Showing posts with label Missional. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Missional. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Mission



Karl Helvig: Youth and Young Adults 

Mission impossible.  Mission accomplished.  Mission: Put a pony tail in my daughter's hair and convince her to leave it there (which, for a dad like me sometimes feels like mission impossible!).

This past Saturday the students of Studio72 talked and learned about God's mission.

More importantly, we sought to JOIN in his mission and steer our lives to BE missional.  



 Every day on mission.




It strikes me that Advent and the whole Christmas season is really quite timely for a conversation about mission.  Sometimes we can be easily tempted to believe that Christmas is about all sorts of things that it really isn't about: shopping, tinsel, reindeer with red noses, ugly sweaters, egg nog, movies with heart warming themes and lots of fires in fireplaces.  None of those things are bad (I plan to include many of them somewhere during my Christmas season), but they are most certainly not the center of what Christmas is about.



Rather, thousands of years ago God made a promise to a guy named Abram and said he would bless the whole world through him and his kids.  Some time went by and God made another promise to save and redeem his people (which, is actually part of the first promise to bless others through his people).  Then, all sorts of God-followers spent lots of time talking about how this would happen and when this would happen and who the Messiah would be (Messiah being the anointed one of God who would accomplish the thousands of years old mission that God set in motion with a guy from a place called Ur... [feel free to peruse Genesis 11-25 for more on the guy from Ur, also called Abram, also called Abraham]).  So, God has been on a mission for about as long as anyone can tell and that mission is simple, He wants to bless the world.

 

Christmas is the season when we remember one of the
central, major, history-altering moments in God's mission.

 God decided to move his mission forward by coming to earth.


 That is what Christmas is about.

 

God moved his mission forward by coming to earth.  God included Abram in his mission, Abram lived on earth.  After Jesus grew up and was crucified and resurrected he told his followers he would leave his Holy Spirit with us here on earth.   
 

God's mission gets moved forward by people on earth.

 

This Christmas season: be invigorated as you continue to join in God's mission; be reminded of the miracle of God's coming to earth to accomplish his mission with us; be encouraged by the friends and family and tinsel and ugly sweaters that ideally remind us of the reason we celebrate so thoroughly every year.

How are you joining that mission this Christmas?

 

Merry Missional Christmas!

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Hot Tub Evangelism



Pastor of Care and Finance, Ron Mol
You never know the opportunities God may send your way on any given day - even when you leave the beautiful state of Colorado!

Last week I had the privilege of taking my wife and son on a vacation.  We left late on Friday and drove only to North Platte, Nebraska, where we found a Fairfield Inn to lodge for the night.  

Before retiring, Scott and I opted
for a visit to the hot tub.


When we got to the whirlpool, we found it was already occupied by a gentleman.While starting a conversation with him would fit my nature, I was also keenly aware that this would likely embarrass my teenage son, so I showed great restraint and remained silent.  Our predecessor in the hot tub did not have a teenager with him, however, so he was not inclined to restrain himself! “Where did you guys start your day today?” he asked.  “Well, we got a late start from Denver on our way to Chicago, how about you?”  I had taken the bait.

The stranger told us his name, and that he was returning to his home south of Denver from Chicago.  I told him we lived in Highlands Ranch.  

 He asked if I knew where the corner of Broadway and Mineral was.


At this point I thought God might be prompting me to talk about our church a little bit, so I told him I was a pastor and my church was right at that location.  He started asking me about our church and told me he was currently looking for one (about this time, Scott had had enough of the heat).  The stranger and I shared some of the details of our respective spiritual journeys, and he told me he would like to visit our church sometime.

So, if you meet a new face at church in the near future,
you may want to ask how he heard about our church!  And always be looking for an opportunity to share the good news with those you meet.

Friday, March 8, 2013

A Celebration of Generosity




                                     
Senior Pastor, Steve Thulson
When word came – first to our Pastors, then our Elders, and finally our Congregation last Sunday morning – there were jaws dropping, tears, applause, even cheers. When a few days earlier, Ministry Assistant Jamie Durbin had opened the church mail and saw the anonymous check from a brokerage firm, she had to ask Ron Mol if she was seeing the comma and dot in the right places.

