Monday, November 28, 2016

Praise and Thanksgiving / Mrs Barb Jackson

Mrs Barb Jackson
Pastor's Wife
Batavia, IA



Praise and Thanksgiving

It is that time of year when we gather with families and friends and dedicate the day to praising God and thanking Him for His blessings.  We eat, reminisce, and enjoy holiday traditions.  We share with one another for which we are thankful: family, food, home, job, and health.  Then, tomorrow comes and we return to life's every day demands.  Does thanksgiving still have the same priority and focus?  Sometimes we “fit it in” among distractions or perhaps get to the end of the day and realize we left God out altogether.  He is worthy to be praised with all of our being.  God provides for our every need and sacrificed His only Son lovingly.  He deserves thanksgiving every day.

When we approach God's throne in prayer, we need to prepare by humbling ourselves and realize His greatness.  We begin by praising Him.  Praise is recognizing God for who He is, which requires some knowledge of Him and his attributes.  It means we need a close personal relationship with His character and actions through repentance and faith. The psalmist of Psalm 113:1-6 says, “Praise ye the Lord. Praise, O ye servants of the Lord, praise the name of the Lord. Blessed be the name of the Lord from this time forth and for evermore. From the rising of the sun unto the going down of the same the Lord's name is to be praised. The Lord is high above all nations, and his glory above the heavens. Who is like unto the Lord our God, who dwelleth on high. Who humbleth himself to behold the things that are in heaven, and in the earth!”

How do we view God? Do we have our own ideas of who God is? Do we see Him as THE great God? He has many attributes.  The following are examples: God is immutable (Malachi 3:6), faithful (1 Cor 1:9), incomprehensible (Psalm 145:3), merciful (Psalm 136), kind and loving (Titus 3:4-6), just (1 John 1:9), and infinite (Job 5:8-9).  He created the universe and all is under his feet as a footstool.  I have to admit that I had my own idea of God until I completed an extensive Bible study, “Behold Your God: Rethinking God Biblically”, by John Snyder.  In my mind's eye, I knew God was big, but in reality I had a small image of Him.  We will never be able to fully comprehend the magnitude of His greatness because of our human limitations.  Because of this, we must be careful not to minimize who He is when we come before His throne in prayer; we must praise Him by acknowledging and appreciating His attributes.  Let's begin our prayers by praising Him for who He is.  God desires our fellowship, but more importantly, He wants and deserves honor and glory.  He likes to hear our praises and be reminded of His greatness.  As His model prayer in Matthew 6:9-13 indicates, we need to acknowledge His great power and bring honor and glory to Him in our words and deeds.  

After we praise God, we should offer our thanksgiving, which is gratitude for what God does. How many times has the Lord answered our prayers or provided for us even when we didn't ask?  He may not answer the way we want, but He answers according to His plan for our lives.  He deserves our thankfulness and appreciation for His provisions.  We need to be specific when thanking Him.  When someone says thank you, don't we appreciate a specific thank you versus a generic one?  It is easy to thank Him when everything is going great, but we also need to thank Him for trials.  It is the trials that bring us closer to Him and magnify Him in honor and glory.  God uses trials to mold us and to fulfill His greater plan.  Psalm 118:1 “O give thanks unto the Lord; for he is good: because his mercy endureth for ever.”  1Thessalonians 5:18 “In every thing give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you.”  God will answer our prayers according to His perfect will and that fact alone, shows what a great God we have.

Have a blessed Thanksgiving!

Monday, November 21, 2016

We Are Our Worst Enemy / Mrs Tiffany Ingham

Mrs Tiffany Ingham
Pastor's Wife
Emmanuel Baptist Church
Newland, NC


Happy Thanksgiving Yall! God is so good to us! Today, I am going to share with you the one thing I am Thankful to have learned while going through a trial.

   It happened one Friday morning, at 4am, in the month of May 2008. I was awakened by a loud crash!  It came from my children’s bedroom.  I sat straight up in bed and awoke my husband to tell him that someone was in the kid’s bedroom. He grabbed a baseball bat and as he opened their bedroom door the fire alarm went off. The closet in my children’s bedroom was in flames and was spreading fast! My husband grabbed a rug and began beating down the flames so I would be able to grab our children out of their bunk bed. We did not know at the time, but the insulation in the attic was on fire as well. We lost almost everything in our home. Our children were safe, thank the Lord! My husband had to be taken to the hospital to be treated for the burns on his hands and arms. 

   I can remember coming back to the parsonage, with my husband, whose hands and arms were now bandaged. As I walked through the blackened mess all I could say was “God is so good!” He spared my husband and my children!”

   A few days later, a fire science class came through and assessed the damage. We learned that a faulty light in my children’s bedroom closet had started the fire.  We also learned that if our children had been in their bedroom for only five more minutes they would have lost their lives. As well as, if my husband and myself had been in the house for ten more minutes we would have lost our lives as well. 

