I just got back from a week in beautiful Austin, Texas helping our sister church, Gracepoint Fellowship Church-Austin , prep for their Inaugural Service. About a dozen of us from Berkeley and SF went for the entire week leading up to the Inaugural Service. The week in Austin entailed passing out invitation flyers, meeting students at their dining halls, and doing the odds and ends of church operations – setup, take down, loading, unloading, cooking, cleaning, video, publications, lighting, keying keychains, all while swatting away those pesky Texas mosquitoes.
It was great to be with our Austin brothers and sisters for a week and I didn’t realize how much I had missed so many of them until I was with them again. We did morning prayer walks, DT with Pastor Manny, and fellowshipped together in the evenings over various work and dining tables every day.
And while the team from Berkeley was trying to be helpful, a realization that I couldn’t deny was the difficultly in setting up a church. It was hard just being there for one week but I can’t imagine the work and toil of all that we did that is done on a regular basis apart from us, week in and week out. In Berkeley, there’s always someone else or some other group that’s scheduled to do a certain task, or a subject matter expert that’s a resource for knowledge. But in Austin, everyone’s needed for loading, everyone’s needed in the kitchen, and everyone is a subject matter expert.
But this picture of the church is all worth it. On Inaugural Sunday, there were 30 plus students in attendance and they saw the concrete love and deep relationships that were displayed when all the 50 plus visitors from Berkeley, Waypoint Community Church, and Bridgeway Church of Silicon Valley joined the Austin team in their celebration. And that concrete love and richness in relationship isn’t something that can be faked. And that’s why the gift of the church is so beautiful - broken lives come together to fellowship and love each other so that the world may see that Christ is alive and real in our midst. So although I already miss my friends in Austin, some of whom were my former leaders and housemates when they were here in California, I’m so encouraged to see them pour out their lives day in and day out over the work involved in the new church in Texas. So it’s no excuse for me to slack off here or rely on someone else to be that subject matter expert while I know many are working hard in Austin, in hopes that those who come will find rest and Lord-willing, join the Austin team in their good labor.