Showing posts with label despair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label despair. Show all posts

Sunday, September 11, 2016

Saving People & Leaving the Saving of Souls to God



Living Hope: Even in the Darkness of Despair
A David Kiern Film, 2014, narrated by Joel Smallbone, and starring real people as themselves.


This movie, at its simplest, appears to be about ‘missions’. More correctly it’s about, in the words of Mother (now Saint) Teresa, Christians going to the poor of South Africa to “love Jesus”. And she implies, when you see the hungry, the naked, the sick, you are seeing Jesus in disguise. So love --  them.
The setting is the Capetown area, including Oceanview where one in three women and one in four men test positive for HIV, the average life expectancy is under 50, and the infection rate is 44%. This is a story of men and women, who with these statistics in their heads were compelled to take their families from the comforts of home to the social battlefield thousands of miles away.
I’ll let you discover the players for yourself, but suffice it to say, that each one had to surrender to God’s will ‘one day at a time’ not knowing what God wanted them to do tomorrow. We share in their agonizing and from that come some memorable thoughts.  When Joey Lankford was concerned about what his wife would think about taking the family to Capetown, his father comments, “If God is calling you to the mission field, you won’t need to sell the idea to your wife.” How true that is and how different from those men (in particular) who wrongly drag their wives and families there only to meet defeat and discouragement. Courtney Lankford needed no selling. She was just waiting for Joey to catch up to her.  Later in the movie, in reference to how her marriage with Joey was strengthened by their ministry in S.A., we hear Courtney observing that “When you take two people and put them through a trial, they will cling together for dear life.”  Joey on the other hand, who was always worried about his wife’s happiness and his responsibility for it, had to hear and accept these words from God: “Her happiness is not found in you anymore; it’s found in Me; I’ll provide.”
The film addresses the age-old dispute about the social gospel (Christian faith practiced as a call to social reform) vs. the salvation gospel (Christian faith practiced in pursuit of helping people make personal conversions). John Thomas clearly answers the question when he says, “I thought Jesus wanted me to save souls; I discovered He wanted me to save people.”
Thomas is the founder of http://www.livinghope.co.za and the rest of the film showcases the four areas of ministry Living Hope focuses on with some gut-wrenching true-life stories that will amaze you.  There is Living Care (focusing on healthcare); Living Grace (focusing on the homeless and those dealing with addiction); Living Right (HIV/AIDS education and prevention); and Living Way (Economic Empowerment).
In the Living Care section we experience the story of a lady dying of AIDS who fought Christianity for a long time until one of the team finally got through to her. She held on and eventually wanted to get baptized but moving her anywhere was out of the question. What happens next, just six days before she dies, will, I believe, impact each viewer immensely and unforgettably.
My favorite part of the movie is that of Dana Perino, currently an American political commentator and author, and the 27th White House Press Secretary, serving under President George W. Bush. She was there when the President selected Living Hope as one of two faith-based organizations eligible for grants under a “stop AIDS in Africa” program he implemented. Dana tells the story and shares her feelings when she and her husband went to serve with Living Hope after her W.H. stint. Her presence, at least for those of us who watch her regularly on television, helps us ‘click’ with the reality of Living Hope in today’s world. She asks, “If you have the means to help people (the pill for AIDS), don’t you have a moral obligation to give it to them?” And that’s exactly what Bush did through so many organizations. When the President met John Thomas, he remarked, “I’ve always wanted to meet the pastor of the one local church that the U.S. government funds.”
Throughout the movie one could feel the dependence on prayer shared by the team and those they were working with. From the seed project in Living Way to the provision of funds for a major surgery of a worker’s wife – another moving story in itself, prayer made the difference.  And then there’s a fourteen-year-old mother with AIDS who named her baby (born with advanced stage of AIDS) “no hope”.  Can you imagine being at such a point in life, that this what you do? Living Hope staff saw this as just an amazing opportunity to minister to this young lady in a way that enabled her, months later to remark, “You people showed me Jesus.” And then asked to be taken down to the registry office to officially change her child’s name to “The Lord Is My Hope”.
Many churches would do well to show this movie one Sunday morning instead of their regular program, warning people that it won’t be a 30-minute sermon that day.
The players have one final piece of advice for us – if you’re going to do this kind of thing, you need to do it properly. You start by spending a lot of time with God.
For most of us, I recommend starting with seeing this movie. If after seeing it, you still feel like pitying those poor missionaries, you’ve missed the point. Being a missionary in this kind of setting, is rather something to be envied – for it is there, one gets to really see God at work.


