Sunday, September 11, 2011
Inspired by Summer Television
The basic idea of the show is teams of three compete in extreme challenges throughout Morocco. The challenges include riding camels, kayaking, whitewater rafting, hiking and a lot of rappelling. The teams included fishermen, cops, sisters, urbanites and wilderness guides. The team I ended up rooting for was "No Limits".
No Limits was a group of friends from Colorado. Jeff, is a Physicians Assistant, mountain guide and motivational speaker. Ike, a National Guardsman, and Erik a motivational speaker and author. Oh, and Erik is blind.
Look at that list of activities above. Erik rode camels, blind. He whitewater rafted, blind. He rappelled down mountains, blind. The most amazing moment of every show was watching some challenge that was difficult for sighted people to do being replicated by Erik.
Erik's participation (and excelling) in the competition was amazing. Being a big softy though, these shows are always about the relationships for me. Erik and Jeff have been climbing together for years. Jeff and Erik have climbed the highest peaks on all seven continents together. Jeff has to keep track of Erik in order to guide him. Erik has to trust Jeff. At one point during the show, Jeff and Erik jumped arm in arm off of a cliff into the waters below.
It was amazing to watch Jeff with Erik. Jeff never acted put out by Erik's disability. He was gracious and patient. One time he lost Erik and he was so apologetic, acknowledging that the spirit of competition overtook him. For his part, Erik acknowledged when activities were scary, though he stepped up and did them all (even the camels!).
What does this have to do with fundraising? I was struck while watching the show by the similarities between Jeff and Erik's relationship and my own relationship to Jesus and to students. Like Erik, I need to be led. When it comes to all aspects of my life, I need to someone to tell me "go left!", "watch out for the rocks" or "jump now"! Unlike Erik though, I either fail to acknowledge my need for help, or I see my need for help as a personal failure. Erik is fully relient on Jeff in his expedition, and I am fully reliant on Jesus in ministry, impending fatherhood and just generally living. When I listen to Jesus' voice, wait for His instruction and acknowledge I need his eyes, my life takes on a real rhythm. Fundraising sometimes feels like riding a camel, but doing that with a guide is better than blind and alone!
I also am privileged to function as Jeff in the lives of some amazing students. When I allow myself to be amazed by their growth, risk-taking and faithfulness, I can sit back and like Jeff, be amazed by what they are accomplishing. However, when I get caught up in the lures of success, fear and competitiveness I can run out by myself, ignoring those I have been called to care for and ignoring my own guide.
I realize it has been a long time between posts, probably because fundraising often feels like riding a crazy camel (while blind no less!). I am attempting to humble myself to allow Jesus to be my guide and to humble myself to be guide to students.
Friday, April 22, 2011
Inspired by students!
Table #1~Good Samaritan~ Luke 10:25-37
Table #2~ Rich Young Ruler~ Mark 10:17-31
Table #3~ Four friends and paralytic~ Mark 2:1-12
#1: You co-lead a group of 5 freshmen who are from the same floor. They don’t know each other too well as this is only your 2nd week of small group. They all come from church background but you aren’t if they are committed to following Jesus or if they just went to church with their parents.
#2: You co-lead a group that have 5 non-Christians coming. Occasionally a Christian student or two drops in but for the past four weeks these 5 non-Christians have shown up consistently. You’re not sure what is interesting to them about Jesus but the conversations during scripture study are lively.
#3: You co-lead a study that has 3 juniors and 1 senior who come every week. You’ve known all 4 for as long as you’ve been attending InterVaristy events. They have been around awhile and attend events faithfully.
Ideas for invitations:
Table 1
Pair 1:
- Conversation: ask where have you experienced Samaritian love?
- Group application: find someone to serve in secret… report back next week
- Community application: find an agency to serve at
Pair 2:
- Do an act of kindness towards someone that you don’t like (usually don’t interact with)
- Take action in issue of injustice if it’s not your responsibility
- Brainstorm people you don’t like and pray for them
- Use your own resources to care for someone who needs it… go the extra step
Pair 3:
- engage and serve younger students
- as a group meet with the university president or community leader and ask who is the ignored population in that community. Share with fellowship and plan how to serve
- Find a campus group and join even if you wouldn’t normally associate with them
- If they live off campus: find ways to serve their literal neighbor
Table 2
Pair 1:
- Meet with a leader for discipleship time (What questions would you ask one-on-one?)
- “mini-lent”: give a specific thing up for a week
- Bake sale: give donations/proceeds to the poor (decide on specific groups)
- Volunteer somewhere together
- Putting on a community dinner for a section/wing/floor
Pair 2
- What keeps you from following Jesus? This week will you submit that to God and pray to remove that barriers?
- As the lead, give your group a sacrificially large amount of money and have them go use it for a good cause
Pair 3
- Challenge members to brainstorm practical, real-life applications to help those in need and utilitize your riches.
- Discover areas in their lives where they are ‘rich.’ Be imaginative in finding areas in which they have riches to offer (math tutor, rides, etc.)
- Communal applications of reaching out to the poor/destitute, finding ways to give up riches
Table 3
Pair 1
- What’s stopping you from ‘goring through the roof’ to Jesus? What would that look like in your section?
- Who might need to be carried to Jesus?
- What does it look like to have your sins forgiven?
Pair 2
- Do you have any friends who have faith? What does that look like?
- Who in the passage do you relate to?
- Who would you be willing to dig through a roof for?
- What lengths would you go to in order to help a friend?
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Injury and Community
I fell while I was delivering a newspaper. It was an icy morning and I simply lost my balance. I ended up having surgery later that morning and I now am the proud owner of a steel plate and seven screws in my ankle.
Being injured has a funny effect on your sense of worth. You are simply not able to do very much anymore. Getting a cup of coffee is as daunting as a two mile run was a week prior. A worldview that depends on "earning" your worth is quickly eradicated. Twelve hours a day of elevating your ankle is not conducive to productivity.
In the midst of the struggle though, I experienced the surprising beauty of community. People from my church brought Donan and I dinner for the first week. Cards came in daily. People gave us chocolate, money and an attention seeking stuffed tiger name Leonardo. WSU students came and brought me pop and candy.
I (like many people I know) am way more comfortable serving, than I am being served. I think that is why fundraising has been so difficult for me. How can I ask people to support a ministry in which others are being served? How is going to benefit the donor? Shouldn't I be doing something for the donor?
Being injured has reminded me that love and support doesn't work that way. Sometimes people are generous. Sometimes I need help. Sometimes I cannot support myself.
So thank you to those of you who support us. We are blessed in many ways...even when our bones are broken!
Friday, January 21, 2011
Job Provision
I have taken a paper route. It is about 15 hours a week and in early in the morning. Thank God was the flexibility of my IV hours that allow me to get some sleep AFTER my route is done!
Donan accepted a job as a classroom aide for the local Head Start program. Donan works about 16 hours a week as well and this job allows her to get some valuable insight into childhood development, a passion that has been growing in her for years.
Please thank Jesus with me for this provision. Hopefully it will be possible for both of us to work full time with IV in the future, but for now this will allow us to still serve on campus 20-30 hours a week and serve Jesus at WSU.
Monday, January 10, 2011
Thank You!
I am on my way to campus soon, so I will keep this short...
In December, Donan and I received over $5500 in our staff account. To provide context, this is the largest month of support that we have received in 7 years of staff work (excluding an annual gift from a local church).
I am in awe of the support of God and the support of our friends and families.
For Donan and I to both serve Jesus and the students at WSU, this needs to become an average month, which still feels a little daunting. However, I am so much more full of hope than I was a month ago.
Thank you again for your radical partnership.
Jeremiah