Sweet counsel 12.03.09

December 3, 2009

REACHING BELIZE: Thursday, December 10, Johnny Boswell and I are leaving for Belize. We will come back the following Monday. We are going down there to visit with the Belizian church leaders and with the MTW missionaries down there (and with Helen Lacey too!), so that we can bring back recommendations to the Session on what the next 5-10 years of our partnership together for the gospel should look like. We feel that the Belize work is at a significant crossroads, and we want to do everything we can to encourage the brethren there and see Christ’s Church in Belize be strong and grow in its maturity and in its ability to be self-sustainable. We will convey your love and affection for them all, and Johnny and I will report to you on our visit when we return.

A THANKFUL PASTOR: Much of my week is spent addressing problems, listening and talking to people, directing traffic and preparing to preach and teach. I have a front-row seat to individual problems and our shortcomings as a church. Sometimes it all gets me down. Thanksgiving has come along at just the right time and made me think about the mercies of God to me. I ought to share some of those thoughts with you.

I am thankful for First Presbyterian Church–a congregation…

  • which loves the Word of God and values sound doctrine and expository preaching,
  • which has such a keen interest in blessing the whole world with the good news of Jesus Christ,
  • which is willing to let its leaders lead,
  • which is willing to let its leaders alter vehicles of ministry without too much fuss,
  • which has so many people who regularly remind me that they are praying for me,
  • which weeps with those who weep and rejoices with those who rejoice,
  • which expresses its love for little ones and our community through its children’s ministry, Preschool, and Presbyterian Day School,
  • whose deacons work really hard,
  • whose elders genuinely want to see people converted and nurtured in the Christian faith,
  • which pays me generously so that I can preach, lead and serve without worrying about how to make ends meet, and
  • which doesn’t mind having fun along the way.

I am thankful to God that you let me be your pastor.

Gratefulnesse

Thou that hast giv’n so much to me,
Give one thing more, a gratefull heart.
See how thy beggar works on thee
By art.

He makes thy gifts occasion more,
And sayes, If he in this be crost,
All thou hast giv’n him heretofore
Is lost.

But thou didst reckon, when at first
Thy word our hearts and hands did crave,
What it would come to at the worst
To save.

Perpetuall knockings at thy doore,
Tears sullying thy transparent rooms,
Gift upon gift, much would have more,
And comes.

This notwithstanding, thou wentst on,
And didst allow us all our noise:
Nay, thou hast made a sigh and grone
Thy joyes.

Not that thou hast not still above
Much better tunes, then grones can make;
But that these countrey-aires thy love
Did take.

Wherefore I crie, and crie again;
And in no quiet canst thou be,
Till I a thankfull heart obtain
Of thee:

Not thankfull, when it pleaseth me;
As if thy blessings had spare dayes:
But such a heart, whose pulse may be
Thy praise.
—George Herbert, The Temple (1633)

REALIZE: Sunday School classes are the primary vehicles of NURTURE (remember our four values: WORSHIP, TEACHING, NURTURE, REACHING) at FPC. Here are some reasons you ought to be part of a Sunday School class at FPC.

  1. You need a place to develop community with other believers. You were never meant to live the Christian life alone.
  2. You need a place to pray and care for others and to be prayed for and cared for.
  3. You need a place to hear and discuss God’s Word and its application in your world.
  4. You need a place where you can find, grow, and use your gifts and talents for good of the church body.
  5. You need to be under spiritual protection of godly leaders who will help you grow (Heb. 13:17; Acts 20:28‐29).

Join us at 9:30 am each Sunday morning. There’s coffee and refreshments in the fellowship hall from 9:00 until 9:30.

ANTICIPATE

Morning Worship: Luke 13:22-30 will be in front of us. Here Jesus speaks of his message in narrow terms. One commentator put it this way: “Unless all human life is just a game; unless we are mistaken in our strong sense that our moral and spiritual choices matter; unless, after all, the New Testament as a whole has badly misled us–then it really is possible to stroll past the open gate to the kingdom of God, only to discover later the depth of our mistake.” It’s Communion Sunday. In the morning liturgy we will sing Joy to the World, Thou Art the Way, three verses of Shepherd of Souls, Refresh and Bless (after Communion) and in place of the Gloria Patri we’ll sing the last verse of While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks by Night.

Evening Worship: I will preach the third sermon in the Legacy series on women in the Bible. We’ll take a third look at our great-great-great…grandmother Eve, especially as she is the audience of the first proclamation of the gospel and a participant in God’s great work of redemption. We’ll sing O Come, O Come, Emmanuel, What Child Is This, All Praise to Thee, Eternal Lord (one of Martin Luther’s Christmas hymns), Good Christian Men, Rejoice, and Gentle Mary Laid Her Child.

Sweet counsel 10.29.09

October 29, 2009

RETREAT

Preaching way off in Tennessee: This weekend I have privilege of being the speaker at a family retreat for Riveroaks Reformed Presbyterian Church in Germantown, Tennessee. The retreat will be held at Camp NaCoMe, which is somewhere in the hinterlands of rural middle Tennessee. Their associate pastor, Rev. Ford Williams, was the pastor of Grace Presbyterian Church in Starkville for part of the time that Judy and I were students at Mississippi State. Ford and I serve currently serve together on the Mississippi Joint Committee for Campus Work. Please remember to pray for the Palmertrees as we travel and as I preach in the worship times from the gospel of Luke. We will be driving back Sunday afternoon–not sure that we’ll be back in time for Evening Worship at FPC.

REMIND

Faith Promise deadline: Sunday, November 1 is the preferred deadline for Faith Promise cards. Of course, we will accept them after that date, but your Mission Committee needs to know the totals to make plans for support. As of Sunday, October 25, the totals were discouraging: pledges were 51% lower than 2009 pledges. The number of cards is roughly the same (39), but about a dozen of those are children participating in the Two Cans for the World Faith Promise drive, so their pledges are probably quite low. This seems to be an area where the economic downturn is hitting us hard. Maybe for some of us, Faith Promise has never been much about faith in previous years; after all, we had the extra money to give anyway. This year might be the first time that trusting God to provide will be an essential element. Please consider what God might have to commit under his gracious provision. In Faith Promise giving, you take a step of faith in seeking for God to provide what you pledge to give toward missions. When Faith Promise drops, then your Mission Committee must make decisions to end support for missionaries and/or reduce support for all our missionaries. Your participation in this “missions mutual fund” is an important investment.

