Prayer Walk for Peace

by New Life Little Village 26. September 2009 17:31
New Life Little Village presents

PRAYER WALK FOR PEACE

New Life Community Church in Little Village would like to invite you to a prayer walk for peace in Little Village.  Over the last two weeks there have been at least 4 deaths and multiple shootings.  We need to unite as a community and come together to pray for peace in our neighborhood.  Please join us and invite others.  We want to make this a big rally and come together to pray for the youth of our neighborhood and seek to stop the violence!

WHEN: Sunday, September 27th, 2009 at 2 PM

WHERE: Meet at New Life Little Village at 27th and Lawndale.  March west to Ridgeway, North to 25th, East to Kedzie, South to 27th, and back to the church at 27th and Lawndale

WHAT: A rally and march of community residents praying for peace in our neighborhood in response to the recent violence.

Don't miss this event and chance to unite together and pray for peace!
 
New Life Community Church
2657 S. Lawndale Ave.
Chicago, Illinois 60623
773-762-0270

Unseen Things

by Bill & Donna Mills 24. September 2009 16:15
I have noticed that when my kids walk with me and they don't know the way or they sense danger, then they slip their hands into mine.  When disoriented, stick with Dad.  This is a lot more comforting than getting directions or looking at a map – just stick with Dad and you don't really need to know the way.  Stay with Dad and you are guaranteed to arrive at Dad's destination.  Sometimes they don't even care about the destination, they just want to be with Dad.  Kids can enjoy the day with Dad armed only with a general sense of where we are going.  They don't need a lot of explanation or a detailed schedule.

By contrast, if we haven't got a certain and compelling knowledge of God's will, we Christians tend to look at things that can be seen: these conditions, those circumstances, this logic, that result.  Instead of falling to our knees many of us turn to our lists of pros and cons.  But we really only have two things to guide us: 1- our own desires (we'll find reasons to support them), and 2- the often hidden will of God. Sometimes the two coincide, and sometimes they clash.

We'd do better to treat the search for God's specific intentions as a fresh opportunity to fellowship with Him.  This is the wisdom I have learned from young children – when disoriented, stick with Dad. Enjoy being with Him.

When our Mongolian friends are on a long journey, they take delays in stride because they are focused on enjoying the journey.  The trip is a series of interesting experiences.  Enjoy the fellowship.  Take in the changing scenery.  Eventually we will get there.  Westerners like me think of the trip as an inconvenience that must be endured in order to reach the destination.

Certainly God gives wisdom and direction (Jn. 15:15), but does He want us to rush off by ourselves just because we know the way forward?  It's much better for us to seek out the God Who hides Himself (Is. 45:15).  Then we can enjoy the changing scenery of our journey with Him, and begin to appreciate unseen things – the promptings of His Spirit and the most valuable things:
  • The influence of a godly leader

  • The impact of a word spoken in season

  • The power of an act of kindness

  • The liberation won by forgiveness

  • The mystery of eternal rewards
May the Lord guide us all in New Life and make us fruitful . . .'as we look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen. For the things that are seen are transient, but the things that are unseen are eternal.' (2 Cor. 4:18)

He was recently hired!

by Al Garcia 16. September 2009 19:32
Hello Career Explorers,
 
If you are unemployed, underemployed, or misemployed, why not attend this weeks Career Crossroads Support and Resource Group?  Check out what one of our graduates had to say about the group:
Pastor Al,
"Thanks for your insight and knowledge of how to customize our resumes for each job opening. I was so much more prepared when I was in the interviewing stage of my job search. I always prayed before every application I applied for and before I was interviewed. This helped me spiritually be prepared for each interviewers question and calm my anxiety. This career group has helped me network with others that I could help with some leads for their special gifts. I have been blessed by God in the job he has given me to fit my needs and job skills. I pray and thank God every morning and night for his timing not mine. He is in control of all that happens for us. Thanks for being Gods servant to his people. Your time and effort is very well appreciated and revered from all whom attend your career classes.
God Bless you and your staff," - Richard Gray  
Crossroads Career and Resource Group
Wednesday, 9am-11am
New Life Oak Forest (Lower Level)
5333 W. 151st
Oak Forest, IL. 60452

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Consider it Joy?

by Nick Rakochy 10. September 2009 12:30

James 1:2-8 2 Count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of various kinds,  3 for you know that the testing of your faith produces steadfastness.  4 And let steadfastness have its full effect, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.  5 If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him.  6 But let him ask in faith, with no doubting, for the one who doubts is like a wave of the sea that is driven and tossed by the wind.  7 For that person must not suppose that he will receive anything from the Lord;  8 he is a double-minded man, unstable in all his ways. 

If I am honest, this command has frustrated me in times past. On the surface, it seems to promote a grin-and-bear-it, everything-is-happy kind of a perspective toward life and its difficulties, which strikes me as insincere, frustrating, and annoying. In times of enduring uncertainty and excruciating trials, how can I be expected also to produce any type of positive feeling about the whole ordeal?  

As it turns out, this happy-go-lucky front is not what James is calling us to, and I was both challenged and encouraged again recently as I reflected on the passage.

