Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Kristi Graner to be keynote speaker at 2011 ARC Southwest Gathering


The Alliance of Renewal Churches (ARC) is excited to announce Kristi Graner as another of our keynote speakers for the 2011 ARC Southwest Gathering: Prayer – Ushering in a Kingdom Uprising. She will be speaking on the topics, “I Give You Authority” and “Praying in Power.”

Kristi and her husband Gary currently direct Dare To Believe Ministries, a ministry that focuses on Bible based teaching and mentoring of people to “pay attention to” God’s voice in their lives. Kristi was on the pastoral staff of Hosanna! in Lakeville, MN until 2009. She oversaw Hosanna’s leadership development, prayer ministry, and revelatory and freedom ministries.

Krisit has a passion for equipping and coaching people to discover their spiritual gifts, passions, leadership skills, and life purpose She regularly teaches at Hosanna! and other Christian venues throughout the United States and abroad. Kristi holds a Master’s Degree in Theology and Spiritual Formation. She is a trainer for Streams Ministries International, is a trained speaker and prayer leader for Alpha North America and has been trained at the Bethel School of the Prophets in Redding California. Kristi has been married to Gary Graner since 1983. They have two sons. The Graner’s live in Minnesota.
Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Pete Greig to Speak at ARC 2011 Southwest Gathering


We are excited to announce that Pete Greig will be one of the keynote speakers at our ARC 2011 Southwest Gathering: Prayer-Ushering in a Kingdom Uprising. Pete Greig is one of the founding champions of the 24-7 Prayer and Missions movement which has spread into more than half the nations on earth. He teaches at St Paul’s Theological College in London and serves as Director of Prayer for Alpha International, a course which has introduced fifteen million people to the gospel.

Pete and his wife Sammy are currently planting their third church, this one in Guildford near London where they live with their two sons and Noodle the Labradoodle. Pete’s books include Red Moon Rising, The Vision and God On Mute – Engaging the Silence of Unanswered Prayer. He aspires to sail and despairs regularly over the woes of Portsmouth Football Club.

The gathering will be held in San Diego, CA on July 13-15, 2011 at Penasquitos Lutheran Church (PLC). Worship leaders will include Vineyard worship leader/pastor and ARC member, Danny Mullins; and the Young Adult worship band from PLC who rocked the house at last year's gathering.

We'll be sending you more details on a regular basis in the months to come, but for now,put the gathering on your calendar now and be sure to add some extra days to enjoy the beauty that is San Diego.

Per Nilsen Installed at North Heights


ARC member, Per Nilsen, has been installed as the new senior pastor for North Heights Lutheran Church in St. Paul, MN. Per (pictured along with North Heights pastor and ARC National Leadership Team member, Eric Bluhm, left; and ARC Director, Mike Bradley, right) served as lead pastor for Community of Hope Lutheran Church in Rosemount, MN, and as a member of the Board of Directors for The Master’s Institute (MI) Seminary prior to accepting this call to North Heights. He and his wife, Mary, have two sons.

Per shares: “The vision the Lord has placed on my heart is a vision for the Church that the ARC has been working toward since its inception; congregations integrated through vision and values, united in carrying out the work of Jesus Christ. I’m excited about the expanded role that North Heights can bring to the growth and development of the ARC. ”

Please keep Per in prayer for revelation and wisdom, and for the entire staff of North Heights, as they launch into this next season of ministry and adventure with the Lord.
Wednesday, August 4, 2010

God Encounters at 2010 Southwest Gathering



Multiple God encounters were experienced at this year’s ARC Southwest Gathering, “The Empowering Presence,” held in late June at Robinwood Church in Huntington Beach, CA. The theme was designed to help us continue sowing an ARC core value in our lives - a radical dependence upon the empowering presence of the Holy Spirit - to the point it is a part of our spiritual DNA and something we live incarnationally, not merely acknowledge theologically.

