My name is Jeff and I'm a pastor of a small, local, Christian fellowship

It's a wonderful thing to love your work; to know that when you do it you are doing something that you were born to do. I am so fortunate to be both. I don't say I am the best at what I do. God knows that are so many others who do it better. But I do feel fairly lucky to be called by such a good God to do work I can only do with his help, to be loved by a beautiful woman, and to have a workshop where I can work my craft. These musings of mine are part of that work.
Powered By Blogger

Friday, February 24, 2012

Mission Progress Report


This past week, the steering group of what we simply refer to at Refuge as the Spring Missions Event began planning this year’s version. We are quick to not call it a “missions conference” as that implies big-ness and this is a decidedly small-scale occurrence as those things go. But having said that this (now) annual happening – called “For the Glory of the Name” the last two years – has been catalytic in the life of our fellowship in creating a greater vision and awareness of the work Jesus still calls his disciples to.

Some of us helped Dave....
Missions” – as the word is understood in churches like Refuge in the Charismatic/evangelical tradition – has been a regular part of our fellowship since before I got here. Under my predecessor, John Tuttle, our fellowship made a commitment to tithe 10% of our annual income to mission work (I don't know percentage-wise how we're doing today but most years its close – or more if you count all the mission money that flows through our small coffers). What’s more, the proximity of the YWAM-Northwood campus has nearly insured that there has been a regular flow of individuals who have either attended or joined our fellowship over the years who are committed to extending the Gospel to the uttermost part of the realm. And when you foster relationship with people who have dedicated their lives to “going”, often you end up coming alongside them to help in what they do simply because they’re your friends. Dave and Pam Innerebner, serving on the Lac Coutre Oreilles Reservation about an hour and a half north of here, are a case in point. Dave was a YWAM staffer when he began attending CFGT in the early 90s and as he has pursued his calling to serve the First Nations people, some of us have helped him in stints whether it’s been joining him in outreach, assisting him build “the Lodge” on the grounds of what is now the YWAM-Discovery campus or the biannual wood-cutting events one of the guys from Refuge organizes. For many years in November, CFGT would host our annual “reenactment” of the first Thanksgiving as Dave and his tribe of First Nation folk would come down off the Rez for turkey dinner with all the fixins'. And some years, it even led to dancing. At the turn of the 21st Century, we helped found and establish The Garage, our local youth center. And just a few years ago we joined a couple of other local fellowships in our area to open The Well International, a ministry in nearby Barron committed to reaching out to the small but growing Somali refugee population there (see Same time next year). All this to say that Refuge has been involved in mission and mission work for some time.

In 2010, the first year of “For the Glory of the Name”, Duane and Lois Pederson (See The essence of discipleship), on an extended sabbatical leave from the YWAM Crossroads Discipleship Training School they lead in Baguio, Philippines, were part of the planning group. As I recall, Renee and I met out at their cabin on Loon Lake east of New Auburn, and it was Duane, in fact, who was the inspiration for the title of our event. “We don't go in search of adventure. We go because he calls. We go for the glory of the Name,” is an approximate facsimile of Duanespeak. Duane, a former farmer and pastor, has a very practical, no-nonsense approach to missions. He and Lois have been serving cross-culturally overseas since the early 90s and are spiritual parents of many pastors and ministry leaders in the Far East. And so going is fun and includes adventure but ultimately the matter is about obedience that flows out of love for the God who has saved them. A promoter Duane is not and so whenever they return from their life on the Pacific Rim he never regales us with inspiring missionary tales out of principle – his humility forbids him from doing such. So, the only way to really get a grasp of the impact of their response to God's call is to go there and see for yourself (In '03 and '04, two small teams from CFGT did just that. And last year I taught a week at their CDTS and then Randy and I joined Duane and a few others who traveled up “into the bush” to spend a week with the Agta, Filipino aboriginals who live in far northeastern Luzon). In any case, our small planning group seized upon the next best thing from going there: we would invite all those we currently support either financially or regularly in prayer to come together for a weekend of intentional relationship building and strengthening.
Duane sharing at Refuge
In that, we feel, we were successful. Duane and Lois were on furlough, Dave and Pam came down off the Rez, Wade and Jessica Copland, the young California couple directing The Well (as well as Paul & Keri, another couple who were working with the Coplands at the time) came over from Barron, Tom and Lisa (YWAM-Northwood staffers who for several years running have lead small teams to northern Thailand as part of a DTS outreach) drove into town and even Don, the Director of the Chetek Youth Center Project (a.k.a., “The Garage”) were all on hand on that Friday night to share a brief synopsis of their ministry following an ethnic meal made of selections from each of the countries where they serve. The next afternoon, our ministry team assembled out at the River House just outside of Chetek and spent all afternoon and into the early evening ministering and praying over each couple. We had presumed it would only take a few hours and then we would enjoy a cook-out by the river but every couple were in need of ministry and that became the order of the day. On Sunday morning, Duane shared and challenged Refuge to a greater commitment to the Great Commission and living lives for “the glory of the Name.”

