Minggu, 28 Juni 2015

The New Missionaries

Appleseed Travel Journal - The New Missionaries


Roger
Brooks and I just completed a week training a missionary team in China. The details of this team and their mission organization are withheld for security reasons.
But we are reminded just how privileged we are to be involved in God’s work throughout the nations in this day and age. The face of missions has shifted in the last decade in several key ways and it is wonderful to see newer missionaries receive training that reflects this shift:
  1. Missionaries are not taking their own culture, and not even their church culture, into new places. God’s work is meant to be expressed uniquely and beautifully through each culture it encounters as its seed takes root within that people.
  2. National workers take on leadership quickly. Outside missionaries do not have to remain in one place, full time, for extended periods of time. Rather, nationals are entrusted quickly to build and sustain God’s work.
  3. The message and power of the life-changing Gospel can reproduce and become a movement quickly. Unreached groups of people throughout the world are bound up in so much oppression, superstition, mindsets of poverty, and hopelessness. The Gospel is needed like no other time in history! To see the power of this Gospel unleashed among a world of over 7 billion people, it must become the simple, viral movement that Jesus initiated. Newer missionaries are receiving training in starting these types of movements!
What a great time to be involved in the nations.
How blessed we are to have friends like you traveling with us and sustaining all we do!

Stop Wasting Your Time Doing This!

FrankViolaBlog - Stop Wasting Your Time Doing This!


Posted: 25 Jun 2015 04:41 AM PDT
Before I launch into today’s post, I’m seriously perplexed.
On Monday, I posted my 2015 Blog Reader Survey and asked nicely — I said “Please” with a capital “P” even — that you take 2 minutes (yes, 2 whole minutes) out of your busy schedule to fill it out.
To my surprise (no, to my shock), only .05% of you have done so.
So I want to thank those of you who took the 2 minutes out of your busy schedules to respond to my really nice request. :-)
But to the rest of you, can you pause and take 2 minutes to fill it out for me? Pretty please?
Right now, the numbers are way too small for me to get an accurate sample. And I use the information in the survey to improve this blog and my other writing and audio projects for you, my readers.
So pretty please with cherries and blueberries on top – take 2 minutes out of your grinding schedule and answer the survey.
HERE IT IS AGAIN
Okay, I’ll now wait for you to go fill it out and return to read today’s post . . .
Waiting … (thumb roll) 1 minute past.
Waiting … (humming) 2 minutes past.
Okay, here we go.
Stop Wasting Your Time Doing This!
While I’m not a fan of Facebook groups, I do enjoy connecting with people on my Facebook page.
However, from time to time, I’ll look at some of the news feeds of my friends. And I’ll see some of them getting roped into full-blown doctrinal beatdowns on their walls.
In like manner, I’ve been pulled into countless Facebook groups – meaning, people  “joined” me.
I don’t follow these groups and rarely make a comment.
However, once in a while I’ll get tagged, so I end up looking at the thread.
For the last seven years in observing these groups, I’ve lost count of the knock-down, drag-out, WWE-styled smackdowns over biblical topics I’ve seen.
The people go back and forth, some ending up being so infuriated that they end up blocking their debating opponents.
In addition, some of the befuddled contentious souls are routinely banned from these groups.
(Oh, these are all “Christians” groups mind you, Ahem . . . )
Not once during these blood-lettings have I ever seen anyone change their minds.
Lots of wasted time and energy is burned up in these threads. And for that reason, people leave them constantly.
Why, then, do people continue to argue and exchange theological blows on Facebook?
These are the thoughts that have gone through my mind whenever I’ve observed these things:
“Has it not dawned on them that their comments are not making a dent in the minds of others?”
“Do they have too much time on their hands, so debating and angering people is a pleasant hobby for them?”
“Do they have a lot of pent up frustration that they are unwittingly unleashing on the pour souls who are part of these groups?”
“Have they still not discovered the other means that actually impact people and change hearts and minds?”
Now, I’m sure there may be a few exceptions to the above. (In life, there are always the .001% exceptions.)
Surprising, shortly after I wrote this post and put it in my queue, one of my Facebook friends made this comment on his wall:
Facebook is not a place for intelligent dialogue. I have learned very few people can have a rational discussion about just about anything. I look, but have learned to refrain from engaging current political, religious or cultural topics. The vast majority of people already have their minds made up on a given issue and viewpoint. Facebook is merely a place they use to reinforce that viewpoint and anything challenging them is viciously attacked. 
Interesting, eh?
My point is simple.
Facebook isn’t the place to change people’s minds.
It’s a great way to keep up with old friends or — if you’re a writer — to connect with your readers.
But in terms of real impact and changing people’s minds, there are far more effective ways of doing both.
Oh, if you saw my post on the mentoring project from last week, I’m working on a safe place where Christians can receive mentoring and connect with others of like mind and heart at the same time.
And that project will have nothing to do with Facebook. :-)
LikeWithBorder

