After lots of planning and patience we are glad to announce the opening of Community of Hope Free Medical Clinic. This evening we will begin with six appointments from 7-9 p.m. Eventually we will offer 12 appointments and add either appointments or days as more doctors or nurse practitioners volunteer at the clinic.
We agreed last (Sunday) evening to provide the resources for Jonathan and Kari to take the Perspectives on the World Christian Movement. Some of you may remember we hosted Rob Olmstead for a World Missions Conference a few years ago. Rob used a good bit of what he learned from this same course.
Caleb Crider, husband of our adopted missionary couple in Portland, recently wrote about how we view our surroundings as it relates to the work of the Kingdom and the Church. You ma click on the link in the left sidebar to access the article.
There are a number of reasons why we should not take others for granted. One obvious reason comes from our own disdain for the feelings this creates in us when we are passed over. Last year we adopted Jonathan and Kari Masson as missionaries. Our relationship is as non-conventional as is their particular path to missions.
You see we have a difficult time breaking out of our mental images that calcify and dictate our responses. So, imagine a young couple mixing vocational goals and an eagerness to live missionally in another country. By missional, we mean to live as missionary in whatever context, vocation and living arrangement a person chooses. It is like Caleb Crider has encouraged us to think, "we are all missionaries." Yet, outside our family structures, and maybe a few friends, we cannot see our way to think of them as "missionaries" in the same way we find it difficult to self-identify this way where we live.
In this holiday shortened week, consider reading Psalm 107 each day.
Here is Pastor Todd's weekly email. If you would like to receive his weekly email, send him a note at tlittleton@snowhill.org
I trust your week has been well. Until Tuesday I have been free from the Spring allergy season. I am now more than sympathetic, I am empathic by experience. When is the first freeze?
A friend responded to a comment I made this week by asking, "Do fish know when they are wet?" A curious reply to my statement I was thinking about how we sometimes miss the ways in which we are influenced by the culture in which we live - and occasionally rail against. Derrick's cute reply makes the point. Often we become so used to "things" we rarely see we have in fact adopted habits/practices we would otherwise eschew.
We
do have this precarious existence. Jesus is praying in John 17; evidently
overheard and recorded. In the midst of his praying Jesus points to the place
of the disciples - in the world. He also notes the worldly opposition to the
way of God. He concludes that he was not asking to take the disciples out of
the world but that they would understand they had been sent into the world as
He had been.
You could say we go through stages in Christian history. We wrestle with just what does in mean to be "in the world." On occasion the church/Church has chosen something of a reclusive posture emphasizing the need to be "unstained by the world." Other times the church/Church seems to be a mirror image of the very culture in which is located in time and space. Theologian H. Richard Niebuhr wrote Christ and Culture offering five different approaches to living in the world for Christians. Today this discussion is getting a fair bit of attention again.
Jesus
coming into the world altered the way the world works. Once and for all grace
took human shape and form. Praying for the disciples and their "remaining
in the world" signals a connection with the mission of Jesus. Rather than
view the ascension as grace "leaving the world," Jesus bestows his
mission on his followers who now are to live and grace in human form in the
world. The world is not to be the same. Unfortunately we often pick up the
habits and practices of a world we often despise. Our traits and character fail
to exhibit the grace of Jesus and we miss living out the mission of God in the
world.
Consider you ways; how you live. Could it be said you are living grace in the world?
It is not good to be alone. It is good to be alone. Solitude of the heart, describes the late Henri Nouwen, is necessary lest we view others as pawns for our own benefit. He wrote,
What are your thoughts?
One of our adopted missionaries, Caleb Crider, wrote the following,
If you are a Prius-driving, Lego-modding Starbucks barista, you’re uniquely qualified to be the missionary to that tribe. If you’re a Mac-using, soccer-mompreneur PTA member, your job is to incarnate the gospel among your people. It’s not enough for you to just try to fit in. You were saved to live out a Christ-transformed life in the midst of your social circles. You are where you are for a purpose.
There is no “home” and “foreign.” You are a missionary.
Read the entire article here.
We received the following email from Jonathan and Kari. It is test time for Jonathan. Here is his schedule. Pray for each of these events.
Consider reading Psalm 133 each day this week.
Carlo Caretto told a story common to us all. He knew the coffee was about to run out and thought before his two companions got to it he would drink it all. He did and then felt awful for such an act of selfishness. He wrote,
Consider what life is like lived with others and how you may include rather than exclude them along the way.