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Our Rhythm of Study - Read the WORD

November 6, 2022

Growing up, there was one big reason why any church was to be preferred over another. They had to preach the Bible. Can I get an amen? Above everything else, the pinnacle of all things Christian, was this idea of preaching the word, and the way the word was to be preached was expository teaching. It couldn’t come out of a lectionary. It couldn’t be selected passages related to the church calendar. It couldn’t be topical. It had to verse by verse study of the Bible.

Our Rhythm of Study

October 30, 2022

When Mosaic was first started, we adopted five rhythms; Beautify, Listen, Eat, Study, & Sent. If you really think about these five "ways of life" you will see that they form the process of being and becoming a disciple of Jesus. As a result, our study is not random, it is focused. Focused on becoming more like the one we follow, ie. Jesus.

Our Rhythm of Eating Part 2

October 23, 2022

A number of years ago now, we took some time to discuss the things in Jesus’ life that were good news to those around him. We called it “The Lost Gospel” because it represents the things that were good news then, but are often not talked about now. One of those things seems to have been his willingness to welcome people into his life. Whether it was the children or the outcast, Jesus made room for all of them in his life and particularly demonstrates this during meal times.

Our Rhythm of Eating

October 16, 2022 • John 12:44—13:26

Take a few minutes to stop and think about what meals were like in your home as you were growing up. If you are still a young person, what it is like now? If you have your own kids, what is it like in your home? If you are an adult, whether single or married with no kids, what is it like for you now? It would be interesting to go through the entire Bible and find out how many direct references there are about important events taking place (whether past, present or future) during what we would now call a “church service”. Maybe it would have been while they were in the temple, or tabernacle, or synagogue, but you get the point. Then, to compare that with how many important events take place while at a meal. My guess is that there would be no comparison.