New Home, God’s Grace, God’s Glory

Thank you for your prayers.  As usual, God came through, and yesterday morning I signed a lease for a townhouse/duplex at 406 North Ave. in Burlington.  We are excited and maybe a little anxious as Christin and Jude fly in on Friday, we move in on Saturday, and continue the adventure God has called us to.  This morning God reminded me just how strategic this place is in His kingdom purposes…

I love nature.  From just about anywhere in Burlington you can catch a glimpse of Lake Champlain, New York’s Adirondack mountains across the lake, or the Green Mountains east of the city.  In fact, I can get a glimpse of each from our new home.  Even just a few weeks ago, thousands of leaf peepers flocked to Vermont to see the fall colors across the rolling hills and marvel at the beauty.  It’s not difficult to comprehend from here how God’s eternal power and divine nature are evident in His creation (Romans 1:20).

Nestled in the midst of this natural beauty, just a few blocks from our new home, is Burlington’s Old North End.  Many have described it as Vermont’s most impoverished neighborhood, and it’s home to thousands of international refugees through the Vermont Refugee Resettlement Program.  Honestly, this community does not look like it belongs in Vermont.  Yet God has reminded me that the residents of this community (along with all of humanity) are uniquely designed to worship Him and reflect His glory in a way that far exceeds what the surrounding natural beauty can do.  As God’s image bearers nothing in all of creation has the potential to reflect His glory as they do.

This morning as I read the beginning of Romans 1, I was moved by Paul’s statement in verse 5- “through  whom (Jesus) we have received grace and apostleship to bring about the obedience of faith for the sake of his name among all the nations.”  We have received grace and have been sent out so that the glory of His name will be known in all the ethnic families of this world.  This is God’s purpose for each of us whether a CEO, custodian, entrepreneur, single mom, salesman, pastor, mechanic, or recovering drug addict.

I love how David Platt puts it in his book Radical:

God gave his people his image for a reason- so that they might multiply his image throughout the world.  He created human beings, not only to enjoy his grace in a relationship with him, but also to extend his glory to the ends of the earth.

Simple enough.  Enjoy his grace and extend his glory.

I am so blessed to live in a place where I can enjoy God’s grace and share the gospel with the nations- Somalia, Rwanda, and Vietnam to name a few- just blocks away.

Here are some specific ways you can pray for us:

*Pray for the normal adjustments that come with our family moving to a new community- new friendships, learning our way around, meeting our neighbors, and making 406 North Ave. our home.

*Pray that we will quickly build relationships with families in the Old North End and the groups that serve them.

*Pray for discernment concerning which existing organizations we should partner with who already serve refugees.

*Pray for the Kids Alive ministry, their leader Doug Hoffman, and team of volunteers who minister to almost 70 kids each Saturday morning in the Old North End.

*Pray that God will continue to provide us with needed financial support from churches and individuals.  We have taken a step of faith in moving without our support fully raised.  For more details go to our partner page.

*Pray that God will use this move to strengthen our marriage and family- especially with baby #2 on the way in May.

Hunting for a home!

Would you mind taking a couple of minutes today and pray for us as we seek God’s direction on the right home? Between yesterday and today I will have looked at around ten rental possibilities as places for our family to reside for the next couple of years- until we can sell our home in NJ and purchase a home in Burlington.  I’m also uploading videos for Christin to view to help insure  I don’t make any major man mistakes in the home selection.  Please ask God to be our wisdom -that we would select the right place to continue raising our children, reach out to our neighbors, and begin a home church.

Look for a more complete post later this week. Thank you for your prayers!

Timeline

Thank you prayer partners for keeping up with the Pounds family.  Many of you have asked about our timeline for moving to Burlington and how things are progressing in general.  In the almost 8 weeks since we’ve left NJ we’ve enjoyed some quality time with our families, Christin and Jude visited some of her extended family in Texas, while I traveled to S.E. Asia.  Now we’re revving up for Burlington.

