Church

A Better Way To Celebrate St Patrick…

…than wearing a shamrock or even drinking a Guinness

Pray his prayer ‘St Patrick’s Breastplate’! 

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On the day we remember a powerful missionary pioneer. I’m reminded of what a revolution this man of God wrought by reading Steve Addison’s Movements That Change The World, required reading for New Thing Europe!

Pray this with me, pray it for me, pray it for you and yours, for your spheres of influence, pray it out loud ( unless it’ll get you thrown off the bus)!

I arise today 
through a mighty strength, the invocation of the Trinity,
 through belief in the Threeness,
 through confession of the Oneness
 of the Creator of creation.

I arise today
 through the strength of Christ’s birth with His baptism,
 through the strength of His crucifixion with His burial,
 through the strength of His resurrection with His ascension,
 through the strength of His descent for the judgment of doom.

I arise today
 through the strength of the love of cherubim,
 In the obedience of angels,
 in the service of archangels,
 in the hope of resurrection to meet with reward,
 in the prayers of patriarchs,
 in the predictions of prophets,
 in the preaching of apostles,
 in the faith of confessors,
 in the innocence of holy virgins,
 in the deeds of righteous men.

I arise today, through
 the strength of heaven,
 the light of the sun,
 the radiance of the moon,
 the splendour of fire,
 the speed of lightning,
 the swiftness of wind,
 the depth of the sea,
 the stability of the earth,
 the firmness of rock.

I arise today, through
 God’s strength to pilot me,
 God’s might to uphold me, 
God’s wisdom to guide me,
 God’s eye to look before me,
 God’s ear to hear me,
 God’s word to speak for me,
 God’s hand to guard me,
 God’s shield to protect me,
 God’s host to save me
 from snares of devils,
 from temptation of vices,
 from everyone who shall wish me ill,
 afar and near.

I summon today
 all these powers between me and those evils,
 against every cruel and merciless power
 that may oppose my body and soul,
 against incantations of false prophets,
 against black laws of pagandom,
 against false laws of heretics,
 against craft of idolatry,
 against spells of witches and smiths and wizards,
 against every knowledge that corrupts man’s body and soul;

Christ to shield me today
 against poison, against burning,
 against drowning, against wounding,
 so that there may come to me an abundance of reward.

Christ with me,
 Christ before me,
 Christ behind me,
 Christ in me,
 Christ beneath me, 
Christ above me, 
Christ on my right,
 Christ on my left,
 Christ when I lie down, 
Christ when I sit down,
 Christ when I arise, 
Christ in the heart of every man who thinks of me,
 Christ in the mouth of everyone who speaks of me,
 Christ in every eye that sees me,
 Christ in every ear that hears me.

I arise today
 through a mighty strength, the invocation of the Trinity,
 through belief in the Threeness,
 through confession of the Oneness
 of the Creator of creation. AMEN! 

Church We Can All Do

I follow Rachel Held Evan’s blog and I’m grateful for her pointing to this church in New York (a city I’m so excited to be visiting at the end of the year with Zoe).

What a great idea – Dinner Church! Who do you think they got that from?

I can see this working brilliantly here in Manchester.

Sounds, looks and tastes a lot like how church started, and grew – and maybe it holds a big key to how we can once again build movements that don’t depend on ‘Who’s your Pastor?’, but rather ‘How’s your Pasta?’

More about St Lydia’s here. 

Big, Scary, Vision presented tonight at Ivy Annual Gratitude Meeting #NewThingGlobal

Ivy has had an exciting year of MORE hasn’t it? So many things to be thankful for! And now we’re in our year of EXCELLENCE, encouraging one another to do my best for God, with what he has given me, wherever he’s put me.

But what would God want us to look like five years from now? By the end of 2020? John Wimber said most leaders overestimate what they can do in a year and underestimate what you can do in 5 years.

I’ve been here just over 6 years now. I’m 50 in a couple of weeks. It feels like a biggie to me. I’m at a stage in my life where there are only two things I want. I want to do God’s will for my life with all my heart, and I want to do it in community with people I love and who love me. 50! I might only have, what – another 70 years of ministry, unless the Lord comes back! What kind of impact could we have in 5 years? What goals should we set? What should be stopped and what could be started?

This week we met together as staff, then as elders – and I reported back on my week in Kenya; the challenge and huge opportunity I believe God has put before us by Ivy being part of the New Thing network.

It was a pretty intense week! I was there with Pete Edwards who came to represent Westminster Theological Centre and how that could help, as we were talking and praying with a small group of church leaders, a few from North America who founded New Thing, with others from the Philippines, the former Soviet Union, Albania, India and of course African leaders.

New Thing is a church planting network now connecting 50,000 reproducing churches in North America, and I’ve told you before that I’m at the beginning of the work here in the UK, as New Thing UK. The idea from Dave and Jon Ferguson’s book Exponential is that you draw your vision on a napkin. Last year at the AGM I said God had been expanding my vision so I drew not just the M60 and around it. (draw it up – to UK and Ireland)

The fabulous humble guys who wrote that book and head up New Thing, brothers Dave and Jon Ferguson established 4 values to connect churches together; I talked about it this morning at Kingsway and I encourage you to listen to that podcast but to summarise we are partnering in Relationships and Resources, establishing local Residencies in churches to host and train up new leaders, and Reproducing at every level of leadership and serving.

Some of you will have heard me say how recently at a conference I was in conversation with a friend, Alan Hirsch, a well respected theologian, that just made me a little wobbly at the size of the job, opening up in the future as New Thing UK.

