2013 Newsletters

Zion NewsletterDecember 2013
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Join Us For Christmas!

Don’t have a place to worship this Christmas? Come worship “the desire of nations!”Christmas2012_800

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Christmas Program Practice

Attention parents and students gearing up for the Christmas Eve Children’s program! New practice times are announced!
Wednesday, December 19th
5:30pm New Life Pizza Party
6:00pm Rehearsal & Practice

Sunday, December 23rd
9:00am Practice (BEFORE Church)
3:00 – 4:30pm Practice

**Please note time changes & additions!

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Do You Believe In Santa Christ?

Rev. Dr. Sinclair Ferguson helps us to distinguish between cultural celebration and biblical truth, to make sure that the Christ we worship during this holiday season is really the Jesus of Scripture. The sad reality is that many Christians have a Christology that is more informed by Santa Claus than Scripture. For them, the message of the incarnation has been so twisted or diluted that they have in fact created for themselves a savior who is nothing more than a Santa Christ.

As you prayerfully read Dr. Ferguson’s words, ask yourself the following question this Christmas season:

“Do I believe in a Santa Christ?”

1. A Pelagian Jesus is a Santa Christ

Santa Christ is sometimes a Pelagian Jesus. Like Santa, he simply asks us whether we have been good. More exactly, since the assumption is that we are all naturally good, Santa Christ asks us whether we have been “good enough.” So just as Christmas dinner is simply the better dinner we really deserve, Jesus becomes a kind of added bonus who makes a good life even better. He is not seen as the Savior of helpless sinners.

2. A Semi-Pelagian Jesus is a Santa Christ

Or Santa Christ may be a Semi-Pelagian Jesus — a slightly more sophisticated Jesus who, Santa-like, gives gifts to those who have already done the best they could! Thus, Jesus’ hand, like Santa’s sack, opens only when we can give an upper-percentile answer to the none-too-weighty probe, “Have you done your best this year?” The only difference from medieval theology here is that we do not use its Latin phraseology: facere quod in se est (to do what one is capable of doing on one’s own, or, in common parlance, “Heaven helps those who help themselves”).

3. A Mystical Jesus is a Santa Christ

Then again, Santa Christ may be a mystical Jesus, who, like Santa Claus, is important because of the good experiences we have when we think about him, irrespective of his historical reality. It doesn’t really matter whether the story is true or not; the important thing is the spirit of Santa Christ. For that matter, while it would spoil things to tell the children this, everyone can make up his or her own Santa Christ. As long as we have the right spirit of Santa Christ, all is well.

But Jesus is not to be identified with Santa Claus; worldly thinking — however much it employs Jesus-language — is not to be confused with biblical truth.

Who is the Biblical Christ of Christmas?

The Scriptures systematically strip away the veneer that covers the real truth of the Christmas story. Jesus did not come to add to our comforts. He did not come to help those who were already helping themselves or to fill life with more pleasant experiences. He came on a deliverance mission, to save sinners, and to do so He had to destroy the works of the Devil (Matt. 1:21; 1 John 3:8b).

– Those whose lives were bound up with the events of the first Christmas did not find His coming an easy and pleasurable experience.
– Mary and Joseph’s lives were turned upside down.
– The shepherds’ night was frighteningly interrupted, and their futures potentially radically changed.
– The magi faced all kinds of inconvenience and family separation.
– Our Lord Himself, conceived before wedlock, born probably in a cave, would spend His early days as a refugee from the bloodthirsty and vindictive Herod (Matt. 2:13-21).

There is, therefore, an element in the Gospel narratives that stresses that the coming of Jesus is a disturbing event of the deepest proportions. It had to be thus, for He did not come merely to add something extra to life, but to deal with our spiritual insolvency and the debt of our sin. He was not conceived in the womb of Mary for those who have done their best, but for those who know that their best is “like filthy rags” (Isa. 64:6)—far from good enough—and that in their flesh there dwells no good thing (Rom. 7:18). He was not sent to be the source of good experiences, but to suffer the pangs of hell in order to be our Savior.

Excerpt taken from Sinclair Ferguson’s In Christ Alone
Originally posted at Ligonier.org

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Spaghetti Dinner For Haiti

HarvestHaiti_SquareJoin us tonight from 5 – 7 pm at GHV High School before the GHV vs Belmond-Klemme basketball game. Spaghetti, garlic bread, lettuce salad & drink, as well as 25 Gluten-free servings will be available. This is a FREE WILL DONATION MEAL, and all proceeds go directly to Haiti homes. We so appreciate your support!

