Posts Tagged ‘Immersion’

Redemption Group Immersion—Seattle, March 2012

Monday, January 9th, 2012

Pre-registration is now open for the March 2012 Redemption Group Immersion. If you’re a ministry leader and would like to launch Redemption Groups in your own church or ministry, this is a great opportunity for training your team. Head over to the Get Started page to find everything you need to know, including next steps for building your Redemption Groups ministry and an application for the Immersion.

A Glimpse into the Laboratory: Counseling in Community

Thursday, September 8th, 2011

The most frequently asked question about Redemption Groups is “when is the next Immersion“. We’re working to develop a network of leaders and churches to host Immersions much more often to allow regular opportunities. In fact, there’s one coming up in St. Louis, MO in January 2012, and very likely another in the Pacific Northwest (Seattle or Portland) in March 2012—more details forthcoming. To hear announcements for those opportunities, be sure to sign up for the e-mailing list on this site, and also the Immersion waiting list.

In the meantime, we’ve been developing additional ways to train leaders for Redemption Groups that we hope will create more opportunities for training, most notably the training course we call Counseling in Community, or more affectionately, CinC (pronounced “see in see”).

This course combines training in some of the basic biblical counseling skills outlined by Paul Tripp in Instruments in the Redeemer’s Hands, with some of the heart-searching content in Redemption, all practiced in realtime in a “fishbowl” lab environment. The typical CinC course runs parallel to the weekly Redemption Group program. Each week, CinC students join Redemption Group participants for the Redemption main session. After the main session, when RG participants go to their groups, CinC students remain for some skill instruction from Instruments, followed by a lab exercise.

The lab, which is part three of each session, brings together and puts into action what students get from part one (Redemption main teaching)—we’ll call that the sermon—and part two (Instruments skill instruction). The sermon is intended to stir the student’s heart and set up a question that they’ll take into their lab exercise. The skill instruction component works through a series of skills from Instruments in the Redeemer’s Hands, like “enter the person’s world through entry gates“. From session to session, we address aspects of LOVE, KNOW, SPEAK and DO—the four major components of Tripp’s counseling model. (Sometimes, we’ve run a compact four-session series, in which case, we work on only four of the skills in Instruments, and replace full Redemption teachings with five to seven minute mini-sermons or devotionals, based either on bible passages that correspond to themes in Redemption, or other bible passages).

The lab looks like the following diagram.

 

In the lab, students sit in an arrangement like the diagram above. Participants in the yellow pod will discuss their response to the sermon, engaging in twenty to thirty minutes of group dialogue and counseling—like a slice of Redemption Group. Typically, one or two people in that span of time will end up on the “hot seat”, being pursued in counseling by one or more others.

While the yellow pod is engaged in this discussion in the inner circle, the green and blue pods seated in the outer circle observe the yellow pod’s interaction, paying close attention to general things like the pace of the conversation, the non-verbals and how well they work together, and more specifically, they watch for the entry gates (for example): What entry gates were opened? Which did they go through? How did they go through the gates? What effect did it have on the one being counseled when this or that entry gate was gone through? What effect did it have when some other entry gate was missed?

At some point, the Lab Facilitator pauses the inner circle’s conversation and transitions the lab into a time of debriefing. Everyone discusses what they observed, how it felt, and what they can learn from what went well and what could have gone better. Each session, the topic for the inner circle’s discussion changes to follow the sermon series, and new observation tasks are added to the outer circle as each skill from Instruments is introduced, and each pod rotates into the inner circle. Observations build over time.

These labs have been very fruitful in several ways. First, there is personal transformation as hearts are laid bare and the Spirit does his work in real time through the Word and the community. This is a real life discussion after all, fishbowl observers notwithstanding. Second, students’ eyes are opened to so much that is going on during these interactions by watching others counsel and being counseled, and by having their own counseling observed and receiving feedback. Third, they learn more how to listen and talk deeply with others, especially in group contexts.

