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Frankly Speaking - August 30, 2019

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August 30, 2019

I thirst for the living God. When can I go to meet him? 
 (Ps. 42:2, NCV)


A generation ago, “seekers” was one of the buzzwords of the day. There were “Christians” and church people on the one hand, and there were “seekers” on the other … a better word, many felt than “unchurched” or “lost.” There were some good things to say about this language, but also some downsides. For one thing, a lot of people are not seeking, at least not seeking the God of the Bible. In fact, there are people who are running away, avoiding God (see Romans 3:10-11 and John 1:5,10)! Besides that, the population of those seeking the God of the Bible is diminishing more and more as our culture moves further and further away from a Christian way of seeing things.
 
The biggest factor in my mind, however, is the fact that the people who seek God the most are mature believers. It is not that other Christians are not seeking God, but that the longer you do so and the more you seek him, the more “thirsty” you become … the more you realize that what you are really seeking deep down inside is to be found in God and was there all along. It is a bit of a paradox. On the one hand, knowing God through Christ really does satisfy (John 4:14). On the other hand, it arouses our longing even more and makes us, in a way, even thirstier. We know more than ever what we have been missing, and we seek more because we really know where the Living Water is to be found.
 
On Sunday we finished the series, Catch the Wind, about spiritual “practices” or “disciplines” in our lives. These are practices that open us up to the “wind” of God’s Spirit, wind that brings power and direction into our lives. However, the practices do not have any particular efficacy on their own. People pray and fast, for example, in all kinds of religious traditions. Those practices are not uniquely Christian, although there is a unique Christian way of doing them. It is possible, for example, to attend church or small group or read your Bible or journal faithfully, but not get much benefit from it because you are going about it the wrong way. The disciplines are not magic. They are not a way to “control” the spiritual life. They are simply a means of seeking God. If one really wants to find God, these are time-proven and biblically supported ways of doing that. I hope you will give thought to at least one new practice that you would like to incorporate into your life routine this fall, but more than anything I want you to seek God. Jesus promises that if we do seek, we will find (Matt. 7:7).
__________________
 
One of the ways God becomes more real to us is by seeing Him work in the lives of others who are discovering Him in their lives, and one of the ways to do that is by inviting people to come and experience Christians worshiping on Sunday. Not everyone is open to that, but there are more than we tend to think. Who is in your world that might welcome that sort of invitation? There’s plenty of room this weekend as the 9:30 service at The Point re-launches for the fall season. I am looking forward to the months ahead as yet another time to seek God more than ever, and glad to be doing it together with you.
 
Yours,
Frank

 

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Frankly Speaking - May 17, 2019

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May 17, 2019

“I must proclaim the good news of the kingdom of God to the other towns also, because that is why I was sent.”
Jesus in the Gospel of Luke 4:43 (NIV)


There is a sense of “must-ness” about Jesus without which he cannot be understood. There is always the sense that he is a man on a mission, that he is under orders, that it is only daylight for a while and that there is an urgency about doing what must be done while he can. His great passion in life was to be about his Father’s business, to cooperate with what the Father was doing in the world. If we are to truly be his disciples, that must be our concern as well.
 
We must never lose sight of the essential mission of the church: to make disciples (Matt. 28:19). As we reach out to others – in word and deed - we grow in our discipleship. As we grow in our discipleship, we become more effective and more motivated to reach out to others. 
 
This summer we have at least two major mission initiatives. One is to send a team to work with refugees in Jordan. We have felt led by God to invest ourselves in this extraordinary movement and having people involved onsite is an important part of discerning the situation. Another team (of over 60 people) is going to the Bahamas to work on storm-damaged church buildings.
 
In addition to helping others through these projects, we ourselves benefit. People invariably come back from these ventures with new eyes to see what God is doing in the world. The deepening that God works in them spills over into the lives of others upon their return. On the one hand, they represent our church in the work that they do. On the other hand, they help build us up as well. Discipleship. Outreach. Hand in hand.
 
We are still evaluating whether or not we can send a team in the fall to Japan, one of the largest unreached people groups in the world. If you have any interest in this at all, we would love to hear from you.
 
Your generosity in giving helps make these efforts possible. This Sunday, May 19, we invite everyone to make a special, above-and-beyond-their-regular-giving offering to help support those who are going. It is the way each one of us participates in the trips, even if we do not ourselves go. In that way we are truly “like-minded … one in spirit and purpose” (Phil. 2:2).
 
Yours for the sake of the world,
Frank
 
P.S. – indicate on your check or online that your gift is for the “Short Term Missions Offering”

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