Dec 14

This Sunday, in our December series Christmas Behind the Seen I talked about choosing Joy, even in our disappointment and in light of God’s promise of restoration. As part of the message, I talked about Alan and Heidi Matthew who are going through the fight of their lives as Alan was diagnosed with Stage 4 cancer of the esophagus and lungs. In the midst of this incredibly difficult trial, Alan and Heidi are choosing joy. Here’s the unabridged version of Alan’s note he sent last week as we’ve been talking about joy, faith, and trials.

Oh Jonathan, I so much appreciate you my brother and pastor. You have truly been a new and positive influence on me as you took over for Jan. My life experience holds lots of choosing joy in trials but I must tell you it is so different this time. You see, this time I am truly focused on the Lord and what He has planned for me. With the faith in what is to come – promised by Him – I am free to choose His Joy. I cannot control my own life and have not been able to. Once I really grabbed onto that concept and it became real to me, I can surrender my cares to Him. This time it is not as conceptual, however, it has consumed me to follow what He wants me to do: look outside my own trials and reach out to others. That means sowing the seeds of Truth and bearing spiritual fruit. This lesson squares with James 1 because it grounds me. I am not tossed by the waves but can focus on God’s truth and share it with others. The test of trials makes me stronger when I have this confidence.

It has been very exciting to have non-Christian people ask me about positive attitude in the midst of trials. What they are asking me is, “What is it that allows you to be positive?” My response about having faith in the unseen future puzzles them. What they are really looking for is how they can share that confidence in facing their trials, their heartaches, and their failures. Doubt is what holds us back and throws us back into the waves (just like Peter when he took his eyes off Jesus when walking on water). I was pleased to have 9 guests to attend two RainCity Lounge performances because people were open to my invitation… because they saw something different in me when I responded to this great trial in my life.

So what is the result? Perseverance in Faith. And how does that happen in my trial? I have to ask for it. I have to ask Jesus with faith to supply it to me without doubt. This is what differs in my life today. I can ask without doubt because I believe it.

Finally, God is good. He wants the best for us, not the empty trials that enter our lives. He wants us to be stronger and more productive (John 15 – my Father prunes the branches to make them stronger and more fruitful) How am I pruned? How is it that trials make me stronger and more confident in my faith? How is it that my Lord went through all trials and more than I will ever see, yet without sin?

I can therefore come boldly before Jesus knowing He went through trials much worse than mine and can help me overcome mine with mercy and grace in my time of need.” (Hebrews 4:15-16)

So how is this practical when facing a trial? True faith brings joy. Joy overflows when you reach out beyond yourself. People see that in you and respond. They want what they see in you. It isn’t the trial that brings the joy. It is the response to the trial that people see. My prayer is to respond to trials by asking Jesus for the extra measure of faith I need – without doubt or reservation. Believe me when I say that it is not easy to do and requires focus on Him to deliver it to me because I don’t have that kind of strength. He develops perseverance in me to make me mature and complete, and He uses trials to do that. Bless you my brother!

That’s how you choose joy, even in your disappointment because God has promised ultimate restoration in and through the Christmas gift of Jesus Christ.

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Dec 14

Discovery is a safe zone for anyone who simply wants to learn more. It’s for committed Christians, curious skeptics, and anyone in between. The next 6-week session begins Sunday, January 9th, at 10:45 am.

Bruce Bickel, a member of our church and an author of a number of books about the Christian faith, will lead the class with the help of Tom Regan, our Young Adult pastor. They won’t be defensive, judgmental, or confrontational. They want everyone who comes to Discovery to feel free to bring their questions and doubts about Christianity, as well as their friends who have them, too. The goal is to help bring clarity to what Christianity teaches and help provide answers to pressing, relevant questions.

