Thursday, April 4, 2013

OCC--Louie Giglio--Immeasurably More


Tonight was our first general session for the Operation Christmas Child Global Connect Conference and it was a mind-blowing experience to be worshiping with brothers and sisters from 102 countries around the world.

After Randy Riddle led us in a time of rousing praise to God (complete with noisemakers) in celebration for 100 million shoeboxes, he was joined on the stage by former shoebox recipient Izabella McMillen who reminded us, "I would not be able to stand here today without your faithfulness."  Seeing the video of Izabella's story helped us focus on what each of these precious boxes means to the child who receives it.

As he came back to speak of the history of OCC in the United States, Randy Riddle spoke of the exponential growth of those early shoeboxes by saying, "When it was paired with the gospel it became something God blew His breath on and it exploded."

And Franklin Graham said, "It's something God has done and we want to give Him the glory."

Ross Rhoads, pastor of the first church to pack shoeboxes in 1993 told of how their church collected 11,000 boxes in just 14 days that first year--a foreshadowing of God's hand on the project.

Executive Director of Samaritan's Purse Canada, Sean Campbell, spoke of the  boxes his country packed in that inaugural year of 1993 and joked that it was the only year Canada packed more boxes than the US.  On a more serious note, he spoke of the Bible's warning that in the end times "the love of many will grow cold," and reminded us that packing shoeboxes is a way to keep our love alive.

Sean told the story of giving a shoebox to a 10-year-old boy in a psychiatric ward in an Eastern European country.  When he pulled a Beanie Baby out of his box and smiled, his doctors were amazed.  The doctors explained that the boy's parents had been executed in front of him four months earlier and this was the first time since that he had smiled.  "It's all about the Prince of Peace," Sean said.

After some phenomenal guitar and worship music by Dennis Agajanian and the Tommy Coomes band, Franklin Graham introduced Louie Giglio--

Speaking about the global presence in the room, Louie said, "We are better when we are in the company of people from the whole world."

There is a plaque in the Georgia Dome that commemorates that largest gathering ever held in that venue--a Billy Graham event.  Louie said we're here to remember the legacy of a faithful God.  "We're not here tonight to underestimate the power of God....We're here to celebrate that God will expand His kingdom."

He admitted that he can't comprehend 100 million shoeboxes.  It's supernatural.

But we also can't fully comprehend that God emptied Himself and took on the skin of a baby and appeared as the gift of God to the world in that original mission of Operation Christmas Child.  Into a manger came majesty--majesty in a mess.

How amazing that God gave the news of His coming first to the shepherds.  They were too dirty to go to church and God said when you can't make it to me, I'll come to you.

What Louie felt God wanted him to bring to us tonight was a personal encouragement that the God of 100,000,000 shoeboxes is on our side.  There are huge hurdles in each of our lives tonight where we're trusting God and the truth of Ephesians 3:20 is that God is able to do immeasurably more than we can imagine.  To HIM be glory.  We're in partnership with the God who does immeasurably more.

When you walk in the door of God's faithfulness, it marks you.

You can count shoeboxes but you can't count changed lives.  You can't quantify the healing God brings through a shoebox.  You can't count the immeasurably more.

In that night glory came into the mess of a manger and peace with God is now possible.

Those who were rebels against God can become the worshipers of God.

It's not just on a grand scale;  it's on a personal scale.  We cannot count God out because God can do immeasurably more.

I AM--the God who spoke the world into being.  It's the power of the gospel to do immeasurably more.

Louie went on to say that the Old Testament word for glory meant 'weight'. He explained the working of an elevator where a weight or counterbalance is used to make the elevator rise.

The weight came down in the presence of Jesus and we were lifted up.  His resurrection was the counterweight to our sin and rebellion.  When the weight of the gospel comes down our worship comes up.  The gospel and worship are never separated.  Without the gospel there is no worship.

It's not about serving because we 'ought to' it's about the privilege that we MAY serve.  When the weight comes down, craziness (worship / service) goes up.

We all have a supernatural testimony.  Sin makes us not just bad, but dead.  The gospel is what makes us alive.

God can do immeasurably more than we can imagine.  100,000,000 is a huge number but God can do 500,000,000 or billions.

God knows the name of every kid on earth and I think there's a shoebox waiting for every one of them.






2 comments:

  1. How good it is to hear it again. I so enjoyed this speaker and wished I had a re-cap. Now I have it. Thank you.

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  2. Just one correction. Sean Campbell was the Executive Director of Samaritan's Purse Canada and not a pastor of a church in Canada. SP Canada collected boxes in the first year, and have continued over the past twenty years. Now there are 10 sending countries. Australia/New Zealand; Canada; Finland; Germany/Belgium; Japan; Spain; United Kimgdom; USA

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