Below is our updated moving timeline including specific prayer requests:

*Over the past few days I’ve emailed a dozen potential apartments and rental homes in Burlington. Please pray for God to direct us to the right home in the right area where we can begin building relationships immediately and move towards hosting a house church in the near future.  Ask that God will give us favor with our new landlord and neighbors.

*This week I’m also working on making sure Awareness to Action (a nonprofit I and some friends started in NJ) is caught up on all of its paperwork and legal to operate in Vermont.  Our goal is to utilize Awareness to Action as a community development platform to serve the community and build relationships.  Please pray for favor with state officials who will be reviewing our application.  Also ask God to give us wisdom in how to best utilize this nonprofit organization to best serve Burlington.

*I’ll arrive in Burlington on Monday, November 8, with Pippin the wonder dog to spend a couple of days scoping out our apartment & house rental finalists.  Christin and Jude will fly into Burlington at the end of that week, and our furniture will be delivered to our new address on Friday, November 12. Pray for a smooth transition with all of those moving parts and also ask for God to give me some real discernments as I visit each of our potential homes in person with security deposit in hand.

*On Saturday, November 13, we’re moving in!  We’re so thankful to have a crew from the Point Church in NJ traveling up to assist us as well as some college guys from New Life Community Church in Northfield, VT.  With the small ruckus will be creating, please pray that God will use this to help us begin building meaningful relationships with our neighbors and others in the surrounding community.

*You can also continue praying for Miles Ean and Matt Mashue (along with Tirzah and Benjamin) as they search for jobs in the Burlington area.  Just pray that God leads them to the right job at the right time.

As always, thank you for your prayers!

16 Days in S.E. Asia

Having just returned a couple of days ago from a 16 day trip to S.E. Asia, this blog entry is more of a brain dump than a typical prayer update.  God blessed me with the opportunity to meet both missionaries and national believers, preach at a local congregation, meet with two different house churches, get my hands dirty (literally) serving with a community development organization, spend some quality time with my youngest brother and his wife, and learn a lot from those who do amazing work in the arenas of community development and church planting.   Due to security issues, I have to be purposely vague concerning specifics about where I went and who I met.

Here are a few personal reminders and lessons learned from my trip:

  • Every time I spend significant time in another country, I return with a renewed thankfulness that I live in America.  I recognize our nation, people, and government are far from perfect, but we do have a constitution guaranteeing us the freedom of religion and the right of free speech.  It’s easy for me to take our freedoms and rights for granted until I see what it looks like to live without them

  • I met people who have made some big sacrifices to take the good news of Jesus to unreached people groups.  Many of us will never hear their names or the stories of how the gospel is spreading where they are working-  these people care very little about personal glory or recognition.  They do what they do simply because they love Jesus and care about people knowing Him.  Living in a nation where we quickly turn Christian leaders into Christian celebrities, it was humbling to realize that we will probably not know who the true spiritual giants of our generation are until we get to heaven.

  • In the West and specifically in America we tend to over complicate this thing called church.  It’s so easy to forget that the early church in Acts was led by a group of unschooled ordinary guys who’s only qualification was having spent time with Jesus.  If the way we do church only allows those with advanced theological education or complex strategic thinking to take ownership, then we’ve probably created an unnecessary barrier for many scripturally qualified people.  The churches I saw being started were scriptural, simple, and reproducible- growing and multiplying in areas that are often referred to as “closed” to Christianity.

  • I was reminded that in unreached unchurched areas, community development and church planting can and should go hand in hand.  This is not a fast way to approach church planting- it requires great prayer, perseverance, persistence, and sacrificial, no string attached service.  The results are undeniable- whole communities become “softened” to the gospel, people open up their hearts and homes, and you eventually see lasting fruit.  There is something about sacrificially serving others that makes it easier for people to comprehend the good news of Jesus.

  • From day 1 our new church in Burlington needs to “adopt” an unreached people group- meaning we need to support work with a specific people group through prayer, finances, and even sending people.  This is not something we need to build up to. Our people will benefit with a bigger vision of God, a deeper understanding of the gospel, and the excitement of being a part of God’s activity in fulfilling the Great Commission at the ends of the earth.

