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Global Leadership Summit 2011, Part 3: Brenda Salter McNeil

August 29, 2011 by Dan Sullivan

Cory Booker

Next up at the Willow Creek Global Leadership Summit was Cory Booker, the mayor of Newark, New Jersey. He told a lot of stories and I didn’t take many notes. The stores were great though, and I wish I would have made a reminder of each of them. I found myself judging him at first like a wishy-washy male Oprah, but then I realized I was short-changing him, so I loosened up. He was a great speaker after that! 🙂

It was pretty interesting that a lot of what he focused on was humility and action. That was the message of a lot of speakers, or at least it came up over and over again in every speech. His story in which a lady told him to “Just DO SUMTHIN!” came up over and over again from other speakers, so I’d better give him credit for that here. You should try to hear him speak if you get a chance.

Brenda Salter McNeil

McNeil was a pretty fiery speaker and had a lot of good stuff.

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She was talking about changing generations. It’s true, older people I know are still surprised when the call and get a “foreigner” on the phone, but I’m usually surprised when I get someone that “doesn’t have an accent.” (You really need to say that with a Southern Indiana accent for it to sound right.)

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The Gospel is cross-cultural and cross-economical and cross EVERYTHING!

As far as Acts 1:8 goes, I know it says Blog Idea here, but I can’t write about that in this spot. I’ll save that for another day.

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Our modern Samaria is where everything horrible and rotten happens. She said it’s that part of town that you drive into and check to see if your doors are locked. It was off limits to Jews, which is so radical about Jesus taking the disciples through there. You can read more about that elsewhere. Her challenge to us was to not be afraid to go to those places. When you make disciples in your own culture, you don’t have to figure out a lot of messy details. When you go among people that are so radically off from you culturally, it takes a lot of work to figure out what discipleship looks like in their culture. (personally I’m still trying to figure this out in American culture!)

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These Dangerous Action Items are great. #1, get a Divine Mandate. When God has called you to something, you will be unstoppable. If you are just doing stuff to do stuff, it will come to nothing!

She told us to get down on our knees and pray for a mandate. Pray for a calling from God.

One way I’ve done this in the past (actually to find the two last houses we’ve lived in that weren’t just temp housing) was to walk through a neighborhood praying

God, bless this neighborhood. Bring Your Kingdom into this neighborhood! And if you want me to be a part of that, here I am! Plant me where you want to use me!

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Don’t look around and complain about what is going on in your neighborhood. Ask God how He is going to open up a can of Romans 8:28 in that situation?
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This part was great. In Acts, on the day of Pentecost, they had a prayer meeting and people started catching on fire! Have you ever had a prayer meeting where you thought people were going to start catching on fire?!

When you have your mandate, and you see what is going on around you, gather others and help them repeat the same process you just went through. Once you have a group of people with a shared calling, you can act and do something.

This was a great moment and I think I would have done well to just go and pray for a bit, or have all of us pray for a bit, but conferences are what they are, and when McNeil was done they launched some cheesy video advertising something. That didn’t kill everything, but it did make me want to go to a Pentecostal church some Sunday, where they worry more about listening to the Holy Spirit than keeping to their schedule.

Here is the tweet I sent out after that.

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Filed Under: Bible Study, Short Quotes Tagged With: Bible Study, faith, God, good deeds, Holy Spirit, justice, sermons

Not for the Sake of Making them Mad

March 25, 2011 by Dan Sullivan

[box type=”shadow”] Jesus did a lot of stuff to deliberately make the people around Him mad, but He wasn’t just a nuisance for nuisance’s sake. [/box]

I’m reading the Chronological Bible Reading plan and right now Jesus is just going around ticking a lot of people off! He was talking to a Samaritan woman, which Jews just don’t do. He was in Samaria in the first place! Which they just didn’t do. Then He’s picking grain on the Sabbath and eating it, which didn’t exactly break the Torah, but was against the detailed interpretation of the Torah that the Pharisees heaped up on top of the Torah.

Then Jesus goes in to the synagogue in Matthew 12. The Pharisees lay the beartrap “Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath?” and Jesus stomps on it and drives it into the ground.

Matthew 12:12-13
“Which one of you who has a sheep, if it falls into a pit on the Sabbath, will not take hold of it and lift it out?12 Of how much more value is a man than a sheep! So it is lawful to do good on the Sabbath.”13 Then he said to the man,”Stretch out your hand.” And the man stretched it out, and it was restored, healthy like the other.

