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May 2014 Crier

5/2/2014

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Prayers & News:
News
  • Summer Training is July 17-23rd, 2014 at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Midwest City, OK and registration is open on the website.
  • Our Business Manager and Treasurer (Nathan and Dorothy Ruppert), after blessed years of service, are stepping down. OAFC is looking for dedicated volunteers to fill their shoes by July 2014.
  • We've purchased a new van for our Travel teams to more confidently go out and share the Gospel. Look for it soon at a church near you.
  • Due to safety concerns, the Kazakhstan international team has been canceled. 
  • The new 5th edition of the OAFC Songbook has finished production. We're planning to distribute them to local groups at Summer Training. (Everyone who comes to Training gets a songbook).
  • We're making room in our archives by digitizing our files. We're purchasing a commercial document scanner and will be working on this project for the next few months.
  • Executive Director Matthew Tassey and wife Veronica are going to be bringing our new baby to Training, so come and see. (She'll only be a month old, so cute!)


Prayers of Supplication
  • That God would provide our next Business and Financial Manager before July, 2014.
  • That God would guide and bless our Summer Training preparations and conference.
  • That God would bless our local groups with weekends, youth, and leaders.
  • That people would be receptive to the Gospel.


Prayers of Thanksgiving
  • That God continues to provide for OAFC's financial needs through our supporters.
  • That God blessed the production of the new OAFC Songbook and we give thanks to the CID LWML for their grant which provided the funding for this project.
  • That the Oklahoma District so graciously received us.
  • That God has given us many great leaders and volunteers to serve OAFC.

2014 Objectives
  1. Sustain and grow our current groups
  2. Add more local groups across the country
  3. Equip youth and adults for witnessing in a cyber-based culture
  4. Recruit a new Business and Financial Manager
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The Church is the Root of Missions

As we prepare to gather for Summer Training July 17-23rd in Midwest City, OK, let's look again at our theme PROCLAIM! from the letter of the Apostle Peter to Christians scattered throughout the world. Especially in light of gathering in local churches for our Training, let's look at what Peter has to say about the Church and Mission.

Peter says, "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! According to his great mercy, he has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven for you... Since you have been born again, not of perishable seed but of imperishable, through the living and abiding word of God... And this word is the good news that was preached to you" (1 Peter 1:3-4, 23, 25). The only place we find this phrase "born again" in all of Scripture is in John 3 - Jesus' discourse with Nicodemus - and here in 1 Peter. In John 3:3, 5-6, Jesus says, "Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God," and again, "Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit." Jesus is talking about Baptism here - the birth of water and the Spirit. Since Peter is quoting Jesus (there's no one else who says this, so he must be quoting Jesus), that's what Peter is referring to. And Paul speaks the exact same in Titus 3:4-8: "But when the goodness and loving kindness of God our Savior appeared, he saved us, not because of works done by us in righteousness, but according to his own mercy, by the washing of regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit, whom he poured out on us richly through Jesus Christ our Savior, so that being justified by his grace we might become heirs according to the hope of eternal life. This saying is trustworthy, and I want you to insist on these things..."

The Church instituted by Jesus - that is, the place where those who stand in the office of the Apostles proclaim their witness and administer the Sacraments that proclaim the voice of Jesus to the congregation gathered by the Word of God in Christ - is the place of mission. Again and again throughout his letter, Peter will return to the Baptism we received through the hands of the elders and shepherds leading the Church (1 Peter 5:1-2). And that Baptism is never about leaving a person alone in their faith. We don't want to preach the Gospel to someone and just leave them on their own. Baptism unites us into the body of Christ, as a congregation of believers united around he who is our head. That means that in our witness and evangelism, we should always seek to connect people to the local congregation - a branch of the Church living in the vine who is Jesus (John 15:5) - where they can be fed and strengthened continually in Word and Sacrament as part of a body - not as a lone Christian.

That's why we insist on working with local congregations in our witness training in OAFC. We know that anyone can go out and PROCLAIM! to anyone, anywhere, about the Gospel. We know that everyone, no matter where they are, can believe - even if it's their last hours, lonely on a cross like the man next to Jesus. But we also know that the standard and expectation of Christ is bringing people into the Church. So OAFC always seeks to work with local congregations to connect the people with whom we share the Gospel to local congregations for Word and Sacrament ministry. 

That's also why we in OAFC are so very grateful to congregations who open their doors to this ministry for the opportunity to give youth a place to grow in their faith and to share the Gospel. So we give a big Thank You to all of the congregations and members who have opened their doors and houses and neighborhoods to OAFC youth and adults over the years - because you've helped in the sharing of the Gospel as Jesus intended and also helped to instill in youth the love of the Church and the knowledge that the Church is the root of all missions. God bless. you as you and we PROCLAIM!
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The Mission of OAFC is to equip youth and adults to witness more effectively of Jesus Christ through Singing, Bible Studies, Personal Witnesses, Dramas, Puppet Shows, and Neighborhood Canvassing.
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April 2014 Crier

3/28/2014

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Prayers & News:
News
  • Summer Training is July 17-23rd, 2014 at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Midwest City, OK and registration is open on the website.
  • Our Business Manager and Treasurer (Nathan and Dorothy Ruppert), after blessed years of service, are stepping down. OAFC is looking for dedicated volunteers to fill their shoes by July 2014.
  • We've purchased a new van for our Travel teams to more confidently go out and share the Gospel. Check out the pictures.
  • Due to safety concerns, the Kazakhstan international team has been canceled. 
  • The new 5th edition of the OAFC Songbook has finished production. We're planning to distribute them to local groups at Summer Training. (Everyone who comes to Training gets a songbook).
  • We're making room in our archives by digitizing our files. We're purchasing a commercial document scanner and will be working on this project for the next few months.
  • Executive Director Matthew Tassey and wife Veronica are going to be bringing our new baby to Training, so come and see. (She'll only be a month old, so cute!)


Prayers of Supplication
  • That God would provide our next Business and Financial Manager before July, 2014.
  • That God would guide and bless our Summer Training preparations and conference.
  • That God would bless our local groups with weekends, youth, and leaders.
  • That people would be receptive to the Gospel.


Prayers of Thanksgiving
  • That God continues to provide for OAFC's financial needs through our supporters.
  • That God blessed the production of the new OAFC Songbook and we give thanks to the CID LWML for their grant which provided the funding for this project.
  • That the Oklahoma District so graciously received us.
  • That God has given us many great leaders and volunteers to serve OAFC.

2014 Objectives
  1. Sustain and grow our current groups
  2. Add more local groups across the country
  3. Equip youth and adults for witnessing in a cyber-based culture
  4. Recruit a new Business and Financial Manager
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The new OAFC van - coming to a church near you.
Proclaiming the Excellencies

We're going to take a break from our Life series as we prepare for the upcoming Summer Training by looking in the next couple of months leading up to Training at what God's Word has to say about witnessing and how we can respond in confidence and certainty.

Our theme this year is PROCLAIM! from 1 Peter 2:9, "... that you may proclaim the excellencies of him who called you out of darkness and into his marvelous light." And that is the task of every single baptized Christian: to proclaim.
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Though sometimes this gets confusing and confused, especially when we put this beautiful teaching of Scripture next to another blessed teaching; that of the office of holy ministry. Some would make this verse say that the office of the holy ministry has been given to every baptized Christian, and therefore every baptized Christian has the same call and sending to preach as does the pastor. However, that's not what the text says. And let's delve into why it doesn't say that.

First of all, God instituted the office of the holy ministry through his Son to his apostles to be an office of preaching, teaching, and administering the Sacraments publicly in the Church. Paul many times will say that there is a difference between pastors and laity as some are called to the office and others are not. The pastor is called to act publicly on behalf of the Church and in the stead of Christ for the people. If everyone was a pastor, where then would the congregation be? Who would be served? If there was no pastoral office, who would serve (and with what authority)? That's why Paul says in Romans 10, "How can they hear unless one preach, and how can they preach unless they are sent." And at the end of this same epistle of Peter, he addresses the pastors (shepherds) separately from the congregation - because there is a godly-instituted difference.

So the pastor is called to preach, teach, and administer the Sacraments publicly for the congregation. But then what do we do with 1 Peter 2:9 and the commission of all the Baptized to PROCLAIM!? Simple; just answer the question: is the congregation in worship and study the only place where you can hear or read or discuss or live the Word of God? No. God has called each and every person to do his will for the care and stewardship of his creation wherever you are: be that as a student, a child, a brother or sister, worker, friend, husband, wife, boss, you name it. If you're there, God has called you to work for him there. Colossians 3:23 "Work as for the Lord." And that includes working to share the Gospel of what Jesus Christ has done for you by calling you out of the darkness and into his marvelous light. 