I know as I continue to process my time in S.E. Asia that God will show me more.  I can already see subtle yet significant changes in how I’m approaching church planting in Burlington.

Thanks for taking the time to read this and for your continued prayers.

TRANSITIONING

Calling our lives “in transition” seems like such an understatement right now as we’ve said farewell to New Jersey, are presently enjoying time with family in Georgia, and look forward to moving to Vermont in November. Just four weeks ago we said goodbye to the Point Church and New Brunswick, and it has taken me a few weeks to regain some mental-spiritual-emotional equilibrium.  Leaving the place and people you love is never an easy thing.

At the same time we’re very thankful for this two month break and loving this time with our families in GA .  We’re so thankful for our families, the sacrifices they’ve made for us, and their continued support as we prepare to move even further away.  This makes it especially gratifying to see Jude’s grandparents enjoying this extended time with him.  Jude is definitely enjoying the extra attention.

Here are a few more God stories from our break:

  • Our BIGGEST God story is Christin being pregnant with our second child.  She’s approaching the two month mark with the baby due in early May.  We apparently like packing these major life transitions together =)
  • Last week our renter moved into our house in New Brunswick.  We’re so blessed to have a tenant and Section 8 (federal housing) administrator who love Jesus.  We’re thankful our house can now become a home for Mary and her three daughters.
  • I was invited to speak on Sept. 19 at Wildwood Baptist Church, the church in GA where I served as College & Singles Pastor that sent us out to start a church in NJ over six years ago.   We could not do what we do without churches like Wildwood supporting us.
  • For 16 days in October I’ll be traveling with a team to Southeast Asia where I’ll get to spend several days with my youngest brother and his wife.  (Due to security issues please do not post any comments to this blog with either his name or the country where he resides.)

As we continue preparing to move to Burlington, VT, our most obvious need and prayer request is financial support.  We now have $2708/month raised, leaving $1875/month to meet our monthly salary needs.  Please pray with us for God to bring financial partners- both churches and individuals- to support our remaining monthly salary needs and the additional start up costs for this new church.  You can to the partner page of our website for details on how you and others can support us.

Please also pray…

  • Pray that we’ll continue making the most of our time with family in Georgia before moving to VT.
  • Pray for God to use this break to renew and recharge us as we prepare to dive into ministry in VT.
  • Pray that God will lead us to the right rental house or apartment in Burlington- that this place will quickly become a home to us and a place where we can begin building relationships immediately.
  • Pray for the others on our team who are preparing to move to Burlington: Matt, Tirzah, & Benjamin Mashue, Lance Farrell, and Miles Ean. Pray especially that God will provide jobs and point them to the right home or apartment.

Thank you for remembering us!

VENTING- Beyond Marketing

This is part 2 of my sporadic blog series titled “Venting.”  As I stated in a previous post, please realize that as I vent that I am not speaking against some ambiguous group of evangelical Christian leaders.  I am venting about my own struggles as a follower of Jesus and a leader of other followers- struggles which I am confident are not limited to just me…

When I left for college in the fall of 1990 my ambition was to get my degree in Business Marketing, find a job with a cutting edge marketing firm in Manhattan, and become a voice of Christian integrity in the business world.  This was a noble goal, but like many other college students my career goals and college major shifted with me receiving a degree in Educational Psychology and becoming a Student Minister.  Despite the shift, my interest in marketing has remained.  I see the need for churches and other mission oriented nonprofits to brand themselves accurately and effectively- they should have a voice in their communities and culture.

That being said, I sometimes wonder if we (spiritual leaders, churches, Christian organizations) spend too much time marketing ourselves rather than allowing the ripple effects of our ministry to those around us to in effect serve as our marketing.  We have come up with all kinds of “Christianese” cutting edge terms and catch phrases as we attempt to brand ourselves- we all want to become missional churches, experiencing organic community, serving through incarnational ministry, so that we’ll experience exponential growth (and yes I’ve used all these terms in the past year).

