Surviving In Egypt (Life of Joseph) No.25- Survival Through Diversity episode artwork

EPISODE · Oct 6, 2019 · 35 MIN

Surviving In Egypt (Life of Joseph) No.25- Survival Through Diversity

from GraceLife Sarasota · host Joe Davis

In my experience, one of the hardest things for a church to develop is true diversity. Many churches talk about it, celebrate it, even put it on their websites—but let’s be honest: we feel safer when everyone looks like us, sounds like us, and shares our background. Diversity is risky. It’s uncomfortable. It’s messy. And deep down, we know it. We would never say out loud that we want our church to be white, middle to upper middle class, with similar experiences. We may not even consciously realize we resist diversity. But our staffing budgets, our programs, our habits, and our behavior often tell a different story. We will tolerate diversity—only if the costs are controlled, the risks are minimized, and we only experience the benefits. That’s because the American church has allowed the Gospel to become narcissistic. We’ve stopped treating it as a worldview—a lens through which we interpret history, culture, and even our own stories. Instead, we’ve shrunk it down to something that exists primarily for our comfort, our preferences, our spiritual experience. But survival in Egypt is so much bigger than our own experience. This week we learn how Jacob finally saw past his own family—past his own tribe, his own comfort, his own limited perspective—to the real promise God made to Abraham and Isaac: that their family would become a blessing to all nations. Not just people who looked like them. Not just people who lived like them. Not just people who made them comfortable. God’s vision has always been global, multi ethnic, multi cultural, beautifully diverse. And if we’re going to survive in Egypt—and influence Egypt—we must learn to see what Jacob finally saw: God’s mission is bigger than us, and His blessing is meant for the whole world.

In my experience, one of the hardest things for a church to develop is true diversity. Many churches talk about it, celebrate it, even put it on their websites—but let’s be honest: we feel safer when everyone looks like us, sounds like us, and shares our background. Diversity is risky. It’s uncomfortable. It’s messy. And deep down, we know it. We would never say out loud that we want our church to be white, middle to upper middle class, with similar experiences. We may not even consciously realize we resist diversity. But our staffing budgets, our programs, our habits, and our behavior often tell a different story. We will tolerate diversity—only if the costs are controlled, the risks are minimized, and we only experience the benefits. That’s because the American church has allowed the Gospel to become narcissistic. We’ve stopped treating it as a worldview—a lens through which we interpret history, culture, and even our own stories. Instead, we’ve shrunk it down to something that exists primarily for our comfort, our preferences, our spiritual experience. But survival in Egypt is so much bigger than our own experience. This week we learn how Jacob finally saw past his own family—past his own tribe, his own comfort, his own limited perspective—to the real promise God made to Abraham and Isaac: that their family would become a blessing to all nations. Not just people who looked like them. Not just people who lived like them. Not just people who made them comfortable. God’s vision has always been global, multi ethnic, multi cultural, beautifully diverse. And if we’re going to survive in Egypt—and influence Egypt—we must learn to see what Jacob finally saw: God’s mission is bigger than us, and His blessing is meant for the whole world.

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Surviving In Egypt (Life of Joseph) No.25- Survival Through Diversity

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Faith Life Church with Keith Moore (Video) Keith Moore Keith Moore is the founder and president of Moore Life Ministries and Faith Life Church of both Branson, Missouri and Sarasota, Florida. Two of the greatest emphases of Brother Moore's ministry are the importance of the written Word and the necessity of being led by the Spirit.Having traveled extensively across the US and abroad for over 30 years, Keith and his wife Phyllis minister strongly on such areas as love, faith, healing, prosperity, and honor.Their heart is to see the lost saved, the sick healed, the distressed relieved, the broken restored, and the discouraged empowered to victory. Brother Moore says, "True Christianity is not the formal, powerless thing that so many have come to know. Real fellowship with the living Christ, the Anointed One, results in the destruction of every bondage, the removal of every burden, and the fulfillment of every good desire. There is no life so exciting as the victorious life that is true Christianity."You will find the teaching ministry of Matt Leicht - Life, Sarasota, Real Estate Matt Leicht On this podcast I talk about new things coming to Sarasota whether that be new Sarasota amenities, different building projects, or feature a local celebrity on the show. I also bring you the latest with Sarasota real estate, by sharing funny stories, new real estate market trends, current builder incentives and more. I get to do all of this by sharing personal stories and leaving you with a piece of motivation until we get back together next week. Music Compound Backstage Sharing news, events, and other happenings of Music Compound school of rock in Sarasota, FL as well as music news on the Suncoast. Inside Florida Politics Gannett Join Gannett Florida's all-star political lineup each week for a lively discussion and in-depth reporting on politics from the state of Florida. Zac Anderson from the Sarasota Herald Tribune, Gannett state capital correspondent John Kennedy and Palm Beach Post politics editor Antonio Fins bring you insight and analysis each week, along with special guest reporters fresh from the scene of breaking political news.

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In my experience, one of the hardest things for a church to develop is true diversity. Many churches talk about it, celebrate it, even put it on their websites—but let’s be honest: we feel safer when everyone looks like us, sounds like us, and...

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