I see a recurring theme in these last few entries. It has to do with how we worship and how we allow worship to lead us. Worship is an integral part of our faith.
But you are to seek the place the LORD your God will choose from among all your tribes to put his Name there for his dwelling. To that place you must go; there bring your burnt offerings and sacrifices, your tithes and special gifts, what you have vowed to give and your freewill offerings, and the firstborn of your herds and flocks...because the LORD your God has blessed you. Deuteronomy 12:5-6, 7b
I'm worried that we think excellence is a must in worship. We see in this passage from Deuteronomy that we are to bring our best before God. Burnt offerings and sacrifices aren't just any gifts. They're of the best quality that we have to offer. We don't just tithe what's left over. We take off the top 10% and give it to God. The "firstborn of [our] herds" are given, showing our faith in God. So, naturally, we would come to worship, expecting God to want only excellence.
But that's not true of God. God expects what we give to Him to be an offering of sacrifice. I think God expects us to do the best with what we've got. Sometimes that's not "excellence" in our eyes.
“If you wait for perfect conditions, you will never get anything done” (Ecclesiastes 11:4 NLT).
It's so important for us to alter the way some of us see worship. Sometimes we notice the things that we think go wrong. I think some worshippers focus on the "errors" they think they see in worship. They must leave worship that day feeling lost or as if they hadn't worshipped because of a lack of focus. They were waiting for the "perfect conditions" mentioned in Ecclesiastes instead of getting caught up in what worship was focused on that day.
I saw a Dove commercial once called "Dove Evolution."
Our culture expects perfection as well. So when we come into worship from a world that is not of God, we're expecting perfection. If things are not perfect, we're distracted and we allow the imperfections to pull us away from a genuine worship of God. We should be so caught up in worship that we don't notice when the instrumentalist plays something incorrectly. We shouldn't allow a reader's mis-spoken word distract us. Imperfection is natural. Ask David...
God doesn't bless only excellence. He blesses those that are faithful enough to trust Him and offer some sort of sacrifice to Him. Let's stop worrying about perfection or excellence in worship. If there's some down time, let's enjoy the silence. If there's a few misspellings, let's understand the true meaning of the word that is intended. If something unplanned happens, let's enjoy the spontaneity of the Holy Spirit working in and through our worship.
Our family of worship will not demand perfection or excellence in our offering of worship. Instead, we'll seek perfection in our actions and words outside of worship. We can thank God for the perfection of Jesus and what His life means for us.
Worship well,
Jonas
Our blog
This blog is a central location for discussion on any topic whether it applies to our church family or not. Post questions or comments and Pastor Leader or another member will reply.
Homepage: http://www.stonechurchucc.org/
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Thursday, July 15, 2010
Sunday, July 11, 2010
Seeking a feeling is not worship
From Rick Warren's "Daily Hope" devotional.
"I go east, but he is not there. I go west, but I cannot find him. I do not see him in the north, for he is hidden. I turn to the south, but I cannot find him. But he knows where I am going." Job 23:7-10 (NLT)
Will you continue to love, trust, obey, and worship God, even when you have no sense of his presence or visible evidence of his work in your life?
The most common mistake Christians make in worship today is seeking an experience rather than seeking God. They look for a feeling, and if it happens, they conclude that they have worshiped. Wrong! In fact, God often removes our feelings so we won't depend on them. Seeking a feeling, even the feeling of closeness to Christ, is not worship.
This reminds me a bit of the Craig Detweiler film in the last entry, Do You See? Sometimes we go to church expecting to receive some sort of out-of-body experience like what we hear about on radio shows or what we see on televangelists' shows. I think we go expecting to be wowed, like in a zoo or with a Vegas slot machine, like Craig mentioned. We expect to be given a show and get a "feeling," but we don't expect Jesus to come out of His cage. Because if He does, we might get "attacked." We just want to get the show, give the "Jesus monkey" a peanut and go home. We've had our "experience" for the week; time to get back to life. We don't want to become committed or anything. Then we won't be able to feel OK saying, "No," or "I don't really agree" or "I don't like that."
Maybe if we want to get "feelings" or have "experiences," what we need to do is reach out. How about this: we need to "help broken people heal." Or give "hurting people...hope." Or get "hungry people...fed." Then I think we can experience something and have a feeling. We'll get a feeling every time because we're putting ourselves out there and allowing our hearts to be broken and our bodies to be put to the test. We have to feel something because we're putting every part of us in that vulnerable place--in that uncomfortable place we haven't been before, or at least very often.