BIG SIDE-NOTE: One big lesson for me was when I moved to NJ to start the Point Church.  I remember inviting unchurched people to come check out our church, and they’d look at me like I was asking if they wanted a rash.  They were unchurched for a reason- THEY DON’T LIKE CHURCH!  I compare this to my aversion to yogurt.  I hate yogurt.  I don’t care if it’s Greek yogurt, fruity yogurt, yogurt with nuts, or expensive fancy yogurt. It’s still yogurt.  I imagine that’s how my unchurched friends (and I mean real nonChristians) feel about me inviting them to church.  They don’t care if it’s contemporary, postmodern, incarnational, organic… No matter how we market it or package it, it’s still church.  SO rather than marketing something that nonChristians are not interested in, why don’t we focus on what does matter.

Back on point.

Think about it…

Do our people really understand what our catchy terms mean?

Does the world around us know what we’re talking about (and do they care)?

Even if they did understand, what terms would they use to describe us?

Do they think our labels, branding, and marketing match what we’re delivering?

What if…

We made the mission of Jesus our focus and really put our time, energy and resources towards living that out?

We allowed our ministry and investment in people to speak for itself?

We stepped back and allowed our community to say who we are and what we’re about?

I know this sounds risky- actually allowing our community, the people we serve and invest in, to declare who we are and what we’re about.  I have several ideas on why we should take the risk:

#1) We often over promise and under deliver. Some of us are big picture kind of people who like to dream about what God could do.  We love talking vision, mission, and strategy.  Sometimes this can lead to talking big to people in the community about what we’re going to do then struggling big-time to do it.  Instead of this leading to strong community partnerships this can lead to a skeptical and even calloused response to our efforts.

#2) It’s always better when someone else rings your bell. Just to be clear: getting others to ring our bell should NEVER be our motivation.  Let’s be honest, though, nothing is more annoying than someone who tells you how good they are.  The more someone brags, the more you want to find the cracks (and show the cracks to others).   When a third party does the bragging, everyone receives the information in a completely different manner.

#3) When our community and culture label us, they understand what they mean.This does not mean they always get it right.  BUT if we do an effective job of connecting who Jesus is and what scripture says, with what we do, they just might get the idea.  Also, if what we what we do matches what we say, we’ll usually earn the opportunity to clarify who we are and what we’re about.

#4) I really believe this makes good scriptural sense. Check out these scriptures:

Matthew 6:1-4

1 “Beware of practicing your righteousness before other people in order to be seen by them, for then you will have no reward from your Father who is in heaven. 2 “Thus, when you give to the needy, sound no trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, that they may be praised by others. Truly, I say to you, they have received their reward. 3 But when you give to the needy, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, 4 so that your giving may be in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you.

Acts 11:26b
And in Antioch the disciples were first called Christians.

(notice that the disciples were identified as “like Christ” by the people of Antioch)

Acts 20:18
You yourselves know how I lived among you the whole time from the first day that I set foot in Asia. (and knowing Paul’s track record, I’m pretty sure these guys were not followers of Jesus when Paul arrived)

Last week in Jersey- Update & Prayers

I’ve often thought of  our church-planting experience as just that- it’s sometimes slow, sometimes fast, you’re never quite sure what’s around the next corner.  It’s simultaneously exhilarating and  frightening, you often feel like you could throw up at any moment, yet once you get off you get back in line to ride all over again.  As Christin, Jude, and I exit New Brunswick, New Jersey and prepare for Burlington, VT, I want to share a little of what God is doing and some specific ways you can continue praying for us.

God continues to provide…

*A few weeks ago I received an unexpected phone call from my friend Reid Monoghan, the pastor of Jacob’s Well, a two year old church plant in nearby East Brunswick, NJ.  They blessed us with a $3000 check for the new church in Burlington.  One word: WOW!