This has helped us achieve a variety of outcomes, including the following:

  1. For those who’ve never gone through a Redemption Group, it has been eye-opening and paradigm-shifting like a Redemption Group, though not as intense or in-depth as a Redemption Group. This has let us introduce a lot more of our community to this kind of conversation, which in turn deepens their communities.
  2. It has helped us surface new candidates for Redemption Group leadership. People who may not have thought of themselves as counselors find themselves coming to life and using talents they didn’t know they had. (At the same time, there are those who imagine themselves to be counselors, but demonstrate a lack of readiness to counsel in these labs. By identifying this early in the lab environment, we can avoid spending time and energy on developing them as counselors until the time is right for their further development.)
  3. It has been a good skills training for existing volunteer counselors, including Redemption Group leaders.
  4. As we’ve developed lab facilitators, we came to see that the skills that are good for facilitating a lab are also good for supervising a Redemption Group and coaching its leaders. So running these labs has also helped us train group supervisors.
  5. It’s been much more scalable for introducing people to counseling in a community setting and recruiting new leaders, where previously the Redemption Groups themselves were our only viable means. A typical Redemption Group involves two leaders with six participants, a ratio of 1:3. A typical CinC lab involves two leaders with twenty-four participants, a ratio of 1:12, or four times as many participants as leaders.

There are trade-offs, of course. A CinC lab is no replacement for a full Redemption Group experience; lab participants don’t get to go as deeply into their own hearts: the time in the inner circle is shorter and each student may go into the inner circle a few times through the duration of the course. On the other hand, this lab format allows many more people to have an eye-opening experience: this is what deep conversation in community can sound like and feel like.

We think this training method is going to be a very nice complement to the Redemption Group Immersions, and with its greater scalability, we expect it to create more opportunities for more training to come.

Update: a sample syllabus for Counseling in Community is available here.

All of Life is Worship

Monday, June 13th, 2011

From the March 2010 Redemption Group Immersion in Seattle, Mike Wilkerson teaching on “All of Life is Worship” from the Introduction of the Redemption book.

When is the next RG Immersion?

Thursday, June 9th, 2011

This is probably the most common question about Redemption Groups I get: When is the next Immersion?

Understandable, because our Immersions have consistently been profound, life-changing experiences—not to mention being excellent equipping for future RG leaders.

I’d like to see Immersions happening so often all over the country (and the world) that there is always a quick, concrete answer to this most common question, a schedule of upcoming Immersions. In fact, we’re working on that behind the scenes—more to come.

In the meantime, here’s a sneak peek at what’s going on that you might not have heard about. The Karis House Community Counseling Center will host an Immersion that begins this weekend (June 10, 2011) in St. Louis, MO. And Providence Church in Frisco, TX will be hosting one in July 2011.

We haven’t promoted these broadly because they have emerged primarily as opportunities to equip those who are in those church communities and their nearby networks. As such, they have been essentially sold out since planning began. However, we have been able to open some seats for others to travel in from all over. In time, we expect to do a lot more of this, partnering with other churches.

If you’d like to let us know that you and your team are interested in such opportunities as they arise in the future, let us know, and we’ll try to get you in! You can sign up on the Redemption Group Immersion Waiting List here.

Anna’s Redemption Group Immersion Experience

Friday, February 18th, 2011

Anna, a teenager from Idaho, has posted her reflections from her recent experience at the January 2011 Redemption Group Immersion in Seattle which she attended with her father, her best friend, Mr. B. and Mr. H from her hometown. Here are a few excerpts:

Redemption Groups are the Mars Hill system for leading people to redemption from their sin and suffering, kind of like AA for every problem, except it works! The way that they accomplish this training is to put you in a high speed, high intensity, actual Redemption Group, you literally get thrown in the deep end!

This process biblically leads people to see their sin, to mourn over it, to confess it, to give it to God, to ask for forgiveness, to be forgiven. And finally to be redeemed!!!

