Thanksgiving 2015

thanksgiving-2015

Our Thanksgiving Day family time was significantly enriched by a guest from Saudi Arabia. We shared stories and laughed and cried together.

As part of our time together I told the story of Squanto as recorded in the children’s book by Eric Metaxas. Squanto was the Native American who had been kidnapped and taken to Europe and then came back and actually helped save the struggling Pilgrims. In many ways Squanto’s life paralled the life of the Biblical Joseph.

We had a contest for the best instant message inviting Squanto to the first Thanksgiving Dinner. Everyone was a winner.

Alejandro and His Daughter

alejandro-and-daughter

Alejandro Colindres and his now grown daughter.

I am still reflecting on the power and inspiration of the weekend with Alejandro Colendres and Fraternidad Chrisiana, his network of churches, in their annual Christin Fellowship Conference in Stamford, Connecticut, attended by over 1000.

Alejandro’s ministry here in the States began 30 years ago when he came to the United States from Honduras for 10 months to be with his infant daughter who was suffering from a life-threatening illness and being treated in a hospital in Baltimore.

As he waited for the recovery of his daughter he very naturally shared his faith with every one he met. God arranged special encounters and miracles. People began coming to faith in Christ. The first cell group was held in a McDonald’s.

As people moved on from that location and were scattered they started cell groups; cell groups multiplied and became churches; churches multiplied. Today there are over 50 churches in the eastern USA and internationally.

The focus of this network of churches is training every believer to become a trainer of new believers who become trainers of new believers. This work is seen as a partnership with the Holy Spirit who arranges divine encounters and performs miracles which lead to increased faith and faithfulness.

The theme of the conference was ‘activate’. I was invited to address the conference on Sunday morning on that theme.

I can testify that my faith was ‘activated’ to a new level as a result of being with these people of God.

Immanuel Community Church

immanuel-community-church

Up until four days ago I had never met anyone from the Immanuel Community Church in Flushing New York. Now after spending Labor Day weekend as speaker for this congregatio’s annual retreat at Camp Deerpark near Port Jervis, New York, Ruth and I feel we have new friends which we will treasure forever.

Mark and Annabelle Perri pastor this amazing multicultural congregation in Queens New York. They truly are “defiant gardeners” effectively planting a visible community of God’s transforming grace in the midst of this confluence of the nations.

Mark recalls that in 2001, at the same congregational retreat, sensing an impending disaster coming upon the city and nation. Now 14 years later he has a similar sense. The congregation spent much of last night in prayer that God would prepare us to be faithful and victorious in these troubling times.

I face this fall season troubled by what may happen but somehow confidently expectant of a mighty manifestation of God’s grace.

And I stand amazed at the way God is connecting His people to work together in this great Harvest Time.

Healing for the World

Tonight is the night! Tonight we have a Healing and Evangelistic Service at Grace Chapel, 2535 Colebrook Road, Elizabethtown, PA at 7 pm. Everyone is welcome. Just come expecting a miracle.

But why is this meeting so special? The entire Kingdom Life Network (KLN) Impact 2015 Conference since the opening service on Wednesday evening has been special. The Conference was true to its theme: Kingdom Ethics in an Unethical World: Baptize Us with Fire.

And the Fire of His presence has come. Bishop Lawrence Chiles gave a powerful word on Wednesday evening on the importance of knowing Christ. And Thursday morning, 87-year old Don Jacobs, world teacher on leadership development and now continuing to focus on leaving a written legacy, gave a foundational teaching on the Kingdom of God. Young men and young women spoke. A pastor and a lawyer spoke on how the church should position herself in this new legal and social situation. And last evening Bishop Joseph Kamau from Kenya, whom God has used to powerfully impact me and my family, spoke a life-giving word on preparing ourselves for a breakthrough change of seasons. And the worship each session transported us into the presence of God.

And today is going to be special as Alejandro Colindres and Team conduct a retreat day of foundational Christian teaching followed by Spirit- empowered ministry. We expect to see people healed today, saved today, delivered from all types of bondages and filled with the Holy Spirit today. All because the Resurrected Jesus is walking among us. Of course, anyone is welcome to today’s sessions which begin at 9 am and continue till 5 pm.

But why am I so singularly focused on tonight?

Tonight is for the community; it is for the world. It is for unbelievers and pre-believers and not just for believers.

You remember when Jesus walked the roads of Judea, He was focused on bringing the gospel to the nations. He became very angry in Jerusalem one day when he saw how the money changers had taken over the “court of the Gentiles” and turned it into a place for changing money. This court was one place where Gentiles could draw near to God. And now God’s people had actually excluded the Gentiles from this one place where they could draw near to God.

