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With God…On a Mission

February 8, 2012 1 comment

In January we titled a few of our messages, “With God…on a Mission.” It was an attempt to link our teaching on the “mission of God” with the traditional Advent theme of “Emmanuel…God with us.

Now that God is with us…so what and what now?  Mission.

It seems for many Christians today there are two major thoughts missing in our thinking. I am convinced that if we could re-shape our imaginations around these two truths…it could change the world.

(1) We must understand Jesus’ invitation and our role in the ongoing work of God in this world. Jesus started something..and asks us to join him in completing it. This work is more than proclamation, it is looking at the whole model of Jesus’ ministry and seeing our mission as the same (demonstration).

“The crucial form in which the Great Commission has been handed down to us (though it is the most neglected because it is the most costly) is the Johannine. Jesus had anticipated it in his prayer in the upper room which he said to the Father: “As thou didst send me into the world, so I have sent them into the world” (John 17:18).

Now, probably in the same upper room but after his death and resurrection, he turned his prayer-statement into a commission and said: “As the Father has sent me, even so I send you” (John 20:21).

In both of these statements Jesus did more than draw a vague parallel between his mission and ours. Deliberately and precisely he made his mission the model of ours, saying “as the Father sent me, so I send you.” Therefore our understanding of the church’s mission must be deduced from our understanding of the Son’s.” – John R.W. Stott in Christian Mission in the Modern World

(2) We must begin to see our vocation as our missional service. It is an unfortunate reality that often Christians (and even non-Christians) segregate their lives into “sacred” and “secular.” But dividing our lives in this way presents a major issue – we begin to see mission as the role of the church (institution) and Sunday’s as the spiritual part of our week. But the reality is what we do Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday is just as important to the mission of God as what we do on Sunday.

Jesus worked. We often forget that the whole life of Jesus is important for us to model…and he spent the majority of his years as a carpenter. His work was building and improving the life of those around him. He worked to better the lives in a small community called Nazareth.

How does your vocation partner with the mission of God?

Categories: Uncategorized

Kingdom Tension

February 7, 2012 2 comments

I wrote this several months ago…but thought in light of our recent studies in the book of Mark it would be good to share it again.

 

The Kingdom of God. For many it is confusing. Their confusion is understandable. Because when we speak of the Kingdom of God we are talking out of both sides of our mouth…we speak of the already present kingdom and the yet to come kingdom. Which is it? It is both. The already but not yet kingdom.

John Wesley dealt with the same tension with his theology of “imperfect perfection.” By the grace of God we have been made perfect, yet we are still being made perfect. That is to say, although we are in Christ, we have not yet fully attained the perfect and final mark of Christ-likeness.

“I realize that many people scorn such a doctrine of “imperfect perfection.” But to deny the possibility of being filled with the Spirit and knowing God’s perfect love, because we are still finite creatures subject to the limitations of an earthly existence, is to miss something which is vital to New Testament Christianity. We therefore subscribe to “the Wesleyan paradox” of Christian perfection. The full truth is not gained by removing the tension between the two poles (“perfect – not yet perfected”) but by holding these two truths with equal emphasis. Only thus does the Christian life flower into Christlikeness.” – William Greathouse. Nazarene Theology in Perspective. Pg. 23-24.

So how do we live in the tension? How do we confidently walk as perfected but knowingly admit we are still deeply flawed? How do we boldly proclaim the reign of Christ but still cringe at present evil in the world? How do we live in these days?

We must live in the tension. See it as a good thing. We must recognize the stretching and the forming of the tension. We must look for the glimpses and listen for the stories of mercy, justice, hospitality, healing, hope and love. We must seek to freely forgive and be forgiven. But we must do more than witness, we must seek to proclaim and become living illustrations of what the kingdom will look like when Jesus returns. And we must pray…earnestly pray for our King to return!

“The kingdom of God is the rule or reign of God. Whatever or whoever is subject to his authority is under the authority of the kingdom. We do not “build” the kingdom of God. Rather, God invites us to enter (Matt. 18:3); receive (Mark 10:15), or inherit (Mat. 25:34) the kingdom. When we enter the kingdom, we also participate with what God is doing in the world (Matt. 10:7-8). The mission of the kingdom is always God’s mission. Our calling in the church is to bear witness to what God is doing in the world, primarily by proclaiming and exhibiting the character of the kingdom in the grace-filled stories of redemption in our lives, in the nature of our relationships together, and in the way we engage the world around us.

Our confident hope as Christians is that Jesus is coming back to earth to establish his kingdom fully and forever. When he returns, the dead in Christ will be resurrected. Faithful saints from every language and every tribe will welcome his return and will be gathered together as one people, reconciled to God and one another, kneeling before him in worship, wonder, and praise. In that day, there will be no sorrow, no sickness, no suffering, no death. As God created the universe in the beginning, the new creation will reflect its original pristine beauty and purity. We will forever be with the Lord.” – Ron Benefiel in Missio Dei: a Wesleyan Understanding. pg. 107.

Categories: Uncategorized

January 26, 2012

January 26, 2012 1 comment

Reblogged from NBConversation:

Do you see Jesus in others? And not just when you see someone do good works or when someone is kind and compassionate. Do you see Jesus in the broken, the sinful, the despised, the angry, and the hated people of the world?

