What’s Your Next Step? by Kim Reisman focuses on awakening faith in those who are not yet Christ followers and enlivening the faith commitment of those who are already following in the Jesus way. What’s Your Next Step is interactive and posted regularly providing a wonderful opportunity for community building – so feel free to comment and dialogue on the issues of faith and life raised here!

This morning I received an email from a friend in Australia who has been on the planning team for World Methodist Evangelism’s International Christian Youth Conference on Evangelism. It was a general update but included a video from the most recent ICYC event in Seoul, South Korea in July 2010.

I watched it & the memories just flooded over me…

Twenty-one years ago, in 1980, I attended the first ICYC in Truro, England. It was an amazing experience – transformative in ways I never could have anticipated at the time.

Peter Storey 1980

Peter Storey - Truro England ICYC 1980

The speakers were tremendous – I particularly remember Peter Story, who’s testimony about what was happening in South Africa during those years absolutely rocked my world.

It’s amazing how much things can change in just a few decades & how much things can stay the same. Apartheid may be history in South Africa, but racism is still haunts the entire planet.

Peter Storey

Peter Storey

In the message we drafted in Truro, we called upon the church to be ‘a family fellowship which will facilitate young people’s visions, which will respect and help young people, and give them a share of responsibility.’ How often do we still hear that challenge?

ICYC Name Tag 1980

1980 ICYC Name Tag - Kim Dunnam

I left Truro energized & that experience provided a foundation for everything I’ve done since. Who knows what kind of impact the young people who were in Seoul in July will have on their churches, communities & world? There’s still so much kingdom work to do…

 

A final thought… The final paragraph of the message drafted at Truro calls upon the World Methodist Council & the churches in the Wesleyan family to ‘set up the necessary administrative machinery to enable young people to offer one year of their lives in full time mission, evangelism and ministry in areas where there is need for such service.’ Hmmmm…..

‘We ask the World Methodist Council to set up a summer school for evangelisim and discipleship.’ Hmmmm…

The needs remain. Will we listen to our youth – even if their voices are just an echo over 21 years?

 

If you have trouble viewing the video, click here.

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Kimberly D. Reisman

Kim Reisman

At the end of April, the Southern Poverty Law Center will celebrate its 40th anniversary. We were invited to attend, but unfortunately won’t be able to. What a huge disappointment! John & I have been supporting the SPLC for a long time – I didn’t realize how long it’d been until I opened the envelope with our invitation & included was a certificate thanking us for our commitment.

It’s amazing what can be accomplished when people join together. In so many arenas of life, it’s easier when someone comes alongside us than when we try to go it alone. That reality is true of God’s kingdom work as well.

As Christ followers, we pray that God’s kingdom will come on earth as it is in heaven. That means we’re praying that God’s intention for all creation – for every human being & everything else on the planet – would be realized in all its fullness, now. One of the reasons I’m attracted to the Wesleyan way of following Jesus is the emphasis on both personal & social holiness. In response to God’s grace we open ourselves to the power of the Holy Spirit to transform us internally – but also to move from the inside of us to the outside us. To move through our hands & feet, through our commitments, through our decisions about money & time, through our relationships so that through the power of the Holy Spirit the whole world might be transformed & God’s intention for creation realized in all its fullness.

I really believe that’s one of God’s main ways of acting in the world – through the power of the Holy Spirit in the lives of ordinary people. But that places lots of responsibility on OUR shoulders – WE are the ones that have to be open. WE are the ones who have to live in ways that give the Holy Spirit free reign to be lively and active. And my experience has been that you can’t do that alone.

There’s another thing about the Wesleyan way of following Jesus that means a lot to me. It’s the emphasis on what we call prevenient grace. That’s God’s loving presence that goes before us – that’s already present before we even arrive on the scene – that’s already working before anyone even realizes it.

It’s the way that God works preveniently that makes me realize how important it is to come along side each other. God finds lots of ways to be at work in the world & some of those ways might actually surprise us. So we can never rule out linking hands with others – even others who aren’t like us, even others who don’t share our particular faith commitments.