The Sunday evening after I came home, a man I haven’t seen for about 20 years since I was in the Police turned up with a prophetic word for me. He told me exactly what I was worrying about (without me saying a word about it) then said, ‘You are going to be part of a movement that will lead a billion people to Jesus, so you can be sure that God will bring alongside you the people you need, when you need them – so relax – and be yourself.’

That took the pressure off! And to be honest, the only thing I could see in my life that could really be part of that billion is New Thing. Last week showed me how the dream could become a reality, and a lot of it has to do with the next 5 years.

By the end of the week in Kenya the vision just got bigger; because we were talking about movements like New Thing Europe, and even Global New Thing.

We’d all read a great book by Steve Addison ‘Movements that change the world,’ which you’ll hear a lot about this year – and I really need you to come to Ivyfest in Buxton on the first weekend of July where I’ll be unpacking it fully as the focus of the teaching there. He describes how movements grow that change nations and cultures. What makes movements in history happen? And it’s a very disturbing book!

It’s the kind of book you read and have to ask, ‘How does this apply to us?’ What am I going to do about what he says? Where do we go from here? Do we have the courage to engage with what he’s saying?

The book has 5 sections, because there are 5 things at the heart of movements. I haven’t got time to go into all 5 but I will at Ivyfest and I’d love it if you got hold of the book and read it first, maybe in Grow Groups after Easter?

He starts out looking at the life of St. Patrick, who travels into scary remote places to barbaric peoples in the face of great opposition, to establish decentralized churches all over Ireland that fitted the culture there – and you still see the impact of that hundreds of years on.

Then how the Methodists got started, here under Wesley and in the USA under Francis Asbury, who was what they called a circuit rider, who called and raised up hundreds of young people to go into ministry, and the growth of Methodism was unparalleled, like wildfire – when they didn’t try to control it. But within 100 years that impact had died, organized to death, formalized it and sterile.

He says Jesus was a movement catalyzer of course, and we all feel that impact. So what was it about what he and Paul and others did, that had such great impact, which lasts? I’ll just outline a couple of the 5 briefly:

  • WHITE HOT FAITH

He says, ‘Movements begin with men and women who encounter the living God and surrender (all) in loving obedience to his call.’

Oscar Muriu who hosted us in Nairobi said Missionary zeal is developed in the mortar of spiritual discipline, pounded by the pestle of persecution and crisis.

So where is the white-hot faith around here? Oscar said it’s hard for us to have white hot faith in countries where it’s comfortable to follow Jesus. Where is our mortar and pestle? How do we stoke and develop this kind of faith? Because we’re very comfortable. But you can see white hot faith in the places where there is a cost to faith.

MOMBASA last Sunday – I am ALIVE! My faith is REAL!! I’m not just laying my life down in theory now…

How do we fight against the tendency to make Christianity easy, comfortable? To remove any sense of sacrifice and suffering? ‘Come to Jesus and everything will be nice.’ That’s not the gospel! If you remove the fire, lower the cost, you lose your zeal, the fire becomes embers. If we ask ‘Is it safe? Can we go into that place? Is there Ebola?’

Imagine if Jesus said ‘Is it safe for me to go to Earth?!’

  • COMMITMENT TO A CAUSE

Movements need leaders who embody and live out the cause! That’s Jesus, that’s Paul. Wesley was a trigger person, who led from the front and was passionate to be a movement carrier. And Zinzendorf. Have you heard of him? Austrian nobleman. Founded the Moravians. His missionaries were told they couldn’t talk to the slaves they went to witness to in the West Indies, so they sold themselves into slavery, became slaves voluntarily – so they could go into the fields where the slaves they wanted to reach were and tell them about Jesus.

We need the kind of Christian who will lay down their lives, so others find life. Who are these people? How do we find them? Where are they?

Some are at uni now, or they could go off and do jobs that do a lot of good or earn a lot of money one day. Nothing wrong with that, but some of them could be a new generation of leaders of the new generation of all kinds of churches the world needs in the future.

We don’t just want to say to young people ‘Give your life to Jesus,’ we want to say LIVE your life FOR Jesus! Lay it all before him! We have to gather and challenge such people and say, ‘Have you considered this? Some of you, God is calling you into full time church work! Get involved!’ Then we train them, empower them, release them. And we don’t measure our church by how many come but how many GO. The catalysts.

Addison says, ‘Movements happen when there’s a cause worth dying for, to change the world.’ And the fact is those between 17 and 27 are the most willing to pay the price to do this. The older people become, the more they have debt and are locked down by golden handcuffs and children, mortgage etc. If that’s you – your job is not done unless you model, mentor, pray for and help this next generation emerge.

One of the guys with us in Africa, Josh Howard, his church planters in India are all between 18 and 25. They’ve planted thousands of churches. We need to raise up the young leaders before it’s too late.

You know ISIS is a movement!? Who’s signing up for that? Leaving Australia and the UK to join up. Young, passionate, ready to die for the cause. This is meant to be spiritual warfare isn’t it? The Army know how to recruit, at 16 – they sign up, to suffer, to train, to be battle ready and to lead others. They get so much responsibility. They give them a tank! We give them table tennis. What are we missing? Is our cause worth dying for? IT IS!!!

We mapped the world out into 8 zones, and some of us took responsibility for various of them. And I got Western Europe, and the prayer goal of 250 new reproducing churches in the next 5 years! I need a much bigger napkin, and to get better at drawing!

