Wednesday, December 23, 2009

9 Baptisms in 2009


In 2009 First Christian Church had the privilege of helping 9 children and teenagers make their commitment to Christ and follow Him in baptism. We continue to pray for these young people as they walk with Christ daily. And we pray that as a church community we continue to love them, encourage them, and model Christian discipleship by the way we live.

We celebrate with and pray for those baptized in 2009: Emily Frame, Eion Frame, Summer Santella, Craig Fox, Austin Carr, Miranda Dix, Natalie Hale, Erik Frame, Genesis Frame.

We welcome Craig, Austin, Natalie, and Miranda as members of First Christian Church.

Sermon Dec. 20, 2009

THE JOURNEYS OF CHRISTMAS
Sermon by Judy Turner

There are some journeys that people have made that changed history: Columbus sailed across the ocean blue in 1492. Our ancestors made journeys across oceans to settle in the new world, and changed the history of future generations. American soldiers have travelled to foreign countries and fought to depose tryants, and changed the course of history. Or, even a single person making a simple journey across town on a bus can change history . In the 1950’s in Montgomer, Alabama, African-American Rosa Parks refused to surrender her seat to a white passenger and launched the Civil Rights Movement that has changed history in this country. But the greatest journey of all was the Christmas journey, the journey from heaven to earth, from there to Bethlehem. We know the story well in its earthly version, about Mary and Joseph and angels and shepherds. We know it so well some of us have become immune to its wonder. But this morning I read to you the Christmas story, not the earthly version, but the heavenly version. It comes from the Gospel of John, the first chapter, and it begins like this:

John 1:1-5, 14
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning. Through him all things were made. Without him nothing was made that has been made. In him was life, and that life was the light of men. The light shines in the darkness, but the darkness has not understood it. ..vs. 14 The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only who came from the Father full of grace and truth.

Pastor Leith Anderson reflects on this passage and says, “There you have it. That is the God’s eye view of Christmas describing the most amazing journey ever taken. It was the Christmas journey, the journey from heaven to earth. 'In the beginning was the “Word', that is a name for Jesus, the Son of God who created not only this earth and the universe, but heaven. He built heaven: 'through him all things were made.' Heaven was his home. He owned it. It is a perfect place, more magnificent than all the stars on a cloudless night, more magnificent than the most beautiful sunrise or sunset you have ever seen, or the most beautiful music you have ever heard, happier than the happiest days that any of us have experienced in all of life. That was home for Jesus, the Word. But the Christmas journey brought him from there to here. 'The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us.' He moved to our world. He was born to one of us human beings, in one of our stables, in one of our villages, right here on earth."

Pastor Anderson continues and tells about visiting Manila in the Philippines and being taken to a garbage dump where thousands of people live. Shacks are constructed out of things other people have thrown away, and their children are sent out early every morning to scavenge for food out of other people’s garbage, so they can have family meals. People have been born there on the garbage dump, had their children, finished out their lives and died there without going any place else, even the city of Manila. Appalling! But what truly astonished Pastor Anderson was that there are Americans who also live on the garbage dump. They are American missionaries, Christians who have chosen to leave this country and go there to communicate the love of Jesus Christ to people who otherwise would never hear it or receive it. That is amazing! People would leave what we have to go and live on a garbage dump. Amazing, but not as amazing as the journey Jesus made from heaven to earth.

Jesus, the Son of God made that journey , and he knew what he was doing. He knew where he was going. He knew what the sacrifice would be. He journeyed from heaven to earth with the mission to save us, to rescue human beings from destruction. For the human beings he created in love had turned against God. Sin had entered the world, and like a cancer was destroying everybody and everything. But Jesus came to turn it around, to make it possible for us to turn back to God and be restored in His love, and then to become people through whom He could work to restore the entire creation. What an incredible choice Jesus made. I think if God had a consultant who was a modern business person, probably the advice would be to cut his losses and forget about this human race and start over someplace else. Except God so loved the world and us in it that he sent his One and Only Son from heaven to earth. And the good news is that God still so loves this broken, war-torn, environmentally devastated, unjust world as much today as the day Jesus came to die for it.

But what does that have to do with you and me and our busy, stressful, complicated, sometimes wonderful lives?

1. Jesus wants to be with us, wherever we are.
It tells us that Jesus is willing to come wherever we are to be with us. He wants to come right into the middle of the mess where we live. As a child I knew when company was coming. I did not like company the signs of company coming. My mother would get this stressed look on her face, out would come the vacuum cleaner and the mop, and I would try to find somewhere else to be because I knew she would get me involved in cleaning house for company. Or, I would try to talk my way out of the chores, saying, “We don’t want to be hypocrites, do we? We want them to think we live like this, everything clean and straightened up?” But I never prevailed and always was involved in the frenzy of cleaning the house for company. And now, well, if company is coming, out comes the vacuum cleaner and the mop. I have a different perspective on it now.

But sometimes we apply that kind of thinking to our spiritual lives, and that is a problem. We hold God at a distance, thinking that when we clean up our lives, then we’ll be ready or worthy to have Jesus come closer. When we get things straightened out and are less confused, then we’ll be ready for Jesus. When things settle down and we don’t have so much on our plate, then we’ll have room for Jesus. When we overcome our resentment, or heal from our grief, then Jesus can come. But the problem is that time never comes, and we push God further and further away, and we miss the love, the power, the healing that could be ours if we just humbly open wide the door of our hearts and say, “It’s a mess, Lord, but come in. I need you so much.” The message of the amazing Christmas journey is that God loves us so much, He wants to come right into the middle of our mess, our sadness, our struggles. He knows we can’t fix it, clean it up, heal, in our own power. He wants to come and do what only He can do.

2. Jesus will help us make whatever hard journey we need to make, whatever is our part in becoming whole and becoming the people we were created to be.
The hardest journey for us can be just a walk across a room to talk to someone we are alienated from, with the hope of restoring a broken friendship. The hardest journey can be going to fill out another job application, when we’ve been turned down so many times. The hardest journey can be taking a step we know God is inviting us to take, and we may even really want to take that step. But it’s a step into the unknown, and it’s so scarey. The hardest journey can be starting a conversation about Christ with someone whose heart is hard against God, but we know desperately needs God. What the amazing Christmas journey means is Jesus will take that step with us. He will give us the power to do the hard things that can make all the difference. He is absolutely committee to our having a full and abundant life, and He will help us make the journeys necessary to get there.

3. Jesus will lead us on our spiritual journeys home to God.
Whether we know it or not, we are on a spiritual journey. Each and every one of us, day by day in our minds and hearts and choices and actions are either moving toward God or away from God. If we have asked Christ into our lives, then our ultimate goal is oneness with Christ. Incredible as that seems, despite our failures and sins and detours, by the grace of God and by our repenting and continuing to say “yes” to God, we are getting there. As the scripture says, “Degree by degree we are being transformed into the image of Christ.” If we have not asked Jesus into our lives, what better day than today to discover what it means that Jesus came to make His home with us, so we can be at home forever with God. What better day than today to decide for God, to say “yes” to God, to take that next step on your spiritual journey?

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Awards Night for the Ministries Council

David and Mary Ann Bell receive the "Golden Muffin Award" for their outstanding work this year with the Friendship and Hospitality Ministry. With the award goes our great appreciation for their faithfully providing refreshments during the fellowship time each Sunday. Special thanks to Mary Ann for the muffins!

The "Golden Hammer" Award is presented to Allawayne Carr. Her work with the Worship Ministry this year involved overseeing the renovation of the front of the sanctuary, involving knocking down of a wall. She also led in the knocking down of the wall in the youth room this summer. Thanks, Allawayne, for helping open up space for worship and for the youth ministry.
The Worship Ministry also created the Worship Arts Team this year, who have done a beautiful job with decorating the church for special seasons.

The prestigious Church Publicist Award goes to Susan Krotz, who has made First Christian Church the most publicized church in town! Susan's work with the Evangelism and Compassion Ministry also involved helping us all with creation care and developing the church Community Garden. Not pictured is Elaine West, who receives the "Heart of Compassion" Award for helping us make Christ's love real for people in need.

The coveted "Golden Shoe" Award goes to the head of the Discipleship Ministry, Barbara Hale.
The poem with the award: "There was a young woman who lived in a shoe, she had so many children, and always knew what to do." The award recognizes the wonderful growth in children and youth ministry, with as many as 35 children and teens on Wednesday nights and the creation of His House ministry for children this year.

