a blog for our network of house churches

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

08.23.06 thequest UPdate

I Began a Journey Today – July 14, 2006.

by Victoria Cavendish


I began a journey today. It started with the alarm going off at 6:00 a.m. I hate alarm clocks. I hate their noise. I hate what they mean. I don’t want to get up because I must, but rather because I am done sleeping.

I was not done sleeping this morning. The dream—disturbing—was vivid in my mind and I needed to resolve its problems—a broken car, lack of a parking place, a need to be somewhere with my eldest child. How was I going to get there? What had happened to my car? And would I ever find a parking place where I wouldn’t be towed? All very silly things as I now contemplate them.

Nonetheless, I called to my youngest daughters and told them the time. Neither responded and I pushed the snooze alarm. I push the snooze button at least five or six times every morning. I hate alarms. I hate getting up when I’m tired.

At 7:15, I finally rolled out of my bed. My two daughters were already up getting ready for summer school. My 13-year old spends an unbelievable amount of time primping herself. My 10-year old, in contrast, has to be ordered to take showers, brush her teeth, and brush her hair. This, too, I know shall pass and soon she will be boy-crazy and worried about her appearance. For now, she retains her childhood innocence and cares more about the experience and wonder of living life to its fullest.

I got dressed and trundled downstairs, dog and cat following. They know I am the one that opens the doors in the morning. I am the one that takes them for the first morning walk. I opened the doors and call for Runt the little gray striped cat. No response. He will come when he is hungry.

I made my coffee and called Mindy, our dog. After gathering needed things—leash, purse, keys, books, pens, etc.—we pile into the car, the girls, me, and Mindy.

I dropped them off at school and they rejoiced that they were early this day. I am a chronically late person. It goes back to my hatred of alarms and any artificial construct telling me I must be someplace at a certain time.

Mindy whined as they leave the car. Mindy is a border collie mix, and she does not like to see her “sheepies” leave her. Of course, she is ecstatic when they return, jumping and greeting them with licks and barks. Her enthusiasm of her dance of greeting is directly proportional to how long her sheep has been gone. Interestingly, once a sheep, always a sheep. She remembers my children’s childhood friends and greets them with as much excitement as a family member. She is not that way with strangers. She is a good dog. We are lucky to have her as a friend.

Today I decided we would go to a different park for our morning constitutional—a British way of saying going for a walk. Sharon Woods seemed close and interesting. I was bored with Antrim Lake. The gravel path annoys me as does the loudness of the cars going by on 315, the highway that bisects the park.

By the time we parked, the morning fog had lifted. A man was mowing the wide picnic area. The smell of the cut grass was delicious. I didn’t even mind the sound of the mower as I enjoyed the smell so. I decided we would walk around the picnic area over by the lake. I would have preferred to take a trail, but the park does not allow pets on nature trails. I wonder why.

I stopped by the billboard at the beginning of the picnic area trail and noticed pictures of the eastern bluebird. I would like to see one. The last time I had been here with Patricia, my youngest, we had seen a blue jay. A blue jay's blue color is not so striking as the eastern bluebird’s.

We began our walk. I watched birds flying and marveled at their ability to stay suspended in air. To have a 3-dimensional world where you can go travel up and down besides forward, backward, and sideways would be an interesting adventure. I noticed that they do not always flap their wings but at times seem to have a controlled falling-gliding motion. Intriguing.

The air was cool but damp with moisture. A soft breeze rustled the leaves of trees and meadow grasses. I turned left onto the park road that ended at the far end of the lake. It was a pond when I was a child. How had it become so large?

I caught sight of a something yellow on a thistle. A large yellow butterfly I mused, but no. It was a small yellow finch. It’s beak was red. I stopped to watch it, amazed that it was light enough that the thistle could hold it up. I tried to get nearer to see it more closely. I lamented that I was not wearing my glasses and owned no binoculars. My movement frightened it and it flew further into the trees. I noted its tiny size and the blackness of its wings. I wondered what it was. Later I looked it up, it was probably an American Goldfinch.

We walked on. Suddenly I caught sight of blue color up in the picnic area’s trees to the right. I focused on it and realized I was seeing a bluebird. How lucky to see one right after I had seen its pictures on the billboard.

We walked on. A lady stepped out of a car and asked me if this was the multipurpose trail. I answered that I did not know and walked on. Two other ladies who heard her question came to talk to her as they had similar questions.