*Christin, Jude, and I returned to NJ last Monday from an amazing Global Impact Conference at First Baptist Church Callahan, Florida.  One of their Bible Study Groups blessed us with a portable sound system to use for block parties and small worship gatherings in Burlington.

*God continues to move churches and individuals to support our new work.  We now have $2217/month of our financial support raised- almost 50% of our monthly salary needs.

*God may have provided a renter for our home.  We’re so excited about a single mom and three of her daughters potentially living in our home.  She’s a Section 8 housing client, so we’ll have a final home inspection on Monday to make everything official.  Everything about this situation looks like an answered prayer for both her and us.

Please continue to pray…

*Pray that God will work out all the details between us, our potential renter, and the county Section 8 housing administrators.

*Pray that God will continue to bring financial partners- individuals and churches- to support the start of this new church in Burlington.

*Pray for the others on our team who are prayerfully preparing to move to Burlington: Matt, Tirzah, & Benjamin Mashue,  Lance Farrell, and Miles Ean. Pray especially that God will provide jobs and point them to the right home or apartment.

*Pray that these last few days in NJ will be a sweet time with our friends and spiritual family at the Point Church.  We will miss the community of New Brunswick and especially our relationships here so much.

*Pray for the Point’s leadership as they continue to lead this church to the next level: Tim Nussbaumer- Teaching Pastor, Jon Zila-Worship Pastor, and Tony Yuhas-the new Executive Director.  This church is stocked with amazing pastors and servant leaders.  I’m excited to see what God has in store.

Thank you for remembering us!

Dear New Jersey

The following post is from my wife Christin’s blog: http://www.gainingpounds.blogspot.com.  As you’ll quickly see, my wife is a much better writer than me.

Dear New Jersey,

I have so many things to say as we get ready to leave you. We have been through so much together these last six years. It has been tough at times but I like to think that we won you over in the end. For a while we weren’t sure if you liked us or not, but we killed you (murdered, really) with kindness and you didn’t have much of a choice but to accept us. I remember pulling in with our U-Haul truck to the three ring circus that was our house closing. It was standing room only in that tiny room with a round table not big enough for all the lawyers, brokers, real estate agents, and us commonfolk. Jersey accents were flying, tempers were high, tears were flowing, and I’m pretty sure someone asked us to do something illegal before it was all over. Welcome to New Jersey, Pounds’, you aren’t in Kansas anymore.

The first month in our new old house, amid wallpaper stripping and detoxing it from years of cigarette smoke, we slept on a mattress on the floor of our room. I lay awake each night listening to the noise on the street, wondering what in the world we had done, praying for sleep and for the morning to come. Someone would shout and it sounded like they were right outside our window. What were they shouting about at 3 in the morning? This was different.

We would walk down the streets of New Brunswick and pray for the people we saw, not knowing anyone and trying to read their faces–would they accept us, would they accept Him? It was so strange, so full of strangers, but love came quickly to us. We started to see the same faces over and over, started to notice the personality of the city. We became fixtures at Starbucks on George Street, the nexus of the New Brunswick universe. We spoke to the regulars and became part of the inner circle of people who spend most of their working hours plugged in and sipping all day on a Grande mild with Hazelnut.

Good things started happening, God began building his church. Someone was saved and we baptized him in the ocean. We moved from a small apartment to a playhouse, then a hotel, then office space, a night club, a school. We asked you how we could help and you cynically pointed out many needs. Let’s see if they really will… You gave us your trust in the end and I think we loved you more for making us work for it.

Thank you for teaching us so much about relationships and service and living in community. Maybe our biggest lesson from you was how to share our lives with our neighbor-what it means to love her as we love ourselves, to give freely to him of our time or money or shelter. You gave us some of the best friends we will ever have. For all of the knocks you get for being brash or quick tempered, we have found friendship in your Kind, Generous, and Loyal.