Leading up to the gathering we were praying for God encounters and that is what we got. Testimonies of God encounters included people who prayed for an assurance of salvation, baptism in the Holy Spirit, fresh fillings of the Holy Spirit, and inner and physical healing. Others have shared how God met them in the midst of personal challenges in life, speaking prophetic words and words of knowledge to them. ARC Pastor Dave Drum shared that he was blessed with a God encounter before we even officially started the gathering. He writes:

“I came to the ARC very much in need of His empowering presence on a personal level. Before the conference even started, I was invited into a prayer group for the evening's leaders. Truthfully, I didn't feel like I had a whole lot to offer, but I went, and much to my surprise, God had something for me in that time. Within seconds after praying a prayer for myself, I heard someone else with a word of knowledge, praying for and prophesying over me the exact prayers I'd just prayed for myself. That ended up being the theme of the whole conference, songs sung just for me, prophetic words given just for me. I feel bad for everyone else, but sure am grateful for the ways God chose to bless and refresh me!”



The gathering featured wonderful times of worship together. Worship leaders Bob Mabry and Chris Hankins led two of the worship teams and we were blessed again this year to have the young adult worship team from Penasquitos Lutheran Church lead us. There were many wonderful workshops and an early morning chapel time led by Pastor Nathan Hoff that was a highlight for many who attended.

Pastor Brendon Fairley and other youth leaders planned and led a youth track for the gathering, with the teens joining young and older adults for many of the main sessions. Many teens were also subject of God encounters, some giving testimony to being baptized in the Spirit, filled afresh with the Spirit, and experiencing God’s healing touch emotionally and relationally. One testimony of what God was doing in and amongst the teens who joined us comes from Tyler Clark, a member of the Wonderful Mercy (Gilbert, AZ) youth group. Tyler writes:

"I know God was at The ARC Gathering in Southern California this June, but I had a hard time feeling His presence. I know that “where two or more are gathered He is there,” but it felt as if He was a million miles away, like a far-off stranger that no matter how fast I ran towards I couldn’t close the gap between us. In the end, though, He did show up because He is good and faithful. My encounter with God came during the Friday night session. I’ll describe it for you in present tense so you can get a feel for the moment.

I am standing, trying to make it through worship like I had the rest of the week. Then, unexpectedly, I feel an overwhelming pressure on my knee (which I had so badly injured it required surgery a few weeks earlier). I sit down, grit my teeth, and try to bear it, but it’s getting more and more intense. Almost as if someone or something is squeezing it.

Seeing I am in agony, Dirk (WMC youth pastor, Dirk Duhlstine) has Charlie Hayes get me a painkiller while I hobble the kitchen for some cold water. Thinking I’m going to be okay I return back to my seat, but I immediately break out into a sweat and start having a hard time breathing. Finally, Dirk tells me to go upstairs and I take off quicker than I’ve moved since my surgery. He even has to tell me to slow down!

Well, I’m almost in tears by the time I make it to my bed. I lie down, Dirk gets me ice and pillows, and then he leaves. I manage to keep my composure until I hear the door shut at the bottom of the stairs. Then I just let it all out: I cry and scream in pain. I clear my head enough to start praying. But then I just go numb. Fire engulfs me but it doesn’t hurt me, and I can hear other things crying out, being consumed by the fire. This fire is freeing, energizing, and even empowering.

After all this takes place I lie on my bed and all these happy thoughts and memories start going through my head. One sticks out like in bold letters in my head: baptism by fire! After that I could not be the same; I had God with me and I knew it now. I’d have to say this encounter was the most significant appearance He’s ever made to me.

Now, God is too good to let it stop there. Friday and Saturday mornings they had special youth sessions, and it wasn’t the teaching that touched me but what took place at the end. Brendon, the Youth Pastor of the other group that was there, encouraged us to be vulnerable with the people in your group. Of course, God just had to take me out of my comfort zone; He told me to go with people I had never met.

I managed to be obedient for once and went to a group with two guys and three girls: Lindsay, Morgan, McKenzie, Mike, Jonny, and me. Turns out Jonny and I were the only ones who felt safe enough to share deeply the first morning. My heart sensed safety among fellow believers my own age and I told them things I couldn’t even tell my mom. In turn that gave a sense of freedom to the others to share the next day. It gave me this joy that, well, blew my mind in these circumstances!

