Pastor’s Weekly Notes

August 24, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Announcements, Pastors Notes

PASTOR NOTES…

NEW HOPE CP CHURCH…SEPTEMBER 3, 2010…

VERNON BURROW

Kelly, Brittany and Bill BrownNEW MEMBERS…BROWN FAMILY…united with our church during worship last Sunday.  They moved here from San Diego, California and began attending our church regularly since late January 2010.   Kelly is enrolled in Stephen Ministry training and is a part of the first class of Stephen Ministers, due to be commissioned early in January 2011.  Bill has been serving as an usher, very active in the Tuesday morning Men’s Prayer group, active in the Buildings and Grounds ministry team, and pitches in on many other things.  Brittany is a student at Vol State and works at McDonalds located at the I-40/hwy 109 business center.  They come by transfer of membership from Our Redeemer Lutheran Church in San Diego, where they were very active in the ministries of that church.  They have bought a home in Mt. Juliet.  They are already listed in the latest edition of “Church Workers Directory” (this edition is printed in orange to identify it as the latest).  Bill is Chief Engineer for Highland Ridge, Buildings I & II, in Nashville.  Kelly works out of her home as a computer engineer.    They found our church through our web-site.

INFORMATION FROM LEBANON MINISTERS…Hearthside Assisted Living and Independent Living hosted a group of Lebanon ministers for our regular monthly meeting.  In addition to wonderful fellowship I collected some information that may be helpful to some of you.

-          Hearthside Assisted Living has been up and going for some time.  They are building several cottages for Independent Living, some of which are already finished and occupied.  They are located at 215 Castle Heights Ave. N.  This project was started by College Hills Church of Christ but operates as a service to the entire community.  Good folks.

-          Linda Ligon is Activities Director and welcomes volunteers from many churches.  You may contact her at 443-1994.

-          There is no official Ministerial Association for Lebanon.  This group started informally as a get together for a few ministers, and has grown.  John Grant, who is administrative pastor, at College Hills coordinates the monthly gatherings.

-          Last month he invited as many private counselors as he knew about in the area to meet with ministers and share their mutual concerns.  I asked Sandy Dancy and Karen Crowder to attend that meeting to get to know professional counselors available if they should need to make referrals.  The sharing back and forth between ministers and counselors was very helpful.  The counselors said that among the many problems people bring to them are: excessive anxiety and families’ loss of communication with each other due to use of digital devices.

-          John has collected a lot of information and plotted it in a chart so that churches and counselors will have information about each other that may be helpful in our trying to meet the needs of people who are having problems.

-          One of the ministers thinks that Lebanon pastors need to connect more with community activities.  For example that minister belongs to Kiwanis, and he is the only minister in that service organization, and that there are no ministers in Rotary.  What is your read on this?

-          The pastor at the Faith Evangelical Lutheran Church on Main St. has been trained as a Stephen Minister.  They do not have the SM program in their church, but they do have three ladies who have served as Stephen Ministers in other churches and have not gotten back into it.  Their church is smaller than ours but they do a lot of community service.  The Pastor’s name is Rev. Dr. P. Morgan Gordy.

-          There is a church named Cross Style Church at 104 Trinity Drive and exists primarily as a service oriented group, much like the Salvation Army.  They have a place for homeless people to stay and they will find them work.  Ph. 443-4485.

With our people:

-          Dora Crawford will be 84 years old this Sunday.  She has had a lot of physical problems during the past 18 months and has not been able to come to church in a while.  I visited with her yesterday.  She lives alone, but her sons and their families see after her well.  Carrie Shehan and Eli go to see her often.  So does Royce Jackson, her Sunday school teacher, Mary and Lisa Thompson take her communion, and maybe others go that I don’t know about.  I do wish she could feel like coming to church Sunday so we could sing Happy Birthday, and maybe a cake or something.  But she doubts she will be up to it.  Call her and/or send her notes.  She is a great lady.

-          Jimmy Reynolds is scheduled to have an arteriogram next Wednesday.  His blood flow is not what it should be.

-          The men in the Tuesday morning group are trying to help Jimbo this week to find a place to stay and work to do.

