Archives For Evan Forester

What is going on ?If you asked 100 Christians, “What is the Gospel?” I guarantee you would hear several very different explanations. “Being a Christian means you’re a good person,” or “I think the living the gospel is just about loving people,” or “It means you go to church whenever you can” or “You just need to follow the 10 Commandments and then you’ll go to Heaven” or “Umm…you know, it’s the Bible…right?”

The problem is, few of us know the Gospel because we simply do not hear it, read it, or study it enough. There are a million competing messages out there that distract and pull us away from the truth. We need to constantly remind ourselves of the Gospel, and recognize that we can never know the truth too well.

Here is a pretty great (and short) video explanation of the Gospel from John Piper: Continue Reading…

The Fave Five 01.25.13

Evan Forester —  January 25, 2013

1) Favorite History Changing Video: Real Ghost Footage (I think this might finally be proof! The truth is out there…)

2) Favorite Image: Run Shadowfax!

3) Favorite Movie: Toy Story (Live Action Version)

4) Favorite Super Bowl Commercial: Come on Get Happy (from VW)

5) Favorite Physics Defying Basketball Shot: Hawks fan throws ‘Miracle Shot’ from half court!

You’ve found yourself in a mini-series on Rebranding the church. If you missed it, then I recommend reading the introduction. Essentially, we believe that followers of Jesus should be most recognized for what they contribute to the world instead of what they are against in the world. Each week we tackle something the church must demonstrate they support.

Focussing on the Bible in church seems like common sense, yet it happens far too rarely today. But if we hope to have any consistency in our message (or “brand”), we must all be speaking from the same message. The Bible is the only thing that can provide that consistent message for the church.

Bible Study 2

More importantly, the Bible speaks an incredible message. It is one full of hope, grace, peace, forgiveness, and love for a broken world. While I cannot expect all churches everywhere to suddenly agree on everything in the Bible, I know wonderful things would happen if we all spent more time in the Word, both at church and at home. Continue Reading…

The Fave Five 01.18.13

Evan Forester —  January 18, 2013

1) Favorite Musical Performance: Buddy Greene at Carnegie Hall (You won’t regret watching this)

2) Favorite story from Oprah (I never thought I’d say that…):  THIS IS GONNA SHUT YOUR MOUTH

3) Favorite Image: Gandalf’s Problem Solving Flow Chart

Source: Jon Acuff

4) Favorite Blog post: 5 promises from your Bible about your time with God (from Desiring God)

5) Favorite Free App: The Faithlife Study Bible (aka the World’s most advanced study Bible)

Enough with the Ordinary!

Evan Forester —  January 17, 2013

I was recently interviewed by Tammy Helfrich for her “Life Changers” series. Tammy is committed to helping others realize that their voice matters and to embrace their story. The Life Changers series is “about people like you and me, who decided to do something different. They decided to change their life, or the lives of others around them.”

In the interview, I share some of the lessons we’ve learned since moving overseas. You can read the full interview here: LifeChangers: No More Ordinary. Here is a little preview:

Tammy: What was the breaking point for you? What made you say “enough of ordinary”?

Evan: My wife and I had discussed moving overseas since before we married. In the beginning, I thought it was just a pipe dream. One night, however, she spoke about it with such vivid hope that something dawned on me. “Maybe this isn’t a ridiculous idea, maybe God has laid this on our hearts for a reason.” We prayed about it every night for two years, and the more we prayed about it, they more we wanted to do it.

There were two major breaking points for us. First, I never wanted to just talk about dreams and then never go after them.

I believe if you have a dream, you need to go after it. (Tweet that!) 

You might fail, but I think failure is much better than never trying. Secondly, we were tired of being so busy all the time. Both of us were working full time and in night school. We wanted to actually experience our newlywed years together, and we wanted to go on an adventure together. So we moved to the other side of the world!

To read the rest of the interview, where I discuss trusting wholly on God, stepping out of comfort zones, and the terrors of driving on the left side of the road, head on over here. While you’re at it, check out Tammy’s blog and say hey in her comments section!

The film “Up” has one of my favorite quotes: “Adventure is out there!

