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President's Perspective

What Does It Cost You?

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By President Randall A. Bach

We recognize Old Order, or traditional, Amish people by their lifestyles. They live on farms clumped together in rural communities and dress in attire like that of 17th century peasants. The Amish, as I will refer to them here, are fascinating people. They are known to eschew electricity, telephones, and other modern conveniences. They rely on horses and buggies for transportation, farm with horses providing power instead of modern implements, and are renowned for their craftsmanship with wood, sewing, and other arts that require skilled and experienced hand labor.

Old Order Amish are generally respected for their quiet lifestyle that can appear as a nostalgic throwback in history. When among their own, the Amish speak variations of German dialects mixed with English, which explains why they often speak English with accents. Although they are willing to have pictures taken of their places and handiwork, they forbid having pictures taken of themselves because they believe that would be a violation of the Second Commandment against making graven images.

David and Malinda Borntreger

The Amish began as Mennonites and are still generally considered part of a broader Mennonite or Anabaptist community with a similar foundation of beliefs. However, the Amish pulled away from the Mennonites because of the controversial teachings and extreme separationist views of Jakob Ammann (c. 1644-c.1730) in Switzerland and southern Germany. Those teachings included rules of excommunication that called for family and social shunning of people who strayed from strict adherence to Amish beliefs and practices.*

David and Malinda Borntreger of Northwood, Iowa, have been shunned by their close family members, extended family, and their entire Amish culture and community in which they were raised. They were entirely cut off from the life and loved ones they knew. Why? Because they dared to embrace teaching about a personal relationship with Christ as primary in their lives over Amish dictates. What a heavy price the Borntregers are paying: children ostracized from their parents and grandchildren cut off from grandparents. It is difficult to imagine how painful the experience of shunning is. Members of First Church of the Open Bible in Clear Lake, Iowa, have encircled this family with adoption-like love. If you have not read the story of this family or seen the video interview with David and Malinda, please do so below.

What does it personally cost you to believe in, know, and serve Jesus Christ? I am going to take a guess here that it does not begin to compare with what the Borntreger family is experiencing. Christians in America significantly gave shape to our government, principles, freedoms, and way of life for our nation. However, a change has been occurring over recent decades, so much so that perhaps we ought to take note of the level of David and Lindaโ€™s commitment in the face of judgment and alienation by their home culture. While we must take care not to exaggerate or embellish facts, followers of Jesus who are committed to believing and adhering to biblical truth and commands are increasingly finding their home culture, particularly governing authorities and courts, attempting to judge and shun them, to punish them for daring to hold to and abide by anything other than secularist dogma.

Peter wrote to new believers, instructing them to live as free people without using freedom as a cover for evil intent. He encouraged them to submit to authority. He even specifically stated that slaves (slavery legally existed at that time) should submit respectfully to their masters. Peter continued on to discuss the importance of enduring suffering, explaining that if suffering comes as a result of doing good, then to endure that suffering is pleasing to God. Peter wanted readers to understand that serving Christ can be costly. In fact, he exclaimed, โ€œTo this you were called, because Christ suffered for you, leaving you an example, that you should follow in his stepsโ€ (1 Peter 2:21, NIV). We should defend our liberties, hard fought for by others. However, it is also timely to remind ourselves what Godโ€™s Word says regarding the cost of following Christ, including in America. David and Malinda Borntreger are experiencing that cost firsthand. Will you please take a moment now to pray for the Borntreger family? Pray for strength, continued courage, grace, and for deeply fulfilling relationships with their new church family. โ€œLord, may we all please you in how we respond to suffering because of our belief in you and because we are following you and your Word.โ€

*Source: Encyclopedia Britannica

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The Church I See

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There has been much discussion about the future of the Church. While Iโ€™m not a futurist or researcher, Iโ€™m grateful for voices that help us think wisely about pursuing the mission of the Church in an ever-changing culture. Researchers like Ed Stetzer and Carey Nieuwhof highlight some encouraging trends, such as revivals on college campuses, rising Bible sales, and Gen Zโ€™s hunger for authentic faith.

