Gang Violence & Slavery/Human Trafficking

Sunday, during the early portion of the service I talked about the gang violence that took another young life here in our city over the past week (the neighbour of one of the young men in our ministry). I also mentioned one of the great grievances of our day being the 27 million people in our world who currently are in slavery. I challenged you to pray and act as though you have a Mighty God.

Different ones of you will have different degrees of burden for these issues. That’s right and a part of God displaying His perfections through us collectively as a body. However, it’s hard to imagine living as though these kinds of things are not going on if we believe in heaven and understand that we have been rescued by the Lord Jesus. My desire is that each person in this body pursue wholeheartedly whatever it is that the Lord has laid on your heart. You were created with a purpose, and filled with His Spirit and need to courageously and passionately pursue that calling as you listen to what burdens God’s heart.

Much of our summer ministry is geared towards the rescue of those in the cycles of desolation in our inner cities. Please pray and stay involved and ask God to do mighty things this summer.

I’m not sure what to do on the slavery issue but I’m glad there are some people already involved in this issue.

I’m listing a few websites below that I’ve found helpful on this issu. These are some different Christian organizations that have done good work in the area of slavery/human trafficking. There may be ways for us as a church or you individually to get involved.

Our God is mighty to save.

www.notforsalecampaign.org
www.lifeimpactintl.org
www.tradeasone.com
www.childrenshungerfund.org
www.love146.org
www.ijm.org
http://www.gozoe.org

“Yet a little while, and the coming one will come and will not delay; but my righteous one shall live by faith, and if he shrinks back, my soul has no pleasure in him. But we are not of those who shrink back and are destroyed, but of those who have faith and preserve their souls.” Hebrews 10:37-39

With love,

Brother Joe

A New Parable

Congratulations to John and Allison Mason who began today a new parable of Christ’s love for His bride the church. Be in prayer for John and Allison as they begin their life as one.

Allison served for two or three years as a summer intern at Springs of Grace and both John and Allison have been involved serving the Lord on campus at Northeastern State University.

Death is not dying

Rachel Barkley is a 37 year old wife and mother of two from Vancouver, Canada who is dying of cancer. Hers is a tremendous testimony full of scriptural, God-centered truths. I would encourage you to take the time to listen to this video presentation.

There is nothing new under the…church!

I was asked recently to give my thoughts (again) on the ministry of Mark Driscoll and particularly his involvement in The Gospel Coalition Movement. I listened to his message from 2 Timothy 2 from the recent Gospel Coalition Movement. Driscoll is articulate, funny and has a reputation of being on the edge that he seems to work hard at maintaining.

His Song of Solomon series is an example of the worst of his edginess. This side of Driscoll has been dealt with extensively (e.g. The Rape of Solomon’s Song by John MacArthur -http://www.shepherdsfellowship.org/pulpit/Posts.aspx?ID=4168; Phil Johnson’s message at 2009 Shepherd’s Conference “Preachin’ Dirty” [dealt with the issue more broadly than Driscoll] and the follow-up to that message which speaks more directly to Driscoll http://teampyro.blogspot.com/2009/03/preachin-dirty.html)

What struck me was not so much the problem Driscoll’s edgy preaching creates and its embrace by ministers I highly esteem but how it is nothing new.

In the mid 1980′s I was exposed to Jerry Johnson (an evangelist out of Kansas City who passed out a book at his meetings that my pastor at the time said “You feel like putting a brown paper bag over it so that no one knows what you are reading”. It was controversial and popular because of its crudeness. His gospel left a lot to be desired as well.

A few years later – in the early 1990′s Tommy Nelson (Pastor of Denton Bible Church) gained quite a pop following through a singles bible study he conducted in Dallas on the Song of Solomon. What made Nelson popular was his use of pop language and borderline crass speech to deal with matters of sexuality – all the while taking a position that promoted purity and contained a biblical gospel. Sound familiar?

I recently found some study material that I worked on for some young preachers at that time. These were young men I loved who I was afraid were being enamored by this style while benefitting from other positive aspects of Tommy Nelson’s Ministry (by the way – aspects that I too am thankful for).

I encouraged those young pastors in 1990:
1) to find role models who went hard after holiness and loved faithfully handling the Word of God. Pursue a course of ministry that runs the risk of being “too holy” rather than “not holy enough”.

2) to always be cautious about “the new” and “the clever” in preaching

3) to scream loudly against and run away from any message that makes Jesus a means to an end rather than the end. (Nelson had stated in his series that coming to Jesus would give you a better sex life)

4) to be men who loved and treasured the praise of God more than the praise of men. It matters much more that God is pleased with your message than that people laugh at your jokes.

Listen to Mark Driscoll’s message on 2 Timothy here (http://www.dennyburk.com/Podcast/?p=49

 and John MacArthur’s message on the same text here http://www.gty.org/AudioPlayer/Sermons/55-9

Is Driscoll’s popularity the result of handling powerfully the text or being clever and edgy?

Driscoll in 2000′s, Nelson in 1990′s, Johnson in the 1980′s – There is nothing new under the sun or in the church.

May God give his church holy preachers and powerful preaching.