A call to priesthood: The Top Five Events in 2014

This insightful Stratfor article lists five calls to strategic intercession for the Church.  That’s not necessarily what George Friedman intended, but I wouldn’t be surprised if this Jewish man came from the tribe of Issachar, given his gift of understanding the times. I would encourage Christians to read it and expand their understanding of what is transpiring in the world and then to take it to the Throne of Grace to ask the Lord what He thinks and how one should pray.  I believe that Jesus cares about all of it – from the last item on the list (very personal and “micro”) to the other very “macro” international developments – and everything in between.

If you’re part of a House of Prayer, print this out and let it be some of the fuel for intercession.  We, the Church, are called to stand in these gaps as priests – bringing them before the Lord and bringing the Lord directly into the middle of each of these events/situations.

What do I stand for?

I’m struck by a message I just finished listening to by Paul Manwaring. He asked this question – “What do you stand for? What are you willing to pay a price for?”

Honestly, I’m not quite sure yet.

As I look back, I have paid a price for certain convictions, but at the same time I’m not aware of clearly defined life messages in me or people knowing what I stand for. It seems that this is still developing in me – at the tender young age of 53!

At one point in the message I heard, Paul asks people who DO know what they stand for, to stand up and make declarations. Declare what they want to see; what they’re pulling for.

Well, I’m going to start to declare (write):

  • what matters to me
  • what I want to see

By writing it down, it gets it out of me and puts words onto sometimes shifting feelings/experiences. By posting it, I’m just starting to stand – to be public – preparing to pay the price for my convictions.

Here goes (in no particular order):

  • Europe matters to me – both the land and its people.  I wasn’t born here, but I most certainly trace my ancestry here.  It certainly began before I could say it was “God” but I know now that it was God who put it in my heart and brought our family here to live.
  • Reconciliation – ever since being awakened to reconciliation as a “thing” by Nadine Roure and Elvire Dieny, seeing reconciliation happen – at ALL levels – has been deeply satisfying and I increasingly see where it’s vital.  After all Paul told us in 2 Corinthians 5 that we’ve all been given the ministry of reconciliation.
  • Family matters to me – I’m certainly NOT the poster child for how to do family (in ANY of my family roles thus far in life), but the theology of family continues to grow for me on a regular basis.  God’s design for family; God’s government is family; The enemy’s incessant targeting of family; etc.
  • Identity/Son (and daughter) ship – WHO we are is so incredibly important.  When we understand the glory that God put in each one of us and His design for us and how being His son or daughter literally unlocks eternity TODAY for us – Wow!  It’s just the key to everything.  If I can (and increasingly as an older man, I CAN) help someone to find their identity – call out who and what God has made them to be – that is TRULY  satisfying and has eternal value.
  • Marriage matters to me – Why?  Because Jesus is coming for a Bride.  There’s going to be a wedding!  The power of this eternal union is echoed by what we experience right now between a man and a woman who commit before God to each other for their whole lives.  The power of that covenant is amazing and it’s only a shadow of the covenant that Jesus has with His Bride.  The depths of this are amazing.
  • Worship and God’s Presence matter to me – Not simply because I’m a musician, and one who is named David to boot, but I was made to be in His Presence and to focus on Him.  We all were, in fact, but because God has given me this gift and desire, I believe that He’s also given me a mandate to facilitate the experience of His Presence to others.  I also believe that we are changed by His Presence and we are fundamentally designed, as creatures, to become what we behold – to become like what we worship.  Hence if I worship God, I become like God.  If I help others worship God, I help them become like God.  This is my principle tool of discipleship that I have to offer.
  • The Kingdom of God matters to me.  It is so important to me that my citizenship is primarily with Heaven and that my understanding of “progress” in society is linked to the advancing of the Kingdom where Jesus is King and not necessarily a particular earthly government. My love of a country must be motivated by Jesus’ love for that country (and He loves them ALL) and what Jesus wants for that country.  This may or may not be my country of birth or my passport country(s).
  • Erasing Dualism and Living in Tension matter to me – So I’ve just finished stating “where I stand” but actually because of the things I stand for, I refuse (in principle) to let these stances hinder love or put God in a box.  Jesus was “box buster” in so many ways.  Our detachement from the cultural context of His earthly sojourn makes it easy for us to miss just how many boxes He exploded in His time.  We probably will never discover fully how He made people feel and react in in 1st century Palestine, but the willingness to understand that Jesus does do that – not just to 1st century Palestinian residents but to us as well – is the first important step to letting our own boxes disintegrate and letting Jesus out of the box that we so-easily stuff Him into. When we let typical “either/or” thinking dominate our reality, we immediately begin to de-humanize those who think differently.  In so doing we declare where Jesus is not welcome to challenge us to love that which we don’t understand or with which we don’t agree.  If, for example, reconciliation matters to me, then I can’t afford those walls to stand in my reality.  Not easy at all this wall-dismantling-process, but essential as members of God’s family.

