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Word on the Street is…

I was catching up on Twitter and FaceBook yesterday after incredible Easter services at LifePoint. It was quite energizing reading the words for LifePoint’ers of all ages. Yesterday was incredible at LifePoint, 4500ish in attendance (still waiting to hear final numbers), people embraced Christ, etc. Enjoy reading these as I did:

  • I thank God for Life Point Church Smyrna; Pastor, staff, and volunteers on this resurrection Sunday as the depth of today’s message was on the true meaning of Easter. Jesus died for our sins and was raised again to reconnect us with our Creator (non-sugar coated message)..God has done an amazing thing for us and will continue in our every day lives if we’ll let Him. www.lifepointchurch.org/yes
  • Whoever thought an empty tomb could fill so many hearts
  • Praising God for His grace and mercy. Please pray for our area. Many we know have a great deal of damage from the tornadoes that went through our area on Friday. Places we drive everyday look like a war zone. Pray for us as we minister to those around us!
  • Great time of Worship today, Ron! You did a marvelous job on “I Will Rise”… always a joy to be a part.
  • All I can say is WOW #lifept
  • Home from some kickin’ LifePoint services this morning
  • Had a really swell “Easter Eve Sundown Service” last night & two great service this am @ Lifepoint!
  • Happy Easter from India
  • In awe of what today means. Jesus is risen! great morning at Lifepoint.
  • The most interesting thing of the day so far on Easter @lifept. Lady brought baby squirrels to church in a fanny pack…ok
  • I will rise, because He is risen! Happy Easter!
  • Wonderful service at Life Point and headed to Easter lunch with friends.
  • Easter at @lifept has been incredible, so thankful for a God who provides #lifept
  • Church was PACKED!!! PRAISE GOD THOUGH!!!
  • Worship @lifept was off the hook this morning! when God shows up, there’s no stopping it! also, we are bustin’ at the seams…God is good!
  • “Either Jesus paid the price for your sin or you will.” -@pathood
  • Serving at Lifepoint Church this Easter morning!
  • The easter bunny is FAKE! happy easter
  • Rejoicing this morning, Easter isn’t about bunnies and eggs, but about our risen Savior. How amazing the gift we have in Jesus.
  • Had a fantastic Easter. My church (and the “octopus” within it) ROCKS! “We will overcome through the blood of the Lamb and the words of our testimony…”
  • Great message at Lifepoint Church-He Lives!!!
  • Had an amazing day of incredible worship from LifePoint Church. Pat really presented the WORD today and did a great job presenting the Gospel.
  • Woooo worship was AMAZING.

YES!

YES! seriesI have been working on some details with our LifePoint team for our new series that starts this Sunday called YES! Pat will be challenging people to put their “yes on the table”. It is hard for me to contain the excitement of what God has in store for people of Middle TN, LifePoint’ers, and even me over the next three weeks.

As I was doing some writing for our website and series today, here are some things I realized:

Each day, Jesus said ‘YES!’ to His Father and His mission
Each day, Jesus said ‘YES!’ to serve the needs of the people around Him
Each day, Jesus said ‘YES!’ to the opportunities to help and teach his friends
In the Garden, He said ‘YES!’ the Father’s plan
On good Friday, Jesus said ‘YES!’ to the Cross and being our sacrifice
On the Cross, Jesus said ‘YES!’ to the thief beside Him that he would be in Heaven
On the most important Sunday in human history, Jesus said NO! to death and ‘YES!’ to life….and to us

My Question for you: What is the biggest ‘YES!’ you have said to Jesus recently? For me, it was going to Guinea, Africa.

What I Discovered about LifePoint while I was in Africa

  1. We have incredible leaders: my team leader for this trip, Scott, has a demanding professional job, a wife, 3 boys; yet, he and his wife planned the logistics of our trip, got us prepped, & are on the forefront of creating a movement in another country.
  2. We have incredible Global partners: Perry & Donna, our host family, were phenomenal. Their wisdom, work, and energy were amazing. The influence of our partners, Darryl and Glenda, in the city where we stayed was impressive. It is obvious the relational impact that are making for Christ. Bottomline, missionaries have an awesome calling and they work their tails off.
  3. God had given LifePoint an effective and inspiring vision and strategy to glorify God in the nations.
  4. The people of LifePoint don’t just talk missions, we do it.
  5. LifePoint’ers are hardworkers and willingly to roll up their sleeves and serve.
  6. Our strategy of invest and invite (winning the right to be heard, relational evangelism) works in other cultures, too. Obviously, it is effective because we are building upon how God has wired us (all people).
  7. We have a great staff team! Thankful that they can allow me to be gone for 10 days to experience this trip. It has been a blast celebrating God’s continued work with them.