I carry deep conviction and a faith-filled anticipation about what I see and am praying for. When I think about the Church and the days ahead, I donโ€™t see a Church in retreat, but I do see a Church being refined  โ€“ prepared for what God is getting ready to do. A victorious and glorious Church (Eph. 5:27).

Jesus said, โ€œI will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against itโ€ (Matt. 16:18 ESV). That promise has no expiration date. Jesus is still building His Church today.

As the church advances, it will not stand on programs, buildings, or production. . . it will be built on the authority of Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit.

Across the body of Christ, there is a growing recognition that the future of the Church will not be built by addition alone, but by multiplication. Disciples will make disciples, leaders will develop and release leaders, and churches will plant churches. There are many voices helping to bring clarity to this, and we are seeing that same conviction take shape within Open Bible through our Mission to Multiply and the Power of We.

So, when I think about the Church and what is ahead of us, what do I see?

We often measure success by attendance, budgets, and programs. While salvations and baptisms remain central, we must expand the scorecard. As Larry Walkemeyer describes in The River Church, we must move from โ€œlake churchesโ€ that gather to โ€œriver churchesโ€ that send โ€“ becoming disciple makers who multiply.

The book of Acts shows us a model of a church that did not just meet but multiplied. The future will not belong to churches that simply gather a crowd, but it will belong to churches that make and send disciple makers. Jesus did not commission us to build an audience. He commanded us to go and make disciples (Matt. 28:19). Multiplication begins there โ€“ in intentional, relational, Spirit-led disciple making.

Multiplication is not just a strategy or a motto we adopt. It is the culture of Spirit-empowered, disciple-making churches. The Church I see measures health not only by attendance, but by how many are discipled, equipped, and sent to reproduce whatโ€™s been invested in them. This is our Mission to Multiply.

I SEE A SPIRIT-EMPOWERED CHURCH

We live in a time of rapid change. Technology, AI, and social media shape how we communicate and connect. These tools can be helpful, but they donโ€™t transform lives. The Holy Spirit does. 

These tools can be helpful, but they donโ€™t transform lives. The Holy Spirit does. 

Pentecost was Heavenโ€™s defining moment for the birth of the Church and the fulfillment of what Jesus said in Acts 1:8. The early followers of Jesus did not have the influence, resources, or tools we have today. What they had was the power of God. That has not changed!

In the days ahead, more than ever, the Church will move forward not through innovation alone but through consecration. The church I see is unapologetically dependent on the Spirit of God.

I SEE A COURAGEOUS CHURCH

In the book of Acts, every step forward required courage โ€“ Peter and John before the Sanhedrin, Stephen in the face of death, Peter going to Corneliusโ€™s home, the sending out of Paul and Barnabas. These were not small steps; they were courageous steps across cultural and spiritual boundaries. The early Church moved from gathering to going, from addition to multiplication. The expansion of the early Church was not accidental. It followed obedience and courage.

The Church I see will walk in that same Spirit.

Courage to preach the truth in love.
Courage to plant in hard places.
Courage to raise and release the next generation.
Courage to choose multiplication over comfort.
Courage to link arms with others for the sake of the greater mission.
Courage to build the Kingdom over our own castles.

We can stand on His promise and by His Spirit knowing โ€œGod has not given us a spirit of fear but of power and of love and of a sound mindโ€ (2 Tim. 1:7 NKJV).

I SEE THE POWER OF WE

As we look forward, one of the strongest convictions I carry is this: our future will be stronger through the Power of We.

Individualism limits impact; partnership multiplies it. When we share vision, develop leaders, and align around mission, we step into something far greater than any one church could accomplish alone.  I believe the future Church will not thrive through isolation but will flourish through collaboration. The church I see understands that โ€œweโ€ is stronger than โ€œme.โ€

When we share vision, develop leaders, and align around mission, we step into something far greater than any one church could accomplish alone.

I am confident in what God has called us to:

The church that makes disciple makers will multiply.

