Party Bus, Planting, & Praying…Reaching Unreached Campuses

Jon Wong, an intern at USC working with fraternity students, is sharing on the bus ride down about why he chose to go start something new for God.

Jon Wong, an intern at USC working with fraternity students, is sharing on the bus ride about why he chose to start something new for God.

Last night as a response to my talk on Acts 8 and the story of Philip and the Ethiopian, I a gave a surprising and spontaneous response to the students. I asked them if God was to invite them to “Go South” now, who would be down?

I then told them that I had a bus parked outside and I had 20 tickets for the most eager people that wanted to go to an unreached campus right now and pray.

It was 10pm and we would be back at 1am.

20 students quickly ran down and we were off.

The goals of the night were these:

  1. To see which students were the most open and spontaneous…who had the planting spirit
  2. To encourage students to care about not only their own campus but the 70 in Los Angeles. 50 of which have very little to know witness.
  3. To learn about planting and hear stories and preaching to encourage them to go “where God is wanting to work next”
  4. To pray for an unreached place and call down the Kingdom of God there.
  5. To Have fun! Planting should be fun and the most fun…I think 🙂

Check out the video and see how the driver responded! Incredible

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Three Things Effective Leaders Must Do

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By Chris Nichols

Life in ministry can be frantically full, especially in a ministry setting where apostolic and evangelistic gifts are being effectively demonstrated.  Pushing forward into new territory, calling skeptics and seekers to belief, and gathering them into Jesus centered community are foundational elements of ministry culture and is invigorating for everyone involved.  Whether you are planting or building, these are essential qualities that need to be valued and encouraged.

But the leaders of apostolic movements must do more than churn up evangelistic and expansion activity.  They need always be aware when ministry activity is edging into chaotic, gospel activity rather than strategic kingdom advancement.

In order to avoid developing that kind of frenetic ministry culture, effective leaders of apostolic movements must be ready and willing to do three things in order to lead effectively.

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The Importance of Language: Are Apostles For Today?

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The term apostle can provoke all kinds of reactions. What exactly does this word mean? Are there really present day apostles? If so, what do they do? And why does it matter? These are all really important questions. This blog post series is an attempt to look at these questions and point to biblical answers. I have asked Tim Catchim, a great thinker and writer on the apostolic, to write a blog series for us. Here is post one in the series “Are Apostles For Today?”

In Organization at the Limit, a book dedicated to looking at organizational dynamics that contributed to the Columbia space shuttle disaster, William Ocasio discusses the unique connection between language and our ability to “see” what is going on around us. Language has the subtle, yet powerful ability to focus our attention. It can point us toward existing problems and solutions, or it can blind us from those very things. In other words, the language we commonly use can greatly influence what gets noticed and what gets ignored. He says it like this, “It’s not that language determines what can be thought, but that language influences what routinely does get thought.”[1]

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Sentralized West Coast

Speaker-GroupJoin us for the Sentralized West Coast 2014 gathering in Costa Mesa January 23rd-25th, 2014. We will be hosting some of the best missional thinkers and practitioners in the world.

Come spend time with and learn from Alan and Deb Hirsch, Michael Frost, Ori Brafman, Neil Cole, Hugh Halter, Jen Hatmaker, Dan Kimball, Noel Castellanos, Lance Ford, Kathy Escobar, Kim Hammond, Lisa Sharon Harper, Caesar Kalinowski, Matt Smay, Leroy Barber, Efrem Smith, Jon Huckins, Sean Gladding, Beau Crosetto, Brad Brisco and others.

We will be offering 14 main sessions, 27 breakout sessions, and significant “living room” times to network and connect with all the presenters. So get registered, mark your calendar and plan on joining us in Costa Mesa in January!

Lost & Found

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[This post is part of a series called Rooted. Find the other posts here]

Delinquent Donkeys

Maybe someone left the gate unlatched. Or maybe one of the animals leaned hard against the wooden rails of the coral. Regardless, the herd of donkeys escaped their quarters and wandered off to who knows where. When the loss was discovered, Kish longed to get his valuable pack animals back. In the 10th century B.C economy, donkeys were the fuel efficient cargo trucks of the day. So Kish recruited his handsome son Saul and a trusted servant and sent them on a search. They looked far and wide. No donkeys. Finally the servant said, “There is a man of God in the next village. Let’s ask him.” So their loss, longing, and search led them, as a last resort, to seek God for help.

But what they found was not what they expected. Their seemingly haphazard search for delinquent donkeys led them into the middle of an epic search conducted by none other that Yahweh himself. The Lord was looking for a man with a heart for God who would serve his people with him. He is still looking.

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