Well, night number two of Big Apple Adventure VBS is in the books. Another great night of meeting students and their families, energetic music, and kids running down the halls with their hair on fire. OK, not really. Our night started off with a taco dinner served by our kitchen staff. They have served the Lord wonderfully in this capacity. Great job. We moved on to the Worship Rally as our kids were introduced to the lesson theme for the night. Students were challenged to connect with love the same way that the woman who anointed Jesus’ feet did. Her devotion was an act of love. Our students were challenged to love Jesus in the same manner. Rotations of crafts, music, and missions reinforced the bible story. One of the many highlights of the night, in my opinion, came from adult VBS. It was a real treat to see adults working on a craft project, and loving it. It was also a great blessing to see some of our adults drop their children off and stay for bible study. A big thanks to our adult VBS leaders. Great job. Our attendance was 127. I am thankful for every student, parent, volunteer, and teacher who helped make tonight a success. I am expecting God to continue blessing our efforts as we continue this week to pour our lives into these children.
Big Apple Adventure : Day #1
Night number one of Big Apple Adventure VBS is in the books. I have only two words: Chaotic Beauty. It is an amazing thing to see how months of planning come together. It is amazing to see teachers and other volunteers serving in areas in which they have a passion for. It is as equally amazing to watch children invade the church campus and make themselves at home. Our first night was a good one. We had an opportunity tonight to meet new families and strengthen existing relationships. Although our number are not final, we had approximately 120 present tonight. I was especially proud of the nearly 50 adults who were involved in Adult VBS.
Students were challenged tonight to Connect with Faith. Our students studied the story, in missions, music, and crafts, of the centurion who reached out to, and trusted Jesus by faith. A big thanks goes out to our two summer student missionaries (Crystal and Mandy) working with Low Country Ministries who led our music tonight. Great job. A big thanks as well to our VBS Director (Nancy Duncan) who helped to pull everything together and keep things on track. Great job. I look forward to tonight and what day number two holds. God is most definitely good and we are expecting Him to do great things this week.
Book Review : Surviving Your Serengeti
I tend to shy away from books that are written and labeled as fables. I took a chance on Stefan Swanepoel’s latest book, “Surviving Your Serengeti; 7 Skills to Master Business and Life”, and am glad that I did. The book’s subtitle reads “A Fable of Self-Discovery”. In this work, Swanepoel takes the reader down a path of self-examination that seeks to cultivate the most innate skills that will enable us to live our lives to the fullest.
Swanepoel grew up in Africa and the Serengeti is part of his life. I believe this is what makes the book successful. He uses the images, pictures, and the spirit of this wildlife habitat as the backdrop of this book. The story unfolds with three couples finding themselves on safari together. One couple in particular engrossed with the life and work of one of the locals. He turns out to be an old college roommate thirty years prior.
This local, Zachariah, shows the how seven of the most familiar and prevalent animals on the Serengeti plain can teach us great lessons. He focuses on the seven skill that these animals use to survive and how, if properly cultivated within us will make a difference in our personal, family, and business lives. The seven animals and skills are: the wildebeest (endurance), the lion (strategy), the crocodile (enterprising), the cheetah (efficiency), the giraffe (grace), the elephant (communication), and the mongoose (risk-taking).
I enjoyed this book. It is an easy read with just over 150 pages and an easy to follow story line. The author’s background, having seen and experiences these animals in the wild, makes the correlation between the animal and human world believable. ‘Surviving Your Serengeti’ causes the reader to examine and determine if adjustments are necessary to utilize our God-given abilities.
Book Review : The God I Never Knew
In his most recent work, “The God I Never Knew; How Real Friendship with the Holy Spirit Can Change Your Life”, Robert Morris sets out to help the reader understand the Holy Spirit. It is the Holy Spirit that he feels has been seen by many as “mysterious, confounding, and even controversial.” When I saw the title and subject of this book, I was immediately interested. I believe the person of the Holy Spirit is vitally important in the life of a believer. An opportunity to know more about His nature would be welcome. The beginning of the book was the best part. Morris starts out by re-stating commonly known attributes of the Holy Spirit and His function: to convict, to comfort, to guide, and to enable. The book went downhill from there.
The section of his book dealing with the three baptisms I found to be convoluted and confusing. A great deal of scripture reference was given in dealing with the three baptisms. He leads the reader to believe that there is a need to receive Holy Spirit sometime after conversion and that you must pray to receive Him. In his attempt to make the work and ministry of the Holy Spirit simple to understand, he buries the reader in examples and analogies that do anything but simplify. Morris spends a great deal of time discussing the Holy Spirit’s role in speaking in tongues, private prayer language, and healing. This section seemed to be a teaching on charismatic gifts rather than a teaching on the Hoy Spirit. I believe this book did not go far enough in answering the more difficult questions related to the ministry of the Holy Spirit. I was very disappointed in this book and cannot recommend it.
