Monday, June 30, 2008

Scattered, Covered, Mostly Smothered ...

Scattered, Covered, and mostly Smothered
and more than ever, drawn to the Gospel.
The incredible weight of sin became very real to me this past Sunday. When I stood to teach, that weight nearly smothered me. I could hardly speak. My notes served me little. One of the most painful and difficult days of teaching/preaching I have ever faced.
The words that kept coming to mind were - 'there is so much at stake.' There is so much at stake. There is so much at stake. The weight of the moment, and the enormous ramifications of sin fell almost silent in comparison to the burden I suddenly felt for people - all people - our people - those who were present Sunday, and the terrible injustice that preachers and teachers and churches have done to them - to us. What injustice? Not teaching the true Gospel of Jesus Christ. Not helping us to see that the Gospel at work in us is more than a ticket to heaven some day in the future - it is Jesus at work in us NOW - shaping us into His image, helping us to live like Him, and to love like Him. The Gospel at work in me transforms me - I CAN live like Him, I CAN love like Him, I CAN forgive, I CAN accept, I CAN trust, I CAN - not I, but Christ in me. I can raise my children as a gospel dad, I can love my wife as a gospel husband, I can pastor as a gospel elder, I can BE Him, not I but Christ in me. As I am forgiven, I forgive. As I am accepted, I accept. As I am loved, I love. As I am served, I serve.
Still scattered. No longer smothered.
More than ever, drawn to the gospel.

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Danny D and Rob Sumowski @ The 567

We had a great night at the 567. The weather was beautiful outdoors and in. The house was full and stayed that way all night - tough to find a seat! Dan and Rob sounded great. Here are few shots from the night...

Friday, June 27, 2008

My City - an invite

Consider Yourself Invited to the 567.

Door Open at 7:00 PM
Concert at 8:00 PM
Come early - we might be full!
Why not have dinner downtown - Michaels on Mulberry is great, or Spaghetti Alley, maybe Luigis??? After dinner grab an ice cream from the Ice Cream shop in the Dempsey. Then coffee at the 567! Enjoy Friday night downtown.

Thanks Brett and Caleb - Notes From Vail (3)

Sometimes a simple moment changes everything. I mean EVERYTHING. Caleb Land and Brett Moore first introduced me to A-29 a couple of years ago, now. That moment changed everything that would happen afterword. Pretty incredible, isn't it. Something as simple as, 'hey you have got to check out Acts-29 and Mark Driscoll - man you will love what these guys are preaching and doing' was used by God to impact eternity. Those words led us down a great path which most recently took Amy and I to Vail, CO for an incredibly 4 days. Thanks Brett and Caleb!
Wednesday in Vail was great. After our morning session together, Amy grabbed a quick lunch with me and the other A-29ers then headed out for a great massage at the spa. I hung out with Jonathan Dodson - pastor of Austin City Life in Austin, TX. A great connection and I look forward to learning from Jonathan. It seems they are doing some great community group stuff.
After lunch (and Amy's massage) we napped! Sweeeeeeeeet.
Wednesday night our regional leader - Daniel Montgomery - Sojourn Community Church - took all of our region out to dinner in Vail Village (where the pic of me and Amy above was taken). As good as dinner was, what was better was that I gained a coach!! I have been pushing to find a coach in the A-29 network who though like me and shared a common vision (there is great diversity within the network). Daniel and I had tried to talk before the retreat but had not connected - he knew I was looking - after some discussion on their shifts in community groups and our shared vision for community, Daniel agreed to coach me. That will be huge for NCCd. Thanks Daniel.
We closed out Thursday with a report on some great work all oer the world thru A-29 International. We concluded with a great time of vision casting from Driscoll. A-29 has officially outgrown 'network' status, we are fast becoming a movement.
What a week.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Notes From Vail (2)

Great day today.

Coffee and stuff just before a short time of worship songs. Guys and Gals split for teaching from Gary and Betsy Ricucci. Gary reminded busy planters that they are husbands and a husband's responsibility to his wife comes before his responsibility to his church. It wasn't a 'trip to the wood shed' as Gary said. And it didn't come across that way. In the busy and hurried life of a planter it is far too easy to take my wife for granted. Thanks Gary.

