The Priority of Prayer First

In 1 Timothy 2:1, Paul tells Timothy, “I urge, then, first of all, that petitions, prayers, intercession and thanksgiving be made for all people.” Paul is essentially saying, I’ve got a lot of things I’m going to tell you, but the very first thing is that prayer needs to be a priority. We believe in the priority of Prayer First.Praying with healthy desperation is important individually, as families, as churches and certainly in Converge MSC. From 21 Days of Prayer books written by our President Gary Rohrmayer, our 2nd Tuesday Zoom prayer meetings, to praying regularly for our churches and pastors, prayer is a critical, first priority for our movement.

One of the ways that we serve our churches in the area of prayer is through Prayer First Weekends. The purpose of these weekends is to help raise the temperature of prayer within your church. These weekends can be catered to your setting and needs, and involve teaching on the issues of prayer along with “practicing” what we are learning, preaching on the issues of prayer, and finally, a concert of prayer where we pray for God’s transformational work in our lives personally, our churches and communities. Several churches have experienced the benefits of a Prayer First weekend, and we have seen God move in some really remarkable ways.

Recently, Springbrook Church in Huntley, Illinois participated in a Prayer First Weekend. Pastor Richard Wollard shared, “We had come through a significant staff change over the previous year. The Prayer First weekend catalyzed our church at the end of that challenging period of time. We got great feedback from the workshops, and the concert of prayer the last night was really powerful. Even long after the weekend, people continue to talk about that night. The Prayer First Weekend has given us a new passion for prayer, invigorated our prayer team, and given us a passion to pray for unchurched neighbors in a deeper way. We can’t wait to see how God will continue to move as we increase our priority on prayer.”

If you would like to consider a Prayer First Weekend at your church, contact Bryan Moak at bryan@convergemidamerica.org.

Life Connection Church’s Inspiring Mission in Cuba with Converge MSC

Written by Ailaine Cruz, member of Life Connection Church

Converge MSC’s mission is to start and strengthen churches, our desire is healthy churches. We believe this goal can be reached as our partner churches go forth and partner with other churches within our district to further strengthen and collectively grow in healthiness. As our district has expanded into the Caribbean, new opportunities have arisen. Life Connection Church (LCC) in Orlando FL has taken such an opportunity to serve God’s church among the nations.

Pastor Ric Doguiles, from Life Connection Church (LCC) in Orlando FL, always dreamt of having a multicultural church. So, when he met Pastor Ran Perez, and his wife, Pastora Marilee, who are from the city of Camagüey, Cuba, he invited them to start a Spanish service in their church facility back in 2022. A beautiful partnership was started. Pastor Ric got wind of the fact that the couple founded several rural churches in Cuba and they continue to work closely with the local pastors.

A year later in January of 2023, Pastor Ric and his leadership team visited Cuba and they saw firsthand the desperate plight of the churches there. They lack access to healthcare and basic transportation, among other common necessities. The local pastors were walking for miles and hitching horseback and tractor rides for church and visitation. When Ric returned to Orlando, he appealed to his congregants about the dire need of humanitarian attention to the churches there and they responded to the call. Life Connection Church was able to raise funds to provide a generator for the main church facility and establish a medical triage facility at the church to address the basic medical needs of the community. LCC was also able to raise funds to buy 4 motorcycles and donate 2 bicycles for the local pastors to use in their ministry.

In July 2023, LCC again embarked on a medical mission to Cuba. On this trip, the team was able to bring 2,170 pounds of medicine, food, and other supplies. Their medical volunteers were able to train the various church members in CPR and First Aid techniques. Along with this, LCC has helped establish 3 medical posts with their church partners in Camagüey, Las Tunas, and Monte Santo. LCC’s support has also provided the ability to hire a nurse who will travel once a month to each church to tend to basic medical needs as well as staff to manage the pharmacy/medical triage in Camagüey.

While they made great strides in their missionary and humanitarian efforts in Cuba, the congregation of LCC knew that there was still a lot to accomplish. Later in the year, LCC had a charity gala and held multiple rummage sales in their facility. All in all, LCC has raised a total of $38,000 to support the cause and has sent a total of 3,800lbs of medical supplies since this outreach has started. There are now 16 thriving rural churches in Cuba that are being supported by LCC. They continue to be an important partner in the incredible work that God is doing in Cuba. During the charity gala, Pastora Marilee expressed her heartfelt gratitude to all the generous donors on behalf of the churches in Cuba. The partnership from LCC has made a lasting impact in many lives and has created a network of local churches in Cuba that is vibrant and stronger than ever.

If your church is interested in growing a relationship with a church in the Caribbean, to see how the Lord might use you as He did Life Connection Church, please contact us. Learn more about upcoming opportunities and Converge MSC’s work in the Caribbean here.

Transformation Tuesday

We are so thankful to get to work with Chapelstreet church in Geneva, IL, and watch them partner with local ministries! Check out the article below to see what they have been up to.

“Chapelstreet Church makes impact locally in partnership with local ministries! For the second year in a row we have partnered with Up & Running Again and Wayside Cross & Lifespring Ministries. There are too many pictures to showcase, but let me tell you a bit about the history and impact that was made this past Sunday when five Wayside residents, two Lifespring residents, and a host of Chapelstreeter volunteer coaches crossed the finish line!

For the past 12 weeks we have been driving to Aurora to run each morning at 5:45 (Lifespring) and 6:00 (Wayside) to run four days a week in preparation for the Fox Valley Half marathon. Each run is one that includes fantastic discussion, encouragement, and milestones. We start with run five minutes and walk five minutes for just 30 minutes total. We conclude our training with a ten mile run two weeks prior to Sundays race of 13.1 miles.

During the 12 weeks if runners reach various milestone of training we purchase them running shoes and when they hit 30 workouts we pay for their race entry. Throughout the 12 weeks there are nearly 20 that show up at least once and our seven finished with excellence. On Saturday we celebrated each athlete with a banquet (above picture) where we ‘carb load’ and share with one another and our family and loved ones before we get a great night sleep.

Of the 48 training runs only one was in the RAIN. However, on race day we set personal bests on all accounts despite the RAIN! Above we are celebrating with Glenn who was our final runner. Below is a picture before our Cadre of Ladies left the overhang for their run in the rain. History was set because for the very first time a Up & Running Again participant placed 2nd in his age division. Tom Robertson from Chapelstreet came in 3rd overall but Wayside Tom (41st overall) was not far behind with a 1:37 and placed 2nd with Coach Steve placing third in the same age division. Misha and Cory broke the two hour barrier and Jennifer & Larissa ran faster than they ever dreamed of…finishing with huge hugs from their daughter’s who saw them FINISH what they began three months ago!

Doing HARD things and persevering was a theme for each of our runners and watching each finish is one of my greatest JOYS each September. The relationships formed over 12 weeks are both deep and rich. We’ll continue to support our runners, attend graduations, and perhaps run again. This year Larissa (on the right above) ran 15 minutes faster than 2022. Next year maybe one of this years finishers replaces me as the point leader and champions the 48 runs that it takes to prepare for 13.1 miles.

Relationships is what drives IMPACT!

Jennifer above heard about Up & Running Again when I ‘pitched’ the idea to all Lifespring and Wayside guests. She had already begun a hard restart on her health and lost many pounds, but running was a bit outside of her comfort zone and she had early morning work commitments. We moved the start time up to 5:45 am and she only missed 4 runs all summer/fall. She learned that she can reach goals, run half marathons, grow closer to Jesus, and meet wonderful people along the way who will relentlessly support & encourage her.”

Church Planting Landmines – By Gary Rohrmayer

We don’t like to talk about failure. Church planters who fail do not speak at our conferences or write books. We hold up the successes and then wonder why so many church planters are surprised by hardships and overwhelmed by failure.

Learning from failure is a key concept in life and successful church planting. When asked about his hundreds of failed attempts to invent the lightbulb before experiencing success, Thomas Edison simply said that he had discovered all the ways not to produce the lightbulb. Church planting is no different. It needs to be seen as a process of ‘failing forward.’

