Monday, September 19, 2011

Breakdown and News - TXT


Video version available HERE.

Well, Fall is upon us and it is time to warm up the blog and talk about what God is doing. There is some news and updates, as well as a thought I had about broken stuff.

You see, my car just died. It didn't suffer, and it wasn't in any pain. It just died a natural death of old age. Sure it had wrinkles (I called them smile lines) and emitted great quantities of noxious fumes, but, nonetheless, I loved the old girl.

Why, just a couple of days before her demise I was giving her a bath and I thought I detected a tear coming from under her windshield wipers. She must have known, in the way cars do, that this was to be our last car wash together, in this life.

Ah well, as I think about all the investment and care we put into our vehicles, I'm reminded that we are challenged to care for this thing called church. You know, the gathering of people that follow Jesus.

Think about it. A car cannot just be left to it's own care, it needs gas, oil, new tires, the occasional tune up and parts break down and need to be replaced. Any group of people needs the same maintenance, but the kicker is that we are both the mechanics and the components of this contraption.

God has been talking to me a lot about the value of the parts that make up the whole. I mean, everybody loves the spark plugs that ignite conversation and action, or the pistons that gets things moving, or the tires that actually put rubber to the road.

But what about the radiator that keeps the rhetoric from overheating, or the wind shield wiper that does the jobs no one else wants to do, or the air bag that everyone thinks is just full of itself, but may save a life one day.

Anyhow, we've got a newsletter out that goes into this topic a bit as I write about the almost businesslike way we are challenged to live together. It's also got news about what Shepherd's Call is doing in the Kitsap community, an announcement about our fresh new website (check it out), and a special report on the Liberia mission coming up in January.

This Liberia thing really captures the idea of what I'm getting at here. This is an opportunity to give a native Liberian mission the tools it needs to be a mechanic to the followers of Jesus in that country. This trip will be to lay the groundwork for literally sending a bulldozer over there, with the objective of unifying the churches as they work shoulder to shoulder to repair one another's roads. It's a long story of how this idea came to be, so read the newsletter for more details.

In case you are wondering, I did get a replacement for my old van that died. And the timing of that was blessing, because I was just starting the Fall semester at seminary and needed a working vehicle to get to the ferry. God is good.

But you know what else is good? The comment question of the day, which is, "So, what part are you?"

Be sure to leave your interesting, creative, humorous or insightful responses in the comment section below, or on FaceBook. And if you have any questions for me, post them and I will respond to them here. I'm Locke Morgan with Restoration Ministries Worldwide, thanks for watching.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Driven To Give

Video version available HERE


L: Hi Guys. Today I'm here with Joe Bridger, a local children's pastor and recent recipient of a the car you see here, through RMW's Shepherd's Call ministry. We also have his wife, Dorothy, and his two great kids, J.J. and Josiah with us to say, "Hi." They are a terrific family that loves God and is driven to serve the cause of Christ in this world.

J: On behalf of the Bridger family and on behalf of everybody that we have the opportunity to serve, we want to say 'thank you.' Because if it weren't for you giving to Joe Needs Wheels or walking up to us in a coffee shop or handing us some cash or just saying 'hey we love you and are praying for you,' if it weren't for those moments we would not have experienced the joy that we have experienced now, and now we can go and see people in a new way, thanks to your love and support.

J: You know, when you give to God it really does transport you to a new place of joy. Just like getting into a car, it takes you to a place that you may never have been before.

L: We can give to God in many ways, like with our time, money, effort, what we say, the choices we make and the people we hang out with. Joe and I feel called to put the pedal to the metal in Christian service, and have chosen to make that the driving factor in our life's work.

J: But there is a reason why we do what we do, and it is the same reason why every member of Body of Christ gives to God. When you and I accepted Christ, our hearts became an engine of compassion for the pain all around us.

L: You see Christians are designed to give of themselves sacrificially. Don't believe me? Look in the Bible at Romans chapter 6 and you will read that while we are indeed freed from sin, we have also been commandeered for righteousness.

J: Christ set a pattern of righteousness that contoured itself around touching lepers, eating with sinners and dying on a cross. And He did it all with a sense of purpose that this is what His life was meant to do. And those same master plans have been applied to you, as a Christian.

L: So, if you feel a drag on your performance, then there could be a broken valve in your compassion regulator. On account of it having nowhere to go. Maybe you've got a warped U joint that is taking up that space, and it needs to be realigned?

J: The conundrum here is that the compassion we have, actually came from God in the first place. We are simply converting the potential energy of God's grace into a combustion of service that propels us forward to live in Christ. When functioning properly, you might call it the "Eternal Compassion Engine."

L: Simply put: it's grace in, compassion out. That's all that giving to God means. The biblical book of Matthew in chapter 25 says, "...to the extent that you did it to one of these brothers of Mine, even the least of them, you did it to Me."

J: Isn't it cool how God's mind works? I mean, to design us in such a way that we find fulfillment in investing in other people the very grace that we receive from Him, is shear genius. It's almost like He wants us to work together in harmony and love.

L: But you know what also works together in harmony and love? That's the question for the day. Which is: "If you had to spend a million dollars in a week, what would you spend it on?"

J: Be sure to leave your interesting, creative, humorous or insightful responses in the comment section below, or on FaceBook. And if you have any questions for Locke (or me), post them and we will respond to them here. I'm Joe Bridger...

L: ...and I'm Locke Morgan with Restoration Ministries Worldwide, thanks for watching.

All: Bye!

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Mistakes Were Made - TXT


Well if you got a notification email from about last week' blog post, again this week, then my apologies are in order.

Yes, a mistake was made. The kind that comes from having lots to do, and relying on automated programs to do the remembering for you. I feel awful...and dirty...like a spammer.

Anyhow, there is something that we can learn here. And I'm not going for the "everybody makes mistakes" cliche. That's so overdone. No, I want to talk about the value of mistakes.

If we look at mistakes from the perspective of God, who has an intense desire to see us mature into healthy, productive, well rounded, beings within His Kingdom, then a mistake is not just a screw up, it's an opportunity.

When James and John, disciples of Jesus, got their mom to pitch the idea that they should be the Messiah's sidekicks, it was a massive fail. But Jesus used it to teach humility to all the disciples, and to all of us.

When David, the old testament king of Israel, got all adulterous and murderous, you would think that God would just cut His losses and raise up a new king. But, no, David was family, and warts and all God loved him back to righteousness.

Even today, I look at my life and can see that in spite of the mistakes, fumbles, foibles and outright wrong things that I have done, He has used them all to make me less of a drooling, childish human being. I can look back and be aghast at the things I've done only because I have learned from them.

It's like with my kids, I try to tell them that unless they learn from their mistakes, then they are most likely going to repeat them.

On the other hand, if they do recognize the error of their ways and build the kind of character that will prevent them from doing the same thing again, then my fatherly heart is greatly warmed. And that is how God feels when we finally get it.

It's not about condemnation and gotcha games. Mistakes are those wonderful slices of life that allow us to see the very real consequences of our actions and change because of it. Unfortunately, much of this world has dedicated themselves to recasting their mistakes and failures as enlightened success.

Aren't you so glad that, as Christians, we don't have to do that?

But you know what also doesn't have to pretend to be something it isn't? That's the question for the day. Which is: "What would you say to a spammer?

Be sure to leave your interesting, creative, humorous or insightful responses in the comment section below, or on FaceBook. And if you have any questions for me, post them and I will respond to them here. I'm Locke Morgan with Restoration Ministries Worldwide, thanks for watching.