After our divided time, we got back together for a couple of songs then grabbed lunch. Amy and I took our lunch to the room and sat on the balcony together.

After lunch we headed to Vail Village where we walked and walked and walked! Shopping for the little ones!

There are really no words to describe the beauty of this part of God's creation... pictures could never capture the enormity of the mountains and all of the varied shades of color - grays, browns, greens, blues, whites. Just outside of our door is a roaring creek, right now resembling a small and violent river more than a creek - I suppose it is from the still melting snows.
Well - its off to dinner - Caleb I'll let you know who I see tonight ;)

Notes From Vail

What a day!
Flight to Denver - 5,280 feet above sea level - yes that's why it is called the mile high city!
Rental car and drive from Denver to Vail - B E A U T I F U L
Snow still on the ground
Elevation at Vail Summit Pass - over 10,500 feet!!!
Temp in Denver 84
Temp somewhere between Denver and Vail - 48
I love our network!!! A-29, wow.
Ate dinner with Duane Smetts and his wife Aimee - from San Diego,
met our Augusta GA planter, a TN planter, Ashville, NC planter, Mars Hill Pastor (Bubba - that's right Bubba in Seattle - go figure)
Really cool time talking with Aaron Carlson and his wife - they are preparing to launch New City Church Denver - they are great.
Enough for now - more later

+ Caleb - this one is for you - brief conversation with Matt Chandler, hello to Mark Driscoll, conversation with Daniel Montgomery, and Ed Stetzer said, "Oh, excuse me,"(after he almost ran over me).

Friday, June 20, 2008

The Darker Side of My City

So, this week I am working hard to get everything ready for this week AND next week. Next week Amy and I are headed to much needed Acts 29 pastors retreat in Vail, CO. Vail will be great, but to tell you the truth I'd be just about as happy if it were an A-29 retreat that Amy and I were attending in Perry! Just to get away together and to hang out together - then throw in time to meet and hang out with other church planters and, well, I can't wait.

That's why this weeks installment of "My City" is taking a little different spin. Chris Horne with the 11th Hour wrote a great piece on one of the darker sides of my city - it is well worth reading and serves to remind us of the great darkness that surrounds us. Here's the write up...
(PARENTAL GUIDANCE suggested - this is an ADULT topic)
The Rub: a fight over Macon’s massage parlors is brewing
by Chris Horne additional reporting by Whitney Gray

