The Day of our Departure Draws Nigh!

In the next couple of weeks, we are reasonably confident that we’ll be able to buy tickets to Peru! We’d like to move in early August. This will allow Aila to celebrate her end-of-July birthday in Grand Rapids with friends and family. The exact date of our departure will depend on the airline ticket prices once we get the green light from Mesa Global, our sending organization.

These final two months of life in the US are:

  • A time of great joy! August 4th will mark thirteen years since Adriana and I moved from Lima, Peru to the US. We finally make our way back to do what we feel God has for us to do.
  • A time of great sadness! We leave friends and family who we love dearly and who have made the US home.
  • A time with too much to do! We’re trying to balance packing, spending time with friends and family, meeting with potential ministry partners, an assortment of academic and ministerial tasks, and defining details related to the move.
Please pray that God would give us strength, perseverance, and wisdom!

Here are some family highlights from the last two months:

April

Our baby, Imara, turned 5! When we moved from Grand Rapids to Wheaton, she was only four-months old. Now a fivenager in all the best, most hilarious and some of the more difficult ways, Adriana and I could not be more thankful for her and her cheerful, energetic personality.

We spent a week in North Carolina at a Spiritual Formation retreat and training required by Mesa Global. This gave us much needed to time to reflect on God’s faithfulness and goodness and the many ways we need to turn to God for grace. We also met other Mesa missionaries who encouraged us in our calling.

May

We travelled to Wheaton College for my graduation. Thank you, Jesus, for your faithfulness throughout the PhD journey.

We visited the church in Illinois where we served on staff for three years. Excitement filled our car on the way to see our All People’s Fellowship family, and many warm hugs welcomed us. When the first Christians in the early church called each other “brothers and sisters,” they were not joking! God’s family is truly a family.

Ilana ran her first 5k as a part of an after school program called “Girls on the Run.” She did a fantastic job, running the entire time.

We had a big garage sale to purge many of the things that we will not bring with us to Peru.

June

Our kids ended their second and final year at The Potter’s House. We’re thankful that God opened the doors for us to be part of this sweet community where our kids grew academically and spiritually and made great friends.


Please Pray

  • That God would give us strength, perseverance, and wisdom for our transition from GR to Peru.
  • For unity and understanding amidst the stress.
  • That God would continue to provide as the remaining support comes in.

Why Theological Education?

I began this mini-series to explain why my family’s ministry focuses intently on formal theological education (TE). I’ve said that TE is training in things related to God, and it takes a variety of forms—from Bible studies to sermons to seminary degree programs. Formal TE seeks to equip ministry leaders, those who teach and preach and carry a burden of responsibility for the people of God. TE should be integral (addressing the whole person with an eye towards all of life) and formational (moving people towards conformity with Jesus). My aim as a theological educator is to help people know God more deeply and fully so they see the world from God’s perspective and live in the world according to God’s design.

Thus far, I’ve tried to make the case that TE is central to the mission of the church. In the “great commission,” Jesus commanded his followers to do the work of TE: “teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you” (Matthew 28:20). The rest of the NT echoes this command, and the early church took it to heart as “they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching…” (Acts 2:42). The church cannot see TE as an optional “add-on” to evangelism or a take-it-or-leave-it supplement to the “real” or “more important” work. Faithfulness to Jesus requires that the church do TE. Yet, this work is not without perils!

Why theological education?

Reason #4: teachers have a dangerous job!

In the sermon on the mount, Jesus anticipates a problematic response to his ministry. Given the authority with which he speaks and the depth of his wisdom, some might mistakenly think that his teaching replaces the teachings of the Old Testament. “No! No! No!” Jesus says, “Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets…” (Matthew 5:17). “Law” and “Prophets” refers to the first two of three sections of Israel’s Scriptures (the third is called the “Writings” or sometimes “Psalms”). Jesus came to fulfill the OT. He exemplifies how to live in full accordance with God’s teaching, putting on display an abundant life in perfect relationship with the Father. Jesus presents himself not as a replacement of the Law but as its ultimate interpreter and embodiment. And those that follow in his footsteps, well they better follow in his footsteps! After all, “anyone who sets aside one of the least of these commands and teaches others accordingly will be called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever practices and teaches these commands will be called great in the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 5:19).

Teachers face a tall task! They must interpret,* appropriate, and communicate God’s instruction in changing times and contexts. When they do this poorly, when they lessen the demands of God’s kingdom, setting aside Jesus’ commands and teaching others to do the same, they suffer the consequences. They’re called “least” in God’s kingdom. I don’t know exactly what that means, but it is not good!

Yet, it’s no safer to increase the demands! Paul warned about those that judge others based on what they eat and drink and their religious celebrations; he talked about those that make extra rules and commands that “indeed have an appearance of wisdom…but they lack any value in restraining sensual indulgence” (Colossians 2:16–23). Jesus criticized the Pharisees for making heavy burdens for the people (Matthew 23:1–4) in contrast to Jesus’ light burden (Matthew 11:28–30). No, establishing rules and requirements that add on to Jesus’ commands will not do.

Navigating life in Christian freedom requires discernment, humility, the enlightening power of the Holy Spirit, and guidance! Teachers, those that offer guidance to others, have a responsibility to do this well because they wield a dangerous power: the power of the tongue. James warns would-be teachers to think twice about this vocation because “we who teach will be judged more strictly” (James 3:1)! He then describes how the tongue, though small, “is fire, a world of evil among the parts of the body” (James 3:6). An impetuous, careless, or manipulative word can set a person’s life on fire.

Teachers must bear this responsibility with fear, trembling, and boldness. They must speak the truth confidently, guiding people towards the Lord. They must speak with humility because when they err, and they will do so, they can do loads of damage to others and to their own souls—the Lord will judge them! Leaders must care for God’s flock with love and gentleness, wisdom and perception, and with a recognition that they serve the Lord and the Lord’s people, not themselves!

As Hebrew 13:17 says, leaders “keep watch over you [their flock] as those who must give an account.” Church leaders have a dangerous task. God holds them responsible for the way they care for God’s people. By virtue of their role, they wield significant power. And they must seek to empower people to live faithful lives in Christian freedom, giving way to neither license nor piling on unnecessary demands.

So, why theological education?

Because theological education aids preachers, teachers, and leaders in their dangerous task! Through formal training, people learn to interpret God’s word, come to know God’s character more fully, and reflect on how to embody God’s teaching so that they can communicate God’s word faithfully and guide others as they follow Jesus.



Discover more from Asi es la vida...

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a comment