Sunday, February 23, 2014
"Freedom"
For all those trapped in employment they do not find fulfilling or in unemployment that has devastated their self worth, I shout "FREEDOM" (in the Spirit.) Chains which have bound you have fallen off. Creativity and divine favour is released on you and flows into your life. Doors once tightly locked shut have opened. Resources once hidden from your view, spring up before you. Confidently walk forward.
Labels:
creativity,
Employment,
freedom,
Unemployment
What if we did what He said we should be doing?
What would it look like if, as leaders, we focused less on the things that make our churches entertaining and more on making disciples? As shown by Kelly Tshibaka at Foursquare Connection 2011.
Labels:
church,
Jesus,
Making Disciples,
What if?
Pastor or CEO?
The sad demise Rev Yong-gi Cho, founder of the million member Yoido Full Gospel Church in Seoul, South Korea, recently sentenced to 3 years prison for defrauding the Church of millions of dollars, should cause a deep reflection in Australian Churches which have followed his “business model of leadership.” When church leaders start acting as CEO’s who alienate long term faithful members who “dare question” their decisions, the indications are that the particular Church is in d...eep trouble. Fortunately Yoido Church had 29 elders, faithful to Jesus Christ, who were willing to stand up to Rev Cho and call him to account. For a time they were despised, rejected and alienated by the church. Now, their integrity and faithfulness is revealed.
A few years ago I attended Church Leader’s training seminar in Townsville, Qld Australia. The leader of the Organizing Church arrogantly proclaimed that as leader he demands ‘total’ loyalty to his person, his vision and his decisions. He went so far as to say that if all people in his satellite churches in other towns did not know he was ‘the leader’, he would sack the assistant Pastor at that location. Sadly this insidious balderdash has been taken on by young ministers who are genuinely seeking to plant and build up live churches.
Wayne Jacobsen ( https://www.facebook.com/wayneljacobsen) wrote the following comment on the Korean Situation: Remember when everyone was pointing to this man as an example of what all pastors and churches should be doing? Just because something is large and "successful" in worldly terms doesn't mean it reflects the life of Jesus. As tragic as his failure is, it serves as a reminder that if our engagement with Jesus isn't transforming us in ways that make us more gracious and loving to people around us, it isn't real! This is what Jesus meant when he said we'd know them by their fruits. Exploiting relationships with others for personal gain is as polar opposite to the nature of Jesus as anything else I can think of.
Be Blessed, Jesus is your real leader ........Robert Lipsys
Labels:
Business Model of the church,
CEO,
church,
Wayne Jacobsen
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Fear makes us reactive instead of proactive
Fear makes us reactive instead of proactive
from Jeremiah Johnson's facebook page
Don't live your life reacting
Live your life impacting ...
A defeated foe is not worthy of your fear
Jesus has permanently placed you in the winners circle
Your back is never against the wall
No matter how you feel
You were born again a winner
Never lose sight of that
No matter how you feel
by Jeremiah Johnson #Jesusgrace
Labels:
Jeremiah Johnson,
winners circle
Unballanced Grace
Unbalanced Grace From Jason Clark's Blog
http://jasonclarkis.com/
I was hanging out with a friend the other day. He is in his mid sixties. He is coming into such a wonderful revelation regarding our Fathers love. He has lived his whole life enslaved to a harsh master, need, but He is beginning to discover an always good and loving Father. This beautiful revelation has entered his life in the form of Grace.
For twenty minutes he spoke excitedly about how miraculously astonishing Grace is. As he shared, I whole-heartedly encouraged and agreed with him. When he told me about the incredible freedom he was discovering through amazing Grace, I laughed with him, reveling in the wonder. When he described how Grace was setting him free from sins that had haunted him his whole life, I grinned and nodded my head enthusiastically and said, “Grace is good like that!”
He was well into praising how Grace was changing the way he saw people when it happened. I’ve seen it before, heck, I’ve done it myself. Suddenly, like a fist to the jaw, he balanced it.
While describing the most beautiful revelation, while speaking with more passion and freedom than I had encountered in my 18 years of knowing the man, suddenly, and at absolute odds with what he had been sharing, he blurted, “I know you can abuse it, grace.”
He balanced it.
I could almost hear his thoughts “maybe I have gone too far, this grace thing is starting to sound too good to be true.” And I understood what happened. Grace can be a scary thing, especially when no one balances it. You see, I had been agreeing with him without reservation and I think that ugly religious muscle spasmed.
It’s not his fault. That ugly religious grace has been dished out and taught by those who have a greater fear of the world we live in than revelation of the kingdom of heaven; those who focus more on need than Love, on not sinning instead of becoming His righteousness (2nd Cor 5:21). When need trumps love, grace is a cheap parlor trick – empty rhetoric.
