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Christy Penman (née Johns) in 2012

7PM Tonight!

Trees are prepped and ready for lights and decorating. Garland, wreaths, greenery, bows ready to be embellished and hung. Poinsettias delivered. It’s beginning to smell and look like Christmas! Please join us for this time of making our facility beautiful for Advent. Apple cider, sweet treats and Christmas music will accompany us! All are welcome.

 
photo 3 (3)photo 4Nicole Keys, daughter of Ty and Cindy Keys, remains in critical condition at Shands following a car accident. There is some progress as Nicole tolerates a reduction in sedative medications. It has been a comfort and encouragement to the family that a nurse caring for Nicole over the last few days is also a member at Christ Community. The family asks for prayer for Nicole, and for the Keys family, Ty and Cindy and younger sisters Gabby and Hannah.
​If you would like to stay updated on Nicole’s recovery you can friend Ty Keys or Mick Popp on Facebook, or send an email to prayer AT christcommunitychurch.com to subscribe to regular emails. As other ways to care for the family become apparent, we will post them here.
 

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Almighty and gracious Father,
we give you thanks
for the fruits of the earth in their season
and for the labors of those who harvest them.
Make us, we pray,
faithful stewards of your great bounty,
for the provision of our necessities
and the relief of all who are in need,
to the glory of your Name;
through Jesus Christ our Lord,
who lives and reigns with
you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever. Amen.

 

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I’m glad to announce that Steven Eicholtz is now coordinating the youth ministry on a part-time basis. Steven is marrying Bethany Norman on December 28. Both have been serving our students all semester. Read Steven’s encouraging testimony.

Youth Christmas Event | Sunday December 8 | 5:00pm 

 

Phil Ryken on this famous 1517 Renaissance painting by Quentin Massys:

The Moneylender and His Wife confronts us with the choice that everyone must make between God and money. The moneylender is sitting at home, with a measuring scale and a pile of money in front of him on the table, carefully assessing the value of a single coin. Yet our eye is also drawn to the woman sitting next to him, the moneylender’s wife. She is leafing through a Bible or a book of spiritual exercises, which presumably was bought by her wealthy husband. She is having her devotions, except she is distracted by all the money being counted. As she turns the page, her gaze is captivated by the coin in her husband’s hand.

Moneylender 

Massys saw how easily money can pull our souls away from the worship of God.

All of us feel this tension. We know that God demands our highest allegiance. We believe that nothing is more precious than the message of his gospel — the forgiveness of our sins and the free gift of eternal life through faith in Jesus Christ. Yet we are easily distracted. Sometimes we would rather thumb through a mail-order catalog (or Pinterest) than listen to what God has said in his Word.

(There is) a striking detail in The Moneylender and His Wife. Remember that in this masterpiece both husband and wife turn away from God to focus on their money. On the table between them, Massys cleverly painted a small round mirror—-

striking detail

 

—which reflects a little scene that is taking place just outside the frame of the painting. If we look at the image in the mirror closely, we see the dark lines of a window frame intersecting to make the form of a cross. We also see a small figure reaching out for the frame, as if to hold on to the cross. His face is familiar to art historians: it is Massys himself.

 

The artist is reminding us not to look for money to give us any satisfaction in life. Instead we invited to reach out for the cross where Jesus gave his life for all our greedy sins, to hold on to Jesus and to find our full satisfaction in him.