The Great Commission Jesus gives us in Matthew 28:18-20 stresses making disciples of all nations and baptizing disciples in the name of Jesus. This Sunday we will hear from Bryan and Jennifer Lucas in church. Then immediately following church we will head to the Grimes’s house for a baptism and BBQ. This is truly a “Great Commission Sunday!”
Please sign-up to share something at the BBQ Here
“I can’t stand religious people!” This is a sentiment that is common today. Is it fair? In some ways, no. But in other ways, yes. It is absolutely not fair to lump all people that have faith (in some way) as a certain kind of “religious” person. Just like it would be unfair to say “I can’t stand all people from Nevada!” (There are many lovely people in Nevada!) It is also unfair because “religious” people can be loving, kind, self-sacrificing, examples of godliness, and make the world around them better! But the statement above is totally fair if we are talking about a “religious” person who says they love God, but their actions are in complete contradiction to what God desires. They are total hypocrites. I get it why people would not like these sorts of “religious” people.
One of the classic arguments against Christians is, “How dare you push your morality on me?” This is a good argument if morality is simply a conversation about whose personal opinion about morality is better. The flaw in the argument is that Christian morality is from God, not from the individual. In other words, our morality as Christians is not our own. A response to this person might be, “Are you not simply saying your morality is better than my morality? What makes yours better? And, by the way, why are you insisting I abandon my morality for yours?” (insert loving, caring tone) This week in Romans Paul addresses human self-righteousness and morality.
This Sunday is our 2nd Summer BBQ! We will worship, take communion, and I will preach on “The Most Divisive Issue Today” in the American church. Wow. A can’t miss Sunday!
The concept of wrath is not popular in modern culture. And for good reason! God’s wrath is a holy reaction to anything sinful. Wrath is distasteful to modern people because punishment for anything seems harsh, mean, and unnecessary. Harsh because people don’t understand the weight of sin against God. Mean because any level of holding people accountable is taking away freedom. And unnecessary because people don’t believe their actions are wrong. How can we possibly reconcile God’s wrath with His love, justice, mercy, grace, and holiness?
Sin, as theologian D.A. Carson puts it, involves “the de-godding of God.” What a wild statement! We, of course, can never make God not God in reality. But the very nature of sin is de-godding God in our minds and lives. We replace God with other gods that occupy our attention, allegiance, and energy. The Bible calls these God-replacements idols. We de-god God with idols in our lives. And this is the what D.A. Carson is referring to. We take God off of his throne and replace Him with something else. Most of the time, that something else is us. We climb onto God’s throne to run our own lives and make ourselves the greatest authority.
This Sunday we will celebrate two significant life events in our community! First, William Ronald Karch will be baptized. Second, we will celebrate our 2022 graduates after church at the Grimes’s house - all are welcome!
Come this Sunday to celebrate. I will preach a special sermon (not in Roman’s series) on baptism and why The Covenant Church baptizes infants as well as believer’s in baptism. I believe this has practical implications for all of us as a community of believers!
Summer is here! That means Summer BBQ’s and activities. We love to gather together over food and fellowship!
Here are 2 Events for June:
June 5 - After Church BBQ (Stay after church at school for a famous Rock BBQ)
June 12 - Celebrate Rock Graduates (Grimes’s House after church)
Another week of horrible news in our world. Children being killed at school is not right and everyone knows it. We want justice. We want help. We want things to be made right. All of us. Many disagree on what must be done to make things right. But all of us agree this world is broken and needs fixing when school children are killed in a place they should find security, education, and a loving community. Although I believe more can be done to address the problem politically, I ultimately believe we need the power of God to address the defects in our hearts. The defects that would lead to murderous acts. And the defects that lead to anti-God tendencies in all of us. We need the power of God.
I love articles that proclaim, “Celebrities are just like us.” They usually involve a celebrity spilling coffee on themselves, changing a baby’s diaper, or some such mundane life activity. The irony, of course, is that celebrities are not just like us. The coffee they are drinking is in Italy. The baby is being changed at a 5 star resort. Their lives are simply more luxurious and exotic than most! But in terms of being human beings with human joys, sorrows, laughter, and sadness, they are just like us. People in the Bible are similar.
