Fasting And Prayer As Your Spiritual Worship
Sunday, December 31, 2023
Fasting And Prayer As Your Spiritual Worship By Ronnie W. Floyd
Saturday, December 30, 2023
This Lord's Day (December 31, 2023) at Rainsville First Baptist Church
Tomorrow is a unique day for it is the 53th Sunday of the year. That's right...an extra Sunday to worship in 2023 and the last opportunity to gather for corporate worship in 2023. It will be a different day, as well, with these features:
Hear Bob Langmaack's testimony and then celebrate his baptism in our Worship Service at 10:15
* We will commit ourselves afresh through the reminder of our Lord's commitment as we celebrate the Lord's Supper* We will sing, pray, give, and fellowship.
* 8:45-9:10 - Churchwide Breakfast served in the Large Fellowship Hall
* All adults and youth will stay in the LFH for Sunday School and the Pastor will share vision for 2024
* Children will go with Whitney during SS
- This offering will close the gap of the mission expenditures lacking for 2023 and set us on good, solid ground for 2024.
- No online giving will go toward this unless the online giver designates their offering that week to Mission Causes.
- Anyone wishing to use an envelope to designate their offering will have to write in Mission Causes. Otherwise, on that Sunday alone all gifts listed as tithes and general fund or are undesignated toward anything (cash) will go to Mission Causes.
Tuesday, December 26, 2023
8 Ways to Break the Bondage of Worry by Dr. Chuck Lawless
I admit it – I can be a worrier. That’s a problem, given Paul’s words in Philippians 4:6 – “Don’t worry about anything . . . .” I’m learning to overcome it, though, so maybe these suggestions will help you:
- Commit your life to Christ. If you are not a Christian, you lack the help of God who can free you from worry. If you’re an unfaithful Christian, you must turn back to God if you want His help. All of us must turn from sin and trust Christ (Mark 1:15).
- Be honest with somebody about your worries. Some of us (especially Christian leaders) realize that worry is problematic, so we don’t tell anybody. Bearing worries alone, though, only increases the burden. It’s also selfish—it ignores the help of others who love us, and silly—it assumes no one else will understand.
- Recognize worry for what it is: a lack of faith. Writing those words is painful to me as a worrier, but I can’t ignore the reality. Worry says, “I’m not convinced God is going to take care of this problem.” One of my steps in overcoming worry is to repent, and I’ve learned that taking this step can itself be freeing.
- Pray about what worries you. That’s what Paul told us to do in the rest of Philippians 4:6—“but in everything, through prayer and petition with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God.” Humbly cast your cares on God by talking to Him (Psa. 55:22; 1 Pet. 5:6-7). Frankly, most of us would worry less if we just prayed more.
- Read the Word, and watch for stories about God’s care for His people. I realize this suggestion may sound far too basic, but that doesn’t make it any less imperative. Worry is bad thinking, and bad thinking can be driven out only by the truth that sets us free (John 8:31-32). Pour the things of God into your head (Phil. 4:8).
- Memorize and recite Jesus’ words as often as you need them. Particularly, quote these words: “And who of you by being worried can add a single hour to his life?” (Matt. 6:27). Worry doesn’t accomplish anything, except hinder our relationship with our Go—who, by the way, isn’t worried about anything.
- Thank God for every victory over worry He grants you–even if the victory seems small. Our victory ultimately is in Jesus, and it is He who empowers us to push beyond our worry. Be grateful.
- Don’t let the enemy win. It’s Satan who wants you to be bound up in worry. When you worry, ask God to break the enemy’s power over your life. Christ has already broken Satan’s back anyway (Col. 2:15), and He can give you peace the world won’t understand (Phil. 4:7).
Monday, December 25, 2023
Merry Christmas
Saturday, December 23, 2023
This Lord's Day (December 24, 2023) at Rainsville First Baptist Church
I will be preaching a very unusual Christmas message tomorrow partially in light of the war going on in Israel and how that war relates to the Christmas story (for it does!!). War is a part of life, but even most wars have had ceasefires during Christmas. But there is one war going on that does not take Christmas off but in face intensifies.
Join us for worship tomorrow as we look at the "War at Christmas" based on Revelation 12: 1-6.
