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R.C. Sproul: What Is Grace?

thank you notes for children’s ministry volunteers

A number of decades ago at the Ligonier Valley Study Center, we sent out a Thanksgiving card with this simple statement: “The essence of theology is grace; the essence of Christian ethics is gratitude.” In all the debates about our role versus God’s role in sanctification—our growth in holiness—we’d stay on the right track if we’d remember this grace-gratitude dynamic. The more we understand how kind God has been to us and the more we are overcome by His mercy, the more we are inclined to love Him and to serve Him.

Yet we can’t get the grace-gratitude dynamic right if we aren’t clear on what grace means. What is grace? The catechisms many of us learned as children give us the answer: “Grace is the unmerited favor of God.” The first thing that we understand about grace is what it’s not—it’s not something we merit. In fact, if that is all we ever understand about grace, I’m sure God will rejoice that we know His grace is unmerited. So, here’s our working definition of grace—it is unmerit.

Paul’s epistle to the Romans sheds light on what we mean when we say that grace is unmerit. In 1:18–3:20, the Apostle explains that on the final day, for the first time in our lives, we will be judged in total perfection, in total fairness, in absolute righteousness. Thus, every mouth will be stopped when we stand before the tribunal of God. This should provoke fear in the hearts of fallen people, as condemnation is the only possible sentence for sinful men and women: “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (3:23).

But those who trust in Christ Jesus have hope, for if we are in Him by faith, we have been “justified freely by His grace.” Note that justification is accomplished not by obligation, but freely through grace on account of the redemption purchased by Jesus alone. There’s no room for boasting, for we are justified not by our works but by grace alone through faith alone. Paul goes on to cite Abraham as the preeminent example of one who was justified by faith alone and therefore free from God’s sentence of condemnation. If the basis for Abraham’s salvation, his justification, was something that Abraham did—some good deed, some meritorious service that he performed, some obligation that he performed—if it were on the basis of works, Paul says, he would have had something about which to boast. But Abraham had no such merit. All he had was faith, and that faith itself was a gift: “Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness” (4:3; see Eph. 2:8–10).

Romans 4:4–8 is a key passage here:

Now to the one who works, his wages are not counted as a gift but as his due. And to the one who does not work but believes in him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is counted as righteousness, just as David also speaks of the blessing of the one to whom God counts righteousness apart from works: “Blessed are those whose lawless deeds are forgiven, and whose sins are covered; blessed is the man against whom the Lord will not count his sin.

That’s grace. Paul couldn’t say it any other way. To him who works, it’s debt; if you merit something, it means that someone is obligated to pay you. If I hire you as an employee and promise to pay you one hundred dollars if you work eight hours, I must pay you for working the eight hours. I’m not doing you a favor or giving you grace. You’ve earned your pay. You’ve fulfilled the contract, and I’m morally obliged to give you your wages.

With respect to the Lord, we are debtors who cannot pay. That’s why the Bible speaks of redemption in economic language—we were bought with a price (1 Cor. 6:20). Only someone else—Christ—can pay our debt. That’s grace. It’s not our good works that secure our rescue but only the works of Christ. It’s His merit, not ours. We don’t merit anything. He grants us His merit by grace, and we receive it only by faith. The essence of grace is its voluntary free bestowal. As soon as it’s a requirement, it’s no longer grace.

4 Ways Husbands Should Lead

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There are four primary ways from the Bible that husbands should lead.

“Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the church and gave himself for her to make her holy, cleansing her with the washing of water by the word.”
Ephesians 5:25-26 CSB

Many people get stuck on Paul’s directive in Ephesians 5 for wives to submit to their husbands. But Paul gives three times as much space to his instructions for the husbands as he does their wives. We may be quick to miss it, but what Paul says to men is just as counter-cultural today as any biblical teaching on submission. Our society certainly does not like the idea of submission. But as it turns out, the men of our society don’t really like to lead, either.

Paul’s instructions in Ephesians 5, which draw from the creation narrative of Genesis 2, give us at least four ways husbands should lead in a Christ-like leadership role.

4 Ways Husbands Should Lead

1. Husbands should lead by providing for the wife.

Before God created the woman, he had the man working in the garden. Only after Adam had a job did God bring him a wife.

There’s a very simple application here: Ladies, if he can’t hold down a job and still uses his parents’ credit cards, you might want to think twice!

2. Husbands should lead the way spiritually.

When Eve was brought to Adam, he already had a relationship with God. He was tasked with relaying to her the commands of God and leading her in obeying them.

Men, as the spiritual leader in your home, you are to wash your wife, as Paul says, “with water by the word.” That means you lead your family in the application of Scripture.

This doesn’t mean you have to lead your wife in a Bible lesson every night—though it wouldn’t hurt. It could be as simple as saying, “Hey, baby, how can I pray for you?” and then holding her hand and praying over her. When you look up, she’s probably going to be crying, and you’re going to be leading…and then you can write me a thank you note for that simple piece of advice.

Washing your wife with the word means you become the primary mouthpiece declaring to her God’s feelings about her—that she is valued, cherished and precious in God’s sight, with a bright future because of God’s plans for her. Ask yourself: If your wife’s spiritual identity was based solely on your words to her, what would she think of herself?

3. Husbands should lead in romance.

The first human words recorded in the Bible were Adam composing a love poem about his wife. (It sounds better in Hebrew.) He was the one expected to take initiative and romance his wife.

Men, you should be the one budgeting for and suggesting date nights. You should be expressing your love in ways that don’t come as naturally to you because that’s how your wife needs to be loved. You should be the one figuring out when the relationship is in trouble and that you need some counseling.

4. Husbands should lead in sacrifice.

In Ephesians 5:31 Paul references God’s instruction to the man to leave his previous life and cleave to his wife: “For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two will become one flesh.”

Paul then makes a startling comparison. He says that when husbands do this, they mirror Jesus’ relationship with us: Jesus left his heavenly home and laid down his life for us. Now we are to do that for our wives.

Laying down my life doesn’t simply mean being willing to die for my wife; it means daily putting her needs above mine and using my power to serve her.

It means that in decisions, I give her needs and preferences more weight than my own. If I am serving my wife like Christ served the church, then in 90 percent of instances where we disagree, we are going to end up doing what she wants, because most decisions are not spiritual leadership decisions—they are preferences, and mine should always be second to hers.