Just touching the door handle feels strange. It’s almost midnight, and I’m trying to walk into the one of the few businesses in Macon that isn’t a bar or Waffle House and is still open. Or so the sign says. The door, however, won’t budge. I press the button on an adjacent electronic box. It makes a noise, and I try again. The door opens to a small lobby, like a doctor’s office—empty chairs and old magazines, the smell of disinfectant wafting in from some place. The mamasan—a short, Asian woman with curly hair—greets me, saying very little. Smiling, she waves me inside and leads me to the back, down a hallway, directing me with monosyllabic English: “here”, “go”, “this one”.
At once, I am equally piqued by the rush of unveiling the lascivious unknown and somewhat bored—almost saddened—by how ordinary this actually is. There are no less than 20 of these places in Macon. Except for those with flamboyant neon signs that cry out for attention the way a toddler does when it’s ignored, they are unassuming, blending in, easy to look past on the daily commute—just another storefront in another strip mall.
The public offers snickering nicknames for them, the stuff of playground talk, like “nookie parlor”, “jack shack”, “sex spa”. But the men who frequent them call them AMP—Asian Massage Parlor. And everyone knows what that means.
“I started wondering why there are billboards for something that pretty much everyone knows is illegal,” Dr. Andrew Silver, a Mercer professor who works on sex trafficking issues, says about what initially drew him in. “We don’t have billboards that advertise for heroin, or even for porn. People would be up in arms about that stuff, but they aren’t about this.”
Before the Mother’s Day tornadoes altered the landscape, Silver counted 18 billboards along the 170 miles of I-75 laying south of Macon, seven coming within the few exits before Mercer University. North of the city, The 11th Hour counted another ten, a number dwarfing the three that promote city attractions.
“I do have some concerns about our image,” Macon-Bibb County Convention and Visitors Bureau President Janice Marshall says. “Travelers don’t want to stay in an area with massage parlors because they don’t want to have to deal with the questions from their children.”
Marshall adds, “A perception is as good as fact. I can’t afford enough ‘Song and Soul of the South’ and ‘Historic Macon’ billboards to counteract that.”
Lamar Advertising sales director Terry Harvin says that when a business—any business—is caught in illegal behavior, they pull the sign. To his knowledge, Harvin says they’ve pulled every AMP that has been raided.
Dr. Silver says, “Personally, I think it is foolish for them to advertise like that. It seems like an invitation for law enforcement to visit.”
What happens behind closed doors…
I tell the mamasan that I want a half-hour, and she tells me she wants $40. She asks if I want a shower, but I don’t. I’ve already had one, I tell her. “Just the massage,” I say. She smiles and, pointing at a hook on the wall, tells me I can change clothes. My girl will be there shortly. Then she shuts the door.
The massage table is nothing special, but it’s tidy. Someone has neatly arranged an orange beach towel over it and placed two thin white towels at the foot. I take off my shirt and then my pants. The nightstand alarm clock, on the shelf below the baby oil, hand sanitizer and paper towels, is incorrectly blinking 2:38am. Trying my best to pretend that I’m waiting on a real massage, I finish stripping and wrap a towel around me. To distract myself, I concentrate on the muted strains of Amy Winehouse outside the door. They tried to make her to go rehab but she said, no, no, no…
This routine—getting laid in an AMP—is easy to learn. It’s all over the Internet, on blogs and review sites. Basically: let them know you aren’t a cop but you are interested in what they offer. Just don’t ask for anything that isn’t on the menu. In other words, don’t tell the mamasan you want sex. Wait for them to ask.
That exchange is nothing more or less than an agreement between consenting adults. Or, so says David Corr, the Chairman of the Bibb County Libertarian Party, who is easily the most visible and vocal proponent of adult entertainment in middle Georgia.
Not only that, prostitution can be good for the city. Citing numbers used during the most recent SPLOST hearings—that 40% of sales in Bibb County is conducted by people from outside the area—Corr says that these places, as well as strip clubs and adult novelty stores, could be a boon for local coffers.
“If we get tourists to come to the spas, they’re obviously going to be buying food and gas and other items,” he says. “That’s going to have a positive economic impact.”
Those sentiments are echoed by Grady Odom, who has managed and/or owned area clubs like Boss Hogg’s, CafĂ© Erotica, the Neon Cowboy and the Cadillac Club. Today, he’s a consultant for Club Sinsations, a bikini bar off of Riverside Drive.
“In this location, if they (City Council) would allow nudity and alcohol to be in the same place, I think we could bring in two and a half, three million a year.” Rhetorically, he asks, “What’s the sales tax on that?”
Between $175,000 to $210,000 a year. That does not include, as Odom points out, the money municipalities routinely charge for adult entertainment licenses. And it doesn’t include the licenses that exotic dancers have to get, which is only $50 here, but upwards of $300 to $500 around Atlanta.The real money, he believes, is in conventions, which the city could better entice with more adult entertainment. For a city competing with Atlanta and Savannah, every edge is important.
