All posts by Pastor Jeremy
25 Day Bible and Prayer Challenge- Part 2
Here are the rest of our Scriptures for our journey toward Ash Wednesday.
Feb 1 Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will. Romans 12:2
Feb 2 Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. Phil 4:6
Feb 3 Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Matt 28:19
Feb 4 and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.” Matthew 28:20
Feb 5 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law. Galatians 5:22-23
Feb 6 Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God—this is your spiritual act of worship. Romans 12:1
Feb 7 The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full. John 10:10
Feb 8 For I am with you, and no one is going to attack and harm you, because I have many people in this city. Acts 18:11
Feb 9 One night the Lord spoke to Paul in a vision: “Do not be afraid; keep on speaking, do not be silent. Acts 18:9
Feb 10 I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. Galatians 2:20
Feb 11 If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness. 1 John 1:19
Feb 12 for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, Romans 3:23
Feb 13 Jesus answered, “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. John 14:6
Feb 14 For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— Ephesians 2:8
Feb 15 But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Romans 5:8
Feb 16 Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things. Phil 4:8
Feb 17 And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. Phil 4:7
Feb 18 But in your hearts set apart Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect, 1 Peter 3:15
25 Day Prayer/Bible Challenge
This weekend I issued a church wide challenge to Grace. For the next 25 days, let’s read the Bible daily and pray the Lord’s prayer together. I truly believe a church that prays and searches the Scriptures together can change the world for Jesus. We just finished a sermon series called “Get In Shape” The overall goal of the series was to begin the new year by focusing not just on our physical health, but our spiritual health.
Our first step to improve spiritually as a community of faith will be to read the Bible and pray.
Second, we will discern what our Lenten fast and covenant might be this year. I will talk more about that in a later post.
Third, this Spring we will launch a brand new church wide initiative to “be healthy” in Christ. Our small groups will be issued a two-fold challenge of serving in ministry and mission. And, we will host an event focused on becoming a healthy follower of Jesus.
Please join your church family in continuing to shine the light of Christ on all we encounter.
From January 25 to February 18th (Ash Wednesday)
Challenge-
Read one Bible verse a day
Pray the Lord’s Prayer at least once a day
Week 1 Daily Scriptures
Jan 25 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. John 3:16
Jan 26 For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future. Jeremiah 29:11
Jan 27 And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose. Romans 8:28
Jan 28 For I can do all things through Christ who gives me strength. Philippians 4:13
Jan 29 In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Genesis 1:1
Jan 30 Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. Proverbs 3:5
Jan 31 In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make your paths straight. Proverbs 3:6
Lord’s Prayer
Our Father, who art in Heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in Heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom, and the power and the glory forever. Amen.
Go in peace and go with God.
Grace Announces Plan for a Second Campus In El Dorado Springs, MO
Grace Announces Plans for a Second Campus In El Dorado Springs, Missouri
Grace United Methodist Church (Lee’s Summit, MO) – January 11, 2015
Today we announce our plan to launch a second campus in El Dorado Springs, MO. Our new campus is on the site of the former El Dorado Springs United Methodist Church, which closed in 2014. There are 3000 people that live in El Dorado Springs, and within 5 miles, 5000 people.
This expansion is not a church plant. It is a satellite campus. This means it is not a separate church, but a second Grace United Methodist Church campus. Over the next few months we will outline our plans for reaching new people for Jesus Christ in El Dorado Springs.
The mission and programming will mirror our programming and missional strategy. It is the same pastoral team and same philosophy of ministry. There is one Lead Pastor, one staff, one organizational structure, one ministry budget and one leadership team. We will be replicating as much of our ministries as possible at our second site in order to extend the gospel message into a new area.
Currently, there are a few faithful former members that attend a 10:45 am Legacy service. It is our intention to partner with them in developing an outreach strategy to and with the community. We assume preaching responsibilities next Sunday. We will strengthen the current worship service with the intention of adding a 9:15 am contemporary worship service with children’s ministries in the fall of 2015.
