Pastoral Notes for Sunday, January 21, 2018
As we close out 2017 and begin 2018, it’s appropriate that we take a moment to give a quick financial update. In case you’re new with us, our church budget year runs from July 1 to June 30, so we’ve just closed out the second quarter of the budget year.
Below you will find a breakdown of where things stand financially at present. Praise be to God, it is another encouraging report! Thankfully, many of you have faithfully and generously given to the work of ministry at Cornerstone this past quarter, and so we’re moving into 2018 slightly ahead of budget. Through you, God is providing what we need as a congregation, and we are so very grateful.
Please take time to review the financial summary below. If you have any particular questions about our finances, feel free to e-mail our Office Administrator, Susan Bumpus, at office@cstonepres.org.
Bulletin for Sunday, 01.21.18
Pastoral Notes for Sunday, January 14, 2018
Last year was the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation. For theology nerds and Reformation history junkies, it was the event of a lifetime. Hundreds of Reformational conferences were hosted and dozens of new books were written. It was tantamount to a religious Super Bowl for Protestants.
Like many churches across the world, we memorialized the occasion in a variety of ways, including a special sermon series, a midweek lecture series, and even a Reformational concert. In all the many remembrances, you could always bank on one thing—that the great German reformer, Martin Luther, would be talked about. It’s right, of course, that Luther would be given such prominence, for it’s difficult to imagine how the Protestant Reformation could have made such a wide-reaching and lasting impact without his strength of passion and steely resolve leading the charge.
The same could be said of another Martin Luther, who led a different reformation, standing for a different kind of protestantism. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was born in 1929 with the name Michael King, but his father changed it to Martin Luther when he was five out of respect for the founder of the Protestant Reformation.
Though Dr. King’s theology didn’t square with his German Reformer namesake in every way, they certainly agreed on gospel essentials—all men are created in the image of God, and the love of God in Jesus Christ extends to all men. King understood that these simple but profound truths necessarily implied that all men should be treated equally with dignity and respect regardless of kindred, tribe, tongue, nation, and yes—color.
The problem was that in America at the time equality, dignity and respect between blacks and whites was missing. Schools, restaurants, hotels, and buses were segregated by color. Blacks were systematically marginalized with the enforcement of Jim Crow laws. Violence toward blacks was often swept under the rug by authorities. Seeing the systemic social, ethnic, and economic prejudice all around him, King determined to give life for the cause of civil rights.
In his now famous Letter from a Birmingham Jail, King references Martin Luther’s bold statement at the Diet of Worms when he was asked to recant of his beliefs, “Here I stand. I cannot do otherwise, so help me God.” It’s clear that Dr. King felt himself to be in the same position when it came to the injustice and prejudice toward blacks in his day. He couldn’t recant or remain indifferent or lukewarm. The time for action was now.
Over the years of protesting for this new reformation, King won significant victories and experienced painful defeats. He was a hero to many, and a villain to others. Threats on his life and on the lives of his wife and children became commonplace. Those threats escalated as the civil rights battles grew fiercer. Ultimately, King’s commitment to public righteousness cost him his very life. Fifty years ago this year, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was shot and killed outside room 306 at the historic Lorraine hotel in Memphis, TN. President Ronald Reagan signed into law Martin Luther King Day as a federal holiday on the third Monday of January, which means tomorrow we have the opportunity to pause and give thanks to God for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, remembering – and joining – his protest until everything is exactly as it ought to be (Revelation 21:1-4).
Bulletin for Sunday, January 14, 2018
Pastoral Notes for Sunday, January 7, 2018
This past Monday (New Year’s Day) I wrote an email to the Cornerstone leaders, reflecting on the worship service last Sunday and encouraging them in prayer as we look toward 2018. It struck me after writing the message that you—the congregation—might also receive benefit from what was written, if for no other reason than to know that you’re loved and prayed for regularly by the leadership.
Brothers,
There is no better way to close out 2017 and open up 2018 than in the house of the Lord. What a special grace we enjoyed yesterday, remembering that “God has been our dwelling place in all generations” (Psalm 90), and that in the same way he’s been “...our help in ages past” He is also “our hope for years to come” (O God Our Help, Isaac Watts). What solid ground we have to stand on as we venture into the year ahead.
Reading Psalm 1 this morning, I lifted each you up by name, praying that as you delight and meditate on the law of the Lord this year, you would become like a tree planted by streams of water, yielding fruit in season, whose leaf doesn't wither, and that you'd prosper in all that you do. As I prayed that prayer for you, I prayed it for me, too. For there is nothing I desire more in 2018 than to be like the wise man of Psalm 1 even Christ the Lord.
