Sunday, December 30, 2007

Great End To 2007

After a brief encounter with my couch this afternoon I couldn't wait to say how proud I am of The Grove Team! First we were truly blessed by our visit by Teen Challenge. Their rich testimonies touched our hearts and helped put some faces behind this local ministry we are committed to support. I hope you were among those in attendance.

Then to top it off we put on a feast of ham and all the great sides to bless these 33 men to let them know we care about them. Our team did an awesome job setting up, serving the men, eating with them at their tables, and then clean-up and reset the auditorium. Thanks to all the devoted members of the team. (pray for Marianne and Marty who were sick this morning and couldn't attend - Marianne worked hard to pull this together)

I plan to write tomorrow and recap the year but wanted to make sure everyone was reminded of our baptismal service next Sunday followed by some baby dedications. If you have been considering baptism or have questions about it, let me know.

Tune in tomorrow - I'll try to be brief!

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

The Day After

Merry Post-Christmas to all of you!

I can't tell you how many times I heard someone say or said it myself - "It just doesn't feel like Christmas!"

As much as I like change and new things to happen in my life - consistency at Christmas is something I've cherished. Yet the older I get it seems that my expectations of Christmas each year are unrealistic. As hard as I try to control it, I don't have the ability to do so.

Let me explain. All my growing up years I believed it was almost heresy to celebrate Christmas on Christmas Eve like some weird families did. Then as our kids grew up, got married, and moved away we realized if we were going to have any quality time with them we needed to do it Christmas Eve.

This year added a new little wrinkle - our son in law Scott was being deployed to Iraq for the third time December 29th! That meant he and his family couldn't travel away from Ft. Campbell (Army rules) so we snuck down there before Christmas to see Jenny graduate from college and briefly celebrate with Scott.

We're hoping Jenny can come up soon after Scott leaves so we can celebrate with her and our grandson.

But what about next year? Will there be more challenges? You can count on it. As soon as you think you've got things figured out - you realize you don't.

That leads me to the spiritual part of this blog. STOP! Don't go away just because I said that word Spiritual.

There is one thing you can count on Christmas after Christmas, year after year. It's something we all need more than another sweater, tie or the obligatory Starbucks gift card.

Rick Ezell in one of the blogs I subscribe to writes:

"What do you need for Christmas? The question of need is not the same as the question of want. I suspect that what we need is vastly different from what we want. I've said many times, and I suspect that you have to, in response to the question, what do you want for Christmas? "You know, I don't really need anything."

There's one gift I need, and I need it 365 days a year. I need it every bit as much as the air I breathe, and the water I drink, and the food I eat, and the shelter over my head, and the love of my family. In fact, I need it more than any of these. And you need it too.

What's beautiful about this gift is that it doesn't cost us anything; it's available to all."

Later in the blog Rick reminds us of what Paul said when he wrote to his friend Titus: "For the grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men. It teaches us to say 'No' to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age, while we wait for the blessed hope-the glorious appearing of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ, who gave himself for us to redeem us from all wickedness and to purify for himself a people that are his very own, eager to do what is good" (Titus 2:11-14 NIV).

Can you guess what the gift is? It's not something you have to stand in long lines to return today. Have you ever received it? Be careful, most of us miss the gift we all need for Christmas. It's Grace!

We are told in the Bible that because of our sin we are separated from God. But God provided a way out of the punishment we deserve - he sent His Son Jesus to pay the penalty. Without receiving Christ, which means to receive God's grace, then we have no hope of eternal life and whatever you experience here on this earth for the short 70 or 80 years, that's it.

But God's grace doesn't effect us only when our physical bodies die. No read again what Paul says the benefit of grace is for us today, ""For the grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men. It teaches us to say 'No' to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age, while wait for the blessed hope.."

The grace of God is the message of Christmas. Grace is the one true lasting and satisfying gift of Christmas. If we don't receive it all the other gifts are inconsequential.

My prayer for you today - in your groggy, ate too much, slept too little holiday time, is that you've accepted the free gift of God's grace.

If you're still confused about this - not sure and want to know more - then The Grove is the place to come and grow and learn.

This Sunday we will be treated to some awesome life stories of God's transformation in the lives of those who attend Teen Challenge. Come early to get a good seat.

Then beginning January 6th we begin an exciting message series entitled "Work Matters". We will explore topics such as: What Should I Do With My Life? How Do I Balance Life and Work?
Work Matters: How Do I Mange My Money? How Do I Leave A Legacy?

I hope you can come and grow with us at The Grove and maybe even bring someone you care about to one of our services.

In the meanwhile, let's take a moment over the last few days of 2007 and reflect on how blessed we are. I hope to recall some of the highlights at The Grove in my next blog.

While you are in the reading mood - check out two new blogs by Carolyn and Vince - I think you'll enjoy them too! You can find them at http://groveworship.blogspot.com/ and http://mediathegrove.blogspot.com/

Remaining in His Grip,

Jeff

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Hoover The Red-Nosed Westie

Okay, okay before I get too much flack for dressing our 1 year old in a reindeer costume let me confess something - Cindy did it! I'm sorry honey but I don't want to take the rap for this one.

So how nonspiritual to write about your dogs - I'm getting to it, just be patient.

We picked up Hoover's little sister on Saturday - she will be known as Kirby. She's a bit past 10 weeks and already the boss of the household. In watching her and Hoover together I came to some conclusions about life.

#1- we all need to set priorities. Our breeder (Carol Schedler) did such a good job in the early development of this puppy that we can either go with the program and have it easy or fight it and have a mess. So we are on Kirby's schedule right now. Up at 5:30 with mom, plays, outside to do her business, back inside eats breakfast, plays some more, outside and then back to bed about 8am and she sleeps til almost noon. I won't bore you with all the rest of the days activities but I'm reminded that first things have to come first. A devotion I got today said this:
"Speaking to the recent Alabama Baptist Convention gathering, Richard Blackaby insisted the most important thing any leader can do is to go deeper in his or her walk with God.“If spiritual leadership is about taking your church into a more intimate walk with God, you cannot give what you do not have,” Blackaby said. “You can talk about it, you can point in that direction, but you can’t take them there unless you’ve been there yourself.”

I'm going to work harder at this.

#2- life is a tug of war. Sometimes you seem to win, other times someone else - the good news is we all win in the end (that is if you've trusted Christ). I plan on holding on and not letting go.

#3- playtime is fun and good for you. Seeing the puppies run and bounce on the front yard makes me laugh out loud. We all need to run and bounce more!

#4- you have to stand up for yourself. Hoover has put Kirby in her place several times. But that doesn't stop her from trying to get one over on him. That's a lot like the enemy - if you give in - give him a foothold - you will play heck shaking him off of you later.

I'm sure there are many more lessons to come. I'm just too exhausted to think of any more - maybe I'll just curl up on the couch with the westies and take a nap too!

Til next time I'm in His Grip,

Jeff