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December 20, 2006
A Christmas Wish from New Orleans
“For a child will be born to us, a son will be given to us; and the
government will rest
on His shoulders; and His name will be called Wonderful, Counselor,
Mighty God, Eternal
Father, Prince of Peace. There will be no end to the increase of
His government or of
peace.” ~Isa. 9:6-7a
What a promise! What a Savior! What a Hope! This year has
been life altering,
challenging, draining, inspiring and sobering in so many ways. I’m
still learning to lean
into the Father … depend on the Holy Spirit … treasure the Son …
and live to the hilt in
every situation I believe to be the will of God. I have seen the
visible display of the
hand of Jesus and observed the church really being the church.
I’ve been thrilled to see
Trinity not only survive but take significant steps to being all we
are called to be.
I’ve met some 6,000 volunteers from 36 states and 6 countries who
are choice servants of
God. I’ve got a kindred spirit with pastors around the country
from Bethel in North
Dakota, to Forcey and Grace in Maryland, to the Bay Area Chinese
Bible Church in
California to Arlington Heights in Illinois, and all of the
hundreds of others that are
too numerous to mention. I am a thankful man.
Donna, Jonathan and I will arrive in Maryland to be with family
and friends on December
24. On December 30 we will have a reunion with many Pennsylvania
teams at Hershey
Evangelical Free Church at 6:00 p.m., and I will be preaching at
their three services on
the 31st. We will travel back to New Orleans on New Years Day.
I am praying God’s best for all of you this Christmas. May
light with no darkness fall
along your path. May love without fear or bitterness be in your
heart. May truth without
falsehood fill your mind. May the presence of the spirit of God
fill you with joy. May
Christ be kept strong in Christmas. May the grace of God
strengthen you all.
Betting the Farm on God,
Michael
December 10, 2006
Praise, Prayer and Provision
Praise:
1. At our Tuesday evening meeting a group reported leading a
person to Christ and another
man was so moved he is praying to see if God wants him to move here
to be part of our
Compassion staff.
2. Yesterday, Donna was working with a person in need.
Practically the woman needed
washing machine detergent to take care of her family’s clothes.
Donna walked passed
Trinity’s welcome center and there were 6 bottle of detergent that
mysteriously appeared.
No one else knew the need. God provided through somebody! Was it
you?
3. Churches have been quite creative in raising the needed
funds. The women’s ministry at
Village Church of Barrington (Illinois) held an auction to benefit
the “free store” at
Trinity Church in Covington. Businesses and individuals in the
community donated items
and joined in the bidding. The church raised almost $20,000, which
the free stored used
to provide necessities at no cost to Katrina victims.
4. Here was a letter that came in from a team member. Scott
Lundeen of Urban Impact
dubbed these incredible servants “chronically cheerful”:
“I have never worked so hard, been so tired, or felt so good about
being tired. I think
the same is true for all 15 of us who traveled to New Orleans to
help rebuild homes for
people struggling to rebuild their lives… Of our group, there were
3 police officers, a
mail-lady, a concrete contractor, a chemist, one who gave dialysis,
an art/advertiser, 2
ministers, and some of us are retired. All gave up their vacation
time. Looking back, the
most memorable part of the trip was being surrounded by chronically
cheerful people.
Despite all the hard work, everyone had fun as they gave their time
and effort to the
Lord’s work.”
5. A church in Chicago just purchased new pews. They wanted to
give their old ones to us.
We didn’t know of a need but told them to send them down. This
had to be a God-thing.
The pews arrived on a really big truck. Someone from Hershey was
in the city near the
17th Street canal and discovered a church that needed them.
6. Jeff, a nine-year-old from Nebraska, sent us a donation of
pennies, nickels, and dimes
he saved up to help New Orleans. Thank you, Jeff.
Provision Requests:
Mark Lewis, our Compassion director, put the following Christmas
gift list together:
Can your church help put Christmas under the tree all year long in
Louisiana? Consider
these giving opportunities to help those who have gone so long with
so little after
Katrina:
• *$10 for a day’s worth of mask, goggles and gloves for one
person doing gutting.
• *$50 for drywall joint compound to repair three rooms of a
flood-damaged house.
• $100 for paint to prime-coat a flood-damaged house.
• $250 for a month’s worth of gas for one pickup truck.
• $500 for new electrical wiring in a flood-damaged house.
• $800 for a month’s worth of paper/plastic products and
disposable supplies for volunteer
teams.
• $1,000 for a month’s worth of supplies for the Free Store
outreach, making daily needs
available to those in Covington who are still getting back on their
feet.
• $12,000 per home-to adopt a flood-damaged house, providing all
the materials needed to
repair it.
• $20,000 for under-supported, long-term staff who are making it
all happen.
• $300,000 for long-term EFCA Crisis Response/Ministry Center
building at Trinity
Church-to be used for storage as well as a staging area for future
disaster responses on
the Gulf Coast.
• $4 million for an urban-ministry center for Urban Impact in New
Orleans.
I could add:
• Money for Mark Lewis to come up to full support.
• Money to pave our parking lot at Trinity for the first time.
• Money to continue our Katrina projects.
Prayer Request
1. We are still looking for a children’s pastor. Our search team
has had four candidates
make it to the level of bringing them to Trinity. We continue to
wait on the Lord’s “yes”
for our ministry. If you know of any contacts for us, please
encourage them to send a
resume to Trinity Church. Pray we do not get weary in the
process. Many church leaders
are telling us this is the hardest position to fill.
2. Pray for work teams. We had almost a full house last week and
will be almost to
capacity again the week after Christmas, but many weeks at the
beginning of next year are
wide open. Pray people will realize that much still needs to be
done. God’s hand is
still at work. Why not plan to travel to Louisiana this spring?
Create a team from your
church, or join with other churches, and contact us to schedule a
trip. You’ll be part of
changing lives and experiencing the church being the church.
3. Tyndale Publishing House is looking at my book today.
Potentially the book would be
picked up with a wider distribution. Pray.
4. Pray we have courage as a church to obey Jesus. It is always
easy to want to be safe,
status quo; sanitized, inward looking and formulaic kinds of Christ
followers who want to
keep the problems of the community at a distance and share holders
happy. Pray for us to
continue to take the higher road.
“Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving
safely in a pretty and
well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, thoroughly
used up, totally worn out,
and loudly proclaiming ‘Wow – what a ride!’” ~Peter Sage
“There are people who prefer to say ‘Yes,’ and there are people who
prefer to say ‘No.’
Those who say ‘Yes’ are rewarded by the adventures they have, and
those who say ‘No’ are
rewarded by the safety they attain.” ~Keith Johnstone
“We are the first generations of man that actually expected to find
happiness here on
earth, and our search for it has caused such unhappiness.” ~Peggy
Noonan
Betting the Farm on God,
Michael Sprague
November 22,
2006
Thanksgiving in New Orleans
I have prayed for about thirty years now that during one season of
my life I would get to
experience an Acts 2 time of revival. One reads in scripture and in
Church history about
these supernatural times, and the only conclusion is that these
seasons cannot be
manufactured but come from the unique move of the Holy Spirit
accomplishing divine
purposes. Daily, it seems I am getting a glimpse of the hand of
God.
I was in awe Sunday throughout our services. The Sunday before
Thanksgiving has become
our traditional all-church sharing service. This year was
electrifying. The testimonies
gave glory to God for His supernatural interventions. The “man from
the woods” shared how
he was living in a tent until he came to Trinity three weeks prior.
Now he is part of a
family of believers. Another man told how he got saved while
camping in the woods. Some
people read scripture. Others recounted God delivering them from
Katrina. One man stood
on his foundation of faith even though his wife tragically died this
past year. A mom
told how her daughter got out of drugs and asked for prayer for a
younger daughter who is
still tempted. We continued to hear these types of stories all
morning long. We prayed,
praised and thanked God. It does not get any better than this.
The hand of Jesus is visible through teams and at Trinity.
1. A team member named Steve from Hershey, PA came to New Orleans
with an interesting
assignment. His 9-year-old granddaughter had packed a gift backpack
with goodies for some
little girl in our community. How would he ever find the right girl
to give this to?
Steve worked all day and at night was very tired. Resting, he sat
next to a visitor to
Trinity. This lady happened to work at a school. Steve asked, “Do
you know of any
9-year-old girl who needs a special touch of a backpack?” She
thought of just the child.
A little 9-year-old girl rode out Katrina with her family. The
water rose and rose and
into the attic they went. They had to cut their way out through the
roof and swim to a
boat. Terrified, this little girl had not been the same since. The
girl was now a member
of our community, and in a new school. She rarely said a word. The
backpack was perfect.
The name of the girl who gave the gift was ... what do you think
... GRACE.
2. God continues to give favor with the community. One team from
Yosemite, CA went into a
store in New Orleans. The store clerk said, “What church are you
with?” “Trinity” was
the answer. The clerk said, “Oh, that is a wonderful church. It is
doing so much.”
Later they were in Wal-Mart on the Northshore and a clerk said, “Are
you with Trinity? We
know that church.” Good rumors abound.
3. The blessings of heaven are coming our way. Many of you know
about our lack of a sign
on Hwy. 190 identifying the church. We have tried for 7 years to
secure a sign, but to no
avail. Repeatedly land owners, mayors, and highway administrators
have rejected our
requests. This month, Coles Rental World moved into a new facility
on Hwy. 190 down the
street from our church, and gave us permission to put up a sign.
That same week the lady
at the end of 10th Street changed her mind and gave permission to
put up a sign. Seven
years – no sign – now maybe two signs? Yea, God.
4. The God of the re-supply is still at work. On Monday an
18-wheeler pulled in and
restocked our free store with goods spilling into the hallways
everywhere. Poor people
line the halls from 1-4 pm daily to receive and then God
re-supplies. Yea, God.
5. Someone made a set of church pews available to us. What would
we do with these? God
knew. We met a group of Christians who needed ... pews. Wow!
6. Last week I got an e-mail from a team member who found the
experience here
“incredible”. She was in “awe” (her words) of what God was doing.