One of my favorite Puritan prayers in the The Valley of Vision collection is the “Prayer for the New Year.” You’ll find it below. If you would, take a moment today at some point and pray these petitions with Cornerstone in mind, anticipating that Jesus Christ, our Lord and Captain, will lead us ever onward and upward in the year ahead. Love you brothers.
Your servant,
Nate
“O Lord,
Length of days does not profit us,
except the days are passed in thy presence,
in thy service, to thy glory.
Give us the grace that precedes, follows, guides, sustains, sanctifies, aids every hour,
that we may not be one moment apart from thee.
May we rely upon on thy Spirit to supply every thought, speak in every word, direct every step,
prosper every work, build up every mote of faith.
Give us a desire to show forth thy praise; testify thy love, advance thy kingdom.
We launch our bark on the unknown waters of this year,
with Thee, O Father, as our harbor
with Thee, O Son, at our helm,
with Thee, O Holy Spirit, filling our sails.
Guide us to heaven with our loins girt, our lamp burning,
our ear open to thy calls, our heart full of love, our soul free.
Give us thy grace to sanctify, thy comforts to cheer, thy wisdom to teach, thy right hand to guide,
thy counsel to instruct, thy law to judge, thy presence to stabilize.
May thy fear be our awe, thy triumphs our joy. Amen.”
Bulletin for Sunday, January 7, 2018
Pastoral Notes for Sunday, December 31, 2017
“He who calls you is faithful; he will surely do it.”—1 Thessalonians 5:24
“And I am sure of this, that he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ.”—Philippians 1:6
For the first five months of 2018, we’re going to work verse by verse through Genesis 1-11 in a series entitled, “New Beginnings.” I’ve titled the series “New Beginnings” for two reasons primarily.
First and most obviously is the fact that this series will begin next Sunday, which is the first Sunday of the new year, January 7, 2018 (Epiphany). But, the second reason is that Genesis, as the title indicates, is a book of beginnings.
Most famously, Genesis retells the story of the beginning of time, space, and history. Only in Genesis do we find a systematic retelling of the creation narrative. But as the story of the beginning unfolds, we find that creation’s beginning is only the first among many “new beginnings” in the book. For Israel, the original audience, Genesis served as the foundation of the Law (also known as the Torah). Given through Moses to the post-Exodus Israelites, Genesis revealed the origin and backstory of God’s covenant love for his people. A love that runs like a red thread through the pages of the Old Testament, culminating in the New Testament with the life and ministry of Jesus Christ.
Not all the beginnings in Genesis are good, however. Sin makes its first appearance on earth in Genesis 3. In Genesis 4, we witness the first murder. In Genesis 7, we witness the one-and-only worldwide flood. Yet with each of these “new beginnings” an opportunity is presented—an opportunity for repentance, redemption, and recreation. That is to say that the narrative of Genesis is shot through with grace, which is the only real and enduring foundation for all new beginnings.
As we look ahead to 2018, with all its expectations and fears, Genesis teaches us to trust the gracious Creator God who was there at the beginning. For He is the same yesterday, today, and forever. Which means that no matter what starts and stops, fits and spurts this year brings, one thing is certain: we can trust this God to carry us all the way.
Bulletin for Sunday, December 31, 2017
Pastoral Notes for Sunday, December 24, 2017
“Here is the answer to the human predicament, the solution to our slavery to sin and our separation from God. God bridged the gap by coming from heaven to earth. This is how much the mighty God cares about us. Love was when God spanned the gulf. Love was when God become man. Love was when God surprised those he had created by being born as one of them—as a baby.”—Alistair Begg
“Filling the world,
He lies in a manger.
Ruler of the stars
He nurses at his mother’s bosom.
He is both great in the nature of God,
And small in the form of a servant.”
—St. Augustine
“Perhaps this Christmas you feel your hold on faith is weak and faltering. That may be so. But Christ’s hold on you is firm and sure. He left the glory of heaven to rescue the people the Father had given him. And he will not lose any. He will not lose you—not if you’ve been given to him by the Father.”—Tim Chester
“Moonless darkness stands between.
Past, O Past, no more be seen!
But the Bethlehem star may lead me
To the sight of Him who freed me
From the self that I have been.
Make me pure, Lord: Thou are holy;
Make me meek, Lord: Thou wert lowly;
Now beginning, and always:
Now begin,
On Christmas Day.”
—Gerard Manley Hopkins
“Christmas means that, through the grace of God and the incarnation, peace with God is available; and if you make peace with God, then you can go out and make peace with everybody else. And the more people who embrace the gospel do that, the better off the world is. Christmas, therefore, means the increase of peace—both with God and between people—across the face of the world.”—Timothy Keller
“Now,
I in him surrender
to the crush and cry of birth.
Because eternity
was closeted in time
He is my open door to forever.”
—Luci Shaw