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All right, so membership class,
it used to be, I think before I got here, that they would have
several different membership classes where they'd have an
hour here and an hour there. And then I decided, well, let's
just put it all together and drink from the fire hose. So
supposed to have four hours of instruction. I think we might
have changed it in the bylaws to three hours cuz I usually
try to get it in between 9 and 12. Or if we do it on a Sunday
afternoon for three hours there. And I've got a whole pew full
of handouts here that I'm gonna start and work our way down.
And we will be taking breaks as the morning goes along, so
you won't be sitting here listening for the whole time. So let's
go ahead and jump in then with one of, let me tell you what
we're gonna do, okay? So first of all, we've got a couple of
handouts on the history of the church and basically the DNA,
what this church really is all about. And then we've got the
bylaws. And the bylaws is the biggest
handout that I'm going to give to you. It's the most detailed.
And we'll spend quite a bit of time going through that. But
we won't cover everything in the bylaws today because we don't
have time for that. And the assignment will be that
you'll take the bylaws home and read them. And then when you're
done with this class, you'll have an interview with the elders
to apply for membership. And at the elders interview,
if you have any questions or concerns about anything in the
bylaws, you can bring that up at that time. In your interview
with the elders, you also want to share your personal testimony,
because we want a regenerate membership. We want our members
to be born again. And so you don't just join the
church because your family joins the church, or you've got tradition
or roots, but you join the church because you're a believer in
Jesus Christ, and you have personal faith, and you have the Holy
Spirit, and you can really be a member in that sense. And that's
the most important membership, is the spiritual, organic membership
that you already have. and really we're just going through
the official process of what is supposed to be genuine and
real in the heart as Christ makes us members of his body. So then
after the bylaws, we'll talk about the doctrinal statement,
and we like to keep our doctrinal statement short and sweet. We
don't go into long detail, but we try to put things in there
that will let people know what our church stands for, and somewhat
in contradistinction to other churches around so that you can
know, well, what makes this church different than this church? What's
important to us doctrinally? And then there'll be some policies
that go along with the doctrinal statement. The policies are not
as important as the doctrinal statement, but just things that
we've come up with practically how we operate. So those things
can change over time, but it's good to let people know our child
protection policy and also a few other policies. And then at the
end, we'll just go over some of the ministries of the church
and how you can get involved, and we'll be talking about that.
So that's the plan for the morning. And as I said, we'll take some
breaks here. Our first break will be after we discuss the
bylaws. But the first thing I wanna talk about is the history of
the church. And I love the history of this church and I'm so thankful
for the history of this church. So let me hand out for you a
brief summary of how the church began and what changes it's gone
through over the years. Would you like one or two copies
as a couple? Okay. Can we take two? Yes, you certainly can. All right, so you see here that
the church was originally a part of the PCUSA, the Presbyterian
Church USA, and that actually goes back to... 1881, if I'm
remembering correctly. Yep. So I've also got with me
here an article from The Voice newspaper. It's the local newspaper
here in the area from 1979 with an article about the history
of Firth. And so in there, it gives a few
details that aren't here. So 1881 was when it started as
a church. And it didn't start here at this
location. It was across the park. And Caddy Corner, basically on
the corner, the northeast corner of the park, there's a brick
house there now on the corner, but that used to be the church
grounds. And then we were a part of that
for 61 years. You can do the math from 1881
for 61 years. But then in the 1920s, which is not 60 years,
this is when it started to go a different direction, the pastor
that was here, and somebody told me what they thought his name
was, but I didn't write it down, he began to let the congregation
know that the denomination was losing its doctrinal bearings.
And this usually happens in denominations at the seminary level. Seminaries
tend to go liberal, if you wanna use that word, Theological liberalism
is not the same thing as political liberalism, although they do
have some association and overlap, but theological liberalism was
basically a departure from the faith that began in Germany and
some of the schools in Europe, and it denied certain basic truths
of the scriptures having to do with the miracles that are in
the Bible, that philosophical naturalism really took over the
thinking of Western civilization at the academic level, and that
is the belief that there really is nothing beyond the physical
world. And so therefore, the Christians, they had to kind
of try to find a way to make themselves seem intelligent and
relevant to a culture that no longer believed in the supernatural.
And so they started taking a lot of those things out of their
preaching and stopped believing in them. That was known as theological
liberalism. Things like the virgin birth
of Christ, things like the you know, parting of the Red Sea
and those miracles that are in the Bible. They're like, well,
those things may not have actually happened and that's not important.
What's important is, you know, the moral spiritual truth that
God loves you and things like that. So that was theological
liberalism and that started taking over the PCUSA in the 1920s and
before that, but it was kind of coming to a head in the 1920s. And this became known in America
as the divide between the the theological liberals and the
conservatives, and the liberals, they were called liberals, and
the conservatives were called fundamentalists. And now we hear
the word fundamentalist and we associate it with legalism and
narrow-mindedness and bad things. But when it first was starting
to get used, it didn't have those associations. It just meant that
they believed in the fundamental truths of the Bible that the
liberals were denying and no longer believing. And so the
pastor here, as is often the case in Midwest areas, was much
more theologically conservative than the population centers on
the East Coast or the West Coast. And so he was sticking with the
Bible as the denomination was going off to the left. And so
he was deposed from his pastorate because the PCUSA had control
over the pastors. They could give you a pastor
and take a pastor away. And so they didn't like this
guy that was here and they said, you're out. But the congregation
stood strong doctrinally. And they didn't use the Sunday
school literature that was put out by the Board of Education
for the PCUSA. They also didn't support the
Board of Foreign Missions, and those were two areas that the
liberals had really taken over in the denomination. And so because
of that, they Presbytery, the group of church leaders in the
area here, wouldn't give them another pastor. So they were
kind of left to flounder for a number of years. They were
just told, as it says there, that no pastors are available,
sorry. And so they began to pray about the situation, and God
answered their prayers in an unexpected way, that on December
29th, 1946, a fire broke out in the old church building and
burned it to the ground. and they thought maybe it was
a faulty furnace. So the congregation at that time
says, well, we don't have a building, we don't have a pastor, we've
been going a different direction from the denomination, I guess
it's time to cut ties and start over. So that's what they did.
The denomination took the insurance money, they took the lot, and
the church started over with nothing but the membership, which
is the important thing. The building, the lot, all of
that is very replaceable. But you guys, you are what's
important. And so the congregation had that, and that's all they
needed. So that's when they then bought this property, and together
with help from the community and volunteer work, they were
able to build this half that we're in now of the building,
and they completed that As it says there, oh, I don't think
it says there. Oh yeah, June 13th, 1948, they
had the first services in the new building. And they started
with 72 when they left the denomination, but by the time the building
was completed, they had 170 members. So it was neat to see how God
blessed their faithfulness. They went through difficult years,
hard times. and were tested, but then through
that testing, they had a new building and more than double
the size of their congregation, and they were debt free. So pretty
awesome testimony of God's faithfulness. That's why I love the history
of the church here. And we want to continue that history of faithfulness
because history repeats. And basically now in the 21st
century, we're at the same point in the church culture that they
were at in the 1920s, here we are in the 2020s, and instead
of fighting the modernists in the church, who were the theological
liberals of the last century, now most of evangelicalism has
largely been influenced and taken over by postmodernist thinking.
that just relativizes truth and says, well, you know, we can
just kind of drift with the culture on cultural issues and we don't
have to take a stand on certain things about gender roles or
we don't have to talk about homosexuality the way that they used to and
things like that. So a lot of the seminaries have also drifted
in our time. You see a further divide happening. The Reformed church here in town
is talking and thinking about their future. Are they going
to stay with their denomination? Because now they're experiencing
the same thing. Their denomination was good in the 20th century,
but now the East Coast and the West Coast are gone kind of crazy,
as they often do. And so they're like, well, you
know, what's our future? So we'll see what happens there.
So then the church affiliated with the Bible Presbyterian denomination
there in the late 40s until the 1960s, but they ended up leaving
the Bible Presbyterian denomination because it ended up developing
some of those negative tendencies of fundamentalism that we associate
with fundamentalists, the legalism, narrow-mindedness, and divisiveness,
and that kind of thing. And so they're like, well, I
guess we'll leave that. And they were an independent
congregation then known as Firth Community Church during the 60s,
70s, and 80s. And then at the latter part of
the 90s, the church became a part of the Evangelical Free denomination. You see that there in the last
paragraph. And it says that we felt the
need to join with the EFCA, that's the Evangelical Free Church of
America, so the church could call on outside help in dealing
with issues affecting the church, also to help with supplying a
pastor. So they'd had a difficulty with their pastor, and they kind
of felt like they didn't know how to handle it because they
were an independent local church that didn't have those connections.
And so they thought, well, we need somebody that can step in
and help us when the elders and the pastors and the congregation
have a disagreement. So that was one of their motivations
for joining the EFCA, and also to look for a pastor. Now, I
am not a part of the EFCA historically. I didn't grow up in the EFCA.
And so when I came as pastor in 2008, this church had been
with the EFCA for a good 10 years. And as the EFCA had tried to
supply them with a pastor, they couldn't find one in the EFCA
that was really where they were at and what they were looking
for. And so they ended up finding a guy from the Master's Seminary,
where I went to seminary. We seemed to really link up well
and sync up well. And I was excited about being
a part of an EFCA church. But that excitement dimmed over
time as I found out that the EFCA was not as doctrinally strong. now as they had been in the 50s,
60s, and 70s. If I'd been an EFCA pastor in
the 60s and 70s, I would have fit in really well. Sadly, I
don't fit in as well in the 2010s and 2020s. And that's not because
I've changed, but because the EFCA has changed. And that's
another story. Maybe we'll talk about that at
another time. But I do want to give you guys
more of the recent history, probably as we go forward a little bit
more. But this is a good handout for the history of the church
from its beginning in 1881 up until about the time that I was
called as the pastor. And I've been here since 2008.
Any questions about the church history? It's not. We left the EFCA in 2020, I think.
Maybe 2019. I have a bad memory for dates. Yeah. Well, while we're on the
subject, let me go ahead and tell a little bit about that
story. So I came in 2008. I don't think we left until 2020
or 2019. At the beginning, I was very excited about being a part
of the EFCA because I really want our church to not be isolated. I want there to be conversation.
I want there to be fellowship. I want there to be cooperation
among believing churches, even if we're not fully in agreement
on all doctrinal matters. And we'll get to that when we
talk about our statement on cooperation and separation. However, my experience
in the EFCA was that they were not very open to dialogue and
discussion. They basically just wanted me
to follow what the national leadership decided. And they weren't platforming
anybody that held my views on things, but they were only platforming
people that had their views on things and were developing kind
of an echo chamber that was moving the denomination, again, more
in the leftward direction away from what I would think would
be biblical fidelity. And so this arose in a number
of issues. And some of the ways that it
revealed itself was, I went to a spiritual warfare seminar that
they had for pastors and elders in the area, and it was a pretty
strong departure away from the Reformation principle of Scripture
alone as our authority. In fact, the people who were
presenting there explicitly said that their teaching doesn't come
from scripture but it comes from their own practical experiences.
So when I challenged the casting out of demons out of believers,
that believers can't be demon-possessed and you don't have to cast demons
out of believers, I didn't find them ready to discuss and dialogue
that on a biblical basis and we didn't get anywhere. So I
was like, well, what am I doing here if I can't have a good influence
on the movement? Another area where I saw problems
in the EFCA was a general lack of discernment, and in particular
showed itself in a book that was very popular when I came
here as pastor about 15 years ago known as The Shack. Shack
was turned into a movie. It was a best-selling Christian
book. But I use the word Christian rather loosely because the guy
who wrote that book, he doesn't believe in substitutionary atonement.
In fact, he attacks the substitutionary atonement of Christ in the book.
It was also problematic for other reasons. The book was, a lot
of people focused on the fact that his portrayal of God the
Father was as a black woman. And that is a problem, but to
me it's more of a symptom of the real problem was that he
didn't believe scripture and he had really a problem with
the holiness of God, the wrath of God, and therefore his view
of the atonement was all messed up. And so when I tried to dialogue
with the EFC on that, they were just like, well, you know, it's
a book that we might not agree with everything, but it's helped
a lot of people and that kind of thing. And so I just didn't
sense a real desire to stand on truth and fight for the truth
in areas that I think are foundational and important, the nature of
God and the nature of the atonement. Also, I saw a lot of pragmatism
in their church growth methodology and in their missiology. It was
more just focused on success in numbers and not so much in
what does the Scripture actually tell us to do in these areas,
church growth and missions. I saw integration of secular
thinking into the counseling methodologies. They were promoting
Catholic mysticism through the spiritual formation movement.
They were not consistent in their interpretation of the Bible when
it comes to the sufficiency of Scripture. They said they believed
in inerrancy and sufficiency, but in practice, it didn't really
work that way. They were more pragmatic. The
watchword of the ESCA, traditionally, was where stands it written?
And I was like, all right, let's do that. Let's do where stands
it written. Let's talk about that. And they no longer were
interested in that, at least from my experience. And so those
things together with them walking away from premillennialism and
removing that from their doctrinal statement just showed that there
wasn't that much I could do in the movement and we weren't getting
that much out of it. And so for the health of the church, I thought
it would be better to separate amicably to wish the EFCA well,
but at the same time to focus our efforts in other fellowship. And we'll get to that. What churches
do we have fellowship and how do we keep from being isolated
and alone as an independent local church? That's an important issue
we'll talk about. So good, good question. I'm glad
we talked about that. Any questions on the recent history
of the church then? So the process was smooth. We formed a committee on independence,
independence committee. We presented it to the congregation.
