Thursday, December 31, 2015

What will it take to accomplish your goals for 2016? by Dave Kraft

This is the time of year when we begin to think of goals for 2016. Not new years resolution but challenging, stretching but realistic goals. What are some keys that will help you be successful in reaching your goals? Here is Michael Hyatt with some answer to that question.
Originally posted by Michael Hyatt
What does it take to accomplish your goals? Some people think it’s mostly about luck, smarts, good looks, and social connections. Nope.
Researcher Angela Lee Duckworth studied West Point cadets, National Spelling Bee contestants, teachers in tough schools, and sales peoples, asking who would succeed and why.
“In all those very different contexts one characteristic emerged as a significant predictor of success,” she said in a popular TED talk. And it wasn’t the usual suspects. What was it? “It was grit.”
Duckworth defines grit as “passion and and perseverance for very long-term goals … sticking with your future, day in day out.…”
The word I use to describe that is persistence.
We’ve all had dreams about the future that haven’t come true. We’ve probably let some of those dreams die. But what if we could develop the grit and persistence required to revive those dreams and achieve them?
We can. And it’s simpler than you might think. Here are six techniques proven by research and practical experience that can help you accomplish even the most daring goals.

1. Find Your Why

No one perseveres unless they care. To maximize our persistence, we have to pursue goals that really matter to us.
That doesn’t mean we always find these goals fun or even that they’re our idea. They just have to be personally rewarding. Researchers sometimes call these “autonomous motives.”
Think about parenting or getting fit or hitting a major professional goal. All of these challenges will test our perseverance. The trick is to connect with what’s at stake. Why does it matter?
If we don’t stay connected to your why, as one study put it, “the infusion of goals with energy may be distressingly temporary.” In other words, chances are good we’ll burn out and bail.
Autonomous goal motives will result in greater objectively assessed persistence toward an increasingly difficult goal … If individuals strive with more autonomous motives, they will be better equipped to overcome challenges in goal pursuit.
Finding our why is the first step to developing the persistence we need to attain our goals.
This forms one whole section of my 5 Days to Your Best Year Ever course.

2. Believe You Can

To accomplish anything, we have to believe we’re up to the challenge. That doesn’t mean it will be easy or that even know how we’re going to accomplish it. Usually we don’t know. It just means we believe we’re capable.
Every goal has obstacles. When some people have trouble getting over obstacles, they doubt they have what it takes.
Others just work harder. What’s the difference?
According to Heidi Grant Halvorson, researchers label the first group “entity theorists.” They think their abilities are set in stone. You’ve heard people say this: “I’m just no good atxy, or z.”
The second group are called “incremental theorists.” These are the possibility thinkers. When they can’t seem to get over an obstacle, they don’t blame it on themselves. Since they believe they’ve got what it takes, they just look for new approaches to the problem.
“This gritty attitude pays off in a big way,” says Halvorson, “leading to far greater long-term accomplishments.”
So what’s your mindset? Developing persistence requires possibility thinking.
What if that’s not you? The good news is that we can become a possibility thinkers by gaining confidence in our abilities. One way to do that is to get some wins under our belt.

3. Set Your Targets

So let’s say we’ve found our why and believe we’ve got what it takes. It’s time to address the goals we’re pursuing.
I’ve always recommended going after big goals. Why?
Research shows a direct link between the difficulty of a goal and our enthusiasm and performance. And the emotional payoff of attaining big goals rewards our persistence. It becomes self-perpetuating.
The trick is setting milestones. Big goals can also feel daunting. If we chunk them up, we can get some wins under our belt. And those wins can keep our energy up for the big goals. How?
According to Christopher Bergland, when we accomplish small tasks and hit deadlines, our brains give us a hit of dopamine and we feel good.
The more we train our minds toward accomplishing the small goals, the more persistence we’ll display for major long-term accomplishments.