Church Planting Landmines looks at many of the issues that can bring failure and gives practical advice on how to avoid these mistakes. Topics include:

      • Ignoring personal health and growth
      • Lack of leadership development
      • Leadership backlash
      • Evangelism entropy
      • Fear of money
      • Underestimating spiritual warfare
      • Misfiring on hiring
      • Delaying missions engagement

 

Listen and learn from those who have stepped on some of these landmines. Keep failing forward!

Purchase the book today on Amazon!

Celebrating 20 Years of Faith and Miracles: God’s House Orlando

In a heartwarming celebration of faith, community, and two decades of dedicated service, Converge church plant God’s House Orlando marked its 20-year anniversary on Sunday, August 27, 2023. The joyous event was a testament to the unwavering commitment of its founders and lead pastors, Sammy and Shannon Pawlak, as they reflected on their remarkable journey of ministry, miracles, and the faithfulness of Jesus.

The anniversary celebration was a day filled with heartfelt moments and spiritual significance. Families gathered to dedicate their precious babies to the Lord, a touching reminder of the church’s commitment to nurturing the next generation. The church community also took the time to honor the children who were moving up to the youth ministry, recognizing their growth and spiritual development.

A particularly emotional highlight of the day was the acknowledgment of the High School graduates. As they embarked on new chapters in their lives, the congregation came together to pray for their success and God’s guidance in their journeys ahead.

Adding to the sense of celebration and gratitude, the church’s worship team made a special announcement: the release of a commemorative worship album featuring all-original music. This album is not only a testament to the musical talent within the church but also a heartfelt offering of praise and worship.

The significance of the day was further emphasized by the presence of Pastor Gregg Heinsch, an executive board member, who led the congregation in prayer. His words resonated deeply with everyone present, highlighting the church’s mission and the importance of faith.

Perhaps the most poignant moment of the celebration came when Pastor Sammy and Pastor Shannon Pawlak, visibly moved, washed the feet of their daughters, Hannah and Selah. This symbolic act was a profound demonstration of their commitment to the church and the faith journey that began when their daughters were infants. It was a touching gesture that left many in the congregation in tears, a reminder of the sacrificial love and dedication that has been poured into the church over the past two decades.

Converge Cuba

The Lord is opening new doors for Converge MSC.

A 2018 UN report showed that only 10% of the Cuban population is evangelical. According to an article written by Michael Mutzner of the World Evangelical Alliance, there are three groups of evangelical churches in Cuba.

1. The protected churches:

These are churches established before liberation (1959). These churches accept liberation theology and are affiliated with the Cuban Council of Churches (mostly liberal churches). They are close to the state and have favorable conditions. These protected churches represent 8% of the evangelical Protestants in Cuba.

2. Repressed churches:

80% of evangelicals belong to this group. It is politically nonaligned. These are denominations that were present in Cuba before 1959 and therefore allowed to continue operating but unwilling to affiliate with the Cuban Church Council. These groups faced severe persecution in the 60s and 70s and even though things have improved they are still tolerated at best. Many meet illegally in-house churches because they do not receive construction permits or authorizations to meet in larger places. They face confiscation and demolition of property, and their leaders can still face arrests.

3. Illegal and persecuted churches:

Churches established after 1959 in Cuba face the most difficult conditions because they are considered illegal. They represent 12% of Cuban evangelicals. These churches try to affiliate with the churches in “group 2” because they were established before liberation in 1959 and their affiliation gives them some legitimacy/protection.

Takeaway:

Currently, the Converge Caribbean team affiliates house churches that are connected with different Group 2 churches. We are prayerfully looking for a Group 2 network of like-minded churches to partner with so that we can operate with a greater degree of legitimacy in the government’s eyes.

Converge Caribbean is actively involved with approximately 20 churches in and around Havana and Camaguey, Cuba. Most of the churches were introduced to us by Ramon Garcia and other Cuban Converge pastors in the U.S. The Cuba team (Ernie Cabrera, Tom Frakes, and Ramon Garcia) completed two ministry trips to Havana this summer (2023).

On the first trip, we held a lunch meeting with the pastors where we shared the mission, vision, and values of Converge. We also gave out care packages to each of the pastors. We then visited most of the churches and preached to their congregations throughout the week. We also scheduled a focused time to work on and complete affiliation paperwork for most of the churches. A highlight of the trip was a visit to a seminary and meet with the seminary president. During the trip, we also talked about the need to partner with a recognized network

of churches so that Converge and Converge-affiliated churches can work together with a greater degree of legitimacy and freedom to advance the gospel.

On the second trip, we were joined by Pastor Tom Townsend of Trinity Baptist Church of Sun City, FL, and Pastor Mike Chandler of Gracepoint Church, in St. Cloud, FL. The trip gave them an opportunity to see the churches, meet the pastors, preach to their congregations, and pray about developing mutually beneficial partnerships. We shared our desire to host a large conference to strengthen pastors. We made a new key contact with the leader of a large government-recognized network of churches. This was a direct answer to the prayers during our first trip! If the Lord leads this network to affiliate, we will have the credentials we need to gain religious visas and work legitimately. Please join us in praying for this potential partnership, as by God’s grace, we are hoping to start a Timothy Initiative training by the end of the year.

We are grateful for what the Lord is doing in Cuba. He is opening doors for us and the number of churches wanting to affiliate with Converge is growing. We are excited to Start and Strengthen churches in this needy, communist island nation. Santeria is the predominant religion of Cuba which is an African diasporic religion that involves divination, sacrifice, initiation, and mediumship. Recently, a Converge affiliate pastor led to Christ a prominent witch. He is noticeably humble, growing in his faith, and participating in this Converge affiliate church. These pastors lack material resources but abound in faith and passion. As Pastor Tom Townsend noted in hindsight, “… I found the pastors to be dedicated to the Lord and their congregations to be enthusiastic in their worship services. It is pretty astounding to see how the believers are responding to the Lord through very limited resources and government restrictions. The Lord said, “Look at the nations and watch and be utterly amazed. For I am going to do something in your days that you would not believe even if you were told.” (Hab.1:5). Lord, I believe!!!”

If your church is interested in partnering with us in Cuba, please contact us.

Faith Renewed: Baptismal Testimonies from Converge Community Church

“I do not recognize the person I was before Him. He has grown my love, faith
patience and kindness immeasurably and helped me to let go of my plan and trust in His. Of course there are still struggles and pain but I now know that through Christ there is not pain without purpose and every tear is accounted for. I now know that I have eternal life in Jesus Christ.”
“I’m proclaiming that I’ve turned to the Lord and I’m Overjoyed to love the Lord with all my heart mind soul and strength. I accept that I’m a child of God and I’m born again through the death of Jesus on the cross.”

These declarations were joyously proclaimed by new followers of Christ during the baptismal ceremony that took place on August 6, 2023 at Warren Dunes State Park in Michigan. Participating in the ceremony were congregants of Converge Community Church (New Buffalo, MI) and Sawyer Highlands Church (Sawyer, MI). We praise the Lord for these new brothers and sisters in Christ!

Please share your baptism stories with us! Email us here. (link the word “here” to wanda@convergemidamerica.org)

 
 
 

Meet Pastor Zak

From Mobile, Alabama, to academic honors at the Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta, Pastor Roderick Zak’s journey has been extraordinary. A former basketball standout at Spring Hill College, his passion for excellence transitioned seamlessly into his mission as the Senior Pastor and co-founder of Rejoice in the Lord Ministries in Central Florida.

Pastor Zak’s influence reaches beyond the pulpit. With his wife, Vanessa, he established Need to Read (N2R), a non-profit organization empowering over 2,000 households with pre-literacy and literacy skills, gifting more than 40,000 brand-new books. Their commitment to building strong families echoes in their fostering of intergenerational bonds and their own family of four children and three grandchildren.

Pastor Roderick Zak’s dedication to empowering generations and strengthening families is both inspiring and impactful. His journey reminds us that faith, love, and commitment can reshape communities, families, and lives.

Lives and Families Transformed for Eternity

Hope Church made an eternal impact with its recent annual “Live Free” evangelism outreach. This event, dedicated to ministering to Arabs, refugees, and Muslims, brought together around 1,800 attendees for three days of evangelism, spiritual connection, and growth.