We covenanted as a group to plant 10,000 new reproducing churches around the globe by the end of 2020. We said we will establish local training centres in various nations – including one here of course, to raise up and equip new young leaders who’ll go and create churches which become networks, which become global movements, which help a billion people find their way back to God.

We also committed to finding a top few % of those leaders and shaping them, through residencies, to be ‘Jason Bournes’ for the kingdom of God; people who are young, smart, flexible, with adaptable methods, fearless world citizens able to go all over the world learning from different cultures to better communicate the Gospel message.

These leaders will start new missional churches and kingdom movements- beacons of hope all over the world. Maybe spending 6 months in Africa, then 6 months in Manila, training to be movement makers for Jesus Christ. We’ll give and receive these leaders at Ivy.

When I was flying out of Kenya, and flying back into Manchester, looking out of the window at the lights of the cities, I was reminded of Jesus, who looked over a great city, started crying, and said, “There’s a lot of wandering sheep down there without a shepherd, without a Saviour, I long for them to come to me.”

I showed the video about being the lifeboat churches not the cruise liner church this morning at Kingsway. We haven’t got time to show it again tonight, but some of you were here 6 years ago when I showed it and you voted yes to me being the leader here. I told you then that you voted at the same time to be a different kind of church, a ‘Whatever it takes, man the lifeboats, there are people in the water’ kind of church. I’ve called you on that a few times, and you’re still here and you’ve been as good as your word – because we’ve seen a lot of changes and pulled an awful lot of people into the lifeboats on our journey so far.

But now is not a time to settle. Now is not the time to pull in the oars or pat each other on the back. As of tonight, in the year of Excellence, the starting gun goes off, and doing our best means we charge into a future that’s going to be marked with even more evangelistic intensity. The same kind of evangelistic intensity that started this church in 1893, when Oliver Brockbank reached out across social and class barriers to tell people about Jesus, and soon after Ivy Cottage MISSION hall was established.

The same kind of evangelistic intensity has launched and will still fuel all our churches; whether here at Sharston, or at Fallowfield, Kingsway, Didsbury, Merseybank, and wherever else we meet as Ivy. We are not going to take the foot off the gas! We’ll press down even harder this year, and look for every way we can to make the Gospel message come alive in those gatherings and communities, so more and more people find their way back to God.

We want to re- emphasise the importance of everyone at Ivy being in Grow Groups; small groups where real discipleship, support and community happens. Friends, the next five years are going to be wonderful years for all of you who are in that kind of community, and they’re not going to be as wonderful as they could be for those of you who don’t. Christianity is never meant to be lived out in isolation. It’s still Knowing, GROWING and GOING here, and we want to encourage you to take responsibility for yourself to get involved community. You’ll never mature spiritually without it.

If you’re already involved or leading a Grow group, you need to make room for someone. You say there’s no room? Great – that means you need to multiply and start a new group so there’s room for a few new people. I’d love about 20 or 30 new groups to gather for this next Transformed series we’re doing in the run up to Easter, and you can host one, open your home, press play on a DVD, and let Rick Warren lead while you pray and talk with people. And hundreds more people can get connected to the church and to Jesus by Easter if we do that.

A verse that keeps welling up in my heart these days, Romans 1:16, says: “For I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ. It is the power of God unto salvation.” Everything we’re doing, all this seeking of excellence, it’s not for excellence in itself, it’s because the Gospel still changes hearts and lives. That’s why you’re here tonight. Because someone told you – Jesus Christ died for sinners. You believed it, it changed your heart, it changes everything. That message is going to go out with frequency and with power like never before this year, and we’re going to keep on growing and planting more new Ivy Churches.

I want to encourage you that excellence means a call to full participation here at Ivy. This is not a cruise ship, it’s lifeboats – and it’s ALL HANDS ON DECK. You can get a lot out of this church. If you want a place where there’s spiritual presence and power in worship, where you can hear great teaching, have your heart touched consistently week after week, this is a place you can get that. But what about what you give? I include finances in this as well as giving your time and talents – and I’m so glad this year a lot of people have stepped up into regular committed giving to the church. How about you? This year. In the next five. Will you get in the game?

You don’t want to stand before a Saviour who shed his blood for you and say, “I said I’d live for you but I never committed myself to the body of Christ. Never found my spiritual gifts. Never became a part of the serving core of the church. But I got a lot out of it.” You don’t want unstained, uncalloused hands when you put your hands, in a hand with a hole in the middle of it.

What are you going to do that’s great for eternity? What are you living for that’s worth Christ dying for? We’re going to have another Membership Sunday, just after Easter – where I’m going to invite you to stand up if you haven’t done so yet and say, ‘Ivy is MY church. I’m going to give, to work, to protect the unity, to serve the vision, right here.’

And if you’re unwilling over time to throw your hat in the ring and say, “I’m going to get in the game and commit myself, to be a responsible, partnering, member, who speaks well of the church and serves wholeheartedly,” then, please, go sit in another church. I’ve said this before and it’s never meant to be offensive, but we keep filling up here; and we need that seat for someone who’s going to come to Christ and be a serious disciple, join a grow group, grow in maturity and become a contributing, participating member here. Because this is not club membership. It’s about redeeming a lost and dying world that is not going to be reached by people who sit on the sidelines.

We don’t just want to be a congregation. We want a white hot faith, fully committed, go anywhere, mobilized army who, in the name of Christ, become players and servers and prayers and givers to achieve the objective that God has in mind for us!

