Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Final Thoughts: Kingdom Living


Wow. What an incredible summer it has been. I spent almost 2 months outside of America serving and I learned so much during that time. I talked about a lot of what God taught me in my previous posts, so I want to share with you all the main way in which God worked on my heart, and a big lesson that I learned.

I had often considered spending my life in missions and was definitely seeking for answers to that question during this summer.  God gave me an answer with great clarity. I am currently at Texas A&M University studying to be a high school math teacher and have thought for a few years that that’s exactly what I was going to do after graduation. I was spending time in reflection in Honduras and thought to myself, “I could glorify God in my profession as a math teacher, but what does His Kingdom need more? Good math teachers or missionaries?” The answer was clear to me. Barring any changes in my understanding of God’s plan for me, I am going to be a missionary. I may go into seminary for a couple years after college, but it seems very likely that after that, I will spend a significant amount of time making disciples in another nation. Whether it will be for the rest of my life or just a couple years, I am not sure. I’m sure there is much of God’s will that He has yet to reveal to me, but I am excited to continue my pursuit of Him and see where He takes me.

When you go on a mission trip, you spend a certain amount of time in a different community with your focus on making disciples. I learned this summer that one of the biggest mistakes we can make after these trips is thinking that that’s only something we can do in a different community. What we do on those trips should overflow into our everyday lives - we need to be making disciples no matter where we are. If you personally have never been on a mission trip, I strongly recommend going on one. It could very well change your life. Many of you reading this are probably in high school/college and may be unsure about what you’re future is going to look like. Here is a great quote that I heard once that I hope will help you to find clarity. I know it helped me.

“Find where your desires and the needs of the world meet, and go there.”


Isaiah 6:8
And I heard the voice of the Lord saying, “Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?” Then I said, “Here I am! Send me.”

Friday, June 29, 2012

Prayer: The Forgotten Doctrine of American Christianity


A couple weekends ago we went to Tegucigalpa (the capital of Honduras) to drop off one of the other missionaries. That Friday night I was told that we were going to church, and naturally I figured it was going to be a regular service, but it wasn’t. We walked in and there were about 10 people just sitting in a circle of chairs and I was very confused. We sat down and the pastor began to explain – it was a prayer meeting. He assigned each of us a different topic to pray over, ranging from illnesses of specific church members, to broader issues like the election in Egypt that, if the Muslim Party won, would lead to a lot of persecution in the future for the Christians there. We divided into smaller groups, and just prayed. It was awesome.
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The thing that concerns me most is that they have this meeting every week, yet I have never been to a meeting like this in America. Now, if this was only a problem in the church it’d still be a big problem, but what I’ve come to realize is that this is a problem in the lives of many Christians as well. We claim that we’re striving to be like Christ, but we don’t follow after the example he set for what our prayer lives should look like.

MANY times in the gospels it talks about how Jesus would just leave everyone and go spend time alone with the Father. Here are a few of the instances.
Mark 1:35
And early in the morning, while it was still dark, He arose and went out and departed to a lonely place, and was praying there.
Luke 4:42
And when day came, He departed to a lonely place; and the multitudes were searching for Him, and came to Him, and tried to keep Him from going away from them.
Luke 6:12
And it was at this time that He went off to the mountain to pray, and He spent the whole night in prayer to God.

I did not have a prayer life at all before last August, then I was just hit with this reality – that prayer obviously matters, or Jesus would not have done it so often.
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I think a common thought that the Enemy uses to push us away from a prayer life is that it really doesn’t do that much. God’s going to do what he wants to do, and all I can do is hope that what I want is in his plan. The problem with this is that in stands in direct contradiction to Scripture. See the two examples below.

James 4:2
You do not have, because you do not ask.

Exodus 32:12-14
12 Turn from your burning anger and relent from this disaster against your people.13 Remember Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, your servants, to whom you swore by your own self, and said to them, ‘I will multiply your offspring as the stars of heaven, and all this land that I have promised I will give to your offspring, and they shall inherit it forever.’” 14 And the Lord relented from the disaster that he had spoken of bringing on his people.

It is clear in these scriptures that what we pray for can effect how God acts.

We have desires, but instead of praying we turn to our own abilities to try and capture these desires on our own. Obviously, there’s no guarantee God will give you what you want, but what does it hurt to ask? In the words of Chuck Smith, “Prayer does not change the purpose of God, but prayer does change the action of God."
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One of the biggest issues in our society is the fact that we can easily find fulfillment in things other than God. If someone who lived in a much poorer country felt broken and lost, perhaps they would come to God and fervently pray for strength, courage, and hope. What do we do? We try to satisfy our souls with worldly things like alcohol, pornography, video games, television, and many others. When I look at the scriptures, I can’t but ask why the heck we do this?

Philippians 4:6-7
6 Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.

Matthew 11:28-30
28 Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 30 For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”

We must understand the message of these scriptures as it applies to the gospel. He is our Father. He loves us. He forsook Jesus, that we may not be forsaken. He desires so greatly for us to cast our burdens on him, that he may care for us. Yet still, we make him get in line.
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The lack of prayer in our culture has been really rubbing me the wrong way lately, and going to the prayer meeting at the church was my breaking point. I wanted to write this in hopes that it would encourage you to take a look at your prayer life and compare it to what the bible says our prayer life should look like.

In summary, there are 3 main reasons why I believe we should pray often, with passion, and with faith.
1 – We should pray first and foremost because God wants us to. He desires our attention.
2 – The second big thing we must realize is that we should pray because Jesus prayed A TON, and if we claim to follow him, we must follow him in everything.
3- Lastly, because it works. This fact is important to know, but if your biggest motivation for growing in your prayer life is because it works and you want something, then your heart is in the wrong place.


