Sunday, May 30, 2010

Let's do it to it.

Welcome to my summer updates blog!

As you probably know, I'm spending seven weeks in St. Louis this summer with a program called CityLights (http://www.citylights-stl.org/). I'm incredibly blessed to have this opportunity to go to St. Louis to partner with God’s people there to see into God’s heart for the city, for brokenness, and for PEOPLE. I’m excited to go meet the strangers who are going to become like family in a short amount of time.

As I’ve been preparing to leave, God’s been showing me all kinds of ways that he’s already been preparing me for this summer. We were asked to read two books in preparation -- A Credible Witness by Brenda Salter McNiel and A Hole in Our Gospel by Richard Stearns. I highly recommend them both. Brenda talks about the power of the love of Christ that has reconciled us to Christ and to one another. The church should be embodying the power of that reconciliation, and by the grace of God, making ourselves credible witnesses to the gospel of Christ. Richard Stearns, the president of World Vision, talks about how our gospel often has a hole in it. This hole develops when we try to remove establishing justice and serving those in need from the mission of Christ.

God blew my mind with 2 Corinthians earlier this semester when I was reading it in my quiet times (daily time with God), a cool way that God helped me begin to unpack these verses. The verse that I’ve been rolling around in my head since I read it is 2 Corinthians 5:14-15:

14For Christ's love compels us, because we are convinced that one died for all, and therefore all died. 15And he died for all, that those who live should no longer live for themselves but for him who died for them and was raised again.

What does it look like to be COMPELLED by Christ’s love to live for him? It’s a question a started asking a few months ago, and these books have begun to give me a peak into the depths of that answer as they look a lot at 2 Corinthians. I’m super looking forward to getting down to St. Louis to process these challenging, convicting books with brothers and sisters from so many different backgrounds.

My team is made up of 31 college students who go to school around the Midwest and New York mainly, but coming with homes as far away as Hong Kong. We will be living together in community for the summer in an old boarding school. We will be a part of the New City Fellowship faith community while we’re there, a multi-ethnic church that worships in 4-5 languages and has people coming from 25-30 different countries. (http://www.newcity.org/ucity/index.asp)

I still am unsure of what exactly I’ll be doing while I'm there, but I’ll let you know as soon as I get a chance. I’ll be able to check my email and update here about once a week I’ve heard. My address is:

Kristi Freitag

c/o City Lights, New City Fellowship

1483 82nd St

St Louis, MO 63132


I’ll end this post with kind of the summary of what my attitude is about the summer right now.

Anonymous quote in A Hole in Our Gospel:

“Sometimes I would like to ask God why He allows poverty, suffering, and injustice when He could do something about it.”

“Well why don’t you ask Him?”

“Because I’m afraid He would ask me the same question.”

This summer I’m going to let God ask me that question, and I’m apprehensively excited to listen to what He says. I would appreciate your prayers for me and my team as we discover more of God’s heart and allow ourselves to be transformed more into the likeness of Christ and have our hearts broken for the things that break His heart.


Ready.

Set.

Go.

Let’s do it to it.

1 comment:

  1. Kristi, you know I am cynical (at least) when it comes to all things religious, but your example of Christian kindness and ACTION speaks louder than any words. You have always been a remarkable young woman, so it shouldn't surprise me that you continue to do remarkable things with your life. I can't say I will ever really understand your faith (I envy you for it) but I will always try to keep an open mind, especially when I see the example you set of kind and compassionate Christianity. You give Christians a good name. (And LOVED this quote!)

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