Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Wednesday, May 29, 2019....From the Shepherd's Heart


As I shared with the church last Wednesday night, this study on the Kingdom of God is capturing my heart like nothing as in many years.  When Jesus said, "Seek first the kingdom of God..." - He meant it.  First...top priority...with everything in you.

Oh, how this is changing my life and I pray the life of our church.

Tonight, the two sermon series I am currently doing merge into one as we talk about the covenant God made with David.  On the past few Sundays, we have looked at the covenant God made with Noah (Genesis 6, 9).  This coming Sunday we will celebrate the covenant God has made with us as we come to the Lord's Table.

Oh, the truths here with David, Israel's king, as a type and shadow of Christ, our King. 

See you tonight at 6:10 as we worship together with music, prayer and the Word.

Also tonight at 5:00 is the second opportunity to attend a VBS Training for teachers.  The first one was held last Wednesday night.  You only need to attend one.

The youth meet at 6:10 in the Student Center with Zac preaching from Hebrews 2.  The children's summer program under the leadership of Whitney is already in full swing, as well.  A place for everyone tonight.

Summer is here.  I know most of you will have the opportunity to be away and that is good.  We will pray for your protection and safety as you travel.  When you are away, don't forget you can view the Sunday morning worship service and the Wednesday night service live or go back and see it later.

The address is https://rfbc.sermon.net/.  My sermon notes are always there that you can review, as well.

Don't forget you can give online, as well.  Click here to do that and to remain faithful with your giving this summer.

Be as faithful as you can during the summer.  If you are in town, make it a priority for you and your family to be in God's House.

I will not miss a Wednesday night teaching this summer and will only miss one Sunday morning - the day we are gone to Indianapolis on the mission trip.  In fact, watch this blog for I am revealing soon what a hot summer it will be from the pulpit. 

Monday, May 27, 2019

Does Grace Still Amaze You? by Randy Alcorn

Years ago, I spoke at a large event where the vocalist sang one of my favorite songs, “Amazing Grace.” But I was taken aback when I heard the first line: “Amazing grace, how sweet the sound, that saved a soul like me.” The word soul was substituted for the word wretch. Why? Because the word wretch is considered by some to be demeaning to human beings.
I couldn’t help but think of John Newton, the writer of the song. He was an immoral slave trader and blasphemer — a man who knew he was a wretch and who had wept over the depth of his sins. Only because he understood that fact so profoundly could he then understand why God’s grace to him was so utterly amazing. And hence the immortal song he bequeathed to all of us.
Grace doesn’t minimize or ignore the awful reality of our sin. Grace emphasizes the depths of sin by virtue of the unthinkable price paid to redeem us from it. Paul said if men were good enough, “then Christ died for no purpose” (Galatians 2:21). If we don’t come to grips with the hideous reality of our own sin, God’s grace won’t ever seem amazing.

His Call to Sinners

God’s word tells us that Christ died for utterly unworthy people (Romans 5:7–8). The fact that he died for us is never given in Scripture as a proof of our value as wonderful people. Rather, it is a demonstration of his unfathomable and unearned love. So unfathomable that he would die for rotten people, wretches like you and me, to free us from our sin.
Because grace is so incomprehensible to us, we instinctively smuggle in conditions so we won’t look so bad and God’s offer won’t seem so counterintuitive. By the time we’re done qualifying the gospel, we’re no longer unworthy and powerless. We’re no longer wretches. And grace is no longer grace.
The worst thing we can teach people is that they’re good without Jesus. The truth is, God doesn’t offer grace to good people, any more than doctors offer lifesaving surgery to healthy people. Jesus said, “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. I have not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance” (Luke 5:31–32).
Our Lord also said, “To the thirsty I will give from the spring of the water of life without payment” (Revelation 21:6). Without cost to us, but at unimaginable cost to himself — a cost that will be visible for eternity as we behold his nail-scarred hands and feet (John 20:24–29). Bonhoeffer was right: grace is free, but it is not cheap.