So, if you don’t have a passport yet, get one. You need to have your perspective and heart for the Lord shaped by going to Africa, Belgium, China, Brazil, India… If you want to hear more about LifePoint’s Global strategy, come to the Sending Church Conference.

Today is a National Holiday

For a long time now, I have realized that today, the third Thursday of March is a National Holiday. Why today? Sill question I know because it is the first Thursday of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tourney. Yes, it has yet to be officially recognized by the government, but I think it is only a matter of time. Our current president is adding a basketball court to the White House and has completed his own bracket. I can see a recognized holiday passed through Congress in the near future so that as a country we can celebrate this day as a country. Think of it as another day of Thanksgiving as a country:

  • it’s on a Thursday
  • we gather with family and friends
  • we eat a lot
  • filled with tradition: fight songs, streaks, brackets, watching a lot of TV
  • it celebrates the uniqueness of our country and unifies us around our brackets
  • it is the beginning of a second holiday season starting with March Madness and culiminating with the Masters
  • unlike all of the sleeping on Thanksgiving, we get to sit on the edge of our seat for the little guy to beat the powerhouse (not many things more American than that, plus it reminds of the Bible…David and Goliath)

Thank you for joining me in this crusade to bring today, the third Thursday of March to its rightful place as a National Holiday. And yes, there is still time to participate in its most holy of practices for this day, completing your bracket. Need some strategies on how to pick your Final Four and Champion? Here are a few ideas:

  • Choose teams with the most potential NBA players
  • Teams that are heavy with senior starters
  • Choose a team with the more dominant mascot
  • Pick teams with better talent at the guard positions (a.k.a. point guard, shooting guard or 1 & 2 guards)
  • Pick teams from stronger conferences
  • Choose the school with the better fight song
  • Chooses teams with better winning records against the top 50 teams in the country
  • Go for teams with a good record on the road
  • Pick schools that have the strongest schedules
  • Pick based upon the school’s location and where you would whether live between the two schools
  • And yes, the school with better team colors, not sure it is legitimate but it works

If you need a place to complete your bracket go here. Of course, you can view the winning bracket. Happy Holiday!

For Just One Hour a Week

Last night at LifePoint, our Worship Programming Staff hosted a St. Patrick’s Day Party to celebrate the volunteers in our Worship Programming Division. The Worship, Production, First Impressions, and Communications volunteers partner with our staff each week to create a compelling and relevant environment for people to engage and respond to God every week. We created the Party so we could laugh together, celebrate together and say thank you.

We are blessed at LifePoint to have amazing volunteers. It is a reminder that the church is not a building but the people of God gathering together to accomplish His mission in the world. David created this video to show all the dedication and passion that goes into creating a weekly worship service at LifePoint. On Sunday, we currently have 3 services and at the rate of growth we are experiencing (29% YTD), we will have more soon. I amazed and grateful for the 130+ people on average each week that give 800+ hours to create our weekly services so people in Middle TN can be pointed to a Christ-Centered Life. 800+ hours for 1 incredible hour each week to connect to 1 amazing God!

How do you see the world?

Still getting my mind around my recent global experience…the opportunities, the needs, and the people. It is often hard of us in our comfortable corners in the U.S. to get our arms around what is happening in different nations and continents (and honestly, on the other side of town, too).

I am thankful for what God is stirring in the church to reach the nations. In about a 5 week span, there are teams from LifePoint going to West Africa, East Asia, South Asia, Mexico, Brazil, Belgium, Seattle, and the Gulf Coast. I kicked off a conversation with fellow pastor from an innovative church in South Carolina dialoguing on how to use technology to advance missions strategies. I have a college bud who just went to Italy on the mission field full-time. Just learned about a friend and one of my childhood basketball coaches who is on the field in Nigeria. Talked to another mentor and friend serving on the mission field asking me to give my two-cents on how he can mobilize student to reach the Americas (now that is a to do list item)! Wow!

How do you see the world? Six billion people are on the planet. If we reduce that population to 100 people, proportionately:

• 57 of those people come from Asia
• 21 from Europe
• 14 from North and South America
• 8 from Africa
• 49 would be women
• 51 would be men
• 68 would still not be able to read and write
• 6 of those people would own 50% of the world’s wealth and all of those would be U.S. citizens
• 1 of those people would have just been born
• 1 of those people is about to die
• Only 1 of those people have been to college

Thanks to Rob for sharing these numbers (another pastor who is leading his church to impact the globe).