So those are the things that I can say that I stand for and that I want to see – in me, through me, and around me.

Ham on Nye – I’ll take a bite!

I didn’t watch the debate. Based on what I’ve read, I’m not sure it would have been the best use of my time. I think if we take a step back we can (hopefully) see that the debate is NOT a 2-sided black and white affair. There isn’t a “side” that can “win.” How telling that the debate took place in the United States, the poster child society for hyper-polarized opinion, modeled clearly each time we set out to elect our favorite ideologue.

I think what is important in this debate can vary wildly depending on whom you ask. Consequently, I’m not sure how helpful it is to pick up your nametag at the door which brands you pro-this or anti-that. Sure, it’s good to stand up for what you believe in, but that’s just it isn’t it – what DO you believe in anyway?!

For me this debate (I hesitate to say “creation vs. evolution” or “science vs. religion”, etc. because the shorthand titles are INCREDIBLY reductionist and inaccurate) should only be about our non-negotiable beliefs. I think that behind the tip-of-the-iceberg vitriol, it probably is about non-negotiable beliefs for everybody involved…except that most of them might have difficulty articulating just what ARE their non-negotiable beliefs! They don’t know what they’re fighting for!

With respect to this debate, here are mine:

1. God is the Creator and He created the universe and everything in it.
2. Humankind holds a special place in God’s heart and in His Creation.

That’s it.

Notice that the list doesn’t include things like a young earth. I didn’t even mention the evil “E” word made so in/famous by Mr. Darwin. Those things are simply are not issues for me. I care only that the non-negotiable items are in place. How and when God created the universe are things that I believe He is delighted for us to discover – whether we believe in Him or not. But if we ignore that He IS the Creator, we open the door to many problems in our society that we try and fix like a band-aid on cancer.

Unfortunately, a significant number of those of us who do hold to these two important tenants have, in my opinion, wasted a lot of time and energy arguing points, fostering enemies, and misrepresenting God by thinking that various negotiable issues jeopardize the non-negotiable issues. It’s a lamentable state of affairs and I hope the damage can be undone because it clouds the discussion about things that are ultimately very important.

Since I’m neither a theologian nor a scientist, I’m not in the position to noticeably affect the debate. Thankfully, there ARE some of both that contribute helpful voices to the discourse. I’d recommend N.T. Wright as a theologian who knows how to keep the main thing the main thing and can speak with authority on what the Bible says…and doesn’t say! (https://ntwrightpage.com/, https://www.faraday.cam.ac.uk/resources/multimedia/can-a-scientist-believe-the-resurrection/) As for scientists, I really like what BioLogos had to say about Ham on Nye (https://biologos.org/articles/ham-on-nye-our-take) and it would appear that they also have an excellent voice to add.

I’ll end there because I don’t need to debate this.

Waiting in silence – Teddy Hart – Renovatus

https://bit.ly/1g1w7ZU

After listening, you’ll see that I shouldn’t have posted it!

So necessary for me…

So necessary right now…

In addition to the main message, you’ll see Zechariah and Elisabeth in a whole new light. 

Listen in peace…

All that Jazz

Yesterday seemed to have very dissonant chords and unusual rhythm changes.  I like jamming but I’m not so good at improvising.  Dr. Chris Jones helped a lot this morning: https://mediastorage.cloversites.com/renovatuschurch/media_player/Act%203.mp3

I’m involved in a small committee and yesterday two members decided that it was best that they no longer be involved.  (excuse me, but I’m going to be deliberately vague in respect to the people involved) We had not done well in all working together.  This announcement was bittersweet for me.  There is a certain amount of pressure being lifted off in that we were struggling to work together, but definitely an amount of sadness in that we all failed to work it out. 

