Tag Archive: Origin Church

Prayer of the People, 19 June 2022

Heavenly Father,

We praise you and rejoice in your communion — the communion of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Your delight and joy is evident in the beauty of your creation. We see your mystery and majesty expressed in the glories of the night sky and in the wonder of energy passing from  neurone to neurone between synapses. 

There is no space that has kept you from your Creation. We believe for you have revealed yourself. You have made yourself known. You have not left yourself without a witness. 

Even our sin has not kept you from us. Though it ruined our view, though it kept us in darkness, you have ripped the dividing veil through the obedience of Jesus Christ and have given us grace to receive you through your Spirit.


You have triumphed over rebellion.
You have triumphed over pride.
You have triumphed over sorrow.
You have triumphed over despair.
You have triumphed over apathy
You have triumphed over death..

At the Cross it looked like you got tripped up by death. But we are reminded that You laid down your life — for you gave Jesus authority to lay down His life and to take it up again. And so He did! And you have given us grace to call Him Lord.

Hallelujah! Oh what love! We live in the glory of your resurrection, Now what shall we say? If you are for us, who can be against us? So, how long Lord? How long shall we wait?


As we wait Lord, your children are calling out to you in our struggles. We intercede today for the dear people of Sudan, Yemen, Columbia, and Ukraine. Bring peace Oh Lord, and raise up witnesses for your Son among them.

We intercede Oh Lord for our brothers and sisters who living, serving, and pouring out their lives in the neighbourhood around Hastings Street here in Vancouver . We ask you for the grace to love neighours well. May your Spirit bring more life.

We intercede for the dear student families we met during the Acadia Food Hub who reside in the space between what they know and the One they don’t yet know. We ask that you would give them light and wisdom to see and to be embraced by You.

We ask this in the Name of Jesus and we pray as He taught us… ( join me in the Lord’s Prayer)
Our Father in heaven,
hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come,
your will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
And forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors.
And lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from the evil one;
for yours is the kingdom,
and the power,
and the glory, forever.
Amen. 

Prayer of the People, 15 May 2022

A Call to Prayer between now and Pentecost Sunday, June 5th.

We have been invited into a season of prayer. As a church we see the signs that many of our friends and family are carrying anxiety in their bodies. We are asking each one of you to make a special effort to include a simple prayer in your personal and group disciplines of life as we seek the Lord for His grace and healing.

The Apostle Paul wanted the church in Rome to flourish. He writes to this diverse fellowship of believers: “…the kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking but of righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit.” Let’s seek God for the flourishing of His Church. This week let’s pray together. “Lord, May Your righteousness come.”

The Prayer of the People

Heavenly Father, May Your Kingdom come. Thank you for the grace of faith that has brought us into your communion, the communion of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Through the life, death on the cross, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, you have displayed your love and your power over death. Jesus is Lord! He has poured out on us your promised Holy Spirit.

May the rule and reign of Jesus be evident in this church.

Lord, May Your righteousness come. (pause)
In my life… Lord, May Your righteousness come…(pause)
On this campus… Lord, May Your righteousness come… (pause)
In my work place and in my coworkers Lord, May Your righteousness come…… (pause)
In my neighbourhood Lord, May Your righteousness come…… (pause)
In my family… Lord, May Your righteousness come… (pause)
In Buffalo, Jennin, and Mariupol… Lord, May Your righteousness come… (pause)

Lord we yield our lives to you and open our hearts to you. May the humility and strength of Jesus’ way be evident in our lives. We confess that you are Lord with sovereignty over our past, our present and our future. We shall not run from the cross, but rather we shall embrace it so that we meet you in it and joyfully anticipate that the Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead shall also raise us.

(Join me in the Lord’s Prayer)

Our Father in heaven,

hallowed be your name,

your kingdom come,

your will be done,

on earth as it is in heaven.

Give us today our daily bread.

And forgive us our debts,

as we also have forgiven our debtors.

And lead us not into temptation,

but deliver us from the evil one;

for yours is the kingdom,

and the power, and the glory, 

forever.  Amen

Cultivating Community For Good

Note to subscribers: Origin Church begins a series through the book of James this weekend. I’m providing an introduction to the series here:

HI Originals — We are getting ready to study the book of James together. And here’s the theme for our life together over the next two months. : Cultivating Community for Good.