She recounted her
experience and then wrote, “I have a question, however, as a baby
Christian, I had not
heard the expression before of an Acts 2 church until you mentioned
it, and I have read
about it in your book and on your website. What is an ‘Acts 2’
church? Are there any
books that specifically talk to this?” I joyfully referred her to
my favorite passage in
the Bible (Acts 2:42-47) that tells the story of an Acts 2 church.
PTL!
7. To date we have seen 504 teams, 5,925 volunteers, and 230,596
man hours invested in
God’s work here!
Please pray that we would be like the Acts 2 church. Our calling is
not to be a safe,
comfortable, sanitized, inward looking, status quo, formulaic band
of Christ-followers who
strive to keep members happy and keep the problems of the community
at bay. This is not
our dream. It is to see the gates of Hell pushed back by the power
of Jesus. It is to
raise up fully devoted followers of Christ. It includes
risk-taking, faith, unshakable
devotion and a consuming focus on the voice of God. It is to
glorify our Father in
heaven. A friend, Aimee Barrios, sent me this quote from the late
Mike Yaconelli:
"I don’t see much terror today among followers of Christ. I want to
know what
happened to the bone-chilling, earth-shattering, gut-wrenching,
knee-knocking,
heart-stopping, life-altering fear that leaves us speechless,
paralyzed, helpless, and
glad. The terror I am speaking of is a mix of wonder, awe, fear,
and worship, all
happening at the same time. I am beginning to wonder if we modern
followers of Christ are
capable of being terrified of God… We have defanged the tiger of
truth. We have tamed the
lion... The tragedy of modern faith is that we no longer are capable
of being terrified…It
is time for Christianity to become a place of terror again; a place
where God continually
has to tell us, "Fear not"; a place where our relationship with God
is not a
simple belief or doctrine or theology, but the constant awareness of
God’s terrifying
presence in our lives. The tame God of relevance needs to be
replaced by the God whose
very presence shatters our egos into dust, burns our sin into ashes,
and strips us naked
to reveal the real person within. The Church needs to become a
gloriously dangerous place
where nothing is safe in God's presence except us.
Nothing--including our plans, our
agendas, our priorities, our politics, our money, our security, our
comfort, our
possessions, our needs… Our world is... longing to see people whose
God is big and holy
and frightening and gentle and tender... and ours; a God whose love
frightens us into His
strong and powerful arms where He longs to whisper those terrifying
words, "I love
you."
Betting the farm on God,
Michael
November 9,
2006
Extravagant Generosity
“Give and it will be given to you; good measure, pressed down,
shaken together, running
over; they will pour into your lap” (Luke 6:38).
“Instruct them to do good, to be rich in good works, to be generous
and ready to share” (1
Tim. 6:18).
“Sharing then with all, as anyone might have need” (Acts 2:45b).
“For there was not a needy person among them, for all who were
owners of land or houses
would sell them and bring the proceeds of the sales; and lay them at
the apostle’s feet;
and they would be distributed to each, as any had need” (Acts
4:34-35).
I have prayed for almost thirty years now for an Acts 2 experience
in ministry – at least
for a season. I am being blown away by the generosity of spirit
among the people of God
that is unmistakably the heart of God is down-right contagious.
1. People are giving in extravagant ways so ministry can happen,
or so that people’s needs
are met. Today, a person stopped me and said he was impacted by the
cycle of blessing he
heard and observed. He wanted to get in on the cycle, so he took
some of his money and
took a group of God’s people out to lunch. Someone else had some
excess money and wanted
to find out how the Compassion staff could be supported.
2. This week I saw generosity first-hand par excellence while
speaking at Bethel Church in
Fargo, North Dakota. I was washed in love and kindness from a
church that has lavishly
supported us, prayed for us, and sent teams our way. Pastor Doug
Anderson has personally
made a huge investment in my life, and I am forever grateful for his
wisdom,
encouragement, and prayer. I was totally fired up after each
service and found special
delight in seeing 300 college students on fire for the Lord. I
loved talking with two of
the young people who had come to Trinity to work. These two were
assigned to the same
work team during the day. They continued to talk by night – all
night. They are now
engaged! I tell you, this place is changing people’s lives. The
spirit of God is alive!
3. Our teams are made up of choice people who exude a generosity
of spirit. Last week,
one team brought cases of Bibles. A few team members would go out
late at night to
fast-food places or Wal-Mart and ask the late night shift if they
wanted copies. Open
doors abounded!
4. This week we saw the fruit of the efforts of a Wisconsin team.
Months ago, thousands
of plumbing supplies were donated to us. The challenge was to get
the supplies from
Wisconsin to Louisiana. A Wisconsin team accepted the mission.
Through prayer, letters,
calls and persistence they discovered a trucking company that
donated the drivers and the
trucks to deliver these supplies. Everything was delivered
everything this week. Glory
to God!
5. Did you know that Trinity has a mission team in the
southwestern part of North Dakota
this week? Mark Lewis discovered a farming region of this state
that has suffered severe
drought for several years. Their “Katrina” experience has been
long, hard and
devastating. Our Trinity team worked with several North Dakota
churches to bring an
entire town together on Wednesday night for the purpose of prayer
and encouragement. They
took many gifts to extend the love of God to a people who need love
and rain!
6. My book just completed the third printing. Amazing! I had
largely given up on the
book project at least for anytime in the near future. God raised up
Pam Reed to get my
writings published, funded, and promoted. This is God! All of the
proceeds are being
poured back into the work here. Pam is continually designing ways
to get the word out.
God has opened up doors on Moody radio. We even have a potential
door on Dateline NBC.
If you need a book as a Christmas gift, copies can be purchased at
the church office for a
donation of $15.00, or by writing to Trinity Church, P.O. Box 351,
Prospect Heights, IL
60070 (add $5.00 to cover the cost of shipping and handling).
7. Our free-store thrives on generosity. From 1-4 pm each day,
people line up down our
hallway. Bags of groceries go out. How do we get re-supplied? It
happens through a
spirit of generosity in God’s people. Teams often bring groceries
that were collected at
their church back home. Many people who come through the free-store
hear about the
Savior.
8. The truth is: you can’t out give God. Praise the name of
Jesus Christ, our Lord.
Betting the farm on God,
Michael
PS – We still need a children’s pastor. Any ideas out there?
October 30, 2006
Challenges in New Orleans
On Saturday, the first major survey of churches in our region was
released. The numbers
give us the big picture of recovery in the faith community. As of
July, more than half of
the 800 churches in New Orleans and Plaquemines Parish are still
closed, and nearly
two-thirds of the churches in St. Bernard Parish are still closed.
Overall, in the metro
New Orleans area, about 60 percent of the churches have re-opened,
though many are now
located in new, rented locations. Here’s a sampling by
denomination:
Baptist, 652 congregations, 47% not operating
Non-denominational, 102 congregations, 48% not operating
Catholic, 146 congregations, 23% not operating
Methodist, 63 congregations, 29% not operating
Church of God in Christ, 54 congregations, 74% not operating
A.M.E., 13 congregations, 46% not operating
Evangelical Free, 2 congregations, 0% not operating
Franklin Avenue Baptist Church is a good example of a well-known New
Orleans Church.
Their pre-Katrina congregation was 8,000. Their post-Katrina
congregation averages 1,
700. Their building suffered $6-$7 million damage. Flood waters
were 8-10 feet high, and
the roof was damaged. The pastor meets with the remnant of people
still in the area
either at a church in New Orleans, or one in Baton Rouge.
In our St. Tammany Parish, 13% of the churches are closed, including
7 in Covington and 2
in Mandeville.
A couple of months back, the elders of Trinity Church conducted an
evaluation of our
Compassion Ministry. This included prayer, a survey of the
congregation, and dialogue. I
asked the elders to make another one year commitment and then
re-evaluate at that time.
They, however, felt led to make an indefinite commitment to the work
of Compassion. The
visible hand of Jesus is so strong that it is unmistakable. We are
attempting to engage a
greater percentage of our people in the work. We are continuing to
house and deploy about
100 people a day at Trinity Church and position 50 people a day to
be deployed from Castle
Rock. That’s 150 people working a day!
Friends, I believe my greatest learnings from this whole venture may
be yet to come. One
of the things the Spirit is pressing on my heart is to learn what
the urban/suburban
church relationship should be. I have lots to learn; yet, I am
eager. I strongly believe
that if we at Trinity merely clean up our backyards and our
immediate community and forget
the needs of the poor, seniors, and the city, we will end up
damaging ourselves.
The city of New Orleans is paralyzed in many ways. There has been so
much destruction.
This is the hour for the church to be the church. If we honor Jesus
in this, the impact
can be great. If New Orleans can be built on a foundation of Jesus
Christ, with good
rumors about the church floating around everywhere, then it can
happen anywhere! One of
the city planners in New Orleans was flying into Armstrong Airport
and happened to sit
next to a team member. This leader was not a Christ-follower, yet
knew of the efforts of
Trinity Church and exclaimed that no other church had made such a
difference in the city.
It is not the words that I am after, but the realization that lives
that we would never
have touched before are now our friends.
In talking to Mark Lewis of Compassion Ministry, we have concluded
that there is a
definite commitment of teams on the Northshore for at least one more
year, and three years
in the city. Certainly the work of the city will go on for ten
years.
Some people wonder whether it is worth it to rebuild the city. Many
shake their heads in
bewilderment, wondering which kind of government there is in New
Orleans. Some wonder why
everything is not fixed up. Some think it is all fixed up and we
have moved on. Some
don’t care or some new challenge has overtaken this one. I am not
called to fix things,
and certainly don’t have all the answers to complicated questions.
My calling is to be
faithful to the calling of Jesus. People are being changed one
heart at a time. If you
do that long enough, a community can be impacted. My goal is to
keep my hand to the plow.
These are the greatest of days to be alive.
Pray:
1. Friday, I will travel to Bethel Evangelical Free Church in
Fargo, North Dakota and have
a wonderful open door of ministry with my friend, Doug Anderson.
Pray for me as I speak
to pastors, college students, their Katrina ministry team, and to
the congregation.