We need to be able to come along side each other in order to provide fertile ground for the Holy Spirit to work – whether preveniently or otherwise. Some of the Holy Spirit’s work is going to involve people’s inner spiritual lives. So we need to be prepared to come along side others from that perspective. Some of the Holy Spirit’s work is going to involve people’s external physical needs. So we need to be prepared to come along side others in meeting those needs. Some of the Holy Spirit’s work is going to involve issues of justice & peace. So we need to be prepared to come along side others in those kinds of endeavors as well.

God’s Holy Spirit is working whether we recognize it or not…the question is, are we going to join in?

I’m excited about the work of the Southern Poverty Law Center & lots of other organizations that – consciously or not – are working in ways that are consistent with the coming of God’s kingdom. The opportunities to partner are boundless. The opportunities to get involved in what God IS ALREADY DOING in the world are unbelievably exciting. So, as I said the question is, are we going to join in? What’s your next step?

Reisman SPLC certificate 2011

Southern Poverty Law Center

 

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Facebook fakeout

Facebook fakeout

A friend of mine was recently ‘friended’ on facebook by a person she knew way back in junior high. Not unusual these days & in fact often a really neat thing. That was how it was for my friend – a pleasant reconnection. She accepted the friend request & began following the news of her junior high pal at a distance as things would come across her facebook news feed.

Then word came – via the news feed – her junior high pal had cancer. My friend was really sad, as anyone would be to find out another person has cancer. Then word came – only a few weeks later & again via the news feed – her junior high friend had died. This news really knocked my friend off balance. Wait! How did this happen so fast?!

My friend shared with me (not on facebook but in a real, live, face to face conversation) about the confusing set of emotions she was trying to sort through – the obvious sadness, the concern for the children left behind & her desire to help them somehow, the guilt (why didn’t I reach out more?), & (most surprisingly to her) a strange sense that her emotions had somehow been played. As she talked, it dawned on me (again) what an odd thing this whole facebook nation really is.

I can understand the disorientation my friend is feeling. I’ve got facebook friends from my past. It’s been fun reconnecting – seeing what they look like now & hearing about random things in their life as they roll across the news feed. Some of those friends I’ve reconnected with more than others – swapping private messages & actually sharing (even if it isn’t face to face). But many just exist on my friend list – no closer to me now than when we friended each other in the first place.

Kim Reisman

Kim Reisman

I don’t think any of that is a bad thing. Actually I really love facebook. But what I wonder is, are we becoming confused? Are we beginning to mistake the shallow for the deep? Are we beginning to forget that really knowing others (& being known by them) is complicated business – it’s involved, takes effort & makes you really vulnerable & it’s definitely NOT the same as knowing about them via status updates, tweets & photo albums?

It’s easy to fall for the facebook fakeout, mistaking the shallow for the deep – confusing the knowing about with real knowing. But that raises a more significant question: Can we experience a spiritual fakeout? Are we confusing the shallow for the deep? Part of following Jesus is a willingness to regularly assess where we are on our spiritual journey, to internally take stock, move forward or even change directions. So here’s the question – are you mistaking the shallow for the deep? Are you living out of a virtual faith, or is God calling you to go deeper?

 

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I’ve been reflecting on all the hoopla Rob Bell’s new book, Love Wins, has generated recently. I haven’t read it yet, but I can’t wait to find out what was so horrible that John Piper would text ‘Farewell Rob Bell’ and so many other folks would freak out on either one side or the other.

I’m not that interested in weighing in on the discussion at this point – especially since I’ve not read the book. If you’re interested, here are a few thought provoking bloggers you can check out (you may or may not agree with them but they’re definitely thought provoking):

Rachel Held Evans – a great discussion on how Christians talk to one another about significant things.

Thad Norvell Parts 1 & 2 are up – part 3 is on its way. He touches on the issues that lie underneath the current discussion.

Tim Tennent Parts 1-4 – actually engages Bell directly & from a more academic perspective.

For some mysterious reason (the Holy Spirit perhaps?), this whole discussion reminded me of a painting Chris Tomlin commissioned my sister to create a few years ago. My sister is an amazing artist (I know I’m biased but that fact really doesn’t bother me). Kerry works in lots of different media but this painting, called Reflections, is done in encaustic. Here is how she describes it:

Reflections - encaustic on panel - Kerry Dunnam Peeples

The painting Reflections, celebrates the awesome process of changing into who we are and whose we are; Gods children, made in his image. God finds such delight in this process, especially when we reflect and acknowledge his grace within the journey. The painting is composed of several elements or reflections, which together create a visual “thank you” to God. Commissioned by Chris Tomlin, Reflections not only serves as a vehicle to look back with gratitude, but also a gift to honor those who helped Chris along the way.

