Light & Life Christian Fellowship

Roots - GREEN Habits That Grow You!

 

Roots: Habits that Feed Your GREEN!

Did you brush your teeth this morning? Eat some breakfast? Take a shower?

Did you put on your seatbelt? Check your mirrors when changing lanes?

Did you eat too much? Skip exercise? Watch too much TV? Fail to read the Bible?

Our lives are made up of good and bad habits.

Habits that help us now and forever.

Habits that hurt our spiritual lives and keep us from the GREEN lives God wants for us.

 

Someone has said, “First you form your habits then your habits form you”.

If we don’t stop to analyze our habits they will take us somewhere less than God’s best.

 

I see habits like roots. Roots are what connect the seed to the soil. If the Seed is Christ and the Soil is our hearts, then our Roots are those habits that strengthen our connection to him. Roots keep us secure when the storm winds are blowing. They keep us growing when times are dry. Roots are those “private” actions in our lives that nourish our “public” activities. The taller the tree, the deeper the roots have to be.

 

God talks about these roots in Jeremiah 17:8 “They will be like a tree planted by the water that sends out its roots by the stream. It does not fear when heat comes; its leaves are always green. It has no worries in a year of drought and never fails to bear fruit.""

 

During our 40 Days of GREEN we are hoping to help you start new spiritual habits that cause your life to improve. GREEN is about discipleship and discipleship involves discipline.

 

My brother was on a championship cross country team and they all wore t-shirts that said, “The will to win is nothing without the discipline to train”.

 

We all want to be winners. But we can only win if we are willing to train our lives to be godly by creating new spiritual habits. One great book that you can read is titled: The Power of Habits…very excellent source to understand how habits change your life.

God knew all this so he wrote in His book: “Train yourselves to be godly” 1 Timothy 4:7.

Go GREEN!

 

 

Last Updated on Friday, 10 May 2013 18:10

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The Green Triangle of Life

 

The Green Triangle of Life

Do you remember your baptism? It may have seemed unspectacular. But in the invisible spiritual realm something amazing was happening. It was inducting you into a new spiritual reality- a reality of relationship that you can access and flourish from.

When you are baptized as a Christian the powerful words, “In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit” are pronounced over you.

This is a significant point of beginning in your journey as a disciple of Jesus.

At his own baptism Jesus went into the water, had the dove (the Holy Spirit symbol) rest upon him, and the Father spoke powerful words of affirmation. This marked the start of Jesus’ public ministry.

When you are baptized you declare your allegiance, your commitment, your faith, your trust in the great Triune God of the Bible. This allegiance immerses you in the resources of the Trinity. You are ushered into a new place:

God invites you into the middle of what I call, The GREEN Triangle of LIFE…the dance of love and joy that the Trinity (Father, Son, Spirit) engage in, in heaven.

The Father pours his love over you daily…receive it.

The Son pours his truth out to you daily…learn it.

The Spirit pours his power out to you daily…engage it.

Just like a plant needs light, water, air – a biological threesome that creates life- so you need love, truth, power.

This “triangle” of love, truth and power allow you to thrive (or be GREEN for God) and produce great fruit. As you daily access these 3 dimensions of our God you become the disciple you were baptized to be.

When your heart is filled with love, and your head is filled with truth, and your hands are filled with power…you will be GREEN!

You can view it like this:

Father – Love – Light – Heart

Son -    Truth – Water – Head

Spirit- Power – Air – Hands

Be blessed and thrive! 

Last Updated on Wednesday, 01 May 2013 16:01

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Increase YOUR Harvest!

 

 

GREEN means a GREAT HARVEST:

Jesus told a story about a farmer who went out planting seed by hand. (Matthew 13:1-23)

He scattered it and some fell on hard soil, some on shallow soil, some on weedy soil and some on soft, fertile soil.

Only the seed that feel on the soft soil produced a harvest…the rest of the seed never made it to fruitfulness.

Jesus was clear that he was talking about the condition of your heart.

Here’s the word you MUST understand in life:

The condition of your heart determines the size of your harvest!

You, not your circumstances, not your past, not others, not your talents, not your intelligence, not your education, not your income…are responsible for the condition of your heart!

Since you are the director of your heart, you are the one who determines the size of your harvest.

If you keep your heart soft instead of hard.

If you keep your heart sincere instead of shallow.

If you keep your heart devoted instead of distracted.

If you keep your heart full of faith instead of wavering….

THEN your harvest will be plentiful.

GREEN is about a life of fruitfulness. In an orchard or vineyard the harvest is always a question of how much FRUIT was produced.

Fruit in the Bible speaks of 3 things: character, blessing, impact!

Your character becomes more filled with love, joy, peace, patience, self-control.

Your blessings overflow…your relationships, your finances, your health are all helped.

Your impact increases...your life touches others, you influence people for Christ, you march toward your destiny.

GREEN means increasing the size of your harvest…and it's all a matter of your heart! 

 

 

 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 23 April 2013 14:14

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The Oldest Seed to Sprout

This week in 40 Days of GREEN we are meditating on the seed which is Christ. 

