Sunday, June 19, 2011

Sorin, Mr. Popper, and the Christian's Loving and Just Father

What a good day.

Father's Day with little boys is a wonderful thing.

See what kind of love the Father has given to us, that we should be called children of God, and so we are.  1 John 3:1

This morning, Sorin Prodan from Brasov, Romania preached a good message from Leviticus 10:1-11 entitled A Just Father.  I wish every father in our church were present.  I encourage you to get the message--podcast, download, CD, DVD...whatever.  I came home desiring to be a more loving and just father--one in whom my boys might see a picture of the one and only loving and just Heavenly Father!

On Sunday afternoon, we laid down a wad of cash (taking out a small loan for cokes and popcorn!) and took all four boys to see Mr. Popper's Penguins--a movie based on Richard and Florence Atwater's 1938 wonderful children's book.

Whether your children are scampering around your skirt, playing Little League sports, dancing at recitals, spending the summer between high school grades, travelling back and forth between college, or raising their own children, take those in your family circle to see Mr. Popper's Penguins.  Afterward, spend time talking about the movie's themes.  According to www.kids-in-mind.org, the movie's message is that it's "never too late to enjoy time with your loved ones." 

After a great Sunday morning with God's people, a fun afternoon with the family, and well-spent time in the theater, I now find myself enjoying the quietness that only comes when all four boys are snuggled in their beds. 

Lord, thank you for your love and justice.

God has used Sorin and Mr. Popper to remind me today that men must be both loving and just--just like our Heavenly Father.

Pastor Todd

Monday, June 13, 2011

Look at Me

All day, I looked forward to having supper on Monday night.  We had a great first day of Vacation Bible School, and I couldn't wait to sit down at supper with Amy and the boys and hear about their day.  (The best part of the day for me these days is sitting down for supper with Amy and the boys.  If our supper table could talk, oh the tales it would tell!)

We talked Monday alot about the day and what they loved and learned.

I think I'll always remember William's (age 5) words about Benjamin (age 2) after Isaac's (age 3) prayer.  He said, "Benjamin had his eyes open while we were praying!"

Mom said, "Well, the only way you knew that William, is because you had your eyes open too."

I couldn't help but hear the Lord whisper to me, "Todd, learn from this.  Don't focus on what others are doing.  Look at Me."

Pastor Todd

Friday, June 10, 2011

Attempting to Follow God





God never belittles those who attempt to follow him, but he does chasten those who refuse to attempt anything for him.

R. Kent Hughes





Pastor Todd

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Blind Judges







"Judging others makes us blind, whereas love is illuminating. By judging others, we blind ourselves to our own evil and to the grace which others are just as entitled to as ourselves."






Pastor Todd

Give Them Grace

Give Them Grace:  Dazzling Your Kids with the Love of Jesus is a good resource for those wanting to root their parenting in the gospel.  Gospel churches are filled with gospel people who are gospel parents with gospel kids.

More than the tired parenting book of tips and techniques, hints and helps, or principles and practices, Elyse Fitzpatrick calls Christian parents to be about the minute-by-minute work of giving children the grace of the gospel.

Speaking of the obedience which parents want from their children, Fitzpatrick states
If our human obedience or morality isn't motivated by gratitude for God's grace, it is very dangerous.  If not rooted in gratitude for God's love for us in Christ, morality is deadlier to the soul than immorality.  Why?  Remember that Jesus said it is those who are lost, who know they need a physician, that he came to save (Luke 19:10).  Those who excel at [social, civic, and religious laws] may not see their need for a Savior; their hearts may be hardened and unfazed by God's grace.  Remember that it was the woman who knew that she had been forgiven for much who loved much (Luke 7:47).  Forgiveness for deep offenses breeds deep love.  Forgiveness for perceived and reasonable slights breeds apathetic disdain.  A society riddled with self-congratulatory morality will be satanic and resistant to grace.  It will be nice and tidy and loveless and, oh, so dead.  And it will be only a breath away from murder.  Remember that it was the religious leaders, not the prostitutes, who called for the execution of the Christ.
Pastor Todd

Monday, June 6, 2011

Stepping Up: A Call to Courageous Manhood


You gotta love a man who opens up a chapter on The Courage to Initiate with an advertisment for Docker Jeans!



Once upon a time, men wore the pants, and wore them well.  Women rarely had to open doors and little old ladies never had to cross the street alone.  Men took charge because that's what they did.  But somewhere along the way the world decided it no longer needed men.  Disco by disco, latte by foamy non-fat latte, men were stripped of their khakis and left stranded on the road between boyhood and androgyny.  But today there are questions our genderless society has no answers for.  The world sits idly by as cities crumble, children misbehave and those little old ladies remain on one side of the street.  For the first time since bad guys, we need heroes.  We need grown ups.  We need men to put down the plastic fork, step away from the salad bar, and untie the world from the tracks of complacency.  It's time to get your hands dirty.  It's time to answer the call to manhood.  It's time to wear the pants.
Pastor Todd

Thursday, June 2, 2011

A Great Father's Day Gift!