John Fenn, Weirdness from God #3 (Is Shaking from God)

Hi all,
Last week I shared how God will never cause a person to lose control of themselves in convulsions. That doesn't mean the human body doesn't shake or feel warm when in the presence of God - because it can.

Heaven created, but earth formed
A believer's spirit has been recreated by the Spirit of God and can therefore withstand the fullness of heaven. But the human body at this stage of our eternal lives is formed of the earth, and things made of earth are a lower form of creation than the heavenly, so doesn't react well to the things of the Spirit.

Like an electric stove top which has elements made to resist electricity flowing into them, which causes them to heat up, so too does the earth-body resist and react to the Spirit of God.

A person may feel a warmth, 'goose bumps', shaking in one's limbs, or weakness in the body when in the presence of the Lord. If the power is turned up a bit more, like the stove top element that heats up more when more electricity is allowed into it, the human body may be 'slain in the spirit' - poor term to describe a person losing physical strength and falling down as a result.

If the power is turned up a bit more, a person may have a trance or vision as Peter did in Acts 9, or a person may appear to be deeply asleep, and sometimes they are having amazing experiences with the Lord, and yet other times they don't recall a thing afterwards.

If the power is turned up high enough, it will kill the human body, which happened to Uzzah in II Samuel 6:6-7 who touched the Ark of the Covenant to steady it as David had incorrectly transported it by ox cart rather than by priests. If the power is turned up higher than just killing a person, it will change the molecular structure of earth-flesh into heavenly-flesh, which is what happened to Jesus at His resurrection* and what will happen to all believers when our earth bodies are 'changed' into the heavenly**.  *Romans 6:4 says Jesus was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father. **I Corinthians 15:35-55.

I said I'd share about God, the devil, and the flesh...here is the flesh
When a person feels the Holy Spirit come on them and their flesh starts to shake, that can be a natural reaction to the Holy Spirit by the human body, as it is made of earth and reacts to the Spirit of God.

But my point from last week that Paul taught remains true*, God will never cause you to lose control. A person can give themselves over to the shaking because they haven't been taught they can stop the shaking yet still feel the anointing. I have instructed many over the years in this. *I Corinthians 14:32

A typical conversation will be to talk to them while they are shaking, and ask if they feel the presence of God - normally they will say something like 'Yes, this happens to me in the presence of God', or something like that, as they know their body and how it reacts - each person is different.

Then I'll share Paul's teaching, and ask them to take control of their shaking (arm for example) and as they do I continue to ask them if they still feel the presence, which they always answer they do. Within a couple of minutes they have stopped shaking, and testify they still feel the presence of the Lord just as strongly.

They've now been taught scripture and the ways of the Spirit, therefore no longer focused on themselves and their shaking, but are now able to focus again on the Lord and receive from Him.

