About Sam Ford

Sam Ford is a preacher, planter, and pastor from the Pacific Northwest. He is currently pastoring Restoration Road Church in Snohomish, WA.

On Church Planting #1: The Command to Go

2017-03-28T05:57:07+00:00By |Church Plant Lessons 101|

After His Resurrection, the Bible says that Jesus spent 40 days with his disciples teaching about the kingdom of God.   We can only imagine what Jesus taught , what he clarified, or what he warned his disciples about.   The only words that we have recorded are Jesus' last words to His disciples.  It follows then that these are the only words, from those forty days, that Jesus wanted us to concern ourselves with.  All three of synoptic authors record His last words at the end of their gospels, all sounding slightly different: Matthew 28.18-20; Mark 16.15;  Luke 24.44-49.   Additionally, Luke records a variation of Jesus final words at the beginning of the book of Acts. Most are familiar with Jesus final words as "The Great Commission."   The truth is that the heart of the Great Commission actually first was heard somewhere in the middle of Jesus’ ministry.  [...]

On the Lord Jesus, the Book of Acts, and the Planting of Churches

2017-03-28T05:57:24+00:00By |Church Plant Lessons 101|

Our church will officially turn 7 years old in November.  In that time, God has done more amazing things, personally and corporately, than I could ever possibly list--and those are only the ones I know about!  There are countless attacks God has protected us from, mistakes he has turned us from, and decisions he has stopped us from.  By grace and power, Jesus has built his church despite us. From the beginning, we intended to be a church planting church.  Even as we were planted ourselves, we supported church planters locally and internationally.  We have always intended for our core values, especially church planting, to extend beyond words on a piece of paper.   We learned rather quickly, that a commitment to church planting never fails to inspire the same kinds of curious, or down right critical, questions that parents of more than 2.5 children (and less than 2.5 dogs) [...]

Lesson from Honduras #3: We have nothing to give

2021-07-04T17:54:30+00:00By |Church Plant Lessons 101|

Throughout the mission in Honduras we had many “moments of grace.”  These are those brief moments of revelation, when the Holy Spirit makes one truth beautifully clear.  Sometimes that truth is about God’s heart and sometimes they are about our own—but all the times they are unexpected gifts from God.   The timing of these moments are divine.  They have come to me while I am parenting my children, praying in my office, driving my car, or even standing in the shower.  This one came when I we were giving a single-mom a house.On Friday, friends, family, and neighbors all gathered to dedicate the house to Jessica.  We all had the opportunity to share any thoughts or reflections we had.  Only a few of us shared before her pastor prayed.  As the pastor of this team, I obviously felt compelled to speak not only for myself, but for our team, our [...]

Where is the Spirit leading you?

2017-03-28T05:58:13+00:00By |Church Plant Lessons 101|

I was reading in Matthew 4 today and couldn't get passed the first verse:  "Then Jesus was led into the wilderness to be tempted (tested) by the devil"Jesus' 40 day journey into the wilderness is a replay of Israel's 40 year wandering in the wilderness.  Hungry, weak, and vulnerable, the devil himself comes and tempts Jesus to deny God the Father, to lose faith, to sin.  Using the Word of God, Jesus success where Adam, Israel, and every man who has ever lived fails.  That is why Jesus is our sinless Savior and perfect substitute in death and life.What I was struck with most, however, was the fact that the SPIRIT LED Him into the wilderness.  And as I recalled the the story of Israel's from Exodus through Joshua.  Specifically, I considered how the Spirt led them at different times.  A times, the Spirit led them into a time of [...]

#2 Lesson from Honduras: The mission BEFORE the mission

2021-07-04T17:51:43+00:00By |Church Plant Lessons 101|

First, I am not a "missions" expert.  These are simply my rambling reflections about our recent mission trip to Roatan, Honduras. As our trip for Honduras approached, I became more and more anxious.  Part of my anxiety came from the "unknown".  The other half came from what I knew, rather, what I had learned from our Dwellings contact about our build.  In the weeks prior to our departure, he posted pictures first with posts in the ground, then with floor joices set, then with a floor on! Though you would think such progress would encourage my excitement, it only served to discourage it because we weren't the ones doing it. I feared the 10 strong men on our team would not have enough to do, that we would be unchallenged or bored, that we wouldn't struggle or work hard, that we might not suffer enough, or that we would otherwise [...]