(Here’s the reader’s digest version)

  • This perspective VIEWS TRIALS THROUGH THEIR OUTCOME.
  • TRIALS PRODUCE STEADFASTNESS/MATURITY/COMPLETENESS.
  • Sometimes, COMPLEXITY REQUIRES WISDOM (GOD-INPUT), WHICH RECOGNIZES WHO IS ULTIMATELY RESPONSIBLE FOR THE OUTCOME.
  • Trials not only REFINE THE QUALITY of faith, but they also TEST THE NATURE of faith. Are we actually double-minded?
  • Trials are part of the VERY MEANS GOD USES TO MAKE US MATURE/SOLID.
 

First, this passage calls us to a perspective which VIEWS TRIALS THROUGH THEIR OUTCOME. That is, we know that a rock-solid faith is only gained through the fires of life and its struggle. I have these great and precious promises from God, and I say that I believe them, but how do I know?  I know my faith is real when hang onto the promise of God, even though I am completely unable to fix the situation with my own plans.  

So, when life is hard, and I realize again my own weakness, I also know ahead of time that TRIALS PRODUCE STEADFASTNESS.  When I am in the middle of it, I look forward to the invisible yet promised outcome. Not that God saves my home from foreclosure at all costs, but that my faith is becoming rock-solid (mature). Maybe He is drawing me to Himself by breaking my trust on a plot of land, or maybe He will open the door for me to refinance my mortgage in the 11th hour. Personally, I don’t know, and it would be stupid for me to make sweeping generalizations on particular situations. However, I am able to trust because of this FAITH I have in the person and promises of God, and it will result in a complete person, a veteran who is lacking in NOTHING, if we stay in the fire without taking the easy way out, without compromising.  

Sometimes, life is much simpler than we make it, and there is a clear way that we should obey. However, sometimes the choice is not clear, and the decision difficult. So if we don’t know, if we LACK WISDOM about what to do, we must ask from God. Sometimes COMPLEXITY REQUIRES WISDOM (GOD-INPUT). That means, I will not know the right solution unless I go to God. And, in case we think He is malicious, James reminds us that He gives wisdom generously to everybody, without reprimand. So, when I don’t know what to do, I must ASK. This recognizes WHO IS ULTIMATELY RESPONSIBLE FOR THE OUTCOME.  

What if He doesn’t answer, what if I don’t know? Trials not only REFINE THE QUALITY of faith, but they also TEST THE NATURE of faith. That is, when things are rough, and I ask God for wisdom, I prove myself to be DOUBLE-MINDED when I doubt that He will make good on His promise. He promises wisdom, and when I doubt, it shows my faith NOT to be STEADFAST, but actually I am UNSTABLE in all my ways. So, instead of becoming rock-solid, it is exactly the opposite: I am sloshed around like waves.  

So, IS GOD TRUSTWORTHY? Is Jesus with me, never leaving me, like He promised? Did this life difficulty take God by surprise, and I have to help figure out the solution? 

I can consider trials “joy” when I realize my faith is rooted, not in the solution to the trial, but in the One Who holds the solution, when I realize that God always has what is best (even when it hurts terribly). There is both peace and joy in knowing, in trusting. Trials are not necessarily punishment from God (though they certainly can be). Rather, they are part of the very means God uses to make us mature/solid. So, Man of God, stand in there when the trial is difficult. Woman of God, do not waver in your trust. Consider it joy, because your Lord is shaping you into exactly who He wants you to be, IF you will be single-mindedly committed to Him.

Have you given up on your Job Search?

by Al Garcia 7. September 2009 17:09
Well don't!
 
There's a saying that says,"even a blind squirrel will find an acorn someday"
 
The Bible says, that we are to ask and we will receive an answer, we are to seek and we will find, we are to knock and the door will be opened for us.
If you haven't found a job yet, don't get discouraged.  Get proactive and attend this weeks Career Explorer Support Group Meeting at New Life Oak Forest, 5333 W. 151st Wednesday from 9am-11am.
 
Take a look at what one of our participants had to say,
"Pastor Al,
Thanks for the message and support.  I was fortunate to get a job about 2mths ago and am happy with it.  I know it is tough out there as I was unemployed for 5 mths. If I can offer anything to your agenda and program, I can say this.  You offer great support and a great program.  The most important thing I picked up from you was to keep networking and I signed up on Linkedin based on your recommendation.  The net is fine for keeping your name out there via resumes (I did get a few interviews from sites like CareerBuilder and Monster,) but networking in groups like yours and other contacts seem to be the best way to go, at least it was in my case, but most importantly you have to keep the faith in yourself and God.  It's easy to get down in a situation , but things happen for reasons and I'll continue to pray for you and those you are working so hard to help. Keep up your good work.  Your help is greatly appreciated.
 
Tom Borbely "
 
So you see, opportunities are out there you just need to know how and where to look.  Attend the group this week!
 
Now for those of you who are working already, I have also come up with a service for companies and organizations.  I have produced several seminars that can help your company and or organization but you need to be the one to introduce it. If you think your company can benefit from the following presentations let me know.
 
Here is a listing of the different seminars I can do:
  • Establishing a 360 Degree assessment
  • Change Management
  • Implementing an Audit Program
  • Benchmarking
  • Complaint Handling
  • Leading the way for Change
  • Performance Appraisal Systems
  • Problem Solving
  • Project Management
  • Relationship Management Systems
I'm currently working on several others but they are not fully developed yet.  They are:
  • Facilitation Skills
  • Introduction to Strategy
  • Conflict Management
  • Leadership and Delegation
  • Dealing with Employee Absenteeism
  • Job Analysis
 
Sincerely,
 
Pastor AL Garcia
Certified Career and Leadership Management Coach
 

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