a blog for our network of house churches

Thursday, July 26, 2007

07.26.07 thequest UPdate

thequest family,

A diary of a few days. That's what I wanted to share from my vantage point about what God is doing in and through us.

On Saturday we spent the day celebrating Andy and Natalie's wedding. What a cool thing! The wedding kicked off with Andy's pastor from thequest giving the welcome--and it wasn't me! It was Larry T! That's how it ought to be, the house church leader is the shepherd and so it was so appropriate that Andy asked Larry to serve that important role in his life.

During the wedding we got the chance to hang out with some friends from Texas and Portugal that were here to celebrate with Andy along with others from thequest.

Yep, you guessed it, those folks from Portugal are the Schwartz'. We spent the evening with them a few nights later enjoying the hospitality of the Jackson's and seeing many folks along with having some visitors. It was so good to pray for the 3 families who are part of the life of the Schwartz family.

During that Tuesday night, we heard about the impact we have been able to have in Africa. Over the last 3 years, we provided a scholarship to the Feyboi family for their Bible training. Both Ferdinand and Christine are leaders of leaders. We heard a report about their graduation got to see their picture and celebrate them each graduating first in their class!

So what about in our sphere- urban Columbus? Well on Wednesday, 450 fliers were hand delivered yesterday about our Summer Bible Club coming up in 2 weeks. Super huge thanks to Grace Institute from the Powell Grace Brethren Church for helping with that!

Then tonight, the new family House Church was into the 2nd Miracle of Jesus in the Gospel of John...and the kids dubbed it "#2-It's better to believe than to see" (John 4-the healing of the official's son.)

Whew...a lot of things are brewing. There's even more going on in individual lives, but this is enough for this entry.

I'm so glad to be walking with this world-wide family of humble saints who are pressing on to praise our Jesus!

Press on,
Mike

Read the rest of thequest weekly email update HERE

There's no place like home, these Christians say - Los Angeles Times

There's no place like home, these Christians say - Los Angeles Times Cover Story July 23, 2007
By David Haldane, Times Staff Writer

Small gatherings in believers' houses are attended by 1 in 11 U.S. adults, a survey finds. Compared with huge church services, it's 'like a conversation. It's somebody talking to you,' one devotee says

Read the full article HERE>> http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/la-me-housechurch23jul23,1,6416081,full.story?coll=la-headlines-frontpage&ctrack=2&cset=true

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Overcoming Sexual Guilt for the Cause of Christ by John & Abraham Piper


Sexual sin is destructive, but the guilt that follows can be just as disastrous. This guilt is causing thousands to waste their lives.

A tragic number of young people who once dreamed of radical obedience to Jesus have lost this desire. They used to be joyfully willing to sacrifice anything to make Jesus known, but then this urgency faded into uselessness. The gnawing sense of unworthiness and spiritual powerlessness that can come from undealt-with sexual guilt is causing many young people to forsake Christ’s mission.

The tragedy is not mainly masturbation, fornication or pornography. The tragedy is that Satan takes your 2 a.m. encounters with your boyfriend, girlfriend or computer and tells you: “See, you’re a loser. No way can your miserable life make a difference for Jesus!” The tragedy is if he can convince you to trade in your radical dreams for a life of superficial pleasures until you die in your lakeside rocking chair, wrinkled and useless.


I want to take the weapon of your guilt out of Satan’s hand. Yes, I want you to have the courage to not sleep around or surf for porn in the first place. But sooner or later, whether it’s those sins or another, you are going to fail. So the question is not “How can I be perfect?” but “How can I fail in a way that doesn’t sweep me into a life of wasted, middle-class mediocrity with no impact for Christ?”


Kill Temptation with Truth


Many people are ruined by sexual temptation, failure and guilt because their souls and minds have shriveled to the size of a sitcom. That kind of small-mindedness is why the prophet Hosea cried out, “Let us acknowledge the Lord; let us press on to acknowledge him,” and “My people are destroyed from lack of knowledge” (6:3, 4:6, TNIV).