So you may not have a pulpit, font, or altar at the front of the church, but you have been called to that place where you are in order to speak, to work, to live, to suffer, and to bless as Christ living through you and in you because you have been Baptized into Christ. What an awe-inspiring calling that we all have been given by Christ. It's not a calling at odds with the Call of a pastor, nor does it nullify the Call of the pastor, but it works side by side with him to be the light of Christ to this dark world.

Let that whet your appetite for some of the deep and awesome teachings that we'll encounter as delve into this wonderful text of 1 Peter leading up to and during Summer Training. Until then, go register and get ready to join us in Proclaiming His Excellencies to a world that needs to know.
The Mission of OAFC is to equip youth and adults to witness more effectively of Jesus Christ through Singing, Bible Studies, Personal Witnesses, Dramas, Puppet Shows, and Neighborhood Canvassing.
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March 2014 Crier

3/2/2014

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Prayers & News:
News
  • Summer Training is July 17-23rd, 2014 at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Midwest City, OK.
  • Our Business Manager and Treasurer (Nathan and Dorothy Ruppert), after blessed years of service, are stepping down. OAFC is looking for dedicated volunteers to fill their shoes by July 2014.
  • We've purchased a new van for our Travel teams to more confidently go out and share the Gospel. And we've sold the old OAFC van.
  • We're partnering with Pastor Kirby of Lutheran Hour Ministries to send a small team of youth to Kazakhstan as a mission trip.
  • The new 5th edition of the OAFC Songbook has finished production. We're planning to distribute them to local groups at Summer Training. (Everyone who comes to Training gets a songbook).
  • We're making room in our archives by digitizing our files. We're purchasing a commercial document scanner and will be working on this project for the next few months.


Prayers of Supplication
  • That God would provide our next Business and Financial Manager before July, 2014.
  • That God would guide and bless our Summer Training preparations and conference.
  • That God would bless our efforts to send a mission team to Kazakhstan with Pastor Kirby of Lutheran Hour Ministries.
  • That God would bless our local groups with weekends, youth, and leaders.


Prayers of Thanksgiving
  • That God continues to provide for OAFC's needs with generous memorial donations from those like Reverand and Joyce Grieves and Karen Ruhlig.
  • That God blessed the production of the new OAFC Songbook and we give thanks to the CID LWML for their grant which provided the funding for this project.
  • That God has given us many great leaders and volunteers to serve OAFC.

2014 Objectives
  1. Sustain and grow our current groups
  2. Add more local groups across the country
  3. Equip youth and adults for witnessing in a cyber-based culture
  4. Recruit a new Business and Financial Manager
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The Truthful Life


The Christian life is founded on Truth. As we continue through 10 aspects of the Christian life, we've looked at the Abundant Life, the Peaceful Life, and the Thankful Life, and this month we turn to the Truthful Life. Jesus says,

John 17:17, "Thy Word is Truth." John 14: "I am the Truth"

                There are two parts to the truthful life: 1) Jesus, the Word of God, is the absolute Truth, and 2) The Christian faith is based on truth and not myth.

Jesus says in John 14, "I am the truth." He doesn't say, "I am a truth," or, "I am a valid truth," or "one of many." But he is THE truth. In an age of relativism and anything-goes morality, Jesus declares that there is an absolute Truth and He IS it. Now, the opposite of truth is falsehood; a lie. Anything other than Jesus is therefore a lie, false, and misleading. So you're left with this: either there really is an absolute truth, an absolute right and wrong, and that's Jesus, or Jesus is lying about who he is – and if he's lying about who he is, how can we ever believe his own claim that he died and rose to forgive our sins, and give us life and salvation? I believe Christ died for me; I believe he is the absolute Truth. I believe that means that I should seek to make my life conform with his words in everything. And what's more, since I believe that his truth is absolute – not just for me, but for everyone, regardless of their believes or worldviews. That's what absolute truth means.

Secondly, the truthful life not only believes that Jesus is truth but also that the story of Jesus is True. What we have in the Bible isn't just one person's interpretation. It isn't a theory. It isn't a desire or a myth or a mass hallucination. But what the Bible says happened is what actually happened in time and history with eyewitnesses giving their testimonies about what they really and truthfully saw. Our faith doesn't depend on our believing but on what really happened. That's the danger of the phrases, "Just believe it," or "blind faith." Our faith doesn't make Jesus real. Jesus is real – therefore we have faith. We don't have a blind faith but a faith that clings to the truth of the God-made-Man crucified for us and risen from the dead.

These two foundations of the Truthful Life therefore lead the Christian to be, himself, truthful. Paul said, "I believe and so I speak." We believe the truth; so we speak truth. We believe what is true; we speak that which is true. So a world rampant with lies, misdirection, cheating, and every manner of false witnesses, is overwhelmed by the Christian who knows Truth and speaks Truth; and so we're given ever more opportunity to share Christ – the Way, the Truth, and the Life. May God so give us these opportunities as we live the Truthful Life.

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The Mission of OAFC is to equip youth and adults to witness more effectively of Jesus Christ through Singing, Bible Studies, Personal Witnesses, Dramas, Puppet Shows, and Neighborhood Canvassing.
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OAFC Crier, February 2014

2/4/2014

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Prayers & News:
News
  • Our Business Manager and Treasurer (Nathan and Dorothy Ruppert), after blessed years of service, are stepping down. OAFC is looking for dedicated volunteers to fill their shoes by July 2014.
  • We've purchased a new van for our Travel teams to more confidently go out and share the Gospel. And we've sold the old OAFC van.
  • We're partnering with Pastor Kirby of Lutheran Hour Ministries to send a small team of youth to Kazakhstan as a mission trip.
  • The new 5th edition of the OAFC Songbook has finished production. We're planning to distribute them to local groups at Summer Training. (Everyone who comes to Training gets a songbook).
  • We're making room in our archives by digitizing our files. We're purchasing a commercial document scanner and will be working on this project for the next few months.
  • Summer Training is July 17-23rd, 2014 at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Midwest City, OK.


Prayers of Supplication
  • That God would provide our next Business and Financial Manager before July, 2014.
  • That God would guide and bless our Summer Training preparations and conference.
  • That God would bless our efforts to send a mission team to Kazakhstan with Pastor Kirby of Lutheran Hour Ministries.
  • That God would bless our local groups with weekends, youth, and leaders.


Prayers of Thanksgiving
  • That God blessed with expediency and efficiency the purchase of a new OAFC van and the selling of the old.
  • That God blessed the production of the new OAFC Songbook and we give thanks to the CID LWML for their grant which provided the funding for this project.
  • That God has given us many great leaders and volunteers to serve OAFC.

2014 Objectives
  1. Sustain and grow our current groups
  2. Add more local groups across the country
  3. Equip youth and adults for witnessing in a cyber-based culture
  4. Recruit a new Business and Financial Manager
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Thankful Life
In our series looking at the various aspects of Christian life, we've studied what God has to say about having an Abundant Life and a Peaceful Life. Now, let's look at the Thankful Life. And for giving thanks, there's nothing like the book of Psalms.

Psalm 118:1 "Oh Give thanks unto the Lord for He is good; for his steadfast love endures forever."

                Have you ever read Psalm 118? If not, you gotta do it. It's the account of the history of Israel for the liturgical community to sing responsively. The leader will recount a portion of the history of Israel and the congregation will respond "For his steadfast love endures forever." And it continues this way throughout the whole history of God's works of deliverance: from darkness to light in Creation to bondage to freedom in the Exodus and beyond. But behind the whole story, the Psalmist teaches us, is God's unending love, and therefore our thankfulness towards him.

                Maybe you've been told before that you should thank God no matter what and that it's impious to ask why you should thank Him. Maybe you've been told that you shouldn't look for a reason but just do it because He says so. These are simply wrong, non-biblical, pseudo-pious dreams. We thank God, we love God, we pray to Him, for a reason. And where we don't have a reason, we're just doing lip service and our hearts aren't really in it.

                So then why should you "rejoice always, pray without ceasing, and give thanks in all circumstances" (1 Thess. 5:18)? It's because of what God has done FOR YOU. The Psalmist says, "Because His steadfast love endures forever;" that is, because He is continually working His mighty acts of love and mercy in this world to benefit you and others. And we are called to continually call these mighty works to mind, to remember, to recount, to proclaim, and by so doing we are constantly reminded of God's steadfast, immovable, eternal, unbounded love for us and the world (John 3:16). Which, by the way, doing this is called Faith. And when we recall the wonders God has worked for us, most especially we cling to and remember the work of Jesus Christ in our place on that cross and in that tomb, we are constantly called to give Him thanks – because He is good; for His steadfast love endures forever.