Life-Changing Grace

You and I weren’t merely sick in our sins; we were dead in our sins (Ephesians 2:1). That means I’m not just unworthy of salvation; I’m utterly incapable of earning it. Corpses can’t raise themselves from the grave. What a relief to realize that my salvation is completely the result of God’s grace. It cannot be earned by good works.
True grace recognizes and deals with sin in the most radical and painful way: Christ’s redemption. There’s only one requirement for enjoying God’s grace: being broken and knowing it. That’s why Jesus said, “Happy are those who know they are spiritually poor; the Kingdom of heaven belongs to them!” (Matthew 5:3, GNT)
Our justification by faith in Christ satisfies the demands of God’s holiness by exchanging our sins for Christ’s righteousness (Romans 3:21–26). When Jesus saves us, we become new creatures in him (2 Corinthians 5:17). Now we can draw upon God’s power to overcome evil. We start seeing sin for what it really is: bondage, not freedom.
The old summary is correct: God’s children have been saved from the penalty of sin, we are being saved from the power of sin, and we will be saved from the presence of sin. Justification, sanctification, and glorification are all grounded solidly in exactly the same place: God’s grace.

God’s Grace Hunts Sin

The grace of Jesus isn’t an add-on or makeover that enhances our lives. It causes a radical transformation — from being sin-enslaved to being righteousness-liberated. Paul writes of the life-transforming and sin-overcoming power of grace: “For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation for all people, training us to renounce ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright, and godly lives” (Titus 2:11–12).
Don’t ever tell yourself you may as well go ahead and sin since God will forgive you. This cheapens grace. Grace that trivializes sin is not true grace. Paul makes that clear: “What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin that grace may abound? By no means! How can we who died to sin still live in it?” (Romans 6:1–2).
John Piper says, “Grace is not simply leniency when we have sinned. Grace is the enabling gift of God not to sin. Grace is power, not just pardon.” So while God forgives when we sincerely confess (1 John 1:9), we prove that sincerity by taking necessary steps to avoid temptation. As Jesus said, “You can identify them by their fruit, that is, by the way they act” (Matthew 7:16, NLT).
No sin is small that crucified Christ. Sin matters, yet grace has power over sin, offering not only forgiveness but also transformed character (Galatians 5:22–23). Every sin pales in comparison to God’s grace to us in Christ (Romans 5:20–21).

Proclaiming God’s Offer of Grace

There is one sense in which God’s grace is unconditional — we don’t deserve it. Yet in his kindness he offers it to us. But in another sense it is conditional, in that in order to receive it we must repent, ask forgiveness, and place our faith in him. This is a paradox — an apparent (but not actual) contradiction. If we see God as the one who does the work of convicting us and drawing us to repentance, this helps. We did not merit salvation.
But even if we fail to understand this paradox of conditional and unconditional grace, I think God calls upon us to believe it and live in it. Sinclair Ferguson says, “The spiritual life is lived between two polarities: our sin and God’s grace. The discovery of the former brings us to seek the latter; the work of the latter illuminates the depths of the former and causes us to seek yet more grace.”
When we’re acutely aware of our own sins, we’ll proclaim and exemplify God’s “good news of happiness” (Isaiah 52:7). We’ll do so not with a spirit of superiority but with the contagious excitement of a sinner saved by grace — one person rescued from starvation sharing bountiful food and drink with others. We’ll face each day and each person we see with humility, knowing that we too still desperately need God’s grace — every bit as much as those we’re offering it to.

Monday, May 20, 2019

What I Like and Don’t Like about Spiritual Gifts Inventories by Chuck Lawless

I remember my excitement years ago when I first completed a spiritual gifts inventory. I still like inventories and use them, but I do so with caution. Here are my thoughts:
What I Like about Them:
  1. They do push believers to consider how God has wired and gifted them to serve Him. Simply using them is one way of saying, “God didn’t bring you to this church to just sit and do nothing.” Thus, they can help mobilize believers to serve.
  2. They’re one tool to help believers consider God’s hand in their lives. Inventories aren’t sufficient in themselves, but wise church leaders can use them to facilitate needed and helpful conversations with church members.
  3. Handled well, they require church leaders to teach about the important topic of spiritual gifts. Some of these gifts are debated, so laying a biblical foundation for understanding them is a needed first step.
  4. They push us to consider what it means to be a 1 Corinthians 12 churchThat is, they guide us to think about how God has put His body together – according to His will, promoting unity in diversity, and glorifying Himself through various gifts.
  5. They can help us to focus our attention and energy. All of us must at times serve outside our primary giftedness, but considering our gifts can help us use our resources wisely.
What I Don’t Like about Them:
  1. Every inventory is biased at some level. This point is simply a recognition that anyone who creates an inventory has theological presuppositions—including a position on which gifts are still available today—that influence the final product.
  2. Often, they give too little attention to defining the gifts. They may offer definitions, but they’re not always connected to scripture. Moreover, they don’t often recognize that strong scholars and practitioners sometimes differ about the gifts.
  3. Some participants make wrong use of the results. They use them as if they were the final determinant of one’s giftedness, and some use them to deny any responsibility to live out gifts they apparently don’t have. The inventory becomes an excuse for disobedience. 
  4. They allow believers to determine their giftedness on the basis of a paper test rather than on their actually doing ministry. It’s not enough to say, “I have the gift of leadership” if you’ve never given any evidence of such a gift. We best determine our gifts by serving God through His church—and learning what brings joy and blessing.
  5. They can promote an individualized Christianity. That happens when you determine your gifts without seeking input from brothers and sisters in Christ who know you best (see the previous point as well).

