Sunday, December 16, 2007

Broomball and T-Wolves


This past Friday we finished up our December staff training. Throughout the week, we took a personality test and talked about how our personalities work as a team. We helped one another think for how we could work better as a staff team in light of our different personalities. At the end of the week, we played broomball as a staff team. For those of you that do not know, broomball is like hockey without skates and played with a ball. The object is the same as hockey (score a goal). It is loads of fun, but it left us more sore than we ever have been in our whole life. The picture above is of our staff team on the ice.

After the game, Charlie went with Ben, Drew, Trey, and Mark to a Timberwolves basketball game. (They are the NBA team in Minneapolis). We got to sit 8 rows behind the opposing teams bench. We got these great seats because we were at the game 2 hours before tipoff to pass out the promotional item for the game. So all we had to pay for these great seats was a few hours of time. Not a bad deal. This is the second game Charlie has gone to with these guys, and definitely not the last. It has been a real good time for him to build relationships with the guys, and the Lord gave him opportunities for good conversation while at the game. Here are some pictures below of the guys, the Sonics (opposing team), and Kevin Durant (the probable rookie of the year in the NBA)

(L to R: Trey, Drew, and Ben)

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Christmas Tree Shopping

We went to cut down our Christmas tree the day after Thanksgiving, making it an official Brooks family tradition. We took Jennifer's sister, Laura, with us this year. It was definitely colder this year than last, but we managed ok. Here are a few shots of the adventure



Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Christmas Train

Growing up, we had a train going around our Christmas tree every year. Lately, my dad sent up the trains up to us in Minnesota and we set the track up in out loft area. Here is a video of the train in action.

Friday, November 23, 2007

It's been too long

Sorry, in the busyness of the year we have neglected our "blogging." We are continuing our ministry in Minneapolis to students at Northwestern College. God has continued to bless our work at the college as the students we are connected with are continuing to grow in their walks with God. Here are a few pictures for our men's retreat and our women's retreat.
Studying the Word with students

Paintball target practice

Tree Chopping Contest


All the girls on the women's retreat

Girls hanging out

Group Discussion on the reatreat

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Discipleship Groups

These are pictures of our groups that we meet with. Charlie and his guys meet on Tuesday nights, while Jennifer and her girls meet on Wednesday nights. This is really what our ministry is all about. We hope that these groups will be used to grow students up in their walks with God and that they will be built into laborers for the Kingdom of God through them.


Jennifer's group: (top L-R: Kayleen and Kaitlin bottom L-R: Wendy, Adina, Jennifer, Carrie

Charlie's group: Charlie, Drew, Ben, and James

Thursday, August 30, 2007

North Shore

Our staff team took a trip up to the north shore of Lake Superior. It was a good time of fellowship and relaxation before the school year starts. We played tennis, volleyball, swam, went on a hike. We are including some pictures from our time up there. We may have one or two more coming in the future.

Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Bridge Collapse



The 35W bridge going into downtown Minneapolis collapsed this past Wednesday. We watched the television from 6:40 until almost 10 o’clock as they told stories and reported of the events. The bridge was under construction, reduced to 2 lanes in each direction, and at 6:05pm it collapsed with many cars on the bridge. My first thoughts were along the lines of, “That is unbelievable,” or “how could that have happened.” I was shocked and amazed. It was interesting to hear stories of those that survived. One man said his car split in half and he landed with the car front first into the ground after a 50-foot drop. He left with only a scratch on his nose. While there have been five deaths up to this point, I am shocked that there have not been more. Even construction workers who were not in cars survived the big drop. There is something about a tragedy like this that draws us, especially when it is so close to home. I think it is because we realize that we are no better off than the people who were on that bridge. We realize that we could have been driving on that bridge, and we want to know what it would have been like for us (as much as is possible).
I cannot help but be sobered by the fact that it could have been me or even my wife. I was on that bridge earlier that morning; Jennifer was on the bridge 3 hours beforehand. I have heard countless stories of our friends who were there 30 minutes, 10 minutes, and even 5 minutes before it collapsed. Karyn, Jennifer’s friend, would have been there had she not decided to wait around for her friend’s mom to pick her up at the church. In the midst of this tragedy, God is gracious. He spared so many lives; yes, He took a few, but so many were spared.
I cannot help but think of the somewhat cheesy, but very true analogy of Jesus being a bridge to life. So often, we, as humans, put all of our trust in things of this world to bring us life. Sometimes these things hold up for us for a while (much like the bridge held people up for 40 years). We think there is no way that they could ever let us down. As my friend Drew said when he heard of the collapse, “um…bridges aren’t supposed to do that.” That is the way we feel when we construct these things in our life that we put our trust in. If they fail, we think that they are not supposed to do that. The only thing that will not fail is Jesus (2 Corinthians 1:20). He is the bridge that leads to life. The bridge collapsing was such a tragedy because life, the thing that humans value above all else, was taken away from people. This can happen eternally when we trust in our man-made things to give us life. Sure they may hold up for 5 years, 20 years, maybe even 80, but then what. When we die, they give way. Jesus is the same yesterday, today, and forever. I will end with Jesus’ words in Luke 13:4-5:
“Or those eighteen on whom the tower in Siloam fell and killed them: do you think that they were worse offenders than all the others who lived in Jerusalem? No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all likewise perish”
Were the 5 who died when the 35W bridge crossing the Mississippi collapsed worse than everyone else who lives in Minneapolis? No, but unless we repent, we will all likewise perish.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Summer Beach Project

We just got back from a few days at Summer Beach Project in Myrtle Beach, SC. It was such a good time for us. We got to catch up with many of our students that we had not seen in 2 months. As of now, all the students are back at home and will return to campus at the end of August.
God really did a huge work in their lives this summer. he has revealed more truth about the Gospel and they really are different people now from when they left in June. Drew Kirch, freshman at NWC, has grown a ton and is really looking forward to continuing to grow and impact others back at Northwestern in the Fall.
Karyn and Adina both saw the Lord grow them through tough situations with their rooms. It was hard, but the Lord was very faithful to them as they saw Him work in some big ways. Here are a few pictures from our time in Myrtle Beach.

Charlie and Drew

Jennifer with Adina

Jennifer with Karyn

Human Foosbal during campus time

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Updated Exterior

Without many students around and things like that to take pictures of, we have uploaded pictures of the work we have done on our house. We (Jennifer, her mom, her stepdad, and sister) painted the whole house and put up shutters as well.
Hang in there and we will have more pictures once the school year approaches.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Our Anniversary

We have officially been married for one year. It is hard to believe and the year has flown by. To celebrate we took a one night trip to a town called Lake City, MN. Lake City is right on Lake Pepin, which is the widest part of the Mississippi River in Minnesota. We stayed at a Bed and Breakfast called "The Frog and Bear." It was a good time for us to just be together and enjoy one another with no other distractions. We ate dinner on the Mississippi at a place called Skyline on Pepin. Trust us, the name makes it sound a whole lot cooler than it really is. Anyway, here are some pictures for you to enjoy.

Charlie and Jennifer at Lake Pepin

The Frog and Bear Bed and Breakfast

Us at dinner

The Front Yard

We wanted to give you guys the opportunity to see the outside of our house in Spring time. Jennifer loves the pink bush on the left side of the house.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Summer in the Cities

We are finishing up the school year here, having last time conversations with many of the people that we are ministering to, hoping to set them up well for their spiritual growth this summer. We are already beginning our Summer in the Cities program. This will go from now until the middle of August. Many students from all over the Midwest come to Minneapolis-St. Paul for the summer, so we have a program to help them grow in their walks with God throughout the summer. We are studying the book of Colossians and giving them teachings on other life issues.
Our schedule:
Tuesday Night Teaching (TNT)- 7PM - We talk about studying the Bible, sharing our faith, worship, prayer, and many other aspects of the Christian life
Thursday Night Bible Study - 6PM - We meet and play games, then eat dinner, then have a 30 minute Bible study on the book of Colossians
Saturday Night - Attend church as a group, then have some informal time of fellowship following the service
If you are interested in more information click here

