This is a great group of men. They are showing signs of dedication, seriousness, focus and heart. I believe in them.
We are going to see some real men of God grow out of this group of men.
This is a great group of men. They are showing signs of dedication, seriousness, focus and heart. I believe in them.
We are going to see some real men of God grow out of this group of men.
Just got this text from Rusty Wirt, pastor of Community Fellowship in Mayfield, Ky.
“We got the van. Thank you so much for the use of this it for our mission. The team will leave tomorrow morning around 6:30 for Dallas TX. We have 36 people going on mission. 4Rivers is a part of any success we have on the trip. Rusty()(
Well it’s not been a great day. But it ended well.
The boys and I spent the afternoon fishing and it may hVe been the best fishing trip that any man has ever had with his young sons. Look at these catches…
This is the second week of the Remember series. We are working our way through many of the historic Christian traditions that have given meaning and beauty to people’s faith walks for thousands of years. This teaching focuses on the Discipline of Study. If you have ever desired a greater love for the Bible or dependence on its teaching, this message is for you.
The 4RC IPhone APP is now in the iTunes APP store… and it’s free for download. Go grab it now!
http://fourriverschurch.roarapp.com/download
This article was written for Relevant Magazine by Melanie Rainer from Nashville. I loved it and wanted to share it here…
Being a mid-twenties, lifelong Christian is a funny thing. We’ve waded through the weak theology and emotional highs of youth groups. We’ve forged and fought our way through college, which stretched and tested and renewed our faith in both spiritual and academic ways.
But this mid-twenties thing is so much harder. Youth group is gone. College ministry is over. Church isn’t handed to me on a silver platter, just a ride with my parents or a walk across the quad with my best friends. It’s harder now. And it feels like everywhere I turn, the Church (with a capital “c”) is hated, distrusted, over-trusted, mocked, angry, sad, naive, unforgiving, judgemental. Broken (with a capital “b”). It’s all of the sudden really cool to love Jesus but hate the Church.
In a lot of ways, I still feel like a spiritual infant—and perhaps I will always be. I tend to be quick to anger, slow to listen. I rise up on my theological high horse, repeating the arguments of people I trust more than taking the time to formulate my own ideas on really complicated things. Thinking about those complicated things is a scary exercise. The Church has been really ugly in the past. The Church is really ugly today.
But the Church is also beautiful, ordained and beloved by the Creator.
I see the ugly. I see the hypocrisy and the politics and the judgement. But I choose to see grace. I choose to see mercy. I choose to stay in the Church, to ask hard questions and think about complicated things. I choose because I love my God, I love my church—and I love the Church.
When I’m outside the walls of our sweet little church, with its whitewashed exterior and bright red doors, it’s really hard to believe. My world is full of questions, temptations, adversaries—things that make me forget the truth of Gospel grace and just how much I am beloved by my Creator—who sees my ugly. My hypocrisy. My judgment and fear. And He loves me anyway. Who am I to do anything different?
But when I step inside those bright doors, it’s easy to believe. When our voices swell as one, and my eyes glisten with tears like stars, it’s easy to believe. When I feel the presence of the Lord dwelling among His faithful servants, it feels like all is right in the world, for just a few minutes. Because it is.
Church isn’t easy. Church isn’t all the answers. But it works for me, because it helps me to forget me, and focus on something bigger, better and more beautiful.
Our pastor said something that I just can’t get over. It is ringing through my head, convicting and encouraging me at the same time. He was talking about praise, which in many ways is a vital spiritual discipline. We praise because of the joy of the Gospel. And he said, “the joy of the Gospel is going to war against your fears and self-absorption.” I’m letting it fight for me. I’m letting it win. And I can’t do that alone.
So on Sunday mornings, we fight out of bed. We get to church a few minutes late. And then we praise together with a room full of strangers who have become friends, and friends who have become family, and we are knit and bound and promised to each other to death and past death. And that is why Church is still necessary. And beautiful.
“And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.” [Hebrews 10:24-25]
Melanie Rainer is a Nashville-based twentysomething stumbling through life and faith. She is working on her master’s degree at Covenant Theological Seminary and blogs not-quite-often enough at melanierainer.wordpress.com.