After the general sessions of teaching and training we would split into our Redemption Groups. The first several groups we each shared our stories, our hurts, our sufferings, our sins.

One by one we were each prodded, probed and questioned about our stories, about our lives. We were led to see our sin; we were each led to a point where we couldn’t deny our filthy wretchedness. There was no comforting, no Kleenex passing, or defending one another.

One of the big things I learned is that I cannot just throw truth at someone, because they won’t listen, I can’t tell them what their conclusions need to be, but I can learn to ask questions in such a way to lead them to come to their own honest conclusions. Our leaders were wonderful at asking questions that drew people out, they didn’t just tell people where their sin was, like I tried to do; they asked questions that brought you to a place where you had to either flat out lie, or fully confess and see the deep, deep root of your sin.

I cried a lot, which is weird, because I never cry

I told about how much God has blessed me in my life already. How I’ve never had any deep wounds or scars, how I’ve never had any great suffering. How no one has ever committed any great sins against me. How as a Pastor’s Kid I had heard people say that PK’s are either rotten devils or perfect angels, I had grabbed that idea and taken it deeply to heart; how I try SO hard to be perfect. Living in such a way that nobody ever saw me sin, never saw me slip up; never saw me doing anything unpleasant.

The next day it was time for me to go through what Mr. B. began referring to as “The Wringer” which means that it was time for my group to LOVE me by completely stripping me of any remnant of pride and exposing me to the blatant ugliness of my sin. Let me just say, it doesn’t feel very loving until you are through, and you see exactly what they did.

As they asked probing questions to which I had to admit truthful answers or else lie, I felt as if they were stripping me naked, like an onion, layer by layer. Although I already knew of my sin, I’m not sure I really comprehended the lengths and depths to which it went. I did not like confessing it to other sinful struggling people who I didn’t know, and who didn’t know me. I hated it. I tearfully confessed that I had a deep, deep idol… myself. I confessed that I paid homage to my idol by trying to rescue other people so that I could look like a good person, creating a perfect image of myself for other people, by trying hard to earn the praise and affirmation of anyone who would give it to me, by judging other people to make myself feel better, and by believing the lie that I couldn’t really go before God and let Him love me until I had myself together, all packaged up and tied up with a pretty bow.

I didn’t strive to resist sin because I loved God, but because sin made me look bad. I didn’t serve people to serve God, but to make myself look good. My life centered on looking good to family, friends, church, strangers, and even God.

I had taken Christ off of the throne of my life, and had seated myself there instead. Although my behavior was commendable, my heart motives were sinful.

[After the group session] I couldn’t hold back the tears of frustration as I walked down the hall and towards the stairs; my best friend ran up behind me and gasped when she saw my face. “Anna!” she said “I have never seen you cry before, WHAT did they do to you?!!!” I told her about being emotionally stripped naked, feeling completely exposed, and my frustration. The full reality of what she had said to me didn’t resonate until the following day.

On the following morning in group session, they finished picking me apart. (At least that’s what it feels like.) I realized at that point, the lengths that I had gone to in order to promote the best image possible; my best friend of four years had never seen me cry, I mean come on, I’m a teenage girl? That has got to be a feat of epic proportions! And just a few weeks prior I had removed nearly 100 pictures from my Facebook because I thought that these photos were unflattering, so I removed the tags. The depth of my vanity hit me like a 2×4!

Since the day that I invited Jesus into my life, I have known for a fact that I am saved and redeemed, but it was brought to my attention that I had somehow been deceived into believing that I needed to work my way through my sin to get to God. I had forgotten reality… I don’t have to do anything to earn His love. That, however, is not an excuse I can use to sin. In fact, my love for Him helps prevent me from choosing sin. Of course I know I will still sin, but when I do His grace abounds, and by His grace He works in me, chipping away at my imperfections until the day I die. That is how redemption works. The truth I need to cling to is that I don’t need to go and get all pretty before I can crawl into His arms. He died FOR my sin, He KNOWS my sin, but when He looks at me He sees His daughter, covered in His shed blood. He has forgiven me, He has redeemed me. Hallelujah, WHAT A SAVIOR!