Loretta Tanner receives the "Silver Whistle" Award for leading the Ministries Council and keeping us all in line! The Ministries Council was created when we revised the church constitution 18 months ago, and the Chair-Elect of the congregation was made leader of the Council. Loretta has done a great job as the first leader of the Council.
In 2009 the youth room and the front of the sanctuary were renovated. His House children's ministry was created, and children and youth ministry grew. The youth are reaching out to serve the community in such ways as the Hayride on the Square to raise money for Loaves and Fishes. We made commitments to care for God's creation and started a Community Garden. We had lots of good articles and pictures about our church in the Carroll County News. Thanks to the leaders of the Ministries of our church for all this progress! It wouldn't have happened without you.





Sunday, December 13, 2009

Wednesday Night Youth Ministry, Dec. 9, 2009

As usual, we had our rock, paper, scissors to see if the boys or girls were going to pray over the meal.

There is one person from each group to represent. Whoever wins rock, paper, scissors prays for the meal, and that group gets to get their food first. We are slowly seeing more kids stepping out in faith and taking the prayer challenge. Even if they don't win the rock papers scissors, they are still willing to pray.

Barbara prepared the nice yummy warm chilly, which was perfect on such a cold night.

We had 4 letters that were written to James, the boy from Haiti the youth is sponsoring. An offering was taken up for him. $7.00. Shannon suggested we put some things together to send for Christmas, such as crayons, coloring books, etc.

Last night was supposed to be our worship service, but that has been postponed till next week. We had 2 options for the kids, those that wanted to take the Spiritual Gifts Survey stayed in the youth room, and those that didn't, went to the sanctuary with Scott for a lesson on "Submitting to Authority."

This is the second lesson in a series on Spiritual Warfare. This may seem like an intimidating subject that a lot of people would rather not discuss, but lets face it..... the devil is real, and he's real mad. These kids are slowly trying to follow Christ, and sure enough, the devil is at the door trying to stop them. We have been in prayer, and believe the best way to help equip them for this type of battle, is to give them the knowledge, tools, and resources through the Word of God. This was only the second lesson in this series, but it seems they are very understanding and want to learn more. From the lesson last week, one youth said last night.... "Knowing that we really aren't at war to see which side wins or loses makes it easier. The devil loses in the end, the goal is to stay straight." That is something we discussed last week, and it is so encouraging to hear them still talking about it. And it's very true, God gave us the ending of the "story", the devil loses, he just wants to take everybody with him that he can. Those of that have accepted Christ as Lord and Savior, need to keep focused on Him, and spread the word. If we can be contagious for Christ and infect others, there's that many more, God can pluck from the enemy's grasp. PRAISE GOD!!!!

We had many prayer requests, and lifted those up to God.

We ask that all of you be in continual prayer for these kids as they are on their walk. Thank you all for your love, support, and prayers.

Amanda and Scott

These are notes on Wednesday’s Youth Lesson

Authority
Permission to photocopy this Bible study from CoreTruth™ granted for local church use.
Copyright © 2008 Group Publishing, Inc. Loveland, CO. www.group.com/CoreTruth
Notes: You’ll need Bibles, paper, newsprint, tape, and pens. Create
and photocopy a list of Army ranks, scrambled out of order (see
page 9 for the correct order). Also make photocopies of the
Richard Foster quote on page 9.
Have teenagers form small groups, and pass out copies of
the scrambled list of army ranks. Challenge groups to work
together to put them in the correct chain of command, from top
to bottom.
When everyone’s finished, have teams share their guesses.
Then reveal the right answers, found on “The Army Ranks”
handout (p. 9). Ask: Why is this chain of command important
in the Army? In what other areas of life are authority
positions necessary? Why?
Say something like: Today we’re going to look at society’s
“chain of command” and how Christians should relate to
authority figures.
Read aloud Romans 13:1-7, and then ask: Does this passage
mean we won’t be persecuted if we simply obey the
government? Explain. What situations and behaviors do you
think are included in submission to governing authorities?
What things are not included?
Hang up two sheets of newsprint and list kids’ ideas about
situations that are included on one sheet and scenarios that
aren’t included on the other.
Say something like: These instructions about relating to the
government and paying taxes seem out of place here in the
middle of Romans. Why does this even matter? Let’s look
more closely to get at Paul’s main point.
Assign one-third of the teenagers Romans 12:1-8, one-third
Romans 12:9-21, and the remaining third Romans 13:8-14.
Prompt these three groups to read their passages and discuss:
Submitting to Authorities
Lesson 2 – CoreTruth™
Authority • Lesson 2
Page
Authority
Notes:
Permission to photocopy this Bible study from CoreTruth™ granted for local church use.
Copyright © 2008 Group Publishing, Inc. Loveland, CO. www.group.com/CoreTruth
How would you summarize this passage? What is the main
verse? How does the passage influence the way you read
Romans 13:1-7?
When they’re finished, invite a spokesperson from each group
to present their findings to everyone else.
Ask: What do you think a Christian’s main motivation for
submitting to government authorities should be?
Affirm students’ answers and draw their attention to Paul’s
emphasis on loving others in Romans 12:9, 12:16, 12:20, and
13:8. Say something like: Paul’s point is that Christians are to
be good citizens, displaying patience, love, and submission to
authorities for the sake of the gospel. His instructions here
are remarkable when we consider how the government of
Rome was treating Christians.
Explain that Nero, the Roman Emperor, had already been
persecuting Christians for several years before Paul wrote this
letter. Nero committed horrible acts against Christians, such
as having them torn apart by wild dogs or setting them on fire
to serve as lamps for his parties. Paul himself was going to be
imprisoned twice for his faith and was eventually put to death
by Nero’s government.
Prompt teenagers to revise the two newsprint lists any way
they’d like in light of their study of the scriptural and historical
context.
Then have teenagers re-form their original small groups, and
pass out copies of the “Quote by Richard Foster” handout
(p. 9). Ask: How do Foster’s comments on submission relate
to Romans 13:1-7? How was Jesus’ life an example of
the principles Paul explains? How can submitting to the
government be a way of showing love to others? Who is
above you in your life’s “chain of command”?
Direct small groups to brainstorm 10 practical ways
teenagers can practice submission in their personal and civic
lives. Challenge them to focus on situations in which their
behavior might cause others to be intrigued by their faith.
Prompt teenagers to each share one specific idea that they’ll
put into practice this week and then pray for each other.
Authority • Lesson 2
Page
Permission to photocopy this Bible study from CoreTruth™ granted for local church use.
Copyright © 2008 Group Publishing, Inc. Loveland, CO. www.group.com/CoreTruth
Authority • Lesson 2
The ARMY RANKS
The correct order (from top to bottom) is
General
Colonel
Major
Captain
Lieutenant
Sergeant
Corporal
Private
QUOTE BY RICHARD FOSTER
“Power is discovered in submission... [Jesus] called into
being a whole new order of leadership. The cross-life of
Jesus undermined all social orders based on power and
self-interest.”
—Richard Foster, from Celebration of Discipline.

Friday, December 11, 2009

Christmas Eve Candlelight Service


The First Christian Church of Berryville invites the community to attend an Old Fashioned Christmas Eve Candlelight Service on Thursday, December 24th. An open house with homemade holiday treats begins at 10:30PM. The one hour service beginning at 11:00PM will include traditional Christmas carols and scripture readings accompanied by the classical musical talents of the Phillippe Family Quartet. Free nursery services are available. First Christian Church is located at 306 E. Church Street. Look for the candles lighting the way. First additional information contact Susan Krotz 1-870-423-7311

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Our Beautiful Christmas Door



It was such a pleasure to walk up to our church this past Sunday morning, and to see how lovely are the Christmas wreaths on our front door. What a pretty church, we thought, and how inspiring it is to know that the wreaths and greenery used have come to us from a local farm and were made by our neighbors. We felt so grateful to our "Christmas Season Decorators" for their care and thoughtfulness in choosing local artisans and Ozark grown boughs to help us celebrate, and to bring witness the birth of our Savior. Our thanks to them.

Friday, December 4, 2009

Possible Angel Sighting



Two beautiful girls were observed dancing late last night in one of the shop windows. They wore exquistic and fancy gowns and looked so, so, wonderful. They twirled and twirled, around and around they went. My goodness, they were the BEST dancers the town had ever seen. Does anyone know who they are?





