27 March 2015

Healing at the Campus House of Prayer!

You have to check out this story from one of the participants from the Campus House of Prayer in Austin - Clinton was a student in the Boston area with whom Campus Renewal connected. He started a united movement at MIT, graduated and moved to Austin, and has been praying at the CHOP faithfully ever since! Read the following and be encouraged!



First, I wanted to share that on March 11, 2015 we at Greenhouse Healing Room in Austin, TX sent a team out to do some outreach near the UT campus.  A young man approached the team, unable to speak but communicated via writing that he was mute due to an neck injury imposed by his dad and also nearly deaf and could only communicate by writing. He said that demons were afflicting him but he was drawn to the team. They brought him back to the prayer room there on campus and I got to meet him. He wanted to know if we could get rid of the demons. He also asked the question how does Jesus feel about gays? He communicated that he, his brother and sister were raped by his dad, giving him HIV and his mom was murdered. He and brother were homeless and from another country originally.The prayer team prayed for him and he was set free and dramatically healed by Jesus. After he came out, he had given his life to Jesus, he was able to speak and he said that he was able to somewhat hear.

I’m a witness that he was not able to speak a word when I met him but his tongue was loosed and he was able to produce somewhat clear speech afterwards. He could not deny the reality of Jesus and His love for him.

And I have other witnesses to attest to what the Lord did. GOD IS LOVE and He works in miracles, signs and wonders to set the oppressed free because of His compassion for us!


Second, I wanted to share this amazing story that happened on last Friday. Recently, a lady from Persia (Iran, that is – but she likes to call it Persia as it’s called in the Bible) started coming to the church I fellowship at here in Austin and she was baptized Sunday March 15th- declaring her faith in Jesus and as a declaration for her descendants and for Persia. She felt called by the Lord to start studying in seminary at the beginning of the semester and has a huge heart for her people. Anyway, she called me on Friday mentioning that she got in touch with a refugee family who speaks some of the same languages she speaks – Turkish, and Farsi. A few days before, she shared her testimony of how she came to the Lord miraculously after a car accident several years ago and how she came to Jesus from Islam. A mother was there with her 16 year-old son and he said he wanted the book (the Bible). On Friday the lady brought me along and got a Bible for the son, particularity feeling like I may able to minister to the son.


It turns out that there were some other dynamics happening. The husband wanted to leave the wife (who is Iraqi) and family after he found out that the wife’s biological parents came from a Christian background (though the wife was raised Muslim after being taken in after her dad had a stroke). Anyway, on Friday the 20th we went to their apartment, met the woman with her 16-year-old son and 11-year-old daughter. And the son said he wanted to receive Jesus after being given the Bible. So we prayed with him. Soon after, the father came out after a nap. The father is Iranian so he connected well with our sister on mission for the Lord.


He was interested in what we had to say and why Jesus wasn’t just a prophet, but the Lord. After hearing about the free gift of forgiveness, abundance and life in Christ and the sacrifice of Jesus for sin, the father too wanted to receive Christ as not just as prophet but as Savior and Lord, and so we got to pray with the father, the mother, the 16 year-old son, the 11 year old daughter all to receive Christ. (And they have a 17 year old soon to be 18 year old who wasn’t there at that time). And to top it off we got to pray for restoration of their marriage and God moved in that way as well. 

 It also turned out that someone had given them a Bible in Arabic before and planted a seed before the Lord connect us with them.

They were very hospitable and invited us back. So we do plan to stay in contact with them. And take this, the son ended up needing some help with his math – algebra homework – which I’m good at :-) so we got to meet some practical needs as well and pray for their job situation. The father is a master welder and currently works in construction but hasn’t been able to get a decent job that matches his abilities. One of their parents plans to move here to the States and they have dreams of starting a business – like a restaurant. 


You can say a prayer for them as they continue in their journey of union with Christ and for wisdom for us in how we are to support them in their growth and to serve them.


The family said that they don’t have many friends and both father and mother don’t speak English much – the son does.  They’d felt really alone in many ways in our nation. They talked about how our sister was the first person to reach out to them like that.



How awesome is this!!!!

