Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Closed For Christmas????


There’s a little media frenzy over the fact that several churches are choosing to close their doors on Christmas day. There are many views to this argument, but it basically looks like this:

Yes, We are closing! When Christmas falls on Sunday very few people come, so rather than mobilize all our volunteers for a minimal turn out, we’re choosing to focus our attention on Christmas Eve services.

No, We are NOT closing! When Christmas falls on Sunday it makes this scared day even more special because it allow us to evangelize entire families.

Some bloggers and Church websites have basically said that the church is in a catch-22 or a damned if they do and damned if they don’t situation. The church has to make a choice either to be open or close.

I want to weigh in with a few thoughts. First let’s keep in mind that THIS is MY blog and MY thoughts and has NO reflection on what any other pastor or church does Christmas morning. So with that said here are just a few thoughts I have about “Closing For Christmas.”

1. Christmas falling on Sunday should be as natural as Easter on Sunday & Thanksgiving on Thursday. Wish it was on Sunday every year!

2. Is the glass half full or half empty? While many may decide not to attend should that determine whether or not we open our doors?

3. Will there be any less need for the church on Sunday, December 25th? Will there not be hurting, discouraged and depressed people who need to hear the wonderful Christmas story of love, hope, healing and deliverance.

4. When has church been only about numbers? I never want my staff or volunteers to say, we shouldn’t have an event because of numbers. Last, week one person came to the altar crying, give her life to Christ and join the body of Christ – that brought joy to my heart. I didn’t say it was just one.

5. What are we saying to the world when we close our doors? What message is being communicated about the birth of Christ through close doors? The Church has been silence too many times when it should be celebrating and making some noise.

With that said, this year with Christmas Day falling on a Sunday – The Lord’s Day, churches and Christian families will have to “choose this day” whom they are going to serve. Either they will cater to the traditions of a secular Christmas morning and forego church, or make worship on that day primary and traditions secondary.

As for our church and as for me and my house, I suppose we will choose that day to do what we do when Easter falls on a Sunday. We will serve the Lord and celebrate Him at church.

Greater Bethel Church will be open on Sunday, December 25th this Christmas morning. We’re encouraging our membership:

  • To be present before you open presents
  • To celebrate the gift before you open a gift
  • To give the gift of worship to the Christ-child before you give a gift to your child
  • To open your heart to the greatest gift before you open you hand to any other gift
  • And come gather around the cradle before you gather around the tree

“Christmas, is Jesus’ Birthday,” my oldest granddaughter says.

Have a Merry Christmas!

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

God Is Watching Over You


Let me first start by giving a GREAT BIG shoot-out to Greater Bethel Church for a awesome Pastor’s Support Annual Day. Your love and support was uplifting as well as encouraging to Janice & I. Many times people who sit in the pew Sunday after Sunday being encourage never think that the person who stand in the pulpit Sunday after Sunday need encouragement too. Special thanks to the PAC lead by the very vocal & outspoken Ms. Jerrion Cooper “Love you with all my heart.” Finally, to my little/big brother Rev. Ray E. Owens, Pastor of the Macedonia Church of South Bend, Indiana (you can follow him on twitter, blog or church website http://macedoniapastor.blogspot.com/ http://www.macedoniahelps.org/ ) I’m always amazed to watch the growth of a preacher/pastor enormous leap, he was already a passionate & powerful preacher but God took him to another level “proud of you”. Macedonia you have a special gift cherish it, protect it, love it & surround it with prayer.

This has been a very hectic few weeks with final papers due and studying for final grades. Sometime life hits so hard that it causes you to feel down and sometimes even depressed. There are times when life simply doesn’t make sense. During the holiday season with Christmas music, shopping, gifts, & trees, many people aren’t happy. So no matter what you are facing be sure to remember that God’s Got You! God is the Master over winds & waves, sickness & suffering, fear & frustration, pain & problem, troubles & tragedies, disappointments, difficulties, depression, debt, disease, demons & even death.

I want to share one of my favorite passages, Psalm 91:10–11 says "No evil shall befall you, nor shall any plague come near your dwelling; for He shall give His angels charge over you, to keep you in all your ways."

Don’t you just sense your Father’s love in these words? Like a mother hen that spreads her wings over her chicks to protect them, God will “cover you with His feathers, and under His wings you shall take refuge”. (Psalm 91:4) So don’t be fearful of accidents, attacks, pains, predicaments, failures, falls, hell-raisers or haters because your heavenly Father loves you and watches over you.

One of the ways He does this is with His angels. God has declared that no evil, plague or accident will befall you or even come near your dwelling “for He shall give His angels charge over you, to keep you in all your ways”. When He says “no”, He means “no-thing”! And if He tells His angels to “keep you in all your ways”, it means 24/7 divine protection for you!

My friends, your heavenly Father is watching over you. That is why no evil will befall you, nor will any plague come near your dwelling. And He has a host of angels to keep you in all your ways!

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Do Babies Go To Heaven


I just recently received a call from a young mother who's 13 month old child whom we had been praying for telling me she had died. After a long pause she asked me, "what happens to my baby, will my baby go to heaven?"

The following is what I've shared with this grieving mother to comfort her.

"What happens to babies who die?" I think they're all saved. In other words, I don't buy the principle that says that children born into "covenant families" are secure, and children born into "non-covenant families" aren't. I don't go there.

My reason for thinking they're all saved is because of the principle in Romans 1 where Paul argues that all people know God, and they are "without excuse" because they do not honor him or glorify him as God.

His argument is that they are without excuse because they know things, as though accountability in the presence of God at the Last Judgment will be based, at least partly, on whether they had access to necessary knowledge.

And God says they've all got access to knowledge, because they can look at the things he has made and see his power and deity. But they suppress that knowledge instead of submitting to it, therefore they're all condemned.

So I ask the question: OK, is the principle being raised there that, if you don't have access to the knowledge that causes you to be held accountable, therefore you will not be accountable? And I think that's the case.

I think babies and imbeciles—that is, those with profound mental disabilities—don't have access to the knowledge that they will be called to account for. Therefore, somehow in some way, God, through Christ, covers these people.

So that, in a nutshell, is why I think all children who die in infancy are elect and will be, through Jesus Christ, saved in ways that I may not know how, as God honors this principle of accountability.

Thursday, December 01, 2011

Day 37 of 40 Days of Faith

Today is Day 37 of 40Days of Faith: as I read Philippians 1:18-2:18 it was these words that kept repeating "For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain.” Let me place a window so that you can to see God's special message hidden in this passage. When the Apostle Paul originally wrote this letter to the church in the town of Phillipi, the circumstances of his life weren’t exactly ideal. He was in prison - under house arrest in Rome – chained to a Roman soldier as his guard. Paul was a prisoner and yet this entire letter shouts with triumph. It is filled with the words “joy” and “rejoicing”. The Christian experience is meant to be the life and mind of Christ working their way into our lives, whatever our circumstances might be. So re-joy no matter what.

You see, God has a purpose for life – for His glory. For Paul, life was not about getting things, or being happy with our situations. For Paul, life was about pointing others to God. For him life was all about Jesus. It was about giving God the glory for everything. For good times, because they are a blessing. For bad times, too, because God uses them to make us stronger. God has a purpose for each of our lives. We are not floating on a rubber raft in the ocean, just nowhere to go and not knowing how to get there. Life has been described as propping a ladder against a wall, and spending all your years climbing it. Too many people will climb all their lives, only to get to the top and realize they were climbing the wrong wall. God has a purpose for each of us.