Someone said they were visiting Berryville from New York City! Someone said they were famous dancers from the Tulsa Ballet! And someone said they were angels. Oh my!
.
Do you know who these dancers are?







Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Exciting Sunday School Class, Not an Oxymoron

The adult Sunday School class is engaged in an exciting study of the Gospel of Mark. Although Loretta Tanner leads the class, class members bring insights from reading Bible commentaries, share notes from study Bibles, and make applications from our own experience. Even though some people would consider the starting time of 9:30 on Sunday morning to be "early", nobody falls asleep in class! The discussion is lively and keeps everyone thinking, and sometimes laughing.

Ken Hale says, "I believe that we are getting a depth of study during our Sunday school class that is rare. We routinely have those "ah ha" moments that open our eyes to biblical insights before unthought-of by ourselves. I think this is a result of the group discussion style we use."


Teacher Loretta Tanner says, "I am gaining a better understanding of the Kingdom of God."
This is NOT your grandmother's Sunday School class where everyone sat and listened to the teacher lecture and stifled a yawn. This is important stuff for a vibrant life of faith. Here's the Sunday School challenge: If you think Sunday School is not for you, we dare you to come for several weeks. If you don't enjoy it and find it helpful, we will give you a "Get out of Sunday School free" pass for the rest of the year. But we are confident you will want to keep coming!

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Sermons

I KNOW YOUR WEAKNESS
Revelation 3:7-13
Sermon by Judy Turner

Today we conclude a series of messages based on what Jesus says to the churches addressed in the second and third chapters in the Revelation. Today we hear what Jesus says to the church in Philadelphia. When we hear of a city called Philadelphia, what do we think of? The Liberty bell, the Phillies, brotherly love? But the revelation was given to John long before there was an America, about 90 AD. And the city referred to was in the geographical area we now know as western Turkey. I don’t know if I would have liked living in Philadelphia in 90 AD. It was a fairly prosperous city. It had a good location, you got to other important places through Philadelphia. It was called the “Gateway to the East”. They grew a lot of grapes in the area, and the city was a center of agriculture and industry. Yet, they frequently had earthquakes, and one earthquake devastated the city. They had to rebuild. I think if I lived in that city, I would feel insecure every time there was a tremor. Now, we’ve said that the letters to these particular churches were written to people in all churches in all times and places. So, what connection might we make with living in Philadelphia in 90 AD and living in Berryville, AR. In 2009? Hmmm – a center of agriculture and industry – there is a lot of agriculture all around us, and the town has businesses. We’re not exactly a crossroads, but our geographical location is good. We’re the Gateway to ..Green Forest? We don’t have earthquakes, but we have ice storms and floods. But perhaps our greatest insecurity is economic. Look around town. What do you see? I see signs of vitality, some prosperity, and I see signs of poverty and neglect and “don’t care.” These are hard financial times, and many people are struggling. Perhaps like the Philiadelphians, Berryvillians have both opportunity and threat.

And what about the church in Philadelphia? Jesus says to this group of little Christians, “I know you have little strength”. This is a weak church, probably small membership church. Maybe the Christians gathered in that little community were of the lower social classes, were just struggling to make a living and not feeling like they had much power or influence. And they were persecuted because they would not buy in to the culture of emperor worship, and the Jews in Philadelphia made sure the Romans knew that. Persecution meant more economic hardship, and even imprisonment or death. But Jesus has only good and encouraging words for this little struggling church. He knows their weakness, and He knows their faithfulness. Let’s overhear what Jesus says to the church in Philadelphia, and I think we’ll hear something for us as well:

Revelation 3:7-8
To the angel of the church in Philadelphia write:
These are the words of him who is holy and true, who holds the key of David. What he opens no one can shut, and what he shuts, no one can open. I know your deeds. See, I have placed before you an open door that no one can shut. I know that you have little strength, yet you have kept my word and have not denied my name.

First, Jesus reminds us of who He really is: the ruler, the commander in chief of the church, who is holy and true. He is all good, pure, He wants only what is good for us and has the power to make it happen. He is true, and completely trustworthy. In a world where there is insecurity with earthquakes, persecution, ice storms, and economic recession, He is true stability. He stands forever at the head of the church and the center of the universe, and He can never be defeated. He holds the key of David. He is the promised Messiah who came and died, was resurrected and now holds the key to the Kingdom of God. And He opens that door for all His followers.

And He says to His followers, “See, I have placed before you an open door that no one can shut.” What is the “open door” He has placed before you? Are you feeling stuck, trapped, dead-ended in your life? What are your spiritual gifts? What is God calling you do to do? There is nothing that can keep you stuck and defeated when Jesus has placed an open door before you into the future He has for you! He places the open door of witness and service before us every day. When we wake up in the morning, there is an open door to walk with Him. But we have to choose to pay attention to God, give Him priority, respond when He puts an opportunity in front of us to do acts of love, mercy, kindness, justice and to speak words of witness. There are recent examples in our congregation. Many of our youth worked the hay ride to raise money for Loaves and Fishes and raked leaves this week for the church. They went through that open door. Dan saw that Dave had expertise that would help people in Malawi Africa and placed an open door for Dave to go to Africa. Dave went through that door, and now some people in Malawi have hope for a better life through building windmills to move water – out of junk like bicycle parts! And drying ovens using available local materials will help them dry fish food and fish and mangoes. The open door was placed before Dave, and he walked through it. Jill has an open door every day with patients that come to get their teeth cleaned. She talks to them about Christ and invites them to church. Friends, each of us continually has an open door of opportunity to make God’s love real and invite people to enter the Kingdom of God. We have an open door before us with the upcoming Christmas season, a time when people who may not know Christ and don’t have a church are most likely to respond to an invitation to church.

Christ opens the door of opportunity for us, and nobody has the power to shut it. But we can fail to go through that door. Why? For me, distraction, busy with other things and don’t even see the opportunity. Or, afraid, timid – afraid of what people will think, afraid of rejection. But today I have another chance to go through that open door. And tomorrow! I have the opportunity to grow in faithfulness in walking with my Lord Jesus. Nobody and nothing that comes against me can shut that door of opportunity that my Lord opens.

We see in what Jesus says that He is not looking for success but faithfulness. The church at Philadelphia was not large and strong. Today the church growth experts would regard it as too small to be significant. It was weak, yet the members of the body were faithful to their head. He tells them to keep on and persevere, because He is with them in all their trials. There are more wonderful promises for this little weak church than for all the other churches addressed in Revelation.

Revelation 3: 9-10
I will make those who are of the synagogue of Satan, who claim to be Jews though they are not, but are liars – I will make them come and fall down at your feet and acknowledge that I have loved you. Since you have kept my command to endure patiently, I will also keep you from the hour of trial that is going to come upon the whole world to test those who live on the earth.

If they will stay steadfast and patiently endure, they will receive great reward:
(1)They will see how Jesus brings their enemies to bow at their feet. Some of those very people who are now opposing them will come to Christ because of their faithful witness.
Don’t give up praying for people who don’t know Christ. Don’t give up seeking to influence them toward Christ as He opens those doors of opportunity.
(2) They will experience the Lord’s presence and provision through their trials. Whatever difficulties you are facing, He will keep you through the trial. You won’t be defeated. You won’t be destroyed. You’ll come through it with stronger faith, and greater Christ-likeness.
What else does Jesus encourage them to do and promise?

Revelation 11-13
I am coming soon. Hold on to what you have, so that no one will take your crown. Him who overcomes I will make a pillar in the temple of my God. Never again will he leave it. I will write on him the name of my God and the name of the city of my God, the New Jerusalem, which is coming down out of heaven from my God; and I will also write on him my new name. He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.


Jesus says He is coming soon. Hold on to what you have, so that no one will take your crown. When you know your weakness as a Christian, when you see the weakness of our congregation, what do you have to hold onto?
1. You have the Lord’s power that is made perfect in weakness. You see, in the Kingdom, knowing your weakness can be a very good thing. Because weakness leads to dependence on God’s strength. God is especially near to the broken and humble, just as He is far from the proud and self-sufficient.
A young man went out to start a church, with a grand vision of influencing a large city for Christ. He had his vision, his plan, he worked hard. And at the end of 3 years, he had to close the church. It wasn’t viable. He had failed. Wounded and broken, this young man cried out to God. “Why did you let me down?” God spoke to his spirit, “You are my beloved son. I’m crazy about you. But I’m not crazy about your pride. Let’s try this again, my way.” And the second time the pastor started a church, relying on God’s strength and not his own, the church grew and was established. We must hold onto the assurance that in our weakness God can be strong.

