Category: Leadership

  • Redirecting Our Hunger

    Redirecting Our Hunger

     

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    A few weeks ago, I said that I would post another of Dr Atef’s wonderful thoughts on prayer.   If you did not read those, then it would help if you know that he is Egyptian by birth and spent several decades as a “Celibate Priest” in Egypt.  Much of that time was spent in prayerful seclusion.  In recent years, the Lord directed him to relocate near to his sister in Arizona.  Then her husband died and Dr Atef’s assistance was of vital importance.  In the meantime, he was received into the Orthodox Church of North America and many men and women of all ages gathered round him to form a prayerful community.  It is my great privilege to see him from time to time.  I was there in December and he will pay a short visit to Highfield Oval, with two teaching sessions on Friday evening, March 31st, 2019.  The sessions will be open to guests.

    The title I have given this is a little misleading because the notes are about more than redirecting hunger, but they do show important insight into our longings and hunger.  For example:

    The body and soul of the human being longs for sex and for being united with the other. The world makes him/her constantly hungry, never having enough of this greatest pleasure.”

    He then goes on to write about how that hunger after that which will never satisfy can actually be filled by fellowship with God.  These notes are worth meditating upon.

    Click on the link below to read the Dr. Atef notes Transforming Prayer.

    transforming prayer

  • How does your Heart Think?

    How does your Heart Think?

    Photo ©Rawpixel

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    In the preface to his translation of the New Testament, Tom Wright says how important it is for each generation to keep working on new translations.  I couldn’t agree more!  Our language keeps evolving and our knowledge of first century Greek and Aramaic is also increasing. At the same time more manuscripts and portions of manuscripts of New Testament content are being discovered and compared to our existing manuscripts.  I think it is both amazing and very reassuring that we continually encourage scholars to examine the veracity of the New Testament.  The foundations of our faith are always open to scrutiny; what a good thing!

    New translations also give us the opportunity to see the texts in a slightly different light, so I have really enjoyed reading The New Testament for Everyone for the past year or so.  I came across a verse in Mark 2 that suggests a profound truth.  Jesus had just said to a paralysed man, “Child, your sins are forgiven!”  The Pharisees who were watching and listening grumbled to themselves that this was blasphemy.  Mark goes on to tell us that Jesus knew “that thoughts like this were in the air”, and said, “Why do your hearts tell you to think like that?”  He then went on to ask them if they thought it was easier to forgive the man’s sins or to heal him from his paralysis.  So he made his point by telling the man to get up, pick up his stretcher and walk!  This did not serve to change their minds; rather it hardened their fear and hatred of Jesus.

    My thoughts were arrested by that question, “Why do your hearts tell you to think like that?”  Jesus knows the truth that we are simply not objective creatures and we don’t change the way we think easily.  No matter how much we think we are willing to recognise what is true and right and no matter how much we think we are willing to adjust our opinions to new information, we are very subjective and usually stubborn about what we think.  We don’t readily listen or believe information that runs contrary to our existing opinions.

    Do our hearts really tell us what to think?  When he says, “your hearts”, what did that mean to them?  I think it meant the way in which their lives were already aligned with certain beliefs and values.  They were convinced that they were righteous because they had defined God’s laws in demanding detail and then had obeyed them fastidiously, or at least they appeared to do so.  But by that approach, they had drained themselves of compassion, humility and love.

    But Jesus came with a straightforward and very demanding message, “Repent!  (change your mind); God’s Kingdom is arriving!”  The change of mind that Jesus was commanding requires a change of heart, and a change of heart demands humility and courage.

    My guess is that if you are reading this, at this point you are thinking, “But I am not like that”.  That’s what I think too.  My life is not aligned around a legalistic approach to pleasing God and, I am pretty pleased about that; maybe even a little self-righteous.

    Nevertheless, however, it is aligned; my heart is telling me what to think.  Is my heart right about everything?  When I put the question like that, then I have to admit that I must be wrong about some of the ways I have aligned my life.  Some of my values are at least deficient, if not wrong.  Some of them probably need to change.  I am just not aware of which ones should change.

    Certainly values held by the majority of people change over time.  We can find illustrations of that wherever we look.  Think about some of our social values.  When I was a child, it was assumed that the great majority of women would pursue home-making and motherhood as a career.  Women who went out to work were often considered to be selfishly ambitious or irresponsible.  Now it is considered old-fashioned and even unacceptable to think that way!