C.S. Lewis says that in the marriage relationship, men wear a crown, but it is first and foremost one of thorns.

Humanity fell because men didn’t lead like Christ. It was Adam, not Eve, who sinned first. Genesis 3 says that he was “with” the woman when she ate, which means he failed to be the spiritual leader and protect Eve. The first sin was as much one of omission as it was commission: the failure of man to lead. It’s the same sin besetting the men of our society today. When men in the church re-assume their leadership role, their families and our society will be transformed.

Men, your families will be most impacted when you are the one leading family devotions, when you are the one setting the priorities, when you are leading in discipline and keeping the family schedule on track.

Leading your family is your most important assignment.

For more, be sure to listen to the entire message here.

This article about how husbands should lead originally appeared here.

Rumors ‘The Passion of the Christ’ Sequel Is Shooting in Spring Confirmed To Be False

(L) Mel Gibson Georges Biard, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons (R) Screengrab via IMDB

Last week (Jan. 4), “World of Reel” published an article announcing that Mel Gibson’s highly anticipated sequel to the 2004 blockbuster “The Passion of the Christ,” titled “The Passion of the Christ: Resurrection,” would start shooting this spring.

ChurchLeaders reached out to Gibson’s creative marketing and communications agency representatives, Rogers & Cowan PMK, and asked if the rumors were true.

They are not.

Rogers & Cowan PMK representatives informed ChurchLeaders that although it has been reported that the movie is currently in the works, there are no immediate plans to move forward.

“The Passion of the Christ,” a film that depicts the 12 hours leading up to Jesus’ death on the cross, was released on February 25, 2004. It collected over $611 million worldwide—an enormous success, especially considering it only had a budget of $30 million.

RELATED: Mel Gibson Tells Colbert ‘The Passion’ Sequel Could Deal With the Dark Realm of Spiritual Warfare

The sequel was first rumored to be happening in 2016 when Gibson teased it during an episode on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.” Gibson revealed to Colbert that he was working on the sequel, adding that the account of Christ’s resurrection is more than a single event.

“It’s an amazing event and to underpin that with the things around it is really the story. To enlighten what that means. It’s not just about the event. It’s not just some kind of chronological event,” Gibson said.

In 2020, actor Jim Caviezel, who was rumored to be reprising his role as Jesus of Nazareth, told Alex Marlow of Breitbart News Daily that “it’s going to be the biggest film in world history.”

Since the “The Passion of the Christ” was released, both Gibson and Caviezel have made various news headlines.

RELATED: ‘The Passion of the Christ’ Actor Jim Caviezel Speaks at QAnon Conference, Quotes Braveheart

The 67-year-old Gibson was scheduled to appear alongside Tulane University’s football coach Willie Fritz as the co-Grand Marshal of the 2023 Mardi Gras parade but was recently removed after some raised concern about Gibson’s past history of making antisemitic, racist, and misogynistic comments.

Caviezel (54) recently made the news after he spoke “The Patriot Voice” conference, which is known for its association with QAnon, a speech wherein he quoted lines from Gibson’s Academy Award winning film “Braveheart.”

Demi Lovato Ad Featuring Bondage, a Crucifix and the F-Word Banned in the UK

demi lovato
Frank Schwichtenberg, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

A poster of singer Demi Lovato wearing bondage-style clothing and lying on a bed shaped like a cross has been banned from the United Kingdom for being “likely to cause serious offence to Christians.” The ad, which promotes Lovato’s latest album, “Holy F***,” and uses artwork from the album, was removed in August 2022. The U.K.’s Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) upheld the decision in a ruling released today (Jan. 11). 

“We considered…the image of Ms Lovato bound up in a bondage-style outfit whilst lying on a mattress shaped like a crucifix, in a position with her legs bound to one side which was reminiscent of Christ on the cross,” said the ASA in its ruling. The ASA goes on to say that the image, “together with the reference to “holy [f***],” which in that context was likely to be viewed as linking sexuality to the sacred symbol of the crucifix and the crucifixion, was likely to cause serious offence to Christians.” 

Lovato’s album title does not technically include a swear word, but changes one letter of the f-word so that, says the ASA, the meaning “would be clear to most readers.”

Demi Lovato’s Album Wrestles With Her Demons 

Demi Lovato got her start in entertainment as a child actor on “Barney & Friends,” and she went on to appear in TV series and films including “Camp Rock,” “The X Factor” and “Glee.” She released her debut album, “Don’t Forget,” in 2008 and her latest album in August 2022. It is her eighth studio album. Lovato’s newest album debuted in the top spot on Billboard’s Top Rock & Alternative Albums chart and in the seventh position on the Billboard 200. 

Throughout her career, Demi Lovato has had serious challenges with substance abuse and has struggled with bulimia and self-harm. In 2018, she suffered a widely publicized drug overdose from opioids. She has also revealed that she has been raped twice. In 2021, Lovato came out as non-binary and said that her preferred pronouns were “they/them.” She has since changed her pronouns to “she/her,” explaining that she had been “feeling more feminine.”

In its ruling about Lovato’s poster, ASA said the ad was featured in six places throughout London in August 2022, drawing complaints from people who found it offensive and who were concerned that children would see it. The ads were up for four days before being taken down on Aug. 23, 2022. 

Polydor Records told ASA it did not believe that the poster was offensive, but ASA concluded it would be clear to people that the album’s title refers to the f-word and said the ad was “targeted irresponsibly” because children could see it. ASA also concluded that Christians would find it offensive because of the religious imagery incorporated in the ad. ChurchLeaders has reached out to Demi Lovato for comment and will update this article in the event of a reply. 

Notably, Lovato has explored Christianity at least at one point in her life. In 2020, she shared with Apple Music’s Zane Lowe that she had been attending church. “I was not really a big ‘church’ person, like even a month ago,” she said at the time. But she went when her manager, Scooter Braun, invited her to a Bible study. Lovato said, “I just heard God clearer than I had heard him in a long time.” 

‘Cancel Culture Is a Tactic the Left Uses’—Kirk Cameron Hosts Controversial Pastor Douglas Wilson on ‘Takeaways’

Douglas Wilson on Takeaways with Kirk Cameron
Screengrab via TBN

In a recent episode of his TBN show “Takeaways,” Kirk Cameron tackled the topic of “cancel culture.” 