Encaustic is an old form of painting in which the artist uses hot wax mixed with varnish and pigment. The artist must work layer upon layer; painting, then applying heat to make sure each layer marries the previous layer. One of the beauties of encaustic is the transparency of the wax enables the viewer to see a history of marks and strokes. The finished image is often visibly dependent on what went before.  Isn’t life like that?

“With unveiled face…from one degree of glory to the next…”

Like the butterfly emerging from its cocoon, our veil is being lifted and we are becoming more and more the way we were made. The painting Reflections does just that.  It reflects bits of glory in Chris Tomlin’s life. The constancy of family, friends and God, the Holy Spirit who does arrive, and the gift of music, leadership and praise; all these are elements of glory, degrees of change.     ~ Kerry Dunnam Peeples

 

While there are quite a few issues underneath the surface of the debate sparked by Love Wins, the book itself & all the related backlash stem from questions that are at their core irrevocably shrouded in mystery – at least on this side of God’s fully redeemed creation. As I seek to follow Jesus, I’m willing to accept that there are probably quite a few things I’ll have to wait to understand in all their fullness.

What I can grasp now is that part of the experience of following Jesus is the recognition that the veil is slowly being lifted and I’m becoming more and more the way I was made. I’m like an encaustic painting – with each layer of my life and spiritual journey married to the next, with the finished image dependent on what went before. I’d like to think it’s a little bit like what John Wesley called sanctification – as the Holy Spirit of Jesus works within us, we become more and more like him and reflect his glory even more. (2 Corinthians 3.18)

Eventually I’ll probably end up reading Love Wins. And I’m sure I’ll enjoy all the theological wrangling that will accompany that process. But that’s not really the challenging part. The challenging part is opening myself to the creative work of the Spirit who continues to add layer and layer of experience to my life, often applying heat to make sure each layer is married to the next. The challenging part is being willing to truly become more and more the way I was made.

 

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I really enjoyed Jason Vickers recent blog on emerging worship. He’s on target to remind us how rich & deep & wide our history of worship actually is. And reinforcing the role of the Holy Spirit was particularly important.

Translation...

The whole conversation brought some additional thoughts to my mind. I was reminded that while this kind of conversation is often about our understanding of worship, frequently there is also an underlying theme of translation. How is it that we make this good news known? How do we translate this news that is at one & the same time something that inspires silent awe, joyful praise, tearful repentance, ecstatic utterances or quiet prayer? How do we provide the channel for the Holy Spirit to work to make this deeply mysterious yet magnificently understandable news real for each successive generation?

 

Nothing new about these questions. And just as you can see the trajectory that has cut through the more recent history of worship (let’s make the music more like what people hear outside of church so they’ll be able to relate better – let’s be careful about our language in worship or else people won’t be able to understand what we’re talking about) – you can see it in this arena as well. From the beginning the Jesus movement was a movement of translation as the Good News spread from its first century Jewish roots to Greek towns & cities & on. The idea of faith seeking understanding has driven theologians of every age to wrestle with how to explain the mysteries of the Jesus way. In the process we’ve erred on both sides – we’ve so watered down our truths for the sake being understood that they’ve become only shadow representations. Conversely we’ve held our truths so closely that no one has been able to catch a glimpse of their beauty.

 

What I wonder is whether there’s a space in the middle somewhere.

 

Immersion

I’ve never been very good at foreign languages. But many of my friends speak multiple languages – a fact that makes me very envious (a small Lenten confession). What these friends tell me is that to learn any new language, it’s important to have translation resources (e.g. church = iglesia in Spanish; liturgy = the word Christians use to refer to their services & rites, the arrangement & form). You can’t learn a new language without that element. But it’s also important to be immersed in that language – to be surrounded by it so that you hear it all the time. In fact many people say that translation alone isn’t enough to become fluent in another language. Just having the language verbally explained isn’t enough for the language to become your own. In a very real sense, you have to live the language in order to make it yours.