We had a unanimous vote on that issue of leaving the EFCA, which
was so encouraging. Then when we did leave the EFCA,
I tried to do it the right way. I wrote him a letter laying out
all of my reasons. in a respectful manner, and didn't
hear back on any of that. So, yeah, it was a good experience
for the church, and no hard feelings. All right, well, with the history
of the church in mind, then let's go ahead and talk about some
of the DNA of the church. And here, we've got the three
E's of ministry that I wanna put up in front of you. So yeah,
Firth Bible Church. We changed our name to Firth
Bible Church then in 2021, and we left the EFCA in 2020, and
then it took us a little while to come up with what our name
was going to be. And so when it comes to the DNA of the church,
you can really simplify what we're all about in the three
E's of ministry. That is that we're here to exalt
God, We're here to edify one another, and we're here to evangelize
the lost. And here the exaltation is there
with the Hebrew praise as a symbol from the Psalms. And then we've
got the edification from God's Word, the teaching of God's Word.
Then the evangelism with the fishing out there as God sends
us out to be fishers of men. And so really these three E's
summarize our ministry to God, we're here to exalt God, our
ministry to one another, we're here to build up each other in
our faith, and our ministry to the world, that we're here to
proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ and make disciples, baptism,
and such. So as long as we're focused on
a proper biblical ministry towards God, one another, and the world,
then we're well-balanced, we're not leaving anything out, we're
accomplishing what the New Testament has given us to do in the Great
Commission. God is seeking out worshipers,
but worshipers have to be holy and loving as edification focuses
on those dual aspects of loving one another and being holy in
our lives and then that ministry to the world. There's many ways
to minister to the world, but the greatest and the best is
to share with them the message of eternal life and bring them
into a reconciled relationship with God. So those are the three
E's. And as you think about the three
E's, I've also got a little handout here that we put together when
I first came as a church. So these are just a few bullet
points that can kind of give you an idea of what it is that
we try to be as a church. And when I say truly evangelical,
what I mean is that the evangelical movement has kind of lost its
way in some respects, not just the EFCA, but all of what would
be considered evangelical Christianity. And if you're looking at church
history and you want to know what is evangelical Christianity, well
it really comes out of the Reformation. Evangelical is another word for
reformed Christianity that focuses on sola scriptura, that is the
principle that the Bible is our authority, focuses on the idea
that we're here to bring glory to God, that Christ alone is
the one who saves us, not the sacraments of the church. Those
basic Reformation principles that are illustrated in the five
solas, that's an evangelical church in its historic definition.
And then as the Protestant church lost its way and the liberals
destroyed most of the major denominations, then evangelicals were those
Protestants who stayed faithful to those Reformation principles
and faithful to the teachings of Scripture. And then since
that time in the hundred years, since the evangelicals came out
from the mainline denominations, well, you've seen the evangelicals
also weaken in their faith and compromise. And so my goal for
our church and our church's goal that I found when I came here
was that we want to remain truly evangelical. And that is that
the gospel is our chief passion, our true delight. The growth
of the gospel is how we evaluate everything we do. Then secondly,
you see that we're not trying to be a nice church. And what
I mean by that is that we're not just trying to please people
and make people comfortable, but that our goal is to love
people by speaking the truth. And so the gospel's always under
attack, like the author of The Shack attacks the gospel. And
we are called to defend it from those attacks, from those who
are within the church professing to be Christians, and the attacks
from the secular culture without. So you've got to have that militant
mindset as a Christian. There's a spiritual battle going
on and you can't always be nice when you're in a spiritual battle.
You can always be loving, but nice is not a fruit of the Spirit.
Love is a fruit of the Spirit. It's important to differentiate
between those two. Then thirdly, you see, we want
more than lip service to the Bible. We don't just want to
say that the Bible is our authority. We want to actually practice
that and all that we say and do. We teach the Bible and only
the Bible. We don't pick up the latest movement
within evangelicalism, but we just go back to what does scripture
say, where stands it written. And then fourth bullet point
there is we're looking for discipleship, that true disciples are ready
to die for their Lord. And so that means that we want
a church full of people who are actually living that way. We
don't just want pew sitters. We don't just want nominal Christians.
We want a church full of people who are called and who are encouraging
one another, who are challenging one another, who are setting
the example for one another, on that discipleship that is
willing to lay down your life for the Lord Jesus and to follow
Him wherever He goes. That's what we're looking for.
And then family, a focus on family. We believe that men are responsible
for their families. Every dad is called to be a youth
pastor to his own children and to the extent that's possible
to other children in the church. So we want dads involved with
Awana. And we want dads involved with
Sunday school. And we want dads to be doing
personal devotions at home with their wives and with their children,
and to be discipling their families so that you don't just think,
well, you know, we hire the youth pastor to do that. Well, you
know, no youth pastor here. That's one blessing about not
having a youth pastor is it makes it harder for people to shuffle
off the responsibility to the youth pastor. I was a youth pastor
for one year in Wyoming after I graduated from seminary. And
my experience, again, it's just my experience, but it might be
telling. that when I was hired as the
youth pastor, the first problem I encountered was that all the
dads who had been serving in the youth ministry when they
didn't have a youth pastor were like, phew, good, now he can
do it and I'm out of here. And I was like, no, no, no, don't
go, we need you. And I couldn't get the dads involved.
They were just like, oh, nope, that's your job, Timothy, that's
why we hired you. And so I think there's no youth pastor mentioned
in the Bible. You can read through the whole
scripture and it never talks about a youth pastor. That's not saying
it's wrong. We can do things that aren't in the Bible, but
we have to do the things that are written in the Bible. And
we can't replace what's written in the Bible with something that's
not in the Bible. And the Bible says, fathers, bring up your
children in the discipline and admonition of the Lord. And so
that's very important, that family discipleship, all right? The
organic church. We recognize we're just a small
part of what God is doing in our area and we believe that
we must cooperate with other believing congregations while
separating from apostate churches in order to progress the gospel.
So we have to recognize the true unity of the church but we have
to recognize true divisions as well. And so if a church is apostate,
and we'll talk about what that means for a church to be apostate
when we get to our statement on separation, but we must cooperate
with non-apostate churches, and we must separate from apostate
churches, and that's how we move forward for the gospel and do
our part. We're not trying to grow this
organization, we're trying to grow the organism of the whole
body of Christ. So if we had to shut down this
church and dissolve the bank account and we all went and joined
other churches and that was better for the progress of the gospel
and the growth of believers, then we should do that. Because
it's not about this church and this organization, it's about
the glory of God in Christ in the lives of people. So we must
always keep that straight. And then we also want to be a
church full of ministers. That's why I don't really like
being called a minister, because it tends to give the idea that
I'm a minister and you're not. And that's not biblical. And
the biblical teaching is that everyone is called to ministry.
and that pastor-teachers are just one kind of ministry that
enables the rest of you to fulfill the ministry that God has given
to you. And that my ministry is not more important than your
ministry, but my ministry is essential for you to be able
to do your ministry. So I do my part, you do your
part, and we'll take a look at that in scriptures here in just
a moment. And then let's just look at the
last couple here. We want to keep it simple. We don't want
to multiply programs. We want people to be free to
serve God wherever He calls them, even programs in other churches.
So if you've got a home Bible study that you've been a part
of before you joined this church, well, keep doing that. If you've
got a ministry that you are doing that's not associated with this
church, great. We're not here to build this
church. We're not jealous for your time. We want you to be
free to serve the Lord in whatever way He's called you and in whatever
way is fruitful. So we're not trying to do the
latest things, and we're not trying to look like we're presenting
some kind of image. We're just trying to keep it
real. And then finally, we want a pilgrim church. And that is,
we want to resist living for the here and now. We want to
be rich in good works, laying up our treasures in heaven, and
longing for Jesus' return. So if we have this, I think we'll
be doing well. Now I may have left a thing or
two out when I put this together, but these are mostly my thoughts,
and they seem to gel with the congregation here. When I came
in 2008, We've had 15 years now of like-minded, wonderful ministry. Every decision that the Board
of Elders has made in the last 15 years has been unanimous.
And that is just such a wonderful blessing. And that doesn't mean
there hasn't been problems. But overall, we've had wonderful
unity. And the vision that God put on
my heart for the church was also the vision that God put on this
church's heart. And I'm so glad he brought us
together, because not every pastor gets that. And it can be quite
a rough road when your vision is different from the vision
of the church you're called to pastor. All right. Well, that's great.
So any questions about the DNA of Firth Bible Church and what
it is that we're trying to accomplish? Always great to start with the
big picture. So then let's get into some of the practical details.
There you go. The bylaws of the church here. As I said, we're not going to
go through everything that's in the bylaws, but we're gonna
focus on the opening sections on membership, because this is
a membership class, and so it's good to talk a little bit about
membership. Oh, but I did promise that we
were gonna look in Scripture first about the calling of the
church, everyone to be a minister, everyone to be involved. And
for that, my key text is Ephesians chapter four. One of the first
passages I preached when I came here was Ephesians chapter 4.
For my first five years in ministry, I preached it once a year. And
it is the foundational text for my understanding, what I think
is a biblical understanding, of what a church is and how a
church is supposed to operate. At the same time, when I preached
Ephesians 4, then we went to Revelation and we looked into
chapters 2 and 3 in my first year here of ministry to look
at the seven churches and see how Christ evaluates a church
so that we would all be on the same page there. So I'm glad
we're doing that again now, 15 years later, and that you're
joining the church when we're taking a look at that so you
really get a good sense of what the Bible teaches on what a healthy
church looks like and what things we have to look out for as a
church that are dangerous. So in Ephesians chapter 4, it
starts in verse 11. And, of course it doesn't start
there, but that's where I'm starting. And we'll just pick it up where
it says, Notice shepherds and teachers is together grammatically. and I think that's the right
way to translate it, to equip the saints. So the apostles and
prophets have already been stated in the book to be the foundation
of the church. How many times do you lay a foundation?
Once, and you build the whole church on top of that. So God
started the church with the apostles and prophets, they wrote the
New Testament, and that's the foundation. Now the pastors and
teachers and the evangelists, they come along afterwards. The
evangelists proclaim the same gospel that the apostles proclaimed,
The pastors and teachers teach the same doctrine that the apostles
proclaimed, and so we have an apostolic foundation for our
church in the New Testament writings. That's the only reliable source
of apostolic teaching. That's what the church is built
upon, and that's how pastors shepherd, and that's how they
teach. And from that apostolic foundation of doctrine and truth
in the gospel, then the people, as you see in verse 12, are equipped,
and you're called saints, to equip the saints for the work
of ministry. So God has made you a saint. You're a holy one. He set you
apart from sin. He set you apart from the world
and the culture, and he's made you a part of a Christian counterculture
that shares in God's own holy character. and has God's love. And so God is equipping you for
the ministry that he's given you to do through the ministry
of the apostles and prophets who are still with us in their
writings, the evangelists who share the gospel with you, and
the pastors and teachers who shepherd and teach you. so that
you can do the work of ministry. And what is that? Well, look
at what it says. For building up the body of Christ, so you're
here to build up the body of Christ. You can evaluate yourself
as a saint. How am I doing at building up
the body of Christ? Am I tearing it down by being
divisive, by being selfish? Am I staining it with my sin
when I come to church and we're supposed to be holy in our worship
of God? How am I doing at building up the body of Christ? And we
do this work for how long? So there's our goal. Our goal
is that the whole church would be completely mature in Christ.
That's a difficult goal, and we've been working on that ever
since the apostles and prophets went to be with the Lord. And we have setbacks, and we
have advances, and our goal is to do our part. And the local
church is our part, not just the church that meets here on
Sunday morning, but the church that meets over at the Living
Life Church and churches that are around us in the area. Whatever
connections we have, whatever fellowship we have, your family
members who live in other states, you're building up the body of
Christ when you encourage them, and then they are able to be
a better part of their church and their congregation. So keep that
local picture, but then also recognize the connections that
go far beyond the local church. And our goal is that we all attain
to the unity of the faith. And so we've got to be evaluating
ourselves. Well, what are we doing as a congregation to bring
not only our local congregation, but the whole church to maturity?
And sharing the gospel, making disciples, and bringing those
disciples to full maturity and full unity. So, truth unites. Falsehood divides. And pointing
out falsehood is not divisive. It's the people who teach falsehood
are the ones who are dividing. You can pretend to be united
by just overlooking the differences that people have in their beliefs,
but that's not true unity. True unity is when we all believe
the truth. And so we've got to be able to
confront falsehood in order to bring people back to the truth.
Otherwise, we'll never reach that unity of the faith that
is our goal, is our mission, and our purpose. So we're looking
for that true unity, which is the knowledge of the Son of God.
And that's going to bring us to the measure of the stature
of fullness of Christ. And that's a powerful and beautiful
statement of the church's glory, which is really Christ's glory
dwelling in us. And then verse 14, So we gotta watch out for
that false doctrine, not be carried about by it. It comes by human
cunning, by craftiness and deceitful schemes. rather speaking the truth in
love we are to grow up here's the purpose restated once again
we are to grow up in every way into him who is the head into
christ from whom the whole body being joined and held together
by every joint with which it is equipped and that's us and
we're all individual joints here connecting one another in the
body of Christ. When each part is working properly,
it makes the body grow so that it builds itself up in love.
Do you see how essential your ministry is? that you have to
be functioning the way that God has designed you to function.
He's put you in the body for a purpose. He's given you abilities.
He's given you responsibilities with those abilities. And if
you do your part, then if everyone does that, then we can reach
our goal. But if parts are not functioning well, then other
parts of the body are affected by that, and they can't function
as well, and you just see problems. And that's where the church has
its problems, is that we're not individually doing our part,
and therefore, as a whole, we're falling apart, so to speak. So,
I love this passage. You've got to always go back
to it and remind yourselves, what are we doing? What are we
called to? What is God's purpose? What is
our vision? And we don't get our vision from
some human pastor. We get our vision from the apostles
and prophets of the Lord Jesus, who gave it to us from Jesus
Christ himself. That's the vision right there,
beautifully and powerfully stated. So I've preached several messages
on Ephesians 4. Sometimes I assign listening
to one of those messages as part of the membership class, but
I think we hit it pretty well just there. If you wanna go online
and look at one of those sermons on Ephesians 4, you're welcome
to do so, but I'm not gonna require it. All right, so bylaws. We're doing great. We've been
going for about 40 minutes, and we've covered a lot, and now
let's see how far we can get into the bylaws before we take
a break here. These bylaws are heavily adapted
from the EFCA bylaws. When we joined the EFCA, we used
the bylaws that they kind of hand out to churches as a guide
and a model, adapted it at that time, and it's been further adapted
and modeled over the years. You see, our last update was
January 2019. Can't remember exactly what all
changed in January of 2019. I could find those records if
you were interested. But it's one of those things, as you see,
it's kind of like the constitution of the church. You have to file
with the state as a non-profit, and that's your articles of incorporation,
but those aren't very important for the daily life of the church.