08 June 2014

Asia Adventure Prep 1

So, as you know, I'm preparing to go into Asia in a little less than a month. Gah!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Okay, I'm okay. It's just kind of hitting me for real. Having had no real desire to head in that direction, God surprised me with His special kind of grace in this (as in, this is what I want you to do, are you willing?). Sooo, yeah, I'm headed east...

I've been doing some training, and I've been totally intrigued with all that I'm learning, and I wanted to share some of what I'm learning with you. They will be in generalities, you understand, as I can't be very revealing, but it just blows my mind. The college students there have some of the highest suicide rates - I know at Campus Renewal, we talk about the high rate at Columbia, NYU or UPenn at 4-6 per semester, but this is in the double digits. Incredible, and not in a good way. They study hard and graduate, and are dumped into a job market that international companies say only have 10% of their force is employable. Not because of their intelligence, but because of lack of social skills and character. Can you believe it!!!

So, a huge core of this organization that I'll be working with will address those issues, among others, making these students more likely to get a job when they graduate, and to help them see in a global perspective, rather than only an inward individual one. Amazing!

If you'd like more information about the culture I'll be working with and what I'll be doing send me an email here, and I'll be able to be a little more forthcoming. Also, if you'd like to partner with me in my month over seas (see thermometer to the right) click here. It will be life changing to all involved!

08 April 2014

Friend to the Outcasts



Here's a story of Campus Renewal in Knoxville, Tennessee. It still touches my heart, though it can get get buried in the daily tasks. Meet the Pikes...

Pike's at UT...A Fraternity Finding Jesus at the CHOP

   For 100+ shattered and uprooted Pi Kappa Alpha (Pikes) fraternity brothers, the last place they could have imagined a fraternity meeting was at the UT CHOP. Last year it became an unlikely “beacon of hope” for the outcast fraternity.
   As quickly as news stories around the world told of sordid deeds worthy of official expulsion from the UT campus, CHOP opened its doors for these displaced frat brothers to meet and pray every night. One of them described it as, “The first and the last place we rejects would have to ask to be allowed to meet & pray. They embraced us with loving arms and two full plates of chocolate chip cookies.”
As word spread that the fraternity had found our "four walls with couches," more and more Pike’s showed up each week for prayer and Bible study. Soon the room overflowed with 30-40 young men. “Guys who had been given up on and kicked to the curb were shown a new kind of love at the CHOP - Jesus' love,” notes Pikes chaplain Colin Skinner. “We found common ground to meet, pray, fellowship and be Pikes again, but now immersed in the Lord as we gathered in His name and learned about his son Jesus Christ. Some of these same guys before ‘the incident’ didn’t even know his name. The CHOP is our home and our Bible study with the Pike’s continues to grow.”

Again, this is why I do what I do.

03 April 2014

One Cry Citywide Gathering

One Cry Citywide Gathering was really, really impressive. I did a small snapshot on my monthly newsletter, but one of my staff members wrote up a wonderfully summary of this amazing evening!




 Thanks so much to all of you who prayed, and also to those of you who attended Friday night's One Cry citywide university prayer meeting at Calvary Baptist.  It was a wonderful night of worship and prayer, with over four hundred students from all over the NYC area.  We not only had students from a wide variety of colleges, but also from vocational and art schools, graduate students, recent alumni, an NYC chaplain, the head of a divinity school, and many others.  It was a nice mix of young people together with a range of older adults in ministry.

    David Epstein, the pastor of Calvary Baptist, opened the night in prayer.  The sanctuary was full right from the beginning, and once the students settled in to the sessions of worship and prayer, the presence of the Lord in the house was powerful.  Akpene Torku and two students emceed the evening, keeping the time moving well.  Camille San Pablo and the One Cry worship band did a great job of leading all of us in lifting our voices and hands to honor God.  Jeremy Story cast the vision for repentance, unity, and revival on the campuses and in the city.  Ruth Zhou of Youth Evangelism Fellowship, Eric Bennett of The King's College, and others did a great job of opening the prayer sessions on humbling ourselves, seeking God until we find Him, and then turning from our own wicked ways so that God can heal us as well as our campuses and our city.  Many lives were touched during those prayer sessions as students testified afterwards.