LABOR DAY…What does it mean to you?  Probably many things – beginning of Fall, back in school, football, outdoor swimming pool close, political campaigns begin anew, etc.  It was meant to be about the value of work.  Sunday I will share with you several Scriptures that talk about work, wages, and rest.  The communion liturgy will be more liturgical than usual, and will include some language that accents the scriptures we will study.

Don Reeves on Labor Day

Don Reeves, a former pastor, who returns to New Hope on occasion to preach, entertain, or do a funeral, writes a column each week for the Scottsboro, AL newspaper.  He calls it “Letters to the Lord.”  He has a book out containing many of these he has written in the past.  It can be ordered through Amazon.  Go to Amazon and search “Don Reeves.”   Here is an excerpt from the one this week.

“…the beginning of September has always been special to me.

“ I suppose it could be just the fact that, as an early teenager, I loved to sing “September Song” in Miss Mary Myers’ Chorus Class at Troy High School, Troy, TN.  But, on the other hand, I think it may be more than that.

“I really think it has to do with the simple fact that Fall has always been one of my favorite Seasons, and the month of September signals its approach.

“I’ve always loved the beautiful colors that appear when Mother Nature decides to Change Her Clothes right in front of us!  It’s as if she’s saying, “Watch out….here we go again!  Here come’s ole Breezy/Freezie Father Winter!  It’s time for the annual Rest Period of every natural thing’s life.  Enjoy the brief beauty, and We’ll see you next Spring!”

“Lord, it’s amazing how much variety your Divine Nature gives us to share and enjoy….and how even more amazing it is that we humans have a tendency to live-in-such-a-frenzy that we forget to take time to notice!  It’s amazing that, in this day and time, we spend so much of our days and nights ‘enclosed’….in the car, in the house, in the malls, in the buildings we’ve built to house our businesses and  schools (…supposedly to close-our-children-in, while they “learn” Inside about what they’ve got to some day grow-up-and-deal with Outside!).

“But, what do any of us ’really’ learn in such ‘closed-in’ living?”

———————–

Mama used to write me long letters.  They were just like she was talking with me.  When she ran out of paper she quit.  No sign off, no nothing.  Just “Love, Mama”  So here I go.  I can’t wait until Sunday.  See you then.  Pastor B.

PASTOR NOTES…

AUGUST 27, 2010…

NEW HOPE CP CHURCH…VERNON BURROW

Hello, friends and members of this great congregation called New Hope.  I keep thinking about what a great name we have, and the slogan we put with it:  “New Hope – A Place for New Beginnings”.   On this Friday afternoon I am rejoicing that the temperature is normal for this time of year — low humidity and a gentle breeze.  It was almost chilly outside when I arose at my usual time, 5:00 AM.  God gives us a new world every morning.  Isn’t God good!!

John Crowder IIIJOHN CROWDER III joined the church last Sunday by re-affirmation of faith and transfer of church membership.  He has been very active in our church for over a year now.  He and his son John IV head up the Men’s Prayer Breakfast.  He is receiving training to become a Stephen Minister.  He is heading up a committee to plan the Fall Fest.  His wife Karen and brother in law Rick White joined the church earlier this year.  John and Karen have two children – Stacey and John IV and his two daughters, Jessica and Makayla also attend our church and live close by.  John III grew up in a strong Christian home.  He and Karen met in college.  Before retirement he ran a very successful construction business.  They are listed in your Church Worker’s Directory.  Both he and Karen will tell you that New Hope has been a place of new beginnings for the both of them.  Welcome.

JOYCE AND I

Joyce and I are having a little bit of trouble when we insinuate in any way that the other one is getting old and needs to be looked after.  On Wednesday she went to her primary care doctor and he made an appointment for her to get some kind of stomach scan because she showed signs of losing blood.

The stomach test was to take place at 1:15 Thursday.  It was very obvious to me that I needed to take her, and not let her go alone.  I re-adjusted my schedule, re-set some appointments in order to do so.  No problem.  Just glad to do it.  That is what husbands are supposed to do.

Halfway there she asked, “Why are we going this way?”  I said, “Because that is the way to Dr. Engle’s office.”  “Well,” she said, “they told me it was on Highland Ave.”   By then we were almost to Dr. Engle’s office at the opposite end of town to Highland Ave.  “Are you sure it is Dr. Engle we are seeing?”  “Yes”.  “Well he moved from Highland a long time ago, so here we are.”

