Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Foundations: Communicate His Word



What is your mission? Mission, what an intriguing word! As I sat contemplating this week’s lesson, my mind drifted to the Mission Impossible Series of movies. In MI2 the opening scene has agent Ethan Hunt doing some ridiculous rock climbing stunts, only to arrive at the top and receive a mission that will self-destruct in 5 seconds. There is something compelling about exciting about a start to a movie like that.

Deep within our hearts, we long to be challenged, we long to be a part of something bigger then ourselves. The MI movies, James Bond movies, and so many others capitalize on this very desire. For most, we will never be secret agents in the real world, and nothing in real life plays out like it does in the movie. But still, the longing for purpose, vision and a mission haunts us.

This does not surprise God, because He is the one who put that desire in our hearts. But God does not give us desires to frustrate us. Only in pursuing Christ will we find the deepest fulfillment to these desires, and God Himself has called us to a mission. It’s not a secret and it won’t self-destruct in 5 seconds, but it is a call to mission.

Much like the mission in Mission Impossible movies, the statement “this is your mission if you choose to accept it,” stands. But for the agent it was about a singular mission, for the Christian it is about a lifestyle change. If you choose to follow Christ, then you are on mission. If you are not on mission, then you are not a follower of Christ.

That’s a bold statement and a hard truth. So, let’s unpack it a little.

Let’s Get Clear On the Gospel

The last two weeks we unpacked Lakeside’s first two points of the mission statement: Love God and Care for People. Why love God? Why love God’s people? Because of the Good News of Jesus Christ.

God LOVES you. He desires for you to know Him, but sin separates us from God.

You see, we are all born into sin. From the very beginning when our parents ate of the forbidden fruit, sin entered the world. All of creation as we know it has been tainted by sin. We are sinners; therefore, we sin. Our hearts are desperately wicked and sick, there is nothing we can do to heal ourselves, or redeem ourselves.  We broke God’s Law. We deserve death.

But God, in an extravagant display of His love, sent His Son to fulfill the Law completely, to be a perfect sacrifice and payment for our sin. Even while we were sinning, God sent His Son to die for us. Jesus’ death was the satisfaction of God’s just wrath and is available to all who believe.

Jesus rose again from the dead and invites all to come to Him for forgiveness, justification and adoption. It is a free gift to all who believe and receive, but understand this, the free gift is a costly gift. It cost Jesus His life. It cost you your life too.

The Cost of Discipleship

To be a disciple of Christ simply means you are a follower of Christ. Deitrich Bonhoffer said, “When Christ calls a man, He bids him come and die.” What he was getting at is that Jesus did not call you to come to Him for a “get out of hell free” card. This is not some cosmic Monopoly game. Jesus calls you to come to Him to live on mission.

You cannot be a Christian and not be a disciple. You cannot be a Christian and not follow Christ. If you think you are a Christian but the commands of Scripture are not for you, then you are not a Christian at all. Jesus said, “if you love me you will obey my commandments.”

Are you a Christian? Are you obeying Christ’s commands? What’s holding you back?

The Mission

Ok, you’re still reading so that is a good thing. Too often we make light of the Gospel and don’t realize the seriousness of what Christ has done for us and what He calls us to. The first two parts of the mission is to Love Him and love His people as we talked about in the first two weeks. But tonight, we are talking about Communicating His Word to the world.

We have to tell people about Jesus if we are truly a Christian. Matthew 28:18-20 is commonly referred to as the Great Commission. Commission is an older term, but we see in it the word “mission.” It’s not the “great suggestion” but THE great cause of Christ. He wants His followers to go and tell others about the Gospel.

What don’t we see in the Great Commission?

We don’t see excuses:
·      I’m too young, when I get older I’ll tell others.
·      I’m too old, that is for the younger crowd.
·      I don’t know enough, when I learn more theology then I will share.
·      I’m not good with words
·      I might get made fun of
·      I don’t know any unbelievers
·      Write in your excuse ____________________________

What do we see in the Great Commission:
·      All authority and power have been given to Jesus
·      A command to “Go”
·      A command to “make disciples of all nations”
·      A command to “baptize”
·      A command to “teach them to obey”
·      A promise “I am with you.”

Consider this, Jesus spent 3 years with the disciples training them and preparing them. Then He died right in front of them. All hope was lost for them. Until He rose again from the dead!

They just saw the impossible happen, and now He calls them to an impossible mission. Go reach the world, every tribe, tongue and nation and teach them to obey me. Have you ever tried to get someone to obey? That’s a difficult task, if not impossible. Who is Jesus to demand this of us?

He tells them, “I am the one with all authority in heaven and in the earth. I am the boss.”

Do you have siblings? I am the youngest of four. Growing up, it was impossible to get my older siblings to do anything, why? Because I was the lowest in the chain of authority. But when dad told me to tell them to do something, they would obey when I said three little words, “but dad said…”

It was like magic. Why? Because dad was the authority in the house. They didn’t obey me because of my authority, they obeyed because I was the ambassador of my father.

Jesus is not calling us to go and make disciples on our own authority. He said go as His ambassadors, in His authority.

We go to “make disciples.” What does that mean? Simply put, making a disciple is helping someone become what you already are. Paul said it this way, “follow me as I follow Christ.”

As you seek to believe and obey Jesus, help others see Jesus as you do and obey Him as you do. Just like the “follow the leader” game, you just need to be one step ahead of those you lead. Any Christian can be a disciple maker. Just keep your eyes on Jesus and keep demonstrating the next step.

The mission is clear, go and tell others, but we are not alone. We are in His power.

There is a lost and dying world all around us. In our neighborhoods. In our schools. In our work places. Even in our homes. Are you following Christ? Are you living on mission?

