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Knowing our associates

January 13, 2008 by Keith Seabourn 1 Comment

Christmas was a fun time. Kay and I received greetings from staff friends around the world. Friends in Asia, in the Middle East, in Europe, in Africa sent Christmas greetings. We heard from so many of our U.S. donors and friends.

We had the privilege of spending time with our children and grandchildren and parents in Texas.

Many of the Christmas greetings we received and the family updates came by email or an electronic greeting card, especially from our friends around the world. It’s fun to live in an internetworked, connected world where we can communicate so easily and inexpensively. Some of the Christmas greetings came from people I’ve never met in person, but we’ve met and worked together in online forums as members of “virtual” teams that work together online.

Kay and I, as individual staff members of Campus Crusade for Christ, have a very large network of friends and associates living and ministering around the globe. We know a small fraction of the staff of Campus Crusade for Christ.

When I put on my “Chief Technology Officer hat”, I realize how important it is for our ministry to know who our staff are around the world, where they are ministering, how it is going, how we can help them more. But currently, we do not have a global system where all our staff are known.

This might sound atrocious, but at our core, we are a highly decentralized group of individuals called together by God and bound together by our passion to know Him and to make Him known. Our staff are well known within each individual country, but not as well “known” across geographic and continental boundaries.

This hasn’t been a significantly limiting issue until recent years. With God’s gift of the internet to speed missions and allow us to win boldly, build deeply and send urgently using email, web, chat, video and other internet technologies, geographic barriers no longer exist.

We can also work together as staff members across these geographic boundaries. This happens every day in Campus Crusade for Christ. We have teams of people working on common projects where some live in Asia, some live in Europe, some live in North America. We work as a single team because God has provided communication that no other generation of missionaries has ever had.

We now have a greater need to know who the staff of Campus Crusade for Christ are at a global level. We need to know who to invite into some of these projects.

To put this project into perspective, imagine a project to know all the church members in your city, in all churches, that is accurate every week. How would you begin such a project?

So I am on the road again. In an airplane seat again. I left my best traveling buddy (Kay) behind in Orlando. I’m making a short trip to Singapore where for a meeting top global leadership to begin addressing the issue of how to create a global human resources system so that we can know who our staff are, how God has gifted them, where they live, how they are ministering and contributing to the Great Commission, and other simple information.

We’ll launch this project with a physical meeting in a geographic place (Singapore). We’ll mostly work the project through internet communication tools like email, Skype telephone, Oovoo video conferencing, Global ConneXion virtual teaming, and WebEx online meetings.

Living as a missionary in 2008 is filled with tremendous possibilities that never existed for previous generations of missionaries. It’s a tremendous time to help everyone know someone who truly follows Jesus.

Filed Under: Ministry

Global cell phone use at 50 percent

December 14, 2007 by Keith Seabourn Leave a Comment

Global cell phone use at 50 percent – Yahoo! News

I read today that the number of cellphone subscriptions now is half the population of the planet.

Worldwide mobile telephone subscriptions reached 3.3 billion — equivalent to half the global population — on Thursday, 26 years after the first cellular network was launched…

What does that mean to you? I thought about it. To me, it sounds like half the planet is only a phone conversation away from hearing the real meaning of Christmas. Emmanuel — God with us. Half the planet is only a text message or a web page away from knowing about Jesus.
It sounds to me like we’ve got work to do, co-laborers.

Filed Under: Ministry

Edit Google Maps

November 23, 2007 by Keith Seabourn Leave a Comment

I’m a big user of Google Maps. But since I moved into our home in Orlando four years ago, Google Maps has led people to the wrong house in our neighborhood. Now, Google allows users to edit their maps to improve accuracy. Hooray!

Before, I would tell people, “You can look up our address on Google Maps. It will get you close, on the correct street. But we’re on the other side of the lake, so keep driving around the lake until you find our house number.”

So, I’ve edited Google Maps. Now anyone can use Google Maps and actually get to our house without driving around the lake looking for house numbers. Cool!

Now, if Mapquest and MSN Maps would just let me update their location marker…

So if you want to come see Kay and me, please use Google Maps!

Filed Under: Personal

Keith & Kay Seabourn

November 22, 2007 by Keith Seabourn 1 Comment

I’m reading in 1 Peter this morning. Some of the passages are especially challenging.

“So be truly glad! There is wonderful joy ahead, even though it is necessary for you to endure many trials for a while. These trials are only to test your faith, to show that it is strong and pure. … So if your faith remains strong after being tried by fiery trials, it will bring you much praise and glory and honor on the day when Jesus Christ is revealed…” (1:6,7, New Living Translation).

I don’t understand why God needs to use trials to test our faith. It feels bad. It seems there must be another way. But apparently there is not, because he is both all wise and all loving. Putting these together tells me that he is not playing games with me. This is serious stuff and he’s committed to me – both as his child whom he loves and as his child whom he knows will be happiest as I grow stronger and purer.

I was also finishing reading in James this morning. Ch 4:10 surprised me in NLT (which is why I like to read different translations from year to year). “When you bow down before the Lord and admit your dependence on him, he will lift you up and give you honor.”

I’ve been convicted personally about my need to feel and express my dependence on the Lord more regularly, multiple times each day. It’s easy to drift into independence where the focus becomes the mechanics of the Christian life and the processes that lead to success (like sharing my faith with the guy sitting next to me; organizing successful conferences, etc.). It’s a fine line and it’s not very sharply defined. But a life truly dependent on God delights him. By this time in our Christian lives, many of us know the words, and I can trick myself into a feeling of dependence.

My prayer lately is that I’ll truly live out my total dependence on him. It pleases him. He loves it when it’s pure in my own soul.

Filed Under: Personal, Thoughts

Fall colors in Winston-Salem

November 22, 2007 by Keith Seabourn Leave a Comment

Fall colors in Winston-Salem, North CarolinaKay and I are enjoying our time at Jennifer and Keli’s in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. And God delayed the fall colors until we could get here. They are several weeks late this year, according to locals. But they are JUST IN TIME for us! It’s beautiful. Here’s some examples of what we’re seeing.

We’re watching Macy’s parade, cooking a turkey, and enjoying being together.

Filed Under: Personal

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