If you feel called to be apart of campus leadership team to help, please contact the church office immediately. We are in need of passionate people to reach out in the name of Christ. Our pastoral staff and leadership team have been praying about a second campus for the past few years. Several opportunities had previously come before us and we did not feel we were ready to move forward with them. We did not feel the other situations were where God was leading us.
And yes, Camp Galilee is in El Dorado Springs Missouri. We are sad to see the camp close and if possible would love to utilize the facility to reach people for Jesus Christ, but currently, our second campus is not connected to anything that is or will go on at Camp Galilee.
We have been praying about this and working on this step for several years. I am so excited to see it come to fruition and to watch our church take this bold step of faith to extend the gospel message. Thank you and please pray for Grace church as we continue to reach out. We are light in the darkness, for the non-churched, once-churched and badly churched.
“Game Day”
A few months ago Nick Morrow, our college aged assistant tech director at Grace, had a brilliant idea for a video in worship. He was in his college philosophy class and his professor started a discussion about college football fans and church members. Thom Rainer published a brilliant blog here covering the 11 differences between a church member and a college football fan. Nick quickly translated the class discussion into a opportunity to shed light on our own struggles to follow Jesus and our the insanely passion love of college football teams. (and basketball teams ;0)
Essentially, people are more fired up in the United States about football than they are about Jesus. Of course, there are numerous qualifications that can be made with this, but here are a few examples of how college football sometimes wins out over Jesus.
“A college football fan loves to win. The typical church member never wins someone to Christ.”
“A college football fan pays huge dollars for tickets, travel, and refreshments for games. A church member may or may not give to his or her church.”
“A college football fan is known for his or her passion for the football team. A church member is rarely known for his or her passion for the gospel.”
Ouch. So, our drama and tech teams put together a story board, grabbed two hd cameras and went work. The finished video places two “fired up Jesus fans” in the world of church. They have a pre-game ritual, they tail-gate, and they cheer in worship.
If you or your church would like to use this video in worship, feel free. We can dopbox it to you if needed.
Thanks to the Grace team and Nick for your willingness to think way outside the box and offer something meaningful for discussion and inspire change.
Go in peace and go with God.
Run the Race
Game Day Video
I Am A United Methodist Pastor
I am a United Methodist Pastor. My humanness may pull me away from my calling, but I seek, struggle and fight to stand firm on my faith in Jesus Christ. The faith community I come from is inclusive of those seeking to fulfill their call from God. Our focus on serving the needs of the poor is paramount to our service in Christ. Our focus of sharing the good news in word and deed is built into the structure of the denomination. We help people, wherever they may be, connect with God and begin or continue their journey of faith. We are not flashy, we do not seek the spotlight and rarely do we comment on the political realm, only if it serves and is connected to our purpose of fulfilling the Great Commission and Great Commandment.
I am not a manager of a building. I would rather be in the community than in a committee meeting.
I continue to grow in God’s grace daily, desperately seeking direction and a better understanding of God’s will. My daily prayers focus on my wife, unborn child, my family, my friends, our Bishop, our cabinet, my clergy colleagues, the church I serve, the churches in our community and world, those who are suffering, those who are far from God, the community I serve and many, many more.
The Lord’s Prayer is never far from my lips and thoughts.
The Apostle’s Creed informs my beliefs.
I am part of a connectional systems that encourages clergy to connect.
We struggle with fruitfulness and competition and yet we continue to conference together.
We have an Open Communion table.
The churches of the United Methodist Church are mission stations.
Every Sunday is a mini-Easter for us.
From time to time, we move to other churches to serve wherever we are sent.
We mourn with those who mourn, we rejoice with those who rejoice.
We do no harm, we do good and we stay in love with God.
I am a United Methodist Pastor.
What Facebook, Google and Twitter Can Teach the Church…and Apple
People are searching for answers.
People want to be connected.
People want to be heard.
I Want and Need Answers
Three of the most successful companies over the past tens years have addressed those wants and needs.
