Fellowship of the Cross

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I just white-cross-on-cemeterysaw the film,  “Do You Believe.”  It touched my heart.

The film starts with a voice-over from the lead character – a pastor explaining what the Cross is.  My first take was, “Are they telling us the story before showing us?”

We go to films and read books to be drawn into the story of people. We do not want to be told all up front. We want to be shown and then drawn in. So I waited, watched, and then suddenly, I was surprised!

I was drawn into their lives. The cross – the symbol of Christianity – is so much more than a symbol.  The filmmakers were making a point. Do You Believe is a great question!

They take 12 desperate people from all walks of life and place their lives together through circumstance and providence. We are brought into the subtlety of each character’s struggle. That’s when I gained another insight into the cross. The Cross is where and how Jesus died.

Yes, but the cross is my story.

It is where I can come to the end of me, my strength and die there too. He’s there for the lonely, the angry, the frustrated, forlorn and more. In weakness, and not cover up of weakness, He is there. All we need to do is climb up and join. There is fellowship at the end, and when the end is the cross … the end is The Beginning .

No one can brag about his or her accomplishments or dwell on failure here, but here we just live, love, and are thankful the cross is home. I do not have to perform here, I can just be.

I walked out and said to my daughter Stephanie, “Wouldn’t it be wonderful if you, me and Mom had an enlarged family?  A bigger family with surrogate grandmas and grandpas, cousins brothers and sisters?”

Martin Luther King had this dream. It was his cross and his invitation for all of humanity to bring the cross we bear to that same lonely place where people find real fellowship.  His Cross and our crossroad.

Let’s climb up and encourage one another. Climb “forward and upward.”  The cross is not an ideal. No, not at all. It’s not a standard we come up to but a fellowship we come down to.  A place to be “lifted up.”  The cross is real because He is for real.

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Originally from New York, Dennis Cole completed his undergraduate degree at Northeastern University in Boston, Mass. in 1971 and studied acting in Boston and NYC where he earned his Actor's Equity membership in 1975 after completing several New York stage productions. He was saved from the "Broad Way that leads to destruction" in 1983. After entering through the Narrow Gate that leads to life, he was called into ministry. In 1986 he attended Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in South Hamilton, Mass. and completed his Master of Ministry degree 2 years later at Azusa Pacific Graduate School of Theology in southern California in 1988. That same year he and his wife Wendy entered into full time pastoral ministry. Dennis was a senior pastor from 1988 until 2002 in churches in California, Oregon and Michigan and Indiana., In 2001 Dramatic Christian Ministries was founded and became a full time ministry organization in 2002. He now travels extensively throughout the United States and other parts of the world presenting the Bible in the first person through acting. Dramatic Christian Ministries and the Narrow Gate Theatre bring the Bible in the first person to people in order to fully minister the Word of God. The focus of this drama ministry is to equip and uplift the church and to show the way to eternal life to the unsaved. Acting according to His Word invites people to encounter the Bible as it was first "breathed" by the Holy Spirit. Dennis also teaches acting in his recently started school and is involved in producing and directing live theatrical performances in Albuquerque, NM.

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