I Have Been To Penn Station

But I don’t think this is the bustling station in NYC. Pentel made a coffee shop in the Nihonbashi area of Tokyo. Cute naming I suppose….

Tearing Down Buildings

As you see these buildings demolished to build new ones, I wonder with dwindling Japan birth rates… who is going to work there?

We’re in the business of building but our team, was glad to see the old building ripped down.

Strategy For Witnessing By Mac Hammond

The Strategy for Witnessing
Articles – Evangelism
Written by Mac Hammond
Witnessing. Testifying. Sharing your faith. Just the words are enough to tie knots in the stomach of many a believer. In fact, nothing in the Christian life is more likely to induce knocking knees, stammering lips and nervous perspiration than the prospect of sharing your faith with an unsaved person.

To the majority of believers, witnessing means risking confrontation, inviting rejection and suffering embarrassment. It’s no wonder more of us aren’t sharing our faith. But is this frightful image an accurate one?

The wonderful answer to that question is, “NO.”

The Lord never intended the sharing of your faith to be a fearsome, dreaded chore. On the contrary, true evangelism is something that can and should flow naturally out of your relationship with Jesus Christ. And you need to know that evangelism releases the power of God in your life in ways that nothing else can.

Why is that? Because God doesn’t indiscriminately bestow His power upon us. He releases it to those who align themselves with His purposes. And God’s overriding purpose in the earth in this age is to bring people back into fellowship with Himself.

If you want more power in your life, power to change your circumstances for the better, you must align yourself with God’s purposes. His purpose today is the same as it was when Jesus walked the earth:

For the Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost (Luke 19:10).

The good news is, being a soul-winner doesn’t have to be scary or even unpleasant once you’ve discovered Jesus’ secret to stress-free evangelism.

A “Fishy” Story
Did Jesus give us a prescription for success in soul-winning? Yes! We find it in Matthew 4:18,19: “And Jesus, walking by the sea of Galilee, saw two brethren, Simon called Peter, and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the sea: for they were fishers. And he saith unto them, Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men” (Matthew 4:18,19, KJV).

Following Jesus invariably involves joining Him in His quest for souls. Notice He didn’t say, “Follow Me and I’ll make you successful.” He didn’t say, “Follow Me and I’ll make you a good businessman.” No, He said, “Follow Me, and I will make you fishers of men.” This is the central focus of the Christ-centered life.

Blessing and success are merely byproducts of following Jesus. They are signposts that tell you you’re on the right path. If you’re following Him to be a fisher of men, you’ll find yourself healed. You’ll find your needs met. You’ll find you’re successful in business. But the objective is always souls.

So how does this give us the key to a successful strategy for soul winning? It lies in Jesus’ comparison of witnessing to fishing! It’s no accident Jesus used a fishing metaphor when speaking of the call to proclaim the good news. Peter and Andrew were fishermen by trade. But the illustration is relevant to us, as well.

Learning to Fish
Of course, if you’re an avid angler, all of this will make a lot of sense to you. But even if you’ve never baited a hook in your life, you must understand how to be a successful fisherman in order to have a successful strategy in soul winning.

First, let’s make a distinction between two main types of fishing. One type involves the use of nets. Professional fishermen use large nets to harvest huge numbers of fish at one time. This is the type of fishing in which we see Peter, Andrew, James and John engaged in Luke 5.

This kind of fishing can be compared to mass evangelism. When we have a meeting and large numbers of people come forward to accept Christ, we are casting forth a net and bringing in a big harvest of souls. This, however, is not the type of fishing to which Jesus was referring when He said He’d make us “fishers of men.”

The type of fishing that relates to one-on-one evangelism involves the use of a line and a hook.

“But Pastor Mac,” you may be thinking, “They didn’t have fishing poles back in Jesus’ time did they?”

Well, they may not have had “Zebco” spin casters and graphite rods, but they definitely used a hook and line. For proof, look at Matthew 17:27. It describes the occasion on which Jesus and Peter needed money to pay the temple tax. Jesus tells Peter to…”go to the sea, cast in a hook, and take the fish that comes up first. And when you have opened it’s mouth, you will find a piece of money; take that and give it to them for Me and you.”

So, you see, there was another form of fishing in Jesus’ day. This type symbolizes what I call “lifestyle evangelism.” It is person-to-person, one-to-one contact that results in someone giving his heart and life to Jesus Christ.

Yes, Jesus has called you to be a fisher of men. And unless you have a special calling as an evangelist, you’re going to bring them into the kingdom of God one fish at a time.