God is awesome. He knew exactly what I needed and at exactly the right time gave it to me. As I take time to look back on it, I see that God did some amazing things for me. I’m keeping in contact with the people that were in my group because we all have one thing in common: we love God and felt safe enough to share intimate things with one another and not be afraid of being judged.

God is good all the time, and all the time God is good!"

Keynote speakers Lee Grady and Dave Householder blessed us, and the times of just hanging out and enjoying our relationships with one another was again a highlight for many in attendance. Not only was the time built in for those relationships a highlight but the tenor of the relationships had an impact on many. One person who attended wrote:

The most striking feature of the conference was the humility of all the leadership including Grady. I have been to a zillion conferences and while there is great teaching, you feel that the leadership/speakers are unapproachable. In the case of the ARC conference it was just the opposite. While the teaching was fine, what really blessed me was the people. I felt we were all in something together. It didn't matter that you were a pastor or lay person; it felt like we were all one. This makes the ARC special. This is something I hope and pray we never lose. I believe the ARC is a movement that God has raised up to show true humility and passion for kingdom things while being very relational.

Thanks again to Robinwood Church for doing such a wonderful job of hosting the gathering; particular thanks to Chris Hankins and Julie Ramsey who not only gave leadership to so many of the administrative details in putting this gathering together, but who truly modeled the life and attitude of Jesus for us while doing it.

Be watching your emails and the ARC website for an announcement on next year’s Southwest ARC Gathering to be held on June 22-24: Prayer – Ushering in a Kingdom Uprising.
Thursday, July 1, 2010

The Empowering Presence Coming to the Midwest


ARC Leaders: Bring your spouse, congregational leaders and members, along with Friends of the ARC, to join in the fun and fellowship at:

THE EMPOWERING PRESENCE!
The 2010 Midwest ARC Gatherings


A gathering for all congregational members, leaders and pastors of ARC congregations and for all Friends of the ARC


Purposes:

• To provide a place where ARC members and Friends of the ARC can gather for
restoration and refreshing
• To proclaim and to minister one of the non-negotiables of the ARC: The
Empowering Presence of the Holy Spirit.
• To be encouraged, empowered, healed, and set free by encounters with the Holy
Spirit.
• To continue nurturing relationships between ARC members in a climate that is
free to foster authentic relationships.
• To worship the Lord and to bless Him as we gather together - teens, young
adults, and older adults - in the same room at the same time with the same Holy
Spirit.

Dates: Midwest Gathering: October 21-23, 2010

Location: North Heights Lutheran Church – Roseville, MN

Cost: $65 for adults; $40 for teenagers and young adults (under 30 years of
age)

It is for: Pastors, congregational leaders and all members of ARC churches and for
Friends of the ARC

What will those who gather experience?

• Experiential encounters with the Holy Spirit
• Inspiring, intimate and passionate worship
• Personal Prayer Ministry and Soaking Prayer Appointments
• Youth, young adults and older adults participating together
• Relationship building and nurturing between members and Friends of the ARC
• Vision Casting main sessions that impart hope and inspiration for ministry with
the empowering presence of the Holy Spirit
• Hands on experience in ministry with the empowering presence of the Holy Spirit
• Workshops that equip us to minister the empowering presence of the Holy Spirit
to others



Who will help lead and speak at this gathering?

• J. Lee Grady, Editor and Author, Charisma Magazine
• Robert Walter, ARC Pastor and Teacher; LeaderSource Ministries
• Mike Bradley, ARC Director and President, The Masters Institute Seminary
• Eric Bluhm, ARC Pastor North Heights Lutheran Church, Arden Hills, MN and
National Leadership Team Member
• Fred Thoni, ARC Pastor , Elmwood E. Free, and National Leadership Team member,
• Nathan Hoff, Pastor, Trinity Lutheran Church, San Pedro, CA
• Midge Wietzma, ARC Pastor, Wonderful Mercy Church, Gilbert, AZ
• Joseph Johnson, ARC Pastor, Grace Lutheran Church, Huntington Beach, CA
• Bob Mabry, ARC Pastor, Hope Community Lutheran Church, Long Beach, CA
• Peter Churness, ARC Pastor and Director, Lutheran Evangelistic Movement
• Joel and Marissa Bidderman, ARC Member, missionary to Apache Youth, and gifted
worship leaders
• More speakers and workshops to be announced soon
Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Kevin Piscator Installed at Faith Lutheran


