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Something Beautiful for God

September 6, 2017 by Disciple 2 Comments

Can anything ever separate us from Christ’s love? Does it mean he no longer loves us if we have trouble or calamity, or are persecuted, or hungry, or destitute, or in danger, or threatened with death? (As the Scriptures say, “For your sake we are killed every day; we are being slaughtered like sheep.” No, despite all these things, overwhelming victory is ours through Christ, who loved us. – Romans 8:35

When Malcolm Muggeridge went to Calcutta to film Mother Theresa, he recounts how he was constantly amazed by her presence. There was a special place known as the ‘House of the Dying” where the Mother would frequently come to minister to those who were dying. This old brick kiln was home to the very poorest of the poor from the streets of Calcutta, the lame, the crippled and diseased, and there in the coolness, Mother would hold and bathe each one as they slowly died. She wanted to give them a place of dignity, and as she held each in her arms, she would say she looked at each and saw the face of Jesus.

Muggeridge was trying to film in this building, but there was no electricity or power and they couldn’t get the lighting right no matter how hard they tried. On one of the last days, he was in there again and everything was set, but still the light was not good enough to film. Then, quietly and unassuming, Mother walked in and began to minister to each of those lying there. Muggeridge tells the story of how a mysterious glow followed Mother as she moved from one person to the next, holding each in her arms, bathing them to cool their fever; in a final attempt at filming, they were able to get the only footage of her in the House of the Dying, because of the light that went with her on that day.

The love of God through Christ is the essence of the whole Gospel story, and sometimes I wish we would just bring our entire focus to bear on that. The books of Romans is so rich in this regard yet so simple, where Paul constantly brings everything back to this one thing; we are made righteous with God, because of his love for us through Jesus Christ. In a world that seems to be coming every increasingly dark, surely this love is all that we have. I believe Paul thought that.

This week, for the first time in a while just my wife and I wandered out onto the streets, following a strong call to go out and minister his love to a world devoid of any light. We asked if he would come with us. There we met Val, a woman whose job it was to minister and care for the elderly and the dying, a woman who was struggling to come to terms with what she dealt with every day. We knew we had been called out just for Val, and we sat and ministered Christ to her for an afternoon. It was fabulous.

When you get to the pointy end of life, the question of death is always present and nobody has an answer outside of Jesus Christ. We see it and hear it time and again, we have so many answers to all of our questions in life, apart from the very one that matters, ‘is this all there is?’

Val asked us what we could share, how could she come to terms with so much ‘dying’, death seemed to overwhelm her. She spoke of God, but didn’t know of Jesus, the one who died in our place, so that death doesn’t have to consume us.  We were able to introduce him to her, and she listened, we could see the expression; could this be the answer to my seeking?

Jesus is a thing of beauty to behold, and sharing him with others is us doing something beautiful for God. As we were walking home after speaking with Val, we were ourselves overwhelmed at the sheer number of those who don’t know Jesus, or increasingly, have never heard of him. So few of us, so many of them.

We will continue to see Val, we sensed she wanted more – more of us? – not really, she wanted an answer to her life, one that provided a real solution to the problem of life when it ended. Jesus is her answer.

Guess what comes next;

And I am convinced that nothing can ever separate us from God’s love. Neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither our fears for today nor our worries about tomorrow—not even the powers of hell can separate us from God’s love. No power in the sky above or in the earth below—indeed, nothing in all creation will ever be able to separate us from the love of God that is revealed in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Make sure you tell someone this week.

Christ’s Communion in Community

August 5, 2017 by Disciple Leave a Comment

All the believers devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching, and to fellowship, and to sharing in meals (including the Lord’s Supper), and to prayer. A deep sense of awe came over them all, and the apostles performed many miraculous signs and wonders. And all the believers met together in one place and shared everything they had; And each day the Lord added to their fellowship those who were being saved. – The Book of Acts

The sound of small feet pat-patting up our drive, often marks the beginning of a Sunday morning gathering. Young children, parents, singles, multi-nationals, grandparents – there is a wide spread that comes together on a Sunday morning.

Last week, we congregated in the kitchen, standing or sitting while catching up one with another. Stories were shared. On the kitchen table a loaf and a glass of wine; we take the command to share communion seriously, but it is done perhaps, a little differently. Several of us might read a passage that we have been reading during the week, or share what the Lord is doing in our lives or the lives of others. In this instance, one or two of our group needed some real prayer, and so we laid hands on them, praying as we went. Throughout all this, the loaf was broken and distributed, and a single cup was shared.

The Communion of Christ in Community.

In amongst all this, the children wandered in and out to check up on the grown-ups, scavenge for food, or just see what we’re up to. There was no “shhhshing” and they could stay and listen or wander back to their toys.