In the course of the episode, Cameron interviewed controversial pastor Douglas Wilson. Known for wanting to make his hometown of Moscow, Idaho, a “Christian town,” as well as for his Christian defense of antebellum slavery in a pamphlet titled “Southern Slavery: As It Was,” Wilson has often been the subject of criticism for his views on race, gender roles, and Christian nationalism. 

“Cancel culture: we hear about it. We feel it. We see prominent people being made examples of through pressure campaigns,” Cameron said to open the episode. “Tolerance for differing points of view seems to be at an all-time low.”

“‘Adhere to secular woke dogma or you’re toast,’” Cameron continued. “That’s how it feels, right?” 

RELATED: A Christian Town? This Controversial Church’s Goal Is to Make It Happen

Cameron went on to say, “The fear of being canceled can sometimes result in self-censorship—arguably the most painful kind of censorship.” 

The episode featured two interviews. The first was with authors and speakers David and Jason Benham, and the second was with Wilson.

David and Jason Benham: Now Is ‘Not a Time to Be a Lamb Led to the Slaughter’

Cameron’s first interview was with David and Jason Benham, twin brothers who are real estate entrepreneurs known for their dispute with HGTV, wherein the network canceled a reality show planned to feature the brothers in 2014 after controversy arose in light of their views on LGBTQ+ issues. 

The controversy specifically centered on comments David made about “homosexuality and its agenda” being connected with “demonic ideologies.” He also had compared same-sex marriage with Nazi Germany. 

While HGTV canceled the show, they still funded the Benham brothers’ work on six Charlotte-area homes that were to be featured in the now-defunct real estate reality program. 

RELATED: Michigan Football Coach Jim Harbaugh Isn’t Fearful of Being Cancelled for Pro-Life Stance, Shares Why

To begin his interview with the brothers, Cameron said, “When I look at your life, one big word comes to mind: courage. You had courage to stand up. You had courage to speak up. You don’t shrink back from the fight, but you do it in a way that is admirable.” 

Cameron went on to ask the brothers where their courage comes from.

“The Spirit of the living God lives inside of us, just like he lives in you and the viewers that are watching this,” David replied. “And he is the lion of the tribe of Judah. He’s also the lamb that was slain. And so there’s a delicate balance when we are walking by the power of the Holy Spirit with the lion and the lamb.”

Speaking about opportunities he and Jason have lost because of their public comments, David said, “It’s almost always rooted in the fear of man and a man-pleasing spirit. There is an agenda. There is, what Jason and I call, a ‘spiritual thought-mafia’ that’s out there and it’s the spiritual forces of darkness that are empowering a very mob mentality in mainstream media, and even many people in the church.”

A Restored Medieval Depiction of the Crusades Shows How England Embraced Islamic Culture

Crusades artwork
Digital reconstruction of Richard the Lionheart and Saladin and proposed reconstruction of surrounding text. Eames design 466. Photo © Janis Desmarais and Amanda Luyster

(RNS) — An 800-year-old puzzle about a set of 13th-century floor tiles has added to historians’ thinking about the relationship of Europeans and Arabs at the time of the Crusades.

Amanda Luyster, assistant visual arts professor at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, has spent more than two decades studying the so-called combat series, a group of floor tiles uncovered in the 1850s at the ruins of Chertsey Abbey, some 20 miles southwest of London.

Luyster’s research findings underpin the exhibition “Bringing the Holy Land Home: The Crusades, Chertsey Abbey, and the Reconstruction of a Medieval Masterpiece,” which runs Jan. 26 to April 6 at the college’s Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Art Gallery.

The tiles, which were illustrated and annotated with Latin inscriptions, are among the most significant medieval objects of their kind from England, if not all of Europe, according to Luyster. But since the discovery of the highly fragmented tiles, scholars had largely focused on reconstructing the illustrations, which include scenes of Richard the Lionheart battling Saladin in the Third Crusade a half-century before. The Latin text was too badly broken up at the time to be pieced together and read.

Working with colleagues who coded programs to digitally fit the letters together and cross-referenced them against known Latin texts of the era, Luyster assembled about half of the Latin inscriptions to her satisfaction. She also arranged the illustrations as her research suggests they would have appeared on the abbey floor.

Once restored to their original look, the new design reminded her of Muslim and Byzantine silks that Crusaders brought back as souvenirs.

Digital reconstruction of the Chertsey combat tile mosaic pavement. Photographic composite showing roundels surrounded by partial Latin texts. Photo © Janis Desmarais and Amanda Luyster

Digital reconstruction of the Chertsey combat tile mosaic pavement. Photographic composite showing roundels surrounded by partial Latin texts. Photo © Janis Desmarais and Amanda Luyster

Luyster has no illusion that the Crusades, waged from 1095 to 1291, were anything less than major confrontations. But she sees the tiles as telling visual evidence that England during the Middle Ages had robust contact with the rest of the world and that Christian Europe was more porous than historians have believed.

Instead, Luyster said, while the tiles depict Europeans clashing with the Muslims who ruled Jerusalem and the Near East, their manufacture and design reflected familiarity with, and admiration for, Arab artistry. They support the idea that far from thinking of themselves as European, the English who went on Crusades and came back to create these tiles were in deep conversation with Arab culture.

“The Crusaders and other Western Europeans see themselves as Westerners becoming Easterners. Their whole identity is changing, as they move and start living in the area around Jerusalem,” Luyster said.

This cultural fluidity is at odds with a picture of medieval English society as isolated, purely Christian and culturally homogeneous — a view that is increasingly outdated among historians of the period, even as white supremacists in England and the United States have latched onto it.

The key to Luyster’s insight are tiles illustrating the English King Richard I, known as Richard the Lionheart, wounding the Muslim ruler Saladin with a lance, and of a Muslim soldier with an arrow piercing his forehead.

Amanda Luyster at the British Museum photographing the Chertsey tiles in 2017. Courtesy photo

Amanda Luyster at the British Museum photographing the Chertsey tiles in 2017. Courtesy photo

Historians had long known that Richard and Saladin appeared in the overall design of the abbey’s tiles, but other tiles were thought to represent other battles. Luyster’s high-tech detective work on the Latin inscriptions showed, she concluded, that the entire design, not just the Richard and Saladin illustrations, depicted the Third Crusade, led by Richard.

