Family Movie Night “The Wizard of Oz”. Ryan Cummings, Classical
Transcription
Family Movie Night “The Wizard of Oz”. Ryan Cummings, Classical
Family Movie Night “The Wizard of Oz”. Sunday, September 11, at 4:30 p.m., in Morgan Hall. Ryan Cummings, Classical Guitarist in Concert Sunday, September 11, at 6:00 p.m., in the Bramblett Chapel Enjoy an hour of classical guitar music in the intimacy and acoustical vibrancy of the Bramblett Chapel. A love offering will be taken. One Church is Coming October 2! 11:00 a.m. all services will be combined in the Sanctuary. Worship at First Baptist 9/4/2016 Chapel: 8:45 a.m. Celebration: 11:00 a.m. Brian McCartney Sermon: “Expectations and Evaluations” Luke 14:25-33 Connexion: 11:00 a.m. Hambric Brooks Sermon: “Why Do I Fear Death?” John 14”1-3 PAGE TWO MUSIC MINISTRY Classical Guitarist Ryan Cummings in Concert September 25 at 6:00 p.m. Bramblett Chapel Enjoy an hour of classical guitar music in the intimacy and acoustical vibrancy of the Bramblett Chapel. A love offering will be taken. The Holly and the Ivories Piano Ensemble Concert December 18 at 6:00 p.m. Sanctuary Ten First Baptist pianists join together to bring holiday classics in a unique way with five grand pianos. STUDENT MINISTRY This Week What Makes You Happy 3- Reap Better, Sow Better Scripture- Romans 8:31 Orange Leaders Weekend September 9-10. Woodstock Community Church CHILDREN’S MINISTRY If you’re not following FBC Griffin Kids on Facebook and Instagram, you should! We share all kinds of updates about our weekly lessons and worship, as well as details about upcoming events and how you can help grow your child’s faith at home! Facebook – First Baptist Church of Griffin Kids Instagram – fbcgriffinkids Family Movie Night I Sunday, September 11 4:30 p.m., Morgan Hall “The Wizard of Oz” Bring your favorite movie snacks and your blankets and pillows. We’ll have popcorn and drinks! All are welcome to enjoy this classic with us! Sock Hop & Carnival I Sunday, October 2 4-7 p.m., Family Life Center Morgan Hall and the Gym ADULT MINISTRY Adults Ministries team with the Library ministry to provide and promote book discussions on pertinent topics for Christian believers. Our next discussion, which is open to all adults, will be Thursday, November 17, in the church library. Discussion will revolve around a book Dr. Hardee has mentioned several times in recent messages. It is Philip Yancey’s Disappointment with God. Copies will soon be available for check out or purchase at the library desk. We only ask that participants read the book before the discussion. We have previously discussed another of Yancey’s books, The Jesus I Never Knew. A number of Yancey’s books are available in your church library. Library hours are: Sundays 9:15-10:55 a.m. and 12:00-12:30 p.m.; Tuesdays 1:00-3:00 p.m.; and Wednesdays 6:00-8:00 p.m. Bible Study Alert! The following Sunday morning Bible study classes will soon begin a 13-session study of the book of the Revelation: Chapel Class, Morgan Class, Pathfinders Class, Construction Class , and Long Class. Dr. Hardee is also taking a Pastoral Look at Revelation on Wednesday nights in Morgan Hall, 6:006:50 p.m. Now is a great time to plug into a Sunday morning or weekday small group. PAGE THREE Christian Sympathy is Expressed to: Amber and Adam Head in the passing of their friend, Chuck Mesic, on August 25. Marian and Neal Sorenson in the passing of their greatneice on August 24. Family and friends of James Massion Jinks, who passed away August 4, 2016. He was the uncle of Elizabeth Jinks, and youngest brother of Marcus and Lorraine C. Jinks. New Member We would like to welcome our newest member, Matthew McCartney. Matthew joined by letter on August 28. Drawing for Meditation First Baptist member and artist Laura Miller offers a twoday introductory class in Zen Drawing. Drawing is good for both the brain and blood pressure. Students learn to draw simple repetitive patterns and combine them in various ways. Visit www.fbcgriffin.org/drawing to register! Ages 15 and up. No previous drawing experience or talent is required. The cost for two classes is $15 (plus supplies, approximately $10). Contact Laura Miller at: 678-346-6190 or [email protected] for more information. Daytime Women on Mission Demarius Cabrara will be the guest speaker at the Tuesday, September 6 meeting. We will begin at 11:00 a.m. in the FLC Hospitality Room. Demarius received an Operation Christmas Child shoebox as a teenager living in the Dominican Republic. Lunch will follow the program. Please bring a sack lunch. Beverages and dessert will be provided. No reservations required. Prayer Request We all have prayer requests. It is good for us to share with one another and with God our requests. The Prayer Ministry Team now has a prayer request! Each Sunday during the Chapel, Celebration and Connexion worship services there is a person interceding for the worship experiences. We are in need of volunteers who would be willing to pray once