We were blessed to see the evangelistic services touch hearts across all ages, leading dozens of individuals to accept the Lord as their personal Savior. The impact went beyond the event itself, with many families also coming to the Sunday service that followed. 

Thanks to international satellite broadcasting, our reach extended globally, touching thousands of lives in all corners of the world. Hope Church’s mission and success rely on your prayers and support as we continue to serve and minister in the name of Jesus.

Will you join us in praying for our ongoing mission to spread the hope and freedom found in Jesus? Please also pray that the Lord will continue to guide and bless Hope Church’s endeavors as we continue to do the work he has given us.

The Depth of Prayer

Scripture Reading: Philippians 4:4-9; Colossians 4:2-6

“…with all kinds of prayers and requests. With this in mind, be alert…”

Ephesians 6: 18.

Warren Wiersbe writes, “Prayer is the energy that enables the Christian soldier to wear the armor and wield the sword.” 3⁴If prayer is the energy to a victorious life, then how deep is the well of your prayer life? Has your prayer life moved beyond the surface level of asking God to do something for you?

Has your prayer life moved beyond the surface level of asking God to do something for you?

There is more than one kind of praying. The Scriptures are rich with different expressions and forms of prayer. Here is a short sample of the different types of prayer we discover in the Bible. Each one uniquely affects our lives, touches God’s heart, and impacts our enemy.

Thanksgiving is the act of thanking God for what he has done or provided.

The Psalmist repeatedly encourages God’s people to give thanks to God. “Let them give thanks to the Lord for his unfailing love and his wonderful deeds for mankind” (Psalm 107:8). Paul teaches we are to “give thanks in all circumstances” (I Thessalonians 5:18). When we find reasons to give thanks during loss, brokenness, and trials, God receives glory, and the Devil is irritated. Job, a man who suffered unimaginable loss, stood victorious over Satan and offered these words of thanksgiving, “The Lord gave, and the Lord has taken away; may the name of the Lord be praised” (Job 1:21).

Adoration is worshiping God for who he is, his essence, character, and attributes.

David calls all beings, both angelic and human, to worship the Lord for who he is, “Ascribe to the Lord the glory due to his name; worship the Lord in the splendor of his holiness” (Psalm 29:1). Joyful adoration assumes we know who God is. Our prayer lives falter from our lack of intimacy with God’s character. When our knowledge and experience of the essence and attributes of God expands, our adoration deepens. Satan hates praise! Because it reminds him that he is not God and was cast out of God’s presence (Ezekiel 28:17).

Confession agrees with God that we live in a sinful state, and our private sins (thoughts, behaviors) violate His holy character and desires for us.

Scripture is unequivocal on the importance of confessing our sins to God. In I John 1:8-10, we learn that those who claim to be without sin in their lives are self-deceived (v. 8). They make God out to be a liar and do not have God’s truth living in them (v. 10). Yet those who acknowledge their sins experience cleansing forgiveness (v. 9) through Jesus, our Advocate, and Atoning Sacrifice (I John 2:1–2). Satan hates authenticity! From the beginning, he has sought to minimize the impact of our sins (Genesis 3:4–5). Every time we confess our sins specifically, Satan is crushed, and our souls are set free.

Supplication is an earnest plea on behalf of ourselves and others.

It is a needy cry for God to move in and through our lives. Hannah pleaded with God intensely to give her a child. “In her deep anguish, Hannah prayed to the Lord, weeping bitterly” (I Samuel 1:10). Even Jesus offered intense cries to his Father. The Bible says, “In the days of his flesh, Jesus offered up prayers and supplications, with loud cries and tears, to him who was able to save him from death” (Hebrews 5:7). Supplication reflects a whole new level of brokenness, neediness, and reliance on God, which puts the Devil in his place as a defeated foe.

Intercession is a constant imploring for others before God.

In other words, to intercede is to make a case for others before God through our prayers. The Holy Spirit does this for us as believers (Romans 8:26). The Scriptures tell us this is the ministry of Jesus, “Therefore He is also able to save to the uttermost those who come to God through Him, since He always lives to make intercession for them” (Hebrews 7:25). So we have the privilege to stand in the gap for others, bringing their needs, burdens, and cares before the throne of God. Prayers of intercession are crucial to seeing spiritual victories in our lives. This is why Paul appealed to the churches to pray for him and his team (Ephesians 6:19–20; I Thessalonians 5:25).

Watchfulness is prayers of protection and discernment.

Paul writes, “With this in mind, be alert…” (Ephesians 6:18). We have a spiritual enemy stalking us. Peter writes, “Be alert and of sober mind. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour” (I Peter 5:8). Jesus, knowing the enemy’s ability to strike at any time, told his disciples, “Watch and pray so that you will not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak” (Matthew 26:41). Paul taught that one of the disciplines of prayer is not just being thankful but also watchful. “Devote yourselves to prayer, being watchful and thankful” (Colossians 4:2). Satan does not want God’s people to be on the watch for him or to have a heightened sense of awareness of his schemes. He wants us sleepy morally, spiritually, and physically so that we will be caught off guard and fall into his trap.

As you consider these different forms of prayer, take some time to reflect on the areas of strength you can build on and growth areas where you can stretch yourself. Personally, for me, my place of growth relates to the prayers of watchfulness. I need to increase my vigilance and awareness in my prayer life, my weaknesses, and the enemy’s schemes.

Father in Heaven, thank you for the gift of prayer and its various forms that enrich my life. Each one strengthens my faith. They make me more dependent on the power of the Holy Spirit, the advocacy of Jesus, and the richness of your great love. Father, I need you, I worship you, I confess my sins to you, and I thankfully receive your grace. 

In the name of Jesus, Amen.

Check out one of our 21-Day Campaigns for your church to do this Fall and join hundreds of churches and thousands of believers in prayer.

Excerpt from "Jesus"

JESUS IS MY RISEN LORD

If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.

Romans 10:9

Augustine wrote, “Christ is not valued at all unless He is valued above all.” When we confess with our mouths that “Jesus is Lord,” we are acknowledging his absolute, unlimited, and universal authority over all creation. This term ‘Lord’ is translated ‘Jehovah’ in the Old Testament. Jehovah is the highest and most sacred name for God used by the Jewish people. Jehovah speaks of self-existence, eternality, and God’s desire to reveal Himself to humanity in such a way that we can know and relate to Him.

The resurrection of Jesus Christ is the very center of the Christian faith. Apart from the resurrection, Christianity would be little more than a well-intentioned ethical system.

In declaring “Jesus is Lord” we are also recognizing his ownership. As one who is in control by virtue of possession. Scripture teaches that we were “ransomed” (Mark 10:45), “bought” (II Corinthians 6:20) and “purchased” (Revelation 5:9) by the death of Jesus so that we could be set free to “become slaves to God” (Romans 5:22). Therefore, surrendering ourselves to his ultimate control. The Apostle Paul sets the example for us in writing, “I have been crucified with Christ, and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me” (Galatians 2:20).

Confessing, declaring, and affirming is only one part of the equation, Paul continues by stating, “and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead” (Romans 10:9). Confessing is the intellectual assent to the truths of the gospel but “believing in your heart” is a volitional act of your will. It is an entrusting of one’s life and eternity to the risen Lord and living Savior. The resurrection of Jesus Christ is the very center of the Christian faith. Apart from the resurrection, Christianity would be little more than a well-intentioned ethical system. We see the resurrection is at the heart of the apostles preaching, “The God of our ancestors raised Jesus from the dead—whom you killed by hanging him on a cross. God exalted him to his own right hand as Prince and Savior that he might bring Israel to repentance and forgive their sins” (Acts 5:30-31)

Confession is the verbal expression of our deepest convictions, and yet our sincere beliefs will always lead to clear public affirmations (Romans 6:1-7). This is not an ‘either/or’ statement but a ‘both/and’ truth. We must confess and believe that the Lord Jesus is alive and is an active authority in our lives. Therefore, Jesus is my Risen Lord and Living Savior.

Father in Heaven, thank you for the sending the Lord Jesus, the one who is in every way the very essence of God and equal with you. You rule in absolute, unlimited, and universal authority. Who through his death and resurrection, bought, purchased, and ransomed me to be his very own. Father, I give you thanks for Jesus is my Risen Lord and Living Savior.