Sunday, June 13th was the day of my installation as pastor of Faith Lutheran Church in Powell, WY. In one sense, it was the culmination of a journey Mary and I started five years ago when we felt that God was calling me to attend The Master’s Institute Seminary. In another sense, it was just the beginning of a new journey. It was great to have Rev. Michael Bradley and Pastor Kevin and Laura McClure here to do the installation. Kevin and Laura have been a huge blessing to Mary and me over the years and Mike has become a good friend. This journey is helping us to learn that God’s timing is perfect.

I thought that once I graduated God would immediately call us into fulltime ministry. But He knew that I still needed to grow and receive more healing before I was ready.

We started conversations with Faith in the summer of 2008 and made plans to fly out to visit the congregation. When Pastor McClure and I returned from Chicago where we welcomed a church into the ARC, Mary said that she was having problems seeing out of her left eye. An appointment with her ophthalmologist revealed that she had a partially detached retina which required surgery later that day. Part of the surgery included injecting a gas bubble which helped hold the retina in place. This bubble aided the healing, but it also precluded any travel that involved a change in elevation. When Satan was trying to convince Mary that this had thwarted God’s plans, I felt that God was reassuring us saying, “My timing is perfect.” The problem is that even when we hear God speak we don’t take His words to heart.

When you are waiting for God’s perfect timing, you may become resentful that He isn’t moving as fast as you want Him to. I sure did. I started to resent The Master’s Institute for not getting me placed and wanted nothing to do with it. Can you imagine God wanting to inflict that kind of pastor on a congregation? Last summer, Mary wanted to go to the ARC Gathering in Huntington Beach and I reluctantly went with her. That gathering was pivotal in my receiving healing. I felt forgotten. The theme of the gathering was, Not Forgotten. The first day, Robert Walter came over to speak to me. That simple act began a release of feelings that lead to repentance and healing.

Once we accepted the call to Faith, we saw many instances of God’s perfect timing. Our house sold in six weeks. We found a house here in one day. Both the closings and the move went incredibly smooth.

We are starting to see how God has used this time in ways we never expected. Mary will be able to use her Elijah House Prayer Ministry training not only to help individuals but also to assist a member of our congregation in bringing Elijah House training to this area.

Before we arrived, the members of the congregation had to assume many of the duties that are usually reserved for the pastor. My continual goal is to empower them to keep doing many of these things so that we truly are the priesthood of all believers.

Saying that God’s timing is perfect is easy. Living it out is more difficult. We will keep seeking the will of God through the person of the Holy Spirit so that we are in step with God’s perfect timing. If you are waiting for your next kingdom assignment, you can be assured that--God’s timing is perfect.
Wednesday, April 28, 2010

ARC Ministry Team Goes to Nashville



An ARC ministry team traveled to the Nashville, TN area to be with ARC Pastor Tom Hilpert and New Joy Fellowship on April 22-24. ARC Leadership Team member, Bob Mabry (Hope Community, Long Beach), and ARC Director, Mike Bradley, spent the weekend with Tom and his family, and the New Joy congregation. Bob, a gifted worship leader as well as pastor, spent time with the New Joy Fellowship worship team, sharing a teaching on leading worship; and then with the team led worship on Sunday morning. Bob and Mike met with leaders for New Joy on Saturday, and then Mike shared a message on Sunday morning entitled, “Don’t Abandon Your Obedience.” Bob and Mike were available for prayer ministry and visiting following the service. The purpose of visits such as this is to encourage and strengthen ARC leaders and their congregations.

