“I will bow down toward your holy temple and will praise your name for your love and your faithfulness, for you have exalted above all things your name and your word.”
- Psalm 138:2
Today's passage is from the New International Version of the Bible
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From the Gospel.com Blog

Water and Life

July 8th, 2008

One of the things I take for granted in this life is the ability to go to the faucet, turn it on, and drink what comes out. It’s just an automatic process for me, but for many people on this earth getting clean water isn’t quite so easy.

Mission Network News reports on how Living Water International is combating this problem and changing people’s lives:

This year, Living Water International is rehabilitating more than 100 wells in Sierra Leone, where many open wells are contaminated by surface water during the rainy season.

Sierra Leone’s sanitation is poor, and its water table is high. So surface water transports all kinds of filth and debris into the wells. As a result, many people contract diarrhea and cholera - often fatally. Water-related disease is the single largest killer of infants in developing countries. Sierra Leone, according to UNICEF, is one of the worst places on earth to be a child.

Life is changing, however, in places like Calaba Town. Dr. Charles Kimbe, community health officer of Calaba Town, diagnosed 50 cases of cholera in 2007. In 2008, the town has not had a single case of cholera!

Read the rest of the article here.

An Interview with Ray Pelletier for the Internet Ministry Conference

July 7th, 2008

Each year we at Gospel Communications run something called The Internet Ministry Conference (IMC). We consider it part of our ministry to mobolize and train those that are interested in internet ministries.

Last week Brian Atkinson visited Willow Creek and interviewed Ray Pelletier and Sam Haist for the IMC blog. Ray works as the Emerging Media & Ministry Specialist at Willow and Sam is working as an intern.

Their discussion ranged from online discipleship, to social networks, to how the church should use technology. Well worth a listen if you’re interested in how the internet is being used for the Kingdom of God:

Is your church a praying church?

July 3rd, 2008

prayinghandsIn yesterday’s post, we looked at an article arguing that Bible study was an integral part of any healthy Christian church. Hopefully your church already incorporates Bible study into its worship and congregational life—in sermons, in Sunday school, in Bible study groups, etc. But there’s another practice that is both a means by which your church can become more effective, and a basic reason for a church’s existence in the first place: communal prayer.

The Bible Prayer Fellowship is a ministry centered around (you guessed it) prayer, and one thing they’re especially passionate about is getting congregations to come together and pray as a community of Christ-followers.

So… what’s the big deal about community prayer? Why not just have everybody pray individually, on their own, in their own homes? That’s the big question tackled in Oliver Price’s article Who Needs Prayer Meetings?

“I never cease to be amazed at the church’s neglect of true, heartfelt, corporate prayer.” says George Verwer, director of Operation Mobilization. After visiting thousands of churches around the world, Verwer concludes that most churches essentially have no prayer meeting. Some have canceled midweek services for lack of interest. Others have shifted to Bible study or activities, allowing only a brief five or ten minutes for prayer.

Yet a few are attempting to overcome the general neglect of corporate prayer with encouraging results. They see signs that the praying associated with the early church may be revived. What can we do to help?

First, we need a fresh understanding of the purpose of corporate prayer, its priority in the church, and the moral and spiritual power it provides. Prayer meeting can be one of the most satisfying and attractive meetings in the church.

Price goes on to explain why prayer and prayer meetings are absolutely critical to the health of any church community—community prayer brings a congregation together, it’s tied to evangelism, and it inspires a bold spirit. Once you’ve read through that introduction, take a look at these follow-up articles that explore the how’s and why’s of church prayer meetings:

Not convinced yet? There are a lot more articles about the power and importance of prayer at the Bible Prayer Fellowship website. Read through some of these and ask yourself if your church is practicing Biblical, community prayer.

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