“There has to be something for adults to do,” Odom says. “They don’t want to sit at the hotels all night and watch television. This is a $70 billion industry, and we’re missing out on our piece of the pie here in Macon.”Macon city councilman Erick Erickson is dismissive. “Money is not always the best standard to use. What is acceptable to the community? Look at the conventions we are getting. Do you think the Jehovah’s Witnesses are going to be more likely to visit if we have more adult businesses?”
Marshall agrees, “I’ve been in this business for 25 years, and I’ve never had to promote our adult entertainment opportunities.”
Anti-sex industry activist Ned Dominick says, sarcastically, “Think of the taxes if we regulated crack cocaine. Really, does money make it good?”
This “prudishness”, Corr says, is a minority opinion. “I think Macon is past that.” He says that the success of Club Sinsations and the Planning and Zoning (PNZ) approval of the X-Mart Adult Supercenter on Emery Highway is “proof that the citizen’s aren’t interested in archaic morals.”
“I’m going to use archaic terms here,” Dominick counters, “I believe the sex industry is straight-out evil in our communities for all the wreckage of human lives it involves.”
The Rub
“First time?” She asks. I confess and lay on my stomach, trying to relax as she pulls my towel off, draping it back over my bare rear. Then all 4’10” of her hops up on the table and straddles me. Inexpertly rubbing my back, she asks my name, where I live and how old I am. For a moment, it’s like getting a haircut. Small talk and services rendered.But then she slides back, revealing in the process that she isn’t wearing panties beneath her skirt, which I feel instead of see. This is not just small talk. With every touch and question, she is—and has been—testing me for signals that I’m a cop. She is also preparing me for the up-sell.
This is not something a licensed massage therapist would do.Erickson is motivated to pursue regulatory ordinances, which his predecessor, Cole Thomason, twice tried to do.During sessions with his licensed massage therapist (LMT), Thomason got an earful about the rigors of getting licensed while assumedly illegitimate businesses use the title without the same standards.
“It was disturbing but it was also embarrassing,” he says. “There is more regulatory compliance required of people to cut hair.” Even psychics are required to have more than a regular business license.So, Thomason proposed council crack down on the embarrassment. He was surprised by the response he received. “I was accused of trying to be the morality police. Then they told me that there wasn’t any proof that this was even going on.”Erickson notes, “Most of the people who weren’t interested in dealing with the issue are no longer on city council.”
What ultimately killed his efforts in council is that the State was in the midst of beefing up its laws to address this issue, and the city had to wait to see what that would result in.Jane Johnson, LMT, is the chair of the Georgia Board of Massage Therapy, which was established by legislation in May 2005. Like all state licensing boards, the GBMT is based in Macon. Driving to meetings, Johnson became familiar with the many massage parlor billboards. Curious, she made a call that confirmed her suspicions.Despite the experience, there wasn’t and isn’t much Johnson can do. Though the state law is broad enough to make it illegal for an establishment to publicize massage services without holding a state license, enforcement is an issue.
Johnson says, “We really only have jurisdiction over licensed professionals.”
The penalty for unlicensed practitioners is a cease and desist order and a small fine that starts at $100. Before the board can even investigate, they have to receive a complaint from the public. “It usually takes someone in the local municipality to step up.”
Erickson is doing that, reviving the dialogue on council with reports that massage parlors are commonly used to traffic women as sex slaves, and that it’s likely happening here. Dr. Silver concurs because of “our location in the mid-state and on the Interstate.” His interest led him to establish the Sexual Trafficking Opposition Party (STOP) at Mercer, which has spurred student activism.
Skeptical of claims about sex trafficking, Corr argues that opponents of AMPs have never even been in one. He has.
“But not as a patron,” Corr says. “I’ve spoken to the girls. I’ve asked them if they are being forced to do anything.” He stresses that he is vehemently opposed to sex slavery, but remains convinced it isn’t happening here, leaning on his experience in sales to help him judge whether or not someone is being truthful.
Though Grady Odom has no ethical qualms with prostitution—other than its illegality—Club Sinsations neighbors a massage parlor, and he confesses some apprehension.
“I see a variety of women come in and out over there, and they live there in these little places. They have nowhere to go. I see them come in and go away, and it makes me wonder. The majority of these girls speak very little English. Where are these girls coming from? How did they get here?”
Assistant DA Kimberly Schwartz, in the Narcotics and Vice division, says, “You have to decide if you’re going after the people who are running the massage parlors, which requires a costly, long-term investigation. If you’re just focusing on the worker bees, those charges tend to be just misdemeanors.”

