Category Archives: Outreach

Celebrate Recovery Principle #5

We’re preparing to start the Celebrate Recovery program at the Lake Merced Church of Christ in San Francisco.

Celebrate Recovery is a Christ-centered recovery program for people who struggle with various life issues – not just drugs and alcohol.  Many have come to know the Lord through this program while simultaneously recovering from the hurts, habits, and hangups present in their life.

We’re formally kicking off CR at Lake Merced in a few weeks, and on the Sunday mornings leading up to that time the LMC ministry staff is preaching a series of lessons based on the eight Celebrate Recovery principles taken from the Beatitudes. Today I was privileged to present the lesson on principle #5:

(For more preaching, visit the Sermons page).

I’ll be glad when we formally start the meetings – this will be great for our church and community.

Anyone reading this have experience with CR?

Tagged , , , , , , , , , ,

Great Passage Articulating Mission in Ministry

When I think about the mission of the church, lots of Scriptures come to mind. One group I’m particularly fond of is found in 2 Corinthians 5:

2 Corinthians 5:14-20a
14 For Christ’s love compels us, because we are convinced that one died for all, and therefore all died.
15 And he died for all, that those who live should no longer live for themselves but for him who died for them and was raised again.
16 So from now on we regard no one from a worldly point of view. Though we once regarded Christ in this way, we do so no longer.
17 Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come!
18 All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation:
19 that God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting men’s sins against them. And he has committed to us the message of reconciliation.
20a We are therefore Christ’s ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us.

I love this section of Scripture.

Paul starts out by saying, “Christ’s love compels us!” In other words, Christ’s love should be the motivating force behind all of our actions. As it says in 1 John 4:19, “We love because He first loved us.”

When people realize how much Jesus loves them – how much they’ve been given – they can’t help but give back! Jesus’ love is like a fire that serves as fuel for your spiritual life! Without it, you’re simply out of gas.

Paul understood this, and Jesus’ love, put on display through His sacrifice on the cross, literally drove everything Paul did. He could not stop obsessing over it, and this is why he could take a lickin’ and keep on tickin’!

Paul goes on in v. 16 saying, “From now on we regard no one from a worldly point of view.” What does this mean?

Notice the word “we” – Paul is writing to the Corinthian church – a group of Christians. He’s saying, “We, as Christians, do not look at people the way the world looks at people. We don’t judge people from outward appearances. We don’t categorize and stereotype. We don’t assign value based on worldly standards. We see people the way Jesus sees them – as souls, priceless and beautiful, created in the image of God.”

The Corinthians especially would have had a tough time with this. Their society was full of elitist snobs, and the snobbery was contagious. Paul’s telling them, “Don’t be a bunch of snobs! Don’t look at people the world looks at them, and don’t treat people the way the world treats them!”Why?

He explains in v. 17 – “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come!” In other words, “You’re not the same old person you used to be; you’re something completely new – something different. You’ve been washed by Christ’s blood, and have been reconciled to God.”

That word, “reconciled,” is one I frequently find myself thinking about. Reconciliation means “to exchange a hostile relationship with a loving one.” When Paul tells the Corinthians they’ve been reconciled, he’s telling them that, through Jesus, they’ve exchanged a hostile relationship for a loving one with God the Father. Reconciliation means they’ve moved from condemnation to salvation, unrighteousness to righteousness, folly to wisdom, darkness to light. Reconciliation equals newness, and it’s a beautiful thing.

But he doesn’t stop there – v. 18-20a says, “All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation: that God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting men’s sins against them. And he has committed to us the message of reconciliation. We are therefore Christ’s ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us.

Herein lies the mission of the church: carrying out Christ’s “ministry of reconciliation” initiated after the Fall by the Father, culminating in His Son’s death, burial, and resurrection.

The entire world is infected with the disease of sin, this disease in 100% terminal, Jesus is the cure, and we, the church continue His ministry. We are called to administer Jesus to a dying world through ourselves as new creations in Christ!

Paul describes us in carrying out our mission as “ambassadors.”

This is a military term used by the Romans to describe a particular type of official serving their government. When the Romans would conquer a territory by pounding it into submission, often the conquered peoples would remain hostile toward their rule for a very long time. A specialist known as an “ambassador” would be sent to govern that  territory with the sole purpose of fostering good relations with whomever they represented (in this case the Roman empire).

Paul’s use of the word here would have meant much to the Corinthians as Corinth was a Roman city. Paul was saying, “We are representatives of Christ in a territory that is largely hostile toward Him, but we need to work to fix that. We must introduce people to Jesus, and assist in fostering a good relationship between they and He as an ambassador would.”

And I love this last bit: “as though God were making His appeal through us.”

I’ll be discussing the vision and mission of Lake Merced’s college ministry with the students this evening, and this is one of the passages we’ll look closely at.

Studying this fires me up.

Be a blessing to someone today!

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Humans vs. Zombies plus Your Campus Ministry: Students are Dying to Get Involved

Campus ministers – I have an event idea for you that will cause your university administration to get lots and lots of complaints.

“Why in the world would I be interested in hosting an event that garners lots of complaints?!?” you ask.

Trust me, you want the complaints – the more the merrier. The complaints are your friend.

What event idea am I talking about? A campus-wide game known as Humans vs. Zombies (or HvZ for short)- that’s what I’m talking about.

Humans vs. Zombies is a phenomena currently sweeping the nation’s college campuses (check out Bobby Ross Jr’s blog about it and this story from The Washington Post). It’s basically a gigantic game of tag made up of hundreds of participants (i.e. college students).