Biblical knowledge of God, Christ, faith and the cross will revitalize your soul and mind and protect you from sin. It will give ballast to the boat of your life so that the wind of temptation will not be able to tip you over so easily.


The Apostle Paul summarizes the most important thing to know in the fight against sin: "When you were dead in your sins and in the uncircumcision of your sinful nature, God made you alive with Christ. He forgave us all our sins, having canceled the charge of our legal indebtedness, which stood against us and condemned us; he has taken it away, nailing it to the cross" (Colossians 2:13-14).

Instead of holding your sins up in front of your face and using them as the warrant to send you to hell, God put them in the palm of His Son’s hand and nailed them to the cross.

In the next verse Paul says, “And having disarmed the powers and authorities, [God] made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross” (Colossians 2:15). This is referring to the devil and his demons. How are they defeated? Don’t they still prowl around like a roaring lion (1 Peter 5:8)?

Yes, they can still do a lot of damage, but we are saved because on the cross God destroyed Satan’s only weapon against us—unforgiven sin. He can still beat you up and tell all kinds of lies. He will accuse you and shame you, but he cannot damn you. That weapon is gone. Only unforgiven sin damns. And that was what God nailed to the cross for everyone who trusts in Jesus.


With this theology—the magnificent doctrines of substitutionary atonement and justification by faith (even if you don’t know the names)—you can conquer the devil. Hold fast to your salvation and you will have a defense against him when he tells you that your sexual failures rule you out of Christ’s mission and condemn you to a life of meaningless, middle-class prosperity.


Trust Christ with Gutsy Guilt


How can we feel guilt without being ruined by it? Guilt is a good reaction to sin, after all. The problem is letting Satan use it to destroy us. How should lovers of Jesus feel guilty when they do wrong! ?


The prophet Micah offers us a picture of what to say to your enemy as he condemns you: "Do not gloat over me, my enemy! Though I have fallen, I will rise. Though I sit in darkness, the LORD will be my light. Because I have sinned against him, I will bear the LORD's wrath, until he pleads my case and establishes my right. He will bring me out into the light; I will see his righteousness" (Micah 7:8-9).


I call what Micah describes here “gutsy guilt.” He admits that he has done wrong and that God is dealing roughly with him. But even while he suffers, he knows that God is on his side.
You can use words like these whenever Satan tempts you to throw away your life on trifles as if that’s all you’re good for. The morning after you fail, take your theology and respond with gutsy guilt to anyone who tells you Christ can’t use you.

Here is what you say:
Do not gloat over me, my enemy! You enjoy my failure? You think you will draw me into your deception? Think again. Though I have fallen, I will rise. Yes, I have fallen. I hate what I have done. I grieve at the dishonor I have brought on Jesus. But I will rise.
Though I sit in darkness, the LORD will be my light. Yes, I feel miserable. I feel guilty. I am guilty. But the same God who makes my darkness is a sustaining light to me. He will not forsake me.


Because I have sinned against him, I will bear the LORD's wrath, until he pleads my case and establishes my right. Yes, I have sinned. God is indignant at me. But the very One who is angry with me is on my side. You say He is against me and that I have no future with Him because of my failure. That is a lie. My God, whose Son is my salvation, will stand up for me. For me! Not against me.


He will bring me out into the light; I will see his righteousness. This misery that I feel because of my failure, I will bear as long as God decides. And this I know for sure: He will bring me out to the light, and I will look upon His righteousness.

The Increasing Preciousness of Christ


My brothers and sisters, when you learn to deal with the guilt of sexual failure with this kind of brokenhearted boldness, this strong, joyful trust that you have been justified and atoned for, this kind of gutsy guilt, you will find yourself failing less and less. Christ will become wonderful and precious to you—too wonderful and precious for you to turn to anything else for satisfaction.
And best of all, Satan will not be able to destroy your dream of a life of radical obedience to Christ. If you turn to God in your guilt and trust Jesus as your substitute, no one will ever be able to prevent you from having a profound effect for Jesus in the world.


