JOURNEY CHURCH BLOG |

Love God, Love People... Period.

An Honest Prayer about Advent Conspiracy

This Christmas is the third year that we have challenged our friends at Journey to give less at Christmas and give the better gift of presence with family and friends instead.  This year we raised the challenge for each family to give at least $40 less in gifts and donate towards a well in India to provide clean water for 50-100 families.

Last week during our daughters nightly prayer time she asked this simple prayer…

“God, help me not to be sad that I am getting less for Christmas this year so we can help build a well in India.  I really want them to have clean water but I also want to have more Christmas presents so please help me not to be sad.”

I love that she is so honest and for a 9 year old, it is very normal.  So, we decided to involve each of our kids in Advent Conspiracy by giving them a portion of the money that they would have received on Christmas and we are letting them give it in the offering. It may not be quite as exciting for them but they can see what they are sacrificing for and learn how to give first hand.  We want our kids to learn a lifestyle of giving from us.  How can you be creative in teaching your kids to give?

The Gods Conspiracy Week 4 Intro

There has been a conspiracy from the beginning of time in which the full cost of it’s deception are being seen in our world, our nations, our churches, and in our families are only now being seen. 

It has been so successful that we are seeing the decline of nations, churches, and individuals.  Businesses are failing, innovation and manufacturing are declining, marriages are ending, relationships are becoming more shallow and an entire generation is about to experience a test like no other generation before it.

This conspiracy has changed the way we think about God, ourselves, our friends, and our resources.  It is so successful that it may single handedly distract entire generations from the gospel.

It’s greatest success? Quietly changing the way we understand the lives that we were created for and the nature of our creator.

Occupy Wall Street, the global economic meltdown, the Sandusky cover up, the rise in joblessness, the decline of marriage, the dramatic decline of our environment, and the closing of churches are just some of the results of this highly effective conspiracy.  And the truth is, every single one of us is victim to it with little chance of escaping it.

This has to change.  It can change. But it will require an intervention of supernatural proportions.

Want to know what it is and how Jesus said we could break free? Be at Journey tomorrow, Nov. 13th, at 10:30!

An open letter to our Journey family and friends

Dear Journey family and friends, From time to time, there are some things on my heart and mind that I like to share with everyone connected to Journey. That includes all of our guests, attenders, volunteers, leaders, staff members and others that know us from a distance. Increasingly, that community includes pastors and Christians around Chattanooga that are watching our little church and constantly asking me questions about...well...you. I am constantly amazed with the people I bump into that have specific questions to ask about Journey that I don’t even know and have no idea how they heard about us! Regardless, your influence and the environment you have helped to create is stirring people all around us.

Right now we are going through a transition of sorts and our leadership team has been working behind the scenes for several months on some pretty big stuff about to hit Journey in the coming weeks. Often when that is the case, it may appear that not much is going on, but I assure you that where we are headed is significant. As we prepare for that, I wanted to share a few things with you.

1. Deidra and I are so honored to be a part of this community. The idea for Journey may have been birthed before we knew most of you, but it has grown to become so much more. We love you all and KNOW that God has huge plans for us in the future.

2. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you for the investment that you have put into young families at Journey. I know of no other church that has the ratio of adults to children that Journey does. While I know our constant pleas for additional volunteers may seem desperate, none of us have experience in a church that ministers to so many kids every week compared to the number of adults that attend. Wow. THAT is incredible! Thank you! (And if you want to volunteer, let me know) :)

3. We are so thankful that you have helped us to create an environment where you can come as you are and be cared for and accepted. This is one of the reasons that I believe so many churches are watching us. This has been and will always be one of our core values. It helps us to stay focused on reaching out to people who don’t attend church.

4. We have done several things very well in our short existence, but there are some significant holes in our ability to create a movement in our city that honors God and leads many people to live life as a devoted disciple. This is where my heart and our leaders hearts live. We want to be an authentic community of faith that makes a real difference in our community. We want to see the hopeless gain hope, the disconnected to form solid relationships to Jesus and others, the lost to be found, and the Christ follower to grow significantly in their faith, and for the Church to share grace with our community.

