Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Hurricane Living


Inland friends sometimes ask what it is like to live on the coast, where we experience hurricanes.  I’ve lived in Kentucky and Illinois and seen floods, ice storms, tornadoes.  I’ve lived in northeast Ohio and seen blizzards.  Each area has its own unique challenges.   I’ve lived on the Gulf Coast for 21 years, over half my life.  Living in an area where hurricanes are a possibility leads us to prepare, much like living in other areas require you to prepare.  We don’t buy rock salt to cover the driveway and snowblowers.  We buy plywood to cover the windows and generators.

My family and I live at least ten miles inland.  We live near woods and fields of cattle and row crops.  Some of those living inland have said that we on the coast get what we deserve when we get a hurricane.  They say that only the wealthy have their second homes on the coast and that it is okay to let them blow away.  I haven’t always found that to the be the case.  Storms (hurricanes, ice storms, tornadoes) occur all over the country.  Our neighbors use their homes as their primary (almost exclusively ONLY) residence.  Our neighbors are firemen, teachers, WWII vets, farmers, and landscapers.  They are hardworking, caring, good people.  Hardly would we consider our homes expendable.  Living in a hurricane area is just a part of life for us.

Over the years you accumulate things.  One year you buy a generator.  Another year you buy some plywood to cover the windows.  Another year you actually cut them to fit the doors and windows.  You keep your stash of flashlights, lanterns, and batteries handy.

With each storm you accumulate stories.  You remember the places you rode out the storm, the times you evacuated, the times you WISHED you had evacuated and that times you wished you had stayed put.  You remember the storms by how old the children were or when Grandma came over to ride it out with you.  These events become a part of our family history.  

Hurricanes are often large and unpredictable.  Forecasting their landfall and intensity is difficult.  When one enters the Gulf of Mexico, those of us living on the hundreds of miles of coastline must be prepared.  Even small changes can mean a big difference.  Isaac had rain bands some 350 miles across.  We were on the outside edge of those bands.  If Isaac moved 25 miles to the east, it would mean that several more inches of rain fell upon our homes and land, not Mobile Bay.  So an adjustment of less than 10% can mean the difference between a drizzly, breezy day and downed trees, power lines, and significant flooding.

Therefore, we prepare.  For Isaac we were expecting a storm with winds of at least 115mph.  A week ago, the forecast was for it to go far to the east of us.  That would put us on the “good” side. When you’re on the west side of the storm, the rains and winds are much quieter.  As the week progressed, the forecast track moved west.  For a day or so, the forecast track put the eye of the storm passing over our home.  But the forecast track kept moving west.  That puts us on the “bad” side.  When you’re on the east side the rain, winds, and possibility for tornadoes all greatly increase.

At the church, we put our plan into action.  We secured the facility.  We called our “sensitive” populations.  The governor declared a state of emergency and ordered evacuations.  Schools closed for three days.  People move into a strange state of motion.  The stores are quickly emptied of bread, water, canned meat, peanut butter, paper products, batteries, and snack foods. (As a side note, our family always buys ice cream at this point.  That way if the power goes out, we have to eat the whole carton immediately, lest it should melt.)

The news people tell you to fill your car with gas.  On your way to fill up you see several boats on trailers headed inland.  You may find stations out of gas.  When you find gas, you may wait in line behind someone filling up several cans.  Maybe it is for their generator or maybe it is for peace of mind.

Our family seeks to move with calm through the process.  We clear the yard and porch of lightweight items.  We help our neighbors and friends.  We get the animals settled.  As we work, a foreshadowing breeze creates a whisper through the surrounding pine trees, and we take one more look around before we head into the house.  Later we will poke our heads out between bands of rain coming on shore, when the wind the will howl through those same pines.

Despite all the ills of the storms, I love the family time the storm creates for us.  It is almost as if we are being pressed inward, from all sides, to be together.  We do those projects we’ve been meaning to get ‘round to for a while: we clean out a closet or two, I get that old reel cleaned and reassembled, we play games together, we watch classic movies, we go splash in the puddles.  The space of family time is our calm in the storm.  
We don’t really turn on the television very much.  The repetition and the hype seem to steal something from our solace.   This solace remains constant in the time between the bands when the winds and rain is calm or when the rain blows horizontally through those pine boughs.

Kevin Stokes and Tony Wood wrote a song that reminds us that sometimes God calms the storm, and sometimes He calms His children.  No matter where we are, storms will rage around us.  I pray for one or the other for my neighbors and for all those affected.  Sometimes, late at night when I hear the winds blow from inside may warm and dry home, I close my eyes and I see the children I met in Haiti.  I see the tent and tarps they lived in and hear the winds blow around me.  This is the same storm they saw but a few days before I did.  Did they pray that God would calm them or calm the storm?

When the storm is over, like turtles poking our heads out of our shells, we take a look around.  We check on one another.  We see how we can help.  Storms are a part of life.  Jesus reminded us that troubles will come.  However, he never leaves us nor forsakes us before, during, or after those storms.  He calls us to be the arms of compassion to those affected: firemen and farmers on the Gulf Coast, or orphans in Haiti.  When we are affected by the same storm, it seems like the differences between us fade away a little more.  He calls us to remind them all of His promise, “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid.”

Friday, August 17, 2012

Real Social Network


I am fascinated by the way people connect to one another.  We have dozens of options to attempt to connection through Social Media.  We live in a TGIF world: Twitter, Google Instagram, and Facebook.  YouTube is now the second largest search engine.  Millions us have our phones always on and always on us.  Technology drives a large portion of our lives.  I too use many of these technologies on a regular basis.  I’ve connected with friends, love ones, and new acquaintances.  So have millions of others.

But are we more connected than we ever have been? I mean TRULY connected.

On Sunday, August 19, we begin looking at the Real Social Network and power of community.  We are going to study Social Networking and Scripture’s call to live in community, the effects of the (Cloud?) Crowds on our lives, and power of a few faithful friends in our midst.  I invite you to be present each in worship as we look at these in The Gathering.  Remember, you can always find our sermons online at www.fairhopeumc.org or on iTunes.  And if you want to connect with me, you can find me www.facebook.com/rob.haynes or Twitter @rob_haynes. :->

In the August 19 message, I reference these videos.  I offer them to you here if you want to learn more:

Psychologist Sherry Turkle: Connected, but alone?

The Marketing Revolution of Social Media:

Monday, July 30, 2012

The (real) Social Network: The Power of Community


No doubt Social Networking has changed the world.  It has helped to bring down governments (remember the Arab Spring?), streamlined the distribution of important information (ever gotten message about breaking news or a coming storm?), reunited us with old friends (ever friended a high school flame?), and given us something else to amuse us (watched a cat video lately?).  Worldwide over 750 million people are on Facebook.  Twitter is not far behind with 500 million users.  We can communicate more information, to more people, over a broader distance, in a shorter time, than ever before.  We can catch up with old friends, make new friends, and keep them up on what we are doing.

But it forces us to ask the question: we may be more connected, but are building authentic, lasting community?  What is life was more than a status update, a 140 character Tweet, an Instagram photo, or an e-mail?  What if it were more than a simple interface on a screen in the palm of our hands?

Don’t get me wrong, I use all of these forms of communication--sometimes several times a day.  I am glad that we can stay in touch with so many people in such an easy manner.  But I hope that it doesn’t remain there.  Authentic and lasting community takes more that these types of interactions.  How do we move that direction?

Beginning August 19, we will take a look at the power of authentic community with a three-week series in The Gathering.  Be present each week for these times of teaching and study.  And oh, while you’re at it, feel free to follow me: I’m on Facebook: www.facebook.com/rob.haynes, Twitter: @rob_haynes, and Instagram: rob_haynes.    =:-)

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Water, Water Everywhere


Welcome to summer!  One of my favorite parts about this time of year is spending time on the water.  I love to do things in the water, on the water, under the water, near the water-WHATEVER! I love hiking near a mountain stream, fishing under a shade tree on a farm pond, floating on the lake, or sitting at the beach.  I think one of the things that draws me to the water is what it represents.  Singular water molecules join together in the trickle of a mountain stream.  That flows to the pond, which empties into the lake which empties into the sea.  It takes every little mountain stream, every pond, every lake to make up the waters of the sea.  And when they join together, they represent great beauty, great power, and great wonder.  Stand at the edge of the sea on contemplate how vast, how deep, how wide it is.  Consider the myriad of life that exists below the surface of the water.  I may be simple minded, but the profundity of the simple water droplets coming together to form something so mighty like sea leaves me in awe.

Maybe that’s because I see the power of the church in much the same way.  Time and again we see the Spirit of God represented by water in the Scriptures.  By ourselves, we can do very little.  However, when we join together with a few others, we begin to have a great effect--the stream begins to trickle.  And so it goes as we join and as we become a single unit like the sea. 