Ignorant leaders
What happens is that pastors and ministers are ignorant, and frankly, sometimes use these reactions to the Spirit as ego and ministry boosters because news of shaking builds their ministry up in the eyes of many.

And because they are willingly ignorant of the ways of the Spirit and the human body and it makes a good show, well meaning people who attend are allowed to shake, convulse, roll, bark, laugh, and all sorts of things as they give themselves over to it, never knowing God will never cause you to lose control of yourself.

God doesn't interrupt Himself, so He won't have x person teaching while y person in a pew is drawing attention to themselves by shaking or laughing or convulsing - the minister needs to talk to that person and teach them how to regain control of their flesh, or let the meeting go to all laughing or all shaking. God isn't divided against Himself nor therefore does He contradict His purpose in a meeting by interrupting Himself.

And there are some who shake because they like the attention, in a sick way thinking somehow they are more spiritual because they shake. But what if that shaking is not the flesh, but a demon?

How the Holy Spirit uproots a demon so that it manifests
In Matthew 12:25-28 Jesus is accused of casting out demons by the power of the devil, but He responds: "If I by Beelzbub cast out demons, by whom do your sons cast them out? For this reason they will be your judges. But if I cast them out by the Spirit of God, then the kingdom of God has come to you."

Jesus worked then and continues now to work with the Holy Spirit to cast out demons, for His whole ministry is cooperating with what the Father wants to do by His Spirit*. Jesus hasn't changed which means we as His body must also cooperate with the Holy Spirit in ministry. *John 5:19

No one just walks up to a person and says "I command that spirit in you to come out" - the exception in scripture being the person knows they have a spirit and wants it out, their will with the Holy Spirit bringing it to the surface to be dealt with, or a parent of a dependent child asks on their behalf as it manifests.

Notice in Jesus' ministry spirits were manifesting when Jesus cast them out, 'pushed to the surface by the Holy Spirit' for lack of a better way of saying it. We see this in Matthew 15: 21-28 with the woman whose daughter was tormented, evidently as she spoke with Jesus, and in Matthew 8:28-34 where two men possessed with demons manifesting came to Jesus, who cast the spirits out.

In Mark 1:21-26 Jesus is teaching and a demon in a man starts manifesting during His teaching, and He casts him out. In Mark 5 a man with 2,000 demons led by Legion came running to Jesus to be delivered.

We see this same cooperation with the Holy Spirit in Acts 16 with Paul who was followed by a slave girl with a 'spirit of divination', saying; 'These men are servants of the most high god and show us the way of salvation', which in Greek culture was Zeus the sky god, so this spirit was lying about Paul and Silas, and Paul cast out the spirit as it manifest.


As it was then it is now; the Living Word and Spirit agree and work together.
A person convulsing because of a demon is doing so with little or no control over it - the Holy Spirit pushes it up to manifest so it can be cast out. A person convulsing in the flesh can regain control quite easily.

If you ask a person if it is God on them or if God is on them because they have a demon, you will know by their reaction - a demon will often speak up at that point with a hate filled response, and if in the flesh a person will look at you like you're crazy to suggest they have a demon. If its a demon tell it to leave, and if the flesh try to help them grow a bit by regaining control of their body. And if they won't cooperate, then know there are times you have to give up on people not because you don't care, but because they don't.

I never got to what the Argentineans said...So next week Argentineans, where gold dust, feathers, and jewels came from - and more...until then, blessings!
    John Fenn
www.cwowi.org and email me at cwowi@aol.com