Third Mill: Many of you have commented on how enthusiastic you are about Third Millennium Ministries, the ministry founded by Dr. Richard Pratt which is working to make seminary education available to all the world for free. Their website contains an amazing collection of resources. You should check it out at www.thirdmill.org.

REMEMBER

Happy birthday, John Calvin: This year marks the 500th anniversary of the birth of John Calvin, the Genevan reformer, preacher and theologian. Do you find yourself wondering why we mention his name often, yet you’re not sure you want to pick up his Institutes of the Christian Religion and actually read them? Wasn’t he mean and autocratic? Wasn’t he just a one-note theologian who kept harping on predestination? FPC has the great opportunity to hear one of our favorite theologians and preachers talk about one of our favorite theologians and preachers. On Wednesday, November 18, we will have as our special guest Dr. Derek Thomas, who will speak on Why John Calvin Matters. Dr. Thomas has been speaking all over the world this year at various conferences being held in observance of the 500th anniversary. Dr. Thomas’ address will take the place of our ordinary Wednesday Night Connection electives for adults and youth that night.

There is certainly more to Calvin than predestination. He gives us invaluable insight into the nature of biblical revelation, the Trinity, and Christ in his offices of Prophet, Priest and King. His teaching on salvation through union with Christ and the gift of ‘double grace’ in him is especially helpful. What he has to say on living the Christian life is full of practical wisdom. In the words of Dr. Thomas, Calvin’s “disciplined style, his determination never to speculate, his utter submission to Bible words as God’s words, his concern to be as practical as possible: godly living was his aim and not theology for the sake of it; these are some of the factors that make him a giant in the gallery of faithful expositors of Scripture.”

First Wednesday in November: November’s first Wednesday will be the last women’s study in The Prodigal God in the Jackson Room. As always, Men’s Forum will meet in the Mary Thornton Room.

RECONNECT

During November we will have a First Things seminar. First Things is a basics of healthy Christian living and prospective new members’ class. There will be a lot of give-and-take and discussion. Going through the class does not obligate you to join FPC. The format this time is as follows:

  • Sunday, November 8 during Sunday School (9:45-10:30 am) in room C-405 (the PDS 5th grade classroom…take a left at the glass gym doors).
  • Sunday, November 15 during Sunday School (9:45-10:30 am) in room C-405.
  • Saturday, November 21 (TBA–will include food!).

Anyone can join in (even long-time members who would like refresher course).

REACH

ROH: The last Reaching Out at Home meeting in September was well-attended and full of ideas about reaching people we can reach close by. The next meeting will be held Sunday, November 15, right after Evening Worship.

Peru trip: A few slots remain for next summer’s Peru mission trip, July 2-10. If you are interested in going, you need to talk with Grant Carroll right away.

Lowthers almost there: Our friend Roger Lowther, who is raising support to go to Japan with MTW, writes, “Our prayers are being answered! We only need 11 more people willing to support us at $100 per month! Many have already responded with pledges totaling $800 per month. We are so very grateful for you and for God’s provision in spite of our lack of faith. Let me restate why we are raising this money. Without your help we will not be able to live in downtown Tokyo with the new church plant with which we will be involved. Excitement for this church plant is building. This month’s ‘Japan Harvest,’ the English publication for all pastors and missionaries in Japan printed a feature article about it, including the front cover picture. Thought you might like to read it: http://www.believinginjapan.com/wp-content/uploads/JH-article.pdf Please continue to pray with us THIS WEEK that God would provide.

Sweet counsel 09.30.09

October 1, 2009

REMIND
Would you like some Sunday School with your coffee? Coffee is available in the Fellowship Hall from 9:00-9:30 am and from 10:30-10:45 am each Sunday morning. We want to encourage friendliness and visiting. We will have people there who can help visitors find classes for themselves or for their children. Maybe, just maybe, a cup of coffee might help you be a bit more alert for worship as well.

NOTE: Jesus Unplugged study guides: Each Monday a new weekly study guide for the Jesus Unplugged sermon series is posted. Go to fpckosciusko.org and read or download the pdf formatted document. Each guide contains individual and group study questions to prepare you for the upcoming sermon text, along with a daily suggestion of how to incorporate the material into family worship times.

Wanted: men who will fight: Men need to know their sin, fight their sin, and trust their Savior. Men’s groups are starting up again. The old groups will remain intact, and a new group is forming as well. If you are interested in joining the fight, let me, Grant, or Thomas Pound know. Men’s groups offer a practical way to apply the gospel to everyday life: small, simple, biblical, reproducible groups who meet regularly to help one another keep the gospel at the center of their discipleship. It’s time to start fighting…with the church, in the gospel, for the glory of Christ.

REVISIT

World Mission Conference prayer: Last Wednesday night we had a great international dinner put together by Women in the Church. We brought the whole church family together in the sanctuary for a review of the flags, and then the youth and adults had a pre-conference prayer meeting. We structured our prayer time around the fourfold objectives of the World Mission Conference:

  1. To glorify God through worship and praise.
  2. To provide spiritual nourishment by the preaching of the Word of God.
  3. To instill a keen awareness of our responsibility of spreading the Gospel to all parts of the world.
  4. To make firm commitments to support our mission effort by both prayer and financial giving through Faith Promise.
I read an excerpt from an 1856 sermon by Southern Presbyterian leader James Henley Thornwell entitled “The Sacrifice of Christ the Type and Model of Missionary Effort.” Here it is again:
It would be contrary to whole analogy of our religion…to suppose that those whose great business is to die, should remitted to indolence and ease. They are called to sacrifice. Hence, it does not stagger my faith to be told of the magnitude of the enterprise and the comparative inefficiency of the means…of the obstinate and bitter prejudices which must be subdued…the cruel persecutions which must be endured…All these and a thousand more such obstructions are only proofs that the Church must tread in the footsteps of her Master, and bless the nations by the sacrifice of her own ease and life.
–James Henley Thornwell, “The Sacrifice of Christ the Type and Model of Missionary Effort,”
Collected Writings, II.437-38

REFLECT

Faith Promise: World Mission Conference is a time when we seek commitment for Faith Promise, the primary vehicle for supporting world missions. FPC’s Faith Promise disbursements grew from $79,000 in 2002 to $112,515 in 2008. Faith Promise commitments for 2009 dropped to $97,552. As of August 31, Faith Promise giving is 24% behind commitments. When Faith Promise drops, then our Mission Committee must make recommendations to end support for missionaries and/or reduce support for all our missionaries. Your participation in this “missions mutual fund” is an important investment. What is Faith Promise?

