The Capetown2010 Videos are well worth watching
October 23, 2010
Dear friends in Christ,
You are encouraged to pray for our 29th Alpha Course ( and other Alpha Courses around the world) which is currently having its Holy Spirit weekend at a retreat centre. Please pray for our Youth and Young Adult Pastor Jill Cardwell who is giving leadership to the weekend.
Jill Cardwell St Simon’s NV Youth Pastor (click to hear her heart)
Uploaded to http://www.youtube.com
Jill Cardwell who has been with St Simon’s NV for 1 1/2 years, shares her excitement about youth ministry
Blessings, Ed Hird+
b) Deep Cove shoreline (click to view the beautiful scenery)
2)
Daily Devotion On Fire: DAY 430 – God Says No, I Say Yes!
bishopsilas.blogspot.com ( you can still sign up today for another 100 days of prayer with Bishop Silas Ng)
Bishop Silas Ng writes: “There is no better teaching I have heard than what our Chairman bishop, Rt. Rev. Chuck Murphy, teaches about tithing. So you really need to see all the clips now from his talk of Theology of Stewardship last Saturday in our 1st ACiC/AI Regional Conference. That way at least, you will know why you need to tithe, though like many people you might still do what you want to do and not what God wants you to do”:
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Why Bishop Chuck Murphy avoided Tithing
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When I Write the Check, it Stings
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Tithing
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In the Garden of Eden
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A new willing heart is needed
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Stewardship insights on Abraham
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Joseph’s Dreamcoat Stewardship
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Jesus’ Kingdom insights on stewardship
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Stewardship insights on Joseph & Moses
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Stewardship through Jesus’ Parables
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Prayer on getting out of the boat financially
3a)
Reconciliation – Gospel of Reconciliation – Rwanda | The Lausanne Global Conversation
conversation.lausanne.org
By Antoine Rutayisire: Find and share articles, videos, research and links regarding Cape Town 2010 Congress Video on The Lausanne Global Conversation.
3b)
Ed Hird Dr Os Guinness is always well worth watching and listening to. A most original thinker. Click to watch these Lausanne 3 videos.
i) Truth – Why Truth Matters | The Lausanne Global Conversation
conversation.lausanne.org
ii) Dr Os Guinness video on Globalization, given at the Lausanne 3 Congress.
http://conversation.lausanne.org/en/conversations/detail/11428
conversation.lausanne.org
Dr Os Guinness said: “The rarest commodity in the west is attention, not gold, because in the West everyone is speaking, emailing, texting, tweeting, everyone is speaking, but no one is listening.”
3c) Ed Hird Bishop Cyril Okorocha of the Anglican Church of Nigeria shares at the Capetown 2010 Congress about Globalization: Worldliness and Renewal.
Globalization: Worldliness and Renewal | The Lausanne Global Conversation
conversation.lausanne.org
By Cyril Okorocha: Find and share articles, videos, research and links regarding Cape Town 2010 Congress Video on The Lausanne Global Conversation.
3d) Ed Hird an amazing video of Archbishop Benjamin Kwashi, of Jos, Nigeria, discussing life at the intersection of other faiths. He shares how he represented Christ in the midst of racial unrest and violence. “I have a gospel worth living for, and I have a gospel worth dying for.”
i) http://conversation.lausanne.org/en/conversations/detail/11459
ii) A Fresh Approach To Witness – Bold Proclamation | The Lausanne Global Conversation
conversation.lausanne.org
By Archbishop Kwashi: Find and share articles, videos, research and links regarding Cape Town 2010 Congress Video on The Lausanne Global Conversation.