An old Chorus book was pulled out, and led by the Spirit we sang a chorus (or two) that seemed meaningful to what we were talking about or praying about at the time. As we sit around our table, we serve coffee and various food that each had brought along, all the while talking and sharing. Each week there is a period of accountability, who did we share with this week, who did we meet where we had an opportunity to share the Gospel with? Those who are meeting with others throughout the week, shared of how things were progressing, and the conversations that were coming up with new or non-believers. We pray in turn for those we are ministering to outside.

Next is a Discovery Bible Study; we’re currently in the Gospel of Luke and each week we read a small passage. Everyone is encouraged to discuss and share their thoughts with those who normally say too much (I’m one of those) careful to say less, and others who are less comfortable in public encouraged to speak up. The Lord through his Spirit may share something valuable to the quietest among us, and it is crucial that we listen. The discussion this week was robust, and in spite of some mild disagreements, there were no put downs or arguments about doctrine. The passage raised the issue of healing, always a thorny one, but we see our DBS not only as a teaching time, but also a time to learn obedience. The singular most important question we ask is, “what do I need to obey from this passage?” which in turns moves us away from the need to be right.

Our collective takeout, was that the Holy Spirit wants to heal those we meet, but we must also be more prepared for it than we were; out of it has come a commitment among us to spend more time in prayer and fasting on a regular basis, and a group commitment to spend time prayer-walking in each other’s neighbourhood during the week. Most of us already meet throughout the week with others within our gathering anyway.

Lunch is often then served, again from whatever anyone has brought to share, and then a group of us will go out on the streets in the afternoon to share our faith, or to minister to those we are already sharing with. Many of us are meeting in other smaller groups with non-believers throughout the week as well, seeking to reproduce what we have as a gathering, in other’s lives. So, with the Lord’s grace, new gatherings are born, each with an outward focus and commitment to reach others for Christ, as well as have Communion in community.

And the Lord keeps adding to the number – let me leave you with this from a week or so back.

A new couple turned up, as people sometimes do, to investigate our simple church. It doesn’t take visitors long to work out what is going on, but on this day, the couple had to leave early. They drove into town, where the car broke down, and so they sat by the roadside waiting for assistance. While waiting, they decided to talk to passers-by about Jesus, until eventually a lady came out from a house and offered them a cup of tea. She asked what they were doing there; in the course of conversation, our names came up and it turned out we along with others, had already been praying for her to come to know Christ. The visitors shared with this lady their morning with us, which further intrigued her, and so some of us will meet with her again to discuss the things of Jesus some more. The lady is genuinely interested in exploring more about the person of Jesus Christ.

What we have is precious, a gift from God. Let us encourage others who are looking for the same, persevere. God will add the resource as we start doing the work.

Change the World

July 28, 2017 by Disciple 1 Comment

Then you will be arrested, persecuted, and killed. You will be hated all over the world because you are my followers.

Now learn a lesson from the fig tree. When its branches bud and its leaves begin to sprout, you know that summer is near. In the same way, when you see all these things, you can know his return is very near, right at the door. – Matthew 24

I’ve always been interested in modern Christendom’s approach to changing the world. It doesn’t seem to line up with what to me at least, seems the obvious ‘New Testament‘ way. Further, we seem unable to grapple with the rapid decline of church influence on our society, such that the outside world won’t listen to us or take us seriously anymore. “They” are even curtailing where we can speak and what we can believe. The indignity of it all. Our approach has been an Old Testament one of cudgels and cutlasses.

Neil Cole, one of the pre-eminent Disciple makers around today, said recently that a great part of what he does, involves warning churches about what is surely coming. The question is, will we listen? There it is, in black and white, if they hated me, they will hate you. Can it be any clearer?

Is it any surprise then, when a State government attempts to ban the name of Jesus across every playground in every primary school in the State (what about Allah, Mohammed or Buddha?). Should it surprise us when everything in our society tilts against Christendom, when Christmas is slowly dismantled, when proselytising is banned, when the Bible is removed. Why do we respond with shock? Perhaps a better question is, how should we respond?

I have become indifferent to the endless requests to join marches, gatherings, sign petitions and goodness knows what else, to change politician’s minds about the future of the country. Has it done the cause of Christ any good at all for us to wave placards and raise our voices in the face of those whom we expect to live up to our beliefs (I nearly said standard) while in the same breath, tell them of the love of Christ. What good does it do when we tear down and isolate ourselves from the very ones we should be winning to Christ?

Jesus asks us simply to read the signs, and the signs tell us he is on the way, maybe even quite soon. Have we forgotten his message to us, his believers? Let us recap and listen.

That salvation is found in nothing in this world, but only in him, that we are to put our entire faith in him bringing us through trial, judgement and on into eternity with him. Because of this, because he loved us first, so we are to live an obedient life to him, preferably one that radiates out into the world the pure beauty of his presence. Then, when we live a life that will not bring disgrace to his name, to go out into the world wherever he calls us, and tell others the same, even if ‘out into the world’ means across the street to your neighbour. If we just did that at presumably great cost, you wonder if our world would be very different.

