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Introducing One-to-one Week

Carl Laferton | 7 Feb 2011

To mangle a phrase from an old mobile phone company’s ad campaign:

Who could you have a one-to-one with?

When one2one (now T-mobile) asked celebrities who they would like to have a one-to-one conversation with, most of them chose famous dead people: Martin Luther-King, Elvis Presley, and so on.

This week, on the blog, we’re going to focus on Christian one-to-ones. With normal people. Living people.

WHAT'S A ONE-TO-ONE?

One-to-ones are intentional Christian conversations. It’s talking to someone else, or listening to someone else, about Christ. It can be as informal as a chat at the school gate or over a drink in which you share Christian encouragements or prayer requests.

But often, it’s a bit more deliberate than that; it involves opening the Bible up and looking at it together. It’s based on friendship and those everyday conversations; but it’s arranged and organised. Sometimes it’s two Christians of roughly the same age and stage; often it’s an older, more experienced Christian with someone who’s been following Christ for less time. Or it might be a Christian meeting up with a friend who isn't a Christian but wants to find out more.

And here’s the thing: anybody can “do” one-to-ones. There’ll be someone we all know that we could one-to-one with. But often, church members leave it to the full-time “experts”. And the full-timers have a lot of other stuff on their plate… so although anybody could do it, and everybody thinks it would be great if somebody would do it, in the end nobody does it.

And that’s a real shame, because one-to-ones are rocket fuel for the Christian life. They’re catalysts for deep, real, Christian friendship. They’re manure for growing Christians (OK, I’m struggling for metaphors now).

THE BLOG THIS WEEK

So this week, do keep coming to the blog. You’ll find:

  • interviews with church leaders about why they make one-to-oneing a priority
  • normal, living Christians talking about how they’ve benefitted from one-to-oneing with both older and younger Christians
  • someone who isn’t yet a Christian on why they love one-to-oneing.
  • some great pointers to resources to help you, and your church, with one-to-one ministry.

So we hope you’re already thinking: who could I have a one to one with?

But by the end of the week, we’re hoping you’ll be thinking:

Who will I have a one to one with?

Fighting the Monday Feeling

Carl Laferton | 7 Feb 2011
A great truth to ease you in to your week.

"You are… a people belonging to God, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light." 1 Peter 2 v 9

Don't miss a thing

Carl Laferton | 6 Feb 2011

Three annoyances when it comes to great conferences about Bible ministry:

  1. You can’t make it: you miss out.
  2. You’re there, but you have to choose between two seminars you thought would be really useful to you: you miss out.
  3. You’re there, you go to some great talks and seminars… but when you get home, you’ve forgotten much of what was said, and you can’t read your notes: you miss out.
  4. Well, we’ve taken the annoyance out of last week’s Bible Centred Youthworker Conference.

    Simply go here to listen to the main talks, two fantastically encouraging and challenging series on Revelation (morning) and 1 Thessalonians (evening), and to the seminars.

    And if you go to the conference blog, you can find some of the outlines of the seminars, with more to go up in the next few weeks.

    So, no need to miss out this time!

Hearing the King speak

Alison Mitchell | 5 Feb 2011

Millions will hear the king speak this week in cinemas—but one man really did hear the king speak.

A 94-year-old retired policeman, he heard King George VI through a window, practicing his Christmas speech for the following morning over and over again.

How exciting to be able to listen to an actual eye (and ear) witness of the King, sixty years later! Unsurprisingly, the media are full of it, like here.

Course, many of us did that this morning anyway - just we were listening to eyewitnesses of the King of kings.

“We are witnesses of everything he did in the country of the Jews and in Jerusalem. They killed him by hanging him on a tree, but God raised him from the dead on the third day and caused him to be seen. He was not seen by all the people, but by witnesses whom God had already chosen—by us who ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead." (Acts 10:39-40)

Which makes the prospect of a sermon on Sunday seem all the more exciting!

On to a Good Thing

Tom Beard | 4 Feb 2011
Your weekly filter of news and interesting stuff from the internet.

66 books with one theme?
Two videos which give different versions of the same answer. One from Don Carson, the other from young boy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DVgpkG4Ks1s
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OhVrcV6WmfQ

Clear, tangible difference between catholics, liberals and evangelicals
Three quotes which show the sticking point between these three groups - and something they can all agree on.
http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/kevindeyoung/2011/02/03/something-we-can-all-agree-on-even-if-it-divides-us/


50 Fruits of Pride
An outstanding and sobering list from Jeff Keeney, taking the issue of pride and showing how it can work itself out in everyday things. Worth taking the time to think, meditate and then pray through this very deceitful of sins.
http://gospelcentric.org/2011/01/25/the-fifty-fruits-of-pride-a-self-diagnostic/



The Gospel Coalition, in the US, has been doing a series of posts on evangelism answering some good questions:
Why Don’t I Evangelise?
Evangelism and Apologetics: Preaching the Gospel, Answering Objections
Church Programs vs Personal Evangelism
Evangelism for the Rest of Us
The role of evangelistic preaching on a Sunday

So, here’s a question about the whole Christian thing…

Tom Beard | 4 Feb 2011

Wouldn’t it be great to have a little booklet to give to a non-Christian friend with answers to the big questions people have about the Christian faith?