Amen.

Check out one of our 21-Day Campaigns for your church to do this Fall and join hundreds of churches and thousands of believers in prayer.

Excerpt from "Jesus"

The Consistency of Prayer

The Consistency of Prayer – Gary Rohrmayer

Oswald Chambers wrote, ‘Prayer is not only asking, but an attitude of mind which produces the atmosphere in which asking is perfectly natural.’ Prayer is a constant state of humility and dependence on our loving Father. When Paul writes, ‘And pray in the Spirit on all occasions,’ he reminds us of the four keywords for living a victorious Christian life: ‘pray in the Spirit.’ We define ‘praying in the Spirit’ as the means of praying the mind of God, under the will of God, by the continued assistance of the Spirit of God.
Now he adds that we are to pray ‘on all occasions.’ Meaning there is never a bad time to pray. Prayer should never be isolated to certain places or occasions but should be exercised whenever and wherever the Spirit prompts us to pray. Reflecting on the context of spiritual warfare, we can understand Paul’s urgency for ongoing prayer as our enemy never takes a rest from scheming against us. This is why we are admonished to ‘pray continually’ (I Thessalonians 5:17). As soldiers in this epic spiritual battle, our armor will function at a high level if we continuously communicate with the commander-in-chief. Soldiers on the front lines rely heavily on their unbroken contact with their commanding officers to help them navigate the battlefield. Without that unceasing communication, they could be quickly overrun by the enemy, making them vulnerable to attacks and ultimately defeats. So it is with us as followers of Jesus, the armor of God will only be effective as our continual dependence on the Father.
There are three strategies that Satan uses to attack our prayer lives:
  1. First, he will try to discourage us from praying. Have you ever thought that your prayers were useless? Do you ever get tired of praying prayers that go unanswered? Have you ever said to yourself, ‘What is the use? I pray, and nothing happens!’ Those discouraging doubts are planted in our minds by our scheming enemy. It’s at that moment we are to put on the belt of truth like David in Psalm 13, who in one breath said, ‘How long, O Lord?’ (v. 1) and in the next said, ‘But I trust in your unfailing love’ (v. 5).
  2. Second, he will try to distract us from praying. We should not be amazed that when we give time to focused prayer, crazy things happen. Satan is the master of distractions. Jesus asked his disciples to pray for him for one hour. What happened? They all fell asleep! Jesus said to them, ‘Watch and pray so that you will not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak’ (Matthew 26:41).
  3. Third, he will try to deter us in our prayers. Satan wants to weaken our prayer lives and does it in many ways: He will entice us into sin (Psalm 66:19). He will place idols in our lives (Ezekiel 14:1-3). He will cause relational strife (I Peter 3:7). He will seduce us to pray with the wrong motives (James 4:3). He will use our selfishness against us. Solomon wrote, ‘Whoever shuts their ears to the cry of the poor will also cry out and not be answered’ (Proverbs 21:13). John Piper offers this challenge to our prayer lives, ‘Prayer is primarily a wartime walkie-talkie for the mission of the church as it advances against the powers of darkness and unbelief. It is not surprising that prayer malfunctions when we try to make it a domestic intercom to call upstairs for more comforts in the den.’ May we find victory today as we allow prayer to permeate our lives.
A 21-Day Prayer Campaign is an excellent time to renew your discipline in prayer privately and corporately. During the 21-day Prayer Campaign we hope to strengthen the private prayer life of every pastor, staff member, lay leader, and believer in our churches and strengthen the corporate prayer life of every church throughout Converge MSC as together we seek to stand victoriously against the schemes of our arch enemy through Jesus Christ our victorious Savior.
Check out one of our 21-Day Campaigns for your church to do this Fall and join hundreds of churches and thousands of believers in prayer.

The Preeminence of Prayer

The Preeminence of Prayer – Gary Rohrmayer

“And pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests. With this in mind, be alert and always continue praying for all the Lord’s people.” Ephesians 6:18
On a daily basis, it is in our prayer lives where the battle for spiritual victory is won or lost. The absence of prayer makes putting on the armor of God nothing but an intellectual experience completely void of spiritual vitality. Remember, when Paul speaks of the armor of God, he is metaphorically speaking of the spiritual blessings we have in Christ. We unlock the divine truth of the gospel through prayer and constant communion with the Father.
We see this truth come alive in the first chapter of Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, where Paul lays out thirteen of the spiritual blessings we have in Christ. Let’s take a quick survey: We are chosen, made holy and blameless before God, and loved unconditionally (v. 4). We are spiritually adopted as children of God (v 5). We find complete acceptance in Christ (v. 6). We are redeemed through the blood of Christ, forgiven, and given all the riches of God’s grace (v. 7). We are lavished with all spiritual wisdom and understanding (v. 8). We understand the mystery of God’s will (v. 9). We are guaranteed an eternal inheritance (vs. 11, 14). We received the Word of truth and were sealed with the Holy Spirit (v. 13).
At the end of this robust list of blessings, Paul offers a prayer of enlightenment. Paul does not pray for us to receive these spiritual blessings because he knows we already have them as chosen children of God. Paul prays that we will experience the wonder and depth of what we already possess so that we will “know God better” (v. 17) and so that “the eyes of your heart may be enlightened” (v. 18). God desires that we have an ever-expanding view of his infinite blessings so that Christ will transform our lives. He wants us to be people marked with hope and full of assurance. People with unlimited spiritual resources and heavenly confidence, and people marked with supernatural spiritual power and unstoppable strength (vs. 18–20). He wants to equip us to be the victorious warriors God intended.
Just like each piece of armor can be turned into an intellectual exercise void of spiritual power, spiritual blessings can become lifeless Christianity through prayerlessness. Oswald Chambers writes, “Prayer is the exercise of drawing on the grace of God.” Paul’s emphasis on the preeminence of prayer at the end of his study on the armor of God drives this point home.
If we are not regularly encountering God through meaningful prayer, the Devil is winning. He is out scheming us! He is outwitting us! He is robbing us of spiritual power and distracting us with trivial things. John Piper writes, “The devil hates prayer. Our flesh does not naturally love it. Therefore, it does not come full-born, complete and passionate from the womb of our heart. It takes ever-renewed discipline.”
A 21-Day Prayer Campaign is an excellent time to renew your discipline in prayer privately and corporately. During the 21-day Prayer Campaign we hope to strengthen the private prayer life of every pastor, staff member, lay leader, and believer in our churches and strengthen the corporate prayer life of every church throughout Converge MSC as together we seek to stand victoriously against the schemes of our arch enemy through Jesus Christ our victorious Savior.
Check out one of our 21-Day Campaigns for your church to do this Fall and join hundreds of churches and thousands of believers in prayer.

Juntos Somos Mejores – We Are Better Together!

Over the last year we have seen the Lord expanding our district into Mexico – 14 new affiliate churches in one year! This growth is God’s faithful answer to years long prayers of various leaders within Converge MSC. A very tangible fruit of this growth is the Converge Mexico Annual Conference. On June 1-2, Converge churches in Mexico held the second annual conference with the participation of twenty-one Mexican churches. Converge pastors and leaders from the US and Mexico collaborated together in planning, leading and teaching the plenary sessions and workshops. Even the worship team was a mix of musicians from the US and Mexico. This only reinforced our motto “Juntos Somos Mejores – We are Better Together,” which was emphasized all throughout the conference.

One hundred and fifty pastors, church staff members and lay leaders gathered at Iglesia A Su Imagen (Made In His Image Church) in Queretaro, Mexico to worship, learn, meet for the first time and grasp the vision of Converge. Pastors received training and at the same time were able to connect with other pastors from Mexico and the US. For many, the most important lesson learned was that they did not have to walk their journey alone. Six new Mexican church planters are now planning on joining Converge as well as other guest churches interested in affiliation. We are very excited to see how this movement is spreading and pastors are finding new friendships and companionship in ministry. As Jesus said in John 17:21-24 “that all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us so that the world may believe that you have sent me. I have given them the glory that you gave me, that they may be one as we are one—I in them and you in me—so that they may be brought to complete unity. Then the world will know that you sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me.”