Wednesday, December 20, 2023
The Making of a Prayer Journal - Part Five (Praying Hedge of Protection over your family)
1. Protection of the Heart
Father, I trust you to guard (insert names) their hearts and help them ever look to You in love and reverence. By Your grace, cause them to know, love and fear Your name. Guard their hearts from all lesser desires and passions. Lord, please fill them with the continual sense of Your presence and spirit of worship. (Proverbs 4:23; Matthew 15: 8; 22:37; John 4: 23-24; 17:3)
2. Protection of the Mind
Lord Jesus, I believe You to guard (insert names) minds and cause their thoughts to be taken captive to Yourself. Protect them from the suggestions of the world, the flesh and the devil. Fill them with the Holy Spirit and the very mind and thoughts of Christ. (2 Corinthians 10:5; 1 Corinthians 2:16)
3. Protection of Desires, Emotions and Passions
Dear Lord, I trust You to guard (insert names) desires, emotions and passions. Protect and shield them from improper attractions. Please fill them with hunger and thirst for righteousness. Grant them a passion to glorify and hallow Your name. Deliver them from the works of the flesh and fill them with the fruit of the Spirit. (Matthew 5:6, Galatians 5:18-22)
4. Protection from Wrong Relationships
Holy Father, I believe You to guard (insert names) from harmful relationships. Surround them with godly companions, friends and co-workers. Grant powerful awareness and strong conviction when a relationship is becoming unwholesome or wrong. Protect them from wrong involvements and fill them with supernational wisdom. (2 Corinthians 6:14)
5. Protection of the Eyes and Ears
Blessed Lord, I trust You to guard (insert names) eyes and ears from evil and fill their minds with Christ. Grant keen discernment when they see or hear evil. When they see or hear evil, cause their hearts to be repulsed, not enticed. Fill them with a pure eye, a clean mind and deep conviction of truth. (Proverbs 4:23; Matthew 6:22)
6. Protection from Physical, Financial and Spiritual Danger
Sovereign Lord, I believe You to guard (insert names) physically, spiritually, emotionally, mentally and financially. Please send mighty angels to hedge their paths and protect their steps. Fill them with blessing, health, safety, guidance and purpose. Cause them to clearly hear Your voice and walk in Your steps. Bless them indeed and use them for Your glory. (1 Chronicles 4: 9-10; Psalm 23: 91; 3 John 2)
7. Protection from Satanic Attack, Deception and Harassment
Blessed Savior, I trust You to guard (insert names) from all attack, deception, harassment and harm from Satan and his demons. Open their eyes to the deceptions and tactics of the Devil. Fill their minds with Your truth. Please tear down any strongholds or vulnerabilities in their lives. (Name any stronghold and tear them down by the weapons of prayer and Scripture). (2 Corinthians 10: 3-5; Ephesians 6:10)
Lord, cause Satan to release his grip and flee from their lives. Put about them the whole armor of truth, righteousness, peace and the shield of faith. For their particular stronghold or weakness, pray for them to be filled with the opposite trait of spiritual strength (examples: fear/peace; anger/gentleness, lust/purity, wrong desires/right desires, pride/humility, etc."
This is material by Dr. Gregory Frizzell
Monday, December 18, 2023
The Golden Gift of Christmas
These "wise men" were astrologists who had been fascinated with the star seen from the east. They followed it to Jerusalem and on to Bethlehem to find the young Child. There they presented gifts. Where did they get these gifts? Most likely they had them simply in their possession from home thinking they might have had to sell them to finance their trip.
Three gifts were presented which often causes us to believe there were three of these men but we don't know that for sure.
* Gold - Gold was for the king. It is the most precious and valuable metal of them all. By giving it they were acknowledging Jesus as the King.
* Frankincense - This was used by an incense used by priests in temple worship. By giving it they were acknowledging Jesus as a priest - the One who can bring us to God.
* Myrrh - This was a fragrant ointment used to anoint a body for burial. It had a bitter taste. But giving it they were acknowledging Jesus had come to die for the sins of the world. From the cradle, you can see the cross.
They brought gifts for our King, Priest, and Savior.
But gold is what gets my attention here.
Gold is not only the currency of worship but of God.
Gold was overlaid on the mercy seat in the Temple. This mercy seat was where God met man to forgive their sins. This seat was a wooden box representing the humanity of man and it was covered with gold representing God. This was a picture of Jesus who was both human and divine.
Haggai 2: 8 "The silver is Mine, and the gold is Mine," says the Lord of hosts.
Revelation 21:21 "And the street (singular) of the city was pure gold, ..."
God owns all the gold!!!
So when we come to worship, we should bring our gold - the best offering - to emphasize the importance of worship in our life and to honor the King to whom we give.
But there is one thing more precious to God than gold.
I Peter 1: 18-19 "knowing you were not redeemed with corruptible things, like silver and gold, ... but with the precious blood of Christ, as a lamb without blemish and without spot."
The blood of Jesus is more precious to the FAther than gold.
So what this says to me is this...we are to bring our best (gold) offering to God for worship, but what He honors the most is the presence of His Son's blood on us.
Saturday, December 16, 2023
This Lord's Day (December 17, 2023) at Rainsville First Baptist Church
In preparation for the message I will preach on Christmas Eve, I feel it is appropriate I lay some groundwork for why Israel is so vital and why we support the Jews. So, tomorrow we will gather around the Word of God from Genesis through Revelation to see the plans and purposes God has for the Jews.