Those that teach us that we can abuse grace don’t fully know Grace. That teaching looks at Grace through the lens of need. It dumbs Grace down to a commodity that can be traded for freedom, or forgiveness, or favor. Balanced grace is a lie that enslaves us to live in the reality of need. A balanced grace is simply another way to control. If Grace can be balanced, its power is neutered. And a powerless Grace is a cruelty greater than no grace at all.
Grace wont be balanced! He is too perfect, too whole, too free, too just, too pure, too kind, too strong, too wild, too holy… Grace won’t be belittled, Grace can’t ever go bad or run out, He is the good news – always.
After my friend attempted to balance it, there was a dark silence that threatened to ruin everything. For just a moment we teetered on the brink of a faith crisis, but Grace would have none of it. Right there on the verge of hopelessness, I told my friend the beautiful truth I am always growing in, “You can’t abuse Grace.”
I went on to tell him that Grace isn’t too good to be true, just the opposite, its too good not to be true. Grace is unmerited favor. We can’t do anything to earn it and we can’t do anything to abuse it. It’s the gift of His nature given through Jesus. Its one of the most beautiful expressions of His always-good love for us. Grace releases us to see ourselves from His perspective and empowers us to live in agreement with how He sees us, as saints of the highest One…
…I would like to suggest that this journey we are on is about discovering unbalanced Grace.
BY JASON CLARK http://jasonclarkis.com/
http://jasonclarkis.com/
I was hanging out with a friend the other day. He is in his mid sixties. He is coming into such a wonderful revelation regarding our Fathers love. He has lived his whole life enslaved to a harsh master, need, but He is beginning to discover an always good and loving Father. This beautiful revelation has entered his life in the form of Grace.
For twenty minutes he spoke excitedly about how miraculously astonishing Grace is. As he shared, I whole-heartedly encouraged and agreed with him. When he told me about the incredible freedom he was discovering through amazing Grace, I laughed with him, reveling in the wonder. When he described how Grace was setting him free from sins that had haunted him his whole life, I grinned and nodded my head enthusiastically and said, “Grace is good like that!”
He was well into praising how Grace was changing the way he saw people when it happened. I’ve seen it before, heck, I’ve done it myself. Suddenly, like a fist to the jaw, he balanced it.
While describing the most beautiful revelation, while speaking with more passion and freedom than I had encountered in my 18 years of knowing the man, suddenly, and at absolute odds with what he had been sharing, he blurted, “I know you can abuse it, grace.”
He balanced it.
I could almost hear his thoughts “maybe I have gone too far, this grace thing is starting to sound too good to be true.” And I understood what happened. Grace can be a scary thing, especially when no one balances it. You see, I had been agreeing with him without reservation and I think that ugly religious muscle spasmed.
It’s not his fault. That ugly religious grace has been dished out and taught by those who have a greater fear of the world we live in than revelation of the kingdom of heaven; those who focus more on need than Love, on not sinning instead of becoming His righteousness (2nd Cor 5:21). When need trumps love, grace is a cheap parlor trick – empty rhetoric.
Those that teach us that we can abuse grace don’t fully know Grace. That teaching looks at Grace through the lens of need. It dumbs Grace down to a commodity that can be traded for freedom, or forgiveness, or favor. Balanced grace is a lie that enslaves us to live in the reality of need. A balanced grace is simply another way to control. If Grace can be balanced, its power is neutered. And a powerless Grace is a cruelty greater than no grace at all.
Grace wont be balanced! He is too perfect, too whole, too free, too just, too pure, too kind, too strong, too wild, too holy… Grace won’t be belittled, Grace can’t ever go bad or run out, He is the good news – always.
After my friend attempted to balance it, there was a dark silence that threatened to ruin everything. For just a moment we teetered on the brink of a faith crisis, but Grace would have none of it. Right there on the verge of hopelessness, I told my friend the beautiful truth I am always growing in, “You can’t abuse Grace.”
I went on to tell him that Grace isn’t too good to be true, just the opposite, its too good not to be true. Grace is unmerited favor. We can’t do anything to earn it and we can’t do anything to abuse it. It’s the gift of His nature given through Jesus. Its one of the most beautiful expressions of His always-good love for us. Grace releases us to see ourselves from His perspective and empowers us to live in agreement with how He sees us, as saints of the highest One…
…I would like to suggest that this journey we are on is about discovering unbalanced Grace.
BY JASON CLARK http://jasonclarkis.com/
Labels:
Good News,
Grace,
Jason Clark,
Unbalanced Grace?
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