Yesterday would not have been the day to “work it out” and due to the maturity of everyone involved it was not ugly.  No, working it out is something that we all managed to not do on the way.  I’m convinced that God is as interested in the success of the committee becoming a loving family and effective leadership team as He is in the success of what we’re directing. So in that respect, yesterday felt like the stamp of “failure” at least in the part of team-building.  The fact that it happened with maturity and grace, though, allows me to think that it might have been simply an interesting plot twist in the improvised story that God and we are all acting out.

I’m a musician but I’m also a very ordered computer-geek as well.  Put those two together and I’m more likely to listen to Pachelbel’s Canon than Miles Davis.  Yesterday’s events feel dissonant to me like much of certain jazz styles.  The more predictable stuff, I can hang with, but when it gets out there, I’m lost.  But I know enough music to understand that Jazz DOES work and that it DOES have coherence but that the way it works and the coherence it demostrates looks nothing like Pachelbel’s Canon

The message from Dr. Chris Green this morning really helped me in that I’m understanding that Miles Davis and Charlie Parker may be more theologically sound than Pachelbel, Vivaldi and Bach.  Hard to stomach in the ordered world that I want and in my own struggles with the idiom of improvisation – both in music and in life – but I believe it’s a truth that’s hard to deny. 

Renovatus Church – Teddy Hart – The Economy of Mercy

Hey look!  It’s the "once-a-year-blogger" at it again!

Seriously, I wanted to pop this post out before it got stale…which is the problem I have with most of my posts.  Good ideas, but no time/energy/mojo to fully develop them and get them posted.  Then they get stale and I’m like, "meh…"

So, this morning I listened to this teaching while doing the dishes (duh…)  Empty house and no pressure to be somewhere or rush through anything.  Voila a post!

For two days now, I’ve been sitting on what I’ll call a "minor but strategic conflict" with someone.  God has been slowly revealing things about this conflict (and me, of course), but things still feel so confusing.  So this teaching comes along this morning and speaks even more into the situation.  Consequently, I really felt God on it and got a lot of revelation from it.

Will you?  Hard to say.  It might just be me and/or this situation.  But I will say that I felt that Teddy Hart, the young-adult pastor at Renovatus Church, really does have some revelation on:

  • The Mercy of God
  • The Kingdom
  • Forgiveness
  • The parable of the King forgiving the debt of His servant

There are some conceptual connections here that I’ve not heard before and which add depth to this parable, bringing it alive for me.  I imagine that if you’re in a conflict and that you really are wrestling with God about it (and not just stewing) then I think there’s likely sustenance in here for you as well.

I don’t even remember if this is the first time I’ve blogged about Renovatus Church or not as a source for teachings. I think it might be.  At any rate, I can’t recommend it highly enough.  99% of the messages are from Jonathan Martin, the founding and current pastor, and he’s largely the public personality of what Renovatus Church is.  So I’m really recommending him and his messages to you.  The occasional guest speakers that he has are almost always good too.  This is, for example, the 2nd Teddy Hart message I’ve heard and while his speaking style has some rough spots for me, I feel like he has some real deep insights that resonate (at least in the 2 times I’ve heard him).

So, without further ado:

https://mediastorage.cloversites.com/renovatuschurch/media_player/the%20economy%20of%20mercy.mp3

Renovatus podcasts

Jonathan Martin blog

Renovatus Church site

OCE Report: Berlin, Germany

God put Germany on my heart early.  I began taking German as a foreign language in junior high and continued through high school and a bit in university (actually speaking German remains a challenge for me Confused smile).  I’ve been drawn to Germany ever since.  It’s not always been with an overtly “spiritual” context either.  It’s mostly the culture and the geography that have somehow been attractive to me (though I know now that culture and geography are both VERY spiritual).  I would have said it was just an “interest” to me when I was young.  Now I’d say that it was God who gave me an attraction to this country, it’s culture and it’s people.  Consequently, I’ve been really blessed in that:

  • When God called us to France, He had us do our initial YWAM training (DTS) in Hainichen, Germany.
  • Then, after several years of preparation and transition, He placed us in our current home in Alsace just 30 minutes from the German border.
  • I’ve had the pleasure of regularly tasting German culture and connecting with German people while attending seminars and conferences in Germany.
  • Two of our children even spent their high school years just across the Rhine river from us in Germany at Black Forest Academy.

As intercession for Europe has interested me for a while now, a couple years back when Operation Capitals of Europe (an intercession initiative to travel to each European capital and pray for the government and its leaders and to be a catalyst for ongoing intercession in each capital) began, I began to think about which capitals I’d like to connect with.  One of the key ones for me was certainly Berlin!

