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What is it about the City?

On any given week I find myself in downtown Portland working with students at Portland State University. The easiest way to get there from my house is to hop on the bus that picks me up at the end of block. The bus route takes me over the Ross Island Bridge where I get a great view of downtown.

The other day I noticed that every time I’m on the bus almost everyone turns their eyes to take in all of the skyline as we putter across the bridge. Why is that?

Maybe it’s just the scenery of the sun hitting the building and reflecting off the Willamette River, but perhaps it’s something more than that.

Maybe there’s a deep understanding of the power of millions of people in close proximity. Maybe there’s an innate desire in people to find security and purpose that they think the city can provide.

Or maybe I’m over thinking this. What do you think?

Evangelism?

Not sure if this is true, but can you relate to this?

Double check before you hit enter

I love my Mom. I love that she’s trying to figure out Facebook. I love that she’s incredibly genuine and thoughtful.

The other day I posted a picture on Facebook about Portland State University having it’s own beer….or so I’ve heard from one of my coworkers. Anyway, the following morning I posted about getting a good eight hours of sleep the night before for the first time in a while.

Then my sweet, kind, loving mother decided to comment about our blessed night sleep…only she commented on the beer picture. Hilarity ensued. See for yourself.

May there be many more coming my way!!!! HAHAHA!

I love you Mom.

Superbowl + Ad’s = #Brandbowl

An added element superbowl entertainment for me was following the twitter hashtag #brandbowl and reading vast sweeping judgements of commercials and brands.

Biggest losers on twitter…Groupon and Godaddy

Biggest winner…Chrysler

I liked this commercial.


Great story, great thematic elements that draws you in and almost make you believe that Big Car business in back on track. It assumed the audience had intelligence. It helps that the ad agency that produced it is the phenomenal Weiden-Kennedy from here in Portland. I have two problems with this commercial…

  1. It’s a Chrysler. It’s a car that still does not have a great reputation. Advertising can only do so much. Maybe this speaks to how hard it is to change your brand if you’ve fallen off the deep end in the past.
  2. It’s Marshall Mathers. An although I think the dude is tremendously talented, he also wrote about putting his girlfriend in the trunk of a car. It kind of works having him represent Detroit…all city hardened and stuff, but ultimately it’s character that counts.

Take it or leave it…this coming from a guy who thought the Doritos commercials were funny too.

Why I invest in college students?

They are the future leaders of the world. They are the influencers. The potential for kingdom impact is off the charts!

Plus they know how to have a good time.

Thanks to Justin Wise of BeDeviant.com for the video!

Cru Conference Video team does good work

The video’s at our Cru Conference were off the charts good this year. One thing that helped was a super fancy HD projector that launched a crystal clear image all the way across the back of the stage so we could watch things like this MC introduction.

Jason & Kirk Intro 2 from CRUCONFERENCE on Vimeo.

The added flexibility the video screen gave the program team was amazing, plus major arts and crafts weren’t necessary for set design. For example we had a looping video of Times Square during a vision spot about Destino in NYC. It added an element of connection to the content that we haven’t seen before.

What about your conference, any thing cool in production you’ve seen across the country?

More thoughts from I Once Was Lost

Everything I’ve been taught about evangelism has been from the perspective of the person doing the evangelism. What I like about I Once was Lost by Everts and Schaupp is that it examines those who don’t know Christ and what the process has looked like for them to take steps toward Christ.

I Once Was Lost describes the 5 Thresholds that many non-believers cross on their path to Christ. Understanding these has helped me have categories for relational evangelism and reasons to celebrate with our staff and students.

Threshold #1 – Moving from distrust to trust of Christians. —I’m quickly finding out the need for this, and realizing that I’m not trained in this area.

Threshold #2 – Moving from complacent to curious about Jesus.

Threshold #3 – Moving from being closed to change to being open to change in their life.

Threshold #4 – Moving from meandering to seeking.

Threshold #5 – Crossing the threshold of the kingdom itself. —As an organization we’re really good at this, but ultimately this is hard if you can’t get an audience.