Most of the cases from the area are of the small potato variety. The girls get out and then tend to disappear.

“It nice? You like?”
She says her name is Koko, with a “K” or so I imagine if that were her real name. Not that this requires honesty. She hops off of me, pulls the towel away and rubs my legs from the butt down. She asks if I like it. “It nice?” I tell her it is, though I’m beyond uncomfortable at this point. Looking over my shoulder, I watch her take a condom from her bra, unwrap it and place it in her mouth—all without stopping the massage. Koko sees me and grins, making a hard swallow sound when she does. If I’d come for sex, I’d have been excited.“Over,” she mumbles. The towel, my cover, is long gone. For a couple of minutes, maybe just a few seconds, she runs her fingers lightly over my legs, my stomach, my chest. She runs her hands inside my thigh and out, studying my reaction to find an opening for the sell. I had expected a moment when the cards were all laid on the table, when the sham was completely illuminated, when we would discuss the terms of any further activity. This appeared to be it.
After 32 years as a police officer, Odom is understandably proud of the fact that, aside from offended sensibilities, Club Sinsations hasn’t caused any problems for the community. He abhors drug use and would never allow prostitution because, at the very least, it’d give the police a reason to shut him down. “We police ourselves because we know they’re watching us for any little thing.”
He calls Macon’s stringent regulations against adult entertainment “the triple standard” because they require approval from PNZ, city council and the county commissioners. It came in 1993 when John Chambers opened CafĂ© Erotica. Odom was present at the meeting between Chambers, Commissioner Joe Allen and former Georgia Assistant Attorney General Hale Almand when it was birthed.
Odom says, “John knew that if he could keep adult entertainment out of Macon, everybody would have to travel south unless they went to Atlanta.”
Allen remembers it more as the local government throwing its weight around. “John Chambers said, ‘Look, I won’t even try to come to your town if you make sure no one else will come to your town.’ I said, ‘That’s a deal!’ They can’t bring a strip club to this town,” Allen says, offering in the next breath, “If I had anything to do with it, they wouldn’t have any of these massage parlors here either.”

The Negotiation
Koko stops the massage, imploring me with her eyes as if I could do her a big favor. Her mouth clear of foreign objects, she sweetly asks, “Anything else?”“I don’t know. How much is it?”“What you want? Everything?”“No,” I tell her. “This is my first time.”
Gesturing as if her hands were gripped around an invisible shaft, Koko motions towards her mouth and asks, “In here?”
“How much is that?”She raises a single finger.“A hundred?”She nods. “You want—” Koko repeats the previous gesture but motions differently, not towards anything in particular.

The major difference between strip clubs and massage parlors in Macon is that you can’t operate a strip club but you can open a massage parlor. There are other differences, but only one makes sense of why one is permitted, even if only by negligence, while one is resolutely denied. Strip clubs operate in the open and AMPs remain cloaked.District Attorney Howard Sims, says, “Prostitution is still against the law. That isn’t the problem. It’s that you’re having to go behind closed doors to catch what’s going on.”
AMPs are a different beast. Authorities can shut one down for a little while, but watch as it reopens soon afterward. Advances made to combat them are consistently circumvented.Erickson says, “What I’ve asked the city attorney to look into is: is it possible to write a clear ordinance that empowers the Macon Police to enforce the state requirement?”Three years into Georgia’s massage therapy regulations, enforcement isn’t the only issue. Most of the AMPs in Macon have already dropped “massage” from their name, choosing “spa” or “sauna” instead. As for services, many still offer massage, but the growing attraction is for body shampoos, showers and dry saunas.Mayor Robert Reichert wants to add an ordinance for law enforcement to use as a tool, but he acknowledges the complication of resource allocation. “We have to have a measured response that is appropriate to the level of public risk.”City Attorney Pope Langstaff is checking into what Macon can legally do to compliment state law. But finding a way to protect the public good and limit what AMPs can get away with without damaging legitimate businesses is tricky. Langstaff admits, “Regulate one thing, and they move to another.”Efforts by other cities offer insight on curbing the prevalence of these illicit businesses. Clayton and Gwinnett counties have responded to community concerns by dedicating task forces to it. Officials in Nashville hold property owners liable by requiring a consent bond. In every case, it’s a matter of the local municipality turning the heat up. That is, of course, easier said than done.