That’s how this church becomes a catalyst church in the nation. Like dominoes falling onto the next one. As part of New Thing UK. And New Thing UK raises up and trains leaders who plant many new reproducing churches, as part of New Thing Western Europe.

And New Thing Europe plants hundreds of new churches that establish reproducing networks, as part of a movement called New Thing Global, that reaches a billion people for Christ.

You know John 3:16 says, “For God so loved the world.” In the Great Commission, Jesus said, “Go out into the world and make disciples.” God always thinks globally. God acts, loves and redeems globally. His heart breaks for the hurting, the poor and the lost, globally. We have in these days an opportunity and responsibility to the world, to expand the kingdom of God regionally, nationally, and internationally. That’s not hype. We’re serious. Because the world is waiting and longing.

And when you go like I did to the Kibera slum, see the church there among a million poor people, walk alongside a Pastor who used to be an engineer but now he’s moved in to the slum and grown a church from nobody to 100 in a year, meeting in a tiny tin shed next to an open sewer. When he says ‘All I need to build a church here is my Bible’, you see ‘I need to learn form you’ and you see it’s the same God at work in a foreign culture or church on the other side of the world! And you realize we can partner together to have even greater influence and impact, and you’ll never be the same.

You’ve heard how at the elders meeting we believed God was going to roll all the previous years into this one? More, Stretching, Surprises, Multiplication, Opportunity – with Excellence! That means the next 5 years will be the most exciting in the history of Ivy. You may be new here, that’s okay – because you’re here at the start of some incredible new adventures. You’re here tonight as the gun goes off for a new beginning!

We’re going to start a new series in the evening services looking at the book of Esther, and I don’t know why I planned to do that when I did but maybe it’s because there’s that famous verse in the Book where a man of God says to her, “Maybe, in the scheme of God you were appointed to live for such a time as this.”

It’s no accident some of you are in the room tonight, or listening on podcast. I think the whole course of your life led up to a point where you’d be saved and growing and enough of a Christ follower to be sitting there with a heart that’s bursting with excitement about where this is going. I think God appointed you for such a time as this. And now this year we need you to step up, to do your best for God, with what he’s given you, where he has put you. And some of you will be those movement makers of the future and others of you will help find and equip train them.

But finally there’s one thing I need you all to step up into with me in the next year. That list of focuses for this year wouldn’t be complete without this – and that’s prayer. I have to be honest and confess here, as I did to the elders on Tuesday before they anointed me for this next 5 years and for the huge scary goal of now looking at the whole of Western Europe as my mission focus; I haven’t done my best. Not really, not recently. Especially in prayer. I haven’t led you well in prayer, and I am sorry.

I’ve kept busy, but really – I got to a stage where I look at what we’re doing and I could think, ‘I can do this.’ I can preach a good sermon; leading a team of great people is easy, leading a great church is usually pretty easy. I don’t even need to pray very much to do it. That’s maybe why I haven’t called you guys to pray very much before.

But now, I’m calling you to pray. To pray like never before. Individually and corporately. In 2015, to pray harder than we ever prayed. To fast. I’m calling for a rhythm of prayer and various forms of fasting and I need to know when I do that, you have got my back and you’ll be there. Or we’re sunk before we started. What do you say?!

I look at a vision this big and I know we need people, and I know we need pounds, and I know we need plans. But most of all, we need prayer. Prayer, prayer, prayer.

I look at this global vision and I know – I can’t do it.

I can do church, local church, regional church, pretty well. But a vision so big as to be ridiculous – calls forth my very best, and drives me to my knees. And I have to say it’s great to be so out of the comfort zone, into the FAITH zone! My white hot faith is BURNING!! I feel like I did the day I arrived here at Ivy! I came back home from African and I thought, ‘Great! I don’t know what to do!!’

So I decided to fast and pray on Monday. I had a bad tummy so fasting was easier. Anyway, guess what – same day, I ended up in a phone call later that day connecting me to a leader of a huge prayer network, a very influential leader in the black churches in London, who wants to meet up I’ll be seeing him soon. Now if he got on board – we’d soon have to revise the targets! That’s just one day of prayer! And I’m not even good at praying. Some of you are miles better!

I can’t do this.

God can do this!! We need the Holy Spirit’s genius strategies, the big thinking, the people of bigger faith, those who will make the sacrifices, those who will help establish the leadership models and open the doors to create a movement that changes the world. But the only way this church, these networks, this movement can go forward, is with us on our knees. With MAD prayer, for HUGE miracles!

So can I ask you if you’re able – to join me there, right now, on our knees.

Isaiah 49: And now the Lord says –

he who formed you from the womb to be his servant, to bring people back to him; that they might be gathered to him – for you are honored in the eyes of the Lord, and God has become your strength—he says:

“It is too small a thing for you, my servant, to raise up the tribes around you; I will make you as a light for the nations, that my salvation may reach to the end of the earth.”

“Kings shall see and arise; princes, and they shall prostrate themselves; because of the Lord, who is faithful, the Holy One of Israel, who has chosen you.”

In a time of my favour I have answered you; in a day of salvation I have helped you; I will keep you and give you as a covenant to the people, to establish the land, to apportion the desolate heritages, to say to the prisoners, ‘Come out,’ and to those who are in darkness, ‘Appear.’ 

They shall come from afar, from the north and from the west,

Lift up your eyes around and see; they all gather, they come to you.

As I live, declares the Lord, now you will be too narrow for your inhabitants.

The children will yet say: ‘This place is too narrow for me; make room for me to dwell in.’

Then you will say in your heart: ‘Where did they come from? Who has borne me these?

