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Week of 3/26/2017

The True Tent

March 26, 2017 • Pastor Steve Pope

Sermon Meditation for Sunday, March 26th

Looking to Jesus
“The True Tent”
Read: Hebrews 8:1-7

I was a first-year college student when I first read The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis. The book has nothing to do with divorce from marriage, but divorce from the temporary into the eternal. I was especially captivated with the lead character’s description of Heaven’s grass as too hard to walk on - it’s more real than what we are used to. Heaven is God’s ultimate reality, and this earth and all it contains are temporal and soon to pass away. Everything you see around you will one day cease to exist.

The pattern for the tabernacle was revealed to Moses by God on “the mountain.” (Exodus 25:40) The tabernacle was the tent of meeting between God and His people. The tabernacle furniture and the tabernacle itself represented the “real” and eternal elements of God’s Heavenly Throne room. The “true tent” (Gk. skēnē) refers to God's presence in Heaven. The earthly tabernacle serves as a picture of entering into God's presence on earth and in heaven.

Moses’ tabernacle in the desert was, “temporary and inadequate,” but it was not false. “‘True’ is used here as opposed to the shadowy or unreal.” (Hebrews Commentary by John MacArthur) One day, the shadowy and temporary will yield to the solid and permeant reality of God’s Heaven.

The apostle Paul shares this principle in II Corinthians 4:18, which says “we fix our gaze on things that cannot be seen. For the things we see now will soon be gone, but the things we cannot see will last forever.” The eternal spiritual realities are the only things worth living for; God’s love, the gospel message, and the fact that you were made to live with God forever. That’s why the choice to serve and follow God is the most important decision you will ever make.

C.S. Lewis put it this way; “There are only two kinds of people in the end: those who say to God, ‘Thy will be done,’ and those to whom God says, in the end, ‘Thy will be done.’ All that are in Hell, choose it. Without that self-choice there could be no Hell. No soul that seriously and constantly desires joy will ever miss it. Those who seek find. To those who knock it is opened.” The Great Divorce, C.S. Lewis

Hoping to see you Sunday as we discuss eternal realities and worship Jesus,

Pastor Steve

Week of 5/21/2017

May 21, 2017 • Pastor Luke Dailey

Church Family, "Give us today our daily bread." - Matthew 6:11 (H.C.S.B.) I'm fairly new at this wild journey of a ride that we call "parenting." I have an adorable 20 month old daughter, and an 8 week old Gerber Baby model daughter (she's not really a model, calm down). So as far as time and seasons of life in parenting, my experience is lacking. However, I can tell you that I'm looking forward to ALL of the seasons with my kids. Every stage of their development is my favorite. Parents are "strongly encouraged" (or pushed) to parent well. And everyone has an opinion on how to parent well! So there's a lot of information and suggestions being thrown my way as a fairly new dad. One of the strongest suggestions that I hear, and that you have probably been told as well, is that we, as parents, must teach our children to be independent. In our culture, we truly believe that individualism is the key to success. The more independent you are, the better off you are! But when we open God's Word and seek His truth, I find the opposite to be true - we are meant to be DEPENDENT. We are, first of all, supposed to be dependent upon God as the source of all things, and we are meant to be dependent upon the Church, and we are meant to be dependent upon family. When we open the Bible we are forced to see that our culture's view of independence is a shipwrecked idea. This Sunday we will examine the Bible, be convicted, be encouraged, and be built up as we understand the reasons behind our dependence upon our God! See you there, Luke Dailey

Week of 5/14/2017

May 14, 2017 • Pastor Steve Pope

Sermon Meditation Learning to Pray with Power, Part 4 “Heaven on Earth!” Matthew 6:10 & I Peter 3:10-12 Many of us grew up attending religious communities that practiced rote and ritual recitation of the Lord’s prayer, “Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name.” We spoke the words out loud in unison without ever considering the Spirit-inspired power of each and every phrase. Even more concerning, we were never encouraged to consider the application of these words to daily living. Jesus’ model prayer was never intended for rote or ritual recitation, but is to serve as our guideline for daily times of intimate prayer with Jesus. This Sunday, we will drink in the beautiful and powerful next seven words; “on earth as it is in Heaven.” This phrase is as much a prerequisite to prayer as it is a request. What would life be like if our lives were in harmony with the perfect will of God? If the will of God was perfectly established “on earth as it is in Heaven?” We know His will is “good, pleasing, and perfect,” but have we often prayed that our lives and the lives of our loved ones would be brought into full submission to the beautiful will of God? When we answer this prayer with lives of obedience to God, we receive this powerful promise from the book of I Peter, “The eyes of the Lord watch over those who do right, and his ears are open to their prayers.” I Peter 3:10-12 Join us this Sunday as the Scriptures instruct us on the promise of having the Lord’s eyes watch over us, and having assurance that our prayers are being heard by Almighty God. Hope to see you this Sunday! Pastor Steve

Week of 5/07/2017

May 7, 2017 • Pastor Steve Pope

Sermon Meditation for Sunday, May 7th “All the Best!” Matthew 6:10; II Corinthians 10:3-5 I think we’ve all experienced the pain and sadness of watching a son or daughter, husband, wife or close friend stray from the Lord. Often, we’ve tried everything in hopes of bringing them home again - begging, pleading, and rebuking in tears. All our words and efforts only seem to drive these prodigals farther from God. And we watch helplessly as they march down the broad path leading to sure destruction. (Matthew 7:13, 14) The truth of our loved one’s situation is not easily observed with the eyes of the flesh. In Scripture, however, we learn the actual condition of our prodigals. They are in bondage, trapped in a high-walled fortress built of lies. No light can penetrate their chaotic and self-destructive minds. Before our prodigals are set free to experience the love of God, these fortress walls must be demolished. This Sunday morning, we will learn God’s instructions for seeing our prodigals set free. The apostle Paul gives us a clear understanding of the nature of the battle and the powerful weapons at our disposal. In this season of life in America, more and more people are walking away from God and from His church. Rather than grieving and wringing our hands with worry, it’s time to take action. Not with the weapons of this fleshly world, but with the powerful weapons at our disposal in Christ. This day we fight! Come and learn how to fight for your marriage, family and church. Blessings, Pastor Steve