Ministers' Blog

Tuesday, February 21, 2012 - 1:31pm

Will you partner with us and be a part of the Courageous Men's Seminar this Saturday from 8am-12pm? It promises to be a wonderful time for fellowship for men of all ages. Here's a look at what we have scheduled:

Courageous Men’s Seminar Itinerary and Session Information

8:00-­‐8:40  

Breakfast (scrambled eggs, bacon, and biscuits with gravy)

Welcome and Introductory Message by Matt Dowling: “The Courageous Call”

Location: Family Life Center

(10 minute break at the end for coffee and getting to new session)

8:50-­‐9:35

Session 1a: How to lead family worship and devotions (Matt Dowling) in Rm. 186 (Primetimer)

Session 1b: A Courageous Legacy: Impacting Others for Christ (Rusty Tugman) in Rm. 151 (Generation Now)

(10 minute break at the end for coffee and getting to new session)

9:45-­‐10:45

Session 2a: Hedges: Loving Your Marriage Enough to Protect It (Rusty Tugman) in Rm. 151 (Generation Now)

Session 2b: Discerning Courageous Priorities (Matt Dowling) in Rm. 186 (Primetimer)

(10 minute break at the end for coffee and getting to new session)

10:55-­‐11:55

Session 3a: A Courageous Faith: It takes courage to stand with Christ (Matt Dowling) in Rm. 186 (Primetimer)

Session 3b: Dad’s game plan for raising sons and daughters (Darin Sixkiller) in Rm. 151 (Generation Now)

Monday, February 20, 2012 - 12:57pm

If you can, take 10 minutes to enjoy and be challenged by minister Paul Tripp's talk on how we as Christians need to live with forever in mind:

 

Thursday, February 16, 2012 - 8:10am

Though this is not an exhaustive list of Scripture verses relevant to this key issue, these are some key verses which will help you begin to develop right thinking about this topic:

Proverbs 20:1 Wine is a mocker, strong drink a brawler,and whoever is led astray by it is not wise.

Romans 6:12-18 Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body, to make you obey its passions. Do not present your members to sin as instruments for unrighteousness, but present yourselves to God as those who have been brought from death to life, and your members to God as instruments for righteousness. For sin will have no dominion over you, since you are not under law but under grace. What then? Are we to sin because we are not under law but under grace? By no means! Do you not know that if you present yourselves to anyone as obedient slaves, you are slaves of the one whom you obey, either of sin, which leads to death, or of obedience, which leads to righteousness? But thanks be to God, that you who were once slaves of sin have become obedient from the heart to the standard of teaching to which you were committed, and, having been set free from sin, have become slaves of righteousness.

Romans 13:13-14 Let us walk properly as in the daytime, not in orgies and drunkenness, not in sexual immorality and sensuality, not in quarreling and jealousy. But put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires.

1 Corinthians 6:12, 19-20 “All things are lawful for me,” but not all things are helpful. “All things are lawful for me,” but I will not be dominated by anything...Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, whom you have from God? You are not your own, for you were bought with a price. So glorify God in your body.

Ephesians 5:18 And do not get drunk with wine, for that is debauchery, but be filled with the Spirit...

Hebrews 12:1-2 Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God.

2 Peter 2:19 They promise them freedom, but they themselves are slaves of corruption. For whatever overcomes a person, to that he is enslaved.

Saturday, February 11, 2012 - 9:09pm

HT: The Gospel Coalition

The Story: In 2009, 19-year-old Kylie Bisutti beat out 10,000 other young women to win the Victoria's Secret Model Search. Now, at 21, Bisutti says she quit working for the company because modeling lingerie does not conform to her Christian beliefs.

The Background: Although working for Victoria's Secret was her "biggest goal in life," the young model began to have a change of heart.

I actually loved it while I was there, it was so much fun and I had a blast. But the more I was modelling lingerie---and lingerie isn't clothing---I just started becoming more uncomfortable with it because of my faith. I'm Christian, and reading the Bible more, I was becoming more convicted about it.

She said that her husband, whom she married soon after winning the modeling competition, was also a factor:

My body should only be for my husband and it's just a sacred thing.

While Bisutti will continue with her modeling career, she'll do so with her clothes on:

I didn't really want to be that kind of role model for younger girls because I had a lot of younger Christian girls that were looking up to me and then thinking that it was okay for them to walk around and show their bodies in lingerie to guys.

Why It Matters:  On the website of Live31, a non-profit organization promoting healthy self-image through a biblical worldview, Bisutti shares her story and explains how her local church played a role in her decision. In an essay titled "I Quit Being A Victoria's Secret Model To Become A Proverbs 31 Wife," she says, "Christ also led my husband and I to a great church that has helped me so much. It is a lot easier to stay grounded when you are plugged into a church and fellowship with other believers."

