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GMOII Mission in Nigeria - Abuja GMOII Mission in Nigeria is an Official Page with the Mandate of Reaching-out to Un-engaged & Un-reached People groups with the Message of Hope.

26/04/2019

Never underestimate what you can do.
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08/04/2018

7 Marks Of Great Preaching
By David Lose
When a sermon includes the following seven central elements, and when the Holy Spirit is present, something happens—the Word comes alive and people come to faith.
Scripture: 2 Timothy 4:2 (Suggest Scripture)
Everyone wants to hear a good sermon. But what exactly is a good sermon? Certainly, you know one when you hear one, but pinning down the details can be difficult; preaching is an interesting mixture of theology (what we're saying) and rhetoric (how we say it). Yet when a sermon includes the following seven central elements, and when the Holy Spirit is present, something happens—the Word comes alive and people come to faith.
In brief, a good sermon engages the biblical text, proclaims the gospel, connects God's Word to the lives of God's people, is well organized and easy to understand, captures the imagination of the hearers, is delivered well, and orients people toward life in God's world.
1. A good sermon engages the biblical text
Historically, the Christian sermon has always followed the reading of Scripture. In a very real way, the sermon is a response to the Scriptures read. In the Scriptures, the preacher has heard God speak in such a way that she must say something back, first as she works on her sermon and then to her congregation that Sunday. To think of the sermon as response takes seriously the nature of the Bible as God's Word, a living witness that still provokes a response from those who hear it. Therefore, good preachers strive to engage the biblical passages seriously, in a manner that is interesting, inspiring, and relevant.
2. A good sermon proclaims the gospel
Wait a second. Isn't preaching the Bible the same as preaching the gospel?
Yes and no. Certainly, our sense of the gospel (in brief, what God has done through Jesus Christ for us and all the world) emerges from the biblical witness. At the same time, though, there is some value in realizing that we cannot simply equate the two. Luther had a nice way of putting this. The Bible, Luther said, is like the manger in which the Christ child rests. So while we should flee to the Bible to find Christ, Luther counseled, we should avoid falling on our knees to worship wood and straw. To put it another way, we value the Bible so highly precisely and primarily because it contains the gospel.
The preacher's primary task in dealing with any biblical passage, therefore, is to say a word about what God has done and is still doing through Jesus Christ for us and for all the world. Our task as biblical preachers is to approach passages of Scripture (be they parables, wisdom sayings, passages from Old or New Testament) with two tasks in mind:
to hear the particular confession of faith being made in the passage and
to relate it to our overall sense of what God is up to in our lives and the world through Jesus.
That is, whatever you're preaching on, somehow it relates to the ongoing work of the God we have come to know most fully through Jesus Christ.
3. A good sermon connects God's Word to the lives of God's people
Part of the significance of the Christian doctrine of the Incarnation is God's commitment to be accessible, to speak a divine word in human form, to take on our lot and our life. Preaching is an incarnational word, one that reaffirms God's commitment to meet us where we are.
To put it another way, we might go so far as to say that there is no universal gospel apart from the way it manifests itself in the particular and concrete aspects of our actual lives. To talk about "God's love" or "forgiveness" or "grace" in general makes very little sense without pointing to specific examples and instances of love, forgiveness, and grace in our lives and the world around us.
Preaching that is generic or universal in character and does not struggle to relate God's Word to our actual lives is boring, irrelevant, and gives the impression that God does not really care about what's going on in our lives and world. On the other hand, preaching that is only "relevant"—focusing on the latest perceived need, trend, or tragedy in the community without viewing these issues from the perspective of the gospel—is at best therapy and at worst mere pandering.
4. A good sermon is well organized and easy to understand
As we all know, if the message isn't clearly thought out and presented, it just doesn't matter much what's being said. If I can't follow it, then I can't appreciate it and certainly can't be moved to faith by it. Likewise, preaching that is unclear, poorly organized, or difficult to understand is ineffectual.
5. A good sermon engages the imaginations of the hearers
One of the most significant insights of mainline preachers over the last two generations has been that the gospel is more than a head-trip. That is, the gospel is more than thinking a certain way. It is not just cognitive, but also experiential, deals not only with our rational side but also with our whole selves—feelings, desires, needs, heart, soul, and so forth. Preaching, we have come to realize, speaks to the whole person, and to do that, we need to engage the imaginations of our hearers.
6. A good sermon is delivered well
To preach is to communicate. Therefore, it must be delivered effectively so that we may hear the message. In order for that to occur, two things need to take place:
The preacher must deliver the sermon with the appropriate effect. If you're excited, bursting with good news, and think what you have to say really is good news, then your facial expression, body gestures, and voice should express those emotions.
The preacher must deliver the sermon with passion and integrity. People should know that you believe what you say, that you have something at stake in this message, that it is true for you, and that it matters. Insincerity is easily detected by most listeners and greatly undermines preaching.
7. A good sermon orients hearers to life in God's world
Christian worship is the gathering of the faithful so that they may be renewed in faith and sent once more into the world as the people of God. Preaching, as a central part of that worship, has the responsibility to not only proclaim the gospel so that hearers may come once again to faith, but also to redirect those same people to the world as the arena in which they live out their Christian callings to be God's people, and even God's partners, in the world. God has chosen to use human means—the abilities and opportunities of our people in the various roles and dimensions of their everyday lives—to help sustain the world God loves so much.
For this reason, preaching that does not seek to orient hearers to their active lives as God's people sent to care for God's world risks engendering an inwardly focused, even self-centered version of Christianity that betrays God's love for and commitment to God's world.
The next time you are listening to or preaching a sermon, look for these seven marks. This outline of the seven marks of a sermon may give preachers and their hearers some guidelines to talk about what makes good preaching.
By David Lose
David J. Lose holds The Marbury E. Anderson Chair in Biblical Preaching at Luther Seminary, where he also serves as the Director of the Center for Biblical Preaching.