every month or two during either the early service (8:45-9:30) or 11:00 services in the prayer room. Please pray about this request and if you are willing to volunteer please call Ann Fisher at: 770-227-0489. Leave a message and she will return your call. Another praying opportunity occurs every Monday morning from 10:30 to 11:30 as a group meets to pray specifically for our church, the staff, and our members. We meet in the prayer room except on 4th Monday of each month when we meet in a member’s home. Please pray about and consider coming to pray along with us. If you are interested or have any questions please contact Joyce McCartney at: 404-513-9426. Finance Committee Meeting The September meeting of the FBC Finance Committee will take place Monday, September 19, at 5:45 p.m., in the Heritage Room. Helping in Louisiana In response to the disaster occurring in Louisiana the First Baptist Mission Council encourages individuals to send monetary support to the work that the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship (CBF) is assisting with in a variety areas following the devastating flooding in southern Louisiana. Cooperative Baptist Fellowship of Georgia (CBF/GA) is also working to provide assistance. You may give to CBF and/or CBF/GA as listed below. To provide monetary support for CBF’s relief efforts in Louisiana, give online here, or you may mail a check payable to “CBF” with Acct. 17006 in the memo line to: Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, P.O. Box 102972, Atlanta, GA 30368-2972 To provide monetary support through CBF/GA please send a contribution to: CBF/GA, BOX 4343, Macon, GA 31208, marked for Louisiana disaster response. Wednesday Night Menu August 31 –Chicken Pot Pie, Yellow Rice, Salad, Biscuits, Banana Pudding September 7 –Country Fried Steak, Mashed Potatoes, Green Beans, Salad, Biscuits Dessert September 14 –Egg Casserole, Grits, Hashbrowns, Cinnamon Rolls, Biscuits September 21 –Fried and Baked Chicken, Mashed Potatoes, Green Beans, Biscuit, Salad, Dessert From the Prayer Team: “Peacemakers who sow in peace reap a harvest of righteousness.” James 3:18 PAGE FIVE The Christian Dilemma Dr. Bill Hardee O ur religious teachings give us a moral compass. While the primary focus of religion is to connect people to God, the other major goal is to teach us how to live. In important ways, both of these things are intensely personal. While teachers and preachers may offer to us the truths of Scripture packaged in ways they believe do justice to the Bible, no one can relieve us from the responsibility to apply or not apply those ideas to our own lives. While doctrine is important, in Christianity, the role of doctrine is to connect us to God who in turn offers His Spirit to use to help us individually grow under the tutelage of the Holy Spirit. The Bible informs; the Spirit applies. If religious doctrine fills our mind with ideas but does not connect us we God, we are stillborn. Christians are often too naïve about the way we are molded by our world. We believe that we can create a Church totally in line with the ideals of God. History ought to teach us differently. Was there ever an age when people did not argue about what God said? Was there every an age when the interpretation of Scripture didn’t generate more heat than light? History also records too many moments where brother persecuted brother; moments when brother killed brother in the name of doctrine. Jonathan Swift said it poignantly, “We have just enough religion to make us hate, but not enough to make us love.” Our religion can draw lines or it can enlarge the circles of welcome, but it cannot do both. Throughout my life, I have found it mysteriously wonderful that “sinners” loved Jesus. The religiously serious were offended by Jesus’ sharing of bread and life with the outcasts. John the Baptist would have laid into those people with words of rebuke, even as the Pharisees did, but not Jesus. The religiously serious thought Jesus weak on sin. Strange, Jesus found them to be hypocrites who professed an ideal that none could measure up to. I don’t find that “sinners” today particularly love being with Christians, particularly those who seem to possess x-ray vision to see the faults of others. Therein lies our dilemma. How do Christians confess the truth of the Bible with humility? How do Christians hold a moral center without drifting into the mentality of an Old Testament Prophet, thundering rebuke and rejection? In a world where there seems to be so much wrong, how to we balance law and grace, requirement and mercy, judgment and forgiveness? Weeks ago after the wanton killing of 49 good people at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida, national news carried the report of one preacher who proclaimed that this event was the judgment of God on LGBT community and that he wished more had died. That event reminds me of an alleged conflict from the 19th century. According to the story, a controversy arose between