10/7/2021 0 Comments God Calls Us to be FaithfulBeloved of God,
In the coming weeks, the church council is going to be asking that the congregation submit nominations for the 2022 council. The church council is tasked with stewardship of the church finances, real estate, property, and personnel, other than the pastoral called staff. I hope that if you hold these gifts, or know somebody among us who does, that you will consider submitting a nomination. We are currently a congregation of about 125 members, and not all of us will have gifts that suit the task that the council is given. Please be thinking and praying about this over the next few weeks. It may be that you are more gifted than you realize, or that you see a gift for this work in someone that they do not yet see in themselves. More information will follow through the month. Please mark your calendars for our BASIC kickoff event on the 20th of October. I am so excited to have this opportunity for fellowship to start up again, and to renew the ancient Christian discipline of eating together. Adults can eat for $6, children 6-12 for $3, and anyone younger than that is on us. See you soon. Come hungry! Our Scripture reading this week is from the book of Hebrews 4:12-16, and it's a set of verses that will be deeply familiar to us as Baptists. It is obviously a grand endorsement of the power of God’s Word. It is also a picture of astounding grace, and a call to proper Christian confidence. But I want us to notice the way these verses caution us against despair, and give us a reason for hope. The previous passage, from about Hebrews 3:12 on, is offering a word of caution from Israel’s history. It seems that the community who originally received this message had been dealing with the problem of apostasy, folks who lived as Christians for a while and then just...disappeared. We’ve seen this before says the author of Hebrews and this breach of faithfulness doesn’t end well. The most pointed word about this comes right here in Heb 4:12-13. We are on the hook even for our small breaches of faithfulness, not just the big ones that we find when people turn their back on their faith. God sees all of it, and we’re accountable for all of it. You can see why somebody with a clear view of themselves might despair, can’t you? And this is why the next verses are so very important. Heb. 4:14 Therefore, since we have a great high priest who has ascended into heaven, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold firmly to the faith we profess. 15 For we do not have a high priest who is unable to empathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are—yet he did not sin. 16 Let us then approach God’s throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need. God calls us to be faithful with a perfect understanding of just how weak we are. While God doesn’t soften the call, God gives us a High Priest in Jesus who offers perfect help where our imperfect faith may fail. Beloved of God, be faithful in everything. But when you are not, seek out our High Priest, who will not withhold from you His mercy and grace. Please join me this week in praying for:
You are the salt of the earth; you are the light of the world, Marshall
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9/23/2021 0 Comments Grace for the journeyBeloved of God,
The Missions and Outreach team is still working toward building teams to support displaced Afghans who will be in Santa Fe and Albuquerque. If you would like to join in this good work, please email the Missions and Outreach team and let them know. On Saturday Evening, October 2nd, we will be having a time of prayer and reflection in the church building from 5pm to 9pm. Different areas within the church will be designated for prayers of intercession for our ministries, confession, forgiveness, and reflection. You may come and go as you need throughout the evening. Please plan on spending part of that Saturday night with us in prayer. Our reading for Sunday from the gospel of Mark contains several episodes in a row that look like a collection of teaching organized around common images if they are organized at all. But the way we have Scripture is for our good, and I think that God was invested and operative even in a passage like this to place things together that we need to hear. The first part of the passage tells of a concern the disciples bring to Jesus over a man who is casting out demons in his name, but is “not one of us”. They are worried they should stop him, but Jesus disagrees. If he’s casting out demons in Jesus’ name, then whoever he is, he’s not the opposition. Jesus advises them to let him continue, because even if he were merely caring for the thirsty in Jesus’ name, it would be a sign not of opposition, but accord with the Kingdom of God. In the next section Jesus speaks of the judgement that awaits those who cause the small among us (In faith? In stature? Both?) to stumble. In fact, he admonishes his followers to be so concerned with holiness that even body parts that don’t cooperate are up for removal! The idea seems to be that where we go, what we do, and even what we see ought to be done in accord with a holy life, and failure to do so should be addressed at any cost. I like that these passages are side by side, because it reminds us of things that seem contradictory to us at first blush. We’re reminded that faith in Jesus practiced by others, even if we don't understand it, isn’t opposition. We’re told to be gracious about how others are following Jesus, and not to thwart them just because they’re not “one of us”. It’s a call to be gracious. On the other hand, the following passage speaks of a relentless pursuit of our own holiness, and the high cost of causing harm to those who are small or weak in faith. Jesus is clear, the choice is either a deep personal purity or the threat of hell. Nothing about us should be above our own careful interrogation, even our own bodies are to be carefully brought into a life of holiness. It’s a call to be rigorous. We need both words. We need to be reminded to be gracious to others following Jesus, perhaps especially because they will not be “one of us” as far as we can tell. We will disagree with folks as they follow Christ, even as they do so faithfully. But on the other hand, our self-examination and personal practice of holiness should be relentless. We should be constantly concerned with how we ourselves might live a life marked by the purity the Kingdom of God demands. But either of these words without the counterbalance of the other will fall into laxity, or abuse, and miss the point. God is gracious with us even as He is just, and just to us even as He gives grace. Part of discipleship is living in that tension without compromising it’s strains. May God give us the strength to do just that. Please join me this week in praying for:
You are the salt of the earth; you are the light of the world, Marshall |
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Sunday
Worship service: 9:00 am
Sunday School Bible Study : 10:30 am Youth Group (7th grade & up): 6:00 pm Wednesday
McBaptist: 8:00 am
Wednesday Night Dinner: 6:00 pm Directory Available online.
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