Archive for the ‘Inspiration’ Category

Dr. Wallnau speaking on the 7 mountains

Sunday, March 29th, 2009

In an earlier posting we mentioned that Dr. Lance Wallnau will be speaking April 3-4 at the Portland Christian Chamber of Commerce conference. As we mentioned, Lance Wallnau, a business coach, has identified 7 cultural mountains: business, government, arts and entertainment, media, education, family, and church. Christians should be involved in leading the transformation that is needed in each of these.

Lance is a dynamic teacher with a gift for imparting the Word of God. His anointed messages are remembered years afterwards, He captivates his audiences by humor, illustrations, drawings, and a fresh vocabulary which penetrates deep into the heart with incredible authority, clarity, and personal application.

Lance’s prophetic teaching helps people see a clearer path into transformation. His unique style and humor are designed to keep you smiling so it isn’t too painful when the truth hits home. Such high intensity in the Holy Spirit, accompanied by his pointed, colorful delivery, and use of diagrams and instruments enable him to impact his audiences and clients worldwide. His teaching is an unforgettable experience.

If you can’t make the conference or want to hear him free, you can catch him speaking at the International Life Center on Saturday, April 4 at 6:30 p.m. No reservation is necessary. The address is 10014 NE Glisan, Portland, OR.

Love Your Enemies

Friday, January 30th, 2009

Love Your Enemies
By Chuck Colson
1/30/2009
Related Audio/Video Downloads

John Rucyahana Receives Wilberforce Award

In a large open area of a Rwandan prison, Anglican Bishop John Rucyahana spoke to a crowd of killers responsible for the 1994 genocide. “Close your eyes,” he instructed them. “Go back in your mind to 1994. What did you see?” he asked. “What did you smell? What did you hear?”

Many in the crowd began to weep. He told the men to see their victims’ faces. The sobs grew louder. “Now,” said Bishop John, “that which made you cry, that you must confess.”

It’s amazing enough that Bishop John, himself a Tutsi, would speak to the Hutu perpetrators of the genocide. It’s even more amazing when you consider that John’s own niece, Madu, was brutally raped and killed during the genocide. But Bishop John had a reason to reach out to these men in compassion—for he, too, had found forgiveness of his sins through Jesus Christ.

That compassion to love his would-be enemies is just one of the many reasons why we recently awarded Bishop John Rucyahana the William Wilberforce Award.

We present the award every year to a person who makes a difference in the face of formidable societal problems and injustices, no matter the opposition. Former recipients include people like Gary Haugen of the International Justice Mission; Benigno Aquino, the Philippine hero; Baroness Carolyn Cox; and Senator Sam Brownback. These are men and women who, as executive director of the Center for Justice and Reconciliation Dan Van Ness says, “challenge our comfortable assumptions.”

Bishop John’s faith does indeed challenge me. He found Christ while growing up as an exile from his native Rwanda. He puts it better than I’ve ever heard before: “I did not accept Jesus. Jesus graciously met me and accepted me.” This is a man who understands how we come empty-handed to Christ.

At a time when John wanted to pursue a degree, God led him and his wife, Beatrice, to start a school for 170 refugee children in Uganda. Today, some of those grown children serve in key posts in Rwanda.

Studying in the States during the 1994 genocide, Bishop John wanted desperately to go back to the ministry he had left behind in Uganda. But instead, he responded to God’s call to face the darkness by going back to his homeland—returning to Rwanda, finding bones bleached white by the sun littering the streets, open graves fouling the air. Still, Bishop John worked with others to establish Prison Fellowship Rwanda.

He helped start the Umuvumu Tree Project, which has brought together tens of thousands of perpetrators and victims of the genocide, offering offenders the opportunity to confess their crimes and victims the chance to forgive. Many have done so.

I wish I had time to share all the ways that Bishop John’s faith challenges our own. In addition to his work in Rwanda, he played a key role in founding the Anglican Mission in America. He encourages American Christians to be unashamed missionaries to their own society, reconciling their neighbors to Christ.

