Archive for the ‘Church’ category

ENT Harvest Festival Video Slideshow

October 4th, 2009

Yesterday Every Nation, Tallahassee church had our 2009 Harvest Festival at the Tallahassee Museum. It was a great time of food, fun and fellowship with some competition thrown in the mix for all who attended.

The competition at the Chili Cookoff and the “Amazing Race” was tough, but the intensity of the Pie Baking Competition was where things really got serious!

We have some really great people in our church. I’m glad that we got to spend a Saturday afternoon just enjoying one another, especially after working together in our Live to Impact Campaign last weekend.

Below is a video slideshow I made with some of the highlights of the Harvest Festival. Hope you enjoy it!

http://www.vimeo.com/6899221

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7 Reasons Why People Need to Be in Small Groups

September 23rd, 2009

teaching_preaching_church_teachersPreaching is powerful, and has an essential role within a church. But I believe that to be a healthy church, to have the kind of relationships we are intended to have, it takes more than just good preaching.

There needs to be community. The role of the pastor is important, but his preaching cannot fulfill the entire mission of a church by itself. God has given pastors to the church “to equip the saints for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ” (Ephesians 4:11-12).

I was encouraged today when I read an article by John Piper who is a renowned author and Pastor of Preaching and Vision at Bethlehem Baptist Church in Minneapolis, MN.

He wrote, ” I believe in what I do. And I believe that it is not enough.” He then shared 7 reasons why people need to be in small groups:

  1. The impulse avoid painful growth by disappearing safely into the crowd in corporate worship is very strong.
  2. The tendency toward passivity in listening to a sermon is part of our human weakness.
  3. Listeners in a big group can more easily evade redemptive crises. If tears well up in your eyes in a small group, wise friends will gently find out why. But in a large gathering, you can just walk away from it.
  4. Listeners in a large group tend to neglect efforts of personal application. The sermon may touch a nerve of conviction, but without someone to press in, it can easily be avoided.
  5. Opportunity for questions leading to growth is missing. Sermons are not dialogue. Nor should they be. But asking questions is a key to understanding and growth. Small groups are great occasions for this.
  6. Accountability for follow-through on good resolves is missing. But if someone knows what you intended to do, the resolve is stronger.
  7. Prayer support for a specific need or conviction or resolve goes wanting. O how many blessings we do not have because we are not surrounded by a band of friends who pray for us.

While preaching is necessary and powerful, it can never replace purposeful, transparent Christian fellowship and accountability.

As the Hebrews were encouraged, so we need to be encouraged to “not give up meeting together as some are in the habit of doing – but let us encourage one another – and all the more as you see the Day approaching” (Hebrews 10:24)

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Purposeful Relationships

September 11th, 2009

The word used in the New Testament for what we usually refer to as “fellowship” is koinonia. The root meaning of koinonia is “to hold something in common.” Koinonia speaks to a joining together for a common purpose.

I think too frequently we Christians don’t experience true fellowship because they are too easily satisfied with triviality. Our thoughts and talk is filled with things that have no real lasting significance or depth. J.P. Moreland writes, “too much of what passes for fellowship today is trite conversation that has no clear goal for its purpose.”*

I think he’s right. Sure, we should be able to laugh, and  it’s probably even healthy to have moments of levity. One need not be somber all the time! But trivial pursuits seem to dominate the lives and conversations of so many professing believers both young and old! Is this the kind of community that Jesus had in mind for his followers and modeled with the twelve disciples? Is this the kind of lilfestyle that the early church modeled?

They had a message and an experience that had so profoundly impacted them that they were willing to be persecuted, endure  financial hardship, and even die for it. And in the midst of their Christ centered, Gospel motivated purposefulness they experienced not boredom or despair, but incredible joy!

When we Christians gather, we need to be remember our common purpose and re-ignite our passion for the Great Commission. As we do so and intentionally work towards more fruitful conversations with other believers, I believe we can experience something more closely resembling biblical koinonia.

[J.P. Moreland. Love the Lord Your God with all Your Mind: The Role of Reason in the Life of the Soul. NavPress. Colorado Springs. 1997. p 172.]

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