There are notes prepared for the worshipper tomorrow, but you can also see those same notes here where each Sunday you can see the livestream of the service.
We look forward additionally to singing, giving, praying, and fellowshipping as we gather for worship.
Wednesday, December 13, 2023
The Making of a Prayer Journal - Part Five (Praying for your Family)
As we continue to look at each day of the week creating our prayer journal, today we look at Monday when we pray for our families.
Joshua 24:15 "But as for me and my house we will serve the Lord."
We want our family to walk in the will of God and to serve the Lord with gladness and joy.
Pray for their salvation, santification, and for God to direct their every step.
Pray for them by name, their spouses, and future spouses.
Pray for your siblings, parents, and grandparents.
Here is a wonderful resource to use in praying 30 Days for your Children.
Here is a great book by Dr. Gregory Frizzell on Praying for your Family.
In Dr. Frizzell's book, he talks about "Praying a Hedge of Protection and Growth" over your family. Next week I am going to share this resource here on this blog. It is that important.
Monday, December 11, 2023
The Greatest Story Ever Told! by Wade Trimmer
Hearing the word “story” connected with Christmas causes many to think of the event as being a fable or a fairy tale. Couple this with the story of Santa Claus, reindeer, trees, stockings, and gifts, and it’s easy to see why one would lump them all together as just another traditional, but untrue story.
I fear that many people have come to feel the same way about Christmas as one little girl felt. Sitting on Santa’s knee in the mall, she asked, “Are you a politician?”
“Why do you ask?” Santa replied.
“Because you always promise more than you can deliver,” she said.
The First Advent of King Jesus revealed that Father God had not promised more than He could deliver on. The birth of Messiah Jesus was the fulfillment of the promises that God had been making for centuries to Israel, the Old Covenant people of God.
On the first Christmas night almost 2,000 years ago, God delivered on His promises as the Star of the story of God’s unfolding drama of redemption is born in Bethlehem.
The Christmas Event is the greatest story the world has ever heard. The good news it brought and brings – the gospel - is the invitation to tear up all our own little scripts and self-made stories, and enlist, with a clean start and a strategic part, as members of the cast in God’s big redemptive story.
It is my humble opinion, that for too long we have viewed the Bible as a book about what we are supposed to do instead of seeing it as a word portrait of who God is. We have gleaned principles and precepts, formulas, and favorite lessons from it, and yet missed the big picture, the big story – the metanarrative.
“Metanarrative” means “big story.” It is a worldview in story shape. It means a big, comprehensive story that explains who we are, how we got here, why we are as we are, and where we are going. It is a universal that is big enough to cover all the particulars. A metanarrative shapes who we are, what we believe, what we aspire to be, as well as our vision of truth. When we lose it, we lose our identity, we lose ourselves.
The Bible is a metanarrative from creation to new creation. And because it is, as followers of King Jesus, we affirm with confidence what modern man denies, i.e., that there is a master story that makes sense of all reality. We offer what modern man demands, i.e., a real, historical, yet very personal story of the one true and living God who made us and then in the person of His Son, was willing to become one of us in order to redeem us from destruction. And then through His salvation, He would come, not only to redeem us from our sins, self, and Satan, but to intimately relate to us God by moving in to live in us in a forever love relationship! Glory to God in the Highest!
The weight of glory that this story carries makes me feel like the man who had been married for over twenty years and was asked why he and his wife had no children. He replied, “My wife is impregnable.” Realizing that this statement didn’t sound right, he corrected himself. “No, she’s inconceivable.” Even more dissatisfied, he said, “No, no, that’s not right. I guess you could just say that she’s unbearable!” Anyone trying to explain the marvel, mystery, majesty, and miracle of the big redemptive story of God experiences the same difficulty this man had.
God’s big glory story declares that He has spoken fully, finally and in a forever way in the Word that became flesh and dwelt among us as the glory of God - the Promised Messiah, the Star of the Story – the Fulfiller of all its prophecies and types.
The woman at the well in John 4:25 said in Peterson’s Message, “I do know that the Messiah is coming. When He arrives, we will get the whole story.” The whole gospel tells the whole, and old, old, but ever true story of Jesus and His love.
Philip Greenslade sums up the Big Story as he writes: “In him, the ‘Final Word made flesh’ (Jn. 1:14; Heb.1:1), the story of Israel is successfully written, the story of God is fully revealed, and the story of the world redeemingly redrawn.”
What’s your story? Living the “American dream”? Is it getting a good education, a good job, a good mate, get a couple of good children, get a lot of good stuff – cash, cars, clothes, cabins - a good house in a good neighborhood, occasionally attend a good church filled with good people, take a lot of good vacations, enjoy a good time golfing, gardening, and hunting and fishing, then retirement with good health, so that you can go to a good place called Heaven?