How much more might this be the case for following in the Jesus way? We might come to know that liturgy refers to the arrangement & form of the services & rites of the Christian church, but will simply knowing that make the liturgy real for us? Generations of preachers have sought to make God’s grace known in sermon after sermon, but how much more would those descriptive words come to life if the deepest meaning of God’s grace were made known through lived relationships of love & compassion? If translation & immersion go together, then those whom we wish to reach with the Good News of Jesus Christ must not only hear us speak of it, but also become immersed in it through our relationships and through the life of the Christ following community. The language of God is not only verbal, it is not only written, it is lived. When we become immersed in the language of God, reading it, speaking it, living it, we are able to make it our own. When through our relationships, through our communities of faith, through our daily living, we enable others to become immersed in the language of God – to hear it spoken, to see it lived, to feel it within – that is when the Holy Spirit is given room to move & work & that is when others are able to make the language of God their own.

 

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Protesters in Indianapolis

A controversial bill regarding immigration (IN590) is currently before the Indiana State legislature. Recently a group protested against this legislation. About a month ahead of that protest – on February 18 – Michael Coyner, bishop of the Indiana area of the United Methodist Church spoke out against this bill. An important public witness. Here are his remarks.

 

The legislature of the state of Indiana is considering the complicated issue of immigration. Certainly it is understandable that many citizens and many State Senators and Representatives are concerned about this important issue. However, our Christian faith brings a perspective to this issue, which needs to be voiced, and our United Methodist Church has a particular stance on this issue which I share as the Bishop of the Indiana Area of The United Methodist Church.

 

Among the proposed bills before the Senate and House is one which seems to be gathering some support, namely Senate Bill No. 590. I have read through this proposed legislation, and while I am not an attorney and may not fully understand all of the legal implications of this bill, I do believe that it would be a mistake for the Senate and/or House to pass this Bill and for the Governor to sign it, for these reasons:

 

First, this bill begins to move the state of Indiana into areas which rightly belong to the federal government, namely the attempt to regulate immigration. Certainly there is frustration over the failure of our federal government to fulfill its duty in this area, but having each of our 50 states adopt their own immigration policies would be chaos and a violation of our U.S. Constitution.

 

Second, this bill would place our police officers and our business owners in an impossible situation of trying to determine when and if they should demand proof of citizenship or legal residency. It is clear from the experience in other states which have attempted similar provisions that the police are almost forced into racial profiling to meet the requirements of such a provision. Likewise business owners are faced with new liabilities and costs as they seek to monitor their customers according to the requirements of such legislation.

 

Third, this bill would only add to the climate of fear and suspicion which permeates too much of our culture already.

 

Mike Coyner

Bishop Michael Coyner

I believe that Senate Bill No. 590 is contrary to the Social Principles of our United Methodist Church, and therefore I urge all of our United Methodist people to express to their State Senators and Representatives their opposition to this bill. We must find a better way to enforce the laws, which already exist around the immigration debate, and we also must find a better way to protect against racial profiling.

 

Bishop Michael J. Coyner, Indiana Area

So what’s your next step? Will you make a public witness as Bishop Coyner has urged?

 

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I’m nearing the end of a LONG process of doctoral study. If all goes well, I’ll be submitting my thesis (dissertation in American lingo) by late fall. Cross your fingers, say a prayer, light a candle…

The roots of my dissertation can be seen in a little blog I wrote back when Next Step first got off the ground. At the time I was reading a little book of essays I received from my husband John called, A Writer’s Paris: a Guided Journey for the Creative Soul by Eric Maisel. There’s a particularly meaningful section in which he talks about the footbridges of Paris. Bridges in Paris aren’t miles long & clogged with traffic, although there are some that are purely functional – all steel and cement. Most of them, however, are short & sweet, inviting a lingering stroll with a relaxed stop to watch the world go by. Many have been there for hundreds of years, evolving from footbridges, to heavily trafficked pathways & back to pedestrian walkways.