The bylaws are basically what is important for how the church
is governed, how we function practically. And our goal is
that our bylaws are as biblical as possible while at the same
time being suited to the time and the place that we find ourselves
in. The New Testament was written by the Holy Spirit and the Holy
Spirit is very wise. He knew that the church was going
to exist across many centuries and across many different cultures.
And so he didn't tell us exactly what to do in every situation
because there's going to be a lot of different situations and that
would be too long of a book. And so what he did was he laid
out principles by which we can draw from and then apply those
biblical principles to our time and place on how we're supposed
to carry out those things as 21st century Americans. So that's
our goal, is that our bylaws are according to the principles
of the New Testament and that they're the most effective way
of implementing those principles in the time and place in which
we live. And it's open to revision. One of the things we'll see as
we go through the bylaws is that they can be updated by a vote
of the congregation. So let's read the first paragraph
there on membership, section 100.1. Membership in this church
is the acceptance of responsibility. It is the membership that gives
assent and encouragement to the disciple-making ministry of the
congregation. That's a kind of ponderous way
of putting it. You could just simplify it by
saying it's the membership that does the disciple-making ministry
of the congregation. And maybe there's good reasons
for the way it's stated. I might have spoken out of turn
there. Therefore, attendance at business meetings and faithful
service to the Lord are expected. So some of the responsibilities.
Number one, the annual business meeting. That's the main one.
There's also other business meetings that can be held, and we'll talk
about those. But the main one is the annual meeting that takes
place in February. and your membership will be the first order of business
at the annual meeting. And then once the congregation
approves your membership, then you can join in the annual meeting
for the rest of the meeting coming up in February. And then secondly,
faithful service to the Lord. And the bylaws will give some
definition of what faithful service to the Lord looks like and what
our business meetings are all about. Now, you see section 101
then is about three different classifications for members of
the church. An active voting member, that's
what most members are. You can be an active non-voting
member. We have a few people in the congregation
who don't really believe in congregational voting, and they want to be a
part of the church, but they don't want to vote. for multiple
reasons or whatever reasons. And so you can be an active member
who is non-voting, if that's what you want. And then thirdly,
there's the inactive member. So that's someone who's not able
to be here regularly, but they still want to maintain their
membership in the congregation. Maybe they can't be here because
of health reasons, maybe they're elderly, and yet this is still
their home church. And so that's the inactive membership. You can read the rest of that
paragraph when you read through it. So let me go ahead and ask,
is everyone here wanting to apply as an active voting member or
would anyone like to apply as an active non-voting member?
You're all active right now, so I assume that that's what
you're applying for. Anyone that does not want to
be an active voting member? Well, if you think about that
and you decide otherwise, let me know. Otherwise, I'm going
to assume that you're applying as voting members, all right?
Now, active voting members in section 101.2 are those who participate
in the ministry of the church. They are committed to attending
the congregational meetings for the purpose of praying for and
determining the direction for the ministry in consultation
with the elected leadership. So this is an important section.
We'll just kind of take it point by point. Talks about non-voting
members there in 101.3 and the inactive members in 101.4. So
then some of the details about active voting members. If you
miss two congregational business meetings consecutively, then
it's our job as elders. We have currently four elders
in the church, including myself. Jerry McNeese, Jerry Schmidt,
and David Meraz are the active elders, including me. So that's
four. So it's our job then to discuss
your status. If you miss two business meetings
in a row, saying, well, do you still want to be an active voting
member, or do you want to move to the active non-voting membership,
or are you to be moved to the inactive role? If you miss the
congregational meetings without a good cause and you're just
blowing them off, then you're gonna be placed on the active
non-voting role and we won't be counting towards the quorum
when we're trying to establish that we have enough voting members
in order to conduct business. That's just kind of a practical
thing. We're not trying to take any personal shots at anybody.
We have to have a quorum according to the rules. And then 1016,
if you're an active non-voting member, you can be returned to
voting status after an interview where you express your commitment
to participate in the future congregational meetings. So section
102 is an important section on qualifications for membership.
So here you are. Are you qualified for membership?
We already talked about number one, a confession of faith. We
want a regenerate membership. Any person who confesses faith
in the Lord Jesus Christ, having been born again, who has the
assurance of salvation, and whose character, conduct, and reputation
are in accordance with his confession and the word of God may apply
for membership. So that last part there about
your character, conduct, and reputation means that you can't
just profess to be a Christian and then live in a completely
non-Christian manner. but that you have to have a life
that is in keeping with your profession of faith, and that
is that you're trying to obey the commandments. Now, none of
us do it perfectly, but there needs to be that reputation that
you are a practicing Christian and not just a professing Christian. Then secondly, the cooperation.
This has to do with cooperation within the church. We'll talk
about cooperation with other churches, but an applicant, a
member, has to be willing to submit to the statement of faith,
we will go over the doctrinal statement, that's the statement
of faith, and the bylaws of the organization. So you can't be
a member and say, well, I don't agree with the doctrinal statement,
and I don't agree with the bylaws, and I'm here to change everything.
It's like, well, maybe you just need to find a different church,
because we don't want that trouble. Now, if things need to be changed,
you can do it according to the bylaws. If the statement of faith
needs to be changed, you do it according to the bylaws. But
you have to agree to submit to the statement of faith and the
bylaws until they're changed. And you have to have a willingness
to support the church through your attendance, prayers, and
service. That if you're just looking to have your name on
a roll and say you're a member, then you might want to find a
different church. We're not interested in that here. We want people
who are actually attending and praying and serving. All right. So then section 102.3 is a statement
on sex, race, and ethnicity, that we don't exclude people
for being a woman or for being a man or for being African-American
or having a European background, that, of course, we are not judging
people based upon those rather unimportant things, but the spiritual
heart is what's important. The faith in the Lord Jesus Christ
that caused us to be born again and unites us as one body with
people from all different cultures. One of my favorite things about
traveling is to meet Christians in other countries and other
cultures and to speak even different languages and to find out that
despite all of our differences and clothing, and food, and habits,
that we have the same heart for the Lord Jesus Christ, the same
hope of His coming, the same love for God, and the same faith
in God's words. That's pretty awesome. So, the
board examines applicants to determine if they are members
of the body of Christ, to determine if they support the purpose of
this local church, as stated in a class like this, And if
the elder board determines that the moral and spiritual character
does not give evidence, then we will not recommend them and
that their membership will be rejected. So the elders recommend
the members to the congregation and then the congregation votes.
And I can't think of a time where the elders recommended someone
that the congregation didn't approve of. And I also can't
think of a time that someone applied for membership and the
elder said, Nope, you're not qualified for membership. Our
church is pretty clear in how we present ourselves, so most
of the people who come forward for membership, they've already
kind of got an idea of what they're getting themselves into. All right, and you have to be
18 years old to be a member, so 18 months doesn't count, 18
years. And then the procedure we've
talked about, you got the membership class, you read the bylaws as
it says there, and then you attend three hours of classes, which
we're all doing all this morning. You have the interview with the
Elders Board, they recommend you, and then we'll have a couple
of weeks before the business meeting where anyone in the congregation
can give input and feedback and say, well, actually I know this
person and he cheats everybody in his business and that's something
we should probably talk about with him. Or something along
those lines. And so we give time for the congregation
to give their input before the vote comes up. If there's a valid
objection, then that needs to be put in writing, and we need
to have, as it says there, the person appear before the elder
board and give the scriptural reasons why someone should not
be granted membership, and then the elder board considers that
before the business meeting. The recommendation and vote,
there has to be a three-fourths vote in the affirmative for the
congregation, and I think all the votes have pretty much been
unanimous on that. Voting privileges are granted
to the new member after they've been approved. As I told you,
you'll be able to participate in February after we vote you
in. Each member has one vote on each
issue presented for vote. I don't get two, I only get one.
But your wife gets one. And so new members received into
fellowship on a Sunday service. They're encouraged to share their
personal testimony, but you don't have to. The elder board will
notify your most recent church that you've become an active
member here at this church. And if you need to transfer a
membership from your previous church, that's what section 105
is about, transferring membership. So that's the important part
there on membership process. So let's go to section 107 and
look at the conduct and the duty of the members. Toward the church, section 107.1. So we want you to attend regularly
at the services, and we want you to be doing daily private
and family scripture reading and prayer. We want personal
and public testimony, and that means that you're willing to
share your faith with others. And it's your sacred duty as
parents to provide Christian instruction for your children,
like I talked about earlier. Each member shall consider it
their responsibility and privilege to make full use of their talents
for the Lord's service in the church and to other churches
and ministries as well. You're encouraged to remember
each other in prayer, aid each other in sickness, to be courteous
in speech and slow to anger. Slow to anger, that's a good
one. We wanna keep that in mind. That's how a family's gotta operate.
And then the purity. So the first one is kind of focused
on the service and the unity, but then the purity is also essential.
As you go through all the commands in the New Testament, you can
basically categorize them under one of two things. It's either
talking about loving one another in unity, or it's talking about
being separated from sin in holiness, purity. So unity and purity are
really the two major things that make a healthy congregation and
a healthy Christian. So each member is called upon
to heed the admonition to not love the world nor the things
of the world. This is worldliness as the Protestant
church has talked about it in that biblical terminology. So
don't be conformed to the world but be transformed by the renewing
of your mind that you may prove what is the good and acceptable
and perfect will of God. I'm glad that when they were
putting together the doctrinal statement they chose Romans 12
too. I think that's a key place to start there on that idea of
being separated from the world in that holiness. So examples
in speech, defiling speech, in conduct, in love, in faith, and
in purity, in marriage, purity in the marriage relationship.
A member is expected to abstain from any practice which may be
harmful in its influence or a stumbling block to the weaker brother or
sister." And that stumbling block to the weaker brother or sister,
that's one that needs more clarification, needs more teaching, and it's
something that we could talk about in more detail at another
time, but I can't go fully into that right now. But you might
want to mark that as something to look into and discuss because
there is some difference of opinion among Christians as to how to
apply that and what exactly it means to be a stumbling block
to a weaker brother or sister. All right, but moving on, the
attendance at the Congregational Business Meetings, again, highlights
and focuses that responsibility. And then I want to focus here
before our break on section 108, and that is the restoration and
or discipline of sinning members. And you see this is a long section
starting there in 108.1. And basically this is our best
attempt at applying Matthew chapter 18 to how we're supposed to carry
out discipline of members who are sinning in the church. So
the church is called to purity, the church is called to unity.
Well, what if someone is walking out of step with the holiness
that we're called to? And what if someone is creating
disunity in the church? Well, what do we do? Well, there
has to be discipline. If there's not discipline, then
you lose the order. And if you lose the order, then
you lose your identity. One thing I like to compare it
to is, say you had a chess club at school. And somebody shows
up and says, hey, I'm here, and I want to play checkers. And
he's like, well, that's great. You can go start a checkers club.
But here, this is a chess club. We're going to play chess. He
goes, no, I want to join the club, and I want to play checkers.
You have to say, I'm sorry, but we have rules, and we're in charge,
and we're kicking you out, because this is a chess club. We're not
here to play checkers. And that's kind of what it is, where someone
comes into the church and says, hey, I want to be a Christian. I want
to follow Christ, but I want to do it a different way. Well, no, we're
going to follow Christ according to the Bible, and that's our
plan. If you don't want to do that, then you have to go elsewhere,
because that's what this is. And if you allow people to come
in and do it differently, then you lose your identity. You're
no longer a chess club, now you're a chess and checkers club, and
that might not sound like a bad thing when you have an amoral
subject like chess and checkers, but when it comes to loving God
and serving God and the morality of living life, that is a big
deal, and we have to keep our identity. Christ gives us the
instructions in Matthew 18 on how to do that. So if you want
to turn to Matthew 18, I think that would be a good idea to
have that as a reference point. Christ being all-knowing, he
anticipated the formation of the church and he gives us instructions
on what to do if your brother sins against you, as he says
there in Matthew chapter 18 verse 15. And notice that this instruction
is not given just to elders or pastors, but this instruction
is given to Christians in general. If your brother or sister sins
against you, what are you supposed to do about it? So that's why
our statement on the discipline of members says, it is the responsibility
of the church membership and regular attendees. So even if
you're not officially a member, but you're coming here regularly
on Sunday morning, The scripture addresses you. If you're a professing
Christian, then you need to carry out the instructions that God
gives us here in Matthew 18 and 15 in helping professing Christians
to turn away from a lifestyle which is not in accord with Christ's
teaching. So we all got to be looking out for one another in
love. We're not looking out to put people down or to be an authority
that sometimes people enjoy being, but we're here to help one another.
And so we do that by, as Christ says, going to the person, you
and him alone, and tell him his fault. If you see someone sinning,
you don't say, well, I'm gonna go tell the pastor, I'm gonna
go tell the elders. I don't need to know about it.
