Paul Jenkins -
  • ABOUT
  • PODCAST
  • BOOKS I’VE WRITTEN
  • BOOKS I’VE READ
    • So far this year
    • In previous years
  • DECLARATIONS
Paul Jenkins -
  • ABOUT
  • PODCAST
  • BOOKS I’VE WRITTEN
  • BOOKS I’VE READ
    • So far this year
    • In previous years
  • DECLARATIONS
Church stuff, From Me to The G

What happens when we get fixed

Reading Time: 2 minutes

If you know me, this will come as absolutely no surprise: I’m not very handy when it comes to fixing stuff.  In fact, I’m so bad at it that someone who overheard my phone conversation with Wendy the other day actually laughed when they heard me tell The B99 that I was in the process of fixing our microwave!  Literally, I got off the phone and they looked at me and asked (in a tone that mocked me more than they probably meant to), “You’re fixing a microwave???”

It made me realize just how funny it must have sounded.  Me, the consummate un-handyman, saying out loud that I was fixing anything.

“Well,” I rephrased, “let’s just say I’m attempting to fix the microwave.”  This seemed to sound much better to the person, and all was right in the world again.

I could go into all the details about how I fixed a microwave door that was sagging on its hinges because the original weld had broken, but that’s not the point of this post.

(I think I will add a post at some point explaining how a simple rivet was a cheaper solution than what all the other websites told me to do, and it might end up being as popular as the post on how I got my coffeemaker to stop making me what to kill myself.  Another time, though.)

The point of this post is that now, every time I open and close the microwave door, my eye automatically goes to that one rivet and…I…

…smile.

I think about the fact that I fixed it.  I think about how the fixed door makes Wendy (my better 99%) smile when she opens it.  I think about, well, the power of redemption and how God must smile when He looks down on all of His children who were broken and now are being fixed.

Philippians 1:6 says that we can be “confident of this, that he who began a good work in [us] will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.”  How excited does God get over broken sinners being healed through the redemptive work of Jesus? “He will take great delight in you…he will rejoice over you with singing.” (Zephaniah 3:17, emphasis added)

You and I are broken microwave doors, and Jesus is the rivet, and every time God looks at you or me, his eyes are drawn to Jesus, and He smiles.  Our redemption brings him joy, and when we live our lives with the purpose of carrying that redemptive message to the broken world around us, we bring more joy to our Father’s heart.

That’s our purpose at The Gathering.  We live near God in order to be sent to those far from Him, and that, in turn, brings a smile to his face and glory to his name.  Walk with redemption in mind this week and let’s see God smile when we gather together with a bigger family this Sunday!

August 29, 2012by Paul Jenkins
Church planting, Church stuff, From Me to The G

How God punched a hole in the sky

Reading Time: 3 minutes

It’s funny how being a portable church plant can make some things easy and yet other things become much more difficult. When you hold your services in a coffee shop, it isn’t hard to create a warm atmosphere.  But finding space for a full band or figuring out where to have a baptism service?  Seemingly simple tasks like that become increasingly challenging when you’re portable.

That’s where we found ourselves in the week heading up to our first baptism service at The Gathering.  After holding our first baptism spontaneously in the fountain at the square a few weeks back (if you haven’t seen that video, it’s worth two minutes of your time), we had decided to actually get permission this time to baptize four more people at the square this past Sunday. You won’t be surprised when I tell you that we were denied because of liability issues, but I was.  Even after suggesting we’d sign a waiver releasing any other parties from responsibility, the answer was “no.”

That left us a few days out from what could be one of the most impactful services in the short history of our church and with no idea how or where to pull it off.  These are the things most churches take for granted.  They just fill up the old baptistry and dunk people!  Plan B turned into buying a 300 gallon watering trough from Mauney’s Feed Mill in New London, which would be wide enough for me to get in the water with the people being baptized, and deep enough that if they sat down, we could baptize them easily (except for the really tall ones, which you can see ran out of room in the video!).  Plan B got even better when the fantastic folks at Mauney’s heard what we were using it for and just told us to pick it up, use it, and then bring it back.  Saved us about $250 right there, and so when I sat down Saturday evening and saw that the weather on Sunday was going to be 84° and sunny, I couldn’t stop smiling!  God was indeed coming through!

