Have You Taken A Church Field Trip Recently?

WLO_sharingbreadI firmly believe that the key to any discipleship program is doing the word.  One way that we’ve encouraged those in our DOTW Discipleship Groups to do the word is by designating the fifth Sunday of any month as “Field Trip Sunday.” In other words, the fifth Sunday is dedicated to doing the word as a congregation or at least, as a family group.

Below are some examples of how we’ve utilized field trip Sunday during the month of Sharing Your Bread.

  • Last year members of our congregation shared a meal with homeless men and women at a local homeless shelter. Surprisingly, we encouraged church members not to go into the shelter as volunteers or bearing gifts, but rather as one of the throng of homeless people waiting to be served. This act wasn’t really meant to be the “be-all-end-all” of service, but it was meant to establish the foundation for service as church members began to do the word. We learned that Jesus also ate together (instead of serving) with tax-collectors and sinners and he used the meal-time to call sinners to repentance.
  • This year we did two things for field-trip Sunday. First, a few of us hopped in a car and headed down to Albuquerque, New Mexico to participate in a Voice of the Martyrs Conference. Pastor Foley is able to do this from time to time, but for many of us it was a new experience. We were able to talk, share and even cry with people over God’s heart for North Korea. And one of the members of our group even provided food for us for the whole weekend! The night before we left, he stayed up very late to prepare a wonderful mix of peanut butter balls, homemade gluten-free bread and dumplings. He modeled God’s care and love for each of us in how he provided this food!
  • There were some of our younger members who weren’t able to go to New Mexico, so their field trip was to preach the Sunday sermon. On Sunday, everyone, who was present (men, women and children) was tasked with preparing and preaching a 5 minute sermon on the assigned Scripture verse. Why? Because every Christian should be ready to preach, pray or die at a moment’s notice and we wanted to train even the children to be ready to share God’s word to their friends at school.
  • One young lady in our fellowship considered her university to be her field trip. She had a friend who had recently decided to start an “unwise diet plan.” The girl in our fellowship decided to cook her friend a healthy and well-balanced meal and bring it to the university to share together. She not only got to teach her friend about healthy eating, but also shared with her about Jesus.

We’ve also fed and ate with the homeless in the park, held evangelistic parties in our home in which we shared our bread and invited both new and old friends over for dinner. These are just a few of our “unremarkable,” but important field trip Sundays of the past.

Even if you aren’t an official part of the DOTW Discipleship Groups I would encourage you to use the fifth Sunday of this month to do the word that you’ve been studying this month and share with us in the comments what you did, what the results were, what you learned and what you would do differently next time!

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What’s Harder For A Persecuted Christian Than Being In Prison? Being Released From Prison, Says Mr. Bae (These Are The Generations Bonus Material, Part I)

generationsFirst in a series of weekly posts by Mr. Bae, the co-author with Pastor Foley of These are the Generationsthe story of third generation North Korean Christians. Mr. and Mrs. Bae and their children once enjoyed a prosperous existence in North Korean family, but their life was decimated following the North Korean government’s investigation of Mr. Bae on suspicion of Christian activity. Mr. Bae was held without charge in a North Korean jail for more than a year, but during that time his faith grew even as his health faltered. 

Though Mr. Bae was ultimately miraculously released from prison without being charged, the Baes were reduced to the life of vagabonds by the stigma of his imprisonment. They lost their home, job, friends, and health but gained something infinitely more valuable: deep, unshakable faith in Christ. While continually on the move ahead of the authorities, they raised their children in the faith and led other family members and former friends to Christ.

In this series Mr. Bae will be sharing a part of his life story that is not told in his book. It is the story of what happened when he was released from prison, a time that almost no one realizes is actually the hardest time of all, and thus the time when God’s grace shines the brightest.

I would like to share today on the subject of what life is like for the believer who, after being imprisoned for his faith in a hostile nation, is released from prison and permitted to return to his home.

I would like to begin by having you ask me a question that no one has yet asked me since I started sharing the story of my life:

“Which is harder, Mr. Bae: Being held in prison for more than a year without being charged, or being released from prison and allowed to return to your home and family?”

That may sound like a strange question to you, since you will think it obvious that life in prison is a difficult trial and life after being released from prison is a sweet victory.

But in a hostile country, living a life of faith in prison is often a sweet victory and life after being released from prison is almost always the most difficult trial of all.

In prison, even amidst the torture and unspeakable deprivations, there is seemingly endless time to pray, as the days slip by into months and years.

You can remember the story of your life and repent of your sins.

You can sing the hymns of faith and recite the Scriptures of the Bible in your head.

And you can experience Christ’s visitation and grace in so many ways.

But when you are released from prison, you quickly realize that the imprisonment was only a prelude of the torture that the state intends to put you through.

Though the state has released you from your prison cell, they cannot afford to look weak. So as you leave one jail you enter another jail that is much bigger: The whole country.

Out in the open they can now imprison not only you but your whole family.

The torture that once only fell on you now falls on them as well, and that is much harder to witness.

You lose your home.

You and your family are forced to become wanderers.

The government wants to turn you into beggars, and to force your children to drop out of school.

They want to see your illnesses overtake you while no one steps forward to offer medicine.

They follow you from the moment you walk out of the prison door.

Because of this, no one will associate with you.

The government makes sure that your only purpose in surviving is to be a lesson to others never to resist the will of the state.

But the grace of God is greater still.

(To be continued next week…)

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Video – Pastor Foley Answers Questions On Kenneth Bae, Kim Jong Uk, Jonathan Short And The Latest North Korea News

Pastor Tim asks Pastor Foley about the recent blogs he’s written on the three North Korean missionaries who were arrested (Kenneth Bae, Kim Jong Uk and Jonathan Short).  Pastor Foley also gives advice for individuals who may be feeling a calling to do mission to North Korea.

For more videos on North Korea, visit our Seoul USA Video Page!

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