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Archive for Live Sent

Jul
2

The Radical Nature of the Gospel

by newhope


Today is the Salvation Army Founder’s Day, the anniversary of the first tent meeting at which William Booth preached on the Quaker Burial Ground in Whitechapel, London. His life is an example of the Christian pioneers mentioned in Hebrews 12 and reminds us of our accountability to live out the radical nature of the gospel in bringing Christ to the world.

Do you see what this means—all these pioneers who blazed the way, all these veterans cheering us on? It means we’d better get on with it. Strip down, start running—and never quit! No extra spiritual fat, no parasitic sins. Keep your eyes on Jesus, who both began and finished this race we’re in. Study how he did it. Because he never lost sight of where he was headed—that exhilarating finish in and with God—he could put up with anything along the way: cross, shame, whatever. And now he’s there, in the place of honor, right alongside God. Hebrews 12:1–2, The Message

William Booth was born in Nottingham in 1829. While working as an apprentice in a pawnbroker’s shop he became aware of the humiliation experienced by the poor. During his teenage years he became a Christian and spent much of his spare time trying to persuade other people to become Christians too.

After his marriage to Catherine Mumford in 1855 he spent several years as a Methodist minister, traveling all around the country, preaching, and sharing God’s word to all who would listen. Yet he felt that God wanted more from him, that he should be doing more to reach ordinary people. He returned to London with his family, having resigned his position as a Methodist minister.

One day in 1865 he found himself in the East End of London, preaching to crowds of people in the streets. Outside the Blind Beggar pub some missioners heard him speaking and were so impressed by his powerful preaching that they asked him to lead a series of meetings they were holding in a large tent. The date for the first meeting was set for July 2, 1865. To the poor and wretched of London’s East End, Booth brought the good news of Jesus Christ and his love for all men. Booth soon realized he had found his destiny. He formed his own movement, which he called “The Christian Mission.”

The work was hard and Booth would ‘stumble home night after night haggard with fatigue, often his clothes were torn and bloody bandages swathed his head where a stone had struck’, wrote his wife. Evening meetings were held in an old warehouse where urchins threw stones and fireworks through the window. It was not until 1878 when The Christian Mission changed its name to The Salvation Army that things began to happen. The impetus changed. The idea of an Army fighting sin caught the imagination of the people and the Army began to grow rapidly. Booth’s fiery sermons and sharp imagery drove the message home and more and more people found themselves willing to leave their past behind and start a new life as a soldier in The Salvation Army. By the time of Booth’s death in 1912 the Army was at work in 58 countries.

Booth’s heart is revealed in these words: “While women weep, as they do now, I’ll fight; while little children go hungry, as they do now, I’ll fight; while men go to prison, in and out, in and out, as they do now, I’ll fight; while there is a drunkard left, while there is a poor lost girl upon the streets, while there remains one dark soul without the light of God, I’ll fight-I’ll fight to the very end!”

0 Categories : Blog
Jun
23

On the Frontlines: NHP Authors Living Sent (#1)

by newhope

Editor’s Note: This is the first in a continuing series of articles in which New Hope Publishers authors share how they are living sent, or living like a missionary.

Our family is living like a missionary on the street where we live. We are praying for our neighbors—and actually trying to get to know their names and their stories. Inviting them over for dinner and being available when they have a need. We freely give out our contact info, so that they could actually contact us if they had a need.

Our kids are in on the game, too, looking for ways to not only play with but also to encourage the neighborhood kids. We are trying to listen and love and be ready to share the good news of the God who came near. We do this both through our near presence with them, as well as our near conversations with them.

It’s not always easy to be “available,” and we don’t bat 1.000 at it, but we are trying to live sent lives in hopes of seeing “on earth as it is in heaven” right here on our block.

—Jason Dukes, Live Sent

One day my pastor asked me, “What do you want out of life?” Without hesitation I answered, “I want my life to count.”

That conversation happened over 24 years ago and although I was already a dedicated Christian, my simple, six-word answer became a new defining goal of my life. At the time, I focused on living a godly lifestyle before my young children by relying on God’s Word for every one of life’s answers.

My journals turned into typed-out treatises that I shared with friends. They began commenting, “That would make a great book. We all need to learn about that.”

Really, I thought. Could what God is teaching me really help someone else’s life?