Here are the types of questions that you, or friends of yours, might be asking that Discovery will be addressing:

  • What makes Christianity unique among other faiths?  Do the differences really matter?
  • Is it possible to be a Christian without all of the religious baggage?
  • Why do so many Christians come across as offensive in matters of faith?
  • Is the Bible reliable? What if I think it’s trumped by science?
  • If “God is love,” then why is there so much suffering in the world?
  • What if I can accept some parts of Christianity, but disagree with (or have serious doubts about) other parts?
  • Who did Jesus claim to be? Was he really who he said he was?

The subjects covered each week will vary, but it’s not a problem if you can’t attend every class session.  Each week’s discussion is not dependent on what was covered previously. The class will meet for six Sundays in a row at 10:45 am in Room 212/213, starting Sunday, January 9th. Coffee and refreshments will be provided.

So, come and check out Discovery. We trust you will find it enjoyable, informative, and—knowing Bruce—quite humorous. And if you know others who would benefit from this please invite them, too.

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Dec 03

This week, as we head into the Christmas season, here’s a YouTube video that’s gone viral: “Christmas Food Court Flash Mob, Hallelujah”

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This is all about the Uncommon God becoming Common. This is all about the omnipotent God becoming the seemingly impotent Man as Jesus the Christ Child is born in a stable in the backwater town of Bethlehem. This is all about the Sublime God reaching into the slime of a broken world.

I think there’s something beyond the beautiful opera music that penetrated the Welland Seaway Mall on November 13, 2010. I think, if even just for a moment, people saw a glimmer and tasted the reality that the Uncommon God became Common… for His glory and for their good.

This December as you walk the halls of the mall, don’t forget what this season is all about.

Merry CHRISTmas!

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Nov 20

A Northshore Partnership with Step by Step

Bringing Hope & Health to Mothers, Babies and Families

On the weekend following our Christmas outreach to our community, Christmas at RainCity Lounge, we have another great opportunity to share the love of Christ, this time with families less fortunate than many.

On December 18th, from 4-7 PM, Northshore will host the annual Step by Step Christmas Party for underprivileged families in our community. The Christmas party is run through volunteer support and donations from Northshore and other area churches and we could really use your help to make this year a success.

Step by Step is an organization that works with vulnerable families, serving pregnant women and new mothers in Pierce, King and Snohomish Counties. Case workers arrange for nurses, dietitians, and counselors to come alongside clients throughout pregnancy and during the first year of a child’s life. With assistance from federal funding they provide medical care and connections to health and community resources and also offer life skills classes such as budgeting and parenting so that these families can become self sustaining.

For the past six years Northshore Baptist Church has had the privilege of hosting the annual North Sound Christmas party—Making Memories Together. At this event we serve a complete turkey dinner with all the trimmings. Clients also have an opportunity to Christmas shop for their children in our free toy store. The main floor of the church is filled with family-fun activities such as face painting, cupcake walk, cookie decorating, family portraits, and a telling of the Christmas story with a live nativity (Real animals in the Courtyard!). All of this requires a great number of compassionate, servant-hearted volunteers.

Many of the Step by Step case workers have shared that when they walk into a client’s home the only photo on the wall is the family portrait taken by the volunteers at the Christmas party. Clients cherish these photos and the gift of a professional picture of their family to hang on their wall. Throughout the evening your heart will melt as you watch families laugh, play, and make precious memories together, knowing that this is a special addition to their normally challenging lives. Volunteers repeatedly say they are honored and blessed to get to know and serve these families and their own lives are impacted through volunteering at this event.

If you’re looking to make an impact on a family in need this Christmas season, won’t you please join us for this Christmas party? You can view and sign up for the volunteer spots online at our website, nsb.org/register-online. You can also register to provide a donation of a grocery gift card, a new toy for the free Toy Shoppe or even a turkey for the dinner.

Here’s a link to this week’s featured eNews article that includes all the ways you can volunteer before and during the event.

This is a great way to live out Jesus’ call and live on mission as people who are servant-hearted & kingdom-minded.

Thanks for serving our local community with the love of Jesus!