Book Review : Be The People
Whether everyone acknowledges it or not, our country was founded upon the morals and principles of the Judeo-Christian faith. This clear conviction is obvious in the attitudes an writings of our founding fathers. Over time however, there has been a foundational shift to the left. In her new book, “Be The People; A Call to Reclaim America’s Faith and Promise”, political science professor and conservative Christian Carol Swain paints a vivid, realistic, and at times frightening portrait of the current moral climate in the United States.
Dr. Swain begins her book by showing the reader what the foundations of this country were (truth, justice, value of life, pursuit of freedom). She then systematically shows how our government and modern culture have been eroding the Christian values of the founding fathers through choices that moved us away from God. Swain tackles many of the hotbed issues in politics today (family values, feminism, racism, abortion, and immigration). In doing so, she shows how a loss of our moral compass has influenced public policy.
“Be The People” is a tough read. The writing style is not tough. Swain has written with an engaging and inspirational style. The tough part is the content. This book is well-researched and the author has brilliantly made her case that America needs a redirection. The material that she has included evokes feelings of sadness and anger (at least it did in me). I like many things about this book. The perspective of the author is real. Swain writes from the perspective of an African-American Christian female growing up in poverty, twice divorced, now a college graduate teaching in one of the country’s most prestigious universities. All of this together gives her credibility. This book is not a “list of complaints”. Rather, it is a truthful and accurate at the steps that have been taken leading us away from our founding. At the end of each chapter, there are actions steps for the reader as to how we can get back to where we once were. Swain also provided, as reference and background to the reader, our founding documents (Ten Commandments, The Bill of Rights, The Declaration of Independence, and the US Constitution (1787). Very educational. “Be The People” is a phenomenal work and is well worth your time.
Book Review : FutureCast
It has been said that they only constant in life is change. Regardless of how much we like, or dislike the present way of life, the future will look nothing like it. In George Barna’s latest book “FutureCast; What Today’s Trends Mean For Tomorrow’s World”, he shows us how current trends in areas such as lifestyle, family, media, religion, faith, and economy will affect our future. Barna, founder of the Barna Research Group, has compiled extensive research on factors and trends in today’s society and organized them in an effective and easy-to-understand manner.
Barna says that there are three kinds of people when it comes to the future: those who will watch what happens, those who will make it happen, and those who will wonder what happened. I appreciated the breakdown of this book. In each chapter, Barna gives the research that reflects today’s trends. At the conclusion of each chapter, there is a section which forecasts what is likely to happen in the future. I was surprised by a lot in this book. I was also discourage by a lot of what I read. Between the facts and figures and the future forecasts in areas such as marriage and institutional religion, it is clear the evangelical community has many challenges ahead. As a pastor, I found the chapters on faith and religion the most insightful and helpful.
It has also been said that those who do not learn from the past are doomed to repeat it. FutureCast helps to make sense of why things are the way they are and how to prepare for the years to come. I recommend this book for all church leaders in order to better prepare for future ministry.
Summer Reading 2011
Just thought I would share what I am reading over the summer.
How Should We Then Live?: The Rise and Decline of Western Thought and Culture
The late Francis Schaeffer was one of the foremost evangelical thinkers of the twentieth century. He wrote and studied the decline of western culture. Schaeffer gives a personal analysis of the key moments throughout history which have formed our present culture, and the thoughts of the men who brought those moments to pass.
God, Marriage, and Family: Rebuilding the Biblical Foundation
Dr. Andreas Kostenberger serves as professor of New Testament at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. This book tackles the latest debates and cultural challenges to God’s plan for marriage and the family and urges a return to the original biblical foundation.
Futurecast: What Today’s Trends Mean for Tomorrow’s World
George Barna serves as president of the Barna Research Group. Barna presents a timely look at the world in which we are creating every day and offers solid data to show the path and direction country is heading.
Be the People: A Call to Reclaim America’s Faith and Promise
Dr. Carol Swain is a college-professor, award-winning author, and regular contributor to FOX and CNN News. Dr. Swain thoughtfully examines the religious significance of the founding of our nation and the deceptions that have infiltrated our daily lives and now threaten traditional families, as well as our government.
Real-Life Discipleship: Building Churches That Make Disciples
Jim Putman is the Senior Pastor of Real Life Ministries in Post Falls, Idaho. Real-Life Discipleship explains what should happen in the life of every Christian and in every small group so that the church becomes an army of believers dedicated to seeing the world saved.
