Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

Category: Mission (Page 10 of 26)

Talking Missions In Nebraska

The audacity inherent in the email attracted my interest. A church in central Nebraska invited me to speak at their upcoming worldwide outreach conference. What gave the leadership and congregation the impetus to hold a weekend to promote their global agenda? What makes their world focus more than just wishful thinking?

Quite simply, the words of Jesus, “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”

Dawn and I traveled to Hasting, NE, last weekend to join the members of the Berean Bible Church to talk missions. I spoke five times, at seminars and a banquet and the Sunday sermon. It was fun and inspiring to spend time with a group of people committed to fulfilling these words of Jesus.

It’s fascinating to think that when Jesus instructed his disciples to “go to the ends of the earth,” central Nebraska qualified as the very end. For centuries men and women have taken those words seriously. As a result, this group of Jesus’ disciples, on the other side of the planet, are planning and giving and sending people towards making disciples of all nations. Audacious, yes, but not unprecedented. Jesus handed his commission to a small group of people and look what happened.

We change the world one person at a time. Who are you hoping to change?

People of Worth

A child at home in Khayelitsha township near Cape Town, South Africa

“These are people of worth. Created by God and your presence shows them that is true.”

South African Pastor Lional Fredricks, of the desperately poor Khayelitsha township, shared these words with me several years ago while commenting on the value of our American students spending time with children from the townships.

His words have never left me. We choose to serve others, regardless of their station in life and regardless of what they can do for us, because of their infinite value in God’s eyes. We need no other rational, though many good ones exist. Every person we meet is of astounding value in the economy of the Lord.

We cannot fathom God’s love, but we can act in ways toward others that express a small bit of his love. Maybe even today you’ll get a chance to do so. Know that even the smallest gesture, done with kindness, shows value to all “people of worth.”

Darkness Then Light

Reformation-era coin from Geneva imprinted with the city motto

I have come to appreciate phrases in Latin. I cannot read Latin nor do I understand it well, but it shows up in the various documents and phrases that form the basis for our beliefs as a nation and in our faith. Plus it sounds super cool.

Think “e pluribus unum,” which means, “out of many, one,” and serves as a motto of the United States.

Under the leadership of the reformer, John Calvin, Geneva, Switzerland adopted this official motto: “post tenebras lux,” meaning “after darkness, light.”  This phrase leapt from Geneva to become the motto for the entire Protestant Reformation.

In many ways this is a needed motto, a strong encouragement, for those of us who look seriously at our world and hope to bring change. Darkness is ever with us, but light is not far behind. Let’s not lose heart in pushing toward that light.

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