We do reach out. "Help broken people heal."
I think we help people heal during a Healing Service. Let's open it up IN the community, not just TO the community.
"Give hurting people hope."
Diaper Derby, Undie Sunday, Let It Shine Sunday, Hats Off Sunday, Sock It to Me Sunday, Take a Note, Souper Bowl (goes below, too).
"Feed hungry people."
Angel Food Ministries reaches out to our community. But do we make that opportunity openly accessible to everyone in our community? Whoa...that could really tax us. It really might.
PALS is this example. Don really devotes himself to this. I think it's where Jesus stands every single week as people of all walks of life pick up a knife and fork, plate and napkin. I know Don never leaves PALS feeling empty. Tired, maybe. But never empty or lacking in the "feeling" or "experience" department.
Let's stop expecting a feeling IN corporate worship. Let's welcome the feeling we want to feel by going out and doing something that guarantees us a feeling IN ministry to our community and our world.
Peace,
Jonas
"I go east, but he is not there. I go west, but I cannot find him. I do not see him in the north, for he is hidden. I turn to the south, but I cannot find him. But he knows where I am going." Job 23:7-10 (NLT)
Will you continue to love, trust, obey, and worship God, even when you have no sense of his presence or visible evidence of his work in your life?
The most common mistake Christians make in worship today is seeking an experience rather than seeking God. They look for a feeling, and if it happens, they conclude that they have worshiped. Wrong! In fact, God often removes our feelings so we won't depend on them. Seeking a feeling, even the feeling of closeness to Christ, is not worship.
This reminds me a bit of the Craig Detweiler film in the last entry, Do You See? Sometimes we go to church expecting to receive some sort of out-of-body experience like what we hear about on radio shows or what we see on televangelists' shows. I think we go expecting to be wowed, like in a zoo or with a Vegas slot machine, like Craig mentioned. We expect to be given a show and get a "feeling," but we don't expect Jesus to come out of His cage. Because if He does, we might get "attacked." We just want to get the show, give the "Jesus monkey" a peanut and go home. We've had our "experience" for the week; time to get back to life. We don't want to become committed or anything. Then we won't be able to feel OK saying, "No," or "I don't really agree" or "I don't like that."
Maybe if we want to get "feelings" or have "experiences," what we need to do is reach out. How about this: we need to "help broken people heal." Or give "hurting people...hope." Or get "hungry people...fed." Then I think we can experience something and have a feeling. We'll get a feeling every time because we're putting ourselves out there and allowing our hearts to be broken and our bodies to be put to the test. We have to feel something because we're putting every part of us in that vulnerable place--in that uncomfortable place we haven't been before, or at least very often.
We do reach out. "Help broken people heal."
I think we help people heal during a Healing Service. Let's open it up IN the community, not just TO the community.
"Give hurting people hope."
Diaper Derby, Undie Sunday, Let It Shine Sunday, Hats Off Sunday, Sock It to Me Sunday, Take a Note, Souper Bowl (goes below, too).
"Feed hungry people."
Angel Food Ministries reaches out to our community. But do we make that opportunity openly accessible to everyone in our community? Whoa...that could really tax us. It really might.
PALS is this example. Don really devotes himself to this. I think it's where Jesus stands every single week as people of all walks of life pick up a knife and fork, plate and napkin. I know Don never leaves PALS feeling empty. Tired, maybe. But never empty or lacking in the "feeling" or "experience" department.
Let's stop expecting a feeling IN corporate worship. Let's welcome the feeling we want to feel by going out and doing something that guarantees us a feeling IN ministry to our community and our world.
Peace,
Jonas
Saturday, July 10, 2010
Do You See?
Craig Detweiler, filmmaker, author and professor and director of the Reel Spirituality Institute for the Brehm Center at Fuller Theological Seminary comments on the Jesus slot machine, the church zoo, and nice people. http://www.theworkofthepeople.com/
Click here to watch the video.
Our church is not a zoo--is it? Man, I almost cried. This stabs deep to the heart of a huge problem that we've been trained in and have been allowed to grow in. We've been deceived in some ways. Properly schooled in others. We need to think about this a little. What makes us angry? Sad? Worried? What breaks our hearts?
Peace,
Jonas
Click here to watch the video.
Our church is not a zoo--is it? Man, I almost cried. This stabs deep to the heart of a huge problem that we've been trained in and have been allowed to grow in. We've been deceived in some ways. Properly schooled in others. We need to think about this a little. What makes us angry? Sad? Worried? What breaks our hearts?