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Nov 09

“Teacher, which is the great commandment in the Law?” And He said to him, “ ‘YOU SHALL LOVE THE LORD YOUR GOD WITH ALL YOUR HEART, AND WITH ALL YOUR SOUL, AND WITH ALL YOUR MIND.’  “This is the great and foremost commandment. “The second is like it, ‘YOU SHALL LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR AS YOURSELF.’ “On these two commandments depend the whole Law and the Prophets.” (Matthew 22:36-40).

As I was reading through John Piper’s What Jesus Demands from the World, the overwhelming and staggering nature of Jesus’ second commandment to “love our neighbor as yourself” sinks in. Piper explains it this way:

The second commandment seems to me to be an overwhelming commandment. It seems to demand that I tear the skin off my body and wrap it around another person so that I feel that I am that other person; and all the longings that I have for my own safety and health and success and happiness I now feel for that other person as though he were me. It is an absolutely staggering commandment. If this is what it means, then something unbelievably powerful and earth shaking and reconstructing and overturning and upending will have to happen in our souls. Something supernatural. Something well beyond what self-preserving, self-enhancing, self-exalting, self-esteeming, self-advancing, fallen human beings like me can do on their own.

I’ve got a long way to go in loving my neighbor. But I’m moving in the right direction because I know I can’t “naturally” love this kind of way. It takes God’s Spirit to transform my heart to live, look, and love like Jesus does. It takes the God’s Spirit to help me see my neighbors the way He sees my neighbors. It takes God’s Spirit to empower and encourage me to share Jesus’ gospel with them. How are you doing with Jesus’ command to “love your neighbor as yourself”?

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Nov 04

This week, we welcomed a new addition to our extended family. Emma Jane Bruce was born Tuesday, November 2 to Paige’s sister Courtney and her husband Billy. We looked at picture after picture of this beautiful baby. We smiled at the tiny little fingers on tiny little hands. We marveled at the tiny little cheeks on a tiny little face. There’s something utterly astonishing about a newborn baby. As the day progressed, I began to think more and more about the reality that Jesus Christ, God Himself, left eternal glory in heaven to don tiny little fingers on tiny little hands…tiny little cheeks on a tiny little face.  Jesus became a small, helpless, beautiful newborn baby. And this reality sent me to a place of gratitude and worship that God would so love the world that He would give us His one and only Son, knowing that without Jesus, I would be a dead man. And gratitude and worship turned into compassion for the people in my life who don’t know how much God loves them…the people in my life who don’t know that God put on the fullness and frailty of flesh to bring us back to Himself. So I prayed for my friends. I prayed that the Spirit would prepare their hearts to receive the Christmas message of God’s extravagant love.

This December, Christmas at RainCity Lounge is all about Northshore giving our neighbors the gift of God’s extravagant love at Christmas. Christmas at RainCity Lounge is all about creating an intimate, fun place where you can invite your friends to enjoy some great coffee, great dessert and great entertainment that ultimately points them to our Great God. As we prepare for Christmas at RainCity Lounge, the priority is prayer. Prayer for the people in our neighborhoods, workplaces, schools, and spheres of relationship who do not yet know Jesus. Prayer for the Spirit to go before us and prepare hearts. Prayer for the courage to invite friends, family, and neighbors. Prayer for the musicians, artists, technicians, and volunteers for Christmas at RainCity Lounge. The priority is prayer!

I am excited about Christmas at RainCity Lounge because I am excited about people who don’t know Jesus hearing about His great love and His great transforming power for their lives. I am excited about Northshore coming together as a “life-transforming community of Jesus” to serve our community and share the gospel. I am excited that we have a very real, tangible opportunity to be a church that’s servant-hearted and kingdom-minded.

This Sunday during our worship gatherings, you’ll hear more about Christmas at RainCity Lounge and get a taste of what the show will look like. You’ll also be given an opportunity to volunteer to serve during one or more of the shows. Please help us give our community the gift of God’s extravagant love at Christmas. PRAY. INVITE. BRING. SERVE

Go to the RainCity Lounge website to read more about the show and purchase tickets.

View a description of serving positions that need to be filled for Christmas at RainCity Lounge. You will have an opportunity to sign up on Sunday.

