Saturday, June 30, 2012

MISSIONS TRIP #4 - Reflections as we go - Part 1


Very early tomorrow morning, 18 senior high students of our church will leave for a week long missions trip to West Virginia and I, and three other chaperones, will go with them.  Our task will be to work together, with the staff of Next Step Ministries, to build foundations for new housing, build a handicapped ramp, and install siding on existing homes.   It will be an exciting new adventure for all of us, the seasoned and the novice,and their are quite a few of them, because this is the first time we’ve been to this work site in West Virginia.  This time around we’ll also be working alongside other groups, totaling somewhere around 80 people!  Another first for us.

I wish I were better prepared!  

Oh, I’ve packed the work clothes, and the sweat bands, and the shower gear, the sun block and the bug spray.  I think in that way I’m thoroughly prepared.  But I don’t feel the least bit spiritually prepared.  

How can I minister to others – teens, other leaders, the residents of the area where we’ll be working, when I have not been praying and waiting on the Lord myself?   I’ve been too busy with other good, and some downright useless things, too.

I try not to have any expectations for a trip like this because I want to allow the Lord to write His agenda for me, to bring across my path those to whom He has planned for me to minister, whoever they are. But after a busy week of VBS, I’m tired and feel the need for a rest myself.  

My dear friend, and sister in Christ Jeannine, posted these wonderful verses from Isaiah on her Facebook page this morning.

Isaiah 40:31:
“but those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength.  They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.”

There are many unknowns ahead – the practical ones that make me anxious – like sleeping arrangements for 80, enough showers for all the girls to finish in time for dinner, stamina for working in the heat and humidity (some of you KNOW how cranky I get when it’s humid!), and what the work sites will be like.  

And then there are the ministry unknowns, those situations where I want to be "Jesus with skin on" for others, but have no idea what opportunities the Lord will give me.  Those are the ones for which I have not prepared and I would hate to miss a single one because I'm too tired to notice.  If I’m going to bless the Lord and others this week, I will need to have my strength renewed because I WILL want to soar!  I WILL want to keep up and not grow weary!  I WILL want to walk, and keep on walking, and not faint.  

So help me this week Lord to draw close to You.  Help me to remember that you would have me be YOUR representative this week – with teens, with leaders, with other groups, with the staff of Next Step, and with the people of West Virginia.  Help me to walk with confidence that as I hope in YOU, you WILL be faithful to pour out Your strength for whatever ministry You have in mind.

More later. . . . .


A CHRIST-CENTERED COMMUNITY OF GOOD NEIGHBORS - Reflections on this year's Vacation Bible School


If you have read my blogs in years past then you know how I feel about Vacation Bible School (VBS).  Yesterday was our last day of this week’s VBS, and once again I come away thinking the same thing:  I absolutely LOVE VBS!  

Each year, the very first week of summer vacation, Montvale Evangelical Free Church hosts it’s VBS.  And it is spectacular!  You can ask any of the children and their parents, most of whom come, not from our church, but from the neighboring community.  This week I heard parents say things like: “The singing at the opening is so professional!”, and “This is the BEST VBS in the area!”  When viewing the spectacular “Babylon marketplace” downstairs, one of them asked:  “How long did it take you to do this?”

As with any really good ministry, VBS began months in advance, in January actually, when our two directors attended a VBS workshop and decided on the program we’d use this summer.  This year’s theme was “Babylon Marketplace”. The Bible stories which were taught focused on the Old Testament person of Daniel and events in his life during the exile of the people of Israel in Babylon; like his experience interpreting Nebudchadnezzar’s dream, and the Lord’s protection of him in the lion’s den.  

Probably the most challenging next step, after choosing a program, is finding adult staff members to coordinate big picture things, like games, crafts, service projects, snack and worship.   Many of the VBS volunteers are women, but a number of men actually take a week off work to participate as well.  Once that part of the staff is complete, other staff members and their assistants are secured to lead groups of 8-10 children through each day’s activities, worship team members learn the songs with their accompanying motions, and other supporting members for crafts, service, games, skits and snacks are found.  