2. Pray for us at Trinity as we still search for a children’s
pastor. The process is soon
to hit the one-year point.
3. Pray for us as we need wisdom and provision to sustain and
balance the ministry of
Trinity and teams. This is a huge undertaking and we thank God for
the privilege of
service.
4. Pray for us as we try to provide and pay for the
infra-structure of ministry - new
building, new parking lot, new Compassion building, sewage system
needs and renovations.
5. Thanks for all the interest in my book Stories from Katrinaland.
Books are available
at Trinity for a $15 donation, or $20 when ordered from: Trinity
Church, P. O. Box 351,
Prospect Heights, IL 60070.
Betting the Farm on God,
Michael
October 14, 2006
Do You
Need a Miracle?
Last Thursday a fellow Christ-follower stopped by the house and
said, “Michael, I have a
birthday gift for you.” I was presented with a carnation and a
“Happy Birthday.” My
friend continued, “Michael, four years ago you preached on God being
a miracle working
God.” I vaguely remembered that at the end of a Sunday service I
invited the congregation
to come up front to pick up one of the carnations which had been
placed on a set of
tables. The carnation was to be put in a prominent location as a
reminder to pray for a
miracle by a miracle-working God. I had said, “When you get your
miracle, return your
carnation to me.” At this point, I was now very curious.
The story … “Michael, I put the carnation on a mirror and have
prayed daily for four years
because I needed a miracle. My daughter was not walking with the
Lord. I especially
didn’t like her friends. I’ve prayed for four years. My daughter
started walking with
the Lord and wants to join a Bible church. She still has those old
friends, but she is
talking to them about the Lord. I got my miracle and here is your
carnation. I don’t
need it anymore. Happy Birthday!”
More story … “Michael, I have another birthday gift for you.” She
presented a second
carnation to me. “Even though you said to take one carnation, I
took two. I needed two
miracles. My son wasn’t walking with the Lord, either. I prayed
for four years for my
son. He is now growing in the Lord, joined a church, and will be
baptized on Sunday.
Happy Birthday!”
What a great birthday gift. There is nothing better than rejoicing
in a changed life.
It’s true - He is able to do superabundantly beyond all we can ask
or think (Eph. 3:20).
Do you need a miracle? Let’s pray for each other. We certainly
need one in New Orleans.
Pray:
1. Pray for a spiritual revolution and revival in the New Orleans
region. Nothing is as
important as people being introduced to Jesus Christ and then being
discipled.
2. Pray for our endurance in the ministry. Groups have resumed
and church ministry is
flourishing. It is an exciting time. 300 came to our church dinner
on Wednesday night
and then attended Awana or one of our Wednesday evening Bible
studies. Twenty-some were
baptized Sunday.
3. Pray for my leadership in setting priorities, vision, building
staff, shepherding,
caring for my family, and loving Christ.
Betting the Farm on God,
Michael
October 6,
2006
Redwood or Squash
A while back I remember feeling like I was losing strength. In
fact, I felt a little beat
up and overwhelmed. Maybe you can relate. God provided a gift
after a speaking
assignment. My first day off yielded a walk in a redwood forest.
Some of these redwoods
were 2500 years old … meaning some were around when Jesus walked on
the earth. The size
was incredible. It was the kind of upward gaze that leaves you with
a crick in your neck.
Redwoods can grow to 360 feet tall and some are 16-18 feet in
diameter. Together, these
fabulous creations created a canopy that resulted in a cathedral
feel in the forest. In
this church, there was a vibrancy of flora, sunrays, fog rising up,
birds whistling,
squirrels playing, yet a stillness that compelled attention to the
voice of God.
What would God speak to me, I wondered. I reveled in the tenacity
of a tree that could
survive 25 centuries. I admired the thick bark that created an
almost fire-proof shell.
My initial reaction was that it seemed nothing could hurt a redwood!
How wrong I was! The end of my journey in “redwood land” concluded
with a downed redwood
with its inner rings exposed. This tree was illustrative of every
tree in the forest.
Some rings showed years of great growth. Others revealed years of
drought. There was a
spot that revealed an almost devastating fire and another spot that
revealed a lightning
strike. The tree revealed the ups and downs of life.
How true in our lives. If one could look inside at the rings of our
lives much would be
revealed. Our stories may include tragedy, hardship, suffering,
loss, grief and sadness.
The rings may likewise show times of growth, prosperity, gladness
and fruitfulness. It is
interesting how often suffering is the instrument God uses to prompt
a growth spurt.
God is at work growing us up. It’s hard to speed up the process if
our goal is His goal.
If you want to take a shortcut – just remember, He can grow a squash
in 6 months. It
takes a long time to grow a redwood. Your choice – redwood or
squash.
“Consider it all joy, my brethren, when you encounter various
trials, knowing that the
testing of your faith produces endurance. And let endurance have its
perfect result, so
that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.” ~~James
1:2-4
“In this you greatly rejoice, even though now for a little while, if
necessary, you have
been distressed by various trials, so that the proof of your faith,
being more precious
than gold which is perishable, even though tested by fire, may be
found to result in
praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ.” ~~I
Peter 1:6-7
Praise God for the hammer, the file, and the furnace!
~~Rutherford
It is doubtful whether God can bless a man greatly until He has hurt
him deeply. ~~A. W.
Tozer
“But He knows the way I take; when He has tried me, I shall come
forth as gold.” ~~
Job 23:10
When God wants to do an impossible thing, He takes an impossible man
and crushes him.
~~Alan Redpath
“I will turn My hand against you, and thoroughly purge away your
dross, and take away all
your alloy.” ~~ Isaiah 1:25
Life on earth would not be worth much if every source of irritation
were removed. Yet
most of us rebel against the things that irritate us, and count as
heavy loss what ought
to be rich gain. We are told that the oyster is wiser; that when an
irritating object,
like a bit of sand, gets under the “mantle” of his shell, he simply
covers it with the
most precious part of his being and makes of it a pearl. The
irritation that it was
causing is stopped by encrusting it with the pearly formation. A
true pearl is therefore
simply a victory over irritation. Every irritation that gets into
our lives today is an
opportunity for pearl culture. The more irritations the devil
flings at us, the more
pearls we may have. We need only to welcome them and cover them
completely with love,
that most precious part of us, and the irritation will be smothered
out as the pearl comes
into being. What a store of pearls we may have, if we will! ~~Dick
Seume
A young minister once asked an older man of God to pray that he
might have more patience,
as he realized this was his great lack. The aged man knelt and
began to pray that God
would send trouble and difficulties upon the youth. Finally the
younger brother tapped
the older minister upon the shoulder, and whispered: “You must have
misunderstood me; I
asked that you would pray that I might have more patience, not more
trouble.” The answer
was: “Remember, the scripture says: ‘Tribulation worketh patience’
(Rom. 5:13). That is
the only way!”
Stories:
1. Our follow-up ministries are finally kicking in. Many people
who are helped through
our teams are now visiting and attending Trinity. Sunday night,
Wanda was baptized.
Donna and Jonathan were part of a team that gutted her home.
Frannie, our associate cook,
has come to know Jesus and was baptized as well. 20-something
people told stories in the
waters of baptism of how they met Christ.
2. Teams are coming again after a 3 week absence. It is amazing
the sacrifice of so many
to be here. One young woman told about the extreme jobs she took on
to pay her way.
Amazing!
3. New Orleans is hurting in many ways. 30% of the city was in
poverty pre-Katrina.
1,836 were killed in the storm. Half of New Orleans is still gone.
The Saints are back
(3 and 1, not bad!).
4. We are far from full on our calendar. There are lots of spots
open for your team to
join us. There is so much to do.
5. We still need a children’s pastor. A great opportunity for the
right person. Our new
building just opened up and is awaiting a leader.
Betting The Farm On God,
Michael
September 20, 2006
Michael Sprague’s Book Published
God continues to amaze me. He is able to do superabundantly beyond
all we can ask or
think. This certainly is true with the published of my book,
Stories from Katrinaland.
Actually, I signed a contract with a company many months ago to
write a book. I was
assigned a ghost-writer to help, and the company had a rigorous
deadline schedule. In
their practical marketing analysis, the book had to get out as quick
after Katrina as
possible. My goals were quite different. First, I wanted to tell
the stories of the
visible hand of Jesus in our community so He would be glorified.
Second, I wanted people
to realize that Jesus and His Body, the Church, are the hope of the
world. Truly, there
is nothing like the church when the church is operating well. The
church can do what the
government, FEMA, or educational organizations can’t do in the midst
of a crisis. Third,
I wanted to give my attention to pastoring. Writing a book was way
down on my list of
priorities. The people of Trinity Church and our community were my
top priority as a
pastor. Amicably, the book company and I parted ways as we had
different priorities and
time tables. The canceling of the book contract was, in many ways,
a relief. It was
freeing to not have the pressure and/or distraction from pastoring.
God, however, had a different plan. He moved the heart of a
writer/editor named Pam Reed
who serves the Lord at Arlington Heights Evangelical Free Church
near Chicago, Illinois.
Pam and her church followed closely the work at Trinity. She was
moved by the Holy Spirit
to take the letters I had written and compile them into a book,
complete with pictures and
a Navigator gospel illustration. A real book! Who would have
thought! Many thanks to
Pam. In addition, Pam provided the funding for the first printing
and is handling the
distribution. Am I blessed, or what? Anyway, I don’t know if
anyone will want a copy,
but this press release has the information on how to get a copy.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Special to Christian NewsWire
The real story of relief efforts along the Gulf Coast in response to
Hurricane Katrina has
not made the headlines, but it has been faithfully recorded by a
local pastor on his
website. Now Michael Sprague’s open letters chronicling the relief
efforts headquartered
at Trinity Church in Covington, Louisiana, where Sprague serves as
senior pastor, have
been published in printed form in the new 153-page book Stories from
Katrinaland: God
Responds to Disaster in New Orleans.
The church’s own compassionate service to the community has been
augmented
by the work of more than 5,000 volunteers from 36 states and six
countries, to date,
through the coordination efforts of the Evangelical Free Church of
America, which
established Trinity as its regional response hub early last
September.