It’s a promise. Faith Promise is a commitment to give a specific amount to FPC missions over and beyond your regular budget giving.

It’s a promise that requires faith.
People without Jesus Christ are lost (John 14:6; Acts 4:12). We are responsible for sharing the message about Jesus Christ (Matthew 28:18-20). God will supply all we need to carry out the Great Commission (Zechariah 4:6). In Faith Promise giving, you take a step of faith in looking and waiting for God to provide what you pledge to give toward missions.

It’s a personal commitment between you and the Lord. No one but the Lord will know what you have promised to give. No names are required. No statement will be issued to you.

It’s a blessing. Accepting the challenge to reach the lost will lead you to a closer walk with the Lord as you trust him to do more through your life (Acts 20:35).

How does it work? A promise card will be given to you, and we ask that you prayerfully determine what you, with God’s blessing, can commit to missions. This is a promise made annually of what you will give for the coming year (January to December), whether given weekly, monthly, or yearly. This is a commitment made in addition to what you are giving to the church through the general fund, benevolence, etc. Each time you give your offering, mark either on the check or on the offering envelope how you’re dividing your gifts between general fund, Faith Promise, etc.

ANTICIPATE

Morning Worship: Luke 10:25-47 will be in front of us. This is one of Jesus’ most famous stories–”The One with the Neighbor.” “The Good Samaritan” has passed into folklore and along the way has imparted a new meaning to the word “Samaritan” in modern English. When Jesus used the word, it carried a truckload of religious and ethnic baggage. By contrast, think about how we automatically understand the purpose of an organization such as Samaritan’s Purse from its name. Check out their work at their website (www.samaritanspurse.org). It’s Communion Sunday. In the morning liturgy we will sing John Newton’s Let Us Love and Sing and Wonder and The Power of the Cross.

Evening Worship: Grant will preach from Ephesians 4.

Sweet counsel 09.17.09

September 17, 2009

REMIND
Would you like some Sunday School with your coffee? Beginning this Lord’s Day there will be coffee available in the Fellowship Hall from 9:00-9:30 am and from 10:30-10:45 am. We want to encourage friendliness and visiting. We will have people there who can help visitors find classes for themselves or for their children. Maybe, just maybe, a cup of coffee might help you be a bit more alert for worship as well.

NOTE: Jesus Unplugged study guides: I’ve posted an introduction and two weeks’ worth of study guides for the Jesus Unplugged sermon series. Go to fpckosciusko.org and read or download the pdf formatted document. Early reviews have been very good. Each guide contains individual and group study questions to prepare you for the upcoming sermon text, along with a daily suggestion of how to incorporate the material into brief family worship times.
Wanted: men who will fight: Men’s groups are starting back up this month. The old groups will remain intact, and a new group is forming as well. If you are interested in joining the fight, let me, Grant, or Thomas Pound know. Men’s groups offer a practical way to apply the gospel to everyday life: small, simple, biblical, reproducible groups who meet regularly to help one another keep the gospel at the center of their discipleship. It’s time to start fighting…with the church, in the gospel, for the glory of Christ.
REVISIT
Organ concert and mission report: Thanks for your welcome of Roger and Abi Lowther last week. That was quite a concert and quite a moving missions presentation. An FPC member said to me last week that she had assumed that unless you could preach, than church planting work was not for you. Roger’s story shows us that the Spirit uses all kinds of gifts to establish and build up the body of Christ. We need preachers, for sure. But we need so many other gifts as well. It’s like that around here too!
REFLECT
So you want to be a leader…Quotes from a 1995 address by John Piper called “The Spiritual Leader”:
•    ”If you want to be a great leader of people you have to get away from people to be with God.”
•    ”Spiritual leaders have a holy discontentment with the status quo.”
•    ”Leaders must be able to digest depression because they will eat plenty of it.”
•    On tactfulness: “There is a big difference between saying, ‘Your foot is too big for this shoe” and ‘This shoe is too small for your foot.’”
A REAL Apology: You’ve seen a Kindle, right? I’m talking about the little electronic device that lets you read electronic books with great ease. A couple of months ago, customers were buying copies of George Orwell’s 1984 and Animal Farm from Amazon for their Kindle, and it turns out that such editions were unauthorized. Amazon deleted them from purchasers’ Kindle devices and refunded the money. An outcry ensued. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos offered an apology for the way in which they handled the situation. It’s a nice model of admitting fault and accepting blame. It’s short, succinct, and utterly without sugar-coating or predictable passive platitudes of qualification (i.e., “we regret if anyone was offended…”)

This is an apology for the way we previously handled illegally sold copies of 1984 and other novels on Kindle. Our “solution” to the problem was stupid, thoughtless, and painfully out of line with our principles. It is wholly self-inflicted, and we deserve the criticism we’ve received. We will use the scar tissue from this painful mistake to help make better decisions going forward, ones that match our mission.

ANTICIPATE
Mission Sunday and Morning Worship: Dr. Jack Chinchen will preach in Morning Worship from Numbers 14. Jack and his wife Nell are the founders of African Bible College. After spending seven years training pastors in the interior of Liberia, the Chinchens realized the great need for a Bible College that would meet the educational and spiritual needs of the multitude of high school graduates emerging from an awakened Africa. In 1976, the vision became a reality when the Chinchens established Liberia’s first four-year Bible College. The college was designed to hold the highest international university standards and meet the qualifications to offer a Bachelor of Arts degree in Biblical Studies.