5. In the coming weeks, you are going to be seeing some BIG changes at Journey in some core areas, but in others you may hardly notice a difference. We are still committed to imaginative creativity, high energy and spirit led worship, phenomenal children’s ministry, authentic relationships, and reaching out to the uncurched/dechurched in our community. We want to push the envelope and we want to be real. We are, however, changing how we lead and direct Journey as well as the primary fuel for discipleship, the art of growing as a disciple of Jesus. This is the very core of who we are as a church. It is the reason we exist and everything we have ever done has been to lead people to this end. We’ve been setting up this change for the last 4 weeks in our current series. Sunday we are taking it up a notch and I want you there. Seriously. This Sunday.

I know people attend Journey for different reasons and many times you will choose whether to attend based on the topic of discussion. In the next 2 weeks I am going to do my best to detail where we are going very soon and what this will look like. As we begin to implement these changes, you will begin to see the results infiltrating everything we do. That is how significant I believe this will be. I have been praying for each of you and for Journey since we were introduced to each other and God has been consistently telling me that He is about to do something huge in our midst this year. I believe that we are on the verge of this and that all of us are needed to fully realize what God is doing. That is why I am asking you to commit to being at Journey for the next 2 weeks. After that, some of you will be ready to engage in what is about to happen and some may not. If you are ready, we may just create history together in our city for the kingdom of God. Please be patient with us as we deal with the transition in leadership and in working out all of the details. I PROMISE it will be worth it and the very best is yet to come. Finally, thank you for the impact you are making in our church. You are awesome!

Love you deeply,

Mark

Scripture Wallpapers

The Psalmist encouraged everyone to meditate on scripture day and night, during every moment.  Keeping our minds focused and attentive to the bigger truths of life can be difficult.  So I've made some wallpapers for your technology that may help you face truth in every circumstance.  If you're like me, than you have a computer or an iPhone in front of you most of the day.  So by decorating them in truth I am forced to wedge a bit of meditation into my daily events.  Hopefully it can help you do the same.

There are wallpapers available for your Desktop, iPad, or iPhone.  Just pick your favorite, click the appropriate link, and get your meditate on!

Eph2_desktop

Desktop

iPad

iPhone

 

Eph1_desktop

Desktop

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Prov17_desktop

Desktop

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Filed under  //   Scripture   design   desktop wallpaper   illustration   ipad   iphone   mac   typography   wallpaper  

Picking up the pieces after the storms...

Ringgold_damage
The picture above was taken in Ringgold after tornadoes ripped through homes and businesses this week.  Thousands of homes and businesses are still without power and debris will be collected for weeks as people start to rebuild their homes and lives.  For the most part, everyone from Journey seems to be doing pretty well.  Thankfully, no one was injured or worse.  While several had trees and debris in their yards, none seem to have sustained serious damage (if you know of anyone that did, please let us know).  Disaster relief teams have been flooding into the area and the clean up has begun.  The most affected areas near people from Journey is Ringgold; near the Mike and Diann Jarvis and Chris and Samantha Caldwell, in Hixson; in Charlie and Jessica Gann's neighborhood, and Ely Road, near Jean Neyman and Kely Woods.  Ringgold is so devastated that there really isn't much we can do right now.  They need trained volunteers and heavy equipment.  The Gann's, Jean, and Kely have several trees down around them and their neighbors are primarily senior citizens.  As the church, I think it is important to get involved in "helpful" ways to help our community.  Here is what we are proposing....


1.  If you would like to volunteer in the most affected areas, get in touch with either the Red Cross or the Salvation Army.  They are coordinating volunteer activities and offering some disaster relief training.  If you would like to make a donation, they are good organizations to donate though.
2.  Come out with rakes, chainsaws, and gloves to help the Gann's and Jean and Kely's neighborhoods tomorrow (Saturday) morning.  We'll meet at Journey at 9:00 and head to the area that needs the most help. 
3.  Blood Assurance is desperately low on blood, especially O-.  Go to a blood assurance collection point and donate, no matter what type blood you have! They need all types.
4.  COOKOUT THIS SUNDAY AFTERNOON after worship.  While we hope EPB will have power up for most of Chattanooga by Sunday, that may or may not be the case.  We are going to have a cookout to provide some much needed community with each other and have a hot meal for our neighbors.  IMPORTANT:  If you have power, please plan to bring a side dish, drinks, desserts, etc.  We'll provide everything else.  It would make it much easier if you would reply to this email and let me know what you are bringing.  Most likely, those without power won't get this email, so please make phone calls and let everyone you have a phone number for know about the cookout.  For those that don't have power, just bring yourselves and let's invite our neighbors and friends that still don't have power, either.  We will still have our regularly scheduled worship experience and will eat immediately after.  It is a great time to be with friends and help each other deal with the trauma that we've witnessed this week.  Everyone is welcome and we are right next to Walmart, so if we need more food...it's easy to get!

