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‘Missions’ Category

  1. Dominican Republic Trip- Day 7

    July 27, 2011 by admin

    Today was my first of two travel days to visit my Compassion International sponsored child.  The day began with breakfast with Brad and another American pastor here in the Dominican Republic.  It was neat to hear how the English speaking church has become both a haven for missionaries serving here and an outreach to English speaking Dominicans and Haitians in the community.  It is great to hear of church strategies that bring different ethnic groups together.  The American church has much to learn about ethnic diversity in worship.

    This morning, I spent some time finalizing details for the pastors’ conference, which starts on Friday.  I am praying that this will be an exciting and encouraging time for the pastors.  I have finalized session topics for the conference.  One Friday night, I will have two practical sessions covering: The Ministry of Presence (John 11Open Link in New Window) and Equipping Others for Ministry (Ephesians 4:11-16Open Link in New Window).  The Saturday sessions will shift to a more theological nature.  The session topics include: Radical Dependence on the Holy Spirit in the Christian Life and Ministry (John 15Open Link in New Window), Biblical Exegesis (Ephesians 2:1-10Open Link in New Window), Gospel Narrative: The Storyline of Scripture (Genesis 1Open Link in New Window, Genesis 3Open Link in New Window, John 1Open Link in New Window, Romans 1-3Open Link in New Window, Revelation 21Open Link in New Window), and Preaching the Cost of Discipleship (Luke 9:57-62Open Link in New Window, Luke 14:25-33Open Link in New Window).  The conference will end with a time of prayer for spiritual strength and empowerment based on Ephesians 3Open Link in New Window: 14-21.  I am excited and humbled by the opportunity to invest in these pastors.

    The trip to Santo Domingo was a little over 4 hours by bus.  I learned today that the Dominican Republic might be the pothole capital of the world.  I was able to sleep on the bus ride due to some help from David Crowder Band and Shane Everett on my iPod.

    Santo Domingo is an amazing yet sad city.  It is amazing because it is the place where Christopher Columbus first landed in the western hemisphere.  Tonight, I was able to go see his house, the place where he first landed, and the oldest church in the western hemisphere.  It is a sad place due to the exploitation that happens here through the prostitution industry.

    Prostitution is considered a legal occupation in the Dominican Republic.  It is sad to walk down the street and see teenage girls walking with old men.  While on the street visiting historical sites, I was asked multiple times by people if I wanted their services.  It is heartbreaking to see these people selling themselves in order to survive.  These girls are in this position because they have no other way to make money and live in this society.

    The story of the Dominican Republic remains the same the more of the country that I am able to experience.  Behind the lights, tourism, and historic monuments, stands a society full of hurting people who need help escaping from the dark place where they find themselves.  This restoration is found first and foremost in the gospel, but it is also found in putting feet to the gospel message through community restoration!


  2. Dominican Republic Trip- Day 6

    July 26, 2011 by admin

    Today was a day of planning and exploration.  It began by going to see the Jesus statue that stands on the mountain over the city.  It is made by the same sculptor as the statue in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, but it is smaller in size.  The statue of Jesus with His arms spread open wide over the city stands as a strong example of what God wants to do here in Puerto Plata.  God wants people to embrace the gospel, which was clearly given when Christ’s hands were spread out on the cross.  Jesus stands over a city with much need and hurt and offers freedom from sin and a welcoming into a relationship with Him that is greater than whatever circumstances we may find ourselves.

    I spent some time this afternoon working on the pastors’ conference.  Brad and I worked on a flyer for the conference and went to find a place for the conference to be held.  We are inviting a select number of pastors to stay in a hotel for a retreat this Friday through Sunday.  This will be a time of prayer and study of God’s Word.  I am serving as a discussion facilitator for the conference.  Brad is allowing me to be the primary person in shaping the direction and vision for this conference.  I will be staying in the hotel with a translator leading the conference.  I am still seeking the Lord for further confirmation about what He would desire me to teach in order to best minister to these pastors.

