Showing posts with label Sunday Night Thoughts. Show all posts

Sunday Night Thoughts  

Posted by Jordan Jones in

I hate to minimize what happened last night to a few bullet points, but I'm not sitting across from your sipping coffee like I wish I could be. 

  • Last night was one of the highlights of my 3+ years here at Trinity. I saw broken people celebrating the reality that God has been restoring them the last few months. I saw a fire that I have never seen. I saw creativity come out in students in fresh ways. 
  • It was fun leading side-by-side with Zach last night- that guy continues to push me to a place of awareness of what God is up to, how much Satan is pissed at what God is up to...and if our ministry is causing a stir in the battle of good and evil that is in our midst. Thanks dude. 
  • A few people asked what the names of the songs we did last night were, so here you go:
          Cannons by Phil Wickham
          Shipwreck by Starfield
          You Never Let Go by Matt Redman
          Revelation Song by Jesus Culture
          Come Thou Fount
          You Won't Relent by Jesus Culture
          You Deserve by Hillsong United
          Freedom is Here by Hillsong United
  • We had a ton of students turn in Mission Trip Applications...right on! I'm so pumped for the transformation that will happen in our lives, but more importantly the love and service we pray will be infectious to everyone we come in contact with throughout the trips. 
  • Don't forget that we won't have Crosswalk next Sunday night because of Easter. Trinity's Easter Services are this Saturday at 5 and 7 p.m.or on Sunday morning at 9 and 11 a.m. 
Love you guys. Love my job. Love seeing what God is doing among us. Don't take it for granted. 

Sunday Night Thoughts  

Posted by Jordan Jones in

God doesn't base success within the same parameters that man does. This reality collided into me last night.

Let's look at what man would typically describe as a "unsuccessful night":

  • We only had 50 students present. Everyone else either had a hot date or was out of town. 
  • We had 10 leaders that were unable to make it. 
  • It seemed as if whatever could go wrong, did go wrong: Brandon was sick, internet was down so we couldn't pull up the night's schedule or find the videos we wanted to play during the night, a few members of the band didn't show.

And then God did His thing. His thing being restoration, transformation, revealing that brokenness is appealing. 

A few thoughts on the night:
  • Still can't get enough of Hosea 1. I think the thing that hit me most this time through was the children's names and the strong connection Zach made between Israel and us. 
  • It was fun to strip down the band and just get back to the basics. 
  • I heard more stories of honesty and vulnerability among the 50 students that were here last night than I have in 6 months. Seriously. God is a God who pursues. 
  • The gospel declares to us that God hasn't given up on us. Not as if he needs us, but as if he can't bear to leave us to our bowls of beans, to those things that won't satisfy us in the end, but those things that are so easy to grab. The gospel reveals that there is hope. 
  • Wow! What a night. 

Join us next week for Week 2 of Out of the Dark. We will look at Hosea 2. If you are participating in the Food Drop, we will provide food for you in the Student Cafe at 5 p.m. 

Sunday Night Thoughts  

Posted by Jordan Jones in

1. It was good to have a good friend back around...Ryan Jennings. The thing I love about Ryan is he doesn't over-complicate things...he just lays things out and invites others into a greater reality. The Kingdom is advancing...will we join with it?

2. Yes, we do have Crosswalk next week. It's going to be an amazing night of worship. Zach will be leading the night!
3. Turn in Summer Camp Packets by the end of February to get in on the $44 per month for 5 months payment plan. Good stuff.
4. We should be finalizing Level 3 Mission Trip stuff by Christmas. Level 1 and 2 Mission Trip Packets are both available in the wall racks outside the Student Center. Don't forget: you are only eligible for a Level 2 trip if you have been on a Level 1 Trip (i.e. Milwaukee, Rutland, Lansing Project, etc.) or Level 2 Trip (i.e. SEMP) before. If not, we ask that you start off your missions experience with the Level 1 Trip to Cincinnati in July.
5. Exciting news around our community today- Marvin Williams was brought before the church to be considered for the role of teaching pastor. Beautiful stuff. Praying for his family, his congregation and God's kingdom to reign in this process. Excited.

Sunday Night Thoughts  

Posted by Jordan Jones in

I want to share my thoughts about last night a little differently. I want to add some commentary around our topic for the night.

There is this constant confusion around the Kingdom of God. And sadly- rightfully so. In the teaching last night, we discovered that for early Christ followers it would have been unfathomable for them to hear about those who proclaimed to be disciples of Christ who did not understand and orient themselves around the Kingdom of God. Why? Because Jesus constantly talked about it. A few examples:

“The time has come,” [Jesus] said, “The kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe the good news!” (Mark 1:15 NIV).

“The secret of the kingdom of God has been given to you” (Mark 4:11 NIV).