05/01/2018

5 Boundaries to Save You From Unhealthy Relationships and Manipulative People
I recently sat down with a young couple who is going through a very serious struggle in their marriage because of someone outside their marriage. You might assume I’m talking about a mistress or an emotional affair, but this has nothing to do with wrongdoing on the part of either spouse. Their struggle has to do with an overbearing parent.
The husband’s mom (and the wife’s mother-in-law) has bombarded the young couple with pressures, demands, emotional pleas, tantrums, threats, bullying, name-calling and a myriad of other unpleasant tactics to get her way and to manipulate the dynamics within the family’s relationships. She seems to see their marriage as a threat to the relationship and influence she once had with her son. She seems to view her daughter-in-law as competition for her son’s attention rather than a beloved new addition to the family.
This young couple seemed exhausted by their dealings with what seems to be a narcissistic and emotionally unstable person. They want to honor and respect her. They want their young daughter to have a relationship with her grandmother. They want peace and no drama, but they also don’t want to be a doormat to her unhealthy demands. Sadly, their struggle is a very common one.
It’s very common for a couple to face an overbearing parent (or parents) in their marriage, but dealing with overbearing and emotionally unhealthy people can happen in all parts of life (work, school, home, etc.). Not if but WHEN you find yourself in a relationship with someone who is bullying, manipulative, unstable or unhealthy in any way, for the sake of your family and your sanity, PLEASE implement the following boundaries.
Five Boundaries to save you from unhealthy relationships and manipulative people (in no particular order)...
1. “Teach” them how to treat you by how you treat them AND by how you allow them to treat you.
Make sure you’re not responding to negativity with negativity. Don’t sink to their level, because you’ll lose. It’s been said that when you wrestle with a pig in the mud, you BOTH get dirty, but the pig likes it! Be kind and respectful even when it’s not returned; not as a reflection of their character but as a reflection of yours. If the difficult person continues to bully, you might need to remove them from your life to protect yourself and your family until they change their toxic behavior. This leads directly into #2.
Communicate THIS over and over to the difficult person.…
2. Let difficult people know that THEY are choosing not to be part of your life based on how they are acting.
It can be difficult to tell someone (especially someone older than you like a parent) that their behavior is out-of-bounds. Do this with gentleness and respect but also with a resolute firmness that you can’t compromise on this for the sake of your own family. If this difficult person throws a fit and starts trying to manipulate or sabotage the situation, remind him/her that THEY are choosing not to be part of your life based on their decisions. You’re outlining the clear boundaries like the concrete median on an interstate; to protect everyone on the road. If they can’t abide by those boundaries, people will get hurt, so their behavior is forfeiting their opportunity for a relationship until (or unless) they make changes. You can’t make them change their behavior, but they can’t make you abide by their unhealthy behaviors. You aren’t removing them from your life, they need to know that they, by their own decisions, are causing the break in the relationship.
