The Cause to Live For: Building a Legacy Bigger Than You
By Ben Cooley, Chuck Freeland, Dave Miller and
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About this ebook
An edited collection of teachings from Vineyard’s National 20s-30s conference, The Cause to Live For. This book offers readers a chance to delve and dwell deeper in the incredible teaching offered at CTLF over the years, inspiring and equipping a young generation in the counter-cultural ministry of the kingdom today.
Contents:
Foreword – John and Debby Wright
Transform Nations - Jen Rankine
Be a History Maker – Andy Smith
Growth, Health & Forgiveness – Chuck Freeland
Valuing what God values – Jay Pathak
Responding to the present – Jay Pathak
Fear or Faith? – Jay Pathak
Worship and Justice – Ben Cooley and Martin Smith
Remember the Poor – Miriam Swaffield
Go anywhere, do anything – Dave Miller
Ben Cooley
Ben Cooley was just 26 years old when he booked Birmingham’s NEC Arena. He didn’t have the first idea about putting on a major event. He didn’t have a strategy, he didn’t have the funds. But he did a have vision; a vision to live in a world free from slavery. This is a story of passion turned into action. In this book Ben shares the journey of Hope for Justice, from one man with a wobbly desk to an international organisation now rescuing victims in the UK, US, Cambodia and Norway. Featuring real-life rescues and the voices of Rend Collective’s Patrick Thompson, Rob and Marion White, actor Tom Lister, Athena Pond and many others involved in the story so far, this book is about more than fighting slavery. Impossible is a Dare is a challenge. What are you passionate about? What would you like to build or break or change? This book will inspire all readers to find and fight for their own vision and see the impossible for what it really is; nothing but a dare.
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Book preview
The Cause to Live For - Ben Cooley
THE CAUSE TO LIVE FOR
THE CAUSE TO LIVE FOR
Building a legacy bigger than you
Vineyard Churches UK & Ireland
Contents
About Vineyard Churches UK & Ireland
Foreword
John and Debby Wright
Be a history maker
Andy Smith
Transform nations
Jen Rankine
Growth, health and forgiveness
Chuck Freeland
Worshipping with wounds and swords
Miriam Swaffield
Worship and justice
Ben Cooley and Martin Smith
Valuing what God values
Jay Pathak
Fear or faith?
Jay Pathak
‘I Am Yours’: the story behind the song
Dave Miller
Notes
About Vineyard Churches UK & Ireland
The Vineyard movement is built on God’s transforming word and is made up of people who worship God with passion, intimacy and expectation.
We are a growing movement with over 2,500 churches worldwide, with more than 140 (at the time of writing) in the UK and Ireland alone.
We exist to serve people, especially the poor and the vulnerable, and we communicate the goodness of Jesus with compassion and generosity.
We are God’s children, extending his Kingdom together everywhere in every way.
We will make disciples, develop leaders, plant churches and contribute to the blessing of the whole Body of Christ.
The Cause to Live For is a collective of young adults from Vineyard churches in the UK and Ireland who are desperate to see a move of God’s Kingdom breaking out across our nations.
Find your nearest Vineyard church at <www.vineyardchurches.org.uk>.
THE CAUSE TO LIVE FOR
Foreword
Causes.
Everyone has some sort of cause that they live for. For some people their career becomes their cause; some might see earning money as their purpose, while for others an environmental issue or a focus on family is what keeps them going.
As people who have encountered the living God, we think differently. We believe that each person is placed on this earth to glorify God and to work in partnership with him in extending his Kingdom.
We are all on a journey of discovering the next thing that God has for us. We look to see what the Father is doing and cooperate with him in that. He has plans for us, and he wants us to join him on an adventure of his design.
Wherever you are on your journey, we want you to know that he is good, he loves you and he wants to know you intimately.
Our prayer for you is that you will be caught up by Christ, his Church and his cause, as he reveals his unique design for your life, and that this book will be a helpful tool in this process.
John and Debby Wright
National Directors
Vineyard Churches UK & Ireland
A FEW ‘I WANTS’.
A LIFE OF ‘I WILLS’.
A LIFE OF LEGACY.
Be a history maker
Andy Smith
Andy leads Belfast City Vineyard and, together with his wife Harmony, also provides leadership for the Vineyard churches in Ireland.
You are a precious demographic. When we release young leaders, amazing things happen for the Kingdom. The Vineyard is passionate about releasing you, not holding you back. I’m honoured – if not a little surprised – to be invited to share some thoughts with you. You see, I’m forty-something going on sixty-something; I’m a pretty radical introvert, so when I was asked to offer some thoughts to a group of people in their twenties and thirties, I couldn’t for the life of me work out what I would say. Thankfully, I figured it out.
It goes something like this. I live in Belfast. Our offices and ministry centres are right in the city centre. I was on the bus, early one morning, heading in and praying to the Lord, ‘I really need to figure out what you want to say to these guys.’ As I was travelling, I thought I would see who else had been asked to contribute. I saw that a guy called Martin Smith had. My mind instantly flitted back to a time in my late teens, early twenties, when Martin’s band Delirious? had recently released a song called ‘History Maker’. The lyrics proclaim that each of us is a history maker, a speaker of truth to all humanity, and that we shall stand. This became almost like a soundtrack to a really potent time in my life. It was one of the first times I heard that it was OK to reach for more in worship.