[Jesus] sent them out to preach the kingdom of God and to heal the sick (Luke 9:2 NIV).

“Seek first [God’s] kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well” (Matthew 6:33 NIV).

There was a constant reality of the Kingdom of God, the place where God had complete reign and control.

Check out these verses from a widely known passage of Scripture:

“Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven” (Matthew 6:9-10 NIV).

You can’t necessarily see this from the English translation, but in the original text, Jesus used a really interesting literary tool. Now, before you exit out of this tab because this sounds too much like a grammar class, hear me out. He uses something we call parallelism. Basically, parallelism is like saying the same thing twice but using different words. It was a really common practice in the ancient Middle East.

So Jesus was saying, “Your Kingdom come = Your will being done.” Basically, someone’s will and someone’s kingdom are linked together; God’s will and God’s kingdom are connected. That statement would have meant that God’s kingdom coming is the same as God’s will being done here in this world. All of those verses we looked at referring to God’s kingdom actually mean God’s will. In other words, God’s will is near, God’s will is what we seek, etc.

Jesus’ message was, “I am bringing God’s way of doing things into a world where things have gone terribly wrong. God’s way is coming.” Essentially, Jesus Himself was a walking example of what God’s kingdom would look like. By living a blameless life, He was saying, “If you want to know what God looks like, it’s Me. If you want to see what God’s kingdom looks like, watch Me.”

And when Jesus came to the world, He was in the business of restoring wholeness to people—be it physical, mental or spiritual. All of the things that were broken in the garden because of sin, Jesus came to restore. He restored sight to the blind because blindness was not part of God’s original plan. He healed the sick because sickness was not part of God’s original plan. He comforted the hurting because sorrow was not part of God’s original plan. But most importantly, when Jesus came He restored our relationship with God. His life and His death became the bridge for us to have an ongoing relationship with the Creator of the universe. What was destroyed in Eden was restored on Calvary.

Jesus restored what was broken; that was the purpose of His kingdom then and that is how His kingdom comes now. So basically, if we had to sum up God’s kingdom with one word, it would be restoration. But here’s where things start to get messy. Very rarely are your kingdoms and my kingdoms about restoration. If most of us were honest, we would admit our own personal kingdoms really are centered around that whole “King of the Hill” mentality—we push anything and anyone away that messes with us ruling our kingdoms. And while the idea of Jesus’ kingdom sounds good in theory, it starts to lose some of its appeal when our personal kingdom is at risk.

It feels so opposite from how most of us are wired. See, our kingdoms, in an effort to profit ourselves, often involve a lot of breaking, a lot of fracturing and a lot of damage all for the sake of “me.”

So where is your kingdom? The church answer would be “I live in God’s kingdom,” but you and I both know that we all have those places where we want God to take His hands off our lives and let us function how we want to operate, not how He wants us to live. We all have ways of thinking, grudges we hold on to, habits we feed, relationships that are too intertwined, things we want to say, places in our lives where we know what God wants to do, and we just say, “No thanks.” We would rather be in the business of preserving our kingdoms. If your kingdom is your iPod, what is on there that is influencing you more than you’d like to admit? If your kingdom is your relationships, what guy/girl has such a grip on your heart that you really don’t care what God says? If your kingdom is this group, what are you so afraid of? What causes you to avoid new people who come here? If your kingdom is your own comfort, why are you afraid to do something that you know will stretch you and help you experience God in a new way by serving others?

Following Jesus is not easy. Our will often wants to coerce, manipulate and be greedy. To invite Jesus’ kingdom to come into our lives, our worlds, means we invite Jesus to be king instead of us. We invite His way of doing things, His will, to take precedence over ours. We get out of the way.

But before you can even begin to seek God’s kingdom, you have to find your own. You have to identify that area or those areas of your life where your kingdom rules, the areas where you exert your will. So today, start there. Find your kingdom. Before you can surrender all your kingdoms to God, you have to start pinpointing what those are, and looking at what it would take to make that surrender happen. It will require something more from you than a simple prayer. It will require you living and even thinking differently. We’ll talk more about on the 22nd, but for now, ask yourself, “Where is my kingdom?”

Sunday Night Thoughts  

Posted by Jordan Jones in

1. Sign-up for the retreat sometime this week. I'm not asking anymore- just instructing. Embrace God's command to be still.


That's all you get tonight...because you should spend the time you would have spent reading the rest of my post to fill out the retreat form!!!

Sunday Night Thoughts  

Posted by Jordan Jones in

1. I am not going to lie. What God asked me to teach on was not easy. I know I might be a pansy, but speaking with that much authority (or presumed authority) took a lot of Spirit dependency.