Looking back, I believe this little essay by Maisel crystallized my thinking about evangelism & faith sharing – a fact that I’m sure would completely surprise him. It started me thinking about bridges – they’re fascinating things. I remember seeing the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, for the first time.  What an awesome construction! And the Brooklyn Bridge in New York, with all its lights. The awesomeness of these bridges reminded me of the awesomeness of the task of sharing the good news of Jesus Christ with others. The gulf we need to cross can seem so great – a huge gap between our experience of the love & acceptance we receive in Jesus Christ & the experience of suspicion & rejection we often experience in the world.

Pont Saint Louis

But then I returned to Maisel’s words about the bridges of Paris & that was when it seemed to fall together for me somehow because he taught me something about scale. Speaking of writers he says, “You want to show a war, but you must show a battle instead. You want to prove the greatness of a great love, but you can’t do it through hyperbole – you can only do it by a careful noticing of the way your lovers hold hands.” He goes on to recount a time when he found himself on the Pont Saint Louis near a thirty year old man & his sixty year old mother. The son was pouring out his heart to his mother. After describing their conversation, Maisel says, “The setting has allowed him to speak. This conversation never could have occurred in their living room, at the supermarket, or at the Louvre. This bridge creates a place safe enough for a boy to speak to his mother.”

Maisel is right.  It’s not about the awesomeness of the bridges. It’s about the intimacy. It’s about the way the footbridge subtly draws you to the middle to stop & absorb what’s going on around you, to see how the water flows, how the streets lead to & from, how the buildings grow up & out. In reading Maisel, I realized the direction I needed to go with my own work & writing. I realized that we don’t make connections between our experience of being in relationship with Jesus Christ & the experience of the rest of the world through massive efforts & structures.  I realized that it’s about the intimacy of crossing a footbridge to meet another in the middle. It’s not about creating grand strategies & programs – it’s about making connections of love & trust in the individual relationships we encounter in our daily lives. It’s not about proving the great love God has shown in Jesus Christ through hyperbole, but by noticing the way Jesus comes to us as a lover – holding our hand, easing our fears, forgiving our faults & shortcomings – loving us anyway. And more than anything else, it’s about creating places like the bridge where the son was able to talk with his mother, places that are safe enough for us to talk about our faith, the meaning that it has brought to our lives, the difference Jesus Christ has made in our experience of the world.

The questions are as real now as they were back when I wrote that original little blog. What bridges are we able to create in our lives? What next step do we need to take to create places that are safe enough for us to talk about the deep things of our heart? What person in your life is quietly awaiting an opportunity to meet you in the middle of a bridge, to make a connection, to deepen a relationship, to hear or speak a word of faith & hope & love?

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A couple of years ago, if anyone would have told me that the Next Step website would be down for months on end, I would have thought they were crazy. No way! The website is the heart of what I do! It can’t go down!

But that’s exactly what happened. Because of a bizarre & unpredictable series of misfortunes – including serious health struggles on the part of my web provider – the site was down for most of 2010. But today we’ve got a new site & we’re up & running! Hooray!!

Not surprisingly, God had numerous things to teach me in all this, not least of which is the fact that the website isn’t the heart of what I do – GOD is. And God seems able to work in amazing ways without depending on the Internet. Who knew?

Some of the new & amazing things God has begun while the website was down include the Matrix Connexion Project, a mentoring program for young clergy. We’ve got two cohorts in process & it’s proving to be an awesome experience for all involved. You can find a description on the Mentoring page. Another exciting development is the growing Justice & Mercy Initiative, which brings together the Wesleyan distinctives of personal & social holiness through hands on teaching experiences, articles & other posts. A description of JMI is also on the Mentoring page. A third aspect that you’ll want to check out are the Resources & the Discipleship pages. That’s where you’ll be able to find a variety of resources for faith formation, spiritual development, & leadership cultivation. You’ll want to check back regularly for new articles, excerpts & posts. Finally we’ve added a discussion board – the Kingdom Bringers Network – to provide you an extended opportunity for conversation, dialogue, idea sharing & networking.