                So don't just thank God to thank Him. Don't just praise Him to praise Him. Thank and praise Him for what He's done for you – by sending His only-begotten Son, Jesus Christ, to suffer, die, and rise in victory for you, so that believing in Jesus as your Savior from sin, you shall not perish but you shall have everlasting life. So give thanks.

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The Mission of OAFC is to equip youth and adults to witness more effectively of Jesus Christ through Singing, Bible Studies, Personal Witnesses, Dramas, Puppet Shows, and Neighborhood Canvassing.
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OAFC Crier, January 2014

1/9/2014

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Prayers & News
News:
  • We're partnering with Pastor Kirby of Lutheran Hour Ministries to send a small team of youth to Kazakhstan as a mission trip.
  • We're purchasing a new van for our Travel Teams to more confidently go out and share the Gospel. Could you consider donating to OAFC for this purpose?
  • Our Business Manager and Treasurer (Nathan and Dorothy Ruppert), after blessed years of service, are stepping down. OAFC is looking for dedicated volunteers to fill their shoes by July 2014.
  • We're making room in our archives by digitizing our files. We're purchasing a commercial document scanner and will be working on this project for the next few months.
  • Summer Training is July 17-23rd, 2014 at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Midwest City, OK.


Prayers of Supplication
  • That God would provide our next Business and Financial Manager before July, 2014.
  • That God would guide and bless our Summer Training preparations and conference.
  • That God would bless our efforts to send a mission team to Kazakhstan with Pastor Kirby of Lutheran Hour Ministries.
  • That God would bless our local groups with weekends, youth, and leaders.



Prayers of Thanksgiving
  • That God provided safe travel to and from our Board meeting in January and that He blessed us with a very productive time.
  • That God has given us many great leaders and volunteers to serve OAFC.
2014 Objectives
  1. Sustain and grow our current groups
  2. Add more local groups across the country
  3. Equip youth and adults for witnessing in a cyber-based culture
  4. Recruit a new Business and Financial Manager
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Peaceful Life
There's one aspect of life that marks out Christians above all others, and that is the peace of God which passes all understanding. There's nothing like the peace a Christian knows. That peace imbues every part of the Christian life. It comes from two awesome and equally wonderfully teachings of Scripture: 1) The all-availing sacrifice of Christ, and 2) The all-powerful lordship of God over all things.

Colossians 1:20, "Through Christ, God reconciled to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross."

Romans 8:28, "All things work together for good to them that love God; for those who are called according to his purpose."

                These two messages of Scripture are the reason the Christian can have true peace unlike anyone else. Yes, some may believe about other gods that they control history and the future, but no other religion believes that the God who can control all things according to his will would sacrifice himself for the forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation of his creation by assuming our flesh and blood. These two absolutes create the greatest peace the world has ever known.

                Consider if only one of these were true. If you believed in the God who controls all things for his standard of goodness, but you didn't have the proof of his love in Christ, then how could you trust that he desired your good – and wasn't just using you to do good for someone else? And when the text says that he works for the good of those who love God, how could you ever know if You loved God enough to merit his good graces working towards you? That is to say, it's not enough to know the power of God, if you don't also know that the power of God is FOR YOU.

                In the same way, what good is it to know that a man died for you if he wasn't also the God who controls all the world and time, powers and judgment? People die every day – innocent people die every day. So unless that man who died on a cross was the God of all creation, the death of Jesus of Nazareth is simply a tragedy. But because he was the Sovereign God, his death could be for your sins and the sins of all creation.

                Because both of these truths are the reality, we have peace. The God of all creation has chosen to die for you – proving his great love. For "If he who did not spare his only Son, but gave him up for us all, how will he not also give us all things?" So we can rest in the mercy and power of God, knowing that he loves us; cares for us; and will work the ultimate good in our lives.

                Therefore, "May the peace of God which passes all understanding guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus." Amen.

The Mission of OAFC is to equip youth and adults to witness more effectively of the Jesus Christ through Singing, Bible Studies, Personal Witnesses, Dramas, Puppet Shows, and Neighborhood Canvassing.
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Abundant Life

11/8/2013

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Have you ever read the OAFC 10 Basic Concepts of Life? Throughout our heritage as Ongoing Ambassadors For Christ, great pastors and leaders have identified simple concepts about life as a Christian that can help remind us what it means to LIVE as Christians. If you've never read them before, I'll list them out: Abundant Life, Peaceful Life, Thankful Life, Truthful Life, Powerful Life, Purposeful Life, Wholesome Life, Orderly Life, Serving Life, and Giving Life. This list, and the passages they relate to, are found in your leader's Manual. And I'd like to take the time these next couple of months to look at each of these in turn. This month, let's look at the Abundant Life.

In John 10:10, Jesus says, "I have come that you may have life and have it abundantly."

What is abundant life, and why does it matter? The word in the Greek has to do with something filled to the brim – like that suitcase you packed for Summer Training that you had to sit on in order to get it closed. It's about having everything you could possibly want or need with no room for anything else. In fact, King David – the great Psalmist – declares that God desires to give us so much that "my cup overflows" (Psalm 23). It's not just packed to the top but literally bursting at the seams. That's what God wants us to have and that's the kind of life that Jesus says he's come to give us.

But so many are satisfied with less than God wants to give us in Christ. You've heard the diagnostic question: "Do you see the glass as half empty or half full?" And we easily begin to think that as long as we see it as half full – as long as our outlook on life is good and optimistic – that everything is fine. The problem is that God doesn't want to fill your glass halfway, regardless of how you look at it, he wants to fill it the brim, to overflowing, so that there isn't any question as to how you should see it. So God keeps pouring out his gifts that satisfy and fill and overflow – through his Word, through Baptism, through Communion, through Confession and Absolution, through the mutual conversation and consolation of your brothers and sisters in Christ – but too many of us don't want those gifts and so we poke holes in the top of our cups so that the blessings God gives us to have abundant life can never reach the top. We reject God's gifts that he says will fill us because we want something different. We want what we want, not what God wants us to want. It's called sin. It's like eating 2 gallons of chocolate chip ice cream for dinner: you know it won't do anything good for you, it even deprives you of getting good stuff from healthy food. But we live in an ice-cream-for-dinner-world when it comes to the Bible and God's gifts to us in Christ.

That's why Christians are called to live it up to the full, to overflowing, in the blessings that God gives us: because, as we live in the fullness of Christ's gifts, the world will see our lives and will long for the kind of life that Christ gives us. They'll look out from their tombs (Ephesians 2:1) and long to live like the living rather than the dead. They'll see that life isn't about simply having a half full or half empty cup, but about having it all the way God intended it. So even the good gifts Christ gives us of the forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation are both for us to experience and for the world to see.

If you aren't experiencing the abundant life, let me encourage you to go to church; hear his Word and receive his gifts and really think about – believe – what Jesus has done for you, and just soak up his gifts. Let God's Word in Christ fill you up (Colossians 3:16) and replace everything else: confess your sins and get rid of them, and live in the Gospel. In so doing, your "light will shine before others, that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father who is in heaven" (Matthew 5:16). That's the abundant life – life lived in Christ and overflowing with his love.

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OAFC Objections and Answers Edition

11/7/2013

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In my years with OAFC, I've heard a number of objections and concerns that folks have raised against some of the things we do. Many of them come from the best of intentions to insure that people are led into a right understanding of God's Word and faith in Jesus Christ and must be answered with Scripture and clear thinking through of the issue. Some of them come about because of abuses or unintended uses of OAFC, and so are easily corrected by going back to the basics. Others, though, have nothing to do with theology but are entirely about practical matters that are free to be changed according to the best needs of a local group – but should be done only after considering why a previous practice existed and how change would impact the national and future witness of OAFC as an organization. Here I'd like to take the time to answer some of the objections I've heard so that we may be able to continue the conversation about how to keep OAFC as the best youth and evangelism program in our Synod for the next 40 years.


What's in this Issue:

  • Does the Bible Teach Lay People Should Evangelize?
  • Do You HAVE to Do the Survey at an OAFC Weekend?
  • Is the Witnessing Survey a "Bait and Switch"?
  • Is Going to People's Houses Safe in Our Day and Age?
  • Do I Really Need to Learn and Use the Different Methods?
  • Why Do Some People Object to the Question, "Where do you believe you will go when you die?"
  • Do Guys Have to Lead Bible Study?
  • Do We Really Need to Pray Twice at the Beginning?
  • Is Prayer Another Witnessing Method?
  • Do We Really Have to Sing ONLY OAFC Songs at Weekends?
  • What About OAFC Leading Worship?
 
Does the Bible Teach Lay People Should Evangelize? 