Peace,
Jonas
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Service Check-up: How's your servant's heart?
From Rick Warren's Daily Devotional for June 28: "We Serve God by Serving Others." Our congregation needs to individually consider their status as a servant because it will allow us to find our calling, our niche, and will allow us to be very efficient with our time and resources.
Thousands of books have been written on leadership, but few on servanthood. Everyone wants to lead; no one wants to be a servant. We would rather be generals than privates. Even Christians want to be “servant-leaders,” not just plain servants. But to be like Jesus is to be a servant. That’s what he called himself.
While knowing your shape is important for serving God, having the heart of a servant is even more important. Remember, God shaped you for service, not for self-centeredness. Without a servant’s heart, you will be tempted to misuse your shape for personal gain. You will also be tempted to use it as an excuse to exempt yourself from meeting some needs.
God often tests our hearts by asking us to serve in ways we’re not shaped. If you see a man fall into a ditch, God expects you to help him out, not say, “I don’t have the gift of mercy or service.”
While you may not be gifted for a particular task, you may be called to do it if no one who is gifted at it is around. Your primary ministry should be in the area of your shape, but your secondary service is wherever you’re needed at the moment.
Your shape reveals your ministry, but your servant’s heart will reveal your maturity. No special talent or gift is required to stay after a meeting to pick up trash or stack chairs. Anyone can be a servant. All it requires is character.
It is possible to serve in church for a lifetime without ever being a servant. You must have a servant’s heart.
How can you know if you have the heart of a servant?
Jesus said, “You can tell what they are by what they do” (Matthew 7:16 CEV).
Take time when you are brushing your teeth, or washing dishes, or some other activity that doesn't take too much brain power and pray for God to help you pursue your line of service. Also pray for the members of our church family and community to be worthy servants.
Here's your challenge for the week: Look at what others do to be servants. Explain what you can do or did do when your servant's heart is tested. I'll try to blog daily on this topic for the rest of the week in addition to any other topics.
Peace,
Jonas
Thousands of books have been written on leadership, but few on servanthood. Everyone wants to lead; no one wants to be a servant. We would rather be generals than privates. Even Christians want to be “servant-leaders,” not just plain servants. But to be like Jesus is to be a servant. That’s what he called himself.
While knowing your shape is important for serving God, having the heart of a servant is even more important. Remember, God shaped you for service, not for self-centeredness. Without a servant’s heart, you will be tempted to misuse your shape for personal gain. You will also be tempted to use it as an excuse to exempt yourself from meeting some needs.
God often tests our hearts by asking us to serve in ways we’re not shaped. If you see a man fall into a ditch, God expects you to help him out, not say, “I don’t have the gift of mercy or service.”
While you may not be gifted for a particular task, you may be called to do it if no one who is gifted at it is around. Your primary ministry should be in the area of your shape, but your secondary service is wherever you’re needed at the moment.
Your shape reveals your ministry, but your servant’s heart will reveal your maturity. No special talent or gift is required to stay after a meeting to pick up trash or stack chairs. Anyone can be a servant. All it requires is character.
It is possible to serve in church for a lifetime without ever being a servant. You must have a servant’s heart.
How can you know if you have the heart of a servant?
Jesus said, “You can tell what they are by what they do” (Matthew 7:16 CEV).
Take time when you are brushing your teeth, or washing dishes, or some other activity that doesn't take too much brain power and pray for God to help you pursue your line of service. Also pray for the members of our church family and community to be worthy servants.
Here's your challenge for the week: Look at what others do to be servants. Explain what you can do or did do when your servant's heart is tested. I'll try to blog daily on this topic for the rest of the week in addition to any other topics.
Peace,
Jonas
Friday, June 18, 2010
"Serve us" or Service?
From Rick Warren's Daily Devotional.
The last thing many believers need is to go to another Bible study. They already know far more than they are putting into practice. What they need are serving experiences in which they can exercise their spiritual muscles.
Serving is the opposite of our natural inclination. Most of the time we're more interested in "serve us" than service. We say, "I'm looking for a church that meets my needs and blesses me," not "I'm looking for a place to serve and be a blessing." We expect others to serve us, not vice versa.
But as we mature in Christ, the focus of our lives should increasingly shift to living a life of service. The mature follower of Jesus stops asking, "Who's going to meet my needs?" and starts asking, "Whose needs can I meet?"