As the graduates in West Africa proved the value of quality Christian education–dedicated Christian leaders who could truly have a transforming impact on the continent–it became imperative that this same ministry be made available to other parts of Africa. Thus, in 1988, African Bible Colleges established a second institution 4,000 miles away in the East African country of Malawi. Seventeen years later, in 2005, the third African Bible College was opened in the equatorial country of Uganda.

Today African Bible Colleges has nearly 800 graduates serving in a wide spectrum of Christian ministries–from program production at TransWorld Radio, orphan care with Children of the Nations, leadership positions at Campus Crusade (Life Ministries), and HIV ministries with World Relief, to planting churches in the former communist stronghold of Mozambique–ABC graduates are proving to be a key component in the evangelization and transformation of Africa.
In the morning liturgy we will sing  Glorious Things of Thee Are Spoken, a second singing of The Power of the Cross, and Am I a Soldier of the Cross?
Evening Worship: Grant will be back from vacation. He’s tanned, rested and ready to preach from Ephesians 4:1-6.

Sweet counsel 09.03.09

September 3, 2009

REMIND

Time change for Wednesday Night Connection: Beginning Wednesday, September 9, we’re starting supper at 5:30 pm and Wednesday Night Connection at 6:15 pm. Why? In April, 2008, we moved the start time for WNC to 6:00 (remember, it used to start at 6:15), it has been tough for a number of our working folks to get to supper and enjoy that part of the fellowship and then get to the studies and activities afterward. I think that the time adjustment will allow for more visiting around the table and more participation in the Wednesday Night Connection studies. On the other hand, I realize that “15 minutes later” counts for something for those who, like me, have younger school-age children who need to get home. If this time change creates significant problems for you, let me know (one or two of you already have). We might need to trim the WNC time by 15 minutes. That is a possibility. Hang in there, and let’s see how we do. If something’s not working well, we can try to fix it.

Adult electives for Wednesday Night Connection:

  • Framework of Faith: a study of basic Christian doctrine, taught by Phillip Palmertree.
  • What Did You Expect? Redeeming the Realities of Marriage: a DVD and discussion series featuring Paul Tripp, led by Danny and Lynda Temple.

Wanted: men who will fight: Men’s groups are starting back up this month. The old groups will remain intact, and a new group is forming as well. If you are interested in joining the fight, let me, Grant, or Thomas Pound know. Men’s groups offer a practical way to apply the gospel to everyday life: small, simple, biblical, reproducible groups who meet regularly to help one another keep the gospel at the center of their discipleship. It’s time to start fighting…with the church, in the gospel, for the glory of Christ.

Organ concert and mission report: Those are two things you usually don’t find side by side. But Sunday evening, September 13 FPC will hear such a combination. Roger Lowther is preparing to go to Japan with MTW. Roger is also a first-rate organist. In the evening service he will perform, and also he will tell us about the ministry to which God is calling him and his family.  When Nelson and I were in Japan, we met two of the team member who will serve with Roger in central Tokyo in the Christ Church Tokyo plant. Roger and I have mutual friends in Memphis, and that is how I first got to know him. I know you will enjoy hearing what he plays and what he has to say about using the arts to reach Japanese people for Christ.

Jesus Unplugged starts September 13: Bring “ordinary life” and “kingdom life” together by listening to the Gospel according to Luke: Jesus answering questions, Jesus conversing at the supper table, Jesus talking things over, Jesus telling stories—Jesus unhurried and interruptible.

NOTE: Jesus Unplugged study guide: Beginning next week, I will be making a study guide available in weekly or biweekly intervals. The goal is to have some material from the sermon series for you to use in personal study, family worship or small group and Sunday School class settings in preparation for public, gathered worship each week and for application to everyday life. I am doing this on a trial basis, and the study guide will be available in electronic format only, via download from fpckosciusko.org.

Happy New Year! If you missed the Fall Family Night ministry preview back on August 12, you can catch up by picking up an orange Fall @ FPC 2009: What is your next step? sheet. This will give you a lot of information on upcoming events between now and Thanksgiving. The back page is a calendar for the next four months.

REVISIT

Sunday School: Last Lord’s Day, we announced that John Clark Love is the new superintendent of FPC Sunday School. John Clark is bringing some new ideas and some good old ideas to the task. One essential thing we need in all classes is consistent, accurate record-keeping. His job is much harder if the attendance folder for your class is not filled out. We also need to thank Marc Sims, who has been faithfully serving Sunday School in a secretary role during 2009. Remember that Sunday School is the primary vehicle through which NURTURE takes place in FPC. I am encouraged to see that many adult classes are having fun together between Sundays and are coming up with strategies to reach those who haven’t come in a while.

ANTICIPATE

Morning Worship: Last week we ordained Sam Potts to the office of deacon. In connection with that service I preached from 1 Timothy 3 on the good standing and great confidence that faithful deacons obtain. This Sunday I will preach again from 1 Timothy 3. This time the spotlight will be on the office of elder. God equips and calls men to govern and shepherd on behalf of Christ in his Church, and in this section gives the criteria someone must meet to be called a pastor/elder (see also Titus 1:5-9). The terms elder, pastor, overseer, bishop, and shepherd are synonymous in the New Testament, and are used together in such places as Acts 20:28, and I Peter 5:1-4; so, when Paul here speaks of an overseer/bishop, he’s speaking of what usually call an elder/pastor. This position of leadership requires that only the most godly and most motivated men be chosen for this high honor.In the morning liturgy we will sing O for a Thousand Tongues to Sing, Like a River Glorious, and The Lord’s My Shepherd [Psalm 23].

Evening Worship: Grant will preach from Ephesians 3:14-21.

Sweet counsel 08.20.09

August 20, 2009

Sweet Counsel is back after a six-week hiatus…

REMIND

Happy New Year! August is the start of the new year for many of us, especially if we have children. It is also the time when we regroup, restart some ministries that lie fallow for the summer and introduce some new vehicles of ministry. If you missed the Fall Family Night ministry preview back on August 12, you can catch up by picking up an orange Fall @ FPC 2009: What is your next step? sheet. This will give you a lot of information on upcoming events between now and Thanksgiving. The back page is a calendar for the next four months.

