verse 10. In other words the design of God—the aim and purpose of God—in sending Christ to die was particularly to lead his children from sin and death and hell to glory. He had a special eye to his own elect children. It's exactly what the Gospel of John says in 11:52—that Jesus would die to "gather together into one the children of God who are scattered abroad." These "children of God" that Christ died to gather are the "sons" that God is leading to glory through the death of Christ in Hebrews 2:10

You can see this in the next verses too. Verses 11 and 12: For both He who sanctifies [i.e. Christ] and those who are sanctified [the sons he is leading to glory] are all from one Father; for which reason He is not ashamed to call them brethren, saying [in Psalm 22:22], "I WILL PROCLAIM THY NAME TO MY BRETHREN, IN THE MIDST OF THE CONGREGATION I WILL SING THY PRAISE."

In other words the sons that God is leading to glory through the death of Christ are now called Christ's brothers. It was for everyone of these that Christ tasted death.

Verse 13 goes on now to call them, not only brothers, but in another sense children of Christ: And again, "I WILL PUT MY TRUST IN HIM" [Christ's own confession of faith in his Father along with his brothers]. And again, "BEHOLD, I AND THE CHILDREN WHOM GOD HAS GIVEN ME."

Notice, the sons that are being led to glory through the death of Christ are now called children that God has given to Christ. They don't just become children by choosing Christ. God sets his favor on them and brings them to Christ—gives them to Christ. And for every one of these he tastes death and leads them to glory. This is exactly the way Jesus spoke of his own disciples in the prayer of John 17:6: "I manifested Thy name to the men whom Thou gavest Me out of the world; Thine they were, and Thou gavest them to Me." So the picture we have is a chosen people that the Father freely and graciously gives to the Son as his children.

Then notice how verses 14-15 connect the aim of Christ's incarnation and death with this chosen group of children: Since then the children share in flesh and blood [in other words, since those whom the Father gave to the Son have a human nature], He Himself likewise also partook of the same [human nature], that through death He might render powerless him who had the power of death, that is, the devil; and might deliver those who through fear of death were subject to slavery all their lives [namely, everyone of those children and brothers that God had given him to lead to glory by his death].

So here the reason given for the incarnation and the death of Jesus (in verse 14) is that the "children" share in flesh and blood. That's the reason Christ took on flesh and blood. And the "children," according to verse 13 are not humans in general, but children God has given to Jesus. And so the whole design and aim of the incarnation and death of Jesus was to lead the sons, the brothers, the children, whom God gave to Jesus, to glory.

Your Belief Was Purchased by the Death of Christ

Now I will stop here in our text, even though we could keep right on going through the rest of this chapter showing that the aim of God in the sending and death of Jesus was to accomplish something definite for his brothers, his children, those whom God has given him out of the world. But I will stop and make a closing application.

I am not the least bit interested in withholding the infinite value of the death of Jesus from anyone. Let it be known and heard very clearly: God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son so that whoever believes on him—I say it again: whoever believes in him—should not perish but have eternal life. Christ died so that whoever (in this room this morning) believes might not perish but live.

And when you believe as you ought to believe, you will discover that your belief—like all other spiritual blessings—was purchased by the death of Christ. The sin of unbelief was covered by the blood in your case, and therefore the power of God's mercy was released through the cross to subdue your rebellion and bring you to the Son. You did not make the cross effective in your life by faith. The cross became effective in your life by purchasing your faith.

So glory in this, Christian. Glory that your sins really were covered when Jesus tasted death for you. Glory that your guilt really was removed when Jesus tasted death for you. Glory that the curse of the law really was lifted and that the wrath of God really was removed, and that the precious faith that unites you to all this treasure in Christ was a gift purchased by the blood of Christ.

Christ tasted death for everyone who has faith. Because the faith of everyone who believes was purchased by the death of Christ.

For further reflection see:
1 Timothy 4:10
Ephesians 5:25-27
Titus 2:14
John 10:15; 11:52; 17:6,9,19
Acts 20:28
Revelation 1:5; 3:9; 5:9
Romans 8:28-32
1 John 2:2 (compare John 11:52)
2 Peter 2:1



Keywords: Missional

Posted by Dave DeVries | 0 comment(s)

March 23, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/256375456/miss

Christianity is a rescue religion. It declares that God has taken the initiative in Jesus Christ to deliver us from our sins. This is the main theme of the Bible.

There is no hope without the cross. N.T. Wright tries to put this understanding into perspective when he writes:
The death of Jesus of Nazareth as the king of the Jews, the bearer of Israel’s destiny, the fulfillment of God’s promises to his people of old, is either the most stupid, senseless waste and misunderstanding the world has ever seen, or it is the fulcrum around which world history turns.

Christianity is based on the belief that it was the latter. (Simply Christian, p 111)
The cross is central to Christianity. It must be believed, incarnated, and proclaimed to the world.