2. We have the joy of knowing the Lord is coming. “Hold on, He says. I’m coming soon.” John and I were reading a book about life on the English Channel Island of Guernsey during World War II. The Nazis marched in and occupied the island. The Nazis threw people out of their houses and just took over. They required that most of the food grown on the island go to feeding German troops, and the islanders increasingly suffered from hunger. There were fewer goods available as the war went on, and there wasn’t even soap for bathing or salt to season the little food they had. And there was the constant fear. If you hid food for your family or tried to help some of the slave laborers who were terribly mistreated, you could be sent to a concentration camp. The occupation went on for 5 long years, with more and more hardship. But there was a hidden radio in the home of an islander named John, and he listened to reports from the outside world. And he knew when the allied forces were making advances. And he knew it was only a matter of time before the Nazis were defeated and the British troops would be arriving to reclaim their territory. And the terrible occupation would be over. Deliverance was coming soon. And, John said, the hardest thing was to keep his head down, not to walk with a spring in his step, to keep his eyes looking vacant and hopeless, lest the Nazis get suspicious. But brothers and sisters in Christ, we don’t have to keep our hope a secret. We can always walk head held high and joy in our steps. Christ is coming! He is coming at the end of time, we don’t know the time or season. But it is closer today than it was yesterday! And He is always coming. He comes into our lives every day to set us free and empower us to do His work! He is coming so hold on to the hope and joy you have in Him!

What is the reward of patient endurance and holding on to what we have? Those who run the race to the end, receive a crown of victory. For those who overcome, they will become a pillar in the temple of God. This is symbolic language for the secure and stable future of being forever in the presence of God.
God’s on name is written on them, they are citizens of the new heavenly city that can never be shaken by earthquakes or ice storms. Even now the faithful followers of Jesus have citizenship in the new heaven and the new earth that is most surely coming. And we have the assurance that Jesus has claimed us for His own! His own name is on us.








Thursday, November 19, 2009

Youth Worship Service Nov. 18

Youth Worship Service November 18

Started with food and fellowship
Once we entered the sanctuary we went over the rules and announcements
Took up offerings to support James Louis in Haiti. $10.33, Justin and Kaleb served as we passed around the offering plate
Garret serves weekly by running the sound
Summer, Klara, and Josie served as we sang, and Klara played the piano for Blessed Be Your Name, while Scott played guitar for worship
Blessed Be Your Name
Better Is One Day
Come, Now Is the Time to Worship
You Are Mighty

The message Scott preached is at the end of this post.

Ended with alter call , where Klara serves weekly by playing the piano during this time, most responded to the front for prayer or prayed in their seats . Elizabeth displayed the awesome love of Christ as she prayed with one of the youth and had compassion and listened to this particular youths needs, hurts, and petitions.

One of our youth, Brandon Garcia, has moved back to Kansas City. He will be greatly missed by all. He had signed up for a bible before he left. The bible and a card was passed around last week and for the kids to sign so we can send it to him. 3 of the youth wrote letter to James in Haiti. Summer has volunteered to be the "Outreach Overseer" where she will be helping to organize any outreach projects.
We distributed 8 bibles last week to kids that did not have one, but wanted one. We have a few more to give out and will do so next week.

God is good , please keep the youth in prayer, as they continue to grow and learn of Christ.

The Message Scott Preached (sort of)
LOOSING SIGHT OF THE GOAL?
By Wade Martin Hughes, Sr. Kyfingers@aol.com

As I start to preach, I have some men carry a portable basket ball goal into the front of the sanctuary and set it up. We discuss who are we going to trust to take a shot and make a basket and not harm our pretty lights?I know who we are going to pick, I have talked to him before hand and told him not to take any shot, just act out the role with me.I give him the basketball and tell him to shoot, he prepares for the shot.I asked him to wait, I blind fold him and tell him to shoot, he is still facing the goal.I say wait a minute. I spin him around and around and around.When he stops I tell him to shoot. He is facing the opposite way of the goal. He starts to shoot, and every one screams, NO! NO!We discuss why blind people do not play basket ball in the NBA.They have never had a blind player? Why?They can not identify the goal. There are many other goals in basketball than shooting the ball, one must be able to dribble and pass the ball? DO WE CLEARLY KNOW OUR PURPOSE?ARE WE PREPARING AND GROOMING GOD’S PLAN IN OUR LIFE?ARE WE HELPING OTHERS TO KNOW GOD’S PLAN?

You have heard: People don’t plan to fail, they fail to plan, and thus they fail. GOAL:A. The end point of the race.B. The end toward which effort is directed.C. What one intends to do.D. A plan or objective.E. What one seeks to achieve.Hebrews 11:6 But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him. Hebrews 12:1 Wherefore seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us.
IN EVERY LIFE THERE MUST BE A GOAL, OR WE AIMLESSLY DRIFT.A. John F. Kennedy set a goal ...Before this decade is over, of landing a man on the moon and returning to earth safely.B. What is the goal of football? basketball? baseball? soccer? swimming?
WHAT IS YOUR GOAL IN LIFE?What is the goal of the church?

A LACK OF PREPARATION AND PULLING TOGETHER CAN BE COSTLY.A. Years ago I saw on the news where a football team was angry at their coach. The coach was making them run long distances. He was making them run sprints. They had to do push ups and jumping jacks.Several of the team members got together and complained and told their Moms how mean the coach was and all he expected.The Moms had a meeting with the coach and later with the Principal.Later they met with the school board and filed a complaint that the coach and his assistants were mean and expected too much.The parents and many of the players had a strike and invited the local TV station camera to broadcast their complaints. I bought a newspaper every Saturday just to follow this team’s Friday night schedule and record. They lost every game that year. Their attitudes toward the coaches and practice had undermined the authority and the lazy approach to the game cost them dearly.

WE NEED VISION FOR THE FUTURE
A. WHAT IS VISION?Something seen.A truth that is a revelation and becomes real to the person.The mode of seeing or conceiving.Discernment or foresight.
B. Proverbs 29:18 Where there is no vision, the people perish: but he that keepeth the law, happy is he. NKJVProverbs 29:18 Where there is no revelation, the people cast off restraint; but blessed is he who keeps the law. LIVINGProverbs 29:18 Where there is ignorance of God, crime runs wild; but what a wonderful thing it is for a nation to know and keep his laws.
C. WHAT IS VISION?Something seen.A truth that is a revelation and becomes real to the person.The mode of seeing or conceiving.Discernment or foresight.
D. HOW COULD YOU LOOSE OUR VISION FOR JESUS?JOSEPH --- HOW DID YOU LOOSE YOUR SON?MARY --- HOW COULD YOU LOOSE GOD’S SON?
Luke 2:41 When Jesus was twelve years old he accompanied his parents to Jerusalem for the annual Passover Festival, which they attended each year. 42 And when he was twelve years old, they went up to Jerusalem; and Joseph and his mother knew not of it43 After the celebration was over they started home to Nazareth, but Jesus stayed behind in Jerusalem. His parents didn’t miss him the first day, 44 for they assumed he was with friends among the other travelers. But when he didn’t show up that evening, they started to look for him among their relatives and friends; 45 and when they couldn’t find him, they went back to Jerusalem to search for him there.46 Three days later they finally discovered him. He was in the Temple, sitting among the teachers of Law, discussing deep questions with them 47 amazing everyone with his understanding and answers. 48 His parents didn’t know what to think. "Son!" his mother said to him. "Why have you done this to us? Your father and I have been frantic, searching for you everywhere." 49 "But why did you need to search?" he asked. "Didn’t you realize that I would be here at the Temple, in my Father’s House?" 50 But they didn’t understand what he meant. 51 Then he returned to Nazareth with them and was obedient to them; and his mother stored away all these things in her heart.
A. THREE TIMES A YEAR EVERY GOOD JEWISH FAMILY WENT TO JERUSALEM.B. FAMILIES AND FRIENDS TRAVELED IN A CARAVAN FOR SAFETY AND PROTECTION FROM DANGERS AND ROBBERS ALONG THE WAY.C. TRAVELING TO JERUSALEM WAS A BIG EVENT.ACCORDING TO JEWISH LAW EVERY MALE WAS REQUIRED TO GO TO JERUSALEM THREE TIMES A YEAR.D. IN THE SPRING OF THE YEAR WAS THE CELEBRATION OF THE PASSOVER AND A SEVEN DAY FESTIVAL OF THE UNLEAVEN BREAD.E. THIS IS THE PASSOVER WEEK, Mary and Joseph stayed for the whole week, they never cut out early. Many left the Passover before the 7th day to get ahead of the crowd. Joseph and Mary made a decision to fully follow the teachings of the day