This Sunday I will start preaching in Romans. It is the beginning of a journey that I hope will be life changing for us. Does that sound too big? Life changing? Yes! Romans has been impactful on some of the great church leaders in history. Augustine gave his life to Jesus when confronted with Romans 13:13-14. Martin Luther’s perspective of God changed from hateful judge to loving grace-giver when he understood Romans 1:17. John Wesley’s “heart was warmed” upon hearing a Romans sermon after a long, disillusioning mission experience. For me the call to preach Romans has produced excitement, challenge, and anxiety. Why?
The term “unfinished business” is used in many contexts. A team that loses the championship game has “unfinished business.” They want to finish by winning the following season. Someone who wants to get revenge against their enemy might have “unfinished business.” They want to finish by exacting revenge. In the final verses of Acts we see the most consequential “unfinished business.” The people of Acts have completed their work. The greatest legacy story ever told has come to an end. But there is “unfinished business” for the following generations. The “unfinished business” of gospel proclamation has continued through the centuries since Acts finished. And we still have “unfinished business” today.
Personal motives are tricky. Our motives can be good and pure. Our motives can be hidden and selfish. Our motives can also be so complicated that we don’t even understand them! This week in Acts I will explore Paul’s motives in reaching out to his fellow Jewish countrymen regarding Jesus. Paul is consistent in reaching out to Jews every time he enters a new city. And the Jewish leaders are consistent in persecuting Paul for his belief in Jesus. What could Paul’s motives possibly be reaching out to the Jewish leaders in Rome?
Easter Sunday Service @ 9:00 am
Today is traditionally referred to as Good Friday. The day Jesus is taken to a criminal’s cross and killed. Jesus is then buried in a borrowed tomb guarded by Roman soldiers. It is a day of tragedy, suffering, death, and mourning. So why is this Friday good? Certainly not because of the unjust trial, conviction, and death sentence. Of course not because of the mental anguish and suffering of Jesus. And in the eyes of Jesus’s family, friends, and followers that Friday was horrific. But this Friday changed the course of human history. This was no ordinary death. The death of Jesus ultimately leads to life. This death foreshadows resurrection. THE resurrection of Jesus and all future resurrections of Christians! So this Friday is ultimately good.
This Sunday marks the beginning of Easter week!
Palm Sunday represents the day Jesus entered Jerusalem the final week of his earthly life. We will celebrate Jesus entering into Jerusalem by waving palms and singing songs of joy. That same Sunday we will read from the Bible as a church and sing songs of joy, lament, and hope. We will walk through the week in readings and song, feeling emotions as Jesus and the disciples must have. We will culminate the service with a reading of Jesus’s burial and communion leaving the taste in our mouths of Jesus in the grave.
Easter is one of the most sacred holidays for the Christian church. The passion week presents some of the highest of highs and the lowest of lows. To fully understand our faith in Jesus we must relive the week leading up to Jesus’s death, burial, and resurrection every year! This year is no different. We begin Easter season this week at The Rock.
It has always amazed me that this world can be so beautiful (both the natural world and people in the world!) and so tragic at the same time. God had created this world “very good” according to Genesis 1:31, but soon after the first humans rebelled against God and God “cursed the ground” (Gen. 3:17; Rom. 8:22). The world has never been the same. We see today a remnant of God’s creation and humans bearing the beautiful image of God. But we also see natural disasters and inexplicable wars. We live everyday in this juxtaposition.
There are two important things happening this Sunday, March 13:
1) SERVICE TIME CHANGE to 4:30 pm
2) ANNUAL MEMBER’S MEETING immediately following church
I look forward to being together this Lord’s Day for worship, prayer, Bible teaching and fellowship!
Before Covid, cruise ships were an extremely safe activity. A Mediterranean cruise was a safe, lovely way to spend a vacation. We have come a long way in cruising since the Titanic! But first century sea travel in the Mediterranean could be dangerous. Acts 27 is the greatest shipwreck story ever told. There is danger, drama, lost hope, and gained trust in God! This Sunday we will see how God was at work in the crew of this ship in hopeless times.