So, as I write I’m on a day-long train trip across Germany back to France after having participated in the OCE initiative in Berlin. This was a very rich time.  Here are some of my impressions.


2012-Oct-16

Berlin Television TowerI arrived after a cramped EasyJet flight from Basel-Mulhouse on a Tuesday afternoon.  I met up with another YWAMer from England and together we negotiated the public transport from Berlin’s Schönefeld airport on the far south side of the city to the S-Bahn station at Alexanderplatz.  Then a bit of urban orienteering on foot from Alexanderplatz for the last kilometer  to the Jerusalem Gemeinde in the center of the city where we would be convening until Saturday.  Getting off the train at Alexanderplatz, one is greeted with the site of the famous television tower, dating from Cold War East Berlin days, that dominates the Berlin skyline a bit like the Eiffel Tower in Paris. We had arrived during the period of time when Berlin was celebrating its 775th anniversary. As such many of the landmarks were lit up each night with changing colors and laser light shows on their facades. The TV-tower was a beautiful red-violet that we saw each night as we returned to our accommodations.

Jerusalem Gemeinde - ground floor on the rightThe Jerusalem Gemeinde is a small church, amazingly and strategically located right on the Spree river that bisects Berlin. Their location puts them in the heart of modern Berlin and with respect to Berlin’s ancient history they are located in the very cradle of the city’s origins.  Their name comes from their strong connection with Israel where they run a prayer house (the Father’s House) on the Mount of Olives.  They also run a prayer house in another location in Berlin.  Their pastor, Andreas Bauer, is warm, welcoming, bilingual and well-connected! I would say that they were an ideal choice as the host church for the OCE intercession initiative.  Obviously God knows how to connect His people together!

Having been on a couple of previous OCE trips and also being connected with some of its organizers, arriving in the church it was good to see some familiar faces!  These trips are a wonderful way to build rich relationships in the Body of Christ as you reinforce existing friendships and create new ones each time – all in the context of worship and prayer in the service of a local expression of His Body.

Our evening was one of introductions (new friends!), worship (led by a wonderful long-time German resident from New Zealand who could quickly usher a group of eager worshippers into God’s presence) and a welcome from the OCE leaders of this trip (Jacky und Angela Krättli) and the pastor of Jerusalem Gemeinde to help orient us to the structure of the week.  The presence of God and relationship form a fabulous foundation for any sort of outreach and this evening was no exception.


2012-Oct-17

Spiritual History

As is usually the case in an OCE trip, we received excellent presentations on the spiritual history of Berlin.  This is done to help outsiders coming in to pray to have more insight into the specific anointings and callings of a city and the resulting spiritual struggles that the city has experienced.  In a capital city both the redemptive anointing given by God for the city and the perversion of this anointing by the enemy are magnified and amplified for the nation and, in an “international city” such as Berlin, the influence extends outside its national borders as well – in Berlin’s case, especially for Europe.

A “spiritual history overview” is a way of looking at events in history with the discernment of the Holy Spirit to understand spiritual forces behind certain events and spiritual effects of certain events. Seen over time, these reveal patterns that show us God’s original “redemptive” intentions for a given place/people and how Satan has used deep wounding in the lives of people as the result of sin to harden and twist hearts and distort the image of God.  This discovery is done by both looking at present societal problems in a place and trying to find historical roots as well as studying history while allowing God to highlight specific moments that were key turning points.

Kudos to those who presented to us the spiritual history of Berlin.  775 years of history in this place is enormous and really impossible to fully distill in our short time.  Consequently, I can assume that what we covered only scratched the surface of spiritual dynamics of Berlin, but also that it was just what God wanted our small band of intercessors to engage with on this trip.  They did an excellent job of researching and presenting some key points of history to help us connect what we see today in Berlin to the origins found in history.  My distillation is, of course, even more concentrated than theirs.

Key Points

For me, the key points that I took away were:

  • Berlin and Germany are called to exercise authority – to rule
  • Berlin is called to exercise this authority with a father heart and a servant heart

I believe these two are the most important, or foundational calls which Berlin has.  After that are other important gifts/callings:

  • Berlin has a gift to teach
  • Berlin has a gift of creativity
  • Berlin has calling as a city of refuge/welcome

The “Father Wound”

When we look at the history of Berlin and Germany in the first half of the last century it is relatively easy to see that the personification of an “abusive father” fits fairly well.  This is fatherly influence, responsibility and authority perverted by Satan.  One can see that in Hitler, who was at one point a real “father figure” for Germany after World War One but who obviously exercised that authority in a perverted, controlling and abusive way.  This kind of abuse of authority distorts the image of God as Father and fosters rebellion against authority of all kinds.

