Tag Archives: vision

Looking ahead to 2012: “Make the most of your time, because the days are evil”

-Ephesians 5:16

NOTE: I’m not saying things will go badly, or that there will be a global meltdown, etc., I’m simply saying not to sweat it, there are more important things to worry about.

Jacob knocked it out of the park yesterday (in his sermon at our church, you can watch it here) with these three observations (I’m taking a lot of liberty in melding his sermon with my reaction to it):

1) Paul doesn’t exhort us to make the most of our time because the future looks so bright, but because the present and near future look so bleak.

I’m not complaining. (My life is phenomenal in every sense. I’m married to an amazing woman..we just celebrated 10 years! I bless God for my two children. Friends and family are spotted all around the globe. Our local church is healthy and growing, regardless of the myriad of challenges.) I’m just saying that Paul’s is an anti-prosperity message. Are you worried about what lies ahead? Are you worried about the ramifications of a collapsing Euro? An indebted USA? Global unrest? Sickness? A loss of a job?

Paul tells us that these are actually the sources of unique opportunities.

These are all reasons to make the most of my time, investing in what will never fade. When bad times came, Paul didn’t encourage the church to hunker down. He encouraged the opposite. Times are bad? Get out and engage into our mission with gritted teeth, armed with hope that surpasses death. Are we on the verge of global collapse? Stand up and be counted, don’t hide in a ditch.

2) Paul’s exhortation is not to more action, but to intentional action.

Making the most of my time doesn’t mean sleeping less. It means opening my eyes to the unique opportunities around me during bleak times. What really counts? What doesn’t? Maybe I need to spend less time at work and more time with my family. Maybe I need to spend less time in a softball league and more time loving on those hurting in my community. Maybe now is the time to sell it all and move to another community, or country.

Losing a job may be the biggest blessing of my life, causing me to reevaluate what life is for. Cancer may be what shatters the chains that attached my heart to what matters least. An exploded marriage may be what forces me to my knees for the first time in years.

As a pastor and missionary, this is exactly what I’ve seen. I can give multiple names for each one of these examples. When times are evil, my frenetic life screeches to a halt as I wrap tearful arms around the few things that count. Thanks you Jesus for the evil times.

3) The evil times will pass, the investments we make in what really counts will last forever.

The stakes in 2012 are eternal. What this means is that I can stop sweating the small stuff… (like the strength of the Euro/Dollar/Yuan, a global economic meltdown, or a stupid Mayan calendar), and begin investing in what matters: the people all around me: my wife, my children, my neighbors, my fellow image-bearers in Cairo, Guayaquil, Paris, and Phnom Penh: their physical needs, and their current and future relationship to their Savior.

Let’s sweat the big stuff in 2012: loving on our fellow image-bearers: weeping over their physical and spiritual situations. Jesus did not conquer death for the benefit of a stable global situation in the present era. He conquered death to save people, now and forever.

Close your eyes. Do you see their faces? Do you see your Savior?

Evil times will pass. These investments will last forever.

Thank you Jacob for yanking us back to reality yesterday.


1) Building Hunt 2) Jonah 3) Church Planting 4) Thanksgiving

Shared this in an e-mail with a brother. Then thought I should post it publicly as we hunt for prayer.
Thank you, thank you, thank you for praying.

Building Hunt…

Last week I visited a potential building. It’s a 16,000+ square-foot two-story building smack-dab in downtown St Jerome. The first floor is rented by several different businesses, leaving 8,000+ upstairs for us, all with rental contracts of 5 years or perhaps more. The location is incredible. And with the rentals it looks like it may be great financially. But the aspect that makes me the most nervous is having to constantly deal with the rentals.

We’re going to take the next exploratory step and put some serious prayer into it as we go. God will lead us where He wants us to go. If the building doesn’t launch us forward to love St Jérôme more effectively, but instead impedes us… we want nothing of it. We are not here for buildings. Buildings are tools.

Jonah…

This morning I preached on Jonah 1:4-16. The main point is that the world does not work like it should. Jonah acts like a pagan, the sailors act like prophets should. Our only hope is God’s sovereignty… and that is on full display throughout the entire book. Obey or disobey, God can, does, and will, use us.

We finished with the Lord’s supper. There is only one hero. It’s not Jonah, or a pastor, or a christian. It’s Jesus Himself. He is the only one who saved us and will never disappoint.