When you find yourself on the water this summer, take a minute to contemplate the little parts that make up the larger body of water.  It takes every drop to make up the whole.  So it is with us.  We all do our part to make up the Body of Christ.  May we enjoy our summer while we maintain our faithfulness in Prayers, Presence, Gifts, Service, and Witness.  Let’s come together in worship, study, prayer, and fellowship.  The rest of the time, let’s go spend it on the water together!

Friday, June 01, 2012

Imagine No Malaria


Think for a moment about the disease that we no longer worry about because of the dedication and research of those of generations before us: scurvy, polio, bubonic plague.  We don’t give much thought to these anymore.  In the USA we would include MALARIA on that list, but that is not so for much of the Developing World.  However there is a plan to eradicate, and YOU can be a part of the solution.
One lesson we learned from General Conference 2012 is that The United Methodist Church is increasingly a WORLDWIDE church.  The number of Africans United Methodists is approaching 5 million.  It is one area where the church is growing the most.  Our brothers and sisters there need our help in serving their neighbors.  Our missional focus for Annual Conference this year is Imagine No Malaria, a campaign to STOP malaria for good.  This is a world-wide effort of the people of The United Methodist Church to raise $75 million to eliminate death and suffering from malaria in Africa by 2015. This comprehensive approach to beating malaria through prevention, education,
communication and treatment.  Malaria is both preventable and treatable. There is currently a plan to eliminate malaria
in our lifetime.  For more than 160 years the denomination has been a key player in the fight against malaria, operating hospitals, clinics and mission centers across Africa.  Through our partnership in ministry with them, we can look forward to the day that we can celebrate the elimination of malaria around the world.
So what can you do?  We will present a special offering at Annual Conference the week of June 4.  We will focus on this special offering here throughout the month of June.  Your gifts, over and above your regular giving, will make a huge difference.  Every contribution makes a huge difference.  $10 buys an insecticide-treated net, one of the most effective methods of prevention.  As little as $28 a month will impact 100 people in prevention, medications, and education.  As with every donation to these projects, 100% of the donation does directly to the project.
Would you join me in this fight against a needless killer?  Together let’s Imagine No Malaria to threaten our brothers and sisters around the world.  For more information, visit our website www.fairhopeumc.org.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Going Fishing this Spring


Summer is one of my favorite times of the year.  I enjoy getting out to the beach, getting on the water, working outside.  Fairhope is a great place to live if you love the warm weather and the sun.  This summer we’d like to celebrate some of these things in The Gathering with you.

Have you ever noticed how much Jesus talks about FISHING in the Gospels?  We see Jesus on the Sea of Galilee several times.  He called fishermen to be among His first disciples.  He used fishing boats for a pulpit. Jesus used fish in His miracles--from coins in their mouths to miraculous catches to feeding thousands of people with just a few fish.  Why so much emphasis on fishing?!?

I’m excited as we are in a series in The Gathering called “Going Fishing: The Fishing Stories of the Gospels.”  Whether you fish or not, I think you’ll find something encouraging, challenging, and edifying in these studies.  That’s because Jesus’ fishing stories weren’t about fishing; there were about LIFE.  I encourage you to bring a friend and come to worship.  Fishing poles in worship will be optional! :)  The series runs through May 20.

Which brings me to another thing: this summer we want to encourage you to “come as you are” to worship.  In May we begin Casual Summer in The Gathering contemporary worship.  I know that there are many things that my draw your attention this summer.  My prayer is that faithful participation in worship will continue to be one of those.  So if you’re headed out somewhere on Sunday, come to church first.  Come in your jeans or your shorts and feel uninhibited in worship.

Later in the summer we have more great series planned, so stay tuned, stay plugged in, stay involved!  I look forward to worshipping, to studying, (even to fishing), and to enjoying the upcoming summer with you!

Friday, April 20, 2012

Ecuador Medical Mission Team--April 20

Ecuador Medical Mission Team

April 20

The Least of These

Have you thought about the "least" these people in our world? Jesus certainly does. He proved that in His life and work in ministry on Earth. He was about God's business in serving and ministering to the people that seemed seemed to have forgotten. Among these were the sick, the poor, the lame, the blind.

This week we've seen our team serve some of these same people here in Ecuador. They have looked past their impressions or even preconceived ideas. Instead they have looked for Jesus in each face they've seen.

Today our work in Quito drew to a close. We were blessed to serve hundreds this week with medical care, dental care, and provided glasses. These children, youth, and adults were able to get the referrals they needed and all medicines and vitamins for each.

We won't have the opportunity to serve in this exact same way again. But this experience encourages us to look for the least, the last, and the lost that are within arms' reach in our own contexts back home. Those that we seem to pass each day on the way to work. The ones we forget about that live near us. The ones that Jesus would spend time with--the least of these.

How about you? Who are the least of these in your own context? Are you ready to serve as Jesus did? Are you ready to use the gifts and graces that He has given you to serve? It doesn't have to be across the world. Maybe it is to be across the street. Maybe it is across the hall. Wherever it is, ask God to show you who you can serve and how. He'll show you. He wants to show compassion and love to His children. And He wants to use YOU to do so.

 

We have been very blessed to work with SIFAT (Servants In Faith and Technology). To learn more about their work and how you can also be involved visit www.sifat.org.

In Ecuador we've worked at sites where Compassion International is making a difference in the lives of children as they release them from poverty in Jesus' name. Visit www.compassion.com

In early blogs, we mentioned the work of Dr. and Mrs. Paul and Flor Fellers and Bayside Medical Mission. Visit them at www.baysidemedicalmissions.com

To learn more about the ministries of Fairhope United Methodist Church, visit www.fairhopeumc.org 

May we all take seriously the word of Christ in His call to serve and to bring life, life more abundantly (see John 10:10).

Matthew 25:31-46

31 “When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, he will sit on his glorious throne. 32 All the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate the people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. 33 He will put the sheep on his right and the goats on his left.


34 “Then the King will say to those on his right, ‘Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world. 35 For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, 36 I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.’

37 “Then the righteous will answer him, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink? 38 When did we see you a stranger and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you? 39 When did we see you sick or in prison and go to visit you?’

40 “The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’

41 “Then he will say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me, you who are cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels. 42 For I was hungry and you gave me nothing to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me nothing to drink, 43 I was a stranger and you did not invite me in, I needed clothes and you did not clothe me, I was sick and in prison and you did not look after me.’

44 “They also will answer, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or needing clothes or sick or in prison, and did not help you?’

45 “He will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me.’

46 “Then they will go away to eternal punishment, but the righteous to eternal life.”

 

 

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Ecuador Medical Team 2012--April 19

April 19

Quito

Medicine can do so much. There's only so much that medicine can do.

I couldn't be more proud of this team. They have done a remarkable job in service to God's people so far this week. They have done an excellent job with every aspect of the experience: the travel, the food, the time with one another, and most of all time in the clinic. They have shown amazing love to these beautiful people in Ecuador.

We have seen people for well check ups. We have also seen them for life-changing illnesses. We have been able to share medical care and offer them the medicines and procedures they need, anti-parasite medications and vitamins for all. We can definitely say that we have made an impact on the people of Ecuador. There is much that medicine can do.

Today, we were also reminded that there is only so much that medicine can do. A poignant lesson came when we saw a middle-aged woman who complained of insomnia. As we asked more questions we realized that she has suffered a great deal. She lost her father and fifteen-year-old daughter in tragic incidents. She was unable to find work. The weight of the world was upon her. He problems were not physical, but spiritual. Our doctor offered some of the most profound healing I have heard in a while. "I've studied medicine a great deal. I also know that there is much that I don't know. In your case, my medicines won't help. This healing can only come from Jesus Christ.". We called the leaders of the church to come pray with her. We offered her encouragement and a community of love and support that she so desperately needed. It was the right medicine and a much needed time.

There is much that medicine can do. But there's only so much medicine can do. My prayer is that we will continue to offer both types of healing wherever we may go and to whomever God may bring our way.

 

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Ecuador Medical Team 2012- April 18

April 18

Quito

What's the difference?

When you see someone, what do you see? Do you see the things you have in common? Or the differences? Here in Ecuador it is often easy for us to see those differences. The differences in skin color, hair, language, customs, foods, etc. Differences abound.

But the members of the team are challenging themselves to see the similarities. The similarities in our families, our friends, our children, our parents, OURSELVES. It isn't difficult to see the similarities when we open our eyes. I think about the parent who rode 4 hours by bus, one way, with her pre-schooler today. He has a rather serious orthopedic condition. She wanted to see our Dr. Fellers because she wanted to continue a relationship they'd built. Quite simply she wants the best for her child. That's a similarity many of us could see.

I also think of the way that we share a common grief when children suffer. We have seen children suffer at no fault of their own. This continues to break the teams's collective heart. And it spurs the team on to our work. Certainly we share this similarity in our own relationships.

