Pastoral Care Matters - The Kenyan preacher’s words gripped me one night. “How many stars can you see? So many! And God knows the name of each one. He has a big book, too. In that book, he has the names of all who love him. Do you love the Lord Jesus? Has your name been written in that book?”
Saturday, July 20, 2024
Wednesday, June 26, 2024
As we turn the pages of the Holy Scripture, one at a time, we go past page 1,000. And there, on the final pages of the Bible, we have numerous insights into who is there, the place, the actions, and what we will do until we finally worship God forever. When we are with God for eternity, our worship will be one of service, though we can’t imagine the details now. God will dwell with his people and wipe away every tear from our eyes. The regular flowering of beautiful trees will bring healing to the nations. We have come full circle from the Garden of Eden to the New Garden in heaven.
I love to follow the names of God through the Scriptures. And here, we find an unusual combination of words. “He said to me, ‘It is done. I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End. To him who is thirsty, I will give him a drink without cost.” Rev. 21. 6
The ancient Greeks upheld "The Iliad," for it taught the ancient world about Hellenistic religion and culture. In everyday language, this book, the history of Troy and the story of the gods, was called the “Alpha and the Omega.” Why? The first chapter starts with the Greek letter Alpha, and the last begins with Omega.
Worship is central when we are concerned with a unique treasure: passing along the teaching of the Scriptures and preparing men and women for a lifetime of pastoral work. Theological education in North America requires many years of investment. We are blessed with seminaries, colleges, institutes, and local programs.
However, in most of the world, including Latin America, only a few can afford the lengthy process of Western Education. Consequently, many local pastors in cities, towns, and villages wait for further training. Training others involves many steps, including strengthening relationships between students and teachers. And we must remember the fantastic abilities of children. They learn to sing, memorize, and join in with adults in praying. At every age, worship matters!
Saturday, December 30, 2023
One evening, late at night, the telephone rang. It was in Brazil, and a friend called me to come because a disturbance in a neighbor’s house was gathering steam. Loud screams were keeping people awake. I took a friend, and we entered the troubled home. There, we sang, read the Bible, and listened intently. Prayers led to words of wisdom. That night, loud screaming turned to sobbing. Salvation came into that home.
The next day, on Sunday morning, the husband and wife openly declared their new faith. They attend the church close to our home. Darkness filled with sin’s gloom was transformed by the light of Life, our Lord Jesus Christ. (This is part of a long story.) Examples of changed lives mark our pathway as Cathie, and I review a lifetime of Gospel ministry. Salvation matters.
Paul asked a series of questions, “How then will they call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the one about whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone preaching to them? And how can they preach unless they are sent?” Romans 10:14,15
Looking back on 2023, with the love lights of Christmas still glowing in the mirror, I'm thrilled as I look ahead, trying to see what's around the bend. I see a signpost that reads, "The Ministry of Summer Camps." Summer camps are one of God’s most effective tools God to call people to Himself. Children’s camps are sometimes divided into girls’ and boys’ groups. Many are built close to water. They provide exciting experiences: canoeing, swimming, archery, and other sports. Playing in teams brings out laughter. Joyful shouts erupt on either side of a volleyball net, all across a soccer pitch, or at both ends of a basketball court.
An environment bathed in prayer permits the Holy Spirit to work. Many times, God reaches a child’s soul. Children in Latin America who go to summer camps are fortunate. How we long for hundreds more to attend camps! Thousands of children each year find our Saviour. Children make decisions that impact their entire lives. I urge you to pray for campers, administrators, and volunteers.
If you've never volunteered to help at a camp, or if you have done so, pray about being involved in a local camp. Give liberally to a worthy summer camp. Someone you share with might find the Lord. Salvation matters.
Thursday, October 12, 2023
Preaching Matters
At age 15, I left the dorm life for home, having just completed Grade 10 at a boarding school. My father was the Secretary of the Keswick Conference in Kenya, and that year, he welcomed about 350 people to the Eldoret Girls’ School. The Keswick meetings lasted an entire week. Personally, I was struggling to overcome strong negative teenage emotions. The first day’s “Bible Reading,” the expository hour, focused on Ephesians Chapter 1. I remember thinking, “Wow! I wish I could preach like this! This is amazing!”