Without the seed you have no life. You have no ability to give life to yourself physically or spiritually. To have life you must have the see living in you. When Christ, by His spirit, enters into your life, then you have life because the seed is in you. 

A small seed that looks dead or powerless to the world (like Christ did) can actually come alive and become mighty. It can become a source of healing to our lives. With those thoughts in mind read this article upon the "oldest seed to sprout" and let Christ sprout in your life more fully! 

 

Scientists have grown a tree from what may be the oldest seed ever germinated.

 

The new sapling was sprouted from a 2,000-year-old date palm excavated in Masada, the site of a cliff-side fortress in Israel where ancient Jews are said to have killed themselves to avoid capture by Roman invaders.

 

Dubbed the "Methuselah Tree" after the oldest person in the Bible, the new plant has been growing steadily, and after 26 months, the tree was nearly four feet (1.2 meters) tall.

 

The species of tree, called the Judean date, (Phoenix dactylifera L.), is now extinct in Israel, but researchers are hoping that by reviving the plant they may be able to study its medicinal uses.

"The medicinal plants from this region are very important because they are historically mentioned in the Bible...," said Sarah Sallon, director of the Louis L. Borick Natural Medicine Research Center at the Hadassah Medical Organization

in Jerusalem, which initiated the experiment to grow the tree as part of its Middle East Medicinal Plant Project.

 

"The Judean date was very valuable and very famous, not just as a source of food but as a source of medicine," Sallon said. "When I heard there were ancient seeds found in the archeological dig, I thought it would be interesting to see if we could try to grow them."

 

Carbon dating of the seeds found at Masada revealed that they date from roughly the time of the ancient fortress' siege, in A.D. 73. The seeds were found in storage rooms, and appear to have been stockpiled for the Jews hiding out against the invading Romans.

 

"They were buried under mounds of debris on the top of the archaeological site of Masada," Sallon told LiveScience.

"The Jews all committed suicide rather than give in to the Romans, and the Romans pretty much destroyed the site after that. It was more or less left for the next 2,000 years."

 

The seeds were excavated about 40 years ago, along with skeletons of those who died during the siege. Since then, the seeds had been languishing in a drawer until Sallon and her team decided to attempt to grow them anew.

 

Last Updated on Thursday, 18 April 2013 22:30

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What's GREEN MEAN?

 

What does GREEN mean?

Green is God’s color for GROWTH…God’s desire for you is not for you to age but for you to advance.

God’s desire is not for you to merely grow older but for you to grow bolder.

God’s yearning for you is to survive but to THRIVE.

God’s plan for you is not for you live and die but to live and multiply.

God’s will for you is not that you “hang on til Jesus comes” but that you “overcome by the power of Jesus”.

God doesn’t birth spiritual children so they can live in spiritual poverty but so they can enjoy spiritual luxury!

God doesn’t want you to grow dry and shrivel, He wants you to grow up and flourish.

God doesn’t want you to live in chains, He wants you to march under the banner of victory.

God doesn’t want you to live in the ignorance of the essentials of Spiritual life development; He wants your mind to know the life-giving truths of His Word!

God doesn’t want you to live in the compromise of convenient American Christianity, He wants you to live in the exciting adventure of “all in” Biblical Christianity.

God doesn’t want you sleep walk through life with the rest of the world; He wants to open your spiritual eyes wider and wider so that you dance your way through life!

God doesn’t want you to die without any disciples behind your name; He wants you to have left your mark of Jesus on many people who learned Jesus from watching you!

God doesn’t want you to be white, or black, or brown, or pick your color…; God wants you to be GREEN!

THUS this Sunday we kick off 40 Days of GREEN!! Jump in and start GROWING GREEN! Sermons, Daily Videos on-line Devotions by our staff, Memory Verses, Small Groups with Workbooks.

 

 

Last Updated on Wednesday, 10 April 2013 14:06

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What's GREEN?

 

What’s GREEN?

 

GREEN is a 7 sermon, 6 week small group, 40 day experience that will help you GROW spiritually. It will teach you the essential keys of how to keep maturing, growing, and advancing in your Christian life.

GREEN is a revelation that God gave to Deb and me as we were praying about how to teach our church about the need for deepening their Christian lives. We were spending time away praying and listening to God and this concept and the overview of the truths was birthed in those few days.

GREEN is the color of GROWING, THRIVING, FLOURISHING in your Christian walk.

ALL of us need to keep GROWING over our lifetime…but most Christians stop growing.

I believe you are either GROWING or DYING. There is no neutral in our Christian lives.

But many Christians try and live in neutral…they live in maintenance mode instead of maturation mode.

GREEN is a strategic effort with multiple layers to help you grow.

You can involve yourself as little or as deep as you want to grow.

Level 1 – I come to the sermons on Sundays.

Level 2 – AND I watch the daily devotionals taught by LLCF staff on line.

Level 3 – AND I sign up for a small group and attend six sessions

Level 4 – AND I memorize the weekly memory verse and meditate on it.