May I suggest to you that your story is far too small, too self-centered, and will never satisfy the reason for your being – that why-am-I-here cry that constantly echoes in the chambers of your heart.
Let me invite you to tear up your little script and join the cast of God’s Big Story. When you get truly captured by it, you’ll be so captivated with it that you’ll be compelled by love to tell the old, old story of God’s redeeming love. You’ll begin to understand that everything we do as believers - as those who are ‘in Christ’ - makes sense because it is connected to God’s big story, illuminating who we are in Christ, who He is in us, and what we are here for.
The hopes and fears of all the years have been meet in Messiah Jesus. We, as the Israel of God, with an assured offspring that will be as the stars of the sky in number, and as fellow members of a holy nation, can live as royal priest, re-presenting God to man and man to God – telling the greatest story ever told – God’s Big Glory Story of Redeeming Love!
Saturday, December 9, 2023
The Lord's Day (December 10, 2023) at Rainsville First Baptist Church
I think I know for sure. Your best Christmas gift did not involve a candy cane or a sack of coal.
The gifts of Christmas, in whatever form they come, are what makes Christmas so remarkable and memorable.
While the experience in Matthew 2: 1-11 is not at the actual birth of Christ, it is always connected with the Christmas story. Wise men come to visit bringing gifts.
But it was Paul who gave voice to what we all believe when he said in II Corinthians 9: 15 "Thanks be to God for the indescribable gift!!"
There is a gift beyond words. There is a gift so grand we can't describe it.
Tomorrow we will gather at 10:15 for worship to sing, pray, hear the Word of the Lord, and then give our gift during our annual "March to the Manger." Our Christmas gift to Jesus is a gift to missions. Can't wait.
Wednesday, December 6, 2023
The Making of a Prayer Journal - Part Four (Praying for your Church)
On Sunday, we pray for our church. Pray Colossians 1: 3 "We give thanks to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, praying always for you."
Pray for our Sunday worship service for the complete work of the Holy Spirit to be accomplished through His Word, for the manifested presence of Jesus to be experienced, and for God to be greatly glorified.
Pray for the unsaved guests and members who attend to be captured by the Holy Spirit resulting in them repenting and placing their full faith in Jesus Christ alone.
Pray for God to call our pastors and missionaries from among our church family.
Pray for your Pastor as He preaches. Pray for God to anoint him with fresh oil. Pray for our hearts to be open and sensitive to the Word coming from God's man to God's people at this time.
On this day, pray by name for your Pastor and his family. Pray for each ministerial staff member and their families. Pray for the elders and deacons of the church.
Pray for Sunday School teachers.
Pray for revival in the church.
There is a great resource here for "31 Days of Praying for Your Pastor"
I have a sheet inserted into my prayer journal for each of the different persons on this day.
Monday, December 4, 2023
What the War in the Middle East tells us about Feminism and the Gender Movement
This past Thursday (November 30, 2023) Dr. Al Mohler spoke on his daily podcast "The Briefing" about the war in the Middle East giving some unique insights into our modern-day culture wars and what this war is revealing about them.
Dr. Mohler is President of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, KY, and has been for over 30 years. He is a man who has a great mind for the Word of God and for culture bringing the two together each day in his podcast "The Briefing."
He noted two things about the continual release of hostages.
1. Women and children are being released first and are the ones being of top priority in the negotiations between Israel and Hamas.
Interestingly, he notes, that in our day of feminism and equal rights for women, no one is marching against this emphasis on women and children being released ahead of men. It would seem if you are for "equal rights" across the board, that should also go for war.
2. The absence of distinction when identifying those being released.
The negotiations are for men, women, and children to be released. No mention of the gender war going on concerning pronouns, non-binary or transgender. They are simply being referred to as men and women, boys and girls.
Why? Because in war and death, all of these other things are not primary. The moral obligation in these days of literal life and death is not gender or equality.
So it raises the question, if at our time of death what we forced others to call us or how we identified is not important, then why is it worth our time in the precious moments of life?
Saturday, December 2, 2023
This Lord's Day (December 3, 2023) at Rainsville First Baptist Church
We tend to forget because it is mainly done with fanfare, but as a church, we have partners in the gospel that extend our mission throughout the world.
Tomorrow, we are going to look at this "Partnership in the Gospel" based on Philippians 1: 4-5 and II Corinthians 8:4. What does it mean for us at Rainsville First Baptist Church?
Also tomorrow, we join millions of Southern Baptists around the world as we embark on a week-long prayer journey in praying for over 3,600 Southern Baptists missionaries in the world. The annual "Week of Prayer for International Missions" begins tomorrow.
Also tomorrow, Gary Blevins, Chairman of Deacons, will have a special announcement for the church.
Can't wait for it all....