THIS Sunday, October 21, Noon to 2pm,

Chili Cookoff is back. This is a tradition at CCC that in the past was present at our Fall Festival. We are bringing it back at Operation Christmas Child! We are cooking for a great cause. EVERYONE is invited to enter their best chili into the cookoff (there will be a prize for Most Popular Chili!) and to come learn more about Operation Christmas Child and the impact it has on children and communities around the world over a church-wide lunch.

A suggested donation of $3 per person or $10 per family will go towards Operation Christmas Child supplies and boxes, which will be collected the week of November 12th.

 

We had another great time at the Great Pumpkin Race! Last Saturday our middle schoolers ventured out onto UF’s campus in an Amazing Race style scavenger hunt. They took pictures with statues, “Tebowed” with Tebow, climbed on the “French Fries”, sang in the Union Amphitheater, and even found athletes on campus to take pictures with, all while completing challenges and searching for pumpkins. It was a great time!

Thank you to all who participated and made it a Great Pumpkin Race!                        Here are some pictures from the race:

 

Church:

Please be in earnest prayer for the Flaniken family. Forrest Flaniken, Jr. was struck by a vehicle and killed while riding his bicycle in Orlando yesterday afternoon. His son, Chipper, was an intern here and has recently returned to begin the work of planting a church near campus. He notified me last night, and I am asking everyone at CCC to pray diligently for his family as they grieve the loss of a husband and father. If you need to learn more, the accident was covered in the news in Orlando.

I am the resurrection and the life; He who believes in Me, though he may die, he shall live. And whoever lives and believes in Me, shall never die (John 11:25).

Man who is born of woman is of few days, and full of trouble. He comes forth like a flower, and fades away; he flees like a shadow, and does not continue (Job 14:1).

For we are aliens and pilgrims before You, as were all our fathers; our days on the earth are as a shadow, and without hope (1 Chronicles 29:15).

We brought nothing into this world, and it is certain we can carry nothing out (1 Timothy 6:7).

The Lord gave, and the Lord has taken away: blessed be the name of the Lord (Job 1:21).

 

Tuesday’s reading is Mark 11:1-14, which offers a new vista into just how utterly remarkable our Master is truly. How fortunate we are to be His apprentices. Good stuff here from a little known backwoods preacher from somewhere called Manhattan.

When Jesus rode into Jerusalem, people laid down their cloaks on the road in front of him and hailed him as a king coming in the name of the house of David. This type of parade was culturally appropriate in that era: A king would ride into town publicly and be hailed by cheering crowds. But Jesus deliberately departed from the script and did something very different. He didn’t ride in on a powerful war horse the way a king would; he was mounted on a polos, that is, a colt of a small donkey. Here was Jesus Christ, the King of authoritative, miraculous power, riding into town on a steed fit for a child or a hobbit. In this way, Jesus let it be known that he was the One prophesied in Zechariah, the great Messiah to come:

Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion! Shout, Daughter of Jerusalem! See, your King comes to you, righteous and having salvation, gentle and riding on a donkey, on a colt, the foal of a donkey. (Zechariah 9:9)

This odd juxtaposition demonstrates that Jesus was King, but that he didn’t fit into the world’s categories of kingship. He brought together majesty and meekness. One of the greatest sermons ever written and preached in 1738 by Jonathan Edwards, titled “The Excellency of Christ.” Edwards’s imagination was captured by the prophetic vision of Jesus’s disciple John in Revelation 5:5-6: “Then one of the elders said to me, ‘Do not weep! See, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, has triumphed. He is able to open the scroll and its seven seals.’ Then I saw a Lamb, looking as if it had been slain, standing in the center of the throne.” John is told to look for a lion, but there in the midst of the throne is a lamb. Edwards meditates on this:

The lion excels in strength and in the majesty of his appearance and voice. The lamb excels in meekness and patience…is [sacrificed] for food…and clothing. But we see that Christ is in the text compared to both, because the diverse excellencies of both wonderfully meet in him….There is in Jesus Christ…a conjunction of such really diverse excellencies as otherwise would have seemed to us utterly impossible in the same subject…

Edwards goes on to list in detail all the ways that Jesus combines character traits that we would consider mutually exclusive.
In Jesus we find:
–infinite majesty yet complete humility,
–perfect justice yet boundless grace,
–absolute sovereignty yet utter submission,
–all-sufficiency in himself yet entire trust and dependence on God.

But in Jesus the result of these extremes of character is not mental and emotional breakdown. Jesus’s personality is a complete and beautiful whole. 

(From Timothy Keller’s King’s Cross)

 

I know, I know. That’s every Sunday for us, Rob. True, but here’s ANOTHER great opportunity that is quite unique. Nicholas Wolterstorff is sterling. (He could’ve gotten into Mississippi State if he wanted. Probably.) Seriously, the topics he is addressing are strikingly relevant for our day and our town. Plus, they are central to the heart of God. Do make efforts to get out to hear him next week.

“When We See Justice, What do We See?  When We Seek Justice,  What Do We Seek?”
Wednesday October 17, 2012, 6:15 p.m.
Room # 170, Pugh Hall, University of Florida campus

And
“Why Do So Many People Think  the New Testament Is About Love and Not About Justice?”
Thursday October 18, 2012, 7:30 p.m.
Creekside Community Church, 2640 NW 39th AvenueBoth lectures presented by guest lecturer: Nicholas Wolterstorff, Noah Porter Professor of Philosophical Theology, Emeritus, Yale University,
and Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences

The Christian Study Center seeks to draw on the intellectual and cultural resources of the Christian tradition and on the scholarly resources of higher education in order to understand cultural change and to address enduring, human questions that are widely shared in the University community.