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HANDOUTS/WORKSHEETS for Sunday February 9, 2014

Ezra gets put off for one more week. My “schedule” has been blown to smithereens anyway, and God has really put this week’s message on my heart. Just happens to hit around Valentine’s Day but was not planned (at least by me). 🙂

FORGIVENESS …

Something that as Christians we should excel at … but we all know that is too often not true.

Sometimes secular psychologists, well, it doesn’t have to be a psychologist, sometimes the guy down the road or our unsaved work friend knows forgiveness better than we do.

Does that ever just bewilder you as it does me?

FORGIVENESS …

We should have it down, but we don’t, but when we do, how amazing!

MESSAGE TITLE: FORGIVEN!

MESSAGE TEXT: Ephesians 4:31-32 & Selected

HANDOUTS/WORKSHEETS for February 2, 2014

■ Does God still stir the hearts and spirits of his people to do his work?

■ Do I believe that?

Here are our handouts. We continue in Ezra as God stirs the spirits of the people to return to Jerusalem for his rebuilding project.

Lessons in the Sovereignty of God: Building with God’s Blessing in a Pagan Land!

Message Title: The People Answer the Sovereign Call of God!

Message Text: Ezra 1:5-2:70

I have learned a new word this week: anachronism.

Anachronism  … 

  • A thing belonging or appropriate to a period other than that in which it exists, esp. a thing that is conspicuously old-fashioned.
  • Something (such as a word, an object, or an event) that is mistakenly placed in a time where it does not belong, such as in a story, movie, etc.; a person or a thing that seems to belong to the past and not to fit in the present.

Example 1: Seeing a cell phone on the bedroom dresser in a 1940’s movie.

Example 2: The following instance in William Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar is a popular example of anachronism. (From Act II, scene i : lines 193 – 194 of Julius Caesar)

  • Brutus: “Peace! count the clock.”
  • Cassius: “The clock has stricken three.”
  • The year was 44 AD, and there were no mechanical clocks at the time of Julius Caesar but were present in Shakespeare’s times that is, when the play was written.

Example 3: Another dialog from the same play is a prominent anachronism example.

“he plucked me open his doublet and offered them his throat to cut”

  • A doublet is a garment that was worn during the time of Shakespeare, and not during the time of Julius Caesar.

———————————-

So we ask … ?

■ Is God merely an anachronism in 2014?

  • Does God belong in our story now as he did in the Old Testament?
  • Is the mighty hand of God “a thing of the past”?
  • Does the Sovereign LORD of Ezra’s time not fit our current perspective of God?
  • Is this Sovereign LORD too old-fashioned, out-dated?

 

 

 

 

Bulletin for FFC for February 2, 2014

Here is this week’s bulletin.

We are now into February and thankfully February is a short month so we can somewhat think about Spring. It seems that our unanimous vote last Sunday morning calling for the end of bad weather has not been heard.

*Please note that I did change the date on the announcement page. I caught this of course shortly after I uploaded. 🙂 Slipped by the proofreader the first time.

More additions to the bulletin added Saturday afternoon. We have waited on a decision as far as a possible cancellation of services before printing, so I have added these announcements that came in late.

HANDOUTS/WORKSHEETS for Ezra 1:1-4 for Sunday …

We begin our study of Ezra this week.

Lessons in the Sovereignty of God: Building with God’s Blessing in a Pagan Land!

Here are our HANDOUTS/WORKSHEETS for Ezra 1:1-4 for Sunday January 26, 2014.

 

From “To Road’s End” blog by John & Katie Carter

Lightening the Load
I am not prone to packrat-ism. I’ve spent too much of my life lugging suitcases around to believe that accumulating goods is worth my while. Yet recently even I have been shedding some weight.

In our modern world many are supremely privileged to have the capacity to pursue arts and crafts. Think about it: a couple of centuries ago you probably wouldn’t have had the spare change to buy a guitar, even if you could find one (when were they invented, anyway?). Here in PNG, that usually remains the case. Because people live a subsistence lifestyle off the land, most have little pocket money. What money they do have often goes towards school fees for their kids or basic necessities, like some store-bought rice or second-hand clothes. I am extremely wealthy compared to them.

So I’m passing on some of my goods to the community here. My guitar? I’ve had it for around 5 years and loved it, especially the smell of the wood when opening the case. I sometimes even made it sound all right! I have sold my guitar to a deserving MK who, at the age of 12 or 13, is already better than me.

Camera. I’ve had it for three years now. A decent DSLR is worlds better than your average compact digital. I used it during village living back in 2010 to get some great shots of life in PNG, and more recently have been capturing my beautiful daughter as she grows at an alarming rate. (I keep wanting to push the ‘slow down’ button on Tikvah, but can’t seem to find it.) The camera went to a young Papua New Guinean lady working in a partner organization here in PNG. She has been trained in media and is responsible for communications and promotional material. I think it will serve her well.

Other loved items have been passed on. Each of these represents an opportunity, and I’m grateful to have had them and to be able to share them. Life is brighter when there are avenues for creativity.

In addition to the good reasons of 1) sharing the blessings I’ve received and 2) not having to lug the stuff back across the globe, there’s a third good reason to be selling these things: we’re going to be going back to school this year… and school costs a lot of money. I suppose that is good motivation for paying attention in class.

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