Farther back in Germany’s history, however, we were introduced to a key case of an abusive father whose wounded son opened the door to one of Berlin’s biggest challenges today – homosexuality.  I quote from one of the excellent documents we received about Berlin’s spiritual history:

Frederick II (the Great) (1712-1786), prepared the way for homosexuality in Berlin. He  was raised by a brutal, tyrannical father with extreme harshness and many beatings. In 1730 Crown Prince Frederick  attempted to flee from his father during a trip to southern Germany.  After he was caught, the king demanded the  death sentence for his son. Through the intervention of the emperor and the Prussian judges, the sentence was lessened to incarceration in Küstrin. In order to make an example, the king had Frederick’s friend and helper, Hermann von Katte, put to death before his eyes. Following Frederick’s submission under the will of his father and an imposed marriage in 1733, Frederick was of course deeply traumatized.  

This wounding through his father (thus no example of fatherhood and no example of God as Father) led to Frederick’s rebellion against God. In many ways, he opened the spiritual gate to the Enlightenment, humanism, and philosophies which turned against God. He was a homosexual.

To continue in the spiritual history on this theme:

On May 15, 1897 a homosexual doctor in Charlottenburg, Magnus Hirschfeld, founded the “Scientific Humanitarian Committee (Whk) with the goal of getting rid of paragraph 175 of the German penal code. He attempted to research homosexuality “scientifically” and founded the theory of the “third gender”. Thus through the gate of Berlin, seemingly “scientific” sexual research began, which was aimed in a specific direction: to legalize homosexuality and establish the possibility of a third gender. Thus the path began, and today Berlin is still a leader in this area. The work of this institute was definitely successful starting what today would be called lobbying on the political level. 

In the 1920’s homosexuals were drawn to Berlin and its “freedom”.  Here they and others could live out their sexuality relatively freely. Many artists were homosexual. In the 1920’s there were already dance halls for men. 

In 1933 everything changed instantly. The Nazis fought against these “deformities”, sharpened paragraph 175, and founded the Third Reich’s Centre for Fighting against Homosexuality and Abortion”. Homosexuals were incarcerated, deported to concentration camps, and murdered. Hirschfeld’s works were burned on the Bebelplatz. 

The student revolts in 1968 (a rebellion of the sons against the fathers), which began in Berlin, also brought change for the homosexuals. Leftist political homosexual groups were formed. Paragraph 175 was abolished in 1969. Films were made in which statements were made such as, “It’s not the homosexual who is perverse, but rather the situation in which he lives.”

Humility and Pride

In the evening we had a speaker from Poland who would share with us an amazing story Thursday and Friday evenings of how God has used prophetic intercessors at the very highest levels of Polish government to demonstrate to leaders that it is God who raises up and brings down authorities in a land, leaving man no reason to boast but simply to humbly serve while in positions of leadership.  To underline, however, that those in places of prophetic intercession are no different in their need to serve with humility, he shared with us a deeply personal message about pride and humility in the place of exercising our spiritual authority.


2012-Oct-18

Prayer walks

Schloß Bellevue - German President's PalaceThere were four different prayer walks that had been proposed to us by email before the beginning of this trip.  Two had to do with local government and the general history of Berlin and two had to do with the issue of homosexuality in Berlin.  Before arriving, I had planned on the prayer walk concerning the local government and was very interested in it.  I’d not given any real thought to either of two walks concerning homosexuality.  As is the case in most intercession initiatives, the vast majority of the people involved were women. As we began to hear about the calling of Berlin to reflect God’s Father heart and the abuse of authority that had opened the doors to homosexuality, and of the importation from America of many aspects of the homosexual culture, I really felt convicted that even though I didn’t WANT to go on the prayer walks concerning homosexuality, that it WAS, in fact my place as a man, as a father and as an American.  In so doing, I would come with the ability to identify more closely with the sin that had opened the doors to the influence of homosexuality in Berlin. As we were finishing one of the worship times, I really felt like it was a time where God was mourning the loss of the chance for the young men snared in homosexuality to become fathers.  In the world wars a generation of fathers was nearly wiped out, leaving a void still felt today in Europe.  With the spread of homosexuality another generation of fathers is being “killed off” by the enemy.