I have a map of the park in my head with all the trails drawn and parking areas and picnic areas marked, but I know no names, simply directions and pictures. What is in a name, I mused. All my knowledge of the park was useless to that woman as I could not communicate effectively with her. Language is an interesting construct of humans. It sets us apart from the beasts of the field. Was I regressing or not progressing by not learning the words?

I came to the lake. Three boys were fishing with an older man sitting. I stopped and watched the tableau. A younger boy reeled in his line then swung his pole and dropped the line farther out. An older boy simply stood and held his pole. The first boy said excitedly, “I caught a fish, Papau,” and began reeling his line back in. His older brother expressed disbelief, but his grandfather just said, “Did you now?” I watched to see if he had, but he hadn’t and no one said anything negative. I walked on not wanting to make them nervous because of my watching. How nice to see the ancient way of humanity expressed so elegantly, the old teaching the young with patience and kindness.

Farther on I found a father with his two daughters but they looked up as I passed by. I did not stop as their’s was a feeling of privacy that invited no observation from an unknown person.

I walked through a flock of geese. They parted and gave us wide berth as they saw Mindy. Their obvious concern over this hairy beast was evident in their mindful eyes on her movements. Mindy for her part ignored them. I wish I could. They stunk or should I say their waste smelled. I had never noticed such an odor from geese before though I have lived near and walked among them many times. I walked on quickly quelling the nausea that rose in my throat.

Just past the geese, I slowed in wonder. What was this tree I saw with leaves like feathers? It had to be some type of spruce and yet I do not remember ever seeing one like this. I reached out and touched its branchlets. Yes, they were knobby just like a spruce. I touched its leaves. They were soft and delicate, not like the usual needles of pines and spruce trees. The featheriness reminded me of a Norfolk pine but the needles were so tiny almost fern like. I saw no cones but then I did not look for them. I searched my North American tree book later but could not identify the tree. It is a mystery. Perhaps on another trip I can ask a ranger.

I walked on and was amazed that I had seen so many new things in a park that was familiar from childhood. Had I never looked before?

We came to the branch in the trail where a grassy path cut a swath through a meadow. This was our path back to the car. I thought this portion would be boring but was proven wrong. The meadow was alive with bees and butterflies. I saw a multiwinged creature similar to a dragonfly but whose flight resembled a butterfly’s. I again wished I had my glasses on so that I could actually make out what it was.

I found the lone red flower that Patricia had pointed out in the middle of the field on our last trip to the park. It was beautiful in it’s own right, not simply as a solitary bright splash of color in the green and gold field. Patricia was wrong, though; I found another smaller specimen of the same plant as I walked further.

I saw a bumble bee and stopped to watch its progress as it sipped nectar from every blossom on a clover head. Its long probiscus entered each blossom and gathered its sweetness. I walked on and saw a strange sight. A bumble bee sat still, not moving, on a thistle blossom. I had never seen one unmoving. I examined it and noticed a patch of yellow fuzz on its back was missing. It was a particularly large bee. I wondered if it had died of old age. What is the length of a life span of a bumble bee? My eyes roamed the field and close by I saw another thistle with a bumble bee similarly still. Another mystery. Gingerly I reached out and touched the first bee to see if it was alive. It slowly moved and then speeding up began crawling over the thistle’s blossoms looking for sustenance. Was it slow from age? Do bees get arthritis? Had it been asleep? Do bees need sleep? Was the blossom soporific for bees? More questions to ask a park ranger when next I saw one.

As I was about to exit the meadow trail I noticed a strange thing, a Queen Anne’s Lace flower that was pink. A white one bobbed next to the pink one, and I wondered if the same plant had produced the variation. My gaze traveled down the stems and I noted that the plants were two. Even the inner blossom of the pink flower was pink instead of the characteristic dark blood red color of all the blossoms I had seen before. How amazing! How blessed I was to see so much on my short walk.

I crossed the road and retraced my steps on the path leading to the car. But my journey of discovery was not over. Beside the path I noticed wild blackberry bushes. One had a ripened berry that awoke yearning in me. I did not need this berry. I was not hungry, yet I longed to taste its wildness. I reached my hand out tentatively looking furtively around and almost guiltily I took it. The birds would not miss one berry. I looked at its plumpness in my fingers as I held it delicately. Then I quickly popped it in my mouth. It was not sweet but sour but even it sourness was delicious. I reveled in this taste of summer and walked on.

