
photo credit: Traci Sproule
Polishing the Pulpit is in the books in Missouri and now in Tennessee. I am still in the hotel in Sevierville. Although I distributed hundreds of Digging Deep books, there’s a sense in which I’ll be going home with much more than I brought with me. If you attended, you will (or have), too. My heart is more full of the will to serve. My head is to capacity of ideas to facilitate the spread of HIS fulness. My spirit is just so very grateful to Him for the way he has encouraged through His people. I want to be better and there are about seven thousand other people who have the same will. The Colleys are deeply indebted to Allen Webster, David Barker, Luke Griffin, Mark Howell, Eddy Gilpin and the elderships that have overseen, for the 30-plus year commitment to serving the church through this, the most vibrant and effective event for Christ, of which we have ever been a part. What a privilege to have been in attendance
this year!
Some have requested this list from the lecture “Babies Have to Grow Up”. It’s a list of some of the things we can do to help our brand new sisters to be nurtured; to have the spiritual needs of infant Christians met as we help them “grow up” in Him. If you are one of the many faithful women who are working in “labor and delivery” in the kingdom of Christ, you know that there are some pretty volatile days after the new birth (John 3). Some of our baby sisters are needing spiritual life support.
Watch here for a few installments of ideas—ideas to help “grow” the babies from the self-focused, crying stages of infancy, to the happy, serving stages of spiritual maturity.
- Stamped and addressed cards. Sometimes you may have studied with the sweet young sister and others do not know her nearly as well as you do. Address a stack of ten note cards to the baby sister (not all one pack of cards—make them different). Get someone to help you, if possible, to address, so that all the handwriting will not be exactly the same. Stamp them. Take them to worship with you and give them to dependable sisters and ask them to write personal notes of encouragement in the cards, and mail them. You may even want to put a “date to send’ in pencil on the back the envelope, so that all the cards will not be received in the same week.
- When you study with the next person you’re trying to bring to Christ, invite the new sister to come along. The blessings here are several and they are solidifying.
Make sure you KEEP studying with the new sister. Ask her to read, with you, a book of the Bible—say the book of John. Maybe just three chapters each week and then meet up weekly, if possible, to discuss the verses read and take lessons for her life. Perhaps your elders, like mine, will love for you to meet with new sisters, during one of the Bible class times, when everyone is already there at the building, and talk with her, about the scriptures. - Most of us know what “secret sisters” is: when each lady is designated a certain sister for whom she will do acts of kindness in secrecy, until the end of the month or quarter or year. If you do this program, be sure your “baby sister” gets one of the MOST spiritual sisters in the whole game. This kind of sister will send spiritual messages, secretly purchase and give spiritual books that are sound, and gift her with coffee cards with the specification that she take a sister to the coffee shop, etc…
- Call or text her often. Set your phone reminder to do this. Many times you will say “Just checking in. Is the cough better?” or “Hey! Did you make it back home?” or “Just making sure you know about the fellowship meal.” But sometimes, be sure you say “How is your walk with the Lord?” or “Do you feel like you are growing, spiritually?”
More next time!
