Open Heavens #2

Sep 07th 2010

I’m sitting on a deck over looking the city from Harvest Fields.  It’s almost 8pm.  Lynn has joined the Midtown Team out prayer-walking.  Field lights at Penn State light up the night. The rest of the city lights are starting to waken.  Clouds fill the darkening sky…except for one place.  An oval, ringed with red, a hole in the clouds, one spot of light, from here it appears to be directly above the Penn State campus.  Open heavens.470_0677

Ancient mystics held to the belief that the Divine inhabited certain geographic regions in a more significant manner than others. This phenomenon has been called holy ground, thin places, or sacred spaces.  I think another biblical name for it is “open heavens” and it isn’t limited by geographical boundaries, it has more to do the hearts of people in the region.

In Malachi 3:10-12, God is speaking to his people and says,

Test me in this,” says the LORD Almighty, “and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that you will not have room enough for it. I will prevent pests from devouring your crops, and the vines in your fields will not cast their fruit,” says the LORD Almighty. “Then all the nations will call you blessed, for yours will be a delightful land,” says the LORD Almighty.

To live in an area/season of open heavens is to live under a flood of uncontainable blessings.  Imagine what it could be like to live under open heavens.  What would it be like your life was flooded with God’s blessings?

Have you ever felt lonely?  Have you ever messed up and wished you could go back for a do-over, get a fresh start?  Draw those words back into your mouth… go back to that one step that led to a journey of lies, pain, alcohol, drugs, brokeness…  Maybe somebody did something to you and you just can’t seem to recover, or maybe you did something and you can’t get your hands clean.  Do you struggle with anger, internet porn, an eating disorder?  What would it be like…if all of a sudden your life was flooded with God’s blessings?

How would it change your family?  A few less loud nights followed by a lot less silent days?  No child left behind.  No kids wondering why their mom or dad left and why they don’t love them anymore — no more abuse.  Good memories of times spent together.  Teen daughters who aren’t embarresd to walk with their dad in the mall — ok that might take more than open heavens!)

How would it change our church?  When I think of times at Calvary when we have hit the mark…as a church, I can’t help but think of…

  • * Families who are adopting children in need of a home…
  • * A small group finding creative ways to help single parents…
  • * Dozens of people giving their spring break to go to the Dominican Republic or Estonia….
  • * A family that takes in a pregnant mom…
  • * Our 1% offering that makes a difference in kid’s lives around the world…
  • * Somebody walking a drunk student home and the next week sharing Jesus with them…

This is a partial picture of a church overflowing with with such a flood of God’s that they cannot be contained by the walls of a building, or an institution.  Can you imagine what our community would look like if those open heavens began to grow so large that the hole in heaven encompassed the Centre Region?  What would it do to our drug problem?  What would it do the 2am Saturday night crowds?  Think of the women who would never again need to worry who the father is… the teens who would never have to go through the ordeal of deciding for or against abortion…the homes that would never be broken.

What if the Centre Region were to experience such a flood of blessings Prayingthat sociologists at Penn State would write textbooks, about a sociological phenomenom called the “Open-Heaven Effect”?

We are in the midst of 21 Days of Prayer for Penn State University and we are asking God to open the heavens.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

21 Days of Prayer — Update

Sep 06th 2010

Two Sunday’s ago, we were challenged to invest 21 days of prayer into Penn State University.  I asked the Calvary family to go on campus to pray one day each week (3 weeks = 3 days) and to pray specifically for three Penn State people.  Pray for three people every day and prayer-walk on campus three days.  calvary on campus

Each of our gatherings has a different day, so someone from Calvary is on campus praying every day for the 21 days…AND if everyone is praying for 3 people — and no one doubles up — then 3000+ people are being prayed for name.  By the way, with some input from others, I decided to pray specifically for 6 people — three who are not yet followers of Jesus, and three who are followers of Jesus.  I’m asking God to help His kids on campus be a great reflection of Jesus.