James writes:

“Don’t be deceived, my dear brothers and sisters. Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows. He chose to give us birth through the word of truth, that we might be a kind of first fruits of all he created.” James 1:16-18

Community in the Church is a gift from the Father. It is produced, it is birthed, by the word of truth, the Gospel in our hearts. He has made us brothers and sisters in this new family. And it’s meant to be good! I’m convinced that community is a good gift and that God wants us to be a community for good. I’m excited about that and terrified at the same time. I’m excited because being a community that produces good fruit is what Jesus envisioned for the church. Goodness characterizes all that God makes. The good quality of God’s Creation is summarized in Genesis 1. After each day of Creation, God says, “It is good” and of people, “It is very good.” 

In good community diverse people are brought together by Jesus to become like Him and act like His family. lLves are restored, souls are saved, people are healed, kindness and generosity are common and gifts are redeemed. That’s exciting! 

But I’m terrified because I know we are not perfect. I know that goodness may not be the dominant memory or experience of the church for some people. With Jesus we know expectations are high. The followers of Jesus’ church are to be like trees producing good fruit. We must be realistic though — people are a mess and can be desperately wicked right at the core of who we are. Yes, to be in Christ is to know Jesus is changing us, Yes He has made us a new creation, but we let plenty of deathly rot creep back in. 

For every Christian leader that has abused their position, for the Christian parent who has resorted to violence or abandoned their spouse and children in neglect, for every church that has tried to cover up sexual abuse, for every community that has tolerated angry controlling malicious leaders, for every committee that has attacked, ignored, or discredited the messengers who were blowing the whistle— I’m sorry. It pains me. We should all be pained.

We have to be realistic about our situation. It’s not just that people are sinful. As Scot McKnight and Laura Barringer rightly observe in A Church Called TOV, church cultures, can become toxic. We know pollution kills. A toxic environment poisons the tree and therefore the tree yields bad fruit. And here’s the rub, toxic environments are not equipped to deal with sinful hearts and with leaders who are behaving badly. 

Jesus had plenty to say about trees and bad fruit. In Matthew 12 he says, 

33 “Make a tree good and its fruit will be good, or make a tree bad and its fruit will be bad, for a tree is recognized by its fruit. 34You brood of vipers, how can you who are evil say anything good? For the mouth speaks what the heart is full of. 35A good man brings good things out of the good stored up in him, and an evil man brings evil things out of the evil stored up in him. 36But I tell you that everyone will have to give account on the day of judgment for every empty word they have spoken. 37For by your words you will be acquitted, and by your words you will be condemned.”

Look, a church community is like a tree and the good person— we bring good things out of what is stored up in us and we are judged by what say and what we do. Sisters and brothers, a church that is cultivating community for good, that is cultivating good community is going to have to attend to the heart! But more than that — we are going to have to attend to the Father of Lights who reveals hearts, and who gives good gifts, He can “make a tree good.” But, he invites us to be participants in the process. Did you notice that? Jesus holds to the common  capacity of the farming community to make a tree good or to make a tree bad. The community is a system that feeds into itself. He says, “Make a tree good and its fruit will be good. Make a tree bad and its fruit will be bad.” What about our “making?”

What if we have allowed toxicity to infiltrate our cultures at home, at work, and even in church? Are we done for? Should we pack it in, chop it down and burn the orchard? One more tree parable offers hope to me. Changing culture requires continual prayer, nurture, truth telling, and action. Changing culture is not just one sermon series and then done! We know that — our adventure in 2021 is to Be More Like Jesus Together — but none of us believe that one series is going to complete that work. Cultivating Christ-likeness is an ongoing response to the grace of God in Christ and the whispers of His Spirit.

That’s why I’m encouraged by this parable from Luke 13 — God gives new chances to people and the church. When it comes to church and community do you come at it with an axe or with a spade? Here’s Jesus parable of hope but also urgency:

6Then he told this parable: “A man had a fig tree growing in his vineyard, and he went to look for fruit on it but did not find any. 7So he said to the man who took care of the vineyard, ‘For three years now I’ve been coming to look for fruit on this fig tree and haven’t found any. Cut it down! Why should it use up the soil?’

8 “ ‘Sir,’ the man replied, ‘leave it alone for one more year, and I’ll dig around it and fertilize it. 9If it bears fruit next year, fine! If not, then cut it down.’ ”

(Luke 13:6-9)


The person tending the vineyard hoped that changing the environment of the tree would ultimately change the tree. That’s cultivation. That’s what we could be doing for each other in the church. We could be cultivating goodness in the way we relate to each other. We can cooperating with the Holy Spirit to cultivating goodness in our hearts, so we yield or produce goodness in our community. But only if we will take the actions that cultivate our church culture towards goodness.

There’s so much available to us in the book of James — but here’s what we are going to focus on over the next two months. Church that cultivates goodness is able:
to Listen
to Include
to Act in Faith
to Speak
to Make Peace
to Humble Ourselves
to Pray and
to Restore.