Reaching Out at Home: Do you have a heart for the mission field close to home? If you are, you are invited to a meeting directed toward developing and strengthening FPC ministry vehicles for local outreach and mercy ministry, English as a Second Language (ESL), church planting in North America, special needs ministry, campus ministries, military chaplaincy, disaster relief, and other ways of reaching out to our nearby neighbors and those in spiritual need across our nation. We will meet over soup and/or sandwiches on Sunday evening, August 23, in the Jackson Room right after Evening Worship.

REVISIT

Rally Day: We fed around 120 or so last Sunday morning. Cooks Culley Newman and Danny Temple, decorators Keith, Teresa, Victoria and Alexandria Paton, and the entire committee (Lynda Temple, Tanya Steen, Celina Wilson, Sandra Fowler and Mary Denny) put an excellent meal together. Grant was in charge of the Rally Day program. Rally Day is not a just a relic of the past. It is a good way to catch a quick glimpse at what the various children’s and adult classes are doing. There are red sheets of paper at the bulletin pick-up points which give a brief description of the various classes. Invite someone to join you in your class, or if you need help finding a class that suits you or someone else, talk to me or to Grant.

Helping Hand for Helping Hands: Thank you for your generous response to the last-minute call for canned goods to replenish the food pantry at Helping Hands. The number of beneficiaries receiving food assistance at HH has increased by 75% over the past 4 months. FPC really rose the occasion with a strong response last Sunday. If you didn’t get in on that particular joy, I’m sure you can call Helping Hands and ask how you can help.

Andy and Bev Warren: At the last Wednesday Night Connection I gave my teaching time to Andy Warren (MTW Ethiopia) for a report. He emailed me last Friday to let me know that he and Bev could be in Kosciusko on the following Wednseday night, and who can refuse such an opportunity? Their visit to the U.S. is not a regular home assignment; rather, it is due to their youngest son Kit enrolling at Mississippi State. They have helped Kit settle on campus, and are getting ready to visit other supporting churches and do some recruiting while they are here. They will return to Ethiopia October 4. Andy showed us a moving video which chronicled some of their work with HIV-infected residents of Addis Ababa and surrounding regions. They are currently working with 485 families affected by the disease. They are always in need of medical personnel for short-term trips. Also, they help 714 children with educational needs. Andy and Bev asked us to pray for them in their new ‘empty-nest’ situation as a family, for the development of the church plant they want to see in Addis Ababa, and for the many people they serve and care for in Jesus’ name.

REPENT
Scotty Smith, pastor of Christ Community Church (PCA) of Franklin, Tennessee, has been posting some prayers on his blog. They have served as rich devotional fare for me recently. Here is one example:

Prayer for a Thick Skin and a Big Heart

Do not repay anyone evil for evil. Be careful to do what is right in the eyes of everybody. If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone.  Do not take revenge, my friends, but leave room for God’s wrath, for it is written: “It is mine to avenge; I will repay,” says the Lord. On the contrary: “If your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him something to drink. In doing this, you will heap burning coals on his head.” Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good. Romans 12:17-21
Dear Lord Jesus, Prince of Peace, apart from you, the admonitions in this passage mock our sensibilities. Everything within us instinctively wants to get even when we are hurt by others. Whether it’s a “light-hearted” insult or an outright assault; whether it’s our forgotten birthday or a remembered failure; whether we’re excluded from a party or included in someone’s madness… so often, too often, the pain we feel get’s recycled and redistributed to others.
We ask you for thick skin and a big heart, Jesus. We want to love well in the presence of everything from non-intended slights to full bore evil. Where evil has already deeply wounded us or is presently lurking, Jesus, let us remember, even deeper in our hearts, that you will repay, you will avenge. Because you have already overcome evil on the cross and have secured its utter annihilation, we can dare to imagine overcoming evil with good. We are clueless about feeding hungry, thirsty enemies, Jesus. Take our hand and show us the way.
And where we are just too sensitive, Jesus, too easily offended, too ready to keep record of wrongs done to us… may the gospel bring us much greater freedom. May this be a week, Jesus, of overlooking everything that should be overlooked, of dealing wisely as peacemakers with the situations we must confront, and a week of revoking all revenge in light of the Day you return to make all things new. All for your glory we ask these things, Jesus. Amen.

ANTICIPATE

Morning Worship: This Sunday we’ll have the joy of witnessing the Baptism of Nathan Carroll. Camille’s father, Rev. Billy Joseph, Minister of Congregational Care at First Presbyterian Church of Jackson, will assist. I will conclude the series The Handing Down: The Gospel according to the Isaac and Jacob by preaching from the genealogy of Esau in Genesis 36–a passage that illustrates for us some truths about God’s “common grace” toward all people and God’s “saving grace” toward believers. In the morning liturgy we will sing This Is My Father’s World, Blest the Man That Fear Jehovah [Psalm 128], and Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing.

Evening Worship: Speaking of concluding a series, Sunday evening will mark the conclusion of my series on Revelation–a sermon on Revelation 22:6-22 entitled Hope Unveiled.

REMIND

Please remember to stay a few minutes after Morning Worship next Lord’s Day, July 12, as the Session has called a congregational meeting for the purpose of electing deacons from the slate of nominees approved by the Session: Kerry Hudgins, Keith Paton, Scott Pickle, and Sam Potts (Michael Holman, Culley Newman, and Bill Roos will rotate off the Diaconate. Dennis Baird has been granted a one-year leave of absence, effective June 1). Also, Eddie Thomas is returning to elder duties after a sabbatical (Greg LeVert begins a year-long sabbatical in July).

The rotation system (3 years of active service for deacons and 6 years for elders) is designed to give the men a rest from Diaconate and Session meetings and primary administrative duties related to the office. But it does not mean that a man who “rotates off” stops being a deacon or elder. Ordination to office is for life, unless a man is called by God to serve elsewhere, or disqualifies himself in some way, or is unable to perform his duties. People, projects and needs in the church do not wait or adjust annually for experienced leaders to step away and new leaders to step in. Both the newly-ordained officer and the officer returning from a year off are thrown right into the deep end of the pool. Remember to pray for our deacons and elders. Encourage and support them in any way you can. They carry out so much of the ‘ground war’ of our efforts. I thank God for each of them.