And there is one more thing that I would like to thank you for. You gave us a son when we thought we may not ever have one. Maybe Jude was like a parting gift that you wanted to give as we were making plans to leave–you wanted us to take some New Jersey up to Vermont perhaps. This kindness I will never forget. I will always be thankful for God bringing us together. And even if this was the only fruit of our lives in New Jersey, I would spend six years all over again to have him.

Oh, New Jersey. I won’t miss the jug handles, our gang member neighbors, or the property taxes. I probably won’t miss the latino music played loud on my street everyday, or having to move my car on Mondays between 8 and 9 and Thursdays between 9 and 10. I for sure won’t miss having to bundle all of our cardboard into 24 inch squares tied with twine for the 3rd Tuesday of the month. But I will miss you.

Beginning of Goodbye

This past week has been incredibly bittersweet as I led my last community service project with the Point Church in NJ.  Leading our annual Urban Plunge project one last time was such an amazing blessing as we saw 75 volunteers (65 who call this NJ community home) give of their time, energy, talents, and resources to serve our community in the name of Jesus.  We definitely bit off more than we could chew: replacing a single mom’s roof, working with 250 kids at New Brunswick’s Summer PlaySAFE program, serving with Elijah’s Promise Soup Kitchen, hosting two community block parties, and running our own Kids Camp & Middle School Soccer Camp.  God came through BIG TIME!  It’s hard to believe this all began six years ago with a small group of people meeting in an apartment- worshiping Jesus, studying the scriptures, and asking God to show us how to serve the community of New Brunswick in His name.

I am confident that just as God has done the seemingly impossible here in New Brunswick, He will do more of the same in Burlington. Our prayers for these last few weeks in New Brunswick are… *For quality time with our friends and spiritual family as we prepare to leave. *For God to send the right renter (or even surprise us with a buyer) for our home. *For God to give us opportunities to leave a lasting impression of Jesus with our neighbors, friends, and community partners. Thank you for your partnership and prayers!

VENTING- Knowledge vs. Experience

Admittedly, this is not one of my prayer posts.  Instead this is the first post of an occasional series, which I like to refer to as “VENTING.”
I realize in the blogosphere every day young cocky guys vent about what they don’t like about modern Christianity (a.k.a. Christendom).  Please realize that as I vent through these occasional venting series on this blog, that I am not speaking against some ambiguous group of evangelical Christian leaders.  I am venting about my own struggles as a follower of Jesus and a leader of other followers- struggles which I am confident are not limited to just me.  Hopefully you’ll find this occasional venting posts helpful to you as you seek to follow Jesus and lead others.  So here’s my first vent….
We know far more than we apply or experience.
We tend to give people a lot of Bible based theology, thoughtful philosophy, even helpful strategies for life, but this great wealth of information does not necessarily translate to long-haul-life-change.   I know plenty of Christians who know what the Bible says but who struggle to connect these truths to their daily lives and even more importantly to what God wants to do in and through them in the context of the real world. Why?  Here are a few reasons that come to mind:
*Information does not equal intimacy. Although it is a common cliche, it is true that we  can know a great deal about God without knowing Him on a personal level.  As a young teenager I was starstruck by Michael Jordan.  He was the most amazing athlete I had ever seen.  I had posters of him all around our family’s basement play room.  I knew all his stats and plenty of information that no one else really cared about.  Although I knew everything about Mike, I would never have mistaken that for knowing him on a personal, intimate, experiential level.  One other thing: my knowledge about Mike did not translate into me being any better on the basketball court… I ended up becoming a wrestler.
*Discussion does not equal action. We love to talk about doing things.  Often in church settings we will fill in the blanks, answer the questions, and even have transparent conversations about issues in a small group setting.  Although all of that can be helpful (and I’m a practitioner of all those things), it does not mean we actually do anything with what we’ve learned.  Until our faith moves us to action, our discussion means nothing.  We must be willing to ask, “what next steps is God leading me and/or us to take?”  Then we actually need to do it… and doing it usually requires some type of sacrifice.  Real action will often require radically reorienting our priorities and that can be painful.
*Challenging teaching does not equal accountability.  This one is especially for pastors and other leaders.  We often proclaim truth, cast vision, share core values, and give relevant messages (all good catch phrases) without actually holding anyone accountable to what we say our churches are about.  We must begin by holding our own selves as leaders accountable to what we share publicly, or we just need to keep quiet.  Then we must have the guts to actually hold other key leaders accountable.  If not, we’re just talking.
Side note: Jesus would often teach something and then lead His disciples to live out what He had just taught (Luke 9:1-6, Luke 10:1-20).  Other times, Jesus would place his disciples in challenging situations and then unpack the teaching points after their experience: Luke 5:1-11, Luke 5:27-31 I cannot think of many (or any)  instances where Jesus’ teaching (i.e. dispensing knowledge), did not relate to intimately connecting with God, and experientially practicing what was taught.  Can you?  His teaching always led people to live out God’s mission.

