Article in the New York Times
New York Times July 29 article. Bob loves the Jews, the Palestinians, and the whole world.
NorthWood in the News
This past weekend was historical in the life of NorthWood to say the least. You can read about it HERE.
Relating to People of Different Religions

I’m often asked, “How do you relate to people of different religions, work with them, keep your own faith, and even in the midst of that be a witness?” This weekend’s sermon illustrates it. Faith is most powerful, not when it’s held in a closet or huddle for those who merely believe it, but when it’s passed out and shared by those who live it and it can’t simply be contained. Here is the mp3 interview I did with Mr. Nguyen Van Kien: Interview with PACCOM delegate.
Dallas Morning News Blog
Hey guys - this is what’s up the next few days at NorthWood. It’s neat to be a part of making the world a better place. Who wudda thot?
Rock on Richard Haas & Council on Foreign Affairs
I’m pretty wasted tonight - started early this morning to get to Decatur, Illinois and got stuck on the tarmac at LaGuardia for a few hours - I made it, spoke. I wanted to write now because tomorrow will be a zoo and I don’t want to forget last night.
Richard Haas spoke and I can see why he is where he is. The guy is brilliant. I’d already read “The Opportunity” a while back and read his articles in Foreign Affairs, but after hearing him - I had a lot of things stirring inside of me. Some key things he said about people of faith and global issues:
--Timing is everything in global affairs - and the timing is now for the discussion of faith and foreign affairs.
--People and ideas matter - they always have.
--Current world described not so much by great powers of of a diminished order.
Each one of these you could talk all day on. I would have liked a day with him to probe him on these issues - and a lot more.
The thing that stuck in my mind the most though - was the question of how to do foreign policy for America. Is the starting point the world, or is the starting point America. Not sure where he comes out on that one. But it sure reminded me of our current “debate” of the church. Our starting point is not the church - but the world. Our seed - the Gospel of the Kingdom. I hope to get to know this guy a lot better.
Today with Richard Haas - Council on Foreign Relations
I fly early this morning to Manhattan for a workshop Richard Haas is leading with other speakers on religion and foreign policy. There is no such thing as a secular world. The old days of diplomats trying to develop foreign and public policy apart from faith is over. There was the idea that faith was a private matter. Does anyone believe that anymore? When you see our current world situation and the future prosepects only dialogue and new ways of thinking about faith in the public sector can save us from all out destruction. I still believe what Jefferson wrote is our best hope of learning to live together. In his “wall of separation” between the church and the government - it was never a denial of faith or a minimalization of it - only a way to allow people of different faiths to communicate without making it public policy. I’m excited about some of the people who will be there and the presenters. At a time globally when we need “religious” statesmen the most - who is there? Why are they not there?
THE TWO MOST IMPORTANT GIFTS OF THE SPIRIT FROM THE CHARISMATIC MOVEMENT
For the past 100 years the charismatic movement has swept the church and the world. Something specific in history happened at Azusa Street, but I also believe many of those same things were happening prior to that, there just wasn’t a vocabulary. There are many things that can be debated about it - but as I was running yesterday I was thinking to myself there are two incredible gifts the charismatic movement has blessed the entire church with. I think it goes beyond the supernatural expression of the miraculous.
First, because of the emphasis on the Holy Spirit I believe there came a strong passion for worship. The charismatic movement has taught the church to worship in ways that are profound and deep that impact mainline churches today. The freedom of the Spirit afforded by the charismatic church spread in music, expression, and a desire for spontaniety that even mainline churches emulate in many ways. I’m so so grateful for that. I can go in most churches and sing worship songs, lift my hands, and worship regardless of the denomination. I would also be quick to say, that as one who discovered the joy worship, when we discover the object of worship - we can “worship” in the highest of the high or the lowest of the low.
Second, because of the emphasis on the Holy Spirit - anything is possible - even outside the realm of human engineering. I am very grateful the charismatic movement has impacted the world as it has. We’ve all heard the stats that 75% of the church globally is charismatic. There are reasons for that - yes sociologically, culturally, identification - but you cannot minimize the belief in the power of the Holy Spirit that makes anything possible - even taking the Gospel to the most difficult places on the earth.
