John Piper: ” The Lord’s Supper expresses the value of Christ by nourishing our
life in Christ. If we come to Christ over and over and say, “By this, O
Christ, I feed on you.  By this, O Jesus Christ, I nourish my life in you.  By
this I share in all the grace you bought for me with your own blood and body”
(1 Corinthians 10:16) – if we come to Christ over and over with this longing
and this conviction in our heart: that here he nourishes us by faith, then the
Lord’s Supper will be a deep and wonderful act of worship. Nothing shows the
worth and preciousness of Christ so much as when we come to him to feed our
hungry souls.”

–entire sermon HERE

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Sundays in August in our Adult Ed, at 9am and 10:30 in Room 122.

Dispatches from the Front is a thoughtful, moving, understated, and ultimately convicting series of videos depicting the work of the gospel in some of the most challenging corners of the world. Far from glorying in celebrity missions, the stories in these videos depict the transforming power of the gospel of Jesus Christ, sometimes in the teeth of virulent opposition. Here are brothers and sisters in Christ who in God’s grace display faithfulness and transcendent joy, unflagging zeal to share the gospel, and an unfettered allegiance to King Jesus. To watch the kingdom advance in the teeth of these challenges is to learn humility and rekindle contrition, faith, and intercessory prayer.”

—D. A. Carson, Research Professor of New Testament, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School; President and Co-founder, The Gospel Coalition

 

Sunday we will share in Holy Communion, with God and with each other.  We want you to partake together with discernment, understanding, faith and joy.  Toward that end, here is an excerpt from a Mike Horton article:
There are essentially 4 views of what happens in Holy Communion. First, there is the Roman Catholic view, which is familiar to many. The official teaching of the Roman Catholic Church is that the bread and wine are actually changed into the body and blood of Christ. This is called “transubstantiation,” from two words meaning, “to change substance.” The bread still looks like bread and the wine still has all of the appearances of wine, but appearances are deceiving. Furthermore, the Lord’s Supper, according to the Roman Catholic Church, is the repetition of Christ’s atoning sacrifice and every time one participates in this sacrament, they believe that Christ is being sacrificed again on the altar for their sins.

(Views 2,3, and 4) At the time of the Reformation, however, Protestants differed in their understanding of what actually was received–and how–in Holy Communion. First, the Anabaptists (View #2) interpreted this meal as merely a memorial or symbolic remembering of Christ’s death. The purpose was to arouse a sense of gratitude and duty in the light of the suffering Jesus endured for us. The Lutherans (View #3) argued that this denied Christ’s express statement, “This is my body,” and made this sacrament into the work of man, because the activity was human–my remembering, rather than divine–God forgiving. Lutherans believe, therefore, that Christ is physically present at the altar in this sacrament, but deny the Roman Catholic doctrine of a change in substance from bread and wine into body and blood. They also, of course, deny the notion of a resacrifice of Christ. The Reformed (View #4 and that of Christ Community), after Calvin, were influenced by the Eastern Orthodox interpretation, arguing, along with Lutherans and Roman Catholics, that Christ is truly communicated through this sacrament, against the Anabaptist view of Communion as a mere memorial. But they believed that the mode or means of receiving Christ was by the Holy Spirit uniting believers to Christ in heaven through the elements of bread and wine.

The apostle Paul says, in fact, that Holy Communion is an actual participation in the body and blood of Christ: “Is not the cup of thanksgiving…a participation in the blood of Christ? And is not the bread the we break a participation in the body of Christ?” “Therefore,” says Paul, “whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of sinning against the memory of the body and blood of the Lord.” Is that it? No, Paul says that he “will be guilty of sinning against the body and blood of the Lord.”

But the purpose of this Holy Supper is not to hold out judgment, but rather to hold out God’s forgiveness and pardon. Through it, we receive the benefits of Christ’s death and present intercession; in fact, through it, we receive nothing less than Christ himself.

the article is HERE

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I’m looking for someone who has a personal connection of some sort with St. Francis house.  Is there a Christ Community type that does?  Call or email the office or 379-4949 and info AT christcommunitychurch DOT com
PS: Do NOT let Chris Hiatt find out that I used the blog in this way.  Shhh.

 

“In our presentation of the Gospel we often focus on what Jesus can do for us.  Now don’t get me wrong.  Jesus does a lot for us.  He forgives us, reconciles us with God, gives us meaning and eternal life.  But the most important thing about Jesus is He gives us Himself.  We have so emphasized the rewards of following Christ that we have forgotten that following Him, being with Him, knowing Him, and calling Him ‘Friend’ and ‘Elder Brother’ are far more wonderful and important than anything else.”        –Steve Brown