The church that depends on the Holy Spirit will endure.

The church that walks in courage will advance. This is the church I see, and I believe we are being invited to build it together.


About the Author

Michael Nortune serves as president of Open Bible Churches. He has ministered in the local church faithfully for thirty-five years. From his start as a janitor and groundskeeper to church planter and lead pastor of Life Church in Concord, California, Michael has had the opportunity to gain experience in every capacity within the church throughout his ministry. Not only does he have hands-on experience on the local level, but Michael has also led at the district, regional, and national levels within Open Bible Churches. Michael and his wife, Julie, currently reside in Colorado and love living near five of their six children and their spouses. They also treasure the time they spend with their other daughter who lives in Alabama with their first (but not the last) grandson!

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President's Perspective

The Promise of Prayer

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Every January since my first year serving as president of Open Bible, Iโ€™ve invited our Open Bible family to set aside a week for focused prayer and fasting. We call it โ€œAwakeningโ€; it is a week to seek God together and align our hearts with His purposes for the year ahead.

Each year Iโ€™ve been encouraged by how many pastors, churches, and leaders have participated. I believe what began as a week of prayer and fasting is becoming something moreโ€”a movement of awakening across Open Bible.

 

… what began as a week of prayer and fasting is becoming something moreโ€”a movement of awakening across Open Bible.

As we approach Awakening 2026, I sense God calling us not simply to talk about prayer or to understand the priority, place, pattern, or even practice of prayer. All of these are biblical and essential, as we will see briefly. But what I also want us to embrace again is the promise of prayer.

As we commit ourselves to prayer and pray according to His will, we know He hears us. But I am also struck by this thought: if Jesus asks us to pray and shows us how to pray and what to pray, then surely He intends to answer those prayers.  He would not instruct us to pray in a certain way only to respond, โ€œI donโ€™t think so,โ€ or โ€œThatโ€™s not something I would do.โ€ When we pray according to His will, there is a promise attached. Letโ€™s examine this thought in more detail.

The Priority of Prayer

In Matthew 6, Jesus says, โ€œWhen you prayโ€ฆโ€ not if you pray, not โ€œon your good days pray,โ€ or โ€œin desperation pray.โ€ โ€œWhen you prayโ€ implies the expectation of regular and consistent time with Him. Prayer is essential for every one of us.

Jesus modeled this. We see that He frequently withdrew to places to pray and would rise early to spend time in prayer. Before performing miracles, making decisions, or facing challenges, He prayed. Prayer was His priority and His starting point. The disciples recognized this priority and eventually asked Him, โ€œLord, teach us to pray.โ€ They could have asked Him how to do anything, yet the one thing they understood they needed was this life of prayer and communion with the Father.

If prayer was Jesusโ€™ priority, it must be ours as well.

The Place of Prayer

Matthew 6:6 tells us to go into our room and pray to the Father. Prayer is personal and relational.

Luke 11 adds another layer: โ€œJesus was praying in a certain place.โ€ This was familiar, intentional, habitual. Jesus returned to a place because prayer was His rhythm.

We all need a โ€œcertain place,โ€ a space where we meet with God. The location isnโ€™t what matters; His presence does. In that place of prayer, clarity grows, peace settles, and the Holy Spirit aligns our hearts with Godโ€™s will.

The Pattern of Prayer

For generations, believers have studied the Lordโ€™s Prayer as a pattern to followโ€”and rightfully so. It includes worship, surrender, dependence, repentance, forgiveness, and spiritual covering. It is powerful and worth using as a model. But itโ€™s more than a pattern. Itโ€™s an invitation to relationship. Prayer is not simply reciting words; itโ€™s drawing near to the Father. The pattern leads us to the Person.

The Practice of Prayer

Prayer is a discipline we cultivate. Acts 1:14 says the early church โ€œjoined together constantly in prayer.โ€ Prayer wasnโ€™t an event; it was a lifestyle. 

Prayer wasnโ€™t an event; it was a lifestyle.