Above all, we have our common love of God and His love for us. Though we may worship in different churches, different denominations, different languages--we share this common love of the One God and His love for us. This unites us beyond any external differences and breaks down barriers. Only God can break these walls with this much love. It is a joy to witness and to partake.

How about you? What did you see today? Differences? Similarities? May God open all of our eyes to the common love He has for us. Look around you today in your own context and the people you'll see. You'll be amazed at the similarities that God will show you.

 

 

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Ecuador Medical Mission 2012--April 17

Ecuador Medical Mission 2012

April 17

Quito

Tonight Hutch, during our nightly devotions, gave a great reminder to the team about the power of leaving a legacy. We have all received a legacy from our parents, our grandparents, pastors, teachers, coaches, and other leaders. They make up so much of who we are, what we do, and the decisions we make.

 

Today, in the work of the clinic, the team saw the effects of legacies. Some of those legacies are healthy families. Some are much darker: babies having babies, difficulties in marriage, unhealthy parenting, and the exploitation of the youngest of God's children. The team was able to shine light in these darkest of places. The light of Christ shone upon these and others. This light came in the way of love and compassion. It came in the beginning of physical healing. It came in the way that the leaders of this church are now able to minister to these beautiful people. If we had not come, those lights may never have shone. Today we began BREAKING legacies. We began breaking destructive legacies and working to replace them with lasting, loving legacies.

 

It causes us to pause. What are the legacies we are leaving? Are we shining the light of God's love on those to whom we are passing our legacies? Are we willing to stand up to those who are passing on these destructive legacies? Are we willing to shine light in these dark areas? My prayer is that we all would so let the Love of God shine through us that we may an impact on this generation and those to come.

 

 

 

 

Monday, April 16, 2012

Ecuador Medical Mission 2012--April 16

Ecuador Medical Mission 2012

April 16

Quito

Today was the team's first day of clinic. The work was exhausting and rewarding. That is often the case when you are working in the gifts that God has given you. You work hard and you are tired, that good tired. It is the good tired that comes when you finish strong in the race, work hard on a project, or pull together with your team to do what seemed impossible-until you tried. Thats's exactly what happened today, all of the above.

 

We saw about 100 patients in the Villaflora region of Quito. We saw kids, youth, and adults of all ages. They all had a chance for a visit with a physician, an eye exam, and a visit with the dentist. In addition, they all received the medications they needed, vitamins, and anti-parasite medications. We have relationships with medical personnel here in Ecuador that allows us to make all necessary referrals.

 

Despite the loud and busy atmosphere, the team worked hard and did a great job. Loud and busy, they realize, just means that there are children (of all ages) whom God loves all around us. And they are within our arms' reach to serve and love. The most important encounters we had today were the spiritual ones. People came to our team members for help in their marriages and spiritual lives. We are blessed to do so.

So the team members lay their heads down tonight with that good sort of tired feeling deep down in their bones. We do some expecting more great things tomorrow.

Medical team pic

 

 

 

 

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Ecuador Medical Mission 2012--April 15

Ecuador medical mission 2012

Quito

 

April 15

 

The team's first day on in Ecuador has been a cultural experience. The day began with a tour of the Mitad del Mundo monument and indigenous museum. We got to see examples of some of the native tribes of Ecuador, see some fascinating science demonstrations on the Equator, and grow together while doing it.

 

After the tour and lunch, we worshipped at Mama Yoli's in the Atacucho barrio of Quito. This is the site of our 2008 medical clinic. We worshipped at the Methodist Church Aqua de Vida. It was a lively service. We were blessed with dancing and singing by the children and folk dancing. They wanted us to see more of Ecuadorean culture and the ministry to the children and families in their community. It was a blessing. The work of Lord there is growing and it is exciting to see.

 

During the service, a member of the church brought flowers to the members of the team. The bouquet was like one that we'd find in the grocery store in the States. She pulled flowers out of the bouquet and passed them out to the team members. By the time she got to me, she had only baby's breath left. She passed that out to me like any other flower. Some people may look at baby's breath as a cheap filler. At that moment, however, it was much more. It was an offering of thanks. The church doesn't have extra money to buy us flowers. And they used every bit of the gift the best they could. I felt grateful for the offering. When she handed it to me I thought of the widow's mite from Luke 21. They smallest of offerings was given, and received, with gratitude. I wonder if I do that often enough? How often do I give of the smallest parts of me? How often do I receive the smallest parts with gratitude? It is this attitude of the heart that makes the offering not the smallest, but among the greatest.

 

Tomorrow we begin work in the clinic. May this attitude infect us all.

 

 

 

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Ecuador Medical Mission 2012, Day 3

Ecuador 2012
Day 3
Portoviejo

Today is a clinic day. While the doctors and others run the clinic, I have offered to help in any way I can. I most stay in the background until I'm needed.

That allowed me to spend time with a local pastor. He serves a church here in town. It sounds like a growing, dynamic congregation. His heart is to serve his people in their discipleship and their learning to serve others in some very real and practical ways. They are working on developing their DNA in that realm. Another important part of their DNA is the multiplication of this model. They feel that to become manageable and effective, they must plant more churches in this same way. I applaud him for his vision of ministry: multiplication undergirded with service and service undergirded with multiplication. We had great discussion and the sharing of ideas about how to continue ministry, each in our own contexts, and encourage one another along the way.

Speaking of service, I stumbled upon an intereststing conversation about justice today. I was talking with a couple of 20 somethings about what it means to bring justice. Can justice be found in our world? How does justice come? For that matter, what does justice mean at all? First of all, biblical justice does not mean as we think of it terms of the court system. It is not necessarily a blinded woman balancing scales. There is a place for that. But that is not the kind of biblical justice we mean. Biblical justice seems to side with the poor, the disenfranchised, the oppressed, the outcast. Look at the people with whom Jesus spent His time. Jesus was faulted for spending his time with the lowly and the outcast. He was faulted by people who were supposed to be defending the causes of these "lowly" people. Instead these religious leaders were casting stones at the oppressed, lame, blind, and outcast. What about in the modern church? Do we side with the religious leaders of New Testament times and put our noses up and those who are "beneath" us? Or do we side with Jesus who decided to extend an open hand to all God's children? Jesus was about the work or healing relationships, setting the oppressed free, helping others see their captivity and then releasing them from it (or maybe the other way around). He took the side of the poor, the downcast and the brokenhearted. Shouldn't we do the same?

In order to truly work for justice in this world, we must practice the justice that Jesus practiced. We have to speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves. We must be on the side of those that society has forgotten (or wants to forget). That means that we must be willing to do so in the places at our doorstep. It means that we must be willing to go even to the furtherest reaches. It means that we must begin to model, in our own lives, the things that Jesus did.

How do we even begin such an endeavor? We cannot do it of our own works or our own merit. We must remember the greatest commandment. Jesus says that is to love God and love our neighbor. How do we serve? We fall in love. We fall in love with God. We fall in love with His people. Then we cannot help but to do the things of love.

 

 

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Ecuador 2012. Day 2

Ecuador 2012
Day 2
Crucita

Today was a day of travel. I stayed at the hotel this morning and read and did some writing. Off to the airport around 11. Fly from Quito to Manta. I

n Manta, Flor and our driver, Elvis picked me up and took me to the clinic in Portoviejo. The work there is busy and ongoing. Paul saw several patients for chronic conditions. Even when it seems mundane, the work is important to those who need to see the doctor. We can't loses sight it that. Tonight we stayed in the Fellers' home in Crucita. The home is just a stone's throw from the Pacific Ocean. It was my first time to be on the beach in the Pacific. It is a beautiful little fishing community. It was great catching up with our friends. I am spending more time with new team members too. I am excited to see how the team continues to come together.

Tomorrow we go back to the clinic. I'm looking forward to seeing who we will meet. God is at work in the people of Ecuador.

Ecuador Medical Missions 2012 Day 1

Ecuador 2012
Day 1
Arrived in Quito Tuesday night. The trip gave me a tight connection in Miami but I made it. More on that later. Suffice it to say that I have a letter to write to the airlines. On the way down I sat next to a man who is doing similar work in South America. It is interesting the way that God is working in the people in the USA and in the developing world. We are but one small piece of a larger picture of God's work.

Wednesday, I leave to fly to Manta and stay in Crucita on the Pacific coast. There I will meet up with Paul and Flor Fellers and the work they are doing at their clinic in Portoviejo. We have been friends for a while and I'm looking forward to seeing their work and ministry. I am willing to serve in any way they need me. They have many connections in Fairhope and are so well respected. I hope that we can build bridges with the work of SIFAT that is also going on in Ecuador. In this my third trip to Ecuador my heart already breaks for the children we will encounter. I am particularly grieved when children suffer at no fault of their own. They did not choose the situation into which they were born. They did not choose their parents. They only know what is around them. Sometimes that is great. Sometimes that is heart-wrenching. I know that cannot extract them from the situation. Perhaps I can be a small part of the solution for their families and communities. In the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus gives the Sermon on the Mount. He tells us to extend compassion, show mercy, proclaim forgiveness and to live out our faith in the Holiness He's shown. May prayer today is that we would all do just that. Lord, may we be open to what you're doing.