GREEN will give you the overview you need to live the rest of your life answering the question: How can I grow right here, right now? How can I explain to someone how to grow spiritually?

GREEN starts this Sunday with an intro message on April 7.

Then the Small Groups will start April 14.

Why don’t you determine that you are going to “GO GREEN” for the next six weeks?

 

 

 

Last Updated on Thursday, 04 April 2013 16:15

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The Cup of Stench

 

Frederick Leahy’s The Cross He Bore, a series of powerful meditations on the death of Jesus Christ. Almost any section of the book would make for useful meditation on Good Friday, but this one stood out and merits being shared.

Gethsemane means "the oil press." David could say, "I am like a green olive tree in the house of God" (Psalm 52:8). Israel in her long history could say the same. But the suffering Savior could say it best of all, for there in Gethsemane--the oil press--he was crushed and bruised without mercy.

But how and why? How is the sudden and dramatic change of atmosphere to be explained, even in a measure? Christ knew all along the death that awaited him. He had grappled with Satan and his legions more than once. He had repeatedly spoken of his death to his disciples, telling them what that death would accomplish. He had prayed with the utmost confidence in his high priestly prayer (John 17).

Why, then, is there this sudden plunge into such awful agony, why this shuddering horror? Why is this fruit of the olive tree so severely crushed? Why does the divine record say that in Gethsemane our Lord BEGAN to be sorrowful, sorrowful in a new and terrible way?

Was it not because God began forsaking him then? How else is this sorrow unto death to be understood "Jesus wept," but never like this. No previous sorrow of his could match this. At the time of his arrest he declared, "Shall I not drink the cup which the Father has given me?" (John 18:11). That cup was constantly in view as he prayed in Gethsemane. What cup? "THIS CUP"--not some future cup. The cup that was symbolized in the feast (Matt. 26:27,28) was now actual: God was placing it in the Savior's hands and it carried the stench of hell. But stop!

Schilder is right. "Gethsemane is not a field of study for our intellect. It is a sanctuary for our faith." Lord, forgive us for the times we have read about Gethsemane with dry eyes.

 

Last Updated on Saturday, 30 March 2013 00:46

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Good Friday Fools

 

The Fools and Villains of Good Friday

(From Bible Gateway) Today is Good Friday, the bleakest moment in the Gospel story. Reading the story of Jesus’ arrest, trial and crucifixion today, we have the benefit of knowing that it’s all leading up to the triumph of Easter. But to the Jesus-followers present at the scene, it must have seemed that the world as they knew it was falling apart.

One of the challenges of reading the crucifixion story two thousands years after the event took place is that it’s difficult for us to empathize with its participants. From our perspective, the Easter crowds seem insanely fickle; Jesus’ disciples seem utterly clueless; the members of the Sandhedrin contemptibly evil; Pilate laughably corrupt.

Those things are true. Nobody except Jesus behaves well in the Good Friday story. But it’s these very people—fickle, clueless, evil, corrupt—that Jesus died for.

The truth is that we have much in common with the fools and villains of Easter. The wonder is that Jesus loved them, and us, enough to submit to foolishness, injustice, and death. The miracle is that three days later, he rose from the dead to offer us salvation. Hallelujah, what a Savior!

If you haven’t read the complete story of the crucifixion recently, today’s a perfect day to revisit it. Here are the four Gospel accounts of the story:

 

Last Updated on Friday, 29 March 2013 13:54

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More Than The Bunny!

 

Beyond the Bunny by Daniel Darling
1 Corinthians 15

What does Easter mean for you? If you go to church, then I'm guessing everyone you know there is making a huge deal out of Easter. Special services. Communion. Cool banners with great graphics. Easter egg hunts. All kinds of neat stuff.

But why is it that the church tries so hard to get people to come on Easter? And why is it that Easter is probably the one time of year when everyone - even those who really don't believe in God at all - go to church?

It is because what happened at Easter is the fountain of our faith. This is what a man named Paul said. Paul was a skeptic of Christianity until he met the Lord in a very dramatic way while traveling on a busy Roman highway. He became one of the most passionate evangelists in the history of the church.

Paul said that if what happened on Easter—Jesus Christ rising from the dead—than we are "of all men most miserable." This is how we would say it today.

If Easter is just a nice religious holiday with candy and bunnies and family and Jesus Christ really didn't rise again from the dead on the third day—then Christians are a really sorry lot. We might as well pack our Bibles and hymnals up and go home.

But the truth is—Jesus Christ did rise again from the dead. It's a historical fact. In fact, in 1 Corinthians 15, Paul lays out the evidence. 500 witnesses saw Jesus Christ in the flesh after he had died and been buried in the tomb. You can't get 500 people to agree on anything, but they all testified that indeed Jesus Christ was alive after He wasn't supposed to have been.

Let's bottom line this. The death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ is the most important event in human history. It's the most important event in your life and in mine.

The events at Easter are the only source of hope in this world. Thru Jesus Christ shed blood on the cross, his payment for your sin and for mine, and his resurrection from the dead give you and me new life. Eternal life forever, in only you believe (John 3:16: John 6:47; Ephesians 2:8-9).