    I have struggled with the idea of leading this conference because I know that I have nothing of my own to offer to these pastors.  I am praying that the Holy Spirit would fill me and empower me in these days.  I believe that the Lord wants to use this conference as a life-changing experience for these pastors during these days.  I want the Holy Spirit’s words through me to fill our time together because only He can truly minister to the hearts of these pastors.


  3. Dominican Republic Trip- Day 5

    July 25, 2011 by admin

    Today was a day of further exploration of the Jenkins’ ministry here in the Dominican Republic.  I began the day by visiting the sites where the water was brought to the village and the village where the homes for the Haitian refugees were built.  It was great to be able to see the smiles on the faces of the people in these villages!

    The missions’ strategy of the Jenkins in the Dominican Republic is community development and restoration.  This strategy is employed by helping people and their communities not by merely giving handouts but through empowering them to grow through partnership in projects.  The communities, in which they minister, are those communities who are willing to invest in what has been given to them.  The goal is that the people would take an active interest in their own community through the projects that are being done.

    This afternoon, I had the opportunity to visit one of the rougher areas of town.  This is called “Aguas Negras,” which means black water.  This is an area of town right on the shore of the ocean where drugs and prostitution are common.  The name comes from the fact that the water running into the ocean is black due to sewage.  This was an area where the Jenkins worked earlier in their ministry.  This was a place where there was obvious love from the people who were living in a place that no one would desire to live.

    The longer that I am in the Dominican Republic, the more God is teaching me that joy is found not in money, fame, possessions, and popularity, but it is found in Him alone.  God moves through broken people in broken places to put them back together to display His glory!  I am blessed and encouraged today that God would choose to work through a broken person like me.


  4. Dominican Republic Trip- Day 4

    July 24, 2011 by admin

    Today was a restful day of recuperation after what had been a busy week for the team.  It was a blessing to be able to spend the day with Brad and his family in addition to their ministry team in the Dominican Republic!  God is truly using the Jenkins’ family in amazing ways here for His glory!


  5. Dominican Republic Trip: Day 3

    July 23, 2011 by admin

    Today was a day of rest for the teams.  It was great to be able to spend some time with Brad and his family.  I feel like the Dominican Republic is becoming less foreign and unknown to me the longer that I am here.

    The people are so friendly and welcoming, which makes it easy to feel like home.  I am still struggling with the language difference.  Not speaking Spanish makes me feel like I am out of the loop in conversations.  This evening at my hotel, I turned on the TV to an American station just to be able to hear people speak a language that I could understand.  It did not matter what they were discussing.  All that mattered was that there were words that I understood coming from their mouths.

    The day ended with a service with the youth group from St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Birmingham.  This was a time of thanks and a foot-washing service.  It was very impacting for me to sit and watch this service.  A service like this is one of the moments that I remember most clearly about Brad’s youth ministry in the States.  As I sat and watched students respond to this clear picture of humility and service, I was encouraged to seek the Lord for a way that I can model this form of servant leadership for my students at home.


  6. Dominican Republic Trip: Day 2

    July 22, 2011 by admin

    Today was the last day of ministry for the two teams that have been here this week.  I had the opportunity to spend some time with both teams helping them with their current ministry projects.

    I began the day at a VBS program that St. Luke’s Episcopal Church from Birmingham was leading.  This was in a community called “The Valley of the Pigs.”  These are people who live directly downstream from a garbage dump and live off of the garbage dump.  There is a pig farm that forms the other side of their village opposite of the garbage dump.  This was one of the worst places that I have ever seen.  The smell was horrible and the living conditions of the people were staggering.  The entire time I was there, I could not get the image of gehenna out of my head.  I need to do more research on this Greek word and topic, but I have heard preachers comment that one of the words that Jesus uses for hell in the Greek New Testament is gehenna.  It is said to refer to a garbage dump outside of the city where bodies are burned and there is a terrible odor.  The image of hell, as pictured in this description filled my mind, as I spent the morning at VBS.

    I also had the opportunity to help distribute debugging pills to the children at VBS and throughout the community.  These are pills that Brad distributes on a bi-monthly basis that work to kill internal parasites.  There is a doctor from UAB here with the Birmingham team, and I had an opportunity to discuss these pills with him.  He said that all most every person that he has seen over the week that he has been doing medical clinics has had stomach issues and pain.  He said that these pills offer the people temporary relief from their symptoms.