REVISIT

Church-wide Taste of Grace supper: A group of 75 or so was treated to a delicious sampling of the culinary riches of the new Taste of Grace cookbook this past Sunday evening. Taste of Grace is available for $20, and sales help fund the 2010 youth mission trip to Peru. The time of singing was excellent (the hard floors of the fellowship hall really help!). Sandra Fowler helped organize the logistics. Deborah Templeton has carried the cookbook project forward since its inception. Thanks to you both!

RELATE

Mission: Japan update: Nelson and I are leaving for Japan on Thursday, July 17! Here are some updates regarding the trip:

  • Mississippi Valley Presbytery has been very generous toward us in offering to pay our in-country expenses (train passes, lodging, etc.). As for the airfare and other expenses, I am following Paul’s example of self-support in Corinth (2 Corinthians 11), so as not to be a burden on FPC funds.
  • Some have asked about our plans for lodging. We will be spending a total of 3 nights in hotels. While in Nagoya we will stay in Linda Wixon’s apartment. Linda will stay with another female member of the MTW team who lives about a ten-minute walk away.
  • Rev. Kaz Yaegashi underwent stomach surgery last week in Yamagata. He is recovering well. His son Morris has been sending reports. The surgeon removed 55% of Kaz’s stomach. Here is a quote from Morris’ email about a strange conference with the surgeon after the operation was completed (not for the squeamish):

The nurse finally appeared and told us to come in to a little room next to the waiting room. Dr. Onishi, the surgeon (who, by the way, is an expert in this specific type of surgery that was performed on Dad. He has done hundreds.) appeared from the OR carrying a plastic container (It actually looked like a casserole dish) with a red blob stretched out in it. It was Dad’ stomach!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!   I nearly threw up.  Mom started crying. The nurse was looking at us all worried; then the doctor said, “problem?”
So, I said to mom “Just don’t look at it if you don’t want to,” as I turned back to the plate of stretched-out, red THING, formally known as Kaz’s stomach.
Dr. Onishi then pointed out the specific location of the cancer, and explained why the surgery took longer than scheduled.

REFORMED YOUTH MINISTRIES

On Monday 14 high school students and 2 chaperones from FPC Kosciusko will depart for the Reformed Youth Ministries (RYM) Sr. High Conference in Panama City Beach, Florida. They will join 1,250 students from around the Southeast for a week of biblical teaching in seminars, worship, preaching from Rev. Joe Novenson of Lookout Mountain Presbyterian Church, and a whole lot of fun.

I will be heading down there on Sunday to do some advance preparation work for the start of the conference (I’ve served on the RYM Board since 1996). Pray for me, as I’ll be teaching a seminar on God’s grace in the life of Jacob (See how good I am at recycling?). Below is a history of RYM that Wayne Herring and I co-wrote. Much to my surprise, it appeared in the most recent issue of the Reformed Theological Seminary Leadership magazine:

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, students of Reformed Theological Seminary (RTS) in Jackson, Mississippi, returning in the fall after summer internships at various churches around the South, frequently voiced to one another a complaint that became all too common: there simply was no good youth conference to which they could take their young people. Plenty of conferences were available, but the primary—if not exclusive—purpose seemed to be to provide fun. Good biblical teaching for high-school students was hard to find, and where it did exist, it was often dry and legalistic. No one, apparently, wanted to teach the basics of Reformed theology and play basketball.

Three RTS students—Wayne Herring (class of ‘71), Pete Hurst (‘72) and Wayne Rogers (‘72)—good friends who loved both theology and fun, decided to attempt do something about the situation. The need yawned large in their minds, and the burden grew in their hearts. In the autumn of 1971, a Saturday afternoon of planning, dreaming, and prayer yielded the idea of Reformed Youth Movement (so named because they were unable to think of anything cleverer). Gradually, though, “RYM” stuck.

Hurst and Rogers, graduates of King College in Bristol, Tennessee, thought the college might welcome a summer youth conference there. Once the college agreed to rent its facilities, the three men wrote letters to far and wide, made phone calls, and did all they could to get the word out. They prayed that God would send fifty young people. To their great surprise and delight, 125 came! The mornings were filled with solid teaching and the afternoons were devoted to fun. Evenings featured serious preaching with an evangelistic emphasis provided that first year by Dr. O. Palmer Robertson.

The conference grew rapidly, moved several times to different locations, and settled in at Covenant College for a run of nearly ten years. In the mid-1980s Bebo Elkin convinced the RYM Board to try Laguna Beach Christian Retreat in Panama City Beach, Florida. Before that move, the conference usually numbered around 400. After the move to Florida, attendance went up dramatically and eventually reached what it is today: 1,200–1,300 in the Senior High Florida conference alone.

Herring recalls that many pastors and church leaders were initially unsure about RYM and could not wholeheartedly support it. Gradually, he says, that changed, and today “we are very grateful for the men who came and stood with us in those early days. And we still believe that only eternity will tell what God has done through RYM. To him alone be the glory.”

As the Senior High Florida conference grew the RYM Board recognized that there were more opportunities to reach students for Christ and strengthen youth ministry in the local church than ever. The lives and culture of youth need the transforming power of the gospel of Christ.  Families and communities devastated by sin need the restoration and hope that only the gospel of Christ can bring. Thus, in the late 1990s the RYM Board decided to expand its conference base beyond a single-site summer youth conference. In the summer of 2000 a junior high RYM conference was begun at Laguna, and youth ministry training seminars were held at various sites. In 2004 and 2005 additional summer conferences were planted in Colorado and the Pacific Northwest; and in 2008 RYM is adding both a Mercy in Missions Project and a winter conference in Colorado.

RYM (recently renamed Reformed Youth Ministries) is now poised to assist churches by providing training and resources in the development and implementation of a biblical philosophy of youth ministry, a church internship program, and the promotion and publication of curriculum and other resources to help church leaders and parents point young people to Jesus Christ, the Son of God and Savior of sinners. We thank God for the birth and growth of this ministry—and we’ve never grown tired of having fun!