Because of Easter, you and I don't have to be chained with the shackles of sin. We're free to live the life God intended. And one day we'll live forever in a place called Heaven, created just for our pleasure.

Because of Easter, we can walk with the God of the Universe as if He is our friend.

So, this Easter, don't let it be all about the bunny. Stop, worship the One who gave you life. Jesus Christ.

Last Updated on Monday, 25 March 2013 14:54

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Leadership Council Nominees for 2013

2013 Leadership Council Nominees. 

 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 12 February 2013 18:10

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9 Lies Media Tells About Christians

Read this article by Frank Viola...Check it out and see what you think: 

 

I realize that “the media” is not a monolith. So I’m using the word generally here. However, over the last year, I’ve seen the following narrative played out in scores of interviews, commentaries, and pundit discussions across the TV news networks, magazines, and the Internet.

So while there are certainly exceptions, I’ve identified nine common lies perpetuated by people in the media. Granted, there are enough vocal evangelicals to bolster each of these stereotypes, so the media isn’t completely responsible. But nuance is necessary here. Thus this post.

Lie 1. Evangelical Christians are intolerant. “Intolerance” is the new clay word that is used to strong-arm an entire group of people who dissent from the conventional wisdom. Thus if a person believes that Jesus is the only way to receive eternal life (as most evangelicals do), they are deemed “intolerant” because the conventional wisdom is to believe that eternal life doesn’t exist. Or if it does, Jesus is but one way among many ways to obtain it. In short, “intolerance” has been redefined by many in our time to put pressure on those who dissent from the status quo. Granted, some evangelicals are (unfortunately) intolerant of anyone’s beliefs but their own. But many are not.

Lie 2. Evangelical Christians hate gays and lesbians. Unfortunately, some Christians despise those in the LGBT community. However, there are many Christians who understand marriage in the traditional way (exclusively between a man and a woman) yet genuinely care for LGBT people. Interestingly, President Obama was against same-sex marriage not too long ago. I don’t recall anyone saying that he hated gays or lesbians at the time.

“What I believe is that marriage is between a man and a woman . . . What I believe, in my faith, is that a man and a woman, when they get married, are performing something before God, and it’s not simply the two persons who are meeting.” Obama in an Interview with WTTW Chicago public television in October 2004.

 “I have been to this point unwilling to sign on to same-sex marriage primarily because of my understandings of the traditional definitions of marriage . . .” Obama in an October 2010 interview with Joe Sudbay while expressing a struggle over the issue and evolving attitudes.

There are evangelical Christians who break with the traditional view of marriage and homosexuality. But the suggestion that all people who affirm the traditional view of marriage hate gay people is patently false.

Lie 3. Evangelical Christians vote Republican. Some do, however, many vote Democrat, Libertarian, Independent, and some don’t vote at all, thinking that voting is to pick up the sword and affirm the Empire (see Yoder and Hauerwas on that score).

Lie 4. Evangelicals are a monolith. This is hardly the truth. As I argued in Beyond Evangelical, the evangelical coalition is incredibly diverse on all fronts and it’s fracturing. So much so that the word “evangelical” must be redefined today. On its own, the word is practically meaningless.

Lie 5. Evangelicals are mostly concerned about outlawing abortion, having limited government, getting prayer back in schools, standing against gay rights, gun control, and evolution being taught in the public schools. While some evangelicals believe all of these things, many do not. And among those who would agree in principal with the ideas, they are not priorities. On the contrary, many evangelicals are supremely concerned with the environment and the plight of the poor.

Lie 6. Evangelicals are warmongers. Some evangelicals support war in certain cases, others do not. In fact, many evangelicals are vocally opposed to it.

Lie 7. Evangelicals are hypocrites. The original meaning of the word hypocrite is someone who pretends or puts on a show. Thus a person who speaks out against the use of handguns, but owns and uses handguns themselves would fit the definition. Hypocrisy doesn’t mean imperfection or the inability to make mistakes. All Christians are imperfect and all have made mistakes in their lives. The rare exception being Jesus of Nazareth. So while hypocrisy is present in the evangelical community, it’s also present in every people-group and movement on the planet.

Lie 8. Evangelicals hate President Obama. It’s unthinkable that a genuine Christian would hate anyone. “Hateful Christian” is an oxymoron. Nevertheless, many evangelicals love Obama yet disagree with many of his policies. Other evangelicals support Obama and affirm many of his policies. If an evangelical Christian hates anyone, they are violating one of the central commands of the Bible – something to which all evangelicals claim to believe in. On that score, Obama’s words about those who hate him are both wise and have very wide application.

Lie 9. Evangelicals set homosexuality above every other kind of sin. Some certainly do, unfortunately. But many view it as no greater a sin than gossip, slander, outbursts of anger, and lying (pointing to Paul’s “works of the flesh” lists where he puts slander and outbursts of anger on the same par as gross sexual sins). And as previously stated, some evangelicals do not believe that homosexuality is a sin. (That’s another conversation for another time.)