The 2024 conference is already being planned and we would love for you to participate. If you and your church are interested in partnering with the Lord’s expansion of His church in Mexico, please contact us to learn more. It’s an opportunity for you, a stateside pastor of a Converge church, to meet, encourage and hopefully become a partner with a Mexican pastor and church. During your time in Mexico you will attend and teach at the conference, and then be paired-up with a local church which you will visit and preach at on a Sunday morning. Or maybe your church would like to financially offset the cost of the conference, support gifts can be made online.

Please visit our new Converge Mexico ministries webpage to learn more and what the Lord is doing through Converge Mexico.

Healthy Churches have Healthy Pastors!

Healthy Churches have Healthy Pastors!

“If the pastor isn’t healthy, the church isn’t healthy.” This statement has never been truer than it has been in the last couple of years. Pastors have struggled to stay healthy with all the issues surrounding COVID, let alone all the other myriad of issues that regularly surround church leadership.  Some pastors have simply thrown in the towel and said “I’m done with ministry. It’s just not worth it”. How sad when that happens! Many of these pastors held those feelings to themselves and never felt comfortable talking with anyone about their struggles. Obviously, we want our pastors to be able to share with each other. We, as regional leaders, want to be there as well. But sometimes you need to talk to someone who is outside your circle, someone who has the ability to walk with you, confidentially, and spiritually.

Converge MSC has just such a resource, it’s called the MAP program. The MAP program (Minister Assistance Program) exists to allow pastors, spouses, and any children living in your home to do up to 9 counseling sessions each per year with a licensed professional counselor for only $25 a session. That also includes any other full-time pastoral staff at your church, along with their spouses and children as well.

Counselors can be chosen from a list you can find on our website https://convergemidamerica.org/counseling. Each counselor has been vetted regarding their testimony in Christ, their agreement with our Converge Statement of Faith, and their education and licensing qualifications. Each counselor has also agreed to the MAP program policies and procedures. We are always eager to add more counselors in our ever-expanding region, so the list is always changing.

We have sought to make the MAP program as “doable” as we possibly can so that you might say yes to this opportunity. You don’t have to be in crisis to use the MAP program (although if you are, please do). We know that it’s important to do an annual physical with your doctor to make sure there is nothing going on in your body that will make you sick.  We believe it is important to do a check-up to make sure you’re mentally, spiritually, and emotionally healthy as well.

The MAP program exists in no small part because of your generous giving. Each year we spend $20-30k to allow our pastors and families to use the MAP program, and we would love for that number to climb as more and more pastors and families see the incredible importance and benefit of seeking out counseling. So thank you for your generosity.

Pastor, we encourage, no, we implore you to not take lightly the gift of the MAP program for yourself and for your family. Don’t keep yourself from resolving issues, conflicts, tricky relationships, or anything else that you need healing from so that you might be the healthy pastor your church needs. You are loved!

Converge Celebration Banquet

Thank you for joining us for our 2023 Converge Celebration Banquets in Chicago and Orlando.

Our Chicago Banquet and the inaugural Southeast Banquet were both incredibly successful because of your attendance and giving.
The Celebration Banquet has been a pivotal part of Converge MidAmerica’s history for over 25 years. Representatives from our churches come and enjoy a meal, warm fellowship, inspiring worship, powerful testimonies, and challenging preaching.

Here are some quick stats:

  • Over 100 churches sent over 800 people.
  • Chicago had 650 attendees.
  • Orlando had 160 attendees.
  • Over $210,000 came in from our generous supporters. Your donations broke our previous giving record of $201,000 in 2016.

Thank you for making Converge MSC what it is today. Without you and your church’s involvement, Converge would not exist.
Special thanks to Wanda Manning. Her leadership over these years has taken this banquet to new levels of success and fruitfulness. Also, thank you to the Converge MidAmerica Administrative team whose servant hearts made this event special on every level.

Did you miss the banquet?
We’re sorry we didn’t see you this year. It is still not too late to give! 
This year’s donations are going to support two different aspects of our ministry:

  1. Church Planting Matching Grants
  2. Work funds for our 6 Network Leaders in Haiti who oversee over 300,000 churches

View photos from our Chicago and Orlando Converge events here

God is Moving: Hope Arabic Church

On the far right of this photo stands a man from Kuwait whose search for the Christian faith brought him to our doorstep. With burning questions and a deep desire to learn more about Jesus, he scoured the internet for an Arabic church, and it was Hope Arabic Church that caught his eye. Despite reaching out to them, they somehow missed his messages. Eventually, this man decided he needed to meet them in person, so he booked a plane ticket and flew from Kuwait to Michigan to meet their pastor — Avdal Boktor, whom he followed on social media — at a Sunday morning service. 

After attending the Sunday service and meeting with Pastor Avdal, they welcomed him with open arms and answered his questions. They shared the message of salvation with him, and at the end of the meeting, he accepted Jesus Christ as his Savior.

From that moment on, they continued to guide and disciple him online, with him returning to Michigan three times for intensive courses on the basics of Christian faith. On April 9, 2023, he returned once more to be baptized.

Throughout this incredible journey, they have witnessed the power of God’s hand in bringing people together across oceans and cultures. Hope Arabic Church gives all the glory to God for using them as a church and reaching the Muslim world from their humble corner of America. May this story inspire all of us to reach out to those seeking the freedom only found in Jesus, and may we be a beacon of hope for those who are searching.

May is Church Health Month

In an effort to promote healthy, missionally engaged churches we are encouraging all of our churches and church plants to join us in establishing a church health rhythm.   

Why May? May is excellent opportunity in a church’s ministry calendar to get a pulse on the ministry so that they have enough time through the summer to make plans and strategic moves before their growth thrust in the fall

What does a church health rhythm cycle look like?


Phase 1- Prepare & Take Surveys (Sometime during the months of May-June).

Phase 2 – Analyze Results (During the months of June-July)

Phase 3 – Develop Ministry Plan (During the months of July-August)

Phase 4 – Kick off, implement and monitor (Kick off in September and push hard to April)

Phase 5 – Evaluate through surveys and repeat process (During May – June)

We are encouraging all of our churches to establish an annual church health rhythm. The more churches we can get involved in looking at qualitative and quantitative growth issues the more focused we can be in providing resources, coaching groups, seminars and workshops.

I believe that in taking a close look at your church’s health and growth systems is key for it to be missionally engaged in God’s redemptive work in the world. I am convinced that if every church, big or small, would once a year survey 30 key players and influencers in it, an NCD would help them make the necessary adjustments, tweaks and changes to be missionally engaged. 

High Hill Christian Church and their NCD experience

Pastor Robert Gentry from High Hill Christian Church (High Hill, MO) speaks on his experience and journey with the Natural Church Development Survey, what he has learned and identified as growth opportunities and his experience with NCD coaches.

Our NCD journey as a formal Converge member church began in November of 2020, but in reality, it began many months before as I began to engage with Converge MidAmerica, the local Converge Together Group that I’m a part of, and some independent research of my own. At the time I was serving as the Executive Pastor at High Hill Christian Church and was looking for a way to evaluate the health and strength of our church. Our first assessment was on November 15, 2020. Two months after that I transitioned into the Lead Pastor role at our church.

Our first round of results was pretty dismal. I met with my NCD coach and went through the results. We then met with the coach as an eldership to discuss what the next steps would be. I tasked my freshly hired Executive Administrator to start and lead a church health team to work on our three lowest categories, as identified by the NCD. I also bought her every book I could on the NCD. Some of these answers are informed by my conversation with her. Working with Natural Church Development has strengthened our church from the inside out. It has helped us by identifying our strengths and weaknesses and then providing the structures to rebuild and work on those areas.

Since introducing NCD to our church, our growth has been phenomenal and we are currently seeing new faces and families every week. Sometimes as many as 5 new families a week, which for a church of 150 is a lot. Our church averaged about 110 in 2020 and now we average over 150. With this growth, we’ve introduced new structures to welcome newcomers and are trying new ways to better plug them into the life of our church.

The Health Team has also come up with ways to better identify our church’s staff, elders, and volunteers to the rest of the congregation. We have dramatically changed every element of our Worship Experience, (our lowest scoring NCD category two years running) from the preaching and worship, to appearance and volunteers.