If you see someone sinning, you need to go to that person and
talk about them, talk about it with them. That's the right thing
to do. That's the respectful thing to
do. That's what we want people to do for us. The golden rule
goes a long way. If you see me sinning, I don't
want you to go tell the elders that I'm sinning. I want you
to come talk to me. Because you might have misunderstood what
you saw. And that's kind of important that we clarify that before you
go start telling other people what I did. If I want to be treated
that way, then I should treat you that way. So man up, even
you ladies, be courage and bold and go and do the conversations
that you don't want to do, that are hard, that are difficult,
but that's what it means to be a mature Christian. Be responsible. So you go to them and you discuss
it with them alone as Christ says. If he listens to you, Matthew
18, 15, great, you've gained your brother. But if he does
not listen, take one or two others along with you. Happily, sometimes
you go and discuss sin with someone, and they're like, yeah, you're
right, that's sin, I want your help in confessing it and forsaking
it and turning away, and boom, you can do some discipleship
right there. Other times, the person's gonna be like, I don't
think that's sin, or I don't think that's any of your business,
and don't talk with me about that. Well then, what do you
do? When Christ says, then you take one or two others along
with you. That's up to your discretion. Whether you think one is right
or two is right, you get one or two other Christians. Now,
if you want one of them to be an elder or a pastor, fine, but
it doesn't have to be. It could just be one or two other
people in the church or even just another Christian or a family
member that you'd go and talk with this person. You have some
discretion there on how you want to carry out this command of
bringing one or two others with you. And you do that so that
it's not just, well, that's just like your opinion, man. But instead,
now you've got, no, this is the opinion of the church, and us
three, or us two, are representing the congregation, and we're not
telling everybody, but we're telling you this is what the
Bible says, and this is what we believe, and you're not allowed
to have your own personal opinion on this. So that's why you take
one or two others so that, as Christ says, every charge may
be established by the evidence of two or three witnesses. So
now if he blows you off, then you've got two or three witnesses
that can go to the church and say, well, we tried to help this
person, we tried to show them that their decisions here were
destructive, and they refused to listen. So you're witnessing
about that. The second person doesn't have
to be a witness of the sin that's being confronted. He has to be
a witness that we talk to the person and the person is not
willing to listen. So if he refuses to listen to the two or three,
then you tell it to the church. And the way you tell it to the
church would be you approach the elders and you let them know
about what's going on and how you did step one, you did step
two, and now you're on step three. And so then the elders then will
bring the next step together with the congregation that the
elders lead and the congregation is involved, okay? So you tell
it to the church. And if you refuse to listen even
to the church, let him be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector. And this is first century Jewish
terminology for somebody that is excluded. Somebody that doesn't
get to be a part of what you're doing. And of course Gentiles
now are included. We're all Gentiles and tax collectors
can be saved and that was a big part of Jesus' ministry. But
this is just terminology to describe someone that would be excluded.
So that's the final sad step of church discipline. When a
person is unwilling to repent, unwilling to listen, then they
can't be a part of the church membership anymore. They can't
even attend on Sunday morning. And I have to say, you're not
welcome here until you repent. Now, that seems hard, and that
seems cruel, and it seems countercultural, but it's actually loving. The
loving thing to do in order to love the congregation and to
maintain the identity of the congregation is to exclude those
who are working against what Christ is trying to accomplish.
Because if you tolerate sin, it spreads. And a church that
ceases to discipline will soon cease to be a church. You can
see that in church history over and over again. As soon as a
church is like, well, you know, let's just be loving, let's just
accept, let's just welcome this person even though he's not willing
to repent, it's not long before sin just fills the church and
it's no longer even a church, the lampstand is removed. It's
a false church. So for the love of the church,
we have to do it, but also for the love of the individual. We're
not a civil authority. We don't have the power of the
sword. And so if someone's sinning, we're not going to be visiting
upon them the penalties of the Old Testament law. We're not
stoning anybody to death. But what do we have power to
do? We have power over who is a part of our meetings. This
is our meeting, our building. We have the power to decide who
gets to be here and who doesn't get to be here. So it's not a
public meeting in that sense. It's public in the sense that
anybody can come, we want everybody to come, if they're coming in
order to find out what we're about and they want to be supportive
of what we're about. If they're coming just to see,
that's great, we want people to come and see. But if they're
coming to try to undermine what we're doing, well then no, you
can't come, you have to go. And that's our right. And it's
the right thing to do not only for the congregation but also
for the person. It's not loving to let a person continue in sin
and to fool themselves and think that they're all right with God
and the church accepts me so God must accept me and I don't
have to repent. That's not good for that person.
Spiritually, it's not good for that person in a lot of ways.
So, this is to be done for the love of God, the love of the
church, and the love of the person who is sinning. So that's why
we wrote the way that we did in section 108. First, by individual
reproof, anyone who claims to be a Christian and is regularly
attending is to be confronted. Now, if somebody doesn't claim
to be a Christian, but they're coming for a few months, and they're
interested, we're not gonna say, well, you can't come because
you're living with your girlfriend. But once that person is like,
yeah, I wanna be baptized, and I wanna join the church, and
I believe, and I wanna be a member, but I wanna keep on living in
sin, sorry, you can't do that. You need to make a choice. You've
been here long enough, you know what the message is. Do you wanna
follow Christ, or do you not wanna follow Christ? That's the
decision in front of you. And then second, as it says,
by two or three church members, and then third, by the entire
church mediated by the elder board and the pastor. If none
of this leads to repentance, the regular attender or the church
member must be asked to cease from his attendance and participation
until willing to turn from the sinful behavior. Also, other
like-minded churches may be contacted regarding the situation so that
the sinner doesn't just go to the church down the street and
try to hide and fit in. Because that happens a lot. That's
what makes church discipline difficult, is that we have lots
of different churches around, and if one church finds out about
your sin, it's like, oh, I'll just go over here and blend in,
and nobody will know. And that happens. And so we want
to do what we can. We're not malicious. We're not
like following this person trying to ruin their life. We're trying
to protect the church, and we're trying to help the person recognize
that you can't just hide your sin. You got to deal with it.
So the second to the last paragraph gives some examples of what types
of sins need to be confronted, and really any sin needs to be
confronted. And that includes sex outside
of marriage, pornography, homosexuality, lying, causing disputes, unwillingness
to work and support one's family, teaching that goes against the
statement of faith, immoral or crude or abusive speech, stealing,
tax evasion, drunkenness, drug abuse, anything else the New
Testament speaks against as sin. There are gray areas, so to speak,
where people will differ on, you know, is this okay or is
that not okay? Like, is it okay to have a Christmas
tree or is that pagan? We're not gonna discipline somebody
for having a Christmas tree, as you see, but if the New Testament
specifically speaks against something as sin, then that needs to be
addressed. The other areas, we wanna, you
know, challenge one another. If you wanna challenge me on
Christmas trees, great, you know, we should talk about it. That's
part of being a family, living together, lovingly discussing
things that we disagree on, and coming to the Bible to make our
decisions. So don't be afraid of talking
about those gray areas with me or with anyone else in the church.
Just always do it from a Christ-like, humble, and loving manner. All
right, so given that these responsibilities are applicable to all believers,
this church will reserve the right to exercise biblical discipline
of regular attendees who profess faith in Christ, even if they
are not a part of the official membership. So you don't have
to be an official member for us to come and say, you're sinning,
you claim to be a Christian, you need to stop that. Okay,
so that's a difficult issue. It's unpleasant. There have been
times as a church where we've had to go through this process.
Since we make this known that we do this, very often the person
removes himself from involvement in church because he knows that
that's gonna happen and he wants to avoid the confrontation. And
so in those cases, the process hasn't been allowed to go through
all the steps, because the person has seen the writing on the wall
and has run, so to speak. And so in those situations, we
can't exercise church discipline, but the person has kind of disciplined
themselves. And we kind of have to wait until they find repentance
and pray that if there's anything we can do, we should still talk
with them and still go and say, hey, how come you're not coming
to church? And what's going on in your life? So you don't have
to remove somebody who's removed themselves, but we still have
a spiritual responsibility to love and speak to them. All right. Well, inactive membership is
in 109, and withdrawal of membership is in 110, loss of rights of
membership. Just things that are just practical
that you have to do in order to keep an active membership
role. But we're gonna go ahead and
let you read that on your own, those sections, and we'll take
a break here, and then we'll come back in about five or 10
minutes to talk about the meetings of the church and the government,
and we'll probably wrap up our study of the bylaws here in about
another 20 minutes of discussion. So we're continuing on with the
bylaws in our membership class we've covered the first section
the 100s on membership So let's take a look at section 200 on
the meetings gonna just take a brief look here at the annual
meeting and special meetings So the annual meeting will be
during the month of February. All of the officers are elected
at annual meetings. They serve multiple year terms,
so we try to stagger those so we have different deacons and
elders being appointed yearly. And other business is taking
place. One of the main things there
at the annual meeting is the budget for the upcoming year.
The elders will propose the budget, and then there'll be time for
discussion on all of the budget. And then there can be amendments
and changes that the congregation votes on as the elders have proposed
it. And then the whole congregation
will approve the budget at the annual meeting. And there's other
items that come up from time to time. One of the things that
was early on in the ministry here was changing from our old
hymnals to the hymnals that we have now. And the first time
we brought that to the congregation, there was some hesitation about
changing the hymnals, and so we didn't vote to change the
hymnals. And then a year later, after we'd talked about it more
and had a chance to talk with those who would be most affected,
like the pianists, then we were able to go ahead and move forward
with that. So one of the great things about
the annual meeting is it makes sure that the elders are communicating
well with those in the congregation who are going to be affected
by their decisions, so that when we don't do that, we find out
at the annual meeting, well, did you think about this? Or
did you think about that? So I really like the way that the
church is set up at the annual meeting. We'll talk about that
a little bit more here in a minute. But then section 201 is about
special meetings. And so you see in section 201.1
that special meetings can be called to deal with one or two
items that need to be addressed that can't wait until the annual
meeting. And so those are announced with
at least one week of notice ahead of time. Usually we have special
meetings after church on Sundays. And of course you have to have
the quorum and The quorum is 50% of the active membership
being present for a business meeting. So that's why we have
to have inactive members and also remove members so that we're
able to actually conduct business with a quorum. If we have a long
list of members who don't come to the meetings, then we'll never
be able to have a meeting. And the purpose of a quorum,
of course, is to make sure that you don't, you know, handpick
a time and place where you can just select a few members to
come and get business done in some kind of underhanded manner.
We don't want to conduct ourselves like that. That's why the meetings
must be published ahead of time in the bulletin. That's where
you get all of your information on what's coming up for the church.
Not just the announcements on Sunday morning, but the weekly
bulletin that is put out should have those publications. And
then when it comes to voting requirements, you see there in
section 204, you have to have three-fourths of the active voting
members present in order to call a pastor, buy, sell, or encumber
real estate, or to make amendments to the bylaws. So most things
are just a majority vote, but these few things are three-quarters
vote in order to call a pastor, to do stuff with real estate,
or to amend the bylaws. And then we're gonna follow parliamentary
procedure when necessary. We're not sticklers for that.
If we have a contentious issue and it gets riotous and people
are talking over one another, then we'll bring in the parliamentary
procedures, but usually we're able to conduct ourselves without
that level of formality. All right, you can read the rest
there on the meetings and then the government of the church
in section 300. I wanna read section 301 points one and two
here. But let's start with section
300.1. This church may affiliate with such general church organization
or denomination as it shall hereafter determine, respecting, however,
that in no instance shall the right of property interest pass
to the denomination, nor shall we become subject to any other
person or entity or to be encumbered thereby, and that the government
teaching and practice of such denomination must embrace the
doctrinal statement of the congregation. So we have to be in doctrinal
agreement with any denomination we join, and the denomination
cannot take control of our property. That was a problem with the PCUSA. They had control of the property,
and they also were in charge of calling pastors and getting
rid of pastors, and that was not good for the local church,
so we're not going to make that mistake again. And then the church
is currently unaffiliated and we seek to work with other faithful
congregations in accordance with our statement on cooperation
and separation. So let's do that. Let's do the
statement on cooperation and separation. Thanks, David. So this is front and back. One
side you've got cooperation, the other side you've got separation.
There's not really a page one or page two. They're both equally
important. And we'll go ahead and start
with cooperation. And there, Luke 9, 49 and 50 states that
he who is not against us is for us. And we have to remember that.
Sometimes Christians remember the opposite statement, that
he who is not with us is against us. But Jesus also said, he who
is not against us is for us. And we must act according to
that. Oh, I see I've got the old name there of the church,
the Evangelical Free Church. I corrected it in the title,
but then I have to correct it there in the first paragraph.
So, Firth Bible Church, it should say, will pursue biblical unity
with all Christian churches which are not apostate. And apostasy
is defined on the opposite side. Biblical unity amidst separate
organizations, congregations within the body of Christ is
exemplified in the following ways. Number one, working together
in missionary enterprise in both giving and participation. We
had the privilege of doing that this week. We had our event at
the high school, the Todd Becker Foundation came and shared the
gospel with all the teenagers. We had over 100 teenagers there.
I didn't count how many, but it was great. and had over 60
come forward and respond to the message. And so that was so exciting. And we had members from the Living
Life Reformed Church. We had members from Redemption
Hill in Hickman. We had the pastor and his wife
from another church plant, I forget the name, Anchor Bible Church
that's just getting started south of Lincoln. And we contacted
the Reformed churches, and we had Chet there, the youth pastor
from one of the Reformed churches, I think, in Holland. I always
get those two mixed up. But it was great to see the churches
come together to work together on that missionary enterprise
of reaching people with the gospel. And so that's one way that we
show that unity. Number two, working together
to meet the physical needs of saints who are suffering. And
we've got scripture examples of all of these, of congregations
in separate places working together for these purposes. Showing hospitality
to those who are traveling through our area in Christian ministry,
3 John 5 through 8, and pursuing doctrinal clarity in the unity
of the faith, as they did in Acts chapter 15. The churches
came together to discuss a doctrinal issue and to pursue a unified
knowledge. And then number five, exercising
loving church discipline, as we just talked about in our previous
session, for the health of the individual and the body of Christ,
according to Matthew 18. So biblical unity involves a
repudiation of factionalism that centers around personalities.