My wife and I recently moved to New Zealand on a quest for adventure. I had lived my entire life in Atlanta, Georgia. While it was a lovely place to live, we wanted to do something different and out of the ordinary. Heading to a new country on the complete opposite side of the world may have been a bit drastic, but New Zealand is full of beaches, mountains, glaciers, fiordes, rivers, sounds, volcanoes, and more.

Our epic adventure was practically guaranteed.

Then, Disappointment

After being here for a few weeks, however, I felt disappointed. We had made some great friends and the job hunt was going well, but adventure seemed to elude us. I expected every day in this country to feel like something out of The Hobbit, and yet our biggest thrill had been a simple bike ride through the park.

And then something life changing dawned on me:

No matter how exotic the location of your home, you still need to walk out the front door if you hope to find adventure. Continue Reading…

The Fave Five 01.11.13

Evan Forester —  January 11, 2013

1) Favorite Lamp/Cause: The GravityLight

2) Favorite Year in Review Video: Google Zeitgeist

3) Favorite online store: The Billionaire Shop

4) Favorite Video: Deaf 8 month old boy hears for the first time

5) Favorite Quote: Teddy Roosevelt – Man in the Arena

“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.”

What was your favorite thing on the web this week?

You’ve found yourself in a mini-series on Rebranding the church. If you missed it, then I recommend reading the introduction. Essentially, we believe that followers of Jesus should be most recognized for what they contribute to the world instead of what they are against in the world. Each week we tackle something the church must demonstrate they support.

Although we have lost a drive to gain knowledge, many Christians today seem to think they’re smarter and better than everyone else. Spend a few minutes reading comments in controversial blogs or religious discussions, and you will undoubtedly see someone claiming to be a Christian and then telling everyone they’re idiots because they believe in evolution or something.

Courtroom One Gavel

I have to admit, in my younger years I was often guilty of this. I thought my logic was irrefutable, and I said many unloving things to people when they didn’t agree. Not surprisingly, those unloving things only pushed them further from the faith.

It really does not matter how smart you are, God is crystal clear in the Bible that we must be humble. Continue Reading…

You’ve found yourself in a mini-series on Rebranding the church. If you missed it, then I recommend reading the introduction. Essentially, we believe that followers of Jesus should be most recognized for what they contribute to the world instead of what they are against in the world. Each week we tackle something the church must demonstrate they support.

Today I have the honor of guest posting on The Daily Retort about the church’s need to develop a thirst for knowledge. Tor is a great writer and has years of experience in journalism, blogging, and book publishing. If you’re visiting from Tor’s site, thanks for stopping by! We’d love it if you said hello in the comments.

And now, why the church needs to demonstrate a greater thirst for knowledge:

A History of Thought Leadership:

For centuries, Christians led the way in discovery of new truths and the applications of those discoveries. In John 8:32, Jesus said, “you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” Christians took this to heart and so they became great scientists, built new schools, and did anything they could to advance learning.

sultanate water wheel

In The Book that Made your World, Vishal Mangalwadi discusses this at great lengths. One example is that of Christian monks, who used water wheel “technology” to grind their wheat into flour. This process saved people millions of hours of work over the years and allowed them to focus on science, family, prayer, education, and so on.

Unfortunately, many people today think of Christians as ignorant and anti-science and reason. Read the full post and learn what we can do about it on Tor’s blog.

Is There Hope Amidst Tragedy?

Evan Forester —  December 17, 2012

This past week our nation endured another horrific tragedy. I wish I was a better writer. I wish I was capable of writing something that could do justice to the situation. But as many have said, sometimes words just cannot get the job done.

Candle

Like many others, this event has shaken me considerably. The fact that this happened to children is unspeakable. I am not a father yet and cannot even begin to imagine losing a child. I do, however, have a wife that I adore. She happens to teach 6 and 7 year olds and loves them incredibly well. If this had this been her school…

Well, we’ve all had the same nightmarish thoughts this weekend.

Although these events always raise far more questions than answers, there is still hope. I’ve been reading The Reason for God by Tim Keller. It is quickly becoming a favorite of mine. I’ve actually wanted to share this quote with you for a few weeks now, and it seems this is the proper time: Continue Reading…