All the while, creative minds are churning, and prayers for creativity are being lifted.  The Lord’s help is being sought for answers to questions like:  How will we get children to move smoothly from one activity to another?  What kinds of crafts, service projects, snacks, and games will we have this year that will “fit” with a Babylon theme?  How can we make a large room like fellowship hall look like a Bible time’s marketplace?  How can we most effectively communicate God’s love to the children?  By the time the next to last week in June arrives, most of these questions have been answered.  

Beginning at least a month beforehand, requests go out to our church body to help with supplies, including items like dried apricots and figs; fleece; rugs; large tents; gaudy fabric for decorating; Bible character costumes; artificial flowers; bottled water and a host of other things.  Although preparations for crafts and service projects go on for some time before, this year we held only one work day to prepare the site – the Saturday before the Monday start – to turn our large fellowship hall into a marketplace.   Volunteers arrived to set up eight large tents, and tent floors were laid with loaned oriental rugs.  Tents were creatively draped with fabric and artificial flowers until, voila, we had a VBS Babylon marketplace that would rival a REAL ancient one!

But that wasn’t all!  Some time earlier in the week I entered the church sanctuary to see the handiwork of our church family artisans!  They had transformed the stage into a scene from Bible times!   I thought I was IN Babylon!

Even after months of preparation, it’s not until the first day of VBS that the true transformation happens!  Staff members, dressed in biblical costume and encouraged to remain “in character”, engage the 150 children who moved through the program each day.  They were so convincing that a few of the children had to be reminded that they weren’t actually in Babylon!  

I hope you can feel the excitement and enthusiasm VBS engenders in me every single summer.   I love it for the “feel” of really living in biblical times, even if for only one week, but that isn’t the only reason I love it.  I love it because for one concentrated week we have an opportunity to encourage children to know and walk with Jesus.  And I also love it because of the glimpse it gives us of the Body of Christ, the Church, at work.  

Lots of adults of all ages are involved in VBS.  Their hard work and enthusiasm is a labor of love that flows from a desire to make Jesus known and bring glory to God.   For most Christian adults service is a "given", an expression of gratitude to the Lord for all He did to make our salvation possible.  What really excites me however, is the participation of so many pre-teens and teens. They are everywhere!  They help with crafts and games, assist children’s leaders, and almost singlehandedly lead worship.  And, they get up early every single day of the very first week of summer vacation to do it!  That part is the MOST amazing!  

They could choose to think only of themselves and the hard year they’ve had at school and seize the opportunity that first week off affords to sleep in, but they don't.   And we are SO thankful for that, because VBS could not succeed without them!

When I think of VBS I’m reminded of many Bible passages that apply to the Lord’s people doing the Lord’s work:  

There is Exodus 35:30-31 where Moses is giving instructions for the building of the tabernacle.  He says to the people:

“See, the Lord has chosen Bezalel son of Uri. . . of the tribe of Judah, and he has filled him with the Spirit of God, with skill, ability and knowledge in all kinds of crafts. . . .”

Where would VBS be without those whom the Lord has chosen and gifted with the ability to organize, administrate and create?  Where would it be without the big picture people, and the detail people?  Without the artists, musicians, singers, teachers, craft supply hoarders, former Girl Scout leaders, tent owners, gym teachers, game organizers, decorators, muscle men, etc.?   

In the Old Testament book of Nehemiah we see the exiles who returned to Jerusalem working side by side to repair the city wall.  In chapter 6:15 we read:  

“So the wall was completed . . . in 52 days. . . .all the surrounding nations were afraid and lost their self confidence, because they realized that this work had been done with the help of our God.”

Where would VBS be without those volunteers, skilled or not, who came to simply be an extra pair of hands:  to pitch tents and take them down?  Who volunteered for clean up at the end of the week?  Who cut watermelon and scooped ice cream for hoards of kids and adults at the last day picnic?   Where would VBS be without the help of our God to provide all we need?

In the New Testament book of Acts 2:42; 44-45, we read:

“(The believers in Christ) devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. . . All the believers were together and had everything in common.  Selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as he had need.”

Where would VBS be without those who, moved by the Lord, donated water, flip flops, paper towels, cereal, baked goods for the staff, pens, baskets, time and a host of other things to meet our VBS needs?

In Acts 4:32-35:

“All the believers were one in heart and mind.  No one claimed that any of his possessions was his own, but they shared everything they had. . . . There were no needy persons among them.”