Sprague’s letters tell stories brought back by volunteer teams who
camp out at the
church and spread out to various areas of the Northshore as well as
in the City of New
Orleans, working in the city with Urban Impact and Castle Rock
ministries. While
clearing brush and cleaning out houses, the teams have ministered to
the spirit of people
who have lost everything, by worldly standards, and have brought the
gospel alive by
showing the love of Christ in deed as well as word.
The church converts its worship center each week into both a
campground for
volunteers and a “free store,” offering bottled water, ice, food,
and a variety of other
necessities with the help of donations from across the country. The
congregation also
operated a free daycare center to ease the burden of local business
people in the weeks
immediately following the devastating storm.
The soft-cover book published by Mall Publishing, Highland Park,
Illinois, is
available for a suggested donation of $15, plus $5
shipping/handling. Mail checks/money
orders to Trinity Church, P.O. Box 351, Prospect Heights IL
60070-0351. All proceeds
will be used to support the continuing compassion ministries
underway at Trinity Church.
Pam Reed, editor, 847.373.7375 (Arlington Heights, Illinois)
Betting the Farm on God,
Michael
August 30, 2006
A One Year Reflection
Yesterday, August 29th, was the one year anniversary of Katrina. I
got the
aerial perspective of New Orleans as I happened to be flying into
Louis
Armstrong International Airport. I saw lingering “blue” tarped
roofs and
thousands of FEMA trailers. When I finally got out of the airport,
I looked
right above my head as Air Force One flew directly above me as it
was preparing
to land. It’s nice to know the President cares about us. The USA
Today
newspaper in my hand revealed:
• “In New Orleans … A year after Katrina struck, just 29% of
public
schools are open, and only 17% of city buses and streetcars are
operational. A
mere 23% of childcare centers and 50% of hospitals are open, the
Brookings
Institution reported earlier this month.
• “In Iraq … Over the past two years, U.S. forces have renovated
11 of 20
hospitals, built 834 out of a projected 847 schools and increased
power
generation to 1.3 million of a targeted 1.7 million homes, according
to the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers.
“Of course, the work in war-torn Iraq has gone on longer than the
rebuilding of
New Orleans. But it also has happened in the midst of a civil war
that has
taken the lives of an estimated 10,000 Iraqis in the past four
months. Even a
simple task in Iraq often becomes a life-threatening adventure.
“Yet back in New Orleans, the recovery has been painfully slow, as
Irvin and
others can attest to. Even after steady doses of criticism directed
at all
levels of government, large parts of the city still resemble a war
zone.” (USA
Today, August 29, 2006, 13A).
Another article,
“The first major attempt to probe survivors’ mental status found
that about 15%
of residents of the counties and parishes struck by the storm, or
20,000 people,
have depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder and other
forms of
mental illness, twice as many as before.
“About 11% now have severe mental illness, compared with 6% before
the
hurricane. Nearly 20% said they had mild to moderate mental
illness, compared
with under 10% before.
“Yet fewer people reported they were considering suicide than before
the storm.
The finding didn’t entirely surprise researchers, who say people can
be
remarkably resilient when they have to be.
“’Suicide rates always go down in times of war … People pull
together,’ says
Ronald Kessler of Harvard Medical School, who led the study
published online by
the Bulletin of the World Health Organization.
“The finding seems to conflict with reports that New Orleans’
suicide rate
tripled. But in an event such as Katrina, the vast majority of
those who may
have contemplated suicide may be less likely to act on it because
they realize
they are part of something bigger. Conversely, those with suicidal
thoughts who
don’t have others with whom to share the disaster experience may be
more
inclined to kill themselves. So the findings are not inherently
inconsistent,
Kessler says.”
“Among other findings:
• Almost half of people who didn’t evacuate said they wanted to
leave,
but couldn’t get away.
• Seven percent had to be rescued, had a brush with death, or
were
assaulted.
• Almost 90% said their experiences helped them develop a deeper
sense of
meaning in life. More than 75% said they had become more spiritual
or
religious.” (USA Today, August 29, 2006).
There are pockets of hope and pockets of sadness for sure. One year
out I’ve
learned to lean into hope and bet the farm on God. In the midst of
the
devastation, the visible hand of Jesus continues to be
unmistakable. Two more
stories:
1. Sunday, I got to speak to Grace Community Church in Fulton,
Maryland and
observed their special Katrina Sunday. From start to finish they
recounted the
deeds of the Lord related to their teams and Katrina through
testimony,
multimedia and song. At the end of the service they committed to
send team each
month to New Orleans for the next year. 76 people signed up for
teams in one
day and 19 more had to confirm which date they could commit. Later
in the day,
Stephen and Beth Shields, Grace’s Katrina coordinators, had many
e-mails from
people interested in joining a team. Wow!
2. His name was David. I met him at church last week after
sharing our story
of Katrina. There was no way he was going to show up at church.
He’d only
been to church three times and the fourth wasn’t likely. His
girlfriend aborted
their child the night before, to his horror. The relationship
ended, not that
it was spectacular to begin with. The pain was excruciating and
almost
debilitating.
Yet something moved David to go to church. The Holy Spirit, I
presume. “The
Comforter” often does His best work at times like this. The salve
of the Spirit
was applied to the nicks, scars and the open contusions of David’s
inner man
through the stories of God in Katrina-land. There is nothing like
hope when you
have none. There is nothing like the knowledge God can bring good
from bad,
life from death and beauty from ashes.
David wondered, “Why do I look for life in other people and things?
I guess I
need to find my life in Jesus and let Him take care of these other
things.” He
left saying, “I need to bet the farm on God.”
There is hope for New Orleans because Jesus is here. It is so vital
to have the
view from above. Leith Anderson in his book, When God Says No,
says:
“In 1994, television networks featured the fiftieth anniversary of
the allied
invasion of Normandy, called D-Day. They rebroadcast actual film
footage and
commentary from decisive battle. The advantage of a fiftieth
anniversary is
that viewers know who won; the original films, radio tapes and
commentaries
could only report current events and future hopes.
“Part of the anniversary celebration was a reenactment by former
soldiers who
took part in the invasion. The celebrations were likely the last
public
expressions of memories for men now in their seventies and
eighties. Some wore
their half-century-old uniforms. Others parachuted out of vintage
aircraft to
relive old moments of fear, courage and glory.
“One telecast ran two interviews. The first was with a soldier who
fought the
battle on the ground. ‘I was convinced there was no way we could
possibly win,’
he reported. The other interview was with a pilot, who saw a much
wider view of
the conflict. ‘I was convinced,’ he said, ‘there was no way we
could possibly
lose.’” (When God Says No, pp. 56-57).
When we radio to God, “there’s no way we can possibly win,” God
radio’s back,
“there is no way we can possibly lose.”
Betting the Farm on God,
Michael
August 25, 2006
NOTE: I will be speaking this Sunday, August 27th, at Grace
Community
Church in Fulton, Maryland (1/2 mile from Route 29 on Route 216W at
9:
15 am and 11:15 a.m.; and at Forcey Memorial Church, one block off
of
Route 29 at 2130 E. Randolph Road, Silver Spring at 6:00 p.m.
The Power of God Unto Salvation
Last Sunday I illustrated the gospel message from an encounter I
once
had with a group that wasn’t necessarily going to be friendly to my
topic of “Jesus Christ and the Bible”. Indeed, in the room there
were
people with leanings toward many world views and religious
backgrounds. They would have little understanding of “Why the human
condition was so desperate” and “Why a savior was so necessary.”
Without understanding their need, they would probably be rather
uninterested in a solution.
I decided to engage them in a thought provoking exercise. I asked
them
to think about this question, “Outside of biblical figures, who were
the worst and best persons who had ever lived?” The worst person was
easy for the group. Who do you think they said? … Hitler. It was
unanimous. The best person question created quite a discussion.
Someone yelled, “Ghandi”. Others immediately chimed in with “Martin
Luther King”, “Mother Theresa” and “Billy Graham”. One person even
said, “My mother”. I said they needed to narrow it down to one
person. After a long discussion they settled on … guess … Ghandi.
I said, “Let’s set up a goodness scale 1 to 10. Hitler is a “1” and
Ghandi is a “9”. They agreed that none of their candidates for best
person was perfect. Next, I asked the group to put themselves on the
Goodness Scale based on how they’ve lived their life. I encouraged
them not be too hard on themselves. No one would be down with Hitler
but probably none of us would be up there with Ghandi, Mother
Theresa
or Billy Graham either. How good are you, I asked. What’s your
number? It was fascinating. There were 4’s and 5’s. Some 6’s and 7’
s. One guy said, “I’m a 7.5.” He was the best guy in the room, at
least by his self analysis. I had one more question for the group. “
Where does God draw the line when He decides who goes to heaven and
who
goes to hell?” There was silence in the room. They were thinking
now. They were contemplative and all ears. Secretly, they were
hoping
I would say a number just under their self analysis number. They
longed now for a God who would grade on the curve. I held back a
little and let the significance of the question sink in. Finally, I
gave the answer. The Bible says for a person to merit heaven … to
merit a personal relationship with God … to have earned eternal
life, a
person has to be … a perfect 10. This brought a gasp from the room.
Instantly, the question arose as who can be saved? Is there any
hope?
Bingo!
In understanding the bad news, they were ready for the good news.
What
we could never do for ourselves, God made possible through Jesus
Christ. His Son died on a cross for our sins so that, through faith
in
Jesus, we could stand before a holy God, not on our merits, but on
the
merits of His Son, Jesus. By placing faith in Christ, our sins would
be forgiven and we would receive spiritual life and eternal life.
Think of it – a personal relationship and peace with God comes
through
faith in Christ, not by our works or religion. Jesus said, “I am the
way, the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father but through
me.” (John 14:6)
At this meeting, many trusted Christ. The same thing happened Sunday
when I shared this story at Trinity. If you haven’t trusted Christ
and
are still relying on your own good works and righteousness, I urge
you
to abandon the performance plan and trade it in for the Jesus plan.