We expect the cleanup to take months.  We'll be looking for other ways to help along the way.  If you know of any, let us know ASAP.  Looking forward to seeing everyone on Sunday.

Worship: There Isn't A Recipe

Whenever I want to surprise my wife with a gift, I usually clean the house, make her dinner, or buy her something not too expensive but just enough to evoke a “You totally didn’t have to do that!” response. One thing I learned very quickly is that if I repetitively do the same things over and over, it seems like less of a gift and more of a normality; the shock factor soon wears away, and the initial intention of that “gift” now seems worthless. It’s not that my wife is unappreciative at all, but we all fall into habits and lose sight of value, don’t we? I think this is because the relationships we have with other people are not meant to be formulaic. They are meant to be progressive. So, a question I recently have had is, if our relationships with other people are supposed to be progressive, how is our relationship, and more specifically our worship, with God supposed to be any different?

Growing up, my family bounced around from time to time to a number of different Churches. However, it seemed that no matter how many different churches we went to, they all shared a very familiar pattern to their music. They would have slow songs, a couple of mid-tempo songs, a “Special Music” song for the offering, and one at the end that everyone usually held hands for (awkward when you’re sitting on the end). Even though that was almost 20 years ago, I think we still fall into a pattern of the types of music we sing in church today, especially in the more "modern" churches.

HOW TO WRITE A TOP TEN WORSHIP SONG IN UNDER TEN STEPS

  1. Big Intro
  2. Soft Verse
  3. Soft Chorus
  4. Louder Verse
  5. Loud Chorus (Sometimes repeated)
  6. Soft Bridge
  7. Build the Bridge up
  8. LOUD CHORUS
  9. Big Outro

 

Add this in with a few more similar songs, a prayer, and maybe a revisit to an old hymn at the end, and you have yourself a one way ticket on an emotional flight to destination "Surefire Repentance."  I hear their weather's nice.

Now, honestly, there is nothing wrong with this type of song. But the fact is, there isn't a recipe for worship. Repetition of music can be extremely useful when it’s filled with truth. The only thing we need to be careful of is that when we fall into repetition, it’s easy to see that we might be relying on the musical dynamics of the songs to ignite an emotional response more than we are pleading for an encounter with the Holy Spirit. The music we sing is not the worship itself, rather it is meant to provide an environment for us to connect with God in worship.

Ultimately, worship is not for us. It’s not about how it “makes us feel”. With that in mind, it doesn’t matter if the band plays our favorite song, if the cymbals hit at the right time, if there is a facemelting guitar solo (although preferred), or the singer has an impressive range. All that matters is that we open up our hearts completely, just as they are, and allow God to move in us whichever way He wants.

 

Maybe...

Lk 22:31-32

Have you ever really thought about the process of sifting wheat? You might have a general idea, but let me try and give you a clearer picture.

You see, wheat is actually a grass. The part of the wheat we eat is called the kernel which is inside the head. In manual sifting, the very first step is to cut the wheat down separating it from its roots. Next, the stalks are laid out on the ground to be threshed. In threshing, the wheat is beaten with a flail (a nun chuck like tool) to separate the head from the stem. Finally, the head is tossed up in the air allowing the last inedible part, called the chaff, to blow away. The left over edible part, called the kernel, is the only part left.

I don't know about you, but I've never really thought about how laborious and exhausting the threshing and winnowing of wheat really is. I guess I just imaged it being similar to mining for gold by throwing rock and dirt into a sifter, shaking it gently back and forth, and allowing the little parts fall through.