Imagine, African missionaries to us—yes, we need them.

But most of all, Bishop John is a shining example of what it means to love our enemies—and to overcome evil with good.

What the Obama Inaugural Means

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

Watching the inaugural today was a very emotional experience for me. I lived in Washington, DC from 1962 to 1968. I walked that mall back then during that March on Washington (August of 1963) at the mall when King spoke and gave his I Have a Dream speech. The emotions of that moment still flood my mind. It is still amazing what happened from that astonishing non-violent action.

Then JFK was shot (November 1963) and I was caught up in the emotions of Washington with the loss of this leader with his vision of a coming Camelot and our responsibility to make it happen . Part of that vision was to put us on the moon. And that we did. I got to be a part of that vision. After three astronauts died when their capsule caught fire, my company sent me to Houston to check out things there for ideas on how to make those flights safer.

I remember walking the streets of a poor part of Washington one day much later and not seeing not a single person. Off in the distance somewhere I heard shouts. I finally found a lonely walker and asked what was happening. One of the Kennedys’ (probably Bobby Kennedy) was moving down the street in (probably an open) car, and the people were shouting greetings with hope in a coming Camelot.

Then Martin Luther King was shot in April of 1968. Again the emotions of another leader’s death shook the city. I was working at the coffeehouse of a church in the inner city that night, and calls were coming in to us that the city was burning just a few blocks from where we were. We stayed at the coffeehouse. And not even a single window was broken there that night as we worked.

Then, a few months later (June, 1968), we saw the death of Bobby Kennedy. Camelot never came.

Today, again, at this same mall we see the visions that these leaders held in the past beginning once again to break loose of the bondage that has held them for years. The most important thing about President Obama’s inaugural speech, however, is that the President only used the word “I” about three times. What really happens here in this change is up to us. It wasn’t “A change I can believe in” but “A change we can believe in”. The responsibility for leading is with us – not President Obama. What are you going to do about it?

Disciplines for the New Year

Monday, December 29th, 2008

What gifts would you like to bring to the Christ-King? Pick from the list or create your own as the Spirit leads you.

The Story of the Whale

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

Whale1

If you read the front page story of the SF Chronicle, you would have read about a female humpback whale who had become entangled in a spider web of crab traps and lines.

She was weighted down by hundreds of pounds of traps that caused her to struggle to stay afloat. She also had hundreds of yards of line rope wrapped around her body, her tail, her torso, and a line tugging in her mouth.

A fisherman spotted her just east of the Farralone Islands (outside the Golden Gate) and radioed an environmental group for help.

Within a few hours, the rescue team arrived and determined that she was so bad off, the only way to save her was to dive in and untangle her.

- a very dangerous proposition.

One slap of the tail could kill a rescuer.

They worked for hours with curved knives and eventually freed her. When she was free, the divers say she swam in what seemed like joyous circles. She then came back to each and every diver, one at a time, and nudged them, pushed gently
around–she thanked them. Some said it was the most incredibly beautiful experience of their lives.

The guy who cut the rope out of her mouth says her eye was following him the whole time, and he will never be the same.

May you, and all those you love, be so blessed and fortunate to be surrounded by people who will help you get untangled from the things that are binding you. And may you always know the joy of giving and receiving gratitude.

Prayer and the Website

Monday, July 2nd, 2007

We have opened up a new catetgory on the main menu on prayer. Lots of good stuff there. The city-reaching stuff is still there under the church. Enjoy! Within the next few days, we’ll add more to the prayer resources.

Changes and Transformation

Saturday, February 24th, 2007

I like to talk about change, and during the next few months you will see some changes here I think you’ll like. Here are some of these you can expect to see:

  • Main menu changes to include The Journey, Prayer, Healing…
  • Better usability, such as interactive buttons.
  • The addition of professional graphics
  • The updating of resources
  • Additional cool content from Carl.

The changes will be slow and over time. I stay very busy with clients and this site is a ministry of love and calling. My financial resources limit what I can do in a given time frame. We need a new and faster computer as well as additional financial support to put more time here. We pray for that!