For the reduction of our mortgage debt, Centennial Covenant received a gift of $400,000!

We praise God for his gracious provision, and thank these generous friends!

This reduces our debt from $1.2 million to $800,000 which will allow far more of the ongoing generous giving from our other 175 households to be applied to direct people-to-people ministries.

Last Sunday we shared even more beautiful examples of generosity.

-          Each week, our children place coins from their allowances in a basket – gifts for Jesus and his work. Darlene and Stefany have observed, though, that some kids – from a family scraping by at the poverty-line – tend not to put in just coins, they put in dollar bills. They make sacrifices.
-          Last week we received thank-you notes from two families in the community who had been in financial crisis due to unanticipated health problems. We had been alongside them with gifts from our Benevolence Fund.
-          We have been experiencing a gradual but steady growth in ongoing financial support of our core ministries and mission, getting closer to the levels we approved last Fall!

Don’t you think these gifts are from the Spirit and please the Father every bit as much as the extraordinary donation to reduce our debt?

And then there’s the generous grace of God we celebrated last Sunday in Dale Flander’s strong teaching and stories like Donna Osborne’s. She told us how her lost hearing seems to be returning at least in part. And even greater is the powerful freedom she has experienced by God enabling her to forgive a man who kidnapped and terrorized her years ago. Dale’s reminder was to let such “highs” be windows to everything our Lord is doing all the time – even in the “lows” when his goodness is not quite as evident.

God is good. All the time. And all the time, God is good. Right?

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Healthy, Missional

Maybe you’ve stumbled on this phrase in conversation, read it in a book, heard it in a sermon, or seen it printed in a church bulletin.  We, as a gathering of Christ followers, desire to be healthy and missional as we seek to glorify God by “following Jesus on a shared journey of transformation in his mission to our broken world” (hint: that’s our church mission statement for those who haven’t come across it before :).

What does that mean?  What does it mean to be healthy and missional as Christ followers?

That’s a great question, let’s explore.

Healthy: we don’t want to be unhealthy. We are not seeking brokenness, infighting, distrust, and discord.  Rather, things like balance, rhythm, engagement and rest, confession, grace and truth, and compassion all come to mind.  All communities, whether churches, clubs, schools or companies, have the potential to form harmful or healthy patterns and characteristics.  We at Centennial Covenant seek to be mindful of our health as individuals and as a community in all areas of life.  We want to be healthy.

Missional: God has been at work in this world from his time of creation and he is still active today.  He has a purpose, a vision, a direction for all things.  He is on a mission.  As Christ followers, we want our lives to be about His mission.  We want to be people who join in the work that God is already doing.  We want to be missional.

So, how do we measure that?  How do we know if that is where we are and where we are headed?

It’s not an exact science, but the denomination we belong to, the Evangelical Covenant Church, has spent some time thinking about this question and they have come up with a great list.  This list is not a perfect measure, but it is an excellent point of reference as we ask ourselves and we ask one another, are we healthy and missional in our lives of discipleship.

Here is the list: 10 Healthy Missional Markers
(you can find the full version online here)


1) Centrality of the Word of God (2 Timothy 3:16)

2) Life transforming walk with Jesus (John 3:3,30; Phil. 1:6)

3) Intentional evangelism (Matthew 28:18-20)

4)Transforming communities through active compassion, mercy and justice (Micah 6:8)

5) Global perspective and engagement (Acts 1:8)

6) Compelling Christian community (Acts 2:42-47)

7) Heartfelt worship (Psalm 138:1a; John 4:23)

8) Sacrificial and generous living and giving (Romans 12:1-8)

9) Culture of godly leadership (Hebrews 13:7)

10) Fruitful organizational structures (Exodus 18:13-26, Acts 6:1-7)
(Again, the full version can be found here)

I invite you to wander through these 10 markers over time, read the passages, and examine whether God is drawing you to a growing edge in any of these areas.  Then share with a friend or your family.  Tell somebody what God is telling you.

Looking forward to continuing with you on this shared journey.

Grace and Peace,
Karl