4. Measure Your Gains

When we set big, challenging goals it’s easy to see how far we have to go and lose enthusiasm. We can start criticizing ourselves and get dispirited, can’t we?
Something I learned from Dan Sullivan has helped me rethink this problem. Dan talks about measuring the gain and not the gap.
If your goal is to write a book, pay off your mortgage, build up your retirement—whatever—it can be daunting to look up and realize how far you still have to go.
That’s the gap. But look at the gain. See how far you’ve already come and let your progress inspire your perseverance.
This another reason setting milestone is helpful. Not only do they help break up the big goal into manageable chunks, they give us something to measure—forward or backward.
And here’s a plus: If we get good at measuring the gains, we’ll not only cultivate persistence. We can also sustain momentum.

5. Build Your Team

We have a very powerful myth in our culture—the myth of the self-made man. I’ve got news for you. There’s no such thing.
Success requires help, usually lots of it. After the surprise success of The Hobbit, J.R.R. Tolkien was asked to write a sequel. But when he began writing The Lord of the Rings he couldn’t make any progress.
So how did he finish what became one of the best-selling books of the twentieth century? The constant encouragement of his friends—especially C.S. Lewis, who kept him focused and energized.
There are two kinds of relationships that we need to develop to help us persist in the face of adversity:
  • Mentors. Everyone needs a guide, preferably many. These are people with experience and maturity who can counsel, inspire, and challenge us.
These relationships can be personal or virtual. They can even been literary through biographies, histories, and great novels.
  • Peers
Facing the world with friends and colleagues gives us confidence. It also provides us insights and solutions we wouldn’t have considered on our own.
Building a team of mentors and peers will help us persist toward even the most daunting of goals. This is actually the primary reason I started my Inner Circle Mastermind.

6. Celebrate Your Wins (Especially the Small Ones)

In the Genesis story it says that God looked at everything he created and called it good. But he didn’t wait until the whole creation was finished. He did it at each stage. It’s a good model for us, too.
I firmly believe in celebrating our wins. I recently took my whole company on a Caribbean cruise to acknowledge a major win. But it’s important to pause and celebrate the small wins too.
When we celebrate reaching our milestones, we stay emotionally engaged for the long haul. Bergland says it’s “about harnessing your reward circuitry and tapping your dopamine pipeline.”
All I know is that’s exciting. And I want more after every win.

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Who's it going to be or not going to be this coming year! adapted from Steven Furtick

The following is adapted from a post by Steven Furtick, Lead Pastor of Elevation Church in Charlotte, North Carolina:
Who’s it going to be?
Why not YOU?
Who’s going to be used by God in ways they never dreamed about before?
Who’s going to take their life and ministry to the next level?
Who’s going to break an addiction that has been a stronghold in your life for far too long?
Who’s going to come up with the next innovative idea that everyone says won’t work?
Who’s going to step up and assume leadership where there has been no leadership?
Who’s going to believe God for the impossible, the unthinkable, the miraculous?
Who’s it going to be?
Why not you? Why not now?
Or, negatively, who’s it going to be?
Who’s going to forfeit their marriage by having an affair?
Who’s going to ignore their kids and give their lives to the job until it’s too late?
Who’s going to lose their job because of a lapse of integrity?
Who’s going to bomb out in their walk with Jesus?
Who’s going to continue to let the TV dominate their lives, values and time?
Who’s going to stop spending time alone with God because they’re just too busy?
Who’s it gonna be?
It could be anybody.
It must not be you.
Jesus has too much he still wants to accomplish through you.
This next year lies before you. What you’re going to do with it is a blank slate. The person you’re going to be by the end 2016 is yet to be determined.
You aren’t destined to be caught in an ever-downward spiraling motion of failure, defeat and discouragement.
You won’t get anywhere by looking into the rearview mirror.  2016 is a new year with new opportunities and challenges. Forget what is behind and reach for what is before you, by His grace! (Philippians 3:13)
This could be the year where it all comes apart…or this could be the year when it all comes together for His honor and purposes!
The choice is yours.
So what’s it going to be…who’s it going to be?
The answer to that question will determine how you invest 2016 starting in just a few days!