You are Talking about THAT in Church

Kem Meyertweeted‘ today, “Sex is MAJOR ‘head in sand’ issue. People make bad decisions on bad information & suffer alone. It should be talked about in church more.” I AGREE!

I am blessed to be at a church that believes we must tackle the real issues of life and address them from the Truth of God’s Word. On Sundays, we are dealing with the topic of sex, marriage, etc. through an incredible series called Love Dare. The content is driven by the Old Testament book of Song of Solomon. Plus, our student ministry is helping students navigate the turubulent waters of teenage relationships, sex, etc. with their series Love Sick. Tonight they are having a panel of adults answer questions submitted by students—what an awesome idea…it shows students that we care about what they are dealing with and that God’s Truth is relevant even in 2009.

What the Church can learn from IKEA

A few years ago, with the help of my wife, I became a fan of IKEA. Since then, I have shared the wisdom with others of all things IKEA. It is rather simple to become a fan of this international home goods retalier: innovative products that work great in your home at smart prices, great design, and some good food while you shop, too.

Over the last few months, for one reason or another, I have ended up swinging through IKEA’s Atlanta store and it caused me to think about: ‘What the Church can learn from IKEA’:

  1. Focus on the Experience — distinct, focused brand; great signage; incredible first impressions
  2. Give a Picture of Results — as you walk through the ‘showroom’, there are several places where you can see a setup of all the IKEA gear in a space based on square footage. In the church, would it help people move to spiritual maturity if we give them clearer pictures of a spiritual growth destination? They think so.
  3. Take Care of Kids — throughout their stores, IKEA has kid-friendly & family-friendly experiences. There is a whole department for kids furnishings and gear, toy areas, a kid hangout spot in their restaurant, family restrooms, and even childcare where kids will have a multi-sensory experience while their parents shop. For the church, investing in kids’ ministry is huge. If you don’t get kids’ ministry right, there is going to be a lot wrong in your church.
  4. Have a Great Web Experience
  5. Add Value to People’s Life — people invest their time and money in things that add value to their life. Millions of people shop at IKEA because their products and experience give value to people when compared to competitors where people could spend their money. For people to invest themselves in the church versus a hobby, sleeping late, etc. they have to experience added value to their life. Is your church creating a compelling vision and value to your attendess’s lives?
  6. Customizable — the possibilities of products and the options at times can be endless when shopping at IKEA. In our culture today, we are seeing that people’s faith journey is different and individual; and while process is crucial, everyone’s journey will not be the same. Our faith journey is more relational and organic, not step 1, step 2, etc.
  7. Accessible to Diverse Cultures — The products and experience of IKEA is truly international. It appeals to so many cultures because they are intentional in communicating to many, they have a level of excellence and value that speaks to all cultures, and what they have everyone at one point or another needs. In the church, no matter the culture, we have what everyone needs (a relationship with Christ), when we strive for excellence our message it is appealing to all cultures, and we should make sure our message is received by and touches all nations.
  8. Pay Attention to Details
  9. Mulitple Points of Contact — for IKEA, that is the web, catalog, and their stores. For the church, our campuses, the web, of course, but more opportunities like: local/community ministry projects, relationships/invites, multi-campus strategy, ‘Matthew parties’, simply being incarnational in our neighborhoods

Obviously, I am an IKEA fan and with good reason. More importantly, I am a fan of the local church with great reason. Because of that, I believe other fans of the local church should look everywhere and at everything to see how the church can bee as effective as possible in our mission.

West Africa Update, Thursday

Thursday was our last full day in Kankan. Early in the morning we set out for two villages south of Kankan. As usual, the hustle and bustle of Kankan in the morning was quite fast paced with a lot of people on their way to one place or another. We made the trip to the villages just fine with no curveballs.

The first village of the day, Farako, was the smallest of the three villages we visited. We stopped by the village on Wednesday just to tell them we would be coming today. You can tell they were expecting us because when we arrived, their two soccer teams were having a match on the field next to the village. This was significant because they wanted to display there soccer teams to us because we had left soccer balls with the village when our team visited in June. Both teams were dressed in bright colored jerseys, pretty impressive sight. After walking up the road to watch the soccer match, we were greeted by one of the village chiefs. We talked with him for a moment and watched the match. The chief interrupted the match and had all of the players line up shoulder to shoulder and walk towards our team to give us a formal greeting. That was cool.