Monday, May 13, 2019

Tonight, May 15, 2019....Plans for Wednesday Night

Tonight the adults and students will worship together at 6:10 in the Student Center.  Zac will continue his normal preaching schedule tonight preaching from Hebrews 2 and the Youth Praise Band will lead the music.

I am in Montgomery supporting our softball team in the state finals.

This promises to be a great night for all of our adults and you are encouraged to be in attendance and be blessed by the preaching of Zac from Hebrews.

God Has Spoken—Are You Listening? by Kelly Minter



A couple of years ago I did the Daniel Fast by Susan Gregory. I only drank water and ate essentially lettuce and rice for 30 days (I checked the rules and coffee didn’t count as water so I almost died.) I wanted to fast because I needed some direction and had some pressing aches in my life that I wanted the Lord to address and fix. But during that time I sensed Jesus saying, don’t seek the fix; seek My face. This was a bit of a new angle for me because having grown up in the church I’m actually pretty skilled at seeking Christian fixes, ideals, and disciplines. In other words, I’ve learned how to seek Christianity. But seeking Jesus, not for what He could do for me or give me, but for who He is, turned out to be exactly what I needed.
As we step toward spring and the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, I know many of you are coming through the thick of an icy winter desperate for healing, a fix, a spotlight of direction, a miracle, a green bud on the branch. In seeking the face of Jesus you won’t be ignoring or abandoning those longings, rather you’ll be affirming that Jesus is the greatest need of your life.

JESUS, OUR SPEAKING SAVIOR

One of the reasons we lay aside something of significance during Lent is to make room for Jesus—to hear His voice with less distraction and greater clarity. Listen to the words of Hebrews 1:1-3:
Long ago God spoke to the fathers by the prophets at different times and in different ways. In these last days, he has spoken to us by his Son. God has appointed him heir of all things and made the universe through him. The Son is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact expression of his nature, sustaining all things by his powerful word… (emphasis mine.)
We discover that a really long time ago, back when the Old Testament prophets were alive, God spoke! To whom did He speak? The people of God under the old covenant (fathers).How did He speak? By the prophets. But now, in “these last days” that we’re living in—during the date on your calendar, in your city, on the street you live in, within your church community, right now—God has spoken. But He’s no longer speaking through the prophets; rather, He’s spoken through His Son Jesus.
“As unruly as things can be in our world, Jesus is still ruling and reigning.”
I’m a communicator by nature. I enjoy being thoughtfully communicated to and love communicating with others. This is sometimes to the dismay of my closest friends who occasionally like to not discuss every single thing under the sun. Sometimes they just want to be with me, something I do not understand when we could be conversing and figuring things out! So I find it particularly meaningful that the God I serve is a speaking God and that He’s chosen to speak specifically through Jesus. When I set certain meaningful things aside, I express through quiet and self-denial, that I long to hear from Him.
You may be thinking, “I need to hear this from Him today”, or I need Him to communicate that to me.” But what if we reframe our time with the Lord, simply by acknowledging, I need to hear from Jesus today, whatever He may say.

JESUS, OUR SUSTAINING SAVIOR

In that same passage we find out another revelation about the speaking voice of Jesus: The whole world is sustained by “his powerful word.” The word “sustaining” here means to uphold and gives the sense that Jesus is personally carrying things forward to their “appointed end or goal.” As unruly as things can be in our world, Jesus is still ruling and reigning. He has not left us. One scholar put it like this: The author of Hebrews “is not referring to the passive support of a burden like the Greek god Atlas bearing the dead weight of the world on his shoulders. Rather, the language implies a ‘bearing’ that includes movement and progress towards an objective.”
You may have unsolvable problems and pain in your family, friendships, marriage, or workplace. In the midst of what is so tumultuous, Jesus is personally involved and sustaining all things. He has not lost control of our world or your world. He is intimately involved by the power of His word.
As we enjoy this season of Lent by reflecting on Jesus, be encouraged that God has spoken through His Son Jesus. If you need a word from Him, He’s eager to give it because He’s a speaking God. And if you fear He’s left you alone or taken His hand off your life, go ahead and kick that lie to the curb because He’s personally sustaining all things. I know this because Jesus is a speaking Savior who told us so.