F. ON THE WAY TO AND FROM JERUSALEM THE WOMEN USUALLY WALKED IN FRONT WITH THE CHILDREN, THE MEN WALKED IN THE BACK.G. JESUS IS 12 YEARS OLD. AT 12 JESUS COULD HAVE BEEN WITH THE WOMEN AND CHILDREN, OR JESUS COULD HAVE BEEN WALKING WITH THE MEN.Often a 12 year old would travel with the women and then the men for a while.THREE DAYS WITHOUT JESUS?HOW COULD YOU GO THREE DAYS WITHOUT GOD’S SONAND NOT KNOW IT?A. First off, Mary and Joseph were doing their religious duty.In the midst of their duty they lost track of their duty?B. There is assumption or presumption here in this little family.Joseph took it upon himself that Jesus was with Mary.The probability dictated where Jesus should be.C. Mary thought that Jesus was with Joseph?D. To caught up in all the festivities to pay attention to the visionE. Well, if Jesus is not with you, He should be with our family and friends? This is careless behavior at best.

CONSIDER WHERE DID I LOOSE JESUS?WHEN WAS THE LAST TIME I SAW HIM?A. We can not stay here and find Jesus? We must go back before we can go forwardB. Now let us think like a 12 year old boy?Where would a 12 year old be?C. playing with his friends D. Riding in his buddies in a new chariot looking for a girlfriend?
NO HE WAS IN CHURCH JESUS WAS ON A MISSION? HE KNEW HIS GOAL?JESUS WAS SENT! HE HAD A CALL! HE STEPPED INTO ACTION. Jesus was on assignment.
WE ALL ARE CALLED TO SERVE GOD AND HAVE OUR OWN ASSIGNMENTS They found Jesus in the CHURCH, he was in the learning room.He listened to teachers, he spoke amazing wisdom.
Jesus was absorbed in the Word, DON’T YOU KNOW --- COULDN’T YOU GUESS ---I WOULD BE IN MY FATHER’S HOUSE?WORSHIP, PRAISE, LEARNING, THE FATHER.

DO YOU KNOW YOUR MISSION?HAVE YOU EVER LOST SIGHT OF YOUR GOAL?ARE YOU GROWING YOUR MISSION AND GOD’S PURPOSE?KJVHabakkuk 2:2 And the Lord answered me, and said, Write the vision, and make it plain upon tables, that he may run that readeth it. Do not forget that God is a rewarder of those that diligently seek Him.
There is a pay day at the end of the road, hang on!

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Sunday Morning at His House

On Sunday morning and Wednesday evening children come to His House to learn Bible verses, Bible stories, to worship with music, to serve others, and sometimes to prepare something to share with the congregation.

Genesis works on a memory verse from the Bible



Teacher Jill Stice reviews lessons from previous weeks

Children come in to the Tent of Meeting to hear a Bible story



The class at the Tent of Meeting




Making a joyful noise unto the Lord!


Getting ready for a drama to be performed in the worship service






Thursday, November 12, 2009

Youth Rake Leaves for the Church





Last night many of the youth met at 4:30 to begin the annual leaf raking project although it will take one more time to complete it .
We began as always with just hanging out with one another,
We introduced the youth to our kid from Haiti we are funding,
Watched the Nooma video Kickball and discussed it afterward.

Bible Lession: Matthew chapter 7
9 Or which one of you, if his son asks him for bread, will give him a stone? 10 Or if he asks for a fish, will give him a serpent? 11 If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give good things to those who ask him!

1 Do you think God's idea of better, is better?

2 Are you waiting for God to answer a prayer? If so, why do you think it hasn't been answered yet?

3 How do you feel when God says no?

4 Have you ever noticed where God did you a favor by not giving you what you asked for?

5 What was the point? It's not about the stuff!!!!!!! ( it’s about the relationship with God)

6 Are you asking God right now, "Why can't I get what I want???!!!!"

7 Have you ever asked God for something and not received it? And are saying to Him, "BUT I THOUGHT YOU SAID YOU LOVED ME????!!!!"

8 What's your stringy thingy?

9 What's your kickball?

10 Do you KNOW and believe that God is good?

After the lesson we ended with prayer and followed up with the 3nd session on what baptism all about lead by Judy Turner

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

I Know Your Lukewarmness

Sermon from November 8, 2009
Based on Revelation 3:14-22

The Church in Laodicea


We are drawing near the conclusion of our tour through the seven churches of the Revelation, all located in what is now western Turkey. Judy and I want to end our tour with a positive example, and so we are delaying our trip to the sixth church on the list, Philadelphia, until next week. So this week, we will be visiting the seventh church on the list, the church that gets the most negative report from Jesus, Laodicea.

Laodicea was one of three cities clustered together in the Lycus River Valley, the other two being Hierapolis and Colossae. Laodicea was at the junction of three major trade routes and was a center of mercantile banking. Agriculturally, it was famous for its black sheep and for the fine textiles produced from their wool. Laodicea was also the home of a famous medical school and was famous for ear ointment and eye salve, the latter of which had been known to save people from blindness. Laodicea was prosperous enough that, when a devastating earthquake struck in 60 A.D., it proudly declined help from the empire and rebuilt itself.

Laodicea had one major natural limitation. Whereas Hierapolis had hot springs famous for healing qualities and Colossae had a cold, clear, dependable stream for excellent drinking water, Laodicea lacked dependably good water. In the summer, the Lycus River tended to dry up. Then Laodicea had to depend on an aqueduct transporting hot springs water from some miles away. The water entered the aqueduct hot and clean, but reached Laodicea lukewarm and impure, tasting of algae, think pond scum. One historian said it was fit only to be an emetic.


What Jesus Said to the Church in Laodicea


3:14 “And to the angel of the church in Laodicea write: ‘The words of the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the beginning of God's creation. 15 “‘I know your works: you are neither cold nor hot. Would that you were either cold or hot! 16 So, because you are lukewarm, and neither hot nor cold, I will spit you out of my mouth. 17 For you say, I am rich, I have prospered, and I need nothing, not realizing that you are wretched, pitiable, poor, blind, and naked. 18 I counsel you to buy from me gold refined by fire, so that you may be rich, and white garments so that you may clothe yourself and the shame of your nakedness may not be seen, and salve to anoint your eyes, so that you may see. 19 Those whom I love, I reprove and discipline, so be zealous and repent. 20 Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and eat with him, and he with me. 21 The one who conquers, I will grant him to sit with me on my throne, as I also conquered and sat down with my Father on his throne. 22 He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.’”

The risen Jesus has one major concern about the Laodicean church, so major that he finds nothing good to say about them except that they still have time and opportunity to repent. The Laodicean church, like the city water, was neither healingly hot nor refreshingly cold, but stagnantly, sickeningly lukewarm. “I will spit you out of my mouth,” is a very mild translation of what Jesus actually said. “I will throw you up from my mouth,” would better convey the sense of the Greek word.

What about the Laodicean church would reduce the loving Lord and Savior to such disgust? Of what did their lukewarmness consist? Recent commentators are almost unanimous. Hot springs water and cold springs water are each useful as beverages when they are fresh from their source, but algae-filled, second-hand, lukewarm aqueduct water with high mineral content is useless except for inducing vomiting. Hierapolis and Colossae had pure water, straight from the source, reliably present as a continual means of healing and refreshment. Laodicea did not. Its water was second-hand, impure, foul-tasting, unreliably present. Jesus is saying that the water offered a good picture of their spiritual life. Their spirituality was second-hand, impure, unreliably present, not practically useful. So the point Jesus is making is that we are to go directly to the source, to him. He will supply what we need.

Like the church at Sardis, Laodicea could at times put on a good front. Their prosperity allowed them to camouflage their desperate spiritual condition. They could even fool themselves; “I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing,” they could say. Jesus had a jolting response, in effect saying: “You may be a mercantile banking center, but, in comparison to me and my plans for you, you are pitifully poor; you need to acquire gold refined in fire, pure and eternal wealth which you can acquire nowhere but through faith in my gospel. You may market medical knowledge and treatments for blindness, but in comparison to what I can show you about this world and the next, you are totally blind and need the Holy Spirit’s eyebalm which only I can give to you. You may sell the finest wool in the world, but in comparison to the righteousness in which I long to clothe you, you are stark naked, and you need to open yourselves to my offer to graciously clothe you.”