   God had spared my family. I didn’t care about the possessions that had been lost in the fire. But then the big “D” began to set in…Depression. I wasn’t depressed over our possessions even though the church had forgotten to sign the insurance papers that covered possessions. I became overwhelmed with worry about my children’s safety. I didn’t want to let them out of my sight. At nighttime, while lying in bed, I would worry that another fire would come and take my children. You see I had a miscarriage before my daughter was born. I never dwelled on it because I was so thankful the Lord allowed me to have a child I could hold in my arms. Now that my son and daughter were almost taken, it overwhelmed my mind with worry.

   One evening, I attended a revival meeting and the preacher preached a sermon on “Depression”. Can you believe it? A preacher who actually admitted that he had gone through a depression. His sermon changed my life. The title of the sermon was “Protect Me From Me”. All of those bad thoughts that I had been having about possible harm coming to my children. I was dwelling on them and the devil was enjoying every minute of me terrorizing myself. 

   You see…the devil will give us a thought and we choose whether or not we will grab it and hold onto it. We need to tell the devil to flee and give that thought to God right then and there. It was then; I realized that God would take my children when He wants them. They belong to Him and they are in His hands. God has just loaned them to me as a gift. ~Ephesians 4:27 says “Neither give place to the devil”.

   Ladies, remember that God loves you. He does not want us to torture ourselves with thoughts of what may or may not happen.
   I have an incurable disease that causes me to feel worthless at times. The devil will bring horrible thoughts to my mind. But we can not let the devil use thoughts such as: "I am worthless",“I am ugly”, “I am not good enough”, “No one likes me”, “God can’t use me”, or being worried what others may think of us. God does not want us to worry about things such as: Our children, our bills, our past, our future, our health, and other people’s problems. We need to give our bad thoughts and worries to God.

~Ephesians 4:6-7 “ Be careful for nothing but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God.”

7. And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.”
 I pray this helps you as much as it helps me on a daily basis. Happy Thanksgiving!
Hugs ladies! Remember, you are loved! We are so blessed!


Sunday, November 13, 2016

HOW TO GET ALONG WITH PEOPLE / Mrs JoBeth Hooker

Mrs JoBeth Hooker
Pastor's Wife
Calvary Baptist Church
Memphis, TN

HOW TO GET ALONG WITH PEOPLE
Life is people!

Romans 16:1-2, I commend unto you Phoebe our sister, which is a servant of the church which is at Cenchrea: 2 That ye receive her in the Lord, as becometh saints, and that ye assist her in whatsoever business she hath need of you: for she hath been a succourer of many, and of myself also.

Romans 16 is a praise-of-others chapter. Paul spends the entire chapter bragging on people that made a difference in his life and in the lives of others. I love this chapter because I genuinely love people. There have been a lot of unsung heroes in my life and, I’m sorry to say, those precious people never got bragged on or praised by me like they should have and I regret that! This is a great chapter to remind us all to look into the faces of people, see them how God sees them- as somebody very special- and brag, praise and honor them. In Romans 16, Paul shows us by example how to do that and gives us some very good reasons as to why:

1. Find something good in every person and purpose to learn each person’s name. People feel special when they know we cared enough to just remember their name. I’m not good at it, but I try really hard.
2. Seek to know only the good and not the evil. Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so them: for this is the law and the prophets. Matthew 7:12 I wouldn’t want anyone knowing only the bad stuff about me. Everybody needs to feel acceptance and love.
3. Be positive about people because: 
a. We are family! They are our brothers and sisters in Christ. (16:1)
b. They serve in the church and are a necessary help to the church. 
(16:1, 2) I think particularly of those who help in the nursery, junior church, choir, Wednesday’s kids class, teen activities, the PA booth, financial aid, the bulletin and so much more. There’s a lot to do!
c. They have put their necks on the line for others. (16:3, 4) Running a bus route in a not-so-good part of town is a prime example of this!
d. Their presence at church encourages the pastor. (16:5) 
e. Fellow Christians have sent them to us and have commended them to our watch-care and well-keeping. (16:7) I think of the Clarke family, of Scott and Tess Ryder whose little girl Sophia has been at St. Jude and the Boddie’s in the loss of Akesha. They need us!
f. They are hard-workers and goodness knows we need hard-workers! (16:12) I think of the men of our church who have worked on buses, mowed the grass, built structures, painted, cleaned, picked up trash, changed the lightbulbs…wow! We can’t afford to lose anyone!
g. They bring others to church with them. (16:14) I think of the Browns who brought Crystal and Anthony. What a blessing!
h. They visit and fellowship with others. (16:15, 16) That’s our whole church!! Our church IS the most loving church of any church I have ever known!
4. Don’t mess with the critics! Don’t give a critical tongue a hearing! Every person in our church deserves better than that! (16:16)
5. If there is truly a problem, then they need us to lock arms and pray for them! God alone has the power to change them and we limit Him when our attitude toward them is not right. (16:24) We need grace. They need grace. We all need grace! It comes through knowing Jesus Christ, but also through:
a. Preaching
b. Local church
c. Encouragement of others
                                                           …THAT’S US! PRAISE THE LORD!

