My 30 Days under the Overpass: Not Your Ordinary Devotional

My 30 Days under the Overpass: Not Your Ordinary Devotional

by Mike Yankoski
My 30 Days under the Overpass: Not Your Ordinary Devotional

My 30 Days under the Overpass: Not Your Ordinary Devotional

by Mike Yankoski

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Overview

Live Life Loud!

You passed that same ol’ bum on the street this morning. You sat next to some smelly girl on the subway last night. You ordered a burger from a worn-out cashier over your lunch hour. What do you think about these people? What does God think about them? My 30 Days Under the Overpass is not a devotional you will read in your quiet time, then carry on with your day. It’s something you’ll actually do—all day, every day—because these thirty days will rock you. Intense reflection on God’s thoughts and feelings toward the poor, broken, and downtrodden will change you…and you will begin to change the world. Not on your next mission trip. Not at church next Sunday. But right here, right now.

Ask It.

How do you treat others—those you like, know, don’t know, don’t like? Those who fall into your comfort zone, and those who shove you outside of it?

Read It.

Mike Yankoski and his buddy, Sam, chose to become homeless to discover their answer.

Think It.

Would you go sleep under a bridge in the rain? Would you panhandle for your next meal? Would you help those who do?

Believe It.

“I tell you the truth, whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me,” said Jesus (Matthew 25:45).

Live It.

This is not your average devotional. You’ll read it, but you’ll also do it. Get ready for a life change that will change lives.



“Mike takes Christ at His word, and challenges you to summon the courage to live the real Christian faith.”

Dean R. Hirsch, President, World Vision International

Story Behind the Book

“Is God enough to sustain me? Is He trustworthy? Is He worth staking my life on? What happens if I die? Will I even survive? Such questions rang loudly in my mind as Sam and I decided to lay down everything in a full embrace of the homeless life. Some experiences were uncomfortable, some shocking, some disturbing, some hilarious, and still others frustrating. But five months of life on the streets has left us, our faith, and our lives forever changed. We’ve been back from the streets for two years, and now this devotional makes it possible for people to make real-life changes. It contains stories and reflections not included in Under the Overpass .” —Mike Yankoski

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780307562531
Publisher: The Crown Publishing Group
Publication date: 02/04/2009
Sold by: Random House
Format: eBook
Pages: 192
Sales rank: 1,031,787
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Mike Yankoski, from Parker, Colorado, is a recent graduate of Westmont College in Santa Barbara, California, where he studied computer science and theology. He is currently working on an initiative called World Wide Open to connect individuals, churches, and ministries worldwide. Mike and his wife, Danae, were married in August 2005 and live in Santa Barbara, California. He seeks to live out his faith with radical intensity, and intentionally pursues a lifestyle that reaches others for Christ and glorifies God.

Read an Excerpt

MY 30 DAYS UNDER THE OVERPASS

NOT YOUR ORDINARY DEVOTIONAL
By BY MIKE YANKOSKI

Multnomah Publishers, Inc.

Copyright © 2006 Michael G. Yankoski III
All right reserved.

ISBN: 1-59052-668-6


Chapter One

GUT CHECK 1.0

Flip on tonight's news or go to a news blog and you'll learn all about the wretched things that are going on in our world-famines, epidemics, earthquakes, hurricanes, rapes, beatings, political chaos, slavery, human trafficking, just to name a few. When you look at all of it, it's enough to make you feel really, really small, like there's no way you can make an impact.

Well, I want to let you in on a little secret: The world is not yours to change. None of us is big enough, influential enough, or powerful enough to end any one of the world's major issues. The only person powerful enough to eradicate poverty or cure all disease or stop earthquakes is Jesus. But He didn't do any of that. Jesus, in His wisdom, knew He couldn't just come down here and fix everything for us; He knew we wouldn't learn anything that way. Instead, He showed us how to live by spending thirty years on earth, setting the ultimate example for us to follow. He didn't end poverty. Instead, He reminded us that "you always have the poor with you" (see Mark 14:7).

But that doesn't mean Jesus did nothing to help the poor, nothing to reach out to those whom everyone elseshunned. Instead, He lived with them, listened to them, ate with them (sometimes He brought the food), partied with them, healed them, wept and laughed with them ...

Same with us. Yes, the world is messed up. There are a lot of hurting people and a lot of important issues. You can't end poverty, stop earthquakes, or feed every person on the planet. But that's no excuse to do nothing. If you're a Christian, loving other people is not a "calling" you can patiently discover or wait for God to reveal to you. It's a direct, nonnegotiable command.

