My 12/29/13AM sermon, Blessed Devotion from Isaiah 58:1-14, is now online. The sermon sought to unpack what true devotion to God looks like by pointing to hearts and lives that are humbled before Him. I hope this sermon is helpful as we reconsider priorities for the New Year. Have a great week.
Christmas Eve Recap 2013
We had a great night of worship as a church family together tonight.
We opened singing O Come, O Come Emmanuel and went into this video by Isaac Wimberley:
Advent: God With Us from The Village Church on Vimeo.
After singing Joy To the World, Hark! The Herald Angels Sing and O Come All Ye Faithful, Mandy Swisher sang O Holy Night using these lyrics:
It is the night of the dear Savior’s birth!
Long lay the world in sin and error pining,
Till He appeared and the soul felt its worth.
A thrill of hope, the weary world rejoices,
For yonder breaks a new and glorious morn.
Fall on your knees, O hear the angel voices!
O night divine, O night when Christ was born!
O night, O holy night, O night divine!
Born on the floor of a hay-scattered stall.
True Son of God, yet bearing human feature,
He entered earth to reverse Adam’s fall.
In towering grace, He laid aside His glory,
And in our place, was sacrificed for sin.
Fall on your knees! O hear the gospel story!
O night divine, O night when Christ was born!
O night, O holy night, O night divine!
With joyful shepherds, proclaim Him as Lord.
Let not the Promised Son remain a stranger;
In reverent worship, make Christ your Adored.
Eternal life is theirs who will receive Him;
With grace and peace, their lives He will adorn.
Fall on your knees! Receive the Gift of heaven!
O night divine, O night when Christ was born!
O night, O holy night, O night divine!
Weekend Recap – 12/22/13
My 12/22/13AM sermon, God-Centered Christmas from Luke 2:1-7, is now online. The sermon sought to showcase how God and Christ are seen in the Christmas story so that we might believe and worship God for His amazing plan in sending His Son. I hope it does this for you and you spend time this week marveling at God becoming man.
My Christmas Heritage
Remembered a story I had heard at my Grandpa Lemay’s funeral visiting with family and got permission to post it here. It was written up for our family’s newsletter and called Christmas In Tonica. The Gpa Lemay in this story is my great grandfather…
Grandpa Lemay accepted a job to run a farm implement store up North and moved his wife, six children and Grandpa Denny to the little village of Tonica, IL. Three weeks after arriving there the farm store burned to the ground. Grandpa picked up whatever odd jobs he could and looked for other work. Eventually the railroad decided to re-open the depot in Tonica and Grandpa was hired to run it. They all worked at the depot for weeks cutting down the tall grass, pulling weeds, scrubbing the inside, doing repairs, etc. Two days before it was scheduled to re-open, Grandpa received a telegram saying that they had changed their mind and decided not to re-open the depot after all. Grandpa was back to picking up odd jobs and the family struggled to make ends meet and put food on the table thru that fall and into the winter.
Christmas came and Grandpa Denny walked the children to church for the Christmas Eve service. Mom said that there was the most beautiful tree in the church and she sat there and just drank it in so that she could remember it when so got home, because there was not going to be any tree at their house. She had been hearing her friends talk about what they were going to get for Christmas and she knew that she and her brothers and sisters were not going to get anything. So, she sat there trying to listen to the service, but feeling sad and gloomy about the Christmas that wasn’t coming to their house. And then, she would feel guilty because that wasn’t what Christmas was about – it was about the birth of Jesus and she should be feeling happy and joyous about the birth of her Savior. It was a long, hard service for that little nine year old girl.
After church they began their trek home. The snow was falling softly and the world seemed quiet and peaceful. Grandpa Denny started them singing Christmas Carols to pass the time as they walked. Their house was up on a hill and shortly before you got to it, there was a creek with a wooden bridge across it. When they got to the bridge, Grandpa Denny exclaimed in his booming Irish baritone, “Raise your voices, children. How is the Lord going to hear you praising Him when you are singing like that? Raise your voices and praise the Lord, now.” Of course, they had no way of knowing that they were not just praising the Lord – they were also signaling the people gathered in their house.