It was raining when I woke up Sunday morning.  Hard.  Hard enough that I checked the radar map on my phone as I drove into the coffee shop to set up for service.  I couldn’t believe what I saw.  The entire screen was filled with a big circle of yellows and oranges and reds, and there was no end in sight.  Forecast was for 100% chance of rain until 11, and then a 75% chance after that.  That’s when I asked God to punch a hole in the sky.  I wish I could say my prayer was more fancy than that, but it wasn’t.  I just asked Him to make a fist and punch it through the clouds so that we could baptize the people that He had drawn to Himself and to our church.

It rained all the way to the church.  It rained the whole time we set up.  It rained when we started the service.  It rained while Phil and Jen led us in worship, right up until the LAST SONG.  It was during that song that I noticed it wasn’t raining as hard and so I checked the radar map again, and I found that we were right on the edge of a hole in the storm.  It literally looked like someone (gee, I wonder who?) had punched a hole into the storm!

God was moving on our behalf, and He was just getting started!  As worship ended, I knew that God wanted to set free people who struggled with 2 things: addiction and cynicism.  I know, a pretty weird combo!  But we watched God break people and begin to set them free, and it was so powerful that 4 of those individuals ended up being baptized spontaneously simply in response to what God had just done in their lives moments earlier.

It was raw. It was real. It was exactly what we needed.

How does God break addictions?  He fills the addicted so full of Him that they can’t squeeze in anything else.  How does He break cynicism?  He makes a display of His grace through 8 individuals who are so hungry for Him that they would step into a 300 gallon Rubbermaid tub in the back alley of a building in downtown Albemarle in order to go down in the water so they can come up clean.

This, church, is why we do what we do, and the great thing is that we are just getting started.  The best is yet to come!

August 22, 2012by Paul Jenkins
Church stuff, From Me to The G

Lessons learned from coconut water

Reading Time: 3 minutes

This week I took my first sip of coconut water.  Then I took my second sip.  I even took a third sip.  Then, I stopped sipping.

What can that simple experience teach us about bringing people far from God near Him?  Plenty.

For starters, the only reason I even tried coconut water was because all I’ve heard in the last few months is how good it is for you.  How all the fitness gurus drink it.  How holding that container and sipping it will catapult my body into a new fitness stratosphere.  But when I tasted it, the first thing I thought was that no matter how much you market something terrible, it’s still terrible.

I don’t want that to be true of our church.  It’s so easy to say that we’re this or we’re that, to put a great  presentation together.  Marketing is easy; planting is hard.  Surface presentation feels good immediately; planting  for future growth feels good eventually.  I’ve said this before, but the church is often guilty of over-selling and under-delivering.  And at that point, our services become nothing more than the hype that sells coconut water, and people will be disappointed when they finally give what we’re selling a try.

Second, we’ve only got a limited number of opportunities with people when it comes to drawing them nearer to Jesus.  There are people who overuse the phrase that you only get one chance to make a good first impression, and while that’s technically true, the reality is that most of us will give something a few shots before we move on.  After my first sip of the vile stuff, I took another, and another.  Why?  Because I really wanted to like it, and so I kept hoping it would get better.

Apply that to the lives of hurting, broken, unchurched people who come to The Gathering.  If what we say we are doesn’t match up to what we really are, they will have the same reaction that I had with the coconut water, and it won’t be a good one.  Our job is to make sure that doesn’t happen, for sure, but the good news is that many people are so thirsty for something real that they will probably give us another sip or two, and that’s where our integrity as a church is so critical.

More than being the best at everything (which is impossible and would be like trying to market coconut water), we have the opportunity to be the best at the things that make us uniquely us: a culture of people who want to do life together, a culture that is passionate about being near God and each other in relationships.  What we have to offer the thirsty lives around us is so much better than coconut water!  We hold out the refreshing water of life.  Jesus said in John 7:37-38 that if anyone was thirsty, “let him come to me and drink.”  Our job is to make sure the first sip is as refreshing as Jesus said it would be, and how we serve the thirsty goes a long way towards the way they react when they try Him.

Let’s be the best at offering a cup of cold water to weary travelers, and we’ll see a great harvest of souls gulping down the water they’ve craved instead of throwing coconut water in the trash.

August 9, 2012by Paul Jenkins
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About Me

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It means the world to me that you're here. I write mostly to get out of my own head, and tend to focus on culture, faith, church hurt, and emotional and spiritual health.

I long to live an authentic life marked by faith, family, friendships, and joy. If what I write resonates with you and you choose to subscribe, I'd consider myself even more blessed. 😀

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