Great content in this book, but again what does it mean for us as a ministry in Portland (and on a larger level) on a practical level? I’m not sure. Any thoughts? Have you seen these thresholds to be true?

Kind of a book review – I once was Lost

I just powered through  I Once was Lost – What Postmodern Skeptics Taught Us About Their Path to Jesus, in two nights. I felt like I was living the first page yesterday, except that it was raining.

At Portland State University there was a church/Bible school group on campus singing worship songs and trying to awkwardly convert people, including yours truly. The leader was wearing bouncy moon boot shoes to attract attention…yeah, strange. To be fare, they did pray with me and were encouraging, but I couldn’t help but laugh as I read the first page of this book last night….

I can remember that afternoon as if it were yesterday. I (Doug) was standing out in the middle of the green grass of the quad on campus, singing as loudly as I could. Twenty of my Christian friends and I were holding guitars and singing to “witness” to the students who lounged nearby on the sunny patches of grass in the middle of the Cal Berkely campus. We wanted to show our fellow students our authentic joy and love for Jesus. What better way to witness than with bold worship?

And man, did we grow that day! It was a profound faith experience for all of us who were willing to be “fools for Christ.” We stood publicly and shamelessly for the gospel. Our faith was tested and affirmed.

But as for those who were trying to catch some rays on the lawn–well, no one was curious about issues of faith after our public spectacle. Instead of being attractive or intriguing witnesses for Christ, we were just one more random thing in their day, it seemed.

Our bold worship had grown our faith, but it made for weak evangelism. Our fatal flaw? We came up with our evangelistic strategy while we were alone in a room together with a bunch of Christians. Not once in our brainstorming and planning did we ask where our non-Christian fellow students were coming from. Not once did we try to find out what they might need to take a step toward Jesus. We were mostly coming up with something we wanted to do, not something that would be actually helpful to those unsuspecting sunbathers in the quad. I’ll never forget that afternoon.

More to come on the rich evangelism insights from this book that was given to us at our recent leadership conference. It’s written by college ministers doing the work, so it has hit home with me profoundly!

Thoughts on evangelism; skepticism and proclamation.

We want to see the campuses in this city transformed. To do that we share our faith a lot. Along the way a couple issues have surfaced for us that we’re doing our best to deal with.

  1. There is a general sense of skepticism here that was not present in my last location (Montana). It’s not that students won’t talk to you…they’re just skeptical (especially of Christians).  For them, Christians are judgmental and overly political. This means more trust has to be built, more rapidly.  One of the best ways to do that is to value the people we’re engaging with. This is where body language, listening skills and tone matters. They must know that I care about them and value them and their thoughts.
  2. This environment can become deadly suffocating when it comes to actually proclaiming the Gospel. If our team wasn’t careful, we could default to have amazing conversations for hours on end that never bring anyone to a point of understanding about who Christ is.  We could easily let cultural norms overtake bold proclamation of the Gospel.
  3. Teaching a student to share their faith here is tricky. Because of the complexity of many of the conversations, modeling an evangelistic opportunity often ends up with Suzy Freshmen wondering if she could ever be skilled enough to share her faith.

Out of these realities has come some action points for me….

  1. Get Biblical about evangelism. Before I bow to any sort of cultural pressure (or CCC staff pressure) I have to ask myself what the Bible says about it. I’m starting with a look at a few verses on evangelism in context (thanks Keith Davy)…John 1:35-51, Acts 8:26-40, Acts 17:16-35
  2. ’100% Try’. A while ago I heard someone say that every conversation they’d have with someone they would try to share the Gospel and bring someone to a understanding that they need to make a choice about Christ. Of course, sometimes God would close conversational doors, but they would try.  They called this the 100% try’. That’s what I want my life to look like.

Any push back? What about your context? What are you learning?

Our Adoption Story!

I was in Seattle last week with other Campus Crusade leaders from the northwest region and there were lot’s of questions about the recent adoption of our son Isaac. My smok’n hott wife has nicely recapped our story, so if you’re interested here are the links.

I don’t think everyone is called to adopt, but I do think everyone should ask the Lord if it’s for them.

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