Oct 22, 2023
Special Music, Mr. Tilson, The Great Judgment Morning
 
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  • Oct 22, 2023Special Music, Mr. Tilson, The Great Judgment Morning
    Oct 22, 2023
    Special Music, Mr. Tilson, The Great Judgment Morning
     
  • Oct 22, 2023Special Music, Choir, He Will Hold Me Fast
    Oct 22, 2023
    Special Music, Choir, He Will Hold Me Fast
     
  • Oct 22, 2023The Church’s Role in Missions: The Church Supports the Missionaries (Philippians 4:19)
    Oct 22, 2023
    The Church’s Role in Missions: The Church Supports the Missionaries (Philippians 4:19)
    Missions is the mission of the church. God has commanded the church to “teach all nations.” We cannot be everywhere at once, so God calls some to leave where they are and go somewhere else to fulfill the great commission. We call these people “missionaries.”
    The church supplies the missionaries. As we reach the lost and make disciples, God calls some of them to this special ministry. The church sends the missionaries. The Lord works through the local church to confirm His call, and missionaries are sent out of the local church.
    Once the church supplies and sends the missionary, it plays the vital role of supporting the missionary. The missionary needs help from God’s people if they are going to accomplish God’s work. They need material support in the form of finances and physical resources. They need spiritual support in the form of regular, fervent prayer for their ministry and encouragement through communication and responsiveness.
    We should give sacrificially to support missionaries. We should give of our money, even if it means making do with less, trusting that God will provide. We should give of our time and energy to lift missionaries up in prayer, stay in contact with them, and take opportunities to respond to their needs. And for those who support missionaries, God has given a special promise: “But my God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 4:19)
  • Oct 18, 2023The Blessings of Growth (2 Peter 1:10-15)
    Oct 18, 2023
    The Blessings of Growth (2 Peter 1:10-15)
    Series: II Peter
    You can tell as you read his writings that Peter had the heart of a pastor. Jesus had commanded Peter, “Feed my sheep.” He instructed Peter, “and when thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren.” In this last letter that Peter wrote, he knew that his time to die was coming soon and he wanted to remind the believers to keep growing in grace and knowledge by diligently adding to their faith Christ-like character.
    In 2 Peter 1:10-15, Peter mentions three blessings that continual spiritual growth brings. When we are growing in grace, we can have full assurance of our salvation. We can look forward to a wonderful entrance into heaven, without regrets. We are protected against spiritual amnesia by a continual remembrance of the truth.
  • Oct 15, 2023The Harshness of Gentle Parenting (Ephesians 6:4)
    Oct 15, 2023
    The Harshness of Gentle Parenting (Ephesians 6:4)
    Series: Parenting
  • Oct 15, 2023The Church Sends The Missionaries (Acts 13)
    Oct 15, 2023
    The Church Sends The Missionaries (Acts 13)
    It is common in our modern era for missionaries to use mission boards to help them get to their field of service. It is an application of the Biblical pattern of many churches working together to fund and support Christian workers who are going out to plant new churches in faraway places.
    When used properly, mission boards can be a great blessing by collecting and distributing the funds for the missionary and providing much-needed advice and practical assistance. But mission boards can be misused, and one of the primary ways a board can go wrong is when that board becomes the sending agency instead of the local church.
    God has chosen to use the local church in this age to be the organization that distributes the gospel around the world. Souls are evangelized, edified, and equipped for service through the ministry of the local church. And it is the local church that has the privilege of confirming God’s call on a person's life and sending them out to accomplish God’s specific will for their life.
    The church cannot rely on outside groups to do their job. They cannot delegate their responsibility to a para-church organization. The church must supply and then send the workforce for worldwide evangelization.
  • Oct 8, 2023Children Obey Your Parents (Ephesians 6:1-3)
    Oct 8, 2023
    Children Obey Your Parents (Ephesians 6:1-3)
    Series: Parenting
  • Oct 8, 2023The Church Supplies the Missionaries (Acts 13)
    Oct 8, 2023
    The Church Supplies the Missionaries (Acts 13)
