God moving into the neighborhood

http://globalopps.org/tmbriefs/MoveIn2.jpg

From time to time The Message is just brilliant in the way it has paraphrased some of the texts in the Bible. John 1:14 (MSG) says:

“The Word became flesh and blood and moved into the neighborhood.”

Anyone who is involved in tentmaking will from time to time be asked what tentmaking is all about. The simple answer is this:  It is all about God moving into the neighborhood. By sending Christian professionals to work in other countries and places, God’s kingdom is established in new neighborhoods all over the world.

A few years ago Barna research surveyed why people come to Christ. According to their statistics most people become believers because they have a close relationship to someone who knows Jesus.

Workplaces and neighborhoods are wonderful places for making contacts with new people. These relationships are creating highways along which the Gospel can travel.

Unfortunately other surveys show that many believers often spend most of their time hanging out with other people who are already followers of Jesus. In this way great opportunities for sharing the Gospel are lost.

One married couple once decided to make changes in their lives in order to build friendships with more people who didn’t know Christ. They promised each other that they would make sure that 50 per cent of the people who came to their home would be those who had no faith in Jesus. The decision caused huge changes. First they had to stop inviting their Christian friends. And then they had to befriend people who had little or no knowledge about Jesus.

Two Challenges

First, we will challenge you to write down the names of friends with whom you have regular contact. As you look at the list, ask yourself if you should befriend more people who do not know Jesus Christ in order to introduce them to him.

Second, we would like you to look at the map below showing where in the world the Gospel is least known. We ask you to prayerfully consider if there are any new places God is asking you to go so that he will be able to move through you into some new neighborhoods.

Six Principles for Sharing Your Faith in the Workplace: Or Anywhere Else

http://globalopps.org/tmbriefs/paul.jpg

Most Christian want to share their faith but for one reason or another they often don’t. It may be fear of embarrassment, or offending someone; or the sense that the time is not right, or that they lack adequate preparation and don’t know the right methods.

To keep it simple, the best time and place is in the course of everyday activities while you are in the presence of non-believers. One can learn a lot by following the example of the Apostle Paul. Let’s take the account in Acts 17.22-31. Paul is in the Areopagus where the thinkers from Athens all go to hang out and talk. What can be observed about his interaction with them.

1. He was ready. His preparation was not for a specific kind of situation or encounter. Rather he had prepared himself by prayer, prior study of God’s Word, and dependence on the Holy Spirit. He knew what he believed and trusted God to guide him to bring to mind what was needed for the specific situation.

Today that might look like a person who is active in his church and spends time in Bible study, prayer and spiritual development. Ideally, he has a mentor, or discipleship relationship with others in the body of Christ. He does not allow the church program to dominate all of his agenda and balances his time with family and with unsaved from his neighborhood or work.

2. He was positive. Even in the face of hostile doubters he was not hostile towards them. Instead he pointed out their religious interest and commended them for it. This became a bridge to introduce them to the real God.

Find something in the life of a person you are witnessing to that reveals their desire to do good, or a subconscious awareness of void in their life that only God can fill. Talk about it sympathetically with them.

3. He started where they were. Paul accepted the limitations of their knowledge and started from the point of their awareness. They had erected a statue to the unknown god because of their fear of not “covering all the bases” and causing trouble for having omitted one of the gods. They recognized forces and beings outside their control had impact on their lives. So he started from the point of their thinking and took them further.

In today’s world it might not be a statue but it could be videos or pop music that express social failure or despair. It might be the idea that every path leads to God or all gods are the same so it is not important. Perhaps it is signs of violence or loneliness in the neighborhood. Whatever, condition we find people in we need to understand them and start from that point.

4. He showed interest in people. He went and hung out where they were. He listened to them and showed interest in the things that interested them. He obviously, spent time understanding the poets and philosophers who had shaped their thinking.

It is so disheartening when a Christian says, “I couldn’t go there, they do ____ (fill in the blank with your choice of sin) there. Exactly, that is where you find the needy, not in church. A woman in our community spends her time in strip clubs befriending sex workers and listening to the stories of their broken lives. When they realize they are at the end of their rope, they reach out to her and she ministers God’s love to them.

5. He told them the way to reconcile with God, when the time was right. He did not begin by telling them they needed to be reconciled with God. First he had to gain their interest and confidence. When he sensed they were ready to understand the importance of the way of reconciliation then he tells them of God’s plan.

One does not have to wait to be asked before talking about God’s plan of reconciliation, but it should be at a time when their conversation reveals they are aware of a problem. This calls for sensitivity to the leading of the Spirit.

6. He gave the Word, and then he left. He gave them the message and then moved on. He knew that what he had to say was controversial and that most were not convinced. But he chose not to stay and argue (harangue) with them. He planted the seed and then left the Holy Spirit with them to use it in their minds for a while. It’s best to give people some space to “digest” what they have heard and leave them hungry for more, rather than to feel that one is pressuring them to go where they do not want to go. The Holy Spirit will continue working in them, and when the time is right they will come back for more.

