You Are

Listen to Jonathan Woolner describe the strategy, introduced by Jesus, of changing the world with unschooled ordinary people: people just like us. You are the salt and  the light, Jesus doesn’t say you should be the salt and the light… Read along in
Matthew 5:13-16,
Matthew 5:3-12,
Matthew 15:13-16,
Mark 9:31-34,
Luke 8:1-2,
Luke 9:49-50,
Luke 9:52-56, and
Acts 4:13.

Chosen

Listen to Jonathan Woolner explain that Jesus was a rabbi. ‘Jewish to the bone’
Jewish disciples had to have three stages of education:

  1. Age 6-10: Memorize the Torah (Genesis-Deuteronomy)
  2. Age 10-13: Questioning and answering
  3. Age 13-16: Determined whether students would train for discipleship or for common trades.

Age 30: Students on the discipleship track look for rabbis to follow, rabbis observe students and discern whether or not they are capable of taking on their yoke.

Jesus was unique in that he surprisingly pursued people who were not on track to be disciples, and He pursues us in the same way. He believes you have the capacity to be like Him.

John 1 – “In the beginning was the word…” vs 14 – “…the word became flesh”
Luke 2:41-52 – vs 52 – “…grew in wisdom and stature and in favor with God and Man”
Matthew 11
Matthew 4:18-22 – “Come follow me, Jesus said…”
John 15:16 – “I chose you, you did not choose me”

The Power of Connection

Listen to Jonathan Woolner talk about Zacchaeus. “…In the absence of connection there is always suffering.” Jesus moved toward suffering while tradition held that a tax collector would not even be considered human. He also calls him (who lacked connection) by name (pure and innocent). Jesus makes the first move. He invites us to be who we really are. Read along in Luke 19:1-10, Matthew 5:8.

Orderly Disorder

Listen to Jonathan Woolner introduce the concept that the kingdom of God works in ways that we may not expect, much like a mustard plant. He invited us to ask the question, “What makes you think the world is the way you see it?” And mentions spiritual abuse being something we should be aware of. “We are like God, not when we are pure, but when we are loving and gracious.” Read Matthew 13:31-35

Unifying Grace

Listen to guest speaker, Mick Wilson, brother-in-law & friend of Jonathan Woolner talk about “Grace Deficit Disorder” (thinking God will love us more if we serve Him more) and why mature christians need to revisit the gospel so they don’t forget God’s commitment to them as they commit to God. The fullness of God is in us, not just you as an individual. Receive the sacrificial love of Christ and bend it out to each other, your families, and this community. Read Ephesians 1 & Ephesians 3:10.

The Familiar Unfamiliar

Listen to Jon Woolner speak about Abraham being asked to sacrifice his son, Isaac. A discussion is brought up about the Western perspective (we may not be aware of) influencing our understanding of this story. In a dramatic unexpected twist, God generously provides the sacrifice for Abraham to offer. Read along in Genesis 22.

A Free Cup Of Espresso

Listen to Jon Woolner speak about God’s grace being non-reimbursable and something we just can’t un-experience. God makes the first move. Grace is that moment when I wake up and find out that my life is..a gift. Learn to accept radical love and acceptance. The Bible is full of story after story of people waking up. Transformation is not about doing stuff, it is about waking up. See Luke 15:3-31, Romans 5:6, and Psalm 139.