When Google came along there were other search engines. The creators of Google did not like the way those search engines “page ranked” things. So they designed a new way to rank pages. It was intuitive. It made sense. It worked. So when searching for answers to your questions, you would find them in the top ten hits. Not only that, they have continued to improve upon their early success by making Google better. Right now we have more knowledge available to us than ever before in the history of the world. The most famous library you might have never heard of was the library in Alexandria. It contained what was reported to be “all of the world’s knowledge”. Sadly, it was sacked and burned. Knowledge lost. Today, you don’t need to go to a library. The answers to your questions are available online. Just search enough and you will find it! When people are searching for answers, most of them turn to Google. I know I do.
I Want to Be Connected
Facebook is a revolutionary way to connect with your friends, acquaintances and family. Originally offered to students, now the whole world can join in. Over 700 million people are now on Facebook. Wow. Lots of people are now connected through Facebook. Remember how difficulty it used to be to know how your high school friends were doing? I do. I had lost touch with a few of my friends, and I’m 37. It’s nice to see how highschool, college and seminary friends are doing. I may not personally communicate with them for months, but I can check their status and see how they are doing and what they are up too. Very cool stuff. Most people are on Facebook in the U.S. They are connecting. And as Facebook adds new features, soon we will be connecting not just through chat, but through video as well.
I Want To Be Heard
I was not a big fan of Twitter until a few months ago. I didn’t want to Tweet or be a Twit. I didn’t want to be a follower either. Twitter is basically a newsfeed of 140 characters or less of people sharing information, blogs, ideas, quotes, conversations, pics and a bunch of other stuff with people that “follow” them. The more people you follow, the faster your news feeds goes. It amazing how quickly good and bad information can be shared. Many people follow celebrities or news organizations. Imagine the front page of Yahoo, the Huffington post or the Wall Street Journal reposting links to their articles. You are just a few clicks away from information you are interested in. The real genius of Twitter is posting to followers. People follow you and when you post something whatever you said or shared is placed in their newsfeed. Hundred, thousands or millions of people will see what you said in an instant!
I had two conversations that changed my mind about Twitter. First, a mom of a high school student said that I needed to be on Twitter. I’m a pastor and I like to stay connected to our congregation, and in my opinion, very few were on Twitter so what was the point? Well, the high school students were all using Twitter. They next conversation was with two friends who were using Twitter to follow live events that were not being broadcast. After going back and forth for a while, I decided to make the leap. I jumped on Twitter and currently follow 1000+ people and have 600+ followers. So I am listening to others, and some are listening to me.
Fifty years ago the church filled all three of those roles. People who were looking for answers could find them (or at least be pointed in the right direction) in church. People looking for connection and relationship could find them in the church. People wanting to be heard could be heard in the church.
Our world has changed. Has the church? Do we still have a chance to fulfill those vital needs? Has our season in the United States gone?
Those questions will not be answered by me here. I’m not sure if there is answer. And if there is, many of us might not like it.
The “Death Tsunami” that is approaching the Mainline denominations quickly. Many are in decline. Less and less “attend” church. Some churches are doing well, and by some I mean a handful in each city or state.
I love the church. No, I don’t love a building, but the body of Christ. As a pastor I need to love God and love neighbor. A few pastors I know don’t really enjoy their jobs. In fact, one was reported to say, “I don’t like these people.” If you don’t like people and you don’t find joy in laboring for the Lord, what in the world are you doing trying to lead a church?
What role can we fill? Who are we called to be in the next twenty years? Shall we just hold on to what we have, take care of our own and just die gracefully?
I pray not. If the “church” is to survive and thrive, we need to do a few things.
1- Help people find answers to their deepest spiritual questions- not tell them the answer, but help them find a path to the One who has the answers. The Bible is a wonderful guidebook!
2. Help people connect- not just in a church building, but with each other outside the walls, maybe, dare a I say, in a completely different model of church known as house churches.
3. Let people be heard. Listening is something that some of us don’t do well. Listen to God and listen to your neighbor.
It’s time the church moved beyond just sharing the love of God with their neighbors who attend church on Sunday. There is a vast ocean of people who never encountered a “Christian” that helped them find God. The soul moving experience of Jesus Christ in your life should inspire us to share His message and help those in need.