Some while back, the leaders of the China church began the ‘Back to Jerusalem’ project, taking up a vision they felt the Lord gave them to evangelise the entire Silk Route, all the way back to Jerusalem. Every since Paul’s day, the Gospel has moved West and they wondered whether this might usher in the return of the Lord. Millions have signed up, at great cost. Evangelising the ‘Stans’ and Arabia might be one of the most challenging activities ever undertaken by a believer. Of the first 40 groups to go out, 37 were arrested inside a month – but don’t worry, millions more, literally, are queuing to take their place.

All of this tells me that Christ is indeed on the way, that the purposes of God never cease and nothing will hinder them. They will be fulfilled in the fullness of time and no government pettiness will stop it for a moment. Isn’t that great!

The only question is then, what will I do with my brief time? Will I accept that all this is going to come to pass, that as a believer my message will be unpopular, but needs to be heard anyway as it will be heeded by some. Further, will I live in the faith and knowledge that God has given me a simple task to do right where I am.

If I do that, then I can leave the running of the world, the fate of politicians and governments in the hands of one to whom ‘all authority has been given’ and focus on my much simpler task.

One it would seem Jesus was confident would change the world.

 

Intentional Disciple Making

July 21, 2017 by Disciple 2 Comments

For I have a great sense of obligation to people in both the civilised world, and the rest of the world, to the educated and the uneducated alike – Paul, Romans 1

Some of the women in our gathering have met up with, and are bringing to Christ, a woman they met on the street. This lady is past middle aged, but has grabbed the Gospel with both hands and is coming to an understanding of faith. They have all started meeting regularly in a Discovery Group, and I suspect, she is likely a person of peace, a hub in a community. It is wonderful to see. Recently she thanked my wife from the bottom of her heart, for taking the time to share with her on the street, for introducing her to a Gospel that is life changing.

There are more stories I could tell as well. This blog was started primarily to encourage a few believers who were either new to the faith, or wanted to make themselves useful for God, or simply wanted to do something different with their lives, other than turn up to church each week and go through the motions. It was also a journal for us, a reminder as to what the Lord was doing in one corner of his world.

The day I think it becomes, “look at us” is the day we stop writing. We never wanted it to be about anyone other than Jesus; we are invited to join him in his work, not the other way around.

We have been trying to do things differently for more or less a decade. Doing things differently principally means, trying to be a Disciple Maker for Christ, drawing those who don’t yet know into a relationship with Christ, and then encouraging and working with them to do the same to those in their ‘oikos’. A new, genuine, church is born.

There was quite a response to the post a few weeks ago, questioning whether we should all be out on the streets or not. Some – well, maybe most, see this as very threatening, sharing the Gospel with complete strangers. Is that what it’s really about? In some senses, yes it is, I believe.

But, there is a single, simple word that seems to describe the great difference between the work of those in the Scriptures, and the lack of work of the vast majority of believers in our churches today. It is the word ‘intentional’. Whether you choose to go out on the streets, into the shopping mall, or just invite people into your home to run a discovery Bible study, there has to be some intent in what we do for God. From Jesus in the Gospels, through to the Apostles, then Paul and on through the ages, He has asked us to be very intentional in the way we live for him.

This means for each of us, that we should live with an attitude similar to Paul’s above, that I have an obligation to live in a way befitting the God that I serve. Further, that like him, I should be on the lookout continually, for opportunities that the Spirit of Christ will present to me on a moment by moment, day by day basis to introduce Jesus into someone’s life. Taking that a step further, I could even be intentional in moving out into my community, praying, prayer walking, knocking on people’s doors, talking to another in a coffee shop – the list is endless. If I was to spend a lifetime doing that, and saw just a single person come to Christ, it would be a life well lived.

This stands in direct contrast to the many, who see their obligation framed in a single sitting. Is it any wonder that the devotion of so many seems so cold, and that the world has such a low opinion.

Imagine just for a moment, that the church as we know it in the West, was completely taken away. Buildings, pastors, Sunday services – all gone. What would you, what would I have left, how would my service to Jesus look like then?

One of the things we are learning, is the vital importance of the community of Christ in and around us. We could have written as easily as much about that. But, it seems that the local community of Christ frequently dies, unless there is some intent to live obediently in this area of disciple making.

The good news is this though. Around the world today, thousands, most likely tens of thousands of ordinary people, are living out their lives intentionally for Christ. They are stepping out, looking for opportunities, quietly sharing their faith and leading others into faith. They will never make the front page of Charisma magazine.

But they should be an encouragement to each of us, that we too can do something simply for Christ. This week and going forward, like Paul, like others, let us live an intentional life for our Lord. Surely he is worth it, surely it is what he asks us to do.

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