A Christmas Story

Friday, December 22nd, 2006

Here is one of our favorite Christmas stories:

http://www.creatingnewworlds.org/thestory.htm

Have a wonderful Christmas.

News Item:


“The city of Boston sparked controversy when it renamed the spruce tree in Boston Common a holiday tree unstead of a Christmas tree. The city’s nativity scene will now be [called] the Holiday Homeless Family.”
Tina Fey

What the Church Needs

Monday, December 18th, 2006

On December 4 I had the privilege of sitting in a conference with Tom White and George Otis as they shared about their perception of what God is doing today. The place where we met was a Rodeway Inn, and functions to the world as a part of that larger chain. In reality, it’s a church that draws over 500 for worship on Sunday, with businesspeople staying there the weekend finding Christ before they head on home from the nearby airport. A few years ago, the motel was the largest center of prostitution here in Portland. Some of those same rooms now serve as half-way housing for kids on the way for finding jobs, Christ, and directions in life.

Tom White had been responsible for getting George in – a challenge in itself with George’s busy schedule. Tom introduced some issues for George, but it was Otis that really dropped the dynamite on us.

In summary, Otis said that we are at a very dark time in history. A time when strange leaders have weapons of mass destruction with the intent to use them and other leaders seem powerless to stop them. A time when political, economic, social, and the rest of our human systems are failing us. And this is not just at national levels, it also true in cities and regions. He’s releasing a video in about two weeks detailing this, but it is short – probably 20 minutes or so. The video shows the story of how we’ve built human institutions with time (League of Nations, United Nations, etc.) and these have all eventually failed us. The world, Otis said, faces almost certain destruction without a supernatural intervention from God.

The Good News, Otis said, is that this supernatural intervention is happening. When Otis did his Transformations I video back in 1999, he had identified about 12 cities worldwide that were totally transformed by the power of God politically, socially, spiritually, and economically – any way you could measure it. Moreover, these were sustained transformations involving the entire city that continued there over time. (Only one was in the U.S.) The video showed what happened in four of these cities.1 A few years later I asked him the count at that time and he told me had about 24 cities. This week is said the count is now over 250 cites and growing very rapidly. This is not just revival, but a supernatural outpouring of the Holy Spirit with stories you would not believe. George spent Monday night telling us some of the stories. Moreover, he has identified some 550 what you might call “salty places” where the fire has begun to burn and already has begun to explode. Like an appetizer for a meal, in these places there is already a deep hunger for the main course.

Thousands of cites have contacted him to come and help them get started after seeing the first video. George says he has no program. He’s only researching what is common to all of these and reporting what he sees. George says you can’t imagine yet what God wants to do. Moreover, he says taking our coffee into the Sunday Service and doing our chit-chat isn’t going to do what needs to happen. It won’t happen until there is a deep, deep, deep hunger for the coming of the Holy Spirit. In these cites people became desperate for spiritual awaking. Then the Holy Sprit comes. Moreover, here is an interesting quote from him:

The greatest breakthrough today is where the Spirit of God comes down and attaches Himself to the broken and humble. It’s where God goes when He wants pleasure.

At various conferences I’ve met several of the pastors that have led these transformations in the cities. They all fit this definition, even to the extent of these pastors being ridiculously humble. Otis says what he is seeing is much like Ezekiel 8 and the supernatural story there and the humility of Ezekiel.

To hear the sessions:

http://www.prayersummits.net/?pageid=59321

Authority and Power in Strategic Prayer

Tuesday, October 10th, 2006

Carl will be speaking on Authority and Power in Strategic Prayer at a Men’s Breakfast at Christian City Church (formerly Bethlehem Church) in Lake Oswego, Oregon near Portland on October 21 (Saturday) at 8 am. The breakfast is free, but you may wish to donate something for the food. Email or call Carl ahead of time (503 697-4773) if you plan to attend so we have enough food. (Leave a message if he isn’t there.)