In summary, don’t be swept away by these lies even though someone with a bigger megaphone than yours happens to be heralding them.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 23 January 2013 15:14

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My 2012 Personal Check Up

Dear Partners in Christ,
On the last day of 2012 I make it a practice to test my life. 
It is my desire not just to “grow old” but to “grow up” in Christ. Just as I go to the doctor for an annual physical, I take today to conduct an annual “spiritual” check up…although our “evaluation” of ourselves must be done on an ongoing basis.
 
Here’s my personal inventory that perhaps you would find helpful as well. 
 
I suggest a 1 – 10 rating that allows you to grade yourself on a continuum.
1. Take this in a spirit of grace not legalism, but also in a spirit of honesty.
2. Thank God for his faithfulness and mercy upon your life in 2012.
3. Repent of your shortcomings.
4. Commit yourself to growing in 2013.
 
 
The Personal Check Up
 
 
Psa 139:23, 24 Search me, O God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.
 
1. The Center Test – Was Jesus the first love of my life? Did I center all my life in Him?
 
 
2. The Glory Test – Was it my aim to bring glory to Jesus, and not myself, in everything I did?
 
 
3. The Bread Test – Did I daily feed on His Word to nurture my mind, heart, and spirit?
 
 
4. The Breathing Test – Did I rely on the presence and power of the Holy Spirit throughout each day?
 
 
5. The Prayer and Worship Test – Did I live and minister by the power of prayer and enjoy the sweetness of personal worship?
 
 
6. The Gospel Test – Did I grow more urgent in my desire and actions to help people receive the gospel of Jesus?
 
 
7. The Disciple Test – Did I personally pour into a few lives to move them towards maturity and fruitfulness in Christ?
 
 
8. The Family Test – Did I nurture my spouse and kids in such a way that they loved the Lord and me more than last year?
 
 
9. The Friend Test – Did I build deeper friendships with a few people who refreshed and sharpened me?
 
 
10. The Fitness Test – Did I eat, exercise, and rest in a way that provided excellent maintenance of the temple I live in?
 
 
11. The Financial Test – Did I manage money wisely and practice radical generosity?
 
 
12. The Fun Test – Did I have rich times of recreation, laughter, and decompression that rejuvenated my overall energy levels? 
 

Last Updated on Monday, 31 December 2012 17:51

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The GREAT ADVENTure - Day 24, Dec 24

Joy to the World, the Lord has come! And that changes everything! 

There is hope, there is joy, there is Love! 

The Light has pierced the darkness and OVERCOME! 

COME TO OUR CHRISTMAS EVE WORSHIP AT 4PM & 6PM AT NORTH CAMPUS AND 8PM AT CHERRY CAMPUS. 

Here are the final GREAT ADVENTure Options: 

 

Monday, December 24

1. Read Luke 2:1-20

2. Attend one of our Christmas Eve Services

3. Either in person or by phone tell 10 people, “I love you”.

4. Pray for 5 people you love who do not know Jesus.

5. Make homemade Christmas cards and hand them out at Christmas Eve service.

6. Make a “gratitude” list for at least 30 things you are thankful this Christmas

7. Before going to bed tonight, kneel down and thank Jesus for coming.

One of the greatest news broadcaster, Harry Reasoner, shared these profound thoughts one Christmas Eve: 

 

On the occasion of Christmas and the celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ (God incarnate), it is appropriate to consider the following insightful commentary from Harry Reasoner from  Christmas Eve of 1973,

“Christmas is such a unique idea that most non-Christians accept it, and I think sometimes envy it. If Christmas is the anniversary of the appearance of the Lord of the Universe in the form of a helpless baby, it’s quite a day. It’s a startling idea, and the theologians, who sometimes love logic more than they love God, find it uncomfortable. But if God did do it, He had a tremendous insight.

“People are afraid of God and standing in His very bright light. But everyone has seen babies and almost everyone likes them. So if God wanted to be loved as well as feared, He moved correctly here. And if He wanted to know people, as well as rule them, He moved correctly, because a baby growing up learns all there is to know about people.

“If God wanted to be intimately a part of Man, He moved correctly. For the experience of birth and familyhood is our most intimate and precious experience.

“So it comes beyond logic. It’s what a bishop I used to know called a kind of divine insanity. It is either all falsehood or it is the truest thing in the world. It is the story of the great innocence of God the baby. God in the power of Man. And it is such a dramatic shot toward the heart, that if it is not true, for Christians nothing is true.

“So even if you did not get your shopping all done, and you were swamped with the commercialism and frenzy, be at peace. And even if you are the deacon having to arrange the extra seating for all the Christmas Christians that you won’t see until Easter, be at peace. The story stands.

Last Updated on Monday, 24 December 2012 14:39

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The GREAT ADVENTure - Day 23, Dec 23

 

Don't miss our Special Christmas Services Today: North Campus - 9 & 11am, Cherry Campus 10am & Noon! 