Preaching matters! Think about it. Our sense of hearing is so fragile. So delicate! Play one note on a piano, and a split second later, the sound has passed, lost in time. Speech, though, is more complicated. It takes hundreds of tiny sounds to form a sentence. And yet, years later, you can still remember some of those words. More than that, words form a worldview; they convey a message. What messages do you remember from your teen years? Here’s what moved me: making Grade 11, four weeks later, such a different experience as I returned to dorm life.
Like hundreds of other missionary kids – MKs, or we sometimes use the term Third Culture Kids, TCK’s - I experienced the power of words. Our family saw the WORD affecting young and old, rich and poor, men and women. Hearts were changed, people were saved from their sins, families were touched, and life improved in innumerable ways.
Paul asked a series of questions. “How will they call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the one about whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone preaching to them? And how can they preach unless they are sent?” Romans 10:14,15
Today, across Latin America, an ingathering of people into the Kingdom of God is happening, the likes of which have never previously been observed. Preachers are being called by the Lord to spend their lives sharing the Gospel. People, by the thousands, are hungry for change in every country in Latin America. I’ve watched massive evangelistic campaigns, and I’ve been part of door-to-door surveys and invitations. Space doesn’t permit me to share examples, and time doesn’t permit us to delve deeper into this.
But when we are gathered around the throne of God with people from every language, every ethnic group, and every time and place, we will praise the Lord forever.
That’s when we will really know
a great truth: Preaching matters!
Saturday, May 13, 2023
As a young high school teacher in Beausejour, Manitoba, 25% of my teaching responsibilities included being the Boys’ Guidance Counselor.
Cathie, a nurse, and I learned firsthand the effects of addictions, poverty, and broken relationships on students and in many people's homes during our three years there. One of the most complicated home
situations involved alcoholism.
“What can change these situations?” We cried out, imploring the Lord for wisdom
at the high school and the local hospital. “Lord, will you not bring about a
transformation in the life of so-and-so? You promised that in Christ, we are a
new creation?” This month, I focus on God’s power to
bring about Holy Spirit-initiated ‘makeovers.’
Recently, right here where we live and serve, we’ve been encouraged to hear and see remarkable changes and transformations brought about by the power of God in the lives of people afflicted with alcoholism.
One of our own missionaries, who currently ministers to drug addicts and prisoners, shared his own thrilling testimony of transformation in his April newsletter - a transformation that began in Toronto.
He writes, “Dear partners and friends, I thought speaking about what the Resurrection means would be appropriate. It fills me with joy; the whole meaning of the cross and the Resurrection changed my life.” He goes on to relate how his life, which in his teens and early twenties included gang involvement, struggles with drug addiction, and trouble with the law, was changed by a personal encounter with Jesus, first through the ministry of others and then directly through the Word of God: “(A) youth Pastor … gave me the New Testament Contemporary English Version and going home on the bus that day, I started reading (it) and started understanding every word spoken by Christ. It felt as if I was walking with Jesus . . . I started seeing His grace and hope for my life; shame and guilt left my life through His death and His love.” He goes on to share how as he further developed his relationship with Jesus, he began to make amends and forgive others.
Why are testimonies like these and others so important? Because of changed lives, and because of God's resurrection power. Change matters.
Mistakes Matter - I will always remember three mistakes I made during the summer after I turned 18. My summer job was to select parts for shipment from the International Harvester central warehouse in Winnipeg to dealers across Western Canada.
Each warehouse worker received one or more computerized forms. These identified the product and indicated the number of items for each shipment. As a summer employee, I became jealous of the old-timers who got bigger jobs. The older, experienced guys walked into the supply area with a hundred items or more to fulfill. To obtain more challenging orders, I raced to complete the smaller tasks. One week, I almost lost my job. The boss told me I sent three incorrect orders to three dealerships supplying parts for tractors or other farm equipment. I quickly learned about my disability. I misread those long numbers because I sent the wrong spare parts. I had to learn fast. I could not make similar mistakes, for I needed the funds for tuition for the upcoming school year. Mistakes matter.
Mistakes come in many forms. Let’s examine two of them. Some make mistakes before their life’s work begins. Others make multiple errors during a training period. I love to contrast the mistakes two men made: Peter and Paul.
We follow Peter through repeated blunders and events. We love him for the spontaneous answer to Jesus’ question: “’Who do you say that I am?’ And Peter answered, ‘You are the Christ of God.’” Luke 9:20 How quickly Peter grasped the truth! Also, Peter was the only one of the twelve willing to step out in faith. He literally stepped onto boisterous waves, walking toward Jesus. We love him for being close to Christ. He wa one of the three on the Mount of Transfiguration. With Peter and James, Peter watched Jesus heal Jairus’ 12-year-old daughter.
