Friday, August 10, 2007

Getting Real by Pastor Brice

One of the 3 Essentials of Strawberry Community Church is fellowship. We express it this way: Encourage One Another (see below for all 3 Essentials of SCC)! “Encourage one another,” gets at the idea of serving others in real humility and sharing our real lives with one another. Fellowship is a word that tends to roll off the tongue without much meaning. Fellowship is more than donuts and coffee. For many, real fellowship seems absent in the church.

One of my favorite scriptures on fellowship is Hebrews 10.23-25, “Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful. And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds. Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in habit of doing, but let us encourage one another – and all the more as you see the Day approaching,” (emphasis added)

Much is written these days about fellowship using words like: genuine, authentic, and vintage. Good words all, describing our longing for meaningful connection to others. I want to share some guidelines that foster real relationships that reflect Hebrews 10. These are shared in the book, Building a Church of Small Groups. I’ve taken some liberties describing each element.

  • To Know and Be Known – starting point of relationship that leads to real accountability in our walk with Christ. Requires willingness for vulnerability and opening your life to others.
  • To Love and Be Loved – even through relational discomfort I choose to love another anyway. I know that I will also be loved – even if I act like a jerk.
  • To Serve and Be Served – humility and flexibility are required for true service in Christ’s name. Some opportunities for service are planned, others are unexpected. We’re called to both.
  • To Admonish and Be Admonished – we all need people who will tell it like it is. People who will hold a mirror in front of us and ask, “do you see yourself as you really are?”
  • To Celebrate and Be Celebrated – to really rejoice in what is happening in each other’s lives. Praise God for his faithfulness!

Let’s all recommit ourselves to seeking, embracing, and living in real fellowship!

The 3ssentials of Strawberry Community Church are:

Encountering God, Encouraging One Another, and Enriching the World

Thursday, July 5, 2007

Vacation Bible School Brochures

Vacation Bible School Brochures available for print (enlarge to 8.5x11)



















Life in the Light by Pastor Brice

A reflection of John 8.12

On the streets of Athens a man once carried a lamp, in broad daylight, searching for one honest man. Diogenes lived in 4th century B.C. Greece. The sight of this strange man carrying a light in the day caused some people to pause and reflect on their life.

Jesus was called “the Light of men.” In fact, John says that, “In [Jesus] was life, and the life was the Light of men. The Light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not comprehend it.” (John 1.4-5).

Later Jesus would proclaim, “I am the Light of the world; he who follows Me will not walk in the darkness, but will have the Light of life,” (John 8.12).

The word “follow” literally means to walk behind. In Jesus’ day, a disciple would literally follow his rabbi to watch what he did and hear how he talked. He did this in order to start doing as his teacher did.

When you walk behind Jesus you’re following THE light – not just one carrying a light. When you pledge allegiance to the Christ and trust him with your whole life you discover that as He makes His home inside you that the Light of life is in you! The dark places are lit up and you see clearly who you are in relation to God.

A light in Jesus’ day was a small oil burning lamp. It’s amazing how bright a small flame is when light is absent.

“I am the Light of the world; he who follows Me will not walk in the darkness, but will have the Light of life.”

Perhaps part of what we’re to understand as “the light of life” for us is:

-When the flame of Christ’s light burns in you, your soul is satisfied.

-When you hold it near your face, you see yourself as you truly are - beloved by God.

-When you hold the flame to your feet, it purifies like refiner’s fire as you confess failure.

-When you hold it out in front, it lights your path an guides decisions.

-When you hold it above you, it shines so others can see and be drawn to the “Light of the world.”

May the Lord God bless you as you walk in the light!

Pastor Brice

Friday, June 1, 2007

"Love Amidst the Brokenness" by Timothy George

September 11, 2001, is frequently compared to December 7, 1941, as a day that will "live in infamy." But a more appropriate analogy might be August 24, 410, when the city of Rome was besieged and pillaged by an army of 40,000 "barbarians" led by the Osama bin Laden of late antiquity, a wily warrior named Alaric.

Read the rest of the article here

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

APOLOGETICS: Always be prepared to give an answer. 1 Peter 3:13-18 by Jeff W.

“Christian apologetics lays before the watching world such a winsome embodiment of the Christian faith that for any and all who are willing to observe there will be an intellectually and emotionally credible witness to its fundamental truth” James Sire

Why use apologetics in witnessing?

It is a response to persecution (1 Peter)

It is an explanation and a proclamation (Acts)

It is a deliberate argument (Paul debating with the authorities in Thessanolica)

It is a confrontation

It is a humble spiritual demonstration (Cor. Ch.2)

It is personal participation

It is correcting error and misbehavior (2 Cor.)

It is a personal witness

It is a presentation of Jesus as God (John 20:30)


Apologetics:

1.The truth about GOD
ISAIAH 40:28


2.The truth about JESUS and the RESURRECTION

ROMANS 10:9

3.The truth about the BIBLE

JOHN 8: 31-32


PROOF OF GOD:

1.Argument from Degrees of Perfection

2.The Design Argument

3.Pascal’s wager

4.The Argument from Truth


PROOFS OF JESUS AND THE RESURRECTION: FIVE POSSIBILITIES

1.The Resurrection REALLY happened

2.The apostles were deceived by an hallucination

3.The apostles created a myth

4.The apostles were deceivers who conspired to pull off the greatest hoax in history

5.Jesus only swooned and was resuscitated; he did not really die


Common anti-biblical arguments:

1.Inaccurate population and army numbers

2.Different accounts of how the RED SEA was parted

3.Chronological errors in the life of Christ

4.Different accounts of the angel sightings at the empty tomb

5.The Miracles of the Bible are not possible

Friday, May 18, 2007

TRIALS AS A TRAIL TO COMPLETENESS by Brice

"Consider it pure joy, my brothers, whenever you face trials of many kinds..." God says in the book of James (James 1.2).
Worldly wisdom teaches us to respond to the above statement, "How absurd! That's just pie-in-the-sky, wishful thinking! Talk about putting a positive spin on a lousy day!"