--  By Ken B. Godevenos, President, Accord Resolutions Services Inc., Toronto, Ontario, September 11, 2016. www.accordconsulting.com

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Sunday, February 19, 2012

The Way Greeks Live Now - NYTimes.com

A very detailed look at how Greeks live today. This is brilliant "wide-angle" writing. I can vouch for much of what is being said. It checks out with my recent experiences there as well as what I hear from my relatives and friends even this week. What is startling about it all is that the author seems to be describing a painting that is not still life, but rather spans a period of time in which a civilization is collapsing but there's no ultimate end result (will they make it? will Greece survive?). What we get is only the dire warning that the way Greece is going may well be ominous for many more nations in the world today. Get yourself a good cup of coffee and enjoy this full-length description of erosion.

The Way Greeks Live Now - NYTimes.com


[Are you looking for a speaker at your church, your club, school, or organization? Ken is available to preach, teach, challenge, and/or motivate. Please contact us.]
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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Joseph Takes Their Liquid Assets In Exchange For Food - Genesis 47:15-17

And when the money was all spent in the land of Egypt and in the land of Canaan, all the Egyptians came to Joseph and said, “Give us food, for why should we die in your presence? For our money is gone.”  Then Joseph said, “Give up your livestock, and I will give you food for your livestock, since your money is gone.”  So they brought their livestock to Joseph, and Joseph gave them food in exchange for the horses and the flocks and the herds and the donkeys; and he fed them with food in exchange for all their livestock that year.

Eventually our money runs out and we are left with our possessions that money has bought or possessions that have been given to us over the course of our lives.  What does not disappear however is our innate desire to survive.  For that we need the basics of life – shelter, clothing, water, and food  -- the latter being most necessary for long-term survival.  That was the state that almost all Egyptians and Canaanites were in after they had given all their money to Pharaoh for grain in the previous year.  Now, totally dependent on Joseph, they came begging for more food, but without money.

The ever-creative Joseph, realizing their fear of dying, asks them for their most valuable liquid assets – namely their cattle and other livestock, in exchange for grain.  And the people consent, eager to live for one more year.

As I read this portion of scripture two pictures come to mind.  The first is that of an addict (be it drugs or be it gambling or any other addiction you can name).  First the addict spends an ever-increasing amount of his/her income or wealth on their addiction.  Then things get so bad that all their money is spent on the addictive habit.  Finally, he/she is forced to give up their car, or their house, maybe even to ‘sell the whole family farm’.  I am not suggesting the people in our story here, the Egyptians and the Canaanites, were addicts.  Not at all – they simply needed to survive.  But the felt despair and the limited options one can take are the same when driven by either the need to survive or a terrible addiction.

The second picture I see is that of many a person today who is overcome with poverty or the inability to provide for his or her family.  This may be due to personal circumstances or to a great extent it may be due to the economy we live in where unemployment is as high as it is.  What can these verses possibly say to an individual in those circumstances?

Life is indeed most challenging at times.  And there are times we do need to take some drastic “giving-up-certain-things” type of action in order to survive or for the sake of our children and other family members.  But we must realize that we cannot do it alone.  We must realize that we need to put ourselves in the hands of God – not for what He can do for us right now – but for Who He is.  We must first yield totally to Him in all aspects of our life and then, living uprightly, we can seek the sound wisdom He has stored up for us as promised much further down the road in scripture, in Proverbs 2:7.  Charles Stanley describes living uprightly as obeying God and following through and doing what God commands of us.  If that is your situation today, I pray that you will have that willingness and deep desire to get through your difficult times, with God.

Today would also be a good time to consider whether we too are in any sort of similar circumstances to that of the people who gave Joseph their livestock.  Are we living in a state of addiction or fear or despair to the point where we would give up, perhaps in our case, unnecessarily something that we should not?  If so, may I suggest that there are options we have today.  There are alternatives that we can get help with.  There is no need to do what we know to be wrong.  Like the young unwed pregnant mother who, out of despair, sees no way out but to have an abortion, we must realize there are options.  There are people willing to help us do the right thing.  We need to seek them out and receive their help.


[Are you looking for a speaker at your church, your club, school, or organization? Ken is available to preach, teach, challenge, and/or motivate. Please contact us.]

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It would be great if you would share your thoughts or questions on this blog in the comments section below or on social media.