Right on, Rick! We need to continually strive toward service in our church family.
Peace,
Jonas
The last thing many believers need is to go to another Bible study. They already know far more than they are putting into practice. What they need are serving experiences in which they can exercise their spiritual muscles.
Serving is the opposite of our natural inclination. Most of the time we're more interested in "serve us" than service. We say, "I'm looking for a church that meets my needs and blesses me," not "I'm looking for a place to serve and be a blessing." We expect others to serve us, not vice versa.
But as we mature in Christ, the focus of our lives should increasingly shift to living a life of service. The mature follower of Jesus stops asking, "Who's going to meet my needs?" and starts asking, "Whose needs can I meet?"
Right on, Rick! We need to continually strive toward service in our church family.
Peace,
Jonas
Thursday, June 17, 2010
What Excuses Have You Been Using?
I was reading Rick Warren's Daily Devotion and realized the magnitude of our potential as a church. Not just a group of folks under a roof, but the whole church of Christ. We certainly have no excuse for any uninvolvement in ministry.
As we serve together in God's family, our lives take on eternal importance. Paul said, "I want you to think about how all this makes you more significant, not less . . . because of what you are a part of." (1 Corinthians 12:14a, 19 MSG)
God wants to use you to make a difference in his world. He wants to work through you. What matters is not the duration of your life, but the donation of it. Not how long you lived, but how you lived.
If you're not involved in any service or ministry, what excuse have you been using?
Abraham was old,
Jacob was insecure,
Leah was unattractive,
Joseph was abused,
Moses stuttered,
Gideon was poor,
Samson was codependent,
Rahab was immoral,
David had an affair and all kinds of family problems,
Elijah was suicidal,
Jeremiah was depressed,
Jonah was reluctant,
Naomi was a widow,
John the Baptist was eccentric to say the least,
Peter was impulsive and hot-tempered,
Martha worried a lot,
The Samaritan woman had several failed marriages,
Zacchaeus was unpopular,
Thomas had doubts,
Paul had poor health, and
Timothy was timid.
That is quite a variety of misfits, but God used each of them in his service. He will use you, too, if you stop making excuses.
Find a church family that you can relate to and dig deep into a ministry that interests you. Your talents and passion are to be used by God, whether you feel that you have found them or not. God will sift them to the surface.
Peace,
Jonas
As we serve together in God's family, our lives take on eternal importance. Paul said, "I want you to think about how all this makes you more significant, not less . . . because of what you are a part of." (1 Corinthians 12:14a, 19 MSG)
God wants to use you to make a difference in his world. He wants to work through you. What matters is not the duration of your life, but the donation of it. Not how long you lived, but how you lived.
If you're not involved in any service or ministry, what excuse have you been using?
Abraham was old,
Jacob was insecure,
Leah was unattractive,
Joseph was abused,
Moses stuttered,
Gideon was poor,
Samson was codependent,
Rahab was immoral,
David had an affair and all kinds of family problems,
Elijah was suicidal,
Jeremiah was depressed,
Jonah was reluctant,
Naomi was a widow,
John the Baptist was eccentric to say the least,
Peter was impulsive and hot-tempered,
Martha worried a lot,
The Samaritan woman had several failed marriages,
Zacchaeus was unpopular,
Thomas had doubts,
Paul had poor health, and
Timothy was timid.
That is quite a variety of misfits, but God used each of them in his service. He will use you, too, if you stop making excuses.
Find a church family that you can relate to and dig deep into a ministry that interests you. Your talents and passion are to be used by God, whether you feel that you have found them or not. God will sift them to the surface.
Peace,
Jonas
Monday, June 14, 2010
Discipline--repetition or "love of self?"
At a recent book study, we read about discipline as a "love of self" from Reaching People under 40 while Keeping People over 60 by Ed Hammett and James Pierce. We then discussed whether discipline was truly a love for self or whether it was just repetition. PJ thought discipline is not always a "loving" feeling; sometimes discipline is the last thing we want to do. Rick Warren's daily devotion personally reinforced that discipline is a repetitious exercise, done because I "love" (or like) trying to be more Christlike.
Friday, June 11, 2010
You cannot grow without a teachable attitude
by Rick Warren
Practice these things. Devote your life to them so that everyone can see your progress. 1 Timothy 4:15 (GW)
While you were given a brand new nature at the moment of conversion, you still have old habits, patterns, and practices that need to be removed and replaced.
We are afraid to humbly face the truth about ourselves. I have already pointed out that the truth will set us free but it often makes us miserable first.