I Stand at the Door and Knock


Jesus renders a harsh analysis of the Laodicean church not to condemn them, but to awaken them to the fact that, while they appear religious, they lack firsthand relationship with Christ. He offers to transform that. “Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with him, and he with me.”
Do you hear what Jesus is saying? Christian life cannot be fourth hand or third hand or even second hand. Rather, Christian life happens when we individually respond to the gospel of a living Christ and invite him into our lives. We do not have to seek him out. He has already sought us. He has already found us. He has already paid for our redemption. He has already won the victory over every enemy who would hinder us, even the last enemy death. He already has prepared for us a spring of living water welling up to eternal life. Behold, he stands at the door and knocks. He is waiting for us to believe the good news, to repent of our wasted years without his living presence, to invite him into our lives to be our living Lord, and to let him supply us with the living water of the Holy Spirit.
How Our Adventure Begins


The adventure with Jesus starts when we hear his knock on the door and invite him in to sit and dine with us. Those who have hosted Jesus at the supper table in their hearts may expect to be hosted by Jesus at the victory dinner in the new heaven and new earth. And in anticipation of that great future, those who invite Jesus into their lives, receive even now the gift of a spring welling up within them to eternal life, a Spirit who enables them to say, “Come! Whoever is thirsty, let him or her come; and whoever wishes, let him or her take the free gift of the water of life.”

Most of us will happily drink iced tea or iced lemonade in the summer and hot tea or hot coffee in the winter. Not many of us would happily down room temperature pond scum water at any time of the year. If what we offer is not dead religion, but vibrant faith in a living Lord, there will be people who want that. If they see that we are open, honest, transparent, sincere, AND that we are guided and empowered by a living Lord—if they see our relationship with Jesus making us loving, compassionate, generous, merciful, and creative—they are likely to want some of what they see. Our job is not to give them a second hand drink, but to lead them to the source, to Jesus himself.

Focusing on Worship Style Preferences Gets Us Off Track
One of the things I discovered in the listening sessions for our mission, vision, and plan statements—and in follow-up conversations later--is how many of us spend time thinking about whether various components in the worship service are our style or not, or whether certain components disturb or inhibit our style. We also spend time worrying about whether something that may not be objectionable in itself may lead to something later that would be objectionable.
As I have listened to these conversations, I have become aware of several things: (1) how very wide the style preferences in this one small congregation range, and (2) how little sympathetic understanding we have for preferences other than our own, readily placing on other preferences the worst possible associations and having no idea of what they actually mean to the people who hold them.
I am not picking on anyone in particular with this comment. I am picking on all of us at once. A person who prefers a liturgical worship service is not necessarily a spiritually dead formalist, but more likely is concerned about ungrounded manipulative fads that distract our focus from worshiping God. On the other hand, a person who prefers an expressive worship service is not necessarily wanting to see people running down the aisles shouting in tongues, but may simply be concerned that we make authentic, transparent responses to God’s presence among us.
If the person with liturgical preferences wanted something that was spiritually dead, there are lots of places they could go to find that. If the person with expressive preferences wanted something that had no checks against fanaticism, there are lots of places they could go to find that. I have visited both kinds of churches within fairly easy driving range.
Let’s assume that people who come here to worship want some combination of balance, sanity, and vitality that would not be available if we were either dead formalists or crazy charismatics. Let’s notice that what holds the liturgical and expressive preferences together is that both want something authentic, God-focused, and Christ-centered. Then, let’s trust one another and make allowances for one another as we go for it.
Three Things to Keep in Mind

As we move ahead, it seems to me that three things are very important to keep in mind.
(1) We are grounded in the Campbell-Stone Restoration Movement that locates authority in the Scriptures, and the Scriptures contain adequate correctives against most extremes; we are not going anywhere contrary to the Scriptures. Alexander Campbell and Barton Stone had very different style preferences, but they figured out how to work together because they let Scripture govern.
(2) We owe it to one another to seek to understand each other’s spiritual needs with some sympathy. Sometime next year, I would like for us to study together Richard Foster’s Streams of Living Water which describes six great traditions of Christian spirituality, each of which can bring enrichment to our Christian experience. We do not have to give up our own preferences in order to learn to value other preferences.
(3) Presently, we are having to stretch ourselves in one service to meet a variety of spiritual needs. As we move ahead with our plan, we hope to implement a second worship service perhaps as soon as next autumn. This will allow us to have distinctive worship styles in two services, one a little more expressive than our current service and the other a little more traditional. We will not have to stretch ourselves quite so far because we will have choices. But, apart from style, the basic beliefs and values of this church will be expressed in each service.

It's All About Jesus
That’s enough about worship style. The key is not whether the service is hot or cold, not whether it is traditional or spontaneous, but whether it is filled with Jesus, whether it makes direct connection with the Source. It is not about worship style at all; it is about Jesus.

Our job in worship is to connect to Jesus ourselves and to help others connect to Jesus. Jesus promises that wherever two or three of us gather in his name--that is, in accord with his purposes--he will be in our midst ministering to those who call on him.
He stands at the door knocking. He is ready to come in and fellowship with us and to minister through us to the needs of real people. He can be a refreshing cold drink or a warming hot drink. The one thing he will not abide is second-hand stagnancy. That makes him want to throw up—his words, not mine. Let’s avoid stagnancy and go for the real thing: the refreshing, loving, life-giving presence of our living Lord.
(P.S. As the service drew to a close, our Music Director, David Bell, did a couple of things that unmistakably and admittedly came from a Baptist heritage. I commented, "I spoke in my sermon of our liturgical sub-culture and our expressive subculture, but I failed to mention our largest subculture." I did not have to say more as we laughed together at ourselves.)

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

I Know Your Deadness

A Sermon Based on Revelation 3:1-6
November 1, 2009

The Church in Sardis

We are in a series of sermons in which we are looking at Jesus’ messages to the seven churches of the Revelation to John. Today we come to the fifth church, which was located in Sardis in what is now western Turkey.

The city of Sardis was capital of the ancient kingdom of Lydia. Like nearby Thyatira, its wealth rested largely on the textile industry. It had reached the peak of its wealth and grandeur in 700 B.C. The main part of the city was located on a high cliff which was thought to be invulnerable. A city or portion of a city located in such a situation was called an acropolis. Nevertheless, Sardis was captured five times, including by Cyrus of Persia, Alexander the Great of Macedonia, and Antiochus the Great of the Alexandrian empire. In the cases of Cyrus and Antiochus, their troops at night scaled the precipice on which the city sat and discovered that the city had posted no guards. In other words, the city in its complacency was asleep.

There were in Sardis, as in other Asian cities, temptations and pressures for Christians to participate in the cults of the emperor, of the trade guilds, and of the Asian Great Mother Goddess. But these are not the issues Jesus raises as he addresses the church in this town.
What Jesus Said to the Church in Sardis
3:1“And to the angel of the church in Sardis write: ‘The words of him who has the seven spirits of God and the seven stars. “‘I know your works. You have the reputation of being alive, but you are dead. 2 Wake up, and strengthen what remains and is about to die, for I have not found your works complete in the sight of my God. 3 Remember, then, what you received and heard. Keep it, and repent. If you will not wake up, I will come like a thief, and you will not know at what hour I will come against you. 4 Yet you have still a few names in Sardis, people who have not soiled their garments, and they will walk with me in white, for they are worthy. 5 The one who conquers will be clothed thus in white garments, and I will never blot his name out of the book of life. I will confess his name before my Father and before his angels. 6 He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.’

The Sardis church has the reputation of being a strong and vital church. To the outward eye, it is faithful. But something is seriously wrong. Jesus has little good to say about the Sardis church except about a small faithful remnant within it. To the church as a whole, Jesus says, “You have a reputation of being alive, but are dead. Wake up!”
Since there is no specific listing of their misdeeds, it seems that their devotion is halfhearted, that their hungering and thirsting for righteousness is never more than a vague yearning, that their avoiding of blatant sins does not lead them into daring adventures for God, that there is not enough reality and vitality to their spiritual life to make an impact for Jesus.

He warns, “If you do not wake up, I will come to you like a thief in the night, and you will not know at what time I will come to you.” Why will they not know? Because like their city historically had been, the church in Sardis is spiritually asleep. They are sleeping through the spiritual warfare of their times. As Rip Van Winkle missed the American Revolution, so they are missing the point of their Christian lives.

