Category Archives: Tour 2 – Fall 2011

Who is the Dream Tour Team?

Who is the Dream Tour Team?

I’m Teri.  The Dream Tour is my Kingdom Dream.

The dream involves two important components.  First, to head out on the road to inspire, equip, and challenge dreamers across the US.  Secondly, to take a team along and intentionally coach them in their personal Kingdom dreams.

I take a new team with me for each new leg of the tour (alumni are invited too.)  I hope to create a path for team members to experience God in incredible ways.  And to help them build networks, clarify dreams, define next steps and have a lot of fun while doing it.

Meet the teams who have gone so far…

                                                                Dream Tour #1 Summer 2011 – Leah, Emy, Ashley

We keep our core group small.  But, sometimes that number can grow for short periods of time.  We had 12 people on the Tour at one point this summer.  (See slideshow for more pics.)

And here is our crew from the Tour #2 Fall 2011.

Lisa, Teri, Lily, Rebecca

We meet hundreds of really, really cool people and find out about their dreams.  We work hard.  We get to see some of the most fabulous places.  We get to do some super fun stuff.  All the while, we find out just how faithful God really is.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

It’s time to gear up for Dream Tour #3 Winter 2012.

We’ll kick off from Gainesville, GA around the 10th of January for about 6 weeks.  We’ll focus on Florida and Texas and wherever else God leads.

I’m looking for a new team.  Here are the “requirements”:

  • Love God and others as we work through our brokenness
  • Expect God to show up in miraculous ways even when struggling with doubt
  • Be willing to live out of a backpack (See The Way We Roll)
  • Be willing to move around a lot
  • Be willing to pray, serve, and have a lot of fun

What do you get out of it?

  • An adventure
  • A deeper faith and relationship with God
  • Lots of new friends
  • Many stories to tell
  • To be coached in the next steps toward your personal dream

Sound interesting? 

Shoot me an email. Tell me about yourself.  Let me know your dreams.  We’ll talk and see what happens.  Who knows, you might be climbing into a van in January and going on an adventure!

What I Learned From Leg#2

What I Learned From Leg#2

Teri

The 2nd Leg (Chapter) of the tour is finished.  I’m back in Iowa.  It snowed last night.  I took a few days of rest and now it’s back to normal.  At least as normal as my life has become.

I’m pondering what I take away from the last six weeks and 6,500 miles.  It’s always good to ponder such things.

First and foremost, I wonder why was I the least bit afraid of doing this?

Why in the world did I even hesitate to take up this grand adventure??

I spent so much energy worrying about all the “what if’s” that I wasted precious time I could have been enjoying the “what will be’s”.

As I look back at the most powerful aspects of this Luke 10 adventures, there are a few surprises for me:

Prayer. It was the personal prayers spoken to each individual that had the most powerful impact. God spoke deep truths through our prayers right into the hearts of those we prayed over. We kept our “pray-dar” on at all times and have some incredible stories.

Read about some of these stories here and here and here.

The Gap. We intentionally left a large gap between what we needed and what we had.  We wanted God to show up.  And He did.  In really creative and wondrous ways. “The Gap” seemed to speak louder to people than just about anything else other than the personal prayer. Someone I spoke to said it best, “What you are doing is making the rest of us wonder what we’re waiting for!”

Read about some of these stories here and here.

The Stories. At the end of this, there are a dozen or so God-sized stories to tell about dreamers and dreams, and about God and His American Bride.

Read about some of these stories here and here.

The Stolen Moments. Staying in people’s homes was really important. There was power in the stolen moments we got we each of the families to talk, share our hearts, and be brothers and sisters in Christ.

Read about this here and here.

There is no doubt about it, this tour has changed my life forever.  I will never look at the world and God the same again.

Rebecca said it best:

Five weeks ago I didn’t know God was this faithful. That He could do something that I labeled failure and still be true. That He could catch us when we were falling off a cliff and make it funny. That He could give us this many presents when it wasn’t any of our birthdays. Five weeks ago I didn’t know His bride – His American bride – was this beautiful. That she was being called to walk in love, and she was answering the call. That she was striving hard to be His hands and His feet. That she was so generous and honest and kind.
I’ve seen the American Church alive and worshiping. I’ve seen complete strangers open their front doors and welcome us with hugs. I’ve seen hearts healed. I’ve seen dreams born. I’ve seen the same God I saw in Haiti and Africa and China and around the world take charge of a red mini-van to proclaim His kingdom in the USA. To God be the glory.