Church is not about me trying to build a following. Or organizations,
it's not about our organization. Or around doctrinal issues that
the scripture does not focus on. What does Scripture focus
on and what does Scripture not focus on? I think the point here
is that you never use doctrine to promote yourself. And we pursue
doctrine, but not for self-promotion, but for the good of the church,
for the building up of the church. So if I start to preach every
week on a doctrine because I end up saying, well, this is the
most important doctrine, and I'm the only one who's teaching
this, well, then you get that idea that I'm trying to build
a faction around myself on this doctrine. We don't want to do
that. In obedience to Christ's command
to love the brethren, one of our goals in ministry will be
to promote greater doctrinal and organizational unity between
our congregation and other believing congregations in our area in
order to enjoy the benefit of mutual edification and to communicate
the unity of Christ's body to the world. So it's important
that we communicate to the world our unity so that they don't
see us as just another group trying to build up their organization. So then you flip it over, and
you get the flip side. We must pursue biblical unity,
but we must also preserve biblical separation. Some churches are
really good on the separation and bad on the unity. Some churches
are really good on the unity and bad on the separation. And
Christ wants us to be good at both. You can be good at both,
and that's what we are called to. So though the body of Christ
is one, and there is to be no division in the body, it is necessary
for a church to recognize proper divisions, those between Christ
and the world, and between Christ and apostate Christianity. So
Christ has separated us from the world, and we are to separate
ourselves from apostate Christianity. 1 Corinthians 11, 18, and 19
makes that very clear. Therefore, Firth Bible Church,
it should read, will not engage in any kind of cooperation in
spiritual undertakings together with any religious or spiritual
organization which is apostate or non-Christian. Some more scriptural
examples from Corinthians. Some examples of activities that
would be included in this category of spiritual undertaking are
prayer meetings, evangelistic outreaches, worship services,
personal growth or self-help seminars and conferences, fundraising,
missions, and Christian camps. So if an organization is apostate,
we're not going to do a prayer meeting with them. We're not
going to participate in an evangelistic outreach together. There are
certain churches around here I did not call and invite to
help with the outreach we were having at Norris this week. And
we're not going to go to their Christian camps. So, an apostate
Christian organization is one in which any of the following
statements are true. It doesn't have to be all of
them. Just one of these things makes you an apostate Christian
organization or church. Number one, they deny the person
or work of Christ in their official written or spoken teachings.
To deny the personal work of Christ is to have a different
gospel and that is the mark of an apostate. You have this all
throughout church history. Started in the very beginning
with the Gnostics who taught that Christ was an emanation
and that God the Father was different from the Old Testament God and
just had all these wrong views of God and what Christ accomplished
in his work on the cross. Muslims have a different Christ. They have a different understanding
about what happened at the end of Christ's life. They don't
think he died on the cross for our sins. And so while they believe
in God and they're religious, they're not Christian, as has
always been recognized. And other groups like Jehovah's
Witnesses, they have a different view of Christ. The Mormons have
a different view of Christ. Very nice people. They do wonderful
music. But they're not Christians. They're apostates. So we have
to make those proper distinctions between what is the true church
and what is apostate Christianity. Number two, they preach a different
method of receiving the gospel of Christ other than by faith
alone. So the Catholic Church is accurate on its Trinitarian
views. It understands the doctrine of
Christ. and understands that he died on the cross for our
sins, and understands his resurrection, but they preach a different method
of receiving God's grace, rather than by faith alone, and that's
what the Reformation was all about. That's why the Protestant
church ended up having to separate from the Catholic church, was
over this issue, and Galatians 1, 8 and 9 makes it that clear,
that the book of Galatians was really the book for the Reformation,
and showed why it was necessary to separate from the Catholic
church. And then number three, they affirm
or promote an ungodly lifestyle as acceptable for followers of
Christ. And you see a lot of examples of that in the New Testament.
Very often we just focus on the doctrine and gospel stuff. But
the Bible says if they're teaching an ungodly lifestyle as acceptable,
that's the mark of an apostate. And that's where a lot of the
churches now are dividing, as churches are ordaining homosexuals
and they're marrying homosexuals, in clear contrast to New Testament
ethical teaching. And so even churches that are
kind of liberal in the 20th century, and they weren't standing strong
on some of those issues, now they're saying, well, we can't
go along with this immorality. And there's a number of churches
in our area that are separating from their denominations because
of this affirmation of an ungodly lifestyle. So I'm glad that they
still have that discernment in a lot of these churches. And
while their doctrine could probably use some shoring up and they
need to start preaching the Bible again, at least there's enough
knowledge of the Bible there and I want to encourage them
to keep on going with that and to keep on reforming. So then
right after number three, I want to clarify what we mean by separation.
We do not believe that the Bible teaches second-degree separation. So second-degree separation means
that you have to separate from those who don't separate. Not
everybody practices biblical separation, and so do we have
to separate from churches and organizations who don't separate?
That's second-degree separation. For example, if the Living Life
Reformed Church is not separating from Mormons, but they're inviting
them to come and do concerts at their church, do we have to
separate from them? We do not teach that we have
to separate. I'm not saying we don't have
to separate, or we can't separate, or we can't talk about it with
them, but we are only going to separate from those who are,
in fact, separate from Christ. So Christians can fail to separate,
but we still want to have fellowship with those Christians and encourage
them to become more biblical in this practice. Weddings and
funerals are spiritual undertakings, but they are exempt from this
statement on separation because it's understood by everyone who
attends that you don't have to be in agreement with the church
that is hosting the funeral or the wedding, but that you're
there supporting the family. So you can go to a Catholic Church
funeral, you can go to a Catholic Church wedding, and that's not
confusing to people. They don't think that by doing
that you're supporting the teaching of the Catholic Church. I think
that's pretty clear in most people's minds. But you might have to
clarify that. You might have to say, well,
I'm coming, but I don't agree with what the Catholic Church
teaches. Because there's a lot of ecumenism in the Church. This exception can also be applied
to certain examples of guest speaking or going to another
organization in order to boldly share the gospel. So if I'm going
to a Mormon school in order to say, well, here's what we teach
that's different from what you teach, and they've asked me to
do that, then I can do that because I'm showing the differences and
I'm not creating a false sense of unity. So First Bible Church,
it says there in the last paragraph, we'll be careful to do nothing
that promotes an apostate church or a non-Christian religion or
to confuse our gospel with theirs in the eyes of our community.
In fact, we will seek to take actions and positions which actively
make a distinction between God's work in Christ and the spiritual
deceits of the enemy. So you see that throughout the
New Testament, and that's what we wanna do. We wanna practice apostolic
Christianity. So that's why in the statement
on affiliation it says, we seek to work with other congregations
in accordance with our statement on cooperation and separation.
Any questions about that? That was one of the first things
I worked on when I came here as pastor was defining our cooperation
and separation statement with the elders and getting it voted
on by the congregation. So it's served us well over the
years and there might be room for improvement. All right, so
then let's continue on in the bylaws and look at the section
on the authority of government. What's the ultimate authority
in this congregation? Well, the Lord Jesus Christ,
but he administers that authority through the members of the congregation. Notice what it says there in
3011. Ultimate authority in the church will reside in the members
of the congregation in the sense that they elect the elder board.
If the church is having a problem and there's a division, well,
ultimately the congregation is the one who's going to decide
which direction the church goes because they're the ones who
appoint the elders. And if you don't like the direction the
elders are going, well, you vote them out and you vote in new
elders and the congregation has that authority. So we are an
elder-led but congregationally ruled church. Some people don't
like that. They think, well, you should
be elder-ruled and not congregationally ruled. I've seen that, and I
can understand that doctrinally. And when I study the New Testament,
I tend to lean towards elder rule. In practice, I really like
doing what I accuse others of doing, being pragmatic. In practice,
I really like the congregational rule because it prevents the
elders from becoming autocrats. And when you have elders appointing
elders, you can end up with an echo chamber, and that can be
very dangerous and can cause a lot of division between the
elders and the congregation. And so I appreciate the elders
being appointed by the congregation and that keeps that accountability
there that seems to be very helpful in this world that is still filled
with imperfect people. So the congregation delegates
to the elders authority for day-to-day oversight of the church, except
for the following. So what can the elders not do?
Well, they can't change the Articles of Incorporation or the bylaws.
They can't approve the annual budget. They can't take people
out or put people into membership on their own. They can't do the
final step of church discipline. They can't call a senior pastor,
and they can't add to the facility. But everything else they can
do. Elder board meetings are open to members of the congregation
and any voting member may request to speak to or bring a matter
before the elder board at any regularly scheduled meeting.
We meet every month, usually the second Sunday of the month
after church. We have a lunch and then we have
our meeting. And so if you'd like to bring anything to the
elders, just let us know ahead of time. We'll put it on the
docket and we'll get to you towards the beginning of that meeting
so that you don't have to stay for the whole meeting if you
don't want to. but you're welcome to, and you're always welcome
to sit in on the meetings. If any confidential matters come
up that need to be discussed, we'll just ask you to leave until
we've been able to discuss that, and then you can come back in.
That doesn't happen very often. So that's why it says the elder
board may choose to close the meeting to visitors when discussing
matters needing confidentiality. So authority for the day-to-day
ministry of the church is in the elders, and if the elders
say, you know, on a Sunday morning, We're going to change up the
order of service and we're going to do the singing after the service
instead of before the service so that elders have that right.
And the congregation can't say, well, you can't do that. We've
always had the singing before the sermon. Now, when you're
appointing the elders, you're giving them the right over things
like that to be able to make those day-to-day decisions. when
COVID hit in 2020, and the elders had to decide. Do we meet inside? Do we meet outside? What are
we going to do here? We still don't know much about
what's going on. Do we close down completely? And we made
those decisions. That congregation followed those
decisions, and it worked out wonderfully, and I was really
pleased with how everybody handled that. The elders working together
well, the congregation following, and had great unity in a time
where a lot of churches really struggled with that unity. And
so I'm proud of how we've conducted ourselves. So yeah, the elder
board also has the authority there in 3012 to change the annual
budget, but we can't set the annual budget, but we can change
it as needs arise, but by no more than 10%. So our annual
budget's usually around 120,000, I think. So if we decide, you
know, we need $8,000 for a new air conditioner, we can do that.
If it ends up being more than 10%, you know, we need a new
roof for 20,000 or whatever, then we have to go to the congregation,
have a special meeting and have them vote on it. We can appoint
committees and task forces. And the bylaws have a lot to
say about committees and appointing committees, which I'll let you
read. We don't do a whole lot of committees, but we have from
time to time, like our independence committee. That was a good one.
So then section 400, we'll just go over very briefly here on
the officers of the church. There are three corporate officers.
The Articles of Incorporation require corporate officers. In
the state of Nebraska, in order to have a nonprofit, you've got
to have a chairman, you've got to have a secretary, you've got to have
a treasurer. So we have those. Those corporate officers are
selected from the elders. So the church appoints the elders,
and then the elders sit down at the first meeting after the
annual meeting and say, all right, you're the chairman, you're the
vice chairman, you're the secretary. And deacons can also serve as
the secretary. Deacons can't be the chairman
or the vice chairman, but they can serve as the secretary. Qualifications
for the officers, well, you have to be a member of the church,
and then you're elected at the annual meeting. You serve a three-year
term. And then vacancies can be filled
by the elder board. Somebody steps down and we need
to appoint somebody, we can appoint someone until the next election.
So if you had one year left, I suppose we'd appoint someone
for a year and then have that filled by the congregation at
the next election. So then you can read about the duties of
the chairman, the secretary, the treasurer, and how all of
that works out. And I wanna read section 401.1
about the office of elder. The elder board comprises the
voting officers of the church for month-to-month business.
Deacons don't vote, but they sit in, they give advice, they
participate in the discussions, but the elders are the ones who
vote. they provide the spiritual oversight for the congregation.
So the Bible calls you as a Christian to submit yourself to the elders. That doesn't mean the elders
get to run everything in your life. I'm not going to tell you
what to wear and what job to take and all that type of thing.
But it does mean that when it comes to the matters of the church,
And elders say, hey, you can't be in this ministry anymore because
I don't like the way you're doing it. Then you have to say, okay,
I'll go do a different ministry. When it comes to the matters
of the church, that's where the elders have the authority. And we expect
you to follow God's instructions. And you should expect us to follow
God's instructions and not use our authority for selfish reasons,
but to use it in love. But you gotta have authority.
You gotta have people who are in charge, who are making decisions.
And then it's important that the people follow those decisions,
just like a family. The elders are the ruling spiritual
authority on matters of doctrine and practice and discipline.
So you go to someone and you say, you know, I think you're
sinning. And they say, I don't think I'm sinning. And then you bring two
others and they say, we think you're sinning. And he says,
well, I don't think I'm sinning. And you go to the elders and the elders
say, we don't think he's sinning. then that's where it stops. You're
not gonna have church discipline against someone who the elders
don't think is sinning. So they are the spiritual authority
on those matters of discipline as well as doctrine and practice.
If I get up and preach something and the other elders come to
me and say, we don't think that's biblical, Timothy, we don't want
you preaching that. I'm like, okay, you're the elders, I'll
submit, I won't preach on that. So I'm subject to the elders
as well, just as the other elders are subject to the majority of
the elders. And here's a good place to talk
about the duties and responsibilities of elders and deacons. So if
you're interested in being an elder or a deacon, men, then
this would let you know what we expect, what are the responsibilities
of elders and deacons. And it is a wonderful ministry,
and I'm very thankful for everyone who has stepped up over the years
to be an elder or a deacon. And the two offices are defined
in scripture. The pastoral epistles of Timothy
and Titus have a lot of instruction on elders and deacons, and we
also see them functioning throughout the New Testament, especially
the book of Acts, how they were appointed by the apostles. So,
let's take a look at the elder responsibilities first. Elders
and deacons are responsible to maintain the character qualifications
for office found within 1 Timothy 3 and Titus 1. And we have a
elder qualification form that we give to every prospective
elder. The elder fills it out, his wife fills it out. or if
not a wife, a family member, someone who knows that person
for a long time and very well. And we go through each one of
the character qualifications with that person and rate them
on a scale of one to five. and make sure that those who
are being appointed to the office are qualified. And when we're
talking about qualifications, as it says, we're talking about
character qualifications. We're not looking for who's the
best speaker, or who's the best administrator, or who knows the
most about business, or any of that. That's all good, but the
only qualifications in scripture are character qualifications.
