Dispelling The Mercy Myth – Mercy Is For All Of Us

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  • Dispelling The Mercy Myth – Mercy Is For All Of Us

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    Part 1 of 3Steve Leach

    If you’re anything like me, when you hear someone mention SEED you immediately think of Nathan Ivey.  Suzanne Hoehne, who serves as the SEED coordinator for my community group also comes to mind, as do my accountability partners Josh Thomas and Jesse Moss.  This is both good and bad.  Good because the Lord has blessed this ministry and given these four a heart to serve in His Kingdom but bad because SEED is not just for the few, but also for all of us who are Christians.  I want to share my experience with the newly started Mercy on Monday, which is one way SEED equips Sojourners for face-to-face mercy ministry in the city.  I hope that readers will share in the blessing of what happened and, in case anyone is as fearful as I was, to dispel those fears and encourage participation.

    The Scriptures command us to “love your neighbor as yourself” in both the Old and New Testaments (Lev 19:18, Mt 19:19, Mk 12:31, et al).  Ultimately this love should reflect the love shown to us by the Father in sending Christ to die for us “while we were still sinners” (Rom 5:8).  While there is no doubt that there are many in this sinful condition in our neighborhoods, I often struggle with how to love them—here’s where SEED comes in.

    As we gathered at the 930 on Monday, August 24th at 6:30pm, we were treated to an impromptu testimony by Austin, a Shelby Park resident who was prayer walking with us, who shared how Nathan and Josh had come along side him and built a relationship with his family.  I was shocked to hear that they knew one another for over a year before Austin accepted the Gospel.  Nathan and Josh not only shared the gospel with Austin during that first year, but also demonstrated God’s love for Austin by spending time with him and his family, helping him move and by fixing some of his appliances.  Austin shared that God used this relationship to soften his hardened heart until he was finally able to understand and accept the Gospel.  Suddenly, my ideas of what loving my neighbor looks like began to change. Moreover, little did I know how God was going to use the rest of Monday evening to radically change my understanding of biblical mercy.  In part 2, I share the how God used us as we met Bob, Colleen, and Tony.

    Tomorrow, read Part 2: My Fears Confronted and God Shows Up

    Steve Leach, the author of this blog, is a member of Sojourn and can be contacted at steveleach729@gmail.com.

    Every Monday night, join a team of deacons and get exposed to face-to-face mercy ministry.  You will never go at it alone and will be guided every step of the way by an experienced minister of the gospel.  On Monday evenings, from 6:30pm till 8:30pm you can shadow a deacon as he/she interviews a resident with a financial need or run an errand for a family in the neighborhood or enjoy a home visitation and share the gospel with the elderly, widows, and lonely in our surrounding neighborhoods.  Contact Jesse Moss at jesse.moss@gmail.com for more info.

    Tags: local missions, Mercy Monday, Mercy on Monday, prayer walking, redemptive relationships
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  • Dispelling the Mercy Myth – My Fears Confronted and God Shows Up

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    Steve LeachPart 2 of 3

    As we split off into groups, my fears cropped back up when I was assigned with Nathan and Jennifer Kramer to go on a prayer walk through Germantown and interact with the residents.  The problem is that I was focused on what R.B. Kuiper calls “man-centred Evangelism,” focusing on my own (in)abilities and on the type of reception I would receive from our neighbors.  We were quickly reminded that the power lies in the Gospel, not the teller or the hearer.  Each week, new Sojourners are teamed up with experienced leaders who guide them through—so I wasn’t being thrown to the wolves as I had imagined!  Additionally, as Austin’s story showed, there wasn’t any sort of pressure to produce results, we simply were to engage those we met, be kind, and seek to make God known through our words and deeds.  Well, as the hymn goes, “’twas grace that taught my heart to fear, and grace my fears relieved.”  Not only were we able to make new friends, but there was absolutely nothing scary and no pressure whatsoever.

    We moseyed on over to St. Catherine Street, one block from the 930, and promptly ran into Colleen, who was returning from doing some shopping.  We spoke for a minute or so and as we were walking away, she called to us and suggested that we go see Bob.  We should not underestimate the value of simply listening to what our neighbors have to say.  I heard over the weekend on a Christian radio program that since 1986, the number of people who have no friends and nobody to confide in has more than tripled.  I didn’t really pay much attention at the time, but on Monday night this lack of community really hit home.