Of this visit Pastor Tom Hilpert writes, “We are a small congregation, and we are also a congregation that is geographically isolated from most of the rest of the ARC. There are times we ourselves have felt like ‘forgotten ones.’ Having Mike Bradley and Bob Mabry take time to visit us -- as insignificant in numbers and location as we are -- provided a tremendous infusion of grace for our church. Mike is a ‘connector’ and that is precisely what our congregation was needing at this point in time - a sense of connection to other churches and leaders who share our values and our mission. Bob is an encourager, and that powerful gift was also very valuable to us, not to mention his tremendous gift of leading us in worship. They showed us that the ARC is serious about being a relational network. I anticipate that the blessings from this past weekend will continue for some time afterward.”

If you’d like an ARC ministry team to visit your church, please contact Mike Bradley at: safeplacemb@gmail.com. Pictured in the photo are Pastor Tom Hilpert (left) and Bob Mabry (right). This picture was taken on a hillside behind the 10-acre family farm Tom and Kari own. By the way, Tom and Kari are both some of the gifted, creative artists God is gracing the ARC with. Tom is the author of a novel – the murder-mystery, “Superior Justice.” I read it recently and highly recommend it for those of you who enjoy that genre. Kari is a singer-songwriter. If you would like to order her cd, you can go to her website at: www.karihilpert.com.
Monday, March 15, 2010

Steve Mohr Installed as Senior Pastor for Our Savior's Lutheran Church


Pastor Steve Mohr was installed as the new senior pastor for Our Savior’s Lutheran Church, a member congregation of the Alliance of Renewal Churches (ARC), on January 24th. ARC Director, Mike Bradley, National Leadership Team member, Eric Bluhm, and ARC Pastor, Kevin McClure, were present to officiate the installation and share in the joy for Steve and the congregation.

Steve writes, “I believe the day was special for a number of reasons. One, I was surrounded by special people; family, ARC leaders, and God's flock here at OSLC. Also I felt we were celebrating the birth of a new season for the church. While I don't know exactly how it is all going to look, my spirit tells me that as I wait upon the Lord, that He is going to do something special through this congregation that will be a blessing to many in our area and abroad. It is my prayer and hope that the kingdom of God will manifest itself in such a way that people will be attracted to the presence and power of God in this place. I pray that the ministry here will be a ministry of transformation, where lives are truly changed, and disciples are born because they have had an encounter with the living God.”

Congratulations to Steve and his wife, Linda; and to Our Savior’s. May God guide, provide, and empower you to not settle for less than all God has for you.
Monday, February 15, 2010

ARC Member Reaches Out to the Forgotten Ones by Fighting Sex Trafficking of Children



The following article is from ARC member, Stephanie Midthun. Stephanie is a gifted worship leader and the wife of ARC Pastor Joel Midthun in Elk Grove, CA.

I went to Kenya for the first time in 2003 to work with street children. I knew God would change me, but I had no idea what to expect. My prayer was: “God break, my heart for the things that break Your heart.” I experienced heartbreak and hope daily as I met hundreds of boys living on the streets of Kenya;most are running from abuse and poverty or they are orphaned. At one point I cried out to God, “Do something, God!” and His reply to me was, ‘ I want you to do something…be My hands and feet and the voice for the children.’ I have been a worship leader and songwriter for many years and the Lord started calling me to write songs for them and head up benefit CD’s and concerts to help rescue more children.

When I returned from Kenya, I was reading an article and this quote from Sean Groves leapt off of the page. If we lift our hands in praise and worship, but with those same hands don’t extend them to the poor, the needy the hungry, then we have worshipped a singer, a song or a service. Worshipping God makes a difference in the lives of others (2003 article in Worship Leader magazine; Worship and Missions). God has since given me a passion for justice and worship. Amos 5:21-24 and Isaiah 1:15-17… stop doing wrong, learn to do what is right! Seek justice, encourage the oppressed, defend the cause of the fatherless, plead the cause of the widow. God is displeased with worship that doesn’t include the ministry of justice. God was appalled that His church wasn’t showing up to stop the injustices….this is the only time the word “appalled” is used in the Bible. (Just Courage, by Gary Haugen, IJM)