But think of Peter’s mistakes! No one else received such a harsh rebuke, “Satan, get behind me!” Peter told Jesus not to walk toward his trial and death. No one else told a servant girl, “Woman, I don’t know him!” When he heard someone else say, “You are also one of them!” Peter responded angrily, “Man, I am not!” An hour later, another person was more direct. “Surely you are one of them, for you are a Galilean.” Peter called down curses on himself, “I don’t know this man you’re talking about.” Luke 22:54-62 and Mark 14:66-72
Mistakes matter. Thankfully, Jesus knows how to deal with us at our weakest moments. Jesus brought Peter back to fellowship, asking three times, “Peter, do you love me?” Christ’s correction came in three times. “Feed my lambs. Feed my sheep. Feed my sheep.” John 21:15-19
Paul made other kinds of mistakes, serious ones, before beginning a task. We meet him agreeing to the stoning of Stephen. Then he went from house to house in Jerusalem, arresting people for believing in the Messiah. However, Christ knew Paul’s deep desire for righteousness. Once Paul’s theological mistakes were corrected, he helped to change the world. Today, the book of Romans shows how much Paul had to offer; we still profit.
Yes, mistakes matter, and we can take comfort, as I did when my errors were pointed out to me, that there is redemption at the time we fall, when we have little faith, or when we are angry about the wrong thing. Christ’s work through the Holy Spirit is to convince us of sin, righteousness, and judgment. Learning from our errors and changing is the best time to say, “Mistakes matter.”
Thursday, March 16, 2023
In Conflicts, Apologies Matter
Did
Jesus’ statement ever strike you as strange?
In
the Lord’s prayer, there seems to be a condition in Jesus’s teaching about
forgiveness.
“Forgive
us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors.” Matthew 6:12.
But
then, Jesus commented, “If you forgive men when they sin against you, your
heavenly Father will also forgive you, but if you do not forgive men their
sins, your Father will not forgive your sins.” Matthew 6:14, 15. I have
often struggled with this commentary. It’s obviously about relationships, hurt
feelings. But is God’s forgiveness toward us conditional on our forging others?
Doesn’t God always forgive, redeem, and transform?
The
Bible doesn’t avoid topics we find uncomfortable. All too often, we find
ourselves in a painful situation. Maybe a family member or a brother or sister
in the local congregation made a comment we found distasteful. What they did
hurt us and offended us! Soon, we talk about it with someone. Afterward, we get
hurt again, and a simple disturbance is now dissatisfaction!
We
get offended! And if things don’t get sorted out, then we dislike that person
enough to stop talking with him or her. We don’t include them in our conversations
or invitations to our homes. Things can escalate. When they do, we find
ourselves gradually separating from that brother or sister, or even a whole
group of people, by now. An actual conflict has taken hold.
In dealing with conflicts, I’ve used a simple chart to discern how far along heightened emotions have come. Where do you start? (This chart is not mine; I can’t recall who created it!)
In Stage 1, we live well with everyday
conversation and discussion.
At Stage 2, conflict grows into irritation.
In Stage 3 conflict, irritations take on sinful contours. This may include anger,
frustration, loud discussions, a party spirit, rage, bitterness, brawling,
slander, and malice, then the ground is set for separation. Sinful behavior now
holds us in its grip. (Ephesians 4:31,32)
At this point, it’s
time to pray the Lord’s prayer!
Before
we get into Stage 4 Conflict! We need repentance. “Forgive me for my debt
as I have forgiven my debtors.” The common
phrase is, “it takes two to tango.” How hard it is to step back! We need to ask
the Lord to show us our heart condition the way he sees it! We need to
apologize. We need reconciliation. Ephesians 4:32 states it best: “Be kind
and compassionate toward one another, forgiving each other just as in Christ
God forgave you.”
I wrote an entire novel about this topic.
In Inn of the Open Door: A Chronicle of Philadelphia, a Jewish woman,
Abigail, is still traumatized by the death of her children in the destruction
of Jerusalem. Her niece, Miriam, has married a Roman soldier, the very picture
of her enemies. This story, set in the Seven Churches of Revelation, examines
steps bringing the families to forgiveness and reconciliation.