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

From the Shepherd's Heart...Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Hello church family and throw open your arms as we welcome 2016!!!

My heart is so proud of this body of believers and excited for the spirit among us of doing whatever we need to do reach people.

First, you have given $16,207 to missions through the Lottie Moon Christmas offering.  That is a record!!!  Praise God!!!

Second, 230 came for the Christmas Eve Service.  WOW!  I pray it added much to your Christmas celebration. We will do it again!

Thirdly, your response to the Sunday School Rally has been very encouraging.  I have already heard of many of you contacting your Sunday School teacher about helping with Care Groups.  Wouldn't it be awesome before your teacher even starts this Sunday that he has had enough to step up that he would not have to ask for any others.  Thanks for your serving spirit. Training for secretaries and care group leaders will be in late January.

Lastly, a great response to the Drop-in Lord's Supper service Sunday night.  I know...I was too long with the families and made everything run a little (ok, a lot) late.  Thanks to all the Deacons who served, to Keith for providing music and to Garry for his lighting and sound.

Two words about policies:

1.  My personal wedding policies...I love premarital counseling and helping a couple prepare for marriage.  Just know, I will not marry anyone without at least four counseling sessions with me or someone approved (in case the couple lives away) before the wedding.  I love being a partner in Christian marriages.

2.  Winter Policies - It is my understanding that in case of bad weather on Wednesdays where schools are cancelled or dismissing early, then the church will not have services or activities that night.  Concerning Sunday services, we will announce on Facebook and our web site as quickly as possible concerning services.  If there are no announcements of canceling, then assume we are open and going.  As always, you do what is safe for you and your family.

I hope you enjoy this wonderful week of the year as we put the past behind us and prepare for the upcoming days.  Remember, we will not have any services or activities here tomorrow night.  See you Sunday.

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

The True Story of Pain and Hope Behind “I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day” by Justin Taylor