What needs to change?

*All or nothing obedience.
Jesus had a very friendly invitation to those who wanted to follow Him: deny yourself and take up your cross daily.  Following Jesus requires having an open hand with everything in our lives: our desires, our feelings, our convictions, our comfort zones, our security, our insecurity, our self confidence, our dreams, our fears, our plans, our relationships,  and even our identity.  Telling culturally conditioned consumers that we must deny ourselves is not an easy message, but it’s always a big first step to follow Jesus.  Sometimes we compromise by offering incremental obedienc (i.e. moving towards obedience in small incremental steps), but Jesus’ challenge was always all or nothing- either you’re in or you’re out.
*A sense of being sent.
Do we approach our lives (wherever I am, wherever I am going) with a sense of being sent on a mission by God? Jesus made a big deal of “being sent.”  He described Himself as “being sent.”  He actively sent out His disciples 2000 years ago and sends us out as His followers today.  Just to be extra clear, you cannot be static and live a “sent out” life.  The ideas of knowing Jesus, following Jesus, and being sent out by Jesus are indivisible- they are all part of the same stream.  Unfortunately many of us are like well equipped sail boats tied to the docks (and those docks can represent all kinds of things in our lives and ministries.).  Many of us have everything we need to catch the wind and sail the open sea- we just decide to never leave the perceived safety of the dock.  Instead of casting off and being caught in the wind of God’s activity, we settle for being mere spectators.
*Jesus’ mission equals our mission.
We need to know what Jesus is sending us out to accomplish. If you are a follower of Jesus then your mission on this earth is inseparable from Jesus’ mission.  Jesus stated His mission with clarity in Luke 4:18-19: The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.  We can look at all the scriptures where Jesus explains what His/our mission is all about and it all boils down to this: seek the lost and serve the least. God has placed each of us in a specific home, family, neighborhood, community, workplace,  and relational network to accomplish this mission.  Period.  We can know the mission, share the mission, philosophize about the mission, strategize how to best accomplish the mission, but ultimately Jesus wants us to personally live out His mission.
*Embrace accountability in community.  Although this can be especially tough for leaders, we need other people.  We need a community of people where we can find accountability and accountability requires transparency.  We obviously  cannot be equally transparent with everyone, but that does not mean we should not be transparent with anyone.  Jesus Himself had an inner circle of three (Peter, James & John), then the twelve, then the seventy two- each with differing degrees of closeness and transparency I realize Jesus probably did not really need accountability the way we do, but during His time on earth He definitely modeled a desire (and possibly a need) for community.   If Jesus pursued community, we can bet we should too.  The fact is we need to be painfully transparent with others we trust, and we need these people to ask us the tough questions, to encourage us, to correct us, to pray for us, and even rebuke us.  We need to listen to the wisdom, experience, and perspective of others who are faithfully pursuing Jesus.  The moment we think we can stand alone, our life and ministry is in jeopardy of becoming at minimum a joke and possibly a wreck.
In closing I want to say how blessed I’ve been over these past six years to serve with a group of leaders who genuinely strive towards these ideals.  Sometimes we’ve succeeded, many times we’ve struggled, but God has been faithful to move us forward together.