#3 might be the most important one on the list if you are married…
3. (For those who are married) Be completely UNIFIED with your spouse in your approach to dealing with this difficult person.
If there’s an overbearing parent (or anyone else) who is trying to insert themselves into your marital business or to pull you away from your spouse, you and your spouse MUST be unified. You can’t be divided. Behind closed doors you might have disagreements about how to best handle the situation, but especially in public and in your communication with the difficult person you must always be united. If your spouse is the one who is the difficult and unhealthy person, that’s a completely different set of issues and I’d encourage you to start by checking out our program at FightingForMyMarriage.com.
#4 is SO difficult to do but it could change the relationship AND change your own perspective in the process…
4. Don’t treat them like they treat you. Treat them like God treats you.
God gives us forgiveness, love and grace even when we don’t deserve it, and then calls us to love others like he has loved us. As a Christian, I believe Jesus was the perfect embodiment of grace, love, truth, strength and all that’s good in relationships. He showed radical grace. He modeled what love was supposed to look like, he “turned the other cheek” when insulted, BUT he also refused to be anyone’s doormat. If people weren’t willing to be in a healthy relationship, he didn’t chase after them. He gave them space and didn’t compromise his character or the rules that must exist in all healthy relationships as a way to appease people who weren’t pleased with him. We can learn a LOT about dealing with difficult people form his example.
#5 sums everything up in one important point…
5. Do all you can to live at peace with them, but if they refuse to live at peace with you, then live your life in peace without them.
This “tough love” can be so difficult, but sometimes someone will simply refuse to be in a relationship with you unless they’re pulling all the strings and you’re jumping through their hoops. Do all you can to live at peace and be one who builds bridges instead of tearing them down, but if this person isn’t willing to do their part, then you might need to love them from a distance. Don’t let them manipulate you or control you or steal your joy. Pray for them. Put the situation in God’s hands, and once you’ve done all you can, move forward in peace, and trust God to do the rest.
By Dave and Ashley Willis
Shared by Dansmith Aisevbo of Groupworld Missions Outreach Int'l Inc in Nigeria

24/12/2017

It's coming to an end. #2017 was a success but #2018 will be better. God bless you all

11/07/2017

Save the Syrian Women and children Refugees! Support Me in Volunteering with Cross Cultural Solutions for the Syrian Refugee Program in Greece from 07/10/2017 - 30/12/2017

11/07/2017

JustGiving - the easiest way to fundraise and donate to charity online

11/07/2017

Dansmith is raising money to help Cross-Cultural Solutions

25/04/2017

CALVARY MINISTRIES (CAPRO) INVITES YOU TO JOIN THE STAFF AND MEMBERS OF CALVARY MINISTRIES (CAPRO) BENIN CHAPTER, EDO STATE, NIGERIA IN CELEBRATING HER 42ND ANNIVERSARY (1975-2017) TAGGED: FIND A LIFE-TIME CAREER WITH CAPRO AS PART/FULL-TIME MISSIONARY VENUE: KINGS SQUARE, BENIN CITY, EDO STATE, NIGERIA DATE: TUESDAY APRIL 25TH, 2017 TIME: 11:00AM capromissions.org This is the link to the video @ You can also watch all our videos on facebook @ www.facebook.com/aisevbo.dansmith

http://groupworldmissions.org/calvary-ministries-capro-2/

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