C. S. Lewis wrote:
One man may be so placed that his anger
sheds the blood of thousands, and another so placed that he will only be laughed at however angry he gets. But the little mark on the soul may be much the
same in both. Each has done something to himself which, unless he repents, will
make it harder for him to keep out of the rage next time he is tempted and make the rage worse when he falls into it. If he seriously turns to God, each of them can have that twist in the central man straightened out again; in the long run, each is doomed if he will not. The bigness or
smallness of the thing, seen from the outside, is not what really matters. [1]
In everyday conflict situations, we need the humility to forgive others and admit any wrongdoing on our own part. Holding onto grudges impedes the restoration of broken
relationships. We would do well to heed
Paul’s admonition in 2 Corinthians 13:11:
“Finally, brothers and sisters, rejoice!
Strive for full restoration, encourage one another, be of one mind, and live in
peace. And the God of love and peace will be with you.”
Apologies matter! When conflicts arise,
let’s once more pray the Lord’s Prayer.
Monday, January 30, 2023
Stories matter
Stories
brighten a day much like the sun’s rays in winter when frost performs its magic
on the windows inside, and it’s freezing cold outside.
What
would life be like without stories? Well, the TV would limp badly on one leg! Dictionaries
would be best sellers. Forget about novels and all those wonderful children’s
books. Communication would be simply black and white. Where would be the colors
that shape emotions?
Mission
work is full of stories. One night (in Turkey), Paul once spoke too long. He
told stories about what happened in Greece. At about 4:00 in the morning, Eutychus
gave up listening. He fell asleep … and slipped out the window! From three stories
up! But Paul was sure the young man wasn’t dead… Well, that’s the rest of the
story! It’s all found in Acts 20:7-12, and I always referred to it in Troas, an
important archaeological site, on my tourist trips in Turkey.
Why
stories? Well, think of our communication patterns. I see my neighbor and greet
him. It’s the same every day. “Hello, Ali,” I say. He responds, “I’m fine; how
are you?” That’s level-one talk.
Many moons ago, I was a high-school teacher. I listened at the lunch table. “Hey, did you guys see the hockey game last night? Now, I can’t wait for the playoffs!” The level-two talk touches on common interests. Like the material at the top of an iceberg, topics melt away quickly. The following season arrives. Then, interactions are about a ski-doo race. Or football. Or baseball.
Education and preparation for a profession go deeper Level three communication makes a huge difference, like waves slapping against an iceberg. We learn about things from anthropology to zoology. But does a professor need to expose something about his or her personal life? Not really.
Much level-three messaging is about skills and knowledge. Level-three
understanding profoundly affects our lives, but much is impersonal. It’s not
about values. I compare getting an education to the space just above and just below the water line on an iceberg. You can hear a teacher speak for hours and still not know what he or she really believes about things, and you may never know anything about their family, where they were born, or their major difficulties.
All
that changes with stories. Level-four interactions make you feel like you’re swimming
in an ocean. 90% of an iceberg lies beneath the ocean’s waves. Values make you want
to examine things from many angles. You want to share in an experience.
Take
the story of the Samaritan woman. If we only had Jesus’ words in John 4:23, 24,
we would know the truth about worship. Of course! The Father is searching for
those who will worship in spirit and truth.
But when we hear the woman talking, and when we engage with her background, wrestling with her about what authentic worship is… wow! This nameless woman comes alive, so to speak. Isn't it wonderful how much we see her life that would have been invisible unless Jesus took the time to talk with her?
We go back to her story repeatedly. It has a beginning, an ending,
and a wealth of content. We love the contours and colors of her story. It sparks
devotion in us. Raw emotions emerge. Why does it offer us multiple challenges? Something
in our life throbs, much like the bass strings on a fiddle in an orchestra. Does
another story about worship in the scriptures speak to us so profoundly?
Oh,
I hope that all of us tell stories. Do what Jesus did. Wasn’t he the most remarkable
storyteller? Be a good storyteller. Yes, stories matter.
