Well, at lunch yesterday (as many of you know by now), Brian Phillips, Birmingham Area Director for Campus Outreach, told me that I... get to stay in Birmingham! I am thrilled beyond words. I'm not sure that the fullness of that reality has sunken in yet... So here, in Larry Langford's lovely land, I remain... until at least August 2013-a full decade of calling Birmingham "home." A shame it took me nearly five years to say it with pride.
Slightly more than a week earlier, I sent Brian an e-mail with the nine reasons why I felt like the Lord was leading me to pray to stay at Samford. The top two:
1. My Community Here
-Never have I been a part of a community (apart from the confines of Beach Project) so ready & willing to challenge, encourage, confront and pray for one another. The guys in my house and the friends I have made at church have shown me, as I have never seen before, what true community should look like. This body would be terribly hard to replace (though, obviously, I am aware of the great community that would be developed elsewhere, particularly with other staff guys) & quite hard to leave
-Never have I been a part of a community (apart from the confines of Beach Project) so ready & willing to challenge, encourage, confront and pray for one another. The guys in my house and the friends I have made at church have shown me, as I have never seen before, what true community should look like. This body would be terribly hard to replace (though, obviously, I am aware of the great community that would be developed elsewhere, particularly with other staff guys) & quite hard to leave
-This semester, I have come to see how important it is for college students to see & interact with real-world Christians. I feel like my house has been a place for that these past few months. I would love for college students to see men & women living for Christ after college in everyday jobs, to interact with and learn from them, to know that it can be done, and to have an example to follow. If we are raising up laborers solely for the college campus (which I do not believe we are), we are missing the greatness of God's calling & vision and being consistently around these men of God affords me opportunity to confront that very thing.
2. My Church
-I love Briarwood & the work that it does, and I do understand that I would need to attend it, but I would ask, as Ryan Akers has, to be allowed to continue to go to my church, Redeemer Community (Joel Brooks' church), as well. I have never so enjoyed church. I have never felt so a part of a community struggling together for the sake of Christ & for the sake of the city. For many of the same reasons as I listed above, I would ask to stay in Birmingham. Joel is my pastor, and he is the first I would ever claim in such a way. I have learned these past few months what church should look like... and it has been transforming.
2. My Church
-I love Briarwood & the work that it does, and I do understand that I would need to attend it, but I would ask, as Ryan Akers has, to be allowed to continue to go to my church, Redeemer Community (Joel Brooks' church), as well. I have never so enjoyed church. I have never felt so a part of a community struggling together for the sake of Christ & for the sake of the city. For many of the same reasons as I listed above, I would ask to stay in Birmingham. Joel is my pastor, and he is the first I would ever claim in such a way. I have learned these past few months what church should look like... and it has been transforming.
Unrelated: An interesting piece in London's The Times- "As an athiest, I truly believe that Africa needs God."