So often, evangelism groups will use Matthew 28:18-20 as their basis for the call to lay evangelism and Lutherans have consistently reacted against this text for that use. Good Bible study has rightly pointed out that Jesus was specifically addressing his apostles with this Commission, and it therefore applies to the apostolic office, to Pastors – not to the laity. Sometimes, for this very reason, some Lutherans have therefore condemned all lay missions. Truthfully, if you can't show from Scripture where it says that lay people have the call to actually verbalize the Gospel, to teach and preach, then we shouldn't be encouraging youth to do it. And if it can be shown that the texts we're using to encourage evangelism are really texts about the Office of the Ministry, the Pastors' call to preach the Word and administer the Sacraments, then we shouldn't use those texts to encourage lay evangelism.

However, Matthew 28:18-20 is not the only verse that compels the spread of the Gospel. Luther rooted the call to lay evangelism in 1 Peter 2:9-12 where he says, "This is part of being a priest, being God's messenger and having his command to proclaim his Word. You should preach the 'good work,' that is, the miraculous work that God has done as he brought you from darkness into light. This is the highest priestly office." And again Luther rightly says, "For no one can deny that every Christian possesses the word of God and is taught and anointed by God to be priest… But if it is true that they have God's word and are anointed by him, then it is their duty to confess, to teach, and to spread [his word]." This is furthered by examples of people like the woman at the well in John 4 and Philip and Stephen in Acts, and even by the physician Luke who was not an Apostle or a Pastor but who, like an investigative journalist, undertook to get the eyewitness accounts of the life of Christ so that he could share them with others through his Gospel and the book of Acts. And so Paul says in Ephesians 4:25, "Therefore, having put away falsehood, let each one of you speak the truth with his neighbor, for we are members one of another."

This is not in competition to the Office of the Ministry held by the pastor to publically teach and preach and administer the Sacraments. Rather, Luther put it this way. The pastor stands in the public office, acting publically on behalf of the Church as the public face of the Church in the stead and by the command of Christ. The laity hold the private office, acting in their private lives on behalf of Christ. Where a situation calls for a public act, the pastor does it. Where a situation calls for a private act, the people do it. Thus it's not a tyranny of the Office, for the pastor doesn't hold the ministry captive, but the pastor has been ordained to act and do publically on behalf of the people so that they can do privately in service to Christ. So everyone is not a minister, in its common sense, but everyone does have the Gospel and the right and responsibility to share it.

That's why OAFC is committed to training youth and adults to be ready to share that message, even as Peter said, "In your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you; yet do it with gentleness and respect" (1 Peter 3:15).

 

 

Do You HAVE to Do the Survey at an OAFC Weekend? 



One of the witnessing methods of OAFC is the survey for a reason. Therefore, as part of the standard program, we train youth in doing it. Yet, there are many weekends when we don't get to do the survey because of weather, lack of training, or other issues. That doesn't mean that you didn't have an OAFC weekend if you didn't have canvassing, then. The important thing is training the youth to be prepared to invite people to their churches, respond to objections to the faith, and be confirmed in their own faith that Jesus Christ is the only way to eternal life. That's why canvassing is part of OAFC. It serves a two-fold purpose: that it reaches out with the Gospel and also that it trains people to reach out with the Gospel. So we can train youth in the witnessing methods and the reasons they exist without ever HAVING to do the survey in the neighborhoods. We can do that in an extreme case – where local neighborhoods don't allow it or you have a group who's not trained enough to do it, yet - but our GOAL should always be to put into practice what we're learning about witnessing and the survey actually does that at the weekends. The same thing goes for puppet shows, dramas, personal witnesses – really, everything about OAFC: it's not just the training that's important, but putting it into practice because then we reach others with the saving Gospel of Jesus Christ, crucified and risen for us.

Is the Witnessing Survey a "Bait and Switch?"

Now, there are some objections people have had to the survey that we need to be able to answer. One, is the survey manipulation, a bait and switch? Some have said that we're lying to people because we say we're taking a survey and then we proselytize. This is not really true. We go out taking a survey for the congregations to help them see the need for witnessing in their community regarding church attendance and saving faith. WE MUST NEVER FORGET THAT WE ARE SERVING THE LOCAL CONGREGATION IN THIS WAY. Where we get this wrong, we really get everything wrong because we are tempted to start believing that the survey is about me going out into the world to show God – we have a drama about that, don't we?

Yet the beauty of the survey is that it puts Christians in direct, honest interaction with the world around them. When we ask people about their faith, any good Christian who encounters someone who doesn't know Christ needs to know how to answer their questions and share the truth of Christ. That's why we train youth and adults in the witnessing methods for Canvassing. When you're at the door and honestly taking a survey and someone tells you they believe they're going to heaven because of their own good works, you don't want someone jarring their own conscience later on because they missed the opportunity to share with that person the only biblical way to heaven through faith alone in Jesus Christ alone. So we do take a survey, and when we find someone who needs, we share the good news.

And, yes, that's very convenient – and that's the point. But here's the issue: if OAFC went out into a community where everyone we talked to knew that Jesus Christ is the only way to heaven, we should be shouting Alleluias at the top of our lungs and rejoicing that there wasn't any reason to teach our youth and adults any witnessing methods. And we would joyfully submit that survey to the local congregation and encourage them to keep on doing what they're doing in preaching the Gospel and administering the Sacraments. But that won't happen until Jesus comes back. So we know that when we go out into the neighborhoods that we will get the opportunity to share Christ and so, as Peter says in his epistle, we prepare our hearts and minds to share the reason for the hope that we have.

For those who don't know about heaven or have some variant views, "Where do you believe you will go when you die?"is truly one of the best questions to ask people to discover about their faith. Since church attendance is important but not what saves you, congregations should really want us to ask people this last question about their faith. Which is why we then want to ask the question of why to get to the root of their faith: both so that the local congregation knows about the salvation needs of their community and so that we can learn whether or not there stands before us someone who needs to know about Christ. At the same time, Peter tells us to be ready to share with gentleness and respect, so we don't force the people at the door to answer and we don't act in disrespectful or forceful ways. That's why we always then ask if they would mind us sharing. That's one of the major reasons it's not a manipulation or a lie. We make it plain that this isn't part of the survey, simply something that any good Christian would want to share with someone who doesn't know Christ.

 

Is Going to People's Houses Safe in Our Day and Age?

The answer to that question will of course depend on who you ask and where you are and how you go about doing it. Because of news media and the instant access world in which we live, we are confronted with the effects of sin every day all throughout the country. Because of the rejection of basic Christian values and morals in our culture, the world to which we are exposed grows increasingly more openly sinful and hurtful to those known and unknown and especially to the Christian message of Law and Gospel. And because of the increasing culture of privatization, fewer people will welcome someone into their home or have a conversation with a person on their doorstep. All this is to say that because there is sin in the world, communicating the Gospel of Jesus Christ will always encounter resistance, especially as our culture moves further away from essential Christian values like hospitality, respect, and true agape love. And, we realize, as we work with youth, there are some situations into which we should not place them.

That's why we send people into neighborhoods approved by the local pastor who should know his community and be able to identify places where youth should and should not go. That's also why, when we speak about host homes, we seek congregation members approved by the pastor – who, again, should know his community, especially his parishioners, well enough to identify places where youth should and should not go. There are dangerous and unsafe places in our world today and even among the safer places there are individuals who would take advantage of a situation to sin. That's why when OAFC sends our youth and adults to houses, either to canvass or to be hosted for the weekend, we take care to be cautious.

This is why we NEVER send an individual youth out on his or her own to do the survey. We always send groups of 2 or 3, and we always strive to have one male and one female per team – and if we have to have a team of only one gender, for safety sake we typically have that be a team of all guys. And we always send teams out with at least one experienced person so that he or she can better read the situation. We tell the teams, if you feel uncomfortable or unsafe in an area, don't go there. Use your discretion. The same is true of hosting, except we also make sure not to mix genders in hosting so that we don't send a young girl to a house with a teenage boy, for example, nor do we send a young girl to the house of a widower. We seek in everything to take the most care of our youth and adults.

A note should be said here about Christian hospitality. OAFC relies on the basic Christian virtue of hospitality as displayed in Abraham, Melchizadek, Solomon, Jesus, and James, to name a few. We are one body, the whole Christian Church on earth, through Baptism into Christ and so we care for each other. And the Christ who loved the lost lives within us to desire reconciliation and fellowship with unbelievers, too. However, because of the privatization of our culture and even of Christianity, fewer and fewer people are willing to open their homes even to Christian strangers much less sojourners, widows, and orphans. While it is the place of the pastor to remind his people about this basic Christian virtue, we in OAFC can recognize 1) Hospitality is the Christian thing to give and to receive, 2) Our culture and our churches have been affected by the privatization of society, often without even realizing it, 3) We in OAFC help to commend this Christian virtue to congregations by requesting to be hosted by their members, and 4) We should always remember to show our deep gratitude in Jesus for those who do open their homes to us to care for the body of Christ.