Knowing that this process of sifting wheat is what Jesus is talking about in Luke 22 is almost scary. Just after promising the disciples that they will be eating and drinking with Him in heaven, Jesus tells them that Satan has begged to sift them as wheat. Remarkably, Jesus seems to have agreed! While it is unclear if this direct attack from Satan was allowed on all the disciples, it IS clear that Jesus allowed the attack against Peter. Astonishingly and humblingly, however, Jesus also prayed for Peter. He did not pray for Peter's protection or safety, or comfort or happiness. Instead, He prayed for Peter's faith, that it would not fail though He knew Peter would deny Him at one of His loneliest times. And, though He knew Peter would fail him, He also spoke a compassionate word of hope... when. Not if. Not maybe. When. When you have turned back, strengthen your brethren.

It seems as though there was something that needed to be refined in Peter. Maybe it was his pride? Maybe it was his faith (1 Pt 1:6-7). Maybe he needed to learn endurance that leads to perfection (James 1:2-4). Maybe Jesus wanted to rid him of his self-righteousness. Maybe... we don't really know. We are not told WHY Jesus allowed this time in Peter's life. We just know He allowed it. BUT, we also know that Jesus prayed for Peter. JESUS prayed for Peter. How amazing is that?

Sifting is no fun and honestly a little brutal. It's hard to tell sometimes whether I'm going through the thrashing or the winnowing....and I sure don't know when it's going to stop.

I often want to identify with Paul. I want to identify with his fervor for the Lord, his missionary zeal, and the eloquence in sharing the gospel and challenging the church. But really, it is Peter with whom I identify. Boldly declaring devotion to Christ one minute no matter the cost, yet, cowardly denying His sovereignty and love when things aren't going my way or when the mental/emotional part of life is so tumultuous that I feel my soul is going to rip in two.

But maybe. Could it be, that Christ, that Jesus Himself, sees something in me that needs sifting? Something in me that needs to be refined? Maybe God wants to rid me of my own pride. My own self-righteousness. My own self-reliance. Maybe He desires for my faith to be refined. To create in me endurance, which refines my character, and produces hope in the only Love that does not disappoint (Rom 5:1-5). Could it be that Jesus has seen in me something worth putting me through the sifting process for? And could it be, that maybe, just maybe Jesus prayed for me too? That out of my trials and pain I may be able to comfort others with the comfort Christ offers me (2 Cor 1:3-7). That I may be able to turn back and strengthen those whose faith is wavering??? Maybe....

Part of what is amazing about all of this is that after Peter's denial, an angel sends him a special message about Christ's resurrection. Jesus gave him an opportunity to verbally reaffirm his love for Him. AND, Peter was used mightily on the day of Pentecost to preach the good news. If Jesus is willing to do that for Peter who so vehemently denied Him, then maybe... just maybe He still loves me and can use me too.

 

Reprinted by permission from Stacy Hill.

Stacy is an attender and group leader at Journey.

Thanks for the post, Stacy.  Great insight.

The Doctrine of the Fall of Humanity

Do you ever get together with friends and start remembering all the crazy things you did “way back when”? Is there a point in your life that you would love to go back to and experience it again? In the Bible, that point for most Christians is in the Garden of Eden.  It was the place where humanity was created.  The place where we drew our first breath, felt newly created dirt between our toes, took in the aroma of thousands of budding flowers, trees, and plants (Genesis 2:8-9).  “The Garden” is the place where humanity first walked and talked with God…and it hasn’t ever happened like that since.

God had thought of everything.  It was free game…eat what you wanted, go where you wanted, and explore the wonders of creation for the first time.  There were no tears, not disappointments, no discouragements, and no heartaches.  Everything was just as it should be to experience life fully.  God forbid one thing, though, that we know about…don’t eat from two specific trees He had planted in the garden, The trees of life and of the knowledge of good and evil.  That was it.  It was paradise.  Life was good.  (Genesis 2:15-17)

In that whole scenario, I’ve always asked an intriguing question, why did God put the tree in the garden?  Couldn’t we have avoided a lot of mess if he had just left those 2 trees out? I mean, really… If you already know the story or if you read ahead, then you know that those trees would change everything for Adam and Eve and ultimately for you and I, too.  Eve would be tempted by a snake (Genesis 3:1-6) to do exactly what God said not to do and Adam would follow suit.  To be fair, it wasn’t any ordinary snake, it was the physical representation of Satan (Revelation 12:9).  This all happened sometime after Satan and his followers went to war with God and the rest of the angels.  Satan lost, he was thrown to the world, he spread his misery to everyone else.

