June Spire - First Baptist Church of Scituate
Transcription
June Spire - First Baptist Church of Scituate
The Scituate Spire FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, 660 Country Way, Scituate, MA 02066 The Rev. Barbara Kathleen Welch, Pastor. Church Office 545-0058 E-mail: praisebe@comcast.net. Web Site: www.firstbaptistscituate.com Vol. 54 No. 6 -- June, 2012 Is Suffering a Choice? Spiritual Suffering or Spiritual Bliss! Saint John of the Cross writes of the Dark Night of the Soul or Acedia. It represents a spiritual darkness, a lack of God’s presence, even a heaviness of heart spiritually. We all have been there at one time or another. Acedia may be a gift. One seeks desperately to find God or to experience God’s presence. Nothing but spiritual growth and blessing ensue when the darkness breaks and the Light of Christ shines again in the heart of the believer. There are two other types of spiritual suffering: The first is caused by spiritual disobedience. This suffering may be likened to a spiritual heartache, something is wrong and we will need God’s help. The heartache will not disappear until we go to God in prayer and through the reading of His Word. The Holy Spirit is convicting our spirits and we should be grateful. The Spirit will faithfully guide and bring about healing, but the remedy is only through total obedience to God’s leadership, the confession of our disobedience, and then the Light of Christ shines again. There is peace, spiritual peace. Jesus must be Lord of all or He is not Lord at all! The second type of spiritual suffering that most of us will experience is the suffering that comes from following Jesus Christ and his ways in a broken and fallen world. There are those in the world who do not love nor appreciate Christians. This second kind of spiritual suffering may be rightly named, “Spiritual Bliss.” If the light of Christ is shining brightly in our lives in actions, words, deeds and behaviors, others who know not Christ will be uncomfortable. This is spiritual bliss. Jesus, our perfect model, suffered for doing right; we will suffer for doing right also. The New Testament text from Romans 8:28 is a verse of sheer promise and delight. We, as followers of Jesus Christ, will be misunderstood, mistreated, and hopefully not in the church, but by un-believers. God will bring about good of anything and everything that touches our lives in a negative or hurtful manner. The bliss of spiritual suffering is underscored in Jesus words, “Take up thy cross and follow me,” It will be costly, but by heaven’s economic plan, not humankind’s economic plan. There is no call to self-reliance. Living a life in spiritual bliss means that we will be living on a much higher level in every area of our lives. Ethically and morally, Christ has re-written the meaning and purpose of how we live. Following Christ will create suffering, for the evil one will seek to deter us in any possible manner. The evil one will tell us falsehoods of, “I am right, I must have my way, and, I am so worried, I am so angry, I am not going to do this or that because I am in control.” These blatant lies will destroy our spiritual footing if we allow the evil one to lead us in a divergent pathway. Christ has won the battle. Be spiritually blessed and experience spiritual bliss in “Taking up your cross and following the One who cannot and will not fail.” Faithfully, Pastor Barb June Days to Remember Prayer Needs Happy Birthday: Linda Baker (4) June (Robbins) Lippard (4) Edward Cass (9) Marilyn Ojala (15) David Antos (30) Our church and its ministry and mission, for local ABC ministry to the people of La Romana in the Dominican Republic. God's presence in our services, our Sunday School, our church boards and committees and officers. For our local, state, and national government leaders, healing for our country, for revival and peace in our nation and world. Happy Anniversary: Joe & Ellen Reynolds -- 39 years (2) Mark & Marcia Wilson -- 17 years (11) Richard & June (Robbins) Lippard -- 24 years (18) Glenn & Carol (Crawford) Jenkins -- 28 years (23) Concerns: Our troops Laurie Edwards Blondy Williams Bobbie Arico Jeff Bailey Ema Veiga Wendell Sides Robbie Fidler Albert Baggs family, bereaved From Christianity Today Think fast One day, my husband announced to the family that he was going to fast and pray. Ginny, our 5-year-old, had recently learned that fasting meant not eating. "No!" she shouted. "You can't fast! You'll die!" Her dad carefully explained that many men and women fasted in Bible times. Ginny paused a moment. Then, with a flash of insight and a note of warning, she proved her point. "And they all died," she said. —Kathy Cash, Dallas, TX. Today's Christian Woman, "Heart to Heart." “Patience is the best remedy for every trouble. Plautus, circa 254-184 BC Contacts The Reverend Barbara Kathleen Welch Pastor(781-378-2067) cell:781-385-1209 Dan Sides, Christian Education (781-545-4950) Chuck Rivers, Chairman Deacons (545-4982) Florence Baggs, Church Secretary (545-0058) Pastor Welch’s hours are Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Ann Marie Field Kenney Olson’s brother Ken’s daughter Sarah Angela Wadsworth James Bailey Calucka Antonieta Barros David Mendes Cindy Lou Strachan Voniderstein family, bereaved The Langford family, bereaved Bob Baggs The Prouty family, bereaved Alyssa McCravy Kathryn Holland Pat Bongarzone Luther Veiga Celebrations: Welcome home, Nancy and Anthony Antoniello from your wonderful trip to the Grand Canyon. Hope you have lots of pictures! We celebrate the marriage of Susan Flannery and James Carmark! Thank you Ellen Everett, for helping out, and congratulations on your son’s engagement. Congratulations to Chuck Rivers’ niece who has graduated from Northeastern University with a degree in criminal law and who aspires to being a