 

 

Do I Really Need to Learn and Use the Different Methods?

If all the world knew Jesus as their only savior from sin and their only reason for a blessed eternal life, then there'd be absolutely no need for anyone to learn any organized pattern for sharing their faith. However, that's not the world we live in. And what's more, there's a lot in the Bible and we need to learn an organized way to share the Gospel of Jesus Christ with others so that we can be prepared.

One of the most basic ways we do that is with the Creeds. These are some of the best witnessing methods for telling someone what you believe about God. And you probably already have these methods committed to memory. Yet the Creeds are methods for answering the question, "What do you believe about God?" There are other questions out there and to those questions we need to be ready with an answer. The question we encounter at the door is "Why will you be allowed into heaven?" John 3:16 gives us a simple answer to that question that is for every single person by faith in that promise. Though some people need more than a simple answer.

If someone believes that their own works earn them heaven, then reading the card will not accomplish because they will hear it as an addition to their good works, which is why we have the SSS method and that's why we need to use it instead of just the John 3:16 card. The SSS answers the needed question of "Can I get to heaven because of something I've done?" If someone tells us that they know Jesus but they don't know if he's enough for them or aren't sure if their faith is strong enough, then simply reading the John 3:16 card won't help them confirm their salvation in Christ and we'll have missed the opportunity put before us by God. That's why we have the Assurance of Heaven method, and that's why we need to use it. So it is necessary to finish these parts of the survey to be the best Christian witness we can. Then we always make sure that we invite and encourage them to our local LCMS church because that's what a believer does.

A quick note on memorizing the methods: Think through the needs of the person at the door who's truly struggling with the truth of God's Word. Whether they know it or not, if they don't know Jesus as their Savior they are struggling against God and need the answer. So if we think that we can just slough something off the cuff and be a good witness, we're kidding ourselves. We need to think through what we're going to say before we say it so that we say the best possible thing and we need to know what God's Word says about those different issues so that we're using, not our sinful words, but His Word, and using it as best as we can. Now, the OAFC witnessing methods are some of the best, most thought through applications of God's Word out there. And unless you're a trained theologian, it'd be better for you to learn how to say things like those methods before you try to say your own thing.

Why Do Some People Object to the Question, "Where Do You Believe You Will Go When You Die?"

Yes, some pastors are wary about the where you go when you die question. I know some worry that turning the focus of the survey on heaven takes away from the focus on Jesus by turning faith into a rewards system, heaven as reward rather than heaven as reality and life in Jesus Christ. You see this all the time when someone says that heaven isn't actually in the Bible. The Christian often struggles for verses that talk about heaven and frequently untrained Christians have difficulties. (First of all, heaven as a word is all throughout the Bible because the word itself means that stuff above the ground, however far up you go. It typically refers to the place where God is and so really means being in the presence of God.) But we can easily get sidetracked on the topic of heaven when we are intending to talk about Jesus.

The funny thing is that we've come to a point in our culture where many people actually can talk about heaven without ever talking about Jesus, and that's not right. So some pastors worry about that part of the survey because of the fear of proclaiming heaven apart from Christ. This is where our witnessing methods shine as Lutheran gems because they ingrain faith in Jesus Christ as the priority and the goal. And this question about where you go when you die is one of the best questions for having a real, not just surface, faith conversation because it really gets to the heart of the matter: eternal life. The promise of John 3:16, you'll note, is eternal life – not heaven! And the SSS method properly shows that sin and imperfection is the problem that separates us from eternal life in the presence of God (frequently called heaven), and even the Assurance of Heaven method roots the Gospel message in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus for the forgiveness of our sins so that we could have eternal life in the presence of God (the assurance of heaven through Jesus Christ). So we speak about heaven because that's the language people know, but we're trained to turn their eyes to the certainty of faith in Jesus Christ. That's how we overcome the objection of heaven as reward and focus apart from Jesus.

Another reason pastors might use to be wary of the question is that it is the major question behind the Kennedy method of evangelism, which is a major non-Lutheran evangelism program that emphasizes personal decisions and sinner's prayers and private conversions apart from the church or Baptism. Because that question is the keystone of that program, many pastors can think that we're using a non-Lutheran evangelism program.

Nothing is farther from the truth. It's just such a profound question that provides the opportunity for good Lutheran doctrine to be proclaimed, that we had to use it. Yet it's so profound a question that it can set someone up to receive false doctrine, as well, and so it has with the decision theology of the Kennedy method. Long way of saying, it may look the same on the outside but it is completely different. A good illustration then for talking about these concerns is the difference between Lutheran worship and Catholic worship; looks pretty similar on the outside but the details and reasons are completely different when you look at it.

A deeper reason some have given is the truth that Scripture is actually pretty vague regarding what happens to the soul between its separation from the body in death and the reunion of soul and body in the resurrection. You see, heaven, as the Bible teaches, is actually what we experience after the resurrection and new creation, after judgment day and the evil face the second death which the Bible calls hell. There, after the resurrection, we will be with God; there we will never again experience death or suffering, and there all will be happy. By asking where do you believe you will go when you die, if you want to be picky as some pastors are, we are clouding the issue and making it as if heaven were about only the spiritual bliss without the resurrection. This is a valid thing to be concerned about. But it's not a reality we can change at a stranger's door. And what's more, the question is really time sensitive because the resurrection does take place after you die, to be technical, it's just a matter of how long after you die. So the concern is valid, but the worry is nit-picky and much more something that pastors have to address in their own congregations to move people's understanding of terms like, after you die, to focus on the resurrection rather than a purely spiritual heaven. That's the pastors' job, not ours. So if he has a problem with it, in the most delicate way possible, he needs to teach his people to correctly interpret what happens after death rather than worrying about how we may be misconstrued.         



If you have just a totally antagonistic person against the question, you might try seeing if they're comfortable with asking it in a different way, such as, "where do you believe you will spend eternity?" Or "what do you believe will happen to your eternal soul when you die?"

As said earlier, though, all of this is predicated upon the fact that we are collecting information for the local congregation so that they know the spiritual battle lines outside their front door. Since the most important thing is knowing Christ and him crucified, a local congregation should want to know about someone's faith more than someone's denomination. So we must ask some type of question for the survey to determine their spiritual worldview, and that involves more than just what pew they sit in. If the congregation can come up with a fitting question to discover this reality, you may make an exception for that congregation and inform your youth and adults to use that exceptional question, while explaining that it is different than the standard and yet, at the same time, showing how it relates precisely to that standard. Then you'll have to show the transition opportunities for sharing Christ if the person responds with anything than other than Jesus, so that they can see how to use the methods - because the methods are tied to that question.               



Hopefully that shows why some pastors may object to the question, where do you believe you will go when you die, while also showing how we can faithfully respond in Gospel freedom with upholding and encouraging the basics of OAFC.

Do the Guys Have to Lead Bible Study? 



OAFC activities should always have Bible Studies. Though one of the main objections to the OAFC Bible Study format in our culture today is our insistence that the guys should lead the study. This is not because guys are naturally more capable at leading, nor is it because men are biologically more wired to comprehend what the text says – in fact, women, as an average, actually have a higher ability for reading comprehension than guys (which would explain the instructions things, right). It has nothing to do with ability. Rather, it has everything to do with the order that was instituted by God for his Church and our pursuit to live that out in our lives.

That order begins with Christ and his Church. Paul calls Christ the husband of his bride, the Church in Ephesians 5. And then he says that this eternally-intended relationship is the reality behind the image of a man and woman in marriage. That is to say, marriage is intended to look like Christ and his Church – not the other way around. And so when God tells us about marriage, he's also telling us about the relationship between Christ and the Church. And God says that Adam is the head of his family and therefore responsible for his family. That's why Paul also addresses congregations in 1 Timothy 2:7-15 and 1 Corinthians 14:33-40 telling them that women should not have spiritual authority over men in the Church of God in Christ. (It's not because of ability or culture or chauvinism; Paul says it's because Adam was created first and was, if you look at the text of Genesis 2, the first preacher of the Law and the Gospel in the first congregation of two.) For this reason, biblical churches don't ordain women, but, in faithfulness to God's Word, insist that men be pastors because this is what God's Word prescribes – again, not because of ability, training, learning, or culture, but because of the order of creation, and that doesn't change and won't ever change.