VBS is a picture of one of the unique and wonderful things about the Body of Christ.  We work together with everyone contributing something.  We use the gifts God has given us to bless Him and others.  All of us work – from the pre-teen helpers to the senior saints.  We work joyfully because even our work is a form of worship.  We worship joyfully because we belong to Jesus.  Worship is an affirmation of our unity.  Working in God’s kingdom is our way of saying thanks to Him.

The vision statement of Montvale Evangelical Free Church is this.  We are:   

“A Christ-centered community of good neighbors”.   

During the week of VBS, we ARE that vision statement!

Saturday, June 23, 2012

THE RIGHTEOUS WILL FLOURISH, EVEN IN OLD AGE



Today is the last day of a week-long visit from my 90 year old mother in law and I’m sad.  Mom and I have always had a special relationship that stems from our faith.  We are bound by a shared faith in Jesus, although our expression of that faith differs in many ways.  Part of my sadness stems from Mom’s lack of assurance that faith in the goodness of Jesus, and not OUR OWN goodness, guarantees us a place in heaven.  As a result of her lack of assurance, Mom’s inability to DO anything worthwhile (as she sees it) in this stage of life, makes heaven an uncertainty she feels powerless now to work at changing.  She’s often said she’s counting on my prayers after her death to ultimately make heaven a reality for her. 

I have no such uncertainty about heaven.  

When Jesus says in John 3:16, “For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life”, I believe Him.  I already HAVE eternal life which Jesus made possible for me.  Heaven is my destiny, not because of my goodness but because of His.

And when Jesus says in John 14:1-3, “Do not let your hearts be troubled.  Trust in God; trust also in me.  In my Father’s house are many rooms; if it were not so, I would have told you.  I am going there to prepare a place for you.  And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come back and take you to be with me that you also may be where I am”, I believe that Jesus means to come for me and take me to be with Him – not at some future time after I’ve spent a while in purgatory, but immediately upon my death. 

The Apostle Paul said that when we are “absent from the body”, we are “present with the Lord”, and I believe that!   There is no holding place after this life and before heaven.  I wish Mom could know that assurance.  It would give her hope and rest.

Instead, Mom sees herself here in this life as having no hope and no purpose.  Her speech is peppered with a longing for those things she can no longer do and lament over a world she no longer understands and in which she seems not to fit.  

Last night I was looking for a particular verse in the Psalms when I came across this from Psalm 92:12-15:
“The righteous will flourish like a palm tree. . . . planted in the house of the Lord, they will flourish in the courts of our God.  They will still bear fruit in old age, they will stay fresh and green, proclaiming, “The Lord is upright; He is my Rock. . . . “

When the Psalmist says “the righteous will flourish like a palm tree”, he doesn’t mean righteousness based on perceived goodness, as man accesses it.  The Bible teaches that the only way a person can be considered righteous is because Jesus has declared him so, not on the basis of works, but on the basis of His grace, through faith in His person and His work on the cross.  (Ephesians 2:8-9)

What an encouragement it is, what hope it gives to read that the righteous will STILL bear fruit in old age, staying fresh and green and declaring that the Lord is their rock!  They will NOT dry up and be useless, they will FLOURISH!  

And they still have purpose:

Ps. 71:18  “Even when I am old and gray, do not forsake me, O God, till I declare your power to the next generation, your might to all who are to come.”

Their purpose is to declare the Lord’s power until they go home to heaven.  To never stop speaking of Him - of His faithfulness, His grace, His goodness, His power to change us – to the next generation.  What a legacy we have - to pass on to those behind us the power of the Lord.

One of my favorite passages is from the book of Habakkuk in the Old Testament.  It’s written to Israel and it speaks of judgment.  However, these verses which come at the end of chapter 3, could be applied, I think, to aging. They encourage us, when we are no longer able to do what we used to, to hold onto Jesus as our source of joy.

“Though the fig tree does not bud and there are no grapes on the vines, though the olive crop fails and the fields produce no food, though there are no sheep in the pen and no cattle in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will be joyful in God my Savior.”

Senior saint – you may not FEEL fruitful and productive – but the truth is, you CAN BE.  As a matter of fact, you can FLOURISH, if you will invest your time and your words in passing along to the next generation what you know about the Lord your Savior, the One in whom you rejoice.