Thus says the Lord God: “Behold, I will lift up my hand to the nations, and raise my signal to the peoples; and they shall bring your sons in their arms, and your daughters shall be carried on their shoulders.

Kings shall be your foster fathers, and their queens your nursing mothers. With their faces to the ground they shall bow down to you, and lick the dust of your feet. Then you will know that I am the Lord, those who wait for me shall never be put to shame.

Then all flesh shall know that I am the Lord, your Saviour, and your Redeemer, the Mighty One.”

The First GLOBAL New Thing Church #NTGlobal

The First New Thing Global Church: my presentation today to the gathering. 

The apostle Paul, when he wrote to the Philippians, saw them as his band of brothers and sisters. They were from a different nation and culture and background, but he could think of them that way because Paul who had of course been Saul saw himself and all other Christ followers as first and foremost ‘citizens of heaven’.

Wherever we’re from, now – that’s what matters most (3:20), even in a place where people in Philippi were very proud of their Roman citizenship. That’s what enabled him to be a missionary church planter. He had a vision of a God who so loved THE WORLD!

I’m excited by the story of Philippians because Christianity started as a global movement and this is the first church in Europe planted by Paul, there in northern Greece. Acts 16 tells us how after the Holy Spirit had been saying ‘No’ to Asia, he gets a dream from God. And it’s not just TO a place, it’s OF a person. We are meant to reach people, and help them find their way back to God.

They even tried to head East but it says the Spirit stopped them! Do you know why? No, neither did he. How frustrating! Paul’s from Tarsus, Turkey. Timothy’s from that region too. Asia Minor was his dream, but then God gave him a bigger dream, a different napkin, a revelation of a Greek man shouting, ‘HELP!’

So, ‘Having seen the vision, immediately we sought to go…’ strategically targeting what it says was ‘the foremost city of that region.’ He went with Silas and Timothy his brand new apprentice, and Dr. Luke joined in right there too and describes how they catalysed a movement.

It started when they asked the question ‘What is God already doing here?’ As Jews in a different context they went in and found there were NOT enough men to form a synagogue (10). So instead they went to the riverside where they identified some devout women who met outside the city to pray and they sat down where they were and connected to them – including one businesswoman called Lydia, the person of peace who opened her home. The church in Europe got started there. Her home remained the base of operations for the church all the time they were there. By the way, did I say she was a woman?

It went pretty well until they had spiritual attack, got beaten & imprisoned, went through an earthquake, and then the city leaders begged them to leave – which could put you off a place. Who told you church planting was easy!?

What he had planted was a REPRODUCING church that spread over the city and region, it didn’t just stay in that one house, it became a network, with elders and deacons.

Over the years he visited a few times, and when he was in prison (Caesarea, Rome or Ephesus depending who you read – I think Rome is most likely) they were so committed now they had sent a delegation to support and reconnect with him, because there was that vital RELATIONSHIP component.

He sowed into them, and they supported him in terms of RESOURCES. Paul says in chapter 4 one of the reasons he was writing was to say thanks that they had provided for him generously in terms of personal support, and also we find out in 2 Corinthians 8 they gave sacrificially to help the original sending church movement back in Jerusalem.

When they heard he was in prison, even though it was a long and dangerous journey, they sent another gift, and a person because he’s a resource too – a Philippian called Epaphroditus (there’s that relational network component again), whose name means ‘Favourite of Aphrodite’ but obviously he’s now found the real God. Paul says he’s his ‘brother, fellow worker and fellow soldier and your apostle who ministered to my need.’ (2:25) However unfortunately he got really sick and nearly died; so Paul used him as the postman to go back to them, with this very practical letter.

Paul (Phil 2:19-23) said he also wanted to send them soon the guy he says he wrote the letter with, his fellow bondservant, Jason Bourne – Timothy. His apprentice leader, who he says is a ‘one off kind of leader;’ who doesn’t focus on himself but on Jesus, a man of character who he wants to be a reproducing church planter so he wants to arrange a RESIDENCY for him there in Philippi. Paul writes him a short reference; this young guy who had ‘proved himself’. He said they had that father/son relationship, in a culture where a son would follow into his father’s business.

Why did he want to entrust his best young leader to them? Because they were in covenant relationship. They had history together. He says they have been PARTAKERS of grace with him (1:7). They shine as lights in the world (2:15). Because even though they were in a different setting, culture and context, they were all PARTNERS (1:5) in the gospel. Koinonia = participants together. Cf Tom Wright – who talks about this being a business word.

Oscar Muriu has previously outlined for us what these Partnerships look like, by the 4 ways the word is used in Philippians:

1:5 – Partnership in the gospel.

Because of the cross and what Christ has done. The gospel defines why we are gathering.

2:1 – Partnership in the Spirit

The undergirding thread that unites us and we all depend on. Not just a clever strategic plan. Has to be living and learning from the Spirit

3:10 – Partnership in Suffering 

Oscar said we need to feel one another as they say here in Kenya; Being sensitive to each other’s needs and challenges. Pray for one another. What are the prevailing problems there in your context.

4:15 – Partnering in Resources 

Giving and Receiving. We don’t just define that by money. We all bring different resources. We need to recognize the resources we bring whether or not we can all bring the same money we can all bring the treasures we have. Such as that won through living in a place of sacrifice and risk. Those in India can help us form leaders that have been to the edge and back again.

Those in Kenya have the gift of the diaspora in any city. Those Africans who can be mobilized to gather to it. Get them to put into the future church that will be in the city.