And so, in order to be an elder, you gotta meet those qualifications,
and then you've gotta do these six things. These are the basics
that we think the New Testament teaches and exemplifies our elder
responsibilities. Number one, oversee the teaching
of God's word, including protecting the church from false teaching.
That's primarily my job in the church as an elder, but not just
my job. The other elders are involved
with that as well, and we have a lot of discussions on those
subjects. Number two, provide spiritual
guidance for individual members of the church. By providing a
godly example, being available for biblical marriage, family,
and personal counseling, and administering the final step
of church discipline, according to Matthew 18, to shepherd the
church in the spirit of Christ and act as loving spiritual fathers
to the members of the church. So, if you need help in your
spiritual life, as a parent, as a husband, as a worker, as
an individual, in your own private life, the elders are responsible
to help you. And so you can talk to me, you
can talk to one of the other elders, and don't feel like you
always have to talk to me, because I'm gifted at some things, and
just because I'm a good teacher doesn't mean I'm the best counselor
in the church. And guys like Jerry Schmidt are really great
at encouraging and have that personal ministry in a way that
I could never be able to fulfill. So, you know, that's why we have
a multiplicity of elders. Different elders can have different
strengths and weaknesses and you can choose which elder you
want to go to. I'm not discouraging you from
coming to me. I love counseling and I love personal ministry,
but I understand that other people can do things that I can't do.
And then number three, You attend the leadership meetings, if you're
an elder, to give direction to the ministries of the church.
You gotta come to the monthly meeting. Exercise financial oversight,
propose the annual budget, set the date and agenda for the annual
meeting. Number four, you examine new candidates for the office
of elder and deacon and propose them to the church after approval.
Also, the elders will investigate any charges against another officer
in the church. Number five, you administer the
Lord's Supper and baptism. And number six, you lead in public
prayer and devote significant time to private prayer for the
congregation. Also, you visit the sick and
pray for them in accordance with James chapter five. And you can
look up James five about calling for the elders of the church
and anointing with oil and we're all on board with that. So those
are the elder responsibilities, and again, it may not be completely
exhaustive, but that's most of what we do on a month-to-month
and year-to-year basis. So then the deacons, you notice
them in the bylaws after the section on elders in 401. Then
you've got the qualifications and all of that. So then you've
got the office of deacon in section 402, if you can find that. So
deacons are also an office in the New Testament. And the way
that they seem to function in the New Testament is that they
are providing practical assistance to the church, taking responsibilities
off of the shoulders of the elders so that the elders can fulfill
their main responsibilities. And so that's why then on the
deacon responsibilities, they have that more practical focus
of overseeing the maintenance of the church building and the
church grounds, assessing needs, financial needs in the congregation,
distributing funds from the benevolence fund, attending the leadership
meetings as non-voting members, in order to assist the elders
in drafting an annual budget, apprising the elders of needs
within the body, and on monthly business decisions. Deacons may
assist in the administration of the Lord's Supper and baptism
as needed, and they also organize church and community service
projects. So that's how the two offices work in our church and
the scriptural basis for them. And that is some of what is not
specifically laid out in the bylaws, but is helpful just to
give to prospective elders and to remind elders and deacons
of as we go on in our work. So I'll let you read the rest
of the thing there on the officers of the church. And I'm pretty
much gonna skip over the elections and the staff. You're responsible
to read those so that you're aware of what is in there. And
if you have any questions about any of that, please bring that
to the elder interview. But I want to jump all the way
ahead to section 900 and look at the administrative and ministry
policy as it's stated there. So this is kind of a summary
here at the end. saying these policies are established
with the full realization that some Christians and Christian
churches may have different views. So you don't have to think that
everything in the bylaws is perfect in order to join our church.
You just have to agree to go by the bylaws in how we interact
with one another, and that's the way it's always gonna be.
There's nothing perfect in this world, and if it has to be perfect,
then you'll be alone. And sadly, that's what happens
with some folks. So you're just agreeing that we're going to
avoid unnecessary tensions, and you can have your own personal
views that are different from what's stated in the policies,
but you're going to voluntarily submit yourself to these policies
for the sake of unity and direction of the ministry. Now, section
900.2 points out, if you find that you can't do that, if these
policies cause you great distress and inhibit your ability to serve
the Lord in this congregation, we would accept, in Christian
love, your decision to find a fellowship that more closely shares your
convictions. So, we understand that we're
doing our best here, but you might see things differently.
And so, if you can abide by these, great. If not, you probably have
to find a different church. All right, so then the last thing
is just on the amendments there on the back page. And of course,
you can change the bylaws by a vote of three quarters vote
at a business meeting. And we have done that from time
to time. All right, great. We made it
through the biggest part here with the bylaws. It's important
that we recognize there are going to be times where we're tested.
And it's easy to say, oh, yeah, well, abide by the bylaws when
you're sitting here and no disagreements have come up. And you can't imagine
that any disagreements would come up. But disagreements do
come up. And that's when you're going to be tested to find out
your character. Are you a person who keeps your
word? Are you a person who does what you commit to? Or are you
a person that just does what you feel like in the moment?
And that's not a person of character. A person of character keeps his
commitments, and those commitments are tested when you disagree
with the leadership. And you will disagree with the
leadership. I hope so. If you don't disagree with the
leadership, then you probably don't have any opinions of your
own. And I want you to have opinions. And I want you to keep your opinions
and hold on to them. That's great. But I want you
to submit to the elders as the congregation appoints them. I'm
an elder, I don't get re-elected, I'm an elder until I'm removed,
and you can read in the bylaws about how to remove me, and it
can certainly be done. And if God does remove me, I'm
okay with that, not that I want to leave, I like it here, but
I wouldn't make a stink, and I wouldn't treat anybody badly
on my way out, because you're Christ's people, and I always
want to honor you. And God is leading. If he leads
me elsewhere, I will follow. So follow the leaders when you
disagree with them. That's the point here. That's
when you're really tested. All right, so the next thing
that's important for us to go through is the doctrinal statement.
Now, while you're passing out the doctrinal statement here,
I'll direct your attention to the teaching requirements in
the bylaws. I saved this until now because it's most relevant
now. But if you've still got your
bylaws in front of you, If you look at section 112.1, back towards
the membership section there. And 112.1, actually that should
be 112.2 cuz I have two 112.1s. There's a typo that needs fixed. So you see 112.1 and then 112.1
the second on teaching requirements. And there it says, non-members
may participate in any public teaching in the church and among
its members. So in order to teach Sunday school or to teach a home
Bible study, you don't have to be a member of the church. But
it is necessary for all teachers, whether you're a member or not
a member, to not teach contrary to the doctrinal statement. So
if you're gonna teach, you can't teach against anything that's
stated in the doctrinal statement without permission. Now if you've
got a different view on something in the doctrinal statement, and
you ask for permission to teach on it, and the elders say, okay,
yeah, we'll let you present your view, then that's great. But
you can't just go off and form your own group and start teaching
your own doctrine that's against the doctrinal statement and cause
that rift in the church. The right way to handle a different
view on doctrine is to go to the elders and discuss it with
them. That's what a man does. A man
goes and discusses it with those who are in charge. A sleazy guy,
he goes around and just talks with other people and tries to
get a following until he's got enough people then that he has
the courage to be able to stand up to the elders. That's cowardly.
If you want to change something, do it the right way and be courageous. So to teach in the church, we
ask that you teach according to the doctrinal statement. So
let's go through the doctrinal statement together. Now, as you see in the footnote,
this doctrinal statement is also indebted to the EFCA. This is
an expansion and a revision of the doctrinal statement of the
EFCA, and it says last revised January 4, 2018. I'm trying to
remember, is that when the EFCA doctrinal statement was revised?
That might be, or was that the last time we revised our doctrinal
statement, which would not be true, and I'd need to update
it, because we did revise it last year at our annual meeting. Yeah, right. So yeah, we do have
our updated doctrinal statement here from last year, and I'll
point out what's new and different. Alright, so when it comes to
the section on God, the Holy Bible, the human condition, and
Jesus Christ, these are all pretty traditional Protestant Reformed
views and Trinitarian views that even the Catholic Church would
agree on. So pretty standard stuff here in these opening statements. But I do want to point out some
of what's said in paragraph 2 on the Holy Bible. We believe that
God is speaking in the scriptures, both the Old and New Testament,
notice the present tense there, through the words of human authors.
As the verbally inspired Word of God, the Bible is without
error in the original writings, is the complete revelation of
His will for salvation, and is the ultimate authority by which
every realm of human knowledge and endeavor should be judged.
The Bible contains all truth that is necessary for victory
over sin and for fullness of life and godliness. Therefore,
it is to be believed in all that it teaches, obeyed in all that
it requires, and trusted in all that it promises. So a great
statement about the authority and the sufficiency of Scripture.
It seems like most evangelicals will agree to the authority of
scriptures, but in practice, it's hard to find a lot of people
who believe in the sufficiency of scriptures. That it's really
all you need. They might say it, but they don't act like it.
And we want to act like the Bible has everything that we need for
life and godliness. It doesn't tell you everything
you need for car repair, but it tells you everything you need
in order to be a godly person. Okay, so then the human condition,
I just want to point out one or two things here. Of course,
you've got the fall in Adam and Eve, that we were created with
dignity in the image of God, and that we still have that image
of God, even though we are marred by sin. And that in union with
Adam, there's this original sin that has caused all of mankind
to fall from the state of innocence so that we are sinners by nature
and by choice, alienated from God and under his wrath. And
notice the last part here. We believe that human beings
are dead in sin, being incapable of coming to God in faith apart
from God's effective call to salvation. So that is a rather
Calvinistic statement about total depravity. elements of Calvinism
is the T in tulip. Tulip is the five points. The
T stands for total depravity. And total depravity has also
been called total inability. So this is a statement of total
inability to be saved apart from God's work and God's grace being
effective. That effectual call is also part
of a Calvinistic view of salvation. So the question came up at the
recent Elder Sunday, you know, how Calvinistic is the church?
Well, The doctrinal statement is pretty Calvinistic, and I'm
pretty Calvinistic. The elders may not be quite as
Calvinistic as I am, and I'm okay with that, because I feel
like in this area there's a lot of confusion, a lot of misunderstanding. There's a lot of caricatures
of what Calvinism is and what it believes, and so sometimes
it's not even a very useful word because it just scares people.
But hopefully, if you don't like Calvinism, you'll find that from
my preaching, it's not my hobby horse, I don't spend all my time
preaching Calvinism, but that when I do get to texts that address
issues of total depravity or God's effectual call, that I'm
handling those biblically and accurately, and that it's not
teaching anything that is a boogeyman, but that we're just teaching
what the scripture says and is actually helpful and good. And
there are Calvinists out there who've made a lot of mistakes
and a lot of bad applications and bad implications from some
of these doctrines, but that's not the fault of any of these
doctrines. It's their fault for misapplying
them and misunderstanding them. So just a little bit about Calvinism
there and how it sadly leads to division that I don't think
needs to be there. And I've had great fellowship
and partnership with non-Calvinistic ministers and gospel workers,
and great discussions with them, and I think that's the way the
church is supposed to function. All right, and then the statement
on Jesus Christ is very orthodox, focusing on his atoning death
and his resurrection being the only ground for salvation. So
if you turn it over, you'll notice that the section on the Holy
Spirit talks about the baptism of the Holy Spirit. It also talks
about regeneration, that's the work of the Holy Spirit, and
that in regeneration we are baptized, that is, united spiritually with
Christ and adopted into his family. So the baptism of the Holy Spirit
occurs at salvation. And that's what makes us a part
of the body of Christ. If you're a Christian, you've been baptized
in the Holy Spirit. And the Holy Spirit indwells,
illuminates, guides, equips, and empowers believers for Christ-like
living and service. So the filling of the Spirit
is different from the baptism of the Spirit. And we're supposed
to be filled with the Spirit, not through some one-time experience
necessarily, although there can be powerful experiences of being
filled with the Spirit, but in general it's more of an ongoing
growth in the Holy Spirit of having Him become in control
of all areas of our life as He is the Spirit of the Lord and
we follow His Lordship. So the section on personal salvation
focuses on the call to everyone in the world, the general call
to salvation. And then the second paragraph
focuses more on the effectual call. And it says, when we respond
to the gospel call, God is at work in our hearts for his glory.
Our choice to believe the gospel is not independent from God's
grace. That is, saving faith doesn't
come from an independent act of our fallen will, but both
salvation and faith are a gift from God, as Ephesians 2, 8,
and 9 teach us. So the good part of Calvinism,
the biblical part of Calvinism, is just trying to give God the
glory for saving sinners. And I think when you read through
the New Testament and you see that God is active in the salvation
of sinners and that he gets the credit, he gets the glory, that's
basically what good Calvinists are trying to protect, is the
glory of God and salvation. Arminians are trying to protect
something else. It doesn't mean that they're against the glory
of God and salvation, it just means that when they get into
discussions on this, their concern lies on the freedom of the human
will and that God is not just pulling strings and we're just
puppets. And so they're trying to emphasize that. And so it
depends on what you're trying to protect as to how you kind
of come at this issue. And I want to value what they're
trying to protect, and I want them to value what I'm trying
to protect, and for us to be able to have unity and understand
each other's perspective. But I did want a clear statement
on some of these things in the doctrinal statement, and the
congregation agreed. They voted on that. So our doctrinal
statement reads pretty Calvinistically. I'll take the blame for that.
