Christian Ministries Matter

Something clicked for me when I came to UGA and joined our BCM. For the first time, I feel a part of a Christian community. I experienced discipleship, leadership, service – all the things that never fell into place before have suddenly come together in the building on Lumpkin Street. I spend a large (probably too large) bulk of my time either at the B or thinking of everything I need to do the next time I’m at the B – and I absolutely love it. But not everyone feels the same way about collegiate ministry, or Christian ministries in general. In the past several weeks, I’ve heard several different perspectives surface in conversations:

“This ministry frustrates me. All we do is talk to our same group of Christian friends! That’s not real discipleship!”

“We keep going in circles with this ministry. All of the problems are discussed, but none of them are solved.”

“I feel like this ministry is isolated and exclusive, and I’m tired of not reaching the campus.”

These arguments each carry valid points and have reasonable proof, but I think we’re getting hooked up on the details and missing the bigger picture of what ministries like the BCM accomplish.

First off, this is college. The setting is no longer the Sunday school/youth group experience so many of us grew up in. The people involved in the ministry want to be there – Mom and Dad can’t drag you into the minivan and force you to sit in the pew anymore. So even though it’s tempting to take for granted the community of Christians around you, don’t. They’re sacrificing study time, party time, and whatever else they could have come up with to be immersed in Christ alongside their fellow believers. Just because you believe the Bible and love Jesus doesn’t make it any easier to show up to a service every week!

But what a community it is when you show up! The Bible studies, the late night talks, the friendships, the experience, and so much more that I have gained from my involvement with BCM have had the greatest impact of almost anything else on my walk with Christ. How can that not be considered discipleship?  I guess we’ve been bombarded our whole lives with heart-wrenching discussions and the tear-jerking bonfire nights at summer camp until we’ve grown complacent with spiritual growth and taken it for granted. What we don’t realize when we’ve been raised in the church is that every discussion makes a difference. That training to open up and examine yourself, to share with your community how you’ve grown and how you’ve stumbled – these are skills that most people outside the church don’t experience in the same way. They don’t have a God to answer to. But Christian ministries believe in discipleship, which means making people grow in the Lord. In practical terms, that means facilitating community environments for people to be held accountable, to love your enemy, to serve with humility, to fess up and do better when you fail. For me, these things mean the difference between a stale relationship with God and an active one full of fruit.

So don’t hate if your small group doesn’t have any non-believers in it. Don’t think that nothing’s being accomplished, or your ministry isn’t going anywhere. I definitely don’t want to undermine the importance of evangelism or applaud exclusive, “Christian bubble” tendencies, but I want us to think about how often we take for granted the value of what we’ve got. People’s lives are changing. Who are we to protest the work of our ministries when Christ is using them to help people grow?

 

 

 

Savannah

How
     how do I express
     in mere words 
     all that my heart knows?
How do I describe
   the only peace that lasts
   the only joy that holds
   the love that never fades?
How do I convey 
    that God
    is more than just a high,
    and that emotions let you down?
How do I speak the truth
   when the truth is far too blunt,
   when the romantic veil is torn,
   and life seeps through the cracks?
All I want is to say what I know
     to share how I’ve grown
           show how I’ve changed.
It’s not the high,
Not the low.
It’s the still small voice in my heart.
Bride of God

Bride of God

The bride belongs to the bridegroom. The friend who attends the bridegroom waits and listens for him, and is full of joy when he hears the bridegroom’s voice. That joy is mine, and it’s now complete. He must become greater; I must become less.

It’s all about God. God takes priority, and then the focus is His union with the church, as a bride to her groom. As spiritual leaders or leaders within the ministry, it’s vital to remember that the goal is to bring the groom to His bride. We must become less and God must become more. It’s not about our following, our popularity, our power, our plans – the bridegroom is coming, and He is greater.

The thought of Jesus should be one of great joy, not bitterness or grudge. To see the bridegroom brings great excitement! But if we set ourselves up as great ones, if we lower our eyes from the standard and stop listening for the bridegroom, His approach won’t bring joy. We’ll draw back in dismay – unprepared and unwilling.

No. He must become greater, I must become less.

Thoughts on Truth

“The wrath of God is being revealed from heaven against all the godlessness and wickedness of men who suppress the truth by their wickedness, since what may be known about God is clear to them… for although they knew God, they neither glorified Him as God nor gave thanks to Him, but their thinking became futile and their hearts were darkened. Although they claim to be wise, they became fools and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images to look like mortal man… They exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served  created things rather than the Creator – who is forever praised.”
Select verses from Romans 1:18-25

There’s a lot in there about truth. As a Christian, the truth is my footpath, my lamp directing me towards righteousness. Without the truth, I am lost. Lies and deceit are miry ways that can bog a man down and drown him in despair, separated from God forever. But the truth – the truth can set you free from any swamp, cut you loose from any trap.

The truth is freedom.

In Romans, Paul writes about the godlessness of mankind, how they abandon what God has clearly shown them to be right and good for whatever desires their flesh demands them to satisfy. They abandon the truth. “The wickedness of men who suppress the truth by their wickedness.” That suppression is why Christians struggle in the world. If everyone stuck to the truth, everyone would believe in Jesus because He IS truth. As it is, however, we must fight against a world full of lies, designed by Satan to mire us down and throw us into despair. It’s hard to battle lies, to withhold trust, to stand alone, when no one believes you. But the truth will set you free. When the world seems at its darkest and you feel the most alone, God still stands with you, holding the truth which will eventually cast its light upon everything. That light will dispel all the darkness and destroy all the lies; it will show the world the truth, and the truth will set us all free.