Thanksgiving #1 – 11.01.24

Lyrics and Music: Seth and Bessie Sykes

The Evangelists Seth & Bessie Sykes were well-known in Springburn, the U.K, and even in the United States. In 1929 Seth, who was a tram conductor, resigned in 1929, and both of them traveled to mission churches throughout the length and breadth of Britain with a barrel organ, singing, preaching the gospel. and retelling stories from the Bible with lantern slides.

This is a favorite hymn amongst residents of Ju Eng Home Singapore. It reminds us to be thankful to our God and Creator who provides and sustains our lives. 

Some thank the Lord for friends and home
For mercies sure and sweet
But I would praise Him for his grace
In prayer I would repeat

Refrain:
Thank you, Lord, for saving my soul
Thank you, Lord, for making me whole
Thank you, Lord, for giving to me
Thy great salvation so rich and free

Some thank Him for the flow’rs that grow
Some for the stars that shine
My heart is filled with joy and praise
Because I know He’s mine

I trust in Him from day to day
I prove His saving grace
I’ll sing this song of praise to Him
Until I see His face

Halloween – October 25, 2024

Once again, I was asked the almost annual question, “Should a Christian celebrate Halloween?” 

There isn’t really a singular answer, but I can give you two questions that you need to settle in your mind before you carve a pumpkin or put a costume on your child.

  1. Are you fully convinced in your own mind? Can you give thanks? (Romans 14:5-6)
  1. https://blogs.loc.gov/headlinesandheroes/2021/10/the-origins-of-halloween-traditions/
  2. Vs. the picture above 🙂

     2) Who else is on the bandwagon with you?  Ephesians 5:1-21, (emphasis on v7) says: “Therefore do not be partakers with them”,  speaking of the sons of disobedience.  For me this has meant a trunk-or-treat event or a harvest festival at church has been acceptable before God.  Trick-or-treating seems like it’s kind of neighborhood or even family dependent, see point one.  🙂 

God’s Word Rules,

Pastor Scott

The Heart – October 11, 2024

Matthew 22:37. Heart-Soul-Mind. Intellect-Emotion-Will. All Three In Balance. 2Corinthians 4:16. Emotions: Extrapsychic/Autopsychic. 12 Base Emotions: 9 negative, 3 positive. Philippians 4:7-8. Guard your hearts. Guard your minds. We cannot allow emotions to out run intellect, or vice versa…

Pastor Jim will be speaking on the New Covenant in Jeremiah 31 on Sunday, but it’s Jeremiah 17:9 that many of us remember from childhood. “The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?” 

If Jeremiah were writing that today he may have contradicted Obi Wan and said, “Don’t trust your feelings!”  “Your ‘feelings’ will lie to you.”  Even though I know that, I still let my feelings rule the day sometimes.  “I know this isn’t the wisest use of my time, but I don’t feel like cleaning right now.”  “I know I shouldn’t be saying this, but it feels okay at the moment.” “The Bible may say that “x” is wrong, but I feel my situation justifies it.”

You get the point. It doesn’t take long for our feelings, our heart, to take us completely away from living in God’s absolute truth.  We need to be careful.  His rule is His word, not my heart.

Pastor Scott

Discipleship Defined 10.04.24

Got this blog from GES on Wednesday Oct 2, 2024 The week the Grace Groups begin their Study of Discipleship.  I thought it was God-timing.  ~Pastor Scott  
Grace Evangelical Society

Success in Fishing Doesn’t Come Free By Kenneth Yates on Oct 02, 2024 09:30 amOne of the characteristics of Free Grace Theology is that it makes a distinction between a believer and a disciple. A believer is somebody who has believed in Jesus for eternal life. They receive it as a gift. Works play no part in it whatsoever. A disciple is a believer who follows Christ in obedience. Discipleship involves works and is not free. All believers will be in the kingdom, but not all believers are disciples.Many Bible teachers disagree. They say we must do works to prove we are saved. They maintain that all believers are disciples. There is no difference between the two.This is a strange and contradictory teaching. Those who promote it say that eternal salvation is free, then quickly add that it will cost the person everything. That makes absolutely no sense. They do this because they think verses that say eternal salvation is free and verses about the cost of being a disciple are all talking about the same thing—salvation from hell. They try to make all these verses be about the same thing.We need only look at one example to see how nonsensical such a view is. Imagine preaching that salvation is absolutely free, then saying that Mark 1:16-20 is talking about the same thing. The Lord calls four fishermen to follow Him. The word follow is a discipleship term. It is an ongoing process. The Lord wants these men to walk after Him, learn from Him, and do the things He commands them to do. Receiving eternal life is not a process. It happens in a moment of time, when the person believes in Jesus for eternal life.Clearly, Jesus is not telling these men to believe in Him. He is not offering them a gift. These men had already believed and received the gift of life (John 1:37-42). Jesus is telling them to do something more and to get to work.The call to do work is also clear in what Jesus wants them to do. He wants them to learn how to fish for men. These four men were fishermen, and they knew the kind of work involved in that business. When Jesus called them to follow Him, they were doing hard work. Some were casting nets into the sea (v 16). Others were mending broken nets and getting them ready for the next trip out into the water (v 19).Recently, I went on a trip to the coast of Georgia. I did a tourist thing where a fisherman showed us how to catch fish with a large net. I volunteered, along with another man, to give it a try. We unfolded the net and waded about thirty yards out into the water. We dragged the net for about ten minutes. We caught a bunch of small fish. After those ten minutes, I was done. I needed to take a nap.It was obvious to me that fishing takes a great deal of work. Not a single one of those men whom Jesus called that day thought, “He is calling us to do something that is absolutely free and takes no work.” They understood that the Lord was urging them to follow Him by doing hard work.Even though I have heard it a thousand times, it still baffles me when I hear people say that the Lord was telling these fishermen to believe in Him for eternal life in these verses. If those four men heard somebody say that Jesus was offering them a free gift on the Sea of Galilee that day, they would have rolled on the ground laughing.There is no doubt that Christ was calling these men to be His disciples. That is not the same thing as believing in Him. Believing costs nothing. Discipleship is very costly. It is hard work. If you try to say they are the same thing, you only look foolish.Let’s keep them separate. Receiving eternal life is given freely by God’s grace through faith alone. Being a disciple will take hard work. Go to the coast of Georgia and drag a net in the ocean for ten minutes and you’ll see. Unless your theological tradition compels you do to so, you will never say that Mark 1:16-20 is an invitation for these men to receive a gift.