Young Evangelicals Listen to Their Pastors. Do Pastors Listen to Them?

younger evangelicals and their pastors
Photo by Jesus Loves Austin (via Unsplash)

(RNS) — “When students come back at semester breaks, that’s when the conversations really pick up,” said Jon-Michael Phillips, 35, a youth pastor at a nondenominational church in Jackson, Michigan, a city of about 31,000 between Ann Arbor and Lansing, the state’s two big college towns.

As students from the University of Michigan and Michigan State return home for the holidays, Phillips is less concerned about college football rivalries than about the political discussions he is bound to have. “Every year, students want to talk to me about things they are struggling with,” he said, “and one of the topics a few are sure to bring up is politics.”

Phillips said students often share that when it comes to LGBT issues, the environment or the Republican Party, they increasingly feel at odds with the politics they often heard from the pulpit as they grew up or what was shared at home.

As they become more politically aware and active, Phillips said, they start to question how their evangelical Christian parents and pastors have presented these issues and others.

“The nice thing is they still want to talk and want to know what I think,” Phillips said. “The question is what I can do with these conversations.”

According to a recent report from Neighborly Faith and Springtide Research Institute, young evangelicals are highly politically engaged, and they continue to be inspired, and influenced, by pastors and other spiritual leaders at their church.

The study, which surveyed 1,989 young adults ages 18 to 25, oversampling for evangelical and born-again young adults, sought to trace who young evangelical adults are listening to in their political, social and religious lives and to provide recommendations on how spiritual leaders can best partner with them for social change.

Kevin Singer. Photo courtesy of Springtide

Kevin Singer. Photo courtesy of Springtide

The report suggests that young evangelicals’ political activities — from community service and volunteer work to activism as well as their voting patterns or attitudes toward the “religious other” — tend to align with their religious leaders’ emphases. The study reported that among other Christians and people of other faiths, evangelical young adults were the only group to say religious texts and leaders influenced how they felt about political issues or participated in their communities.

Kevin Singer, president of Neighborly Faith and Springtide’s head of media and public relations, said the finding that young evangelicals are inspired by their faith leaders and Scripture was expected. “What is especially striking, however, is how much more young evangelicals are inspired by their faith leaders,” Singer said. “The influence of the pastor seems to be alive and well in the lives of young evangelicals.”

Daniel Bennett, professor of political science at John Brown University, a private Christian school in northwestern Arkansas, and a consultant on the survey, said he sees young people coming to university with an earnest desire to make sense of the world around them and act accordingly.

Saying he was passionate about making sure students get faith-filled formation, Bennett was encouraged that young evangelicals continue to turn to pastors, Bible study leaders and other church mentors for advice on how to be politically engaged.

“At college, young evangelicals are disrupted in a sense,” Bennett said. “They are learning how to think, how to wade through religious, cultural and political diversity and difference.”

Ministry Equips Churches To Serve Refugees in Kansas City

refugees
Sharing meals together is one way RefugeKC ministers to Afghan refugees. Submitted photo courtesy of Baptist Press.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (BP) – More than a year after American withdrawal created massive instability in Afghanistan, refugees from the war-torn nation still need practical help and a friendly face.

RefugeKC is a non-profit ministry seeking to equip churches in the Kansas City area to step into this ongoing need.

Founded in late 2015 by Richard Casebolt, a graduate of Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, RefugeKC focuses on building relationships with refugees and meeting their practical needs.

In addition to physical needs, RefugeKC offers prayer and Bible study for refugees.

Casebolt and his wife Vicki met while attending Midewestern. The two, along with their four children, served in missions in Thailand before returning to the States in 2011.

Casebolt began working for a non-profit coffee shop where he started a Bible study with refugees who had spent time in Thailand and could speak the language.

The more relationships he built, the clearer the need became.

“It just became increasingly obvious that there was a need for full-time work among the nations that God was bringing into Kansas City,” Casebolt said.

RELATED: Afghan Refugees Thankful for Sleep Without Fear

“That mission and vision ought to include making disciples among the nations according to the Great Commission. We want to help equip churches to do that and help raise awareness to the issue.”

After the fall of Afghanistan in 2021, refugee resettlement agencies around KC reached out to RefugeKC to assist with the influx of displaced Afghans coming to the area.

The organization helped coordinate thousands of volunteers, who served by picking up refugees from the airport, preparing meals, leading activities for children and transporting families to temporary housing.

Casebolt said the city’s Afghan population grew from around 300 to more than 1,200 in a matter of months.

Richard and Vicki met as students at Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. Richard started RefugeKC in 2015.

Now more than a year later, Casebolt said ministry among refugees from a variety of nations continues. The organization is now more focused on developing deeper personal connections with their new neighbors.

The form this personal ministry takes is small support groups called Ambassador Teams.

Cardinal George Pell, Conservative Force at the Vatican, Dies at 81

Cardinal George Pell
Cardinal George Pell at the Vatican, June 29, 2017. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

VATICAN CITY (RNS) — Cardinal George Pell, who once spearheaded financial reform for Pope Francis at the Vatican, died Tuesday (Jan. 10) at the age of 81 due to complications after hip replacement surgery in Rome.

An influential conservative figure at the Vatican, he was praised for his forceful efforts to reform Vatican finances, but his life and career were marred in recent years by sexual abuse allegations.

Pope Francis, who praised Pell in the past as a “genius” for his work in restoring the notoriously corrupt Vatican finances, said in a statement Wednesday, ”I gratefully remember his coherent and committed witness, his dedication to the Gospel and the church, and especially his diligent collaboration with the Holy See in the context of the recent economic reform, for which he lay the groundwork with determination and wisdom.”

Francis also expressed his closeness to Pell’s friends and surviving relatives and asked faithful to pray for the deceased cardinal.

“Cardinal Pell was one of the giants of modern Catholicism. His death is a tremendous loss to the universal Church, which he loved passionately, served magnificently, and suffered for greatly,” wrote George Weigel, a biographer of St. John Paul II and a distinguished senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, in an email to Religion News Service.

RELATED: Pastor Jack Hayford Passes Away at 88

At the Vatican, Pell worked closely with the financial auditor Libero Milone, who mourned the loss of “a great man and a sincere friend.”