As I was preparing for the launch of the new site I looked over some of my previous blog posts since Next Step’s creation in 2005 (they’re in the archives if you’re interested). My first post way back when

the next step...

was called ‘A Journey of a Thousand Miles’ & opened with this paragraph:

A wise person once said that a journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step. Wise words, particularly when we think about life – our interior life, our soul & spirit life. All of life on this earth is a progression, from birth to death a process of soul & character development. It’s a long journey made up of a myriad of steps taking us from our entrance into this world to the end when we leave it to stand before God. Because life is a process of soul & character development, each step builds on the one before it. Each step either brings us closer to becoming the person God intends us to be, or takes us farther away. Each step paves the way for the next step, & the next & the next.

Today marks another step on Next Step’s journey. Over the last year, our steps may have been hidden from your view, but they have brought us to this place of new opportunity and exciting ministry. I hope you’ll reconnect as we continue the process of soul & character development that is the Christ following life.

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It’s been a long time! Thanks to everybody for hanging in there with Next Step during this down time. Actually down time isn’t really the best descriptor because the past months have been incredibly busy & productive. My PhD work continues – I’m at the halfway mark…Hooray! There IS light at the end of the tunnel & the good news is I don’t think it’s an oncoming train.

More important than the PhD work is what God’s been doing behind the scenes at Next Step. That’s the way God seems to work in my life – behind the scenes. Preveniently is how I like to describe it – bringing people & ideas together in an exciting way that I never could have orchestrated on my own.

The most obvious result of all this behind the scenes work is the newly redesigned website. I’m still exploring it myself! And of course it’s a work in progress so it will definitely change & take more shape as we continue to tweak it. Your comments are welcome as we work to make it the best site possible.

Of course the website only reflects all the real life ministry opportunities that have been unfolding during these past few months. I hope you’ll take the time to explore the site & the various new initiatives we’ve launched. To get you started, I want to describe a few of the most exciting things happening at Next Step.

First, we’ve expanded! Kelly Falany Brumbeloe has joined me as an Associate Director. Kelly is a graduate of Asbury Seminary & serves in the North Georgia Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church. She lives in Marietta, Georgia – gotta love the whole telecommuting thing! Kelly will be blogging & has already begun speaking & teaching. She’s also an integral part of two of the initiatives I’m excited to tell you about. Read on…

Next Step’s mission remains the same – to train, encourage & challenge Christ followers to live more fully as committed disciples of the Jesus way, to share their faith with greater love & boldness, & to impact their world with greater courage and integrity on behalf of Jesus Christ. With that in mind we’ve created the Discipleship Connection Project to provide a point of intersection between theological scholarship & individual Christ followers. We’re going to be partnering with outstanding leaders from universities and seminaries across the world in order to offer online & webcast resources & teaching to deepen & strengthen Christian faith. This is incredibly exciting & I hope you’ll consider participating when we’re up & running. We’ll keep you posted on our progress & the official launch!

The second project I’d like to let you in on is Next Step’s Justice & Mercy Initiative. One of the hallmarks of a Wesleyan approach to Christian faith is the intimate connection between personal & social holiness. John Wesley even asserted that you can’t have one without the other. The Justice & Mercy Initiative will provide hands on teaching & other events so that Christ followers can experience in a dynamic way how these two aspects of the Jesus way come together.

Finally, as you navigate the new site, you’ll notice the opportunity to support Next Step in more deliberate ways. From its beginning, Next Step has been a self-sustaining ministry, existing simply on revenue generated through speaking & teaching. Now God has placed some exciting opportunities before us; but they’ll be impossible without additional support. Many of you have been faithful in your prayers & your spiritual, emotional & intellectual support of Next Step. I hope you’ll consider expanding that support to the financial arena as well. As we finalize the site, you’ll be able to make one time gifts or provide monthly support through our Sustaining Partners program.

These are exciting times for Next Step! Thanks again for sticking it out through all the silent web time – rest assured, it won’t be silent anymore!

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Thanks to everyone for hanging in there with me in the midst of my dissertation process. The good news is, I’m making progress! The bad news is, I’m still not done!

HERE’S SOME EVEN BETTER NEWS!

Next Step is growing! We’re adding staff and additional ministries which is really exciting. All this change means a REDESIGNED WEBSITE. So, while I know the site’s been unchanged for the last few months because of my other writing obligations, we’re now hard at work to create something even better. And I promise, your patience will pay off.

So check back periodically. When we’re up & running again there will be many more resources, additional blogging, discussion opportunities and a whole lot more.

Thanks again for all your support!

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