February
2008
- Vol. 16
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Thirty
Years Jerusalem
The
story of God’s call to a covenant
community in Belgium
by
Sam Geleyn
children
in the community youth program
prepare
some
art work for the 30th anniversary
celebration
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Does God still call people
these days?
Many people would argue that often God seems very
distant. Wouldn’t
life be a lot easier if he just told us what to do, with
a loud and audible
voice, in the way he called Abraham and Samuel? Maybe.
The story of the
Jerusalem
community in Belgium, however, is a clear example
that thousands of
years after Samuel, God has not stopped calling people
together for a clear
purpose and mission.
Jerusalem
is a multi-cultural and multi-lingual
community
Brief history
The early beginnings of Jerusalem
go back to January 1977, when the Belgian Cardinal
Suenens invited a group
of Americans from the Word of God community in Ann
Arbor, Michigan, USA,
to come to Belgium and work with him. As they tried to
discern whether
God wanted them to start a community in this small
country, God answered
very quickly and clearly, bringing a lot of people
together. Only eight
months later the first Belgians made their underway
commitments during
the first community weekend. During the following years,
the Lord continued
to add people to them and revealed more of his call. In
1980 the community,
until then called “Word of God Belgium”, received a new
name from the Lord:
Jerusalem,
a people called to be a sign of peace and unity across
races, cultures,
and languages.
Despite serious difficulties during the 90s, when a lot
of people left
the community because of a leadership crisis, the Lord
has continued to
build his house. The last five years have been years of
rebuilding, regaining
strength, and rediscovering our call. The community now
has 100 members,
but more importantly, God’s joy and power are ever more
visible. Faithful
to its early call to unity, Jerusalem still has members
of different races,
cultures, and tongues, all living in different places in
Belgium. The recent
political crises and division between the different
parts of the country
have strengthened the conviction for this call to be a
sign of unity.
Part of a region
Being part of a community of communities in the Sword of
the Spirit
has been a rich blessing. The support and prayers from
other communities
throughout the European and Middle East region have made
a big difference.
Our students and young professionals especially have
benefited a lot from
regional events, like winter retreats and summer
activities, where they
have received a lot of formation and found strength in
building lifelong
friendships with peers from various Sword of the Spirit
communities and
outreaches. This support has been and continues to be an
invaluable gift
from the Lord and has helped people to press on in times
of spiritual dryness
and struggle. As a community we have had the honor of
hosting a few regional
activities over the last few years (Kairos Weekend, the
regional council
meetings, On Holiday – a weeklong regional summer
vacation for 650 people).
Serving our brothers and sisters, experiencing the unity
we have with all
of them in our common call and living it out together
has been a tremendous
source of joy and strength.
The
guys’ garage (after a couple of days of
painting and cleaning) is now the
new base
for
reaching out to university students in Leuven
A new call to mission
Recently, we have felt the Lord calling us to put more
effort and thought
into evangelism. The “Lighthouse Project” has given way
to five Alpha courses
being set up in the various home towns of community
members. A “flying”
outreach team of speakers is supporting these local
initiatives by giving
the talks in the different places. We experience God
giving us a desire
to invite more and more people into a deeper
relationship with him and
into the richness of community life. We are hoping that
our dispersion
throughout the country, usually regarded as our main
obstacle to strong
community life, might actually allow us to reach a lot
more people! It
is remarkable how God is also using this new project to
bring us closer
to each other, young and old, French speaking and
Flemish speaking.
university
students enjoy a meal during a recent Alpha
course
For the past seven years, another important mission
field has been our
student outreach. This has been a place for community
members who have
recently become adults to grow in their personal
relationship with the
Lord and to discover his call for their lives. Over the
last three years
the Lord has sent us a few new students, and we
experience his call more
and more to reach out to students in Leuven who are
seeking the Lord. With
a new name, Pharos (lighthouse), and an enthusiastic
team running the outreach,
we are hoping we can shine his light ever more clearly
into the Leuven
university scene.
And so we are confident to say that God is a living and
present God,
calling and equipping people to be a witness of his love
and glory. We
are thankful for what he has given us and look
confidently toward the future
with hearts full of hope and joy for what he is about to
do.
No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind
has conceived
what God has prepared for those who love him (1
Corinthians 2:9).
[Sam Geleyn,
age 24, has grown
up in Jerusalem
and has been an underway member of the community since
a year and a half
. He graduated from the Catholic University of Leuven
in Commercial Engineering
in 2006 . He teaches Secondary School in Brussels and
leads the university
outreach Pharos (Lighthouse) in
Leuven.]
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