I wonder what that fruit from the forbidden tree taste like.  I imagine it was incredible, after all, forbidden things just taste better. They are more exciting and seem to be altogether exhilarating…at least in the moment.  For Adam and Eve, though, that moment passed quickly.  This tree of the knowledge of good and evil was different.  It actually gave them knowledge of the difference between what is good and what is evil.  It gave them knowledge that they had done what God told them not to do.  They were acting in sin, an evil deed against the will of their creator and they were ashamed of what they had done…no forbidden fruit is worth that!

At that moment their eyes were opened, and they suddenly felt shame at their nakedness. So they sewed fig leaves together to cover themselves. When the cool evening breezes were blowing, the man and his wife heard the Lord God walking about in the garden. So they hid from the Lord God among the trees.Genesis 3:7-8(NLT)

If this is the entrance of sin, then it still begs the question, what is sin?  The Bible describes in a lot of different ways…

  •  Disobedience to God
  •  Missing the mark
  • Breaking the law of God
  • Madness
  • Selfishness
  • Idolatry
  • Among others

There are generally two broad categories that all other sins fall into.

1.     Sins of Commission – in other words, those are the things that God said not to do and we did them anyway.  We committed sin.

2.     Sins of Omission – those things that we should have done but chose not to.

Shame was their first consequence of sin.  They knew they had done wrong and it felt terrible.  Unfortunately, that wasn’t the only result.  Ultimately their choice to disobey God would cause them to be thrown out of paradise and ultimately have a much more difficult life.  The greatest consequence, though, was that they could now longer walk with their creator.  They could no longer be in His presence, a consequence that continues today. (Genesis 3:9-15)

All of this raises another interesting question, can we avoid sin?  Adam and Eve didn’t, but what about me? I can be good enough.  Unfortunately, the Bible says that we aren’t immune from the temptation to choose ourselves over God. 

For I was born a sinner— yes, from the moment my mother conceived me. Psalm 51:5 (NLT)

When Adam sinned, sin entered the world. Adam’s sin brought death, so death spread to everyone, for everyone sinned. Romans 5:12 (NLT)

Sin would not only brought shame and broke the relationship we had with God, it actually brought death.  The first recorded death in the Bible is spiritual, the death of Adam and Eve’s life of sinlessness with God.  The first killing in the Bible was at God’s hands when he killed animals to make skins for Adam and Eve to wear.  We’ll learn later, that sin would tear apart families, ruin lives, and cause us to seek after every pleasure under the sun with no success in regaining true peace.  It would also lead to an eternity in Hell.

Not only is the cost of sin great, the cost of bring restoration to this fallen reality of life and creation would be immense.  We’ll talk about this Sunday at Journey but if you want to read ahead, look at what God would go through to bring us back.  To restore us to a relationship with Him in sinlessness.  Warning, if you read it truthfully, it’s intense.

2 My servant grew up in the Lord’s presence like a tender green shoot, like a root in dry ground. There was nothing beautiful or majestic about his appearance, nothing to attract us to him.

3 He was despised and rejected— a man of sorrows, acquainted with deepest grief. We turned our backs on him and looked the other way. He was despised, and we did not care.

4 Yet it was our weaknesses he carried; it was our sorrows that weighed him down. And we thought his troubles were a punishment from God, a punishment for his own sins!

5 But he was pierced for our rebellion, crushed for our sins. He was beaten so we could be whole. He was whipped so we could be healed.

6 All of us, like sheep, have strayed away. We have left God’s paths to follow our own. Yet the Lord laid on him the sins of us all.

7 He was oppressed and treated harshly, yet he never said a word. He was led like a lamb to the slaughter. And as a sheep is silent before the shearers, he did not open his mouth.

8 Unjustly condemned, he was led away. No one cared that he died without descendants, that his life was cut short in midstream. But he was struck down for the rebellion of my people.

9 He had done no wrong and had never deceived anyone. But he was buried like a criminal; he was put in a rich man’s grave.

10 But it was the Lord’s good plan to crush him and cause him grief. Yet when his life is made an offering for sin, he will have many descendants. He will enjoy a long life, and the Lord’s good plan will prosper in his hands.