The ReichstagOur particular walk focused on three of the monuments to homosexuality in Berlin and their proximity to other important structures in Berlin.  Our path started with the Schloß Bellevue where the German President has his office.  President Gauck has fairly recently come into office and is the third president in fairly quick succession following two previous “failed” presidencies.  The two previous presidents were both attacked mercilessly by the media and both resigned after a relatively short period of time in office.  Though his personal life is somewhat “fractured” (he is estranged from his wife and lives with another woman), he once was a pastor and has accepted the challenge of taking responsibility in a challenging political and social climate.  We were able to pray that he would be a “father” and a “pastor” to this nation, exercising authority with integrity and humility.

Brandenburg GateWe moved on to two monuments to Magnus Hirschfeld (see quotes above).  The first one is a set of two plaques that have been erected in a place near to Schloß Bellevue with an eye to constructing a larger, more permanent monument.  Here we prayed that the advancement towards the seat of authority would be stopped and would, in fact, retreat.  This monument was just next to the river Spree and at this very spot, all the tourist boats turn around in a wide spot in the river.  We prayed for a shift in the direction of this movement that it would turn around and retreat in the opposite direction and that the other monument would not be built on this site.  The second monument to Hirschfeld is on the opposite side of the river and specifically refers to the crackdown by the Nazis of all homosexual activity.  Here we prayed about the abuse of authority that creates deep wounds, opening the doors to the enemy to sow division and rebellion into the society.

Holocaust MemorialThen we walked/prayed past the Chancellor’s office, the Reichstag and the Brandenburg Gate before arriving at the last monument. This is a monument to the homosexuals that were exterminated by the Nazis.  This monument is just across the street from the Holocaust Memorial.  The Holocaust Memorial is a very unique and powerful area.  It is rows upon rows of large concrete blocks of varying heights that one can walk among.  The homosexual memorial across the street is interesting in that it is a single block, about twice the size of the largest on in the Holocaust Memorial.  It’s symmetry is slightly skewed.  On one end is a small window/portal into which you can look. On the inside is a film loop that shows alternately, men kissing men and women kissing women.  Again we saw the placement of this monument as strategic, across the street from the Holocaust memorial.  Here we were also able to pray about the abuse of authority and also that each monument would be isolated from the other – so as to not create a more influential “whole” as a series.  Already they form the three points of a triangle and we believe that their physical placement, one related to the others, is not a spiritual accident.


2012-Oct-19

Prayer for government

On Friday morning we heard from a pastor from Tübingen about praying for the government and government leaders.  This pastor and his church practice what they preach.  Some years ago, their church acquired an apartment in Berlin, some 7 hours drive from Tübingen, that they use only for bringing prayer teams on a regular basis to the capital city.  As he spoke, we could see his commitment to the responsibility to pray for the government – regardless of one’s agreement with the policies of any particular politician.  He spoke of how the Lord supernaturally showed him Germany’s Chancellor (a previous one) with whom he did not agree, through the eyes of Jesus.  A compassion was immediately placed in his heart and he realized at that moment that the Lord was calling him to be the Chancellor’s “spiritual bodyguard.”  We heard later from one of the members of the German parliament (with whom some of our group were privileged to meet) of the ENORMOUS pressures put on these politicians; how they are literally scheduled to be in three places at once and must consequently have discernment at all times to know where to go and what to do.  We gained more understanding about how much these men and women need our regular, on-going prayer as they navigate the pressures put on them by their office.

Part of the German Foreign Affairs complex - designed by HitlerIn the afternoon we split up into three groups.  One prayed in the Reichstag dome – a impressive glass enclosed structure that sits above the plenary session hall on the top of the Reichstag. Another group was the group which was able to meet with the aforementioned parliament member. The group that I was in prayed at the office of the Minister of Foreign Affairs.  We were able to sit at a café in the huge atrium of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, split into to groups of 3-4, and “innocently” sip our coffees and pray as we had no official invitation to be there.  Afterwards we were  walked around the enormous complex of two large buildings (one of which was designed by Hitler and used as the Nazi’s finance ministry during that era. While walking around, we witnessed the departure of a Japanese delegation and the changing of the flags from Japan to the next nation that would be visiting.  One could really see the “international connecting” that went on in that building.