Sunday, January 15, 2023
Eu quero ser, Senhor
Yet not I, but through Christ in me
(Jonny Robinson / Michael Ray Farren / Richard C. Thompson)
What gift of grace is Jesus my redeemer
There is no more for heaven now to give
He is my joy, my righteousness, and freedom
My steadfast love,
my deep and boundless peace
To this I hold, my hope is only Jesus
For my life is wholly bound to His
Oh how strange and divine,
I can sing, "All is mine"
Yet not I, but through Christ in me
The night is dark but I am not forsaken
For by my side, the Saviour He will stay
I labour on in weakness and rejoicing
For in my need, His power is displayed
No fate I dread, I know I am forgiven
The future sure, the price it has been paid
For Jesus bled and suffered for my pardon
And He was raised to overthrow the grave
To this I hold, my sin has been defeated
Jesus now and ever is my plea
Oh the chains are released,
I can sing, "I am free"
Yet not I, but through Christ in me
With every breath I long to follow Jesus
For He has said that He will bring me home
And day by day I know He will renew me
Until I stand with joy before the throne
To this I hold, my hope is only Jesus
All the glory evermore to Him
When the race is complete,
still my lips shall repeat
Yet not I, but through Christ in me
Un año más, cayó la lluvia sobre el campo
Un año más, mojĂł el RocĂo nuestras manos
Un año más, el viento sur llegó hasta el norte
Un año más, el Sol brillo en el horizonte
Un año más, vemos la Luna y las estrellas
Un año más, siguió la danza de planetas
Un año más, de ver el pan en nuestra mesa
Un año más, que nos sostiene Tu Presencia
Un año más de tu bondad de tu eterna fidelidad
Un año más de sostener la creación con Tu poder
Un año más de inclinar tu oĂdo a nuestro clamor
De responder y consolar un año más
Un año más, el agua convertida en vino
Un año más, no falto sombra en el camino
Un año más, se sobrepuso la alegrĂa
Un año más, de verte obrando cada dĂa
Un año más de tu bondad de tu eterna fidelidad
Un año más de sostener la creación con Tu poder
Uña año más de inclinar tu oĂdo a nuestro clamor
De responder y consolar un año más
ReplyForward |
Friday, January 13, 2023
"Giving" or "Giving up"?
Friday, December 30, 2022
Research matters
We often get so busy with urgent tasks that we don’t look further, searching the horizon.
As a grandfather who picks up a 4 ½-year-old from school, I found this fascinating: Picking up grandchildren from school can help mental health, the study concludes. Research suggests looking after grandchildren regularly may help prevent loneliness and improve well-being. For grandparents, research matters about general health and especially mental health.
A friend sent me two sayings this month: “It is not what you accomplish that matters most. It is what you set into motion.” And here’s another stimulating thought at the beginning of a year: “Write books and make furniture, paint a picture, or plant a tree. They will live longer, travel further, and last longer than you ever will.”
A new congregation begins in Western Brazil. |
Once, in the 1980s, I was part of a church-planting team. Many people undertook extensive research in the city of Campo Grande, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil. Those original 12 congregations multiplied into today’s 110+ churches. Before initiating Church planting, research matters.
The Biblical story of Joshua granting peace to the sly leaders of Gibeon shows how quick decisions based on emotions can lead to unhealthy choices. Interestingly, God later used Joshua’s mistake to bring about a victory. Biblically, research matters.
Few of us remember that over five million people in Colombia are Internally Displaced Persons, IDPs. During the last eight years, Dr. Christopher Hays and a large team of researchers in Medalim, Colombia, explored the painful contours of 30 years of internal armed conflicts. Overnight, and often during the night, villagers were dragged from their homes. The village leader was often killed in a barrage of bullets, and all were told to leave, given ten minutes to collect their belongings. Many ended up on the periphery of large cities, swelling the slums already a place of misery.
Applied research illustrated two great truths. First, promoting forgiveness creates a space for victims to flourish with their families
Children are greatly affected by violence |
This year, LAM Latin America Mission will ask all our missionaries three questions: 1. What additional resources are you asking God for in your ministry? 2. How might volunteers further enhance your ministry? 3. What more can the LAM office do to encourage you in your ministry?
At LAM, in 2023, research matters.
Tuesday, November 29, 2022
Images Matter
It’s the gift-giving time! Near the end of the year, stores fill up their shelves with things that appear once a year. Christmas is the time for many things to be stored away again once the New Year passes.In contrast, consider the
images associated with the life of Jesus. Is there a child who ever gets tired
of the manger scene? The manger stall with farm animals close at hand, the
visit by the shepherds, even the angels’ song: Mary and Joseph didn’t “own” anything
except perhaps the donkey. Mary and Joseph took their gifts of gold,
frankincense, and myrrh to Egypt. Christmas images of the Nativity matter, for
they profoundly shaped our concept of the desire to give to others. It’s good
to consider the messages we leave with children. Images matter.
Think of some events
during Jesus’ life. He met in homes where he was invited but never “owned” one.
We remember a boat he “borrowed” as a platform, for eager crowds almost pushed
him into the water.
