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The Hidden Curriculum

December 15, 2019 • Scott Scruggs

Every school has a formal and hidden curriculum. The formal curriculum includes things such as math, science and grammar. Meanwhile, the hidden curriculum includes things like who you sit with at lunch and who you choose to be friends with. It’s how the world works, the Church included. Unfortunately, the hidden curriculum of who’s in our group can cause us to have bias. We overlook the bad things our group does and magnify the good things. We view those in our own group as unique individuals and those outside as one big group of people who seem alike simply because they are aren’t like us. However, Jesus calls us to live differently. He calls us to get uncomfortable, stop avoiding others and confront our bias.

The Knowing/Doing Gap

December 22, 2019 • Scott Scruggs

The knowing/doing gap is having all of the data, knowledge and answers right in front of you, but never putting that knowledge into practice. Our biggest problem in the church isn’t information, it’s implementation. The Bible has all of the information and knowledge we need, yet there is a divide between reading Scripture and acting upon it. Jesus came to mend the knowing/doing gap and to show us how to transform our knowledge of God’s love for us into actions of love towards others. We can begin to show that transformative love by starting close to home, with what God has already equipped us in and even with just one person.

Livestream

December 22, 2019 • Scott Scruggs

The knowing/doing gap is having all of the data, knowledge and answers right in front of you, but never putting that knowledge into practice. Our biggest problem in the church isn’t information, it’s implementation. The Bible has all of the information and knowledge we need, yet there is a divide between reading Scripture and acting upon it. Jesus came to mend the knowing/doing gap and to show us how to transform our knowledge of God’s love for us into actions of love towards others. We can begin to show that transformative love by starting close to home, with what God has already equipped us in and even with just one person.

Before You Come Back

December 8, 2019 • Scott Scruggs

We all have that person in our lives who’s hard to love. Maybe they’re a co-worker you’re stuck on a project with or a family member who’s coming to visit for Christmas. If you don’t know who that person is, maybe you’re the one who’s hard to love. Either way, God has given us the ministry of reconciliation. We are called to engage in redemptive conflict in the following ways: 1. Go – Go and bring up the conflict with the person you have the conflict with. They deserve to be the first to know. 2. Admit – Admit to your own share of ownership in the conflict. 3. Pray – Love your enemies and pray for them. 4. Stay – Stay committed to the relationship and don’t give up.