detective! Pat Bongarzone’s granddaughter MacKenzie won a dance competition! One talented little girl! Congratulations, Danielle McCravy, as you are now 18 years old, graduate from high school, and are off to Stonehill College in the Fall! (Can this be our “Little D”?) Anne Marie Fields’ daughter is now a member of the National Honor Society! Antonieta has found an affordable apartment which allows pets – which means she can have her wonderful little doggie Brooklyn with her. In San Francisco! Happy birthday, Hope! And Happy Birthday to Wes McCravy and Alyssa McCravy who is now 21! In Reverend Lynn Anderson’s book, Finding the Heart to Go On, he writes about an elderly lady who has been through extremely tough circumstances. How did she hang in there? She said,“Each morning, I just decided to get up and go on.” Winston Churchill, once speaking to a large crowd of students, gave the following speech: “Never give up . . . never give up . . . never give up.” He said no more. The applause was thunderous and the students gave him a Standing ovation. SPYER-NEWS . . . . . with Snoopy Sue There was a spirit of fellowship and fun at The May Bazaar/Yard Sale. The doors were opened early because of the press of the crowd! There was something for everyone and few folks left empty handed. The workers enjoyed the event as much as the +visitors. Laurie Edwards, who had been recently hospitalized, was there with mother Caroline, keeping the White Elephant table in good shape. Laurie and Caroline never miss helping out at fairs and yard sales. They’re the best! The Baggs family was represented at the White Elephant also – Flo and daughters Bobbie and Catherine. And of course Polly Fallon – a regular. All found treasures they couldn’t part with. There were many items which interested the children also -treasures for all ages – including a toy fire engine with flashing lights and sirens which left in the hands of a very happy youngster, and a little bluebird in a cage who was named Blueberry by the little girl who brought him home. Emily Robinson and Hope Crowell manned the jewelry sales for Missions. Francina Campbell and Pat Bongarzone were in charge of the delectable goodies at the Bake Table. Marilyn Ojala and Ellen Reynolds were at the table featuring the many handmade items crafted by the First Baptist Artisans at the Robbins’ barn. Sylvia Jenkins and Cynde Robbins, assisted by Ruthie Sides, held sway over the many tomato plants which were started by Cynde. (Thank you, Cynde, for all your hard work.) There were also perennials donated by many friends and members. Donna Walsh manned the very attractively laid out book tables in the foyer. Lots of good reading there! It was said the “Café”, where Christelle and Rob Fidler and Wes McCravy (who was cooking up some great looking ‘burgers) satisfied lots of hungry folks’ appetites with a varied menu. Chuck Rivers, Wayne Robbins, Anne McDonley and Coleen Burke handled garage sales where there were many bargains to be had. Ruth McCravy and Danny Sides assisted in the clean up afterward. Some of the visitors we had were: Phoebe Mulligan, the “Grande Dame” of Scituate; Jack Russell Benny, who loves church events, accompanied by Bob Baggs; and all the folks we see every year. So good to see them again. Grace and peace. Thoughts to Consider: 1. Prayer is not a “spare wheel” that you pull out when in trouble, but it is a “steering wheel” that directs the right path throughout. 2. Why is a car’s WINDSHIELD so large and the rear view mirror so small? Because our PAST is not as important as our FUTURE. So, look ahead and move on. 3. Friendship is like a BOOK. It takes a few seconds to burn, but it takes years to write. 4. All things in life are temporary. If going well, enjoy it, they will not last forever. If going wrong, don’t worry, they can’t last long either. 5. Old friends are Gold! New friends are diamonds! If you get a diamond, don’t forget the gold! Because to hold a diamond, you always need a base of gold! 6. Often when we lose hope and think this is the end, GOD smiles from above and says, “Relax, it’s just a bend, not the end! 7. When GOD solves your problems, you have faith in HIS abilities; when GOD doesn’t solve your problems HE has faith in your abilities. 8. A blind person asked St. Anthony: “Can there be anything worse than losing eyesight?” He replied: “Yes, losing your vision.” 9. When you pray for others, God listens to you and blesses them, and sometimes, when you are safe and happy, remember that someone has prayed for you. 10. WORRYING does not take away tomorrow’s TROUBLES, it takes away today’s PEACE. From an email This is another chapter from the book For Those Who Hurt, a collection of essays written by C-Z Antos, wife of David for 57 years. After her death in 2003, David compiled and published the essays in book form. Our Fathers Where is God? While working on his book, Disappointed With God, Phillip Yancey interviewed a young man who was suffering the results of a severe automobile accident and whose wife had cancer. Yancey asked the young man to describe his disappointment with God. The grief stricken man answered, “…I don’t feel any disappointment with God…I learned not to confuse God with life…I feel free to curse the unfairness of life and to vent my grief and anger. But I believe God feels the same way about that accident…grieved and angry. I don’t blame Him…God’s existence, even His love for me, does not depend upon my good health.” And consider tjhis story: In 1871, Horatio Spafford saw his wife and four daughters off to Europe on the ocean Liner Ville du Havre. Halfway there the ship was rammed by another vessel and sank. All four daughters drowned. Mrs. Spafford survived the disaster. Immediately, Spafford booked passage on another liner to join his grief stricken wife. During his voyage Spafford felt God’s