As Paul wrote to the nearby Ephesian church, Jesus in effect speaks to the Sardis church, “Wake up, O sleeper, rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you.”
To What Does Jesus Want the Sardis Christians to Awaken?
Allow me to suggest some things that sleepy Christians typically do not understand. I could list dozens, but I only have time for three. Sleepy Christians do not comprehend:

1. the holiness of God and the perfection he has planned for us.

2. the wonders of the costly grace of God.

3. the power and presence of our living Lord in our daily lives.
Let’s look at these one at a time.

1. Sleepy Christians do not comprehend the holiness of God and the perfection he has planned for us. God has a perfect plan for his creation. His plan leads to love, harmony, freedom, justice, peace, beautiful variety, and endless creativity. That is not the condition of the world in which we live. Our world is filled with hatred, strife, oppression, injustice, war, ugliness, and dullness. So are our hearts, which have been filled by our world. God cannot forever tolerate our compromises with sin, the compromises by which we hold back from living the perfection he has planned for us. God cannot let sinners carry their sin into eternity. As long as sin reigns over our lives, death reigns over our lives, and we cannot enjoy God’s perfect plans for eternity.

Anyone who says, “I was brought up in the church. I was never lost,” just does not yet grasp the holiness of God, the perfect plan of God, does not yet grasp what must happen in our lives if we are to enter eternal life. Being brought up in the church and never being unbelievers are wonderful things but they are not sufficient to address our holiness gap. However, if we wake up to the holiness of God, we will know that it is not sufficient to linger complacently in our shortcomings as children of God. Something’s got to give. Let’s wake up to God’s holiness!

2. Sleepy Christians do not comprehend the wonders of the costly grace of God. The fact is that we cannot by our own efforts alone root the sin out of our own lives, let alone out of anyone else’s life. Without a miraculous and incalculably costly redemption, we are lost in unholiness, and so is everyone else. Nonetheless, God has in Jesus Christ provided the miraculous redemption; Jesus took the cost of our sins on himself; we may be saved by sheer grace—a gift we do not deserve-- through our faith in Jesus’ righteousness. He will cover us with his righteousness while the Holy Spirit works in our lives to grow our actual righteousness degree by degree. This is wondrous good news for us and for all who will believe and open themselves to the process. This is a matter of eternal life winning out over an eternal living death, of righteousness winning out over sin; it is a matter demanding our deepest response of gratitude, of joy, of celebration, and of love. It must express itself in our highest worship and in our deepest service. Let’s wake up to the wonders of God’s costly grace.
Brief Intermission: The Relation of Holiness and Grace

Let’s take a brief intermission before we go on to the third thing that sleepy Christians do not understand. No, this is not a time to go get popcorn and a soft drink, but to consider the relation of holiness and grace. Holiness does not cancel grace, nor does grace cancel holiness. They must be held together.
Those of you who have been reading James Bryan Smith’s The Good and Beautiful God have been giving thought to this in the past couple of weeks. In Chapters 5 and 6, Smith describes two young women who show to us the importance of grace and holiness.
In Chapter 5, he tells the story of a young woman who as a teenager had wandered away from the ways of right living and had ended up pregnant. Later, having recognized the errors of her ways, she returned to her church only to face several harsh and judgmental rejections from the pastor, not only of herself, but also of her baby. She went to a different church that graciously accepted her and her child. In time, she and her daughter ended up serving as missionaries in Africa. What a wonderful transformation was made possible by the graciousness of the second church!
In Chapter 6, Smith tells the story of a young woman thanking him for his sermon on the grace and unconditional love of God. What she had gotten from his sermon was this: “You see, I’ve been living with my boyfriend for the past six months, and I was raised in a church that said that this was a sin, and I felt really guilty. But this morning you said that God loves us without condition and that Jesus has forgiven all our sins, and then I realized that my guilt was unnecessary. Jesus paid it all! So I just wanted to say thank you for such a liberating message.”
Smith was crushed because he had no intent to say that our behavior is of no consequence. He got a second chance to talk to the young woman a few months later. He explained how important and good for us God’s holiness is. He explained that the reason premarital sex is wrong is that God designed sex to be a sacred act of intimacy within a marriage covenant, and that the reason to wait is that we are created to be sacred and special people. The young woman saw that her boyfriend was not viewing her and their sexual activity in this way. Smith advised her to cut off the sex until she was married. She foresaw that her boyfriend would leave her, but did it anyway. She was happy to spend the next couple of years discovering her sacredness as a child of God. Then she looked up Smith to tell him that she was headed into a marriage based on true and mutual respect.
In thinking about this sequence of events, Smith concluded that the young woman had to hear him affirm the unconditional love of God before she could begin to deal with his more challenging message about the holiness of God. It is a practical reality that many people will not hear a message of holiness until they have been assured of a message of grace, but it is also true that in this culture, in which the predominant cultural religion involves an imaginary teddy bear God who has no moral concerns, many people cannot really understand the significance of grace until they understand the perfect, holy standards of God and how far they have fallen short of them, and hence how much they need grace.
Holiness and grace go together. Leave out either one and the cross of Christ at the center of Christian faith has no meaning, and we have no saving, transforming, compelling message. Grace and holiness, holiness and grace, you can’t have one without the other. We must wake up to both! End of Intermission.

3. Sleepy Christians do not comprehend that we have a living Lord whose power and presence we can experience in our daily lives. In our cultural religion, God is a remote and impersonal force governing the universe toward total love and acceptance. Christian faith is quite different. The God of the Bible has specific purposes, reveals his will through inspired Scriptures, has sent his perfect Son to demonstrate his reign over all life and to deal with our sin issues. His Son Jesus was crucified, entombed, raised from the dead, and exalted as living Lord of the universe. Jesus continues to make himself known to his followers through the Holy Spirit, guiding, transforming, gifting, and empowering us, working supernatural miracles in and through us, embodying his love for the world through us. Being empowered by Jesus does not make us any more invulnerable to human suffering than he was, but it does enable us to live extraordinarily meaningful lives. Knowing that Jesus is involved in our history, in our biographies, in our daily experience of life, makes every day a great adventure.

This is my testimony. I had a dead faith until Jesus with the Holy Spirit came to wake me up and to become a living force in my life. I cannot claim to have awakened myself. Jesus did it. My part was that I had studied the Bible and was prepared by that study to recognize and to welcome what was happening when it happened. Let’s all wake up to our living Lord and to his powerful presence in our lives.
Conclusion

Our part in waking up is to study, pray, and be ready. Jesus will do the rest. In this letter, the one who wakes up to holiness, wakes up to grace, and wakes up the living Lord is described as one who conquers and receives a great promise from Jesus: The one who conquers will be clothed in white garments, and I will never blot his name out of the book of life. I will confess his name before my Father and before his angels. That’s a good thing! Claim it! Wake up to all that Jesus can mean for your life.

I Know Your Spirituality

Sermon, October 25, 2009
Revelation 2:18-29
The Good Things Jesus Said to the Thyatiran Church

We are examining the messages of Jesus to the seven churches of the Revelation. Today we come to the fourth church, Thyatira. I want to start with the good things that Jesus had to say to the Thyatiran church.

2:18 "And to the angel of the church in Thyatira write: 'The words of the Son of God, who has eyes like a flame of fire, and whose feet are like burnished bronze. 19"'I know your works, your love and faith and service and patient endurance, and that your latter works exceed the first…..
Jesus commended the church at Thyatira for these things:
(1) it was characterized by the hard work for which the Ephesian church was noted, but it had not fallen away from its first love as had the Ephesian church;
(2) it shared with the church of Smyrna the patient endurance of persecution;
(3) it had stood up to external threat of emperor worship as well as the church at Pergamum;
(4) moreover, the church at Thyatira was improving, doing more in its second generation than it had in its first generation.
There were some in Thyatira who deserved gold stars on their brows.
The Not So Good things Jesus Said to the Pergamum and Thyatiran Churches

Now we turn to the not so good things Jesus had to say.
Last week, when we focused on the problem of the Pergamum emperor cult, we skipped over the cult that had infiltrated the Pergamum church. Here is what he said about that:
2:14But I have a few things against you: you have some there who hold the teaching of Balaam, who taught Balak to put a stumbling block before the sons of Israel, so that they might eat food sacrificed to idols and practice sexual immorality. 15So also you have some who hold the teaching of the Nicolaitans. 16Therefore repent. If not, I will come to you soon and war against them with the sword of my mouth.