The not-so-Happy Ending
Because I assumed the negotiations would be held in a different manner—one that didn’t involve me laying naked on a table as she leans over—I thought I could simply say I’ve changed my mind and walk away. Thinking quickly, thought not deftly, I tell her I only have $20. She says there is an ATM in the parking lot and slides slippers towards me. Koko blocks me from my pants and shoes. She wants me to leave in my underwear.It takes a promise to return on Friday before I can go. Koko buttons up my shirt and hands me my shoes. I tell I’m sorry, and she pats my head like I’m a kid. Then we walk down the hallway together. She holds my hand and says, “Goodnight.” Koko and the mamasan wave at me as I leave.]Getting in my truck, I can’t shake something Ned Dominick said. “The heart and soul of my problem with massage parlors is that it injures everyone involved.” In reflection, the experience already has surreal properties, the way their faces keep popping up in my mind. I recall what a blogger wrote on the specifics of AMP etiquette: “Also, remember to smile at her. She’s human.” I feel ill.

Here's Chris's blog - you can comment there if you would like.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

'God Talk"

Two conversations this week have reminded me of the importance of specifics in our missional conversations. Both conversations were filled with 'good' things that I hold in common with those that I spoke with - things like being nice, helping others, righting wrongs, even pointing people to God. Both conversations included a similar thought - believe in God, be good and in the end it will all be OK. Both individuals arrived at their conclusions based on what they believe - which seemed to be a rather baseless opinion - a mix of this and that - firmly rooted in little more than a 'belief.'
If I had let the conversation end with 'God and 'Good' I would never have discovered the truth - in our culture far more people believe in and talk about 'God' than not. The Great Divide comes when we push beyond the general and generic 'Good God' to the only way TO that 'Good God' - Jesus. We may have many 'God' things in common with a Muslim, or a Jehovah's Witness, or a Latter Day Saint - but when we push through the generalities and guide the conversation to the specific - Jesus is THE Way, THE Truth, and THE Life and no one (NO ONE) comes to the Father but through Him, When we push through to the true Gospel - we find that all things in common fall loudly to the floor.
We must let the Holy Spirit guide us and be sensitive and loving in our conversations, BUT at the same time being missional means that we understand that the focus of the mission is the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Therefore - with humility, sensitivity, and the leading of the Holy Spirit - we must learn to move beyond the comforts of 'God Talk' and wade into the dangerous, delightful, transforming waters of the Gospel!

Monday, June 16, 2008

Missional Preaching + Holy Spirit = Missional People

We ended a series that served as a Vision Series where we unpacked what it means to be a worshipping community of missional theologians. For three weeks we looked at being missional and just what that means and looks like. I shared with a friend recently how excited I was because it seems that NCCders are 'getting it.' Then last week I started hearing from some of our folks and now I am REALLY excited! Listen to this:

One NCCder e-mailed me that she had a great opportunity that day thru one of her 'rhythms of life.' As she walked in her neighborhood with a friend Jesus provided a great opportunity for her to talk about Him - and she did!

Another NCCder went to a bar with her friend. A rough and tough biker dude was talking about how he was too far gone for God - too big of a sinner. This NCCder has a hard time talking with others about her faith, but she said she just had to. She spoke up and said hey - its not too late! Just repent and turn to Jesus. She did it! They talked more, he ended up making light of her words, but she did it!

Another NCCder, a real estate attorney, was talking with someone at a closing. The opp for a more personal conversation opened up and he took the opp to talk about Jesus and invite an unchurched dude to New City.

Yet another NCCder had a misunderstanding (it REALLY, REALLY was) with our local Law Enforcement. This NCCder was actually taken to the Law Enforcement Center, processed and put in a cell until the misunderstanding could be cleared - which took s o m e time. As this REALLY was a mistake on the part of the officers, I would probably have been really hot and not very happy. But, this NCCder took advantage of the situation and as opportunities presented themselves he prayed for those in the cell with him and actually shared the gospel with two guys! He learned about them - talked to them - and then talked with them about Jesus and Christianity.

Last one. One of our NCCders met a non-church goer at the 567. They had several conversations oer the course of a couple of nights at the 567. Sunday we had a visitor from the 567.

That's all in ONE week! And that's just from those who shared with me what was going on with them. Imagine a church of people who understand that God is on a mission of redemption and restoration - a people who have joined Him on that mission! Then imagine a city, transformed by the Gospel of Jesus Christ as God's people join Him on His mission.