The original link is here…
http://m.relevantmagazine.com/god/church/blog/28952-gods-ugly-broken-beautiful-church
We had a great day at Four Rivers yesterday. Pastor Stoney told me that one person met Christ at the Calvert City campus. We also had a large
crowd there.
That new facility is truly turning out to be a big help to an already ‘on fire’ campus.
Eddyville had a great crowd despite the Spring Break crowd loss. I am really proud of the new band who led worship. They did a great job.
It was also nice to have so many guests from Suwanee Furnace Baptist Church. I really like those folks.
The Paducah campus had a stellar day. 8 people made professions of faith. Jonas and the band did a great accoustic worship set. The altar was filled with people getting serious with Christ about various things in their lives. It was an honor to be a part of it.
Do you like Pancakes? How about PANCAKES WITH A PURPOSE?
Check out this image, consider it your invitation & help out Lifeline Ministries this Saturday morning while eating ALL YOU CAN EAT pancakes at the Huddle House from 7:00 to 11:00 am.
Make sure and tell them you are eating for Lifeline!
Thanks everyone.
Please repost this & help me invite a bunch.
Get your River Groups together for breakfast.
This is a fun way to raise money for a good cause.
I know Easter can be such a busy time. And it is also easy to miss out on the personal worship experience in the process of ministering to people on such a big day. Happens to me all the time…
A few years ago, we started doing additional gatherings on Easter weekend and quickly noticed that one of the types of people who came were church leaders from other congregations just looking to unplug from responsibility for a moment and worship personally.
With that in mind, if it would be beneficial to you and your family, let me invite you to one of our alternate Easter gatherings. You could worship without interfering with your normal Easter schedule.
We have gatherings on Sat, Sun & Mon evenings.
Check out FourRiversChurch.com for details.
OK. Maybe that was a little over the top.. lol.
But really, there is no better time than this. Churches, the good ones at least, pull out all the stops at Easter. They are so excited and hopeful the new guests will show up. And nearly everything they do is to the highest quality that they can muster. There really is no better time to check out a church.
I know that at FourRiversChurch.com in Western Kentucky, we go crazy, in a good way, at Easter. We added 4 extra gatherings at our 3 campuses. We will be led in worship by at least 6 different bands/worship leaders. We will be led through the gatherings by at least 6 different emcees. Our kids ministries will be full of excitement and anticipation.
Everything is at its best at Easter.
You can find a complete list of Easter gatherings for Four Rivers by checking out the large banner at the top of www.fourriverschurch.com.
So why is Easter so important? I mean, its all about eggs, bunnies and chocolate, right?
Well, that’s certainly part of the American holiday. But Easter is much older than America or American tradition.
Easter is the biggest holiday in the life of a Christian. Easter is huge in importance and value.
The week leading up to Easter is called HOLY WEEK. Although a Roman Catholic could probably better describe all the intricacies of holy week, let me give you an overview.
Palm Sunday (The Sunday before Easter) commemorates the triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem.
Holy Monday commemorates the moment when Mary pours perfume over Jesus feet. This story seems to lead to Judas Iscariot’s betrayal because he was worried about how much the perfume cost and that Mary was being wasteful. This is a very special story in the development of the gospel.
Holy Tuesday commemorates the Parable of the 10 Virgins which Jesus used to teach about readiness and preparedness. It is on this day that we get ourselves ready to meet Christ through his death and resurrection.
Holy Wednesday commemorates, among other things, the decision made by Judas Iscariot to betray Christ.
Holy “Maundy” Thursday commemorates the washing of feet and the last supper.
Good Friday remembers the death of Christ on the Cross to forgive the sins of the world. It is a very somber and difficult day for those who take this holiday seriously.
Saturday is about Jesus’s body, dead in the tomb.
But then Sunday is Easter! Tomb empty. Stone rolled away. Salvations secure. Lives Changed!
And that is why this is such a huge holiday. It commemorates the most important part of Christian history.
Celebrate the resurrection of Jesus in church this week.
We would love to have you at Four Rivers.