Update from China

Appleseed Travel Journal - Update from China


Brooks
Wow! What a week…our hearts are full as we reflect on the past 12 years and how God has connected all of us with specific people in specific regions all over the world. Our scripture for this season is:
Ephesians 3:18-21 New Century Version (NCV)
18 And I pray that you and all God’s holy people will have the power to understand the greatness of Christ’s love—how wide and how long and how high and how deep that love is. 19 Christ’s love is greater than anyone can ever know, but I pray that you will be able to know that love. Then you can be filled with the fullness of God.
20 With God’s power working in us, God can do much, much more than anything we can ask or imagine. 21 To him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus for all time, forever and ever. Amen.
In looking back, we can see that this is exactly what God has done…we could never have known what to ask for…it only makes me more excited to think about the next 12 years!!!!! One of you wrote “I feel China is going to play a big part in the plan of things in the last days…” We really agree with this!!! Reaching China and also reaching Muslims…these are HUGE population groups in the world today and reaching them has the power to influence hundreds and thousands of people all over the world! As we come off of this trip, this is exactly what we feel it has been intentionally and purposely about. We believe that while it has looked very different than other trips we’ve taken, it has definitely been a continuation and outgrowth of what has gone on before. The focus has very much been in these two areas and we fervently believe there is much fruit to come…not from us, but from those on the ground, in the trenches, doing the hard work. Please pray with us for these folks!
As for China…I had NO idea what to expect, but I can assure you that China is more first world than even the US is!!! The technology, the wealth, the educational system, the businesses, global commerce, infrastructure…not to mention their thousands of years history which bring great strength and pride in their nation, their families, traditions and culture. They value beauty, history, ingenuity, intellect, perfection, and consumption. Of course, this is a first-timer’s very, very limited view of only two cities in only two weeks!!!
As for our group…phenomenal…amazing…inspiring…passionate…sacrificing all to “go into all the world.” Representatives from Indonesia, China, Australia, America, Singapore, Egypt…all believing they have been asked to go to Nepal or to a province in China. Even though we brought new information, challenging mindsets and long-held methods, as the days went by, we saw them wrestle with concepts, and daring to believe that maybe more could happen if they let go of the old and embraced the simplicity of the New Testament model.
And, really…who couldn’t just fall in love with these folks…check out some of the ones who are believing for the impossible…that our Dad can actually do more than we could ask or imagine!!!!!








Thursday night the students hit the streets…Roger and I had our own time of reaching out…we were in a large park lost and searching for the ancient stone wall that surrounded the city (seriously a whole wall, literally 60 feet high and we couldn’t find it????). In a land where we NEVER hear English spoken I heard somewhere in the masses of people someone singing “I am 16, going on 17…” in English at the top of her lungs with a gorgeous voice! There was this adorable young girl holding her phone with the music track blaring and singing boisterously into it as her mike! I ran back to her and asked if she could speak English…she stepped back and then answered, “Yes, we do!” So I blabbered on and on how happy I was to meet her and could she please help us find our way (remember everything, maps, signs, everything is in Chinese). In very, very good English, she and her friend said, “Yes, we are happy to help you and we are going that way. Can we walk together?” So we spent about 40 minutes with them. They chatted on and on, told us many things about Chinese life as students, the pressure to do well and how they had finished exams and had both been accepted into an obviously very prestigious university in Beijing and would be leaving in September. They talked freely, answering all of our questions about religion, customs (hanging red ribbons on trees for good luck at specific sites for health and marriage or things like parents hanging them there for their students’ exams). They asked if we had anyone to have dinner with and I’m very confident they would have spent as much time with us as we would have been able to give. Sadly, I only got their photo, not a contact number as our new friends would have gladly followed up.


