Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Three P's of Partnership

This past weekend we had the priviledge of hosting a team of leaders from Murray Hill Baptist Church in Jacksonville Florida.  We had a great time as we served together, helped get them acquainted with the city and worshipped together.
 
This team were here not only to serve, as we did some Guerilla Gardening and community clean up, but to learn about the city and our ministry so that they may lead future teams.  


Perhaps the most exciting part of the their time with us was the opportunity to have them join one of our Fellowship groups for worship.  It was a great opportunity for our friends from Florida to meet people from literally around the globe, to hear so many different accents as they fellowshipped and to all come together in worship.  

For our people, it was a great example that although we may be small we are part of a much bigger family.  It also provides such a great example of minstry and mission that people would give of their time, energy and resourses to travel all the way here to come along side us to help us serve and minister in our community.  This is a powerful witness to a young group with seekers and many new and young believers.  

We took the time during our Fellowship meeting to not just celebrate, but to formalize this new partnership with the signing of a covenant.  In that covenant we specifically communicated and committed to the very things we exercised on this first trip:

1) Prayer-it is such an encouragement to a new church plant to know that they are being held up in prayer.  A prayer team is specifically praying for Hamilton.  Prayer is the foundation for any ministry and through it we see God work.

2) Provision- Financial provision is a very real and practical support to any church plant.  Beyond just the money, however, a financial commitment no matter the size, communicates something important about commitment.

3) People- beyond prayer and provision, having people come, whether a short term mission team or even longer term opportunities for individuals of families, is also important.  For the supporting church it helps to place names and faces, sights, sounds and smells to the prayers and support.  It becomes more personal and more important.  For the church plant, it is a shot in the arm of encouragement and importantly allows for a burst of ministry strength and energy as we try to reach a community.


We are very pleased and excited as we move forward with this new partnership.  
And for those who have partnered with us in the past, or continue to walk with us in different ways, a huge thank you for your continued support as well.  


This last photograph is of a quick caricature done of Pastor Doug Axtell of Murray Hill by Oliver Guevara of The Hamilton Fellowships at the end of our worship time.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

An Answer To Prayer

I saw the red light flashing on the phone; I had voice mail.  I picked up the hand held receiver and began to scroll through the call display to see if I recognized who may have left a message, but I did not.  I asked Kim if she knew who had called and left the message, to which she replied, " Oh ya, I forgot to tell you. Have a listen, you will never guess who it was."  And she was right, I would have never guessed.    

When I checked my message it was from Tim, one of the guys from the Beer Store.  He had not been out for a few weeks so it was nice to hear from him.  As it turns out, he had not been out to Beer Store Church because he got a job at a local restaurant in the city.  

Getting a job had been Tim's prayer request since we first met him.  He had worked at getting a resume, worked to distribute it, and then waited.  It seemed that there was no one hiring for kitchen work and so he collected bottles each week, came for a sandwich and coffee and we prayed.  Finally, after months and months, someone called and he was hired.  

Tim had called and left a message to thank  us for the coffee and sandwiches which helped him get through many weeks, and to thank us for praying because "every little bit helped." 



Monday, May 5, 2014

On Wearing Pants For The First Time In Months

"I am wearing pants for the first time in months."

That was the first statement of praise this past Sunday as our Fellowship @ Locke began our time of worship.  To be exact, it was not the first time my dad had worn any pants, but the first time that he had worn anything other than elastic waist track pants since his surgery back in February.   Sure it was nice to have on jeans again, but the true celebration was what the jeans represented.  Those jeans represented increased mobility after the surgery and they also represented that all the tubes that once where hooked up have now been taken out, and that his last incision from the feeding tube is almost now healed over.  These are things truly deserving of praise!

As life goes on quickly it is sometimes easy to overlook the truly remarkable things that God does in our midst.   It would be a tragedy, however, if we do not take the time to celebrate pants.    I hope that this is a powerful moment for our Fellowship.  What began as shocking news of my dad's cancer has now become a true praise, and I will go as far a saying a miracle.  It began with a providential finding in which my dad was sent to the wrong specialist for a medical issue he wanted addressed.  This specialist, although unable to address the original concern, decided to do a scan since my dad was in his office and had never had one before.  It was this scan that revealed the cancer that otherwise may have worsened before it was ever discovered.  God was at work.  We as a church took the time to anoint my dad with oil and pray before he began 7 weeks of intense chemo and radiation which was to be followed by a very intensive and invasive surgery.  It is the chemo and radiation treatment that I look back on and say that there was a miracle.  Simply put, my dad experienced little, if any, of the affects that the doctors were concerned and warned him about.  The medical team was astounded that he came through without loosing any hair, without loosing much strength and without ever becoming nauseous or ill.  And because he came through with such good health, he was that much stronger as he entered into the massive, invasive surgery from which he has been able to make such a quick physical recovery.  

So, pants are certainly something to be thankful for.  And for our church, pants are a powerful example of answered prayer and the power of God.  So the next time you are putting on pants, you can remember this story.  Similarly, if you are putting on pants it means God had given you another day and the physical means to do so, all of which are a reason to give thanks and praise.