 

Sunday, December 23 Great Adventure Options

1. Read Luke 1:26-35

2. Pray for our worship leaders - Mary, Craig, Tai, Jr.
3. Give 10 people Merry Christmas hugs at church today.

4. Write your favorite Bible verses on 5 slips of paper and hand them to 5 people.

5. Ask someone to tell you about his or her favorite Christmas.

6. Kneel down in a quiet place and read Luke 2 aloud as an act of worship.

A Christmas Devotional: 

READ: Isaiah 2:1-4

They shall beat their swords into plowshares . . . ; neither shall they learn war anymore. —Isaiah 2:4

In his book Christmas 1945, Matthew Litt tells about the first peacetime Christmas celebration in the US after World War II. The New York Daily News alerted readers to expect a fleet of warships in New York Harbor: “Christmas Day will find a mighty armada, consisting of 4 battleships, 6 carriers, 7 cruisers, and 24 destroyers.” But instead of waging war, the military ships hosted 1,000 needy children.

The children’s measurements had been taken previously so that perfectly fitted navy-blue coats and woolen caps would be gift-wrapped and awaiting them aboard the ships. These vessels of war had been transformed into carriers of compassion.

The prophet Isaiah predicted a future day of Christ’s reign of peace on this earth: “They shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore” (2:4). Christmastime serves as a reminder that the Prince of Peace will ultimately bring a time of global calm and compassion.

As we celebrate the first coming of the Prince of Peace and wait for His second coming, we are reminded of our privilege to serve as His “carriers of compassion.” —Dennis Fisher

Lord, You have come and brought peace, and I long to
share Your compassion everywhere I go.
Thank You that this world will know ultimate peace
when You return. Amen.

 

Last Updated on Sunday, 23 December 2012 14:53

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The GREAT ADVENTure - Day 22, Dec 22

Dear Friends, 

3 more days til Christmas! Sunday...you should prioritize worshipping. Monday, Christmas Eve, you should come enjoy our candlelight Christmas Eve service. Christmas Day you should worship Jesus in your home with your family or friends. Spend time gazing on God's glory as revealed in Jesus Christ.  Here's a devotional for today from Joe Stowell: 

 

You don’t have to gaze long at the night sky to marvel at the wonder of God’s awe-inspiring handiwork. The massive stretch of galaxies and the cloudy mass of our own Milky Way remind us of the spectacular creation and the sustaining work of Jesus by whom it is all held together (Col. 1:16-17). It’s as though all of us have front-row seats in the theater of God’s creative power.

But the nightly show we experience is nothing compared with the glory that God displayed when He sent His Son to Earth. While shepherds were watching their flocks, the sky was suddenly ablaze with angelic messengers praising God and saying, “Glory to God in the highest!” (Luke 2:14). Even Magi from a foreign land came and worshiped the King when God planted the brightest of stars in the east, which led them to Bethlehem.

While “the heavens declare the glory of God” nightly (Ps. 19:1), never before or since has the theater of the universe been more alive with His glory than it was with the announcement that the Creator of this universe loved us enough to come to our planet to save us from our sin. Keep that thought in mind the next time you marvel at the stars!

Lord, make us mindful of the glorious day when the
heavens resounded with the announcement of the
coming of Your Son. Lead us to glorify Him in ways
that catch the attention of our watching world.
The spectacular glory of God’s love for us
was revealed in the coming of Jesus.
The Great Adventure Options for Dec 22
Saturday, December 22
1. Read Isaiah 9:2-7
2. Make hot coffee or cocoa.  Find a homeless person to give it to.

3. Walk on the beach and find a special Christmas shell to take home.

4.Take something from your garage or closet to the Goodwill Thrift Store.

5. Walk through your favorite store without buying anything. Thank God for all you already have.

6. Spend 10 minutes praying for Christmas services. 

Last Updated on Saturday, 22 December 2012 15:04

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The GREAT ADVENTure - Day 21, Dec 21

 

 

 

 

The World is supposed to end today, 12-21-12. The Mayan Calendar only went this far. But as of this morning I am still here and so is the world. It reminds me that our job is not to figure out the future or the date of Christ's Second Advent. Our job is to keep trusting and not let go of His hand. Here's a devotional by Joe Stowell about this. 

The Great Adventure Options for Today are below. 

 

"Nevertheless I am continually with You; You hold me by my right hand." Psalm 73:23

One of the joys of being with kids is holding their hands. We do it to keep them safe while crossing the street, or to keep them from getting lost in a crowd. And whenever they stumble and lose their footing, we grab their little hands tighter to keep them from falling.

That’s what God does for us. Inevitably there are stones and cracks that trip us up on the sidewalks of life. That’s why it’s easy to identify with the psalmist, who said, “My steps had nearly slipped” (Ps. 73:2).

We all face a variety of issues that threaten to make us stumble. For the psalmist Asaph, seeing the prosperity of the wicked caused him to question the goodness of God. But God squeezed his hand and reassured him that, given the judgment of God, the wicked do not really prosper. True prosperity, the psalmist discovered, was found in the fact that God was always with him: “You hold me by my right hand” (Ps. 73:23). And just for good measure, God reminded him that He would also guide him through life and ultimately welcome him home to heaven (Ps. 73:24). How good is that!