Lynn and I have been on campus prayer-walking three time so far — once we started at the Creamery, once we finished at the Creamery — and we’ve

  1. – Prayed at Haluba Hall for the football players & coaches.
  2. – Prayed at Paternoville for students to find community in Christ.
  3. – Prayed at the law building that God’s grace would flow from there to the campus.
  4. – Prayed for International students and the world that God brings to our doorsteps.
  5. – Prayed for Students on the Blue Band.
  6. – Prayed among the lab buildings for those involved in the sciences, that they would know the Creator.
  7. – Prayed at Eisenhower for September 19th and the arts.
  8. – Prayed for students we passed.

As Lynn and I drove home the last time, it occurred to me, in 16 years of being a pastor here — as a whole church — we have on occasion prayer-walked on campus, on occasion prayed for the campus, but never before have we focused our prayers on Penn State University for 21 Days.  I said to Lynn, “That’s just stupid.  Why haven’t we done this before.”  So I want to tell you I’m sorry for not leading us to do this sooner.  I want to say thanks to those who have faithfully prayed for God’s dream to unfold at the heart of our region, even when I didn’t.  And I want to encourage you, if you haven’t been praying, pray.

Also, Sherilyn Jameson and Pastor Stac both have great blog posts about their experiences prayer-walking.  Just click their names to go to their blogs.

Maybe I’ll see you at the Creamery!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Prayer Passion #8 — Open Heavens

Sep 06th 2010

OK, pick a number, any number. What was the number? Did you pick a number between 1-10? Did you pick a number between 1-100. If anyone picked a number over a million, please respond to this and let me know! It isn’t always our first inclination to think big, is it? ban1

In 1998, Larry Page and Sergey Brin incorporated Google while still grad students at Stanford University. According to Fortune Small Business Magazine, Internet users perform over 150 million searches a day on the Google Search Engine. Google can access over two billion pages in 74 different languages. One study recently showed that Google users used the search engine 13 million hours in one month. How did they get so big?  I don’t fully know the answer that question, but here’s what I do know…it started with their vision. The word Google comes from a mathematical term that is the #1 followed by 100 zeroes. Did you pick google as your number?

While most people are likely to pick a number like 3, or 27 or maybe 79. Page decided to pick a 1 with 100 zeroes. Jim Reese, chief operations engineer of Google says this about the company’s founders:

It takes a lot of confidence and courage to go ahead and …[be huge]. It’s rare to find people who think on such a grand scale and are also able to create a great product at the same time.

Last week as Lynn and I were prayer-walking on Penn State’s campus, I felt like God wanted us to expand our vision — help us pray huge.  So as we sat in front of Eisenhower auditorium, I started praying that God would fill it.  As we wandered amongst the science labs, Lynn started praying for a revival among the scientists, that they would come to know and love the Creator.  When we got the Creamery we prayed…that the ice cream would be free… just kidding.

The great American philosopher, Forrest Gump, said one time, “When somebody says to you, ‘I am here to help you’, hang on to your wallet.” Well, let me tell you to hang on to your wallet, because I want to help us pray huge for Penn State University.  I want to help us expand our vision… actually not so much our vision of what we can do, or even our vision how much might happen, but ultimately our vision of God.

In Malachi 3:10-12, these words are written…

Test me in this,” says the LORD Almighty, “and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that you will not have room enough for it. I will prevent pests from devouring your crops, and the vines in your fields will not cast their fruit,” says the LORD Almighty. “Then all the nations will call you blessed, for yours will be a delightful land,” says the LORD Almighty.

