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This blog chronicles my adventures since my junior year of college to..everywhere. Primarily it consists of life experiences and God stories in Honduras, Costa Rica, and Panama. Enjoy and God bless!

Monday, October 28, 2013

Student/Leader Testimonies: Crossfire Retreat 2013


Praise #2: God spoke through the speakers and people giving their testimony, and this opened up conversations with the students about this theme and what it means to their life.

*Esther: Esther (H.S. math teacher at CCA and dear friend of mine) came to me super nervous about what she would say on Friday night. She was only told on Thursday that she would be the one giving the wrap-up talk/challenge after the gospel was shared at the retreat. The Lord has gifted her incredibly with an ability to communicate truths from Scripture to a middle school/high school audience, and she did a phenomenal job letting Him speak through her.

She challenged the students to examine their lives and think about why they were at retreat that weekend. Were they at the point of crossroads with making a decision to follow Jesus? Were they following Him, yet wrestling with big God questions? Or were they there to enjoy “walking in the cool of the Garden” with God and grow deeper in understanding His love and purpose for their lives?

This talk really set the stage for the entire weekend, as well as delivered the most powerful message of all: “He (Jesus) was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was upon him, and by his wounds we are healed” (Isa. 53:5)

*Danae: Within the past month, God has been confirming His call on Danae (H.S. English teacher at CCA and my upstairs neighbor/running buddy/accountability partner) to spend next year in Guinea (Africa) with Mami teaching missionary kids. Panama has been a place of spiritual renewal for her, of understanding what God’s love means and looks like through His people, and yet, why would God remove her from this place and send her somewhere far outside her comfort zone? There is a song we’ve been singing in worship during Crossfire that sums up pretty well why:

Spirit lead me where my trust is without borders
Let me walk upon the waters
Wherever You would call me
Take me deeper than my feet could ever wander
And my faith will be made stronger
In the presence of my Savior” (Oceans by Hillsong United)

Danae shared how God wants our WHOLE SELVES. This is not to say that once we find joy and peace that He removes us from that situation, but yet, God teaches us and lays different burdens on our heart as we get closer to Him.

He stretches us to trust Him, whether it is like Abraham who left his family, his people, and his country to obey God, or it is like Ruth who surrendered identity and security (“your people will be my people and your God will be my god” Ruth 1:16), or like Peter, who, while fearful, climbed out of the boat and walked on top of the waves toward Jesus (Matthew 14:22-23). Her talk was a challenge to students and leaders alike.

*Student #1: One of the worship band members, an incredibly talented guitar player and gorgeous singer, shared about a vulnerable part of her life and how she’s surrendering it to Christ. Having struggled with an eating disorder throughout middle school, she now finds assurance and worth in knowing Christ.

*Student #2: One of the sophomore guys who is known mainly for being able to free style rap at the drop of a hat shared openly and honestly about having Tourrete Syndrome. It took a lot of guts to get up there and share in front of his peers, especially as he talked about how these impulses have affected his friendships, his daily life and even made school a huge struggle. He shared how he wasn’t sure how God was using this experience; although, I’m pretty sure that simply sharing his story was a big step in allowing God to redeem this struggle in his life and a powerful witness to other MS/HS guys of looking to God when we don’t understand the circumstances in our lives.

*Seniors #3-4:
After the weekend, a senior girl and guy each shared in church about the impact the retreat made on their lives and what God was teaching them in particular. For the senior guy, it’s been a year-long journey of surrendering to God his future, as he college plans and is unsure about what career path to take. This retreat came at the perfect time for him.

For the senior girl, what resonated the most with her was the symbolism of literally nailing our sins (written on a slip of paper) to the cross. Saturday night, Pastor Bob Gunn (a long time Bible translator and missionary/pastor in Panama) shared stories from his life of how he had to surrender to God in the little and big decisions. He then gave the challenge to the students to surrender their own sins/struggle areas of their life to Jesus, the only one who can forgive and redeem and restore us to a right relationship with Him.

God had been working in students’ hearts during the weekend, and middle and high school students rushed to the stage. Kneeling by the wooden cross, they scrawled their sin/area of life they wanted to surrender to Jesus on a square of white paper. Then, they selected a nail and a hammer and began the work of nailing this piece of paper into the cross. I watched as student after student sat by the cross and committed this act of surrender and prayed for God to continue to work powerfully in their lives. I had the sweet privilege of praying with a few middle school girls afterward who surrendered some pretty tough stuff, like future plans and family life and anger and attitude. Some students returned to the cross multiple times, as God spoke to their hearts and said, “Well, what about that area of your life? Will you give that to me, too?”

In church, the senior girl explained how the sound of the hammers pounding away was convicting, because it made her reflect on how Jesus took the punishment of death that we deserved and all of our sin upon Him when he suffered an agonizing death on the cross.

What a fresh perspective to view the experience through the eyes of a student! To those listening to her testimony or those present at the retreat, I’m sure we will never take communion or look upon a cross in the same way. The cross will always serve as a reminder of just how much He loves us.

His love is:

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