The Kitchen is here!

OK guys, those of you whole follow my blog know that I don’t use this blog to pitch products very often. I’m making an exception for this one because it is so exciting. And just in full disclosure, in case you didn’t realize this already, I do work for KidzMatter, the company producing the product I’m about to discuss.

Today KidzMatter launched a all-new quarterly curriculum called The Kitchen. It’s just what you’d expect from KidzMatter and more: clean, easy-to-use, fun, entertaining, and a whole bunch of other adjectives I could throw at you but won’t for sake of length. :) It’s for kids’ ministries from 1st-6th grade for right now. It’s got some pretty sweet lessons, great videos, music, and a ton of other stuff.

I’m not just posting this here because I’ll score brownie points with my boss. (Though it does help!) I’ve been given the privilege of working behind the scenes the last few months with the curriculum author, Tina Houser, on getting this project in place. She’s a children’s ministry veteran and has so much to say. Her excitement for this curriculum is over the top. I know that she has poured weeks into just getting this one month ready for launch. She believes that this is something that people will use and love. Her excitement has me excited too! I hope you’ll check it out and download the sample lesson. I think you’ll agree with me that it’s awesome stuff. Check it out at kidzmatter.com/kitchen.

But God.

Tonight was our annual Praise Dinner/Worship Service at my home church, Liberty Baptist. Every Thanksgiving week, we come together to enjoy a meal (like every good Christian) and have a service with testimonies and singing. I look forward to this service all year.

I was sitting in service tonight flipping through my Bible on the awesome YouVersion iPhone app. I felt that I needed to read Ephesians 2. I flipped (or tapped) over there, and read these 10 verses:

1 And you were dead in the trespasses and sins 2 in which you once walked, following the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work in the sons of disobedience— 3among whom we all once lived in the passions of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, like the rest of mankind. 4But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which he loved us, 5even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ— by grace you have been saved— 6and raised us up with him and seated us with him in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus,7so that in the coming ages he might show the immeasurable riches of his grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus. 8For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, 9 not a result of works, so that no one may boast.10For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them. (Eph. 2:1-10, ESV, emphasis mine)

I got done reading that and those two little words stuck out at me. “But God…” Those two little words are the turning point. “But God” changes everything.

We are all, by nature, sinners living in the passions of our flesh. Then God “but”s in. His rich mercy and love don’t just save us from Hell–a powerful thing by itself–but they raise us up with him and seated us next to him. All for what? Just so he could show us His grace. That’s it. He saved us just to lavish on us his grace.

Even crazier? Not 10 minutes after I got done glancing over this passage the pastor starts reading it from the stage. God had a message tonight! I pray that it might stick with you like it is with me. Go out and remember God’s “but”. It changes everything.

Free stuff from Chris Tomlin and Matthew Paul Turner!

Matthew Paul Turner (@jesusneedsnewpr on Twitter) is running a pretty awesome giveaway with Chris Tomlin. You’ll get all kinds of good stuff like turkey, a CD, a movie, a book, and more. You can check it out at MPT’s blog.

P.S. I’ve got a real blog post bouncing around in my head that’s coming up soon. It involves football!

True Vocation

Here at Indiana Wesleyan, the university requires a class called “World Changers.” Every student seems to have a different opinion of the class. It hasn’t been awful so far, and we’re talking about a lot of deep questions. I really, really like deep questions.

Today in class we were covering the 4 Life Questions (more on those at some point in the future). In talking about what we’re called to do in life, my prof (Brad Garner) quoted theologian Frederick Buechner:

True vocation is the place where your deep gladness meets the world’s deep need.

That quote really set off a firestorm of thoughts in my head. Too often we refer to our job as our vocation. It’s not. Our vocation is the thing that deeply satisfies us in Christ while working to fulfill the needs of the world. We can look at great figures in missions and the church and see this, yes. But look at more than that. Look at businessmen and women changing the world they’re in. Video editors. Secretaries. Waitresses. Firefighters. Teachers. Factory workers. Every single one of them can do something to meet the world’s needs from their place of work.

Additionally, it made me think of something else. For many, their job and their vocation are not the same. The youth pastor at my church worked for many years as a mattress salesman while working only part-time for the church. Mattress salesman was his job. Ministry was his vocation. Every Christian has to have a job. We also have to have a vocation. And the greatest thing in the world for God is finding where the two concepts converge in our lives everyday.

What are your thoughts?

Creation

I just wanted to drop in and let you guys know that I’m going to be in NYC for about 2 weeks!  I’m really excited about it, and I wanted to blog one last time before I went, so here goes:

Have you ever just looked at the world around you?  Yes, I know you see it all the time.  But I’m not talking just seeing it.  I’m talking really looking at it.  I did that tonight.  I was just making a short little trip, maybe 2 minutes away.  As I drove past our abundant corn and soybean fields here in Indiana, I saw the beauty in them for the first time in a long time.  Something was different about them.  They had a spectacular, enthralling allure.  Simple, green plants.

Over those little green plants stood a massive, fiery orange sun just setting below the horizon.  A veritable symphony of colors from magenta, to cyan, to a majestic yellow, and finally to a royal purple burst across the sky.  It was otherworldly.  It wasn’t that impressive, but it was beautiful.

On the way back home, I passed several people just cruising down the road.  Yet in them, I saw an even greater beauty.  It was the beauty of the very image of God created in them.  They weren’t exceptionally attractive people (especially the one old guy…eeew), but they were God’s people.  They had the visage of an omnipotent, omniscient Creator.

God gave us creation.  All of it.  He told us to appreciate it and take care of it.  God gave us creation for rest, and for our enjoyment.  The next time you’re just driving mindlessly into work thinking about all of the tasks you have to accomplish, just stop.  (Not literally, as that may cause a serious traffic flow issue.)  Stop your thinking and look at the world and the creation around you.  Look at it as if you’d never seen it before.  Find rest in it.  That’s why it’s there.  Don’t neglect it.

Page 5 of 23« First...«34567»1020...Last »