We go in.  They find no record of any appointment.  The office gals were very disturbed thinking that they had fouled up.  Nothing to do but to reschedule with Dr. Engle.  Sometime after that and after many phone calls we found that the appointment was on Highland Ave, but not with Dr. Engle.  We missed that appointment.  On the way to get her something to eat (she had to fast for this appointment) I was saying that next time I would go with her to the doctor so we would not get confused about where we were to go.  I knew that Dr. Engle is her long time friend and that she just assumed that kind of test would be done by him.  It’s OK if she got a little mixed up.  After all……

Things went downhill from there.  She would like me to know that she is plenty capable of handling her doctor needs by herself and that she has been doing it for all these years before I came along and that I did not need to bother.  Not in an angry tone, smiling all the time, but very direct indeed.

She went away for a while today.  Saying when she returned that her primary care doctor would receive the results of her tests in a few days.  I cannot wait to tell her, “No, you do not need to go to the doctor with me.  I too can handle….”

(4:45 PM Joyce just got word from her doctor that all is well.  Yes!!)

ON THE TABLE IN THE NARTHEX ARE A NUMBER OF SCRIPTO BOOKLETS FOR YOUR TAKING.  The “Scripto” books deal with a wide range of topics that are of interest to Christians.  They are easy to read, with nice “scripto”.  I have distributed these in the past and these are some I found in my library.  You are free to take one or more of these free of charge.  If they prove to be helpful enough the church may want to consider buying a new supply.  Some of the titles are:

Why Jesus Gave His Life for Us

Parenting

If You Are A Single Parent

About World Hunger

About Being Presbyterian

A Christian Response to Aids

Celebrating Advent

About Tithing

About Pentecost

About Jesus Christ

About the Sacraments

About Easter

About Christmas

The Bible and You

About the Sacrament of Baptism

How the Bible Came to Be

About Cancer

Living With Cancer

Facing Death

Who Is God

Natural Family Planning

About Faith and Your Child

STEPHEN MINISTRY TRAINING IS IN FULL SWING.  These teachers and class members are putting in an enormous amount of time in training between now and Christmas.  They will spend 52 hours in training, not counting preparation time, and just the logistics associated with that many classes.  So I ask you to pray for them, and not only that, but to look for ways that you can be of practical help to these people.  They are making a great investment that will prove to be a blessing to many people in our church and beyond for many years to come.

I believe that effects of this program will be far-reaching.  I believe that our entire church will become more conscious of our need to care for one another, to bear each other’s burdens, and to weep with those who weep, and rejoice with those who rejoice.

WITH OUR PEOPLE

-          College students

o   Brittany Brown in Vol State

o   Shawnee Etheridge at Cumberland University

o   Katie Dickson at Tennessee Tech

-          Jerry Etheridge is still waiting for a kidney.  He is at the top of the list now and should get a kidney pretty soon.  In the meantime, he is on dialysis three times a week.

-          Jerry Etheridge and a friend of his are partnering in setting up a program called “THE MENTOR PROGRAM – Alternative Intervention Juvenile Boot Camp.”  Pray for success for this much needed program and pitch in to help when you can.  His phone is 615-881-1100.

CHURCH WORKERS DIRECTORY UPDATE

Passed out last Sunday with the latest names, addresses, phone #, e-mail addresses, birthdays and anniversaries.  This is a very valuable tool to help us keep up with each other, encourage each other, affirm each other, get together with one another, talk with one another.  This one is printed in Orange, so you will know it is the latest.  The next update will be in another color.  Keeping it up to date is a full time job.  Already I have found that we misspelled Etheridge and had Jerry’s phone wrong.  It is 881-1100.  Please write on your attendance pads on Sunday when you have a change of address, phone #, etc.  I will pass them along to the congregation in Pastor Notes and in about 3 months we will have a new printing.   Thanks to Carrie Shehane for helping with this.

Good-bye until Sunday.  Pastor B.