Church Planting…

Have some serious regional and provincial church-planting projects. Won’t go into it here. Just can’t figure out how to have enough time. God is up to something though. There are multiple things popping up all over the province that tell me God is planning something big in the near future. Kind of like moving in for check mate. You feel it coming and see things happening, but just don’t know exactly when and how. I trust He knows what He’s doing.

Thanksgiving…

Looking forward to jetting down to my cousin’s in Albany for thanksgiving. My brother will travel up from N. Carolina before shipping out as a Marine to Afghanistan in January. My sister is also coming up from the D.C. area. It will be a great family get together (Albany is about 5 hours from our place).

Thanks for your prayers. We always, always need them.

In Christ,

-Rob


How To Pray for Québec: 3,000 New Churches! (from Operation World)

A church a day… every day… for the next eight years.

Montreal Crowd

Montreal Crowd waiting for a ColdPlay concert (Photo by Anirudh Koul)

(from  page 196 of Operation World):

Québec is a unique region that has experienced in one or two generations the secularization and modernization that took France centuries to accomplish. While mostly French in language and culture, it is increasingly multicultural, with an Anglophone minority and growing immigrant communities. Pray for:

    1. Political currents that swirl around the issue of separation from Canada. Although such sentiment has waned of late, it is never far from becoming prominent. Pray that Quebec might make a valuable contribution to the redemptive history of Canada.
    2. Québec CanadaThe Catholic church dominates Québecois identity and culture (more than 80% self-identify as Catholic), but not in attendance. Québec’s church attendance rate is Canada’s lowest. There is a demonstrably low commitment to community activities; in particular, church and faith are highly personal and privatized.
    3. Evangelicals* in Québec. Protestants are decidedly low in number and evangelical churches regarded as nearly cults. While Protestants are very mixed among French, English and immigrant cultures, there are also a significant number of practicing Catholics with evangelical beliefs.** Pray for unity, fellowship and even collaboration.
    4. Church planting needs to occur in much greater measure. To bring Québec up to par with the rest of Canada in the numbers of evangelical congregations, 3,000 more churches must be planted.
    5. Ministry vision to Québec and beyond. Christian Direction/Urbanus partners with all denominations in the vision to have a spiritual impact on the whole Francophone world, starting in Québec. French-Canadian evangelicals usually feel more affinity with other Francophone evangelicals globally than with Anglophone Canadian evangelicals.

* **Clarifications in following posts


Two-Weeks to Launch Baby! (Saint Eustache’s Sunday Morning Services Begin September 26, 2010)…

…and we’re still praying for the church in Saint Eustache (Église l’Oasis), for Ken (lead pastor) & Anne Taylor, and for a fabulously humble, passionate, and committed core group.

Here’s an introductory video to the church (for those who speak French, for those who don’t, at least you’ll see and hear Ken).


What Are the Essential Elements of a Church Planting Movement?

First of all, we need to define what a church-planting movement is. Here is David Garrison’s definition:

A rapid and multiplicative increase of indigenous churches planting churches within a given people group or population segment

According to Ed Stetzer, no such movement exists among the majority peoples in any of the thirty-four western industrialized democracies in the world. Though much church planting is taking place in many western countries, it has not reached this point of “rapid and multiplicative increase”. He spent a year looking for one, with this eventual conclusion:

Ed’s search for the mysterious church planting movements began to feel a lot like looking for the Holy Grail in the Middle Ages. Everyone knows that it exists, and everyone knows someone who has seen it. But the Grail always ends up two villages away, and when you search two villages away, the treasure is another two villages away. Likewise, today many people seem to be hearing a buzz about a church planting movement (among the majority peoples in the western industrialized world), so everybody thinks there is one-but somewhere else. (p. 167, Viral Churches)

Such movements do exist, however. Just not among Western Industrialized democracies. They have even been thoroughly observed and documented:

Looking over the Two-Thirds World-parts of Asia, Africa, and Latin America-where millions of people are coming to faith in Jesus Christ through the church planting movements, Garrison generalized something he named the ten “universal elements of a church planting movement.” According to his research, these qualities do not appear to be

limited to one geographical, cultural, or sociological sector of

the world. They have been documented in relatively affluent and impoverished urban areas, as well as rural, pluralistic, Hindu, Buddhist, communist, Muslim, Roman Catholic, animistic, and even post-Christian secular contexts. (p. 168, Viral Churches)