The works salvation plan is sinking sand. The grace plan is God’s
offer to you. Listen to John 3:16, “For God so loved the world, He
sent His one and only Son, that whosoever believes in Him, will not
perish but have eternal life.”
Betting the farm on God,
Michael
P.S. Another woman who was at Trinity Sunday came into the church
this
week and accepted Christ. Praise the Lord! She went from room to
room
throughout the entire building telling people what had just
happened.
Sounds like the woman at the well, doesn't it? She was at church on
Wednesday night and had to tell everyone there.
August 21,
2006
Katrina: One
Year Later
Some interesting statistics about Katrina victims came out today in
a USA Today
poll (August 21, 2006):
• 16% - say that their lives are back to normal one year later
• 56% - say their kids under 18 have been negatively affected by the
storm
• 25% - have not moved back
• 20% - have moved back but believe they may need to move out again
• 14% - are currently unemployed
• "those who say they are experiencing a great deal or quite a bit
of …”
o anxiety - 27%
o trouble sleeping - 26%
o depression - 23%
o "difficulties in marriage or other family relationships" - 18%
• Top 5 Most Difficult Things to Deal with Since Katrina:
1. damaged property
2. financial problems
3. mental or emotional sate
4. "getting our lives back on track"
5. "no longer having a job"
• Top 5 Types of Help Most Desired to Recover from Katrina
1. $
2. help with damage or contractors
3. more FEMA help
4. "a place to stay"
5. a job
Our own stats here at Trinity look like the following:
• # of volunteers: 5,458
• Volunteer work hours: 206,350
But statistics can’t really tell the story. The real story is being
written in
my own heart and hundreds of others in the custom designed ways of
Jesus.
Here’s one example of a life marked by Jesus recently:
“I have to confess that I really didn’t want to go on this trip. I
only went
because my husband, Bob, wanted me to go. I had no expectations
about the trip,
no plans of reaching out to anyone or being moved by what I saw, but
what I
experienced, changed my life. I will never forget the gratitude of
the people
we met. Everywhere we went they would go out of their way to come
and thank us.
I was overwhelmed by the devastation and how widespread it was. I
was shocked
by the FEMA trailer stories that so many people wanted to share with
us. But I
was truly blessed on Super Friday.
“I am not a compassionate person; I keep to myself and try not to
get involved
with other people’s problems. What I experienced on Super Friday
changed that.
I saw a 3-year-old girl helping to haul out her family’s personal
belongings to
the curb. I met Jarrod, a young black man with dreadlocks down to
his waist,
and I confess that if I had run into him anywhere else, I probably
would have
crossed the street to avoid him. He was working by himself, gutting
his home on
the street we were cleaning. I went right up to him and we talked.
He didn’t
know he could get help from your organization so I gave him some
phone numbers.
I called over a couple more team members and we gave Jarrod a Bible
and prayed
with him. He was so grateful. Every time I think of him I weep. I
seem to be
doing a lot of that lately!
“I believe God is working in me to change my heart and my attitude.
I hated to
leave Covington and I pray that God will make it possible for us to
return soon
and stay longer. As much as we desire to be with you, helping in
New Orleans,
we feel that maybe we aren’t ready yet. We are praying that God
will prepare us
to do His work now that He has opened our eyes to the need.
“I just wanted to share a little of our week, there was so much more
. . . thank
you for allowing me to share this and to serve. No, thank you!”
These God stories are being written day-by-day. They do not stop.
This morning
I met a woman whose home in Abita Springs was gutted by one of our
teams.
Actually, my wife and son were part of the team. This lady has had
a personal
encounter with Jesus Christ and is now attending Trinity with a
friend. Her
life, though difficult at times, now includes the Lord and a church
family. The
visible presence of Jesus is operating here, building us. This
building is not
always in the way we envisioned it, but it is for our best. C. S.
Lewis put it
this way in Mere Christianity:
“I find I must borrow yet another parable from George MacDonald.
Imagine
yourself as a living house. God comes in to rebuild that house. At
first,
perhaps, you can understand what He is doing. He is getting the
drains right
and stopping the leaks in the roof and so on: you knew that those
jobs needed
doing and so you are not surprised. But presently He starts
knocking the house
about in a way that hurts abominably and does not seem to make
sense. What on
earth is He up to? The explanation is that He is building quite a
different
house from the one you thought of – throwing out a new wing here,
putting on an
extra floor there, running up towers, making courtyards. You
thought you were
going to be made into a decent little cottage: but He is building a
palace. He
intends to come and live in it Himself.”
A few items of information to close:
1. Katrina Sunday is this Sunday. August 29th will mark the 1-year
anniversary
of Hurricane Katrina. Hundreds of churches across the country will
reflect on
God’s faithfulness. A DVD has been produced to promote the ongoing,
urgent need
for teams, financial support and prayer.
2. As the fall approaches we have many openings for teams to help us
rebuild the
broken community in Louisiana. Would you pray we get filled up once
again in
the fall?
3. A wonderful servant from Arlington Heights Evangelical Church has
edited my
letters and done the work of turning them into a book to be
published any day
now. Wow! I never expected that in the midst of my schedule. I am
thankful.
More information to come. I’ll have some copies soon, and it will
be available
through Amazon.com.
4. Jonathan is back at Baylor University starting school today. I
drove a cargo
van to Texas to get his bedroom furniture into a four-bedroom duplex
that six
boys will share. Pray for him if you get a chance. Pray for Donna,
too! She
was a little weepy in leaving her boy once again. I told her, “Now
she will
have more of me!!” That didn’t seem to help. We are back in the
empty nest
again wondering what adventures are in store for us this year.
Betting the farm on God,
Michael
July 24,
2006
Incredible
Teams: God’s Choice Players
My apologies again for not writing much lately. I am just trying to
keep up.
This week, a pastor was trying to call me and located my number in a
directory.
Unbeknownst to me, two of the digits of the phone number had been
transposed.
When he called and asked for me, he discovered the number was to a
psychiatric
ward. He told the nurse “sorry” but commented that I probably felt
like I
needed to be there at times. Pray for strength, wisdom, endurance
and rest.
Having just had our 5,000th volunteer has caused me to be filled
with incredible
gratitude. 5,000! That’s God at work! 5,000 choice, wonderful
servants. The
stories are endless ... Acts 29. Let me convey a few stories that I
recall from
the last few days:
1. A woman named Janice, who was unemployed, wondered, “Should I
go?” She was
so nervous about New Orleans. The night before the team was
leaving, God seemed
to say, “You need to go and help those people.” After ministering,
she said,
“Now it has changed my life!” In fact, Janice took her first steps
to quit
smoking this week. We rejoiced with her.
2. Two team members trusted Christ last week. Glory to God.
3. One man commented this morning that he had never seen a building
being used
so much for God. We really are the church of the stained carpet.
In fact, he
made an interesting request. He asked that when we eventually
replace the
carpet, he would like a piece of the stained carpet to place in his
trophy case.
A trophy of Grace!
4. A New York team has pow-wowed for some time now to impact their
community.
During their week here, they experienced the open doors that come
from “serving
evangelism.” While working at a house, they talked to homeowners,
mailman,
mother, uncle, the niece, and others. Servanthood opened the door.
They worked
with people and become part of them.
5. One woman talked to God about ministry and helping our
community. She felt
God said, “No, if I wanted New Orleans fixed, I could fix it. If I
didn’t want
this to happen, it wouldn’t have happened. You are not doing this
for Me, I’m
doing this for you.” Teams continue to talk about God’s
transformation of
teams.
6. A Nebraska team told about their church receiving a significant
trust five
years ago. They struggled on what to do with the money. Finally,
they decided
to put it into people and chose to put the money into sending teams
to New
Orleans. Their challenge has been to practice 1 John 3:18, “Little
children,
let us not love with word or with tongue, but in deed and truth.”
Thank you
God.
7. One team has found itself almost daily getting food and other
things from
Wal-Mart. They have an interesting approach to reaching out. They
bring a
Bible with them into Wal-Mart. While waiting in the check-out line,
one of the
team members discovers the name of the cashier and uses the wait
time to write
the person’s name and a note in the front of the Bible. When it is
check-out
time, they place the Bible on the conveyer belt along with the rest
of their
goods. The cashier tries to scan the Bible a couple of times, and
then asks,
“Is this your personal Bible?” The answer is “No, it’s yours.” The
team member
then presents the Bible to the cashier, and shows them their name in
the front.
Every Bible has been received with delight and astonishment.
I’ll stop here. More stories to come. If you didn’t read my July
21st letter
about the Katrina Project and the need to schedule teams, please
check your
e-mail or read the letter at www.trinitychurchonline.net.
Betting the Farm on God,
Michael
P.S. I’ve got an egg-sized knot on my ankle from rolling my foot
while playing
basketball. I guess I’ll have to slow down now!
July 21,
2006
Important
Updates from Trinity Church
This has been my longest stretch between writings. Sorry. Between
on-boarding
staff, opening a new building, running teams, and planning for our
fall launch
of ministry, it has been some run. There are two huge areas I want
to alert you
to for prayer and participation.
#1 - Katrina Project
Everyone on our team is rallying around the Katrina Project. The
Katrina
Project will center around calling churches throughout the country
to set aside
time in their services on August 27th, the one year anniversary of
Katrina, to
remember, pray and take up a special collection to rebuild New
Orleans both
spiritually and physically. A special 5-minute DVD is being filmed
next week
for churches to utilize. This DVD will go out automatically to all
EFCA
churches. If you would like a copy to show in your church (non-EFCA
churches),
please e-mail me your address or your church’s address and we will
get one out
to you. Please, please help us by asking your pastor or missions
committee if
they can dedicate a few minutes on August 27th for prayer, DVD and a
special
offering. Let me know if you can serve as a point person in your
church to help
with the Katrina Project. Thank you. Springing out of this Katrina
Project
will be great intentionality also in envisioning and training teams
that come
our way in the coming days. Materials are being prepared to make
for a
life-changing week that will impact and serve your home church and
create a
kingdom worldview.
