Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Personal Connection

Dear Worshipers,

On Sunday, the new liturgical year begins with the first Sunday of Advent. The theme of our approach to Christmas this year is “Personal Connection”. During this season of anticipating our celebration of the coming of our Lord we will be utilizing a video to help us enter into this amazing story in a fresh, new way. This is the text of the narration.

From the beginning of time, they’ve said He was an observer watching as humanity went about its business. They’ve said He doesn’t care. They’ve even said He doesn’t exist. But when the time was right God got personally involved.
Christmas celebrates the event that forever changed humanity’s relationship with the Divine – the day God got personally involved in the form of a helpless baby. This Christmas we invite you to know the God of personal connection.

CTRL + Click here to view a preview of the video we will show through the Advent season culminating on Christmas Eve at our 8 p.m. service. [You will need an internet connection to do this.] We purchased this from a Christian media company called Midnight Oil, and the link takes you to their website where you will preview the streamed version, a much lower quality than what we will show in service, but you can get the idea. Their slogan is “Telling the Story in a New Light”. I believe that is exactly what they have done with this short piece.

You may ask why I am telling you about all these service details. It is because I want you to use this tool to make a personal connection with someone. You can copy the sentence above and paste it in an email. Your friend should be able to view the video. Invite them to the Christmas Eve service, with you. It is through these personal connections that people come to know the Lord. It is likely that your story of redemption has personal connections written all over it, and I do not mean only the personal connection to God through Jesus Christ.

We are also hoping to put the link on the home site of our webpage, so you could wait for that, and then direct people there using the handy “Worship With” cards available in the foyer. We are working to have a number of spots run on television featuring a personalized 30 second version of the video. The one I have linked is 56 seconds and not personalized.

If it seems like we are going through a lot of trouble to get this thing seen, that would be because we are. It is a powerful, and uplifting little piece that I believe the Lord will use in a number of lives this season. Will you help us get the word out? There is no other name worth sharing, no one better to introduce your friends and family to this Advent season than Jesus. Please take advantage of these opportunities.
In Christ, Pastor Scott

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

GIVE THANKS, AGAIN

Dear Worshipers,

Give thanks to the Lord for He is good. His love endures forever. Psalm 136.1 (NIV)

Sometimes it is easy to be thankful. Everything’s going your way. Finances are in order. Family is getting along. Friends are helpful, happy and healthy. Fears are stilled. It is easy in those moments to give thanks to the Lord, primary because you can see His goodness so clearly.

Other times you might find yourself having a difficult time being thankful. Checkbook is out of balance. Children are fighting. Companions are sad and sick. Concerns are looming. In these moments it can be very difficult to thank the Lord, primarily because you might not be able to see His goodness as clearly, if at all.

But let us always remember the last part of the verse. His love endures forever. It may look differently at times, but it endures. It may seem near sometimes and far away at others, but it still endures. It never fails. Forever is a really long time.

I was clinging to this just over a year ago as I drove with Sarah to Charleston to see my father-in-law. Having been transferred there from Beckley where they had started angioplasty, he had experienced a heart attack and in surgery undergoing a quadruple bypass. As I drove down I-79 we prayed, some together, some separately. All the while we were trusting in God’s enduring love. We hoped we would arrive to find that he had come through surgery beautifully, that he had not bled though he had been on blood thinners just days before, that the Lord was going to give him a little more time with us here.

Chances of all that happening were not great. A few doctors at WVU told him last spring they would not do the surgery because they felt as though he could not survive it. We hoped for the best, but feared the worst.

While we drove, I was thanking God for His faithful love. Thanking Him that no matter what happened I knew it was the best. Thanking him that we were close enough to get there quickly. Thanking Him for the times I had shared with Sarah’s dad. I praise God that I was able to see His goodness even in the uncertainty of the situation.

I praise God that all we prayed for He gave us. Sarah’s father came through “beautifully”, the doctors words. He did not bleed. Praise the Lord! That we would have a chance to talk to him even later that day, and then the next. He recovered well from that episode, and now we are trusting God for the next.

Her father will have surgery on his carotid artery next week. It is a high risk procedure. His blood oxygen level is below where it should be for this procedure. He is concerned he will have a stroke and suffer the consequences through the balance of his life, should he live.

There is much uncertainty, so we must have much faith. We are praying and trusting and thanking God for the last year with Sarah’s dad, and hope to have another by God’s grace. The last year has been an expression of His love to us. We can see that clearly now.

Next time you face some uncertainty, maybe later today. Thank God. Thank God right now that when that time comes you are confident His love will be faithful. Thank God for the way you are experiencing that today.

Let us give thanks to the Lord, for He certainly is good. His faithful love endures forever.

