LaGrange District Mission Team Heads to El Salvador

June 1, 2011 by

LaGrange District Mission Team Heading to El Salvador

This morning, June 1st, at 5:00 AM a team of 15 volunteers from 5 different churches in the LaGrange District met at the Atlanta airport and headed to Ahuachapan, El Salvador on a mission trip. The mission team will work with the Methodist Church in El Salvador as part of the “Bridges” initiative. On the trip, representatives from the team will blog each day so that Georgians can be part of the experience. This will be my second trip to El Salvador in as many years. On my first trip I encountered churches full of passionate followers of Jesus Christ. We worshiped with our brothers and sisters and worked side by side to grow God’s church. What a joy it is to connect with other believers in a different country and see God at work in powerful ways. I hope as you check this blog daily you can share in the amazing experiences of building a bridge between the North Ga Conference and the people of El Salvador.

Peace,
Brian

“Like” The LaGrange District Facebook Page!

May 30, 2011 by

We are happy to introduce The LaGrange District Facebook Page. Search “The LaGrange District” on facebook + ‘Like’ the page for the latest LaGrange District UMC News, including updates from our District Superintendent. Please forward on to others in and outside of the District! From what we understand, we are one of the first – if not the only - district in the North Georgia Conference to have a Facebook page.

Click Here to find the page. This is another way we’re pushing the envelope to create a community within our district to connect us, from the very north of the district to the south, east and west.

Blogging the Stop Hunger Now Experience

March 12, 2011 by
Nathaniel Long, John Mattox, and Dan Dixon at the Stop Hunger Now warehouse in Marietta

Nathaniel Long, John Mattox, and Dan Dixon at the Stop Hunger Now warehouse in Marietta

Have you heard that three pastors from our District are participating in the 4 by 40 project by eating 40 packages of Stop Hunger Now meals during the 40 days of Lent?? What an interesting concept. They are Nathaniel Long of Senoia UMC, Dan Dixon of Mt. Gilead UMC and John Mattox of Pleasant Grove UMC. You can follow along with their stories as they are blogging at the links below:

Meet the “Hogfather” of the LaGrange District (Rev. Nathaniel Long) by clicking here

Keep up with “Preacher Dan’s Ponderings” (Rev Dan Dixon) by clicking here

View some of Rev. John Mattox’s posts at the Pleasant Grove UMC blog by clicking here

Rev. Long will be doing an on air interview next Wednesday at 8:00pm for 95.5 The Beat Atlanta. We’ll tweet that from the District Twitter feed to remind you: www.twitter.com/lagrangedist.

“Today, I quit being a Christian”

August 5, 2010 by

“Today, I quit being a Christian.”

With those words last week on Facebook, Anne Rice delivered a wake-up call for organized religion. The question is whether it will be recognized as such.

“I remain committed to Christ as always,” she wrote, “but not to being ‘Christian’ or to being part of Christianity. It’s simply impossible for me to ‘belong’ to this quarrelsome, hostile, disputatious, and deservedly infamous group. For ten years, I’ve tried. I’ve failed. I’m an outsider. My conscience will allow nothing else.”

To read the rest of this article by Leonard Pitts that I read in the AJC today, click here.  There are numerous points he makes that we all need to think about.

Young Adult Gatherings at Annual Conference

June 8, 2010 by

Annual Conference 2010 is upon us! If you’d like to blog or tweet daily about your experience at Conference, let us know!  Here are some things happening at Conference for young adults to take note of:

All young adult clergy, laity, and those who specialize in young adult
ministry are invited to Two Story Coffee House on Tuesday night, June
15, from 8- 10 pm BEFORE AC kicks off for a time of acclimation,
fellowship, and networking. The first 75 guests will receive a voucher
for a free coffee drink of their choice! Two Story Coffee is located
at 1680 S. Lumpkin Street in Athens. Parking is available on the
street or in the lot behind Two Story or their neighbors, Athens
Classic Properties or Home Place. After 9 pm additional parking is
available at Earthfare, across the street. For more information about
Two Story Coffee house, check out www.twostorycoffeehouse.com.
Questions??? contact Margaret Freeman at mfreeman@ngumc.org

Also, during lunch each day of annual conference young adults are
invited to meet just outside the Classic Center Theatre to walk to a
nearby restaurant to eat. Another great way to meet other young adults
from across the conference!

Two opportunities for young adults to be in mission at annual conference:

Stop Hunger Now initiative June 16-17 | Athens Classic Center
Because 25,000 persons die of starvation and malnutrition every day,
the North Georgia Conference is committed to this packaging project
that provides basic meals to the world’s nutritionally deprived poor.
Volunteers must be at least 12 years of age. You will be able to
indicate the times you will help package food when registering. It
would be great to have lots of young adults sign up with the youth
delegates on that Thursday evening shift.

4th Annual 5K Run/Walk June 17 | 6:30am | Athens Classic Center
Pre-registration Fee: $20 before race day
Come join us in downtown Athens for the 4th Annual North Georgia
Conference 5K Run/Walk. The start/finish will be the Classic Center,
located at 300 N Thomas Street, Athens, GA 30601. The entire course
will be run on paved streets in and around downtown Athens, GA.
Proceeds from the race will benefit The North Georgia Housing and
Homeless Council. Participants are encouraged to pre-register prior
to the day of the race at $20. Registration fee on race day is $25.
Help is also needed during the race.

A Medical Perspective on The Crucifixion

February 22, 2010 by

As we are now in the lenten season, consider the points made by the doctor in this video. Truly amazing what Jesus did for us. Remember, Jesus was fully man as he experienced this.