10 Common Elements Between Reproducing GROUPS and Reproducing CHURCHES

10 Common Elements Between Reproducing GROUPS and Reproducing CHURCHES

1.9.CC.IdealChurchPlantingModel
Groups that experience a multiplication carry a DNA that can be scaled into bands of leaders with a contagious attitude to expand His church to new horizons.
In their book, Exponential, Dave and Jon Ferguson wrote the following statement, “We’ve coached hundreds of churches that want to reproduce new sites. Without question, the churches that are most successful are those that have, in place, a culture of reproducing small groups.”
One of the reasons my church (Real Life Church, Sacramento, CA; Pastors Scott and Karen Hagan), has a vision for reproducing groups, is that we also have a vision for reproducing church sites. At the time I am writing this we are a nine-year church plant with five other church sites outside of our Sacramento Campus.
I am aware of many churches that have a vision of starting new campuses but they don’t have an intentional focus on starting new groups. Having small groups that are multiplying may not be a requirement for success in every instance, but there are some significant parallels to take into consideration.
Below are 10 elements that reproducing groups have in common with reproducing churches…
1. Desire to start something new. The pre-season before my high school football team won a state championship, myself and the other seniors chose a tagline as a theme for that year. On the back of our practice shirts it said the following: “If you ain’t the lead dog, the scenery never changes.” The concept was that if we set uncommon goals and uncommon standards for ourselves, we would go to uncommon places and see uncommon things happen.
A small group that desires to see their group turn into many groups is still an uncommon vision today. It’s uncommon because most people don’t want something new; instead, most people want something familiar.
An environment full of existing groups that want to see new groups launched is healthy soil for sowing vision about launching new churches. This leads me to my next point…
2. Speaking vision to potential leaders. In order to reproduce small groups, you have to deposit vision into people who aren’t currently leading. You have to look them in the eye and call forth their leadership potential. Building this type of muscle memory through the groups ministry allows a body of believers to flex when needed and call forth new pastors and leaders for new church extensions and services.
3. Cultivating new leaders. I hear many pastors complain that they don’t have enough volunteers. This reminds me of a mentor I had who said, “Leaders don’t grow on trees. You have to develop them yourself.”
Apprenticing green group leaders conditions a church for the task of cultivating new leaders of leaders.
4. Transferring responsibility to new leaders. If you’re going to raise-up new small group leaders, you’re going to have to give new people more responsibility and ownership. For some odd reason, human nature can resist giving ministry away. The rhythm of passing the baton of leadership for new churches can be nurtured on a grass roots level with a heart to enlist more people into the mission of group life.
5. Culture of SENDING. You can’t multiply churches when you’re also trying to amass power and centralize resources. Jesus demonstrated a decentralized mindset when He sent his small group out two-by-two to bring the gospel to new homes in new towns (Luke 9:1-4).
Having a culture of “sending” is a can’t-miss-ingredient to plant new sites and communities. Small groups that are releasing new leaders to start new groups can make the process of “sending” second-nature to a church.
6. Risk-taking faith. It’s an adventurous process for a rookie group leader to take a step of faith and attempt to do something they have never done before. It’s a vulnerable feeling to put yourself out there and begin something fresh for God’s kingdom.
What if it fails? What if I make a mistake? What if nobody shows up? What if people are disappointed with me?  These are all the common questions a new group leader will have to overcome internally. It’s all risky-business.
The good news is, “God rewards faith.“ Thus, multiplying groups becomes the training ground for a church to practice the same trust it will need to multiply churches.
7. Asking for sacrifice. When you ask people to plant a new group or a new campus, you’re asking them to sacrifice. You’re asking them to give more of themselves. You’re asking them to increase their commitment towards a spiritual endeavor. You’re asking them for more of their time, resources, effort and emotion.
Some churches have hesitated to ask their people to sacrifice out of a fear of rejection, while others have avoided it out of ignorance. Getting people more acquainted with the habit of kingdom sacrifice can be fostered through thriving group life and then refined in church planting.
8. Willingness to get out of comfort zones. Change makes people strange. Most believers gravitate towards predictability. The problem is, Jesus is in the business of telling us to “get out of the boat.” The Holy Spirit is our Comforter, which makes Him irrelevant if we’re already comfortable.
Exhorting your groups to birth new groups will challenge the same comfort zones your organization will face in birthing a movement.
9. Inviting New People. To get any ministry off the ground, leaders have to be able to rally new people to the new dream. This is true for young groups and young churches.
Both undertakings require the same instincts of reaching out and gathering.
10. Determination to forge a foundation. The process of establishing a new group is a smaller, but similar, pattern of establishing a new congregation. Once the initial burst of adrenaline and excitement is gone, there must be enough perseverance to form relationships and solidify a collective identity.
Entrepreneurial groups, that successfully sink their roots down deep, adopt realistic expectations about what it takes to anchor a new work for God. It’s the identical psychological toughness needed for church multiplication.
In conclusion, I believe that reproducing groups can be the seed for reproducing churches. Groups that experience a multiplication carry a DNA that can be scaled into bands of leaders with a contagious attitude to expand His church to new horizons.
Agree? Disagree? Feel free to leave your thoughts and comments below…  

