A driving force behind the decision to move to a new schedule was a process of thinking through the question:

“What is the purpose of our weekly gathering?”

The leadership of Christ Community emerged from reflecting on the Scriptures to say that worshiping God in community is central to what we do each week—AND central to what every Christian needs each week.  To gather with God’s people to offer Him praises and hear His word.

Let me encourage you to pray about two practical goals:
1.) I will orient my life around a weekly service of worship with God’s people.
2.) I will take the necessary steps to be in the sanctuary prior to the start of the service, whether at 9am or 10:30am.

I firmly believe that these radical and simple commitments could bear all sorts of fruit in us, individually and corporately.

Psalm 84 gives a wonderful picture of the great benefits of a life centered on gathering to worship God corporately.  We need to bring him our praises and our pain, our hopes and our hurts.  For in His presence we are ransomed, healed, restored, forgiven.  We move from strength to strength.

How lovely is your dwelling place,
O LORD of hosts!
My soul longs, yes, faints
for the courts of the LORD;
my heart and flesh sing for joy
to the living God.
Even the sparrow finds a home,
and the swallow a nest for herself,
where she may lay her young,
at your altars, O LORD of hosts,
my King and my God.
Blessed are those who dwell in your house,
ever singing your praise! Selah
Blessed are those whose strength is in you,
in whose heart are the highways to Zion.
As they go through the Valley of Baca
they make it a place of springs;
the early rain also covers it with pools.
They go from strength to strength;
each one appears before God in Zion.
O LORD God of hosts, hear my prayer;
give ear, O God of Jacob! Selah
Behold our shield, O God;
look on the face of your anointed!
For a day in your courts is better
than a thousand elsewhere.
I would rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God
than dwell in the tents of wickedness.
For the LORD God is a sun and shield;
the LORD bestows favor and honor.
No good thing does he withhold
from those who walk uprightly.
O LORD of hosts,
blessed is the one who trusts in you!
(Psalm 84 ESV)

 

Hey Everyone!

The Palmer Home trip is rapidly approaching! On June 24th-30th, we will be heading to Columbus, MS to serve the good people and families at the Palmer Home for Children. This will be an awesome week filled with hard work, great fellowship, and just an awesome time to get away from your usual life here in Gainesville and really see first hand how God is able to work and change hearts in a big way.

The Palmer Home has been around for over 100 years and is home to over 100 children who are “social orphans.” The children are placed into real homes on the Palmer Home campus with loving house parents who cultivate the family atmosphere. The children are given chores and responsibilities, as well as given the opportunity to attend good schools in the area. The youth group has been going to Palmer Home for four years now, and has been an awesome growing time for everyone. For more info on The Palmer Home visit this website, palmerhome.org

Feel free to email me with any questions, ddonovan@christcommunitychurch.com

More information will be coming soon!

 

Sign Up Today!

 

Important Facts to remember:

Dates: June 24-30

Cost: $175 per person

DEADLINE: June 3rd


**Make checks payable to CCC, and turn into Drew or Church Office

 

Here’s a sneak peak at our projects for Get Out & Serve on June 2. We’ve got opportunities in the morning and in the afternoon, and childcare is available in the morning for parents who want to serve hands-free! Details below.

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Get Out & Serve – Join Us on June 2!
Each quarter, we gather as a church and reach out to our community. Join us on Saturday, June 2nd for a fun day of service projects. Sign up on Sunday, May 27, or email Chris Hiatt right now and tell him which project you’d like to join.

Note to parents: We are offering childcare for the little ones for morning projects! You must RSVP to chiatt@christcommunitychurch.com if you’d like to register your children.

MORNING

Project #1 – Partnership with Terwilliger Elementary
We will paint the basketball court at Terwilliger and deliver much-needed supplies to teachers. Remember to bring some supplies for our supply drive this summer benefiting the school. A detailed list of items is in this excellent blog post from Holli Best.
Details: 8AM meetup at CCC on the patio. We will ride to the site together.

Project #2 – Acts of Kindness
Join a team headed to a large property to handle yard work and other tasks. This is fun work! No experience required, and appropriate for all ages.
Details: 8AM meetup at CCC on the patio. We will ride to the site together.
Items needed: Chain saws, Loppers, Weed eater, Work Gloves


AFTERNOON

Project #3 – Visit a Nursing Home
Share the love of Jesus over BINGO with some of our community’s elderly people. This is a great project for youth and young families. No bingo experience required. Limited to 10 people!
Details: 1:30PM meetup at CCC Offices. We will ride to the site together.

Project #4 – College Students! Work Day + BBQ + Pool Party
No skills or experience required. Help us take care of some special projects and clean our building.
Details: 3PM meetup at CCC on the patio. We will head to the BBQ after we finish our work!

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You should come to this. It will be awesome.