The rules are simple: in order to play, students must register by the deadline on the local game organizer’s custom website (provided by the national HzV organization). Registrants are then assigned a number that they’re required to right down and hold on to. As soon as the registration deadline is passed, the game starts.

The organizers (which you could be) are tasked with selecting a small number of registrants (2 or 3) to act as “OZs,” or “Original Zombies.” Everyone else starts out as a “human.” Once the game starts, humans are required to identify themselves by wearing a red bandana tied around their arm, and the zombies’ objective is to turn the humans into zombies by “feeding” on them (all they have to do to “feed” is tag them).

The original zombies have an advantage in the beginning of the game because nobody knows who they are when the game starts (they don’t have to identify themselves for the first hour or two of the game). Once a human becomes a zombie by being tagged, they have to stop wearing their bandanna on their arm instead wearing it on their head Rambo-style to identify themselves as a zombie (the OZs also have to wear a bandanna on their head after the first couple of hours when their covert time runs out).

But wait … it gets better. Humans have the ability to defend themselves if they’re carrying a “weapon.” If a zombie is coming after them, they can throw a wadded up pair of socks (i.e. a zombie grenade) at them, or shoot them with a nerf gun (if school administration says nerf guns are okay to use). If they score a hit, the zombie is out for fifteen minutes giving the human time to run away.

Zombies must “feed” – that is, tag a human – every 48 hours or they “starve” and are permenantly out of the game (zombies tend to be very motivated to tag humans because of this).

When a zombie “kills” a human (tags them), they’re required to take the registration number from the human they’ve tagged and enter it in to the host’s HvZ website. Once the kill is registered, the tagged person’s status goes from “human” to “zombie” on the website (so everyone knows who’s who – this game is much too large for the honor system).

Game organizers have the ability to determine where the game can be played and what areas are off limits. The game is always limited to the college campus – off campus is considered out of bounds –  but certain areas on campus can be designated as safe zones (for instance, the inside of campus buildings can be designated as safe zones, but anywhere outside on campus is a play zone – game moderators determine this ahead of time).

I know what you’re thinking … “Yeah, that sounds like fun, Wes, but an afternoon game of tag can’t be that cool!”

Yeah, maybe an afternoon game of tag wouldn’t be that cool, but this is far from an afternoon game of tag … an HvZ game normally lasts for 4 to 7 days – 24 HOURS A DAY – an often starts at midnight on the first day.

That’s right – if you’re a human and decide to venture outside of your dorm room at 4am to wash your stinky undershorts, there may be a zombie lurking in the bushes just waiting to jump out and and “eat” you. You’d better go to the laundry room armed! Better yet, you’d better take some buddies who are still human with you, and they’d better have their zombie grenades and nerf guns on them because outside is dangerous!

Seriously though – normal, everyday campus life turns into an adventure when you’re playing HvZ.

It’s not uncommon to see groups of twenty or so humans roaming campus in the middle of the night with their nerf guns and wadded up socks “zombie hunting,” and it’s also not uncommon to see a human getting chased across the quad in the middle of the day by a group of a dozen zombies. It’s unsafe for humans and zombies alike to venture out alone!

During the play time organizers can create special missions, add corresponding events, whatever – organizers are encouraged to get creative with this.

Now you’re saying, “Okay Wes, that sounds pretty cool, but let’s go back to what you said in the beginning … you said this game will cause my school’s administration to get all kinds of complaints! Why would I be interested in a game that will cause the administration to get hassled?!?”

Good question, but as my friends who’ve hosted the game have told me, the complaints are nothing but a good thing. Why? Because the complaints won’t come from people annoyed you’re playing HvZ on campus – no siree. The complaints will come from people who really, really want to play HvZ (after they see how much fun it is) but missed the deadline to register and aren’t allowed!

I’m serious – this has already happened to two college minister friends of mine (Clint Hill – CIA Corpus Christi, TX; Lynn Stringfellow – CIA Tampa, FL) who hosted this game on their campuses. Their school administrators were flooded with complaints from people upset they weren’t allowed to play!

The result in both instances? The school admins asked each campus ministry leader to organize another round of this game later in the year and offered to pay to advertise it so everyone on campus would know about it and be able to register in time. Honest – this happened on two campuses independent of each other!

Both ministries had several hundred students participate in HvZ with them the first time, but they’re expecting more like a couple of thousand in the future with their school administrations’ help!

As they put it, hosting this event has been the best advertisement for their campus ministry they’ve ever had. One minister said 25 visitors showed up to his weekly campus Bible study because the students learned about their ministry and made friends with ministry members through playing HvZ. This game has also lead to individual Bible studies, and I’ll leave it up to you to decide whether playing a game where people pretend to be zombies that can lead to Bible studies is a good thing or a bad thing. :p

If you’re a campus minister blessed with a student organization, I encourage you to arrange for your club to host HvZ on your campus. Use it as a tool for your ministry members to build relationships with the students you interact with through the game. It may sound silly, but it’s really bearing fruit for those that have (check out this article written for The University of South Florida’s school paper – good ink).

If you’re interested in hosting a game, go here to get the details about what’s involved, and if you’re a campus minister who would like to talk to my friends who’ve already hosted this game, leave a comment expressing your desire to speak with them and I’ll see about putting you in touch.

It’s all about connecting people with Jesus, folks. We oughta use whatever tools available to us within reason to connect people to Him – even silly games like this one.

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,