Pell became the first cardinal to be convicted of sexual abuse in 2017 and spent more than a year in prison until his conviction was overturned on appeal by the Australian high court, which cited a lack of evidence. While in jail, he wrote three books detailing his physical and spiritual experience, which he called his “prison journal.”

The Priesthood of the Father Giving up the Son

Father giving up the Son
Adobestock #448753824

In his outstanding book Christ CrucifiedUnderstanding the AtonementDonald Macleod gives an intriguing insight about the priestly role God the Father played in giving His Son up as an atoning sacrifice. He writes,

[Luke 22:19 and Romans 8:32] point to a priesthood of God the Father, ‘giving’ or ‘giving up’ His only Son. . .What can we say as to the precise nature of the Father’s action at Calvary? The New Testament answer is breathtaking. He acted in the role of priest. Just as Jesus ‘gave’ His life a ransom for many (Mark 10:45) so God the Father ‘gave’ His one and only Son; just as Christ ‘delivered up’ Himself as a fragrant offering (Eph. 5:2) so God the Father ‘delivered up’ His own Son (Rom. 8:32). Clearly, then, corresponding to the priesthood of the self-giving Son there is a priesthood of God the Father. From this point of view, Golgotha becomes His temple, where. . .He is engaged in the most solemn business that earth can witness. He is offering a sacrifice. The cross is His altar, and His own Son the sacrifice.

When we think of the priestly ministry of Christ—from His incarnation to His substitutionary atoning death on the cross—we should do so with an eye to what the Scriptures teach about the priestly act of the Father giving up the Son for the salvation of His people. The Son is the priest who offers Himself without spot to God, and the Father is the priest in giving His eternally beloved Son as a sacrifice for the sin of His people. Jesus has been ‘given for us’ by the Father (Isaiah 9:6) so that we might be reconciled to God.

This article originally appeared here and is used by permission. 

25 Really Strange Things Church Members Say to Pastors

thank you notes for children’s ministry volunteers

It’s not a boring vocation because the things church members say to pastors are just…hilarious.

If you serve as a pastor or church staff member, there is rarely a boring moment. A few years ago, I began polling pastors and church staff and collecting some really weird things church members say to them.

Here is my current top 25.

I modified some to fit into a direct quote, but the essence remains. The words in italics are my own commentaries.

      1. “Will you bless me divorcing my husband so I can marry a convicted murderer? God told me to do it.”

        Yes, I am sure that’s exactly what God said.

      2. Said to a pastor in his ordination council: “What is your view on Christian missions in space?”

        via GIFER

        Space the final frontier…to boldly go where no man has gone before.

      3. After the church member had surgery: “Pastor, will you pray for me to pass gas.”

        Maybe there was a spontaneous answer to that prayer.

      4. “I want you to come see my display of nude art.”
        via GIPHY
        I’m still trying to find out what the pastor decided.
      5. During the offertory: “Pastor, do you have change for a 20?”
        via GIPHY
        Probably a deacon.
      6. To a worship pastor after the service: “Here’s the bulletin. I graded each song based on how worshipful it was.”
        via GIPHYThank you. We will be sending you your grades on how much the church staff likes you.
      7. “Can we put the children’s moment back in the bulletin? I know we don’t have any children but the old folks like it.” 
        via GIPHY
        Yes, we will alternate it every week with the senior moment.
      8. “I used to be a warlock.”
        via GIPHY
        Was that before or after you became a deacon?

What is a Leader’s Greatest Strength?

thank you notes for children’s ministry volunteers

What is a leader’s greatest strength? The story of Dak Prescott gives us some insight.

A Devasting Injury

On Sunday, October 11, 2020, Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott dropped back to pass and surveyed the New York Giants defense. Finding no one open, he then scrambled out of the pocket and began running downfield. Giants cornerback Logan Ryan then executed what appeared to be a routine tackle of Prescott.

But something very non-routine happened as Prescott was dragged to the ground.

Prescott’s leg bent awkwardly suffering a compound fracture and dislocation of his ankle. His season was over and future, both as a potential free agent Cowboy and NFL player, were suddenly in question.

An Unspeakable Tragedy

But this was not the worst thing to happen to Prescott in 2020.

Six month earlier on April 22, Dak’s brother Jace unexpectedly died as a result of suicide. Dak, as well, was no stranger to mental illness as he had struggled with it as well.

How does someone possibly recover from mental illness, an unspeakable family tragedy, a devastating physical injury, and the potential loss of a career all happening simultaneously?

While every person handles life’s challenges differently and professional assistance is often required, Sports Illustrated’s Greg Bishop profiled Prescott and gave us a picture into his inspirational journey in its September 15th edition.

Give Thanks In All Circumstance

It sounds counterintuitive but while laying on the field, Prescott remembered a friend telling him to thank God over and over in times of crisis. Even in the midst of tears streaming down his face, that is exactly what Prescott did. He said, “That (thanking God) was my peace in all of this.”

Serve Others

On the day of his injury, Prescott served his teammate, backup quarterback Andy Dalton, by texting him a congratulatory message on winning the game.

He also served his family by texting his Aunt Gilbeaux, “Quit crying; I will be fine.  It will be fine.”

Growing, Healthy Churches Need Protectors and Advancers

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Every organization needs both protectors and advancers.

A successful entrepreneur gave me this advice a number of years ago. Shortly into our meeting he dropped this nugget of insight. He didn’t unpack it a lot, but I found interesting enough that it caused me to further reflect. (Side note: These kind of comments are why I always have something with me with which to take notes when I meet with people. That way I can unpack it further after we are finished and the conversation heads in other directions.)

The business leader told me in his business all their employees are either protectors or advancers. He said protectors are usually found in HR, legal or accounting departments. They “protect” the organization. There needs to be an adequate number of protectors in every organization.

Advancers, on the other hand, grow the business. Regardless of their job title these people help the organization do more towards accomplishing their mission. They produce a product. These people are “revenue positive“. They add income to the bottom line.

Then he went on to say he always wants more advancers than protectors. Far more. In fact, nearly everyone in his company (and it is a very large company) needs to be an advancer.

Growing, Healthy Churches Need Protectors and Advancers

After the meeting I kept pondering his words. I saw relevance in his theory in business and in ministry. This logic could work in the for profit world and the non-profit. It could even apply in the church.