#2 - Need for Teams
We have now scheduled 5,000 volunteers. PTL. The need is still
great. We have
been 120 strong at Trinity the last few weeks, and Castle Rock is
full.
However, Mark Lewis tells me that no teams are scheduled for August
20th-September 16th. I know this is a tough time with school
resuming and
summer finishing. Is there any way you can help. If so, please
call Mark in
the Compassion Office at 985-893-0218.
Thank you for not forgetting us. I’ll get some new stories out in
the next
couple of days. It continues to be amazing what Jesus is doing.
Betting the Farm on God,
Michael
June 21,
2006
Basketball/Katrina/Michael/Glory to God
Many of you know that my favorite sport is basketball. I'm cheering
for Shaq
and the Heat this week in the NBA finals, but have already
experienced the
thrill of the game myself. Jesus is visibly at work on the
northshore of New
Orleans as well as the basketball court. For several years now I
have been on a
basketball team that takes the sport seriously - sometimes too
seriously. I
play with some great guys from the community, but our team is
notorious in the
league. We lead the league in technical fouls. One time one of our
guys wanted
to beat an opponent up in the parking lot after the game. The guy
he wanted to
punch out was a guy in my church. I walked out to the car with the
guy to help
protect him. Another time, things got so out of hand that the
referee called
both teams to mid-court and chewed us out and threatened to toss
everyone out of
the gym. I could almost see the heading, "Local Pastor Arrested in
Basketball Brawl." I've wondered, "Should I stick with this or give
it up?" A delight in the game, and hope for these guys compelled me
to
continue. Over time, I have been able to share with each one.
A couple of months ago, to my surprise, one of my teammates showed
up at
Trinity. After the service I met with him, and he trusted Jesus.
Wow! He has
been at Trinity with his wife and eight (yes eight) kids ever
since. He is
growing and hungry for God's Word. Last week he took a week of
vacation from
his job to be a basketball coach at Vacation Bible School. Kids got
saved in
his group. He brainstormed with our VBS director about how we could
start a
monthly basketball camp for 5th - 9th grades. It is in the works.
In our new building, before the vinyl flooring was laid, we wrote on
the floor
the names of people we wanted to see saved and occupying our new
facility. On
that special day, I remember praying for our community and my
basketball guys.
I'm amazed! The gospel is the power of God unto salvation to all
who believe.
I can't wait to see what God will do next!
Praise:
1. Thanks for praying for our grand opening of the new "Family
Discipleship
Center." The month of "open house" has gone so well. Lots of
visitors! Twenty-something kids trusted Jesus as Savior.
This Sunday we have a power-team coming in from Katy, Texas to
share the
scripture with the kids. These "Commando's" for Jesus will break
books, tear phone books in two, repel from heights and share their
stories. The
furniture for the building seems to arrive daily and the grass was
laid today.
I thank God for the gift of this special building. Our desire is to
use it to
"help people become fully devoted followers of Jesus Christ."
2. I continue to thank God for our teams. We have 100 more
volunteers this week
- Choice People! One couple last week celebrated their 25th wedding
anniversary. They had the option of going on a cruise or working
here all week,
gutting houses and talking to people about Christ. This dear couple
chose to
join us. Thank you, Chris and Sue Hart for your compelling devotion
to the
Savior.
3. Churches continue to send teams and practice great creativity
in resourcing
the ministry. One church got a donation of two trucks of hats and
had a
"hat sale" to raise money to continue the work with Compassion.
Another woman just donated a trailer and raised $4,000 from her
hometown to give
to Compassion to go along with the trailer. Praise the Lord!
Thank you for not forgetting us. We truly are partners with people
in 36 states
and 6 countries. What a display of the Body of Christ.
Betting the Farm on God,
Michael
P.S.
Pray for the
rest of the guys on my basketball team. I'll keep you
posted!
June 1, 2006
Acts 29 Stories and Urgent Prayer Requests
If you have been to Trinity on a team you know that sharing nights
can be sooo
good. There is nothing like recounting the deeds of the Lord!
Tuesday night
was one of the best. The stories of God are still being written.
It's like
Acts 29!
Stories:
1. Becky from PA has been here 4 times to help! One of the things
she learned
from a previous visit was to "take this home with you." At home,
she
bumped into a woman in K-Mart who was walking around in a daze. Her
home had
burned down the night before. She had no money and needed a ride
home. But,
she also needed a booster seat for her child. Becky bought the
woman a booster
seat and took her and her 3 children to the motel where they were
staying. The
woman said, "No one has ever been so nice to me."
2. A team of 8 came from Grace Community Church in MD to spend the
week
following up on people that Trinity has reached out to in the past.
An
86-year-old Louisiana woman had previously had three or four teams
help her at
her house. 195 trees had been taken off her property, and her yard
still looked
like a war zone. This new team visited her and she assumed that
since the
services were provided, it was now time to pay up.
They said, "We do not want your money. We are here for the love of
Christ, representing Trinity Church. Trinity Church wants to love
this area,
and cover it with the love of Jesus. They talked about her
relationship with
Jesus Christ. This team volunteer said, "I have been studying the
Bible
for 28 years. I have never heard a community talk about the church
like we were
in the 1st century ... talking about Christians because they love so
much …
people talking about Trinity Church. 'Oh, those people from
Trinity' … good
rumors."
3. A lady named Jessie visited a person who lived with all kinds of
Confederate
flags surrounding his home. (Jessie is a beautiful, zealous
Christian black
woman.) When she saw all of this, God whispered, "I'm in charge of
this,
not you." The man at the house came out with a long beard, a pony
tail,
jeans, a wife-beater t-shirt and a confederate belt buckle. God
whispered,
"This is all about Me." What a conversation it was! Jessie and the
man were both from the south. The man had 2 heart attacks and
couldn't take
care of his roof. Trinity fixed it for him. Jessie and her partner
prayed for
this man and left a Bible and a Wal-Mart gift card. He welcomed
them to return
and then said to Jessie, "Can I give you a hug before you leave?"
God
worked! Jesus tears down walls.
4. Angie from Oklahoma attends Oklahoma Fellowship E. Free Church.
Before
coming, her team went through an evangelism class. Upon arrival,
Angie
volunteered for kitchen duty. On Tuesday, during the day, a young
woman from
New Orleans came into the church. God whispered to Angie, "Has
someone
shared the gospel with her? Someone should share the gospel with
her. Are you
going to share the gospel with her?" Now the only other time Angie
tried
to share the gospel with someone, the person wasn't interested.
This time the
woman trusted Christ!
Prayer Requests
1. June 4, 11, 18 and 25th is our big open house to the community
for our New
Family Discipleship Center. 15,000 square feet of space will be
used for Great
Commission enterprises. The community has been invited through
10,000 mailers,
newspaper ads, and personal invitations. Pray for the salvation of
many and the
possibility of connecting unchurched families to Trinity.
2. Pray for hundred's of details that need to be completed in
finishing the
building by Sunday. We are running out of hours.
3. The schedule for June is as follows:
June 4: Children - Jubilee Gang - high energy multi-media ministry
experience
Adults - Steven Mosley, One-man drama (Rick Warren's Drama Pastor)
June 11: Children - Gene Cordova, Ventriloquist
Building Dedication
Community Picnic
June 12-16: Vacation Bible School - Mega Sports Camp
June 18: Children - VBS Sunday
June 25: Children - Commandos! USA - high energy power team
imparting God's
message
4. Pray that we find the right Children's Pastor. The Search
continues. We
have added 2 of the 4 staff needs, one is on the way (pray for the
sale of a
house), and the Children's Pastor is still in process.
Thank you for praying. We have worked for 3 plus years for this
Grand Opening.
May Jesus be honored!
Betting the Farm on God,
Michael
May 15, 2006
Crack Pots for Jesus
What a difference eight months makes! Back in August, I was gearing
up to
re-launch our new ministry year with a full staff and a new building
right on
the horizon. The Elders had just unanimously approved my 70-page
strategic
plan. We were ready to roll. Oh, how the Trinity - the Father, Son
and Holy
Spirit - must have had fun with my plan of operating from strength.
What a good
chuckle they had over “Michael’s plan”. They decided they could do
better!
Exceedingly better! Included in the revised plan was their desire
to teach me,
“But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellence
of the power
may be of God and not of us” (2 Cor. 4:7).
Oh, how I needed to learn that God often uses cracked pots rather
than fine
china. I can now relate well to Judges 7. Remember the time Israel
was invaded
and oppressed by the Midianites at Harvest time? Year after year
rolled along
until Gideon raised an army of 32,000. That’s a lot of men until
you realize
the Midian army was as thick as locusts and their camels could no
more be
counted than the sand on the seashore (7:12). The enemy army was at
135,000.
Gideon’s inexperienced troops were outnumbered 4 to 1. God said,
“Gideon, you
have a numbers problem.” Gideon was glad God saw this too.
However, God said,
“You have too many troops. Have a troop reduction.” Wow! A
special waiver was
offered to opt out of battle and 22,000 men opted out. Now Gideon’s
army was at
10,000, and he was outnumbered 13 to 1. God again said, “Gideon,
you have a
numbers problem.” I’m sure Gideon was thinking, “God, I don’t know
if I want
your help anymore.” Sure enough, there was another troop reduction
from 10,000
to 300. Now they were outnumbered 450 to 1. If you read the text
carefully, it
appears that the “geeky” guys were left and not the “Navy seals”
types. The
only guys left were the ones who lapped water like a dog.
Isn’t this God? Often when He does something big, He stacks the
odds against
Himself so the credit will go to Him alone. Gideon and his 300 were
stripped of
everything and needed to learn to depend totally on God or perish.
They were
learning a God-confidence based upon His sufficiency rather than
self-confidence.
God’s promise, “This can be nothing other than the sword of Gideon.
God has
given the Midianites and the whole camp into our hands. Arise”
(7:14-15a).
Their God-confidence oozed. The 300 were divided into three
companies of 100.
Weapons were issued - trumpets (rams horn), a clay pot, and a torch
to hide in
the pot. In the darkness of the night, they circled the Midianite
camp.