The West can bring technology to the table. The Lord will bring what we all have.

What will the systems be that help us come together so that we do far more together that we cannot bring alone? Without each other, our leaders will not be able to develop into the global church planters the world needs.

Raising up JASON BOURNES For The Global Kingdom Mission #NTGlobal

Dave Ferguson and Oscar Muriu shared this session: 

We are here because Oscar was speaking at the Willow GLS and he connected well with Dave. They then reconnected through New Thing and Exponential where Oscar asked, ‘What are you living your life for that is worth Christ dying for?’

Global partnership talks developed from that.

We want to get people to gather from the corners of the world and become part of a network, then trust is communicated through all the relationships in that network.

There are groups that meet to train, or to talk, but a network is there to do something – together. Not in a rigid way, but a structured way.

The posture of New Thing is ‘YOU CAN DO IT – How can we help?’

Not, ‘We absorb you.’

I can still be myself, not give up my identity.

To help leaders be future focused. Not centralized but synergical.

It is easier to partner around mission than around theological positions.

One of the phrases that has come up recently is ‘How can we raise up the Jason Bournes of mission today?’

Watch those films!

You see there

1) He’s young/ energetic 2) He’s skilled 3) He has adaptable methods – he killed a guy with a newspaper! 4) Fearless 5) Mobile 6) Cultural navigator, anywhere he goes

Read Steve Addison’s book on Movements and it’s scary because we see I’m not taking enough risks! Francis Asbury, St Patricks, they were Jason Bournes!

Bob Buford says ‘My fruit grows on other people’s trees.’ We meet someone, we bless and help them, and get to be in some way part of it.

The vision of New Thing is to CATALYSE MOVEMENTS of Reproducing Churches, relentlessly dedicated to helping people find their way back to God.

How do you create movements? Get it simple – simple enough to explain on the back of a napkin!

REACH people

RESTORE God’s dream for the world

REPRODUCE (apprenticeship)

All movements – for good or ill – have those 3 Rs.

Movement is how you accomplish the mission. If you get a group of friends together on mission, you get reproducing networks, that reproduce movements.

Start with the end in mind. Ask, ‘What if we could reach a billion people?’ If you think in big terms like this, that’s about 17% of the world population. People who are full on disciples. That’s Gladwell’s Tipping Point. Those will influence the whole. You can start to really restore the dream then.

What do you aim at, to get this done?

1) At a grass roots level – REPRODUCTION. Get asking at every level, ‘Who am I apprenticing?’

AND 2) How do you convene mass movement leader and thought leaders?

E.g. In China, you see the underground, house church movement is the largest. It’s under the radar, in homes etc. But they will never change the country because they don’t want to engage the powers that be.

There are also some churches, persecuted thought movers, smaller groups who are standing up to their injustice and disseminating ideas.

4 Values at New Thing;

RELATIONSHIPS – we want to be friends, who accomplish together for the Kingdom. There’s trust here.

REPRODUCING – we have a knack to start new things! That’s not the case in lots of the Body of Christ. We have a gift here to steward well for the rest of the church.

RESOURCES – This includes finances, but it’s more than that.

RESIDENCIES – The apprenticeship before you go and plant. Challenge = one new resident per site, per church. This is simple discipleship making.

Desired Outcomes? From our time together, could we think in terms of a leadership residency exchange program? Look at Jason Webb, spent 3 years here at Nairobi Chapel and he carries that back to his leadership now in USA. That’s the prototype. Imagine that kind of thing happening over and over. Can we arrange 6 months with these different nations? Being mentored, growing relationships. It’s a huge win for ministry.

Could that have an agreed curriculum, to teach the same basic things to church planters?

What if there are models and strategies we can share and things we can agree to do better together?

Could we sit at the round table, not have any one culture dominate mission?

The nature of a diamond cut well, is that as light shines through it, that would refract into different colours we would all see from our perspectives. You could argue ‘It’s blue!’ No, ‘It’s red!’

If we exchange positions, then you see the other person’s view and you grew because of that.

If we learn trust, I can hear you say ‘It’s red!’ and hear that from you.

The gospel is a diamond. The Bible has been read to us from a Western hemisphere perspective for centuries. But there are different perspectives! In Russia, the Philippines etc. God created diversity. He is not threatened by it. A global conversation helps us see a bigger God.

A western missionary says, ‘The story of Joseph’s main lesson is – in prison of palace, no matter what, God never forgets you.’ (individual)

An African reads the story of Joseph and says, ‘The main lesson from this is – in prison or a palace, NEVER forget your family.’ (community!)

Who is right?

Could BOTH be?

There is much we can teach and learn from one another – how? TRUST, and/or GO and see their view.

1 Cor 12 – If the whole body were African, where would the time keeping be? If they were all one part – where would the fun be in that?

We give honour to the big parts in the church – but God honours the little parts (like those in Islamic countries etc.?) so there would be no division.

If we are independent, we think ‘I can do this. We don’t need others.’ If a part of the body does that, it is sick – it leads to death. Pride kills the body!

Reciprocity! Every member of the body (this is not about size – you could do without some intestine, but not your pituitary gland) gives something to the rest of the body and depends on the rest.

One of the things that has plagued missions is that it has been a one way stream.

Humility determines our posture as we approach each other. To go to the Japanese church and say, ‘Teach me.’ When I go to another culture, I never come as an expert, but as a learner. Then conversations open up.

The question ‘What can I do for you?’ is an arrogant question. Instead we say, ‘We need one another. To bless one another. Grow together.’