After focusing a number of years on the children in Africa, God spoke to me that there is also something HERE for me to do. I read an article in our newspaper and I was shocked to read about the sex trafficking of children in our OWN community and that a woman named Jenny Williamson had a dream to build a home for these children in Sacramento called a Courage House. I called Jenny and we met for coffee and found that we had an equal passion for Africa. Part of her ministry is in Tanzania and she planned to build a Courage House there too. Jenny told me how God broke her heart for these children around the world, but the when she started doing research, she found out that we have a massive problem of children who are being sold or trafficked for sex right here in the U.S. There are an estimated 500,000-800,000 in the United States and Sacramento, where we live, is one of the top 15 cities! The average age of these children is 12 and 13 yrs old, some as young as 10. There are only 3 small homes in all of the U.S. and none of them are Christian. There are very few resources for these children to address their specific needs and the trauma they have endured. Eighty-five% have been abused in their homes and they run from home or their parents are in jail. Many are in the foster care system too. The combination of all these factors makes them vulnerable to the pimps. The kids end up in Juvenile Hall as a temporary solution to protect them, but the cycle repeats when they get out. The FBI, the police task force, the judges, Juvenile Hall and foster care do not have the answers . The church can take the lead in building these homes to provide healing and hope in Christ and the world is looking to us for answers.

When I met Jenny, she told me she needed a song to tell the story of these girls. She had no idea I was a song writer and a worship leader. I knew right then it was where God was calling me. Jenny told me that when our newspaper wrote a story on her vision for the Courage House, she got 3 calls from 3 different prostitutes and they each said the same thing…”These girls need this home so they don’t turn out like me. They just need someone to believe in them.” The 14 year old being prostituted called her and said the same thing…’I just need someone to believe in me,’ please build this home. Within a couple of days I wrote the song, Believe in Me and since then it has snowballed into an entire CD benefit project that includes ten different Christian recording artists from Nashville to Sacramento. The Lord brought us an African Christian rapper who co-wrote several songs with me and who represents the global part of the ministry. An LA based film producer produced a powerful, haunting video to go with the Believe in Me song and it tells the story of a girl caught in sex trafficking. The songs on the CD minister hope, healing, courage and inspiration to be a world changer. We also have the FBI share some statistics at the concerts as well as a mom who tells the heart wrenching personal story of the trauma her daughter went through when she was trafficked for sex. The response to the CD and the concerts has been amazing. Since last October, we have been doing benefit concerts for the Courage House and the Lord has moved so quickly, that now a 50 acre horse property has been purchased to be the first U.S. Courage House. There is much work to be done, but by March 1, 2010, the dream of the first Courage House will now be a reality!

C2BU (Jenny Williamson’s non-profit organization) has a God sized vision to build a Courage House in every city in the U.S. and the world where there is no home for these kids. We see that God is raising up an army to do this! Since January 250 people are going through a CASA/Chaplaincy training here in SAC (through C2BU) to be able to mentor and help the girls. We have seen the churches coming together to host these concerts and help get the Courage House off the ground. In Elk Grove, where we live, 15 churches came together to host a large concert and raised over $120,000 for the Courage House- all this in a recession in CA! Next week we are going to the Bay Area where 15 churches are also coming together to host another massive concert. The Lord is raising up the church for ‘such a time as this.’

If you are interested in the Believe in Me CD and video or would like to book a concert or event please go to www.c2bu.org for more information. We are going on tour March 20-28, 2010 in Southern California and will be doing multiple concerts at many ARC churches there. Join us if you can! The concerts are listed on the website under the events section.