Suddenly, 300 clay pots smashed, 300 torches pierced the night, 300
rams horns
blared, and 300 voices shouted, “The sword of the Lord and of
Gideon.” Panic
seized the Midianites as they stumbled out of bed. Confusion
reigned and many
were trampled. All fled! The truth: The power is not the clay
pot, but in the
One who resides in the jar! In the midst of the brokenness of the
cracked pot,
the light of God shines brightest.
I’m learning that God often uses weak, broken pottery and seldom
uses fine
china. Rather than operating from my plan of strength, God wanted
me to learn
His sufficiency in the midst of weakness. He stripped away my props
quickly:
Empty nest
Evacuation
House damage/trees down
House unlivable
Church scattered
No offerings
Hurting people
30% of church gone
Elder Board changes
4 staff positions short
Parent’s move
Postpone fall furnishings campaign
New building pledge system collapse
Building program
God took away the props and stripped away some encumbrances,
man-made
securities, self-reliance and self-effort. He took me through the
refiners fire
and pruned the dead wood because He insists our spiritual life and
strength come
not from our sufficiency but His.
I am not who I used to be. I’m lighter and realize I am alive in
the cause of
Christ. Jesus always makes a way that includes streams in the
wilderness,
beauty out of ashes, life out of death, and joy after sorrow. “For
me to live
is Christ” (Phil. 1:21a). How beautiful was Sunday morning as
worship tables
displayed cracked pots and candles lit. Each one who attended was
equipped with
a flashlight. At one point we turned off the lights and I asked
Trinity folks a
series of questions:
1. If you’ve experienced “desert times” and seen God faithful,
turn your light on
2. If you’ve had job loss or job troubles, yet today you are
working, turn your light on.
3. If burdens were crushing you this year, and you couldn’t carry
them on your own, yet He carried you and you are still in the game
of life, turn your light on.
4. If you have become a Christian this year, or rededicated your
life to Him, turn your light on.
5. If you’ve had a major financial blessing, turn your light on.
6. If you are weak, but know He is strong, turn your light on.
7. If God has used you over the last eight months, turn your light
on.
8. If you identify with cracked pots imagery, yet know the power
is not the pot, but the one in the pot, turn your light on.
You should have seen the hundreds of little lights that were shining
in darkness
Sunday illustrating the sufficiency of Jesus. Hallelujah! Amen.
PRAISE & PRAYER:
1. Praise: One man said, “I wondered why I was coming (to
church), now I don’t want to leave.”
2. Teams still pour in weekly, though two weeks ago the Compassion
staff had their first “down” week since Katrina hit. They deserved
the rest. Pray for Mark, Jenn and all of the team.
3. Pray for the wonderful teams
A man who was committed to coming injured his hand, and was not even
able to
open a Bible, told a team member he thought he broke his hand and
his New
Orleans visit was questionable. The entire team found out and asked
the church
to pray. That night, while getting up in the middle of the night,
he tripped on
the bone of his 125-lb. dog and fell down onto his hand and heard a
big pop. He
moved his hand and found it was all better. Canine Chiropractics or
Divine
Provision? The man served in New Orleans all week.
A lawyer, back for the second time, commented how he finds life so
different in
the midst of disaster response. People operate out of being at the
same level
as servants rather than a hierarchy. He finds that to be a display
of what
heaven will be like
4. Pray for a million details in finishing our new Family
Discipleship Center in preparation for our four weeks of Grand
Opening during the month of May. There is a still lot to do, and
the construction company is not finished yet.
Betting the Farm on God,
Michael
April 30,
2006
The Jesus Movement
Lately, I have been asking questions of the early church that might
radically
influence the Jesus movement today.
1. How did an obscure, marginalized Jesus movement become the
dominant faith of
the western world in just a few centuries?
2. How did Christ-followers convince people they weren't vagabonds,
gypsies or
involved in a cult?
3. How did the Christian community in the first century go from
being one,
one-zillionth of the population to 56% of the Roman Empire? That is
a growth
rate of 40% per decade!
4. How did they grow so rapidly with no power, soldiers, weapons or
buildings?
5. How did they turn the world upside down in spite of persecution -
thrown to
the lions in the coliseums, arrests, pressure and scattering (1
Peter 1:1). The
believers lived in catacombs, pup tents and caves.
How did they do it? In 1 Peter, I found Christ-followers:
"Beloved, I urge you as aliens and strangers to abstain from fleshly
lusts,
which wage war against the soul. Keep your behavior excellent among
the
Gentiles, so that in the thing in which they slander you as
evildoers, they may
on account of your good deeds, as they observe them; glorify God in
the day of
visitation."
1 Peter 2:11-12
I. Lived a New Kind of Life
While the first century world had long stopped listening to
believers, they
still watched them. What did they see? Here are a few examples:
A. Rome was a hierarchical society with people divided into rigid
classes.
Everything reinforced the caste system. Clothes showed what class
you were in.
I know it's hard to imagine a culture where clothes reflect
someone's status,
but in the Roman culture it was true. What happened in the Jesus
movement?
Masters would serve slaves. Slaves would eat first. Slaves would
weep. There
was never a community like this.
B. In the ancient world, was it better to be born a boy or a girl?
A boy! One
historian writes, "Exposure of unwanted female infants (the practice
of
just abandoning them until they would die outside somewhere) was
legal, morally
accepted, widely practiced by all social classes in the Greco-Roman
world."
Here is a letter that I just read this week. It was written during
the first
century by a Roman husband to his wife. Apparently, she was
pregnant. This is
what he writes, believing himself to be a good husband:
"Know that I am still in Alexandria. I beg you to take good care of
our
baby son. If you are delivered of a child before I come home, if it
is a boy,
keep it. If it is a girl, discard it. You have sent me word,
"Don't
forget me." How could I forget you? I beg you not to worry."
The Jesus movement came along and treated women differently … valued
…
treasured … respected and all life was sacred. Little girls and
boys were
prized. It is no wonder women flocked to the church.
C. Several times in the early church there were massive epidemics.
One wiped
out one-quarter of the population of cities in the Roman Empire and
another took
one-third. The Roman writer Dionysius says of the fear in the
population,
"They pushed sufferers away and fled from their dearest, throwing
them into
roads before they were dead and treated unburied corpses as dirt,
hoping to
avert disease."
What did Christ-followers do?
They took people in. They cared for the sick and dying. They did
this
sometimes at the cost of their own lives. There was never a
community like
this. The result was a church of irresistible influence that became
a catalyst
for change.
Sheldon Vanauken said, "The best argument for Christianity is
Christians;
their joy, their certainty, their completeness. But the strongest
argument
against Christianity is also Christians - when they are somber and
joyless, when
they are self-righteous and smug in complacent consecration, when
they are
narrow and repressive, then Christianity dies a thousand deaths."
II. Do Good Deeds as a Way of Life
1 Peter 2:12 "… on account of your good deeds, as they observe them,
glorify God in the day of visitation."
Isn't this the way of Jesus:
Matt. 5:16 They may see your good deeds
Luke 6:31-35 Love your enemies, do good to them
Acts 20:35 It is more blessed to give than to
receive
Romans 12:20-21 Overcome evil with good
Gal. 6:9-10 Let us do good to all people
Eph. 2:10 Do good works
2 Thess. 3:13 Do not grow weary of doing good
1 Tim. 6:17-19 To do good, to be rich in good deeds
Titus 3:8 Engage in good deeds
Titus 2:11-14 Eager to do what is good
Heb. 10:24 Spur one another on to love and good
deeds
1 Pet. 3:13 Eager to do good
III. Do Good Deeds as a way of Life among Skeptics
Historian Will Durant said this:
"Never had the world seen such a dispensation of alms as was now
organized
by the Church … She helped widows, orphans, the sick or infirm,
prisoners,
victims of natural catastrophes; and she frequently intervened to
protect the
lower orders from unusual exploitation or excessive taxation. In
many cases,
priests gave all their property to the poor … others devoted
fortunes to
charitable work. The church or her rich laymen founded public
hospitals on a
scale never known before … Pagans admired the steadfastness of
Christians in
caring for the sick in cities stricken with famine or pestilence."
Isn't this what is needed today. We live in an age of skepticism
and cynicism.
We say, "Everyone has an angle" or "There is no free lunch."
We think everyone is hyping, selling or spinning. This is where
Christians and
good deeds come in. It is by stealthy, radical acts of service that
shock
people. These free expressions of compassion don't grab the
headlines, but
change lives. The church of the first century was at its best, in
the shadows,
underground, quiet, humble, yet totally counter cultural. You
couldn't keep
people away. It was what everyone was looking for.
Isn't that true today? Our Kingdom weapons are brooms, rocks,
visits, listening
ears, open hands and generous hearts. The church is not just a
"religious
services provider" whose job is to make sure everyone in the church
is
happy while everyone else is going to hell. Rather, we gather on
Sunday as the
Body of Christ and then are turned loose on Monday to practice good
deeds in the
world. Like it or not, we are "living epistles" read by all men.
The
truth is "people don't go where the action is, they go where love
is."
Jesus said, "All men will know you are my disciples by the love you
have
for one another." A visual aid prepares the listener to hear the
truth.
Right?
IV. Share your Hope
1 Peter 3:15 says, "but sanctify Christ as Lord in your hearts,
always
being ready to make a defense to everyone who asks you to give an
account for
the hope that is in you, yet with gentleness and reverence."
As we live in a new way and practice good deeds, God will open
doors. There is
the opportunity to share Jesus.
This is the plan that allowed early Christians to turn the world
upside down.
Jesus is burning it into my heart that this is His plan for our days
as well.
Let's have at it.
Betting the Farm on God,
Michael
April 22,
2006
You're Not Crazy!
You're not crazy! These are words our teams need to hear. Our team
volunteers
have now exceeded 2,700 and have logged in 110,000 man hours. There
were 142
last week. Wow!
Over the past several weeks, the volunteers have included a high
percentage of
college students. Some of these students have given up the beaches
of Florida
for New Orleans. They gave up fun in the sun to gut homes.