We then walked back to the village and greeted the older chief and asked if we could visit in the village. The Farako people were happy to have us and so our small groups of three or four including our translators began to walk around the village and meet people. Scott and Ron toured the village and walked down to the river by the village (later, the chief shared how that was significant to them and it showed that we loved their village).

Matt, Rocky, and I broke away from the crowd pretty quickly and stopped in an area where there were several huts in a circle. We met the ‘family chief’ for this part of the village along with some of his family. As I was getting to know the family chief, I asked how many children he had. He paused for a while and counting them in his head. I was expecting him to say like 18 or something (many men have multiple wives in this culture). After a minute or so, he said, “six.” I told him I had three, two daughters and one son. As soon as I said that, his wife asked if I would give my oldest daughter to marry their youngest son. That’s a new one! (Later, I guess to sweeten the pot, they offered to give me their grand-daugther, 6 months old, in exchange for the earlier marriage proposition, I think they were kidding at that point.)

While we were with this family, we are able share the entire ‘Creation to Christ’ story, laugh together, take pictures, and we even helped them grade some casava, a local crop (they look like white carrots). After time visiting folks in the village, we gathered back in the center of the village under a huge tree. There there drummers played some folks danced (not quite as elaborate as the village from Wednesday). Then Ron played a couple of worship tunes again for them to hear and we presented them with the machetes and soccer balls. It was pretty cool when the entire village that was there began to applaud loudly.

This village also prepared some for food us as a gift. We were led to the chief’s hut who greeted us when we arrived at the soccer field. He seemed to be a middle aged man, tall, and wore a bright blue. He had a commanding presence and really connected to our team. As we waited for the food, we had an incredible conversation with him. Primarily, he and Perry. The chief spoke of the tapes from Genesis he had listened to, inquiring more about Christianity, told us a story of how his grandfather had a great relationship with a Catholic Priest 50 years ago, and talked about his beliefs as a muslim. He seemed to be very open to Christ as well so he gladly accepted an additional tape and some booklets. We then ate in his hut, again from a common bowl of rice with peanut sauce and chicken on top. Kelly and Donna also came across a young man who was very eager to receive some of the booklets and was seeking to know more. The response in the Farako village has been really encouraging.

Our afternoon stop was in a large village closer to Kankan called Borifinen. As we arrived, we saw many of the teenage to young adult age folks headed to go fishing. We were wondering if there was going to be anyone left in the village once we arrive. We were able to locate the chief of the village and quickly many children came to where we were and then the elders began to gather. Now at the third village, we did the routine of waiting for everyone to gather, talking back and forth greeting one another, and then off the walk around the villages to observe and meeting people. Each of our groups did our normal thing and had some great experiences. Each group was able to share stories of Christ in the gatherings we found ourselves in.

With the time of day getting late and being sensitive to the village people, instead of doing the music this time, we just gathered back to share a few stories of Jesus to everyone who gathered and present our gifts. So, once everyone had gathered, we told them thank you, then Scott and I both told our faith stories of coming to Christ.  To emphasize the difference of their religious background and following Christ (the Guinea people would often say we believe the same God), I made sure to interject the name of Jesus several times in my faith story. After the translation, a spirited response was given by first an older man sitting off from the elders. Basically, he said that they had been muslim forever and that they will not change. Perry, said that is fine, if they do not want to hear stories for Jesus anymore we would not come back because we did not want to disturb the village. Then, that let to another spirited and long response from one of the elders because he wanted us to return and apologized for the older man’s response. I shared with them I was a pastor and they were excited to introduce me to their Emon (spiritual teacher). It is hard to capture the entire scene in a blog post, so I would love to describe this in person sometime. It was quite an adventure.

We closed our time out with presenting gifts, taking pictures, and saying farewell (we actually said ‘An be kof fe’ which means “see you next time”). They welcomed us back anytime.

Ron, MC, and I were dropped off in the market to pickup some bread and then we stopped at a cyber cafe. We were able to reconnect with some folks back home (I love technology!). I was also able to put two Christian songs on MC’s phone using the bluetooth connection from my Mac to his phone (I love technology!). After getting the two songs on his phone, MC said, “This makes me so happy.” As we then began to walk out of the cyber cafe to find a taxi to go back to the guest house, I asked MC if he felt like he was following the way of Jesus. His response are words I will never forget, “I think so, it is in my heart and I cannot help it.” Wow! Pray for MC. Following Christ in a land where there are so few, and the religion is so different, it quite costly. I get excited every time I think of this moment.

The rest of the evening was debriefing, sharing God stories, eating, and prepping for the long road trip the next day. Thursday is a day I will never forget.