Screen Shot 2014-12-21 at 9.05.31 AM
In March of 1863, 18-year-old Charles Appleton Longfellow walked out of his family’s house on Brattle Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and—unbeknownst to his family—boarded a train bound for Washington, D.C., traveling over 400 miles across the eastern seaboard in order to join President Lincoln’s Union army to fight in the Civil War.
Charles (b. June 9, 1844) was the oldest of six children born to Fannie Elizabeth Appleton and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, the celebrated literary critic and poet. Charles had five younger siblings: a brother (aged 17) and three sisters (ages 13, 10, 8—another one had died as an infant).
Less than two years earlier, Charles’s mother Fannie had tragically died after her dress caught on fire. Her husband, awoken from a nap, tried to extinguish the flames as best he could, first with a rug and then his own body, but she had already suffered severe burns. She died the next morning (July 10, 1861), and Henry Longfellow’s facial burns were severe enough that he was unable even to attend his own wife’s funeral. He would grow a beard to hide his burned face and at times feared that he would be sent to an asylum on account of his grief.
When Charley (as he was called) arrived in Washington D.C., he sought to enlist as a private with the 1st Massachusetts Artillery. Captain W. H. McCartney, commander of Battery A, wrote to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow for written permission for Charley to become a soldier. HWL (as his son referred to him) granted the permission.
Longfellow later wrote to his friends Charles Sumner (senator from Massachusetts), John Andrew (governor of Massachusetts), and Edward Dalton (medical inspector of the Sixth Army Corps) to lobby for his son to become an officer. But Charley had already impressed his fellow soldiers and superiors with his skills, and on March 27, 1863, he was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in the 1st Massachusetts Cavalry, assigned to Company “G.”
After participating on the fringe of the Battle of Chancellorsville in Virginia (April 30-May 6, 1863), Charley fell ill with typhoid fever and was sent home to recover. He rejoined his unit on August 15, 1863, having missed the Battle of Gettysburg (July 1-3, 1863).
1868
1868
While dining at home on December 1, 1863, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow received a telegram that his son had been severely wounded four days earlier. On November 27, 1863, while involved in a skirmish during a battle of of the Mine Run Campaign, Charley was shot through the left shoulder, with the bullet exiting under his right shoulder blade. It had traveled across his back and skimmed his spine. Charley avoided being paralyzed by less than an inch.
He was carried into New Hope Church (Orange County, Virginia) and then transported to the Rapidan River. Charley’s father and younger brother, Ernest, immediately set out for Washington, D.C., arriving on December 3. Charley arrived by train on December 5. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was alarmed when informed by the army surgeon that his son’s wound “was very serious” and that “paralysis might ensue.” Three surgeons gave a more favorable report that evening, suggesting a recovery that would require him to be “long in healing,” at least six months.
On Christmas day, 1863, Longfellow—a 57-year-old widowed father of six children, the oldest of which had been nearly paralyzed as his country fought a war against itself—wrote a poem seeking to capture the dynamic and dissonance in his own heart and the world he observes around him. He heard the Christmas bells that December day and the singing of “peace on earth” (Luke 2:14), but he observed the world of injustice and violence that seemed to mock the truthfulness of this optimistic outlook. The theme of listening recurred throughout the poem, eventually leading to a settledness of confident hope even in the midst of bleak despair.
You can read the whole poem below:
I heard the bells on Christmas Day
Their old, familiar carols play,
and wild and sweet
The words repeat
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!
And thought how, as the day had come,
The belfries of all Christendom
Had rolled along
The unbroken song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!
Till ringing, singing on its way,
The world revolved from night to day,
A voice, a chime,
A chant sublime
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!
Then from each black, accursed mouth
The cannon thundered in the South,
And with the sound
The carols drowned
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!
It was as if an earthquake rent
The hearth-stones of a continent,
And made forlorn
The households born
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!
And in despair I bowed my head;
“There is no peace on earth,” I said;
“For hate is strong,
And mocks the song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!”
Then pealed the bells more loud and deep:
“God is not dead, nor doth He sleep;
The Wrong shall fail,
The Right prevail,
With peace on earth, good-will to men.”