Walking to the car and unlocking its door, I felt a satisfaction and peace I had not known when the alarm had jangled my nerves this morning. No, I don’t like to get up in the morning nor do I particularly like exercise for its own sake. How much I would have missed if I had stayed in bed or gone home after dropping off the girls.

My journey ended. My purpose achieved. Sometimes the holy message of creation is more eloquent than the Bible. “For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made.” Romans 1:20

Do I understand who I am or who He is? Do I know His plan for my life? No. Yet I have peace. The thought and intelligence He put into making this world has been put into me. I am a part of this amazing world. What greater privilege could I seek than to know I am His, created for His pleasure and purpose?


To read the rest of thequest UPdate, click here

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Urban Church Planting--a short video

Tim Boal posted this to his blog...and I thought it was worthy to post here as well:

Christians in the United Kingdom talk about what Anabaptist urban church planting might look like. Featuring Stuart Murray Williams.

Click Here: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3810722917615661271&q=church+planting

Thursday, August 17, 2006

08.17.06 thequest UPdate

thequest family,

At the National Celebration of our Grace Brethren family, a central Ohio area pastor was asked to speak--Terry Hofecker from Northwest Chapel in Dublin. His title was Not by Might, Nor by Power. Zechariah 4:1-14

This phrase which bounces around in Christian circles- "not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit says the Lord" has held great power through the ages. That was the first point- It is about the Holy Spirit. He must be at the center of things. We can't do anything without Him. Our dependence must be on His guidance, not our own. This was a great reminder....

Pastor Terry's third point looked intently into verse 10. In the story of the passage, it is a prophecy from the Lord about the completion of the Temple project by Zerubbabel. Listen in:

Zerubbabel is the one who laid the foundation of this Temple, and he will complete it. Then you will know that the LORD Almighty has sent me. Do not despise these small beginnings, for the LORD rejoices to see the work begin, to see the plumb line in Zerubbabel's hand. (Zech 4:9-10 NLT)

Embedded in this passage is that amazing statement--Do not despise these small beginnings. Actually in the original it is a rhetorical question:

Who despises the day of small things?

or consider this contemporary translation which gets the spirit of this question:

For who dares make light of small beginnings? (trans. from the NET Bible)


The idea behind a rhetorical question is that everyone knows the answer. If I ask this:

Isn't it true that the Buckeyes the best college football team in the country? Everyone knows (even the polls) the answer to that. Now don't get side-tracked by my illustration.

The answer that everyone knows to God's question: Who dares make light of small beginnings? NOBODY. Small is the way things get started. From building the Temple to growing an apple tree, it always starts small.

I was moved by this truth. Beyond that, I really began to embrace that this is the common sense design of our God for the way things work in our world.

In our culture of XL, mega and super-size, the small things get the shaft. They are overlooked. Maybe even despised by some. God's rhetorical questions helps us set out to do the small things. To encourage our co-worker, smile at people on the street, pick up the laundry, make a meal for a neighbor, share more about Jesus in a conversation, etc... All small things, but don't despise those small things, they pave the way to bigger things.

Small churches ought not be despised either--from without or from within. Rather than bemoan what you don't have, look at all the benefits you do. You can know each other, reach out to many, serve each other and meet in all kinds of places and times. Don't despise the small things.... That's the way God made things to get started.

For who dares make light of small beginnings?

Press on,

Mike

Read the remainder of thequest UPDate here

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

08.09.06 thequest UPdate

thequest family,

This week I read a compelling piece...which I thought I would pass on to you here:

X Factor Evangelism by Michael Wiles


To the early Christians a capital X signified Christ. When we involve ourselves in X Factor Evangelism, we are trying to emulate Christ's example in reaching the lost. Christ always started with love. Love is the key that opened the door for Him to minister, but Christ did not stop with love. Love is not enough if it is separated from the light and truth of Scriptures.

Too often when we try to evangelize, we emphasize one aspect over the other. Trying to be the light of the world without love is often hurtful and pushes people away. Love without light does not bring the true healing that a lost and hurting world needs.

X Factor evangelists are willing to love those who are different from themselves and be salt and light in their lives. They are willing to overlook the differences of custom, language, dress and style. Their motivation is to help, not hurt, to make the hurting feel better and not just make themselves feel better. They desire to have a positive impact on all those around them, not just the ones who look, act, and talk like them. They strive to have an impact with life-changing results, an impact that involves bringing everyone to the true light ? Jesus.

