RE: Everywhere
From: Ruth-Ellen & Jon Pirini [mailto:roofellin@yahoo.com]
Sent: Monday, 22 January 2007 12:46 AM
To: 'Jono Miller'; Jmpthechimp; 'Dave Miller'; 'Jude Miller'; Tim; lookup@paradise.net.nz; George; 'franki'; Extended Millers Blog
Subject: Everywhere
Hey there  family….
We were challenged today at church  with the word ‘everywhere’ and how many times especially in the book of Acts we  are told to preach the gospel to everyone, everywhere.  We are really  enjoying going along to our church & feel encouraged & inspired each  week.  
We were also challenged this week to  effective rather than busy & messy rather than comfortable!  (I will  write more about this on my blog site)
I have included an article which was  read out during the service which I thought was rather pertinent & which you  might enjoy!
Leader's Insight: My Little Shark  Hunter
Always  brave, my son tackles a new dangerous mission. At times, I wish I felt better  about it.
by Phil Callaway, guest columnist 
Ever since he was knee high  to a Doberman, the boy was fearless. Take him to the ocean and he'd jump in  looking for sharks. Take him to the mountains and he'd see how high he could  climb. One day when he was five, I watched in horror as he jumped off a roof—a  garbage bag duct-taped to his back. We couldn't be more opposite, my son and I.  The higher he climbs, the more he believes God is with him. Not me. I believe  God put us on dry land and says, "Lo, I am with you always."
In his  first year of college, he called one night to ask me for money. "I'm sorry," I  said. "You have reached this number in error. Please hang up and call your Uncle  Dan."
"I scaled a  300-foot cliff today," he said, undaunted. "You'd have loved  it."
Right. His  father who contracts vertigo standing on a  skateboard.
For years  I've wondered what God would make of our son. Would he call him to be a  crash-test dummy? A professional bungee jumper? Or would he fulfill every North  American parent's dream by settling down in a huge house with a nice wife and  provide us some grandchildren to spoil?
The  unexpected answer arrived by e-mail one day:
Dear Dad  and Mom,
I just want  you to know that I met a couple nice girls and we're planning on being married.  In 
If you  haven't fainted yet, here's the truth. It may be more shocking. In the country  of 
Dad, you  told me once that Jesus came to comfort us, not to make us comfortable. I guess  I've been comforted enough; it's time to offer some to  others.
Your son,  Steve
"Where do  you think we went wrong?" I asked his mother. "Couldn't he just have a beach  ministry in 
"It's what  we've prayed for all these years," she said with a grin, "that he would live  life on purpose."
And so one  month ago, we hugged our firstborn son goodbye as he embarked on a grand  adventure half a world away. It's funny the questions people ask when they hear  he's in 
I sat with  a missionary the other day who is pouring her life out in 
A few  nights before he left I asked Steve what he'd miss most about home. "The dog,"  he said, smiling. Then why is it that I found him studying family photos and  lounging on the sofa watching an old Disney movie with his brother and sister?  Was he killing time? Or saying goodbye to the remnants of  childhood?
I've shed a  few tears, for sure. But mostly I've been giving thanks. For a son who's a much improved version of his  father. For e-mail and cheap overseas phone rates. And I'm thankful  there are no sharks in 
Phil  Callaway is the best-selling author of a dozen books. Visit him at    HYPERLINK "http://www.laughagain.org"  www.laughagain.org .
PS I have also mostly completed out  new blog site…the link is below…might interest u!
Love
Rufus
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