the 2 prominent preachers, Newman Smith & Robert Hall. Newman Smith wrote a bitter pamphlet denouncing Robert Hall and what he believed to be his faulty doctrine. Having finished the pamphlet, Smith was having trouble coming up with what he thought was a proper title. So he sent the book to a good friend for a suggestion. Some time earlier Pastor Smith had written a widely read and helpful pamphlet entitled, “Come to Jesus.” When his friend read the new pamphlet against Hall, he sent the pamphlet back with this suggestion, “The title I suggest for your pamphlet is this, ‘Go to Hell,’ by the author of ‘Come to Jesus!’” It is said that Pastor Smith destroyed the pamphlet. Sounds like someone may have come to Jesus. So, how do we hold to our moral center but not slip over into judgment, cynicism, and a critical spirit? First, remember that personal and spiritual growth takes a lifetime. Salvation does not imply perfection. It is simply a description of someone who is beginning down a new road where they are remolded and refined over the course of a life. Only as we live and grow do we see other frailties in our lives which need to be overcome. Sinlessness is not the objective; wholeness is. During my teenage years, I had a bumper sticker that read, “Christians are not perfect, just forgiven.” Strange, even being flawed, we are forgiven, find peace, and discover a new source of joy. The teachings of Scripture are not given to make us better judges, but to make us better followers of Jesus. It is intriguing that the gospels tell us that in dealing with the ordinary people in Israel, Jesus taught only using parables. In other words, so many of the texts where we find more in-depth guidance seems to have been directed to the 12 disciples and those other followers who believed. He gave just a taste of the kingdom to the masses and waited for people to seek more. He wasn’t a moralistic prophet. He was a compassionate healer, a fascinating storyteller, a welcoming friend to the struggling, a defender of anyone weak, and a thorn in the hide of the judgmental. From time to time, I still see him in his people. PAGE SIX VITAL SIGNS | August 28, 2016 ATTENDANCE SERVING SUNDAY, September 4 If you’ve traded dates to serve, please remind the individual with whom you traded. Worship Attendance 473 CONTRIBUTIONS Budget $ 1,370,000.00 Linda Chappell, Ronnie Hopkins Needed Weekly $ 26,346.15 Intercessors: Jeanne Lesser, Chuck Prothro Common Grounds: Andrea’s Team– Becky & Moe Brooks, Received Budget (8/28/16) $ 17,727.35 Needed in 35 Weeks $ 922,115.25 April English, Andrea & Charles Woodroof Received in 35 Weeks $ 839,118.86 Below Requirement to date $ 82,996.39 Deacons: Pete Baldwin, Nicholas Bland, Len Bythewood, Extended Teaching Care 11:00 a.m.: Babies: Walkers: Ginger Clark, Carol Potter Twos: Brittany & Bryce Howell Threes: Jessica & Patrick McEwen Greeters: 8:45 a.m. Chapel Service: Brenda & Ed Bistany, Rudolph Bullard, Butch Sutton 11:00 a.m. Celebration Service: Martha Donehoo, Gail Gardner, Belinda Shaw 11:00 a.m. Connexion Service: Nicholas Bland, Hope Brooks, Teresa Brooks, Laura Cantrell, Becky Owen Library: Evans Millican Security Team: Shane Bean, Kim Willis Transportation: Call Kim Willis at 678-873-7295 First Baptist Church of Griffin 106 West Taylor Street Griffin, Georgia 30223-3025 www.fbcgriffin.org A Stephen Ministry Congregation Church Numbers Church Office ......................................... 770-227-5517 Fax number ............................................ 770-412-7873 Pastor’s Study/Pastoral Care ............... 770-227-1096 Weekday Office ...................................... 770-228-7880 Dr. Bill Hardee, Senior Pastor...………………..……………..………………ext. 120 Dr. Hambric Brooks, Associate Pastor……………………………………...ext. 123 Rev. Kyle Boyer, Minister to Students……………………………………….ext. 111 Rev. Sarah Murray, Minister to Families with Children…………………...ext. 122 Rev. Brian McCartney, Minister of Education………………………....……ext. 124 Rev. Marty Watts, Minister of Music and GSA Director…………………...ext. 121 Mrs. Diane Lamb, Weekday Director and Director of Food Service…….ext. 128 Dr. Bruce Morgan, Pastor Emeritus FAITH FORMATION THIS WEEK Wednesday, August 24 Sunday, August 28 Children 80 64 Students 74 34 129 255 283 353 Adults MINISTERS ON CALL Brian McCartney September 2-4 Marty Watts September 9-11 If you have an emergency after hours, on these weekends, and need to contact a minister, please call 678-572-3962. Worship Broadcasts can be found each Sunday on Comcast Cable Channel 25 (11:00 am and 10:00 pm) and at WKEU 88.9 FM (11:00 am) Live Streaming is now available on our website. For a detailed listing of calendar events, please visit the church website at www.fbcgriffin.org If you want information to appear in the E-Vision, please have all info to Publications by FRIDAY at 5:00 P.M. each week. All information for The Page should be in by WEDNESDAY at 12:00 P.M. each week. Information should be emailed to [email protected].