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      « Some thoughts on love | Main | HoneyRock Chapel »
      Monday
      Oct262009

      HoneyRock Blog to be updated every weekday!

      Hi Everyone - It is John Vandervelde
      writing today!


      This week we're launching a
      new plan to be more diligent about communicating with our friends through
      the HoneyRock Blog.  As you may know, we send out a
      monthly e-newsletter, we update our FaceBook fan page every so often, add videos to our YouTube page when we get a chance, and work to
      keep our website current.  But, we also have this great HoneyRock blog,
      and it frequently gets checked by those interested in what is happening
      at HoneyRock despite the fact that it is not updated regularly.  We've
      realized we need to be more diligent about updating it and interacting
      with people through this blog. 


      So, we're now going to be
      updating our blog every weekday!
      Our plan is to share with you our
      prayer requests, what we're thinking about and learning, what programs
      are coming up next, events you can get involved in, and other things
      that are a part of our ministry.  Things are going to be a little different
      than they've been in the past on this blog.  We're going to attempt not
      only to communicate more regularly, but also communicate more of our
      heart and the things God is doing in our lives and through this place.


      On with today’s update...


      Each morning at 7:45am we meet
      as a staff around the fireplace upstairs in the Chrouser Center Dining
      Hall.  We spend 15 minutes in a time of group devotion to God.  We open
      his word and we pray together.  Today we read Ephesians 2:1-10 and I
      shared some thoughts about our spiritual "Regeneration" -
      how God, by His grace through Christ, makes us Alive again.  We were
      once dead in our sins, but now we are alive.  We are regenerated.


      This weekend I was down in
      Wheaton taking a class called "Evangelism and the Local Church"
      led by Nancy Grisham.  As a part of this class we attended Willow Creek's
      Saturday evening service.  It had been about 10 years since I had been
      to Willow Creek and in addition to the many structural changes to the
      building; I also noticed many other changes.  As I approached the building
      the door was opened for me by a greeter who said, "Welcome to Willow
      Creek."  As I stepped inside another greeter in a bright red Willow
      Creek greeter jersey welcomed me, "Hi, we're glad you're here this
      evening."  A third greeter, stationed at the door to the sanctuary
      welcomed me and handed me an "outline" for the sermon.  Finally
      a fourth person guided us to our seats and asked if we were comfortable. 
      I was amazed.  For years part of Willow's strategy for reaching "Unchurched
      Harrys and Marys" who were potentially seeking after God was to
      allow anonymity.  Meaning, in the past, you could drive into the Willow
      Creek parking lot, park your car, walk into the building, take a seat,
      stay through the service, and leave at the end without anyone from the
      church even saying hello to you. 


      The second change I noticed
      was the style of worship music.  In the past Willow Creek has not been
      much of a singing church. The songs were chosen to be seeker-sensitive
      and more entertaining than drawing people to worship God with their
      whole hearts.  This Saturday I stood with about 5000 other people in
      the Willow Creek sanctuary, many of them with hands raised high, and
      sang 3-4 deep, meaningful worship songs—including 2 hymns.


      Another change I noticed was
      in Bill Hybels’ sermon.  Known as being an incredible speaker who is
      authentic, dynamic, and speaks to the heart-needs of people, Hybels
      and his seeker-sensitive messages were used to fill the seats at Willow
      Creek.  Not known for tackling issues like sin, hell or doctrine from
      the pulpit, Hybels’ mission used to be to draw people back to the
      church and into small groups or mid-week services where they would give
      their lives fully to Christ.  The Bill Hybels I listened to on Saturday
      preached on doctrine.  He opened Ephesians 2 and did a beautiful exegesis
      of the text that was challenging and meaningful to me, a committed follower
      of Christ.  He even preached about hell, and he unveiled a list of the
      "doctrines of the Christian faith" and explained how belief
      and understanding in the Doctrine of Regeneration is necessary to be
      a follower of Christ.  He used a diagram to powerfully show the difference
      between the life of someone who is dead to God and the life of someone
      who is alive through Christ.  He preached for nearly 45 minutes.  It was
      powerful, challenging, relevant, and not what one would have traditionally
      thought of as "seeker-sensitive."  


      Finally Hybels concluded his
      sermon with an altar call.  That's right, an altar call at Willow Creek. 
      He asked people who knew they were dead to God in their sins to come
      forward and give their lives to Christ to be made alive.


      There's a phrase I heard recently
      in regards to the idea that no church is perfect, it goes something
      like this: "If you find a perfect church, don't go there, because
      than it won't be perfect anymore."  Truly no church is perfect,
      including Willow Creek.  But I do applaud their efforts and the changes
      they've made.  We need to constantly be evaluating the methods we use
      to share the Good News with others, and we always need to keep God's
      Word at the center of what we do.


      People in today’s world are
      hungry to hear God's word and are hungry for the Truth.  They are still
      hungry for the gospel after 2000 years, maybe more so today than ever
      before.  There is an openness in today's culture to spiritual things,
      and spiritual conversations are not something completely outside of
      normal for most people, even the unchurched.  What an exciting and adventuresome
      time to be a follower of Christ!  What a cool time to be involved in
      a ministry like HoneyRock that not only shares the gospel with people
      but also further encourages Christ Followers in their walk with him. 


      My prayer for us today at HoneyRock
      is that our lives and our words (our words and our deeds) would point
      people toward Jesus—that we would have the boldness to live lives
      and have conversations that testify to God's love and grace in our lives
      and that people (young and old) will be drawn closer to God.


      TODAY'S PRAYER REQUESTS / PRAISES:


      We praise God for a great weekend
      working with 5th graders from Three Lakes and Sugar Camp (our local
      school district).  Despite coldness and rain kids had a fun and challenging
      time learning how to work as a team and care for each other.


      We are praying for Edie Williams
      (Bud Williams’ wife) who was recently hospitalized and in critical
      care with fluid in her lungs.  Edie is doing better but is still in the
      hospital.


      We pray for 7-year-old Ethan
      Welsh (nephew of former staff members John and Lauren Welsh) who was
      recently hit by a car.  Ethan has swelling of the brain and also contracted
      H1N1 in the hospital.  Pray for healing for him.   

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      Reader Comments (1)

      Great that the blog will be updated more often. Thanks for sharing your observations regarding Willow Creek. A lot of humility and soul searching and God seeking led to the changes at WC, and it seems the same is happening at HoneyRock. Will be praying!
      October 26, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterDenise Kerns

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