Now these words are not specifically about prayer, Prayingbut it contains a picture that describes what we are hoping for as we spend 21 Days of Prayer for Penn State.  It’s the picture of “open heavens.”  We long for God to hear us and respond.  We long for Him to pour out His blessings.  Imagine what it would be like to live under “open heavens.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Prayer Passion #7 — Bold Prayers

Sep 05th 2010

Let me take you for a moment to the book of Exodus. Easy to find, second book of the Bible, a quick study on prayer. ban1

In Exodus 1:8…A new King arrives on the scene an unnamed Pharaoh. The Pharaoh was one of the most powerful monarchs on the earth. He had at his disposal one of the best fighting machines of His time. His army had defeated every foe within thousands of miles. His power was great, his authority absolute. No congress. No independent prosecutors. He was a divine ruler, viewed as a god.

In Exodus 1:9…We discover that the King had a fear, so he brought his people together — his advisory council — and he said, “Look the people of the children of Isreal are more and mightier than we, come let us deal shrewdly with them…” So Pharaoh put into place a three pronged plan — Deception, Domination, and Destruction. He deceived them into thinking they were slaves. When they were deceived, he dominated them with heavy taskmasters — (vs11-14) made their lives bitter with hard bondage. He wanted to bring them to the point where they thought the mere goal of victory was survival. And then he began to destroy then (vs 16).

But something happened — backed into a corner, hopeless, helpless and homeless — the children of God discovered the power of prayer. Exodus 2:23-25 reads,

Years passed…the Israelites continued to groan under their burden of slavery. They cried out for help, and their cry rose up to God. God heard their groaning, and he remembered his covenant promise to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. He looked down on the people of Israel and knew it was time to act.

Think about this, without that prayer, Exodus would be a two-chapter book.  Because of that prayer — simple heart-felt, groaning — 38 chapters had to be added to report on God’s answer.  Is this true of you?  Some of us have becomes so afraid of embarrassing God with prayers that He might not answer, that we’ve stopped praying bold prayers.  We’ve stopped praying for miracles.

The only resource Isreal had was — (you’re expecting me to say “prayer”) — was God.  No army, no economic resources, no social status or political clout. Nothing.  All they had was God.  And when they cried out to God — in total dependence — they found God@work, just like in the early days of the Jesus-movement.

Someone once said that the difference between prayer as we usually conceive it and the early church practiced it is as different as the difference between a swim in the tub and a swim in the ocean.  Read the book of Acts.  When the early church prayed, the earth shook, captives were set free, the lame walked, when they prayed for boldness, God granted signs and wonders.  Prayer in the early church was an adventure.  Wide-open, you never knew when an angel might show up, or the Holy Spirit might give a message.

21 Days of Prayer.  For 21 days starting last Sunday leading up to our Calvary on Campus event, calvary on campuswe are following a call to pray.  We are asking everyone at Calvary to pray on campus at least three times (once a week) and to pray for at least three people by name.  Can I encourage you to pray bold prayers?  Who knows what books might need to be written to record God’s response?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Meet Zach — He Didn’t Rob a Bank

Sep 04th 2010

I don’t think I could play golf.  Take that back, I can’t play golf.  On the rare occasion that I do play golf I keep score by the number of balls I lose…or find while I’m looking for balls that I lost.  In other words, if I tell you that I’m “one under” on the day what I really mean is that I found one more ball than I lost.  But enough about my golf game — meet Zach.  zach nash

14 year old Zach is a pretty good golfer — good enough to win a Junior Wisconsin PGA championship.  After receiving his medal, he was in the club house celebrating and having a soda with his mentor, when his mentor happened to count Zach’s clubs.  Zach had 15 clubs in his bag, the limit is 14 clubs (Rule #4 of 6791).  This is the “I don’t think I could play golf” part — way too many rules — although when I golf I only use three clubs, 3 iron, sand wedge, and putter.  Apparently if you carry more than 14 golf clubs, you get penalties…in addition because Zach didn’t realize he was carrying 15 clubs, he also signed his scorecard with the wrong information, sans penalty strokes.  All of this simply means that by the letter of golf-law, Zach should be disqualified.