Some of us are called to go and be in the places where the biggest problems are. Some of us need to be there, working, helping, serving, not only on two-week trips in the summer but for years at a time, even lifetimes at a time. But some of us aren't supposed to do that now. It's not the right season. We're in school or providing for our family or training to go somewhere in the future.

But don't buy into the lie that "ministry" only happens overseas or during summer trips or on Tuesday evenings at small group or Sunday mornings at church. Ministry is about people in need, and those people are all around.

How can God use you to impact, change, affect, influence, love on, and meet the needs of the people all around you? What's holding you back? How can you break out of the fear and questions that keep you from "loving your neighbor as yourself"? (see Matthew 22:37-40).

That's what this book is all about: helping you ask and answer questions about yourself, your world, and your God that you might never have asked before-and then discover huge ways God can work in and through you to affect the people around you.

Lord, thank You for the opportunity to spend some serious time in Your Word, learning how to love others like You do. I pray for the discipline to stick with this devotional and allow Your Spirit to move and work in me. Be with me when I'm reading these words, affect me, change me, move me. Show me how I should be treating people differently in my life, how I can reach out and do a better job communicating Your love. These are big prayers, Lord. Help me not to get frustrated or disheartened, but to keep going, trusting that You're working in me to make me more like You. Amen.

Personal Inventory Questions

If we only listen or read, it's easy to just go through the motions. Writing stuff down helps make it stick. The "Notes to Self" sections are meant to help you record and remember your steps through this devotional. Think of them as big, yellow, sticky reminder notes. Jot down a phrase that sticks out or a verse that has struck you. Write the name of a person you've been praying for, or tape in their picture. Once a week you'll have room and time to work through what you've read, prayed, and experienced. Before we start, here's a "Personal Inventory" with a few questions to help establish a beginning point. At the end of these thirty days, we'll look at a similar survey to help you gauge your progress.

1) A new person arrives at my church or youth group. What is my response? I:

1. Introduce myself. 2. Make fun of their clothes. 3. Pretend I don't notice them.

2) I'm downtown with some friends and walk past a homeless person sitting on a bench. What am I feeling?

3) On the freeway ramp, I drive past a man flying a sign reading: "Hungry. Anything helps." I (do/don't) believe his sign. Then, I:

1. Pretend to try to find a new radio station. 2. Glance and make eye contact and then react as though I've been caught doing something I shouldn't. 3. Roll down the window and say hello.

4. Wish I had some food to help meet the need.

4) I'm feeling like God is asking me to do something really "uncomfortable." I:

1. Refuse to budge and put my head down, trusting it will "all go away soon." 2. Promise I'll pray about it, but forget about it when quiet time comes. 3. Seek counsel and find out if it's really the Lord's call on my life.

5) I just received a flier in the mail for a local homeless ministry. They're asking me to consider volunteering and/or helping financially. I:

1. Throw it away. 2. Put it in the drawer to look at next month. 3. Write a check so I don't feel guilty. 4. Write a check and find a time to deliver it while I'm volunteering at the mission.

6) What is my comfort zone? What are three things that make me uncomfortable?

7) Who is a person (or group of people) it's hard for me to feel like loving?

8) What kind of candy bar would be most difficult for me to give away?

PLEDGE ARE YOU WILLING TO MAKE A COMMITMENT?

Lord, help me. I want to grow closer to You. That's why I'm doing this whole devotional anyway. Help me to grow, to realize what You want me to realize. Change my ideas about who I am, who others are, who You are, and what Your church is, so that I'll love others as You would have me love them.

I pledge here that I will try to find time every day to seek after You by working through this devotional. God, you know I'm busy and there are a ton of things competing for my time. Help me to have the discipline to do what I say I'm going to do, but also help me not to be too hard on myself when I fall short. Thanks for loving me so much. Draw me ever closer to You. Amen.

I, _____________, pledge on this date, __________, to seek and earnestly desire to know God deeply and more fully. When this devotional asks me to do things that are challenging and outside my comfort zone, I will seek the Lord for the courage to step out and trust with everything I am that He will lead me where He wants me to go.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from MY 30 DAYS UNDER THE OVERPASS by BY MIKE YANKOSKI Copyright © 2006 by Michael G. Yankoski III. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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