In simple terms the goal in business is to make a profit. The goal in ministry or nonprofits is to advance a cause. In both types of organizations we need to protect and advance. If we don’t have protectors we will eventually get into trouble. If we don’t have advancers we will eventually not exist. 

Enough Already With the Smoke Machine

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Now that all the church and local theater Christmas productions are over, it’s time to have a serious discussion about smoke machines. A smoke machine (or haze/fog) can be a fascinating addition to any stage production, whether it features dramatic acting or a music concert. However, with most Church and local theater productions I watched this year, the production team had no clue about how a smoke machine should actually be used.

Enough Already With the Smoke Machine

Just to be clear: For most instances, smoke (or haze/fog) is designed to enhance the lighting, not overpower it. In other words, smoke effects should help define the light, not dominate the light.

EGR – Extra Grace Required?

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My friend tells the story of a pastor who had a certain way with difficult people. You know: the kind of people who are whiny, needy, angry, insecure, volatile, vain, messy, picky, overbearing, ugly, no-fun, un-hip, clueless, or otherwise not-with-the-program. This pastor asked his staff to be patient with such people, and referred to these unfortunates as EGR: Extra Grace Required. The difficult people in the church who needed extra grace.

Huh?

EGR – Extra Grace Required?

The phrase Extra Grace Required stuck with me for days. I began to wonder: how much is the regular amount of grace? Is there a Grace Manual somewhere that details the proper amount of grace for each condition? What about people afflicted with multiple shortcomings? (I qualify for several conditions listed above—but I’m not going to tell you which ones! – OK, it’s all of them.)

So here’s the first problem: the well-meaning pastor implies that grace is a tool in the pastoral tool-kit. Reach into ministerial bag and grab some ointment labeled ERG. Apply generously, as if grace is something dispensed from the Haves and given nobly to the Have-nots. As if grace is drug, and the minister is the pharmacist. But grace isn’t a salve to be applied; it’s a feast to be shared. We welcome others to the very table we enjoy, where together we revel in God’s bounty. God gives grace. We share it.

Sunday School Games: 8 Fun, Ageless Activities for Youth Groups

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Although these Sunday school games are designed for children, older kids may enjoy them too. With some adaptations, these eight Sunday school games will be lots of fun with teens!

All these Sunday school games are excerpted from Wiggle Tamers (Group, 1995) and Fidget Busters (Group, 1992) by Jolene Roehlkepartain. (Both titles are out of print, but you can purchase them used on Amazon.)

As Roehlkepartain explains, when a class takes a break for a structured, movement-filled game, kids get their wiggles out. Then they have more focus and attention on the lesson. (That definitely applies to youth group students!)

So have fun with these 8 ageless Sunday school games. Try playing them at church with kids of all ages.

8 Sunday School Games for Kids and Teens

1. Balloon Grab (suggested for preschool)

You’ll need 17 balloons: four yellow, four green, four blue, one orange, and four red.

  • Inflate the balloons. Place all the balloons — except for the orange one — in the middle of the room or field. Keep the orange balloon near you.
  • Say: I’m going to name a color. If you see a balloon that color on the ground, grab it and run all around with it. If you can’t grab one, follow someone who has that color balloon. Then when I name another color, everyone is to drop their balloons and grab the color balloon I named. Again, if you can’t grab one, follow someone who has that color balloon.
  • Start by naming yellow. Then after a minute or so, name a different color. Repeat the activity five or six times. End by naming all the colors.
  • Then say: Orange! Grab your orange balloon and hold it high. Say: Now follow me as we go back to our lesson!

2. Broken Dishes (suggested for preschool)

You’ll need a paper plate for each child.

  • Give each child a paper plate. Then have kids skip around the room while holding onto their plates. Whenever you say, “Broken dishes,” have kids drop their plates and shout “uh-oh!” Then have kids pretend to clean up the mess. After they pick up their plates, let them continue to skip until you call out “Broken dishes” again.
  • Repeat the activity three or four times. Then say: Let’s set the table back at our lesson to find out what’s cooking.
  • Have kids take their plates back to your lesson area to place neatly on the floor or table before you continue with the lesson.

3. Jelly Bean Roll (suggested for K-3)

You’ll need a bag of jelly beans.

  • On one side of the room, have kids kneel side
 by side in a line. Place a jelly bean in front of each child.
  • Say: When I say “go,” roll your jelly bean across the room using only your nose. Remember, you can’t touch the jelly bean with your hands. Ready? Go!
  • Allow kids several minutes to roll their jelly beans.
  • Then say: Let’s roll our jelly beans back to our lesson. There I’ll trade a clean, yummy jelly bean for your dirty one.

4. Peanut Butter (suggested for mixed age groups)

  • Say: It’s time for the Peanut Butter Game! When I say “go,” hop around the room. Whenever I say, “peanut butter,” stick to the people closest to you no matter how many there are. Then, when I say “jelly,” unstick yourselves and hop around the room again. Ready? Go!
  • Play four or five rounds.
  • Then say: Let’s sit down now so we can stick to our lesson.

Christian Valentine’s Day Ideas: 46 Activities for Sunday School Kids

Christian Valentine's Day ideas
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Soon you’ll need Christian Valentine’s Day ideas for your children’s ministry program and Sunday school classes. Kids of all ages “love” to celebrate this special holiday. And kidmin workers give it extra meaning when we focus on God’s love.

To help with your planning, here’s a collection of 46 Christian Valentine’s Day ideas. They all celebrate God’s love for kids. Use these activities at church, in classrooms, or at home!

46 Christian Valentine’s Day Ideas to Celebrate God’s Love

Christian Valentine’s Day Ideas: Messages + Lessons

  1. Use this children’s message to help kids know that God’s love wraps us in comfort when we’re feeling down.
  2. Use this Valentine’s Day children’s message to show kids the depth of God’s love.
  3. Here’s a Valentine’s Day Sunday school lesson to teach preteens about God’s loving guidelines.
  4. Use these five experiences to engage kids with God’s grace and care. They’ll never forget his love for them!
  5. FREE Preteen Lesson to help kids learn about God’s love.
  6. FREE Preschool Sunday School Lesson for Valentine’s Day.
  7. This candy message object lesson is a sweet way to teach children about God’s love.
  8. Kids will enjoy this children’s message as they learn to pass on God’s love.
  9. Use this Kids Sunday School Lesson to learn to show love to others.
  10. Use this Elementary Sunday school lesson about God’s amazing love.

