Archive for November, 2009


One sentence descriptor

Have you ever tried explaining what you do to somebody and it turns from what should be a one sentence descriptor to a briefing of your job description? Yesterday while on the phone with Adam, we finally figured out the best way to describe what XEE is and does. We actually stopped the conversation and had a mini-celebration as a result.

So without further ado: “XEE teaches Jesus followers how to tell the story of the gospel within the context of relationship.”

from Why We Love the Church

A friend had this quote posted on his facebook page this morning. Very thought provoking. Enjoy!

from JD Greear’s blog today:

“I can’t help but feel that lurking beneath the surface in much of the current disillusionment with the church is a dis-ease with the traditional message of salvation. People are passionate about the poor, the environment, and third-world debt. But they seem embarrassed by a violent, bloody atonement for sin, let alone any mention of the afterlife that hangs in the balance.

My observation is that as people grow tired of hearing about the atonement, salvation, the cross, and the afterlife, they grow tired of church. Because the more that sin and redemption and heaven and hell recede into the background, the more the church becomes just one among several options for making a difference in the world.

So as much as the church has been nothing but a holy huddle at times and as much as I admire zeal for good works, there is a danger in much of the missional literature that the gospel of God’s grace toward sinners gets swallowed up in urgent calls for world redemption and cultural transformation. There is a danger of centering our churches on adopting schools and offering parenting classes instead of being centered on the message of a heavenly Father who adopts unworthy children of wrath through the work of His Son on the cross. There is a danger that we find our unity in doing good missional deeds for our community and not in the good news of the gospel. There’s a danger our Christianity becomes all imperative and no indicative, all about what we need to do with God and little about what God’s done for us. There’s a danger that when people get disinterested in the gospel, they get disinterested in the church. And once they leave the church, they’ve left the only institution whose mission aims for eternity and whose gospel is truly good news.”

- Kevin DeYoung and Ted Kluck, Why We Love the Church, pp. 50-51

D.C. Roller

Today I write from the nations capitol of Washington D.C. George Roller, a co-laborer in Christ and good friend is the Executive Director of the Center For Christian Statesmanship.  For two years we’ve talked about putting a trip together and having me come out. What a treat it’s been to experience Capitol Hill with him!

So far, I’ve walked through the Senate buildings helping deliver flyers to all 100 US Senators for our Politics and Principles luncheon tomorrow, joined in and met Senate Chaplain Black during his Friday Bible study (only in America can the gospel be preached from inside the Senate Building, conquered old Rag Mountain in Virginia, visited Great Falls (saw some incredible kayakers surfing the rapids…check out the video,) and today wandered the hallowed halls of Capital Building, Supreme Court and Library of Congress.

It may sound like a lot of fun, and don’t be misled…it is, we are using this time to plan our Mission To Congress this coming summer. I’ve been blown away to think that so much of the world has been influenced from this one location. To walk where histories heroes such as Lincoln, Adams, Washington and Jefferson walked and set direction for a united nation. It’s been exciting to  see and experience. I’ll write more when I’m not exhausted and can share about our Politics and Principles luncheon.

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