Looking for a good gift to get dad for Father's Day?  Tired of buying ties?  Get him the good new book by Dennis Rainey of FamilyLife, Stepping Up: A Call to Courageous Manhood.

In a day of passivity, irresponsibility and overall laziness among men, Rainey's call is clear, well placed and much needed.  He builds Stepping Up around his five steps of manhood, and regardless of your man's stage of life, this is a good book for those wanting to be a better man.

Read what Crawford Loritts has to say about Stepping Up in the forward:

When I was twelve years old, I experienced a “defining moment.”  Don’t get me wrong; it wasn’t some uncommon extraordinary experience.  It wasn’t a brush with death.  I hadn’t contracted some debilitating disease.  Neither had I been traumatized by some predator.  It was what my father did and what my mother stopped doing that marked me deeply for the rest of my life.  And it happened in less than five minutes.
It all had to do with painting.  The family who rented a property my parents owned moved out, and there was some “fixing up” and painting that needed to be done before the new tenets moved in.  My father thought this would be a great project for the entire family to tackle, so on a Saturday morning, my dad, my mother, my two older sisters, and yours truly reported for duty.  Mom and my sisters were working on the first floor, and my job was to help Pop paint on the second floor.  And that was the problem.  I never did like to paint.  I didn’t then, and I don’t now.

So I had to somehow figure out a way to be free of what I thought was an unnecessary burden.  My “ace in the hole” was my mother.  Mom was always more sympathetic to her precious little boy than Dad was, and I knew that if I pressed the right buttons, she would rescue her one and only son from spending his Saturday doing something he didn’t want to do.  So under the guise of having to use the bathroom, I went downstairs and began to complain to Mom.

While I was in the middle of convincing my mother that I needed to take off and play with my friends, Pop showed up.  As I write these words, I am vividly remembering and reliving that momen.

My mother said to my father, “Crawford, CW (my childhood nickname) is only twelve years old, and he doesn’t need to be here with us all day.  He needs to be enjoying himself with his friends.”

Then my father said, “Sylvia, I got this.  That boy one day is going to be somebody’s husband and somebody’s father.  There are going to be people depending on him.  He has got to learn how to do what he has to do and not what he wants to do.”

To my mother’s credit, she looked at me and then at my father, nodded in agreement, and turned away.  Pop then turned to me and said, “You take yourself upstairs and paint until I tell you to stop.”

And I did.

Even at twelve years old, I knew that something important had just happened.  It wasn’t that I had just lost a little skirmish, and this time I wasn’t going to get my way.  The words “somebody’s husband . . . somebody’s father” and “He has got to learn how to do what he has to do and not what he wants to do” kept replaying in my mind.  Of course I wasn’t fully aware of the weight of what had happened.  In fact, it would be years before I fully appreciated the significance of that Saturday morning.  But I did have the sense that what just happened was a gamed changer.

My mother knew that in order for her boy to become a man, the most important man in his life needed to shape him.  Pop knew that in order for his son to provide leadership and stability to those who would count on him one day, “CW” needed to embrace core lessons in manhood, obligation, and responsibility.

A transition took place that day, and I’m so glad it did.  In a very real sense, it was what some would call a “rite of passage.”  My dad knew that in order for me not to become a fifty-year-old adolescent, I needed to make some intentional steps toward manhood.  I can’t tell you how grateful I am to God for the gift of Pop’s courage, and that he wasn’t passive when it came to my development.

Some years back when I heard my good friend Dennis Rainey give a talk that formed the outline of this book, not only did it bring to mind that Saturday morning almost fifty years ago, but it resonated deeply within me.

The message that Dennis unpacks in this compelling book is core and critical to the direction of our families, our church, and our nation.  Perhaps you think that statement is a bit overblown.  I can assure you that it isn’t.  As a pastor, I witness daily the void and dysfunction caused by men who don’t really know who and what a man is.  They’re not to blame.  When men do not step up to embrace the seasons of their lives, it damages hope for those who are following and limits the impact of these men will have during their moment in history.

All of us need help in this journey toward authentic, intentional manhood.  Thank you, Dennis, for giving us such a powerful, engaging resource that helps us and inspired us to keep moving with courage toward being the men that we can be and that indeed God has called us to be.
Crawford Loritts
Atlanta, Georgia
Our society needs men who will step up.  Our church needs men who will step up.  Our families need men who will step up. 

Get this book for a man near you and encourage him to STEP UP!

Pastor Todd

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Summer MIDWEEK


WHY DO THEOLOGY?
OR...
THE IMPORTANCE OF KNOWING WHAT YOU BELIEVE ABOUT GOD

While interest in theology is on an upswing among many American Christians, some modern-day church goers are quick to turn their noses up at the though of theology.  Several may insist on sentimental spirituality or religious ritualism, but knowing God more intimately and trusting him more fully often requires digging in to understand the basic elements of foundational faith.  Doing theology may seem like work at first, but the payoff is transformational.