Andrew Mason Andrew Mason is the Small Groups Pastor of Real Life Church, a family of churches across the Northern CA region. He oversees Small Groups, Discipleship Ministries and Assimilation. He is Founder of SmallGroupChurches.com, an online community of leaders dedicated to growing churches one small group at a time. Andrew resides in Sacramento, CA with his wife Camille and their son. More from Andrew Mason or visit Andrew at http://www.smallgroupchurches.com

Allen White: Why Off-Campus Groups Are Just BETTER

Allen White: Why Off-Campus Groups Are Just BETTER

group_seniors
A group’s location says a lot about the group.
A group’s location says a lot about the group. If a group meets in a classroom at church, it feels like Sunday school. It’s formal. Sometimes the room is distracting because it’s normally used as
children’s space. I remember leading a group for Pete Scazzero’s Emotionally Healthy Spirituality in a third grade classroom. A child had created a poster for Diary of a Wimpy Kid. While I really wanted to help people work through their ennagrams and get to their family dynamics, I kept thinking, “No, it’s chocolate. Really!”
This is why off-campus groups are just better:
1. Better for the Group.
A home is more personal than a classroom. While a group could cover the exact same content in both environments, there is something about a home that reframes the meeting as “group life” rather than just a class. Hospitality has become a bit of a lost art. Growing up families would regularly have each other over for dinner. Today, families are generally too exhausted to think about volunteering for another thing. Inviting a group into a home is a meaningful gesture. Group members can get to know the group leader by asking about family pictures or mementos from years gone by. What’s even better is having the group trade off homes. This way the group can meet in every member’s home and get to know them better as well.
A home is a more casual environment. The meeting doesn’t necessarily feel like a “church thing.” They are meeting with a group of people to encourage each other, study God’s Word, and pray for each other. Granted, it’s not a Thursday night poker game, but you can have that kind of community.
This can also apply to a third place like a bookstore, a coffee shop or a community room at an apartment complex. While these settings are not as personal as a home, they certainly are not as formal as a classroom. The other great thing about meeting in a third place is there is no cleaning up before or after the meeting, and possibly no refreshments to provide. Latte anyone?
2. Better for the Church.
Now, by better for the church, I don’t mean less wear and tear on the building or giving the childcare workers a night off, but that’s not a bad start. Most churches do not have adequate educational space to house every small group who meets. When I served at Brookwood Church, groups met every day of the week, Sunday through Friday, morning, noon and night. Even though there were a couple hundred groups, we completely ran out of space. We weren’t going to build anything else, so where do you turn?
Once we embrace the idea that the church is not merely a building, but the body of believers, suddenly the church has all kinds of space. In fact, churches have millions and millions of dollars worth of property that they aren’t even utilizing—the homes of their members. No need for a capital campaign or building a new building, the church has buildings. They just need to plant group life there.
3. Better for the Neighborhood.
Pastors debate whether their churches should be missional or attractional. I would argue they need to be both. Churches should offer a weekend service where unchurched people would feel welcomed and interested. A place where they friends can invite them, and they can hear the Gospel. But, the church should also go to them. When our church in California, New Life Christian Center, launched our first self-produced curriculum (read more here), we encountered a result we didn’t count on—people who had never darkened the door of our church were meeting our pastor in the homes of their friends. As our group leaders reached out to friends, neighbors, and co-workers, they were invited into a comfortable place, their friend’s home, rather than a church service where they might not feel as comfortable. After a few weeks of watching our pastor on video, the leader asked if they like to come to church with them. When they came to a service, they felt like they already knew our pastor because they had just spent a few weeks with him at their friend’s house.
4. Transitioning Your Groups Without Transitioning Yourself Out
There are some exceptions to where groups meet. There will certainly be some resistance. In some places, there will be a flat out sense of entitlement. After all, didn’t the church members fund the building campaign, so why can’t they use the building?
As I mentioned, when I first arrived at Brookwood Church, the vast majority of groups met on campus, and I wasn’t about to change that. It’s not that I’m a chicken. I just lack the gift of martyrdom. After all, what we were doing was working for a lot of the groups. If it ain’t broke…
I made two commitments to the existing on-campus groups. First, while we were starting many new groups off-campus, I would never ask them to move off-campus. Second, I promised them I would never split up their group if they exceeded 12 members. That’s for another day. Remember, if you kick them out, they might just kick you out.
Now, over the course of the next four years, we started hundreds of new groups off-campus. And, we started a few groups on-campus. Now by “few” I mean four groups. A couple of people could not figure out another way to have a group, so I gave them a room. Then, we started a group for single moms. Not only did I give them a room, I gave them free childcare, free curriculum, tickets to a Chonda Pierce concert (with free childcare)—the whole works. After all, single moms and their kids are our modern day “widows and orphans.”
Once we changed the expectations for most groups to meet off-campus, they figured it out: meeting place, childcare, and whatever other objection they had. They didn’t feel like second-class citizens. They just understood that we were out of space. We may have missed starting a few groups along the way, but the groups we started were better in so many ways.  
Allen White Allen White consults and speaks in the areas of small group strategy, staffing structure, volunteer mobilization, and spiritual formation. He blogs at http://allenwhite.org. More from Allen White or visit Allen at http://allenwhite.org