    Before the final prayer session, I spoke briefly from Isaiah 55, "Ho! Everyone who thirsts, Come to the waters; And you who have no money, Come, buy and eat.  Yes, come, buy wine and milk without money and without price..."  The Gospel is not about working hard to make ourselves good enough for heaven.  So many of these young people have worked very hard to gain acceptance to their universities, but the Gospel is not about work.  It is rather about receiving the free gift of grace and forgiveness in Jesus Christ.  About twenty seven students responded to the invitation to receive that free gift of forgiveness, and prayed together with me.

    I spoke again briefly near the end of the night on catching and holding onto the vision of just how important Christian unity is.  Jesus is coming back for one church, one people, not a collection of groups or denominations.  We are members of one another and we need one another so that the Lord's full purposes will be accomplished on the campuses and in the city.  Once again, it was difficult to get students to leave the sanctuary as they wanted to continue praying, singing, worshipping God, and talking long after the time ended.  To me one of the greatest blessings was standing on the street outside of Calvary Baptist afterwards and still seeing students singing the praises of God as they exited the building and walked away down 57th Street, something you don't see very often in New York!

    Many people came up afterwards to say how blessed they had been by the time.  One young lady who did not want to be there and did not want to pray told another person afterwards that now she did want to become a Christian, that she had never experienced a time like this before.  Other students testified to receiving healing, being filled with the Spirit, or receiving new freedom during the evening.  God moved in response to the prayers of many, so please keep praying with us for these students as they return to their campuses refreshed and with new vision.  God bless you all!

27 February 2014

Reaching Campus - Fools Marching in the Dark

I really love this post from our national blog, Reaching Campus. It's by one of my staff workers here in NYC, and he tells of our walk so succinctly. He does me proud, I must say. Read for yourself, and let me know what you think...

Fools Marching in the Dark



Learning to Walk in Faith and Not By Sight

“Faith is taking the first step even when you don’t see the whole staircase” (Martin Luther King Jr.). 
Living in the world’s most influential and powerful city, you are often reminded that people walk the streets of New York at a blistering speed of 20 mph. It is a city where diplomats from around the world sit at the United Nations trying to solve the world’s problems; however, they inevitably fail or have little power to stop the tanks, social uprising protests, and inequality that surround the world.

It is the center for fashion where the motto of the town is “if you can make it here, you can make it anywhere.” It is a place where people dream of being the stars on Broadway or dream being the wolf on Wall Street instead of a faithful lamb. Living as believers in New York City, it feels like fools marching in the dark…learning to walk in faith and not by sight on our campus.

Falling Forward

What do I mean by falling forward? I thought about one of the greatest commencement speeches back in 2011 at UPenn. Denzel Washington spoke on failure – not a typical speech for a graduating class. He brought up a new concept of falling; he called it “falling forward.” Often times, we are told that we need to fall back on something when we fail in life, our career, and school. Denzel Washington jokingly said falling forward allows you to see what you are hitting when you fall. It’s a pretty scary experience. Yet failure is part of our walk. We learn that in everything we do for the Lord, there will be failure and that how we move forward from it requires faith and trust.

For the past couple of months, I have been reading and pondering on where God has taken me and my walk in faith. I remember recounting all the failures and attempts when I was a student and looking back at each step led me closer to God. Despite falling, it kept me going and encouraged me to trust in God. I found that as a student, things don’t pan out, our prayer meetings are few, and the world tells us to turn back, causing everything on our campuses to seem dead. But there is a quiet resolve knowing that God is still working and that His work bears fruit for His kingdom.

What we do even in our failures has purpose to help us grow more, depending daily on Him and looking upward even though the world would call us fools. N.T. Wright said, “What you do with your body in the present matters because God has a great future in store for it…What you do in the present—by painting, preaching, singing, sewing, praying, teaching, building hospitals, digging wells, campaigning for justice, writing poems, caring for the needy, loving your neighbor as yourself—will last into God’s future. These activities are not simply ways of making the present life a little less beastly, a little more bearable, until the day when we leave it behind altogether.”

Marching Through the Dark with God Alongside Us, Anything is Possible

“If we hold on, and though we carry scars, God is with us marching through the dark. Turn the light on, and hope will bring us far, yes the fools are marching through the dark. So turn the light on, cuz home is not too far, God is with us marching through the dark” (Fools Marching in the Dark -Tim Be Told).