Author: John Piper, With Abraham Piper John Piper is the Pastor for Preaching at Bethlehem Baptist Church in Minneapolis, Minn. He is the author of several books including Desiring God, Don’t Waste Your Life and What Jesus Demands from the World. From 850 Words of Relevant July 23, 2007

Thursday, July 19, 2007

07.19.07 thequest UPdate

thequest family,

I'm still being challenged as I reflect on our Assembly from Sunday. The challenge around a blind man who proclaimed Jesus before the religious leaders (John 9) really sank into my soul.

Since that time, I've had the opportunity to share Jesus or about thequest with 6 different people. That's six new people--a couple of cashiers at the convenience store, a couple of girls who visited our assembly, a friend of a friend and a new neighbor we just met. How did all of that happen?

Well, I hadn't really thought about it, until now. I've just been living my life (ie. going to the convenience store to buy things) and having Jesus at the front of my mind. I've re-committed to move when He prompts me. That has been the how? Listen and Live.

So a couple of times I realized I may have missed a chance--and the Spirit gently prompted "why don't you go back and say....". So I've listened. In fact today, it happened. I was leaving a restaurant with the group of guys from our Life Transformation Group with. I saw a friend coming towards the place, and we said hello and met his friend for the first time. They asked what we were doing and we told them we were doing an "LTG". We chit-chatted for a few more minutes. They went in. We actually sat down to finish up praying for our LTG time.

As we were praying, the Lord ran this thought through my mind to invite my friend's friend to thequest. I bounced it around...and we kept praying. Then I committed to do it. As we finished praying, I told them I was going back inside. As I walked up to the table where my friends were sitting, they turned to greet me. They asked, "Hey, we were just talking, what is an LTG?" Wow...God was working in their hearts to keep them talking about this...until I got there to answer the question! It's a good thing I responded to the Spirit's prompt!

Like I've told a couple of people, I feel like I'm back in the saddle again. It has been a busy summer with lots of good things, but I'm glad to be back in the groove. God wants that for us...to break the sound barrier and sow seeds abundantly.

Won't you commit to connect to

>>World >> Prayer & Share with 3 people
But if you remain in me and my words remain in you, you may ask for anything you want, and it will be granted! John 15:8
>>Are you growing in your connection to those who don't know Jesus?

God is doing it. Last week, I said I had fallen short...and then all this. I am excited about what God is up to!

I'm praying for you!

Press on,
Mike


Read the rest of the weekly UPdate HERE

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Simple Church and Church Multiplication

Here's a video that speaks to some of our values...

Monday, July 16, 2007

Church is Weird


A friend of mine recently tried to convince me how weird we were. For a while now, he has been obsessed with the idea of what real community looks like and how the Book of Acts paints a very different picture than what the Church looks like today. During our conversation, he told me that if you read the Bible carefully, you’ll see that we’re not normal—that is, those of us in the North American Church in the 21st century. The Book of Acts describes what normal should be like, and it turns out that the “normal” Church in those days would be pretty radical now.

Take Acts 2:42. It’s a verse that describes life in the first-century Church just after the amazing events of the Pentecost: “They devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer” (TNIV). In this one sentence there are four devotions of the early Church, the Church that changed the world.


They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching

There’s a real sense of authority here. The nascent Church didn’t just drop by to sample what those who had been with Jesus were saying—they were devoted to this teaching. You can imagine that they weren’t just gunning for a 96 percent or better on the next test. The didactic message was, “God has been here, we have been with Him, and we declare Him to you.” These apostles proclaimed not only who Jesus was (Acts 2:36), but the! y boldly declared that a proper response should produce in a follower of Jesus a radical change from one’s society (Acts 2:40). If a new believer wasn’t “fed” by this teaching, there was nowhere else to go!