The Pharisees, who loved their power and they ways more than they wanted to draw near to God, decided that they wanted to kill Him when they saw this.
The place where I tend to stray at this point is that I try to think up things that church people love and are entrenched in that are the opposite of what Jesus taught, and I want to spring their traps too.

#Fail

Jesus didn’t do this just to make people angry. He was trying to draw people to God. The guy with the withered hand wasn’t just a pawn in Jesus’ powerplay against the Pharisees. Jesus really wanted to heal that guy, and make Him whole. As a part of that, He wanted the people around to see that He could do such things, and that He didn’t care what day He did it.

One time Jesus said “your sins are forgiven” to a guy just so they would know that He had the power to forgive sins.

Always always always Jesus’ acts are to point us to the Father and His greatness. The very next section in Matthew 12 points to Jesus as the fulfillment of hundreds of years of hints from God.

Matthew 12:17-21
17 This was to fulfill what was spoken by the prophet Isaiah:
18  “Behold, my servant whom I have chosen,
my beloved with whom my soul is well pleased.
I will put my Spirit upon him,
and he will proclaim justice to the Gentiles.
19  He will not quarrel or cry aloud,
nor will anyone hear his voice in the streets;
20  a bruised reed he will not break,
and a smoldering wick he will not quench,
until he brings justice to victory;
21  and in his name the Gentiles will hope.”

Not just to make people mad, but to draw them out of their wrong thinking in and into the glorious life of God.

Filed Under: Bible Study Tagged With: faith, freedom, glory, God, Jesus, Matthew, miracles

Punishment Without Shame

October 1, 2010 by Dan Sullivan

I was reading John 19 about Jesus and Pilate and followed a reference from a friend to Deut 25.

Deut. 25:3 but he must not give him more than forty lashes. If he is flogged more than that, your brother will be degraded in your eyes.

Punishment under Levitical law was not intended to degrade one person in the eyes of another. Rules like this were in place to deliberately keep someone from being degraded. A notion of punishment without degradation seems so foreign to us. In our law system, the degradation begins with the mug-shot on the web version of the newspaper. then comments and mockery are allowed toward the person. There were 4 people arrested for dealing & making meth yesterday in Evansville. As usual, they looked absolutely miserable. When I saw the article there were already 4 comments under the article about how the people looked.

It seems really foundational to understand that God never desired shame to be carried along with punishment.

Filed Under: Bible Study Tagged With: God, grace, Law, mercy, shame, Torah

John 17:6 – God Shares What Was Already His

June 25, 2010 by Dan Sullivan

John 17:6
I know this sounds like Yoda talking, but the fact that Jesus says “yours they were” shows that God didn’t CHANGE from the OT to the NT.
People belonged to God and were faithful to Him and experienced some sort of grace before Jesus came. It wasn’t the fullness of salvation that Jesus would finally bring about, but God wasn’t some angry, closed off deity like your Sunday school classes may lead you to believe. He’s been in the saving & redeeming & keeping business a long long time.

Filed Under: Bible Study Tagged With: God, Jesus, NT, OT, salvation

God Isn't Afraid of Anybody: Scary or Dirty or Unholy

June 6, 2008 by Dan Sullivan

John 4:7 When a Samaritan woman came to draw water, Jesus said to her, “Will you give me a drink?”

I was thinking this morning about Jesus asking the woman for a drink of water. There were several times when we lived in Asia that there would be a kid walking down the street eating some bread or even candy, and they would tear off a piece, or pull out a chunk, and hand it to me to eat. It was not because they thought I was so hungry, or because they had so much that they could share foolishly (which is God’s character, by the way) but because hospitality was a way of them showing love and kindness. There were actually a very very few times that I turned such offers away, though I knew that whatever I was eating might make me sick.
Jesus comes to this lady as a humble man in need. I can only imagine how men have treated her over her life, if she’s had 5 husbands and is with a man now. And here is Jesus asking her, “WILL YOU give me a drink?” – not even commanding her.

Isn’t that just like God? He isn’t afraid of whatever cooties she has, but he immediately gives her a little honor boost. She has a water bucket and he does not. She is able to draw water and He can’t. He made water flow out of a rock, in the desert nonetheless, but now He has limited Himself the point that He has to ask an unclean Samaritan woman for help!

God is not afraid of what is unclean. He isn’t afraid to take it by the hand and walk an unclean woman towards righteousness!

Filed Under: Bible Study Tagged With: fear, God, Jesus, Samaritan

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