Here is what Jesus said about a similar cult in the Thyatiran church:
2:20But I have this against you, that you tolerate that woman Jezebel, who calls herself a prophetess and is teaching and seducing my servants to practice sexual immorality and to eat food sacrificed to idols. 21I gave her time to repent, but she refuses to repent of her sexual immorality. 22Behold, I will throw her onto a sickbed, and those who commit adultery with her I will throw into great tribulation, unless they repent of her works, 23and I will strike her children dead. And all the churches will know that I am he who searches mind and heart, and I will give to each of you according to your works.

Jesus gave nicknames to the false prophets in the Pergamum and the Tyatiran churches; he called them Balaam and Jezebel respectively.
We know that, in the Old Testament, when Israel was in the wilderness, Balaam led Israel into sacrificing to idols and participating in immoral fertility cults.
Centuries later, when Ahab was king in Israel, Queen Jezebel also led Israel into sacrificing to idols and participating in immoral fertility cults.
Balaam of Pergamum and Jezebel of Thyatira were leading gullible church members into the same sorts of impure spiritual practices. In both cases, the churches of those cities failed to protect their members from being misled.

The Balaamites of Pergamum and the Jezebelites of Thyatira were somehow persuaded that what they were doing was not wrong. I imagine that the false leaders said something like: “We know that these false gods don’t really exist, and that these worship practices are meaningless, but they are important parts of our culture, and it is prudent to go along with the culture in order to get along with the culture.”
The Thyatiran Trade Guilds


Some scholars think that Jezebel led Christians of Thyatira to join the local trade guilds. Thyatira was the Asian center for trade guilds. There were associations for bakers, bronze-workers, wool-workers, linen-workers, leather-workers, garment-makers, cobblers, tanners, weavers, dyers (most notably purple cloth dyers), potters, and more.
In Thyatira, one had to join the trade guilds in order to practice one’s trade and to sell one’s products in public markets. Now, there is nothing wrong with trade guilds in and of themselves, and the main problem with having to join them was this: in the Asian province, the meetings of the trade guilds were held in temples and involved eating food sacrificed to local gods, most likely in Pergamum to the emperor, and most likely in Thyatira to the god Apollo. Such occasions often included fertility cult practices and ended in debauchery. It seems likely that the false prophets whom Jesus labeled as Balaam and Jezebel somehow made attending such rituals seem acceptable, even wise. The church at Thyatira allowed Jezebel’s false teachings to go unchallenged and left her free to mislead members. Jesus took a hard line against them on this matter.

What Are We to Do?
What are we to do when spiritual impurity comes into our midst?
It is our job to welcome everyone who wishes to learn about Jesus, and we have to expect that some people who come intending to follow Jesus will bring some baggage of spiritual and moral confusion with them. In most cases, we can gently, kindly, patiently, lovingly, and firmly help them straighten that out over time. It does not please Jesus when we become overly rigid, obsessed with searching out and destroying the weeds among the wheat. He wants us to keep spiritually confused people within hearing range of his gospel, which is where they need to be.

But sometimes we have to take strong stands. That happens when people are leading the church or its members or the people to whom it is in mission astray. I knew a small Lutheran Church that had a middle class family, managers of a local franchise of a major restaurant chain, join their church. The family waited until they thought they were solidly in with the congregation before they began to distribute literature about Lucifer whom they said was a misrepresented angel of light who could provide the church with extra power. This was not just a case of spiritual confusion on the part of the new members, but a deliberate and strategic attempt to gain a foothold for Satanic worship in a church. The spiritual leaders of the congregation did what Jesus blamed the leaders of the Pergamum and Thyatiran churches for not doing. I believe that Jesus was pleased with their strong stand.
My Annual Halloween Message

It is time for my annual Halloween message.
From the Christian standpoint, All Saints’ Day, November 1, is intended to honor Christian martyrs and other faithful, deceased Christians. There is nothing wrong with it.
But from the pagan standpoint, the night before All Saint’s Day (All Saints’ Eve or Halloween) marks the end of the growing season and the beginning of “the dark half of the year.” It celebrates the spiritual forces of darkness in a way that is completely contrary to Christian spirituality, ways that are related to ancient pagan cults. There is much wrong with that.

Like many of you, I grew up unaware that evil spiritual forces were real or to be taken seriously. Halloween was a time for the fun of pretending to be scared and the even greater fun of pretending to be scary. But I have since learned in Bible study and pastoral practice that Halloween is not so innocent.
What the Bible Says about the Occult
The Bible has much to say on the subject of the occult. Israel’s participation in autumn and spring fertility cults was utterly and consistently banned by God throughout the Old Testament. King Saul’s dealing with a medium—witch—spiritualist—whatever you call her--was completely contrary to God’s law and will (Leviticus 20:27; 1 Samuel 28). Examples of the seriousness of spiritual impurity may be found in the New Testament with the narratives of the sorcery of Simon Magus (Acts 8:9-24), the magic of Elymas Bar-Jesus (Acts 13:6-12), the demonic fortunetelling of the slave girl (Acts 16:16-40), the magic books and crafts associated with the Ephesian temple of Artemis (Acts 19:18-41), and the listing of sorcery as among the works of the flesh that may prevent us from inheriting the kingdom of God (Galatians 5:19-21). These matters are wrong because they do not fit with faith in the holy, loving, and sovereign God we know through Jesus Christ. The occult may masquerade as loving and helpful at first, but it turns out to be disturbing and destructive.

It Still Happens; We Need to Be Prepared
Many people in our culture have been destructively caught up in the world of the occult. At times it even creeps into the church. In the church I served in Indianapolis, while an elder was assuring me that we had no problems with the occult in Indiana, maybe in Arkansas where I had come from, but not in Indiana, a bright but troubled young man in the youth group was dabbling directly in Satanism. His parents had confidentially shared with me the troubling evidence. It is no accident that the young man also was considering suicide. Satan comes to destroy. Christians need to be prepared to rescue and to protect Satan’s targets.
Don't Be Killjoys


We need to search for a path that is at once sane and spiritually pure. We do our faith no favors if we make Christians look like paranoid killjoys. There is nothing wrong with celebrating the end of the harvest season, with using our artistic imaginations and creativity to design interesting costumes for a party.
Don't Be Satan's Accomplices
But there is something terribly wrong with granting the forces of darkness access to our children’s spirits or to our own. We need to take charge of our family’s costuming, decorating, party games, and so forth to see that we do not glorify things that are contrary to our faith. Once we have done that, we can with clear conscience have a great deal of seasonal fun. Finding the right balance calls for prayerful discernment that we may learn from Scripture and the Holy Spirit.

It is not just Halloween. In this culture, we are not infrequently exposed to spiritualities that are rooted in something other than Christian faith. God wants to guide and help us in ways that glorify his Son Jesus Christ. He has given us five senses and reason, plus the Bible, the Holy Spirit, and the church. Beware of substitutes. Beware of astrology, Ouija boards, palm-reading, healing crystals, seances, psychics, spirit-guides, and so forth. They do not glorify Jesus Christ, and, although they may seem innocent at first, they tend to put us under the influence of the enemy. Jesus takes such matters seriously.

It Would Not Be Loving for Jesus to Stand by Helplessly
Forget your Sunday school image of a wimpy, sentimental Jesus. It would not be loving for Jesus to stand by helplessly while our spiritual impurities are poisoning our souls. Jesus acts strongly to cause us to question the spiritual origins and the spiritual consequences of our actions. He demands that we become spiritually pure.
What Jesus Promises to the Spiritually Pure; Claim the Promises


Jesus has glorious promises for the pure of heart: To those who adhere to a pure faith, he adds: 2:25 I do not lay on you any other burden. 25Only hold fast what you have until I come. 26 The one who conquers and who keeps my works until the end, to him I will give authority over the nations, 27and he will rule them with a rod of iron, as when earthen pots are broken in pieces, even as I myself have received authority from my Father. 28And I will give him the morning star. 29 He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.'

That is what we want Jesus to say to us, that we will share his rule over the nations and that we will receive the bright morning star, that is, eternal relationship with Jesus himself. If we have the all-penetrating light of Christ, we do not need to try to supplement it with the false lights of Satan. This is a call to spiritual purity. Do not let this call pass unanswered. Come to Jesus, to Him and to Him alone.