For more on the ministry of SIFAT, visit www.sifat.org

To learn more about Bayside Medical Missions, visit www.baysidemedicalmissions.org

The picture is a shot from the hotel. This is a park and arena. I love the mountains beyond.

 

Sunday, April 01, 2012

What does resurrection mean to us?


“What does resurrection mean to you?”  A friend recently asked that question to several of us.  Many said that it meant that we get to go to heaven, that Jesus died for our sins, that we have hope of eternal life.

No doubt it means all of those things.  But if we only stop there, I think we’ve sold short the power of resurrection.  All of human history revolves around the resurrection.  We note Jesus’ birth as the start point of our calendar, in part, because of the resurrection.  The church exists today because of the resurrection.

So what does resurrection mean to us?  It means that what Jesus said about Himself is true.  That requires us to make some careful study.  In Luke 4:18-19, Jesus speaks to the people of the synagogue of Nazareth, “The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor.  He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set the oppressed free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.”  This is a clear proclamation of why Jesus came to embody resurrection, even before His death, and to offer the hope it brings here on earth.

In Luke 10, Jesus sends out the 70 to minister in His name.  He tells them to proclaim that the Kingdom of God has come near.   Jesus continued to bring this message of hope of the Kingdom of God in the things He said He came to do: to bring healing to people--mind, body, and soul.  He brought sight to those who suffered from physical and spiritual blindness.  He came to set captives free-even from the prisons that they built for themselves.

What does resurrection mean?  It means LIFE.  It means life here and now as well as there and then.  It means that we can live as a people of hope-in this world and look forward to the next.  It means that our spiritual deaths in this world can be turned around by Christ’s life that he brings still today.  We see this life when we practice the means of Grace which are, among others, faithful worship, regular Bible study, serving others, diligent prayer.   Would you join me in these?  For it is my prayer that this Easter season may you experience the power of resurrection, even but a glimpse, on Earth, as it shall be in Heaven.  

Thursday, March 01, 2012

Luck or Love: A look at Saint Patrick


A New Year’s focus of mine is to work on that reading list sitting on the shelf in my office.  That’s lead me to George Hunter’s The Celtic Way of Evangelism.  Hunter examines the church of today with the church that St. Patrick served in the fifth century.  The parallels are both encouraging and challenging.

As a young man, Patrick lived a simple life in what is now northeast England.  When he was sixteen he was kidnapped by a band of Celtic pirates and sold into slavery.  For six years he worked herding cattle.  It was during this time that he used a difficult situation and turned to God.  He grew in his knowledge of God by celebrating God’s work in the creation all around him.  He says he looked at the skies and the earth and knew God must be at work.  This lead him to prayer literally hundreds of times a day.  Patrick grew to understand his captors and their culture.  He came to love his captors and hope for their redemption in Christ.

One day God gave Patrick a vision for his freedom.  He walked three days to the coast and found the ship in his vision that lead him to safety.  On the European continent he joined a monastery and refined his call to serve God.  He knew that he had to go back to the people he grew up with and tell them about the faith in Christ he had found.

So began the telling of the Good News of Jesus in present-day Ireland.  Patrick worked hard to love and serve those in his immediate setting.  He welcomed all right were they were and used the common ground to build bridges to explain the work of Christ.  He sought forgiveness in relationships.  He even went so far as to earn the money to pay back his former slave owner.  He wanted to show him the ransom that Jesus paid for his soul too.

We may celebrate St. Patrick’s Day in different ways today.  But I wonder if we could take this as a model for sharing the Good News of Jesus in our own contexts?  What if we loved and served those in our immediate setting?  Welcomed all who came into our midst as our own brother or sister?  Sought forgiveness in relationships?  Did all we could to live a peace with one another?  We certainly wouldn’t need to look for luck when we’ve lived our sharing Christ’s Love as Patrick did.

Sunday, January 01, 2012

New Year, New Readings


“My ground is the Bible...I follow it in all things, both great and small.”--John Wesley

Have you ever read the Bible.  I mean REALLY read the Bible.  I’m not talking about just listening to the preacher read the Scripture selection of the day and then explain it.  I’m not talking about just hearing the Sunday School stories as a kid--or maybe even as an adult.
I mean reading it with intent.  I mean reading it with expectation.  I mean reading it with open eyes.

Nothing will change a life more dramatically than the power of God’s Truth working in people’s lives.  God reveals Himself to us through the power of the Scriptures.  When we spend time regularly reading the Bible, amazing things happen.

The Bible, among many things, is God’s revelation of Himself to us.  It is the story of God’s people throughout time.  It contains stories of hope and redemption, of hurt and betrayal, of love and of forgiveness.

In this new year, I encourage you to find a plan for reading the Bible for yourself.  Maybe this is something you’ve done before and want to pick up again.  Maybe this is new to you.  I’ve listed a few resources below to help you begin your journey.  These aren’t the only ones, by far.  But it may be a good place for you to start.

I think you’ll find that your reading will increase as time goes on.  I know I started by just reading a few paragraphs a day.  Now, a few paragraphs of Scripture is never enough to me.  I think you’ll find the same for yourself.  I’d love to hear your feedback as you encounter this life-changing message for yourself.  Here’s to a wonderful journey together.
Bible Reading Plans for Beginners:
Zondervan’s Website has some great plans for beginners, including time in the Old and New Testaments.  You’ll find some great plans here.

American Bible Society also has a daily reading plan that you can read online or by e-mail.  You can find it here.

Daily Devotional
The Upper Room has an online devotional that matches the print edition.  You can subscribe here.

The Bible in a Year
You can subscribe to a one-year reading plan by e-mail at Biblegateway.com.  Start it anytime you like, and finish 365 days later.


For Intermediate or Advanced Study
Zonderan's Website also includes some more advanced reading plans for intermediate and advanced readings.  You can find some pretty neat plans here.


Saturday, December 24, 2011

Merry Christmas

What a joy to celebrate Christmas together.  Here's a link to the video we used in the Gathering service tonight:


Also, here's a copy of the story "Balancing Christmas."  God Bless You and Merry Christmas.


Balancing Christmas
An early morning quiet covers the house as I sit alone on the couch with my Bible and
coffee. A steady rain falls outside. The house is dark except for my reading light.
I place my Bible on the table by the lamp & look up to see the darkened Christmas tree. My
heart is thankful to God for the blessings represented by each ornament on the tree. Images in
plastic, glass, paper, & ribbon colorfully adorn the evergreen in the corner of the den. Each
three-dimensional picture recalls the fond memories of friends, family members, students, &
others dear to us from years gone by.
I notice that the ornaments are clustered together toward the bottom of the tree again.
When we hang them, Beth tries hard to help the children spread them all over the tree. She
reminds Joshua & Meg to balance the decorations evenly all over the tree. It is difficult
because they get excited about putting up the ornaments. Their hands work quickly when it is
time to decorate—moving faster than her admonishments. When the decorating is finished, the
ornaments are bunched together on the lower third of the tree. The bottom branches bend
under the weight of several decorations on each branch. The tight cluster of adornments
seems to stop about eye-level for the children. I smile inside. I realize that the cluster of
ornaments will move up over the years. It will steadily grow a little higher each Advent. As
the children grow in age & stature, so too will the
“waterline” of our ornaments rise.
The tree is crowded with ornaments. I saw a tidbit that purported the average tree to have
75 ornaments. I think we’re overachievers. But there will be a day when the children will
have their own homes with their own trees. They will take many of these ornaments with them
to get their own Christmas decorations started. Like taking the cuttings off of a tree to allow a
new tree to take root, we will encourage Joshua & Meg to set their own roots of Christmas
traditions.
Our tree may look a little bare that year. Alone, Beth & I will space out the ornaments
evenly all over the tree. She’ll remind me to make sure we have a balance of sizes & colors &
shapes all around the tree. We’ll even make sure to cover the back—so you can see them out
the window too. And as we pick up each ornament we’ll tell a little story about them: where
we got it, when we got it, & fondly recall the giver. Maybe when Beth isn’t looking I’ll cluster
up a bunch of ornaments toward the bottom of the tree. I’ll remember a morning in a dark,
quiet house when everyone else was asleep & our Christmas tree was beautifully and
wonderfully out of balance.

Monday, December 05, 2011

I've posted some new information and links concerning the Ecuador Mission Journey opportunity in April 2012.  Check out more information at www.fairhopeumc.org/Ecudaor.

Is God calling you to serve on this journey next year?  Contact me if you'd like to talk more.