Believe in Me Stephanie Midthun

She is lost and alone- waiting to be found
And find a place she can call her home
Her innocence was stolen, her shattered heart is broken
Quietly suffering she cries…Believe in me, believe in me I’m
Longing for my captive heart… to be free

Daughter you are not alone-He died so you can live
He gives a place - you can call your home
The years the enemy stole, He’ll restore and make you whole
He’ll heal your pain and whisper to your soul…

Believe in Me, Believe in Me
I’ll help you see what you cannot see
Believe in Me… I have come to set your captive heart ….. free

Deliver her from darkness… rescue and redeem Give courage and purpose, to live for you our King
Break the chains that bind her, let her spirit sing… You are free you are redeemed, Daughter of the King

Believe in me, Believe in me. Help me see what I cannot see believe in me.
I’m longing, for my captive heart to be free. Believe in Me, Believe in Me
Wednesday, February 3, 2010

A Call to High Level Commitment in Relationships

I had the privilege recently of being asked by Pastor Graeme Sellers to preach at Wonderful Mercy Church (an ARC church) in Gilbert, AZ. In praying and preparing for the sermon, I believe the Lord impressed upon me to call all ARC leaders and member churches to a commitment to live out relationships at the highest level. Therefore, as the Director for the ARC, I am calling all ARC churches and leaders to a commitment to live out our relationships with one another at the highest level through the empowering and transforming presence of the Holy Spirit (see 2 Cor 3:18). I am calling us to this commitment because as followers of Jesus Christ, godly relationships are not optional; they are a non-negotiable.

We do not have permission from Scripture to rationalize this away by saying that we are focused on doing God’s work, focused on the mission task He’s given us, even as we may be leaving a trail of damaged relationships in our wake. For you see, Beloved, for followers of Jesus: RELATIONSHIPS ARE THE TASK. Jesus Himself tells us this in John 13:34-35:

So now I am giving you a new commandment: Love each other. Just as I have loved you, you should love each other. Your love for one another will prove to the world that you are my disciples (Jn 13:34-35).

How we live out our commitment to relationship with one another will say important things to others about who God is and about what He can or cannot do in our lives. If we cannot learn to live in right relationship with one another, we do not have much of anything important to say to a culture that is relationally broken, cynical and distrustful.

How we live out our commitment to relationship with one another can give others hope that through God’s grace and power there can be a different way, a better way to live; a way that is marked by unconditional love, grace, forgiveness, and trust, rather that unforgiveness, distrust, shame, and pain.

How we live out our commitment to relationship with one another can give others hope that God does intervene in the affairs of human beings and that He does have the desire and power to change us. The way we live out our relationships with one another can show people that God is able to set us free from old habits, unhelpful ways of thinking, and hurtful ways of responding and relating to one another. How we live out our commitment to relationships with one another speaks to the world around us. What is our commitment saying?

Beloved, moving forward together in a commitment to nurture and maintain relationships at the highest level is something that our enemy fears because he knows, that alone we may be gifted, but together we are a force to be reckoned with.

Because relationships are our task as followers of Jesus Christ, IT IS NOT SURPRISING THAT RELATIONSHIPS WILL BE THE VERY PLACE OUR ENEMY WILL ATTACK. Make no mistake about it, as followers of Jesus Christ you have one who loves you with a love that is unshakable and extravagant – you are the Beloved sons and daughters of God. But just as much as you have One who loves you, you also have one who hates you and schemes to steal from you the destiny God has for you (see John 10:10; 1 Peter 5:8; Eph 6:10-12). You and I have an enemy who wants to sow and provoke unforgiveness, bitterness, chaos and division in our relationships, because if he can succeed in this he can succeed in disrupting God’s purposes in and through us to continue the ministry of Jesus in the world today.

If our desire in the Alliance of Renewal Churches is to be an alliance where relationships are a commitment that we desire to live out at the highest level, then we can be certain that those relationships will be a target of the enemy - in our homes, in our churches, and between churches and leaders. One author rightly reminds us:

“The enemy is ever drawing us to find fault with one another. Interestingly, the Greek word for ‘demon’ – means, ‘to disrupt, to rend and tear.’ The enemy attacks our minds and seeks to rend our relationships through faultfinding, often with and by those closest and dearest to us…In all manners of ways, the enemy seeks to estrange us from one another, perpetually attempting to sow discord and division.”