I did it the right way, through the congregation. The church then, not too much
out of the ordinary there, but you do come to the last paragraph
and you see that the church is shepherded by biblically qualified
males, and we had to put that language in there of male because
there's so much gender confusion in our society. You couldn't
even use the word man anymore, you've got to say male. And then
also because there's so much egalitarianism among professing
Christians that they think that this old idea that leadership
has to be male is very antiquated and the Bible shouldn't be interpreted
that way. But we think the Bible's pretty plain, and God spoke it
the way he meant it, and that men are supposed to lead their
families, men are supposed to lead God's family. It doesn't
mean they're better, and I've got lots of sermons on that subject.
If you're curious about men's roles and women's roles and why
it's important, I'm happy to have those discussions. All right,
and we already talked about elders' roles, and so you have a little
bit of that there. So then when you come to the Christian living
section, you see that point number eight is broken down into a number
of sub points. So you've got eight A through
G there, starting at the bottom of the page and then going to
the top of the next page. And there's a couple of things here
that would be somewhat distinctive of our congregation that was
that it would define how we view this in contradistinction to
other movements or other evangelical churches, like the section on
spiritual gifts. We say that the office of apostle
and prophet are no longer given, the gift of apostle and prophet
is no longer present among Christians, nor speaking in tongues, nor
healing or miracles. Now if you speak in tongues or
you believe that that is a gift today, you're allowed to do that,
you're allowed to have your opinion, you're allowed to speak in tongues.
I might even allow you to speak in tongues in church if you asked
nicely. And there was an interpreter. But we're going to try to do
everything according to Scripture, and we're just letting you know
what our position on these issues is. So to join the church, you
don't have to be in 100% agreement. You just have to be willing to
submit to, this is how the church is going to operate. This is
how the church is going to function as a congregation. So we're not
going to have a speaking in tongue service without interpretation,
for sure. And we'd be hesitant even to
have a speaking in tongues service with interpretation because we
don't believe that what people do today is the same thing as
the gift of tongues in the New Testament. Not trying to put
anybody down or discard anybody's experiences, just a matter of
interpretation. So God still heals and works
miracles, but he's not distributed the gifts to members in the church
today. So I don't have a gift of healing
or a gift of working miracles, but that doesn't mean that we
can't ask God to heal or to do miracles. So this is traditionally
called a cessationist position. And the cessationist position
also can be misunderstood and maligned. And so we don't want
to do to others what we don't want done to us. So I have to
be careful not to misunderstand or show the worst part of a different
doctrinal position. And so I don't want people doing
that to me and saying, well, you don't even believe that the
Holy Spirit exists. I'm like, well, I believe the Holy Spirit
exists. I believe the Holy Spirit is active. And so let's treat
each other with respect and not misrepresent positions and just
have those discussions. Always going back to God's word.
So then on prayer and God's will has to do also with the healing.
Prayer for healing is good. We should pray for healing, but
we have to submit ourselves to God's will. We don't know whether
or not he's doing things through our illness, and that's why our
prayer isn't being answered. So this is kind of against the
name it and claim it philosophy of church and the health and
wealth movement. That's pretty much what that
paragraph is about. Now we've got a paragraph on
manhood and womanhood, and this is one area that we've had discussion
on and are trying to make sure that it communicates well and
is biblical. So let's just go ahead and read
that. Very controversial in the church today. The church at large. Our church is not that controversial,
but it still comes up. We believe that God has created
us to be male or female, gender being determined biologically
at birth, Male and female complement one another in their nature and
character and in their roles in relation to both family and
church. Marriage is to be between one man and one woman. God has
designed and instructed men to take the leadership role in their
household, being ultimately responsible before God for the decisions
and directions of the family. This leadership is to be exercised
in love, seeking God's highest glory and the highest good of
everyone within the family. Women are instructed by God to
submit to the leadership of their own husband in all things. In
contrast to our society, we uphold the value of motherhood and raising
children as a full-time calling. So we don't prohibit a woman
from working a job outside of the home, but we do uphold the
value of motherhood and raising children as a full-time calling.
That's what we encourage women to pursue, both young women and
married women. And of course, when your children
are raised, then if you want to get a job in a daycare and
be a blessing to other families that need your help, that's great.
If you want to be a high-powered lawyer, you'd probably say, well,
I don't know if that's really God's calling for your life.
I think the domestic life is really a wonderful calling and
one that is so much derided in our culture that we need to set
an example in the opposite direction and show people that family is
important and career is not to be an idol in our lives as men
or women. So there's a lot of liberty there
in how you carry out the calling that God has given to you, but
we want to emphasize those biblical values of motherhood and child
raising, even being a grandmother and serving mothers who are younger
once your own children are raised as the scripture teaches. So
then the section on submission to government. Again, doctrinal
statements tend to reflect the difficulties of the time, and
so some of this on manhood and womanhood and government are
issues that are currently being worked out in the church and
are under attack by the enemy, and so we want to make clear
what we think the doctrinal position is according to Scripture. And
so we, going through COVID, had a lot of discussions about what
a submission to government looked like, and I've got a sermon series,
a four-part series, on Romans 12 and all of its implications
and how to apply it in the current time. You can find that online
if you're interested, if you weren't here for it. It says, So when the scripture says submit,
it doesn't say except for this and that. You always submit.
And one form of submission is disobedience that accepts the
penalty. That's a form of submission. We're not taking up arms, we're
not resisting arrest, we're not shouting obscenities at the police
officer. If I feel like it is my duty to God to disobey the
governing authorities, then I accept whatever penalty the authority
puts on me for disobedience. That's the right way to do it.
In the military, if a man disagrees with his superior officer, If
he has a moral obligation to disobey an order, he also has
a moral obligation to submit to whatever penalty is imposed
upon him for disobeying that order. And so that's the way
a moral person disobeys while still submitting to the authority
structure and not tearing down that authority structure which
is placed for our good. You don't want a chaotic, anarchic
society, and you don't want to do anything that's going to contribute
to an anarchic society. But instead, we show the world
the right way to honor God in civil disobedience. And we may have more opportunities
for that in the future. And then the section on racism,
sexism, and justice. Well, of course, this comes out
of the social justice movement. We initially adopted the Dallas
Statement on Social Justice and the Gospel as our guideline as
this became such a hot-button issue in the last five years. six years, whatever it's been.
And so if you'd like to read the Dallas Statement, I've got
some copies of it up here. But since then, we've incorporated
what we think are some of the essentials of what is a rather
long document into a much shorter, briefer statement in our own
doctrinal statement. So I tried to condense what was
in the Dallas Statement into this statement that was approved
by the church last year, or this year, earlier this year. We believe
God's word defines justice and injustice. Racism is an example
of the sin of partiality. That's how the Bible talks about
racism is partiality. Christ commands his followers
to show no partiality for or against any people group. But
male leadership in the home and in the church is based upon God's
creative design and is not an example of partiality or oppression.
Furthermore, identifying sins such as fornication, abortion,
homosexuality, and transgenderism as morally wrong is not partiality,
but must be done as an act of love, speaking the truth to those
who are enslaved to evil passions. So that covers racial issues,
patriarchy issues, if you want to use their terminology, and
then sexual issues, all of that justice stuff that has come into
our culture, that's our position stated as succinctly as we can.
And then you come to the back and there's a statement on the
intermediate state and God's plan for the future. We don't
believe in soul sleep as it's taught by some Christian denominations. We believe that to be absent
from the body is to be present with the Lord in conscious enjoyment
of heaven. And then as far as God's plan
for the future, we are a premillennial church. We believe in Christ's
return before a literal thousand year kingdom and that's the way
I'll most likely be preaching the book of Revelation unless
I have some personal revelation that shows me otherwise. It says,
So the premillennial part is kind of the distinctive part.
All Christians believe in a personal bodily return of Christ, but
we believe in a premillennial return. The coming of Christ at a time
known only to God demands constant expectancy and, as our blessed
hope, motivates the believer to godly living. Following Christ's
return, Jesus will rule on this present earth over all nations
for a thousand years. We believe that Israel will always
be the nation which God has chosen for himself. While Israel is
currently under the judgment of God for her rejection of him,
there will be a future national salvation for Israel. We do not
believe that the church has permanently replaced Israel as the chosen
people of God, the recipients of all the covenants of promise,
but rather that the church shares in those promises through Christ.
During the millennial reign of Christ, Israel will experience
the fulfillment of all of the promises of the prophets as Jesus
Christ rules as the son of David on the throne in Jerusalem. At
the end of the millennium, Jesus will assign all believers to
condemnation and eternal conscious punishment, and the believer
to eternal blessedness and joy with the Lord in the new heavens
and the new earth, to the praise of his glorious grace. So that's
our doctrinal statement. It has been much expanded and
revised. The goal of the doctrinal statement
is to communicate to you, the members of the church, what the
teaching positions of the church are. And again, you don't have
to be in 100% agreement, you just have to not actively undermine
the doctrinal statement if you're gonna be a member. Any questions? It can be revised. Nothing is
perfect. All right, so we covered the
statement on biblical cooperation and separation. At that same
time, I was gonna make a mention of other churches that are nearby
that we cooperate with. And there's some new ones that
have not yet made it onto this list that we can add. As I mentioned,
there's a new church plant in Hickman, Nebraska called Redemption
Hill. Redemption Hill Bible Church. I think that's the full name.
Sam Lawson is the pastor there, and they just started in the
last few months. And Hickman has needed a Bible teaching church
for quite a while, so I'm very happy that some Christians have
undertook that, and it seems to be going well. But other nearby
churches, Mark Starr has left, you could cross out his name,
and instead we have Nat. But the Living Life Reformed
Church has a new pastor, and we're getting along very well,
and I think it's gonna be a great partnership. Country Bible Church
has Dean Delfos there as the pastor. Crossroads Bible Church
in Manly, east of Lincoln. Gary Whistle, very faithful man.
Dustin Rogers in Lincoln at Heritage Bible Church. And there's many
churches in Lincoln, too many to list. But then down below
I've got a group of pastors that meet with regularly and have
done so ever since I've been here. And so for the last 15
years, Rod Gertzon, Dwight Oswald, Doug Witzke, Mike Wing, Brian
Fulkin, some of these guys came a little bit later, like Peter
Kuhn and Casey McNerney. But yeah, just a great group
of pastors that are also premillennial, like I am, dispensational, and
so that kind of unites us together. Some of them aren't Calvinist,
so, you know, we have some doctrinal disagreements, but great fellowship. So yeah, that's some of the things
that keep us in touch with those who are closest geographically
and also closest geologically in our part of the world here. And then also recently, there's
been a group of pastors that have been meeting called the
Master's Fellowship, TMF. the Master's Fellowship is mostly
graduates from the Master's Seminary. That's why it's called the Master's
Fellowship, but you don't have to be a graduate from the Master's
Seminary in order to participate. And we've been holding breakfasts
twice a year and bringing in speakers and having fellowship.
And so that's been encouraging as well to see the Master's Fellowship
take off in not only in our area, but around the states and even
around the world. So that's an encouraging development. Good things are happening. It's
not all bad out there. Good to keep that in mind. So
that's just to let you know that we're not Lone Rangers out here
building our own little kingdom, that we're just a part of what
is going on. All right, so we've got about
a half an hour left. Let's see if I can get through
the policies that we need to cover. We'll probably do this
pretty quickly. Well, The child protection policy
is what I'm referring to. And this is a longer document,
one that is sadly important. You kind of wish you didn't need
a child protection policy and that we still lived in a society
where children were safe. But that doesn't seem to be the
case. And so I will make some copies of the child protection
policy and hand this out to you afterwards before you go. Or
I can put it in your mailboxes if you have a mailbox in the
other room if you do need to go. Basically, if I was gonna
summarize the child protection policy is that when we have children's
events at the church, we don't allow an adult volunteer to be
alone with the child. That's just not a good idea. And so there's always going to
be either multiple children or multiple adults, and we have
windows on all of the rooms that we're allowed to meet with with
children. You can't go into a closet with a child that doesn't have
a window. You've gotta be where people can see what's going on.
And we do allow for people who have a criminal background in
this area to attend the church, but they have to be escorted
by another member of the church at all times when they're in
the church building when children are present. If you have a record
in this area, you're not allowed to be in the building when children
are around without an escort from the church. And the identity
of the offender will be made known to the congregation. He
can only be here at approved times by the elders. A sex offender
can't just come whenever he wants. He's got to have approval to
be for any event that he attends. And then there's also the response
to claims of sexual abuse. How is the church going to handle
it if somebody claims to be abused? And so, you know, the reporting
is all pretty standard and the investigation shouldn't be anything
out of the ordinary there. So we ask anyone who's going
to be involved with children's ministry to acknowledge that
they have received and will abide by these policies by signing
them after reading them, and then also a background check.
So we've got an application where they fill out information if
you're involved with children's ministry, and we'll do the background
check and make sure that we know if there's anyone who has a criminal
record in that regard. So I'll make copies of that and
get that to you. All right, the other policies
that I wanted to cover with you are the building use policies,
on a happier note. So if you wanna use the church
for any purpose, a baby shower or a birthday party, a Bible
study, Tupperware party, if you wanna use the church building,
here's our policies. And we try to keep it simple.
Try to keep it generous. In a spirit of generosity, we
desire our building and its resources to be used by all of our church
members. The following rules will be sufficient to protect
the church's property and reputation. Number one, the use of the building
and its resources are only for those who are members of the
church or by request of a member on behalf of someone else. So
we don't allow outside people to make requests to use the church
building, that if you know somebody in the church who's a member
and they request it for you, well then we will consider that.