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Hurricane Living


Inland friends sometimes ask what it is like to live on the coast, where we experience hurricanes.  I’ve lived in Kentucky and Illinois and seen floods, ice storms, tornadoes.  I’ve lived in northeast Ohio and seen blizzards.  Each area has its own unique challenges.   I’ve lived on the Gulf Coast for 21 years, over half my life.  Living in an area where hurricanes are a possibility leads us to prepare, much like living in other areas require you to prepare.  We don’t buy rock salt to cover the driveway and snowblowers.  We buy plywood to cover the windows and generators.

My family and I live at least ten miles inland.  We live near woods and fields of cattle and row crops.  Some of those living inland have said that we on the coast get what we deserve when we get a hurricane.  They say that only the wealthy have their second homes on the coast and that it is okay to let them blow away.  I haven’t always found that to the be the case.  Storms (hurricanes, ice storms, tornadoes) occur all over the country.  Our neighbors use their homes as their primary (almost exclusively ONLY) residence.  Our neighbors are firemen, teachers, WWII vets, farmers, and landscapers.  They are hardworking, caring, good people.  Hardly would we consider our homes expendable.  Living in a hurricane area is just a part of life for us.

Over the years you accumulate things.  One year you buy a generator.  Another year you buy some plywood to cover the windows.  Another year you actually cut them to fit the doors and windows.  You keep your stash of flashlights, lanterns, and batteries handy.

With each storm you accumulate stories.  You remember the places you rode out the storm, the times you evacuated, the times you WISHED you had evacuated and that times you wished you had stayed put.  You remember the storms by how old the children were or when Grandma came over to ride it out with you.  These events become a part of our family history.  

Hurricanes are often large and unpredictable.  Forecasting their landfall and intensity is difficult.  When one enters the Gulf of Mexico, those of us living on the hundreds of miles of coastline must be prepared.  Even small changes can mean a big difference.  Isaac had rain bands some 350 miles across.  We were on the outside edge of those bands.  If Isaac moved 25 miles to the east, it would mean that several more inches of rain fell upon our homes and land, not Mobile Bay.  So an adjustment of less than 10% can mean the difference between a drizzly, breezy day and downed trees, power lines, and significant flooding.

Therefore, we prepare.  For Isaac we were expecting a storm with winds of at least 115mph.  A week ago, the forecast was for it to go far to the east of us.  That would put us on the “good” side. When you’re on the west side of the storm, the rains and winds are much quieter.  As the week progressed, the forecast track moved west.  For a day or so, the forecast track put the eye of the storm passing over our home.  But the forecast track kept moving west.  That puts us on the “bad” side.  When you’re on the east side the rain, winds, and possibility for tornadoes all greatly increase.

At the church, we put our plan into action.  We secured the facility.  We called our “sensitive” populations.  The governor declared a state of emergency and ordered evacuations.  Schools closed for three days.  People move into a strange state of motion.  The stores are quickly emptied of bread, water, canned meat, peanut butter, paper products, batteries, and snack foods. (As a side note, our family always buys ice cream at this point.  That way if the power goes out, we have to eat the whole carton immediately, lest it should melt.)

The news people tell you to fill your car with gas.  On your way to fill up you see several boats on trailers headed inland.  You may find stations out of gas.  When you find gas, you may wait in line behind someone filling up several cans.  Maybe it is for their generator or maybe it is for peace of mind.

Our family seeks to move with calm through the process.  We clear the yard and porch of lightweight items.  We help our neighbors and friends.  We get the animals settled.  As we work, a foreshadowing breeze creates a whisper through the surrounding pine trees, and we take one more look around before we head into the house.  Later we will poke our heads out between bands of rain coming on shore, when the wind the will howl through those same pines.

Despite all the ills of the storms, I love the family time the storm creates for us.  It is almost as if we are being pressed inward, from all sides, to be together.  We do those projects we’ve been meaning to get ‘round to for a while: we clean out a closet or two, I get that old reel cleaned and reassembled, we play games together, we watch classic movies, we go splash in the puddles.  The space of family time is our calm in the storm.  
We don’t really turn on the television very much.  The repetition and the hype seem to steal something from our solace.   This solace remains constant in the time between the bands when the winds and rain is calm or when the rain blows horizontally through those pine boughs.

Kevin Stokes and Tony Wood wrote a song that reminds us that sometimes God calms the storm, and sometimes He calms His children.  No matter where we are, storms will rage around us.  I pray for one or the other for my neighbors and for all those affected.  Sometimes, late at night when I hear the winds blow from inside may warm and dry home, I close my eyes and I see the children I met in Haiti.  I see the tent and tarps they lived in and hear the winds blow around me.  This is the same storm they saw but a few days before I did.  Did they pray that God would calm them or calm the storm?

When the storm is over, like turtles poking our heads out of our shells, we take a look around.  We check on one another.  We see how we can help.  Storms are a part of life.  Jesus reminded us that troubles will come.  However, he never leaves us nor forsakes us before, during, or after those storms.  He calls us to be the arms of compassion to those affected: firemen and farmers on the Gulf Coast, or orphans in Haiti.  When we are affected by the same storm, it seems like the differences between us fade away a little more.  He calls us to remind them all of His promise, “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid.”

Friday, August 17, 2012

Real Social Network


I am fascinated by the way people connect to one another.  We have dozens of options to attempt to connection through Social Media.  We live in a TGIF world: Twitter, Google Instagram, and Facebook.  YouTube is now the second largest search engine.  Millions us have our phones always on and always on us.  Technology drives a large portion of our lives.  I too use many of these technologies on a regular basis.  I’ve connected with friends, love ones, and new acquaintances.  So have millions of others.

But are we more connected than we ever have been? I mean TRULY connected.

On Sunday, August 19, we begin looking at the Real Social Network and power of community.  We are going to study Social Networking and Scripture’s call to live in community, the effects of the (Cloud?) Crowds on our lives, and power of a few faithful friends in our midst.  I invite you to be present each in worship as we look at these in The Gathering.  Remember, you can always find our sermons online at www.fairhopeumc.org or on iTunes.  And if you want to connect with me, you can find me www.facebook.com/rob.haynes or Twitter @rob_haynes. :->

In the August 19 message, I reference these videos.  I offer them to you here if you want to learn more:

Psychologist Sherry Turkle: Connected, but alone?

The Marketing Revolution of Social Media:

Monday, July 30, 2012

The (real) Social Network: The Power of Community


No doubt Social Networking has changed the world.  It has helped to bring down governments (remember the Arab Spring?), streamlined the distribution of important information (ever gotten message about breaking news or a coming storm?), reunited us with old friends (ever friended a high school flame?), and given us something else to amuse us (watched a cat video lately?).  Worldwide over 750 million people are on Facebook.  Twitter is not far behind with 500 million users.  We can communicate more information, to more people, over a broader distance, in a shorter time, than ever before.  We can catch up with old friends, make new friends, and keep them up on what we are doing.

But it forces us to ask the question: we may be more connected, but are building authentic, lasting community?  What is life was more than a status update, a 140 character Tweet, an Instagram photo, or an e-mail?  What if it were more than a simple interface on a screen in the palm of our hands?

Don’t get me wrong, I use all of these forms of communication--sometimes several times a day.  I am glad that we can stay in touch with so many people in such an easy manner.  But I hope that it doesn’t remain there.  Authentic and lasting community takes more that these types of interactions.  How do we move that direction?

Beginning August 19, we will take a look at the power of authentic community with a three-week series in The Gathering.  Be present each week for these times of teaching and study.  And oh, while you’re at it, feel free to follow me: I’m on Facebook: www.facebook.com/rob.haynes, Twitter: @rob_haynes, and Instagram: rob_haynes.    =:-)

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Water, Water Everywhere


Welcome to summer!  One of my favorite parts about this time of year is spending time on the water.  I love to do things in the water, on the water, under the water, near the water-WHATEVER! I love hiking near a mountain stream, fishing under a shade tree on a farm pond, floating on the lake, or sitting at the beach.  I think one of the things that draws me to the water is what it represents.  Singular water molecules join together in the trickle of a mountain stream.  That flows to the pond, which empties into the lake which empties into the sea.  It takes every little mountain stream, every pond, every lake to make up the waters of the sea.  And when they join together, they represent great beauty, great power, and great wonder.  Stand at the edge of the sea on contemplate how vast, how deep, how wide it is.  Consider the myriad of life that exists below the surface of the water.  I may be simple minded, but the profundity of the simple water droplets coming together to form something so mighty like sea leaves me in awe.

Maybe that’s because I see the power of the church in much the same way.  Time and again we see the Spirit of God represented by water in the Scriptures.  By ourselves, we can do very little.  However, when we join together with a few others, we begin to have a great effect--the stream begins to trickle.  And so it goes as we join and as we become a single unit like the sea. 

