Sweet counsel 06.18.09

June 19, 2009

REMIND

Remember the VALUES: Worship, Teaching, Nurture, Reaching

The Apostle Paul gave his protege Timothy a number of charges and exhortations in the two New Testament letters addressed to Timothy. Paul wants Timothy to lead his flock wisely, courageously and virtuously. He offers as something of a thesis statement this marvelous assertion in the opening of his first letter to Timothy:

The aim of our charge is love that issues from a pure heart and a good conscience and a sincere faith [1 Timothy 1:5].

Love requires personal holiness (a pure heart), honest self-assessment and charitable assessment of others (a good conscience), all of which flows from one’s relationship to God (sincere faith).

  • a pure heart: a heart delivered from corrupting idolatries and influences, rather than being dominated by sinful desires;
  • a good conscience: a true knowledge of God and a true self-understanding, rather than being deceived by and laden with guilt; and
  • a sincere faith: living a God-ward life, receiving his Word and gifts on his terms, rather than living with pretense and hypocrisy.

Church-wide Taste of Grace supper: Sunday evening, June 28, at 6:00 pm we will gather in the fellowship hall to celebrate the release of the Taste of Grace cookbook (fundraiser for 2010 youth mission trip to Peru). You are asked to bring dishes from recipes you submitted for the cookbook. We will also have a time of singing and prayer. Your response to the call for recipes was overwhelming. No doubt this will be an evening of great food and sharing.

REVISIT

37th General Assembly of the PCA: The 37th General Assembly of the PCA met this past week in Orlando, Florida. While I did not attend as a commissioner this year, I’ve tried to keep with the proceedings via computer. Most of the denomination’s agencies (Administrative Committee, MNA, MTW, Reformed University Ministries, Ridge Haven, PCA Foundation) have cut their budgets by 15-20% because of decreases in church giving. Belt-tightening is going on everywhere, not just at FPC Kosciusko.

When we speak of General Assembly, many people want to know if there are any ‘controversies’ brewing. The only issue that would qualify as such is ongoing debate over the roles of women within the local church, especially with reference to the office of deacon. This week, by a margin of fewer than 20 votes, the PCA’s General Assembly voted against adopting overtures that would form a study committee to examine women’s roles in the denomination. The vote was 427 in favor and 446 opposed. Earlier in the week, the GA’s Overtures Committee had recommended that the Assembly reject Overtures 5 and 10—which called for a study committee to be formed to craft a pastoral letter to churches on the issue. (Last year, a similar overture was rejected.)

According to Overtures 5 and 10, “the PCA has struggled with the question of how women in the local church are to exercise their God-given gifts within the framework of the Book of Church Order (BCO).” Additionally, “many PCA churches are uncertain about how to use appropriately God’s gifts among the many capable women within the membership of those churches.”

Why vote against a study committee? The narrowly-prevailing argument was that a study committee report does not have real constitutional authority (like the Westminster Confession, the Larger and Shorter Catechisms, and the Book of Church Order), but in reality such reports often take on that kind of authority in presbyteries and sessions. Thus, if further clarification or amendment needs to take place on this issue, it ought to be done through the process of amendment of the Book of Church Order.

Those arguing for a study committee believe that more pastoral instruction needs to take place, and that a study committee could produce a document that defines boundaries of biblical practice on

RELATE

Mission: Japan: I love world missions, and I love pastoring a church that loves world missions. As the pastor of such a congregation, I have a number of opportunities come my way to see the work in various parts of the world. Many of them I have to turn down. On others (Peru in 2007 and Romania in 2008) I have been very blessed to see first-hand the advance of the Savior’s kingdom.

In July I have the rare opportunity to retrace some steps, doing some preaching and teaching with the MTW team in Nagoya, Japan. Many of you know that I spent the summer of 1989 in Nagoya, assisting the church planting team there. A couple of members of that team are still there, and I look forward to renewing those ties, seeing some Japanese pastors I worked under back then, and observing how the work has changed in two decades. I am taking Nelson with me, and he will assist with conversational English classes. A key part of our visit to Japan will be to take a few days and visit Kaz Yaegashi in Yamagata (northern Japan). Kaz is a PCA minister who was sent to Japan as a missionary (though he is a Japanese citizen) by Mississippi Valley Presbytery back in the 1970’s. I have known Kaz and his wife Katie for the last 10 years. Katie’s father, Dr. Jim Moore, pastored the Macon church from 1961-1968. Kaz was recently was diagnosed with stomach cancer and will be undergoing surgery to remove most of his stomach on June 25. Kaz’s illness makes the trip take on a different tone, as he will no doubt still be recovering. I pray that the trip to Yamagata will convey the concern and love of the brethren here in the States for Kaz and Katie.

REFRESH

Between Sunday, June 21 and Sunday, June 28, the Palmertrees have the opportunity to get away to Gulf Shores…and we’re taking that opportunity.

ANTICIPATE

Morning Worship: There will be more of God’s relentless grace in the life of Jacob–this time in Genesis 29:31-30:24. It all plays out like an outrageous TV reality show–a hillbilly soap opera of bigamy, unrequited love, jealousy, sibling rivalry…and of course, God’s grace that is greater than all our sin. In the morning liturgy we will sing All Praise to God, Who Reigns Above, Jesus, Lover of My Soul, and And Can It Be?.

Evening Worship: How the Lord has been with us through these sermons on Revelation. I’ll be preaching on Revelation 17-18 this coming Lord’s Day evening. Ch. 17-19 elaborate and expand on the message of the sixth and seventh plague bowls, which tell of the systematic destruction of the enemies of God—the red dragon, the beast from the sea, the beast from the land, Babylon and all those who bear the mark of the beast.  We will learn from the imagery of the downfall of the great harlot Babylon. This is not our first meeting with her [14:8; 16:19]. We will see how true the old sayings are: “Don’t judge a book by its cover.” “Appearances are deceiving.” “All that glitters is not gold.”

Advertisement

One Response to “Sweet counsel 06.18.09”

  1. Scott W Moore said

    Hey Phillip!
    Remember me from your RTS days? I found your blog tonight clicking on some links i found in http://gairneybridge.wordpress.com that led me to http://www.reformedandlovingit.com that led me to you. I wondered who would use Sibbes as their blog title. I had wondered whatever happened to you. I’ve been working in Mexico with the ARP ever since leaving Jackson. I’m working on a blog too. One of these days I’ll send you a link.

    Take care,
    Scott

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

Gravatar
WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.