The Christian however, James tells us, is to understand personal trials as one of God's means for perfecting or completing our lives and faith - so that we will lack nothing!

The great Baptist preacher Charles H. Spurgeon wrote about his trials of depression saying, "It would be a very sharp and trying experience to me to think that I have an affliction which God never sent me, that the bitter cup was never filled by his hand, that my trials were never measured out by him, nor sent to me by his arrangement of their weight and quantity."

God pleads with us to endure the trial. But how?

1. Seek God's wisdom (James 1.5-8). Wisdom in the Bible is practical insight with spiritual implications. You are to ask God for wisdom to see how he intends to shape your life through the trial. Do you need to learn patience? Love? Have a hard edge in your personality softened? Seek God's wisdom for endurance, strength, and courage.

2. Remember your place before God (James 1.9-11). In Christ, the poor are not so poor and the rich are not so rich. In Christ, the poor have far more than their bank accounts, closets, cupboards, and driveways reveal. The poor have the presence of the living God abiding with them. In their humility they are exalted. In Christ, the rich are measured by more than the sum of their possessions, trophies, and accomplishments. The rich are to honor God as provider and not sink into the self-made illusion. Trials help the rich keep their feet on earth. In Christ, God has begun a good work in you and He will be faithful to complete it.

3. Think about the blessing (James 1.12). God promises to complete you in this life and to prepare you for the ultimate blessing - life in heaven in the full presence of God.

It's your choice how you allow God to use trials in your life. You can run, hide, and try to conquer them. Or, you can choose to "let endurance have its perfect result..." (James 1.4a) by seeking God's wisdom to move through the trial so that your wholeness will be certain.

My beloved, choose God!

Brice

Opinion: Retrieving a consistent pro-life ethic by David Gushee

Christians are so tangled up with politics these days that our political loyalties threaten to engulf our Christian commitments. We want the politicians to listen to us and the politicians want us to listen to them. It is nice to be wanted but not nice to be used. It is nice to have an impact but not nice to lose our soul in the process.

The two major political parties are like two suns in the same cosmic neighborhood that fight to pull the in-between planets into orbit around them. The power of Party identity is so profound that otherwise thoughtful people lose the capacity for independent reflection. Christians then move on to confuse that Party loyalty with our loyalty to Christ and biblical moral values. ("Party" is here capitalized intentionally, symbolizing the way a political party becomes an unholy idol.)

We need a transcendent moral vision that can function as its own kind of “sun,” powerful enough to function as the center of our own moral solar system and to help us resist the pull of competitors.

That is precisely what Christian faith is supposed to provide. The Bible is full of such claims as these: "There is one God." "You shall have no other gods before me." "Our God is a jealous God." "You cannot serve both God and mammon." "Jesus Christ alone is Lord." "We must obey God rather than men." Such exclusivist religious affirmations strike many as dangerous. But they are far less dangerous than the alternative—religious-type loyalty to a secular political Party and its ideology.

I believe in this biblical God. I believe that the Bible reveals his holy will. As a Christian, I believe that no force is to be allowed to compete with God’s Word for the government of my life in any aspect. This includes Party loyalty.

This God revealed in the Bible is the Creator of the cosmos and this gorgeous, precious planet. He demands careful stewardship of it and all of its living creatures. Biblically, we are not free to continue pummeling the Creation and testing its resilience to the breaking point. Therefore I am a Christian “environmentalist.”

This God made every human being in his image. He declared, and in Christ incarnated, the immeasurable and matchless value of every single human life. Therefore I believe in the sanctity of life. This includes every life, from its conception through its death (even after death, if one thinks about the dignified treatment of the dead) and into eternity.

Every life means every life, without exception. That includes two-month-along developing human beings in the womb, poor babies in Bangladesh, impoverished children in ghettos, abused wives and children, civilians in war zones, wounded soldiers at Walter Reed, imprisoned detainees in the war on terror, aging people living in nursing homes, mentally handicapped people, people convicted of heinous crimes. Everyone.

Therefore, I oppose abortion, euthanasia, war, murder, poverty, abuse, lack of adequate health care, torture, cruelty, degradation and the death penalty. As John Paul II said, our God is a God of life, a God for life. Because I am a Christian, I look for every opportunity to avoid adding more suffering and death to our vicious world. If there is any way to solve a human problem that does not involve creating even one more dead body, I’m for it.

God loves people. He made us with the capacity to flourish. He calls us to love our neighbors. One aspect of that love is helping our neighbors to become all that God made them to be.

Therefore I am pro-human wholeness. I support loving and nurturing family life, racial reconciliation, restorative justice, gender equity and quality education for everyone. I support the life of culture and the mind, beauty and the arts, science and technological advancement in the service of human well-being. I oppose structures and behaviors that discriminate improperly between groups of people, block their access to these essentials of human flourishing, and therefore limit the fulfillment of their God-given potential.

Because I am a Christian, I am pro-life, pro-family, pro-creation care, pro-poor, pro-justice, pro-wholeness and pro-peace. There are a variety of names for this ethic. I discovered a great one in the early 1990s -- the consistent pro-life ethic. It term emerged from the Catholic tradition and has been embraced well beyond that communion. No political party on the landscape today articulates this ethic in its fullness. But I believe that this is the moral vision that ought to govern the thinking, living and voting of Christian people.

-30-

-- David Gushee is university fellow and Graves Professor of Moral Philosophy at Union University in Jackson, Tenn. www.davidgushee.com