Monday, December 21, 2015

Do Christians and Muslims Worship the Same God? by Albert Mohler

A statement made by a professor at a leading evangelical college has become a flashpoint in a controversy that really matters. In explaining why she intended to wear a traditional Muslim hijab over the holiday season in order to symbolize solidarity with her Muslim neighbors, the professor asserted that Christians and Muslims worship the same God.
Is this true?
The answer to that question depends upon a distinctly Christian and clearly biblical answer to yet another question: Can anyone truly worship the Father while rejecting the Son?
The Christian’s answer to that question must follow the example of Christ. Jesus himself settled the question when he responded to Jewish leaders who confronted him after he had said “I am the light of the world.” When they denied him, Jesus said, “If you knew me, you would know my Father also” (John 8:19). Later in that same chapter, Jesus used some of the strongest language of his earthly ministry in stating clearly that to deny him is to deny the Father.
Christians and Muslims do not worship the same God. Christians worship the triune God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and no other god. We know the Father through the Son, and it is solely through Christ’s atonement for sin that salvation has come. Salvation comes to those who confess with their lips that Jesus Christ is Lord and believe in their hearts that God has raised him from the dead (Romans 10:9). The New Testament leaves no margin for misunderstanding. To deny the Son is to deny the Father.
To affirm this truth is not to argue that non-Christians, our Muslim neighbors included, know nothing true about God or to deny that the three major monotheistic religions — Judaism, Christianity and Islam — share some major theological beliefs. All three religions affirm that there is only one God and that he has spoken to us by divine revelation. All three religions point to what each claims to be revealed scriptures. Historically, Jews and Christians and Muslims have affirmed many points of agreement on moral teachings. All three theological worldviews hold to a linear view of history, unlike many Asian worldviews that believe in a circular view of history.
And yet, when we look more closely, even these points of agreement begin to break down. Christian trinitarianism is rejected by both Judaism and Islam. Muslims deny that Jesus Christ is the incarnate and eternal Son of God and go further to deny that God has a son. Any reader of the New Testament knows that this was the major point of division between Christianity and Judaism. The central Christian claim that Jesus is Israel’s promised Messiah and the divine Son become flesh led to the separation of the church and the synagogue as is revealed in the Book of Acts.
There is historical truth in the claim of “three Abrahamic religions” because Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all look to Abraham as a principal figure and model of faith. But this historical truth is far surpassed in importance by the fact that Jesus explicitly denied that salvation comes merely by being merely one of “Abraham’s children” (John 8:39-59). He told the Jewish leaders who rejected him that their rejection revealed that they were not Abraham’s true sons and that they did not truly know God.
Christians do not deny that Muslims know some true things about God. As a matter of fact, in Romans 1:19-20 Paul explains that all people have some real knowledge of God by general revelation, so that they are without excuse. Speaking at Mars Hill in Athens in Acts 17, Paul argued that even some of the Greeks’ own philosophers and poets gave evidence of a rudimentary knowledge of God — but this was not a saving knowledge, and the Apostle was brokenhearted when he saw the Athenians at worship.
In making her claim that Christians and Muslims worship the same God, the professor claimed the authority of Pope Francis, and since Vatican II the Roman Catholic Church has become ever more explicit in its teaching that salvation can come without a conscious and explicit faith in Christ. This is simply not an option for evangelical Christians committed to the authority of Scripture alone and to the Gospel as defined in the New Testament.
Francis J. Beckwith, a leading Catholic apologist and philosopher, defended the claim that Muslims and Christians worship the same God. At one point, Beckwith argued that two people could have differing knowledge of Thomas Jefferson while knowing the same Thomas Jefferson as the third President of the United States. He continued: “In the same way, Abraham and Moses did not believe that God is a Trinity, but St. Augustine, St. Thomas Aquinas, and Billy Graham do. Does that mean that Augustine, Aquinas, and Graham do not worship the same God as Abraham and Moses? Again, of course not.”
But this line of argument evades the entire structure of promise and fulfillment that links the Old Testament and the New Testament. Abraham and Moses could not have defined the doctrine of the Trinity while they were on earth, but they believed that God would be faithful to all of his promises, and those promises were fulfilled only and fulfilled perfectly in Christ. And, going back to John 8:56-58, Jesus said: “Your father Abraham rejoiced that he would see my day. He saw it and was glad … Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was, I am.”
Evangelical Christians understand that, theologically, there is a genetic link between Judaism and Christianity. That is why Christians must always be humbled by the fact that we have been grafted onto the promises first made to Israel. In terms of both history and theology, there is no genetic link between Christianity and Islam. The Qur’an claims that to confess Jesus Christ as the divine Son and the second person of the Trinity is to commit blasphemy against Allah.
Hard times come with hard questions, and our cultural context exerts enormous pressure on Christians to affirm common ground at the expense of theological differences. But the cost of getting this question wrong is the loss of the Gospel. Christians affirm the image of God in every single human being and we must obey Christ as we love all people everywhere as our neighbor. Love of neighbor also demands that we tell our neighbor the truth concerning Christ as the only way to truly know the Father.
We must also understand that the most basic issue is the one Jesus answered with absolute clarity. One cannot deny the Son and truly worship the Father. There is no question that the Muslim is our neighbor, but there is no way to remain faithful to Scripture and the gospel and then claim that Christians and Muslims worship the same God.