    We were also distributing water purification devices to people who had attended the seminar.  These are 10 gallon buckets that have a clay pot placed inside them.  Within the clay pot are layers of charcoal and silver, which serve as a filtering device for the water.  These water filters are said to filter 95% of the bacteria and harmful substances from the water.  At the seminars, people are taught the science of water being a source of disease and are presented with the truth that Jesus Christ came to provide living water.  This is a material that I am going to get to help further shape and develop while I am on this trip.

    In the afternoon, I went to the Mustard Seed House for disabled orphans.  This was a very sad place.  There was one child there who was 2.5 years old, but he weighed only 12 pounds.  He had been neglected and malnourished prior to coming to the orphanage.  It is truly heartbreaking to hear the stories of these children.  It was amazing to me that almost all of these children had smiles on their faces despite their disability and the difficult place were they were in life.

    In the evening, we went to the community where the houses were being constructed to have a dedication service.  This was a great service.  It began by taking some time for all of the people who had worked on the project to write Bible verses and prayers on the walls of the house.  This was a great picture of grounding the building of the house in the Word.  Then the pastor of the Reformed church in the community preached.  He thanked all involved in the project and began to proclaim the gospel to the community.  He said that with the Word of God being the formation and grounding of these homes that Satan would not be able to have a foothold.

    During the dedication ceremony, the church sang some hymns in Spanish.  The more that I travel and see the church around the world; the more that I feel like the typical American definition of church misses the point.  In America, a building, numbers of people, and a denominational affiliation define a church.  In this context, similar to the underground church that I was able to be a part of in China, church was the people of God gathered to remember the Word of God and to proclaim the greatness of God.   The American church must begin to be defined biblically and not culturally.

    I ended the day at dinner with Brad and his family at Burger King.  It was nice to have a taste of the United States to end the day.  I am praying that God would continue to place me in a spirit of listening to Him so that He can show me more and more of what He is doing for His glory in the Dominican Republic!


  7. Dominican Republic Trip: Day 1

    July 21, 2011 by admin

    Today has been a crazy day.  As soon as I got off of the airplane, I was immediately doing ministry.  Brad has two different teams from the United States serving with him until this weekend.  Today was a day where Brad spent most of our time showing me the projects that God has given them and checking in on these teams.  I am coming in what has been a hectic week, but in the midst of the chaos, God is clearly at work.

    God opened doors for me to have gospel conversations with two guys on the plane on the way to the Dominican Republic.  It is always encouraging to see who God places in my path for His glory.

    The work of God that I saw today in the Dominican Republic consisted of exploring projects and helping these teams.  One team has been building some houses for Haitian refugees, who lost all of their possessions in a recent fire.  There will be a dedication service this weekend to present these families with these homes.  The other team is working on building a fresh waterspout to send clean water into a village where people were having to walk 700 meters for water.

    I am struck by the poverty and depth of need in the Dominican Republic.  These new houses that the team is building are single rooms that are about ten feet by ten feet.  These homes will hold anywhere from 2 to 8 people.  I was also amazed from discussing needs with Brad to discover that prostitution is legal here.  There are twelve-year-old girls who work in the prostitution industry and sell themselves for $3.  This breaks my heart!

    All of this need and poverty is going on while thousands of western tourists come to this island in order to go on vacation.  These tourists do not take the time or have the interest to see the true side and need in the eyes and lives of the people.


  8. Book Review: Radical Together: Unleashing the People of God for the Purpose of God- David Platt

    March 15, 2011 by admin

     

    In Radical Together: Unleashing the People of God for the Purpose of God, Dr. David Platt challenges the church to seriously examine the mission of God and how effectively each local church is carrying out this mission.  Just like Platt’s first book, Radical: Taking Your Faith Back from the American Dream, Radical Together presents a biblically grounded challenge that the church must address.