Exercise Good Judgment – Missions Part 3

February 11, 2010 by

Guest Blogger – Jamie Jenkins, Executive Assistant to the Bishop

There is a wrong way to the right thing. News headlines in the past few days have offered an example of this.

Ten Baptists from Idaho have been detained in Haiti after attempting to leave the country with 33 children without proper documentation. The authorities accuse them of child trafficking. One member of the church group said, “We were just trying to do the right thing (by rescuing the orphans).” The government of Haiti has charged the group with kidnapping.

The rescue mission’s stated purpose was to “share God’s love with these precious children, helping them heal and find new life in Christ.” The group was acting independently, without guidance from the Southern Baptist Convention’s North American Mission Board according to Mike Ebert, a spokesman for the board. He said, “It would be wrong to present them as up to anything other than trying to rescue these children. It was unfortunate the way that they jumped in but we have to trust that the safety of the children will be kept in mind.”

“Laura Silsby, spokesperson for New Life Children’s Refuge, said the group had received the children from a legitimate orphanage in Haiti and did not realize that additional paperwork was needed to take them out of the country. She said this was nothing more than an effort to save abandoned, traumatized children.

I don’t know the details but I suspect that these were well intentioned people who simply wanted to help. Like many of us their hearts were touched by the suffering and devastation they saw. In an emotional response their hearts overruled their head. That is not always a bad thing. Sometimes we miss opportunities to help by spending too much time thinking things through. At the same time I understand the concern and caution exercised in this situation.

Haiti has long been a hub for sex trafficking or trafficking of children for domestic slavery. Even before the January 12 earthquake, it is estimated that thousands of children are taken from the slums and streets of the Haitian capital every year. But the quake has made the situation even worse. Now there are thousands of new orphans and thousands more children separated from their families.

It is an unspeakable tragedy that under any circumstances people would kidnap children and send them into domestic or sex slavery. But given the enormity of this natural disaster it is even more unbelievable.

The efforts of the folks from Idaho accent the dilemma in which all caring people find themselves. The outpouring of concern and the tremendous cash contributions are expressions of compassion. People want to help. Multitudes of people are standing ready and eager to go to Haiti to offer assistance as soon as the opportunity opens.

No doubt there are many children and others in Haiti needing help. But this is a time when good judgment needs to be exercised. You can learn how you can help the people of Haiti at www.ngumc.org. But the principle of doing the right thing the right way is true in all our efforts to serve and give. The end result should be to help others and to glorify God.

-Jamie Jenkins

To read more from Jamie Jenkins, click here.

To see more in our Missions series, click here: Part 1. Part 2.

My Denarius

January 23, 2010 by

Denarius dating from 222-235 AD

I am a historian, so I thought it was pretty cool to get this denarius coin that was used in imperial Rome, under Severus Alexander, 222-235 AD. The most memorable passage of scripture involving the denarius is when Jesus compared The Kingdom of Heaven with The Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard in Matthew 20:1-16. While clearly it is a message that the last will be first and the first will be last, I also look at this denarius as a message for me to just be a good steward over what God has given me, and not to worry about comparing that to what others receive for their works.

The other scriptures involving the denarius are when Jesus talks about Paying Taxes to Caesar in Matthew 22:15-22 and Luke 20:20-26, and Revelation 6.

Denarius - "Tails"

Turning Missions on their head – Missions Part 2

January 22, 2010 by

Binyavanga Wainaina

I have heard it said that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. once spoke, “The only reason to look down on someone is if you are going to lift them up.” Today, I wanted to highlight an interview I heard on the radio with Binyavanga Wainaina, who is described as “one among a rising generation of African voices who bring a cautionary perspective to the morality and efficacy behind many Western initiatives to abolish poverty and speed development in Africa.” I was really impacted by his perspective on aid, and it caused me to really take a look at my own motives in missions and in being a Christian in general when reaching out to others.

A lot of people arrive in Africa to assume that it’s a blank empty space and their goodwill and desire and guilt will fix it. And that to me is not any different from the first people who arrived and colonized us. This power, this power to help, is just about as dangerous as hard power, because very often it arrives with a kind of zeal that is assuming ‘I will do it. I will solve it for you. I will fix it for you,’ and it rides roughshod over your own best efforts.      -Binyavanga Wainaina

Anyone doing missions will certainly be able to take something away from this interview, which was on the program “Speaking of Faith” with host Krista Tippet. Click here to listen to the program, “The Ethics of Aid.”

Willing to Lay down Your Life? – Missions Part 1

December 29, 2009 by

For our next feature series on the blog, we’ll be taking a look at missions. There was a story in today’s AJC about a missionary who is described as “unusually serious” about his Christian faith, and focused on North Korea. I wonder if we realize how much danger can be involved when God leads us on certain mission assignments. Recently, there was a story about a youth group from Georgia that was in Honduras when political fighting broke out. If God was leading you into a place like North Korea, what would you do? The story, which is linked below, is about Robert Park, a Korean-American who has been detained by North Korean officials. Park’s pastor said this about him:

The Rev. John Benson, the pastor of Life in Christ Community Church in Park’s hometown of Tucson, Arizona, said Park’s devotion is exceptional. “You have to understand that for this guy, when it comes to the Lord, he’s very, very serious,” said Benson, who led weekend services to pray for his safe return. “Unusually serious.” Park’s father, Pyong Park, described him as fearless and said he was willing to lay down his life. “He was not afraid to die,” said the elder Park, who lives in Encinitas, California. “What he wanted was the whole world to know of North Korea’s situation.”

U.S. missionary Robert Park, a 28-year-old Korean-American (AP Photo/ Freedom and Life for All North Koreans, Seo Suk-gu)

You can read the story at this link. We hope to have some reports and tweets from people in our district on mission trips.


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