Living in New York, I face many obstacles and the forces of the enemy that try to keep people in the dark. People are not seeing the hope and the light that Jesus brings. Yet despite seeing so many campuses in the dark, I have so much hope and passion to see one day, consistent prayer covering this city. As a student, I was often discouraged by the darkness and overwhelming odds and the word of the world telling me that what you’re doing is foolish. Yet as I was listening to the song by a band named Tim Be Told, it reminded me that everything we do for the Kingdom, though it seems foolish, it brings about a breakthrough.

As Phillip Yancey said, “Perhaps something like this was what Jesus had in mind when he turned again and again to his favorite topic, the kingdom of God. In the soil of this violent disordered world, an alternative community may take root. It lives in hope of a day of liberation, in the meantime it aligns itself with another world, not just spreading rumors but planting settlements in advance of the coming reign.”

As we continue living and holding tight to the message of the work done on the Cross, we shouldn’t feel discouraged but walk in faith and not by sight because often times we may not see the entire picture. God will one day, as it is written in Revelation 21, make all things new. Keep planting on your campus and march forward.

Anthony Deng is a New York City Metro Campus Coordinator for Campus Renewal. He leads and coordinates volunteers for events such as One Cry and helps facilitate the New York City Metro Area student core team. Anthony was born and raised in New York City graduated from CUNY the City College of New York, and has a B.A in History and Asian Studies. Anthony gives New York City tours to freshmen of various campuses. On his tour, he teaches and shows students various hidden gems of New York City. On the side, he loves to collect college sweatshirts and t-shirts.  In addition, he loves to play and watch basketball and football. He an avid fan of the Pacers & Colts.

06 February 2014

Motivation is Simply in the Why

Another Post form our national blog, Reaching Campus, that totally blessed me!

Motivation is Simply in the Why.

Motivation

When Jewish psychiatrist Viktor Frankl was arrested by the Nazis in World War II and put in Auschwitz, the infamous death camp, he was stripped of everything: property, family, possessions, and a manuscript he had spent years researching and writing on finding meaning in life. The manuscript had been sewn into the lining of his coat.

“Now it seemed as if nothing and no one would survive me; neither a physical nor a spiritual child of my own,” Frankl wrote. “I found myself confronted with the question of whether under such circumstances my life was ultimately void of any meaning.”

A few days later, the Nazis forced the prisoners to give up what little clothing they still wore. “I had to surrender my clothes and in turn inherited the worn-out rags of an inmate who had been sent to the gas chamber,” said Frankl. “Instead of the many pages of my manuscript, I found in the pocket of the newly acquired coat a single page torn out of a Hebrew prayer book, which contained the Jewish prayer ‘Shema Yisrael’ (Hear, O Israel! The Lord our God is one God. And you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might.)

“How should I have interpreted such a ‘coincidence’ other than as a challenge to ‘live’ my thoughts instead of merely putting them on paper?”

Frankl later reflected on his ordeal in Man’s Search for Meaning, saying, “There is nothing in the world that would so effectively help one to survive even the worst conditions, as the knowledge that there is meaning in one’s life…. He who has a ‘why’ to live for can bear almost any ‘how.’ 

How to Motivate

How do you motivate students to mission?  I found myself in my third year as a campus missionary trying to figure this out.  I went through my catalogue of seminary answers and compared that to real life always coming up short.  I found that what was natural to me was quite challenging for some students.  Where I was able to share my life with those in need of Jesus, students were finding it difficult to get motivated.  The answer to motivation is in the why.

Elijah’s Motivation

Elijah first enters the Old Testament in 2 Kings 17.  Elijah was given the task of demonstrating to all of Israel that Yahweh was Lord over all, not Baal.  God asked him to go to Zarapheth immediately (v.9).  The Bible says in the following verse that Elijah went immediately.  He didn’t have to think about it, pray about it, or weigh the pros and cons.  Elijah demonstrated through obedience the reason for the “why”.

Why did Elijah respond instantly?  Why does he speak so confidently about God?  The reason for the “why” is simply that he knew without a doubt that Yahweh was Lord over all.  He knew all that God had done.  He knew His Scripture (or he would not have been able to predict a drought; see Deutoronomy).