Want to read more from Kelly? Check out some of her other LifeWay Voices posts:

Friday, May 10, 2019

Friday, May 10, 2019....From the Shepherd's Heart

This past Sunday we noted how Noah was surprised by the revelation of a covenant God made with him and his family.  Never had God (at least as with using the word) made a covenant with a person. 

We started a two-part message last Sunday on how this covenant not only surprised Noah, but greatly enriched his life. 

The three things we saw this past Sunday in regard to this covenant and Noah:


I.  The Covenant Made was not Based on Noah’s promise or potential

II.  Covenant Provides Abundant Rest

Genesis 5: 29 – when Noah was born and given the name “Noah” which means “rest, comfort.”

When you enter into covenant with God, you will find the reason you were born.  The true purpose of your life.

III. Covenant Provides Adequate grace

This Sunday we will continue with three more blessings that came to Noah because of the covenant.

AND THE BEST NEWS is we are seeing these same blessings are ours in Christ, who is our covenant.

Also this Sunday we will honor all women (not just mothers) on this special day. 

And due to graduations being earlier this year than expected, we have moved the Graduate Honor Service to this Sunday, as well.  



Monday, May 6, 2019

Why Don’t We Shout in Worship? by Jon Bloom

Do you ever shout in church as an expression of exultant, exuberant worship? If not, why?
Is this even a relevant question? Or is it just a foray into the “worship wars” that devolves into debates over style and tone preferences?
I think it is relevant, regardless of our style and tone preferences, because we find clear examples and exhortations regarding shouting in the Bible, particularly in the Psalms. And so, we need to ask ourselves whether or not it matters to God if we actually do what these psalms commend or command us to do. Here are a few samples:
  • Psalm 27:6, “I will offer in his tent sacrifices with shouts of joy; I will sing and make melody to the Lord.”
  • Psalm 32:11, “Be glad in the Lord, and rejoice, O righteous, and shout for joy, all you upright in heart!”
  • Psalm 33:3, “Sing to him a new song; play skillfully on the strings, with loud shouts.”
  • Psalm 47:1, “Clap your hands, all peoples! Shout to God with loud songs of joy!”
  • Psalm 66:1–2, “Shout for joy to God, all the earth; sing the glory of his name; give to him glorious praise!”
  • Psalm 71:23, “My lips will shout for joy, when I sing praises to you; my soul also, which you have redeemed.”
What do we do with these statements? God doesn’t waste his breath in Scripture (2 Timothy 3:16). He has included everything intentionally. So, he clearly wants us to do something regarding these references to shouting. I wonder if biblical shouting is not only an expression of joyful worship but also a way of experiencing dimensions of joyful worship that we don’t experience otherwise.

Why and When We Shout

Now, all of us shout. If we have voices, we’ve all shouted many times, and for numerous reasons. We’ve shouted in the overflow of great joy. We’ve shouted in the exultation of victory. We’ve shouted in the tension of competition. We’ve shouted in the chaos of battle. We’ve shouted in the tumult of controversy and argument. We’ve shouted in moments of great danger. We’ve shouted in the explosion of hot anger. Certain strong emotions prompt us, any of us, to shout.
But we rarely shout alone. Similar to laughing, and to some extent singing, shouting seems to be designed primarily as a corporate expression of strong emotion, something we find most enjoyable or helpful or needful when we do it with other people.
For example, I’m a shouter when I watch the Minnesota Vikings play football. This is true whether I watch them live at a stadium or, perhaps even better, in a room with family and friends. But if I watch a game alone, the dynamic is different.
Case in point: On January 14, 2018, Vikings quarterback Case Keenum threw the “Minneapolis Miracle” pass to wide receiver Stefon Diggs in the last seconds of a divisional playoff game to defeat the New Orleans Saints. When that happened, our living room full of Vikings fans erupted in deafening shouts for joy that went on for minutes. If I had watched by myself, I might have shouted, but it would have lacked the depth of joy and celebration (and volume).
Why is this? There’s something profound and mysterious about a group of people sharing a common excitement and joy. Often, joy is heightened when we experience it together with others — and certain joys are only properly expressed in shouting. To not shout together as Stefon Diggs ran into the end zone would have emotionally muted the whole experience.

What About Church?