As Germany has a “Father” anointing as a nation, its impact and influence on the world stage, especially in Europe, is significant.  Chancellor Merkel might get the most air-time and ink, but the Minister of Foreign Affairs and his office put the face of Germany into clear relief on a daily basis in countries around the world. Whether it be the role of gatekeeper of individual visas, foreign trade agreements, the official voice of German foreign policy or the promotion of cultural exchanges, Germany’s role in the world has an impact.  We were able to pray that the Foreign Affairs Minister would, again, show the Father’s heart in the way he presented Germany to the world.  We prayed that Germany’s stand as friend of Israel would not only be firm/unwavering for Germany as an individual nation, but also that Germany would serve as an example, in particular to other European nations and in particular with respect to the vote in November at the United Nations about the Palestinian’s request for “observer status”.

Beautiful building left unbombed between modern structuresWe were privileged during this week to connect with Germans who have lived their whole life in Berlin and love their city and take their watchman and priestly responsibility very seriously.  One of these was an 80-year-old spry man by the name of Wolfgang.  Wolfgang was 8-10 years old as Berlin was bombed during World War II.  He remembers the hand-to-hand combat in the streets between the German and Russian forces and he lived in East Berlin during the years of the Cold War.  He told me that what he sees now with respect to coordinated and united prayer for the city of Berlin is unprecedented. There was really a sense during our week there that “now” is the time for Berlin.

After our time of prayer was over, we had a few free hours in the afternoon before the evening teaching session.  After a loooooonnnng wait for a bus (thank you Lord for the fabulous, sunny, “open heaven” weather that we experienced in Berlin), I was able to return to the Holocaust Memorial and walk slowly through it taking photos in some incredible autumn afternoon light.  We ended the day with a time of worship and sharing from the different groups and then we commissioned the OCE team that is travelling to Moscow.


2012-Oct-20

Sachsenhausen

Sachsenhausen concentration campSaturday, our last full day was filled with one principal focus, the Sachsenhausen concentration camp just north of Berlin.  As we were already staying in the northern suburbs of Berlin at Gnadenhaus (a wonderful Christian guest house), we were able to catch a bit more sleep before being taken by the pastor of Jerusalem Gemeinde to Sachsenhausen.  Sachsenhausen was a strategic camp in the German network.  It was built close to Berlin to be used as the “mother camp” where camp architecture and methods (including extermination) where developed and “perfected.”  It was also where the other camps were administered from and where the camp staff was trained. Rudolph Hess lived in the town next to this camp.

Our twice daily trip on the Berlin subwayThe pastor shared with us that though foreign missionaries and intercessors come to Germany all the time with the same message: “You are forgiven.  Put down the past.  Take off your mantel of shame.  Move forward.” etc., the truth is that the horrors of the concentration camps have yet to be fully dealt with spiritually.  Their church has made it a regular practice to come to Sachsenhausen (the pastor also lives in the northern suburbs of Berlin) for different occasion to simply pray and worship.  He told us that while in places such as Auschwitz and Treblinka, the local towns have incorporated this part of their history into who they are – not trying to distance themselves from it but to help facilitate the healing – the town where Sachsenhausen is located however, does not openly try to engage with it.  One new vision is, that as there was a network of camps, that there would be a corresponding network of prayer houses at the towns where all the camps were located to establish life where death was once established.

We did not see much of the camp itself, but we went into one of the remaining barracks that has been converted into a meeting room for different presentations on the camp site and we simply worshipped and took communion there. We then went to the former administration building of the network of camps (currently in use for local Brandenburg state administration) where we did an prophetic act.  We took a length of about 250 meters of red nylon cord and went around the building with it.  (it was good to do this on Saturday, but we still had to explain our bizarre activity to one person in the building!) We then proclaimed the blood of Jesus via this red cord around the building in an act of cleansing and to cut off the negative influences that once spread from Sachsenhausen to the other camps.

We then returned to downtown Berlin just in time for the Jerusalem Gemeinde’s weekly service, Saturday at 4pm.  As we had used their facility the whole week and connected with a handful of people from this church, it was good to “meet” the rest of the congregation and worship with them.  Finally, grabbing a great Kebab on the way back (thank you Edith!), we took the train back to Gnadenhaus to pack and sleep.


Berlin - a city of peaceMy trip home begins here!2012-Oct-21

Up early for a beautiful, calm day-long trip on the train from Berlin to Mulhouse.  Thrilled to pass through the German countryside for several hours and to reconnect with my family at the end!