Christian Valentine’s Day Ideas: Crafts

  1. A Valentine’s Day craft and object lesson that will show God’s love to someone special.
  2. Preschoolers can make this Valentine Heart Placemat for to celebrate Valentine’s Day.
  3. Use this Valentine’s Day Love Arrow Pencil Topper to discuss how God is love.
  4. Kids can create this Valentine craft: Peekaboo Hearts just bursting with love.
  5. Give your congregation an opportunity to pray for kids in your ministry with this craft.
  6. Kids create this necklace to share each bead of love with family and friends.
  7. This Valentine Hug Craft for preschoolers makes a great gift for parents or grandparents.
  8. Help little ones create this keepsake handprint heart for Valentine’s Day.
  9. Free printable to make this Proverbs 3:5 Valentine card…and four other great ideas!
  10. Free printable to make this glow stick Valentine card…and four other great ideas!
  11. What child doesn’t love a panda bear? And this one is made out of hearts!
  12. Kids make friendship stickers with hidden messages to encourage others.
  13. The dots on this Valentine’s Day Card are made with a pencil eraser. Easy-peasy for kids.
  14. Heart Sheep Card to say Happy Valentine’s Day to Mom from craftymorning.com.
  15. We love anything with handprints! Here’s a fun Valentine’s Day Tree made from kids’ handprints from coco29.com.
  16. No-mess Valentine Craft for Preschoolers from sundayfamily.com
  17. Two thumbprint heart gifts kids can make for their family from fun-a-day.com
  18. Kids can give these Heart-Shaped paper clips from Sea Lemon to add love to paper projects.
  19. Kids can make this valentine with a God’s Love Cross from snapguide.com

Christian Valentine’s Day Ideas: Snacks

  1. Use this snack to teach kids that God fills our hearts through the Holy Spirit.
  2. Kids learn that God’s love is sweeter than ever with these healthy, heart-shaped watermelon drops.
  3. We had a Valentine breakfast to honor our volunteers in February with the theme “Touching Children’s Hearts.”
  4. Here’s a hearty snack for Valentine’s Day that kids will love to make in your children’s ministry!
  5. With these cupcakes, help kids understand that God wants us to hold Jesus in our hearts.

Christian Valentine’s Day Ideas: Activities

  1. Encourage your church to give the children in your ministry a Prayer Valentine.
  2. Kids can create this gift bag to share God’s love with others.
  3. Use John 3:16 to create this meaningful bulletin board from mpmschoolsupplies.com
  4. Use American Sign Language and kids’ hands to share love from busymommymedia.com
  5. Valentine’s party focused on encouraging kids to love one another as God loves them.
  6. Add a growing tree of hearts in your classroom.
  7. Sponsor a Secret Valentines program for your entire church each year.
  8. Lead kids in this game of Heart Tag to learn about God’s love.
  9. Use this Hidden in the Heart activity, a bulletin board craft idea, to celebrate Valentine’s Day.
  10. This is a great glowing gift from (or to) teachers by firstgradewithacherryontop.blogspot.com
  11. This Love Each Other song is a fun musical activity that teaches preschoolers to love their neighbors.
  12. Use this activity for Valentine’s Day to help kids know they’re special and loved.

This article about Christian Valentine’s Day ideas originally appeared here.

Lifetime’s ‘Gwen Shamblin: Starving for Salvation’ Dramatizes Life of Alleged Cult Leader

Gwen Shamblin
Screenshot from YouTube / @Lifetime

Lifetime has released its first trailer for “Gwen Shamblin: Starving for Salvation,” a movie based on the life of church leader and diet guru, Gwen Shamblin Lara, who has been accused of leading a cult and who died in a plane crash in May 2021. The film stars Jennifer Grey (“Dirty Dancing”) and is set to release Feb. 4.

“Based on a true story, the movie centers on the controversial religious leader and faith-based diet creator who positioned herself as God’s prophet and preached the virtues of being thin,” says Lifetime in a description of the film, marketed as a movie “ripped from the headlines.” 

Gwen Shamblin Lara According to Lifetime

Gwen Shamblin Lara became well-known in the 1990s due to her Weigh Down Workshop, which was offered in many churches, and her book, “The Weigh Down Diet.” The “Way Down Approach” is based on the idea that people who struggle with disordered eating should look for a spiritual solution to those challenges. 

Shamblin Lara founded Remnant Fellowship church in Brentwood, Tennessee, in 1999 with Weigh Down participants as core members and was the primary leader of the church. HBO Max’s docuseries, “The Way Down: God, Greed, and the Cult of Gwen Shamblin,” chronicles Shamblin Lara’s rise to prominence and describes in detail a culture of control and spiritual abuse at the church.

The docuseries portrays Shamblin Lara as someone who began with biblical principles and good intentions, but who came to lead a ministry characterized by brainwashing and manipulation. Former members report child abuse, eating disorders, depression, and suicidal ideation. In a statement responding to the docuseries, the church said, “Remnant Fellowship categorically denies the absurd, defamatory statements and accusations made in this documentary – yet another Hollywood attack on religion.”

Gwen Shamblin Lara was one of seven people who died in a plane crash on May 29, 2021. Among the deceased was her husband, former “Tarzan” actor Joe Lara, as well as Remnant Fellowship church leaders David Martin and his wife Jennifer, Jonathan Walters and his wife Jessica, and Shamblin Lara’s son-in-law, Brandon Hannah.

Lifetime’s minute-long trailer portrays Gwen Shamblin Lara’s ministry and influence. At one point, she tells her followers, “This demon isn’t food. It’s sin.” Elsewhere in the trailer, the character says, “Satan does not give up,” “I’ve always had what I would call a crush on God,” and “Your stomach doesn’t need food. It needs God.” Another scene shows a man standing with his wife and son. He tells Shamblin Lara, “We’ll follow you wherever you lead us.” 