I can’t wait to see what God will continue to do in my heart, as I work my way through all that He is bringing to light in my life.

I would do the RGI again in a heartbeat, lugubrious as it was!

“It is doubtful whether God can bless a man greatly until He has hurt him deeply.” – A.W. Tozer

Pastor Testimonial: Post-Immersion, Groups are Much Better

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

Mike Keogh, a pastor at South Hills Evangelical Church in Missoula, Montana brought a team of his Redemption Group leaders to the recent Redemption Group Immersion in Seattle. The impact on their ministry effectiveness was huge. Here’s how Mike put it:

We had already gone through a dry run of Redemption Groups before our leaders attended the Seattle Redemption Group Immersion in January 2011. Soon after returning from the Immersion, we launched our next round of Redemption Groups. After our first night, we debriefed as leaders and the word that best described how we felt was “giddy”. Never in all our eight weeks going through the dry run had our groups experienced as much closeness as they did on this one night.

To add a bit more back story, prior to Mike’s dry run of Redemption Groups (pre-Immersion), he had already taken his leadership team through quite a bit of training and preparation, including our recommended Redemption Group Leader Syllabus, and they had already seen some fruitfulness in their ministry. What the Immersion gave his leadership team was a better experiential “feel” for what a group could be like.

This is why it’s called an Immersion. It’s more than a leader training; it’s training by experience. It’s something you can’t just read about or download. You have to be there. And look what a difference that’s made for Mike and his ministry team. Praise God for bearing even more fruit in their Redemption Groups ministry.

To here about future Immersion opportunities, subscribe to our e-mailing list, follow us on twitter or subscribe to this blog.

Passover: God’s Best at Your Worst

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

From the March 2010 Redemption Group Immersion in Seattle, Pastor Justin Holcomb teaches how God gave his best—the precious blood of his son, our Passover Lamb—to rescue us from our worst sin, suffering and self-righteousness.

Experiencing My Risen Redeemer

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Laura’s reflections from the March 2010 Redemption Group Immersion

I have sought redemption before…only to be disappointed. I wanted redemption my way. Although I never wanted any part of my healing to be without Christ, I was leaving the Cross behind. I was asking God to fit into my equation for redemption.

After going through the rich material in Redemption Group, I was humbled first and foremost by the immense love of my Savior. He gently exposed my equations for redemption. He then softened my heart to the shame I have been trapped in since a woman within my church molested me as a teenager.

The only way I can describe my life of shame is that I was frozen inside of an ice cube. As days passed, the ice cube grew larger, safely guarding me from those around me and from my Savior. People could still see me and I could still relate to people. I became adept at allowing people to think they knew me while staying safely distanced. This ice cube left my soul weary, my heart embittered and every part of me disillusioned.

From the inside looking out, this ice cube gave me a very distorted lens through which I viewed everything. I hated myself for the sin someone committed against me. I saw God’s Word as a source of bondage—for she used Scripture to justify the wrong she committed against me. This shame that enslaved me manifested itself as feelings of depression, despair and hopelessness. I had forgiven my perpetrator; I had invested much energy and many tears in the healing process. However, I believed that I was as whole as I would probably ever be.

Then my Savior stepped in and melted the layers of shame, despair and deception. With his brilliant light and radiant love, he melted all of the ice that surrounded me. He gave me the courage to be in His presence, naked and unashamed. Jesus took my shame upon Him in His death. In allowing Him to take my shame, I can put my hope fully in my God. It was not the experience of Redemption Groups that brought redemption, but experiencing my risen Redeemer.

Below is the psalm Laura wrote during the Redemption Group Immersion.

I have spent the first 25 years of my life telling you—my creator–how you created me wrongly and what simple changes you could make or simply help me to make to bring redemption. I even bartered with you, promising you your share of Glory.

