Avoiding Busyness (Thirty Days To Greater Fruitfulness, Day 7)
This blog has been temporarily overtaken by my Thirty Days To Greater Fruitfulness Challenge. You can find out more by checking out the Introduction.
If you’re like me having “nothing” going on seems rather boring. Especially if you’re in the business of accomplishing change. Today has been a lesson in me not trying to make things happen. By the time most of my day was over, I told the Lord, “Lord, where should I go to do something to blog about today?” While I didn’t get a response, I sensed the Lord’s hand rest on me like a dad trying to put the breaks on an over-caffienated teenager. The only thing I can describe to you is that it seemed like the Lord wanted me to understand that it was important not to go out and “make something happen.”
That’s what this whole journey has been about in the first place, right? Slowing down and listening so that the activity that does happen actually has the marks of Jesus on it. And while activity is nice, I’m not in this for nice events or human made agendas. God works on a different plane and that’s what I’m attempting to tap into.
On a different note, yesterday in prayer I felt the presence of the Lord come into the room in a unique way that I haven’t sensed in a while. It was really refreshing and in my mind it’s an indicator that the Lord is up to something, though, what that is I’m not sure. All of that to say, make sure you enjoy His presence and really break past just the silence into an actual encounter with Jesus. It’s a world of difference that will change your world.
How about you? Have you been experiencing God’s presence as you’ve been listening? And how have you combated the need to feel busy?
Join us on the “Thirty Days to Greater Fruitfulness” experiment. For the rest of September we are spending 30 minutes in silent prayer listening to Jesus and then acting on what He asks us to do. Then we blog about the changes that are occurring in our lives through the marriage of listening and obedience. It’s not too late. If you’re just checking out that experiment feel free to jump in. And if you want more information, you can check it out here.
Photo Credit: Calendar by Adreanna Moyer Photography
The Apostolic Pattern (Why Are Multiplying Churches Necessary? Part 3)
This is Part 3 in the Series “Why Are Multiplying Churches Necessary?” It would be helpful to read Part 1 and Part 2.
“Jesus lives on in an apostolic mission that advances by church multiplication.” – Wolfgang Simson
If you’re familiar with the New Testament, you know Luke wrote the Gospel of Luke as a historical account of Jesus before, during, and immediately after the cross. What some don’t realize is the book of Acts is Luke’s historical account of the resurrected Jesus’ activity as He leads and guides the church into the very activities that characterized His ministry on Earth (cf. John 14:12-14, Acts 1:1-3). The heart of the matter is this: Jesus’ post resurrection ministry was lived out through the church in the book of Acts in the form of a multiplying church movement.
Let’s look at some quick facts. The Church Jesus left was insubstantial compared to the crowds who had followed Him before His death. Paul speaks of Christ appearing to 500 people after His resurrection (1 Corinthians 15:3-8). Since this is the highest number of post-resurrection numbers spoken of and Paul refers to these men as brothers, my assumption is they were the lump some of Jesus’ followers. Yet, by the early third century, this relatively obscure band of five hundred had become somewhere between 5 and 10% of the Roman Empire and up to 30% of some major cities.
The book of Acts records the harvest in language that should both stun us and move us to action. When Peter preaches at Pentecost in Acts Chapter 2, a massive harvest of 3,000 new believers come to the Lord. Luke describes it this way: and there were added that day about three thousand souls (Acts 2:41). This continued on for a season in the life of the early church (Acts 2:47, 5:14) and the results were significant growth that all of us would love to have.
However, eventually the church began to feel the burden of it’s growth. The result was a decision to multiply leadership beyond the apostles to the men we refer to as deacons in Acts 6. When this multiplication of ministry happened, a small but significant shift occurs in Luke’s story. Instead of the church having new members added to them, the church begins to multiply (Acts 6:7). The church didn’t just multiply one time. It multiplied several times (Acts 9:31, 12:24)
This is more than just semantics. The shift in language represents the fact that instead of just a few people doing much of the work, many people were embracing the mission of God. See, addition works like this: 2+2+2+2+2+2=12. Multiplication works like this: 2x2x2x2x2x2=64. The more multiplication you have happening the bigger the results. This is why Paul would tell Timothy to take what he had taught him and teach it to faithful men who would teach it to other faithful men (2 Timothy 2:2). It was a God-sized idea to expand the Kingdom.
And you couldn’t stop this multiplying church. Its multiplication made it hard to know where it started or ended. Before you knew it, this little group of Jesus followers became a multitude that had no visible leader. You could kill one of the leaders, but another would rise in its place. It’s why human’s hate viruses: they multiply out of control. This is what allowed the first century church to reach an unprecedented amount of people in such a short period of time.
Beloved we find ourselves in a season of history where we must recapture the spirit of evangelism and multiplication that gripped the early church. This isn’t a call to return to only first century practices, but to capture those elements that made them vital and caused the Gospel to spread like a virus throughout earth. Jesus is worthy of His name going forth and redeeming many in this hour. May we, like them, be consumed for His name’s sake and see the church multiply in the Earth.
Photo Credit: Onion Cells by Kaibara87
The First Signs of Fruit (Thirty Days To Greater Fruitfulness, Day 6)
This blog has been temporarily overtaken by my Thirty Days To Greater Fruitfulness Challenge. You can find out more by checking out the Introduction.
Sometimes fruit doesn’t come in the way you would expect. Take this little experiment we’re on for example. I figured the first signs of fruit would be someone getting healed or delivered. Maybe someone would be set free from a besetting sin or by the end of the month someone would get saved. These were the thoughts I had as I prepared for this month.
But the first signs of fruit have actually been people slowly beginning to let me know that their beginning to focus more on listening and obeying what they hear from Jesus. And so now there is this small group of people from different parts of the country who are beginning to listen to Jesus and do what He says. Imagine what could happen if we all began to do this and encourage one another forward into obedience to Christ’s voice. I say all of that to say, you are setting an example and pulling other people into listening and obedience just by doing it yourself. The fruit will begin to speak for itself.
At the same time, we need to continue to press in for more of God’s power and authority to accompany our obedience. Sean Hughely, one of the guys who presses me to go further in Jesus, just tweeted this tonight and I believe it’s applicable for where we’re at:
“If Jesus Lives in you, He might just change someone’s life forever today…THROUGH YOU!! If that statement bugs you, check your faith meter.”
This is the crux of what we’re aiming at in this challenge: touching Jesus, obeying His voice, and changing the world by doing so.
So, have you seen any fruit since we’ve begun the challenge? Tell us in the comment section what’s changed from listening and being obedient.
Join us on the “Thirty Days to Greater Fruitfulness” experiment. For the rest of September we are spending 30 minutes in silent prayer listening to Jesus and then acting on what He asks us to do. Then we blog about the changes that are occurring in our lives through the marriage of listening and obedience. It’s not too late. If you’re just checking out that experiment feel free to jump in. And if you want more information, you can check it out here.
Photo Credit: Calendar by Adreanna Moyer Photography