The Church Health Team has given great insight on what needs to happen in and around our building, how we are structured and organized, and how we can love our people and community better. Personally, I love having a rotating team that has helped us see blind spots that our staff and elders easily miss.

Without Natural Church Development, we would probably be continuing old cycles and practices that would no longer be functional for us. We truly have the NCD and of course, the Holy Spirit to thank for all of the growth, new structures, and the current health of our church.

If your church is interested in completing the Natural Church Development (NCD) please contact us.

Three reasons to take the Natural Church Development survey

May is “Church Health Month” around here at Converge MidAmerica.  It is a season in our calendar where we encourage churches to take a close look at both the quality and the quantity of their church’s ministry through taking the Natural Church Development Survey.  Here are a few quick reasons for you and your church to embrace this church health process.

1) It is based on the most comprehensive church health research ever done. 

Over 90,000 churches have completed NCD surveys around the world. Over 47,000 churches have completed NCD surveys in the USA. Dave Wetzler, the USA Director of Natural Church Develop, reports that when churches have completed 3 surveys and two full cycles of addressing the weak system, they have discovered through the process that they see 85% of them improving in quality and quantity both globally and here in the USA. 

They have also discovered that churches that plant daughter churches – they have an overall average score of 55 or higher. When a church has a score at 50 (average) or less, they are still very inwardly focused on their church, their health and their ministry programs. Once a church reaches a healthy average of 55, they become more outwardly focused in reaching other segments of the community or multiplying through church planting and mission efforts. Conversion growth increases and church planting increases. 

Every time a church takes an NCD Survey, it adds to the research and moves us from guessing to assessing. 

2) It separates fact from feelings

So many decisions are based on feelings rather than facts. The NCD survey takes all those feelings that are running through the minds and hearts of your people and quantifies them. 

Church Health is measured through hard data as well as soft data. The hard data is the key statistics you track as a church: attendance, offerings, new visitors, members, baptisms, small groups and leaders. So every church has its own dashboard of stats that they are looking at frequently.  

The soft data is the quality side of your services and ministries. It is people’s attitudes, feelings and perspectives towards the programs, process and the personnel of the church.

People’s real attitudes, feelings and perspectives are hard to determine at times, especially in a church. So how do you get below the surface of what people are thinking and expecting in your community of faith? 

The NCD Survey does this in a very positive and detailed way. It gives you an overall morale number for your church and then drills down in revealing what your people feel are the strengths and weaknesses of your church at this time. 

3) It provides a focused pathway to strengthen your church.

Once the feelings and perspectives of your people have been quantified, now the church can, with laser-like precision, focus on the systems within the church that are weak and need some attention.

All too often church leaders are guessing rather than assessing. They are going on a hunch rather than accurate data. This will always lead to a backlash against leadership initiatives and possibly leadership itself.  

When you listen to your people’s feedback, you honor them and create a deeper level of ownership in the ministry of the church.

Focusing on the feedback of your key leaders helps you develop an annual ministry plan – a plan with clear goals, deadlines and delegated assignments to improve the area your people identified as needing strengthening.

A little focus can make a lasting impact. For example, developing a 12-month ministry plan that focuses on raising the temperature of evangelism throughout every level of the church helps shape the culture and raises the effectiveness of the church.

This month, we have a special promotion for any churches registering for the Natural Church Development survey! Natural Church Development surveys usually cost $400, but if you sign-up between now and the end of May, you will only pay $300. Additionally, if this is your church’s first Natural Church Development survey, the investment is only $250. You need only to sign-up now, but you can schedule the NCD for later in the year.

First Baptist Glenarden kickstarts Turkey-Syria Crisis Response giving

First Baptist Church of Glenarden (Maryland) has provided a $100,000 lead gift to Converge’s Turkey-Syria Crisis Response, according to Pastor John K. Jenkins Sr., who serves as Converge president and lead pastor of First Baptist Glenarden. The fund provides support to those whose lives have been turned upside down by the catastrophic earthquake that, as of February 15, has claimed the lives of more than 41,000 people. 

“This is one of the most devastating natural catastrophes of our lifetime,” Jenkins said. “Imagine how you would feel if you lost your entire family in one instant. That’s what happened to thousands of people. Forty-one thousand losses of life that we know of right now; that’s like losing an entire town.

“As the church, we are the arms and legs of the body,” Jenkins continued. “And we’re called to serve and help — not just in the moment of the crisis, but we will look at planting churches there that will help in the long term.”

Converge will work at three levels to assist the effort of our Turkish brothers and sisters. We will partner with Ilk Umut (First Hope) during the crisis response, which will include providing hot food, showers, laundry facilities, medical help and more. 

The next stage is partnering with the Foundation of Protestant Churches in Turkey to strengthen the churches directly affected by the earthquake and share the gospel in word and deed. A crisis is a great time for the Holy Spirit to work in people’s hearts and minds. 

We also have a direct connection to a local church in Southeast Turkey through Converge workers. This church in a city of more than 1.5 million people will be a part of our strategy to start and strengthen churches in Turkey and Syria through these gifts.

Jenkins encouraged other churches to participate in the Turkey-Syria Crisis Response. By doing so, they will combine efforts to make a much more significant physical and spiritual impact than they could on their own. 

“This is how we show the love of God,” he said. “And we want to charge churches to be sowers. God will bring back a harvest.

“Psalm 133 says, ‘Behold, how good and pleasant it is for brothers to dwell together in humanity.’ We can work and have a much greater impact if we do it collectively. So, we are asking other churches to join our efforts to help during this catastrophe.”

This article was authored by Mickey Seward, Converge’s Director of Communications and Point editor.

Mickey has served in ministry positions as director of communications at Mobberly Baptist Church, a multisite church based in East Texas, and as national director of communications for the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. Prior to holding those positions, he spent 15 years as a college sports information director.

Jeff Forester Baptism

Heritage Church: Impacting Lives, Sharing the Gospel, and Fostering Growth

Heritage Church, nestled in Sterling Heights, Michigan, has made an indelible mark on its suburban community, located just 12 miles north of Detroit. With a neighborhood rooted in engineering, automotive industries, and a blend of first and second-generation white-collar workers and small business owners, the church’s mission to reach those far from God is incredibly vital.

According to Heritage’s pastor, Jeff Forester, over the past 17 years they have seen remarkable growth, evolving from a modest gathering of around 240 attendees annually into a thriving congregation of approximately 3,800 individuals. This meteoric rise is a testament to their unwavering commitment to sharing the gospel and witnessing lives transformed by faith.

What sets Heritage Church apart is its resounding impact on individuals’ lives. An astounding 3,380 people have been baptized during their journey, a testament to their dedication to seeing lives transformed rather than focusing solely on numbers. In July, they rented a baseball stadium for a memorable baptism event, witnessing 159 individuals publicly declare their faith in Christ.

The church’s vibrant ministry has also forged meaningful partnerships and is deeply connected to Converge, a network of like-minded churches. This partnership has enriched their ministry and fostered a sense of belonging within a supportive community of churches. Heritage Church has also joined forces with the Timothy Initiative, a global ministry empowering individuals to become disciple-makers, allowing them to expand their reach and fulfill their mission more effectively.

As the church continues to thrive, they face the challenge of limited space, prompting active efforts to launch a new location. They have already added a fourth Sunday morning service to accommodate their growing community and are developing a comprehensive discipleship program, equipping individuals to become disciple-makers and ensuring their impact continues to grow.

Heritage Church’s affiliation with Converge in 2015 was driven by their desire to find a tribe of like-minded churches. They recognized the importance of partnership as they continued to grow and sought to plant new churches. The supportive and collaborative atmosphere within Converge aligns perfectly with their mission to start churches, strengthen existing ones, and send people out to make a difference.

Heritage Church’s remarkable journey, unwavering gospel sharing, and dedication to transforming lives have fueled their substantial growth and impact. Their affiliation with Converge and collaboration with organizations like the Timothy Initiative have enriched their ministry and extended their reach. As they look ahead, Heritage Church remains steadfast in their mission to make disciples and impact lives for Christ.