Last Day in China

Appleseed Travel Journal - Last Day in China


Brooks
Sunday morning in China…and wanting to squeeze out every last moment to soak in the people, the culture, and the beauty of Shanghai…
We had hurriedly passed through People’s Park a week ago and I just had to go back. All throughout the park, we had seen men and women in small groups, clustered together in designated (by the people themselves) sections of the park. It was very obvious that those who wanted to play mahjong gathered in one area; others wanting to play cards in another; dancers in another; and then anywhere and everywhere seemed just the right spot to practice qigong…movements or even exercises that are done to aid in both their spiritual and physical health.

People’s Park

This huge park is right in the center of downtown Shanghai. So much beauty in the midst of the many skyscrapers in this vibrant, beautiful city.
Although Saturdays and Sundays are reserved specifically for matchmaking, public parks seem to be a place for either an escape or a meeting place out of the many and massive apartment buildings throughout the city. Early each morning you can find clusters of two’s and three’s or even an entire class exercising together, practicing Tai Chi and other types of martial arts, some even gracefully using swords as an extension to their movements.


Huge, tall apartment buildings are found everywhere throughout the city, a sharp contrast with the old and the new.
We watched elderly folks practicing an interesting health discipline of beating their bodies against trees. Interspersed throughout the wooded pathways we would see men or women who were leaning and bouncing their backs against a tree or sometimes even standing freely, swinging their arms back and forth across their bodies. I’m told this is a great stand-in for a massage and is great for relieving aches and pains. However, there is a strong admonition to NOT hurt the trees. Seriously! Some of the trees have literally been beaten to death, and China is very intentional about beautifying and reducing pollution in their cities by planting trees. Traveling even just a short way outside of Shanghai, it’s easy to see massive tree farms to supply the city with its 100 trees to be planted each day policy. Definitely, going to a park in China is not just a playground with a few swings. Instead, it’s literally a forest within the city! Absolutely beautiful and peaceful providing just the right place for whatever activity you’ve chosen.
And, of course, what would a park be without a children’s area? This one even included an ingenuous giant sandbox where kids could master large construction machinery…after a merry-go-round ride, of course!