The Bible doesn’t explicitly explain why this phenomenon occurs, but it certainly acknowledges that it does. Most of the scriptural instructions to shout are addressed to the gathered saints — the Psalms were mainly meant to be sung (and sometimes shouted) together with others. There’s a unique and powerful dynamic when we “give thanks to the Lord with [our] whole heart, in the company of the upright, in the congregation” (Psalm 111:1).
So, all of us shout. But assuming we’re in a familiar culture, we also all know when we’re not supposed to shout. Appropriate and inappropriate times and places to shout are culturally or sub-culturally reinforced. It’s okay to shout at a football game; it’s not okay to shout in a funeral home.
What about when our church gathers together to worship (and it’s not a funeral)? What does our church culture encourage? Are there occasionally moments of exuberance in song where all the saints “shout for joy to God” (Psalm 66:1)? Or does that always feel out of place, or only done by one or two courageous (and odd) people?

Spiritual Discipline of Shouting?

An even more penetrating question than cultural decorum is this: Do we ever feel the realities of the mercies of God, our redemption, the spiritual conflict we’re engaged in, the promise of our resurrection, and Christ’s ultimate triumph strongly enough to inspire a shout?
I ask this question for a couple of reasons. One, it might reveal a personal affectional deficit in our souls that we need to address with our Lord — that we’re not connecting deeply enough with the realities of what’s happened, and been promised, to us. And, of course, that’s all of us to greater or lesser degrees. What we may need is to repent of giving excessive attention to lesser things, and spend more extended time meditating on “the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus” (Philippians 3:8) in order to stoke the embers of our passion for him.
But a second reason is that, to some degree, an affectional deficit might be due to the fact that we don’t shout together. I experienced the reality of the “Minneapolis Miracle” more deeply and intensely because I shared and shouted over it with others. I often feel certain great truths of God, or at least dimensions of them, more deeply and intensely when I share and shout over them with others. I can’t replicate in my private devotional times what I experience together with the saints on Easter morning.

What We All Want

Shouting is commended and commanded in the Bible, like singing, because there are dimensions of joy in God that are only experienced when we express ourselves in this way — particularly when we express ourselves this way together.
Like anything else, shouting can be superficial, but that shouldn’t prevent us from shouting. Because of the clear biblical exhortations to shout, I commend these thoughts to you for your prayerful consideration — especially pastors and leaders who craft worship times for gathered saints. What we all want is for the saints to experience as much blessing of delighting in God as possible. And the Scriptures tell us, “Blessed are the people who know the festal shout, who walk, O Lord, in the light of your face” (Psalm 89:15).

Saturday, May 4, 2019

Saturday, May 4, 2019...From the Shepherd's Heart

As a church family, we have been exploring and exegeting Genesis for two years (not sequential) and since January we have concentrated on the life of Noah.  As preaching in Genesis 6, God releases a word that is one of the most powerful words and concepts in the Bible - the word "covenant."

When we see this and know who God is (a covenant making and keeping God) and what God has done (made covenants manifested greatly in Christ); then we have to stop a few Sundays to talk about covenant.

There are two major types of covenants:  a covenant between God and man;  a covenant between man and man.

Tomorrow we will continue to look at the covenant God made with Noah and see wonderful applications for us today.

Tomorrow night at 7:00 we host the Plainview Baccalaureate Service. It is always an honor to host community events.  This weekend we hosted the annual DeKalb County Band Festival.

Wednesday, May 1, 2019

National Day of Prayer....May 2, 2019 in Rainsville

Tomorrow is the National Day of Prayer. While the main observance will be in Washington led by Dr. Ronnie Floyd, communities throughout our nation will also gather to pray.

So will we in Rainsville tomorrow at 12 Noon at the DeKalb County Schools Coliseum parking lot in front of the Memorial (bring your lawn chairs).  The service will last about 30-40 minutes and five different persons will be leading us in prayer and we will sing two songs. 

The theme of this year's observance is "Love One Another" based on John 13:34.  The event is sponsored by the Rainsville Ministerial Association.

Also tomorrow, we are "Praying the Four Corners" of Rainsville.  We will gather simultaneously at 11:00 AM at the four corners of Rainsville to pray for our city.  There will be four gatherings - one each at the welcome sign and flagpoles coming into our city from Ft. Payne, Fyffe, Henagar and Section. 

This gathering will be led by one of the pastors in Rainsville and will most likely not last longer than 15 minutes and then if you have time, you can then join with the larger gathering at the Coliseum at 12 Noon for the National Day of Prayer event.