Because that's the order of the Church and the Family, OAFC wants to imitate and demonstrate that order in our Small Group Bible Studies as best we can so that youth who are surrounded with the exact opposite message from our culture can see us upholding God's Word in our lives and so embolden them to live faithfully in God's Word in their lives. So we train up our young men in the Scriptures and in how to study so that they can be prepared to lead others in that study.

But what does that mean for the gals at our weekends? Do they have to not ask any questions and remain silent the whole time? No. Good study of Paul's instructions tells us that Paul is specifically talking about leading and preaching, not of any sound at all. And, furthermore, the Small Group Bible Study is not the same thing as Church. Note this well, because it means that where there's no guys in the group (rare, but it happens sometimes when the Local Director is away), it's still okay for the girls to have a Bible Study led by another girl – because there isn't a guy around. But when there is a guy present to lead, the role of women in the Bible Study is the same as in marriage and in the Church: to complement (not, say nice things, but complete and fit together) the Bible Study by filling in any gaps or weak points the leader might have. She can ask questions or provide insights, that's fine, simply always in respect to the leader.

Because the world around us refuses to hear God's plan for men and women, and because they continue to proclaim a completely opposite message of God to our youth, especially, in bold and loud ways, it's even more important that we as OAFC attempt to shine the light of God's truth for our youth and adults; to humble ourselves under God's Word so that he may lift us up by the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

Do We Really Need to Pray Twice at the Beginning? 



I've noticed a number of guys leading the OAFC Small Group Bible Study without following the basic format. So it's probably good here to talk about the reason we have that format the way it is. First of all, two very different prayers for two very different purposes begin our Bible Study.

The first prayer is the prayer prayed by the leader to ask God to direct us in our time of study by showing us Christ. Remember, we talk about Bible Study as a witnessing method for pointing people to Christ. This is the true focus of every single Bible Study, both in OAFC and in the Church at large because Christ is the center and meaning of all Scripture (John 5:39). So we pray that God will guide us to do that very thing. The second is the group prayer of thanksgiving to orient our hearts in gratitude and to help youth and adults feel more comfortable praying in public. These are different prayers for different purposes and so, just like in Church where we pray many prayers because they're for many purposes, we should really pray both.

And the reason the format instructs you to do the somewhat awkward thing of praying the opening prayer first, pausing, and then leading the group thanksgiving prayer is so that others will be more comfortable praying the prayers after you. If you tell new people that all they have to do is pray a "thank you" prayer and you, the leader, go and do something else, what does that say to the person nervous about praying out loud? So instead, pray for God's Holy Spirit and guidance through his Word to show you Jesus Christ and him crucified for you in your Bible Study. Say Amen. And then lead the group in the one sentence thank you prayers with your One Sentence thank you prayer as the first example to model to them all that's asked of them. That means that the leader's one sentence prayer should probably be pretty short and unintimidating regardless of how much he has to be thankful for in order to calm the minds of those who may be nervous about praying – because people are pretty nervous about being asked to pray aloud, even in church, and we need to be sensitive to that.

Hopefully in your local groups you can ask your Pastoral Advisor to help train your guys in ways to lead the Bible Study, itself. That's one of the reasons local groups have Pastoral Advisors. There are multiple ways to do this. Probably the best way for youth to learn how to get into the Bible is by seeing other adult males, like their Director or their Pastor, doing that very thing in their Bible Study. For this reason, we shouldn't be afraid to have our leaders lead and our youth learn, even during Bible Studies – and not just the Renewal of Baptism study. And then, we learn from the discipleship model, after having seen many times how the leader leads, then the leader mentors a couple of the youth by being present still while giving them the opportunity to try leading. The leader fills in the gaps and helps prompt the youth in better ways to use their own talents for leadership. Only after doing this a number of times, until the youth feels confident to be on their own and the leader feels confident he can do it on his own, then do we let the youth alone lead the study. That's simply solid discipleship and it's the best way to train our youth; not only for Bible Study, but in everything. So, if you have youth who are struggling to really get into the Small Group Bible Study, go back to the basics and give them the training from experienced adult leaders that they need.

Then we ask a follow-up comprehension or application question to help bring home the point that the message of Jesus Christ from the text is meant for everyone. The leader wants people to be able to speak about what they've learned about Jesus because we want everyone to be able to share what the Bible says about Christ as our witness to the world. So this is a very important part of the Bible Study. Example questions may be, "How would you use this text to tell someone about Jesus?" or "How has what we've studied strengthened your faith?" These questions will do more than summarize the text, but will also end up summarizing it, as well. Remember, the Small Group Bible Study is a witnessing method for pointing our youth and visitors to Christ and equipping them to share the love of Christ with others. If we don't hammer that home, we've missed the point of the Bible Study, and we've missed the point of the Bible. Give it a try.

Is Prayer Another Witnessing Method? 



Prayer is a great gift of God. Luther says we pray 1) Because God commanded that we do so, 2) Because he has promised to hear us, 3) Because he has given us the very words to pray so that we know our prayers are pleasing to him. Christians pray. We pray the Lord's Prayer because it's the God-pleasing prayer he taught us. We pray the Psalms as the prayerbook of the Bible. And we pray Scripture back to God as it fits our needs, praise, supplications, and thanksgivings. Sometimes God uses our prayers and our acts as praying Christians to show the world the love of Christ. But is prayer an OAFC witnessing method? No.

If we were to talk about prayer as a witnessing method we would be turning prayer into something that it is not. Prayer is conversation between God and his people. We call God "Father" because we've been baptized into his family through Christ, his Son. That's not something an unbeliever can rightly do, nor would they consciously think of referring to God as a dear and loving Father were it not the predominate language of the Christian Church. Prayer is personal – that's why, when the Pastor prays on your behalf, you should say "Amen" if you agree with his prayer, because Amen means "yes, so shall it be so for me, too." But if we thought of prayer as a witnessing method, it would no longer be about the conversation between you and God, but you would be putting on a show of prayer for the sake of your neighbor. Jesus has some pretty harsh things to say about people who do that very thing in Matthew 6, and, in fact, people doing that very thing are the reason he taught us to pray privately and the reason he taught us the Lord's Prayer. So prayer is not a witnessing method.

The Christian should do all things in prayer, though. Paul says this in 1 Thessalonians 5:17 to pray without ceasing. As we live lives that look like Christ, people will notice and it will make a difference in our world. That's vocation, that's ethics. That's bearing the name of Christ as baptized Christians. That's why our prayers are always "in Christ." But that does not make them witnessing methods. That makes prayer a great gift of God that blesses us, and in the process blesses others.

Do We Really Have to Sing ONLY OAFC Songs at Weekends? 



Depends on why you're asking. In OAFC we teach singing as one of our witnessing methods by which we proclaim Jesus Christ and him crucified for us to the world. Our songs strengthen us by feeding us with the Word of God rightly interpreted through song at the same time as it declares that very Word of God to those around us. That we are being fed the Word at the same time as we sing it to the praise and glory of God is why St. Augustine said, "He who sings prays twice," and why Luther said, "Music is the handmaiden of theology."

If you don't know you need to know that not all music is created equal – not even all "Christian" music. Just as there are many denominations because there are many interpretations of Scripture, so many of the songs produced and played on the radio come from those different churches with different interpretations of Scripture. OAFC, as a Lutheran group, has committed itself to teach and preach and sing only pure Lutheran doctrine. That's why our songbook has to be doctrinally approved by our pastors on the Board. We know that the songs in the songbook are doctrinally approved and so we can trust that when we sing those songs we are rightly teaching our kids and sharing with the world the right interpretation of Scripture which produces the firmest faith in Jesus Christ. This is why the hymnals of the LCMS are also great places to find songs for your group to sing, because they are approved songs that correctly teach Christ.

There's far too much "Christian" music out there that says nothing about Jesus, nothing about the Word and Sacraments or the Church, but instead focuses on me and my decision (false theology) or some generic praise choruses that anyone – even non Christians – could sing. That music is not witnessing music. So be careful about what you decide to sing at a weekend. Corrupting music corrupts youth. It doesn't strengthen your faith in the Word of God that declares Christ and him crucified for you and it doesn't have the power to change hearts and minds for Christ as witness if it never gives witness to him. So why use it at OAFC where we tell people we use our music as a witness?

Non-Christian music should be easy then to say, Not at the weekend, for the exact same reasons as above. It doesn't mean other music is "the devil's music" or inappropriate for Christians to listen to. It's not about that. It's simply about the witness we bear during the weekend. As Paul said, "I decided to know nothing among you except Christ and him crucified" (1 Corinthians 2:2).

What About OAFC Leading Worship? 



