JR. Forasteros - November 13, 2011

TBA

This is Not the End

In witnessing the collapse of institutions Western culture has put our faith in for the last 500 years, we are despairing more and more as a society. Christians who are choosing to live in this world as Exiles, however, know that this is actually Good News because God is doing something new. We can feel the despair our culture feels as we mourn for the loss of what used to give us safety and security. But we can't stay there. We must choose to live by faith, to believe God's promises that This is Not the End!

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When have you been the furthest outside your comfort zone? For me one of the times that sticks out the most is when I went to speak at a Pastors’ Conference in Guatemala. I was there with five other USAmerican pastors. We flew into Guatemala City, and then had a six hour drive across the country to the city of Quetzaltenango. This was back when I was a youth pastor, and as soon as our host Carlos found out I was a youth pastor, he made a couple of calls and suddenly there was now a youth ministry conference in addition to the pastors’ conference, and I was the keynote speaker.

I had 4 years of experience as a youth pastor. Mi Espanol es muy malo. And back then it was even muy-er malo than it is now. And I knew zero about Guatemalan church culture or teen culture. I was wildly underqualified to speak at a youth ministry conference, to say nothing of being the only speaker.

 

We finally reached our hotel, and Carlos told me to be ready to leave after dinner. Leave? Yes, as it turned out, the new youth ministry conference was at a church across town. So after dinner, I climbed into a van with fifteen or so Guatemalan people, including my translator, and we went across town.

It was then that it occurred to me that if something happened – if there was a car accident or if somehow I got lost and on my own, I was functionally helpless. I didn’t speak the language. This was before cell phones had good international plans. And I was in the middle of a city I didn’t know at all.

I wasn’t scared – the people I was with were great. But I was struck for the first time in a long time how thoroughly helpless I was. I was wholly dependent on my hosts for everything – even basic communication.

How often are we in those kinds of situations – where we have little control, where we’re at the mercy of others? I’m guessing for most of us, the answer is “Not very often.” For good reason: it’s really uncomfortable to be out of control. (Maybe some of you are about to head into that situation for Thanksgiving.)

It’s not good to always feel out of control, but it is good sometimes. In fact, we’re going to explore today how Jesus calls us outside our comfort zones.

There are sometimes ways we need to grow, ways we need to encounter God that can only happen when we leave the comforts of home and risk.

Join us Sunday as we learn how and why God calls us to leave the comforts of home.

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