Friday, December 18, 2015

2015 Year-End Giving by David O. Cofield

2015 will prove to be a monumental year in the life of Rainsville First.  It has been a great year of baptisms, growth, missions and financial records.  Yet, there is still much to be done as we continue to press on.  There is no better way to set a strong foundation for 2016 than ending on a strong financial note in 2015.  I invite you to help us end the year strong and prepare ourselves for an exciting 2016 by prayerfully considering an end-of-the-year gift to Rainsville First. 

Some help as you prepare year-end-giving:

*  The gift must be RECEIVED on or before December 31.  The IRS makes no exceptions. It does not matter what the date is on the check or when it was postmarked.  Any gifts made through online giving (https://pushpay.com/pay/rainsvillefirstbaptist) by midnight Dec. 31 is counted toward 2015 gifts.

*  Most giving to the church is tax deductible, but not all.  Donations when you specify an individual are non-deductible. 

*  Use a giving envelope.

*  Just a few suggestions.  All giving to the general fund and debt retirement of the church is tax deductible.  Also included would be giving to the Benevolence Fund (not to individuals but to the fund), Lottie Moon Christmas Offering, other mission offerings or most designated accounts of our church.

*  Gifts to the pastor or staff may be given directly to any one of them.  If it is passed through the church it will be taxable income for the minister or staff member.  These gifts are non-deductible because they are allocated to an individual.

*  You may give land or property.  The church cannot assign a value to such gifts, you must provide the value. 

*  Stocks or bonds (which can be very beneficial for the donor in saving on taxes, as well as the church). 

*  Deferred giving:  Include your church in your estate or designate the church as an heir or insurance beneficiary.  Even Charitable Remainder Trusts, Charitable Gift Annuities and Life Estate Reserved accounts can be set up.  Visit The Baptist Foundation of Alabama (of the Alabama Baptist Convention) www.tbfa.org

"Giving with glad and generous hearts has a way of routing out the tough old miser within us.  Even the poor need to know that they can give.  Just the very act of letting go of money, or some other treasure, does something within us.  It destroys the demon greed."  Richard Foster, Money, Sex and Power



Tuesday, December 15, 2015

From the Shepherd's Heart...Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Sunday night proved to be a meaningful night of worship set by Bro. Keith, the praise band and team and the Worship Choir and Children's choir.  It was a beautiful tapestry of new songs and carols, Scripture reading and devotions, solos and choirs, adult and children's choirs, specials and congregational participation.  It was a beautiful night of Christmas music leading us to worship our King.

Thanks to those who serve with our children providing them opportunities to sing and worship and especially, Elizabeth Wootten, who is the key leader.

Thanks to our praise band who works so long and hard to provide excellent live music each Sunday:  Keith Beatty, Brandon Boswell, Shane Hiett, and Jared Underwood.  Our praise team is simply the best:  Crystal Hall, Traci Roper, Kelly Underwood and Melinda White.

This Sunday night we are scheduled for a"normal" Sunday night; so I wanted to do something a little different.  The Billy Graham Evangelistic Association has been doing "My Hope" outreaches in the fall for the past three years featuring Dr. Graham using DVD and TV to share a message with America.  Last year, he did a message on "Heaven" that God really used in my life and the life of our church.  In fact, I showed the "Heaven" message on Wednesday night and was so blessed that I took a Sunday morning to show it, as well.  This Sunday night will not be a "normal" service, but I think it will be one you will enjoy and be challenged. If you can bring a friend or family member, they will hear a good presentation of the gospel.  The service will not last but about 45 minutes so come and bring someone with you.

Don't forget our schedule the last two weeks of the year:
This Sunday - Upward Meeting for all coaches  4:00-6:00 (SFH)
Monday, December 21 - Caroling 6:00 pm
Wednesday, December 23 - no services
Thursday, December 24 - Christmas Eve service  5:30-6:00 pm
Sunday, December 27 - Sunday School Rally for youth and adults in the auditorium, 9:00-10:00 am
Sunday, December 27 - Lord's Supper Drop-In Service 5:00-7:00
Wednesday, December 30 - no services


 Church Goal:  $5,500.00

Given to Date:  $8,402.00

Thank you for giving.  If you have not given, then it doesn't matter that we have already reached our goal.  It means you have not gotten in on the blessing of giving to reach the World.  So, give this Sunday or before the end of the year.