It looks like we have a few more months of gathering online here in Vancouver. Our experience of christian community has been good but  variable over the past year. For some of us we have grown with Jesus by leaps and bounds ( we feel rich with Jesus), others of us have languished, and some have almost given up. (these feel impoverished). But James in the first part of Chapter One encourages us to not give up on Jesus or each other—instead we are called to persevere even though we are under pressure and facing trials of many kinds. 

Here’s what I’m trusting — even through this pandemic and the contraction of our liberties we can grow with Jesus! We can enjoy the gift of community that has been born among us through the Word of God sown into our hearts. God is creating good community in Jesus name now — if only we will remain open and responsive to Him and to each other.

It’s Been A Year

My awareness of the Covid-19 virus and it’s devastating and multi-varied symptoms, started in January 2020. A member of our Origin Church congregation had traveled home to Wuhan with her son for Chinese New Year. She texted my wife and I, saying something wasn’t right. People were sick; it was hard to get information. I started looking.

Within a couple of days I read a tiny article saying that Wuhan was going to be locked down. We texted and encouraged her to make her way home to Canada if they were healthy and she could leave. She made it.

Once in Canada she went straight from the hospital and quarantined with her son in the apartment for 21 days. Yes that’s right — 21 days! She did this voluntarily and in consultation with her family doctor while the rest of us were still trying to figure out if there was really a problem. She and her son were fine, but she was stunned that there were no questions and no instructions at YVR.

Sometime in the middle of February I heard a strange alert on CBC that come from the CDC asking organizations to begin making or reviewing plans to be shut down or continuing with limited operations for several weeks. This was strange! I had never heard such an alert in my life. So I came home that night around 9 PM and asked my family, “What would you want to have in the house if we had to stay at home for two weeks?”

Wow, the looks and the incredulity. But they answered, “Chocolate and toilet paper.” So off I went right then at 9:15 PM to the Superstore and did a big shop for extras that we would want to have in the house if we were here for two weeks. Yes, I bought chocolate and toilet paper.

Then I started following a couple of people on Twitter who were providing almost hourly updates on what was happening in Italy and Iran. Wuhan, Italy and Iran were part of my regular prayer and intercession for days. The images of people dying or dead in the streets were shocking. This was no ordinary flu. Our lives were about to change.

On Sunday March 8th 2020 our congregation gathered on the UBC campus. But I felt strange. Our team of students and staff decided that we were not going to shake hands at the doors and that because we were not sure we could safely administer the Lord’s Supper we were not going to include this in our gathering. These decisions did not feel easy. We tried to work out plans for gathering safely, but we were planning in the dark. We also decided that we would not reach out and touch the shoulder of our neighbour for the blessing at the conclusion of the service. We started socially distancing on March 8th. That’s the last Sunday we gathered publicly since the beginning of the pandemic.

By the next Sunday, 15 March 2020, the UBC campus was rolling up the carpet, shutting the doors, and moving online. So did we.

It’s been a year.

Prayer of the People, 15 Jan 2021

Heavenly Father,

You have loved us with an everlasting love. You saw each of us in our mother’s womb and you have knit us together for your glory. Now in the fellowship of your people, your new creation impulse is at work. Thank you for including us in your communion, the communion of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

What a happy thought Lord, our sin, not in part, but the whole, is nailed to the cross and we bear it no more. Praise the Lord. Praise the Lord! Thank you for the dramatic testimony of your love in the body of Jesus. We thank you for the grace to believe!

By your Spirit and not by the pride of our own strength cause your Word to be fulfilled in our generation. Build your church Lord right next to the gates of Hell. Rescue the perishing. Please  restore people on our campus and in our city into the image of their Creator through the knowledge of your Son Jesus Christ. Transform us that we might become like Him together.

Oh Lord, we lift up to you the Provinces of Ontario and Quebec. Comfort and heal Lord from the ravages and insecurities of the pandemic. Fortify them with your wisdom and with hope.

We lift up to you the dear people of Yemen and ask that you would bring peace.
We lift up to you the dear people of Turkey and ask that you would send rain.
We lift up to you the dear people residing in Strathcona Park here in Vancouver and ask that you would open hearts and open doors so each one may be treated with dignity and granted opportunities for safe housing and flourishing community.

Oh Lord we need you and so we pray…

(Please join me in the Lord’s Prayer.)

Our Father in heaven,
hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come,
your will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
And forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors.
And lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from the evil one;
for yours is the kingdom,
and the power, and the glory, 
forever. 
Amen.

This prayer was part of the Origin Church Weekend Broadcast on 15 January 2021