    The core question raised by the book is: “How can we in the church best unleash the people of God in the Spirit of God with the Word of God for the glory of God in the world?” (ix).  Platt further expands this question with a very convicting statement: “I am convinced that in the church we can – unknowingly and unintentionally – actually prevent God’s people from accomplishing God’s purpose.  If we are not careful, our activities in the church can hinder the advancement of Christ’s kingdom” (ix).

    In addressing this core question, Platt claims that Radical Together will “build upon biblical foundations in order to consider practical implications for how a right understanding of the church fuels radical obedience among Christians” (x).

    Platt begins with the claim that “the worse enemy of Christians is good things in the church” (1).  Platt warns readers that “As Christians today, you and I can easily deceive ourselves into thinking that dedication to church programs automatically equals devotion to kingdom purposes.  We can fill our lives and our churches with good things requiring our resources, and good activities demanding our attention, that are not ultimately best for the enjoyment of the gospel in our churches and the spread of the gospel in our communities” (3).    The chapter goes on to challenge churches to put everything (staff, programs, procedures, plans, and facilities) on the table to truly see if it is effectively accomplishing the spread of the gospel to the church and the nations.  As Platt warns, we are prone to “exalt our work over God’s will, our dreams over God’s desires, and our plans over God’s priorities” (9).

    Next, Platt addresses the challenge of “the misunderstood gospel,” which is “the gospel that saves us from work saves us to work” (21).  Platt explains this idea by saying, “true faith in Christ inevitably produces great work for Christ – not works fueled by the flesh in an attempt to earn your way to God, but works fueled by faith in a life that is abandoned to God” (27).  This is a picture of the gospel that does not merely save a person from his or her sin, but a gospel that sets them free to live for the fame and glory of the One from whom they have received such great grace!  Platt argues that many Christians today have not heard this gospel clearly presented.  He states that “when the gospel of God is clear in the church, Christians will work hard by the grace of God with great delight in the glory of God” (36).

    “The Word does the work” (39) is Platt’s third challenge.  He says, “We don’t have to work to come up with a word from God; we simply have to trust the Word he has already given to us.  When we do, the Word of God will accomplish the work of God among the people of God” (40).  This chapter focuses on the work of God through the Word of God in the Church at Brook Hills.  Platt approaches this topic with humility pointing all the glory to God who works through him.  Brook Hills is not pictured as a model to be followed in step by step practice but as a picture of allowing the Word of God to lead the people of God.  Platt reminds us that “the Word is sufficient to hold the attention of God’s people and satisfying enough to capture their affection” (57).

    “Building the right church depends on using all the wrong people” (58) is the fourth challenge that Platt seeks to address.  The core of this idea is that “the goal of the church is never for one person to be equipped and empowered to lead as many people as possible to Christ.  The goal is always for all of God’s people to be equipped and empowered to lead as many people as possible to Christ” (60).  The church has lost the biblical idea of making disciples and replaced it with business models and manufactured ways to do church.  This stands as a challenge to the church to focus on people rather than programs.  Platt says, “Who can fathom the potential of the church when we stop just programming ministry for people and we start propelling people into ministry?” (73)  Readers are reminded that “the plan of God is certainly not confined to large churches or gifted leaders.  The plan of God is for every single person counted among the people of God” (83).

    The fifth challenge is “our unmistakable task,” which is “we are living – and longing – for the end of the world” (84).  Platt states that “if we were willing to take some risks, if we were willing to alter our lifestyles, and if we were willing to organize our churches around taking the gospel to people who have never heard the name of Christ, we could see every people group on the planet reached with the gospel.  And in the process, we could be a part of the end of the world” (88).  This challenge focuses on defining the unreached and the biblical call to engage all nations with the gospel.  Platt uses the example of the Brook Hills Baruti to talk about how local and global missions are not in conflict in a local church but serve as two sides of the same coin.  He also addresses the importance of short term mission trips in exciting in Christians a heart for the nations.  Christians have been given the great mercy of God in the gospel and are commanded to share it to people all over the world.  When this mission is accomplished, Jesus will return and the end will come.

