Saturday 28 December 2013

Journey Through the Bible: Romans

     Just before Christmas we finished the book of Acts, and we are excited to continue our book-by-book teaching through the Bible in Romans starting Sunday, December 29th!

     This letter written by Paul the apostle to the church at Rome is filled with both conviction and comfort, as the gospel is clearly laid out for the believer and non-Christian alike. It is a tightly presented case for Christianity as well, studied even by students of law for its impeccable and incomparable legal perfection. 

     We are trusting God to work powerfully through His Word as we survey chapter after chapter of this book, aptly nicknamed "the gospel according to grace".


Friday 20 December 2013

Christmas Service

Our Christmas service will be Sunday, December 22nd! 

Christmas and Easter are the two biggest holidays in Christian calendar. For Christmas we celebrate Jesus' coming to earth to take on the human body while on Easter we celebrate the resurrection of Jesus in bodily form. Two very important events that changed the course of human history and changed the world. 

A lot could be said about Christmas, it's meaning and purpose, but here we wanted to share some fun facts regarding things that mark the Christmas season. 

Date:
  • The first recorded date of Christmas being celebrated on December 25th was in 336AD, during the reign of Roman Emperor Constantine. A few years later Pope Julius I officially declared that the birth of Jesus would be celebrated on December 25th.
Name:
  • Christmas is a compound word originating in the term "Christ's Mass". It is derived from the Middle English Cristemasse which is from Old English Crīstesmæsse, a phrase first recorded in 1038 followed by the word Cristes-messe in 1131. 
  • "Xmas" is an abbreviation of Christmas found particularly in print, based on the initial letter chi (X) in Greeek for Khrīstos (Χριστός) , which means Christ and has been used since the 1500s.
Christmas Tree History:
  • The modern custom of the Christmas tree developed in early modern Germany with predecessors that can be traced to the 16th and possibly 15th century, in which "devout Christians brought decorated trees into their homes." Its 16th-century origins are sometimes associated with Protestant Christian reformer Martin Luther who, according to the TV channel History, "first added lighted candles to a tree."
  • There has been a great controversy in Christian circles regarding a Christmas tree and its supposed pagan origins, yet there is no strong evidence that the above-mentioned Christmas tree tradition was influenced at all by pre-Christian era paganism of European nations.
Christmas Tree Symbolism:
  • Since evergreens don't change much through the seasons that came to represent the unchanging or consistent character of our God. 
  • Just as we give Christmas gifts to each other by placing them under the tree, so it was God who gave His greatest gift to mankind by allowing His Son to be hung on a tree (Acts 5:30; 10:39).
  • Christmas lights that decorate Christmas trees are said to represent Jesus "the light of the world" (John 8:12; 9:5), as well Christians being the light of this world (Matthew 5:14).
  • The star on the top of a Christmas tree represents the star of Bethlehem that guided the wise men to Jesus (Matthew 2:2-10). 
Candy Canes:
  • The traditional candy cane was born over 365 years ago when mothers used white sugar sticks as pacifiers for their babies. Around 1670 the choirmaster of Cologne Cathedral in Cologne, Germany, bent the sticks into canes to represent a shepherds staff. He then would use these white candy canes to keep the attention of small children during the long Nativity service.
  • The red stripe was added to the candy cane at the turn of the century, when peppermint and wintergreen were added and became the traditional flavors for the candy cane. Some sources say that  candy maker in Indiana developed the candy cane as a witness of Christ's love. 
Christmas Carols:
The carols mentioned here are the ones we will sing for our Christmas service.

  • Joy to the World - was written by Isaac Watts based on Psalm 98 and first published in 1719. The song was originally written as a hymn glorifying Christ's triumphant return at the end of the age rather than a song celebrating His first coming.
  • What Child is This - was written by William Chatterton Dix in 1865 who was at the age 29 struck with a sudden near-fatal illness and was bedridden for months which lead him to deep depression. And out of this near death experience he wrote this hymn.
  • Hark!The Herald Angels Sing - was written by Charles Wesley, who is know as "the prince of hymn writers" and brother of John Wesley who founded the Methodist Church. 
  • It Came Upon the Midnight Clear - was written by Edmund Hamilton Spears who was a clergyman. This poem appeared first in The Christian Register in 1849. Fellow Massachusetts resident Richard Willis composed the music a year later. 
  • O Come, All Ye Faithful - is originally written in Latin under name "Adeste Fideles". For a long time no one knew for sure who the author was. Recent research point to a English layman John Wade as the author and that it was written in 1744 and first published in 1751. English translation was first published in 1852.