Global Opportunities founder, Ruth Siemens, tells many stories of how this works in her article on Fishing Evangelism. Once after misplacing a great sum of money her staff realized her concern. When it was found staff commented on how lucky she was. She quickly replied it was not luck but that she prayed to God and he helped her find it. She did not elaborate at the time and walked away. Later when the staff person was having a problem of their own she approached Ruth and asked how this relationship with God worked and if she would pray for help in her need. The staff person was ready and responsive at that point.

These are simple principles… Be ready…  be friendly…  be intentional…  be interested…  trust in the Holy Spirit… move on. Practice them. It’s not that complicated.

TOP Ways to Share Your Faith in the Workplace

http://globalopps.org/tmbriefs/man.jpg

Phill Sandahl

The essence of being a tentmaker is to live an integrated faith in all that you do, whether at work or play, so that others will see the work of the Father through you. This is true whether you are living in your birth culture, or as a guest in another culture. Living in another culture just adds another layer of complexity.

Interpersonal relationships are a big part of taking Christ to the nations. Holidays and celebration days are especially rich opportunities for building and extending those relationships. One might say it is peak “fishing season” for fishers of men. There are more opportunities for connecting and people seem to be in a more open and receptive mood.

Recently I came across some good lists of practical suggestions for how to share ones faith with neighbors and another one focused on the workplace. While there were a lot of useful ideas I quickly realized it was written by, and for, North Americans. Some will work, and some won’t, in multi-cultural settings. They are starting points to discover some of the best ways to engage people naturally in your specific workplace.

 These are my top 5 ways to engage cross culturally in the workplace:

 1. Share stories about your/their family traditions related to the holidays
 2. Share food from your/their cultural tradition
 3. Attend their parties – invite them to your
 4. Find out when there are special events in their lives (birthdays, etc) and seek
    to recognize and bless them
 5. Go out of your way to recognize the people who are often overlooked in the
     workplace. Learn the names of all the people in your workplace and pray for
     them.

Holidays offer increased opportunity to build relationships for those who are open to seeing them. It is “open Season” for fishers of men. It may not even be a holiday where you are, but a holiday of your host culture, which you are not accustomed to celebrating. Either way you win. There are twice as many opportunities in a multi-cultural setting.

 The Novena

An air of expectancy filled the neighborhood. The celebration of Quito’s Independence Day had passed and people were preparing for Christmas. Ecuador, having a long catholic tradition, has a celebration they call the Novena which takes place for the nine days leading up to Christmas. Each neighborhood wanted to do something together to recognize the season. Ours was no different.

Often Novenas just become pretexts for drunken partying completely missing the original purpose of preparing to celebrate the birth of Jesus. With Ecuadorian friends we set out to redeem the time. We gathered all the adults in the neighborhood together and made our proposal. Each night we would have a party for all the children in the neighborhood. All of the families would contribute food and help with games and activities including the launching of brightly colored hot-air balloons which sailed off into the night – a favorite of all Ecuadorians.

The Christmas story was told in 9 installments, one for each night, accompanied by singing and visiting. Everyone had a wonderful time.

It was so successful that when the next major vacation event came along – Carnival – the neighbors said they wanted to do something special for that occasion as well. In the end a bus was chartered and the whole community rented a retreat house on the beach where all the families hung out together for a whole week.

 Strangers Bearing Gifts

There was a knock at the door. Who could it be? Diane was not expecting visitors. When she opened the door she was shocked to see a whole family of Indians with an armload of wrapped gifts. She greeted the strangers and asked how she could help them. Perhaps they knocked at the wrong home. No they explained, they had come to the right place.

We are your neighbors from the next block over, and we have been curious to meet you and know why you have come to our country. Though Christmas is not practiced in our land we know that in your country it is a time of gift giving, so we have come to give you gifts and meet you.

This was the beginning of an unexpected opportunity to share about Christ with the people of India with whom they had come to work.

 Cookies in India

Baking and sharing cookies with the neighbors during the holidays was a family tradition in our home. So when my grandchildren moved to India, they continued the practice there. They found it took on a new cultural twist. You can’t just drop the cookies off and leave. You are always invited in to visit. First you have to explain what the strange practice is and why you are giving things to your neighbors. Of course, there is also the serving of tea and conversation. Each visit will last from one to two hours so you need to allow lots of time and several days to complete the project.

At this time of the year it is easy to get caught up in buying and giving gifts. Perhaps one should ask instead, “How can I bless the people in my life?” then instead of focusing on buying and giving one might find that the best way to bless is to give of your time and energy. This is the real spirit of the season. “For God so loved the world, …He gave His Son…” because He wanted a relationship with us.