The lines between “charismatic” and “non-charismatic” have blurred dramatically since the 70’s and they will continue to. So, how do you reconcile some of the differences? I don’t - they’re there. Like the debate about free will and human responsibility - it’s a tension that will exist. But I woudn’t want to do away with a God that is in total control - neither would I want to follow a God that made me a robot. Excesses? Yes. Need for more excesses out of some who never …
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Globalization’s Impact on Institutional Missions
There have been several articles in the past year from many mission organization publications dealing with laymen, churches, and even other ngo’s (non-governmental humanitarian organizations) that are working around the world and and their impact on missions. At heart, I believe the real question that we struggle with is when the world is won for Christ, who will win it? Who will lead it? Who will be up on the front edge? My response is two-fold. First, we all will. Second, typical, normal, everyday national and international laymen will be up on the front edges--not religious professionals. Why? Theologically, the Great Commission was given to the whole church, not religious professionals like me. It is my job not because I’m a religious professional but because I’m a follower of Christ. Those of us that are religious professionals are to be more than anything equippers for the entire body--not the superstars. Biblically, you cannot ignore Antioch. It wasn’t the Apostles. It wasn’t the missionaries sent there (there weren’t any--it was these two lay guys who are on fire and a church emerges out of what they are doing.) Practically, we will never be able to fund enough missionaries, institutions, and organizations to do what God has called and commissioned the entire church to do. The Great Commission is great because it will take all of us. It’s too great a thing for a handful of people or institutions to accomplish.
Why do we segment everything all the time? Haven’t we learned there is no break between the sacred and secular? Now we want that division between the “vocational” and the “avocational”? What a stupid debate. Who is most important the vocational missionary (Paul) or the laymen (Antioch businessman) who owns the Great Commission and does business globally in secular non-Christian societies to bless those societies and model what faith looks like? You have to have both and trying to implement a pecking order is arrogant, prideful, flesh filled, and self-centered. Kind of reminds me of Jesus dealing with the apostles when they were arguing over who is the greatest. We now have over 15 couples out of NorthWood working world-wide as vocational missionaries. We have others in the pipeline. I do believe we are in need of radical redefinition of missionaries almost to the extent of the radicalness of what Carey did in his day. I also believe we …
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Power of the Church versus Power of the Gospel
The power to transform a person, a family, a tribe, a nation, and the world doesn’t lie in the engineering of the perfect church - but lies in the planting the the seed of the perfect Gospel in the dirt of humanity. There, left to dirt and rain - the Gospel grows and works to a point that the church emerges. Form follows function. We think function happens if we get the right form. We may never which comes first, the chicken or the egg - but we know the Gospel before the Church.
Kingdom Builder or Castle Builder
I’m involved in a project that is bringing together some pastors from all over the world. We are learning from one another and trying to partner to see this world transformed. The group is small by design and to be involved it has little to do with your vision but your fruit. I had the opportunity to visit with both Ralph Neighbour, Jr. and Ralph Neighbour, Sr. today. I’ve known Jr. since I met him almost 20 years ago in the LA area. He’s always reminded me of Martin Luther for some reason. Sr., I met years ago and went to one of his cell church conferences. He had a significant impact on how I would develop in my views of ministry and the world. I was sharing with them some of the things that we’re doing globally and some dreams as well as some of the partnerships. Sr. called me up and gave me some profound advice. “All of the kind of men you want to work with will be inovators. But I’ve discovered there are two kinds of men. One is a castle builder and the other is a kingdom builder. A castle builder has his own agenda to build his castle. He wants notoriety and recognition. A kingdom builder wants God’s kingdom established. Be discerning of castle builders!”
How do you look in a man’s heart and know what is there? Texans are a lot like Asians. We smile and nod our heads, are warm, start in politeness, but want to get to know someone before going deep. In working globally, and in the US, one of the lessons I had to learn was that just because someone smiled at you didn’t mean they liked you or shared your values. How do you distinguish the two? Can you distinguish the two? At first, everyone and everything looks as it should. Time and conflict expose it for what it is. That’s easy and obvious. My question is, how do you see it before you go deep with someone so it doesn’t sidetrack what God’s call is. Maybe you can’t avoid it. Paul dealt with it, Peter did--everyone does. Maybe the point is, don’t freak out when it happens--it’s just part of the deck of cards.
Recently, I’ve been recieving a lot of “unsolicited prophecy” and I feel it has been from God. Some …
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