And Jesus was angry that His people had made it difficult for the people who had not known God to draw near and to come to know Him. (This was a point made by Don Jacobs in his lecture on the Kingdom of God).

Now I know why this anticipation for tonight is so strong within me. Meetings to encourage Christians are necessary and important and wonderful. But the Gospel is for the world, and God is always calling “Who will go for us? Who will be one of my harvesters? Who will clear their agenda so the Court of the Gentiles is once again a place where those who have not heard can hear and be impacted by the glorious Gospel of the Kingdom?”

So tonight the Gospel goes forth, not just to the church, but to the world. Tonight the Court of the Gentiles is cleared so that all may come into the presence of God!

May the the church meeting house at Grace Chapel become filled with ‘Gentiles’ tonight. May tonight be the night when those who have not known God, enter into their destiny as sons and daughters of the King, our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ!

Come to think of it. I also have been a Gentile. So tonight, I too will draw near!

 

Deeper Intimacy

deeper-intimacy

Yesterday morning in my prayer walk at dawn I found myself on the banks of the Conewago Creek. It was a beautiful setting: birds were singing lustily, wild geese were finding breakfast in the surrounding fields, a bull frog was occasionally reminding me of his hidden but watchful presence. All this, as the fog was slowly lifting. I suddenly found myself with a strong desire to be down by the creek side instead of observing the creek from an elevated bank. But the brush covered bank appeared unstable and I finally convinced myself that observing the stream from the bank was almost the same as actually being down by the stream.

As I turned to walk away from the bank, still in prayer, I suddenly tripped and fell. As I was falling I had the thought, “I am going to end up head first in this stream.” But instead of that I landed firmly on my knees. As I rested there for a moment I saw that there was a direct and stable way to descend the bank to the creek side. So I quickly made my way to the stream’s edge. As I touched the edge of the water with my sneakered foot the urge to be in the stream returned and I stepped into the middle of the stream.

As I stood in the stream I sensed God saying several things to me:

1.” I do not want you to be satisfied to just observe what I am doing, I want you to be in the center of the river that proceeds from the throne of God. I want you to move into a deeper intimacy with me. (Observing the move of God is not the same as participating in the move of God.)

  1. The path to deeper intimacy is best discovered on your knees in prayer.
  2. I so much want a deeper relationship with you, that I am willing to bring you to your knees so you can find the way.”

As I finally left the center of the stream I was filled with joy at the word that the Lord had given me. I looked forward with anticipation to the Kingdom Life Network Conference to begin in the evening at Grace Chapel with guests from all over the world. I knew in my spirit that God wanted to lead all of us in the conference to a deeper place with Himself and that that journey would start from a place of humility on our knees.

Lambs Among Wolves

wolf-in-sheeps-clothes

One of the most painful human experiences is to find that what you had hoped would solve your problems, would satisfy your deepest longings, would dramatically change your life, only served to allay your inner pain for a relative moment before leaving you in greater anguish and dismay than before the hoped for event. We know that no court, be it inferior or supreme, can satisfy humanity’s’ deepest needs and longings.

The true answer can only be found in a relationship with Jesus Christ as Lord, as well as Savior. Many people say, “Oh, yes, I believe in Jesus, but I will not give Him the keys to my house. I will call Him when I need Him; but I will determine what I will believe and what I will do. I will decide what I will value and what I will discard.”

And Jesus weeps over those who wish to use him but not follow him. “Father, forgive them because they do not know what they are doing.”

So, weep with Jesus over all whose present celebration will only lead to bitter disappointment. Weep for the children who will grow up in a society where values are turned upside down. (Ezekiel 9:4)

And let us weep for ourselves that we do not have a place to lay our heads. Weep that institutions and denominations and courts and governments we had thought would carry the values of Christ no longer can be trusted to do so. But also weep that we have ourselves betrayed our Lord by looking to false gods to satisfy our needs.

But do not weep for too long. For Jesus says “Lay your head on me and not on another god. And know that in the midst of the greatest storms I am resting in your boat, confident in the victorious outcome of our journey. And know that I awaken not to the fierceness of the storm, but I awaken to comfort you, my anxious children.”

Yes, do not weep for too long; let the Lord comfort you and let the dead bury the dead. It is time to follow Jesus as “lambs among wolves”. So, the world is falling apart, but we are called to go into the world carrying his love and life-transforming Gospel.