To God be the glory.

Final Stats – (almost) Six Weeks!

Final Stats – (almost) Six Weeks!
  • 6,560 miles
  • 22 states (some more than once)
  • 24 cities
  • 20 homes
  • Talked with over 500 people about their dreams
  • Prayed personally with about 100 people
  • Left with $300 and a full tank of gas and never ran out of gas or food
  • Lived stories that will continue to impact us for a long time.

This is what Lisa said about the tour:

This month has been a whirlwind. Leaving Georgia in a van of 4 people and belongings for a week, we set out into the known and unknown. We met with old friends and did a lot of Luke 10:9.
Heal the sick, and tell them, ‘The Kingdom of God is near you now.’

In fact, we lived out Luke 10 in its entirety, and found that it works. The Kingdom of God IS LIVING and MOVING in the US right now, not just overseas, not just on a mission trip. We collided with every day lives, every day people, every day ministries. We stirred amidst people who struggle and push God for more in the US then we walk away thinking we met the most amazing people in the world. We united and stoked the body (of Christ that is).

The fall tour might be over – but there are more stories we haven’t shared with you yet.  Keep watching the blog for the more…. 

Unite Rebecca With Her Car Campaign!

Unite Rebecca With Her Car Campaign!

We need your help.

We’ve got a little over a week left on our tour.  We’re in New Orleans right now, then on to Houston, and then Dallas.  We’ll leave Lisa off with her family in Dallas.  Then Rebecca and I will head to Kansas City and then to Nebraska where I’ll drop Rebecca off with her family.

After that, I will drive to Des Moines for the official end of the fall tour.  I’ll spend November and December there as I prepare for 2012 tour seasons.

The problem?

Rebecca’s car is still in Gainesville, Georgia.  As we’ve been weighing all the options, the cheapest and easiest route is to fly her from Omaha to Atlanta.  There she’ll spend some time in Gainesville working on her dream with the folks at AIM.

We need someone to donate a one-way plane ticket for Rebecca from Omaha to Atlanta.  We need to get it booked soon.

If you would like to donate the ticket, you can either purchase it for her (please let us know at stories@dreamtour.org), or you can go to her PayPal account here (click on the PayPal button) and donate the amount of the ticket.

Please help us reunite Rebecca with her car!

Week Four Stats (and a story)

Week Four Stats (and a story)
  • 510 miles
  • 2 (new) states – 1 previously visited state
  • 5 cities
  • 2 homes
  • Spent some precious time with some precious people
  • 1 awesome  **FREE** concert (See details below)
  • Met 4 new dreamers and got their stories – watch for them on the blog…

Technology and Providence

It started out this morning. We woke up late, stumbled into the living room, and blinked at each other. “So . . . what are we doing today?” Silence and a few shrugs. Apparently, we didn’t really know.

“Uh, we’re meeting a couple people for lunch,” Lisa offered.

And after that? Well, God knew. He didn’t tell us. But He knew.

That afternoon found me sitting in a white, stained-glass chapel playing a gorgeous grand piano to an invisible audience. Basically, it was one step away from Heaven. But wait. It’s about to get better.

Lisa came in. “So, we’re going to Lexington. Something about a coffee shop. Teri said we need to go.” We didn’t know exactly which coffee shop. Or why. But we jumped in the van and started driving.

We had three options for coffee. Lisa pulled out her smart phone and started researching. Which one? Which one? Coffee Grounds. One random pick out of three. Why? Cool name. And one free cup of coffee.

We got ourselves some caffeine and a fruit smoothie, sat on a couch, and stared at the wall. What are we doing here again? Lisa got back on her phone. Any tips for Coffee Grounds? “Go to the back room and check out the books on the bookshelf.”

Well. Beats staring at a wall. She went to the back room.

Twenty minutes later, Teri and I thought maybe we should go see what was taking so long. And that’s how we met Chris. He was sitting by himself in this back room, and when we came in, he was telling Lisa all about his church. We sat down and joined the conversation. In the middle of which, Chris got a facebook message from a friend. “Two free tickets to the Casting Crowns concert. Tonight.”

He asked what we were doing for the rest of the evening. “Uh, we don’t really know.” (That’s become our answer to quite a lot of things.)