Oh yeah, the Apple thing. Apple is an innovative, visionary company that does most everything (except apple tv) with excellence. Do your best at reaching God and neighbor. Don’t say it’s good enough. Do everything you can to make a positive difference for Christ wherever you are and wherever you go.
Dont’ be like the world, be a light in the darkness for the world.
Go in peace and go with God.
There Are No Lines
Prevailing wisdom and philosophies do not cover all of a generation. No, it is sadly and usually the loudest that are heard. So in the following, this is not all inclusive or encompassing. It is an attempt to explain why things, for some, are very confusing. I know members of all these generations who get it. I know some who don’t. All that matters is LOVE. If you struggle understanding why Twitter is so popular, the following will help.
Color Inside the Lines (silent generation)
When I was in kindergarten, I remember Miss Mapes teaching us all “color inside the lines”. We sat at our desks (divided tables) working diligently to make sure that not one bit of color went outside the lines. At the time of course, we were only given one coloring sheet so if we messed up, no second chance, no extra credit, you failed. It was an exercise in discipline and framed the standards of the education we would receive from then on. And that phrase continued to meet me in my work, personal and educational life. The very tired phrase of “we’ve never done it that way before” comes to mind with this mindset.
That teaching, philosophy and learning carries many people through much of their life. Just keep your head down, go along to get along, and don’t rock the boat. In a world with much certainty, jobs that lasted at the same company until retirement, families that didn’t move 4-5 times while the kids were growing up, and a deep sense of community and trust developed over time, that worldview worked and help together the fabric of society. It was the prevailing wisdom of the Silent generation. Interestingly, no member of the Silent generation was ever elected President, and many of them have faded from the social and political world.
Color Outside the Lines (boomer generation)
In the late 1990’s, while I was in grad school, a new phrase began to emerge. That phrase was “color outside the lines”. There are several books that claim the phrase in their title, but I remember hearing professors use it frequently. It was touted as the next great philosophy. Bend the rules. Live in the gray of the world. The words both/and were lifted up as well. This idea took hold and many pushed a can’t we agree to disagree view. Not only that, but it lifted up a kind of dualism of attempting to live in both worlds of two arguments.
This view comes from the Boomer generation. Boomers grew up in a time of significant change in society. Worldviews were shifting and changing with each new protest and dramatic political decision made in the 1960’s. There were several deaths of prominent leaders in the US that caused many boomers to question authority, purpose, meaning and the stability of the world. They are known as the protest generation, although many of that generation moderated with age and became more like the previous generation in regard to work.
For many, “color outside the lines” was a revolutionary statement made from the Boomers to the next few generations.
There Are No Lines (Gen X and beyond)
In what appears to be an evolution of thought, which has been built upon the work of others, I would postulate something different. How about, “there are no lines”. In a world that attempts to be bound by rules and control, there are no lines. What kept us apart for many years is long since gone.
In a world of deep interconnectedness through the web, new connections and ideas can be assimilated and adapted immediately. The edges are now all soft.
Generation X grew up in a very similar time as the Boomers, but with significant adaptation of new technologies.
Things are blending together so quickly, that there is not enough time to define it, other than to say, there are no lines. And this new world, it is for sure and definitely NOT FLAT!
Stop trying to find the lines, follow the lines or color over the lines.
There are no lines. Once you recognize this, you will finally discover the lines you see were self imposed. Only try and realize the truth.
There are no lines.
The world is an empty canvass. Make of it what you will.
Sadly many do not understand this and use rules and regulations to abuse those who disagree. Many will attempt to understand, but try and merge a misguided and well- meaning version. It won’t work.
We are predisposed to repeat the past, unless we choose to change it.
Do we wonder why Gen X and the Millenials have slowly faded from church? This is why.
Seek the abiding and magnificent love of God. Receive it. Share it. Live it. And please reject the rules based religions that bind you up, and keeps you from true peace and happiness.
Embrace the full love of God in Jesus Christ.