ANTICIPATE

Morning Worship: Grant Carroll will preach in both services on Sunday. In Morning Worship he will begin a series on Ephesians 1-3 entitled God’s Glory Revealed in the Gospel. In the morning liturgy we will sing My Hope Is Built on Noting Less, Jesus, Lover of My Soul, How Vast the Benefits Divine, and Christ of All My Hopes the Ground.

Evening Worship: Grant will continue preaching from Ephesians 1 and minister at the Lord’s Table. We will sing Thy Works, Not Mine and How Sweet and Awesome Is the Place.

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.”

Sweet counsel 06.11.09

June 11, 2009

Last week I had to pull out of town before I could get Sweet Counsel completed. We went to Lucedale, where Nelson and I put in two flower beds for Judy’s parents. So, let’s catch up…

REVISIT

Vacation Bible School: As I write, there is one more day of Vacation Bible School left. The King Is Coming has been a great curriculum, but what makes a good VBS is great workers and helpers. We’ve had plenty of those. Christi Sims has done an excellent job directing the week. As of Wednesday, we’ve had 78 different children come at least one day, with an average daily attendance between 65-70. Our youth always come through with great help with activities in the gym, teaching, crafts, music, skits, sound engineering, nursery. In fact, our teenagers provide help in every facet of VBS. We couldn’t do it without them. And, space does not permit me to talk about how great the skits were…You can find photos on fpckosciusko.org sometime on Friday.

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 innippon 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. Two weeks ago Kaz was diagnosed with stomach cancer and will be undergoing surgery to remove most of his stomach on June 22. 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.

REPENT

Below is a very insightful comparison between “religion” and “the gospel” drawn from the sermons of Tim Keller (Senior Pastor of Redemer Presbyterian Church in Manhattan and author of The Reason for God and The Prodigal God). Tim does a remarkable job of probing hearts and revealing how easily we slip into self-dependence. Read the comparison list below with humility and care. It will do your soul good.

RELIGION: I obey-therefore I’m accepted.

THE GOSPEL: I’m accepted-therefore I obey.

RELIGION: Motivation is based on fear and insecurity.

THE GOSPEL: Motivation is based on grateful joy.

RELIGION: I obey God in order to get things from God.

THE GOSPEL: I obey God to get to God-to delight and resemble Him.

RELIGION: When circumstances in my life go wrong, I am angry at God or my self, since I believe, like Job’s friends that anyone who is good deserves a comfortable life.

THE GOSPEL: When circumstances in my life go wrong, I struggle but I know all my punishment fell on Jesus and that while he may allow this for my training, he will exercise his Fatherly love within my trial.

RELIGION: When I am criticized I am furious or devastated because it is critical that I think of myself as a ‘good person’. Threats to that self-image must be destroyed at all costs.

THE GOSPEL: When I am criticized I struggle, but it is not critical for me to think of myself as a ‘good person.’ My identity is not built on my record or my performance but on God’s love for me in Christ. I can take criticism.

RELIGION: My prayer life consists largely of petition and it only heats up when I am in a time of need. My main purpose in prayer is control of the environment.

THE GOSPEL: My prayer life consists of generous stretches of praise and adoration. My main purpose is fellowship with Him.

RELIGION: My self-view swings between two poles. If and when I am living up to my standards, I feel confident, but then I am prone to be proud and unsympathetic to failing people. If and when I am not living up to standards, I feel insecure and inadequate. I’m not confident. I feel like a failure.

THE GOSPEL: My self-view is not based on a view of my self as a moral achiever. In Christ I am “simul iustus et peccator”—simultaneously sinful and yet accepted in Christ. I am so bad he had to die for me and I am so loved he was glad to die for me. This leads me to deeper and deeper humility and confidence at the same time. Neither swaggering nor sniveling.

RELIGION: My identity and self-worth are based mainly on how hard I work. Or how moral I am, and so I must look down on those I perceive as lazy or immoral. I disdain and feel superior to ‘the other.’

THE GOSPEL: My identity and self-worth are centered on the one who died for His enemies, who was excluded from the city for me. I am saved by sheer grace. So I can’t look down on those who believe or practice something different from me. Only by grace I am what I am. I’ve no inner need to win arguments.

RELIGION: Since I look to my own pedigree or performance for my spiritual acceptability, my heart manufactures idols. It may be my talents, my moral record, my personal discipline, my social status, etc. I absolutely have to have them so they serve as my main hope, meaning, happiness, security, and significance, whatever I may say I believe about God.

THE GOSPEL: I have many good things in my life—family, work, spiritual disciplines, etc. But none of these good things are ultimate things to me. None of them are things I absolutely have to have, so there is a limit to how much anxiety, bitterness, and despondency they can inflict on me when they are threatened and lost.

ANTICIPATE

Morning Worship: We will follow Jacob on his trip to Haran in Genesis 29:1-30. Time and again God displays his grace and glory by overcoming the weakness and sinfulness of Jacob. Although God has pursued Jacob and revealed himself to him in a gracious way, the sanctification process for Jacob will be slow and painful. In the morning liturgy we will recite the Apostles’ Creed and sing Lead on, O King Eternal, Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing, Amazing Grace, and Blessed Are the Sons of God.

Evening Worship: Thanks for the encouraging comments on the Revelation series! If you need to give me discouraging comments, state them now, because I am ready to press forward! We will be looking at Revelation 15-16. The passage shows us the fourth set of visions, which consist of a vision of seven bowls of God’s wrath being poured out. Like the seven trumpets, the bowls and reminiscent of the plagues against Egypt in the book of Exodus. The bowls sumbolize the wrath and judgment of God against evildoers. If we belong to Christ, the wrath of God will never touch us, for Christ has faced it and had it poured out on him at the cross. Well did Augustus Toplady pen these lines:

If Thou hast my discharge procured,

And freely in my room endured the whole of wrath divine;

Payment God cannot twice demand,

First at my bleeding Surety’s hand, and then again at mine.

Thanks, Joe! VBS0602Sunday is Joe’s final Sunday on our staff. The Hollands will still be here for a while, as they are awaiting the sale of their house. Joe will be something of a “church planter in residence” here, tending full-time to the development of the church plant in Culpeper. They will be here on Wednesdays and Sundays when they are not traveling or visiting other churches in our Presbytery. We rejoice at the news that his support is at 94% now. We are sad to see them go, however. Joe has been a good laborer and has served us well. You can follow the development of the Culpeper, Virginia church plant at http://culpepermission.org/.