So, next time you stumble, remember that the powerful hand of God is holding your hand and walking you through life—all the way home!

Many things about tomorrow
I don’t seem to understand;
But I know who holds tomorrow
And I know who holds my hand. —Stanphill

Great Adventure Options Friday, December 21

1. Read Isaiah 7:10-14

2. Stop at a Laundromat and give someone there $1.00 in quarters.

3. Watch a clip of “A Charlie Brown Christmas”. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DKk9rv2hUfA

4. Pick up trash in your nearest city park.

5. Buy a bottle of sparkling cider and give it to someone and say, “I am celebrating you today!”

6. Mayan Calendar ends today. End of the World? Spend time today thinking about the second advent of Jesus.  

Last Updated on Friday, 21 December 2012 14:58

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The GREAT ADVENTure - Day 20, Dec 20

Dear Friends, 

I bless you today in the name of Jesus. 

In the midst of your joy, your pain, your health, your hurt...Jesus is Emmanuel...He is there to walk with you, to work with you,  to weep with you, to wake you up each morning...He is "God WITH us". 

Here are the ADVENTURE OPTIONS for today followed by a devotional for you to meditate on. 

The GREAT ADVENTure Day #20
Thursday, December 20
1. Read Matthew 1:18-25, 2:1-2

2. Pray for some of our ministry staff - Omar, Percy, Robert M, David R, David H

3. Invite someone to Christmas Eve services

4. Write a Christmas note\letter listing the 10 best things of 2012. Email it to a few friends. 

5. Gather all the change in the house and put it in the offering on Sunday. 

6. Call someone who has recently lost a loved one. Tell them you are praying for them this season.

 

THE GIFT

We refer to Christmas as the season of giving. Most of us try hard to find gifts that friends and family will like, but not all gifts are equal. Some gifts come with a subtle hint, like an exercise machine or a book about weight loss. Other gifts are those that the giver really wants for himself. But the best gifts are those that come from someone who loves us and knows what we want.

Last Christmas, my pastor, Jim Samra, challenged us to think about Christ’s coming in another way. We know that Jesus was God’s perfect gift to us (Rom. 6:23), but Pastor Jim added another thought. He said that His coming to earth could also be looked at as a gift that Jesus gave to His Father. Jesus loved His Father and knew that what He wanted more than anything else was for us, His creation, to be reconciled to Him. Through His incarnation, Jesus made it possible for us to be a holy and blameless present to God (Col. 1:22).

Thinking of ourselves as a gift to God makes us want to be a present worth the cost, “fully pleasing Him, being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God” (v.10).

Dear Lord, from whom all blessings flow,
Most precious gifts dost Thou bestow;
So truly faithful may I be
As Thou art gracious unto me. —Roworth
God’s highest Gift should awaken our deepest gratitude.
written by Julie Link

Last Updated on Thursday, 20 December 2012 14:56

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The GREAT ADVENTure - Day 19, Dec 19

Today,  my prayers are with you as you seek to walk forward for Jesus. 

So many things happen in 2 weeks...Christmas, the end of 2012, the beginning of 2013. Meaning there is celebration, reflection and anticipation all clumped together in a few days. Keep your focus on Jesus. Keep the main thing the main thing. 

Here's a brief devotion on one of the characters of Christmas: Anna - 

 

’ve never been exceptionally good at waiting. While I’ve learned that waiting can only be productive if I have set the desires of my heart on the things of God, lately He’s been working on my attitude in the waiting.

Anna, the prophet, certainly knew how to wait. We don’t know the circumstances of her widowhood, but we do know a bit about her extraordinary vigil: “She never left the temple but stayed there day and night, worshiping God with fasting and prayer” (Luke 2:37).

Because of Anna’s willingness to wait for the Lord out of love—not simply seeking what He would give her—she experienced a powerful, persevering faith. Scripture tells us that Anna, after having seen the Messiah, “talked about the child to everyone who had been waiting expectantly for God to rescue Jerusalem” (Luke 2:38). She didn’t stumble into the messianic revelation. It was a claim upon which she had staked her life and something she had waited many years to see. She remained in an attitude of worship of the One who would bring it to pass. And in the end, He proved to be the rewarder of her life (Hebrews 11:6).

We like to think we’re in control of the stuff of life, and we often use our own resources to bring about a desired result. We pursue a relationship, push an issue with our boss, or put ourselves deeper in debt to make sure we get what we want when we want it. Instead, if we determine in our hearts to wait for the presence of the Living God, not simply for an answer to our request, worship becomes a natural byproduct of the waiting.

Like Anna, let’s worship God even when we’re faced with unanswered prayers and unclear direction. Worship in the waiting can be a beautiful thing.

GREAT ADVENTURE OPTIONS FOR DAY 19

 

Wednesday, December 19

1. Read Luke 1:57-80

2. Give a $1 or $5 bill to someone…tell them about your Adventure if they don’t understand why.

3. Decide to come early or stay a little longer to help greet people at our Christmas Eve services.

4. Find 10 workers you can say “thank you” to. (Store clerks, crossing guards, teachers, etc)
5. Send 5 emails telling 5 people how special they are to you.