In Christ,

Pastor Scott

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Preparing for Heaven: Getting to Know Jesus

Dear Worshipers,

As I drove across campus this morning on my way to church, I was praying. I noticed a young man walking with his Vault energy drink in his hand and his backpack loaded with the days necessary supplies. It occurred to me that he seemed prepared for the day. Then the Lord prompted me with the question, “Is he prepared for eternity?”

That’s been on my mind a lot lately with Pastor David taking us through this series on heaven. In that time I have conducted the funeral of a long-time family friend, attended another in our church, and talked with a man in his late 30’s who is likely dying from an inoperable brain tumor. Being reminded that this life comes to an end prepares you for the next, if you are willing.

I thought of that young man on campus, and then all the others that I drove past. I prayed for them. I wonder who it is in their lives that Jesus wants to use to introduce Himself. I wonder who in your lives Jesus wants to introduce Himself to through YOU.

There are any number of people in your circle of influence that are not ready for eternity. They are not ready to meet their Maker and answer the question of why they did not accept the free gift of eternal life available in Jesus Christ. They have not made heaven their home.

As wonderful as it is to be able to look forward to heaven, how much more wonderful would it be to be able to take as many of those in your circle with you? To know they will be there. How can you know unless you ask them? How do you get the “forever” dialogue started? What open doors exist to even begin that conversation? I am glad I asked.

Jesus. No Other Name. I trust you have noticed the banners at the front of the sanctuary these last tow weeks. They present the title of our upcoming Christmas musical, and that truth that “there is no other name in all of heaven for people to call on to save them.” (Acts 4:12b) Invitations will be available beginning tonight to use as a tool to open the door for people to come and meet (and celebrate) Jesus.

Please take advantage of this tremendous opportunity. I think you will be surprised at peoples response when you invite them this. I am praying, and have asked a team of others to pray for this. I am trusting the Lord to open the doors of peoples hearts in this season. Will you reach out and put your hand on the doorknob? It may be open. If it is, take the opportunity to introduce your friend to Jesus, or at least invite them to a place where that can happen. It may be locked. But even if it is, leave the invitation there anyway. It may just be read and received just the same.

You may even be the one who knows that young man walking across campus. If not, then let the Lord use you in the life of the folks around you. Help them prepare for heaven by learning to call on the only name that can get them there.
In Christ,

Pastor Scott

Notes
♪ We have our first combined rehearsal for the Christmas musical TONIGHT at 6:30. There is a basketball game at 7:00 so plan accordingly for traffic and potential parking issues. I will see many of you TONIGHT.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Facing Your Giants

Dear Worshipers,

I did something unusual today. I took a personal day on a Tuesday. The kids had the day off school and a few other factors influenced me to make that decision last night. We try to make unusual days like that special for our boys and so today we decided to go see a movie we have wanted to see. After seeing it I am about to do something else that is a little unusual. I want to recommend that you go see this movie.

The movie we saw was “Facing the Giants”. It tells the story of a frustrated high school football coach who finds inspiration by turning to his faith. More than “a simple David-and-Goliath metaphor on the gridiron. This film tells the story of faith in the face of long odds and the need to align our priorities with God's.” [From a review on the Focus on the Family web site just Ctrl-click Plugged In Review ] And I am not talking about the unusual Christ-absent God references we see in some movies. Christ is at the core of this one, including a revival and at least one youth giving his life to Christ and being radically transformed. And yes, this is playing at the movie theater. Carmike at the Mall to be more

This film was touching on many levels. The coach read his Bible and prayed. His wife got down on her knees and prayed. They prayed to God at other times. There was talk of God working and changing lives. It was amazing to see all this stuff that we believes happens and makes a difference in our lives portrayed in a movie. It was awesome. You will be inspired.

That is really why I am writing. Not to advocate enjoying a good use of the arts to see God reveal Himself, although that is a good thing. Not to give you a good option for entertaining your family this week (if it is still here), that that is a good thing also. I am writing to inspire you. That is why I bother to take the time.

I was inspired in watching this film. I trust you will be as well. But even if you do not go, here these words from the coach, "Our goal is not to win games; it's to honor God." Insert whatever consumes a fair amount of your life instead of “to win games”. Our goal in all that we do is to honor God. That is one of the ways we might define worship, and particularly a lifestyle of worship, “Our goal (in everything we do) is to honor God.”

We all face giants. Not 9-foot-tall spear-toting ones, or undefeated football teams by the same name, but something else. What is that thing that causes fear to well up in the pit of your stomach? God wants to help you face that “giant” and bring honor to His name in the process.

Face your giants today. Be inspired by the presence of your Extraordinary God at work in your ordinary life. Honor Him by giving Him praise, whether you win or loose.


In Christ,

Pastor Scott