That’s when I attended my first Christian writers’ conference, which changed my life. Now I continue to witness through my books, articles, seminars, speaking ministry, and a devotional blog. I’m living sent as founder and CEO of Life That Matters Ministries through which I carry out the calling on my life to help others live significantly.

—Sharon Norris Elliott, Power Suit

As a former missionary, my current “living sent” looks radically different than it did when traveling through Europe several years ago. Today, I’m in America, am a minister’s wife, and I live the life of a stay-at-home mom. My calling to “go into the world,” however, remains the same.  

The only difference is, rather than going overseas to share Christ, I am now seeking to make friendships with other mothers in my church and community. It is through these new relationships that I seek to share Christ.

My current missions field is the local playground, story hour at our community library, and play dates with moms I meet through my 15-month-old son. I cherish the opportunities given to me to hear the hearts of mothers in various stages of parenting. God often reminds me that He is just as pleased with me sipping a cherry limeade at Sonic with a new mom who feels overwhelmed as He was when I traveled throughout Europe.  

I have come to realize that “living sent” is not really about where you are going with God’s Word. Instead, it is a more about living a life that seeks exalt to Him in your conversations and relationships.

—Lorie Looney Keene, Pull Up a Chair

First and foremost, in this season of life, as a mother to two preschoolers, I try to lead a life of God’s love and grace in front of my husband and boys. I find that is a most difficult task at times. I try to point out to my children God moving and working in the world, so they will have a global perspective of God’s mission.

As I’m planning out my daily schedule, I seek God’s guidance on prioritizing which tasks will have the most eternal significance. I look for ways to get beyond my Christian bubble. Whether that is building relationships with moms at the ballpark, ministry projects with my children, teaching children at church, or social networking.

I use social networking to connect with women from all backgrounds and religions. I seek to use my author’s blog www.mitzieaker.com, Facebook, and Twitter to witness personally and connect others to Christian bloggers and resources that witness to God’s glory.

—Mitzi Eaker, Missions Moments 2

I’m living sent through my daily job, working in disaster recovery for the Florida Conference of the United Methodist Church. Our focus is to always be in a state of readiness, to perform in any disaster, by meeting the needs of the people, whatever they may be. We take Mark 9:41 (giving a drink of water in Jesus’ name) literally.

Our message is to be the eyes, ears, hands and feet of Jesus, ministering hope and encouragement to people who are in disastrous situations. Many times all they need is someone to listen to them and give them a hand up. The people I have met are not victims, they have amazing stories to tell and have rightly earned the title “survivors.” Through their testimonies, their lives are a message from God.

—Sandy Lovern, Finding Your Way

0 Categories : Articles
Jun
21

Jason Dukes: Living Sent

by newhope

What does living sent look like? What does it mean for the church? Can we think beyond “discipleship” programs and begin to  demonstrate a lifestyle of love?

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

0 Categories : Podcast
Jun
15

What Is a Christian Book?

by newhope

This week Jason Dukes, author of Live Sent, led a workshop based on one of my favorite verses, 2 Corinthians 3:3. As a publisher, my favorite version of this verse is found in The Message. “Christ himself wrote it—not with ink, but with God’s living Spirit; not chiseled into stone, but carved into human lives—and we publish it.”

The Apostle Paul wrote these words in defense of his ministry. Christ was transforming those to whom Paul had been preaching. Paul was a great missionary, but he knew that only God could make Himself visible in the lives of these believers. God’s mark on their lives was divine, a permanent mark, a life changing mark, a deep and abiding mark, so visible that Paul wrote, “You yourselves are all the endorsement we need. Your very lives are a letter that anyone can read by just looking at you” (2 Corinthians 3:2 MSG).

So what was God carving into the lives of these believers? Most certainly, it was a new moral order with new desires, new relationships, and a new worldview. Most certainly, it was peace, love, and joy etched into their hearts, and as a result they exuded fairness, generosity, acceptance, forgiveness, compassion, honesty, humility, and work ethic like nothing seen before in their communities. Whatever was taking place, these believers were an open book for the world to read and their lives were so unique, so set apart in attitude and behavior, that the only explanation possible was the living Spirit of God carving God’s character into the depth of their souls.

This brings me to publishing. Books that have spiritual value are written by authors being transformed by God. When I look at a New Hope book, my mind doesn’t leap to the message of the book, but rather to the author who penned the book. If we have published someone’s book, it is because we saw evidence of the Christ-life in the author, and God’s living Spirit in the message the author was speaking and writing.