To be able to impact the lives of others we must have relational credibility with them, they must begin to trust us, they must give us access to their lives, they must, in the words of a juvenile inmate, allow us to move into their "top five" of influence.

Let me explain what this means. I recently attended a Kirk Franklin concert where he recounted his trip to a juvenile detention center earlier that day. During the visit he met one young man that said "Mr. Franklin, I have to be honest with you. I have some of your music but you are not in my top five favorite artists. But, he added, none of my top five have come to visit me in jail. I want you to know that you are now in my top five, not because of your music, but because you took the time to come here today.?

For God to use us to impact our world it is not about how talented we are but about how willing we are to show love for all people and how much we are willing to take the time to be salt and light in their lives.

X Factor Evangelism will help you to truly love and disciple others as Jesus commanded us to do. It will help you to identify and change those thoughts, beliefs and actions that close the door to relational evangelism to the hurting in your world. Let me tell you the stories of two ordinary people that are living X Factor Evangelists.

Tom intentionally bought his morning coffee from the same convenience store so he could develop a relationship with Mark and look for opportunities to make Christ relevant to him. If you would see Tom and Mark side by side you would notice that they have little in common in the way of appearance. Tom is very clean-cut and traditional in appearance. Mark is just the opposite with tattoos and piercings covering much of his body. Mark now has a personal relationship with Jesus due to Tom being willing to overlook their differences and "take the time" to get into Mark's "top five."

Frank, an atheist, was invited to a Bible study by Jonathon. Frank went and intentionally challenged all the "stupid things" discussed at the meeting. Frank expected Jonathon to get mad and not invite him back. To his surprise Jonathon was patient and answered each question. Jonathon allowed, and even encouraged, him to disagree, at which time he then patiently walked Frank through the Bible. Today Frank's questions are answered and he is serving the God he once didn't believe existed.

It is my prayer that as you apply the principles of X Factor Evangelism you will learn to express God's love in such a way that you are moved into someone's "top five" of influence and have opportunities to be salt and light during your normal daily routine. May God lead you to be the X Factor in the lives of others so that you may play a part in touching lives and changing hearts.


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This article was pieced together by Mike Jentes from a recent ChurchSmart resource catalog and is found online here. The book X Factor Evangelism is available from ChurchSmart Resources and from the author's website/ministry You Can Ministries


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The rest of thequest UPdate HERE

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Ron & Chery Boehm our missionareies to the MidWest. www.gbnam.org

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

08.02.06 thequest UPdate

thequest family,

Last week, I shared with you about 4 points of emphasis for our logo. Well yesterday I was talking with Jesus and it sure seemed like He wants me to add a 5th point.

I had a time of deep conviction and giving back thequest family to the Lord after one of the sessions here at our National Celebration. It was so clear that I was trying to control things on my own. I needed to stop. I needed to be reminded by our Jesus that it is His Church.

In the middle of that dialogue, the Spirit pointed me back to the thoughts about our paper chain. I began to muse less and less about the paper, and more and more about the chain. I was flashing through Scripture thinking of where chains show up. Thinking about what chains were used for. They are used for binding things.

Prisoners are in chains. The Apostle Paul was in chains. He was a prisoner, but that didn't stop him from sharing the Gospel. Chains were on all sorts of people in the New Testament. Peter was in them until an angel led him out of prison. They couldn't keep the demonized man in chains.

Chains bind people. Paul closes out his letter to the Colossians by saying...Remember my chains. Paul earlier in that letter describes two other men as being bound. Epaphras (1:7) and Tychicus (4:7) are "bond-servants." They are bound to Jesus. They are no longer their own. They are bound to someone else. They are chained to Jesus.

This bond was not in a brutal prisoner relationship, but as a willing servant who willingly wrapped the chains around his wrists. Then gave the end of the chain to Jesus to allow and submit to His guidance.

We in thequest family are bound to Jesus. He is our Savior, Lord, Leader, Friend, Comfort and Messiah. As we remember our paper chain, may it remind us--It's all about Jesus. We are chained to Him. And we delight to go with Him because He has what is best in mind for us.

It's not about inviting Jesus into your heart. It's about chaining yourself to Jesus. It's about losing my life for His sake. I can refuse and I could gain the whole world yet still lose my soul. Let's live bound to Jesus.

Your fellow bond-servant,

Mike



the rest of the 08.02.2006 thequest email UPdate