John Markum

The CRAZIEST 48 Hours of my Life!

The only thing crazier in fact might have been 2 season with Jack Bauer. Regardless, my weekend began with my sister, Jennifer, coming with me to church on Saturday morning to prepare for the surprise baby shower for my wife Tiffany. My first mistake was telling her, “If I can just get through the next 12 hours…!” Little did I realize at the time what all would happen in that small period of time, and how much more I had to do afterwards.

The baby shower went from noon to 2pm, after which, Tiffany (9 months pregnant) began complaining about a pain in her side. At 2:30 she called her doctor who told her to go into the hospital to be safe. Jenn takes her in so that I can perform the wedding which began at 3pm. I go to the hospital immediately afterward. The doctors fear that she may have a bad appendix or gall bladder in addition to her early contractions.

They decide to do a sonogram at 7 – 7:30, which gives me just enough time to get through the Saturday night service that I lead at Edgewood and Tiff feels safe letting me go to do it. I get through our live Q&A just in time to get back as the doctor tells her: “SO we’ll take you in about 30 minutes for your C-section!” Wow, what have I missed!

At 8:19pm, July 30th, Elijah Jesse Markum was born via C-section at Trinity 7th Street; 7 lbs. 4 oz. 19 in. Mom and baby boy are both healthy and suppose to come home tomorrow.

I took our other 3 to church on Sunday morning, did another Live Q&A with our Youth Pastor in the Youth Service, checked on Tiff and the baby, performed a second wedding for the weekend, helped my sister and brother-in-law get my older kids fed and into be, dropped in on the reception as the party winded down, and finally crashed on the couch in my wife’s hospital room, with a brand new baby who “kept us company” all night.

I’ve managed to recuperate some today! Luckily, I have a few days off this week. But I had to share with all my blog viewers how our weekend went. And no, the rumors of my blog getting repossessed are not true. Thanks for asking, though. And thanks to everyone who prayed for me and my family this weekend! Tiffany and I are in your debt.

Blessings,

John

How to treat a new follower of Christ

I find it interesting that many church people would cross mountain and sea to bring their friend or loved one to Christ. But afterwards many of these same people expect them to change over night. It just doesn’t happen that way. Here are a few things that every newer follower of Christ needs from the people in their life that are suppose to be more mature in the Lord:

  1. Extra Grace: We’re suppose to be gracious to one another anyway, but especially to the person who has recently crossed the line of faith, we should understand that they need people to give them the benefit of the doubt and love them through some things. This often means patience as they identify themselves in the church family.
  2. Accountability: Giving them more grace does not mean they get away with inappropriate behavior or sin. What it does mean, is that we help them see where they need growth, relate personally to their difficulties when possible, and encourage them that we’re all becoming more like Christ together.
  3. Meaningful Friendships: The saying, “Nobody cares how much you know, until they know how much you care” applies to everyone. Personally, I choose to take my criticism from the people who love me. So newer followers of Jesus need people who genuinely care about them as a person and not just as a “prospect” to their church.
  4. Opportunities to Grow: We all need new challenges to take us to higher levels. This is certainly true of a new believer. A baby wants to learn to roll over, then crawl, then walk, then run, then climb. New believers don’t want to sit in a crib forever either. They want a faith that is real, and we should encourage that. Help them find places to serve, share, learn, relate, and use their faith in practical ways.
  5. Freedom: All of us need the ability to be who and what God created us for individually. There is plenty of room for us to be different and yet unified. Our goal is unity, not uniformity. There is a difference. We can all be ourselves in plenty of areas. We should encourage new believers to discover their uniqueness in Christ. This also means providing the safety for them to ask honest questions and get honest answers.

Whether you are a newer follower of Jesus or a veteran, we all have room to grow. And to the seasoned follower of Jesus, you’re missing a huge part of your own spiritual growth if you’re not willing to love a new brother or sister in Christ into your church family. Be like Jesus and be inclusive!

Blessings,

John

The phrase no pain, no gain has been a mantra for athletes and fitness junkies for years. And what they understand about physical pain needs to be broadened to a much more general use in all of our lives. Pain hurts. That's the whole problem. No one enjoys it, and if someone does, we rightfully

The Premium of Pain