 

Fellowship Summer Sundays at CCC – 6/3, 7/1, 8/5
On the first Sunday of each month, the entire church is invited to gather on our property from 5pm to 8pm. These events are an opportunity to build community and to enjoy fellowship with each other outside of the Sunday morning gathering. Bring a sandwich or another main dish for you and your family, and we will provide chips, fruit and drinks. We’ll have volleyball set up, basketball games going, while others might bring cards or board games to play on the patio. Bring the kids and let them play. There is no childcare.

CCC Dessert Contest Is On!
Bring your best dessert to share and compete for a $25 gift card, and bragging rights.

Questions? Contact Frank Matthews – fmatthews@christcommunitychurch.com

 

Last night after Todd and I put our children in bed and I was ready to “veg” out, he insisted on reading me Jim Wallis’ commencement address to Virgina Theological Seminary. (You may read the entire address here) It’s titled; Unexpected Hope: The Vocation of the Church. Most of the graduates were leaving seminary and going onto leadership roles in churches around the nation.

Wallis starts by saying; “the central vocation of the churches: to offer unexpected hope”. He explains, “Because our mission is to the kingdom of God—“thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” That is what we pray. And while the kingdom of God was the central message of Jesus, and the New Testament, it has faded as ours. Finding salvation to heaven is part of the message, getting closer to God is part of the message, but the heart of the message of Jesus was a new order breaking into history—to change everything about the world, including us.” He continues saying that Christianity is not just about giving people a ticket to heaven, but its about bringing about wholeness, fighting for what we now call “common good”. Its about a relationship when made changes all other relationships, even us.

I love the following paragraphs:

But when people see the kingdom of God being actually lived out, they are first surprised by it, and then attracted to it.

Like when a huge and successful church in a midwestern state’s suburbs decides to take on the renovation of dilapidated and failing public schools in their neighboring urban area. Or like when a church in the Southern Bible Belt puts up a sign welcoming the Muslim cultural center that had just moved into their neighborhood and befriends those who were afraid of being attacked; and when that story of Christian/Muslim friendship on CNN changes the hearts of angry men in Pakistan. Or when a graduating seminarian, like many of you today, decides to start a church made up of homeless people and, after ten years, most all of their congregation’s leaders literally came from off of the streets.

When a Christian family farm business builds day care centers and houses for their migrant workers, provides college scholarships for their employees’ children, gives millions of dollars to Africa and Haiti, and still has the most successful orchard in their region, it attracts attention. When conservative southern California Anglo churches get deeply connected to Hispanic churches in their own communities, come to know each other’s faith and families, and then seek to fix a broken immigration system, it gets the attention of policy makers in Washington. When a famous evangelical mega-church in Chicago sends its people to the Middle East and starts speaking up for beleaguered Palestinian Christians, it challenges foreign policy. When another one in Ohio doesn’t just righteously proclaim itself to be “pro-life” but quietly takes in hundreds of low-income pregnant women every year to help them carry their child to term and settle into a better life, people feel helped and not just judged. And when faith-based organizations and denominations who might vote differently in elections make it clear to both Republicans and Democrats that they must not balance their budgets and reduce their deficits by increasing poverty and must draw a circle of protection around the poorest and most vulnerable, it breaks through the self-interest politics of both parties.

All these are true stories. And they are all about the unexpected and about bringing hope to hopeless times.

As I listened to Todd reading, I thought about one of our members, Melissa Julien. Melissa is a public school teacher in Gainesville. She is teaching in one of the most impoverished schools in the area. There are kids languishing in poverty in every school in Gainesville, but this school serves a higher percentage. The teachers at this school have very little parent support, and provide one-hundred percent of their supplies, this includes class room materials, hygiene items for the children, and often food for their families. Melissa isn’t just a teacher, she is also caring emotionally and financially for the kids at her school.

On June 2nd, we are having our next Get Out and Serve day. We are re-stocking Melissa’s classroom (and other teachers as well). This will help the teachers recover from the school year and prepare for Summer school. The following items are needed. You may bring them this Sunday to church or on June 2nd.

paper towels, hand soap, printer paper, construction paper, cardstock (white and mixed colors), crayons, tissues, hand sanitizer, disinfectant wipes (brand name only), ziploc bags (quart and gallon size), spiral notebooks, visa-vis markers, dry erase markers, glue sticks, erasers, markers, pins, pencils, paper cups and plates, stickers, sidewalk chalk, bubbles, scissors, baby wipes, gift cards to Target, office supply stores, Wal-mart.

You may also donate: hand-me-downs–kids underwear, socks, plain colored collar shirts, school uniforms. As you get close to the end of school for your own kids if you have school clothes that will not be worn next year those are welcome as well.

While collecting supplies for the school is a part of our service day, we will also be painting their basketball court on June 2nd.

Let’s Get Out and Serve!