Beloved, let us do everything we can to zealously guard and protect our relationships with one another. Let us be ruthless in guarding against the strategy of the enemy - to deceive us with accusing thoughts of one another in order to lull us into hanging onto unforgiveness toward each other. The Apostle Paul told the followers of Christ in Corinth:

“Anyone whom you forgive, I also forgive. Indeed, what I have forgiven, if I have forgiven anything, has been for your sake in the presence of Christ, so that we would not be outwitted by Satan; for we are not ignorant of his schemes (2 Cor 2:10-11).”

To hang onto unforgiveness is to make a choice to put ourselves in jail and to turn ourselves over to the torturers as Jesus says in Matthew 18. To hang onto unforgiveness is to surrender our freedom as Paul reminds us in Galatians 5:1 where he exhorts us, “For Freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery.” To hang onto unforgiveness, Beloved, is to choose to settle for less than all God has for us.

Living with unforgiveness toward one another is never spiritually permitted, though the enemy will attempt to deceive us into believing that it is, even using Scripture taken out of context as a rationale and justification for doing so. Let’s reject that and instead, let us have the courage to own our stuff in a ruptured relationship; let us humble ourselves and be the first one to say, “I was wrong. Please forgive me.” Let’s not settle for less, Beloved. Let’s do spiritual warfare and cut the enemy off at the knees by walking in love, grace and forgiveness toward one another.

If you are a member of the ARC, I am “calling you out,” and calling myself out at the same time. I am calling us out to live out a commitment to relationships at the highest level this year. I am praying that God will grace us with a humility that the world and the devil sees as a weakness, but that God sees as a strength. Let us be amongst the most humble Christian leaders in our cities, our regions, and in our country. Let us be leaders and church members who will dare to take the first step and say to another, “I was wrong, please forgive me.”

If we will do this, we will see ruptured relationships restored, and we will see our witness to a relationally hungry world increase. Living out our relationships at the highest level will make us dangerous for the Kingdom of God and a real threat to the dominion of the enemy.

In God’s Unshakable and Extravagant Love,

Mike
Monday, February 1, 2010

The ARC Welcomes a New Administrative Assistant

The ARC is happy to announce the addition of Heidi McClure as a member of to our team. Heidi will be serving the part-time position of Administrative Assistant, working with me (Director Mike Bradley) in St. Paul. Denise Siemens, who helped to found the ARC and served faithfully as the Administrative Assistant since its inception, has stepped down to give attention to the growing ministries of Lutheran Renewal. As Director of the ARC, and as a friend, I want to express my heart-felt thanks to all Denise has contributed to the ARC. Please continue to keep she and Lutheran Renewal in prayer for God’s guidance, empowerment and provision.

As you can see from the pictures, Heidi has a heart for adventure and for serving the Lord. She is pictured bungee jumping and on a mission trip to Africa. Heidi also works part-time for The Master’s Institute in the School of Ministry program and in October, married Jude McClure, son of ARC pastor, Kevin McClure.

Following is a welcome letter from Heidi to you as ARC members. If you’d like to welcome Heidi aboard you can contact her at: info@arcusa.org. Welcome, Heidi!

Hello ARC members! My name is Heidi McClure.

I am very excited to be working here for the ARC and even more excited to get to know each of you, your ministries, your family, and your heart for the Lord.

A little bit about me, I grew up in small town Minnesota and loved it, but I was ready to see a bit more of the world after I
graduated. I moved out to Colorado Springs were I attended a two year Leadership Academy called twentyfourseven. Well at school there I was able to do missions in over twelve countries, work in the church, complete an Ironman, Eco Challenge, and many college classes teaching me in all areas of leadership; but the most important and priceless thing I learned there was how to seek the face of the Lord and my life will forever be changed because of that.

After graduating form twentyfourseven I transferred to Northwestern College here in St. Paul MN and in 2007 I graduated with a double major in Public Communication and a Biblical Studies Degree. Quickly after finishing I begin traveling the world again leading large missions groups and taking some independent trips. I have a passion for the Lord and a passion to see others eyes open to all that He is. I am very grateful to be apart of the ARC family now and to partner with all of you in your ministries. I will be praying for you and here to assist you in any way that I can help.

Sincerely,
Heidi McClure

Followers