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Advent 2012: Good News of Great Joy

Advent2012_800We have returned to another Advent season as we look at the four Sundays before Christmas to celebrate the Incarnation – the birth of our Savior, Jesus the Messiah!

Here are some resources to help you “fix your eyes on Jesus” (Heb. 12:2) during this Christmas season:
1. What is Advent?
2. Special events
3. Devotionals

1. What is Advent?

What does the word advent mean, and why is it important to my life?

Dear Zion,

You’ve probably noticed that we have begun a special season at church called “Advent.” This word comes from the Latin, adventus, which means “coming,” but both of these words help us understand the biblical Greek word parousia, a word we see in I Thessalonians 3:13, “the coming of our Lord Jesus.” Advent is an opportunity to remember that Christ came into the world “for us and for our salvation.” How can we as Christians benefit from the season of Advent? What can we do to remember “the reason for the Season?” How should we “keep Christ in Christmas?” Let me offer some suggestions.

First, we should medit… Continue reading “Celebrating Advent” →

2. Special Events

Here are some dates to keep on the calendar of opportunities at Zion!

Date Event
December 1st Women’s Fellowship Christmas Brunch

Saturday morning at 9:30 a.m., for a hosted brunch and program.  Invite your friends and get your tickets!

December 2nd Advent Party

Meet at the church at 3p.m. for caroling, decorating, Christmas carols, and a light supper.  Fun for the whole family!

December 16th Zion Christmas Cantata

Join us Sunday evening for a special Zion tradition, and stay after the beautiful music for refreshments and fellowship.  Begins at 7p.m.

December 24th Christmas Eve Service

The prelude begins at 6p.m., and you won’t want to miss hearing our youth recount the meaning of the Christmas story!

December 25th Christmas Day Service

Service begins at 9a.m. with Holy Communion.

December 28th College Christmas Parsonage Party

All college aged students are invited over to the parsonage for food, fun & games!  Come from 7 – 10p.m.

Be sure to keep up with all the events and meetings by checking out our church calendar or seeing the events at our Facebook page.

3. Devotional Aids

DGAdventDaily Readings for Advent
by John Piper

“What I want most for Christmas this year is to join you (and many others) in seeing Christ in all his fullness and that we together be able to love what we see with a love far beyond our own half-hearted human capacities” (p. vi).

A free devotional by Desiring God, download and print this or read it off your favorite eBook reader. A great resource, which matches our Advent theme perfectly this year!

Scripture Readings
AdventReadingThese morning and evening readings will draw you to God’s Word and help you to ponder Jesus’ coming for His people. Print it out and stick it in your Bible, add it to your calendar, or do whatever you need to benefit from Scripture!

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December Newsletter & Calendar Posted

Zion NewsletterThe Zion Chronicles for December 2012 is now available for download. You can view the document or download it here. Also, we have updated the church calendar for the month. You can view that by month, week, daily, or agenda style, by clicking here.

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The Power of Family Worship

Rev. Dr. Terry Johnson writes in his book, The Family Worship Book:

If your children are in your home for 18 years, you have over 5,600 occasions (figuring a 6-day week) for family worship.If you learn a new psalm or hymn each month, they will be exposed to 216 in those 18 years. If you read a chapter a day, you will complete the Bible 4.5 times in 18 years. Every day they will affirm a creed or recite the law. Every day they will confess their sins and plead for mercy. Every day they will intercede on behalf of others. Think in terms of the long view. What is the cumulative impact of just 15 minutes of this each day, day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, for 18 years?

At the rate of 6 days a week (excluding Sunday), one spends an hour and a half a week in family worship (about the length of a home Bible study), 78 hours a year (about the length of two weekend retreats), and 1,404 hours over the course of 18 years (about the length of eight week-long summer camps). When you establish your priorities, think in terms of the cumulative effect of this upon your children. Think of the cumulative effect of this upon you, after 40 or 60 or 80 years of daily family worship. All this without having to drive anywhere.

Parents, do you value where your children are headed spiritually? Have you really appreciated what an impact you can have on your child’s relationship with Christ?

Terry Johnson is senior minister at Independent Presbyterian Church in Savannah, Georgia. His Family Worship Book is available in the Pastor’s Study Library.