 

 

Last Updated on Wednesday, 19 December 2012 14:51

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The GREAT ADVENTure - Day 18, Dec 18

 

Yesterday we lost a great Christian leader in the Southland. Frank Pastore died after a motorcycle accident...please be in prayer for his family. Frank was my age. And it made me stop and think deeply about how important every day and every word is. 

I want to live carefully with life. I want to have the fewest regrets possible. 

 

"REGRETS"
By Rev. Wayne Palmer

December 18, 2012

Read Luke 1:64-66 TEXT: "And immediately his mouth was opened and his tongue loosed, and he spoke, blessing God." (Luke 1:64)

 

Squeezing together at Christmas can put a strain on even the closest of families. That strain can explode into cutting words that splinter and scar a family for years. Perhaps this Christmas will see empty places around your table-and deep regret in your heart.

Zechariah knows that regret well. Nine long months have gone by since he has spoken a word. Out of disappointment he last used his voice to blurt out his doubts, regarding the angel's promise. Over the months his faith has been restored by the wonderful things he has seen and experienced, but the echo of his last words still sting in his mind.

But along with that echo are the words of the angel, "You will be silent and unable to speak until the day that these things take place" (Luke 1:20). One by one everything the angel predicted has occurred, and now the last piece has fallen into place: the child has been named John. In an instant God restores his speech. And the first words from Zechariah's mouth are words of blessing for the great things God has done.

Each of us carries regret in our heart over careless words we have said. Perhaps you regret something you said to a loved one now gone. Just remember Jesus Christ came in the manger to win forgiveness for that sin. Because He died and rose again, we have new hope and new life. It's a hope that through Christ Jesus our splintered families and relationships will be repaired. We hope for this certainly in this life or, for all who believe, in the never-ending life we will enjoy together when Jesus Christ returns.


Prayer: Heavenly Father, heal the wounds I caused by my hasty, hurting words, restore the relationships I have damaged, and fill me with peace and joy for Jesus' sake. I pray in His name, Amen.

GREAT ADVENTURE OPTIONS FOR DECEMBER 18

 

Tuesday, December 18

1. Read Luke 1:46-66

2. Pray the Lord’s prayer slowly- 3 times: morning, noon, evening.

3. Write a card to someone you have had tension with during 2012.
4. Watch for babies today. Ponder what Jesus was like as an infant.

5. Call one of your older relatives and say a prayer for them on the phone.

6. Pick up a few pieces of trash in some area where you park.  

Last Updated on Tuesday, 18 December 2012 15:06

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The GREAT ADVENTure - Day 17, Dec 17

In a time that is laden with fear, we must be the people who point others to peace, to security, to divine protection. 

My daughter was present at a shooting at the mall this weekend. It was scary as people ran screaming out of the Macy's store. But my daughter had a peace and a hope that came from Emmanuel. 

Here's a devotional by John Piper about Fear. After this are the Great Adventure Options for the Day: 

FEAR NOT - Luke 2:8-11

The angel said to Zechariah: "Fear not!" He said it to Mary: "Fear not!" And now He says it to the shepherds: "Fear not!" It's a natural thing for a sinner to fear. The more guilt we have, the more things we fear: fear of being found out for some little deceit, fear that some ache we have is God's judgment, fear of dying and meeting the holy God face to face.

But even though it's natural, God sends Jesus with the word: Fear not! Hebrews 2:14 says: Jesus became man "that through death He might destroy him who has the power of death, that is the devil, and deliver all those who through fear of death have been held in lifelong bondage."

Doesn't this last phrase imply something tremendously liberating for our daily life?

If the worst fear--fear of death-has been taken away through the death of Christ, then surely God does not want us to fear the lesser things in life: job insecurity, not having enough time to finish a sermon, having over for lunch someone who can't speak English, failing a test in school, being rejected by your friends, etc.

The message of Christmas is fear not! God is ruling the world for the great good of His children. Believe His promises: "Fear not for I am with you. Be not dismayed for I am your God. I will help you; I will strengthen you; I will uphold you with the right hand of My righteousness... Do not be anxious about your life, what you shall eat or what you shall wear... Cast all your anxieties on God because He cares for you ... The Lord is my light and my Salvation: whom shall I fear. The Lord is the stronghold of my life: of whom shall I be afraid?"

 

Great Adventure Options: Monday, December 17

1. Read Luke 1:18-45

2. Write a poem (short, simple) or draw a picture about Christmas (stick figures count) 
3. Take a walk through your neighborhood after dark...notice which places have Christmas lights) Pray for your neighbors to see His light.

4. Do something nice for someone, secretly, and never tell.

5. Pick up trash in your neighborhood.

6. Bonus: Inhale some evergreen smell deeply…thank God for the fragrance of Christmas. 

 

Last Updated on Monday, 17 December 2012 14:39

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