Mom said that all of a sudden there were tiny little lights that looked like fireflies in their parlor. But, that couldn’t possibly be because the parlor was always closed off and no one ever went in there! But as they got closer the lights began to look like little flames – candle flames! Could it possibly be! Her heart was filled with such excitement as they all dashed into the house. And there, in the parlor, was a Christmas tree decorated with beautiful ornaments and covered with tiny lighted candles. While they were gone the neighbors had brought in the tree and decorated it. And they had brought one present for each of the children and food and candy and all sorts of goodies. The neighbors stayed and everyone visited and ate and laughed and wished one another, “Merry Christmas.”
And it was indeed the very Merriest Christmas. Mom lived to be 90 and she always said that was the best Christmas she ever had. As I was cleaning out her dresser after she passed away, I found one little silver Christmas tree candle holder carefully wrapped in tissue paper at the bottom of a drawer. It wasn’t from that night as it looked relatively new. I don’t know where she had found it, but I certainly know the memory that it held for her.
Christmas In Dark Places
Video and Poem by Glen Scrivener:
HT: JT
LRC Email – The Side of Caution
Here’s my email to Leadership Reno County alums for 12/16/13:
Weekend Recap – It’s Time
My 12/15/13AM sermon, In the Fullness of Time, from Galatians 4:4-5 is now online. We had a great morning singing songs of our Savior’s coming to save, Children serving the congregation by presenting the Song of the Stars musical and lots of energy. My sermon got at how God sent His Son to redeem and adopt sinful humanity. I hope it served everyone well.
Hope you had a great Sunday, too.
Review of Disney’s Frozen
Here’s the trailer:
I got to watch this movie over Thanksgiving break as Meg and I took our nieces and nephew to the theater with our oldest 2 to watch it. We were pleasantly surprised with the quality, story and overall positive message this movie propelled. Here are three things:
1) The movie “felt” like other Disney classics. I, for one, grew up singing Lion King, Little Mermaid and Aladdin songs. This movie delivered that classic Disney feel with soaring melodies, fun songs and memorable characters. I even purchased the soundtrack and enjoy remembering the movie’s highlights.
2) The movie helps us get past bitterness. Ok, a little deeper thought, but by and large people can tend to not open up about problems they face. Unfortunately, this can be seen in church culture especially at times. One subtle message brought home powerfully was the danger holding all of this in and how it wrecks you. The Bible speaks of bitterness as a damaging root. The bitter root of the older sister helps drive the plot of this movie and drives the plot of much of what we read on Facebook or other places where we tend to hold our problems in. Don’t be given to such things, but be open and move ahead in progress.
3) Finally, and most encouraging is the clear Gospel message. Trevin Wax quoted Gene Fant’s piece and I could agree more. He writes: “The film’s world had been plunged into the deepest darkness of winter, families were torn apart, evil was sneering and shameless, everything was falling apart and when the young woman dies, it looks like all is lost. Then something amazing happens: We realize that her death was the antidote for all that was wrong. She returns to life. And spring returns. And relationships are healed. And evil is exposed and brought to justice. And joy returns. In our theater, the audience erupted into cheers. I was dumbfounded by the movie’s final twenty or so minutes. It was an astoundingly clear parable of the Christian Gospel…”
So, take in this tremendous film. Enjoy it. But be mindful of how it points to something greater: the true and better sacrifice of God’s Son so that people can relate rightly to God the Father.
Music Review – Folk Angel’s All the Earth Rejoice
Been listening A LOT to Folk Angel’s All The Earth Rejoice. If you don’t know Folk Angel, according to their website, they “write and rearrange traditional Christmas songs, and through that creative process, retell the Gospel story that illuminates all things.” I have most all of their projects, but this most recent one has been getting a lot of play, mainly because I enjoy the stylistic diversity. There are traditional songs redone in fun ways, new songs that help us glorify Christ and songs that I anticipate using in the local church. My favorite track features Isaac Wimberley and is entitled He Knows.
I can’t say enough to recommend this to you. But, don’t just take my word for it…go over to the All The Earth Rejoice page and sample each of the songs. And, then, give them support by purchasing it for your holiday worship and enjoyment.
Folk Angel is also on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram
Ladies Christmas Tea Video
Here’s a video by Elizabeth Wood for our 2013 Ladies Christmas Tea. This, in particular, is a worshipful trip into Christ’s glory…
2013 Christmas Tea from Phil Auxier on Vimeo.
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