 

Monday, February 6, 2012 - 1:27pm

Here's a neat opportunity to take a graduate level bible class for a low cost:

Beginning tomorrow night, Dr. John Harrison’s graduate class “Preaching the Parables of Jesus” will be open to the public from 7:30pm-9pm. Over the next 6 weeks on Tuesday evenings, Dr. Harrison will be focusing on these well-loved teachings of Jesus and will provide new and valuable insight that can be used when teaching and preaching from these texts. Anyone interested is welcome: ministers, Bible class teachers, church leaders, etc. Cost is just $40 inclusive of all 6 weeks and can be paid in cash, check, or credit card. Please email Josh Bailey (josh.bailey@oc.edu) with any questions or call 405-425-5389.

Friday, February 3, 2012 - 11:38am

I want to share a blog post with you from a church planter in Vancouver, Washington who is likely dying of cancer. I find his testimony and the reflections he makes about Christian hope to be spot on. I hope you will be blessed by his thoughts.

 

Tuesday, January 31, 2012 - 9:21am

May God be gracious to us and bless us 
   and make his face to shine upon us, 
                         Selah

that your way may be known on earth, 
   your saving power among all nations. 
Let the peoples praise you, O God; 
   let all the peoples praise you!

  Let the nations be glad and sing for joy, 
   for you judge the peoples with equity 
   and guide the nations upon earth. 
                         Selah

Let the peoples praise you, O God; 
   let all the peoples praise you!

  The earth has yielded its increase; 
   God, our God, shall bless us. 
God shall bless us; 
   let all the ends of the earth fear him!

 

Friday, January 20, 2012 - 8:22am

The Supreme Court's landmark decision legalizing abortion in America was delivered on January 22, 1973. Many churches observe a "Sanctity of Life" Sunday every year in observance of this landmark case, and they use it as a reminder that because of the Christian confession that life begins at conception, abortion should be prohibited.

In thinking through this issue, I found the following article by Dr. Albert Mohler helpful. He writes:

"Abortion is now America’s most common surgical procedure performed on adults. As many as one out of three women will have at least one abortion. In some American neighborhoods, the number of abortions far exceeds the number of live births. Most Americans will pay little attention to the 38th anniversary of the infamous Roe v. Wade decision. In 1973, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that a woman has a constitutional right to arrange the killing of the unborn life within her. Since that decision was handed down, more than 50 million babies have been aborted, at a rate of over 3,000 each day. One of the most chilling aspects of all this is the sense of normalcy in American life. Abortion statistics pile up from year to year, and each report gets filed. Moral sentiment on the issue of abortion has shifted discernibly in recent years, as ultrasound images and other technologies deliver unquestionable proof that the unborn child is just that — a child. Nevertheless, the larger picture of abortion in America is basically unchanged.

With predictable regularity, cultural authorities call for the emergence of a moderating position between the pro-life and pro-abortion positions. But efforts to achieve a stable compromise on the abortion issue are doomed to failure. The two positions hold irreconcilable views of reality. The pro-life movement holds that the central issue is the unborn child’s right to live. Abortion activists have staked their entire case on the claim that the only determinative issue is the woman’s unrestricted right to choose. A middle position would require pro-lifers to accept that the deaths of some unborn children are acceptable, and abortion rights activists to accept that some decisions for abortion are wrong. Given the logic of their positions, there is no means of compromise. In recent years, some on the pro-choice side of the controversy have called for abortion proponents to use language indicating that abortion is a painful and wrenching, but sometimes necessary procedure, and to accept that some reasons for abortion are just not sufficient. Nevertheless, this is received as a call for treason within the abortion rights movement, and these voices are regularly sidelined. At the same time, there has been an effort to protect abortion with euphemism and evasion. Abortion rights activists speak of being pro-choice, not pro-abortion. The unborn child is reduced to a fetus, or a bundle of cells. Abortion clinics are described as women’s health centers. There are some abortion activists who will not join that bandwagon. With chilling candor, they defend abortion as abortion, they defend the decision to abort as a morally superior decision, and they lament the evasiveness of their colleagues in the abortion rights movement.