But you, Oh God are not simply the God of my youth who offers empty hope and abuse. You are the God of me today—offering true hope, lasting change and real peace.

See my definitions of purity, beauty, wholeness and peace miss you and circumvent the cross. My disillusionment is because of my definitions—not your character.

My created world of walls and expectations that only kept me from you were my attempt to string together fig leaves to hide my shameful body. I take off these leaves and stand before you, my God—naked and unashamed and ask for Your garment of righteousness.

Experiencing God’s Lavish Grace in Christ

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

Joel explains how God showed up at the March 2010 Redemption Group Immersion

I went into this past week’s Redemption Group Immersion with a strong, ugly sense of older brother pride. I stocked up my work bag with brochures and business cards, bringing five years of professional counseling experience and success, viewing my presence as a “gift” to the participants in the training. What a shock to realize that God had different plans for me; his desire was to wreck me, to change my mind and my heart, to heal me, and to restore me to full confidence in his record and not in my own. I’ve narrowed down some specific places in my life that God worked this week to restore me back in line with the truth of the Gospel:

  1. My battle with shame, covering myself with good works and my “nice guy” identity
  2. My automatic “judgment” of younger brothers and jealousy of their stories of redemption
  3. My small box that I “allow” God to work within, living as a “functional deist”
  4. My story in the context of God’s redemptive story: Is the climax of my life the cross/resurrection or my self-actualization? Am I a glory-thief?
  5. The Holy Spirit’s conviction and pointing to truth instead of lies
  6. The community of faith – fellow partakers of God’s grace in the moment
  7. My emotions are a tool that God can work with, not a hindrance. The glory of God can come through my emotional engagement with people.
  8. The outworking my deeper sense of God’s love and forgiveness–my marriage, my parenting, my job, etc. etc. etc.

Last week, God’s grace enabled me to insert real-time forgiveness right in the moment of condemnation. In the midst of my realization of sin (older-brother pride), I experienced God’s lavish grace in Christ–a foolish, undeserved grace that he showers on me. And he covered my sin, not haunting me with a sense of not repenting deeply enough, or that I had to do something to pay him back. Lord have mercy on me, the sinner.

“I am shocked anew by the cross that has ministered such miracles to me.”

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

Natalie’s reflections from the March 2010 Redemption Group Immersion

God talked to me a lot about his leadership during this Redemption Group Immersion. I felt honored to be asked to co-lead a group but felt nervous, too. To be honest, I was afraid of messing up, of saying something wrong, of misleading people in my ignorance or sin. I was paired with a leader who had co-led my original RG almost two years ago, and our gifts, styles, and stories are very different. Together we led our group awkwardly, stumbling through disagreements at the start and repentance of our sin as the week continued. It was incredibly sweet to see God unify us and lead us.

It was on Wednesday morning that the Holy Spirit showed me that I was thinking too highly of myself, that specifically I was thinking I was a better leader, further along in something, than my co-leader. He broke my heart as he revealed that I actually thought this toward him–that I didn’t like his leadership and thought I could do better. The rest of the week involved confessing and repenting of this over and over, as he gave me chance after chance to trust him and admire him instead of myself. It was truly lovely to see him at work.

I am stunned by his perfect timing, knowing, loving, speaking, and doing in the lives of the women in our group, in the lives of everyone. He instructs, warns, comforts, and heals each of us with a gorgeous precision and stunning intimacy. Oh the stories of his love and faithfulness that we heard! God made much of himself this week, as he led me to himself with so many others. He graciously didn’t let me be a great leader while he showed himself to be the Great Leader.

Now that it’s over, my Father keeps talking to me about how he loves: today he showed me, again, that my fear of failing and falling are based in my desire for some of his glory, and in a distrust of his future grace. He will show me grace whenever I fail, whenever I sin, as well as when I obey—any obedience of mine is also his grace. I am shocked anew by the cross that has ministered such miracles to me!