New Nashville church trying to mirror New Testament church

Guess how Ramiro and Melissa Cruz would spend one free night a week.

Get some extra sleep? Nah.

Read that book? Not likely.

Binge-watch the latest Marvel show on Disney+? Please.

What then?

Hands down, the Cruzes would serve the people around them. They’d start a Bible study. They’d begin spiritual conversations. They’d volunteer to help struggling families.

When Melissa graduated high school, she jetted straight out of Chicago for Mexico. But she wasn’t heading to Cozumel, Cancun or Cabo San Lucas. Instead, her months-old faith, stimulated by the book of Acts, motivated her to serve Christ in northern Mexico.

When Ramiro is at the DMV, people stalled in the traffic jam of bureaucracy discover the tenderness of Christ. Melissa says his heart and personality turn most places into a pastor’s office.

The couple started their first church in Illinois. Then they moved to California to start a second church. Now, they are starting their third church in Tennessee, motivated by a strategy to minister to people as Jesus builds his church.”

Today, there are books, podcasts, conferences, and decades of research on starting churches. But the Cruzes first two churches started without all that. Instead, they simply helped others find the Lord’s love and power ― and people wanted that.

Cruz 

What do you want in church?

Eddie Gonzalez only wanted two things as he looked for a church near his middle Tennessee home.

He asked God for a church with Spanish-speaking people and worshipers that put God first. The Lord answered his prayer with Mosaico Church, a new Converge church near Nashville.

“Since the first day I went there, I knew,” he said. “I love the Mosaico Church family to death. Anybody I talk to, I can’t stop talking about that church.”

His parents left Cuba when he was seven and resettled in America. Throughout the ups and downs of his life and faith, one truth remains: put God first.

Gonzalez has followed Christ for decades. Now, more than ever before, Gonzalez recognizes transformation in his character and conduct because of Mosaico Church.

“God, through this church, is completely changing my life,” he said. “I know the presence of God is there.”

Who is God with and how?

The Cruzes started a church near Chicago and another in California before their third church plant, Mosaico Church, located in Smyrna, Tennessee. Their template is the book of Acts. The couple keeps learning from New Testament disciples responding to a God who dwells with them.

As a high school student on a church retreat, Melissa watched as a youth leader lit a candle in a pitch-black room. Cruz and the other teens were each given a candle and invited to light their candle from the only light in the darkness.

“I could clearly see I was part of the darkness,” she said. “For me, that was my moment of never going back.”

She never heard from that church again. There was no follow-up discipleship. She read a Bible her mom had given her, and the Holy Spirit worked through the New Testament examples.

“My idea of what a Christian is were the people in the New Testament,” she said of her early months following Christ. “The people turned their back on any other plans they had and followed Jesus 100 percent. That was the only version of a Christian in my mind.”

She graduated high school early and went straight to the mission field, just like what she saw in Acts and the Gospels. She arrived in northern Mexico, dependent upon God’s leadership and love.

Ramiro – while eating quesadillas – experiences God

Ramiro grew up in Tuxtla Gutiérrez in far southern Mexico. The town is 28 hours from El Paso, Texas, and 10 hours south of Mexico City.

Cruz entered a church building almost every day of his life. He read the Bible often and many people in his family followed Christ.

At 17, though, even with all his Christian influences, Cruz unexpectedly experienced something supernatural. While eating quesadillas with his uncle, aunt and cousins, a pastor approached them.

Before the pastor left, he told Ramiro, “I want to pray for you because God has something for you.”

“When he put his hands on my head, I started crying and I couldn’t stop crying,” he said. “Something changed in my life. Something changed inside me. I wanted to serve Jesus with all of my life.”

So, he moved north to study at a Bible school. But, God had another surprise in store. The missions organization that sent Melissa to northern Mexico partnered with the Bible school.

God must be writing this script.

“I met him the first week I was there,” Melissa said. “He was doing an internship, and part of his job was to disciple new interns, like me.”

The couple who celebrated 16 years of marriage in August laughs at her words.

“It’s a lifelong assignment,” Melissa jokes about Ramiro’s role in her life and faith.

Where is the Lord taking us?

Ramiro moved away to Bolivia a few months after meeting Melissa. They grew closer despite dial-up AOL connections and Skype calls in wireless cafes.

They got engaged and moved to the Chicago area. While waiting on the residency paperwork for Cruz, he and Melissa wanted to honor the Lord while the paperwork shuffled.

“We didn’t know how long that would be, so we started doing ministry while we waited,” she said. “Neither one of us are ‘sit still’ kind of people.”

A Bible study turned into a ministry that turned into a church for Hispanics, Ramiro explained. So, even though they planned to go back to Mexico after their wedding, the couple quickly discovered many ministry opportunities among Hispanics in Chicago.

They discovered the same in California and now in the Nashville area with Mosaico Church. Ramiro knows he and Melissa are a team with the Lord leading and supplying them.

“I cannot plant a church by myself,” he said. “We have to do it together.”

Mosaico demands more than just one night

In January 2021, the Cruzes were ready to act on their positive assessment as Converge church planters. So, they pursued a place to meet. Through Facebook, a church that converted a Mexican restaurant into a worship space offered it to the Cruzes.

Construction on restaurant 

But, after the Cruz family signed the lease in January, a significant challenge emerged.

Smyrna officials didn’t know a church worshiped in the converted restaurant. Therefore, a town inspection for code violations began. That process meant tearing up flooring and opening holes in walls and ceilings. The town required a $15,000 fire alarm system.

“It was very challenging,” Melissa said. “We went into the lease as a major step of faith financially.”

God provided for many needs through a Cornerstone Fund grant to Mosaico Church. The $12,500 grant could have covered the work the Cruzes anticipated. But the unexpected repairs and expenses cost the church tens of thousands of dollars before Mosaico Church gathered to worship even once.

Starting this third church plant has brought the whole family deeper into the Lord’s service. Ramiro and Melissa and their two children, Israel and Michelle, invested thousands of hours of sweat and energy into renovating Mosaico’s space.

Moreover, coordinating church volunteers to help the family work on the building left no time for anything else. So, Melissa had to shut down a staffing company she started during the pandemic.

Volunteers made huge sacrifices and contributions as well. People from the church worked alongside the family for seven months, making repairs and changes. To the glory of God, despite all the lost sleep and sacrifices, and struggles, the church had its first worship service in August 2021.

The Cruzes see many similarities in a new church plant and the New Testament church through the financial challenges and faith required for planting. Converge staff, Melissa explained, have directly and quickly helped Mosaico Church on very time-consuming projects and needs.

For example, she said Converge shares so many resources a new church needs. When the Cruzes needed an ordination process, Converge quickly e-mailed those resources rather than the couple reinventing the wheel.

“With one e-mail, you have it in your hands instead of spending weeks writing your own process,” she said. “They are there for us. I love it.”

Support like that keeps Ramiro and Melissa focused on the ministry and strengthens their faith in God as they press through the church’s early challenges.

God is with them in the challenges

They’re not alone with work, family, and financial stresses. Many of the people who worship at Mosaico Church know hardships and trials as present-day realities.

“They’re just arriving in Nashville from other countries,” Melissa said. “This is a very high refugee population.”

Many of them are applying for asylum visas or have received such a visa. They’re receiving help from food pantries, clothing giveaways, and other ministries.

But, through Mosaico Church, these new residents are learning something tremendous. They love to serve even as they’re receiving help.

“They are learning they have something to give,” Melissa said. “Serving others is teaching them to be givers as well.”

The foundation of such a perspective is the gospel itself. For people hungry for stability and in need of so much from God, the gospel is declaring truth and hope to them.

“They are very hungry for a message of hope,” Melissa said. “They’re very responsive to the idea that God has a plan for their life, and he knows what their future is because their future is completely insecure.”

She said many refugees worry about losing their visas, being deported or never seeing family members again. On top of such stress, getting to church can be a challenge because their workload for jobs and life requirements is much higher.

The Cruzes said many American churches can offer Bible studies, men’s groups or women’s groups to make disciples. But getting the Spanish-speaking people they serve into a building is often their first challenge, even if they understand why the community is so busy.