Friday, June 13, 2008

The Red Swill @ the 567

What a GREAT night at the 567! ared Wright and the Red Swill were great! Here are a few shots from last night - hate you missed it, these guys are really good - what a great sound in the 567.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

the 567 Added as a Bragg Jam Venue

That's right!
Bragg Jam 2008 will include the 567 as a music venue.
The bands for the 567 are not lined up yet, I'll post them when I know them.
But here is a list of some of the bands included in this year's Bragg Jam:
Jason Isbell
Sons of Roswell
Kitchafoonee Cowboys
Sweet Betty
Col Bruce Hampton
Mudcat
Charlie Wooten
Kevin Kinney
Acoustic Workshop
A Special Reunion of Macon's First Punk Band VEX
PJ Morton
Collective Efforts
Doski Woski
Psyche Origami
Josh Roberts and the Hinges
Bad Monkey Scott Baston and the News Architects
Jared Wright and The Red Swill
The Little Country GiantsRobert Coleman
The Liabilities
Hank Vegas
Acoustic Workshop
The Revival
Abby Owens

Monday, June 9, 2008

Think About It...

"Our goal is not to convert people to our church. Our goal is to see them converted to Jesus through the gospel so that they can BE THE CHURCH on mission that truly declares and demonstrates the gospel in all of life."
Jeff Vanderstelt, Soma Church

Reactions?

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Great Night @ the 567 (and 2 coming up)

Last night was a great night at the 567. Joey Faulk, a friend from our previous church did a great job - 1st time I had heard Joey out of a church context. Thanks Joey, great job. Megan North took the stage at 8:30 - great voice, good performer - and it is hard to beat a room full of people ending the night singing Hotel California by the Eagles (I think Megan won some new fans!). We had good crowds, met some new folks,. and the Starbucks was good as usual - the Frappuccinos were a hit as the temps outside were HIGH.

(JUNE 12)
We are all really excited about Thursday night's big show - The Red Swill will be on stage at 9:00 PM. These guys have a sweet sound that should really be a great fit for the 567 and we may have a full house.

(JUNE 27)
Dan Darden and Rob Sumowski (formerly with Gypsy Train) will get together for will be another fun night. These are 2 of the most talented musicians I personally know. They are both capable of almost any genre of music (Dan can't rap) and know more music than most of us have forgotten!

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Imagine A City...

This past Sunday I had a conversation with one of our men. He has recently started reading Total Church and he and I have been talking about where New City is headed. He asked me of some churches who were similar in vision to New City - I pointed him to a couple that came to mind very quickly - Soma and Kaleo. I regularly visit there web sites and blogs and much of what they write and teach rings true in my heart.
Jeff, pastor of Soma recently started blogging. I read his blog today about the vision he had as he started Soma - it will probably sound familiar because so much of it I share for New City - (he just writes better!).
So here's a sample...
...Then, I would draw arrows coming out of the box and clarify: The mission of the church - the purpose of the gospel - is to call a people who are set apart to God through the work of Jesus Christ in order to send them out of the building for mission. The goal is not to fill a building with people but to saturate the city we live in with the glory of the gospel of Jesus Christ through the called people of God living lives full of the Spirit, surrendered fully to the will and mission of God, living out the gospel in tangible ways in every place, home, neighborhood, business and school in our cities. The goal according to Paul as he addressed the church in Ephesus is to see Christ fill all in all - so that no one in our city will be able to get away from the real presence and proclamation of the Gospel AND the heavenly realms will be blown away at the manifold wisdom of God displayed in his Church everywhere.I asked the question, "What if we were to intentionally send more resources out of the building for the sake of the mission than we tried to keep in the building?" "What if the gifts that God has given to the Body are not just for the sake of our gatherings, but for the
building up of the Body in the city we live in?" "For example, what if the gift of administration isn't just for organizing our databases or events, but also for organizing broken systems and structures in the city we live in?" "What if our teaching gifts are not just for teaching a class for believers but also for tutoring kids that need extra help in school?" I remember asking, "What if we made it our goal to equip the believers that come to faith to leave the building and start new missional expressions of the church in their context?" What if we did not stop sending equipped missionaries back out until the city of Tacoma was filled in every way with the presence of Christ through His Body the Church?"
And here's the whole story.