2. I am learning that you can't successfully speak with authority (at least without coercive power) unless those you are speaking to have witnessed sacrificial acts of love and service on your part (why do you think everyone listened and respected a little, fragile old lady from Calcutta when she spoke?!?)
3. Umm...wow. When the Spirit of God speaks restoration into a human heart, the aftermath is undeniable. Thank you for showing me that the deepest thing you can do spiritually is simply obey. It's amazingly refreshing.
4. I have heard some rumblings that I am unapproachable, that some students and parents see me as someone that it is not easy to come to and talk through an issue, problem, etc. A couple things I want to share. First, I can completely understand that sentiment. I am pretty intense about most things, my passion is both my greatest glory and greatest curse. I often become very defensive. This is not exactly the ideal circumstances for open dialogue. However, please know my door is always open. Students, parents and leaders walk through it all the time (both literally and figuratively). I desire to walk through your journey with you. It's why I'm here. I am sorry for the times that I have communicated otherwise with my actions.
5. See you next week for our November AMP, the Bonfire Blitz! You won't believe the kinds of foods we will be grilling over fires in the back woods. It's going to be sickkk. And to the weather complainers- Supposedly it's not supposed to be that cold either (and you will be outside all night for Halloween, one night before!!!) Don't forget to bring your friends...it's the reason we do these kind of nights!
6. I know I say this a lot...but I love my job. Heart transformation never gets old.

Sunday night Thoughts  

Posted by Jordan Jones in

1. Check out Ezekiel 33. Intense. Who are the watchmen in your life? What are they challenging you to that you have been ignoring? Who has God divinely placed in your life for you to be watchmen over?

2. Church should never be normal. You should never walk away and have more "natural" things to talk about like whether the band played well, if the talk was entertaining than supernatural things. Situations and circumstances that can only be explained by, "It had to be God."
3. Who did you serve at Crosswalk tonight? Who did you love? Who was sitting off to the side that you brought into the mix?
4. I can't apologize for speaking the greater reality of the Scriptures. It's a little heavy I know, but I just can't get that picture out of my head of God seated on His throne receiving all the glory right now- I will stand before Him and I want to proudly say we pursued Jesus with all that we had. Not just got together and started to love each other a little more and felt good each week- but we loved Jesus and others relentlessly. It's a scary thing, but it's the reason why we were created.
5. The band blew it out of the water tonight. Great job...I was lost in worship!
6. You aren't going to want to miss next week! Zach is speaking and I promise no matter where you are at the theme will be radically relevant to your life!
7. If you are interested in being baptized, please e-mail me at jordan.jones@trinitywired.com or sign up at the back table in the Little House (Student Auditorium) next week.

Sunday night Thoughts  

Posted by Jordan Jones in

1. Country music is never good in prolonged doses.

2. I pray for the new students that made their way into our midst tonight- specifically that they commit to coming to Crosswalk for the rest of October. Our most anticipated series is on tap.
3. Mechanical bulls and I together do not equal bliss.
4. Definitely experienced the wildest hay ride in my life.
5. See you next week for the beginning of the DEEP series!!! Bring your Bibles!

Sunday night Thoughts  

Posted by Jordan Jones in

I am fickle. Small. Selfish. Insecure. But daily being restored by the power of the Gospel and Jesus himself. 


I want to apologize for the fact that I walked away from our gathering tonight more focused on the sound being off during worship, how the night just seemed too frazzled and how nothing seemed to flow- all the while Jesus was changing lives. Shame on me. The Gospel went forth and transformation was the invitation. How trivial do I make things?

A few thoughts

1.  I am excited to see God use Zach at Crosswalk- he will be one of the main teachers throughout the year and I think God through Zach is what our community needs- the raw Gospel flooding us with its relentless pursuit. 
2.  Next week (our first AMP night) is the time to bring your friends!!! Our hope is that you have already been living out and sharing your faith with these friends and AMP nights are a natural environment for you to introduce them to the community that is challenging you in your spiritual journey. We will have a hay ride, line dancing, mechanical bull, dress-up contests/ prizes, free grub, etc. It's the same time as a regular Crosswalk night. 
3.  The Gospel changes lives. Period. 
4.  Normally "wrong" behaviors in our lives are just symptoms of a larger disease- the condition of our hearts. 
5.  I am going to be honest- I am tired of preferences. Especially from those who are part of the body of Christ...those who know Jesus. It's not about us! It's not about our preferences, our wishes...it's about Jesus' name becoming more and more famous. So we didn't play a game that you wanted? Or you were only placed with 3 of the 4 friends you asked to be with in your small group? Was Jesus' name magnified? Did His Gospel go forth? Did you serve someone, sacrificially love someone at a gathering? I think these are the questions we should be concerned with...
6.  We have some of the best leaders imaginable.