“But how?” you may ask. The answer lies in Jesus’ comparison of witnessing to fishing. The same things that make for a successful day of fishing will also make for success in soul winning. The following principles of good fishing are your guide to being an outstanding winner of souls.

1. Go Where the Fish Are
I remember an occasion back when my sons were young in which I found them standing at the edge of a mud puddle, fishing poles in hand, eagerly waiting to haul in a big one. There was just one problem. There were no fish in the mud puddle.

To catch fish you must go where the fish are. Today, fishermen have sophisticated sonar and depth finders that permit them to “see” the bottom of the lake and to locate schools of fish. Why all the high-tech hardware? Because any fisherman worth his salt knows that to catch fish, you first must find fish.

The same is true when it comes to soul-winning. Too often our tendency is to remain in the comfort of our church and familiar social circle of believers. As a result, we become totally isolated and separated from lost people. Then we wonder why we never have the opportunity to lead someone to Jesus.

If you’re going to win souls you’ve got to go where the lost people are. The most natural place to start witnessing is to lost relatives and friends. Regrettably, most of us alienate every lost person we know within a few weeks of being born again.

While it is important (especially for a young believer) not to maintain close, intimate fellowship with unbelievers, you shouldn’t close the door on opportunities to share your faith with them. Maintain relationships (not fellowship) with people in the world. It’s where the fish are.

When you barricade yourself behind the four walls of the church, you miss the entire purpose of God for your life and rob yourself of His enabling power to change the world around us.

2. Go Where the Fish Are Hungry
Any angler will tell you, it is not enough to just go where the fish are. You must go where the fish are biting. There is nothing more frustrating to a fisherman than to be sitting on top of a big school of fish that are completely uninterested in eating. If the fish aren’t biting, it doesn’t matter what type of bait or lures you put on your line. You’re not going to catch any fish.

This is no less true in witnessing. We experienced a prime example of this in the church I pastor. In the early years of our fellowship, we frequently sent witnessing teams into the neighborhoods right around the church building. To our dismay, these teams experienced very little success. Why? The fish weren’t hungry.

Then, as I was praying about the situation one evening, the Lord impressed me that we weren’t going where the harvest was ripe. Yes, there was a harvest around our church, but it was not yet ripe.

So, instead, we started focusing our attention on the inner city where the needs were greatest. Immediately we started seeing the hundreds of individuals coming into the kingdom of God. Why? Because now we were fishing where the fish were hungry.

To be a successful soul winner, you must find the hungry fish. How? By following the direction of the Master Fisherman, Jesus. He directed Peter to go to a certain place at a certain time to catch a fish. Likewise, Jesus, through the Holy Spirit, will guide you to the right places and times to meet a person hungry for the things of God. You simply must have an open and hearing heart.

Follow the leading of the Spirit in you witnessing. Don’t just blast anybody that gets in your path with your Gospel shotgun. That is how many people get turned off and hardened to our message.

Learn to allow the Spirit of God to lead you to the hungry fish.

3. Use the Right Bait
Once you’ve found some hungry fish, the next important key to landing them is using an appropriate bait. I’ve yet to meet the fisherman who was so skilled that he could throw a naked hook into the water and catch a fish. It’s a simple, inescapable fact fishermen have to use bait.

Successful lifestyle evangelism involves the use of bait as well. You are probably aware that God created each of us a three-part being spirit, soul and body. Now, a good bait in witnessing is something that attracts a person at either the physical or soulish level.

Why not try to attract a lost person at the spiritual level? Because the bible tells us they are spiritually dead (Eph. 2:1-2; 2 Cor. 3:12-16; and 4:3-4). An unregenerate person is unable to understand or even perceive spiritual things. That is why you must often minister to a physical or soulish need in order to attract a person to address their important spiritual needs.

Jesus used many different kinds of bait. One of the most successful for Him was healing. Jesus attracted people to His message of spiritual life by addressing their physical needs namely the need to be healed from sickness and infirmity.

The Rev. Kenneth E. Hagin calls healing “the dinner bell of the gospel” because it is so often the thing that attracts a person to God. Once a person gets a taste of the healing part of salvation, he is going to be hungry for the whole works spiritual, emotional and intellectual redemption.

Another aspect of the physical realm is financial. Great financial needs can cause a person to be drawn to the promises of God concerning provision and sufficiency. When a poor woman finds out God doesn’t want her to be poor, it can be the bait that brings her to the point of complete surrender to Christ. This is another type of physical bait.

There is soulish bait as well. A soulish bait is something that speaks to and attracts the mind, will or emotions of a person.

A good example of this is music. Music speaks to the soulish part of man. It has enormous power to move and influence. This is precisely where much of the church world has missed it through the years.