West Africa Update, Wednesday

Wow, what a full day Wednesday has been. Today was our first of two days in the villages. We woke up early and had a few stops to make as we headed out of Kankan to the villages. One of the adventures for the morning was trying to make it across the bridge that goes over the river in Kankan. They have been working on the bridge this week, looks like they are resurfacing the bridge by pouring new concrete. Scott has gotten big kick of this since he is an engineer and bridge designer.

We were able to make it across the bridge in time but that was quite chaotic since only half of the bridge was passable. That half was left for all of the normal daily traffic including hundreds of people on foot, many on motos (mopeds) and bicycles, and then folks like us trying to weave through in vehicles.

The drive to the village took about an hour and half through the African countryside and African bush along dirt roads. The village we went to today was a larger village and its name is Gbanankuda. Our team who came to Kankan in June visited this village as well. It was cool to recognize the chief of the village from picture from the former trip.

When we first arrived, people quickly began to surround the two vehicles we were in. We greeted some of the men in the village there and talked for a few minutes. Then we walked through the village to the chiefs hut along with a lot of the village. There were people all around. We greeted the chief and the elders, they then shared a greeting with us, and invited us to visit and spend time in the village.

I went around the village with Matt and Rocky from our team and “MC” our translator. Initially, there was a ton of activity and interaction with people. We saw an older man’s hut. We toured the ceremonial area of the village that once had a huge tree standing but had been taken down because of hives. We then saw a the village well where women were drawing water and dozens of children around. There Matt shared his testimony. We were also asked to pray for a someone’s sick brother and for another person’s sick mother.

As we walked around the village we continued to pray with people and greet people. The energy and smiles from the Maninka people in the village was incredible. From, experiencing their culture at our time with the chief to interacting in the village was incredible.

Later in our walk around the village Matt, Rocky, MC, and I (along with our ‘tour guide’), we entered an older man’s hut, Lansine Dumbuya (la see na doom be a) who said he was triplet and fought in World War II. Several other younger men also were in the hut with us. We greeted him and learned a little bit about his life. Then, I was able to share our Creation to Christ story with him. I also shared my faith story and we were able to tell him and the men how they could receive Christ. Lansine is a Dozo (African for warrior) and a fettisher (practices Africa folk religion, believes objects have powers).

While in Lansine’s house/hut, I was given my Maninka name, “Moussa Dumbuya” (moose a). Dumbaya is a common surname in Maninka (Scott’s Maninka name is also Dumbaya). I am going to talk more with our translators tomorrow about what it exactly means, if there is a meaning. When we were doing this, we were also moving quickly to the music and dancing so there was a lot of chaos.

Next, the village drummers and dancers but on a show for us that is all you would expect for an African celebration. It was very entertaining and joyous, a lot of laughter from us and the Africans. The dancers were men dressed as women (very interesting), one had a mask on and they would dance to the music of the drummers and would pull up some of our team to dance with them, that was awesome. Somehow, I did not get pulled in. I guess it was because I was late to the party or I was holding the camera.

Ron, Rocky, and Matt then played a few worship songs for the crowd. It was especially incredible when the drummers from the village began to play the beat along with the songs our guys were playing. After a couple of the songs, Ron through our translators was able to share about Jesus as he explained the meaning of the songs.

At the end of the celebration/ceremony, we gave the elders some soccer balls and machetes. They received them with very kinds words and gave us a blessing. They invited us back. One thing that stood out as the talked to us was that they were very pleased that we had promised to come to the village in February and that we had done what we had said we would do. I was impressed that they remembered that our partners had made them that promise.

Well, we thought it was time to leave as we went back to the chief’s hut to say goodbye. After we waited for everyone else to gather again, we then learned we had to wait and not leave yet because they were preparing for us a meal. To honor their request and allow them to extend hospitality to us, we waited as the meal was ready. Once it was ready, we went to one of the elder’s homes to eat the meal. It was “village rice” with a peanut sause on top. It was cooked and smelled delicious. It was in a common bowl which was a new experience. Then our team circled around and we scooped a portion out with our hand and ate it. Yes, I did eat it and it was good!

I am still processing all that I saw today and all of the incredible things I got to experience including some conversation with our translator MC who we feel is seeking God. He was asking about popular Christian songs he has learned by being at our partners house, Daryl and Glenda Cox.

The needs and opportunities are so overwhelming but it has been a great day of excitement and peace for me as I sensed accomplishment of what God called us to do. Now, it is time to get ready to visit two villages tomorrow.

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