We publish what God is doing in and through His people. This is the value of a New Hope book. And I believe the only value of any book that claims to be “Christian” is found in what God has already done. Believers are who they are because of Christ. And Christian authors write books worth reading because God’s living Spirit has already written God’s message in their hearts.

0 Categories : Blog
Jun
6

What Is Discipling? (part 3)

by newhope

by Jason C. Dukes

The third element of discipling I would suggest is release. I believe it is safe to say that for the most part, church culture has made discipleship more about retention than release. People are encouraged to stay in discipleship programs rather than being released to actually disciple. Church gurus stress our need to grow the church, and what they mean is more people in gathering and in small groups.

I would suggest that Jesus wants to grow His church out there among the harvest, not in here among those already harvested. The harvest grows out there. . . .

Discipling is more than some class once a week that we market and hope for high attendance. It is learning and living all week. It is eating together. It is praying together. It is having fun together. It is doing things of interest together. It is serving together. It is doing life together.

That is the model of discipling that we were given by Jesus, but to make it easier on ourselves, we boiled it down to a formula and program and said, “Go through this class, and you will be disciples.” It’s not that classes aren’t important. It’s not that gathering together in classes or for collective worship is not important. It’s not that we don’t need to have Bible study together. These are important, but these can’t be the extent of our discipling.

On the first night our church family gathered as a core group, we shared four statements with those who gathered. One of them was this—we will not busy you with church activities, but rather we will equip and release you to be the church within your daily and weekly activities. This is a must if we hope for followers of Jesus to actually engage culture and see others begin to follow Jesus. . . .

Let’s surrender our programs and enter into this relational releasing process known as discipling and see what happens. Let’s live sent daily and be discipling. If we will, then we will be intentionally delivering a message, learning and living the ways of the Author, and giving other people the opportunity to see the Author in our ways. Then, they will learn and begin to live His ways too. Then, we will be discipling.

This article is adapted from Live Sent: You Are a Letter by Jason C. Dukes.


Jason C. Dukes is a learner, dreamer, and teacher. Raised in New Orleans, Louisiana, Jason has been on an amazing journey for the last five years while planting Westpoint Church in the Orlando, Florida, area.

0 Categories : Articles
Jun
3

What Is Discipling? (part 2)

by newhope

by Jason C. Dukes

Jason Dukes, along with his father, Jimmy, baptizing Jason's son, Caleb.

The second element I would suggest for the discipling process is discernment. Unfortunately, this element of discipling is often left out within programmed discipleship. Discerning where someone is spiritually and where someone is going in life is not required in programmed discipleship. You can simply plug someone into the linear process. Problem is, what results is a stifled disciple, which is actually an oxymoron.

Let me explain. As followers of Jesus, we have the Holy Spirit residing within us. Jesus spoke of the many ways having the Holy Spirit matters in the daily life of a follower as recorded in John 14 to 16. Paul follows that with some pretty insightful teaching in 1 Corinthians and Ephesians. John also elaborates on it in 1 John 5. Among the many aspects of what the Spirit does in and through us is discernment.

 As we engage people in relationship, we need to do more than think, What are the five steps I must take this person through so they will now be a disciple? Maybe a better approach would be to pray something like this:

Holy Spirit, please give me discernment into the heart and life of my new friend. Give me Your wisdom and insight so that I may know how to love them right where they are and encourage them for where You want them to go as we walk on this mutual journey with You.

What if we prayed that? Don’t you think the Spirit would grant us discernment? Then, we would be pulled into an amazing adventure of learning the ways of Jesus and living out those ways alongside someone into whose life we are speaking encouragement and direction as the Holy Spirit leads us. If we would listen as the Spirit provides this discernment, we would be able to determine where on the journey a person is rather than pigeonholing them or trying to take them through a step-by-step process.

This is important. Think about it. If we discount where someone has been in their lives, we will miss out on ways God has already been at work in a person’s life before we ever met them.

Jesus took this seriously. With Peter, Matthew, Mary, Nicodemus, the woman at the well. We must take it seriously too. It is important for us to realize that discipleship is not a program that begins after someone begins to follow Jesus. It is a process that even begins before conversion.