Even if we are eaten by wolves we can know that it was His plan that our death would lead to the expansion of the kingdom. We can know that wolves will taste the difference and become hungry for a personal encounter and relationship with Jesus.

And we, we can rejoice and be exceeding glad because great is our reward in heaven because we have given our lives for the salvation of even our enemies, as did the prophets before us.

At the end of the day there are three options:

  1. We can compromise the Gospel so there is nothing for the wolves to hate .
  2. We can hate and curse and damn the world which Jesus came to save, so that no one will want what we have, or
  3. We can go forth rejoicing that we are called to live and serve in such a time as this. We can rejoice that we are called to lay down our lives for the world in loving service. We can rejoice that we have the privilege to proclaim the life-changing truth that Jesus is “the way, the truth and the life and that no one is reconciled to the Father except through Him.

In all of this, we can be confident that the Holy Spirit is in us and that He will guide us moment by moment and give us exactly what we need in our hour of trial.

It cannot get better than this: If we live, we live unto the Lord. If we die, we die unto the Lord.

Blessed be the name of the Lord!

Funeral of David Showalter

david-showalterToday Ruth and I had the privilege of attending the funeral service in Plain City, Ohio, for David Showalter, age 96, the father of six sons and a daughter. ( A second daughter died in childhood as a result of an accident.) We have been close friends of a number of the family members.

All six sons are ordained ministers as is the son-in-law. All have been very effective and productive in their respective churches and communities.

As I reflected on this family it occurred to me that it was as though David and his wife Rhoda received God’s invitation to by faith raise up a nation for His glory.

The Showalter nation is known for its godly character, its clarity of identity and its world-changing impact. The Showalter nation has enriched the nations of the world by humbly laying aside its glory so that others might become rich

Praise be to God for the amazing legacy of this humble servant of God, David Showalter and his praying wife Rhoda who preceded him in death by four years.

Reflections Following Anabaptist Renewal Circles Meeting in Hartville January 16-17, 2015

Arc 2anabaptist martyr

 

 

 

 

 

 

Reflections Following Anabaptist Renewal Circles Meeting in Hartville January 16-17, 2015

Five hundred years ago Europe was in crisis: feudalism was breaking up, the monopoly  of the  Catholic church was breaking up; new winds of freedom were blowing; the Turks were threatening from the east.

Would the people of Europe truly find God or would they come under new gods that would prove more destructive than the dark ages from which they had just come?

At this moment  the light shone. And God in His grace raised up a remnant who were determined to overcome by the blood of the lamb, the word of their  testimony and not esteeming their lives unto death.

A powerful  movement began to sweep Europe. The movement was focused on the  Presence of Jesus; it was  Spirit- empowered; it was radical ( non-compromising); it was grounded in Scripture.  It was characterized by signs and wonders and miracles. It swept through Switzerland, Germany and Holland. Thousands were impacted by the movement.  A leader  baptized 3,000 on one occasion. At one time 25 percent of the area that is now Belgium and Holland identified with this new Anabaptist movement.

God was giving Europe  the opportunity to enter into a vibrant relationship with Himself  that could save them from  godlessness and even from the ultimate devastation of two world wars.

But after only ten short years, this powerful new movement received a destructive blow by Satan, the archenemy of revival. At Munster, Germany,  the Anabaptists followed charismatic, but deceived, leaders to their eternal shame and destruction, leaders who attempted to forcibly establish the Kingdom of God on earth.

Menno Simons, a former Catholic priest,  worked tirelessly, especially in the Netherlands to pick up the pieces after the Munster rebellion to establish this scattered people firmly on the Word of  God.  In so doing, he made a shift which appeared necessary, and even good at the time. This shift had the ultimate effect of hindering this new move from being the movement God  had intended to sweep Europe. Menno Simons shifted from a  focus  on the living Presence of Christ  to an emphasis on becoming a holy church, of getting it right and doing it right.

Consequently the people, instead of crying out to God for revelation and power and holiness created by His Spirit, became preoccupied with avoiding another Munster. As a result these people became  known as the “quiet of the land,” a good people, hard working and conscientious, people of their word and of the Word.