I look forward to seeing you there!

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Oct 28

Recently Jon and Pat Sween, who serve on The Navigators staff in the Seattle area and are a part of the Northshore family, sent me this story on what it has means for them to take Jesus into their neighborhood. The Sween’s wrote:

What does it mean to live in your neighborhood?  In this age of garage door openers, fences to separate houses and a hectic lifestyle, how do we live in our neighborhoods in such a way that our neighbors get a complete picture of the good news of Jesus?  Is it just a matter of getting them to our church so they can hear a message from the Bible?  Is it bringing them to a crusade at a stadium event?  These may be very good things if the timing and the setting is right.

We’ve lived in our neighborhood for 23 years.  We’ve received an education from our neighbors on what it means to live and relate as friends.  Our very imperfect family has tried to live the gospel of the kingdom with friends in the neighborhood that we really want to experience the good news of Jesus.  Yes we’ve invited them to a variety of things including our very good local church with some good results.  We’ve also had a neighborhood book club for 20 years that has created a relational environment to get to know our neighbors.  But I’ve often wondered if anything about our faith has flowed naturally and relationally to our friends that we care deeply about.

A few weeks ago I had lunch with the husband of one of the kids that grew up just across the street from us.  He is a follower of Jesus and works as an engineer in a city close to where we live.  We had a great time at lunch and chatted about him going with me to Kazakhstan or India to teach at a secular university on servant leadership.  His wife, the girl who grew up across the street from us for 15 years is now a follower of Jesus also.

A few days later I received an email from his wife, let’s call her Susan.  Susan wrote to say thank you for meeting her husband and how helpful the time had been.  Then she described what it was like growing up across the street from our family.

“I grew up across the street from Jon and his family.  He and his wife and his daughters were instrumental in drawing me to Jesus.  They modeled what it means to live life as followers of Christ, and they showed me how a Christian home can truly look.”

I was stunned but encouraged by Susan’s gracious comments.  As I said previously, we have struggled in our family and our marriage to reflect Biblical values so please understand that out of our brokenness God did something good.

As I have reflected on Susan’s comments the Lord brought several things to mind on living and relating in our neighborhood.   Some of those reflections are the following;

  • God takes our brokenness and uses it for the kingdom beyond what we could imagine
  • The gospel can flow naturally and relationally if we take the initiative to love our neighbors
  • Living and relating in the neighborhood takes lots of time and prayer
  • People, even little kids, are watching how a Christian family lives and relates
  • The good news of Jesus has to be incarnated in close proximity to where people live

Let me close with John 1.14 in The Message:  “The Word became flesh and blood, and moved into the neighborhood…”

Has Jesus moved into your neighborhood through your marriage and your family?

Jon & Pat Sween are passionate about the advancement of the gospel via the workplace, neighborhood and networks around Seattle.  Their heart is to plant the idea virus of “right where you are God is at work.”  They have three grown daughters, two awesome son-in-laws, and six great grand kids (one on the way in March). They’ve been on The Navigators Staff and have partnered with Northshore for 23 years.

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Oct 21

Today the Northsound Church Planting Network (part of Converge Northwest & Converge Worldwide) gathered with Dr. Jerry Sheveland, Converge Worldwide President, to talk about the state of church planting nationally and internationally in and through our movement of churches. Dr. Sheveland shared with us a passage from 2 Samuel 10:9-12.

Now when Joab saw that the battle was set against him in front and in the rear, he selected from all the choice men of Israel, and arrayed them against the Arameans. But the remainder of the people he placed in the hand of Abishai his brother, and he arrayed them against the sons of Ammon. He said, “If the Arameans are too strong for me, then you shall help me, but if the sons of Ammon are too strong for you, then I will come to help you.” (2 Samuel 10:9-11)

The armies of Israel were being attacked from the front and the rear. So commander Joab selected “choice men” to fight the battle at the front and “choice men” to battle at the rear. And his “conquer and divide” battle speech in v. is epic…

Be strong, and let us show ourselves courageous for the sake of our people and for the cities of our God; and may the Lord do what is good in His sight. (2 Samuel 10:12)

This is the call of Jesus’ mission through multiplying churches and church planting movements. The battle of light vs. dark is being fought on all sides, so we take “choice men” and send them toward the battle.  Then we take other “choice men” and send them to battle on other fronts.  We are fighting for the “cities of our God.” We have been strategically placed in our local communities to love and serve them with the kingdom heart of God… and to proclaim the gospel truth of Jesus.  We are to fight for the cities of our God with the great gospel of Jesus.

