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New book release from Lincolnshire pastor

April 30, 2012

Pastor Lee Eclov wants pastors to remember.

Specifically, he wants them to remember God's grace. His new book, Pastoral Graces: Reflections On The Care Of Souls (Moody, 2012) is a practical and encouraging corrective for stretched-thin ministry leaders. His publisher's website sums up the message of Pastoral Graces this way: "Grace is the credential that lets us park close to people's hearts.When Jesus Christ, the Lord of the church, calls a pastor He instills a kind of heightened instinct for grace; what we call a shepherd's heart. However, pastors often become disoriented by leadership demands, congregational expectation, and the wounds of ministry. They forget how to use the grace of Christ in the everyday work of pastoring."

The book's message is as appropriate for a pastor-in-training as it is for a ministry veteran. Eclov has been the Senior Pastor of Village Church of Lincolnshire since 1998. Prior to that, he pastored in Pennsylvania for 14 years. He also spent 5 years as an assistant pastor at North Suburban Evangelical Free Church. He's been married to wife Susan for nearly 40 years.

He is a Contributing Editor of Leadership Journal, and columns and messages are featured at www.PreachingToday.com. He has been an adjunct professor at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School and currently teaches a pastoral counseling course.

At the heart of it all, however, Eclov is first and foremost a shepherd. And as a shepherd, he wants to encourage other shepherds to rediscover the never-ending grace of God in their lives and ministries.

 

Note: If you've read Pastoral Graces and would like to write a 300-500 word review to share with the Christ Together community, please email us here.

2nd Saturday Market Place is Gurnee’s place to be

April 25, 2012

2nd Saturday Market Place is about bringing people together and creating something more than the sum of its parts. Market organizers anticipate the Market Place bringing hundreds of people together over the next six months.
 
2nd Saturday Market Place director, Sheila Baker Bondurant, puts it this way, ‘Consumers are looking for something special, family friendly and/or local and many are looking to find a great bargain. Farmers Markets are popping up everywhere but not being well attended, which is bad for vendors. There are people like me who need to sell things either for the cash, the garage space or both, but a yard sale won’t draw enough of the right buyers. People in apartments are out of luck when it comes to holding garage sales. EBay isn’t practical for an individual selling lots of low-cost items. But these are people who need to generate extra cash to support their families and with our marketing efforts and perfect location 2nd Saturday Market Place can help them do that. We want to bring all of these people to one place so they can support one another in reaching their goals.
 
"First Christian Church in Gurnee wants to get to know our neighbors better while supporting our community. We will do our absolute best to be certain everyone who attends 2nd Saturday Market Place leaves with a smile on their face and a happier heart – and is looking forward to coming back next month! When we’ve done that, we will have met some very important goals."

Sponsors will receive special recognition for providing free goodies for shoppers. The group will develop a kids area and as much entertainment as they can coordinate. The greatest outstanding hurdle is recruiting the first time vendors – and customers - necessary to make the event successful.

2nd Saturday Market Place is scheduled 8AM – 1PM, May through October. The inaugural Market Place, May 12th, will feature a Blessing of the Bikes at 10AM for all street-legal bikes.
 
Individuals and commercial vendors are encouraged to apply. Spaces are available by calling 847-986-6290 or visiting www.GurneeMarket.com, where you can find more information about the fledgling 2nd Saturday Market Place.
 
The church will have a booth each week with Go Project information to be distributed. If you are a church or have church members who might like to be a vendor - please go to the website: www.gurneemarket.com.
 

To Love Your Neighbor, Know Your Neighbor

April 4, 2012

Editor's Note: Ben Stevens was a student at Trinity International University in Deerfield from 2006-2009. He and his wife Becky were living in Arlington Heights while they were beginning the process of raising support to head to Berlin to serve with Greater Europe Mission. He penned the article below about their experience in Arlington Heights. It has been featured on both the relevantmagazine.com website and The Gospel Coalition blog. Ben was kind enough to offer to share this excellent piece with the Christ Together community. If you try some of his excellent suggestions, please do let us know how it goes!

