Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Nation of the Underground

Nation of the Underground is this weekend (starting tomorrow)! I believe registration is closed, but if you have the opportunity to go, please contact them (nationoftheunderground.com) to be sure!

In the beginning of Philippians 2, Paul points out that divisiveness within a fellowship indicates spiritual problems. Let's drop the selfishness and pride that are causing us to act like people who haven't experienced the full extent of the saving grace of Jesus Christ! It is time to unify the Church so that we can do our job... speaking the Truth of the Gospel in love to a world who desperately needs to hear it! Nation of the Underground—along with Hope For The Rejected's Unified Underground and other ministries too numerous to name—is part of a huge revival and awakening of the underground Church, and will be held in Hurst, TX tomorrow (7/24) through Sunday (7/27). Loyal Thurman will be there representing Hope For The Rejected, so be sure to talk to him if you get the chance.

If, like me, you can't attend, please join me in covering Nation of the Underground with all the prayer we can muster. Pray for the safety of everyone who's traveling to be there, and that—above all—God is glorified in every way possible, specifically through the spiritual growth of His children. Only by growing closer to Him can we become more effective agents of His grace here on earth!

God bless!

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

Cornerstone Festival 2008 recap

Last week, the Hope For The Rejected team attended Cornerstone Festival 2008 in Bushnell, Illinois. On Saturday, we hosted Unified Underground Day on the Fatcalf Stage, featuring a number of bands and speakers intermingling throughout the day. Bands that took the stage included Flatfoot 56, Sexually Frustrated, Blaster the Rocket Man, Sleeping Giant, Take It Back!, Bridgeshadows, The Red Baron, Leper, Filthy 42, and Spirit Child. Hope For The Rejected director Loyal Thurman and assistant director Lucas Walther addressed the crowd, along with Rose Kurczab and Lara Freeburg of The Asylum (our gothic partner ministry), Rise Above pastor Skip Brooks, Joshua Stump of Nashville-based The Anchor Fellowship, The Red Baron frontman Phil Porto, and Jeremy Ritch of Pennsylvania's Hold Fast Ministries. Remarkably, we saw many people defying conventional boundaries by sticking around to listen to bands and speakers from all subcultures. Unity was a common topic spoken from stage, but it wasn't the same type of unity that has been called for in the past. Whereas prior years found leaders calling for brotherhood within scenes, it is apparent that everyone is being convicted of the absolute necessity of unity among all of the underground subcultures, as well as unity between those subcultures and the mainstream Church.

Perhaps the most noteworthy difference at the Festival this year was the overall feeling of Christ-centeredness that was apparent wherever one looked. Over the past few years, I have seen many bands out there who are bold and unashamed about proclaiming the Gospel of Jesus Christ to the underground. This year, however, I saw that fire intensified, and I saw something new accompanying it: the bands not only welcomed God's presence, they pleaded for it and led the crowds in outright worship experiences. There was passion and heart like we haven't seen for years, and it finally seems that a number of bands—both new and old—have stepped up to whom the Spirit-filled "torch" can be passed. Jeremy Ritch of Hold Fast wrote, quite simply and unequivocably, "I witnessed revival." Although there is much work to be done and a long road to travel, we are seeing the emergence of a humble and devoted generation of followers of Christ in the underground who seem well-prepared for the task.