    The final challenge is that “we are selfless followers of a self-centered God” (110).  Platt explains this concept by saying, “we are selfless in that we have died to ourselves.  We have lost the right to determine the direction of our lives.  Our God is our Lord, our Master, and our King.  He holds our times in his hands, and he is free to spend our lives however he pleases.  And he is self-centered.  In his Word, God declares his own glory, and in the world, God displays his own glory.  God exalts God…Everything God does, even the salvation of his people, ultimately centers around God, for he is worthy of all praise from all peoples” (114).  Platt argues that the church should be seeker sensitive with God as the divine seeker.  Our lives and churches should exist to exalt God through spreading His gospel and engaging in His mission no matter what comforts we may have to forfeit in the process.  The mission of God can only be accomplished through a radical dependence on God through prayer as He works in and through His church to bring the nations to a saving knowledge of Himself.

    Radical Together is another pointed challenge from scripture to the American church.  Platt once again presents biblical truths in a clear and challenging way to awaken hearts of Christians to the mission and purpose of God.  Platt reminds us that “God does not involve us in his grand, global purpose because he needs us.  He involves us in his grand, global purpose because he loves us” (135).  It is from a heart of humility, a love for God’s glory in the nations, and a passion for the gospel that David Platt presents another book that should be read by every church leader and believer.  God’s fame in the nations through the spread of the gospel is worth living radically!


  9. Light in the Darkness

    May 14, 2010 by admin

    About this time last May, I was on a plane headed to East Asia to serve the Lord doing mission work.  One of the towns that we were in was a large city that had little knowledge of the gospel.  One day, we went to a model display of the city to pray that God would open doors in that city so that people could be drawn to Christ.  This week, I was looking through my journal from the trip and came across one of the reflections that I had while praying over the city:

    “Satan blinds [city name] with darkness that blocks out the Light while Satan blinds the United States with religion that is used as a weaker substitute for the Light because the Light is too strong and radical to fit within the American dream.”

    May the Light of the gospel shine in both the darkness of East Asia and in the darkness of America’s cultural religion.


  10. The Double Obligation of the Gospel

    June 22, 2009 by admin

    Having recently returned from a mission trip to East Asia, I was really struck by the following devotional that I read last night from Dr. Calvin Miller’s Conversations with Jesus.  I hope that this will be encouraging to you as you seek to share your faith with others both on mission trips and in day to day life.  This is written as a response from Jesus to explain the words of Matthew 10Open Link in New Window: 14-15, which says: “And whoever does not receive you, nor heed your words, as you go out of that house or that city, shake off the dust from your feet.  Truly I say to you, it will be more tolerable for the land of Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of judgment, than for that city. ”

    Never forget the bottom line as you minister: You are not accountable for your success or failure in any human arena.  Nothing I have called you to do in my name in this world will be dissmissed as trivial in that world to which you are headed.  If you are rejected in your attempt to preach the truth, the truth that caused your rejection will not be judged by those who turn a deaf ear to your counsel.  Those who reject your words must themselves face the last tribunal.

    So never despair over rejection.  I knew rejection firsthand.  I never despaired.  The greatest truths are regularly rejected.  You do not need to win any battle in the same moment you take up arms.  As I told my disciples as they began their preaching tour, if you are cast out of any city, do not try to barge back and compel anyone to listen. Just shake the dust off of your feet.  Why?  Because those who hear the truth need to remember that the truth of the gospel is not an option left up to human caprice.  The shaking of the dust from your feet will remind those who listen of their obligation to hear.

    The gospel has always carried this double obligation.  It obligates the disciple to tell the message and the seeker to listen.  Pity the complacent witness who will not tell the saving story.  Pity the complacent seeker who will not hear of it.

    But in this double obligation, important as it is, you must never merely count your converts to measure your success.  Truth is its own reward.  Once you have told the truth, you have succeeded.  Telling the saving truth is your responsibility.  Doing the saving is mine. Counting converts in unnecessary.  It is an unworthy bottom line on earth and unessential in heaven.  So do not grow neurotic trying to become a savior yourself.  That is my title; I will do that work.  That should take quite a load off your mind.  You are only responsible for telling the truth.  So tell it.  If thousands are drawn to the faith, you will succeed.  If you die without a single convert and are crucified for telling the truth, you will still have succeeded.