John Piper, Pastor for Preaching at Bethlehem Baptist Church (Minneapolis, Minnesota), is troubled over whether the essentials of biblical faith are embraced by new converts to Christ. He asks this important question: “Do they embrace and make known that the Bible is the only inspired and infallible written revelation of God, and that Christ is God and was crucified for sin and raised from the dead above all authority?” (Mission Frontiers, Jan-Feb 2006, p 17)

Christians need to be clear in communicating the central message of the Bible. What is the central message? Jesus Christ died on the cross to pay the penalty for our sins. Without the cross, there is no atonement. If Christ had not died on the cross, everyone would have to pay the penalty for their own sins. The gospel message is all about the cross, and what it represents.

In 1 Corinthians 2:2, Paul emphasizes the cross: “For I decided to concentrate only on Jesus Christ and His death on the cross.” In 1 Corinthians 15:3–5, Paul articulates the essence of the gospel:
Now let me remind you, dear brothers and sisters, of the Good News I preached to you before. You welcomed it then and still do now, for your faith is built on this wonderful message. And it is this Good News that saves you if you firmly believe it—unless, of course, you believed something that was never true in the first place. I passed on to you what was most important and what had also been passed on to me—that Christ died for our sins, just as the Scriptures said. He was buried, and he was raised from the dead on the third day, as the Scriptures said.
Without the cross, no one is saved. No one is rescued. Everyone is lost.

Why does the cross matter? Because sin is serious. The Bible contends, “All have sinned” (Rom 3:23) and “the wages of sin is death” (Rom 6:23). Sin earns death: eternal separation from God. That is why the cross is so important.

When Christ died, He “canceled out the certificate of debt consisting of decrees against us and which was hostile to us; and He has taken it out of the way, having nailed it to the cross” (Col 2:14). It was on the cross that He paid the debt for our sins. Christ died for our sins, in our place, so we would not have to suffer the punishment we deserve. This doctrine is called substitutionary atonement.
Christ’s death was a vicarious, penal satisfaction. He literally paid the price for our sins. He bore the wrath of God on our behalf. He took what we deserve and He freely gives us blessings that only He deserves. And we who are united with Him are untied with Him in such a way that His death paid the price of our sins and His righteousness now covers us like a garment of absolute perfection. (Phil Johnson, The Nature of the Atonement, March 5, 2003)
Jesus took the place of sinners. 1 Peter 2:24 says: “He Himself bore our sins in His body on the cross, that we might die to sin and live to righteousness; for by His wounds you were healed.” Also, 2 Corinthians 5:21 says: “God made Him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in Him we might become the righteousness of God.”

By His death, Jesus restores our relationship with God. It is not just good news that the debt of sin was paid, but it is also good news that relationship with God is restored!
Sin caused an estrangement; the cross, the crucifixion of Christ, has accomplished an atonement. Sin bred enmity; the cross has brought peace. Sin created a gulf between man and God; the cross has bridged it. Sin broke the fellowship; the cross has restored it. (John Stott, Basic Christianity, p 82)
I like the way Randy Alcorn explains this: “Christ took the hell He didn’t deserve so we could have the heaven we don’t deserve.” (The Grace and Truth Paradox, p. 29)

Christ also suffered when he died for our sins once for all time. He never sinned, but he died for sinners that he might bring us safely home to God. He suffered physical death, but he was raised to life in the Spirit. (1 Pet 3:18)


Keywords: Missional

Posted by Dave DeVries | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/missionalchallenge/~3/256836984/miss

Here is the reality: People are going to hell. That is their eternal destiny without Jesus. We have the answer. We have the only hope. We should be compelled to tell them the Good News about Jesus.

If a car dealer were giving away free cars and you heard about it and you went down and you got your free car and you are driving around and loving your car, would you keep that good news to yourself? Or would you tell all your friends and neighbors and everyone you know: “HEY, THEY ARE GIVING AWAY FREE CARS DOWN AT THE DEALERSHIP. GO GET YOUR FREE CAR!”?

The gospel is such incredible news. It beats free cars for everyone! It brings an eternity with Christ forever. We have to tell people—“Jesus died on the cross to pay the penalty of your sins so that you do not have to!”

The first question and answer of the Heidelberg Catechism describes the good news like this:
Q: What is the only comfort in life and death?

A: That I with body and soul, both in life and death, am not my own, but belong unto my faithful Savior Jesus Christ; who, with his precious blood, hath fully satisfied for all my sins, and delivered me from all the power of the devil; and so preserves me that without the will of my heavenly Father, not a hair can fall from my head; yea, that all things must be subservient to my salvation, and therefore, by his Holy Spirit, he also assures me of eternal life, and makes me sincerely willing and ready, henceforth to live unto him.
If Christians embrace the cross and enjoy fellowship with other Christians, but they do not get close enough to lost people to show and then tell them the good news; it is still not good news. It is only good news to those who hear and embrace it.

Randy Alcorn points this out in The Grace and Truth Paradox:
Most sinners loved being around Jesus. They enjoyed His company, they sought Him out, invited Him to their homes and parties. Today, most sinners don’t want to be around Christians. Unbelievers tore the roof off a house to get to Jesus. Today they can’t seem to get away from Christians fast enough.

Why is that? What did Jesus show them that we don’t? It’s GRACE. People sensed that Jesus loved them, even when He spoke difficult words. He was full of grace and truth. (p 19)
As Christians, we need to get close enough to unbelievers to tell them the Good News of God’s grace and truth.