When you find yourself on the water this summer, take a minute to contemplate the little parts that make up the larger body of water.  It takes every drop to make up the whole.  So it is with us.  We all do our part to make up the Body of Christ.  May we enjoy our summer while we maintain our faithfulness in Prayers, Presence, Gifts, Service, and Witness.  Let’s come together in worship, study, prayer, and fellowship.  The rest of the time, let’s go spend it on the water together!

Friday, June 01, 2012

Imagine No Malaria


Think for a moment about the disease that we no longer worry about because of the dedication and research of those of generations before us: scurvy, polio, bubonic plague.  We don’t give much thought to these anymore.  In the USA we would include MALARIA on that list, but that is not so for much of the Developing World.  However there is a plan to eradicate, and YOU can be a part of the solution.
One lesson we learned from General Conference 2012 is that The United Methodist Church is increasingly a WORLDWIDE church.  The number of Africans United Methodists is approaching 5 million.  It is one area where the church is growing the most.  Our brothers and sisters there need our help in serving their neighbors.  Our missional focus for Annual Conference this year is Imagine No Malaria, a campaign to STOP malaria for good.  This is a world-wide effort of the people of The United Methodist Church to raise $75 million to eliminate death and suffering from malaria in Africa by 2015. This comprehensive approach to beating malaria through prevention, education,
communication and treatment.  Malaria is both preventable and treatable. There is currently a plan to eliminate malaria
in our lifetime.  For more than 160 years the denomination has been a key player in the fight against malaria, operating hospitals, clinics and mission centers across Africa.  Through our partnership in ministry with them, we can look forward to the day that we can celebrate the elimination of malaria around the world.
So what can you do?  We will present a special offering at Annual Conference the week of June 4.  We will focus on this special offering here throughout the month of June.  Your gifts, over and above your regular giving, will make a huge difference.  Every contribution makes a huge difference.  $10 buys an insecticide-treated net, one of the most effective methods of prevention.  As little as $28 a month will impact 100 people in prevention, medications, and education.  As with every donation to these projects, 100% of the donation does directly to the project.
Would you join me in this fight against a needless killer?  Together let’s Imagine No Malaria to threaten our brothers and sisters around the world.  For more information, visit our website www.fairhopeumc.org.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Going Fishing this Spring


Summer is one of my favorite times of the year.  I enjoy getting out to the beach, getting on the water, working outside.  Fairhope is a great place to live if you love the warm weather and the sun.  This summer we’d like to celebrate some of these things in The Gathering with you.

Have you ever noticed how much Jesus talks about FISHING in the Gospels?  We see Jesus on the Sea of Galilee several times.  He called fishermen to be among His first disciples.  He used fishing boats for a pulpit. Jesus used fish in His miracles--from coins in their mouths to miraculous catches to feeding thousands of people with just a few fish.  Why so much emphasis on fishing?!?

I’m excited as we are in a series in The Gathering called “Going Fishing: The Fishing Stories of the Gospels.”  Whether you fish or not, I think you’ll find something encouraging, challenging, and edifying in these studies.  That’s because Jesus’ fishing stories weren’t about fishing; there were about LIFE.  I encourage you to bring a friend and come to worship.  Fishing poles in worship will be optional! :)  The series runs through May 20.

Which brings me to another thing: this summer we want to encourage you to “come as you are” to worship.  In May we begin Casual Summer in The Gathering contemporary worship.  I know that there are many things that my draw your attention this summer.  My prayer is that faithful participation in worship will continue to be one of those.  So if you’re headed out somewhere on Sunday, come to church first.  Come in your jeans or your shorts and feel uninhibited in worship.

Later in the summer we have more great series planned, so stay tuned, stay plugged in, stay involved!  I look forward to worshipping, to studying, (even to fishing), and to enjoying the upcoming summer with you!

Friday, April 20, 2012

Ecuador Medical Mission Team--April 20

Ecuador Medical Mission Team

April 20

The Least of These

Have you thought about the "least" these people in our world? Jesus certainly does. He proved that in His life and work in ministry on Earth. He was about God's business in serving and ministering to the people that seemed seemed to have forgotten. Among these were the sick, the poor, the lame, the blind.

This week we've seen our team serve some of these same people here in Ecuador. They have looked past their impressions or even preconceived ideas. Instead they have looked for Jesus in each face they've seen.

Today our work in Quito drew to a close. We were blessed to serve hundreds this week with medical care, dental care, and provided glasses. These children, youth, and adults were able to get the referrals they needed and all medicines and vitamins for each.

We won't have the opportunity to serve in this exact same way again. But this experience encourages us to look for the least, the last, and the lost that are within arms' reach in our own contexts back home. Those that we seem to pass each day on the way to work. The ones we forget about that live near us. The ones that Jesus would spend time with--the least of these.

How about you? Who are the least of these in your own context? Are you ready to serve as Jesus did? Are you ready to use the gifts and graces that He has given you to serve? It doesn't have to be across the world. Maybe it is to be across the street. Maybe it is across the hall. Wherever it is, ask God to show you who you can serve and how. He'll show you. He wants to show compassion and love to His children. And He wants to use YOU to do so.

 

We have been very blessed to work with SIFAT (Servants In Faith and Technology). To learn more about their work and how you can also be involved visit www.sifat.org.

In Ecuador we've worked at sites where Compassion International is making a difference in the lives of children as they release them from poverty in Jesus' name. Visit www.compassion.com

In early blogs, we mentioned the work of Dr. and Mrs. Paul and Flor Fellers and Bayside Medical Mission. Visit them at www.baysidemedicalmissions.com

To learn more about the ministries of Fairhope United Methodist Church, visit www.fairhopeumc.org 

May we all take seriously the word of Christ in His call to serve and to bring life, life more abundantly (see John 10:10).

Matthew 25:31-46

31 “When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, he will sit on his glorious throne. 32 All the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate the people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. 33 He will put the sheep on his right and the goats on his left.


34 “Then the King will say to those on his right, ‘Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world. 35 For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, 36 I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.’

37 “Then the righteous will answer him, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink? 38 When did we see you a stranger and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you? 39 When did we see you sick or in prison and go to visit you?’

40 “The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’

41 “Then he will say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me, you who are cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels. 42 For I was hungry and you gave me nothing to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me nothing to drink, 43 I was a stranger and you did not invite me in, I needed clothes and you did not clothe me, I was sick and in prison and you did not look after me.’

44 “They also will answer, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or needing clothes or sick or in prison, and did not help you?’

45 “He will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me.’

46 “Then they will go away to eternal punishment, but the righteous to eternal life.”

 

 

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Ecuador Medical Team 2012--April 19

April 19

Quito

Medicine can do so much. There's only so much that medicine can do.

I couldn't be more proud of this team. They have done a remarkable job in service to God's people so far this week. They have done an excellent job with every aspect of the experience: the travel, the food, the time with one another, and most of all time in the clinic. They have shown amazing love to these beautiful people in Ecuador.

We have seen people for well check ups. We have also seen them for life-changing illnesses. We have been able to share medical care and offer them the medicines and procedures they need, anti-parasite medications and vitamins for all. We can definitely say that we have made an impact on the people of Ecuador. There is much that medicine can do.

Today, we were also reminded that there is only so much that medicine can do. A poignant lesson came when we saw a middle-aged woman who complained of insomnia. As we asked more questions we realized that she has suffered a great deal. She lost her father and fifteen-year-old daughter in tragic incidents. She was unable to find work. The weight of the world was upon her. He problems were not physical, but spiritual. Our doctor offered some of the most profound healing I have heard in a while. "I've studied medicine a great deal. I also know that there is much that I don't know. In your case, my medicines won't help. This healing can only come from Jesus Christ.". We called the leaders of the church to come pray with her. We offered her encouragement and a community of love and support that she so desperately needed. It was the right medicine and a much needed time.

There is much that medicine can do. But there's only so much medicine can do. My prayer is that we will continue to offer both types of healing wherever we may go and to whomever God may bring our way.

 

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Ecuador Medical Team 2012- April 18

April 18

Quito

What's the difference?

When you see someone, what do you see? Do you see the things you have in common? Or the differences? Here in Ecuador it is often easy for us to see those differences. The differences in skin color, hair, language, customs, foods, etc. Differences abound.

But the members of the team are challenging themselves to see the similarities. The similarities in our families, our friends, our children, our parents, OURSELVES. It isn't difficult to see the similarities when we open our eyes. I think about the parent who rode 4 hours by bus, one way, with her pre-schooler today. He has a rather serious orthopedic condition. She wanted to see our Dr. Fellers because she wanted to continue a relationship they'd built. Quite simply she wants the best for her child. That's a similarity many of us could see.

I also think of the way that we share a common grief when children suffer. We have seen children suffer at no fault of their own. This continues to break the teams's collective heart. And it spurs the team on to our work. Certainly we share this similarity in our own relationships.