* * * * * *

Having recently moved into one of those anonymous apartment complexes now so common around the country, my wife and I decided to invite all the people in our building over for Sunday lunch. They didn’t know each other, we didn’t know them, and we had no idea how it would go. But most of them came. In fact, they stayed for four hours. And before long we were making up a list of our birthdays to exchange with one another, at their suggestion.

When we moved into the complex, we thought a lot about “how hard it is to meet your neighbors.” And when we discussed the idea of a get-together with the few people we knew in our building, they also commented that it is “tough to have community in the suburbs.” But we were all wrong. It is not difficult to get to know your neighbors—it is simply not something most of us value. The result is a culture of seclusion, and that strains our society in a surprising number of ways. Let me briefly explain how we got here as a culture and then offer a radical suggestion for how Christians could change things.

A New Social Experience

The current American social predicament has a background, but it is not the one you might expect. In contrast to the emotionally charged way in which the story is often told, at no point in history did anyone sit down with the sinister plan of designing a way of living that would make getting to know your neighbors seem difficult. The story is in fact much more mundane: Humans have always sought their own personal interests and enjoyment to the exclusion of other factors, but that goal has often necessitated community. It has only comparatively recently become possible to enjoy great music and get the latest news from the seclusion of one’s home. These technological advances have begun to play a defining role in our social experience.

Add to such technological changes the privileges of economic development. Though the average American family is shrinking, the average new American house has grown from an average of 1,400 square feet to an average of 2,400 square feet in the last 30 years. Our homes increasingly give us plenty of places to hide.

All that to say: The problems have benign beginnings. Nonetheless, we have enough data to know that these trends cost us more than might be apparent at first glance.

In 2010, Californians were shocked when it was discovered that a registered sex offender had held a woman and her two children hostage in his suburban backyard for 19 years undetected. The neighbors, when interviewed, mentioned that it was none of their business why the man had tents and sheds there. In all the years that he had lived there, no one had troubled themselves to have the kind of social interaction that might have ended the tragedy.

Our seclusion also exacerbates the psychological strain on our mobile population. College students and unmarried adults often find no support net for tragedies, depression or even major life decisions. Consider the cost of all the poor choices, days spent in solitude and lost work hours for our society.

In response, it is noteworthy that there has been a shift toward “hyper-locality” in many city centers, a penchant for buying local and having pride in the merits of one’s own borough. But even where such an emphasis and awareness of the neighborhood has slightly altered our consumer patterns, the change hasn’t affected very much else. In some ways, it’s simply added a kind of superficiality to the whole situation.

I do not intend to suggest that the status quo was better or more encouraging at any time in the recent past, but rather to suggest that a tolerably deficient situation has now become categorically intolerable. And whether you are a Christian or not, this societal problem almost certainly touches your life and the lives of the people you love.

To Know is to Love

You cannot love your neighbor if you do not know that neighbor, and time spent with neighbors that does not result in conversions, does not result in spiritual conversation, and does not result in any greater appreciation of the work of Christ, is not a net loss. So let us be resolved to undertake this kind of work, confident that it is a legitimate end unto itself, and that God will call us to account for the time spent serving neighbors.

At the same time, far from laboring simply to address a social problem, by being more concerned to know our neighbors, we can simultaneously address some of the roots of the modern-day crisis in evangelism. That’s because, more than in any other way, churches experience the fallout of the problems described in this article when trying to teach about “friendship evangelism.”

If co-workers are tough to reach in a secular work setting, church friends are already believers, and you do not know your neighbors, it is unlikely that anyone will have the opportunity to observe your life in a context that would make spiritual conversation natural. So in taking a stand on this issue, and teaching our people to do the same, we are fighting not one but two problems at the same time.