    We did listen to Colleen and made our way to Bob’s house and were given a hero’s welcome.  Bob was already familiar with Sojourn because Sean Steadman, a member, had already built a much-needed handrail for him.  Bob later told us he came outside because he saw us talking with Colleen.  Bob invited us to pick vegetables from his garden and we spent a good 30-45 minutes just talking and picking and listening.  Laughter abounded as Nathan and I accepted a challenge to eat one of Bob’s chili peppers, which he assured us were not very hot.  As we began to sweat and our noses began to run, Bob and Jennifer shared a high-five and some hearty laughs.  As we left, Bob shared that he needed to get back to church, intimating that he needed to get right with God before coming back. Nathan reminded him that what we all really need is repentance for our sins and faith in the accomplished work of Christ.  We shared a prayer with Bob, set a time to pick him up for a service on Sunday and set off down the street with no less than three bags of produce.  I couldn’t believe that God used me to draw Bob to himself.  God can and does use his children to advance his kingdom!  I thought the night was over, but God still had more in store for us.  Read part three to find out the rest of the story.

    Tomorrow, read Part 3 of 3 – The Harvest is Plentiful, But the Workers are Few

    Steve Leach, the author of this blog, is a member of Sojourn and can be contacted at steveleach729@gmail.com.

    Every Monday night, join a team of deacons and get exposed to face-to-face mercy ministry.  You will never go at it alone and will be guided every step of the way by an experienced minister of the gospel.  On Monday evenings, from 6:30pm till 8:30pm you can shadow a deacon as he/she interviews a resident with a financial need or run an errand for a family in the neighborhood or enjoy a home visitation and share the gospel with the elderly, widows, and lonely in our surrounding neighborhoods.  It will change the way you view and love your neighbors wherever you live.  Contact Jesse Moss at jesse.moss@gmail.com for more info.

    Tags: local missions, Mercy Monday, Mercy on Monday, prayer walking, redemptive relationships
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  • Dispelling the Mercy Myth – The Harvest Is Plentiful, But The Workers Are Few

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    Steve LeachPart 3 of 3

    I figured that  after meeting a few neighbors, we would be done for the night.  But to my surprise, a few houses down we ran into Tony, who was excited to receive some of our bounty of fresh produce.  Tony began to confide in us how he had gotten into some fights at work and how he had felt wronged and persecuted.  When he later shared that all this happened in 1993, I couldn’t help but feel the hopelessness and bitterness that accompanies those who are lonely and don’t know Christ.  Once again, just the simple act of stopping to say hi to someone and to listening to what they have to say.  We didn’t beat any of these three people over the head with the Gospel; we didn’t hand out any tracts or call down hellfire and brimstone on them (the chili pepper notwithstanding).  In fact, we only shared a prayer with Bob and that was because he accepted our request.

    We have a sign in my office that says “Your actions are speaking so loudly, I can’t hear what you’re saying.”  While this sign is concerned with workplace safety, the message is apropos to our Christian lives as well.  Just walking, talking and listening, not with a mission to produce converts and relieved of the fear of self-reliance, we simply formed redemptive relationships with our neighbors – all the while hoping and praying to make God known to the residents of Germantown.  As both streetwalking groups (yes, the Lord can redeem streetwalking…AMEN!) returned, we reflected on our experiences and what we’d learned and offered a prayer of thanksgiving.

    It turns out that as a group, we were able to talk to a total of eight families within one block of the 930 on Monday night.  Jesse Moss’s group was invited into a home to share the gospel and Andrew Coverdale’s group shared a meal with a disabled shut-in.  Amazing!  Rest assured that I will be visiting Bob again.  This time I hope to share with him more about Jesus and his gift of righteousness.

    I want to encourage anyone (okay, everyone) to show up next Monday at the 930 at 6:30pm and be a part of this ministry.  I was assured that if 200 people show up, there will be plenty to do and, in addition to a seasoned SEED veteran to lead, we have the assurance of Jesus Christ going with and before us (Matthew 18 is taken out of context as applied here).  We are the Church in Germantown (or wherever you happen to live), if we don’t preach the Gospel in “word and deed” then who will?  Who will love the lost and listen to the lonely?  The Westminster Shorter Catechism states that “man’s chief end is to glorify God and enjoy him forever.”  We do both when we are obedient to the command to “’Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind’; and, ‘Love your neighbor as yourself’ ” (Lk 10:27).  Joining with brothers and sisters for SEED’s Mercy Monday is a great way to obey the Lord and participate in His mission to redeem our city.

    Steve Leach, the author of this blog, is a member of Sojourn and can be contacted at steveleach729@gmail.com.

    Every Monday night, join a team of deacons and get exposed to face-to-face mercy ministry.  You will never go at it alone and will be guided every step of the way by an experienced minister of the gospel.  On Monday evenings, from 6:30pm till 8:30pm you can shadow a deacon as he/she interviews a resident with a financial need or run an errand for a family in the neighborhood or enjoy a home visitation and share the gospel with the elderly, widows, and lonely in our surrounding neighborhoods.  It will change the way you view and love your neighbors wherever you live.  Contact Jesse Moss at jesse.moss@gmail.com for more info.

    Tags: local missions, Mercy Monday, prayer walking, redemptive relationships
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  • Mercy on Mondays Kick Off!

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    Jesse MossThis past Monday, August 17, 15 Sojourners gathered at 6:30p.m. at the 930 to kick off Mercy on Mondays.  We split up into three groups.  One group celebrated with a member up the street, one group went grocery shopping for another neighbor, and one group prayer-walked down Mary St. and St. Catherine.  It was beautiful to see the body of Christ coming together to serve and pray for the people of Germantown.  As we went our separate ways to serve, I was reminded of the words of the Prophet Isaiah:

    “if you spend yourselves in behalf of the hungry

    and satisfy the needs of the oppressed,

    then your light will rise in the darkness,

    and your night will become like the noonday.” (Isaiah 58:10)

    I also recalled Paul’s words to Timothy:

    “As for the rich in this present age, charge them not to be haughty, nor to set their hopes on the uncertainty of riches, but on God, who richly provides us with everything to enjoy. They are to do good, to be rich in good works, to be generous and ready to share, thus storing up treasure for themselves as a good foundation for the future, so that they may take hold of that which is truly life.” (1 Timothy 6:17-19)

    Many of us at Sojourn are materially blessed.  God has provided for us and has cared for us, and we who are materially blessed have a biblical responsibility to care for those who are not so materially blessed.  It is very easy to look at material blessing and see ourselves as superior to those whom we “spend ourselves” on.  But all who have been redeemed by the blood of Christ should recognize and understand poverty better than the secular world.  We need look only to Christ who “though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor, so that you by his poverty might become rich” (2 Cor 8:9).  To become rich we had to be poor first.  Poor materially?  No.  Poor spiritually.  And we had the worst kind of poverty–the kind that leads to death and hell.  But God in his grace spoke into our lives and helped us to see our poverty so that we might look to Christ and become rich.

    We will be meeting again this coming Monday, August 24, at 6:30 p.m. in the lobby of the 930.  The call is clear.  We who are the body of Christ should act as Christ acted.  He humbled himself, cared for the poor and the marginalized, and was a servant in all that he did.  We will be making three visits this week:

    • Pamela lives in Puritan apartments and loves to interact with the Body on Sundays, but she often cannot make it to services because of hip and leg pains.  We will celebrate with her by taking a meal to cook at her apartment.
    • Mary used to live across the street from Sojourn until her house was overtaken by drug dealers and squatters.  We have helped her move several times and will be visiting her to encourage and re-connect with her.
    • Freida is an older, independent spirit who has been to Sojourn several times and is hungry for relationship.  We will be visiting her with some homemade brownies.

    Want to be more involved in service?  Have you been waiting for an opportunity to plug into the SEED ministry but aren’t sure how to start?  Do you just want to see what service in Germantown might look like?  Mondays are for you.  Come and join us!

    Jesse Moss is a Seed Leader and member of Sojourn.  You can contact him at jesse.moss@gmail.com.

    Tags: evangelism, local missions, Mercy Monday, redemptive relationships
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