The God I Never Knew: How Real Friendship with the Holy Spirit Can Change Your Life
Robert Morris is the founding pastor of Gateway Church in the Dallas/Ft Worth metroplex. Morris clearly explains that the Holy Spirit’s chief desire is for relationship–to offer us the encouragement and guidance of a trusted friend.
What are you reading?
Memorial Day 2011
Memorials are a familiar concept in our society today. It is human nature to want to mark-off significant events in our lives in such a way as to remember them for a lifetime. We see physical monuments constructed at the sites of tragedy, where there is great losses of life. We also see physical monuments constructed at the sites of triumph, where there is significant human accomplishment. Upon the death of a loved one, family members may leave memorial gifts in order to remember and celebrate the causes and passions their loved one cared so much about. God’s Word reinforces this concept of remembrance. Upon the crossing of the Jordan River, a symbol of entering a new phase of God’s plan for Israel, Joshua made the following statement in Joshua 4:4-7, “Then Joshua called the twelve men whom he had appointed from the children of Israel, one man from every tribe; and Joshua said to them: “Cross over before the ark of the Lord your God into the midst of the Jordan, and each one of you take up a stone on his shoulder, according to the number of the tribes of the children of Israel, 6 that this may be a sign among you when your children ask in time to come, saying, ‘What do these stones mean to you?’ Then you shall answer them that the waters of the Jordan were cut off before the ark of the covenant of the Lord; when it crossed over the Jordan, the waters of the Jordan were cut off. And these stones shall be for a memorial to the children of Israel forever.”
Memorial Day is a day of remembrance. It is a day set aside to remember our service men and women down through the centuries who have given their lives in the pursuit of the freedoms that we as Americans enjoy today. Today should be a day when we stop and reflect on the sacrifices of those who held our values and principles high enough to lay down their lives for. The sacrifices of our military are great. They are selfless and humble. Their lives remind us of the sacrifice that Jesus Christ made for us. He willingly gave His life for those who may never appreciate or embrace it. John 15:13 tell us, “Greater love has no one than this, than to lay down one’s life for his friends.”. Take time today to remember and reflect on those whose lives were given for our freedom and for the Life that was given for our redemption.
Book Review : Radical Together; Unleashing The People of God For The Purpose of God
David Platt, who pastors the Church at Brook Hills in Birmingham, Alabama is fast becoming the voice of the modern evangelical community. He is articulate, passionate, and deeply committed to the gospel of Jesus Christ and His church. In his first book, Radical: Taking Back Your Faith From the America Dream, Platt shared with readers how the so called American dream was incompatible with the radical claims of the gospel. In his follow up book, Radical Together: Unleashing the People of God for the Purpose of God, he shifts the emphasis from a personal embrace of the gospel to a corporate one. He writes “In my first book, Radical, I explored how the biblical gospel affects individual Christian lives. Simply put, in a world of urgent spiritual and physical need, gospel-believing, God-exalting men and women do not have time to waste their lives pursuing a Christian spin on the American dream…In Radical Together, I want to consider what happens – or can happen – when we apply revolutionary claims and commands of Christ to our communities of faith.”
This book is about the church. This book is about the church pursuing its mission that Jesus left for it to pursue. Platt calls for the church to awake and diligently go after Christ and His mission. His point is clear: get back to the teaching of the scripture.
Radical Together breaks down into six sections.
1.Tyranny of the Good: the worst enemy of Christians is good things in the church
2.The Gospel Misunderstood: the gospel that saves us from work save us to work
3.God is saying something: the Word does the work
4.The Genius of Wrong: building the right church depends on using all the wrong people
5.Our Unmistakable Task: we are living and longing for the end of the world
6.The God who exalts God: we are selfless followers of a self-centered God
This book is short (about 120 pages) and is an easy read. However, that does not mean it is not shallow or void of meaningful content. Just the opposite. It is engaging, thought-provoking, and challenging. Platt uses scripture taken in proper context as well as real-life example to prove his point of gospel transformation. I particularly like that the study guide that is found in the back of the book. I believe this is an asset since this is a book written to the church. Great book.
Worth Repeating
“You ask me what I shall do if I am called by the emperor. I will go even if I am too sick to stand on my feet. I f Caesar calls me, God calls me. If violence is used, as it may well be, I commend my cause to God. He lives and reigns who saved the three youths from the fiery furnace of the king of Babylon, and if He will not save me, my head is worth nothing compared with Christ. This is no time to think of personal safety. I must take care that the gospel is not brought into contempt by our fear o confess and seal our teaching with blood.”
Martin Luther, December 1520