You can’t argue with that principle either, because a cursory reading of the four Gospels makes it plain. Jesus invited 12 guys into relationship and entered into a journey with them that God the Father had already been walking on with them. In other words, He had already been at work. He was there through the tragedy and victories of their lives previous to their encounter with Jesus. Now, Jesus was going to complete the work that had been begun and continue it toward more and more completion—the discipling process that never ends. . . .

The third and final part of this article will appear on Monday, June 6.

This article is adapted from Live Sent: You Are a Letter by Jason C. Dukes.


Jason C. Dukes is a learner, dreamer, and teacher. Raised in New Orleans, Louisiana, Jason has been on an amazing journey for the last five years while planting Westpoint Church in the Orlando, Florida, area.

0 Categories : Articles
Jun
2

What Is Discipling? (part 1)

by newhope

by Jason C. Dukes

So, what is discipling? I want to suggest this basic definition: 

Discipling is learning and living the ways of Jesus so that others learn and live His ways, too, so that others learn and live His ways, too, and so on.

Discipling is all about proclaiming the message that God has come near. As we live His ways, we show His love by how we come near as a friend to the people around us every day, not only through some service project. That’s how other disciples are made—they catch it as we do life with them.

Thus, it is a process. However, it is not and must not be simply a linear process. It is instead a very fluid, ongoing process. . . .

Jesus taught His followers over time. He did this in the middle of relationship with them. He did this in the middle of a process that allowed them to learn and live, to be served and to serve, to have both theory and practice. He released them to connect and engage and learn and live and lead others to Him immediately. It is easy then to conclude that discipling is a process which has as its core value the necessity of doing life together.

Elements of the Ongoing, Never-ending Process

I would suggest three elements of discipling. These three do not flow from A to Z. They ebb and flow. Each may be involved at any one time, while all may be involved at any one time. It’s kind of fluid like that, kind of messy like that, kind of unpredictable like that. Kind of like doing life together.

The first element I would suggest for the discipling process is relationship. Every aspect of learning the ways of Jesus and living the ways of Jesus is both validated and authenticated inside relationship. We were made for togetherness. We are stifled when we are alone. The church is people following Jesus together, not an individual. Relationship is paramount. Discussing the teachings of Jesus requires relationship. In fact, I have seen so often that true transformation happens in the midst of ongoing relational dialogue. That’s evident in the discipling process for those who walked face-to-face with Jesus.

Accountability for living out the teachings of Jesus requires relationship. Our culture pretends that hierarchical structures encapsulate accountability, but forced or enforced accountability is not true accountability at all.

When I do something for someone because I have to rather than because I want to, or when I am motivated by obligation rather than love, that is not accountability as described in the New Testament. It is not based in reciprocal relationship. It is not based in love. It is not based in common purpose with the goal of unified restoration and growth. It is, you do something for me or you are fired or don’t get paid, etc. Accountability doesn’t really exist, at least as modeled by Jesus and described in the New Testament, apart from relationship.

Multiplicative results for discipling cannot happen without relationship. Multiplication in the literal sense, being fruitful and multiplying, can only happen within relationship. In the figurative sense, the necessity for relationship is the same. If we are to see disciples made, then we must engage people in genuine friendship. Multiplication cannot be programmed. It happens. It blossoms. It is a product of relationships that flourish and have purpose.

When we befriend someone, our agenda must be more than just adding them to our church membership. Rather, we should walk with them in such a way that they taste and see the love of Jesus, that they witness His ways lived out, and that they learn His ways and follow. This multiplication becomes exponential when it is not constrained by programming standards. It becomes exponential when relationship allows it the freedom to blossom.

Look for the continuation of this article tomorrow.

This article is adapted from Live Sent: You are a Letter by Jason C. Dukes.


Jason C. Dukes is a learner, dreamer, and teacher. Raised in New Orleans, Louisiana, Jason has been on an amazing journey for the last five years while planting Westpoint Church in the Orlando, Florida, area.

1 Categories : Articles
Jun
1

Una carta viva

by newhope

por Dianne Daniels

¿Es usted una carta viva?

Qué pregunta, ¿no? ¡Somos personas, no cartas!

Pero, según Cartas vivas, por Jason Dukes, todos los creyentes somos cartas vivas que Dios manda a los pueblos del mundo. Aunque alguien no lea la Palabra escrita, todavía puede leer la carta viva de nuestra vida. ¿Qué mensaje le damos?