Above all, we have our common love of God and His love for us. Though we may worship in different churches, different denominations, different languages--we share this common love of the One God and His love for us. This unites us beyond any external differences and breaks down barriers. Only God can break these walls with this much love. It is a joy to witness and to partake.

How about you? What did you see today? Differences? Similarities? May God open all of our eyes to the common love He has for us. Look around you today in your own context and the people you'll see. You'll be amazed at the similarities that God will show you.

 

 

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Ecuador Medical Mission 2012--April 17

Ecuador Medical Mission 2012

April 17

Quito

Tonight Hutch, during our nightly devotions, gave a great reminder to the team about the power of leaving a legacy. We have all received a legacy from our parents, our grandparents, pastors, teachers, coaches, and other leaders. They make up so much of who we are, what we do, and the decisions we make.

 

Today, in the work of the clinic, the team saw the effects of legacies. Some of those legacies are healthy families. Some are much darker: babies having babies, difficulties in marriage, unhealthy parenting, and the exploitation of the youngest of God's children. The team was able to shine light in these darkest of places. The light of Christ shone upon these and others. This light came in the way of love and compassion. It came in the beginning of physical healing. It came in the way that the leaders of this church are now able to minister to these beautiful people. If we had not come, those lights may never have shone. Today we began BREAKING legacies. We began breaking destructive legacies and working to replace them with lasting, loving legacies.

 

It causes us to pause. What are the legacies we are leaving? Are we shining the light of God's love on those to whom we are passing our legacies? Are we willing to stand up to those who are passing on these destructive legacies? Are we willing to shine light in these dark areas? My prayer is that we all would so let the Love of God shine through us that we may an impact on this generation and those to come.

 

 

 

 

Monday, April 16, 2012

Ecuador Medical Mission 2012--April 16

Ecuador Medical Mission 2012

April 16

Quito

Today was the team's first day of clinic. The work was exhausting and rewarding. That is often the case when you are working in the gifts that God has given you. You work hard and you are tired, that good tired. It is the good tired that comes when you finish strong in the race, work hard on a project, or pull together with your team to do what seemed impossible-until you tried. Thats's exactly what happened today, all of the above.

 

We saw about 100 patients in the Villaflora region of Quito. We saw kids, youth, and adults of all ages. They all had a chance for a visit with a physician, an eye exam, and a visit with the dentist. In addition, they all received the medications they needed, vitamins, and anti-parasite medications. We have relationships with medical personnel here in Ecuador that allows us to make all necessary referrals.

 

Despite the loud and busy atmosphere, the team worked hard and did a great job. Loud and busy, they realize, just means that there are children (of all ages) whom God loves all around us. And they are within our arms' reach to serve and love. The most important encounters we had today were the spiritual ones. People came to our team members for help in their marriages and spiritual lives. We are blessed to do so.

So the team members lay their heads down tonight with that good sort of tired feeling deep down in their bones. We do some expecting more great things tomorrow.

Medical team pic

 

 

 

 

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Ecuador Medical Mission 2012--April 15

Ecuador medical mission 2012

Quito

 

April 15

 

The team's first day on in Ecuador has been a cultural experience. The day began with a tour of the Mitad del Mundo monument and indigenous museum. We got to see examples of some of the native tribes of Ecuador, see some fascinating science demonstrations on the Equator, and grow together while doing it.

 

After the tour and lunch, we worshipped at Mama Yoli's in the Atacucho barrio of Quito. This is the site of our 2008 medical clinic. We worshipped at the Methodist Church Aqua de Vida. It was a lively service. We were blessed with dancing and singing by the children and folk dancing. They wanted us to see more of Ecuadorean culture and the ministry to the children and families in their community. It was a blessing. The work of Lord there is growing and it is exciting to see.

 

During the service, a member of the church brought flowers to the members of the team. The bouquet was like one that we'd find in the grocery store in the States. She pulled flowers out of the bouquet and passed them out to the team members. By the time she got to me, she had only baby's breath left. She passed that out to me like any other flower. Some people may look at baby's breath as a cheap filler. At that moment, however, it was much more. It was an offering of thanks. The church doesn't have extra money to buy us flowers. And they used every bit of the gift the best they could. I felt grateful for the offering. When she handed it to me I thought of the widow's mite from Luke 21. They smallest of offerings was given, and received, with gratitude. I wonder if I do that often enough? How often do I give of the smallest parts of me? How often do I receive the smallest parts with gratitude? It is this attitude of the heart that makes the offering not the smallest, but among the greatest.

 

Tomorrow we begin work in the clinic. May this attitude infect us all.

 

 

 

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Ecuador Medical Mission 2012, Day 3

Ecuador 2012
Day 3
Portoviejo

Today is a clinic day. While the doctors and others run the clinic, I have offered to help in any way I can. I most stay in the background until I'm needed.

That allowed me to spend time with a local pastor. He serves a church here in town. It sounds like a growing, dynamic congregation. His heart is to serve his people in their discipleship and their learning to serve others in some very real and practical ways. They are working on developing their DNA in that realm. Another important part of their DNA is the multiplication of this model. They feel that to become manageable and effective, they must plant more churches in this same way. I applaud him for his vision of ministry: multiplication undergirded with service and service undergirded with multiplication. We had great discussion and the sharing of ideas about how to continue ministry, each in our own contexts, and encourage one another along the way.

Speaking of service, I stumbled upon an intereststing conversation about justice today. I was talking with a couple of 20 somethings about what it means to bring justice. Can justice be found in our world? How does justice come? For that matter, what does justice mean at all? First of all, biblical justice does not mean as we think of it terms of the court system. It is not necessarily a blinded woman balancing scales. There is a place for that. But that is not the kind of biblical justice we mean. Biblical justice seems to side with the poor, the disenfranchised, the oppressed, the outcast. Look at the people with whom Jesus spent His time. Jesus was faulted for spending his time with the lowly and the outcast. He was faulted by people who were supposed to be defending the causes of these "lowly" people. Instead these religious leaders were casting stones at the oppressed, lame, blind, and outcast. What about in the modern church? Do we side with the religious leaders of New Testament times and put our noses up and those who are "beneath" us? Or do we side with Jesus who decided to extend an open hand to all God's children? Jesus was about the work or healing relationships, setting the oppressed free, helping others see their captivity and then releasing them from it (or maybe the other way around). He took the side of the poor, the downcast and the brokenhearted. Shouldn't we do the same?

In order to truly work for justice in this world, we must practice the justice that Jesus practiced. We have to speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves. We must be on the side of those that society has forgotten (or wants to forget). That means that we must be willing to do so in the places at our doorstep. It means that we must be willing to go even to the furtherest reaches. It means that we must begin to model, in our own lives, the things that Jesus did.

How do we even begin such an endeavor? We cannot do it of our own works or our own merit. We must remember the greatest commandment. Jesus says that is to love God and love our neighbor. How do we serve? We fall in love. We fall in love with God. We fall in love with His people. Then we cannot help but to do the things of love.

 

 

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Ecuador 2012. Day 2

Ecuador 2012
Day 2
Crucita

Today was a day of travel. I stayed at the hotel this morning and read and did some writing. Off to the airport around 11. Fly from Quito to Manta. I

n Manta, Flor and our driver, Elvis picked me up and took me to the clinic in Portoviejo. The work there is busy and ongoing. Paul saw several patients for chronic conditions. Even when it seems mundane, the work is important to those who need to see the doctor. We can't loses sight it that. Tonight we stayed in the Fellers' home in Crucita. The home is just a stone's throw from the Pacific Ocean. It was my first time to be on the beach in the Pacific. It is a beautiful little fishing community. It was great catching up with our friends. I am spending more time with new team members too. I am excited to see how the team continues to come together.

Tomorrow we go back to the clinic. I'm looking forward to seeing who we will meet. God is at work in the people of Ecuador.

Ecuador Medical Missions 2012 Day 1

Ecuador 2012
Day 1
Arrived in Quito Tuesday night. The trip gave me a tight connection in Miami but I made it. More on that later. Suffice it to say that I have a letter to write to the airlines. On the way down I sat next to a man who is doing similar work in South America. It is interesting the way that God is working in the people in the USA and in the developing world. We are but one small piece of a larger picture of God's work.

Wednesday, I leave to fly to Manta and stay in Crucita on the Pacific coast. There I will meet up with Paul and Flor Fellers and the work they are doing at their clinic in Portoviejo. We have been friends for a while and I'm looking forward to seeing their work and ministry. I am willing to serve in any way they need me. They have many connections in Fairhope and are so well respected. I hope that we can build bridges with the work of SIFAT that is also going on in Ecuador. In this my third trip to Ecuador my heart already breaks for the children we will encounter. I am particularly grieved when children suffer at no fault of their own. They did not choose the situation into which they were born. They did not choose their parents. They only know what is around them. Sometimes that is great. Sometimes that is heart-wrenching. I know that cannot extract them from the situation. Perhaps I can be a small part of the solution for their families and communities. In the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus gives the Sermon on the Mount. He tells us to extend compassion, show mercy, proclaim forgiveness and to live out our faith in the Holiness He's shown. May prayer today is that we would all do just that. Lord, may we be open to what you're doing.