Please, pray with me.
Father,
I thank you for adopting me as your child. I know there are things in my life that I can accomplish on my own, but I pray that you would just change my heart to rely on you instead of myself. Give me discipline, Father, to physically humble myself and drop to me knees daily in prayer. I desire to grow closer to you, but often I find myself neglecting to pray, though it’s one of the most intimate ways I can spend time with you. I need you, God. Rid me of myself, for I belong to you.
Amen

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Why God's Plan is Better


 As many of you know, I have a stress fracture in my hip and it has kept me from doing anything super active since December. That’s right, I have not played ultimate in 6 months!! It stinks. Throughout the whole spring semester, I was praying “God, I don’t care if I’m injured the rest of this semester. Take away my legs for now, but I don’t want to be held back physically when I go to Honduras. Please, heal me by then.” Well, he didn’t. There were many times that I found myself asking why, but the beauty of God’s plan is that you don’t have to know what it is in order for him to carry it out.

Last week we were doing a lot of construction, but I couldn’t help because of my injury. I love the physical labor aspect of missions, so this was very hard for me. It was no fun having to watch other guys go to work with the pickaxe (which is my favorite tool) and not be able to help them. The week was not a drag by any means, though. I got to spend a lot of time with the local kids just hanging with them and striving to show them God’s love.

On the last day, all the kids got to draw a picture for one of the missionaries of their choosing and they got up one by one and presented their picture to whomever they chose. There were a couple kids that I was close to and guessed that they were going to give me theirs, but I ended up getting nine in total! There were nine kids that God used me to reach, nine kids that God used my injury to reach (most of whom I had no idea I had an impact on!).

Please do not take this as me bragging or trying to bring glory to myself at all. The point of me writing all this is to show that God has a plan, and it is good. Had I not been injured, I would’ve been working on construction and would not have been paying much attention to the kiddos, and as a result God would not have used me to reach the kids in the same degree. This is why God’s plan is better – because he knows what must happen in our lives in order for the most glory to be brought to him. Who are we, the creation, to question him, the creator?


A picture of the drawings I received! God is working even when we don't know it.


Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Adoption: A Picture on Earth of God's Love


This past week a team from Forney, TX came in and we’ve been working with “Melodias de Esperanza” (the ministry I wrote about a few blog posts ago), helping them with some construction projects in the mornings and leading a Vacation Bible School in the afternoons. Due to my injury, my ability to help out with the construction has been limited, so a few of the Fornians and myself normally just hang out with the kids in the morning which has been a blast. I’ve grown close with a lot of the kids there, so you can only imagine what my reaction to hearing the following news was.

There are four kids there that are siblings named Axel, Arturo, Kimberly, and Victoria. Their dad got murdered a while ago from gang violence (along with many of the other dads of the kids there), and their mom had been living in Mexico for seven years, up until two months ago. That’s when she finally came back to be with them. You can imagine how much joy this must have brought them. Well on Monday during the Vacation Bible School, their mom got on a bus to Mexico and left them. Again.

I don’t know what would be worse – having both of your parents dead or having one of them alive but knowing they’re neglecting their obligation as a parent to raise you. The sad thing is that so many kids around the world have been abandoned and are in need of loving parents to raise them. When you don’t have parents in a society like theirs, history says that they girls will mostly likely end up prostituting themselves and the guys will probably get into drugs.

I got to have a conversation with Axel today and it broke my heart. I was warning him about the dangers of drugs and how smoking was bad for you and he said, “no. fumar es rico”, which translates to “no, smoking is rich/delicious”. He then proceeded to tell me that he had smoked before, and that he didn’t believe in Jesus. He also has a huge disobedience problem. He often will just ignore what adults tell him to do. I pray that God will save him from the evils of this world, but the reality is that his future does not look bright.

I feel that often we get our minds so set on the American Dream that we neglect the kids suffering around the world. I know that up until about a month ago I had never seriously considered adoption (check out the bottom of my blog about Haiti – I talk about a similar experience that I had - http://beautifulfeethonduras.blogspot.com/2012/05/jezi-se-la-vi.html). One of the many negatives of adoption is how much it costs, but I believe strongly that the great need for it makes the cost obsolete. If you have never personally considered adoption, I’d highly encourage you to pray about it.
In John 14:16-18, Jesus says, “ 16 And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Helper, to be with you forever, 17 even the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it neither sees him nor knows him. You know him, for he dwells with you and will be in you. 18 I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you.” Jesus loved us so much that he refused to leave us as orphans, and gave us the Holy Spirit that no matter how lonely we get, we will never be without guidance. I pray that if you are a Christian, the Holy Spirit that has been given to you will convict you to play this same role in the life of an orphan somewhere.

A few verses on caring for orphans:

James 1:27
Religion that is pure and undefiled before God, the Father, is this: to visit orphans and widows in their affliction, and to keep oneself unstained from the world.

Exodus 22:22-24
You shall not mistreat any widow or fatherless child. If you do mistreat them, and they cry out to me, I will surely hear their cry, and my wrath will burn, and I will kill you with the sword, and your wives shall become widows and your children fatherless.

Isaiah 1:17
Learn to do good; seek justice, correct oppression; bring justice to the fatherless, plead the widow's cause.

Axel on my shoulders, Arturo on my back, and Jeffrey (one of the other kids) posting up in front!