comfort and wrote the following: “When peace like a river attendeth my way, When sorrows like sea-billows roll, Whatever my lot, Thou has taught me to say: It is well, it is well with my soul.” Is there any amongst us who has not been touched by these poignant lyrics? And who hasn’t heard of Joni Eareckson Tada, that beautiful young woman who became a quadriplegic after a diving accident. She blesses so many with her inspiring books, art work, and testimony. Asked how she could have faith in God and still smile as she sat in her wheelchair, Joni responded by saying that it was God who put the smile on her face as she sat in her wheelchair. Perhaps Russell Cronkhite, in a Decision magazine article some time ago, summed it up best: “Jesus never promised that if we would accept Him as our Savior, all the trials of this life would disappear. He did promise though that He will always be near to go through the difficulty with us, to give us comfort and strength.” Whether or not we feel disappointment with God, how do those who hurt keep going day in and day out? Perhaps 1 Chronicles 16:11 offers the ultimate answer no matter what our situation: “Seek the Lord, yes, seek His strength.” On StoryCorps, a project of National Public Radio, I heard 73-year-old Walter Dean Myers tell a story that he says has forever changed the way he remembers his father. Myers, an author with almost 100 books to his name, recalls that at 14 he already had a love for writing. Since his parents didn’t have much money, he says he started working early, and before long had saved up enough to buy a typewriter. According to Myers, however, his mother had a drinking problem and spent what he had set aside. When Myers’ father, a hardworking janitor, learned what had happened, he took some of his own hard-earned cash and bought a Royal typewriter for his son. Since Myers went on to become a successful author, his father’s kindness might sound like the kind of moment that every child would treasure. Myers recalls, however, that in the years that followed, his relationship with his dad was not so encouraging. Even though his dad bought him that typewriter, he was deeply hurt by the fact that, over the years, his dad never said anything about his writing. Myers saId that even when he began including in his books some of the stories he had heard his dad tell, his father would never comment on them. At that point, the interviewer asked Myers whether he ever asked his father why he never said anything about his writing. Myers said, no, he had never done that. He added that even when he brought his dying father a book that he had just written, his dad just picked up the book, looked at it, and laid it down without saying a word. This, however, was not the end of the story. After his father’s passing, as Myers was going through family papers, he noticed something that surprised him. He saw X’s wherever his dad’s signature should have been. With words filled with emotion, Myers went on to say, “The man couldn’t read. I mean, that was why he never said anything about my writing. It just tore me up . . . I could have read him a story at the hospital.” At this point, Myers’ story might merge with our own. Few things in life are more important than the ability to be at peace with thoughts and memories of our moms and dads. Yet because of our own unmet longings for approval, feelings of hurt and resentment can linger without the kind of understanding that ended up meaning so much to Myers. It might help us to know that our parents are probably more like Myers’ father – and like us (needy, broken, and with unmet longings) – than we ever dreamed or imagined. Continued Our Fathers continued We have reason to believe that such generational struggles are common to many of our families. Think, for example, about the parents of the Bible. Almost all of them come to us with issues. Imagine the regret that Adam and Eve must have endured, especially after their first son killed his younger brother. Then there’s Abraham and Sarah. If we only remember their best moments, we miss the way they hurt others by their lack of faith. (GENESIS 20:1-9; 21:9-14) Even though they were destined to become patriarch and matriarch of a chosen people, the stories of their descendants were repeatedly marred by what we now call “the sins of the fathers.” The Bible doesn’t cover up Isaac’s personal weakness, Jacob’s deceitfulness, David’s adultery, the ironic foolishness of Solomon, or the kingdom-dividing arrogance of Rehoboam. Such realism does not require us to dishonor our parents. What it can do, however, is to help us avoid a tendency to either idealize or dehumanize them. In reality, our moms and dads are probably neither as good or as bad as we think they are. In so many ways, they are just like us. They too have spent their lives looking for significance, security, and satisfaction. They too have longed for a kind of love, acceptance, and approval that they didn’t find completely in their own parents. There’s a good reason for this universal experience. Even though we were made, in part, of the seed and stock of our moms and dads, we weren’t made for them. Neither were we made to find our life in, by, or through our parents. Some of us may need to lower our expectations of our parents so that we can see past them to the Father who made us for Himself (JOHN 14:8-9). Father in heaven, it has taken some of us a long time to come to terms with parents whose own struggles we have never really seen or understood. Please help us to see them not in place of You but rather in light of the eternal life, provision, and protection that You alone can give to us. From the security of Your presence, help us then to honor the mother and father who needed You as much as we do now. By Mart DeHaan, “BEEN THINKING ABOUT”, RADIO BIBLE CLASS MINISTRIES