PASTOR NOTES…

NEW HOPE CP CHURCH…AUGUST 2, 2010…

VERNON BURROW

Katie Fairest of the Fair!FAIREST OF THE FAIR for Wilson County belongs to our own Katie Dickson this year.  There was a great picture of her on the front page of the Lebanon Democrat Tuesday morning.  Nineteen young ladies participated in the contest.  According to the article in the paper the pageant was “more than poise and beauty, it was also representing the number one fair in Tennessee.”  There were many factors in the selection, including an interview each contestant had with the judges.  Katie was quoted as saying “I practiced the questions in front of the mirror and with my mom.”  She added that growing up around agricultures makes the traditional ‘milking of the cow’ a no-brainer.  The article went on the say: “After competing in the pageant for the past three years, Dickson has also mastered the art of looking pretty in spite of the harsh humidity.”  “I tanned and got my nails done,” Katie is quoted as saying.  This Sunday is the last Sunday before she enters college at Tennessee Tech.  She will read the Scripture for us during morning worship.  She has numerous entries in the arts, crafts, cooking, etc.   She will have them on display along with the rest of you who have entries on Sunday 29th.   She plans to be back home from college most week-ends.

BRING YOUR WILSON COUNTY FAIR ENTRIES AND/OR RIBBONS, PRIZES to church on

August 29.  We will display them for all to see.

INTERCESSORY PRAYER

There is a story about a hell, fire, and damnation preacher who strongly objected to a saloon being built close to his church.  He called the congregation to pray against it.  They prayed that someway God would intervene and keep the saloon from being built.  Sure enough, the night before it was to be opened lightning struck it and it was burned to the ground.  The saloon keeper filed a claim against the church.  He said that it was because of their prayers that his business was destroyed.  The preacher and his lawyer made the case before the court that the church was not responsible for the lightning.  The judge said, “This is the most puzzling case I have ever heard of.  You have a saloon owner who believes in the power of prayer, and a preacher that doesn’t.”

Well, we did some intercessory prayer Wednesday night.  The Bible says we are supposed to do that.  We prayed by name for every person that is listed on our prayer list in our Sunday bulletin.  We shared information about the people some of us did not know, or for what we were praying.  A few names were people none of us knew and we will take their names off to leave room for others.  But before that, we prayed for each person because we know that God knows the need.  We did that praying in the office complex.  From there we went to the gathering room for Rotation Sunday School and we prayed that enough workers will volunteer and many children will show up from our church and community.  Then we went to the sanctuary and gathered around the piano and sang some prayer songs.  At the altar of the church we prayed for Sandy and Karen in teaching the Stephen Ministry Series.  Karen offered a prayer for me that I may be able to fill the pulpit each Sunday in a way that is pleasing to God.   It was sort of a walk-through prayer meeting and it was meaningful and powerful, I think.

I imagine that most of you, like me, have a prayer list.  I make out a new one every Monday morning.  Joyce and I pray for each of those every day, and some people she has on her list, every morning during our devotional time.  I have a simple form on an 8 x 11 paper with a place for the name, what the need is for which I am praying, and the results.  I don’t put more than seven at any time, because it is hard for me to pray sincerely for more than that.  Most of the people on our lists are members of New Hope or St. Mark’s, or family, or close friends.  It is encouraging to see when prayers are answered.  God is good.

WEDNESDAY NIGHT IDEA

While we were praying last Wednesday someone brought up the idea that since Stephen Ministry training will be going on each Wednesday night for a while, that it might be good to have a meal for the whole church before the class starts, and then have something to do after the meal for those who are not in Stephen Ministry. That is a good idea.  I can think of many things we could do that would make the time spent worthwhile for all age groups.  In order for that to happen, someone will need to step up and give leadership in doing this.  I will be glad to talk with that person about ideas for programming.  I have a set of the Bible Studies that are based on old re-runs of the Andy Griffith show.  That’s one idea.  There are others.  Want to try it?  Let me or Evelyn know.

CHINA

Charlie B. went to China last week on business.  What is happening in China is a phenomenon that all of us need to be interested in.  I asked him for some impressions and here are a few of them (in my words)

-          China is going through something of what we did during the industrial revolution but for them change is coming a lot faster than it did for us.

-          They are very conscious of upward mobility

-          Unlike USA there are few labor laws regarding safety and workers rights, etc.  Charlie’s company is trying on its own to practice safety measures.

-          They work hard and long hours

-          They maybe have more electronic stuff than we, but other changes have not kept up with that.

-          They are fascinated with cars.  Buick is a status symbol.