Zach had a perfectly good reason for the presence of that 15th club, and the 15th club did not factor into his ability to win, and the only person who knew was his mentor.  But Zach immediately called up the tournament officials, cited his disqualification and took back the medal.

Here’s the deal, some are placing Zach in the sainthood line-up, touting his integrity and honesty.  Some are taking the opportunity to talk about inane golf rules ruining the game.  Some are quoting golfing legend Bobby Jones.  When celebrated for calling a penalty on himself at the 1925 U.S. Open, Jones replied: “You may as well praise a man for not robbing a bank.”  In other words, don’t make such a big deal out of what should be expected.

But here’s the life-truth that grabbed me, integrity for a follower of Jesus is all about answering the question, “Who do I want to please?  Who’s opinion matters to me?”  Zach’s mentor knew that Zach was faced with a moral decision.  Zach wanted to please his mentor.  His mentor’s opinion mattered more than the opinion of the masses who saw the medal.  So he made a choice to please his mentor.

It paints a picture of what Jesus meant in the gospel of John, when he said, “If you love me, you will keep my words…follow my ways, do what I say.”  Many of the decisions we make in life — especially the integrity decisions, the ones that direct our hearts and souls — come down to the question, “Who am I trying to please?”  Whose opinion matters to you today?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

This Jesus-Thing is Malarky

Sep 03rd 2010

Not sure if you’ve seen the FX comedy Louie. In a recent episode simply titled God, standup comic Louis C.K. shared his theology declaring, “if there really is a God, he’s an ***hole,” and that God is like a “sh*tty girlfriend.”  (Actually feel a little uncomfortable putting that in my blog, but sometimes it’s good to be reminded that not everyone knows the God we love.)  In a flashback to his boyhood days in Catholic school, Louie asks his mother about Jesus and his death on the cross. Louie’s mom responds that Jesus was “a really, really nice guy who lived a long time ago and told everyone to love each other,” but the resurrection, “The whole thing is a bunch of malarkey.”  Listen to the clip below…

This weekend at Calvary as we make our way through Mark’s Gospel, we are asking the question, “Why do people reject Jesus?”  I’m going to explore a handful of reasons, but one sentence in Mark 12 has really grabbed my heart.  In Mark 12:24, Jesus says, “Your mistake is that you do not know the scriptures and you do not know the power of God.”  Interesting thing… He made that comment to religious leaders.  But they didn’t really know God’s words, and they had never really experienced God’s power.

I’m really not all that upset with Louie.  His heart hasn’t been touched by the Gospel of Jesus.  But I’m just wondering how many of us “religious people” don’t really know the scriptures — the voice of God?  How many of us religious people have never really experienced the power of God?  AND… how often is it our actions that cause the Louies of the world to have a bad impression of God?

As we — those of you here at Calvary — go out prayer-walking, go not just with your prayers, but go with the heart of Jesus.  Before you go ask Jesus to let you feel just a touch of his love for the people you walk past.  Ask Jesus to help us know when prayer is not enough, because we need to be the answer to someone’s prayer.  Ask Jesus to pour out his love, his power, and to open up his words to the community around us, so that the Louies of the world want to know the God we love.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Prayer Passion #6 — Prayer-Walking

Sep 02nd 2010

What in the world is prayer-walking?  Multi-tasking for physical and spiritual health?  A dangerous walk with eyes closed?  A prayer marathon?  In Paul’s letter to his friend Timothy (1 Timothy) — as he is giving instruction on how to “fight the good fight” and lead a movement that sees people’s lives transformed by the gospel — he writes these words…ban1

1I urge, then, first of all, that requests, prayers, intercession and thanksgiving be made for everyone— 2for kings and all those in authority, that we may live peaceful and quiet lives in all godliness and holiness. 3This is good, and pleases God our Savior,4who wants all men to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth. 5For there is one God and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, 6who gave himself as a ransom for all men—the testimony given in its proper time. 7And for this purpose I was appointed a herald and an apostle—I am telling the truth, I am not lying—and a teacher of the true faith to the Gentiles. 8I want men everywhere to lift up holy hands in prayer, without anger or disputing.