They devoted themselves to fellowship

Is there any word more tainted these days than “fellowship”? Does the phrase “Fellowship Hall” evoke images of vinyl tile, metal folding chairs and potluck food? Some modern churches have overcome the stigma and have actually managed to engage their members in community, but it’s a tough bridge to cross. Most people today prefer to hang out with friends in warmer environments surrounded by music and those who share a common life Monday through Saturday. Places like Starbucks, Panera Bread and, yes, even taverns provide an atmosphere more conducive to sharing life than the vibe found in church halls. But the first-century Church devoted itsel! f to fellowship. No buildings to maintain, only people to love. Is it too big of a stretch to say that their passion was to be with one another? Conversion in those days meant becoming a part of a new family (the family of God) that was more real than a birth family.


They devoted themselves to the breaking of bread

This could (and probably does) mean at least two things: sharing meals with each other and the ritual we have come to call the Lord’s Supper, or Communion, or the Eucharist. Jesus Himself had instructed His followers to remember Him in the breaking of bread, and the early Church was devoted to remembering Him in this manner. Some churches still are. While the prevailing Protestant emphasis is on God’s word on Sunday mornings, our Catholic brothers and sisters organize their worship around the Eucharist. Perhaps they have something to say to us about this. Perhaps nothing: There are centuries of Catholic teaching about how to encounter Jesus fresh and new every time we come to His table. How can we be devoted to something that only happens once a month or once a quarter?

They devoted themselves to prayer

Yikes! Anything but prayer! My prayer life used to run like this: “God bless Dad, God bless Mom and … um … God bless the puppies.” I always felt like I ran out of stuff to pray about so fast. But prayer was a central devotion of the early Church. I expect their prayer gatherings were more intense than ours. Check out Acts 4: 24–31 to see what I mean, especially verse 31. Can you imagine God answering prayers immediately by shaking the building? And when the apostle Peter broke free from jail (Acts 12:5–19) he made his way to where he knew believers would be praying for him. He knew they would be at their post, doing something important. The praying Church even thought that an angelic manifestation on Peter’s behalf was a normal occurrence (check out the incredible assumption! they make in verse 15).

What would the Church look like if we refused to settle for the same-old, same-old? What if we took a moment to realize how weird we really are? Maybe we could become normal at last.


Author: Ray Hollenbach
Job: Pastor, College Teacher, Soccer CoachRay is just a country parson at a Vineyard church in central Kentucky.
From 850 Words of Relevant--July 16, 2007 http://www.relevantmagazine.com/

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

07.11.07 thequest UPdate

thequest family,


Sorry I didn't get an email out to everyone last week...it was a zany week with the fourth and time away with family. It is hard to believe that was all a week ago.

The summer is clicking by. With that I wanted to revisit our 3 month challenge:

Commit to Connect to >>

>>Jesus >> Life Transformation Group
I am the vine; you are the branches. Those who remain in me, and I in them, will produce much fruit. For apart from me you can do nothing. John 15:5

>>Are you growing in your connection to Jesus?


>>World >> Prayer & Share with 3 people

But if you remain in me and my words remain in you, you may ask for anything you want, and it will be granted! John 15:8

>>Are you growing in your connection to those who don't know Jesus?


>>Community >> House Church
This is my commandment: Love each other in the same way I have loved you. John 15:12

>>Are you growing in your connection to one another?



>>Friends >> thequest
There is no greater love than to lay down one's life for one's friends. You are my friends if you do what I command. I no longer call you slaves, because a master doesn't confide in his slaves. Now you are my friends, since I have told you everything the Father told me. You didn't choose me. I chose you. I appointed you to go and produce lasting fruit, so that the Father will give you whatever you ask for, using my name. This is my command: Love each other. John 15:13-17

>>Are you growing in your connection to thequest?


I'll admit to not fulfilling some of these challenges myself. I am re-committing myself to these things. These were placed in front of us...and yet if we aren't reminded we forget. I forget. So we have a few weeks left...let's see what God does.

Here's one thing that God is doing: I am excited about a good kick-off to a new Family House Church with 5 families involved. I'm looking forward to our series covering the miracles of Jesus in John. That's a great connection to thequest and to one another.

Also I'm trusting that our Assembly this Sunday night will be a helpful spurring on toward these areas. Check out the details below because we have some special guests coming for our special time.

I'm praying for you!

Press on,
Mike


Check out the rest of the weekly email HERE