Monday, December 14, 2015

A Simple Strategy to Pray for Non-Believers by Chuck Lawless

During the holiday season, we often spend time with loved ones and friends who don’t know Jesus personally. The Bible is clear about their spiritual condition, as seen below. Beginning this season – and continuing into the New Year – use this strategy to pray for non-believers you know and love. You might even consider printing this post, fill in the blanks with names, and start praying!
  1. They must hear the gospel: “How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard?” (Rom. 10:14).
PRAYER: “God, let ___________ hear the gospel today. Give me courage to be the gospel spokesperson.”
  1. They are following the enemy: “And you were dead in the trespasses and sins in which you once walked, following the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work in the sons of disobedience” (Eph. 2:1-2).
PRAYER: “God, please give life to ___________, and free him/her from the power of the prince of the air.”
  1. They are blinded by the enemy: “And even if our gospel is veiled, it is veiled to those who are perishing. In their case the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God” (2 Cor. 4:3-4).
PRAYER: “God, open the blinded mind of ___________.”
  1. They are in the domain of darkness: “He has delivered us from the domain of darkness and transferred us to the kingdom of his beloved Son” (Col. 1:13).
PRAYER: “God, deliver ___________ from the kingdom of darkness.”
  1. They are under the devil’s power: “to open their eyes, so that they may turn from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins and a place among those who are sanctified by faith in me” (Acts 26:18).
PRAYER: “God, please open ___________’s eyes. Free him/her from the devil’s power.”
  1. They are caught in the devil’s trap: “and they may come to their senses and escape from the snare of the devil, after being captured by him to do his will”(2 Tim. 2:26).
PRAYER: “God, release ___________ from the devil’s trap.” 
  1. They must repent and believe: “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel” (Mark 1:15).
PRAYER: “God, bring ___________ to repentance and belief. When You do so, we’ll give You the glory.”

Friday, December 11, 2015

Thank you for your Lottie Moon gifts and prayers from Alabama missionaries

You have given $4,792 of our $5,500 Lottie Moon Christmas Offering Goal.  I know many of you have plans to give this Sunday or before the end of the year.  

Here is a video from the Alabama Baptist State Convention of missionaries that call Alabama home saying, "Thank you."

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

The Situation with IMB by David O. Cofield

This is some of the information that I shared Sunday night at our church wide Christmas and Mission Party.

1.  Current situation of the International Mission Board

August 27, 2015 David Platt shared with IMB personnel after their quarterly Trustee meeting:

2014 - IMB budgeted $21 million more than receipts
           IMB sold property to cover $18 million over budgeted receipts
so they spent $39 million more than received.

Since 2010 they have spent $210 million more than received.

So they have met these shortfalls with tapping into their reserves and selling global properties.

Then they are reducing the missionary force and staff estimated between 600-800 this fall.

2009 - was the high mark for missionary service with 5,600
Currently at 4,800 and 450 staff
The goal is to get to 4,200

2.  Why are we at this place?

There are less financial resources available to local churches and churches are giving less through the Cooperative Program.

Dr. Bob Terry just reported in the December 3, 2015 edition of The Alabama Baptist, in a story unrelated to the IMB,

2008 - AL Baptists gave $44 million to Cooperative Program
2014 - AL Baptists gave $40 million to CP.  That is 10.2% decrease.
This year the projection is it will fall below $40 million.