Northshore is committed to the mission of multiplying followers, leaders, churches, and church-planting movements. Will you join the battle?

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Oct 10

This past week I was on Twitter and read this quote from the authors of a new book called Transformational Church: “Regrettably, it has become acceptable to sit in church week after week, and do nothing, but call yourself a follower of Christ.” Let’s be honest, much of what we peddle in American Christianity is not a New Testament, gospel-centered, servant-hearted, kingdom-minded vision of Jesus and discipleship. Much of what we do in American Christianity is a Christianized spin on the American Dream where the church is all about serving our consumer needs vs. serving the King and the kingdom. Our churches have regrettably often become a place where we somehow believe that it’s okay to sit in church week after week and do nothing, yet still call ourselves followers of Jesus. What does Jesus have to say about this? What is does it mean to really follow Him.

In Mark 3:13-35, we see what Jesus has to say about the reality of following Him.

Formation. When Jesus appointed the Twelve, their first “task” was simply to be with Him.  As a disciple of Jesus, they would begin by sharing life with Him. At the core of following Jesus is the desire to be with Him… to share life with Him. When Jesus forms us, we are conformed into His image, not Him conformed into ours. This is crucial to realize because when we conform Jesus into our image and change Him to meet our needs and desires, then when we “worship” Him, we’re really not worshiping Him, we’re worshiping ourselves. Jesus has first and foremost come to change us and conform us into His image and that happens as we are with Him and spiritually formed and transformed by Him.

Proclamation. The next thing these newly chosen disciples would do is be “sent out to preach.” Followers of Jesus go out and proclaim who He is and what His ministry and mission is all about.  If there is formation, there will be proclamation. And if there is no proclamation, there is no formation. People who are being formed and transformed by Jesus proclaim Him to their world. And if we separate ourselves so far from the world that we have no real relationships with people who don’t know Jesus, then it’s difficult to proclaim Jesus. Following Jesus means proclamation.

Liberation. The next thing we find in following Jesus is “liberation.” The disciples (and us) were chosen to be with Him, sent out to preach and proclaim, and to cast out the demons. This very well might mean that we are to be on the lookout for those possessed by demons, but I also think it has a wider application to help free people from the oppression of spiritual darkness. Jesus clearly tells us in our passage that He has come to “plunder Satan’s domain.”  He has come to liberate people from the presence and forces of evil. And when we follow Jesus and join His revolution, we are all about liberation. Remember, this is a war!

Rejection. The bulk of Mark 3:13-35 is about rejection. Jesus’ family rejects Him. The Jewish religious leaders rejects Him. And here’s what this means for us… if Jesus experienced rejection, so will we. Be prepared for rejection by your family, with your friends, in your neighborhoods, in your schools, in your workplaces. Sometimes that rejection is overt, and sometimes the rejection is covert. If following Jesus means formation, proclamation, and liberation, then we can’t be quiet about Him… and it’s going to mean rejection.

This is what it really means to follow Jesus.

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Aug 21

The Math of CommunitySERVE day:

10 Churches +

7 Groups from the local community (Boy & Girl scouts, etc.) +

12 Schools in need of volunteers (8 Northshore & 4 Lake Washington) +

2 Mobile Home Parks +

1 Vision House Project +

1 HopeLink Project +

1150 people x 4 hours/person (4600 hours total)

=

1 Word ~ AWESOME!

Thanks for serving our local community in the name of Jesus!

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