How? 

Refuse to simply sit on the sidelines, assuming your life is over. 

Get to know the younger generation in your church, and in your family. 

Listen when they talk about their lives. 

Ask them questions.

Tell them you’d like to pray for them and ask them how you can pray.

Pray for their children too. 

Follow up when you see them again. 

Give them a call and see how they’re doing. 

Out of those conversations, you will find many opportunities to talk about the Lord and His power as He worked it out in your life and they’ll want to listen because you’ve taken an interest in them.  

Senior saint – rejoice in the hope of heaven that awaits you. 

Rejoice that you do still have a purpose!

Busy yourself with finding ways to encourage the next generation.  

You CAN flourish!


Saturday, June 16, 2012

EXPLORATORY SURGERY - Psalm 139:23-24



I was having a meltdown yesterday over a situation in our family that reminded me of a similar one several years ago.  That first time, out of a great sense of frustration, I reacted toward family members in a way that was not at all Christ-like.  I was thinking only of how I was feeling and, until they pointed it out to me later, I’d given no thought, or care, to how anyone else would feel by the actions I would take.  Later, I was embarrassed and shameful that I had reacted that way and so I contacted all the family members, apologizing and asking forgiveness, which they graciously gave.  

I was feeling that same sense of frustration yesterday over the very same kind of situation, and could feel the potential in me to react in the very same, insensitive, uncaring, and unloving way.  My mind was a gerbil wheel of negative reactions to what I perceived as other people's insensitivity.  Realizing the danger of reacting in the same embarrassing way, I immediately contacted prayer partners and was surprised, although I shouldn’t have been given the absolute faithfulness of God, that everything was resolved early on in a wonderful way and all my fretting had been in vain.

Today I was reading Psalm 139:23-24 where David says:

“Search me, O God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts.  See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.”

I wondered whether I could pray that prayer myself because it seems like such a dangerous one! The footnote in my Life Application Bible calls these verses, “Exploratory Surgery”.  

I’ve had a number of surgeries and I know how painful, but necessary, they are.  They root out cancer and diseased organs that are causing pain and remove them.  Even after they’re out, we’re left with the pain of recovery.  I knew how this felt in a spiritual sense when I saw the kind of uncaring actions of which I was capable.  Even after the Lord convicted me of it, the "healing" was still painful because I had to confess it and then ask forgiveness for it.

Hardly anyone would actually sign up for any radical, physical exploratory surgery voluntarily!  But that’s exactly what David asks the Lord to do spiritually in these verses.  

It’s as if David is saying:   

“Do some radical surgery Lord!  You, who know my heart and my thoughts, examine them, lay them bare before you.  Look for the offensive things you find there and remove them!   And then lead me in the way YOU would have me go, the way that leads to everlasting life.”

Have you noticed that the longer you walk with the Lord the more your sin seems to go underground?   

I’m usually careful not to sin outwardly in ways that are inconsistent with the faith in Jesus I profess.  After all, what would other people think of my testimony of faith in Jesus?  I would never want to dishonor the Lord outwardly!  But, just because my sins are kept undercover, doesn’t mean I don’t have them!  It’s not those overt sins, like words that cut people down, or drunkenness, or lying that trip me up!  No, it’s the sin of my heart, the sin of my thoughts, the secret things that no one else knows about but me and the Lord, that need exposure through spiritual exploratory surgery.

That’s what happened yesterday.  I never actually acted on my inner frustration, but there was always the potential.  I remember what a shock it gave me last time that I was capable of such overt selfishness in such a public way!  Although I’m usually careful not to display it, I saw that given free reign, the sin in my heart and mind was right there, ready to reveal itself in my actions, dishonor the Lord, and ruin my testimony.  I never want that to happen again!

So, while I don’t really want to sign up for spiritual exploratory surgery, it’s vitally necessary for me to pray this prayer of David’s.  The sin in my heart, anxiety in my thoughts, and the offensive ways lurking there, need to be brought into the light, confessed and forgiven.  Only then can I follow once again the way that leads to everlasting life. 

I think what the Lord would have me do is to make these my life verses for a time, to invite Him to do some exploratory surgery of the heart and mind.  I’m not especially looking forward to it, but I know I’ll feel better when it’s over.