Monica, Joyce’s granddaughter, works for Bank of America in Hong Kong, and her husband works in hotel management on the homeland.  She sees the Chinese as very hard workers.  She goes home at five, and many of them will stay much longer.  She says she doesn’t see many smiles on the faces of the Chinese.

I read in “Christian Science Monitor” this week that there is a very significant number of Christians in China.  The estimates vary because it is hard to keep up with their numbers.  A significant number are in house churches, or practice Christianity in more private ways.  But even a small percentage turns into a large number.  More than one billion of the world’s seven billion people are Chinese.

I really am anxious to see you Sunday.  It is a long time between Sundays and if you or I miss a Sunday it really seems like a long time.  Going to New Hope is like going home.  Hope you feel that way about it too.

Pastor B

PASTOR NOTES…

NEW HOPE CP CHURCH…AUGUST 14, 2010…

VERNON BURROW

FELLOWSHIP MEAL AFTER CHURCH THIS SUNDAY

The after church covered dish lunch this Sunday has been announced only once, and I fear that some of you may have forgotten it.  The session in its meeting August 4 looked at the calendar and noticed that there was no fellowship gathering set up for August so they designated August 15 as the time.  So if you can, fix a covered dish and bring it with you Sunday.  Eating together on some kind of regular basis helps us keep the fellowship among us close.

SERMON

The message this Sunday is based on Psalms 139:13-16.  Psalm 139 is one of the great passages in all of Scripture.  The four verses we will concentrate on gets right down and personal about the wonderful miracle God performed when he made us and the purpose for which He created each one of us.  We are fearfully and wonderfully made.  Rich Binney used this passage for our Bible study at the Men’s breakfast last Tuesday, and he talked about what this passage has meant to him.  So, read the passage again, and come ready to receive a blessing from God’s Word.  Ben Spicer will do special music based on the 139th Psalm.  It is a good time for you to invite someone to come with you.

STEPHEN MINISTRY TRAINING will begin a week from tomorrow, August 22.  The leadership team composed of Karen Crowder and Sandy Dancy will do the training.  There are seven persons who volunteered and were accepted for this training.

CHRISTIAN INTELLIGENCE AGENCY (Rotation Sunday School) is on schedule to open September 19.  We are sending special notices to each child in this age group (K-6) each week from now until September.  Let us know if we missed someone this week.  Again, let me encourage you to bring other children in age group for this first Sunday.  We want it to start off big.  Elaborate preparations are being made.  Murals on the walls in the main gathering room, a stage for drama in the fellowship hall, new computers for the computer room, and more.

PRAYER MEETING NEXT WEDNESDAY Aug. 18, 6:30 PM

  • Short devotional from Scripture
  • A Time of Worship and Song
  • Prayers for the challenging programs Coming Up

o   Stephen Ministry Training

o   Christian Intelligence Agency

o   Men’s Prayer Breakfast

o   Youth Fellowship

  • Special needs of people connected with our church – prayer list in bulletin.

CHARLES FAITH was a life-long Cumberland Presbyterian pastor.  He died this week in Calico Rock, Ark, where he had retired following his last pastorate.  I remember him from college years at Bethel.  During those years in the early 1950’s Bethel College was a lot smaller than Bethel University is now.  We had only about 500 students.  A goodly number of young Cumberland Presbyterian students were there preparing for the ministry.  Also, a goodly number of young men had come to Bethel on football or basketball scholarships.  They were not bad people, but most of them were not that much into church.  There was a consciousness that there was a little bit of a gap between the two groups.   Among us preachers there were a few who were just a little bit self-righteous and a little bit judgmental toward those who came primarily to play ball.  Some of the rest of us “preacher boys” were not happy about that at all and wanted to do something about it, but it was Charles, more than any other who bridged the gap, and that without compromising any of his values.  Some of us mediocre preacher/athletes played ball primarily to get to know the athletes better.  Charles was not mediocre – he was a great basketball player – the best of the best.  He was highly respected by the athletes not only for his ability, but for his goodness that didn’t make a show of goodness and didn’t look down on those who didn’t share all his values.  He had a profound effect in bridging a gap.