Jennifer Grey, who plays Gwen Shamblin Lara in the film, has been teasing the movie on her Instagram page. “Up to no good in Montreal,” she said in one post

‘God Using Me in a Different Way Today,’ Says Bills’ Damar Hamlin; Josh Allen Proclaims ‘God’s Real’

Damar Hamlin
Screengrab via Twitter @BuffaloBills

On Sunday (Jan. 8), 24-year-old Buffalo Bills’ player Damar Hamlin, who suffered a cardiac arrest six days earlier during a game against the Cincinnati Bengals, tweeted, “GameDay.. Nothing I Want More Than To Be Running Out That Tunnel With My Brothers. God Using Me In A Different Way Today. Tell Someone You Love Them Today!”

Medical personnel were forced to administer CPR to Hamlin while he was still on the field, shocking teammates and opposing players as they dropped to their knees in prayer. After Hamlin spent three days at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center’s ICU, the Bills released an update on January 5 sharing that Hamlin had started communicating through writing, even asking doctors “who won the game Monday night.” Doctors responded, “Yes, Damar, you won. You won the game of life.”

Hamlin’s injury impacted players, sportscasters, and fans throughout the nation leading up to the NFL season’s final week of play. On Tuesday (Jan. 3), former NFL quarterback and current ESPN analyst Dan Orlovsky prayed for Hamlin on live television.

RELATED: ESPN Analyst Dan Orlovsky Prays for Damar Hamlin on Live TV—‘Maybe This Is Not the Right Thing To Do, but I Want To’

“Maybe this is not the right thing to do, but I want to,” Orlovsky during an episode of NFL Live. “I’ve heard the phrase ‘thoughts and prayers’ all day, and people asking others to pray for Hamlin. I’ve heard the Buffalo Bills organization say ‘we believe in prayer,’ and maybe this is not the right thing to do, but I want to—it’s just on my heart that I want to pray for Damar Hamlin right now.”

Orlovsky then led his cohosts in prayer for the young NFL player as millions of viewers watched.

That same night, former NFL tight end and Super Bowl champion Benjamin Watson shared the gospel during a guest appearance on CNN’s Anderson Cooper 360.

“These times bring us face to face with our own mortality, and we all have a day to be born and we all have a day to die,” Watson said in that interview.

Watson told Cooper that watching what happened to Hamlin should make someone ask, “Where are we? Where do our hearts stand?”

RELATED: ‘Prayer Is Real, and It’s Powerful’—Teammates, NFL Players Rally Behind Damar Hamlin Following Injury

On Saturday, the Bills shared a comment from Hamlin wherein Hamlin recognized how God was using his situation to unite people, expressing gratitude for everyone who prayed for his recovery.

“The love has been overwhelming, but I’m thankful for every single person that prayed for me and reached out,” Hamlin said. “We brung the world back together behind this. If you know me you know this only gone make me stronger. On a long road keep praying for me!”

A Novel Approach to Tackling Common Temptations in the Western Church

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Jeff Christopherson is a missiologist, movement catalyst, and author. He leads Church Planting Canada and Canadian National Baptist Convention and is the founder of Send Network and co-founder of Church Multiplication Institute. He’s authored a new and unique book, “Once You See: Seven Temptations of the Western Church – a Novel.” 

ChurchLeaders had the opportunity to interview Christopherson, asking questions about the message of the book and how he hopes it will help pastors and church leaders break away from the status quo and “relearn” an ancient vision for church as laid out in the New Testament. 

The choice of a novel is an interesting/unique medium to get your message out to Christian leaders. Why did you choose to go this route?

Many books have already been written on many of these subjects, including several of my own. But somehow, despite the numerous discouraging trends, the status quo seems stubbornly resistant to change. 

Taking a page from Jesus’ teaching methodology, I guess I wanted readers to “see” and “feel” the striking difference between approaches—and the consequences of continued allegiance to the status quo. I believe that stories have staying power—they roll around in our brains giving the Holy Spirit opportunity to “change our minds”—which is biblical metanoia/repentance.

Briefly, what are the “Seven Temptations of the Western Church” that you weave into your novel’s storyline?

I would list them as contrasts because the very things that we often celebrate as marks of faithfulness might in reality be the very opposite. Here is what I mean…

  1. Philosophicalism: “We are a Bible-believing people.”

Kingdom Corrective: Essential to a sincere belief in the inerrancy and infallibility of God’s Word is an assumption that God calls his disciples to become a Bible-obeying people and not merely intellectual stakeholders of theologically orthodox positions. We understand that true orthodoxy affirms that biblical belief is a verb—doctrines that we humbly live and practice—rather than a noun—theoretical precepts to which we philosophically subscribe. Therefore, we choose to measure spiritual maturity and doctrinal integrity with the benchmarks found in our everyday obedience to God’s Word.

  1. Professionalism: “We have a gifted pastoral team.”

Kingdom Corrective: The gospel is every disciple’s calling—not just a chosen few. Because of this, we seek to multiply Jesus’ disciples by developing and deploying the body of Christ into a diverse and infinitely reproducible co-vocational mission-force. Therefore, our vocational leaders see their primary assignment as equippers and multipliers of Jesus’ disciple-making insurgency. 

Jeff Christopherson
Jeff Christopherson. Courtesy image
  1. Presentationalism: “Our worship is inspiring, and our preaching is strong.”

Kingdom Corrective: We are the functioning body of Christ in community, not a well-tuned Sunday service. Though we value the weekly gathering of believers for corporate worship and biblical instruction, we also understand that Jesus’ purpose for his body cannot be contained in that hour. Therefore, what we most highly prize, publicly celebrate, and consider as our ultimate act of worship is preparing the entire body of Christ as sacrificial servants for Jesus’ 24-7 mission and his imminent return.

  1. Passivism: “Everybody is welcome.”

Kingdom Corrective: We actively search for lost sheep—not hope that lost sheep look for us. Therefore, we happily inconvenience our personal comforts and disrupt our religious preferences for the sake of effectively participating in Jesus’ selfless and courageous search and rescue mission.

  1. Pragmatism: “We are one of the fastest growing churches.”

Kingdom Corrective: The kingdom of God is our only goal, and not the advancement of our individual brand. Because of this, we choose to measure growth in terms of city-wide gospel impact rather than excelling in a competition for an evaporating market share of the evangelically predisposed. Therefore, for the kingdom outcome of gospel proximity, we prefer to selflessly invest in united efforts of gospel collaboration rather than pragmatically contending for our own interests.

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