Summer 2012

Page 1

The Free Methodist Church in Canada | Summer 2012 | Volume 9, Issue 2

CONTENT COVER Take heart, He has given us the Holy Spirit! by Bishop Keith Elford PAGE 2 Editor’s Desk MISSIONAL ENGAGEMENT: CURIOSITY by Jared Siebert PAGE 3 It’s about the Mission by Kim Henderson PAGE 4 Ghana ... A Missional Story by John-Mark and Loreli Cockram PAGES 5 Nathan’s Photo Log by Nathan Colqhoun PAGE 6 Passages Can Stewardship be Missional? by Sandy Crozier Children forming global connections by Paula Moriarity PAGE 7 OUR HISTORY: JW Hawley - A Canadian Pioneer Missionary in Africa by Dan Sheffield PAGE 8 The Barrie-Ghana Connection by Greg Ford HISTORY VIDEO - ON THE WEBSITE Have you viewed the video celebrating the 150th Anniversary of Free Methodist ministry? You may find it a useful resource as an intro to our history or to use in membership classes. ::: www.fmcic.ca ::: [home page - last menu item on the left]

DID YOU KNOW? The MOSAIC is produced using environmentally responsible processes. The paper is acid-free, contains 10% post-consumer waste material, and is treated with a non-chlorine whitening process. Vegetable-based inks were used throughout the publication and it is 100% recyclable.

MOSAIC

is a publication of The Free Methodist Church in Canada

4315 Village Centre Court Mississauga, Ontario L4Z 1S2 T. 905.848.2600 F. 905.848.2603 E. mosaic@fmcic.ca www.fmc-canada.org For submissions:

mosaic@fmcic.ca Dan Sheffield, Editor-in-Chief Lisa Howden, Managing Editor and Production

Reflecting the diversity of ministry expression within the Free Methodist family

TAKE HEART, HE HAS GIVEN US THE HOLY SPIRIT! | BISHOP KEITH ELFORD

W

hen I was younger, I used to think that professional quarterbacks had exceptional powers. In split seconds they see where to run, how long to hold the pass before they throw it … and when it’s best to sacrifice and just throw the pass away rather than lose ground. To this naïve kid, their ability to call plays to outwit the defense was uncanny. I thought that the credit for all this resided inside a quarterback’s helmeted head. As far as I understood it back then, the coaches on the sideline were just upgraded cheerleaders who patted the players on the back when they did a good job. It wasn’t even on my radar that the plays were called by unseen playmakers watching from a box above the bleachers and that a good quarterback basically executed the plays that were relayed to the field. In this issue, we are talking about “missional engagement”, that is, committing ourselves to be fully abandoned to the Lordship of Jesus and what he wants to accomplish in the world. The church has been given a clear mandate by the Lord Jesus about its role in making disciples, but if we are not careful, we can get very shallow in our thinking (perhaps unconsciously) and suppose that “all that is happening on the field is because of our clever giftedness and/or gutsy perseverance.”

So, what is the Holy Spirit’s role in what we are calling “missional engagement?” What can He be depended upon to do to help us? Actually, that’s the wrong question! What is it that He is doing – even when we are not paying attention? And what is it that we need to keep in mind that He is still doing – when we are being very attentive, but feel like we are losing ground? I want to do a quick sweep through the Book of Acts to highlight some instances of missional engagement. Clearly, there’s more going on than human ingenuity. But first let’s read the clear promise that the Lord Jesus made to the disciples in John 16 about what would happen with the coming of the Spirit. John writes: When he comes, he will convict the world of guilt in regard to sin and righteousness and judgment: in regard to sin, because men do not believe in me; in regard to righteousness, because I am going to the Father, where you can see me no longer; and in regard to judgment, because the prince of this world now stands condemned. “I have much more to say to you, more than you can now bear. But when he, the Spirit of truth, comes, he will guide you into all truth. He will not speak on his own; he will speak only what he hears, and he will tell you what is yet to come. He will bring glory to me by taking from what is mine and making it known to you. All that belongs to the Father is mine. That is why I said the Spirit will take from what is mine and make it known to you. (John 16:8-15 NIV)

Several commentators contend that this is the

most comprehensive statement in scripture on the Spirit’s role in the world. I agree – especially when one understands that Jesus’ words about the Spirit’s “convicting” work refer to more than informing people about their list of sins, about the righteousness of Jesus and about the reality of judgment. An accurate understanding is that the Holy Spirit will convince the world concerning the real nature of sin and the real nature of righteousness and the real nature of judgment. In other words, when the Spirit is active, the message moves from the head (where all kinds of minimizing maneuvers can take place) to confront the heart and will with ultimate realities … and decisions. Let’s see this in play in a number of different instances in the Book of Acts. In chapter two, the Holy Spirit comes with power at a time when Jewish pilgrims are gathered in Jerusalem from all over the known world to celebrate the Feast of Pentecost. A month earlier or later they wouldn’t have been there. Amazing timing! And, the Spiritenabled testimonies of the apostles allowed every one of them to hear the message of the resurrection of Jesus in their own language! Peter, filled with the Spirit, preached and look at what happened: “When the people heard this, they were cut to the heart and said to Peter and the other apostles, ‘Brothers, what shall we do?” vs 37. There it is - the unseen work of the Spirit exposing the real nature of sin as Jesus promised that He would! The mission that Jesus sent his followers on was to the whole world – Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria and to the ends of the earth. But it soon became clear that this same Spirit-filled Peter couldn’t see how God could possibly want to include anyone other than himself (and-people-just-like- him) in His plan of redemption. Then Acts 10 happened and remember that as he was coming out of the vision, three men (ends-of-the-earthtypes who had no Jewish pedigree) arrived

knocking on the door, asking him to do the unthinkable and come into their world! How did those guys know where to go and when to come? A week earlier or later Peter wouldn’t have been there. Several hours earlier, he would have told them to get lost (and stay lost) because in his faulty understanding of personal holiness, he believed that he would have really let God down if he had had anything to do with their kind. In reality, though they were people who did not know anything about Jesus, Luke describes them as devout, Godfearing, generous and praying as best they could. What follows is wonderful “missional engagement”, but what (or who) changed Peter’s heart and what brought the three men to his door? After Peter’s testimony before the Jerusalem council, they had a hunch that the gospel needed to be taken to those ends-of-the-earth types. But who would be any good at that kind of endeavor and where would they start? Some people are of the view that “the world” referred to in John 16 (that needs to be convicted by the Spirit) is the unbelieving world. Unbelievers need to know that the essence of sin is rejecting God’s offer of a life-long relationship made possible through trusting fully in the Lord Jesus. They also need to know about the righteousness of Christ who was vindicated through his resurrection and ascension. The unbelieving world in Jerusalem said that he was a blasphemer who deserved to die. Through raising him back to life, God said that Jesus has the righteousness that heaven requires. Finally, the unbelieving world needs to know about Satan, judgment and the condemnation that is coming for Satan and those who give themselves over to his influence. THIS ARTICLE CONTINUES ON PAGE 5 - TAKE HEART

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