The challenge with students and mission is the why.  Why do we respond to a skeptic’s questions?  Why do we sacrifice ourselves daily for the will of God?  Why do we invite others to live on mission with us? Why? Why? Why?  The answers to those simple questions are what motivate me to missional living.

04 December 2013

Reaching Campus: Mission Essentials

Reaching Campus - Mission Essentials: Scattered

I love this post from Campus Renewal's Blog, Reaching Campus. It totally describes the harvest field in which we sow, and I just love the analogy to the 1st century dispersion. Anyway, just read it!


Mission Essentials: Scattered

I’m not sure how long the term “missional” has been in vogue in Christian ministry, but it is a fairly recent focus of the Church. Though it has only come to the forefront in books and conferences in the past few years, “missional” ministry is the way we often see God’s Kingdom advanced in the Book of Acts.

Now those who had been scattered by the persecution that broke out when Stephen was killed traveled as far as Phoenicia, Cyprus and Antioch, spreading the word only among Jews. Some of them, however, men from Cyprus and Cyrene, went to Antioch and began to speak to Greeks also, telling them the good news about the Lord Jesus. The Lord’s hand was with them, and a great number of people believed and turned to the Lord.   Acts 11:19-21

What a great testimony about the Christians in Antioch: “The Lord’s hand was with them, and a great number of people believed and turned to the Lord.” Any of us would love to have this said about our ministry. This account gives us a model of missional living that can instruct us and our ministries on campus and beyond.

Scattered in Acts

Now those who had been scattered by the persecution that broke out when Stephen was killed traveled as far as Phoenicia, Cyprus and Antioch…

The Christians who came to Antioch were scattered by the persecution that came after Stephen’s death in Acts 7. Up until that time, there is no record of ministry or outreach beyond the city of Jerusalem. Christians had settled in and were establishing programs. However, Jesus called to his followers to be his witnesses “in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” (Acts 1:8)

But there doesn’t seem to be any movement to carry out that commission. What they had failed to do on their own, God used persecution to accomplish. God used this seemingly negative event as a means to accomplish his mission. Though it may not have been obvious at the time, God scattered them for a purpose.
It is also significant to notice who was scattered – “all except the apostles were scattered.” (Acts 8:1) Those who were the most thoroughly trained and who had spent three years with Jesus were the ones who stayed in Jerusalem. It was the everyday, ordinary Christians who were scattered and arrived in Antioch.

Scattered on Campus

Scattering is a fact of life in college ministry. Students are scattered every day across our campuses. They are scattered among residence halls, Greek houses, and apartment complexes. They are scattered among different majors and departments. They are scattered among a large variety of social groups – fraternities, sororities, bands, clubs, teams, etc. They gather to worship and study God’s Word and sharpen one another and then they scatter across the campus and throughout the community.

We need to encourage our students to see this scattering as a blessing and a way to accomplish God’s purpose. They need to have a vision of God’s purpose in it and a sense of calling to the places to which they scatter. Too often we emphasize the “gathering” – our large group meetings and worship services – but we often forget that the real work of reaching our campuses for Christ happens when we scatter. We will never accomplish the mission to which God has called us without embracing the scattering and seeing it strategically.

We also need to help our students realize that the mission of God will not be accomplished by our ministry staffs alone, but by every member doing their part where they are scattered. The church at Antioch thrived because the Christians who were scattered saw the purpose of God in it. We will not reach our campuses unless our students see the same thing.

Scattered Around the World

But beyond that, we need to prepare our students for the scattering that happens when they graduate and leave our ministries. They need to see their future careers, wherever they may be, as a part of the scattering that will take the Gospel to every corner of our world. As engineers, educators, accountants, musicians, etc. they will be scattered among people and places that need the presence of Jesus and the message of the hope that he brings. We need to be equipping them for ministry when their time with us is over.

Erin Armstrong Wedding - 014Mike Armstrong (@_mikearmstrong_) is in his 32nd year of ministry to college students at the University of Arkansas with Christ on Campus and is a past president of the Association of College Ministries. He has been married to Gina for 34 years and they have two grown and married daughters. He has also been a track and field official for over 20 years and is a fan of classic rock, jazz, and the blues. You can read his blog at michaelarmstrong.net or find him on Facebook at THEMikeArmstrong.