This connects to our MULTIPLY values. The โ€œIโ€ stands for Intimacy with God and fellowship with the Holy Spirit. Prayer is what produces that intimacy. The more we practice prayer, the more we recognize Godโ€™s voice and trust His leading.

The Promise of Prayer

Here is the point I want to drive home: Jesus didnโ€™t just teach us how to pray; He promised God would hear our prayers, and His heart is to answer. If He told us to pray, โ€œYour kingdom come, Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven,โ€ then we can trust He desires to fulfill that prayer. He wants us to experience His Kingdom in our lives each and every dayโ€”a promise for us to possess.

Here are a few Scriptures that reinforce this idea:

  • โ€œAsk and it will be given to youโ€ฆโ€ (Matthew 7:7).
    โ€œI will do whatever you ask in my nameโ€ฆโ€ (John 14:13).
    โ€œCall to me and I will answer youโ€ฆโ€ (Jeremiah 33).
    โ€œThe prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective.โ€ (James 5:16).
    โ€œIf we ask anything according to His will, He hears usโ€ฆโ€ (1 John 5:14).

Prayer is more than a pattern or routine; it also has a promise. When we pray according to His will, heaven responds.

As we prepare to step into 2026, I believe God is calling Open Bible to pray first. Before we make our plans, before we act or react, and before we lead, we pray.

Not prayer as routine, but prayer as relationship. Not prayer as obligation, but prayer as awakening. So, I invite every pastor, leader, and church to pursue intimacy with God and the fellowship of the Spirit this year. Hold onto the promise that He hears and answers.

Join us for Awakening 2026, January 18โ€“24, as we pray and fast together with churches around the world, seeking God for a move of His Spirit in the year ahead.


About the Author

Michael Nortune serves as president of Open Bible Churches. He has ministered in the local church faithfully for thirty-five years. From his start as a janitor and groundskeeper to church planter and lead pastor of Life Church in Concord, California, Michael has had the opportunity to gain experience in every capacity within the church throughout his ministry. Not only does he have hands-on experience on the local level, but Michael has also led at the district, regional, and national levels within Open Bible Churches. Michael and his wife, Julie, currently reside in Colorado and love living near five of their six children and their spouses. They also treasure the time they spend with their other daughter who lives in Alabama with their first (but not the last) grandson!

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President's Perspective

The Power of We: A Word to Open Bible Churches

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Adapted from President Michael Nortuneโ€™s message at National Convention 2025

In 1990, during a game against the Cavaliers, Michael Jordan scored a career-high sixty-nine points. Rookie teammate Stacey King came in late and hit a single free throw. After the game, as reporters were clamoring around Michael Jordan for questions and quotes, King quipped, โ€œI will always remember this as the night that Michael Jordan and I combined to score seventy points.โ€

Itโ€™s a humorous line โ€” but also a profound picture of what it means to be part of something greater than yourself. In the Kingdom of God, itโ€™s not about who scores the most; itโ€™s about showing up, stepping in, and doing your part. Even one point matters when the mission is shared.

This is the heart behind The Power of We, the theme of our 2025 Open Bible National Convention. And I believe what we experienced together this year in Orlando was more than a gathering. It was truly a divine appointment!

President Michael Nortune unveils the new Open Bible logo.

Some arrived full of vision and faith while others came a bit weary from the weight of ministry. But what united us was not our circumstances or season; it was our shared faith, our shared mission, and our shared future.

From the first moment we worshiped together, it was clear: God was doing something deep among us. He reminded us that we were never meant to lead alone. The Church isnโ€™t built by individuals โ€” itโ€™s built by people united in purpose, empowered by the Spirit, and connected in community.

Itโ€™s the Acts 2 model.

โ€œAll the believers were togetherโ€ฆ
Each of them was filledโ€ฆ


All the believers devoted themselvesโ€ฆ


All met togetherโ€ฆ they shared everything they hadโ€ฆโ€

Acts 2:1โ€“4, 42โ€“44

Over and over, we see a Church that didnโ€™t just meet โ€” it moved together. The Holy Spirit didnโ€™t fill a bunch of individuals scattered across the city. He filled a room full of believers who were unified in their pursuit of God and His mission.