A Radical Suggestion

In light of all this, I would like to make a radical suggestion. The suggestion is not that “knowing your neighbors should be important to Christians”—everyone knows that already. The radical suggestion is: actually get it on your calendar for next month, and make that a habit. To help you do so, here are a few tried-and-tested tips:

    •    Invite everyone. That is, invite a large group of people, either your whole apartment building or your whole block. This will avoid the impression that you want to build a clique. It gives you a much higher chance for success. And it usually just makes the evening much more enjoyable.

    •    Spend money on nice flyers or invitations. For our first get-together, I spent an hour in Adobe InDesign and made full-color flyers that had a picture of a tasteful dinner scene and the words, “We think it’s too bad we’ve never met all our neighbors.” People want to know your intentions, and they like to be invited to nice events. Do them the honor. It makes a difference.

    •    Plan the get-together for a Sunday. This is not an absolute, but few people have major commitments on a Sunday at 1:30 p.m., which means more can come and fewer have to rush off. Try to plan ahead by three weeks.

    •    Learn how to actively listen before you invite friends and neighbors over. Not only will you not have to prepare “entertainment” for these people, but if you are truly interested in them and don’t squash conversation as it happens, the entertainment will take care of itself.

    •    Involve any of the other neighbors you can (potluck, progressive dinner). This helps ensure that they show up, and it also means they will feel more invested. Hopefully it will keep them from thinking you are trying to be some kind of social control freak.

    •    Be transparent about your faith. When we first met with our neighbors, many were excited that we’d taken such a bold step. I simply explained to them that: “This is something Christians value.” And in one sentence, I had made my faith known and given all credit for something which the people openly liked about us to Jesus. Plain-spoken honesty is the best, and most effective, way to live with your neighbors.

You cannot love your neighbors if you don’t know them. Get it on the calendar and have fun.

Young Life Capernaum is coming to Lake County

April 2, 2012

Did you know that Young Life has been sharing the Good News with teens for over seventy years? Their club and camping programs have touched the lives of countless young people in the last seven decades. Here in Lake County, there are Young Life clubs in Vernon Hills and Libertyville. The Libertyville club is an area-wide group that draws kids from Stevenson, Carmel and Lake Forest High School.

About 50 kids come to club each week. Club has been dubbed as “a party with a purpose” – a fun time for teens to connect and hear a simple message about God’s love for them. Approximately 30 dig a little deeper at Campaigners, the Young Life Bible study night. Now, former Young Life staffer Tasha Taylor is working with a team of others to bring Young Life’s Capernaum program to our area.

The Young Life website explains the program best: “Young Life Capernaum gives young people with mental and physical disabilities the chance to experience fun and adventure, to develop fulfilling friendships and to challenge their limits while building self-esteem through club, camp and other exciting activities. Young Life staff and volunteers model Christ’s unconditional love and acceptance as they walk alongside these young adults — filling their lives with love and support.”

Taylor said, “I came off staff last spring with a desire to start up Capernaum. I just didn’t have the time when I was still on staff. Our Area Director and I both have a heart for this community because we believe that every person deserves to hear the Gospel in a way that they can understand and we both have seen the power of Capernaum working in teens/young adults lives in other areas and YL camps. It is an awesome picture of the Kingdom of God to have students with special needs in relationship and worshipping next to their able-bodied peers.”

Adolescents with disabilities make up 20% of the adolescent population in our nation, with only an average of 10-15% of churches/faith based organizations having a outreach program specifically designed for these kids and their families. “Our heart and goal is to bridge the gap that exists between these families and provide kids with special needs the opportunity to experience growing and fulfilling friendships, to engage in activities that challenge their physical limits, to grow their potential, to explore the relevance of faith in their lives, and to have fun!”

Taylor noted that many local churches have been supportive of the Capernaum vision, and have offered to help as they’re able. “The community has been very engaged in the conversation as well,” she said. “People have been helpful in opening doors for the team and introducing us to the all the right people. We have had more conversations than I can count with existing organizations like Special Olympics and parents.”

