Collegians educated, inspired about missions at DestiNATIONS
By Brittany Jarvis
DALLAS (BP)Approximately 2,700 people, including 2,500
college students, converged on Dallas Jan. 4-7, for DestiNATIONS,
a conference designed to educate and inspire students about
missions.
The Christian life is not about the things that you
bring to this God, said Mike Stroope. Its about
dead corpses to whom God brings life.
Stroope, former missionary for the Southern Baptist International
Mission Board and current president of All Peoples, a church
mobilization organization, spoke on the opening night of DestiNATIONS.
The question before you, Stroope said, is will
you live unto your name, your purposes, ... or will you die?
We no longer kill bulls or pigeons; thats Old
Testament, he said. We present our bodies as living
sacrifices.
A long-time missionary himself, Stroope said he has seen
people go halfway around the world but never die to self.
People choose one of two directions in life, he said. They
either give their lives to Gods glory or to their own.
God, however, is the rightful person to receive glory
to His name.
Erwin McManus, pastor of Mosaic Church and president of Global
Impact in Los Angeles, challenged students to boldly claim
cities for God.
There are synonyms for the word urbanization,
McManus said. One is edge. The second word is future.
If you want to live on what people call the cutting edge,
you have to go to the cities.
Reading from Deuteronomy 2:36, McManus asked, Do you
believe there is no city too high for the Lord? Do you believe
God could deliver every city on the face of this earth to
his people for his glory?
McManus said God gave him a vision years ago to claim Los
Angeles for God. But when it came to buying a meeting place,
his small congregation did not have enough money to purchase
a nightclub that was for sale. Years went by and the nightclub
was sold. After a quick meeting between McManus and the new
owners, the congregation was allowed to rent the club on Sundays
for a nominal fee.
McManus and his congregation began to pray about how to market
their church, since they had no money for promotions. About
that time, the Los Angeles Times newspaper did a full page
story about the church in a nightclub. Following
publication of the article, a local television station did
a centerpiece story for the evening news about the church,
and the story ran two weeks in a row.
McManus concluded by challenging the students to take a stand
and fight for their cities. He encouraged them to intercede
in prayer for their hometowns and to consider moving into
urban areas.
I believe God can change the world one city at a time,
he said.
Dieter Zander, of San Francisco, leader of Church Planting
Movement in Postmodern America, led a seminar in which he
redefined the meaning of church and predicted characteristics
of the future church.
He said the church is not a building, event, spiritual
shopping mall or club you join. The church is, in one word,
people. More specifically, Zander said, The church
is people vitally connected and committed to Jesus Christ,
each other and Gods purpose in the world.
Gods purpose, according to Zander, is not to get people
into heaven. Rather, he said, Gods purpose is to bless
Christians so that they can bless the world.
Based on his observations of college students, Zander said
this generation is the most technically savvy, globally connected
and streetwise generation ever. These characteristics, he
said, will lead to a future church that is community oriented,
faith-life integrated, hyper-creative, supernatural and focused
on doing good.
Friends, you are the future of the church, he
said. And you will have a hand in defining what the
future church will look like.
Voddie Baucham, an evangelist from Houston, and director
of Voddie Baucham Ministries in Oxford, England, concluded
the conference with a message entitled, The Indwelling
Christ. He told the students that God has a purpose
larger than any one person, but that the Spirit of God allows
each Christian to participate in Gods plan. Baucham
also stressed the importance of taking the gospel to the world.
It is estimated that there are about 1.8 billion people
in the world who have never heard the name of Jesus,
he said. Theres a reason that there is an urgency
about the gospel, and that reason is that Jesus is the way,
the truth, and the life and no one comes to the Father unless
they come through Him!
You were put together by God uniquely, and there is
no one like you in all of the earth, he said. There
is a place in this world for you alone where you will serve
God.
Students who attended the conference also heard testimonies
from missionaries who are serving overseas and nationally.
Throughout the event, students were able to learn about opportunities
for mission work and given opportunities to commit to serve.
DestiNATIONS was a Southern Baptist missions conference jointly
sponsored by the state Baptist conventions, LifeWay Christian
Resources, the International and North American mission boards
and Womans Missionary Union.
Ferrell Foster contributed to this article. (BP) photos posted
in the BP Photo Library at www.bpnews.net.
Photo titles: ERWIN MCMANUS, DESTINATIONS, DERRICK THOMAS,
FELLOWSHIP and JEFF LEWIS.
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