Thursday, February 22, 2018

LWF - Perfection Found In Jesus Alone

BIBLE MEDITATION:
“Nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.” Romans 8:39
DEVOTIONAL THOUGHT: 
A perfectionist in the church is a miserable person. And not only that, but he makes everybody else miserable, too. The fellowship is never sweet enough. The teacher is never prepared enough. The music is never spiritual enough, and on and on it goes.
Jesus supplies the only perfection that we will ever attain until we get to heaven.
It is not perfection that God is looking for in His children; it is excellence.
God is working in you to achieve His purpose for His glory.
ACTION POINT:
Memorize this statement, “I am worthy apart from my performance because Christ died for me and gave His life to me. My life is hidden in Him. Jesus loves me.”

Information regarding Pastor Bishop's Funeral

Funeral on Friday, Feb 23, 2018

Visitation will be from 10 AM to 12PM at Full Gospel Christian Church

Service at Noon will include Military Honor Service.

Procession to the cemetery immediately after the service.

Luncheon afterward at the church.

Wednesday, February 21, 2018

Reverend Doctor Charles Bishop

Reverend Doctor Charles Bishop has gone to live with our Lord God.

He takes our love and respect with him. He has been a wonderful Pastor and friend and we all will surely miss him, his guidance and his friendship. He has earned his heavenly reward after his years of faithful service to the church and the Lord.

Live in joy and exaltation with the Lord, dear Pastor.

Funeral arrangements will be shared when details are available.

Saturday, February 10, 2018

3 Experiences Guests Won’t Forgive:


3 Experiences Guests Won’t Forgive:

1) If you treat their kids as a program to be managed rather than kids to be loved.
Structure can beat out spirit, and the programs and processes can become more important than the person.
This can happen in any ministry in your church, but there is little to no grace when it comes to people’s kids.
I’m willing to bet that the heart of your church is about life change, meaning and real spiritual transformation through Christ. You want to see the children love Jesus and enjoy church!
But here’s where it breaks down. If you begin to make your children’s ministry easier on the staff and volunteer leaders by making it more difficult for the parents and kids, you are making a big mistake. You’d never do that on purpose, but it happens.
The leaders must always absorb the pressure, not the guests.
If the kids become a number in the check-in process or are scolded more than encouraged because they didn’t behave just right, or there are so many rules that it’s impossible to keep up with, it’s highly unlikely that the new families will return.
2) If you treat the adults in any way “less than.”
Most reasonable adults are pretty resilient. As I’ve said, they understand there is no perfect church. But if you treat them poorly as a person, you don’t get a second chance.
One thing that’s easy to forget is that even though someone may be spiritually unresolved or disconnected, they are still usually spiritually sensitive.
If the pastor says something that makes a person feel spiritually foolish, or an usher or greeter treats someone with disrespect, they won’t give you a second chance.
We can’t live on pins and needles worrying about offending everyone, but we can do our best to serve with intentional love and grace.
I remember several years ago trying to help a young mom tend to her crying baby in church. I did my best to be kind and respectful, but I inadvertently offended her by asking her to take her child to the nursery. Maybe I could have done a better job, or perhaps it was a no-win situation, but the result was she was upset and said she’d never come back.
Most of these situations are nuanced and unintentional, but it’s so important to do our best to treat our guests with love, respect and kindness.
3) If you treat any guest with an eye to get more than you give.
It might seem nearly impossible for a church team to treat any guest in such a way where that person felt like you wanted more from them than for them. But once again, this is easier than it sounds.
Church leaders are often under pressure. They are under pressure for things like more volunteers, larger offerings and support in general for the vision and direction of the church.
For example, if a church is hurting for more volunteers, they can put pressure on people, including guests, to sign up.
When pressure (or even guilt) is employed rather than inspiration and encouragement, you have fallen into the mistake of wanting more from the people than for them. Your guests have no appetite for that.
Another example might be if a church is behind in the budget. That can sometimes “leak” out in a sermon, or during the time to receive the offering. This kind of pressure makes it feel like the church wants more from the person than for them. If this is what your guests experience, they are not likely to return.
Kindness, respect and love will always help you treat people well.

Tuesday, February 6, 2018

LWF - Just As I Am

BIBLE MEDITATION:
“To the praise of the glory of His grace, wherein He hath made us accepted in the beloved.” Ephesians 1:6
DEVOTIONAL THOUGHT: 
Do you have a “know-so” salvation? What I mean is, do you know that you are saved and have the assurance that if you died tonight, you’d spend eternity with the Lord in heaven?
Many folks don’t have that assurance, and in some cases it is not a spiritual problem. It is a psychological problem. They cannot accept the fact that God has accepted them.
Charlotte Elliott penned these words to a timeless hymn of assurance:
“Just as I am, without one plea, 
But that Thy blood was shed for me, 
And that Thou biddest me come to Thee, 
O Lamb of God, I come, I come!”
You are accepted just as you are. It is all grace.
ACTION POINT:
Find the hymn “Just As I Am” and sing it to the Lord. Make it your song throughout the day when Satan tries to make you doubt God’s love and eternal gift of salvation.

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Devotions taken from the messages of Adrian Rogers. 

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