As Christians, we are to view every encounter with another human being as an encounter with the image of God.

Read more… 250 more words

Categories: Uncategorized

Letter to NBChurch

December 29, 2011 Leave a comment

Dear New Beginnings Church,

The yearly “family newsletter” is a fun tradition in many households. Often included with a family photo, the newsletter chronicles the happenings within a family over the past year, and is sent out so others too may know the stories. The details told might include sadness from the death of a love one, joy from a new birth in the family, laughter from a vacation memory, or even, anticipation of plans for the future.

This year, the family letter for New Beginnings Church would require multiple pages filled with stories of both brokenness and beauty, sadness and joy, division and unity. However, our family newsletter is still being written; the Author has yet to reveal the final pages. Therefore, we are asked not to revel in our brokenness, but to live as a community devoted to living out Christ-likeness. In a way, we are each a newsletter being sent out to tell the world of a faithful God who provides new beginnings.

As we look forward to another year, let us remember to carefully watch and listen, seeking to discern together what God is authoring within our church community. And as you pray, join us in praying for what we believe God has in mind in this next chapter of ministry:

  • Strengthened unity. We are praying for clear understanding of the unity Jesus desires for his followers.
  • A multiplication of our NBCommunities. May God call and help us equip leaders who passionately pursue planting of missional communities throughout our geographical area. This “scattered” element of our discipleship strategy holds great potential in our hope of being a Christ-like church.
  • Continued and renewed partnership with New Generation Christian Church. May God help us find more ways to partner in this Kingdom-minded ministry for the sake of the Lee’s Summit community.
  • Maximized resources. We are praying for God to lead us in ways of expanded building usage for ministry.

As we move into January, here are a few immediate opportunities to look forward to:

  • Starting January 8th we will reconvene our Conversation Hour classes.
  • January 29th we will have a combined service with New Generation Christian Center. This will be an opportunity to affirm our covenant partnership and create opportunities for fellowship.
  • This year we will provide a daily devotion at www.nbconversation.com. This site will offer daily prayers, readings, and additional resources to help equip and prepare us for our Sunday gatherings.

So, as we celebrate the New Year, let us remember the faithfulness of God who loves us, corrects us, forms us, and sends us. And may Jesus’ words to his disciples in John 17:20-21 serve as our benediction from the year past and an invocation for the next:

“My prayer is not for them alone. I pray also for those who will believe in me through their message, that all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us sothat the world may believe that you have sent me.” – John 17:20-21

Let’s start the year off worshiping together! See you Sunday, January 1st, 2012.

Pastors Shane, Margaret, and Justin

Categories: Uncategorized

Jesus’s = The Possessive Noun.

December 9, 2011 2 comments

Recently I asked this simple question on Facebook, “What is the official rule on the possessive noun form for Jesus? Jesus’ or Jesus’s?”

As predicted, some insisted it is Jesus’ and others suggest the rules allow for Jesus’s. Although there may be a confusing history within the manuals of style, the reality of life is simple…we must be prepared to admit there are things in life that belong to Jesus.

Sometimes churches like to refer to their mission or vision statements. Usually it is some variation of words printed on a letterhead, designed into the header on the website, or printed in the weekly flyer. But biblically, “vision” for the church is seeing the future through the lens of Kingdom mindedness…and “mission” is participating in what/how/where God is at work in His world…it is always about this and not the mission/vision of a local organized church. Jesus’s vision and mission for the Church is paramount…Jesus’s as in the possessive noun form – the Church is his and for his purposes (and yes, I chose this time to use the allowed version of Jesus’s to make sure the emphasis is heard).

I am also wondering these days if perhaps even strategy for the Church is given to us by Jesus. Perhaps Jesus’ approach to discipleship is what is missing among many of our churches today.

I am reminded of a quote from Billy Graham. Although known for the great crowds that rallied around his preaching; Graham insisted he wished it were different, ”I think one of the first things I would do would be to get a small group of eight or ten or twelve men around me that would meet a few hours a week and pay the price. It would cost them something in time and effort. I would share with them everything I have, over a period of years. Then I would actually have twelve ministers among the laymen who in turn could take eight or ten or twelve more and teach them. I know one or two churches that are doing that, and it is revolutionizing the church. Christ, I think, set the pattern. He spent most of his time with twelve men. He didn’t spend it with a great crowd. In fact, every time he had a great crowd it seems to me that there weren’t too many results. The great results, it seems to me, came in his personal interview and in the time he spent with the twelve.” (Christianity Today, vol.3, no.1, p.5, Oct.13, 1958.)

Today I have spent time praying and pondering over what God has in store for us at New Beginnings Church in the year of 2012. I am dreaming of 20 groups of 12 (get it…2012…cute huh?) that would take serious the vision of being Kingdom people and seek to live out Jesus’ mission. What if this next year we became passionate about being Jesus’ hands and feet in Jesus’ world? What if we intentionally focused on Jesus’ instructions to “teach…and baptize them”?  What would happen? What could happen?

 

Categories: Uncategorized
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