Let me highlight three points from Paul’s challenge…

1) Pray for everyone — including but not limited to those in authority over us — with every kind of prayer you can pray.  So that we can all live lives filled with peace and godliness.  And the only way for that to happen is…

2) If more and more people know Jesus.  And you know what?  God wants everyone to know Jesus and be transformed by the gospel.  So…

3) Tell people to lift up holy hands (make sure you are right with God, sin confessed etc) without anger (make sure your relationships are reconciled) and pray everywhere.

So to sum it up Paul wants holy, reconciled people to pray everywhere for everyone with every sort of prayer — that’s what prayer-walking is all about.  Will it make a difference?

Sherman Brand was the director for Campus Crusade here at Penn State University in the late 70’s. According to Brand, the late 70’s was a time when some found it difficult to find friends at Penn State who HADN’T recently heard the gospel. And prayer was the key to preparing the way for evangelism of every sort. Once they had Josh McDowell come and speak. Brand says,

We’d been praying fervently for that time. Students gathered for extended prayer, often walking across the campus two by two to blanket it with prayer. Normally Josh McDowells speaks no more than three times on a campus but the third meeting was so crowded that we had to have two talks that night. The campus had a total of 32,000 students and an estimated 12,000 came those 3 nights.

I’m not saying that 21 Days of Prayer for Penn State will result in 12,000 people trying to come to Calvary on Campus to hear about Jesus… but what if God would so choose to respond to our prayers in such a way again?  If you haven’t had an opportunity to go prayer walking at Penn State or — if you don’t live in Centre County — in  your neighborhood wherever you live, could I encourage you to give it a try?  See what God might do.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Prayer Passion #5 — He Knows

Sep 01st 2010

I know you are going to wonder — what in the world this has to do with prayer?  But watch…and laugh.

So what does that have to do with prayer?  Sometimes communication is hard work, and even with hard work we don’t always communicate.  We think what we are saying is perfectly clear and we are quite positive that understanding has been achieved.  We’ve spoken the right words, at the right time, in the right order, with the right intonation.  Surely we have a connection, a melding of the minds, a clarity of mutual understanding.  Only to find down the road…it’s not communication, it’s comedy.

So we begin to think that effective prayer requires proper communication.  We need the right words, spoken at the right time, in the right way, with the right intonation…or else our prayers will not be heard, not be understood.

But here is the good news when it comes to prayer — Jesus words are recorded in Matthew 6:7-8 —

And when you pray, do not keep on babbling like pagans, for they think they will be heard because of their many words. Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him.”

He knows what you need.  He knows what is on your heart.  You cannot miscommunicate with God.  He will not misunderstand.  You do not have an accent with your Father God.  He knows what you need.  He knows what you are saying.  He knows what you would like to say, if you only knew the right words to say it.  He interprets your groans with clarity.  He knows.

So when you pray, relax.  You do not need to search for the right word.  There is no wrong time.  There is no wrong way.  He loves all the intonations you can find.  Just bring Him your heart and talk to Him.  Pray.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Prayer Passion #4

Aug 30th 2010

Kenda Creasy Dean has a warning for parents of Christian teens — “Your child may be following a “mutant” form of Christianity…”  In her book, “Almost Christian” Dean suggests that many American teenagers are embracing a faith that is little more than “moralistic therapeutic deism.”  ban1What’s that?  It’s a watered-down faith that sees God as a “divine therapist” whose mission is to boost our self-esteem.”  Dean describes this “imposter” faith as a significant reason teenagers abandon churches.  She writes, “If this is the God they’re seeing in church, they are right to leave us in the dust.  Churches don’t give them enough to be passionate about.”  (Click here for more info on Dean’s insights.)