Each of those conversations is bringing Capernaum closer to becoming a reality in Lake County. Though some of the resources are falling into place, there are still a variety of other needs for which the team is still searching. “We need a handicap-accessible space that would be available to us to meet in every other week starting in the fall 2012. We need to raise $25,000. We need more people to be leaders and adult support,” she said. “We want to have our club at a church because we exist to primarily reach the families and students who are not connected to a church already, and we think there is great potential if the families were welcomed by a church in this capacity.”

Taylor is asking the Christ Together community to pray. “Please pray for wisdom as we move forward, and for people to join our team as we seek to share the Gospel to these families! Young Life Capernaum began in 1986 and just celebrated 25 years of reaching kids with disabilities through the mission of Young Life. With 25 years of experience, Young Life Capernaum staff continue to provide Young Life areas like ours with resources, training, and wisdom on how best to reach and care for kids with disabilities and their families.  We are committed to providing a safe environment for kids.”

If you're interested in learning more, click here to see a short 6-minute video explaining Young Life Capernaum. Taylor and her team will be having an informational meeting http://www.christtogether.com/events/young-life-capernaum-info-meeting on Sunday, April 22 from 3-4 at Trinity International University’s Waybright center.

For more information, contact Tasha Taylor via email or by calling her at 847.735.9595.

 

Lifetree Cafes springing up in McHenry County

April 2, 2012

"If you're looking for a place where you can explore life, meet new friends, and experience God...then Lifetree Cafe is your kind of place. On film and in person, you'll hear stories that will make you think, spice your conversation, help you make sense of the world, and inspire you. And in the fun, casual, safe environment of Lifetree Café, you may share your story, too."

Lifetree Cafes are springing up in McHenry County. Both Immanuel Lutheran and Willow Creek in Crystal Lake are launching Lifetree Cafes, and other local congregations are working toward this goal as well.

Scott Bartlow, Willow Creek's Catalyst Director, said, "We believe its important to have multiple spaces and environments where people can explore their objections and questions of life and faith. We recognized that Lifetree Café could be that tool that could connect us with our community that didn't feel comfortable attending a church service. It created another space outside our walls to engage those spiritually curious through topics that are relevant today."

Bartlow notes that about 8-10 members of the congregation are consistently attending and serving in Lifetree Café, but the entire congregation is supporting the outreach. Willow Creek's Lifetree Café meets every Wednesday from 7-8pm at Conscious Cup Coffee in Crystal Lake. "Our desire is to see individuals and families in our community begin to take steps toward discovering God," he said. "Our prayer is that God would utilize the body of Christ to invite people into a simple conversation about life and faith. Our hope is people that are on the fringe would feel comfortable and safe to explore Christianity."

The Lifetree Cafe website offers these helpful FAQ's about this fresh new way of engaging others with the good news

What is Lifetree Café?
Simply put, it's a "conversation café"-a place and time for people to gather weekly to experience stories and talk about thought-provoking topics relating to life and faith.

How long does it last?
The Lifetree experience lasts an hour.

Why is it called a "Café"?
Lifetree looks and feels like a cozy café-small tables, comfortable seating, warm environment. Plus, the refreshments at Lifetree Café are free!

What happens there?
The Lifetree hour typically includes real-life stories on film, presentation of interesting and relevant information, conversation with others, and helpful tips to take home.

Is there an admission charge?
It's absolutely FREE! Nada! Zilch!

Who is it for?
Regardless of beliefs, Lifetree welcomes everyone-individuals, couples, singles, students, and families.

What's the purpose?
Lifetree brings people together to explore important and intriguing life issues, serve the community, and experience God through Jesus Christ.

Is Lifetree a church?
No. Lifetree is a weekly event in a comfortable cafe-like environment. There's no membership, no preaching, no singing.

How free am I to share my opinion?
You are very welcome to share your opinion and stories with others. Lifetree is an open and inviting space where everyone's thoughts are welcome. And, at Lifetree Café, you're free to simply listen too. Everyone is treated with respect, even when opinions on a particular subject may differ.

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