Final day of NYC tells students to 'Go!'

Final day of NYC tells students to 'Go!'

by | 12 Jul 2015

Nazarene Youth Conference: Thy Kindom Come drew to a close by focusing on one word: "go."

A resounding thank you was given to the hundreds of volunteers, 7,000 sponsors and participants, and the USA/Canada Nazarene Youth International staff and council.

Guest speaker Eric Samuel Timm began by giving a live art performance, painting a picture of Jesus.

Timm's message began with his hope for the students.

“I pray this wouldn’t be a moment, but a lifestyle," he said. "Moments become movements become monuments.”

Timm continued by explaining the importance of our time.

“Time is precious; invest it wisely," he said. "Do something different with your time for the Kingdom to come.”

Using the story of Zacchaeus in Luke 19, Timm told of how Jesus took the time and looked up and saw Zacchaeus in the tree. While everyone called Zacchaeus a sinner and tax collector, Jesus did something different called him by name.

“Jesus sees us not in the present reality, but in the possibility,” Timm said. “Jesus went to his home for dinner and ate at the table. The table matters — in our homes, to Zacchaeus, to the disciples. Jesus takes ordinary things in His hands and makes them extraordinary."

Timm challenged the students to live as sent people who embody the Kindom here on earth.

“For the Kingdom to come, do something different," he said. "See those people in trees as Jesus sees them, and go and invite them to the table.”

Timm and NYC Pastor Mark Holcomb sat on stage with four NYC participants and led communion.

“As we come to the table, we don’t come by ourselves — we come as a family," Timm said. "Think about the people in the trees – people in your lives that are not round this table with us … yet. In a way, we bring them with us. Reach those people – go – for the sake of the Kingdom.”

NYC 2015 closed as it began, with songs of worship from Harbour and the reading of the Lord’s Prayer.

As students return to their homes and churches, NYC staff encourage them to remember that "It starts with you today. It changes us forever!"

To view archived videos of the services, visit youtube.com/c/nazareneyouthconference.

More from NYC:

Saturday session challenges students to give themselves, follow God's call

Day 2 of NYC explores worship, holiness

NYC opens with focus on image, Kingdom

Live streaming connects broader church to NYC

For conference photos, visit the NYC InstagramTwitter, and Facebook pages or search #nyc15lou. 

Comments

Recientes

Image
Aurba spanish
Caption

La bandera de Aruba consiste de una estrella roja y dos líneas amarillas. La estrella roja representa los cuatro puntos del compás, ya que la isla atrajo personas de todas partes del mundo. La estrella también representa a la isla en si, rodeada por el hermoso mar azul. Las líneas amarillas horizontales denotan la posición libre y separada que Aruba disfruta en el Reino de los Países Bajos. El azul representa al mar que rodea a Aruba; el amarillo es el color de la abundancia, representando el pasado de la isla y sus industrias de oro, aloe y aceite; el rojo es el amor que cada nativo de Aruba siente por su país y por la antigua industria de Palo de Brasil; y el blanco simboliza las playas de arena blanca al igual que la pureza de los corazones de la gente de Aruba que se esfuerzan por justicia, orden y libertad.

Banderas de las Naciones: Aruba

31 Mar 2025
Go to content
Image
Paraguay Youth Camp

Jóvenes paraguayos se animan a correr al…

28 Mar 2025
Go to content
Image
Asia-Pacific

La JNI de Corea regresa a Tailandia para un…

28 Mar 2025
Go to content
Image
Wes Tracy

Recordando a Wesley Tracy

28 Mar 2025
Go to content

Más Popular

There are no news items to show.

Newsletter