Yeah...you're not kidding, Rick...
The fear of what we might discover if we honestly faced our character defects keeps us living in the prison of denial. Yet, we often build our identities around our defects. We say, "It's just like me to be ..." and "It's just the way I am." The unconscious worry is that if I let go of my habit, my hurt, or my hang-up, who will I be? This fear can definitely slow down your growth.
Only as God is allowed to shine the light of his truth on our faults, failures, and hang-ups can we begin to work on them. This is why you cannot grow without a humble, teachable attitude.
• Godly habits take time to develop. Remember that your character is the sum total of your habits. You can't claim to be kind unless you are habitually kind—you show kindness without even thinking about it. You can't claim to have integrity unless it is your habit to always be honest. A husband who is faithful to his wife most of the time is not faithful at all!
• Your habits define your character. There is only one way to develop the habits of Christlike character: You must practice them—and that takes time! There are no instant habits. Paul urged Timothy, "Practice these things. Devote your life to them so that everyone can see your progress." (1 Timothy 4:15, GW)
If you practice something over time, you get good at it. Repetition is the mother of character and skill. These character-building habits are often called "spiritual disciplines," and they include such things as meditation, prayer, fasting, Bible study, simplicity, stewardship, solitude, submission, service and evangelism.
Practice a Christlike discipline: a repetitious love of self-betterment.
Peace,
Jonas
Friday, June 11, 2010
You cannot grow without a teachable attitude
by Rick Warren
Practice these things. Devote your life to them so that everyone can see your progress. 1 Timothy 4:15 (GW)
While you were given a brand new nature at the moment of conversion, you still have old habits, patterns, and practices that need to be removed and replaced.
We are afraid to humbly face the truth about ourselves. I have already pointed out that the truth will set us free but it often makes us miserable first.
Yeah...you're not kidding, Rick...
The fear of what we might discover if we honestly faced our character defects keeps us living in the prison of denial. Yet, we often build our identities around our defects. We say, "It's just like me to be ..." and "It's just the way I am." The unconscious worry is that if I let go of my habit, my hurt, or my hang-up, who will I be? This fear can definitely slow down your growth.
Only as God is allowed to shine the light of his truth on our faults, failures, and hang-ups can we begin to work on them. This is why you cannot grow without a humble, teachable attitude.
• Godly habits take time to develop. Remember that your character is the sum total of your habits. You can't claim to be kind unless you are habitually kind—you show kindness without even thinking about it. You can't claim to have integrity unless it is your habit to always be honest. A husband who is faithful to his wife most of the time is not faithful at all!
• Your habits define your character. There is only one way to develop the habits of Christlike character: You must practice them—and that takes time! There are no instant habits. Paul urged Timothy, "Practice these things. Devote your life to them so that everyone can see your progress." (1 Timothy 4:15, GW)
If you practice something over time, you get good at it. Repetition is the mother of character and skill. These character-building habits are often called "spiritual disciplines," and they include such things as meditation, prayer, fasting, Bible study, simplicity, stewardship, solitude, submission, service and evangelism.
Practice a Christlike discipline: a repetitious love of self-betterment.
Peace,
Jonas
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Daily Devotionals with Rick Warren
Jonas here. I get a daily devotional from The Purpose Driven Connection via email from Rick Warren. He's at Saddleback Church. It's usually a quick read about something that I can immediately apply to my life.
I thought I'd share today's with you and maybe you want to subscribe.
http://profile.purposedriven.com/dailyhope/post.html?contentid=4561\
Real maturity takes time
Wednesday June 09 2010 12:00 AM
Posted by Rick Warren
Our lives gradually becoming brighter and more beautiful as God enters our lives and we become like him. 2 Corinthians 3:18b (Msg)
"Every day God wants you to become a little more like him. "
Discipleship is the process of conforming to Christ. The Bible says, "We arrive at real maturity—that measure of development which is meant by 'the fullness of Christ.'" (Ephesians 4:13, Phillips
Christlikeness is your eventual destination, but your journey will last a lifetime. This journey involves believing (through worship), belonging (through fellowship), and becoming (through discipleship). Every day God wants you to become a little more like him: "You have begun to live the new life, in which you are being made new and are becoming like the One who made you." (Colossians 3:10a, NCV)
Today we're obsessed with speed, but God is more interested in strength and stability than swiftness. We want the quick fix, the shortcut, the on-the-spot solution. We want a sermon, a seminar, or an experience that will instantly resolve all problems, remove all temptation, and release us from all growing pains.
