Friday, December 20, 2013

Going Deep- The Beginning



Going Deep: Lets start today with talking about Paul and Barnabus. For those of you that may not know, let me give you a quick history- Paul (who was named Saul) was a religious leader of Jesus’ time that really hated these followers of Jesus- not just disliked them- He was the one basically leading the charge to hunt down and kill/injure or destroy anyone who even thought about following Jesus- so needless to say was not a very popular guy among the followers. God ends up reaching through to Saul and he ends up becoming a Christian himself. Its really an amazing story and I want to encourage you to read it. 


So Saul converts/becomes Paul and goes off to Arabia for three years and then comes back and wants to join the disciples in building churches. So when Paul comes back to Jerusalem- the early Christians want nothing to do with him. The scripture says that the people could only remember what he did to them. You  could imagine people saying: Saul- the guy who hunted us? The guy who imprisoned my brother? Who beat my mother and sisters? You cant be talking about that guy! You must not know about HIM. He is the worst of the worst! There’s no hope for a guy like that! There’s people like that around us aren’t there? The people who it seems everyone has just given up on. People that everyone seem to talk negatively about- People that have made choices in their lives that seem unforgivable. I see them. And in my job I work with them. 

Enter Barnabas. In my opinion a man that receives less credit than he deserves. Barnabas sees something in Saul. And when everyone else has given up on Saul/ has discredited him (in fact some wanted to kill him) Barnabas takes him in as his student. Sticks up for him even. Barnabas risks his own reputation and probably his own life. And subsequently they become friends. Barnabas mentors him, and builds him up, leads him. And what happens? A little later in the book of Acts we see a little shift.


After years of mentoring, after years of teaching, after years of leading him hand in hand through trials and hardships- the student became the teacher. And what a payout! Paul goes on to plant churches everywhere- and takes the gospel of Jesus worldwide. Thousands became Christians through Paul in his time and BILLIONS have become Christians through Paul since, as he was the writer of the majority of the New Testament! Barnabas, through his discipleship, through his love, fostered a relationship that subsequently changed the entire world


You may or may not know, but our United Methodist Conference, and some surrounding conferences have recently undergone an “audit” of sorts- a consultation that evaluated all the ministries that the “church” offers, and the effectiveness of those ministries. What was discovered? Well like you might imagine, we do a lot. The Upper New York Conference of churches has a list of active ministries so long that I wouldn’t have the time to list them today. And that’s incredible. It’s a testament to the passion we have as a people to serve others. But what was also discovered is that there aren’t many ministries that we are doing effectively. And that’s the part that makes me sad. Because the heart is there. Its just that we are trying to do sooo much- that we aren’t doing anything really well. On top of this- church numbers continue to dwindle. 


So whats the answer? It may even sound good to you. And it’s the title of today’s message. We need to go deeper. Instead of doing a lot of everything- we need to do less and do it better. Instead of scratching the surface with people- we need to reach out to them and go deep with them. Mentor them. Be there for them. To literally be Christ to them. It’s by doing this that we create disciples. 


After all, and forgive me for thinking of things thematically (which is how they train us social workers) this is how Jesus did it. He didn’t just call the disciples- he built them. Years of his ministry and energy, was poured into them. So that they could take the message of Love, and carry it throughout the world.