We are in a defining moment, a time when God is inviting us to lift our eyes to the harvest and step boldly into what we call the Mission to Multiply. We believe in a future where there are life-giving, disciple-making, Spirit-empowered Open Bible churches in every state and in one hundred nations around the world who possess a missional mindset, a multiplying priority, and a mobilizing commitment.

Every church, every pastor, every nation represented globally in Open Bible is a result of that decision. And now itโ€™s our turn.

In Luke 5 Jesus told Peter to cast his nets after a night of fruitless fishing. This time, the nets were so full they began to break. Scripture tells us โ€œThey signaled to their partners in the other boat to come and help themโ€ฆโ€ (Luke 5:7). Later it says, โ€œJames and Johnโ€ฆ were partners with Simonโ€ (5:10).

Both Acts 2 and Luke 5:10 use the root word koinonia, meaning spiritual partnership. We see evidence of the disciples’ shared mission, shared identity, and shared sacrifice. Thatโ€™s what Jesus built His Church on, and thatโ€™s what this movement, Open Bible, is built on.

In 1935, two revivalist groups, the Bible Standard Conference and the Open Bible Evangelistic Association, prayed and believed that together they could do more. As they joined their two growing movements together, they chose unity over independence, believing the mission was too important to accomplish alone.

We are the fruit of that decision. Every church, every pastor, every nation represented globally in Open Bible is a result of that decision. And now itโ€™s our turn.

Thatโ€™s why this yearโ€™s convention marked something historic. Our Executive Leadership Team (ELT) โ€” The Regional Executive Directors, Global Missions Executive Directors and National President and Secretary/Treasurer โ€” made a powerful decision: to lay down their individual logos and ministry-specific vision statements and embrace one unified identity.

Weโ€™re not just working near one another โ€” weโ€™re working with one another. We’re not separate voices, but one voice. Weโ€™re not serving competing visions, but one mission.

Weโ€™re not just working near one another โ€” weโ€™re working with one another. We’re not separate voices, but one voice. Weโ€™re not serving competing visions, but one mission: to globally make disciples, develop leaders, and multiply churches.

We even unveiled a new shared logo, not just as a design, but as a declaration: we are in this together. And itโ€™s not just talk. Itโ€™s already happening.

Churches are being planted in creative ways. Ministries are being adopted and aligned. Schools of Ministry are raising up new leaders. INSTE is discipling new pastors. Open Bible Churches are being planted in new nations around the world.

As we look ahead, we need to continue to strengthen our existing churches, plant more churches nationally and globally, and develop younger leaders. We need to cultivate the next generation not just to inherit the work but to lead it forward.

The good news? We have everything we need.

As Paul reminds us in 1 Corinthians 1, โ€œโ€ฆNow you have every spiritual gift you needโ€ฆ. God has called you into fellowship with His Son, Jesus Christ our Lord. And He is faithfulโ€ (vs 7,9).

Thatโ€™s the Power of We.
Thatโ€™s the heart of Open Bible.
And thatโ€™s the hope for the road ahead.

So, letโ€™s keep signaling across the water, joining our boats (churches) on mission together, and casting our nets together for a great harvest.


Here are some highlights from the Power of We Convention. See more Here:


About the Author

Michael Nortune serves as president of Open Bible Churches. He has ministered in the local church faithfully for 35 years. From his start as a janitor and groundskeeper to church planter and lead pastor of Life Church in Concord, California, Michael has had the opportunity to gain experience in every capacity within the church throughout his ministry. Not only does he have hands-on experience on the local level, but Michael has also led at the district, regional, and national levels within Open Bible Churches. Michael and his wife, Julie, currently reside in Colorado and love living near five of their six children and their spouses. They also treasure the time they spend with their other daughter who lives in Alabama with their first (but not the last) grandson!

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