It's like some master artist sketch!
Awww...
Help! We're stuck in a comic book!!!


Thanks for the encouragement. I really benefited from the song selection and the way that you led--your introduction was so beneficial. It was a joy to work on this project with you.
-P, Seminary Student
Thanks. I thought the worship time was well done in all its aspects. I appreciate your work and leadership for chapel today.
-Prof. Z, Seminary Professor
You wouldn't be a good steward if your current and future ministry didn't allow you to exercise your gift of leading others in worship. I would like to hear your thoughts expressed in our class on Tuesday nights more often – I feel like you have much experience and would bring a lot to our discussions. Speak up and speak out brother!
-T, Seminary Student









As we walked down the park path, I recalled that we were reminded at the start of our journey not to force anything and let God do all the work. We are there to listen as well as to speak. Knowing that, it took a lot of pressure off of us. We walked for another five minutes and encountered a couple sitting on a bench. We politely approached them and asked if they would share their opinions on religion with us. Surprisingly, we got a very warm sounding "Yes!" I didn't actually expect anyone to talk to us that day. The next thing you know, we had been talking for an hour.
Harvard United Ministry chaplain Jeffrey K. Barneson says Harvard has a reputation for being irreligious. “I get these calls from people saying, ‘Oh I’ve heard that Harvard is a godless place,’” he says.
This reputation may soon be no more. According to University President Lawrence H. Summers, the evangelical Christian community here at Harvard has grown significantly.
Speaking to prospective freshmen during prefrosh weekend, Summers said that the number of students at Harvard who identify themselves as evangelical Christians has doubled in the last decade.







Sadly, our culture has grown accustomed to churches saying, "You must look like we look and think what we think, not do what we don't do, and come to our building. Only then will we welcome you in to our community." The Journey is proud to stand against this attitude and engage people wherever they are with whatever they think. And since pubs and coffee shops are where people meet and hang out, it is the natural place for Midrash conversations.



What is conversational evangelism? I asked myself this as I eyeballed the 2 hour block on our schedules marked "Conversational Evangelism Practicum". That Monday morning, I got a sneek peek into our afternoon as York Moore, Intervarsity's director of regional evangelism talked to us about sharing the gospel. Basically, conversational evangelism is the post-modern version of the dreaded 'contact evangelism'. Unlike in contact evangelism where the focus is on your ability to clearly communicate the message to as many people as possible - conversational evangelism focuses on the fact that God is already at work in non-believers around the world and it is our privilidge to go and participate in the harvest. It's "like a treasure hunt" as you talk to people and discover where God is already at work in their lives and help them to see that they are on a spiritual journey. Staff paired up and went out seeking conversations with people around the downtown area and in those 2 hours we saw 4 people come to know Christ (and yes, they were directed to Churches in the area who can continue to disciple and welcome them into the kingdom) as well as nearly 100 presentations of the complete gospel. Please pray for me as next year I hope to include conversational evangelism as one part of stretching the worship team at st. louis university towards a more wholistic view of what worship is. |


“Evidently some people are throwing you into confusion and are trying to pervert the gospel of Christ. But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach a gospel other than the one we preached to you, let him be eternally condemned! . . . I want you to know . . . that the gospel I preached is not something that man made up. I did not receive it from any man, nor was I taught it; rather, I received it by revelation from Jesus Christ” (Galatians 1:7-8, 11-12 NIV).