Truth was still found among the Anabaptists however. In fact “many radical men and women of faith  went to martyrs deaths with courageous witness in both the Netherlands and in Switzerland long after Munster. And there were significant revivals with great ingathering during the next 150 years at least.” (in written communication from Richard Showalter,missiologist)

But this people,for the most part, no longer had a vision to change nations and impact the world with the glorious Gospel of Jesus Christ. By the time  of Menno Simons’ death, most Anabaptists had disagreed with some other Anabaptist over “how to get and keep it right” and had been excommunicated at least once by some other Anabaptist. Even as the impact of Munster powerfully affected the movement, the teachings of Menno Simons also affected the movement much beyond his immediate area of ministry.

And now, over five hundred years later, we are again in crisis. After two devastating  World Wars we face the real possibility in Europe of the revival of Neo-Nazism and racial hatred and genocide like we have not seen before.  And in America, once considered a Christian nation and the hope of Europe, we face the loss of the Christian foundations of our society. And we face confusion and anarchy here like we have never known before.

But thanks be to God!!

God is once again raising up a radical people who  are bonded to Him  by the covenant blood of the Lamb and who fearlessly speak the testimony of the Gospel even though it mean their deaths. God is once again starting, not a denomination, but a movement.  And He is breathing on people all over the world in varied religious traditions.  And, praise be to God, He is also breathing on the smoldering embers of many in the Mennonite  Church in starting that movement.

But God needs more than  good people and  good Mennonites and good Anabaptists. He wants radical disciples who live in His presence  and who then are propelled into the market places of the world with the radical message of Peter and John, good men who were transformed by the Spirit ( and by ‘devoting themselves to the apostles teaching, and to the fellowship and to the breaking of bread and to prayer’ Acts 2:42-47 ) and who could say:

“Look at us; we have something for you. We have life and healing and the transforming power of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Do not look at our past;  do not look at our heritage; do not look at our personal strengths or failures. Look at the Christ in us, who is the hope of glory.  World, we have something for you. Look at us!” Acts 3:4.

It is time. Time to seek His face; time to wait in his presence till he baptizes us anew with the Holy Spirit and with fire. It is time to ask for incredibly big things; time to seek a revelation of HIs love and power that will transform us from being simply good men and women to being flaming evangels of His love and power in a world that is breaking apart and in desperate need of the everlasting Gospel of Jesus Christ. It is time to expect a new move of God that will change nations and affect the outcome of history.

And once we have received that revelation, no devil in hell, or even death itself shall prevent us from doing all that He has called us to do.

I want to be a part of that kind of movement.

Let Us Honor the Women Who Grieve

Let Us Honor the Women Who Grieve

I did it! I did it. I had not done it in approximately a year. But this morning I jogged for two miles and without exhaustion; in other words I could have kept going.

I did it because my daughter Marita announced to me last week that she had just jogged for two miles. She asked mejogging how I was doing. I hung my head and admitted that I had only jogged for one half mile one day this week.

But this morning after walking for two miles and feeling the sun on my back and energy within my body, I said to myself, ‘ I can do this; I can see myself crossing the two mile mark.

As I jogged along I saw the finish line in my mind’s eye but I could not allow myself to focus on ‘how I was doing’; or on ‘how far I still had to go’.

Rather I filled my mind with the sermon I am planning to preach this morning at LifeGate: “Let us Honor the Women Who Grieve.”

I thought of the mothers grieving this morning over the daughters abducted by the Boko Haram. Actually many of these girls were from a Church of the Brethren boarding school ( There are more members in the Church of the Brethren in Nigeria, 150,000, than there are in the COB in the USA). I thought of those who grieve over the millions of children aborted and over this fatherless generation and over all those children who are abused.

I thought of how the mothers wept when all the boy babies were killed at the time of Moses birth and of “Rachel weeping for her children’ when the boy babies were killed at the time of Jesus birth.

I thought that great deliverances of God seemed surrounded by weeping.

I thought that we are His body; may we grieve and may we rise up with healing and deliverance ‘in our wings.’ for this generation.

We can do this with God’s help. We are meant to bring the Kingdom to earth. The Son is shining on us and we can victoriously run the distance.

 

Why Are You Weeping?

Museum

Visited the J Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles yesterday with Sunoko and Natalie Lynn pastors of the Maranatha Christian Fellowship where we are having renewal meetings. I was moved by this painting.

The Bible records that when Mary Magdelene discovered Christ empty tomb she grieved, thinking his body had been stolen. Christ then appeared to her and asks, “why are you weeping?”

In this moving portrayal, a play of golden light over Mary’s cloak seems to reflect Christ’s divine radiance. Giovanni Savoldo (1480) captured the moment when the mournful heroine faces the resurrected Savior and realized that he is the living God.

 

Previous Older Entries Next Newer Entries

Past Blogs

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.