Let me take her thesis a step further.  It isn’t just the teens who are embracing “moralistic therapeutic deism.  In fact the teens are just embracing what we are already hugging.

So what does that have to do with prayer?  Everything.  Prayer and faith go hand in hand.  Prayer is two way communication with God, when it comes to this personal communication it matters far less the words we say or when we say them and it matters far more how well we know the way with whom we are speaking.  Faith is no different.  Faith always has an object.  We do not grow in faith by believing “harder.”  We grow in faith by growing in our knowledge of the object of our faith.

For prayer to increase and faith to grow…we need to know God.

When Jesus taught his disciples to pray, a key distinctive of that prayer was encouraging the disciples to call God…Father.  Not Therapist.  Not Smoother of Self-Esteem.  Father.

A good father loves.  A good father disciplines.  A good father teachers.  A good father sometimes says no.  A good father always has time and loves to listen, but sometimes knows that the time of listening has ended and it’s time to speak.  A good father loves.  A good father deeply desires his children to grow and will sometimes allow them to go through the hardship that brings growth.  A good father is willing to express his disappointment so that his children know his heart.  A good father loves when we ask.  A good father loves your heart more than your fancy words.  A good father pays attention.

I am not always a good father, but God is always a good father.  That thought should shape our prayers…and even more it should grow the passion of our prayers.

Take some time today and talk to your Father God.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

21 Days of Prayer — Calvary on Campus

Aug 29th 2010

This weekend at Calvary we left with a challenge to focused prayer for PSU, during the next 21 days. calvary on campusOn Monday this letter will be going out to the Calvary family. The next few weeks, I’m going to take every opportunity I can to keep this challenge in front of us…so here is the letter.

Dear Calvary Family,

This summer has been a year of transition for the Nolds! Our firstborn, Sarah has moved out of town. Her first job, her first apartment, her first new city all have come into place this summer. With Katy back at Bethel University, 1/3 of our family is not “at home.” But we are still a family – reminds me of Calvary, spread throughout the county, meeting and reaching people where they live – but still a family.

The last few years as we have expanded into a church beyond our walls, we have on occasion found opportunities to gather the whole family, to celebrate what God is doing. A few months ago as the Gathering Pastors were meeting, we decided we wanted to start doing this on a consistent basis… but we wanted it to be something more than just “let’s all get together” and celebrate. The something more that was birthed in our hearts is CALVARY ON CAMPUS.

Part of our calling at Calvary is to reach the next generation and PSU students are a huge part of our local next generation. Every Calvary gathering is connected in some way to Penn State, either through students or staff, through friends or neighbors. So on September 19 at 10:30am we will be gathering all our gatherings for a morning of worship and celebration at Eisenhower Auditorium. It’s going to be a great morning as…
• The Midtown Band leads us in worship.
• Stefan Wiesnewski (PSU football) shares a God-story.
• A great Kidz ConneXion event takes place at 1250.
• And I talk about my favorite topic – The untamed Jesus.

This might be one of the most important things we do this year as a church family. Let me encourage you to be a part of the Calvary family that day. So what can you do to join the Calvary family in this event?

1. Pray. Last weekend at Calvary I called us to 21 Days of Prayer leading up to this event. If you weren’t here go to God Unleashed Video or

      1. God Unleashed Audo
for the message. We want to blanket the campus with prayer from now till September 19th. Go on campus and pray. Go downtown and pray.

2. Invite. Invite a friend to join us at Eisenhower that day. It will be a great event for those who are new to Jesus, and for those who aren’t really into church. Invite a college student. Invite a neighbor, especially if they are connected to Penn State.

3. Come. This isn’t our primary goal…but it would be kinda cool to fill up the bottom floor at Eisenhower.   But even better then how many are there…we believe that God is going to show up.

4. Give. We will be talking that morning about a special offering to bless the campus.

For more info and to register your children for the KidZ ConneXion event go to Calvary on Campus.

See you on September 19th!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.