Trees and trees everywhere and check out the top right directional sign. And, yes, we did go there!



Gardens and beauty are integral to life in China. To qualify as a garden (or park), however, it must have three elements: water, architecture, and rock.

Masses of people not only play mahjong, but also observe. It is so quiet, no one speaks, on-lookers or players. It’s very solemn, serious and lots of heavy duty smoking as players make their next moves.

This group is playing cards and even with observers, it is absolutely quiet as there are high stakes as part of their game.

This gentleman moved from the tree behind him where he had been slapping the tree with his hands, then striking it with his whole body. Now he is swinging his arms around his body, again slapping his body. He’s smiling, so I think it must feel pretty good!

An elderly woman who was doing the same, leaning against a tree while bouncing her body against it.

This young man was amazing to watch. His skill was incredible, his concentration and focus, his balance and control. His master was close by every once in awhile coming close to stop him and give instruction on a move just made and to begin again.


This was some kind of beautiful dancing. I’ve no idea what it is called, but the lady on my right invited me to join in. The ladies in black are the experienced ones while others were like me just trying to follow the teacher. Both the dance and the music were beautiful, smooth, restful, but very intentional.
But, the most interesting of all the happenings today: Matchmaker’s Corner!!! This is the most serious business for parents and grandparents looking for the perfect mate for their children. A carefully written out description of their son or daughter including their height, weight, age, education, salary and position of the eligible mate is carefully placed on an umbrella. Interestingly rarely, if ever, are photos included. Literally hundreds of parents come each weekend to post their child’s stats while others peruse the prospects trying to find the exact right match. With the one child policy this is even more important to family and lineage. While eligible children may not approve of this practice today, it doesn’t stop the fierce and hopeful pursuit of the parents for the perfect mate for their child.


Roger quickly surmised that while matchmaking may be the required activity of the day, many of the husbands left their stations to the keen oversight of their wives in order to hang out with the guys to discuss some of the other important topics of the day.
As you can see, China is pretty amazing and we are definitely on the front end of the learning curve. Takeaways from our very short stint there so far are:
  1. There are TONS of people in China! One/sixth of the world’s population!!! That’s a lot of people!
  2. Beauty is everywhere…in the architecture, the countryside, the gardens, the parks, and especially in the people.
  3. People are stressed and driven by a very perfectionistic society. The standard to “do well” is very high.
  4. Consuming things is important.
  5. Status is important.
  6. They search for and want peace from all of this pressure.
  7. Young people are open to the Gospel, looking for that peace.
  8. They have a LONG, LONG history!!!
  9. They keep secrets from each other and from the government.
  10. Eating healthy is part of their heritage.
  11. There’s nothing that is not edible.
  12. Anything and everything can be copied and done even better.
  13. I thought the U.S. was the center of the universe; turns out maybe it’s China. smiley
  14. We all want more than we have…for ourselves and for our kids.
  15. Most importantly, people really are the same everywhere: we laugh, we cry, we suffer; we all want to experience and know contentment and peace and hope.
Thanks for joining us in this awesome place. Hopefully, we’ll get to see and learn more about China in the days ahead.

GOD'S ENTIRE PLAN: in 5 Simple Verses

Hi Dave and church,

This is one of the most talked-about posts I've ever put out:

GOD'S ENTIRE PLAN: in 5 Simple Verses

You don't need to know more; you need to know less.

Peace is on the side of simplicity, while complexity leads to confusion and chaos.

Try just one verse at a time:


Chip Brogden