    Where do missionaries come from? They certainly do not grow on trees. Nor should they come from Bible Colleges or Christian Schools. God’s plan is for missionaries to be cultivated through the ministry of the local church.
    We find this pattern clearly demonstrated in the New Testament. In Acts 13, Paul and Barnabas were ministering in a local church when God moved through that assembly to direct them to go out and plant churches from city to city. In Acts 15, Silas was chosen to travel with Paul because of his good testimony among the brethren. In Acts 16, Timothy was recommended to the ministry of missions by the believers in Lystra and Iconium. In each of these instances, local bodies of believers played an instrumental role in supplying Missionary’s.
    The purpose of the local church is to evangelize the lost and edify the believer, so that the work of the ministry can continue on. Part of that work is taking the gospel to foreign and remote regions. While it is not God’s will that every believer be a foreign missionary, it is certainly God’s will that some be. It is the responsibility of the church, then, to train and encourage believers to be willing to go wherever God would have them go to share the gospel with whoever needs it.
    We cannot rely on parachurch organizations to supply the workforce to accomplish world evangelization. It is the duty of the local church to supply missionaries.
  • Oct 4, 2023The Fundamentals of Growth (2 Peter 1:3-4)
    Oct 4, 2023
    The Fundamentals of Growth (2 Peter 1:3-4)
    Series: II Peter
    Pastor Peter had a burden to see believers grow and become mature. His second epistle was written specifically to encourage Christians to grow in grace and in the knowledge of God, while warning them that there were those who would corrupt their faith and hinder their growth.
    Before Peter begins to discuss the specifics of spiritual growth, he lays some very important theological groundwork in 2 Peter 1:3-4. Such an important topic requires one crucial, foundational understanding. Spiritual growth cannot be accomplished with God’s help. The kind of “spirituality” that is achieved independent of God is, by definition, self-righteousness. This is the kind of religion that Jesus warned against, when He said, “For I say unto you, That except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven.” (Matthew 5:20)
    God has called all Christians to reject self-righteousness and to let God work in us to make us what He wants us to be. We can grow in grace, but we must grow God’s way to else God will not get the glory that He should get from our lives.
  • Oct 1, 2023The Mission of The Church, A Biblical Philosophy of Missions (Acts 1:8)
    Oct 1, 2023
    The Mission of The Church, A Biblical Philosophy of Missions (Acts 1:8)
    The Mission of The Church, a Biblical Philosophy of Missions.
  • Sep 27, 2023Growing in Grace (2 Peter 1:1-2)
    Sep 27, 2023
    Growing in Grace (2 Peter 1:1-2)
    Series: II Peter
  • Sep 24, 2023Johnathan and the Young Lad (I Samuel 14:6)
    Sep 24, 2023
    Johnathan and the Young Lad (I Samuel 14:6)
  • Sep 17, 2023I Don’t Know and I Don’t Care (Malachi 1:1-2)
    Sep 17, 2023
    I Don’t Know and I Don’t Care (Malachi 1:1-2)
  • Sep 17, 2023A Father’s Faith (Mark 9:14-29)
    Sep 17, 2023
    A Father’s Faith (Mark 9:14-29)
    Nothing feels quite so awful as seeing your child suffer and knowing there is nothing you can do to stop it. If you have ever been in a situation like hat, then you understand the utter helplessness that one feels in that situation. Suppose, then, that you took your child to an expert who was supposed to be a specialist in fixing your child’s problem, but even they could not solve the issue. Your disappointment would be doubled, and you would be on the verge of despair. If you can imagine such a scenario, then you can begin to imagine how the father we meet in Mark 9 must have felt. His son was possessed by a devil and there was nothing he could do for him. He brought his son to Jesus’ disciples to be cured, and there was nothing they could do for him. He was on the verge of despair when Jesus arrived. When he asked Jesus to heal his son, Jesus responded by saying, “If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth.” That was not the answer the man was looking for, and in desperation, he cried, “Lord, I believe; help thou mine unbelief.” Jesus did help that man’s unbelief. He healed the son, and that man’s faith grew that day because he learned that faith is not just believing that God can do whatever you need, but He is the only one who can do whatever you need, and He will meet your needs when you have Faith in Him.
  • Sep 10, 2023Prophesy (Daniel 19)
    Sep 10, 2023
    Prophesy (Daniel 19)