Posts Tagged ‘mission’

Your Mission

May 26, 2009

What are you supposed to do with your life? I’m studying in Acts lately. Toward the end of Paul’s ministry, he was assaulted by “the Jews” at the Temple and hauled off on mistaken charges to be tried. Paul bounced around a little from one governmental authority to another and would up on the Mediterranean coast at the palace of the Roman chief administrator of the area. He could have been set free first if he would have slipped some coins to the one consul or just let the next one decide. But God told Paul that his next ministry was in Rome. Paul evidently figured the easiest way to Rome was to get a trip on the Roman government where he could appeal his case to the Caesar.

The meditation guide I’m using now has a series of meditations on figuring out what you (I) am to do with our lives. What’s your talent? Do you listen to the urgings of God who will guide you?

Mostly what I do both as a vocation and ministry is write and teach. So the proddings I get from the Spirit are to continually look for outlets for those things I do. Jesus was alway perceptive into the people he met. He picked people with strengths that sometimes they didn’t know they had and encouraged them to go and do those things. Some couldn’t make the commitment and went away sad.

Let’s not go away sad. What is it that you can do? What is it that God is calling you to do–or where is He calling you to go? Go and Do.

Gary Mintchell

Ache Search Rejoice

April 20, 2009

— Gary Mintchell

Now that we are celebrating after Easter, this passage from Luke seems even more meaningful. I’ve been contemplating on Luke 15 for months now, and finally decided to write about it. During my study of Luke, I visited Willow Creek Community Church in suburban Chicago. Founder/Pastor Bill Hybels was concerned that his church had lost a little edge and brought out one of his original “Contagious Christians” talks. The outline is his, other thoughts mine.

It seems that well into his ministry, Jesus heard the grumbling of the church people–those who observed all the laws (so they thought anyway), attended services, hung out with the right people and all that. These are things we can recognize today from “church people.” So he told three stories to answer their question about why he hung out with “sinners and tax collectors.” The first story is about a shepherd who has a flock of a hundred sheep. Upon discovering that he has lost one, he leaves everything to find it. The second story is about a woman who has lost a coin and searches diligently until she finds it. The third story is about a man who loses one of his sons and looks longingly every day until that sons returns.

These stories have three things in common: aching, searching, rejoicing. And they all describe God. And as we live in remembrance of the Easter events and celebrate the risen Jesus, remember this context.

God aches for every lost person who cannot find the way to salvation and wholeness. Just as we should ache for those same people. Ache is deeper than shallow emotion. It is as if something in us is missing and we won’t be complete without it. Do we care about those who are lost? Or are we comfortable with those around us? Do we always sit an empty chair in our small groups in remembrance that we need to fill that chair with someone who needs to be brought into relationship?

The aching leads to action–searching. The shepherd diligently searches though all the rocks and crevaces until he finds the lost. The woman sweeps the floor, moving furniture, looking under things until she finds the coin. The man goes out to the hill and looks everyday for the return of his son. Do we ache so much for the lost that we search for them? Are we trying to bring wholeness through Jesus to people in need?

Finding leads to rejoicing. In each case the finder is so overjoyed that they invite all their friends over for a big celebration. Just as Jesus was telling the Pharisees and other “church people” (including us) that God rejoices for every person who was lost and then was found, so we should rejoice when a person finds the way and comes to God. As we live in this after Easter celebration along with facing a chenge in pastoral leadership, it’s important to remember we can have Easter celebrations every week that we find lost people and help them find wholeness. That’s what has grown our congregation, and what we need to continue to focus on.

Easter 2009

April 11, 2009

-Gary Mintchell

Reflecting on being in Jerusalem last month and thinking of the Easter story gives an entirely new perspective. The people close to Jesus had a week of remarkable high highs and remarkably low lows all in the space of eight days or so. And the geographical area covered is so small. I took a picture of the “Palm Sunday” road from the Temple Mount. It is a road that comes down a mountain (hill?) to a valley and immediately rises toward Jerusalem and the Temple. The religious leaders would have easily seen the procession and commotion across the valley. From the peaceful setting of the Garden of Gethsemenee to the prison cell where Jesus was likely kept for the balance of the night (probably in a harness that kept him suspended from a hole in the floor down into a cave-like room) was not far in physical distance but light-years in terms of experience. Then a day of going back and forth between judges to the walk through crowded market streets to the cross. But hope comes from the empty tomb. Earlier in the trip we visited Tabga where the risen Jesus came to Peter and asked him three times “Do you love me?” Then “feed my sheep.”

I suppose that’s our challenge after Easter, too. Feed Jesus’ sheep.

Helping others

September 2, 2008

A week ago Sunday I was just minding my own business helping with Big House Sunday getting coffee to all the caffeine junkies when someone asked those fateful words, “What are you doing tomorrow?” Just working, I reply. Well, at 5 am Monday morning I found myself in an SUV heading toward Cleveland along with eight other guys. We loaded over 26,000 pounds of medical equipment and supplies into two cargo containers headed for a medical mission clinic in Honduras. Want proof? Some pictures taken with my Treo mobile phone are here. It was a good time, as all work projects that help others are.

Next time someone asks you to help out on a special project, say yes. It’ll do you–and a lot of other people–good.

Gary Mintchell