One image governs my daily actions. One day, the sun passed its zenith as even more crowds gathered. The masses were tired and hungry, and the disciples talked amongst themselves. “How will we feed this multitude?” Andrew found a boy who brought two loaves and five small fish for his lunch. After Jesus blessed the lunch, the food was more than enough for everyone. The image of two loaves and five fishes is now universally used as a symbol of generosity and God’s power. Jesus possessed nothing, yet he had everything: authority, compassion, grace, and love. Loaves and fishes. That’s the power of an image.
Many scenes in
Jerusalem come to mind. In the days before the crucifixion, Jesus went down the
Mount of Olives riding on a donkey; it was “borrowed.” The Upper Room? It, too,
was “borrowed.” Even the Passover meal was prepared by his friends. Did Jesus
own anything? Well, yes, for on the cross, Jesus was stripped of everything. But
the soldiers gambled for his tunic. Those are all powerful images.
Christmas is about the coming of the Savior. He owned so little, yet he was rich. And on the cross, he became poor; he took on my sin there. He didn’t “borrow” my sin; he took it on himself and, in turn, offers me salvation. “The punishment that brought us peace was upon him.” Isaiah 53:5 That’s the key image of the Scriptures. That image matters.
What will our children
remember about Christmas during their adult lives? Will the remaining images be
ones of wrapping paper, gifts, and faded family photographs, all too soon
forgotten after the New Year? Or will the reality be that we possess true
wealth? God’s riches. Images matter.
Friday, October 28, 2022
Truth Matters – A monthly blog from David Phillips
Truth matters, and it doesn't change. So, why would you be concerned? As Christians, truth is a cornerstone of our faith. But for a large segment of society, the nature of truth is being redefined.
TV stations spend thousands of dollars covering criminal trials. Observers ask, "What's the truth? What really happened?" Witnesses are called, sworn in, and give statements under oath. They promise to tell the truth.
How interesting to return to history's most important trial. Jesus is led in, having experienced a lack of sleep the previous night. He suffers abuse and beatings at King Herod's palace. Governor Pilate, dressed in a polished military outfit, stands transfixed at Jesus' words, hearing words we still read today.
Jesus stated, "In fact, for this reason, I was born, and for this, I came into the world to testify to the truth. Everyone on the side of truth listens to me."
"What is truth?" Pilate asked, amazed at the quiet testimony from a man the Jews want to be killed. He didn't accept Jesus' words and was initially unwilling to charge him. A few minutes later, he washed his hands of further conversation. He had turned away from the one who said, "The truth will set you free."
In our day, the concept of truth is challenged.
We hear a man or woman say, "My truth is this, …" They give a personal observation. Then a listener responds, showing displeasure. "Yes, but my truth is different from yours!"
What's happened to truth, and why does it matter?
In our pluralistic society, truth has become synonymous with experience. One's personal worldview dictates his or her reality. Thus, truth has become the expression of relative values, not absolutes. Multiculturalism permits everyone to claim various facts. "If enough people are willing to believe in an idea within an information ecosystem, then it must be true to the consumers within that social space," writes the CBC.
"There are many religions and philosophies in the world, so how can there only be one truth?" we are told. "Claiming a single truth is non-sensical. Nothing is definite. Do you claim to know everything? You are looking through the lens of only one religion, disregarding the basic principles of globalism. Everyone's opinions must be valued and examined objectively."
You might hear something like this.
Doesn't a person change opinions and ideas throughout a lifetime? As we grow, we expand our relationships. Our minds absorb new facts, altering our perceptions and broadening our experiences. So, "speaking my truth" now may not be the same as "my truth will be ten years later."
This way, truth, an absolute, is reduced to a flow of consciousness. It is subject to ongoing change.
I'm reminded of Paul's discipleship in the churches he planted. He instructed them not to "be infants, tossed back and forth by the waves, and blown here and there by every wind of teaching and the cunning and craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming. Instead, speaking the TRUTH in love, we will grow up into him who is the Head, that is Christ." Ephesians 4:14,15
Latin American Mission (Canada) works in eleven countries through missionaries and short-term volunteers. In our partnership agreements, we want to speak the truth. The Gospel must ring out clearly. Even when they show us at our worst, truthful words are better than half-truths or white lies. Our theme this year is satisfactorily bearing fruit, as the pictures above show grapes about to be harvested. May we always lead people to him who said, "I am the way, the truth, and the life."