Many folks, influenced by religious tradition, have claimed that godly music had to come out of a pipe organ or some dusty old hymnal. How many times have you heard some pious-sounding person denounce Christian rock music as being of the devil? That attitude is simply not biblical.

Musical style is strictly a matter of culture and preference. It’s the words and spirit behind the music that make it either glorifying to God or a tool of the devil. Different people simply like different types of music. One likes Lawrence Welk. Another likes Heavy Metal.

I’ve seen nearly every style of music utilized effectively to glorify God and draw people to Him. Music is only one among man types of soulish bait that can be used to draw people to Christ.

4. Present the Bait Correctly
As every fisherman knows, it’s often not enough merely to go where the fish are hungry and use the right bait, you must also present that bait correctly to be really successful. The best presentation in fishing is one which doesn’t in any way appear artificial to the fish. In other words, it’s genuine.

The same is true in presenting the gospel. Any hint of phoniness or insincerity is sure to turn a person off to the gospel. Compassion is the key to your presentation

Jesus, for example, was always moved by compassion when He ministered. We, too, need to be moved by compassion when we minister. We need to spend enough time asking God to show us His heart for the lost so that His love and compassion come across when we talk about Him to others. When you present the bait (God’s willingness to meet a physical or soulish need) with that kind of compassion, you’ll be perceived as sincere.

That’s when it’s time to, as the fishermen say, set the hook. You bring that person into a loving confrontation with Jesus Christ. You present Him as the Way, the Truth and the Life. But you don’t stop there. There’s another step.

5. Reel Them In
Have you ever heard of a fisherman going to all the expense and effort of hooking a fish and then just laying his rod down and walking away? Of course not. He reels the fish into the boat. It’s the reason and objective of everything he’s done up to that point.

When you reel in a fish, you take him out of his old environment the water and pull him into a new environment, the air. When a lost person takes the hook of life by making Jesus Christ his or her Lord, you then must reel them in by pulling them out of their old environment, the world, into their new environment, the Body of Christ the Church. But, be warned, like some fish, new believers will often put up quite a fight. They’ll strongly resist any suggestion that they get involved in a church.

That’s when you have to be a skillful fisherman. If that baby Christian stays out there in the world, he’ll be cut off from his source of supply and nurture. It’s absolutely essential that new believers get involved in the life of a Spirit-filled Bible-believing, Word-preaching church.

When you lead someone to a commitment to Jesus Christ, invite them to go to church with you. Offer to come pick them up. Try inviting them to other events, such as care groups, which might not be as intimidating as a full-blown worship service. Do whatever you have to do the get that fish in the boat! That’s the objective of evangelism.

Ask God to show you the style of evangelism that best fits your personality and temperament. Then go fishing! It’s the best way I know to get the power and provision of God flowing in your life.

Copyright © Mac Hammond Ministries
All rights reserved. Used by permission.