Chris invited us to go to a free concert.

Woohoo! We grabbed our coats and hurried out the door. The concert hall was less than a mile away. Oh, but wait. There are four of us now, aren’t there? And only two tickets . . . Oh, well! “Maybe we’ll find two free tickets on the side of the road, just like the wallet,” we mused.

Apparently, God thought that was a pretty good idea.

We got to the concert hall and waited outside for Chris’s friend to come with the tickets. While we stood there, we noticed a man standing next to us. He was mumbling something and not looking too thrilled about it. He was also holding two tickets in his hand. “Free tickets,” he muttered again. We kind of heard him, shrugged, and went back to talking. Five minutes later, we looked at each other again. “Free tickets? Did he really say he had two free tickets? Funny. We could use two free tickets.”

So, we went and asked. And that’s how had a great conversation with Chris and how we got four free tickets to a Casting Crowns concert in downtown Lexington

Welcome to Kentucky. Welcome to God’s sense of humor. Welcome to a day in a life filled with technology and Providence. . . .

P.S. Yeah, it was a pretty awesome concert too. :-)

Week Three Stats – Half-way!

Week Three Stats – Half-way!
  • 1,150 miles  (Total = 3,400)
  • 2 states (Total = 11)
  • 4 cities (Total = 14)
  • 3 homes (Total = 14)
  • Met 160 people talking about dreams (Total = Closing in on 400)
  • 1 Game of Chicken with a Space Ship (See details below)
  • Dozens of fantastic conversations of God and dreams over coffee and good food
  • Dozens of incredible dreamers encouraged

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

UNCOVERING SECRET IDENTITIES

This is a story that could only happen on the road.  And probably only after a good 3,000 miles or more.  It’s a story worth remembering.  But maybe you had to be there.  This is the story of how we uncovered who we are.

It started with a spaceship.

It was strapped down to the bed of a very large semi-truck one car ahead of us, and it was blocking the road.  Literally.  Its two escorts had flanked it on either side and stopped, doors open, lights flashing.

One man jumped out of his truck, climbed up on the contraption, and started fiddling with something.  The spaceship started rocking back and forth.  We figured that wasn’t a good sign.  We scratched our heads and waited patiently for them to continue driving.  The third time they pulled this stunt, however, we started bringing up words like “CIA” and “government conspiracy.”

We didn’t know much.  All we knew was it went exactly 15 mph under the speed limit.  Which, when the sign said 35, wasn’t very fast.  It had at least four escorts that all blared, “WE VALUE SAFETY!”  And it had to swerve – very slowly swerve – to avoid overhanging tree branches.

We pulled out our smart phones and started looking up mysterious headlines for small towns in Ohio.

Twenty minutes later, we were starting to get a little bored.  Thirty mph is not fun.  Especially when you still have 60 miles to go.  They couldn’t keep this up for that long, could they?  The truck was going to turn, wasn’t it?

And then we had a great idea.  Did I say great?  I meant brilliant.  It was the sort of idea Indiana Jones would get while sweeping away down a raging river of death and destruction.  Why wait in traffic behind this very slow-moving, likely-to-be-blown-up-at-any-moment unidentified non-flying object?  Why not pass it?  I mean, we couldn’t pass on the left side of the road, not with the escorts blocking traffic.  But what if we turned on a side street?  What if we sped down a parallel road, then turned back onto the main drive ahead of the semi?

Like I said.  Brilliant.

The car ahead of us was piloted by an older, grandmotherly figure.  She had the same idea.  She put her blinker on and carefully turned onto a side street.  I gunned the engine and tore after her.

“Recalculating,” our GPS warned.  “Recalculating!”

We ignored him.  Lisa pulled up a map on her phone and started directing me through the town’s streets.  All four of them.  They ended in a corn field.  We turned right.  Five blocks, then another corn field.  We turned right again.

The main road was up in front of us.  Oh, so close . . . Oh, so far away!

“Go!” Lisa shouted.  “Go, go, go!”

Teri was sleeping in the back seat.  Or she was until we started careening through this tiny town, breaking speed limits and taking corners on two wheels. (That might be a slight exaggeration.) She woke up with one thought blasting through her mind.  We are about to die in my mom and dad’s minivan.  I gotta be awake to see this!