Gonzalez knows every labor and every challenge is worth the cost. He said the Christian life is not easy, especially for the many Hispanics in Tennessee who need a church. And he sees God doing so much, with the potential to do even more.

That’s why he believes Mosaico is a good church for him. He sees this church as a place where God is present and active.

A new church is one of the most effective ways for more people to meet, know and follow Jesus. That’s why the ten Converge districts committed to plant 312 churches by 2026.

“I see God moving. I see more and more new faces coming in,” he said. “I think there’s going to be a revival that reaches a lot of people.”

That ― more than the best show to binge or the next chapter to read ― is worth staying up late for.

This article was authored by Ben Greene, Pastor & writer, and originally appeared on Converge’s website.

Ben Greene is a freelance writer and pastor currently living in Massachusetts. Along with his ministry experience, he has served as a full-time writer for the Associated Press and in the newspaper industry.

Mexican, Caribbean churches embrace Converge

Even 133 pages of bureaucracy and beliefs in two languages didn’t discourage Iglesia Reformada 2:42 in Mexico from joining Converge, just like dozens of Greater Caribbean churches have done in recent months.

The Chiapas church affiliated a few months ago, one of 68 Greater Caribbean churches in the last year. That total includes three other churches in Mexico, one in Belize, and two in Grand Bahamas.

“God has really opened up a lot of doors for us in the Caribbean,” said Ernie Cabrera, vice president of church partnership for Converge MidAmerica, Southeast and Caribbean. “We’re seeing a whole network of churches come and join us.”

Each affiliation demands significant administrative work for the church, followed by scrutiny from Converge’s regional staff. That paperwork includes dozens of pages, which someone must often translate from French, Creole, or Spanish. All that labor is separate from visits, text messages, phone calls, and emails.

The result is far more than paperwork: These disciples unite Converge churches so they can be better together.

There’s a growing gospel collaboration in Mexico

Twelve Mexican churches are in Converge, plus several more may complete the process by year’s end, according to Jessy Padilla, the director of Hispanic ministries for Converge Caribbean who pastors Iglesia Bautista Emanuel in a Chicago suburb.

In January, he will encourage and support 15 to 20 pastors and their wives at a retreat in Mexico. While he’s there, he’ll share the vision and culture of Converge. He wants those couples who often feel alone or disconnected from distant Christian organizations to find themselves within a support network of trusted relationships.

The Hernandez family, who co-started Iglesia Reformada 2:42, once found themselves in such a challenging, lonely scenario. The couple, who risks persecution and security concerns in Chiapas state, started their church without help from a Christian ministry or organization.

“We were praying for people to help us, to teach us and then Converge came,” pastor Jorge Hernandez said. “We needed some partners but also people with more experience showing us how to plant a church.”

He and four other leaders from Iglesia Reformada went to Cuernavaca near Mexico City for a Converge conference. That conference, the pastor said, is one example of how Converge leaders empower him as he serves the church.

Around Mexico, regular Zoom meetings are planned to connect pastors and support them with beneficial resources. In addition, Hernandez’s wife said the wives of Converge pastors have also come alongside her and other wives of Mexican pastors.

“They are helping us in many cases,” Pastor Hernandez added. “We are so grateful because of Converge’s support.”

Strengthening congregations is a Converge emphasis

Fifteen years ago, Iglesia Bautista Emanuel near Chicago planted a church in a small town west of Mexico City. The church now has a ministry in the community, a pastor of its own, and a building.

In addition, a young man from the church also received theological training in another state. Now he continues growing as a church leader. A Converge partner organization, The Timothy Initiative, helps that young man and many others learn to make disciples who make other disciples.

TTI’s two-year program in the Caribbean is available in Haiti, the Dominican Republic and Mexico. Dozens of pastors are discipling a few hundred people, stimulating hundreds of salvations, baptisms and more churches and spiritual leaders. In Haiti alone, 260 churches partnered with Converge in the last six years.

“I pray more churches in the United States see the opportunity that we have,” Padilla said.

In Mexico, such an opportunity for Iglesia Bautista’s sister church required facing many threats, Padilla said. People damaged the first missionary’s car, attacked his dog and denied him food and necessities. Nevertheless, that church persevered in the gospel, counting it all a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ as Lord.

Converge staff wants to see more and more local churches experience such a resilient vitality. So, the movement strengthens congregations through training church boards, creating LEAD networks and coaching pastors. Converge wants church leaders to form their regions, cohorts and church planter assessments or programs to increase congregational health.

“We allow them to be themselves,” Padilla explained. “Our vision [is] Mexico is going to produce their own missionaries, is going to reproduce their own church planters.”

Converge’s history has always been more about conviction than culture

The partnership with Iglesia Reformada 2:42 isn’t the first time in 170 years that believers muscled through paperwork. Converge grew as disciples new to America made disciples across subcultures and around the planet.

Today, the movement has more than 200 global workers focused on the world’s least-reached people groups. In addition, Converge’s 10 U.S. regions have united to deploy 312 church planters by 2026 and strengthen many congregations. That’s how more people get their name in the book of life.

“We’re just going to continue and bring on churches that are like-minded and have a passion to reach the world,” Cabrera said.

That’s why 133 pages of documents equal far more than paperwork.

This article was authored by Ben Greene, Pastor & writer, and originally appeared on Converge’s website.

Ben Greene is a freelance writer and pastor currently living in Massachusetts. Along with his ministry experience, he has served as a full-time writer for the Associated Press and in the newspaper industry.

You Helped a Church Plant Buy a Building!

Many of you have been following Adam Reardon’s church planting journey. He and his family have been real heroes for all pastors and church planters to emulate. They have displayed true grit in the midst of challenges. Click below to watch a video update on Adam Reardon and Redemption Church’s building.

Redemption’s offer on a building in Belvidere was accepted last year, and Converge MidAmerica was able to help raise an additional $95,000 for their down payment.

Interestingly, Redemption Church gave $5,000 to help Casa de Oracion with their down payment last year. Here is an infant church modeling our Converge values of generosity!

“A generous person will prosper; whoever refreshes others will be refreshed.” Proverbs 11:25

Adam has had the privilege of serving in a few diverse churches in different roles and locations. In 2008, both Adam and his wife Audrey began to feel like God was calling them to plant a church in Boone County, Il. To confirm that call, they participated in a Church Planting Assessment Center hosted by Converge MidAmerica.  

In 2008, I invited Adam and Audrey to work alongside me and help restart Meadowland Church in Johnsburg, Il. While they only planned on staying for one year, God had other plans.  

After serving at Meadowland Church for almost six years, the Reardons sensed God was calling them to step out in faith and leave Meadowland to go plant a new church in Belvidere, Il.

After a lot of prayer and conversations, Meadowland Church agreed to release the Reardons from ministry and send them out as missionaries to Boone County. 

Adam is passionate about introducing people to Jesus, and walking alongside people on their spiritual journey. We are grateful they are still part of what Converge MidAmerica is doing!

Rise Church Building Fund: Will You Give?

Many of you have been following Converge’s Church Planting in Michigan. In the last twelve years, we have grown from 50 churches to 78 churches.
 
Rise Church in Romulus, MI, led by Pastor Aaron Hicks, is one of those new church plants with Converge. Pastor Aaron and his family are real heroes for all pastors and church planters to emulate. They have displayed true grit while facing many challenges. Because of COVID, they lost their meeting space and have been meeting virtually, yet today they have an opportunity to purchase their own meeting space.
 
Here is a video of Rise Church’s story:

As a new church, they need help with their down payment. They can make the mortgage payment yet lack the capital for the down payment. We are looking to help raise an additional $70,000 for their down payment. Converge MidAmerica is offering a Matching Gift of $25,000 to help them. If you would be willing to share this with your congregation, we know it would be a great encouragement to this new church in purchasing their permanent home.

Since COVID, we have been able, through the generosity of our Converge Churches in Illinois, to help two new churches secure down payments for their first building totaling over $150,000. We are asking all of our Michigan churches to help Rise Church through their generosity. “A generous person will prosper; whoever refreshes others will be refreshed” (Proverbs 11:25).

Pastor Aaron, his family, and Rise Church are true heroes. Thanks for considering this opportunity!