The interesting thing was that a high percentage of the “athletes” left Bethel College with a lot more respect for church people than they had before.  After graduating from Bethel, many of them became school teachers and coaches and became significant leaders in the churches in their towns.  I would like to think that all of us “preacher boys” who played ball had some good influence, but Charles was the most effective.  So far as I know he didn’t do much if any pro-active “evangelism”.  He just bridged the gap and made it easier for some others to feel there was a place for them in Kingdom work and that the kind of life Charles lived made them hungry for what he had.

He was a great pastor for many years, but those years at Bethel are what I will remember him for.  I learned from him that getting to be with people who are somewhat different from you — accepting them, loving them, modeling a good life before them, often opens the doors of the church and the gospel to them.  That, too, is evangelism.

Some of you knew Argyle Faith who was once pastor of the CP Church in Lebanon.  Argyle died a few years back.  He was “little brother” to Charles.  Another brother, Gerdy Allen, is a great man and a member of a CP Church in Kentucky.  Their mother and I served on the Board of Foreign Missions of the CP Church for several years.  The Faith’s are a great family.

With our People

  • Pauline Horton is still having a rough time with arthritis.
  • Wayne, her son, has finished this round of chemo, but is feeling pretty bad.
  • Katie Dickson is leaving for college at Tennessee Tech on Aug. 26th.

I am sure that many of you have been attending the Fair.  We are fortunate to have such a good Fair in Wilson County.  I know that Mary Jo puts a lot of work into it each year.  There are no doubt others that I don’t know about.

Those who had entries in the Fair and received prizes, please bring them to church on the 22nd if you can.  Let the church celebrate your skills with you.

Thanks again, for the privilege of being your pastor.  We have lots of good experiences and many good things are about to happen.  Call on me when I can help you with a spiritual mater, or in your ministry.

Pastor B.

Pastor Notes…

New Hope CP Church…8.6.10…

Vernon Burrow

Connie and ClaytonWelcome to our Newest Members.  Connie Spears and Clayton Fisher united with the church last Sunday, August 1, 2010.  Connie came by Profession of Faith and received baptism.  Clayton comes by re-affirmation of faith and transfer of membership.  Their address is 3756 Cairo Bend, Lebanon, TN 37087.  Connie’s dad and her son and daughter and their families came for the baptism.  Connie and Clayton have lived at their present address since 1995.  Clayton grew up in and around this community.   Some of you have known them for quite some time and others of you have met them since they started coming to our church.  Now you have this picture and all of you will know them by this picture.  So help them to get to know your names if you haven’t already.  Clayton is a welder by trade and specializes in decorative iron works (rails, gates, etc).  Connie had to quit her job some time ago because of health.  We are thrilled to have them in our church.

STEPHEN MINISTRY

Seven people have signed up to receive Stephen Ministry training that will start August 21.  They will complete their 50 hours of training by Christmas, and will be commissioned on January 9, 2011.  Sandra Dancy and Karen Crowder are our Stephen Leaders.  They took the week-long training in St. Louis earlier this year and they have worked hard in promoting SM and enlisting SM trainees.

Rotation Sunday School

begins September 19.

  • A small group of people (Robbie, Anna, Ben, Sandy, Michael) are putting a lot of work into getting the rooms ready (they need more help).  Ask Robbie what you can do to help.
  • Each week for the next five weeks the kids in this age group (K – 6th grade) will receive a mailing inviting them to the opening on September 19.
  • We have the names and addresses of those who are in any way connected with this church, but we need more names and addresses of children who are in this age group.  Look for kids around you that don’t have a church and let us put them on our mailing list.

We will stop using Rotation Sunday School very soon and start with a new name “Christian Intelligence Agency” (CIA) that meets each Sunday at the New Hope Church and is for all kids who are in grades K-6.  Look for more information on our website:  www.newhopecpchurch.com

SESSION NOTES

-          Met last Tuesday.  All seven elders plus Amanda, Robbie, and I were present.

-          Prayed for special needs of people within the church

-          Approved the Treasurer’s Report:  Copies on table in narthex.  Offerings for August totaled $4943 – an average of $1231 per Sunday.

-          Received report from the Property Ministry.  Report by Rick White.  Very detailed about matter of maintenance and upkeep.  Seems AC is now working well.  Thanks to Ray Jones family and Bill Brown for lawn maintenance,  and John Crowder III for letting various maintenance workers in at times Rick couldn’t be there.  Thanks to Rick for overseeing this important ministry.