Just recently, Merle Hoffman, a major voice in the abortion rights movement and founder of Choices, a major center for abortions in New York City, has written a memoir, Intimate Wars. In telling her story, Hoffman calls for her colleagues in the abortion industrial complex to defend abortion as a moral choice. Abortion is the ultimate act of empowering women, she argues. “The act of abortion positions women at their most powerful, and that is why it is so strongly opposed by many in society,” she asserts. A central portion of her memoir deals with the abortion rights movement’s attempt to defend abortion in the face of pro-life arguments that the fetus has a right to life. “The pro-choice movement had to find a way to navigate these narratives,” she explains. “The simplest option was to negate the claims of the opposition. And so many pro-choice advocates claimed that the fetus was not alive, and that abortion was not the act of terminating it. They chose to de-personalize the fetus, to see it as amorphous residue, to say that it was only ‘blood and tissue.’” As she explains, the pro-life movement thought that, if women really knew what abortion was — the killing of an unborn human being — they would decide to keep their babies. She rejects the argument. Hoffman argues that woman do know what an abortion is. Abortion does stop a beating heart and that it is not “just like an appendectomy.” Her conclusion is that women know that abortion is “the termination of potential life.” She then makes this statement: “They knew it, but my patients who made the choice to have an abortion also knew they were making the right one, a decision so vital it was worth stopping that heart. Sometimes they felt a great sense of loss of possibility. In the majority of cases, they felt a great sense of relief and the power that comes from taking responsibility for one’s own life.”

Rarely do we see abortion defended in such unvarnished terms — “a decision so vital it was worth stopping that heart.” Merle Hoffman goes on to explain how she can speak of abortion so directly. She has, she tells us, no conception that life is sacred. “Abortion is as American as apple pie.” Hoffman made that statement in a recent interview about her book. She laments that abortion is the cause of shame in some women and that shame attaches itself to abortion in the large culture, even now. In her view, if women would start talking more honestly and directly about their abortions, the shame would be removed and women would discuss their abortions like they speak of “a bikini wax.” Is Merle Hoffman right? Is abortion “as American as apple pie?” To our great shame, she has a right to make that claim. How can it be refuted when abortion on demand has been legal in this country for almost forty years, when one out of three American women will have an abortion, when within some communities far more babies die by abortion than are born? In Merle Hoffman the Culture of Death has found a new voice. Almost forty years after Roe v. Wade, abortion remains a central part of the nation’s moral landscape. Over 50 million unborn children have been aborted within the span of just one generation. A titanic clash of absolutes is taking place in full view, and this clash indicates just how much work remains to be done in the great effort to protect the dignity of every single human life. As those who contend for the sanctity and dignity of each human life try to reach the hearts and minds of our fellow citizens, others are at work as well. If they have their way, Americans will one day openly speak of abortion as nothing more shameful than a bikini wax."

Monday, January 9, 2012 - 7:58am

Richard Gaffin, WTJ 38.3 (1975), 299:

How many believers today understand themselves with the apostle as those “upon whom the ends of the ages have come” (1 Cor 10:11)?

How many experience that they are members of God’s eschatological kingdom not only at hand but already present?

How many grasp with some perception of its vast implications that in the interim between the resurrection and return of Christ the existence of the church in the world is determined by the overlapping tension between this age and the age to come?

Richard Gaffin, JETS 41.4 (1998), 585:

How many believers today recognize that the present work of the Spirit within the Church and in their lives is of one piece with God’s great work of restoring the entire creation, begun in sending his Son “in the fullness of time” (Gal 4:4) and to be consummated at his return?

How many Christians grasp that in union with Christ, the life-giving Spirit, the Christian life in its entirety is essentially and necessarily resurrection life?

How many comprehend that in terms of Paul’s fundamental anthropological distinction between “the inner” and “outer man” (2 Cor 4:16), between “heart” and “body,” believers at the core of their being will never be any more resurrected than they already are?

Richard Gaffin, By Faith, Not by Sight (2006), 75:

How many Christians understand that the Holy Spirit presently at work in them is nothing less than resurrection power, that the Spirit, through whom God “will give life to your mortal bodies,” is “his Spirit who dwells in you” (Rom. 8:11)?

How many believers grasp that the Holy Spirit indwelling them is an eschatological power, that, in terms of the metaphors Paul uses, he in his activity in the church is an actual “down payment” on our eschatological inheritance (2 Cor. 1:22, 5:5; Eph. 1:14), the “firstfruits” of the full “harvest” of his eschatological working (Rom. 8:23)?

How many appreciate that Christ himself, as “life-giving Spirit” (1 Cor. 15:45), is present and at work in our lives in his resurrection power?

Wednesday, January 4, 2012 - 8:39am

Are you ready to be Courageous?

Here in the education ministry at Alameda, we're gearing up for an exciting Courageous Men's Weekend and churchwide viewing of the powerful movie Courageous coming up in February! We will reveal more details about that very soon. In the mean time, I invite everyone to be in prayer for our Courageous Men's Weekend and for the lives that will be impacted and sharpened through this great event.

To get ready for our event, the Resource Center is offering five different resources that complement our upcoming churchwide Courageous movie viewing and Courageous Men's Weekend. All these resources are being offered "at-cost" for $10 and note that there are resources for both men and women

You can pick up your Courageous resources for just ten dollars anytime at the resource center (near the coffee area). You may pay with cash or check (payable to Alameda Church of Christ) and place your payment in the cash box near the display. We are selling these copies at cost, so there will be no profit for the church.