What Wise People Do At New Year

We call them The Three Wise Men, though we don’t know if there were three of them, or that they were men.

We don’t think they were kings.

We do know that they were wise.

They were also a bit late, arriving ‘After Jesus was born…’ 

The Bible is kind enough to spare their blushes, not let us know exactly how long ‘after’ is. They were delayed because they stopped following the star (revelation) and went to Jerusalem to ask directions (relying on their reasoning instead). I wonder how many times I turned up late to the promises of God because I wobbled and listened to the wrong people, rather than follow that star?

Fortunately there they found some people who had more revelation than they knew what to do with, prophecies that said ‘The Messiah will be born in Bethlehem,’ (Matt 2:5) so these foreigners with more faith than the chosen frozen of God saddled up again and got back on the right track.

The story can tell us a lot about the company we keep and how that can make or break us, it can warn us about who we should listen to as we head into our future, too.

But as the year closes out and a new one gets ready to start, I’m thinking about various wise people I know and those I have read about and how they finish an old year really well, to start a New Year better – and what they do and say lines up well with what these wise guys did too.

1. LOOK BACK 

‘We saw his star when it rose and have come to worship him.’

We don’t know where they came from (East is a big place), but they did. They knew God was guiding and calling them and there’s something very powerful about that. Now’s a great time to look back over your last year and reflect on it. John Maxwell says ‘Evaluated reflection turns experience into insight.’ Everyone experienced 2014 – the key word there is evaluated.

Lots of us are having Facebook do this a little for us. I’m getting fed up of everyone’s “I had a great year – thanks for being a part of it’ to be honest, but we all need some method to do this. In the last few days I have thought back through various magic moments in my life in what we at Ivy designated the year of MORE, in the area of my friendships, finance, and family.

I remember hearing RT Kendall say, ‘Count your blessings one by one – you’ll be surprised what the Lord has done.’  Looking back for me helps me think about the ‘it just so happened’ that happened and tie them onto God’s promises and how they got fulfilled in my life which builds my faith so I can pull some principles to help determine where I want to head and what I really want to do next year.

wise-men

2. LOOK UP 

‘When they saw the star, they were overjoyed.’

It was fantastic yesterday at Ivy as many people shared personal stories of how God has helped through hard times, provided unexpectedly, and answered so many prayers. Church should be the place you come to get your faith lifted! If your church doesn’t do that, if it’s closer to the court of Herod than the courts of heaven, can I suggest you get moving?

People who know Jesus Christ ought to be the most positive people on planet Earth! If God is for us, who can be against us? We have just looked at a whole series on Christmas Hope and as I look again through the nativity story I have no right or reason to be afraid as I look at the future.

God keeps his promises. God loves me enough to come to show me. God understands my ups and downs because he left the ultimate UP of heaven to come DOWN to Bethlehem’s messy manger.

God doesn’t want us to just drift into the future or to let 2015 just happen to us. If you’re feeling lost – ask him! His guidance is personal, his promises are powerful and his directions are perfect.

3. LOOK FORWARD

‘They saw the child with his mother Mary, and they bowed down and worshipped him. Then they opened their treasures and presented him with gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh.’ 

What do you buy for a baby? I’d be terrible at this. It’s a good job they didn’t get the newborn size because by now Jesus and Mary are living in a house in Bethlehem when there’s a knock at the door. But what each felt prompted to bring was just perfect. Presents from around the world, fit for the King. God was prompting them when they packed at the start of the journey and they responded. They were open to his guidance in dreams and that soon saved the day, then they set off with purpose, back home. I believe if we follow God’s star he will lead us as we step out. Don’t just wait around for something to happen, set a goal.

Nobody ever just went for a walk and ended up on top of Mount Everest.

Maybe the biggest difference maker I find from leaders I read about and respect is they use a time like this to set goals in various areas and have a clear vision for where they want to be, what they want to accomplish in the coming year with God’s help, and why.

The power is in that word why.

If all my goals are about me and for me, that tells me something about who I’m really living for.

Jonathan Edwards wrote, The happiest Christians are not those who accomplish all of their personal goals, but those who embrace God’s goals. 

What are your goals for GOD in 2015?

This year a bunch of us at Ivy set a goal to read the Bible in a year. And we did it. It was so good, I want to do it again. That’s a great goal.

What about a few more specific goals?

For God, family and fun? I’m setting some short, medium and long terms goals for the year. Not too many, maybe 3 or 4 – you decide as you get with God:

Maybe a goal for your prayer life? How are you going to get close to God in prayer this year?

What about a goal for giving to God’s work? Giving more, living more simply and generously. I’m talking about setting some specific, and measurable goals. So when God makes it happen you can give Him the glory.

Goals for personal development; what are you going to learn next year you don’t know now? And where are you going to go to learn?

Goals for Physical fitness? Will 2015 be the year you run that marathon?

What about a mission goal – could following the star that leads you to Jesus lead you on to another nation maybe, helping the poor and spreading the news about Jesus all around the world?

Take some time to stop – and dream again. Dream bigger, and write it down because as a wise person said yesterday at Ivy, ‘A goal is a dream with a deadline.’

THE ROLE OF WOMEN IN THE HISTORY OF IVY CHURCH

I spent a little time this evening looking through a little piece of the history of our church, as I read extracts from the Minute Book of “Ivy Cottage” Mission Hall.

photo

It started as a record of the ‘Womens’ Bible Class,’ then was unused from 1913 to the 50s.