It's common for OAFC to participate in the worship service. Some may find it surprising, though, when a pastor refuses to let OAFC do this. It may also surprise some that a pastor would ever let OAFC lead the whole service, at all. So what's going on and how do we speak about the role of OAFC in worship?

First, we have to recognize the Lutheran view of worship, and how this differs from that of pop American Evangelicalism's view of worship. Non-liturgical churches typically describe worship as the time when like-minded Christians gather together to offer their "praise and worship" to God. Mostly, this is done through singing and financial offering. Lutherans view worship rather as the time when God has promised to give us His gifts through the means of grace according to his commands and promises. Thus worship for Lutherans is more about receiving God's gifts (which cause us to praise) than it is about the praise itself. This means that Lutheran pastors, as stewards of the mysteries of God (1 Cor. 4:1), have the responsibility in worship to make sure that God's Word is faithfully proclaimed and God's Sacraments are rightly administered according to Christ's institution for the sake of the delivery of God's grace according to His promised means.

For some pastors, that means that they will be very protective of their pulpit and altar – the worship service – as the place to which God has appointed them and which he has entrusted to them. THAT IS ABSOLUTELY UNDERSTANDABLE. In such places, OAFC should simply ask to have the time before service or after service to share a little about our ministry (what is OAFC, prayer and financial support), present the results, and request the congregation to pray for those to whom we spoke. And we may ask if we could have a presentation of our witnessing methods, etc… during their Bible Studies.

We can proudly share with pastors and congregations that our songs have been scrutinized and selected by Lutheran pastors and teachers and determined to faithfully proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ in Lutheran ways. The service outlines we recommend are based on the standard Lutheran Liturgy and make every effort to proclaim God's Word in Christ Jesus as faithfully as the common liturgy in delivering God's gifts. Thus we are able to lead worship just as an organist or choir would.

Some congregations don't do children's messages. Don't be surprised by this. (It doesn't make a congregation "irrelevant" or "unloving" of children). The children's message is a newer innovation for the Church and pastors and congregations have the right not to do it. In congregations where they do a children's message, though, it's natural to seek to do this with a puppet show THAT RELATES EITHER TO THE TEXTS OR TO SOME ELEMENT OF THE WORSHIP SERVICE (because the congregation is there for worship and not for OAFC).

This same concept guides the dramas we do. A pastor may choose – typically for the sake of time – not to let us do a drama during worship. Most services last an hour or so and (to our great surprise) some people are actually offended if service lasts "too" long. Pastors sensitive to this try to accommodate. We should not expect a pastor to shorten his sermon or replace his sermon with our dramas because he has been called to that congregation by God to proclaim the Gospel through his teaching and preaching and administering the Sacraments and we shouldn't do anything to take away from that. Where we are given the time to do a drama during worship, we're called to remember (and act on that reminder) that the drama is about proclaiming the message of Christ crucified and risen for our justification, and not about us.

Leaders should also remember that our youth are traveling to all of these different congregations other than their home church and they have the great opportunity to see the similarities and differences throughout our Synod in worship. This is a great and worthwhile opportunity for them.

In short, OAFC's participation in worship should not be taken for granted. Worship is a time to receive the gifts of God according to His commands and promises and in some places we're given the opportunity to help lead in this and at other places we're given the gift of simply being able to receive without worrying about anything else.

+   +   +       +   +   +      +   +   +

These are some of the biggest objections and issues I've heard in OAFC. Hopefully these answers and encouragements can help your local groups to continue to grow and flourish as the great gifts to the Lutheran Church that you are. A closing thought: it's not wrong to question something, nor is it wrong for someone else to question something you're doing. It becomes dangerous, however, when we don't know how to respond. That's why I put this together. If other objections come up, please let us know. We are committed to the Word of God and living rightly by it, so we as OAFC always want to make sure we're testing ourselves against that Word. After 40 years of Lutheran ministry, I believe our commitment and our ministry has remained true. Please help us to remain so with your prayers and your advice.

In Christ,

Pastor Matthew Tassey

Executive Director, OAFC.

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Summer Jobs

11/7/2013

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In the Garden of Eden, God set Adam and Eve to work – they were to tend the Garden, name and care for the animals. In general, they were to act as God's representative to His creation as the loving and tending hand. Work is not bad, and too much leisure is not what God intended for His people. So as we set into Summer, it's very common, especially for youth, to get jobs and work to earn money to provide for things that we need, things that we want, and to save up for the future. We were made for work, and working is good.

In the midst of all this working, though, let me offer a prayer of encouragement. When God made us to work, he made us to work on His behalf for the world, not just for ourselves. Even our working is about bearing witness to Christ and what He has done for us. Consider that Jesus looked out onto a world of people and said, "Behold, the harvest is plentiful but the workers are few. Pray to the LORD of the harvest to send out laborers into His vineyard." Consider that working isn't just about making money for you but it's also about caring for the needs of this world: both physical and spiritual. So may God give you opportunities this Summer, whether you're working or not, to share in His greatest work, the proclamation of the life-saving Gospel of Jesus Christ to those around you.

If I may then make a shameless plug – a great opportunity to do this sharing of the Gospel over the Summer is at OAFC's National Summer Training to be held in Eagan, MN at Trinity Lone Oak, July 11-17th. Our theme this year is from 1 Corinthians 12, The Body of Christ. Pray about joining us. Do so quickly, though, as registration is coming to a close and we need to know who's coming in order to best serve the local congregations.

Please pray for us that youth may continue to be fired up by the experience of sharing the life-changing and life-saving Gospel of Jesus Christ. Pray for us that leaders may continue to be strengthened and new leaders raised up to plan and lead weekends. And please continue to pray for us that congregations would open their doors and hearts to allow OAFC groups to come and train and recruit their members to be involved in this great organization.

Below you'll find a Bible Study about working from the New Testament. This is a great study for youth as they prepare for Summer jobs, but especially as they prepare for leaving Junior and Senior High to realize that God is calling them to a life of work rather than a life of leisure. It's a reminder that God made us to work and our working pleases him – something we don't hear too often. Enjoy. In Christ,

Pastor Matthew Tassey

Bible Study: Working for the Mission

2 Thessalonians 3:6-18

Example Leader Prayer:

Almighty God, our Father, be with us as we get into Your holy Word and send us Your Holy Spirit that He may open our eyes to see Jesus Christ for us in this Study; in Jesus' name. Amen.

Example Leader Questions:

  1. (v 6) What does "idleness" look like? Why is it such a temptation to be idle? Why is it good to stay away from someone who's idle?
  2. (v 7) How did Paul avoid being idle – both in Thessalonica and in his missionary journeys? How might you follow his example to avoid idleness?
  3. (v 8) What commandment would you be breaking if you ate bread – or any food – without paying for it? Who pays for or has been paying for you food?
  4. (v 9) Do pastors have the right to be paid – which provides for their food and shelter – for preaching the Gospel and administering the Sacraments according to Paul? Why did Paul and his companion choose to work in Thessalonica, instead?
  5. (v 10) What famous early American founder used Paul's command in verse 10: "If anyone is not willing to work, let him not eat"?
  6. (v 11-12) How would you encourage someone who wants to walk in idleness as a "busybody" to work according to God's command? Why does it matter? If you have nothing to do or have no need for the money, what work can you do for Christ's kingdom?
  7. (v 13) Why might you grow weary of doing good? What temptations and afflictions are present in this fallen world that would make it difficult for Christians to do good according to God's standards?
  8. (v 14-15) What is the purpose Paul gives for having nothing to do with the "busybody"?  What is the desired outcome of this treatment? Is it for punishment or for growth?
  9. (v 16) When is peace important in your life? Why would it be helpful in those times to remember that our God is the "Lord of Peace"? Who would notice if you had "peace at all times in every way"? How would that be a witness to Christ in your life?
  10. (v 16) Do you have that peace at all times in every way? Why or why not? What are you holding on to, or what is holding on to you, that's preventing you from knowing the peace of the LORD? Let it go; give it to Jesus and trust that He will take care of it. Trust in the LORD of peace?
  11. (v 17) When was the last time you wrote a hand-written letter? Why is it important that Paul wrote it himself?
  12. (v 18) What is "grace"? How would you describe God's grace to someone else? What is the difference between God having grace and you having the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ with you?
Example Wrap-Up Question: What do you want to do when you get older? (If you're undecided, just pick what sounds the neatest, coolest, or must fun to you). How could you use that labor to bear witness of Christ to yourself, your family, friends, and your world?

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Alleluia! Jesus is Risen!

11/7/2013

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"If Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain" (1 Corinthians 15:14). In this season of the Resurrection we remember that we don't proclaim a myth or simply a belief, but we proclaim the historical fact that God raised Christ from the grave on the third day after his crucifixion. Our faith is based on the truth, not just some hope or dream or fiction. 