She's Mine...

I spent the morning cleaning up around the 567. Cleared the stage - wound up cables - stored equipment - getting ready for First Friday. Russell came to bring the sound board and other equipment for the 567 stage and we got is all set up. After a quick lunch I finished up my sermon for this week.
The sun went behind the clouds downtown
The cafe is cool today as a fan blows across me
The music is just loud enough that I can't hear anything else - but the whirr of the fan blades
And on comes a new favorite -
She's Mine
And I stop to listen
And in a rare moment for me - I closed my eyes and dreamed a silly dream
The lights were dim
And the floor was clear
And we danced
And nothing else mattered for the moment
I'm glad she's mine

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

The Kingdom Mission

Sundays we are working through this descriptive statement - We understand that our church is more than a building, an organization, a man, or a service. We are a group of missionaries, a family of believers, a population of diverse individuals united by, striving for, and growing in the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Better said, we are "a worshipping community of missional theologians." (Dan Kimball, Vintage Faith Church ).
What does it mean to be a worshipping community of missional theologians?
So, we have spent a couple of weeks s t r e t c h i n g our minds with a biblical understanding of missional/mission. Last Sunday we talked about the Kingdom Mission. God is redeeming and restoring a Kingdom. In each of the Gospels the message of Jesus was that the Kingdom is at hand. Before the service we put forth a question and provided everyone with pen and paper to respond:
If heaven came down on Macon today, how would Macon, GA be different?
I wasn't sure how our response would be - it was great - both in # of responses and quality of responses. So here's a few:
No sickness, no sorrow, no tears, and lots of happiness
As a war vet I look forward to the peace and resolution
There would be one church instead of one on every corner
Race would be invisible
It would be cleaner
Beautiful rivers and parks
No homelessness
No crime, no bitterness, no gossip
And a favorite of many present - People wouldn't get drunk when enjoying beer at the bars - at least it got lots of laughs!
I explained the ALREADY and NOT YET of the kingdom and talked about how we - NCCd are the Kingdom of God already. And God desires that we be salt and light - a city within the city. We are to be the already kingdom in, for, and to Macon Ga - a people where racism is wiped out, where there is no bitterness, no gossip, no crime... a people working for the restoration of all that is good and beautiful.
So now, I pause to pray that New City will be just that - a new city - a city within a city transformed and seeing transformation.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Serving Bragg Jam Style

Its that time of year again - Bragg Jam 2008.

July 26
Before New City's first official public gathering we were a handful of old and new friends who shared a vision for something different - a new church. New City would be a church plant right smack in the middle of downtown Macon. As a church desiring to serve our city and forge some new friendships, we volunteered to serve during the 2007 Bragg Jam. We were the first and only church (that I am aware of) serving.
Its that time again! This Sunday I'll have volunteer forms available for all who are willing to help out. I am thankful that we served last year - it was a great opp for some new friendships. Let's overwhelm them with volunteers and a HUGE New City presence this year!

Monday, June 2, 2008

Getting Ready for First Friday

Don't Forget - this Friday is FIRST FRIDAY
Come by the 567 for Starbucks, Joey Faulk, and Megan North

Here's a little taste of what's to come ...

Sunday, June 1, 2008

NY Times Article - young evangelicals & politics

ST. LOUIS — Southern Baptists, as a rule, do not drink. But once a month, young congregants of the Journey, a Baptist church here, and their friends get together in the back room of a sprawling brew pub called the Schlafly Bottleworks to talk about the big questions: President Bush, faith and war, the meaning of life, and “what’s wrong with religion.”

“We go where people are because we feel like Jesus went to the people,” said the Rev. Darrin Patrick, founder of the Journey. “That’s where people are having their conversations about things that matter,” the Rev. Darrin Patrick, senior pastor and founder of the Journey, said about the talks in the bar. “We go where people are because we feel like Jesus went to the people.”
for the rest or the story - here's the link...