There are such movements among western settings (Cuba), in industrialized societies (China), in democracies (many in Central and South America), and among majority peoples (many in Asia and Africa). (p. 167, Viral Churches)

Here are David Garrison’s Universal Elements of Church Planting Movements:

  1. Prayer
  2. Abundant Gospel sowing (focus on evangelism)
  3. Intentional church planting
  4. Scriptural authority
  5. Local leadership
  6. Lay leadership
  7. Cell or house churches (structures that enable rapid multiplication)
  8. Churches planting churches
  9. Rapid multiplication
  10. Healthy churches

How long does it take to make a Disciple?

Viral Churches Ed Stetzer Warren Bird“The real turning point is to know when someone is ready to lead. If a church multiplication movement is to emerge, our disciple-making strategy must be characterized in two ways: intentional and full of faith.

By intentional, we mean the planter must immediately and intentionally invest into those who will be the next leaders. You must make the decision that they are worth every effort you can give them.

Second, our disciple-making must be full of faith. Not in the person we’re discipling but in the divine Person to whom they belong.

Don’t get caught in the trap of thinking you have to stay until they are 100 percent ready. None of us were 100 percent ready when we planted our first church and neither will any of your followers by. Instead trust that as God prepared and steadied you through the process, he will do the same for them. By showing confidence in them, they will show confidence in those God raises up after you are gone.”

-p. 42, Viral Churches, by Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird


The Ability to Control vs. Launching into the Unknown

Viral Churches Ed Stetzer Warren Bird“In seminary, many of us learned the metric of “churches multiplying disciples.” Though it is a noble goal, it will never result in massive multiplication. The emphasis is on changing one life at a time, slowly and incrementally. We measure addition because, at its core, it is a metric built upon the ability to control the situation.

Well-intentioned people will slow or squelch a multiplication movement by pursuing “quality,” waiting for “maturity”, or insisting on adherence to the existing organizational structure.

With “disciples multiplying churches,” you are inviting the unknown. It is the place where the person in the pew, chair, or theater seat is given permission—or better stated, given marching orders—to go and change the world by starting a new church.

When you allow this idea to invade your congregation, God will raise up leaders from corners of the congregation that you never expected and who will do more than you ever imagined.” -p. 41


What We’ve Been Up To: 24 Hours of Vision (Photos)

For the second year in a row at the end of January, 30 of us from the church in St Jérôme disappeared in a lodge Friday and Saturday to pray and plan 2010. It was fun, funny, serious, and energizing (though I was exhausted after preaching Sunday morning as well). We praise God for the opportunity to grow together. Here are a few photos:

24-hours of vision

It's 10pm Friday night, we've just finished 2-hours of pray, and now we're all celebrating Paulo's birthday

L-R: Danny, Réal, Jacob, Paul

L-R: Danny, Réal, Jacob, Paulo

It's getting late

Réal: It's getting late


Video: The State of Global Christianity (a phenomenal video from Urbana)


12 Daughter Churches in 12 Years…

… for a church of 400-500.

Chris has a backwards, red, baseball cap in the middle of the back row, Meryl sports as black baseball cap in front of him.

Chris has a backwards, red, baseball cap in the middle of the back row, Meryl sports a black baseball cap in front of him.

Chris, the main teaching pastor-elder of Southlands Church, and his wife Meryl, kindly gave of their precious Sunday afternoon as they traded stories over enchiladas with Martine and I.

They began their journey in South Africa where their former church has planted around 60 daughter churches. 12 years ago God led them to southern California where their current church has since planted 12 daughter churches.

What?!? A new daughter church every year?

Chris explained to me that it’s not about a church planting program or strategy (which can be helpful), but it’s about building a culture of sending. Each time their church sends a group out people naturally look around and ask, “okay, who’s next?”.

Here’s the kicker. We had the privilege of visiting Southlands church last Sunday and it was one of the friendliest churches we have ever been to. Martine wasn’t left alone for more than two minutes during our entire visit as complete strangers.

Dozens choose to launch out from this family-like setting every year. Goodbyes are murmured between hugs and tears. More are sent.

Chris & Meryl, thank you for taking the time to be with Martine and I.

May God grant that Quebec tremble as God works similar miracles in her midst.


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