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April 2017 Spare Change

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 “All for the Sake of the Gospel”

The past political season has been brutal for our country.  We have seen more displays of disunity recently and they have even made their way into Christian circles.  Lately, Southern Baptist leaders have been at odds.  Most of the tension revolved around support for Trump.  Some leaders were saying it was not right for Christians to support a man like Trump, others were saying it was not right to not vote for a candidate that supported pro-life agendas and religious freedom.  This has caused a rift between some that even caught the attention of the Washington Post.  Eventually, the Executive Director of the SBC, Frank Page, stepped into it to try and bring harmony to the situation and it seems to have calmed down for now.

However, once again Southern Baptists are known for something other than the gospel.  Things like disagreements over politics get us off track and keep us from focusing on the most important thing – Jesus.  I recently have been studying 1 Corinthians.  I get the sense from Paul that he doesn’t want anything to take the focus off the gospel.  Throughout the entire book he is advocating for unity in the church for two reasons-- to build-up the church and advance the gospel.

He deals with issues of sin and sexual immorality for the sake of the church.  He addresses the issue of laying down rights for a weaker brother through the context of eating meat sacrificed to pagan idols.  He encourages the church to not let spiritual gifts divide them, rather focus on loving each other in spite of differences.  He even rebukes the Corinthian believers creating a division over who baptized them.  All of this is to build up the body of Christ, he is so concerned about the unity of the church.

But not just in church-- Paul writes about his willingness to lay down his personal rights and preferences for the sake of the gospel.  He says in 1 Cor. 9:20-21 that when he is with Jews he takes up the customs of Jews, but when he is with gentiles he acts like a gentile (not in a sinful way, rather referring to their manners and customs).  He brings all this to a point in verses 22 and 23, “I have become all things to all people, that by all means I might save some.  I do it all for the sake of the gospel, that I may share with them in its blessing.”

What if our attitude was like Paul’s?  What if we were primarily concerned about unity in the body and the advancing of the gospel?  This should be our attitude in all things, even politics.  I don’t mean that we shouldn’t have political views, but if we are known more for our politics than we are for the gospel then we have a problem.  The banner we carry in our lives as Christians should not be one of republican or democrat, or Trump or Clinton, it should be of Jesus Christ.  We must
remember whose kingdom we are building; it isn’t a kingdom of a political view, it isn’t even a kingdom of America, it’s the kingdom of God.  The kingdom of God is where we will spend eternity, it is our true home.  Brothers and Sisters, we are just sojourners in this world, let’s not get so tied down that we forget our primary mission – to build up the kingdom of God.

Consider how people perceive you, when they look at you do they see Christ or do they see a political party?  In the past, I have been very vocal of my political views; however, after seeing how it has divided the SBC recently, I have been convicted.  I don’t want my politics to cloud people’s view of Christ in me.  I want to become all things to all people that by all means I might save some!

 

Posted by Bryan Gotcher with

April 2017 Student Ministry

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Dear Church Family,

         The Student Ministry just got back from our retreat this year, and it was a blast! We spent much of our time just hanging out and playing games. We played some archery-tag in the mud and played some extreme capture-the-flag! And the lip-sync battle was an amazing show! I loved how fully our students threw themselves into this weekend. And it wasn’t only for the games. During our worship sessions, they were very responsive and were taking notes the entire time. Their small-group times at night showed us leaders that the Lord was definitely working. 

Our theme was “The Fulcrum.” Our sessions focused on Jesus being the center, or fulcrum, of our lives (Psalm 119:165-166), our universe (Colossians 1:17), our identity (Romans 8:1-4), and our hope (John 15:4-5). Jesus is the one who balances our lives for us by paying for our sin and inability to keep the law and saving us, making us “not-condemned” before God. We are new people who walk through this life in the power of the Spirit, blameless before God because of Christ’s righteousness in us! And our hope is abiding in Christ. I think this weekend was a turning point in some of our student’s lives, and I am so excited to see what the Lord will do in and through them. But with all of the positives about this weekend, there is a potential danger for which I want to be on the look-out.

My prayer is that the things that happened this weekend would not simply be seed scattered on rocky ground, which immediately springs up, but is then scorched by the sun. I am overwhelmingly thankful for the fruit that can already be witnessed in our students’ lives, but I want to see long-lasting fruit. We must not turn away from the plow, but we must continue to preach the gospel and abide in Christ. That was our last session; that they would abide in Christ, and He in them, and He will grow the fruit in their lives! Abiding in Christ is a spiritual and physical battle. It requires one to reject the distractions of this world and carve out time to spend with the Lord and His people. It requires that the Lord be protecting us and helping and guiding us back to Him daily. With these things being true, I have some requests to make of you, our church family:

Please pray for our students. They need your prayers. Pray that God would churn their hearts and sink the gospel deep down into them. That He would protect them from the world and from the distractions keeping them from growing in their faith. Pray that they would strive to abide in Christ, and that He would abide in them when they fail. Please pray for our
students.

Please talk to them about their relationships with God. They need people asking them how they are doing in their walk now that they are back from a retreat. They need encouragement and accountability to stay on track and keep Christ at the center. Please talk to them about their relationships with God.

Finally, thank the Lord for what He has done. Ultimately, I am abundantly thankful for what He has done and is doing in our youth group. He is certainly working, which is very good, because “unless the Lord builds, the builder builds in vain.” Ask the Lord to continue working in and through our church. That is the best thing you can do for our students. 

Sincerely,
Brian Van Doren

 

Posted by Brian Van Doren with

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