Number two, all building use requests must be approved by
a church elder or deacon. You don't have to get everybody
to sign off. You get one elder to say good,
one deacon to say good, you're good. Keeps it simple. Number three, the church member
who requests the use of the building must be present for the duration
of the event. You can't request for your friend
and then not be there when the event's taking place. You're
responsible for it if you're the one who's requested, so you
gotta be there. And children must never be left unsupervised
at any event on the church grounds. Number four, because the church
is a non-profit, no for-profit activities will be allowed on
the church property. So maybe no Tupperware parties
after all. Number five, the church building
and all of its equipment should be left in the same state of
order and cleanliness in which it was found. If not, a cleaning
fee of $25 per hour will be assessed. Number six, food and drink are
not allowed in the pews in the worship area. Same as Sunday
mornings. Events on Saturdays must be cleaned
and cleared no later than 6 p.m. Non-church events cannot be scheduled
on Sundays before two o'clock. That time is already taken. Number
eight, neither alcohol nor smoking are permitted in the church building.
Number nine, any decorations or equipment that we brought
in for the event must be approved before the event. Balls are only
permitted in the basement level of the church building. Number
10, usage of the audio-visual equipment must be asked for ahead
of time and supervised by an authorized church representative.
That's somebody who has experience that the church has said, yeah,
we want you to run the soundboard. The church copier is only to
be used by church members. So you're free to use the church
copier as a member of the church. There's a log in there. You write
down your name and what you made copies for. So just utilize the
log and that's fine. You know, if you start running
thousands of copies for your business, we might ask you about
it. You might want to buy your own copier. But we want to be generous with
what we have, right? Number 11, all of the above policies apply
to weddings and funerals at the church as well. And number 12,
while we desire to be generous, the church elders and deacons
have the right on behalf of the congregation to refuse the church
of the building at its own discretion for any reason whatsoever. Nor
are the church elders or deacons required to provide the reason
for refusing any requests. So if the elder says no, and
you're like, well why not? I'm not telling you, I'm just
saying no. You gotta say okay, you get to decide. This is important
because there are certain groups out there that will target churches
for lawsuits or whatever, and so they'll ask for use of your
building, and if you tell them the reason why, they'll use that
against you in a court. And so there's gotta be times
where we can just say no, and we're not obligated to give the
reason. That's the world we live in. Any questions about the building
use? That goes for the equipment in the church too. If you want
to borrow the tables and chairs for a graduation party, just
ask. Put them back, clean them afterwards.
Just common sense stuff. Great. All right, we're doing
great. We're really making it through.
That means that what we have left is to talk about What's
next? How do you get involved in church?
And that's the key, that membership is organic. Membership is what
God has called you to. It's not just about voting at
the annual meeting, but it's about using your spiritual gift
to serve the saints. And so let's talk about some
of the ways that new members can involve themselves and what
some of the needs of the church are currently for service. Number
one, you notice that we put out a prayer sheet every week. And
is this this week's? Yeah, this is this week's. So
you should always bring home a prayer sheet with you. If you
don't have an official responsibility, you're not a deacon, you're not
an elder, you're not a worship leader, that you're not running
the sound board or teaching Sunday school or in charge of snacks
or any of that stuff. One thing that we always need
and that is one of the most important aspects of ministry is the ministry
of prayer. So you take home your prayer
sheet, you pray for it personally, you pray for it as a couple,
pray for it as a family. That is a wonderful way to be
serving the saints and God works through prayer. Prayer is not
wasted time. Prayer is very powerful. And secondly, we have our ministry
rotation. This is an old one, this is not
the current one. And on the ministry rotation, you've got the worship
leader, the prayer leader, the scripture reader, the special
music, the nursery, the brunch, the after service, child watch,
basically all the different things that need to be done on a weekly
basis. divided up among different groups of people. And so then
we put it on a rotation. We've recently added another
worship leader to our rotation. Graham Knobby is going to be
taking over the second Sunday of the month as worship leader,
and that's great. That gives me the ability to
focus on other things on Sunday morning and not be quite so overwhelmed.
I love worship leading, but we've got to get other people involved.
And the prayer leader, again, this is a man's role, and you
see mostly it's elders that are the prayer leaders on our list,
but it doesn't have to be an elder. And if you would like
to be a prayer leader, if you're the type of person who does take
home the prayer list and pray regularly for the congregation,
then you might be someone who should be a public leader. But
you shouldn't be a public leader in prayer if you're not a private
prayer. That's something Jesus warned us about. And so, I've
got some great prayer leaders in the church, and if you're
interested in prayer leading, I do have handouts also as a
prayer leader guide. And in fact, doesn't hurt, pass
those around. The prayer leader guide. You
might find this encouraging and helpful, whether you're officially
on the rotation or not. Scripture reader, again, doesn't
necessarily have to be a man according to the Bible, but we
follow the practice of making it a man. And so we like to have
the men in the church step up as scripture readers. And so
if you would like to do that, talk with one of the elders and
we'll consider that and see about putting you on that rotation.
And then the special music. Doesn't necessarily have to be
music, that's why it just says special. Sometimes people will
do a reading or something else for that special time. If you
have the gift of exhortation or encouragement, we could slot
you into the special and you could have a few minutes on a
monthly basis or bimonthly basis to exhort and encourage the congregation. So that's an opportunity. If
you are involved with music, then we would love to get you
involved with that as well. The nursery rotation. We've got
always needs for more ladies for the nursery rotation. We
do like ladies to be in that role. Most sexual abuse is done
by men, sadly. And so just an added measure
of protection. We don't put the men in the nursery.
And so if you'd be interested in nursery, that is a great ministry
to the moms. And you notice a lot of the moms
are doing the ministry. And so you get some of the older
ladies to sign up for the nursery also to serve the younger ladies
in that way. The brunch, another mostly ladies
ministry there. Not that a man couldn't bring
brunch if he wanted to, but you see that the ladies have been
doing a great job with that. And the after service child watch,
that could be either. We got some men, some women on
that list. I was doing it for a while, but
it's, I can't do everything. So that's why we have ministry
rotations. That was great to see people
step up for that. And I think that's an area we need to shore up and
keep on training and getting even better
at the child watch because sometimes people forget. Yeah, so the child watch is that
the person basically goes downstairs and outside wherever the children
are gathering and playing. And it just keeps an eye on the
children so that if anyone gets hurt, there's an adult nearby.
If any strangers are around, there's an adult that's watching
and making sure that nothing bad happens. Because the parents
are often up here fellowshipping, the children go run off, and
we want to have at least one adult designated to keep an eye. Especially when it used to be
kids would go to the park more, and the adult would go to the
park with them. Not necessarily. You know, if
they have a group that goes to the park and a group that stays
here, then you might have to grab somebody and say, well, I'm going
to go to the park. You watch the kids that are here. So that's
the ministry rotation. And then also I wanted to talk
about Awana. And we do have some of you here
that have already jumped into the Awana ministry, and I'm very
excited about having some more men, and I do appreciate the
women involved with Awana, but seems like with children's ministry,
sometimes the women are more involved and the men are kind
of absent, so that's why I get excited about having more men.
Being a boy myself, having some men who were teachers meant a
lot to me, and I think that it's good to have that healthy balance
of men and women involved. As far as Iwana goes, I'm the
Iwana commander, and that's not what Iwana recommends. Iwana
recommends that somebody in the church be the Iwana commander,
and we don't have an Iwana commander, and so that's something I've
been praying for for quite a while. So if you or someone that you
know would be interested in working your way up to Iwana commander,
then that's a goal that we can set. I'm not gonna throw you
in unprepared, but it would be a great goal to set, and I'd
like to pass that on eventually. Mentioned worship leading, deacon
ministry, definitely a great place to start. If you're new
in the church and you're qualified, maybe not jumping into elder
right away, we might want some more time to test you before
we put you into that position. But a deacon is a great ministry
for a godly man to start building up that reputation of service
to the Lord. Also, you can host in your home,
and it's a great ministry for couples to do. We have Lord's
Night once a month, except for November and December when we
have Thanksgiving banquet and Christmas Eve instead. But in
most months, we have our Sunday evening fellowship, and you can
host that in your home. And you don't have to have a
million dollar home in order to be a host. And it's wonderful
when we're not self-conscious and thinking, well, are people
going to judge me for my house? But instead, we're just graciously
using what God has given us to provide a place of fellowship. Another way to be involved with
the church that I think is much needed would be in missionary
support. We don't have a missions director in the church. We don't
have somebody whose job it is to keep communication lines open
with the missionaries and to be sending care packages and
to be passing on prayer requests and just really keeping that
hand on the pulse of our missionaries and being that connection. So
if you have a heart for missions and you have some administrative
ability, then a missions director would be a position in the church
that is open and would be much appreciated. don't think I'm
being selfish by bringing this up, but just biblical, giving
is an important New Testament ministry. And we have our offering
box there in the back of the church that you are able to give
in any time, before service, after service, during the week,
you can put things in the offering box. You can also give online,
that's why I handed that out, if you'd like to make your giving
automatic. The downside of giving automatically is that you kind
of, don't consciously enjoy the act of giving, but it just happens
and you don't even notice. The upside of electronic giving
is that you don't forget, and it just happens. So you decide
how you want to give and how much you want to give. God loves
a cheerful giver, and the scripture does teach that those who are
taught the word should share all good things with those who
teach, and this church does an excellent job of that. I've never
had to ask for giving, and we've never had a giving drive, or
I've never had a series on giving, or anything like that. If the
passage brings it up as I'm teaching through a book, I'll teach on
it, but that's about the only time that you'll hear me talk
about giving. And I don't even like to talk about it here, but
I had those forms, and I was like, well, I'll pass them out.
If you want to use them, you're welcome to do that. All right, so what comes next?
You read the bylaws that I've handed out. You read the doctrinal
statement, because we didn't cover it all. And you bring those
with you to the elder interviews if you have any questions. And
please feel free to discuss. Don't feel bad if you have differences
of opinion. I do not hold that against you
at all. Also bring your personal testimony with you to the elder
interview. If you've never written out your
personal testimony before, I can send you some guidelines on how
to do that. Just send me an email and ask
for some help on preparing your personal testimony and I'll get
that to you. I've done that before. Personal
training testimony was part of what we did to prepare for the
evangelism event at Norris this week. So it's been on my mind
recently as well. You can share your personal testimony,
not only with the elders, but also, if you like, with the congregation
when you're voted in as a member. And so if you would like to share
your testimony with the congregation, let me know. I'll arrange a time
for that. You can either do it on a Sunday morning, or we could
do it at a Lord's Night. That is also a great time to
be sharing testimonies. And if you've prepared it, and
it's great to be able to use it, and it'd be a great encouragement
to people at a Lord's Night, or even on a Sunday morning.
We'll also ask you if you've been baptized at the meeting
with the elders, and that's a New Testament command. We don't believe
in baptismal regeneration. We believe you can be saved without
being baptized, but we still want people to be baptized because
it is an encouraging thing, and it's good for your spiritual
growth. And so if you haven't been baptized, we'll encourage
you to do that. So yeah, then we'll announce your membership
candidacy. We'll vote in February, and then on a Sunday morning,
we will recognize you as new members. Any questions about
the process? Well, a couple of concluding
exhortations, and then I'll let you go. You guys have been great
doing this marathon. I will send you a message on
Matthew 28, the Great Commission, on how to make more disciples
and how to make better disciples. And that's the goal of many churches,
the understanding that our goal here is to make disciples. But
the devil is in the details, quite literally. And so good
intentions have unintended consequences. How exactly do we make more disciples? How exactly do we make better
disciples? So that's what that message will
be about. And I think it's a good one for new members to listen
to. So that's why I'm going to assign you to listen to it. As
far as what you should keep in mind, we've talked about a lot
of this already, but just a final reminder. Protect the unity of
the church. Don't gossip. Put other people
first. Follow the leaders. You do that,
you'll get a good commendation from the Lord. You don't do that,
Christ will not be pleased with you. And so let's protect the
unity of the church. It's been so good to have such
a united church for so long. I was talking with one of my
pastors that I grew up with, grew up at his church. He'd been
there for 40 years. I told him, well, you know, 10
years in ministry and we've had great unity. And he said, well,
that's the way it was for me. And then I had all kinds of problems
after that. So now I've made it to 15 years without any major
problems. Well, we'll see when they come.
But he assured me that they would come. Be a friend to those who
need a friend. You know, when you come to church,
be looking out for who the Lord wants you to befriend, because
that's really what church is. Church is a family, and you've
got to make friends. Don't just come and sit and then
leave. I'm not the most friendly person in the world. I'm kind
of a loner, kind of an introvert. But I do my best to look around
and see who needs a friend and who I can be a friend to and
have an open heart to say, okay, that person, I really think God
wants me to talk to that person. So even if you're not an extrovert,
just be looking around thinking, who does God want me to be friends
with? Who can I encourage? Not selfishly as to what I can
get out of it, but what I can give. That's very important.
I was watching an old movie with my kids last week, Anne of Green
Gables. And the old spinster didn't want to adopt Anne because
she said we got no use for her. And her brother said, well, I
think we could do a lot of good for her. So they adopted her,
not because they needed her, but because she needed them.
And that's how we should be at church. Be looking around. Who
needs you? And who can you serve? And then finally, I'd ask you
to give me your feedback, your impressions on the church. It's
always great to see the church through new eyes. I've been here
a long time. I don't see everything that new
eyes see. And so if you see things that
could be better, don't be afraid to suggest it to me. I won't
be offended. A lot that's in the church is not my doing to
begin with. I've been here 15 years, so a lot of it is. But
a lot of it was already here before me and things that I'm
fine with. If you have some suggestions
on how they can be better, don't be shy. You have wisdom, and
I want to hear your wisdom. So are there things that are
odd to you? Things that are like, well, why
do they do that? Just let us know. How can we minister to
you and your family better? All right. That's everything
I think that I wanted to share with you today. We got done in
less than three hours. That was unusual.
Membership Class 2023 (Part 2)
Series Special Days
Note that the video is part 2 but the audio is both parts 1 and 2 of the membership class.
| Sermon ID | 121323330187611 |
| Duration | 1:07:10 |
| Date | |
| Category | Teaching |
| Language | English |
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