--Eugene Peterson
Sunday, February 28, 2010
To the Psalms of Ascent, we return
The emphasis of Psalm 125 is on the solidity of the Christian life. Living as a Christian is not walking a tightrope without a safety net high above a breathless crown, many of whom would like nothing better than the morbid thrill of seeing you fall; it is sitting secure in a fortress.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Sunday Lunch
Lunch together after the service Sunday is a wonderful opportunity to:
-- Enjoy food from around the globe
-- Share life with the church family
-- Welcome guests
-- Enjoy food from around the globe
-- Share life with the church family
-- Welcome guests
don't settle for either mere intellectual knowledge of God’s greatness or ungrounded enthusiastic passion
Where the light of revelation is not accompanied by spiritual experience and power in our souls, then it will end either in outward formality or atheism.
--John Owen, from the book The Glory of Christ
--John Owen, from the book The Glory of Christ
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Sunday, February 21, 2010
6pm Monday
We're having our first Leadership Summit. Gathering folks to pray, think, and plan for this wave we are about to ride together.
Join us.
Church office
6:00-7:45pm
Dinner & Childcare provided
.
Friday, February 19, 2010
Saturday
Men's breakfast this Saturday, February 20th 8:9:30 am at Church Office.
Come share a meal together and hear Adam Jeske speak on Missions, Motorcycles and photography.
Please RSVP fmatthews AT christsommunitychurch DOT com if you are planning to attend.
Also, there is a meeting for ladies later in the morning. See website for details.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Vision of God
Last nite I rec'd to UF fca kids that they load 2 books on the hard-drive of their hearts:
The Pleasures of God, by John Piper
The Holiness of God, by RC sproul
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Monday, February 15, 2010
Ash Wednesday
6am and 6pm
Stop by Church Office for a half-hour of:
--Scripture Readings
--Prayers
--Communion
To help you enter the Lenten season.
Saturday, February 13, 2010
A meditation on 1 John 3
Does your faith almost fail you? Fear not, it is neither your graces nor
feelings on which you are to live: you must live simply by faith on
Christ. With all these things against us, now-in the very depths of our
sorrow, wherever we may be-now, as much in the valley as on the mountain,
"Beloved, now are we the sons of God." "Ah, but," you say, "see how I am
arrayed! my graces are not bright; my righteousness does not shine with
apparent glory.
" But read the next: "It doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know
that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him.
" The Holy Spirit shall purify our minds, and divine power shall refine
our bodies, then shall we see him as he is.
feelings on which you are to live: you must live simply by faith on
Christ. With all these things against us, now-in the very depths of our
sorrow, wherever we may be-now, as much in the valley as on the mountain,
"Beloved, now are we the sons of God." "Ah, but," you say, "see how I am
arrayed! my graces are not bright; my righteousness does not shine with
apparent glory.
" But read the next: "It doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know
that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him.
" The Holy Spirit shall purify our minds, and divine power shall refine
our bodies, then shall we see him as he is.
--Morning, Feb 13, CH Spurgeon
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Pray through this slowly, we'll use it Sunday
Father, we confess that we are satiated and bored;
Creation has bored us.
Work has bored us.
Family has bored us.
Friends have bored us.
Our homes bore us.
Television bores us.
Redemption has bored us.
Truth has bored us.
You have bored us.
No generation in history has ever had so much to entertain it.
We are jaded and cynical.
We think the world is our servant, so we are not thankful when things go well for us, and we are not patient when they do not.
We believe every desire should be satisfied, so we are not delighted when they are, and we are not humbled when they are not.
We laugh, but do not know joy.
We are captivated, but are never really awed.
We celebrate, but we do not worship.
Have mercy on us, and forgive us.
Amaze us with grace – blood stained, incarnate, Messianic grace - the Glory of God in Christ.
Creation has bored us.
Work has bored us.
Family has bored us.
Friends have bored us.
Our homes bore us.
Television bores us.
Redemption has bored us.
Truth has bored us.
You have bored us.
No generation in history has ever had so much to entertain it.
We are jaded and cynical.
We think the world is our servant, so we are not thankful when things go well for us, and we are not patient when they do not.
We believe every desire should be satisfied, so we are not delighted when they are, and we are not humbled when they are not.
We laugh, but do not know joy.
We are captivated, but are never really awed.
We celebrate, but we do not worship.
Have mercy on us, and forgive us.
Amaze us with grace – blood stained, incarnate, Messianic grace - the Glory of God in Christ.
