Articles from January 2019

21 - 25 of 25 articles

Serving God and refugees in Greece

by Guest Author on January 4, 2019 in Great Commission

I have been on mission trips in the States and Colombia before, but this experience was completely new for me. I was expecting it to be out of my comfort zone—which it was—but it was also much different than my other mission experiences.

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Sharing the Gospel in Ukraine

by Guest Author on January 4, 2019 in Great Commission

I have always had a special love and passion for children. When I first heard about this mission trip to Ukraine in December, I immediately felt called to go. I saw no better way to spend my break than to share Jesus with orphans.

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Mission Arlington: Seeing and trusting God

by Guest Author on January 3, 2019 in Great Commission

Today was so fun! I intentionally put myself in a position that I would be uncomfortable so that God could use me.

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FUERON RECOLECTADOS $7,070 DÓLARES DURANTE #GIVINGTUESDAY (MARTES DE DONACIÓN) PARA AYUDAR A PERÚ Y

by Ali Corona on January 3, 2019 in CLC Español

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Heavenly citizenship extends to our earthly political engagement

by Kathryn Freeman on January 3, 2019 in CLC

During his keynote at our 2017 Advocacy Day, Dr. Vincent Bacote, a Christian ethicist and professor at Wheaton College, said, “people’s lives as disciples ought to matter every hour of the week.” Dr. Bacote argued that our Christian discipleship should include every aspect of our lives including our political engagement, but many of us struggle to bring our politics under the full authority of Jesus Christ and Scripture.

We often compartmentalize our lives as Christians. We give the Lord dominion over our lives for two hours on Sunday, but our money, our votes, our families belong to us. Even as we declare Jesus Christ as Lord, we treat Him as if the boundaries of His kingdom extend only as far as we are comfortable. But, citizens do not declare national boundaries, the boundaries of our country are determined by those in elected authority. Christians are citizens of a heavenly kingdom, and if we declare Jesus Christ is Lord, He determines the boundaries (Colossians 1).

Scottish missiologist, Lesslie Newbigin puts its this way, “[t]he confession ‘Jesus is Lord’ implies a commitment to make good that confession in relation to the whole life of the world — its philosophy, its culture, and its politics no less than the personal lives of its people.”

While our citizenship is ultimately in heaven, our heavenly citizenship should inform our earthly one. This is not a plea for theocracy; it is a plea for Christian principles to inform how you think about policy issues and political engagement. America is not a Christian nation, our Founding Fathers intentionally included language in the Constitution prohibiting a religious test for federal elected office.

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