Ésta es la pregunta central del libro. Cartas vivas nos anima a vivir de una manera auténtica ante el mundo. Para hacerlo, tenemos que rendirnos al Señor cada día para recibir la vida abundante que Él nos ofrece. Enviar un mensaje intencional a través de nuestras acciones diarias es el propósito de Dios para nosotros. Es más que un proyecto; es más que un sermón; es más que memorizar palabras. Vivir auténticamente indica un esfuerzo total de llevar el mensaje del amor que Dios tiene para cada persona.

¿Por qué es importante Cartas vivas para la iglesia hispana? Porque nos ayuda a desarrollarnos espiritualmente. El llamado a representar a Dios en el mundo es algo que demanda la mejor preparación y desarrollo. Estudiar este libro nos ayuda a hacer esta preparación y desarrollo.

¿Cómo lo puede usar la iglesia?

  • Para el estudio individuo. La iglesia puede animar a sus miembros a estudiar el libro como devoción personal. Después, los que participan pueden hablar de lo que aprendieron.
  • Para el estudio en grupos pequeños, sean grupos ya existentes de adultos u otros grupos de parejas, hombres, mujeres o adolescentes.
  • Para el tema de un retiro. Tal vez otras iglesias pueden participar con ustedes en un retiro de un día.
  • Para un estudio especial para la iglesia las noches de domingo o miércoles. Hay una sección al final del libro que es especialmente para los pastores y los que quieren capacitar a los líderes de la iglesia. También hay un plan de enseñanza en www.wmu.com/cultures/espanol (disponible después del primero de julio).

“La Biblia es la carta de Dios a nosotros. Muchos no la leen. Cristo, en nosotros, habla, aun si el mundo no lee su carta escrita”.1

¿Es usted una carta viva?

1Betty Eason, “Live Sent,” Missions Plan Book 2011–2012, p. 45.


Dianne Daniels es consultora de ministerios y editora para la audiencia multicultural para la WMU® (Unión Femenil Misionera) nacional.

0 Categories : Articles
Jun
1

June 2011: Disciple Making

by newhope

All believers in Christ are called to be disciple makers. This would be a daunting, even outrageous and impossible, task had not our Lord given us His Spirit and promised to be with us always.

“And Jesus came and said to them, ‘All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age’” (Matthew 28:18–20, ESV).

With us. Always. And that means wherever we go. Usually wherever we go is a phrase reserved for contexts like the Congo or China or India or maybe the Middle East. We pause and reflect: It’s good that God is with those who are going to difficult places to speak to resistant people. But we tend to forget or ignore that God expects all of us—not just those designated as missionaries—to be making disciples and the same God who commissions us is with us wherever we go and wherever we are now.

These two truths mean God expects me to be making disciples now at my work among my co-workers. And among fellow parents at my son’s soccer games. And among the neighbors on my suburban street. And among the Chinese living in my community, as well as those living in Shanghai. Yes, the Great Commission is an all-of-the-above thing. People on my street, in my state, in my country, and among every tribe around the world.

This month on NewHopeDigital.com we’re exploring the theme Making Disciples. We’re looking at it from two different but very similar angles: living sent and living like a missionary. We believe Live Sent by Jason C. Dukes, pastor of Westpoint Church near Orlando, and Live Like a Missionary by Jeff Iorg, Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary president, are significant contributions to the discussion. What does it mean to make disciples? How do we make disciples?

Coming soon you’ll also find:

  • Podcasts with Jeff Iorg, Philip Nation, Betty Wiseman, and Donna Thomas
  • Columns from Jeff Iorg, Jennifer Kennedy Dean, Kimberly Sowell, and Mark Russell
  • Articles from Jason Dukes (excerpt from Live Sent), Daniel Darling, and Kathy Howard
  • And much more!

As we all go and make disciples, let’s remember whose we are and whom we proclaim. He has called us from darkness to light for His glory, our good, and the good of all who will believe.

“But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light” (1 Peter 2:9, ESV).

Note: Lord willing, I leave for East Asia on June 3 for an 11-day trip. Pray that I will live sent while there and return home to live the same way here in Birmingham. I plan to to update this column upon my return.

0 Categories : Articles, Columns, Randy Bishop
May
31

Spanish Language Podcast: Cartas vivas

by newhope

Dianne Daniels, multicultural ministry consultant and editor for national WMU, discusses Cartas vivas, the Spanish version of Live Sent by Jason C. Dukes.

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

1 Categories : Podcast
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