It would?! We know—which is why our little I’m Glad You Asked That booklet has proved such a big seller.

But it’s nearly 20 years old now, and has been retired for a few years: so after two decades it’s time (like a Hollywood actress) it had a facelift and a comeback.

So we’re asking ourselves:

  • What questions should it include—what are the questions that non-Christians ask most often?
  • What should the answers say, so that they’re very short, very clear, and point people to Jesus?

This is where we’d love you to come in. The current questions are listed below: please leave a comment, telling us one (or more of):

  • which of them you’d want to keep, and which you’d switch for a question that’s not on the list.
  • whether you’d change the wording of any of these questions, better to reflect the way you hear it asked in real life.
  • any great, quick, Jesus-pointing answers to these questions you’ve found, heard or used.

We’d really, really love your help with this, so that the new version won’t only look better, it’ll also be able to work better and in more situations (just like a facelifted Hollywood actress…)

Here are the current questions:

  • What do Christian believe?
  • How do you know God exists?
  • Can we trust the New Testament?
  • Why does God allow suffering?
  • What about those who have never heard the gospel?
  • What about other religions?
  • Aren’t all good people Christians?
  • Do you have to go to church to be a Christian?
  • Isn’t faith only psychological?
  • Hasn’t science disproved Christianity?

Christ's Anger

Carl Laferton | 4 Feb 2011

Christians should get angry. But we need to get angry about the right things.

We’re currently developing a Good Book Guide for small-group Bible studies looking at the book of Jonah.

The author’s Stephen Witmer, a pastor in Massachusetts. And he makes a great comparison between Jonah, and what makes him angry, and Jesus, and what makes him angry.

  • Jonah gets angry about God forgiving non-Israelites (Jonah 4 v 1-3). He gets angry when God causes the plant which has been giving him shade to wither (4 v 7-9). In other words, he gets angry about things which stop life being as he wants it to be. He is, in effect, angry that he doesn’t get to be God.
  • The only time in the gospels when Jesus is really, clearly angry is in the temple, God's dwelling-place in Jerusalem (Mark 11 v 15-17). It's caused by his discovery that the Court of the Gentiles, where non-Israelites could come to meet with God, is being used as a marketplace, and the Gentiles can’t get in. It makes him furious! He gets angry about things which stop others’ lives being changed by God. He is angry that others don’t get to come to God.
  • I get angry about… Hmmm. Is it things which make my life more difficult, things which I wanted to be different? Or is it things which prevent people finding out about God, and discovering the forgiveness of God.

Stephen’s put loads of interesting, challenging stuff like that in the Good Book Guide. It should be out this summer.

The “Elite” and God: and the Church and the Elite

Tom Beard | 2 Feb 2011

Half of elite scientists are “religious”, and another fifth consider themselves “spiritual”, according to a recent study.

The US survey, which is based on 1,700 scientists, suggests that Richard Dawkins’ famous claim that elite scientists are atheists is also a rather false claim.

That’s the first interesting point made in an article about the study in today’s Guardian.

And Nick Spencer goes on to make a couple more really thought-provoking observations:

  • Here's something helpful for conversations with people who see “what scientists say” as the ultimate authority for everything:

    “Our conviction that scientists, elite or otherwise, are somehow better qualified to discern the nature of reality is dubious.

    “Elite scientists undoubtedly know vastly more about their subject than other people. But to imagine that that makes them somehow better qualified to adjudicate on big-picture questions is like saying because I know my home town like the back of my hand, I am well-equipped to lecture on European geography.”

  • And here's something I found deeply challenging:

    “Christ often remarked on the inability of the educated elite of his time to get what he was about.

    “There is a long-standing theme within Christian thought that sees the Christian message as having a particular appeal to the underclass, not only those socially and politically alienated, but also those the intellectually and educationally excluded.”

My question is: is that true of Bible-teaching churches today in the UK? Does the way we run our churches, and the style of our teaching, have “a particular appeal to the underclass”, both in social and educational terms? Or does it tend to have more of a “particular appeal” to middle-class, university-educated “elites”?

What do you think?

Why Christianity isn’t “private”

Carl Laferton | 2 Feb 2011

Great quote in a comment piece on the newly-released films Biutiful and Hereafter. Both movies (starring Javier Bardem and Matt Damon) tell the stories of men who know that there’s life after death, and what it’s like.

But they keep this knowledge to themselves, which is absurd:

“Information of cosmic significance, which could bring succour and hope to millions, not to mention really irritate Richard Dawkins, is dealt with as a private and personal matter.”

The writer’s talking about two made-up film characters: what struck me is that when Christians are told that faith should be simply “a private matter”, they’re being told to do exactly the same thing.

The gospel for gamers

Carl Laferton | 1 Feb 2011

Here's a great resource for youth or children's work. It's an animated explanation of the gospel, using various Bible stories, for a generation raised on computer games, and encouraged to think that real life is less exciting that what lies within the games console.

And it's free, too!

Makes me wish I was still in youth ministry, so I could use it…

More can be found here: http://www.max7.org/resource.aspx?id=bb1e17c4-870a-48f2-b83e-adbf2f70d403

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