Ash Wednesday & Lent
Ash Wednesday (February 17, 2010) ushers in the season known as Lent, which begins forty days prior to Easter (April 4, 2010). As the first step in the Lenten journey, the Ash Wednesday service invites us to acknowledge our mortality, our sinfulness, and our dependance upon the grace of God.
Lent, a thought by D.Bisgrove
...during times of extraordinary
trials or uncertainty—which certainly describes what many are going through in this time of
economic upheaval, those disciplines become even more critical.
This argues for making use of the current season in which we find ourselves, Lent. Historically this is a time when Christians take stock of their spiritual health in anticipation of the celebration of Easter. It is a time of self-examination, repentance and self-denial (hence the idea of ‘giving up something for Lent’)—all of which are great ways to identify and repent of those things that have taken root in our lives as a replacement for the hope we have in Christ. So take time, as an
individual and as part of a community, to examine your life and access the power God has given
us in his Spirit.
Of course, there’s always the danger that spiritual introspection can make us more despondent,
which is why repentance and self-denial must be done in light of retelling ourselves the ‘old
story’ of Jesus’ birth, life, death and resurrection. Peter wrote that this living hope comes through “the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead” (1 Peter 1:3). This
reminds us that Christian hope is not a philosophy or a technique but the person of Jesus Christ.
Jesus’ resurrection from the dead is the reason Christians believe
that Sartre’s hopelessness doesn’t define reality; that injustice, greed, disease and death will not
ultimately define us or the world. Death has been swallowed up in victory. When Jesus died, so did death’s power over us. And when he was resurrected, it infused the whole creation with a living hope. It is this old story of Jesus’ triumph that we must tell ourselves.
And to the degree that we do, and find ourselves filled with hope, we will naturally want to
tell the story to others. For only in the story of Jesus will we find what we ultimately seek—our
living hope. --David Bisgrove
Here's more about Lent & Ash Wednesday, from years past
Lent & Fasting (from 2008)
-Tomorrow is Fat Tuesday (from 2008)
Lent, a thought by D.Bisgrove
...during times of extraordinary
trials or uncertainty—which certainly describes what many are going through in this time of
economic upheaval, those disciplines become even more critical.
This argues for making use of the current season in which we find ourselves, Lent. Historically this is a time when Christians take stock of their spiritual health in anticipation of the celebration of Easter. It is a time of self-examination, repentance and self-denial (hence the idea of ‘giving up something for Lent’)—all of which are great ways to identify and repent of those things that have taken root in our lives as a replacement for the hope we have in Christ. So take time, as an
individual and as part of a community, to examine your life and access the power God has given
us in his Spirit.
Of course, there’s always the danger that spiritual introspection can make us more despondent,
which is why repentance and self-denial must be done in light of retelling ourselves the ‘old
story’ of Jesus’ birth, life, death and resurrection. Peter wrote that this living hope comes through “the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead” (1 Peter 1:3). This
reminds us that Christian hope is not a philosophy or a technique but the person of Jesus Christ.
Jesus’ resurrection from the dead is the reason Christians believe
that Sartre’s hopelessness doesn’t define reality; that injustice, greed, disease and death will not
ultimately define us or the world. Death has been swallowed up in victory. When Jesus died, so did death’s power over us. And when he was resurrected, it infused the whole creation with a living hope. It is this old story of Jesus’ triumph that we must tell ourselves.
And to the degree that we do, and find ourselves filled with hope, we will naturally want to
tell the story to others. For only in the story of Jesus will we find what we ultimately seek—our
living hope. --David Bisgrove
Here's more about Lent & Ash Wednesday, from years past
Lent & Fasting (from 2008)
-Tomorrow is Fat Tuesday (from 2008)
7pm @ Study Center
A guest lecturer on what the Academy Award Best Picture nominees tell us @ ourselves and good ol' USA. I'm looking forward to it.
Tuesday, February 09, 2010
Reaching Cabbies for Jesus? Not
from my boy, S.Addcox:
A scene in The Moonstone, a novel from 1868. In it a character named Miss Clack tips her cab drivers with tracts rather than with money. The cab drivers are certainly frustrated by her refusal to actually tip--
"He jumped up on his box, and, with profane exclamations of dismay, drove off furiously. Quite useless, I am happy to say! I sowed the good seed, in spite of him, by throwing a second tract in at the window of the cab."
Sadly, examples of poorly representing Jesus are more frequent than we all wish. So realize that our friends may have been treated like this before. There may be a jerk-reaction to us winsomely and tactfully discussing Christ. Patience, patience.
.