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Long awaited Pictures

We finally have our house in a presentable state. First a description There are 3 levels (main floor, basement, and loft area). On the main floor is a kitchen, living room, 2 bedrooms, and a bathroom. In the basement there is a den, bedroom, bathroom, and laundry room. Here are the pictures:

Loft Room



kitchen



living Room (main floor)



Bedroom



Office/Extra Bedroom



Basement: Den



Basement: Guest Room



Basement: Bathroom

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

April Showers Bring May Flowers


Our paradigm of what this phrase meant was blown out of the water when we woke up to this on April 4th. Snow in April? Moving up here has allowed us to experience things that we never would have experienced living down south.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Gospel Relief

We just returned form our trip to New Orleans with our students. It was truly an amazing time where God opened our eyes to many different things. We used 2 Corinthians 8:9 as our theme verse while we were down there "You know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ that though he was rich, yet for your sake became poor, so that you by his poverty might become rich." We talked about how we have been given everything in Christ and we should follow His example of going to those who are less fortunate than us. We helped gut (remove everything down to the studs) 2 houses that had not been touched since the storm. It was eye opening to see everything down there. The biggest things for me (Charlie) was just seeing all of the devastation, giving me a realistic picture in my head. I could not imagine losing everything like so many of those people did. I am so thankful for what I have, but do not want to hold on to it too tightly, knowing that God could take it at any minute. We are stewards of the things that we "have" in this world. I was also hit hard by many of the verses in scripture that we studied that talked about giving to the poor. We see so clearly that God has a heart for the poor, so we are called to the same. I want to always be characterized as a person who looks to others' interests and gives freely to the poor (even when I don't think they deserve it). The parable of the Good Samaritan teaches us to care for the less fortunate when it is uncomfortable, inconvenient, or someone that we do not necessarily like all that much. Throughout our time down there, we read through Theirs is the Kingdom by Robert Lupton. I want to encourage you to look at a few verses in your free time. Matthew 25:31-46, Galatians 2:10, James 1:27, and Hebrews 13:1,2.
Now for the pictures:

Our team in New Orleans

The inside of Elvin's house...you can see the mold on the wall (6-7 feet flooding)

The pile of stuff outside of Elvin's house after we cleared it

The finished product...a gutted house

Devastation in lower 9th Ward

More Hurricane damage

House number 2...flooding up to the ceiling

Group in second house gutted

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

New House - The Outside

Here is a picture of the outside of our house. The next picture is a taste of what our Sunday afternoon looked like after receiving one foot of snow. We had lots of shoveling to do (2 hours worth). We will put up more pictures of the inside once we officially move in.


Monday, February 19, 2007

STP

Every Sunday night we get together with our student leaders for something we call STP. It stands for sharing, training, and prayer. We pray for the campus that God would use us to build laborers on the campus. We usually pray with a map in front of us, reminding us that the Gospel going forth to the nations is the end. This is always such a great time of encouragment for us. It is fun to see how God is changing our students' vision for their lives and for the campus. Our training time has been spent going through the book "Teaching to Change Lives" by Howard Hendricks. I highly recommend you reading it if you are in a position where you are looking to influence people around you (we are praying that all of you would have a desire to impact others with the Gospel). This is a picture of the students taken after STP two weeks ago.

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Winter Carnival '07

We braved the 0 degree wind chill to see some ice and snow sculptures at the annual Winter Carnival in St. Paul. It is a miracle that Charlie was able to get the camera out of the pocket long enough to take the picture. But it didn't seem quite as bad once we experienced 64 hours of temperatures below zero. The coldest in 2 years. Enjoy these pics from the carnival.