The following exercise is from the synchroblog at http://frankviola.org/2012/07/09/gospelforthemiddle
Fielding Melish and his wife Felicia have two children, ages 10 and
6. They live in a very remote part of Maine, USA. They are surrounded by
extended family, none of whom are Christians. The nearest churches are
one hour away, and by all evangelical standards, none of them are good.
These churches are either highly legalistic, highly libertine, or just
flat-out flaky.
One of Fielding’s cousins is a practicing Christian. They see each other once a year. Fielding’s cousin has shared Christ with Fielding many times over the years. Whenever they’ve talked about spiritual things, Fielding shows interest.
One of Fielding’s cousins is a practicing Christian. They see each other once a year. Fielding’s cousin has shared Christ with Fielding many times over the years. Whenever they’ve talked about spiritual things, Fielding shows interest.
Felicia grew up in a Christian home. She’s received Christ, but she
isn’t evangelistic and is overwhelmed with working long hours and
raising two small children. She would love to find a church nearby for
the spiritual support and instruction, but none exist.
Fielding has no college education. While he is capable of reading, he
is not a reader. He doesn’t use the Web either. He’s a man who works
with his hands, both for his career and for recreation. He’s
an “outdoorsman.” He hunts, he builds, he does manual labor, etc. In his
spare time, he helps his elderly parents with various building
projects.
Fielding is not an atheist. Neither is he an agnostic. He believes in
God. He believes Jesus is the Savior of the world who died for our sins
and rose again from the dead. He hasn’t fully surrendered his life to
Christ, but he is not sure what that looks like exactly. His children
know a little about the Lord, mostly because of what their mother has
taught them.
Recently Fielding asked this question:
When I’m with my cousin once a year, I
want to learn more about God. But when I come back home, and I’m around
everyone else, my mind is off of God, and I am back to working, raising
my kids, and helping my parents. Someone needs to come up with a
solution for people like me . . . people who are in the middle. (By
“in the middle,” Fielding means someone who believes in Jesus, but who
isn’t fully absorbed in the faith yet either. They simply don’t know
enough nor do they have any spiritual support system around them.)
Relocating is not an option for Fielding and his wife. Even if they
wanted to relocate, they don’t see a way they could do it financially.
Remember: Fielding and his wife don’t personally know any Christians.
None of their extended family or coworkers are believers either. And
the nearest churches (which are an hour away) aren’t recommended.
Question: If you were Fielding’s cousin, how would you instruct him and his wife the next time you saw them?
The solution is quite simple. My wife and I faced a somewhat similar situation upon leaving the traditional church years ago. We were hungering for fellowship with believers who saw the Body of Christ and organic church-life as we had been given revelation. There was not enough fellowship in our area at the time. After attending a conference in another state, a brother in Jesus offered to set-up a conference call bible study fellowship. About 5 other Christians of like mind participated. We sang a song together, prayed together, shared our lives and studied the bible together. We still do this nearly 3 years later and it has been a Godsend! We have become very close friends and love seeing each other at various bible conferences we attend yearly. God's Spirit has been and still is amazingly faithful and close to us during these conference calls. All you is a phone and some free time nightly each week. Trust me on this one -- it works!
ReplyDeletecorrection: "All you need is a phone . . ."
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