A scene in The Moonstone, a novel from 1868. In it a character named Miss Clack tips her cab drivers with tracts rather than with money. The cab drivers are certainly frustrated by her refusal to actually tip--
"He jumped up on his box, and, with profane exclamations of dismay, drove off furiously. Quite useless, I am happy to say! I sowed the good seed, in spite of him, by throwing a second tract in at the window of the cab."
Sadly, examples of poorly representing Jesus are more frequent than we all wish. So realize that our friends may have been treated like this before. There may be a jerk-reaction to us winsomely and tactfully discussing Christ. Patience, patience.
.
Monday, February 08, 2010
Gratitude & Zeal
If you lose your sense of gratitude for your acceptance into God's Kingdom, you will lose your zeal for the work of that Kingdom.
--Paul Tripp
--Paul Tripp
Sunday, February 07, 2010
1 Thessalonians: 1:1b.The church is a community which lives in God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
We notice in passing the unselfconscious way in which Paul brackets ‘God the Father’ and ‘the Lord Jesus Christ’, as being together the source of the church’s life. Later (in verse 10) he will call Jesus the ‘Son’ of God. Already within twenty years of the death and resurrection of Jesus the coupling of the Father and the Son as equal is the universal faith of the church. This simple fact is enough to undermine the teaching of those who claim that the New Testament nowhere attributes deity to Jesus. --John Stott, because 1 Thess was written 50 or 51 AD, twenty years after Christ died & rose in 33AD
Saturday, February 06, 2010
Acclamation
Minister:
Gracious God,
Gracious God,
his perfect sacrifice
destroys the power of sin and death;
by raising him to life
you give us life for evermore.
Therefore we proclaim the mystery of faith.
All:
Christ has died.
Christ is risen.
Christ will come again.
Friday, February 05, 2010
The Movies and America: The Academy Award Nominees for Best Picture and What They Tell Us about Ourselves
Thursday evening, 7:00 p.m., Christian Study Center of Gainesville
112 NW 16th St.
Gainesville, FL 32603
352-379-7375
112 NW 16th St.
Gainesville, FL 32603
352-379-7375
In Gainesville and In God
Both accounts of the church are true. For God’s church was living in Thessalonica, and the Thessalonians’ church was living in God. To be sure, the preposition ‘in’ has a different nuance in these statements, since the church is ‘in’ God as the source from which its life comes, whereas it is ‘in’ the world only as the sphere in which it lives. Nevertheless, it is still correct to say that every church has two homes, two environments, two habitats. It lives in God and it lives in the world (C.f. ‘in Christ at Philippi’, Phil.1:1, and ‘in Christ at Colosse’, Col.1:2). --Stott
Tuesday, February 02, 2010
Next Step Class
Interested in joining CCC?
OR
Just want to know a little more about us?
Then hit one of these:
Friday Night and Sat AM at the church office
OR
Sunday mornings 9am at Oak Hall
OR
Just want to know a little more about us?
Then hit one of these:
Friday Night and Sat AM at the church office
OR
Sunday mornings 9am at Oak Hall
Stuff for Guys
Reminder there are two more opps for guys to gather with guys this week:
Thursday 6:30am Breakfast @ Perkins on Newberry Road near I-75
Thursday NOON til 1:00--bible Study at Christian Study Center
Monday, February 01, 2010
What I was trying to say y'day
"Before you can (know you are right with God) you must not only be troubled for your sins of your life, but also for the sins of your best duties and performances...before you can be at peace with God, there must be a deep conviction before you can be brought out of your self-righteousness; it is the last idol taken out of your heart. The pride of our heart will not let us submit to the righteousness of Jesus Christ. But if you never felt that you had no righteousness of your own or if you never felt the deficiency of your own righteousness, you cannot come to Jesus Christ."
-- George Whitefield
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February
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- To the Psalms of Ascent, we return
- Sunday Lunch
- don't settle for either mere intellectual knowledg...
- Playground! More Trees!
- 6pm Monday
- Saturday
- Lent Helps
- Vision of God
- Ashes 6pm
- March 6th Workday
- Ash Wednesday
- A meditation on 1 John 3
- Pray through this slowly, we'll use it Sunday
- Ash Wednesday & Lent
- 7pm @ Study Center
- Reaching Cabbies for Jesus? Not
- Gratitude & Zeal
- Sarah Hamersma speaks!!
- 1 Thessalonians: 1:1b.The church is a community wh...
- If only we could. But we cannot
- Acclamation
- The Movies and America: The Academy Award Nominees...
- In Gainesville and In God
- Next Step Class
- Stuff for Guys
- What I was trying to say y'day
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