I grew up in a pretty traditional context, and there’s nothing wrong with that. But when I heard ‘History Maker’ it was one of the first times I’d ever articulated an ‘I want’ to God. I never knew you could want to do anything for Jesus. That he might want something for me, other than to be good. I didn’t know that we could dream with him, reach for things, that he might put some wants in our hearts. Things that we give ourselves to, things that we sacrifice for, to see his change and transformation come to things and people we care deeply about. Walking through Belfast, a few tears coming down my cheeks, I knew I wanted to talk about a few ‘I wants’ surrounded by a lifetime of ‘I wills’. About building a Kingdom legacy in your life that will overflow far beyond you and enable others around you to access life in Jesus and his gracious Kingdom. A few ‘I wants’, a life of ‘I wills’ and a life of legacy.
What on earth do I mean by having a lifetime of ‘I wills’? Well, if an ‘I want’ is like a calling or dream, something that grabs the heart, that we know we must be a part of, an action or mission or assignment that we are given for a season, then an ‘I will’ is the other side of that coin. An ‘I will’ is a response to who Jesus is. It’s not a reaching out for something; it’s a response to something. It’s the life we build around him. It’s the rhythms we cultivate to stay close to him. Because I have encountered Jesus, I will build my life around him, in response to all that he has done for me.
In Matthew 13.44, Jesus tells us: ‘The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field. When a man found it, he hid it again, and then in his joy went and sold all he had and bought that field.’ So he tells this story about the Kingdom of God, life in God’s Kingdom and the opportunity for us. An ‘I will’ is like this man who finds treasure and joyfully sells everything he has to buy the field. It’s a response to discovering the Kingdom. It’s a response that says it’s worth everything – all I have, everything I have.
How should we respond to the Jesus who loves us with an everlasting love, who is Saviour and Lord, who went to the cross for us, who is at the right hand of the Father, who is available to us right now and in the hour of our need? The only response is to offer our whole lives to buy the field with great joy. When we encounter the Kingdom, when we encounter Jesus and our chance of life with him, we respond. We say ‘I will . . . I will respond to you.’
Our ‘I wills’ are our response to his glory, his goodness, his mercy and the possibility of living in the Kingdom. Jesus actually tells us where to start. He tells us the first and greatest ‘I will’ response in John 15. Here he explains that the appropriate response is what he invites us into: a life of friendship and abiding with him. He says to his disciples, and he says to us:
I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener. He cuts off every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful. You are already clean because of the word I have spoken to you. Remain in me, as I also remain in you. No branch can bear fruit by itself; it must remain in the vine. Neither can you bear fruit unless you remain in me.
I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing.
(John 15.1–5)
He’s inviting us to abide, dwell, live or remain in him, as he promises to remain in us. He uses the image of a vine with branches bearing fruit. It’s not about struggle and striving, or about trying to please God. It’s not wondering if you’re making the grade. It’s not a distant thing. It’s close and deep friendship with Jesus: friendship with him as our first goal and response.
Our greatest ‘I will’ in response to him is to cultivate rhythms of love and dependency, where you actually know him and receive his resources and presence and power, as we live out this eternal Kingdom life. In the Gospels, Jesus keeps telling us he is available in and through belief, trust and faith in him. We’re to know him and abide in him. Before we do anything else, before we produce, we remain. We pursue a life of peace and rest in his loving presence. Out of that place we bear fruit. You were made for relationship with him. You were made to give yourself as a response. You were made to give yourself to a life of deep, transforming and empowering friendship with him. Will that be your first and greatest ‘I will’ as a response to Jesus?
This is what I try to do. I try to live out what Jesus invites us into in John 15. To pursue Jesus and friendship with him, then let what he has done in me impact and overflow into the world around me. All the ‘I wants’, all the things we want to reach for and the impact that we dream about, are wonderful – but Jesus tells us that they are all unsustainable, apart from friendship with him.
Here are a few more important ‘I wills’ in response to Jesus for me – and I hope they are for you. The next one is worship. In response to Jesus, I will cultivate a life of worship. Not worship when I feel like it, not worship when there’s a smoke machine and an incredible worship team. I will cultivate a life of worship wherever I happen to be. You’re probably thinking that all life can be worship and I, of course, agree and endorse that. But what I am referring to here are dedicated times of worship, when we open our mouths to worship by ourselves, corporately, in a small group or in children’s ministry, or wherever we happen to be.
Do we build a life of worship? An intimate tending to the presence of Jesus? A life of adoration that leads to an encounter with him? That’s our inheritance as a movement. Worship that isn’t just singing songs about Jesus – but rather singing to him, because he is worthy and he deserves everything we have to give and more. When we encounter him in his presence by his Spirit, he visits us as we pour out our hearts in worship and praise to him.
Worship has been, and still continues to be, a special place. A ‘thin’ place, where the space between heaven and earth is far narrower than usual. We offer Jesus all that we are and he visits us. He breathes on us as people, he heals us, he encourages us, he empowers us. In response to who Jesus is, will we