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Crawford Loritts on Stepping Up, Fatherhood & Courageous Leadership

Dr. Crawford Loritts speaks on the influence of his father for Stepping Up

Stepping Up has a new series of videos out – you may want to check them out!

Crawford Loritts writes the following, from the foreword to Dennis Rainey’s book, Stepping Up: A Call to Courageous Manhood (Family Life, 2011):

When I was twelve years old, I experienced a “defining moment.” Don’t get me wrong; it wasn’t some uncommon extraordinary experience. It wasn’t a brush with death. I hadn’t contracted some debilitating disease. Neither had I been traumatized by some predator. It was what my father did and what my mother stopped doing that marked me deeply for the rest of my life. And it happened in less than five minutes.

It all had to do with painting. The family who rented a property my parents owned moved out, and there was some “fixing up” and painting that needed to be done before the new tenets moved in. My father thought this would be a great project for the entire family to tackle, so on a Saturday morning, my dad, my mother, my two older sisters, and yours truly reported for duty. Mom and my sisters were working on the first floor, and my job was to help Pop paint on the second floor. And that was the problem. I never did like to paint. I didn’t then, and I don’t now.So I had to somehow figure out a way to be free of what I thought was an unnecessary burden. My “ace in the hole” was my mother. Mom was always more sympathetic to her precious little boy than Dad was, and I knew that if I pressed the right buttons, she would rescue her one and only son from spending his Saturday doing something he didn’t want to do. So under the guise of having to use the bathroom, I went downstairs and began to complain to Mom.While I was in the middle of convincing my mother that I needed to take off and play with my friends, Pop showed up. As I write these words, I am vividly remembering and reliving that momen.My mother said to my father, “Crawford, CW (my childhood nickname) is only twelve years old, and he doesn’t need to be here with us all day. He needs to be enjoying himself with his friends.”Then my father said, “Sylvia, I got this. That boy one day is going to be somebody’s husband and somebody’s father. There are going to be people depending on him. He has got to learn how to do what he has to do and not what he wants to do.”To my mother’s credit, she looked at me and then at my father, nodded in agreement, and turned away. Pop then turned to me and said, “You take yourself upstairs and paint until I tell you to stop.”

And I did.

Even at twelve years old, I knew that something important had just happened. It wasn’t that I had just lost a little skirmish, and this time I wasn’t going to get my way. The words “somebody’s husband . . . somebody’s father” and “He has got to learn how to do what he has to do and not what he wants to do” kept replaying in my mind. Of course I wasn’t fully aware of the weight of what had happened. In fact, it would be years before I fully appreciated the significance of that Saturday morning. But I did have the sense that what just happened was a gamed changer.

My mother knew that in order for her boy to become a man, the most important man in his life needed to shape him. Pop knew that in order for his son to provide leadership and stability to those who would count on him one day, “CW” needed to embrace core lessons in manhood, obligation, and responsibility.

A transition took place that day, and I’m so glad it did. In a very real sense, it was what some would call a “rite of passage.” My dad knew that in order for me not to become a fifty-year-old adolescent, I needed to make some intentional steps toward manhood. I can’t tell you how grateful I am to God for the gift of Pop’s courage, and that he wasn’t passive when it came to my development.

Some years back when I heard my good friend Dennis Rainey give a talk that formed the outline of this book, not only did it bring to mind that Saturday morning almost fifty years ago, but it resonated deeply within me.

The message that Dennis unpacks in this compelling book is core and critical to the direction of our families, our church, and our nation. Perhaps you think that statement is a bit overblown. I can assure you that it isn’t. As a pastor, I witness daily the void and dysfunction caused by men who don’t really know who and what a man is. They’re not to blame. When men do not step up to embrace the seasons of their lives, it damages hope for those who are following and limits the impact of these men will have during their moment in history.

All of us need help in this journey toward authentic, intentional manhood. Thank you, Dennis, for giving us such a powerful, engaging resource that helps us and inspired us to keep moving with courage toward being the men that we can be and that indeed God has called us to be.

Zion has used Dr. Loritts’ resources in the past for our Men’s Ministry, and we will be using Stepping Up resources in the future. On top of this, we’re looking at a Super Saturday as well. Interested?! Contact us and come get involved!

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November Newsletter & Calendar Posted

Zion NewsletterThe Zion Chronicles for November 2012 is now available for download. You can view the document or download it here. Also, we have updated the church calendar for the month. You can view that by month, week, daily, or agenda style, by clicking here.

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