    Think of all the heated subjects that seem to divide our Western world today:  Brexit, climate change with its causes and cures, same sex marriage, differences and similarities between sexes, trans-sexuality; the list is very long! When these subjects come up in conversation, or are debated in our media, those participating or observing tend to divide along lines that are already well established in all participants.  More facts and figures don’t seem to change anyone’s mind.  Our “hearts” are already aligned according to a bundle of values and beliefs.  It’s true that our hearts tell us what to think.  Even scientists and journalists, who have (or used to have) a reputation for the objective pursuit of truth are subjective people whose hearts tell them what to think and write or say.

    Jesus confronted the religious leaders with amazing evidence that they should change their hearts, but most of them would not.  How do I avoid that hardness of heart, that harsh certainty that my heart is rightly aligned?

    I think there are a couple of things that can help us keep soft-hearted.  One is to make friends and stay friends with people who think differently than we do.  We should also read, watch and listen to people with whom we disagree.  Where possible, we should engage them in conversation to learn, not to win.

    The way the early Church was organised also gives some insight.  Jesus did not leave one person in charge.  He left a team of 11, who then added the 12th.  They were different personalities and had backgrounds that varied as much as tax collectors and fishermen.  However, they had all been shaped by time with Jesus and that is the main thing they had in common.  Soon others were added and they came from both men and women and from many different language groups, races and tribes.

    Paul used the metaphor of a body to explain how it should work.  We all need each other and the differences we bring.  We have to make room for others to change and shape our hearts.  We have to keep learning and growing in maturity, whilst continuing to be soft and ready to change.

    There are many issues that can and do divide Christians today. Party politics, social issues like same-sex marriage, differing economic views and even theological or differences of Biblical interpretation can cause tensions or division.  Like the Pharisees, we can become so set in our ways that we won’t consider any change.  Our hearts become set and that makes for rigid thinking.

    We should also remind ourselves regularly to be open to new information, even if it challenges an opinion we have strongly defended.  We can choose to be teachable, to keep learning and growing.

    Finally, we should remember to ask the Holy Spirit to soften our hearts and keep aligning and realigning our lives with Jesus.  Loren Cunningham used to often quote a philosopher who stated, “Only the dishonest fear the truth!”  I want an honest, teachable heart that recognizes truth and embraces it, even when it is painful!

    Lynn Green

     

  • An Egyptian Treasure

    An Egyptian Treasure

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

    As you probably know, Egypt is full of hidden treasure and archaeologists continue to make new finds.  Egypt has also held much treasure for me. What an unexpected discovery!  My fellowship with Egyptian Christians has enriched me so much.  One of those treasures was particularly well-disguised.

    It began with unwelcome news.

    I had convened a group of international leaders from Europe, the Middle East and Africa and we had decided to meet in Cairo initially and then make the 90 minute drive to a part of the Western Desert known as Wadi El Natrun.  We were being hosted by an Egyptian, who brought me unwelcome news on the first evening in Cairo.  Without asking me, he had invited a Coptic Orthodox monk (more accurately, a celibate priest), to deliver us a lecture on The History of Monasticism.  We had a full agenda for our few days together and I did not want to lose a couple of hours listening to a boring lecture.  But I couldn’t see a way to get out of it.

    Later that evening I saw a very slight man in a long black cassock entering the house and our host whispered to me; “That’s the man who will be speaking to us tomorrow.  He will need a couple of hours.”  My heart sank, even as I managed a weak smile.

    The next day we made the drive into the desert and found Dr. Atef, the man in the cassock, waiting for us.  The moment he began to speak God spoke to me and said; “This man will be a very important friend to you.”  As he spoke to us, it became like “water in a desert land” to my soul and spirit.

    In the years that followed he completed a Discipleship Training School in YWAM and became a faithful and faith-filled and perceptive intercessor for YWAM, for me and for my family.

    In the years that have followed, I have met him in a number of places around the world.  A couple of weeks ago I went to Phoenix, Arizona where he has lived for a few years and also where a growing number of people have gathered round him in a new monastic order.  I made the trip to Arizona just to spend a couple of hours a day for a few days with Dr. Atef.

    As usual, I came away challenged to grow more in Christ and encouraged by God’s love for me.  He gave me three primary teachings and the first one accompanies this article.  I hope and pray that you will also be challenged and encouraged.  Do take the time to dig for the treasure!

    Click on the link below to read the Dr. Atef notes Prayer Life.

    Prayer Life (Different Features)