3e) Becky Pippert is the author of the best-selling ‘Out of the Salt Shaker’, and spoke at our Anglican Mission Winter Conference. Her books are well worth reading.
i) A Fresh Approach To Witness – Evangelism, Part 1 | The Lausanne Global Conversation
conversation.lausanne.org
By Becky Pippert: Find and share articles, videos, research and links regarding Cape Town 2010 Congress Video on The Lausanne Global Conversation.
ii) A Fresh Approach To Witness – Evangelism, Part 2 | The Lausanne Global Conversation
3f) Ed Hird Very insightful short skit
Bible Exposition: Drama “Letter” (Ephesians 1)
vimeo.com
In this drama, a group of Ephesian Christians await Tychicus’ arrival with Paul’s letter to their church. Fearful that he has been arrested at a Roman checkpoint on his way, they rejoice upon his arrival and begin reading the letter. Join the Conversation…
3g) http://conversation.lausanne.org/en/conversations/ (There are many other Lausanne 3 videos available that you can check out for yourself)
Honouring Our Young Leaders
August 17, 2010
By Rev Ed Hird
We don’t hear enough about the wonderful accomplishments of upcoming young leaders. In our ‘man-bites-dog’ media-saturated world, it is the ‘bad news story’ about youth that seems to get our attention.
The ‘Good Book’ is full of memorable stories about young people who made a difference when no one expected anything from them. Think about the young prophet Samuel in the Temple. Think about young David with his slingshot in front of an older and much larger Goliath. Goliath despised young David, saying: “Am I a dog that you come at me with sticks?” And think about young Timothy, who was mentored by an older and wiser Apostle Paul.
Timothy was in an impossible situation in Ephesus, a port city in Western Turkey. The Apostle Paul had ‘parachuted’ Timothy into this troubled city to turn around a very confused and demoralized community. The problem was that the older, more sophisticated Ephesian leaders didn’t want
Timothy around. They despised his inexperience, immaturity, and insecurity. Paul had to say to Timothy: “Don’t let people look down on you because you are young, but rather be an example for them in speech, in conversation, in love, in spirit, in faith, and in purity.”
As the historian Dr. JW Milne puts it, “Ancient culture generally admired age before youth.” Paul was saying to Timothy: “Don’t let anyone underestimate your worth and value.” As the well-known Dr. John Stott puts it, this “is a perennial problem. Older people have always found it difficult to accept young people as responsible adults in their own right, let alone as leaders. And young people are understandably irritated when their elders keep reminding them of their immaturity and inexperience, and treat them with contempt.”
Now what age was Timothy anyways? Scholars estimate that ‘young Timothy’ was probably around 35 years old. Michael Griffiths commented that “Young in ancient culture meant anyone young enough for military service; ie under 40 years of age”.
So how was young Timothy to get credibility with older people, as he attempted to exercise leadership? The Apostle Paul was clear that Timothy’s authority was not to come by pushing his weight around, by bragging about his credentials, or by laying down the
law. Dr. John Stott wisely noted that “the great temptation, whenever our leadership is questioned, threatened, or resisted, is to assert it all the more strongly and to become autocratic, even tyrannical.” The Good book defines healthy leadership as: “not lording it over those entrusted to you, but being examples.” Rather young Timothy was to gain acceptance by setting an example in the way he not only ‘talked the talk’ but also ‘walked the walk’.
One of the most powerful ways that young Timothy set an example was by not ‘throwing in the towel’ when he felt discouraged. Sometimes Timothy was discouraged, disappointed and distressed, but like Winston Churchill, he never ever gave up. Young Timothy had that essential leadership ingredient that some called ‘stickability.
The Apostle Paul also encouraged Timothy by reminding him that he was very gifted. “Don’t neglect the gift that God has given you”. It is so easy to focus on our weaknesses and neglect our God-given gifts and abilities.
The Apostle Paul said to young Timothy that if he devoted himself to keep growing in his God-given gifts, then everyone would notice how much that he had matured and progressed. One of the dangers with leadership is that we stop growing, and we
lose that sense of teachability. The word ‘progress’ in the Greek means to ‘cut in front’ and is used of armies advancing or ships cutting through water. Progress contains the graphic picture of a pioneer cutting his way forward through obstacles by means of a strenuous effort, like a man blazing a trail through a tangled Canadian forest.
One of our bishops, Chuck Murphy, had us do an exercise to find out if we are more like pioneers or settlers. Bishop Chuck concluded by saying that God is looking nowadays for innovative pioneers who are willing to be trail-blazers and ground-breakers.
My hope for those reading this article is that we may seek to honour the upcoming young leaders who will trail-blaze our future communities.



