Crew Chief Dennis at Copland's house
Much came out of that first event. Relationships were, indeed, strengthened and some people who live very sacrificially were encouraged in the pursuit of their calling. Randy, whose heart was being stirred by a little book he had read while elk hunting in Colorado the fall before (Radical by David Platt), was “volunteered” to mc the Friday night gathering and surprised us all with the energy and passion which he brought to the task that evening. And last, but not least, during the Saturday ministry time, Jessica from The Well had shared a very practical need that weighed heavily on her: the roof of their house leaked and there was no money to fix it. Jon, a man in the building business and one of our deacons, heard that and the next day informed me that our small fellowship was to take that on. A few months later, while we were on sabbatical leave, that is exactly what happened. Their roof was replaced courtesy of generous donations of labor, equipment and money from people from our fellowship and a handful of others.

Focused on the Horn
As I detailed in an earlier post (see "Go to Africa!"), I was a bit surprised when Randy (who of his own volition had moved from just pitching in to actually help plan the event) and Renee and Kari felt persuaded that our focus for the 2011 event was to be Africa, specifically the nine countries around the Horn – Somalia, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Sudan (which had yet to be divided into North and South Sudan), Ethiopia, Eritrea, Djoubouti and Egypt). We had no one there that our fellowship was in any kind of longstanding relationship with but if Africa was where we were supposed to draw our attention to, then it only made sense to find an African to speak to us. We found our Egyptian friend, Akram, but ultimately God found us a man to share with us his burden for his native country – Uganda – and sent him providentially our way just before our mini-missions conference was about to begin.

Maria stood in for all of us
On Friday night, we sat down to an African smorgasbord of falafel, sambusa, koshari and katayes and lots of rice. LeAnne led us in an African praise song sung in Swahili. And both Akram and Pastor John shared briefly of what was going on in their particular country. In the months leading up to the missions event, the planning group had asked for volunteers to “adopt” one of the nine countries for the weekend and every one was spoken for. On Saturday night, those who had adopted a country were responsible to present a list of prayer points to aid in our evening of intercession. None of us on the planning group were prepared for how seriously people took their assignment. Many prepared power point presentations and a few had created some things on poster board. The sharing alone lasted for an hour and a half and we all had a good laugh when Pastor John shared that he had learned things about Uganda he had never known before! On Sunday morning, Maria, a German woman with dual citizenship who is a part of us, asked if she could stand in the place of the European countries who in the 19th Century had colonized much of Africa and ask John's forgiveness for the exploitation that was done often in the name of Christendom. Pastor John was sincerely touched by this act of representative repentance. Later, in his rich Lugandan accent, he invited us to come to Uganda and “...serve the Lord!”

Our MC
Just like the first edition much has come about in part because of “For the Glory of the Name 2.” Most significantly, two weeks from today five of us from Refuge will be flying to Uganda to, among other things, visit Pastor John at his fellowship (Another group – four from Refuge, two from Chetek Alliance – flew out today bound for Kenya for a week before they head up to Israel for another 10 days). But looking closer at the make-up of this year's planning group is also revealing. As I mentioned earlier, two years ago Renee suggested we ask her husband, Randy, to MC the event, last year he helped plan it and this year he is the leader of Team Uganda. Renee went from encouraging those who serve in missions to going out and buying her passport and now eagerly preparing to leave with her husband on her first “out-of-the-country” missions journey.

Jon, who has been supportive of the mission event from the get-go has moved from observer/cheerleader to making a commitment to accompany Dennis whenever a wood-cutting crew heads north to Discovery or accompanying his wife to help serve a hot meal at the Benjamin House Shelter in Rice Lake, Barron County's only homeless shelter. He announced one night at one of the several Africa meetings we held following “For the Glory of the Name 2” that he had moved from “I'll never go to Africa” to “I'd better not say I'll never go.” Melissa, who has spiritual gifts of service and hospitality that get especially agitated around food, began a soup kitchen last year after God spoke to her at a leadership retreat we held. It began in the basement of Refuge with about 18-24 people attending once a week. About mid-year, after some consultations with some folks at Chetek United Methodist who had a similar dream, they officially combined efforts at their place this past fall and the result was synergistic: now regularly 60-70 people show up on Wednesday and Thursday night to sit down and enjoy a good hot meal.
The Meal in Common
And I haven't even mentioned Sheryl, the civil engineer from Refuge who feels compelled to step away from her fledgling new company and her very busy family and accompany us on our journey to Uganda or Troy, Tina, Cody and Sarah who shared this past Sunday that the reason they are going to Kenya is “that our heart might be broken by the things that break God's heart.” These are the résumés of disciples who are beginning to see what Jesus sees and are prepared to go where he leads whether that means across the yard or across the ocean. One trip may be more inexpensive than the other but each is fraught with its own kind of peril and ripe with opportunity to change the world one heart at a time. 
Be there soon...
 


No comments: