Tuesday, 20 December 2011

My family and I came from Marion to pastor Freedom Worship Center a year and a half ago, not knowing anoyne in the congregation except for a couple of people. Each Sunday, I would look into the faces of strangers, wanting desperately to be known and to know them and their stories. It was the loneliest time of my pastoral journey.

But then something happened this past summer. We became a family, after much intentional plowing. I realize it takes a long time to become old friends. It cannot be rushed, programmed or forced. It simply takes time. I have wondered in the past few months how does a church become a family assembly instead of a gathering of strangers? What is the ground that must be plowed in order for family roots to take hold and ultimately blossom in the local church?

1. Families know how to disagree

This does not sound warm and fuzzy does it? But it’s true. Healthy families have learned to honorably disagree and to defend the unity that is so critical for the long term strength of the home. I see people every week that have disagreed with me, but have decided to persevere and forge a friendship despite our differences. This is why I believe church families and marriages are so similar. No one can stay married if they always need to be right. Great marriages and great church families have learned to love while they are fussing and are quick to offer forgiveness and grace.

2. Families celebrate and mourn with one another

Healthy families embrace the rhythms of each others lives, rejoicing when the others are rejoicing and mourning when the others are sad. Recently, I learned of a dear Freedom Worshipper who had just been placed in hospice because of cancer. Later, a despondent single mom asked me to pray with her for her prodigal son. Minutes later, a sweet grandmother told me her daughter, son-in-law, and all their children had just decided to follow Jesus. She had prayed for them for 13 years. I was sad, then I rejoiced. That is family.

3. Families make room for new arrivals

When babies are born, the family celebrates the new arrival. No one is sad because more room has to be made at the dinner table. The same is true with healthy church families. They are always ready to welcome the new arrivals at the table. I refuse to apologize that Freedom Worship Center wants to be a large church, not for the sake of being large and having reputation, but because numbers represent people. But people are not known as a number. I know it can be overwhelming at times to walk into a big building full of strange faces. Believe me, I know. But I have also found that if I simply give it time, people will embrace me if I make room for the embrace.

4. Families serve one another

Healthy church families are keenly aware of the needs all around them. In the early church, it was said, “There were no needy persons among them” (Acts 4:34). What a beautiful picture of family surrounding each other, embracing the broken, and giving generously so that everyone has an advocate and hope.

I am most grateful to belong to a family that can disagree and still love, celebrates and mourns with each other, makes room for the new arrivals and is quick to serve and bless. We are a growing family. Amen.

Posted by: Pastor Jeff AT 02:47 pm   |  Permalink   |  3 Comments  |  Email
Tuesday, 13 December 2011
My ministry here in Fredericksburg has been a collection of "Give me the castaways." I use that term, because that is my one word term to describe the hurting and the broken. Maybe it's someone that no one wanted in the "typical" church. Maybe it's someone whose own family didn't want them. Maybe it's someone who failed in some way and needed the Grace of God to be shown to them after they were left hurting beside the road. I actually had someone once say to me, "How does it feel to get all of the discarded people?" My answer was, "It's wonderful!" I am grateful that churches and families give would give us the broken pieces. 

Give me the person who’s in fresh need of regenerated grace. Give me the person that hasn’t kept the religious handbook (Regarding sins that send you to the island of broken parts) and give me those broken parts. I’ve grown to love castaways because they have shown me an entire new way to see life.


I’m a person who has been changed by broken people. My greatest honor is to be known as the pastor of “castaways.” Please don’t think I’m mad at anyone for sending them to us for I have no right to judge decisions of other people. I’m just thankful for the “castaways.” The castaways helped me build the church while many “church kids” left me when the church wasn’t growing fast enough. They left me when the dream wasn’t matching their expectations.

Some of the greatest people I have worked with in the Kingdom started in their brokenness. It was there that I found that people who had nowhere to go, nothing left to lose, could become amazing assets in the kingdom of God. I realized quickly that I didn’t come to Fredericksburg to change them, God sent me here to change me. He took me to the streets of Fredericksburg to show me what God can do with radical grace. I never dreamed that my calling was to be the pastor to the “castaways.” That wasn’t my plan. But I’m sure glad that God allowed me to fall in love with the idea of what hurting people can become; something special and useful in the kingdom of God. Maybe Tom Hanks and Gilligan's Island was on to something after all...

Posted by: Pastor Jeff AT 02:35 pm   |  Permalink   |  1 Comment  |  Email
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Freedom Worship Center
318 Jefferson Davis Hwy.
Fredericksburg, VA. 22401
Email: info@newfreedomworship.org

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