 Merry Christmas!

Sources: www.history.com; "Repeat the Sounding Joy" by Arden W. Mead ©1988; "The Legend of the Candy Cane" by Lori Walburg, ©1997 by The Zondervan Corporation; en.wikipedia.org

Saturday 30 November 2013

Note: December 1st

The congregation at St. Timothy's is having a special presentation in the afternoon this Sunday, so in order to accommodate, we are moving our service time from 2pm to 5pm. This change is not permanent, it is only for this Sunday. Hope to see you there!

Saturday 23 November 2013

Your Local Church

Living in the information age has its definite benefits and drawbacks. 

One of the many benefits for Christians is the access to what is happening in the wider world and the work of many ministries and the life of the church across the globe. We are able to pray more intelligently and direct our extra giving to work by ministries we can read about and see more easily. 

There is a plethora of resources, from online Bibles and study tools to music to books and more, much of it made freely available by brothers and sisters desiring to bless and encourage the Church and to reach out to the unsaved.

Through online streaming and thanks to fast internet, many other features are available, such as live worship service broadcasts and conferences. Online video hosting sites have brought us the ability to hear and see many church-life activities.

There is such rich resource available to the Christian, in the free world at least, all through the technology of internet. 

However... Among the many known pitfalls of the internet, such as vice and temptation, distraction and a heavy commercial presence that could lead to covetousness, (as well as false teaching and unbiblical representations of Christianity), perhaps one of the biggest drawbacks for the online Christian is the potential to withdraw from personal fellowship in the local church.

The internet hosts some really great teachers, sound in their doctrine, and there are numerous live-stream and recorded services from healthy churches. If we are not careful, we can substitute satisfying our spiritual hunger for teaching and even worship by doing it solo and not gathering locally for in-person, corporate church life and fellowship.

In the book of Hebrews, we are reminded to "not forsake the gathering together of the saints, as is the manner of some" (Heb. 10:25). God expects His family to get together regularly.

God by His Spirit has set each of us in the body of Christ, the Bible tells us, as a member, with the purpose of being a help to the rest of the body "each part doing its share (Eph. 4). We cannot say to anyone else, "I don't need you", nor "I'm not needed" (1 Cor. 12). All parts are needed and valuable. If we withdraw and only fill ourselves and meet our needs, we are both missing out on the ministry of God to us through others who know us personally and depriving them of the same.

The word "local" has become very familiar recently, as the grower and food sector has prompted many to "think global, act local" and "eat local". We can apply these simple little slogans to ourselves and the Church. Let's remember to be present with one another and gather together, despite the weather, the holidays, the busyness of life. Be your part in the "local" church.

Friday 1 November 2013

Remembering Anniversaries

This Sunday marks the beginning of our second year here in Edmonton and next Sunday is the anniversary of our first gathering! We are filled with thanks for how God has faithfully led us and is allowing us to serve Him and the church over the past 12 months.

Coming to a new city with no close contacts was a step of faith, but we have been secure in the call of God to be in Edmonton, and He has opened doors for us and showed us each step as it has come.

We count it a joy and privilege to be able to offer verse-by-verse Bible teaching. "Simply teach the Bible simply" is just what we love to do!

It is quite humbling to consider that as we celebrate our first year in this church plant, there are multitudes of our brothers and sisters in Christ across the globe who face threat and persecution for desiring to meet for worship and to even own or read the Word of God.

November 10, 2013 is the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church. Please remember them, even as you thank God that you can freely assemble and witness in this country. May we make the most of the freedoms and opportunities we have and let the light of Jesus shine through!

artwork by Luke Flowers Creative