11 When he sees all that is accomplished by his anguish, he will be satisfied. And because of his experience, my righteous servant will make it possible for many to be counted righteous, for he will bear all their sins. Isaiah 53:2-11 (NLT)

 

Why We Use Social Media as a Church

When my oldest daughter was first learning to speak, she once asked me, "daj baws?"  I would usually smile and just respond with confused laughter assuming it was a new exploration in her ability to form sounds, but she was persistent. "Daj baws?"  The same question arose all week long and my response only grew more perplexed with time.

Later that weekend I sat down to spend some time with her.  I placed her on my knee and began talking to her as a cartoon appeared on the television.  It was an old episode of Care Bears (thank you, Netlfix) and my little girl immediately drew her attention to the screen exclaiming, "Daj baws!  Datch beaws!  ... Watch bears!"

Suddenly, a breaking point in the language barrier occurred and, because I took the moment to engage the culture of her little world, a new found connection was made to what I thought was childish nonsense.

When you spend time with your children, engaging them and emerging yourself into their realm of awareness, you learn about them and find new ways to communicate with them.  Similarly, as the church we carry a tenuous responsibility to love people who make violently poor decisions for themselves and others every day, and wrestle with the Gospel as it relates to a ragingly evolving culture.  All this while keeping our head above water long enough to catch breath and center ourselves before diving back down after those around us who are drowning.

Culture inevitably offers opportunities to reveal the heart.  Social Media, for example, becomes a platform for impatient and angry people to hurl flaming statements in haste, arrogant people to boast about their successes and post pictures of themselves for validation and to ensure they aren't ignored, skeptical troublemakers to post inflammatory comments, and perverts to illicit sexual affairs.

As culture changes, we are forced to respond in one of three ways - reject it, receive it, or redeem it.

Rejecting cultural trends is a grievously common response among Christianity because of human tendency to abuse the opportunity for selfishly decaying purposes.  By rejecting it we assume we can avoid the sin.  But in doing so, we shift the blame from the heart to the behavior - which only reveals the heart.  The result is always legalism.

Receiving the culture has the opposite effect.  We find ourselves compromising the truth of the Gospel for the approval of people attempting to fit church into the mold of a culture that places no value beyond affluent hedonistic behaviors.  The result is always liberalism.

As leaders in our community, however, we have chosen the third response - to redeem it.  This requires faithful intentionality, honest reflection, and strict accountability because we believe passionately that social media should and can be used for the glory of God and the advancement of the Gospel in every way possible.  That is why, even as a church of under 100 people, our leadership places so much effort and time behind our website, blog, Twitter, and Facebook.  We want to labor in the responsibility of using the opportunities of cultural trends to encourage and enrich the lives of those around us towards a community of repentance and redemption under the authority of Jesus.

We recognize that when we seize these opportunities with humility, then it becomes a breaking point in the language barrier of the church to engage and connect a culture with the Gospel that would otherwise seem as childish nonsense.

A Picture of What the Church Should Be

Last week Chattanooga mourned the death of a fallen hero, Sgt. Tim Chapin, after he confronted a heavily armed and armored robbery suspect who would take his life moments later.  Hixson was flooded with members of local fire and police departments as the family celebrated his life at a funeral service and laid his body to rest at a local cemetary.  You can see in the video the hundreds of representatives who walked from Abba's House to the cemetary where he was to be buried.  Police departments from precincts surrounding Hamilton County volunteered to cover the shifts of local officers so they could attend their fallen friend and coworkers funeral.

As I drove by the church where his funeral was being held, the demonstration of solidarity and community was just overwhelming.  Dozens of police motorcycles lined the front parking lot of the church and firetrucks blocked off portions of Hixson Pike and Hwy 153.  As I watched this video, I found myself moved by the support that police officers were showing for their own who gave his life in the line of duty for our city.

It's a picture that mimics the kind of relationship that Jesus said the church should have for each other.  Willing to give their time for one of the family and show their support in horrible circumstances.  In the early church this would have been played out literally as Christians were persecuted and often executed for their faith.  There was a sense of family, community, and shared sacrifice that was deeper than the typical human experience.  The church is a family.  This is how we should care for one another.

Your love for one another will prove to the world that you are my disciples. John 13:35 (NLT)