Month: June 2007 (Page 4 of 4)

Welcome to Coyote Country

CoyoteWell, it’s official now. Our coyote(s) has/have become a media event. Last night the local CBS affiliate broadcast a portion of their 10p news live from the front of our church building on Mid Cities Blvd. The “minister of a local church” mentioned at the end of this story over on CBS 11’s website is our very own Jim McDoniel who was wired up for an interview that aired during the coyote segment.

You would think this would be a problem I would have encountered sometime in Marble Falls. Working at the church office late at night, it wouldn’t be uncommon at all to see several deer in our parking lot. Of course, we saw deer several times in the Home Depot parking lot in Marble Falls! We did get skunks and armadillos and possums in our backyard a few times, living on that “waterfront property” behind the Post Office. But I never saw or heard any coyotes. No, I have to move to the big city to find that.

Our coyote here, which actually lives not on our church property but in a wooded area to the southwest of us, killed the lady’s dog on Friday. And the buzz that created threatened to impact our Banner Beginning Sunday. We were asked by the city of NRH to distribute flyers and make announcements during services on Sunday, especially after the coyote was spotted in our amphitheater area—right next to our groundbreaking site—Saturday night. The announcements were met with the expected giggles and grins. And I even poked fun (a little) at the situation in my comments during our Fellowship Dinner Sunday night. But it is a serious matter. If that coyote killed one dog and maimed another while the owner was walking them, who knows what it could do to a child? Especially if that child is wandering around our grounds alone at dusk. Like before, during, or after Bible classes on a Wednesday night. Let’s be careful, especially around the west sides of our campus. Let’s keep an eye on our kids.

I’m almost completely unpacked and put up in my office here at the church building. Everything except my autographed Bob Lilly Ring of Honor poster. That’ll probably go up sometime tonight. One of our elders and worship leaders, Gordon Lowry, keeps making fun of my lava lamp. As it turns out, the things in my office are generally the things Carrie-Anne won’t let me display in the house.

Peace,

Allan

Be Careful How You Build

Crowd“By the grace God has given me, I laid a foundation as an expert builder, and someone else is building on it. But each one should be careful how he builds. For no one can lay any foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ.”

These words from the apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 3 served as the theme for our groundbreaking ceremony on Sunday. North Richland Hills Mayor Oscar Trevino and Birdville Schools Associate Superintendent Dr. Jay Thompson, among other civic leaders, joined over 500 of us for the festivities under clear skies and lots of sunshine. We’re building a 1,500 seat worship center along with a youth and benevolence facility that should all be ready by late Spring next year. It’s been in the works for over five years. And now, finally, it’s about to become a reality.

My thoughts on Paul’s writings were that we’re all building on the foundations of those who go before us. Yes, certainly, Jesus Christ is the ultimate foundation on which everything we do and plan is built. But look at Paul’s words in the context of his day. It took literally dozens of years for construction to be completed on the elaborate buildings of the first century. Herod’s temple in Jerusalem took over 50 years to build. And some of the more spectacular edifices would take two or three generations to complete. The idea of constructing a 1,500 seat auditorium in less than a year didn’t even exist to Paul and his readers. Construction workers of his day would begin a project only to see their children finish it. Or, in some cases, one would work a lifetime on a building and never see it completed. It may be finished eventually by that man’s great-great grandchildren who weren’t even born yet when the project began.

Christ is the foundation. But we’re all building on what was passed down. We’re standing on the shoulders of those who go before us. And those who come after us will continue the project until Jesus returns to ultimately complete God’s work of salvation and take us home. That puts a responsibility on us to intentionally understand, articulate, and pass on the Christian faith to our children and grandchildren.

And as hard as I tried to communicate that message during the groundbreaking on Sunday,Preach I didn’t come close to summing it up as well as the pictures from that ceremony do. One can’t help but think about the legacy of Legacy when looking at pictures of Kent Robinson, who’s been a giant in the faith at Pipeline/Legacy since the very beginning, and pictures of all the little two and three year old children. There’s Kent, leaning against the building with his shovel, keeping one eye on the proceedings and another on the lookout for our coyote (that’s another story). And then there are dozens of young children, mine included, who’ve only been around a short time, struggling with shovels twice as big as they are, grinning excitedly as they dig into the ground where our new worship center will be.

What a beautiful picture of passing on the faith and building on the foundations laid by those who go before us. May our God bless us and use us to his glory as we love and serve each other in the Kingdom.

Peace,

Allan

A Banner Beginning

What an amazing day of worship and praise and communion and fellowship with the body of Christ that meets at Legacy! I know it’s a nightmare logistically, but I love the energy and enthusiasm that comes with having the entire church family together for one worship service at the same time. The singing to our Lord was inspired. The words and prayers from our shepherds were challenging and convicting. The example of our Savior to live our lives as huge billboards proclaiming the glory of our God is motivating and encouraging. I certainly felt like God was present in every handshake, every hug, every pat on the back. What a marvelous day and a great beginning to our ministry together.

What a surprise to see LeeAnn Clark and Letitia Daniel in the crowd yesterday morning! The Clarks and the Daniels and their sweet kids are a big part of what made it so hard to leave Marble Falls to begin this work in North Richland Hills. We’ve left so many dear friends—we’ve laughed and cried and prayed and worshiped and had babies and buried loved ones and installed air conditioners and roofed houses and tiled floors and studied the Word and raised our kids and played tennis and froze at football games and lived all the other parts of our lives together in Marble Falls for parts of nine years together. And we love that church and we love that community.

But the work here is great and the challenge is real. I don’t feel as led or guided by our God to be in this place as I do pushed by God to be at Legacy. And that does fill me with a tremendous sense of confidence and courage that he is bigger than me and he’s bigger than us. God has huge plans for us. He is working in mighty ways to impact our mid-cities communities for his Kingdom.

I want to thank you — our family, our old friends in Marble Falls, our new friends here in NRH, all the wonderful professors and staff at Austin Grad, everyone who has played and is playing a role in shaping me and encouraging me and pushing me to be God’s servant and a servant of his Kingdom.

As for blogging, have patience with me here at the start. I have great plans and ideas for this website, but it’s going to take a while. I intend to use this site to encourage and teach and exhort our church family at Legacy and the Kingdom of God abroad. It’ll also be a way for me to update you with our family news and the goings-on of Carrie-Anne and the girls as we get settled back in the city. And — I can’t help it — this will be my outlet for the sports thoughts and opinions that are backing up in my head. This site will undergo lots of changes over the next few weeks. I’ll add pictures and links and all kinds of things that will keep us all informed and uplifted and challenged. And if it turns into a forum for discussion, I think that’ll make it even better.

Keep checking back.

Peace,

Allan

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