But real maturity is never the result of a single experience, no matter how powerful or moving. Growth is gradual. The Bible says, "Our lives gradually becoming brighter and more beautiful as God enters our lives and we become like him." (2 Corinthians 3:18b, Msg)
I thought I'd share today's with you and maybe you want to subscribe.
http://profile.purposedriven.com/dailyhope/post.html?contentid=4561\
Real maturity takes time
Wednesday June 09 2010 12:00 AM
Posted by Rick Warren
Our lives gradually becoming brighter and more beautiful as God enters our lives and we become like him. 2 Corinthians 3:18b (Msg)
"Every day God wants you to become a little more like him. "
Discipleship is the process of conforming to Christ. The Bible says, "We arrive at real maturity—that measure of development which is meant by 'the fullness of Christ.'" (Ephesians 4:13, Phillips
Christlikeness is your eventual destination, but your journey will last a lifetime. This journey involves believing (through worship), belonging (through fellowship), and becoming (through discipleship). Every day God wants you to become a little more like him: "You have begun to live the new life, in which you are being made new and are becoming like the One who made you." (Colossians 3:10a, NCV)
Today we're obsessed with speed, but God is more interested in strength and stability than swiftness. We want the quick fix, the shortcut, the on-the-spot solution. We want a sermon, a seminar, or an experience that will instantly resolve all problems, remove all temptation, and release us from all growing pains.
But real maturity is never the result of a single experience, no matter how powerful or moving. Growth is gradual. The Bible says, "Our lives gradually becoming brighter and more beautiful as God enters our lives and we become like him." (2 Corinthians 3:18b, Msg)
Monday, June 7, 2010
Hello everyone! Welcome to our first run at a blog for our church family. I'm sure we'll adapt and change things very often and that's the idea!
We decided we needed to start a blog for our congregation as we read Reaching People under 40 while Keeping People over 60 by Edward H. Hammett with James R. Pierce. We're trying to be church for all generations--reaching out to a younger generation, while, simultaneously, honoring and preserving our rich heritage. It's a journey. It's a process. We're prepared to step into it because we've already changed for the better in many tangible and intangible ways. Of course--it doesn't make sense to change for the sake of change. We've got our focus on Jesus Christ and we will change as the Holy Spirit guides us.
We'll use the blog for updates on church activities and information. Maybe part of our future worship services will be answering or speaking to issues raised on the blog. This is not supposed to be a clean-cut, neat and tidy kind of blog. We want to ask questions that raise eyebrows because they are the questions on our hearts. We want you to raise issues that make us happy and proud, but also the issues that make us step back and think. This is for furthering Christ's ministry and understanding how our lives mirror that of the most Holy God.
If we don't ask the questions and spread the word, we won't be doing the work we were created to accomplish. This blog is founded on biblical principal: "I tell You," Jesus said, "if they keep quiet, the stones will cry out." Luke 19:40.(NIV) We will not be silent.
Check out our home website by clicking on the picture of our church above. Also, visit our interactive wikispace for detailed information on the ministries of our church and for many pictures.
Peace,
Jonas
We decided we needed to start a blog for our congregation as we read Reaching People under 40 while Keeping People over 60 by Edward H. Hammett with James R. Pierce. We're trying to be church for all generations--reaching out to a younger generation, while, simultaneously, honoring and preserving our rich heritage. It's a journey. It's a process. We're prepared to step into it because we've already changed for the better in many tangible and intangible ways. Of course--it doesn't make sense to change for the sake of change. We've got our focus on Jesus Christ and we will change as the Holy Spirit guides us.
We'll use the blog for updates on church activities and information. Maybe part of our future worship services will be answering or speaking to issues raised on the blog. This is not supposed to be a clean-cut, neat and tidy kind of blog. We want to ask questions that raise eyebrows because they are the questions on our hearts. We want you to raise issues that make us happy and proud, but also the issues that make us step back and think. This is for furthering Christ's ministry and understanding how our lives mirror that of the most Holy God.
If we don't ask the questions and spread the word, we won't be doing the work we were created to accomplish. This blog is founded on biblical principal: "I tell You," Jesus said, "if they keep quiet, the stones will cry out." Luke 19:40.(NIV) We will not be silent.
Check out our home website by clicking on the picture of our church above. Also, visit our interactive wikispace for detailed information on the ministries of our church and for many pictures.
Peace,
Jonas
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