2008 - Alabama Baptist church gave $788 million to their churches (total receipts)
2014 - Gave $720 million
8.7% decrease

Fewer people are participating in church
2008 - AL Baptists had 352,000 in worship
2014 - AL Baptists had 291,000 in worship
17.4% decrease

* So pray for David Platt and the IMB for wisdom. 
* Pray for our church to be wise of walking the balance between the needs of our church and the world through missions.
* Give your very best Lottie Moon Christmas gift this year.  

Supporting stories:  August 27 press release


Monday, December 7, 2015

John Piper reading his Christmas Poem: "The Innkeeper"

John Piper reads his Christmas Poem:  "The Innkeeper"

Enjoy the reading this Christmas Season.



Saturday, December 5, 2015

From the Shepherd's Heart...Saturday, December 5, 2015

I'm looking forward to sharing the Word with you tomorrow in the second message of the series "Look Who Came For Christmas."  Tomorrow is "The Wounded Young Woman At Christmas."

Also tomorrow in your Sunday School, you will be asked to verify your address, phone number and email addresses as we complete our last editing of the impending church directory. Please, take a minute to make sure the office has your correct information.

Congratulations to the Fyffe Red Devils on an excellent season and getting to the State Championship game.  I know you are disappointed but what a great season to make it to that game two consecutive years.

Tomorrow night is our church-wide Christmas and Mission Party beginning at 5:30.  The church will provide the meat so you bring your best covered dish.  Also, this is the beginning of receiving our Lottie Moon Christmas offering.

We now have a church calendar on our web site - www.rainsvillefirst.com - under "Events."  This will be updated daily.  If you are needing to know if the gym or fellowship hall is available, check the calendar first.  When dates are approved, they will be added immediately to the online calendar.


I appreciate the commitment shown by this church to be good stewards of the financial resources given to and through RFBC.  To further enhance the faithfulness required in stewardship, I am asking everyone to be diligent in turning in receipts to Alisa in a timely fashion and to know no reimbursements will be given without a receipt.  Thank you for your commitment to honor God in all the details of His church.

Coming up:
December 13 - "Night of Christmas Music" 6:00
December 20 - "Heaven" message by Billy Graham  6:00
December 23 - No Services
December 24 - Christmas Eve Service 5:30-6:00
December 27 - Sunday School Rally  9:00-10:00 a.m. for all youth and adults 
December 27 - Drop-In Lord's Supper 5:00-7:00
December 30 - No Services


Wednesday, December 2, 2015

I Can Do This by Dr. Waylon Bailey

I Can Do This

How can we help them to know our Lord and Savior and experience the blessings that come from knowing Him?
Here are four things you can do to open up conversations about the gospel.
First, pray, pray, pray. I suggest putting a piece of paper on the inside cover of your Bible with the names of people you will pray everyday that they might be saved. The apostle Paul said “Brothers and sisters, my heart’s desire and prayer to God for Israelites is that they may be saved” (Romans 10:1). I would also suggest  you ask God who those people should be.
We should pray that God would open doors for us to share our faith in Christ. We also should pray for soft hearts to hear the truth which we have to speak.
Second, be a friend and show your heartfelt compassion for the people around you. Acts of kindness and a warm, sympathetic heart will go a long way in opening doors of conversation about the gospel. We should remember that friendship is a powerful tool for the gospel.
Third, live righteously without living judgmentally. No one wants to follow after a judgmental Christian. They do want to follow someone whose life and profession show a credible Christian character. Ask God to show you those areas where you are harming your witness for Christ. Determine to put those things behind you so that you might help others know Christ.

Fourth, always be ready to give a credible answer about why you do the things you do and why you believe as you do. The Apostle Peter counseled us to “Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who ask you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect” (1 Peter 3:15).
We need to be able to tell people what the gospel means. We also need to be able to tell people what the gospel means to you.Both of those areas will be instrumental in helping people come to know Christ. Notice also Peter’s emphasis on how we do this: with gentleness and respect.
Let us ask God for His favor as we seek to reach our family, friends, and neighbors.