For more on the ministry of SIFAT, visit www.sifat.org

To learn more about Bayside Medical Missions, visit www.baysidemedicalmissions.org

The picture is a shot from the hotel. This is a park and arena. I love the mountains beyond.

 

Sunday, April 01, 2012

What does resurrection mean to us?


“What does resurrection mean to you?”  A friend recently asked that question to several of us.  Many said that it meant that we get to go to heaven, that Jesus died for our sins, that we have hope of eternal life.

No doubt it means all of those things.  But if we only stop there, I think we’ve sold short the power of resurrection.  All of human history revolves around the resurrection.  We note Jesus’ birth as the start point of our calendar, in part, because of the resurrection.  The church exists today because of the resurrection.

So what does resurrection mean to us?  It means that what Jesus said about Himself is true.  That requires us to make some careful study.  In Luke 4:18-19, Jesus speaks to the people of the synagogue of Nazareth, “The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor.  He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set the oppressed free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.”  This is a clear proclamation of why Jesus came to embody resurrection, even before His death, and to offer the hope it brings here on earth.

In Luke 10, Jesus sends out the 70 to minister in His name.  He tells them to proclaim that the Kingdom of God has come near.   Jesus continued to bring this message of hope of the Kingdom of God in the things He said He came to do: to bring healing to people--mind, body, and soul.  He brought sight to those who suffered from physical and spiritual blindness.  He came to set captives free-even from the prisons that they built for themselves.

What does resurrection mean?  It means LIFE.  It means life here and now as well as there and then.  It means that we can live as a people of hope-in this world and look forward to the next.  It means that our spiritual deaths in this world can be turned around by Christ’s life that he brings still today.  We see this life when we practice the means of Grace which are, among others, faithful worship, regular Bible study, serving others, diligent prayer.   Would you join me in these?  For it is my prayer that this Easter season may you experience the power of resurrection, even but a glimpse, on Earth, as it shall be in Heaven.  

Thursday, March 01, 2012

Luck or Love: A look at Saint Patrick


A New Year’s focus of mine is to work on that reading list sitting on the shelf in my office.  That’s lead me to George Hunter’s The Celtic Way of Evangelism.  Hunter examines the church of today with the church that St. Patrick served in the fifth century.  The parallels are both encouraging and challenging.

As a young man, Patrick lived a simple life in what is now northeast England.  When he was sixteen he was kidnapped by a band of Celtic pirates and sold into slavery.  For six years he worked herding cattle.  It was during this time that he used a difficult situation and turned to God.  He grew in his knowledge of God by celebrating God’s work in the creation all around him.  He says he looked at the skies and the earth and knew God must be at work.  This lead him to prayer literally hundreds of times a day.  Patrick grew to understand his captors and their culture.  He came to love his captors and hope for their redemption in Christ.

One day God gave Patrick a vision for his freedom.  He walked three days to the coast and found the ship in his vision that lead him to safety.  On the European continent he joined a monastery and refined his call to serve God.  He knew that he had to go back to the people he grew up with and tell them about the faith in Christ he had found.

So began the telling of the Good News of Jesus in present-day Ireland.  Patrick worked hard to love and serve those in his immediate setting.  He welcomed all right were they were and used the common ground to build bridges to explain the work of Christ.  He sought forgiveness in relationships.  He even went so far as to earn the money to pay back his former slave owner.  He wanted to show him the ransom that Jesus paid for his soul too.

We may celebrate St. Patrick’s Day in different ways today.  But I wonder if we could take this as a model for sharing the Good News of Jesus in our own contexts?  What if we loved and served those in our immediate setting?  Welcomed all who came into our midst as our own brother or sister?  Sought forgiveness in relationships?  Did all we could to live a peace with one another?  We certainly wouldn’t need to look for luck when we’ve lived our sharing Christ’s Love as Patrick did.

Sunday, January 01, 2012

New Year, New Readings


“My ground is the Bible...I follow it in all things, both great and small.”--John Wesley

Have you ever read the Bible.  I mean REALLY read the Bible.  I’m not talking about just listening to the preacher read the Scripture selection of the day and then explain it.  I’m not talking about just hearing the Sunday School stories as a kid--or maybe even as an adult.
I mean reading it with intent.  I mean reading it with expectation.  I mean reading it with open eyes.

Nothing will change a life more dramatically than the power of God’s Truth working in people’s lives.  God reveals Himself to us through the power of the Scriptures.  When we spend time regularly reading the Bible, amazing things happen.

The Bible, among many things, is God’s revelation of Himself to us.  It is the story of God’s people throughout time.  It contains stories of hope and redemption, of hurt and betrayal, of love and of forgiveness.

In this new year, I encourage you to find a plan for reading the Bible for yourself.  Maybe this is something you’ve done before and want to pick up again.  Maybe this is new to you.  I’ve listed a few resources below to help you begin your journey.  These aren’t the only ones, by far.  But it may be a good place for you to start.

I think you’ll find that your reading will increase as time goes on.  I know I started by just reading a few paragraphs a day.  Now, a few paragraphs of Scripture is never enough to me.  I think you’ll find the same for yourself.  I’d love to hear your feedback as you encounter this life-changing message for yourself.  Here’s to a wonderful journey together.
Bible Reading Plans for Beginners:
Zondervan’s Website has some great plans for beginners, including time in the Old and New Testaments.  You’ll find some great plans here.

American Bible Society also has a daily reading plan that you can read online or by e-mail.  You can find it here.

Daily Devotional
The Upper Room has an online devotional that matches the print edition.  You can subscribe here.

The Bible in a Year
You can subscribe to a one-year reading plan by e-mail at Biblegateway.com.  Start it anytime you like, and finish 365 days later.


For Intermediate or Advanced Study
Zonderan's Website also includes some more advanced reading plans for intermediate and advanced readings.  You can find some pretty neat plans here.


Saturday, December 24, 2011

Merry Christmas

What a joy to celebrate Christmas together.  Here's a link to the video we used in the Gathering service tonight:


Also, here's a copy of the story "Balancing Christmas."  God Bless You and Merry Christmas.


Balancing Christmas
An early morning quiet covers the house as I sit alone on the couch with my Bible and
coffee. A steady rain falls outside. The house is dark except for my reading light.
I place my Bible on the table by the lamp & look up to see the darkened Christmas tree. My
heart is thankful to God for the blessings represented by each ornament on the tree. Images in
plastic, glass, paper, & ribbon colorfully adorn the evergreen in the corner of the den. Each
three-dimensional picture recalls the fond memories of friends, family members, students, &
others dear to us from years gone by.
I notice that the ornaments are clustered together toward the bottom of the tree again.
When we hang them, Beth tries hard to help the children spread them all over the tree. She
reminds Joshua & Meg to balance the decorations evenly all over the tree. It is difficult
because they get excited about putting up the ornaments. Their hands work quickly when it is
time to decorate—moving faster than her admonishments. When the decorating is finished, the
ornaments are bunched together on the lower third of the tree. The bottom branches bend
under the weight of several decorations on each branch. The tight cluster of adornments
seems to stop about eye-level for the children. I smile inside. I realize that the cluster of
ornaments will move up over the years. It will steadily grow a little higher each Advent. As
the children grow in age & stature, so too will the
“waterline” of our ornaments rise.
The tree is crowded with ornaments. I saw a tidbit that purported the average tree to have
75 ornaments. I think we’re overachievers. But there will be a day when the children will
have their own homes with their own trees. They will take many of these ornaments with them
to get their own Christmas decorations started. Like taking the cuttings off of a tree to allow a
new tree to take root, we will encourage Joshua & Meg to set their own roots of Christmas
traditions.
Our tree may look a little bare that year. Alone, Beth & I will space out the ornaments
evenly all over the tree. She’ll remind me to make sure we have a balance of sizes & colors &
shapes all around the tree. We’ll even make sure to cover the back—so you can see them out
the window too. And as we pick up each ornament we’ll tell a little story about them: where
we got it, when we got it, & fondly recall the giver. Maybe when Beth isn’t looking I’ll cluster
up a bunch of ornaments toward the bottom of the tree. I’ll remember a morning in a dark,
quiet house when everyone else was asleep & our Christmas tree was beautifully and
wonderfully out of balance.

Monday, December 05, 2011

I've posted some new information and links concerning the Ecuador Mission Journey opportunity in April 2012.  Check out more information at www.fairhopeumc.org/Ecudaor.

Is God calling you to serve on this journey next year?  Contact me if you'd like to talk more.