There are some fascinating insights into how Ivy saw itself as a MISSION from its inception, church planting, evangelism, and then that movement became a church as it formalized and hired Pastors to lead it (I’m in danger of doing myself out of a job here) and then started looking at various rules and regulations; and when that happened the pioneering and evangelistic work of women was also truncated. The record speaks for itself and there are some funny things to note along the way.

Many of you will know Ivy started as a men’s Bible study group meeting in a house in 1893. I’ll have to look at their records some time too!

Oct 5th 1908 – Women’s Bible Class held monthly business meetings and had 218 registered members who attended weekly. If they did not attend they were ‘visited’ to find out why, in the September 94 visits were made – this was about the average number of visits monthly for years – reasons for absence ‘away from home, prevented through sickness, or home duties.’

In 1809 two women were classed as ‘lapsed members,’ through absence, many women were classed as leaders and ‘deaconess.’

By 1913 there were 257 women, no surprises that it grew, you wouldn’t want to be missed! If you were a member and not attending you would be ‘specially written to.’

From the earliest days the records show a remarkably generous church with mission at its heart, giving much of the income to mission overseas and organizing outreaches.

This book stops there and there are blank pages until…

Jan 15th 1952 when the first Pastor of ‘Ivy Cottage Mission,’ Mr Hunt uses it again.

They agreed that month to do open air evangelistic meetings, and to use an amplifier to do so.

6 Feb 1952 Mr Hunt would be ‘given the liberty to invite speakers and pay their expenses from general funds.’

The same meeting gave away a lot of money to missions, and agreed to arrange ‘an Evangelistic campaign in the new year.’

26 January 1953

Mr Hunt ‘referred to the growth of the mission and that it had been suggested that the time might be opportune to change the name… (to) Ivy Cottage Evangelical Church.’ This was agreed, and a sign over the gate was to be made.

‘Luxury coaches’ were booked for the outing to Llandudno (we know always knew how to party), with food included this would cost £1 per adult.

Nov 22nd 1954

It was agreed that baptism was not a condition of membership but ‘we were happy to make arrangements for those who believed it was the Lord’s will for them.

‘It was agreed the elders should go carol singing as in previous years…’

8th Feb 1956 when there was no minister in charge…

The treasurer stressed the need for more generous giving and asked that more friends consider using the monthly envelopes system as this had been a great help…’ (I refer you to my talk last Sunday morning in the category ‘some things never change’).

24th April 1957

The new minister Mr Lamb came in like a lion, ‘stressing the responsibilities of church membership, full loyalty to Christ and his gospel and to the work of the local church’. Membership cards were introduced.

There was a struggling church in Brooklands, Ivy agreed to support and take that over as ‘a daughter church’ on the Brooklands Estate.

30 Sept 1959

Mr Lamb formally introduced a constitution.

He said it was not scriptural to have women serve on the church executive and this would be in the constitution.

A member asked whether the Pastor could make ‘an appeal’ at the evening service, the Pastor stated he would do so when he felt lead to do so.’

26 Oct 1960 was a TUMULTUOUS Special Meeting!

A member had asked that the constitution be amended ‘Because

1) Since the introduction the church had declined and become discontented and the members were divided because the ladies were denied seats on the church executive

2) Even if scripture taught that the government of the church should be in the hands of men we must be modern and move with the times for ladies were now emancipated

3) Ladies were in the majority in the church and so they should be in control

7 ladies spoke in support of this proposal 🙂

A Dr Kerr said that item 2 ‘was very dangerous and the argument used could support many false teachings.’

The Pastor could not agree with Dr Kerr on scripture but said the constitution should stand anyway. The final item that night was that Pastor said the piano in the church was to be disposed of and that any member who wanted it could have it.

The constitution was accepted the following January at the AGM.

In the September of that same year a note from Dr Kerr records that ‘the second Pastor of Ivy Cottage Evangelical Church, the Rev BT Lamb, entered into glory on the Harvest Sunday after conducting the gift day services.’

Reading that has made me a lot more wary of crossing the Ivy women!

STAND IN THE GAP

 Notes from talk by @PastorChoco Wilfredo De Jesus

Prayer is necessary, but it’s not a crutch not to do anything. You cannot let your budget dictate your faith. You have to trust God that he will meet your needs. We must MOVE to action

Ezek 22:30

God’s looking for someone to stand in the gap.

Found NOBODY!

Who would stand there.

A gap = place of danger, vulnerability and danger.

These days the gaps are wider.

God’s still looking for those who will engage the gap.

You must engage your community. See your city as your church. Jesus sat with the lost. People who didn’t look like him. Demon possessed men, Samaritan women. He went to them. He wasn’t afraid.

What is sacred is the MESSAGE, not the METHOD. We can use all kinds of methods to reach people.

Fear is the absence of faith.

Nehemiah is living large, then he asks a question that changes the course of his life: ‘How’s Jerusalem?’

If you are not going to do anything, don’t ask!

Nehemiah had to do something. With revelation comes responsibility. Walk toward the need. Bring the kingdom of God outside your church and into the world.

  • He PRAYED and fasted – He WEPT for the hopelessness in the city
  • He PLANNED – you have to write it down. Many of us like the end product but not the process. How many leaders have been talking about doing something for 5 years, but not doing anything
  • He PROCEEDED 760 miles journey. This is sacrificial.
  • He PERSUADED. You will face strong opposition whne you stand in the gap, but God is with you, who can be against you.

Nehemiah was not a priest or a prophet, but he was a worker who went and worked for God.

HOW IS MANCHESTER? Where are the gaps to stand in?