…missio
(my) church gathered.
i put stuff here. like my thinkings. and my seeings.
— @t_f
Posted 5 months ago
1 Notes
Posted 1 year ago
via eyesforyours
7 Notes
Posted 1 year ago
12 Notes
Question: What do you say to the person who says that church is not relevant and is boring?
R.C. Sproul: If we go to the Scriptures and see the record of individuals who encounter God in this world (e.g., Jacob at Bethel, Abraham in Genesis 15, Moses and the burning bush, Habakkuk, Job, Jeremiah, Isaiah), you’ll see a wide range of human emotions and reactions. Sometimes it’s a giddy joy. Sometimes it’s just an awe inspiring silence. Sometimes it’s the quivering lip and the trembling belly. Sometimes it’s the rottenness that enters the bones. Other times it’s weeping. There is no singular, monolithic, prescribed, human emotional response to an encounter with God’s presence in holy Scripture. If you canvass all of those events, the one emotion you will never ever, ever find in Scripture is that people are bored in the presence of God. So instead of trying to entertain and keep people’s attentions, why don’t we simply present God to the people and develop our worship in every way to awaken the people to the presence and character of Almighty God? If you bring people into the presence of God and give them His word, how can it not be relevant?
Posted 1 year ago
This is my band at church doing a song from The Northern Conspiracy (from Mars Hill Church) “What Have We Done”.
it’s a rough recording, but I like Josh on the Cello.
simply recorded by Jason.
Posted 1 year ago
2 Notes
This is my band at church doing the old hymn “Alas and did my Savior Bleed” by Isaac Watts that was adapted by Sojourn Community.
it’s just a rough recording, but i like that you can hear feedback in parts.
and sour notes.
but especially the baby in the beginning.
simply recorded by Jason.
Posted 1 year ago
via papertowngirl
8 Notes
You hear the word “sin,” but only briefly or redefined as “mistakes.”
You can’t remember when you last heard the name of Jesus in a message.
The Easter message isn’t about the resurrection but “new opportunities” in your life or turning over a new leaf.
On patriotic holiday weekends, the message is about how great America is.
On the other weekends, the message is about how great you are.
There are more videos than prayers.
People don’t sing during “worship,” but watch.
The pastors’ chief responsibilities are things foreign to Scripture.
There is more money budgeted for advertising than for mission.
The majority of the small groups are oriented around sports or leisure, not study or service.
You always feel comfortable there.
Church membership just appears to be a recruiting system for volunteers.
You only see other church people on Sunday mornings at church.
—-
If your church meets one or more of these, it might be a spiritual pep rally, a religious performance center, a Christian social club, or something else entirely, but it is probably not, biblically speaking, a gathering of the biblical church.(via GosplDrivenChurch)
and btw - this isn’t just the pastor - it’s the way that you do church…
Source: papertowngirl
Posted 2 years ago
via themodernpost
… Where Christian faith is offered as a means of finding personal wholeness rather than holiness, the church has become worldly.
There are many other forms of worldliness that are comfortably at home in the evangelical church today. Where it substitutes intuition and feelings for biblical truth, it is being worldly. Where its appetite for the Word has been lost in favor of light discourses and entertainment, it is being worldly. Where it has restructured what it is and what it offers around the rhythms of consumption, it is being worldly, for customers are actually sinners whose place in the church is not to be explained by a quest for self-satisfaction but by a need for repentance. Where it cares more about success than about faithfulness, more about size than spiritual health, it is being worldly. Where the centrality of God to worship is lost amidst the need to be distracted and to have fun, the church is being worldly because it is simply accommodating itself to the preeminent entertainment culture in the world. Is it not odd that in so many church services each Sunday, services that are ostensibly about worshiping God, those in attendance may not be obliged to think even once about his greatness, grace, and commands? Worship in such contexts often has little or nothing to do with God.
David F. Wells, “Introduction: The Word in the World,” in The Compromised Church: The Present Evangelical Crisis, ed. John H. Armstrong (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 1998), 31. (via themodernpost)
amyand i were talking about this last night - particularly how this ubiquitous western mentality shows up in “xtian” marriages.
Source: themodernpost
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