-          Plans for Rotation Sunday School (Christian Intelligence Agency) preparation and a plan for publicizing.

-          Report that Stephen Ministry Training is starting this month.

-          Ministry Projects Approved:

-          Cemetery

-          Fall Stewardship Program

MORNING WORSHIP

My son, Tim Burrow, will speak to us this Sunday on “God’s Discipline Is Part of the Process”  The message will focus on how God spurs us to grow through difficult experiences in life.  He has searched the scriptures on this subject.  He also has a personal testimony about how these teachings has worked in his own life.

Tim graduated from the University of Tennessee with a Bachelor of Architecture degree.  He worked as an architect in Nashville for several years before earning the Doctor of Jurisprudence, Nashville School of Law, top 10 percent of his class.  He does primarily construction law.  Burrow and Cravens Law Firm is located at 1700 Hayes St. in Nashville.  He maintains his architecture license and occasionally does design jobs, the largest being “The Braxton” in Ashland City.  He is also a licensed contractor.  His son, John Michael, is entering the University of Tennessee this Fall.  Tim’s  message is based on one of the chapters in a book he wrote and hopes to publish soon on “How to Get to Heaven”.   The book is dedicated to his late and much beloved wife, Tamara, who died of cancer.

He is not substituting for me.  I will be present.  I am looking forward to hearing his message.

SPECIAL PRAYER MEETING

Has been called for Wednesday, August 18, to pray for the success of our STEPHEN MINISTRY and our ROTATION SUNDAY SCHOOL.  We will also pray for the needs of people.  Those who have sickness or other problems and would like to be prayed for that night are encouraged to come.

Thank you for the privilege of serving as your pastor.  Let us pray for each other and encourage each other in the work God has set out for us to do.

Pastor B.

Passionate Worship

August 14, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Uncategorized

passionate-worship(John 4:21-24)

In passionate worship, people are honest before God and one another, and they are open to God’s presence and will for their lives. People so eagerly desire such worship that they will reorder their lives to attend. Passionate worship motivates pastors not only to improve their preaching, but also to learn continually how to enhance content and technique for effective worship. Worship is something alive that requires continuing care, cultivation, and effort to keep it fresh. Pastors should willingly review and evaluate their own work and invite feedback. The motivation for enhancing the quality of worship is not only about deepening our own faith, but also about allowing God to use us and our congregations to offer hope, life and love to others. Worship is God’s gift and task, a sacred trust that requires our utmost and highest.

Return to “Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations

Taken from Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations by Bishop Robert Schnase (Abingdon Press, 2007).

Extravagant Generosity

August 14, 2009 by admin  
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generosity(2 Corinthians 9:6-15)

Churches that practice Extravagant Generosity speak confidently and faithfully about money, giving, generosity, and the difference giving makes for the purposes of Christ and in the life of the giver. They emphasize the Christian’s need to give for more reasons than just the church’s need for money. They emphasize mission, purpose, and life-changing results rather than shortages, budgets, and institutional loyalty. Pastors express appreciation to people who give by thanking members collectively and personally, and they give God thanks for increased giving. Members are informed in positive and consistent ways about their giving. Pastors and church leadership view “giving beyond the walls” as indispensable to Christian discipleship and to congregational mission and vitality. Churches that grow in giving know that generosity increases with participation in ministry and community, and so they work to deepen the core ministries of worship, small group learning, and mission. They address the challenge of growing in giving to long-term members as to adults new to the faith. They also teach, model, and cultivate generosity among children and youth. The spiritual maturity that comes from growth in giving, and the extraordinary engagement that results from tithing, bring clarity of purpose and greater integrity to all the church’s ministries.

These five practices work together in the mission of the church. Take them beyond conversations between pastor and church leaders—take them into the worship services, classes, and homes of every church member to imbed them into the fabric of your congregation. By doing so, you will develop a unifying common language that helps people understand the tasks of Christian discipleship. The exemplary and repeated practices of Radical Hospitality, Passionate Worship, Intentional Faith Development, Risk-Taking Mission and Service, and Extravagant Generosity are the time-tested, theologically sound, and effective means congregations use to fulfill their mission with excellence and fruitfulness to the glory of God.

Return to “Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations

Taken from Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations by Bishop Robert Schnase (Abingdon Press, 2007).

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