Mobile Ministry Magazine (MMM)

Author Archive

Stepping out in Faith

Thursday, May 5th, 2011

Mobility. How often do we think about this word? What does it mean to us really? Oh sure, we want our phones to go with us, and to be ready to do what we tell them to do at all times. How often however, do we make ourselves mobile to God? How often do we move out of our comfort zone?

I was thinking about Jesus the other day and what it really would be like to be him. Compassionate, sure. Slow to anger, need to work on. On the mobility side, how mobile am I? Have I tucked myself safe into my church, where I know I am always plugged into the word of God? Have I surrounded myself only with people who know the word of God and will encourage me when I feel insecure?

Or? Am I willing to take a step outside of that? Am I willing to step away from the battery charger called the church? Am I willing to step outside of what I know and into the unknown? It is easy to have faith when the unknown is only a few steps away.

Paul went from Church to Church and I liken this as him recharging his batteries. He was refilling his emotional tank just as much as he was filling theirs. He would sometimes go months or years without talking to the same people, but he had faith, faith that they would remain the same character. He believed they would grow in Christ while holding to the same personalities he grew to know and love.

How long can our own batteries last? As a young believer, not long. As a more mature follower, hopefully much longer. I may just be talking to myself here (and that would not surprise me), but I saw a challenge of stepping out of the comfort of my church pews where I am encouraged when down. I saw a challenge of stepping away from the charger and not looking at the battery until it beeped.

 

Forgiveness

Friday, February 11th, 2011

There is a certain catharsis that hits our soul when we allow forgiveness in. An unforgiven  heart holds us hostage, held in the stage where the grievance happened. For some it can take a day, for others it can take years to offer forgiveness. There is not set recipe for how we are to forgive, we are just told to do it. Matthew 6:14 says “For if you forgive other people when they sin against you, your heavenly Father will also forgive you”. It is hard. We want justice, we want vengeance. Doesn’t someone see what they did? Yes, someone does.  He will take care of it. We loose our sense of mobility when we get caught up in the when’s and the why’s. We do not move forward.

There is a flip side of this coin. We are humans and so often need to be forgiven of something. I am not a person who does anything half way. When I do something, I either do it big or I fail big. I haven’t learned a middle ground yet. When I burn a bridge (or person who is on the bridge) I do it in massive portions. I wondered why I could not move forward.  I kept trying but was pulled back several times. I had to turn back and apologize. There is no where in the Bible that states God’s forgiveness is dependent on the recipient reaction. They could shut the door on you and that be the end of the conversation. They are in control because after all, they are the ones who were hurt. The release in us comes when we say those words “will you forgive me”. Four words that humble us, bring us to our knees and acknowledge that we are not as infallible as we like to think.

I offered those words this week. The outcome was so much greater than I ever could have asked for. I am now able to move forward where God wants me. I am now able to re-create bridges that I thought were long gone. The person who received an apology can heal, knowing that their pain was acknowledged and avenged. There is no loosing in this situation.

I was encouraged this week by God’s mercy and grace. If they could forgive me, how much more has the Father forgiven me?

 

Mobility in the Midwest ~ Fear Part 1

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011

Fear. Fear pushes us forward and pulls us back. Fear can be as tangle as the person sitting next to us on the bus. The Urban Dictionary has an interesting definition for fear that I think applies to the topic that I am about to talk about.  “Fear is the mind killer. Fear is the little death that brings total obliteration.” What is in our mind is often worse then what is in the real world.

When I talk about new technology in the Midwest, most peoples eyes glaze over. Because here is a dirty little secret that I try to hide. I would say 70% of the homes here still have the rotary phones the phone company installed on the wall in the 60‘s. Say it aloud “ro-ta-ry phone”. It takes 5 minutes to dial a number and if you mess up in the middle, you have to hang up and start over. So talking about phones that do not have a key board to dial on instills a tangible fear in the listener. A few steps were skipped. How we get push past this fear of moving too fast?

We acknowledge that fear. What people think about technology without having used it is far more threatening that what reality ever could be. We help them face it. Then we walk them through it. Fear should not be what holds back people from progressing forward.

I have to be gentle with my fellow neighbors in the Midwest. Less bull in the china shop and more gentle sheep that children pet at the fair. I put the technology in their hands, on person at a time. People aren’t going to ruin my phone by playing with it and I let them touch it. I take the time to explain what it can do for them. Easing one fear after the other, till the only emotion that is left is excitement.

Next week, Part 2 will touch on the topic of fear of success in the Midwest

 

Mobility in the Midwest~Fresh Connections

Tuesday, December 7th, 2010

With the New Year coming around the corner,‭ ‬many people make resolutions and promises for a better year.‭ ‬I don’t make these sort of promises to myself because I will not  keep  them. What I do use this time of year  is to look at where my time is being spent and what kind of connections I have. My very purpose of keeping a Social Media presence is to connect to with people I otherwise would not and to keep the connections I have fresh and alive.

To take this on a personal Christian level, I use Matthew 7:6 as a guide for my time “Caste not your pearl before the swine”. What does this mean?  I cull my connection lists to what  I find to be more meaningful. I know many people take on Twitter as a popularity contest and then use such services as Tweetdeck to tone down the noise of people they do not  want hear. I do not  have time for that. I take this time of year to evaluate what it is I want to hear.  I also need to know that people are listening to what I have to say and that not taking it for granted or advantage of it. This is a great time to  evaluate who is and who should not be my personal space. While I don’t pretend to think the internet is private, I do treat it like I would my home. I don’t have to invite people who I don’t want there.

I also go  through my memberships of forums I belong to. Am I getting out of them what I am putting into them? I had to learn the hard way that my time is limited just like everyone else and I can not give more than I receive. We are all looking for a connection, that is why we  have cultivated these tiny machines. We have social networks at our very finger tips, I feel that this is a  good  time to evaluate if we are connected to something  meaningful to our purpose in life.  I need those connections that challenge and push me further than I went last year, further than I want to go and further than I thought I ever could go.  I need to eliminate the connections that suck up my time and leave me drained. I am better able to give encouragement to the people who need it when I am not watching my pearls being trampled by swine.

I love New Years. No resolutions, just reconnecting with the possibilities that brought me to mobile in the first place.

 

Mobility in the Midwest~where are your files?

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

Mobility is not just about a grabbing a phone, maybe a laptop and leaving the house. Working from home used to be complicated with heavy brief cases, files and if one was lucky a portable hard drive to bring the files from the work computer home. That is no longer the case in 2010. I work from home with the ability to carry my netbook and at most my iPhone. I use the application Dropbox for keeping my files synced with all my computers and my phone. I am in the middle of writing a book and this application has proved to be immeasurably helpful to me. I can write, complete edits and upload to Dropbox ensuring I have everything in one spot.

I have been asked about this process by no less than twenty people this week.  I have shared ebooks, music and basically evangelized Dropbox like no other advertising company could to the Midwest in hopes of unburdening people’s briefcases. Sure there may be other services out there, but  Dropbox fits my needs perfectly and it is social. The more people you share it with, the more space you get to store your own files. What a great system.

My productivity on writing this book has gone out the roof, because as creative types know, thoughts don’t come at the most convenient time. I  type up drafts in the 20 minutes I am waiting in line to pick up my son, edit while waiting in line at the grocery store and come home and have my files waiting for me.  No more lost papers flying out the window, which has happened to me and caused tears. Ahem.

How is mobility defined in your life? Are you taking your files with you or are you burdened with wondering were that flash drive is? Lighten up and give Dropbox a try.

 

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