Apologetics is the art of defending against the arguments of the world against Christianity. One of the loudest arguments against Christianity is that Jesus didn't really rise from the dead. Islam will even go so far as to say that Jesus didn't die on the cross – therefore no resurrection. But we know that Jesus did rise from the dead as literal, historical reality. And as those who know, we have the responsibility to share and to correct those who deny the resurrection. And the proofs are astounding.

To those who, like the Jews in Matthew 28:11-15, argue that the disciples moved the body, we can rightly recall this deception recorded in Matthew's Gospel and further tell them the near impossibility of overcoming the Roman guards and rolling the stone while it bore the government seal – which to break was punishable by death. We have the account of these 500 men to whom Jesus appeared after his resurrection, many of whom, Paul says, were still alive to bear eye-witness testimony of the resurrected Jesus (1 Corinthians 15:6). If 500 people testified in court as eye-witnesses of an event, there'd be no doubt about your case!  To those who denied that he died at all, we have the account from John's Gospel, John 19:34-35, that the Roman soldier who pierced him through heart or lung has borne witness as courtroom testimony that Jesus was dead. And John, himself, who was there with Mary his mother and the women, bears witness of his death. So there is first-hand, primary evidence which is conclusive that Jesus died and rose from the dead. We add to this the determination of the eye-witnesses to suffer bloody and horrific torture and death rather than deny Jesus' resurrection and you have indisputable primary and secondary evidence that our Lord certainly rose from the dead.

So, since we have a reason to celebrate, let's celebrate with the great Alleluias the resurrection of our Lord throughout this season of Easter. As you go through this season of Easter, Directors, Pastoral Advisors, youth and adults, consider spending some extra time in your Bible Studies looking at what God says about the resurrection. I've included a Bible Study that you may choose to do in your local groups on Friday night or for the youth who've already been through the Renewal of Baptism Bible Study – maybe even Sunday morning if the congregation allows. God's blessings to you as you celebrate our Lord's resurrection.

In Christ,

Pastor Matthew Tassey

Don't Try This At Home

You can use this resurrection proof as a witnessing method with your friends. If someone says they don't believe in heaven or that they're going to a grave when they die, we tend to think that we should encourage them to believe that they will be raised. But Paul in 1 Corinthians 15 points us in a different direction. Rather than pointing them to the fact of their resurrection, Paul points them to Jesus' resurrection as the source of their resurrection. Using this with your friends could look like this:

If 500 people all testified in court to the same thing, would you believe it beyond a reasonable doubt? (Answer… Yes) 500 people testified to seeing Jesus of Nazareth risen from the dead with the nail marks in his hands and the hole of the spear in his side. That's proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Jesus was raised from the dead, and this same resurrected Jesus says he will raise us from the dead, too, and give eternal life to all who believe in him as their Savior from sin. What do you think about what Jesus has done for you?

Try it with your friends, relatives, acquaintances, and even neighbors and see how powerful the resurrection of Jesus really is.



Bible Study: God's Law

1 Corinthians 15:1-12

Example Leader Prayer:

Almighty God, our Father, be with us as we get into Your holy Word and send us Your Holy Spirit that He may open our eyes to see Jesus Christ for us in this Study; in Jesus' name. Amen.

Example Leader Questions:

  1. (v 1) What is the "Gospel"? What is it to "stand" in the Gospel?
  2. (v 2) From what does the Gospel save you? What does that mean about those who aren't saved?
  3. (v 3) According to what Scriptures did Christ die for our sins? Why does it matter that Jesus fulfilled the Old Testament prophecies?
  4. (v 4) Where have you heard the phrase before "He was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures"? (Nicene Creed) If the Creeds are just quotations of Scripture, are they man's words or Scripture summaries?
  5. (v 5) Who is Cephas? (Peter) After his resurrection, for how many days did Jesus appear on earth before his ascension?
  6. (v 6) If five hundred eye-witnesses testified that they say Jesus alive after the resurrection, how reliable would that testimony be in court? Then why would some people not believe that Jesus rose from the dead?
  7. (v 7) Who was James? (look back at Galatians 1:19, James 1:1 – this is not James the brother of John who was killed by Herod in Acts 12:1-2)
  8. (v 8) How did Jesus appear to Paul after the resurrection? (Look back at Acts 9:1-5)
  9. (v 9) Why does Paul call himself unworthy? Why would it be hard for someone to believe the word of one who had persecuted the Church?
  10. (v 10) Who gives Paul and us the power to bear witness to Christ?
  11. (v 11) Paul says the order is the Apostles preached and then we believed. What verse from our witnessing methods says this same thing that belief comes from hearing the preaching of the apostles? (Rom 10:17) What does that mean about how we witness?
  12. (v 12) How is Jesus' resurrection the proof of your resurrection? How does Christ unite us to his resurrection? (Look back at Romans 6:4-5)
Example Wrap-Up Question: Do you have any friends who don't believe in the resurrection of Jesus as an historical fact? How might you use 1 Corinthians 15 to help them believe in the literal, historical resurrection of Christ?

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Repent and Believe the Gospel

11/3/2013

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This is the time of year when the Church prepares her heart and mind for the celebration of Easter by committing ourselves to live for Christ; as Peter says in Acts 3:19-20, "Repent therefore, and turn back, that your sins may be blotted out, that times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord, and the he may send the Christ appointed for you, Jesus." In other words, because Easter is such powerful Gospel, we lead up to Easter with the strong Law of repentance and the new life in Christ through Baptism.

In OAFC, this preaching of Law and Gospel is the heart and center of our outreach. Just look at the Assurance of Heaven method that we use at the door while canvassing. We divide the preaching of Jesus into the message of Repent and Believe the Gospel; that is, repent of the sinful things you've done because our sin merits us only separation from God and death. Yet even in this hopeless situation, God rescues us through the Gospel of the Good News that Jesus Christ died to save us from our sins and give us eternal life with him in heaven. That's simply good Lutheran doctrine of Law and Gospel. That's  why we proclaim that message in that way and that's why we teach everyone who will listen this great method for sharing the message of Christ.

Many people today, though, don't like to hear the Law. They don't believe they are sinners or that God really judges sins. But if God doesn't judge sin and if God doesn't count you as a sinner, then why did Jesus have to die and rise again? That's why the Law comes before the Gospel – so that we can see our need for a savior and so turn to Christ as our only Savior because we can't save ourselves. That's why we have to preach the Law to secure sinners so that we can then preach the Gospel in its fullest sweetness.

As you go through this season of Lent, Directors, Pastoral Advisors, youth and adults, consider spending some extra time in your Bible Studies looking at what God says about the Law and our condemnation under it apart from Christ. I've included a Bible Study that you may choose to do in your local groups on Friday night or for the youth who've already been through the Renewal of Baptism Bible Study – maybe even Sunday morning if the congregation allows. God's blessings to you as you prepare for our Lord's resurrection.

In Christ,

Pastor Matthew Tassey

Bible Study: God's Law

Romans 3:1-31 (or just 3:10-22 for a shorter small group)

Example Leader Prayer:

Almighty God, our Father, be with us as we get into Your holy Word and send us Your Holy Spirit that He may open our eyes to see Jesus Christ for us in this Study; in Jesus' name. Amen.

Example Leader Questions:

  1. (v 10) What does "Righteous" mean? Why is it bad that no one is righteous?
  2. (v 11) If no one understands God's ways or seeks God, then how do people come to know about God?
  3. (v 12) If not even one is good apart from God, then what does that mean for non-Christians? Does God think that the nicest person in the world who doesn't believe in him is actually "good"?
  4. (v 13-14) What part of the body is Paul focusing on in verses 13-14? What's so important about this part of the body and what do we do with it? Which commandment is this about? (2nd)
  5. (v 15-17) Do all paths lead to the same place? Why is it important to be on the right path?
  6. (v 18) What does it mean to fear God? What happens when we make God fearless and take away his power to judge the sin of the world?
  7. (v 19) Who is under God's Law? Can you be held accountable to God's Law if no one has ever come to preach it to you? (Look back at Romans 2:14-16 for the answer).
  8. (v 20) What are works of the Law? How do we distinguish works of the Law and works of Faith?
  9.  (v 21) What does Paul mean by "the Law and the Prophets"? (Old Testament)
  10. (v 22) Whose righteousness has come? So then, whose righteousness do we have? How do we get that righteousness?
  11. (v 22) What is "Faith"?
Example Wrap-Up Question: According to Paul, then, why is it so important that we share the faith-creating Gospel of Jesus Christ to everyone? How can you use what we studied to help share God's Law and Gospel with your friends, relatives, associates, and neighbors?

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