Half a block from the main road, we spotted the spaceship.  On the right, barreling towards us at about 3 ½ mph.  From the left, a line of cars raced to barricade us.  We had all of two seconds to pull out in front of everyone.  If we didn’t make it, we were going to be waiting on absolute miles of traffic backed up behind the semi.

One little red stop sign stood in our way.

For half a second, I seriously considered obeying the law.

“Go!” Lisa yelled.  “Go!”

“What is going on?” came Teri’s voice from the back seat.

I gripped the steering wheel with both hands and ran the stop sign.  Goodbye, government conspiracy.  Goodbye, endless line of slow-moving cars.  Goodbye, spaceship.

So, who are we?  We’re crazy, intentional nomads who love sitting upside-down on couches and hate road construction.  We believe in making friends and memories and asking, “Can we pray for you?”  We burst into random song.  We start twitching when we spend too much time in the car.  Or when we drink too much coffee.  And occasionally, we get so excited we forget to stop at stop signs.

What’s your identity?

Week Two Stats

Week Two Stats
  • 800 miles
  • 3 states
  • 5 cities
  • 4 homes
  • 150 people talking about dreams
  • 1 bashed in window fixed within 12 hours
  • 1 stolen GPS and replaced within 3 days
  • Dozens of fantastic conversations over coffee and great pizza
  • 26 teenagers who want follow-up help on seeking their dreams

We’re off to Michigan and the unknown this week.

“He Takes Care of Me”

“He Takes Care of Me”

Here’s a video for y’all.  Week One of our Fall 2011 Dream Tour.  About a quarter of a half a tenth of what we’ve been up to.  Is anyone around here good at math?  Do you know what that means?

We’ve been blessed.  I guess that’s what we’re trying to say.  Our God said He would provide, and He has.  He said He’d watch out for us, and He has.  He said He’d be good and faithful and generous and true.  And He is.  Oh, how He is!

So, take this video as an invitation: We’d like you to share in the blessing.

(Oh, and thanks to Emily, Jenny, and Sarah for sharing your beautiful voices with us.  Your songs and hearts are an inspiration to us.)

Raining Cows

Raining Cows

Rebecca

Couch #2: Holly Springs, North Carolina. (from day three)

That’s where we are now.  But that’s not where we were this morning.  This morning, we were at the last day of the Lucas house, wrapping plastic around mattresses, eating pizza, and cajoling couches up the stairs.  Don’t scratch the paint!

God has called the Lucas family to discipleship.  Very intentional, please-come-into-my-house, would-you-like-a-cup-of-coffee sort of discipleship.  Following after the example of Jesus living day-to-day life with His disciples.

Discipleship gets a little harder when your disciples betray you.  Especially when you’re moving houses.  Even more especially when you’re moving out of a house without knowing where you’re going to move in.  Even much more especially when you’re battling cancer.  Which is what Kathy (Mrs. Lucas) is fighting right now.  What Mark (Mr. Lucas) is struggling to understand.  What Connie (Miss Lucas) is seeking Jesus’ face in the       midst of.

Dear God, bless the Lucas’s.

They were a blessing to us.  We tried, like kindergartners explaining calculus, to give a word, a prayer, a song.  Something to comfort the comfortless.  Something to try to make sense of the un-sensible.  I don’t know that we really succeeded.

But God the Father saw the intention of our hearts and decided to bless us in return.  He says He owns the cattle on a thousand hills.  I figure that means He owns all the cows in Rwanda.  Maybe more.  It’s only been three days on the road for us, and we’ve already seen Him share His cows with us.  We’re looking forward to seeing Him send more.  We’re looking forward to seeing cows rain.

Week One Stats

Week One Stats

Tour Stats for Week ONE:

  •  1,452 Miles
  • 5 Cities
  • 6 States (or more if you count how many times we crossed the Maryland border)
  • 5 homes
  • 40  new friends added on Facebook
  • Only one traffic jam
  • Experienced the GPS voice saying “Recalculating” in 7 different languages and dialects
  • Many dreams explored
  • A handful of dreams discovered
  • Two dreams ready to launch
  • Dino kept safe without incident
  • We’ve spent or given away twice as much as we started with YET still have half as much as we’ve spent (Yeah, I hate story problems too!)

WEEK TWO – We’re headed to Chicago and then Wisconsin where we get to hang out with a youth group and their parents.