#1 Lesson from Honduras: Out of my context

2021-07-04T17:51:30+00:00By |Church Plant Lessons 101|

As both of you know (figure that is how many read this thing), I returned from a mission in Roatan, Honduras last Sunday.  A team of 10 men spent a week building a home for a single mom, engaging with the Honduran culture, and learning about the dwellings ministry we partnered with.  The experience included everything imaginable and a few things unimaginable.  I don’t yet fully appreciate everything that happened there, perhaps I never will.  Since Sunday, and even a few days prior, I have spent a lot of time journaling, praying, and talking about the experience.  It is not that I am searching for that one amazing divine-revelation that will validate the time and expense of the trip. On the contrary, like a grand buffet, I just don’t want to miss any one moral God wants me to chew on from this trip.  With a good pipe in hand, [...]

Words of Men: Dangerous Calling

2017-03-28T05:59:17+00:00By |Note to Self...and Others|

In my pursuit of more joy this year, I have begun reading Dangerous Calling, by Paul David Tripp. From its very first pages, the book cuts like a knife--in a good way.  By God's grace, as I read this I am reflecting on where I was, not where I am.  So while this a book every pastor should be required reading for every to read, I doubt a pastor can really appreciate what is written until they are about 5-6 years into full-time-ministry--just enough time to come face to face with the reality of their weakness.  Perhaps I am speaking only for myself, but I believe that it takes some time for the pride-filled idealism to wear off (at least a little).  In other words, it takes several years for the pastor to start listening to his own preaching and come face to face with his idolatry.  This is also just about [...]

39 Years Down…

2017-03-28T05:59:08+00:00By |Note to Self...and Others|

I turn 39 today.  As I was driving I heard “Forever Young” on the radio, an old 80’s tune. It made me think about the fact that most young people spend their years wishing they were older and most old people spend their years wishing they were younger.  Overall, no one is really satisfied with where they are at.  I want to be content at 39.  At the same time, I don’t want to be complacent.  I want to enjoy 39, but not remain as I am now.  I want to grow more, mature more, and learn more.  I want to become more compassionate, more loving, more peaceful, more patient, kinder, wiser, and healthier (in every sense of the word).  The goal is not perfection, for that is not possible in this life.  The goal is simply to look more like Jesus for whatever number of years or days God [...]

Is there any life apart from Christ?

2021-07-04T17:54:47+00:00By |Note to Self...and Others, Theology 101|

In Philippians 1.18b-26, It is clear that Paul has the expectation that his experience will result in his deliverance.  But, his definition of deliverance is freedom from prison OR freedom from his life.  Either way, his greatest hope is that he will not be ashamed in life or death.  In fact, Paul sounds torn between what he feels is better.  Not that he really has a choice in the matter, but he has a great desire to stay and work for Christ but an equal (or even greater) desire to be with Jesus.  For Paul, to LIVE IS CHRIST TO DIE IS GAIN.  I wonder what it really means to “live as Christ?”  To live "as" Christ seems to mean more than just asking "What would Jesus do?" all of time.  Perhaps we aren't to ask questions at all but, rather, preach to ourselves constantly through our daily life what Jesus [...]

Only Pain will Tell

2017-03-28T06:02:00+00:00By |Note to Self...and Others|

In my pursuit of joy during 2013, I have been spending the better part of January in the book of Philippians.  Ironically, though Paul is writing from within Roman imprisonment, this letter is full of expressions of joy.  It is a convicting read.This morning I am reading Philippians 1.12-18.  Throughout these verses, Paul expresses his joy over the fact that Christ is proclaimed.  This is his greatest motivation for his own life and greatest hope for the lives of others. As I sit here, I am forced to consider whether this is truly my greatest motivation. If Paul is any example, it seems as if PAIN, not time, will tell.Paul is imprisoned, Paul is suffering, and even it is not “hard”, it is probably not what anyone would envision as the path to gospel advancement.  But, surprisingly, Paul tells his recipients that his imprisonment has resulted in just that--it has [...]

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