He dumped water on me in the picture on the right because I was supposed to be wet in that uniform for a VBS skit back in 2006. I still think his face shows a bit too much delight in the task.

WEDNESDAY NIGHT CONNECTION: The original plan for Wednesday Night Connection was for us to continue the Ladies’ Bible Study and Men’s Forum on the first Wednesday of the month. However, Maureen Boswell, our Ladies’ Bible Study leader, has to stay on in Fredricksburg, Texas, after Johnny’s injury and surgery. So we are giving Ladies’ Bible Study and Men’s Forum a vacation in the month of June. The Truth Project and Framework of Faith will continue through the entire month of June. Wednesday Night Connection is designed to connect us with one another in fellowship and reaching and to dig deeply into God’s Word through Bible-centered studies for children, youth, and adults. There’s always room for more–and just because you missed the first and/or second session, don’t think you can’t join in now.

Remember the schedule for the summer:
6:00   Children’s ministry; adult and youth electives will gather in their respective meeting rooms

Electives
•    Framework of Faith: a study of fundamental Christian teaching that aims to be rigorous and refreshing, systematic and stimulating (led by Phillip Palmertree). A number of people have been asking for a survey of systematic theology, and here it is. Join us for a study of the skeletal system of Christian living. Meeting in the Mary Thornton Room.

•    The Truth Project: a DVD-based study from Focus on the Family challenging you to look at all of life from a biblical perspective. This is for youth, their parents, and everyone! This is an excellent curriculum that will last through the summer months. Meeting in the sanctuary.

REPENT

The General Assembly of the Church of Scotland voted last week to sustain a call to a minister who is in an openly same-sex partnership. This is sad and grievous news. My friend David Robertson, minister of St. Peter’s, Dundee (a Free Church of Scotland congregation) spoke to his flock about the situation this past Lord’s Day and posted his remarks on his blog. Below is an excerpt.

1) We reject all forms of homophobia. There is no need for Christians to be afraid of homosexuals. If you are a homosexual you are as welcome in St Peters as you are if you are a heterosexual. And just as we would expect heterosexuals to live according to biblical standards as Christians, so we would expect homosexuals to live according to biblical standards as Christians.

2) We accept the teaching of the Bible about human sexuality. In other words sex is between one man and one woman in the context of marriage. Anything else is sinful.

3) The Church of Scotland last night voted to endorse and accept a minister who openly goes against the Bible’s teaching.

4) The Church of Scotland based this decision on a teaching that destroys the Church. They stated, “The ‘Word of God’ is not synonymous with the Scriptures, but it can, in part, be discerned from the Scriptures through prayer and through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit”. The difficulty here is that whilst this sounds spiritual it means that the General Assembly of the Church becomes the Magisterium – a court which may use the Bible but which in reality tells the rest of us what God says. This is a recipe for an authoritarian church that limits the freedom of the believer to follow the Word of God, which IS synonymous with the Bible.

5) The implications of this decision are enormous. The Church of Scotland decision will hasten the day when the State persecutes those who uphold the Bible’s teaching and when people like myself will be prosecuted for teaching the Bible. This week for example I received an e-mail asking if a talk I gave could be put on a website but suggesting that it would have to be password protected in case I was prosecuted for homophobia – what did I say? Only that marriage was between one man and one woman. People are being prosecuted and losing their jobs, not because they are homophobic, but rather just because they dare to believe that what the Bible says is true.

I’ll keep you posted on what happens next with our brethren back in the homeland of Presbyterianism.

REMEMBER

Pentecost Sunday is fifty days after Easter, the occasion of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit in fulfillment of the promise of Joel 2:28-32 (“I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh…”). In the Old Testament Pentecost was a feast that celebrated the first fruits of the year’s harvest (Exodus 23:16; Numbers 28:26). In the New Testament, the fulfillment appears, and the long-expected Day of the Lord has arrived: the powers of the age to come are released; the harvest of the world begins to come in. Christ—crucified, risen and ascended—pours out the Spirit in unrestrained measure and without geographical or ethnic limitation. The gospel promise “is for you and for your children and for all who are far off, everyone whom the Lord our God calls to himself” (Acts 2:39). Giving special attention to the person and work of the Holy Spirit in our worship helps us recognize our utter dependence on his presence and work in our lives as disciples of Christ.

Last year I heard about an Episcopal church in Jackson which noted Pentecost in a memorable way in their liturgy. A reader began reading Acts 2, and when he came to the part about the disciples of Jesus speaking in various languages, he was joined by readers reading the same passage in Spanish, German, Chinese, and an African language–all of them reading the passage simultaneously!

ANTICIPATE

Morning Worship: I plan to preach from Genesis 27:1-28:9 in the series The Handing Down: The Gospel According to Isaac and Jacob. This is the story most of us know quite well. Jacob and his mother Rebekah deceive Isaac so that Jacob will received the blessing. It’s a sorry sight to see this dysfunctional family in action. But we will also see that God’s purposes cannot be thrown off course. Your sin, though it brings real and lasting consequences, cannot derail God’s gracious plans. The morning liturgy will focus on the gift of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. The singing will include Come, Thou Almighty King, the new hymn Holy Spirit (which we learned last year), Breathe on Me, Breath of God, and Marvelous Grace of Our Loving Lord.

Evening Worship: I rushed through Revelation 11 last week. We’ll be marching at a fast pace as we look over Revelation 12-14. The passage is a procession of visions of a beast. First, John sees warfare between a dragon (Satan) and a woman who bears a child. The dragon cannot kill the child and is eventually thrown down as a voice declares that the kingdom of God and his Messiah have come. Secondly, John sees a beast rising from the sea. This beast appears to prevail over the saints and gain the allegiance of the rebellious world. Another beast appears to aid him. Then John sees teh lamb on Mount Zion at the head of his army of 144,000 marked with the Father’s name (rather than marked by the beast). Then John sees a vision of the son of man glorious in triumph and ready to carry out his judgment.

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