If you want to be more effective on mission for Christ, consider this formula from Dare2Share: Pray, Pursue, Persuade.

Identify “not-yet-believers” in your life: those who don’t know Jesus. Commit to praying for 3 of those people. Pray, pray and pray some more. Ask God to provide opportunities to talk to and share with these people.

Pursue them means learning to “bring God up” in conversations. Listen to what they say and be ready to share the Good News with them. If you are praying for them, trust the Holy Spirit is working and creating the space to share with them. Their deepest longing in their heart is to know Jesus, they just don’t know it yet. It’s important that you don’t force it or just try to say everything at once. There may be a bit of a dance to this method. Test the waters and see if they are interested, engage the conversation, and trust the Holy Spirit to give you the right words.

After praying for them, and pursuing God conversations with them, seek to show them the beauty of the Gospel in your life, attitude and words. Don’t argue with them. Don’t try to show you know more. Don’t major on the minors. I like the phrase, “can I paint you a picture of the Big Story of God”? Most not-yet-believers don’t know the story of God, they only know what the media, movies and TV describe as Christians. Even those who grew up in churches don’t necessarily know the Gospel.


Will you commit to sharing Christ with someone? Let’s live on mission together!

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Foundations: Care for People


If you are a follower of Christ, you need to understand that Jesus didn’t save you to isolation but to community. When Jesus was asked what the greatest commandment was, His response was very revealing. I’ll paraphrase, “the most important is to love God with everything you are, and the second flows from that, to love others as yourself, all the Law hangs on these two” (Matthew 22:37-40).

Vibrant Christian community is at the heart of the Gospel. Learning to get a clear picture of who God is leads us to a deeper love for Him and an understanding of how we are to love others. God is a Triunity…meaning He is a 3-in-1 God. The Trinity is complete and relational, and He invites us into that relationship.

Living in community with other believers is a picture of how the Trinity is in community within the Godhead.

Listen how Peter describes it:

“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. Once you were not a people, but now you are God's people; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.” (1 Peter 2:9-10)

He is not addressing individual believers, but believers in community. Once we were alienated, alone and far off, but now we are a people who belong to Jesus!

Let’s take a look at the early church and see how they understood community.


“And they devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching and the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers.  And awe came upon every soul, and many wonders and signs were being done through the apostles. And all who believed were together and had all things in common. And they were selling their possessions and belongings and distributing the proceeds to all, as any had need. And day by day, attending the temple together and breaking bread in their homes, they received their food with glad and generous hearts, praising God and having favor with all the people. And the Lord added to their number day by day those who were being saved.” (Acts 2:42-47)

What an incredible story! Just before this part we hear that Peter and the Apostles were preaching and 3,000 people were added to the church. These were brand new believers with just a few leaders. They were hungry for God and reflected His love to each other organically. This wasn’t programed or institutional, this was an outflow of their love for their Savior, Jesus Christ.

1.     Apostle’s Teaching

The early believers gathered to listen to the apostles teach what they had learned from Jesus. Their teaching was built on the foundation of the Old Testament Scriptures through the lens of Jesus’ death, burial and resurrection! Today we have their teachings in the New Testament. Lakeside, Loft and small groups are built on the foundation of correctly handling the Word of God.

2.     Fellowship

Fellowship is a partnering together and sharing of each other. This is more than just hanging out. This is being intentional on spending time together for the purpose of encouraging one another in our relationships with Jesus Christ. Youth group and small group is built on providing a positive and safe environment that can help us achieve this focus.

3.     Breaking Bread

Refers to the importance of following through on the ordinances of the church that Jesus Christ instituted. We regularly practice these at Lakeside in the forms of the Communion on the last Sunday of each month and baptism by immersion as people respond in obedience to Christ’s call.

There is also something important and powerful about eating meals together. Conversations happen over food. Snacks and meals are an important time to engage with each other.

4.     Prayers

Learning to pray together and for each other is important. The youth staff values the importance of praying for and praying with each of the students. Students learn how to improve their prayer life by listening to leaders and each other pray out loud.  

5.     Sacrifice

The Early church gave of their own possessions for the care of each other. Many of the new converts were from out of town, who only showed up for the festival. Having received Christ, they stayed around to learn. The new church came together to make sure everyone had a place to stay, food to eat and needs met.

A vibrant community is one that cares for one another. Jesus said, “they will know you are my disciples by your love for each other!” How we treat each other in youth group will reflect our true belief about God. If we are a Christian, that means Christ is more important that “being cool” or “fitting in” with this world. Our brothers and sisters in Christ should be treated in such a way that reflects the love of Christ.

6.     Together

They loved to get together. They met daily. They ate meals together. They did stuff together. They developed true friendships. Youth group is an amazing place to make friends and grow. But don’t just let it stop on Wednesday nights and occasional activities, spend time together.

The youth leaders and I were talking about how our love for each other is going to impact the youth group. The 5 of us are regularly together 3 or 4 times in the average week, sometimes even more. We communicate often and care for each other. We hope the love for each other we model will flow into the lives of the students we lead.

7.     Growing

This amazing passage ends with, “and the Lord added to their numbers day by day those who were being saved.” A vibrant community is a growing community. An old Irish proverb captures this, “The greatest thing a friend can do for their friends is to share them.”

Just as the Holy Trinity, who lacked nothing and had perfect love within the Godhead, saw fit to invite us into His love relationship, so too are we to invite others into our community. When we love God and love each other well, we will see God adding to our group.

Caring for others starts where we are at. Learn to Love God more and look around at the believers God has placed in your life. Commit to loving your church, your youth group and your small group as Christ has commanded. Watch how He uses that group to grow you, strength you and provide opportunities for you. Remember,