Eight Problems with Catholicism and the Roman Catholic Church

The Roman Catholic Church is essentially all that remains of the great Roman Empire.  One of many empires that ruled the known world at one point in history.  Many good things have come out of the church I am sure (ie. preservation of the Word of God through hand copying in monasteries).  However, as I study the Word of God, the beliefs of Catholicism, and watch the trouble in the catholic church, it is very clear to me that there is something wrong.
If you are reading this and you are a Catholic, I hope that you are following Jesus first and foremost and not any other leader before the King of Kings of the Lord of Lords.  There is no intension to be offensive so we pray you read this with an open mind and consider for yourself the practices and beliefs and compare with the Word of God.  For any Christian or sincere follower of Jesus (and the Way), it is the priority is to follow after Jesus first, not any man.
Yesterday after 6 hours of study, research, and some review, I have found eight areas that need to be seriously addressed with regards to the Roman Church. These areas are-
1. Father– Believers are only to call the Father Father.  We are not to call unrelated people such as pastors or priests “father”.  Unfortunately, the pope is called Holy Father.  This is an area of concern as so much honor is given to the minister.  I just can’t understand why the old guys would be kissing other old guys hands.  There are no cultures like that that I am aware of.
2. Prayer to (or through) Dead People– The constant hailing of Mary and prayers directed to her and past saints are concerning.  The Word tells us to only pray to the Father in Jesus Name.  Why would a believer ever kneel and pray to the statue of some dead person and pray to them.  Isn’t that what ‘the heathen’ do?  They are no longer around and cannot hear our prayers.
3. Infant Baptism– The Word says we are to believe and be baptized, not be baptized and believe.  The Roman church has baptized millions of people as infants which is meaningless according to the Word.  It causes confusion as people who don’t know Jesus think they do just because they were baptized.  This is very concerning as many people are literally deceived by this confusion and forever separated from the Father at physical death.
4. Celibacy Of Priests–  It is completely unnatural for men not to marry.  All men and women have a sex drive (especially men) and the Word tells us not to forbid to marry.  Ministers should marry and have a great relationship with their wife and children.  The Epistles say that leaders of the church must be leaders of their own household first before leading a church family.  Could this be part of the reason why we have all this sexual sin recently coming to light in the news?  I am convinced it is.
5. Penance– From what we have researched from the Catholic church beliefs, belief is that you attain salvation by going to a weekly mass service, confessing sin to a priest, and the ‘holy Eucharist” (or communion) on top of just turning to Jesus.  The Word is clear that salvation comes through Jesus immediately when you confess, repent and live the Way of Him to become pure before Him.  Following Jesus is a daily lifestyle.
6. Purgatory– A belief that when you die, depending on your works, you may have to go to temporary ‘holding pen’ to work yourself the rest of the way to heaven.  We wonder then why did Jesus resurrect from the dead for us, if we have to work our way to heaven? Further complicating things for the discussion, there is no mention of purgatory in the Word.  It needs to be documented 2-3 times at least.
There is mention of Abraham’s Bosom which was a holding places for those who called on the Name of Yahweh before Jesus made them righteous before the Father.  You can read about it in Luke 16:19-31.  It is now very unrelated as we have Jesus who has made us holy before the Father and He emptied Abraham’s Bosom when He went to hell on our behalf.
7. The Rosary– There is absolutely nothing wrong with praying prayers based on the Word of God or even reading prepared prayers based on the scripture.  However, having a priest subscribe you to 10 “Hail Marys” to chant with prayer beads is no different than the Buddhists around the world chanting to try to become more spiritual.  The rosary is just like the Buddhist beads we see in Asia and draws away from fellowshipping with the Father.  It is not chanting the prayers, it is believing in the Father you are praying to that matters.
8. Transubstantiation– According to Roman church beliefs, the bread and the wine (literally they use wine which is not recommended) used for communion after a ‘blessing’ from the priest, literally becomes the flesh of Jesus’ body and the wine becomes His blood.  Where does this belief come from? I can’t find anything in the Word of God to justify or even explain this.
When you look at these areas you see all eight distract from what the Word of God teaches.  As a follower of Jesus, I know no church or pastor is perfect.  However when we are in error we need to fix things otherwise we will go farther and farther away from Him. I have seen it in my life and the lives of others.
The conclusion is the fundamental of the Roman church is that the belief is the leadership is built on Peter the apostle.  The problem is this belief is based on one scripture and what most see as a interpretation.  Historically, we have no proof that Peter was ever even in Rome.  It takes a bit of imagination but the Roman Catholic church considers itself the one true church as it somehow traces its line of pontiffs back to Peter quoting Matthew 16:18
<em>18 And I also say to you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build My church, and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it.</em>
For some reason, it is assumed that what is being said here is that the Messiah is going to build His church on one man.  Why would God build His church on one man when one man already failed before.  Remember Adam? He messed up God’s plan for all mankind. The Epistles tell us that the church is built on the apostles and prophets not one apostle.  IF you read this in context, the Rock that the church is built on is not a man, but the rock or foundation is the fact that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God.  Isn’t that why we have the Church of Jesus Christ not the church of Peter?  Let’s read it in context.
<em>13 When Jesus came into the region of Caesarea Philippi, He asked His disciples, saying, “Who do men say that I, the Son of Man, am?”
14 So they said, “Some say John the Baptist, some Elijah, and others Jeremiah or one of the prophets.”
15 He said to them, “But who do you say that I am?”
16 Simon Peter answered and said, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.”
17 Jesus answered and said to him, “Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah, for flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but My Father who is in heaven. 18 And I also say to you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build My church, and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it. 19 And I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed[d] in heaven.”
20 Then He commanded His disciples that they should tell no one that He was Jesus the Christ.</em>
We must make this issues clear as people are lost.  We see many calling themselves Catholics that do not practice, as they say. Everyone needs to know Jesus and repent and turn to Him.  No church is better than any other.  However, a good church is a church that follows directions that God has given us for thousands of years.  What is it all about?  It is all about loving and serving Him.
<em>5 You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength.</em>
Whatever church you attend, if it is not encouraging you to seek Him with your all and all, then it is time to change churches.  If the presence and power of God is there, then help that pastoral team bring more people to Jesus. He is coming back soon and we must not hide the truth.