IF YOU LOVE SOMEONE TELL THEM…BECAUSE HEARTS ARE OFTEN BROKEN BY WORDS LEFT UNSPOKEN.


Saturday, November 5, 2016

Come On Over / Mrs Elizabeth Carrillo

Mrs Elizabeth Carrillo
Wife / Mother / Helps w/ her Husband's Sunday Class
Lighthouse Baptist Church
Lemon Grove, CA


Come On Over!

I love to party, the Baptist way! I mean, over food, laughter, and stories! It involves some work, but I seriously love having people over at our house. Sadly, hospitality seems to be a dying practice in our society, and even in our churches. We're too busy, or perhaps, too concerned that our house is not company-ready. Do we really have to live in a Taj Mahal, or be able to afford steak and lobster before we can invite company over? 

My family has enjoyed great fellowship both in times when we feasted on popcorn, mixed nuts, apple slices, and lemonade in our friends’ small apartment, as well as during sumptuous meals at the lavish homes of our friends. I prepare simple meals when we have company over. My go-to menu includes homemade lasagna (my part-Italian husband's favorite!), green salad, and garlic bread, though at times, I cater to the special whim of guests for pancit, lumpia, and adobo! (If you have any Filipino association, you know that these dishes are labor-intensive, but a definite taste-bud delight!) Oh and by the way, if company offers to bring something, don’t be bashful to say, ‘Yes, what would you like to bring?’ It's more important for me to spend time with guests than enslave myself in the kitchen. You see, it's not the size of the house or the food that is served that matters, but the spirit of the home! 

‘Use hospitality one to another without grudging.’ - 1 Peter 4:9 KJV

Now hospitality is not a time for roast-the-pastor or fry-the-church sessions! The goal is to edify one another. Sometimes, it's a training session on table manners for young parents with young children, or just a time for fierce board game competition! And to make a suggestion, we try not to invite the same people over all the time. We try to have a good mix of church prospects, new visitors, faithful members, and even departing members. Whatever the reason is for the get-together, every gathering at home or in church should be soul-conscious and love-driven! 

How about our hospitality in the church? Do we stare at visitors as they locate empty seats in our Sunday school classroom or main auditorium during the service? If you've experienced this as I have, you'll agree that it's awkward and uncomfortable! Nobody should be walking up and down the aisle looking for a seat, when we can easily give up seats occupied by our purses! 

Have you ever visited a church and have been standing in your seat during visitor welcome waiting for members to welcome you? Have you sat alone on a long pew where nobody thought of sitting next to you, or of even inviting you to sit next to her? Quite ugly scenarios to describe, aren't they? Yet these are happening in the churches of our country, while we talk about love and compassion in the body of Christ! Remember the adage, ‘people don't care what you know until they know that you care’? 

‘A man that hath friends must show himself friendly...’ - Prov. 18:24 KJV

I am not perfect at this, but I try to demonstrate friendliness in our church and practice hospitality in our home. A simple gesture just might convince a visitor to come back to church,
as one lady I invited to sit with our family did. She confessed later that she vowed not to come back had I not spoken to her. Well, she not only came back to church, but became a choir member, a greeter in our Adult Bible class, a very close friend, and she ended up giving another lady a ride to church on Sundays! 

During visitor welcome in church, I try to locate the visitors first before I exchange pleasantries with the dear regular ladies in our church (and we ladies know how long those pleasantries can take :)). More than likely, I'll see my friends again the following Sunday, but I may never see that visitor ever again!

Hospitality is truly a great way to show that we care. Yes, be diligent in keeping a clean home, but it's your friendly and caring spirit that really matters. Go ahead and howdy with friends at church, but be quick to welcome a visitor, and offer her a seat next to yours. Being friendly is good for your soul, comforting to the visitor, helpful to the church, but most of all, pleasing to the Lord! I have forged lasting friendships from simple acts of caring and friendliness in our church, and while practicing hospitality in our home. 

‘As we have therefore opportunity, let us do good unto all men, especially unto them who are of the household of faith.’ - Gal. 6:10 KJV


I am certain that the Lord is pleased and honored when we demonstrate love and friendliness to each other. I promise you, your joy will be full when you practice simple acts of hospitality!

So, as my then young sons would often ask, ‘who's coming over?’