Narcissism has
given way to activism. These young adults are about the cause of
Christ. They
are not crazy! I am so encouraged by hundreds of college students.
Our volunteers have given up vacations to be in the devastated Gulf
Coast.
Often they drive across the country, sleeping a night or two in a
church
basement or a Motel 6. At Trinity, they sleep on a stained carpet
on the floor
with 80 others and choose to work all day in the heat. They get
back to Trinity
tired and drenched with sweat. Yet, they are not crazy!
Volunteers constantly tell me that their lives are turned upside
down. In
losing their life, they find life. In giving, they receive. In
dying, they
find they are really living … some more than they ever have in their
entire
lives. These volunteers are making a difference. Beauty is coming
out of
ashes. Where sorrow resided at night, joy is coming in the
morning. Our
volunteers are not crazy!
Our Wednesday night services have been electrifying lately. A week
ago, it
seemed that every team brought their worksite homeowner to the
service. Imagine
- broken, devastated people who lost virtually everything. Yet, an
army of
volunteers had been with them for the week. Volunteers and
homeowners stood to
their feet and exclaimed joy, hope, and thankfulness. The sharing
could have
gone on all night. These volunteers are not crazy!
One homeowner said, "Before Katrina, I was worth two million
dollars. Now
I am worth nothing. I wish I were dead." A team member thought
about
saying, "Don't be afraid. The Lord sees you." Instead he said,
"We are here to help you." 35 team members arrived and blew this
man
away. During a prayer meeting at the end of the day the homeowner
prayed,
"Help me, Lord, with my unbelief. Give me faith to believe." The
team volunteer said, "Sometimes Mike, people have to see the Lord
before
they can hear Him."
One team said, "The mission of New Orleans has restored PASSION and
compassion to the entire congregation of Faith Evangelical Free,
Woodruff,
WI." They are having community events (with local media coverage)
to
re-tell the stories of what God did in New Orleans. The team needed
a truck to
get a huge amount of donated bathroom home accessories from
Wisconsin to New
Orleans. Where would the truck come from? They heard the story of
my
desperation early in Katrina when I told my associate, "Go into
Covington,
look for the first 18 wheel truck driver you see, and tell him that
God needs
your truck!" If you remember, God provided the truck in two hours.
This
team stepped out in faith, called a truck owner, and God provided a
truck. God
is awesome! "The eyes of the Lord move to and fro throughout the
earth
that He may strongly support those whose heart is completely His" (2
Chronicles 16:33). Amen? Amen.
Pray:
1. Pray for me. I am just keeping my head above water. The
opportunities are
incredible. However, being short-staffed is stretching. We are
voting on a
candidate Sunday and diligently interviewing others. Pray for
strength, wisdom
and endurance. Thank God for what He is doing despite our weakness
and
limitations. God often uses the weak things of this world. He has
one weary
pastor right now.
2. Pray for our strategic planning this week on the future of our
Compassion
ministry. This is so important. I believe our souls will be
damaged if we get
out of the Katrina ministry before God's timing. If we fix up our
own homes and
neighborhood and then forget about the poor and the city, we will
not be about
God's heart. Pray for us as we continue our commitment to being the
church of
the stained carpet for the long run.
3. Pray for resources to continue the work. We need $50,000 for
furnishings for
our new building and over $500,000 to pay off our new building.
4. Pray for a massive mobilization effort over the next 30 days to
prepare our
family discipleship building for effective service - self-help,
painting,
playgrounds, projects, decorations, etc.
5. Pray for our month-long open house for the entire community
during the month
of June. Our desire is to reach out to the Northshore with the love
of Jesus.
The community is white unto harvest.
The June schedule is as follows:
June 4: Children - Jubilee Gang - high energy multi-media ministry
experience
Adults - Steven Mosley, One-man drama (Rick Warren's Drama Pastor)
June 11: Children - Gene Cordova, Ventriloquist
Building Dedication
Community Picnic
June 12-16: Vacation Bible School - Mega Sports Camp
June 18: Children - VBS Sunday
June 25: Children - Commandos! USA - high energy power team
imparting God's
message
6. Pray for revival in the Gulf region and at Trinity Church.
Betting the Farm on God,
Michael
April 7,
2006
Calling all
Prayer Warriors
Over the
last 6 months I have feasted upon and been sustained by the God of
Exodus 17. The people of God faced a great challenge in their
confrontation with the Amalekites. Joshua and the men engaged them
while Moses went up to the hilltop to raise his hands in dependence
upon God. Oh, how he must have prayed. While his hands were raised,
the battle went well. When his arms drooped, the mission was
hindered and the enemy made inroads. Two friends came to his rescue
and lifted his arms. The victory was secured.
Here in
Covington our arms often droop. We covet your prayers. Prayer is the
battle because the prevailing power of God flows through prayer.
Prayer turns the tide. Prayer is "the slender nerve that moves the
Arm of Omnipotence." It's such a mystery but God works through
praying people. Prayer accomplishes what hard work, tenacity and
strategy can't. I wonder how much money has been given, lives that
have been changed, people saved, hearts softened and territory taken
from the evil one because believers have undergirded us in prayer.
Please don't forget to pray.
Prayer requests
for Trinity Church:
1. Prayer for
the unprecedented opportunity to reach our community for Christ. Ask
God for boldness, courage, and wisdom in reaching out to a needy
people who hunger for hope.
2. Pray for
church members who are attempting to re-emerge from disaster. Many
have no discretionary time and are stressed. Children too! Pray for
strains on marriages. Pray for many warriors who serve others above
themselves.
3. Pray for a
weary staff. Being four staff short causes all to do double and
triple duty. Pray for strength, endurance, and patience.
4. Praise God
that candidates are on the horizon to fill these positions:
a. Stephen
Lay from Dallas Seminary will be candidating this Sunday for the
Pastor of Adult Ministry position.
b. Becky
McLain chose to accept the position for follow-up ministry.
c. Fred
Hoffman has become our bookkeeper and probably our administrator.
d. We have
some wonderful candidates now for the Children’s Pastor.
5. Pray for the
completion of our new Children’s building. The construction company
will move out in a couple of weeks. The entire church needs to be
mobilized to finish turning the shell into a home by May 13.
6. Pray for the
grand opening during the month of June when we invite the Northshore
Community to visit with us. Each Sunday will include a major
children’s event including storytellers, puppets, ventriloquist,
Commando’s (brick-breakers, tear phone books, etc.), balloons,
prizes, picnics, etc. These celebrations will enable families in the
community to check out what God has provided. Our desire is to
connect people to Jesus and a local church so that moms and dads can
be supported and children can have one of the best hours of their
entire week. Our focus is on Discipleship and Evangelism. Our
mission is to develop fully devoted followers of Christ.
7. Pray for
labors to work with our massive workdays and for an expanded army of
volunteers to work with every aspect of Children’s Ministry.
8. Pray for
resources to continue to serve Jesus. Katrina has brought about
uncertain times. Pray for $50,000 needed for furnishings. Our
Capital Campaign fund for our new building has been greatly hampered
by Katrina. We are praying for wisdom in how to handle this and the
provision of over a half million dollars.
9. Pray for
preaching messages coming over the next four months.
a. Two weeks
will focus on our vision for Trinity and Compassion.
b. The week
after Easter will be on “Decoding the DiVinci Code."
c. I will
then begin preaching a series going through The Book of Luke and
looking at Jesus. My favorite person to preach on! In fact, if you
want to get to know God - look at Jesus.
10. Pray for
our continued interaction with teams - 130 were here last week and
more have come this week. These are choice people. Pray for
clarification of our mission, depth in our partnerships, money to
not grind to a halt, and wisdom that will allow for longevity.
Here is a
letter that illustrates the continued work:
Dear
Michael, I just want to encourage you and the church with a brief
testimony from a couple in Chalmette. When we arrived I asked the
owner as to how he was doing. He replied, "Before Katrina, I was
worth 2 million dollars. Today I am worth nothing. I wish I was
dead."
I was about
to say, "Don't be afraid, the Lord sees you." Instead, I said,
"We're here to help you. It's going to be okay." Later that day,
three more groups showed up to work on his house (about 35 people)
plus the "wiener wagon". The owner could not believe that so many
people cared for him and his family. Later that day, we prayed as a
group and the owner prayed, "Help me Lord with my unbelief. Give me
faith to believe."
Sometimes
Mike, people have to see the Lord before they can hear Him. And
sometimes it takes a whole church. The scriptures encourage us "to
let our light shine that people may see our good works." The
church's efforts and outreach for many Katrina households has been
nothing less than a miracle.
Mike, the
Lord sees the church's efforts and hearts to come alongside and be
the hands and feet of Jesus joining churches throughout the nation
and the globe to step into their boats as to say, (Mark 6:51). To
give grace through works to the people of Louisiana for it is in the
church's efforts the Lord is able to calm their storm and calm the
seas and the winds that tear their faith and hearts that they may
believe. Keep up the good work of sowing seed for the Kingdom He
loves you. The Lord is faithful and there to amaze. Take courage. He
sees your efforts. Don't forget the loaves.
A word for
the church; share it joyfully. The Lord is our Shepherd.
A brother
that cares
Thank you
dear friends for prayer. I asked a friend this week, “Am I crazy for
being involved in all we got going on?” Without your prayers I would
be in a heap, buried, undone, and ruined. The job is so massive yet
Jesus is so able. It is amazing what He continues to do though weak,
limited, frail people like us who make things up one day at a time.
Keep praying for us semi-cracked vessels who desire deeply to be
poured out for him. Our hearts register deeply with this passage:
"Therefore,
since we have this ministry, as we received mercy, we do not lose
heart, but we have renounced the things hidden because of shame, not
walking in craftiness or adulterating the word of God, but by the
manifestation of truth commending ourselves to every man's
conscience in the sight of God. And even if our gospel is veiled, it
is veiled to those who are perishing, in whose case the god of this
world has blinded the minds of the unbelieving so that they might
not see the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the
image of God. For we do not preach ourselves but Christ J |