When we talk about theology, we are talking about God - his nature, character, and workings - his Being, his activity.  The subject of God serves as the fountainhead for our understanding of everything else related to the Christian faith.  In fact, the fear of god is the beginning of wisdom.  Psalm 111:10 A growing understanding of God yields an increasing understanding of faith, salvation, church, Christan mission, and the living of the daily life.

It's simple.  As goes our theology, so goes our life.
  
Doing theology is a matter of obedience to God.
  
Theology is "the study of God."  Theology is not for the minister, the missionary, or the martyr.  It's for everyone.  While individual believers are at different stages in the faith journey, God calls each one of us to do theology.  The eleventh century philosopher and theologian, Anselm described trust in God as a continuous process of "faith seeking understanding." When we do theology, we are seeking a greater understanding of God whom, in fact, we can never fully know.  In one sense he is so great and glorious that we can never fully know him.  (Romans 11"33-36) We realize that we will not see clearly until we are with God forever.  (1 Corinthians 13:12) On the other hand, we are called to know him.   (2 Peter 3:18)

As an elderly man, the apostle Paul was still pursuing the Knowledge of Christ.  (Philippians 3:10) We are commanded to pursue the knowledge of God.  Following Christ does not mean that we check our minds at the door or put our minds in neutral.  Just the opposite!  Jesus said, "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind" Mathew 22:37

It's a command.  Grow.  Know God better.  It's a matter of obedience.

Doing theology helps us discern the voices of life.

Navigating the many sounds which continuously come at us is hard work.  Somebody's voice is always clamoring for our time, attention, and commitment.  Knowing the good, the right, and the true is not always an easy thing to know.  Distinguishing between truth and falsehood is often challenging and always requires God's leading.

From the beginning, the evil one has sought to steal, kill, and destroy through lies.  (John 10:10) God had spoken to Eve in the Garden of Eden, but Eve also had heard a voice saying something different than what God said.  Her willful act of sin was an example of listening to the wring voice.

God is the ultimate reality from which all other truths come.  Christ, who himself embodied truth said, "I am the way, and the truth, and the life" (John 14:6).  No one can continuously discern truth without an increasing knowledge of God's character and expectations.  Doing theology causes us to focus on God and provides us with the proper lenses through which we can see and discern the many voices of life.

Doing theology helps us respond properly to those who ask the reason for our hope.  (or . . . Doing theology improves our evangelistic efforts.)

We are to always be prepared to make a defense to others for the reason for our hope (1 Peter 3:15).  Would you be ready if someone asked you to give the rationale concerning your Christian belief?  Would you be able to confidently explain why you believe what you believe?

Christian faith is indeed personal, but it should never be private.  We should always be ready to share our faith with others.  More than just being ready, we should be doing it-actually sharing our faith!  Too often we are about "loving Jesus" without adequate knowledge of who Jesus really is.  Doing theology discourages a mere pietistic spirituality and leads to a more robust understanding of God which in turn results in a greater and more accurate love for Jesus.

Many grew up in the church singing, "You ask me how I know he lives?  He lives within my heart."  By singing the words of such a song, one could just as well be singing about Santa Clause as he is singing about Jesus Christ.  Such experiential exclamations are admirable, but these desiring reasons for the faith which we hold often desire rationalistic and propositional truth as well as our experiential assertions.  Doing theology helps up provide both.

Doing theology strengthens trust in our spiritual foundation.

Spirituality is popular these days.  However, followers of Christ understand that mere spirituality is not our goal.  Our spirituality is rooted in the foundation of God's work in Christ.  Our spirituality has an object, and his name is Jesus Christ.  Our spirituality is biblical.

Doing theology gives attention to the foundation of our faith.  As goes the foundation, so goes the structure which is built on that foundation.  Jesus spoke of the essential importance of the foundation-warning that if the foundation is faulty, the house will fall.  He also warned that if the foundation is sound, the house will stand regardless of what may come against it (Matthew 7:25-27).

Some wonder why cracks may appear in the walls of our spiritual houses.  Could it be that attention needs to be given to the foundation and not simply the the walls?  Christian faith may be encouraged by personal experiences, behavioral conformity to Christian values, and religious activities, but our faith will be ultimately encouraged and strengthened by a focus on the foundational aspects.  Doing theology does just that-it focuses on the foundation in which our Christian faith is rooted.

Doing theology results in personal transformation.

Someone studying God for the sake of mere information is not studying God.  True theology always sharpens the mind and warms the heart.  A theologian who may be "cold-hearted" is not a theologian at all.

The Bible says, "Do not be conformed to the world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind" (Romans 12:2).  Transformation is not an option for the believer.  Christians are commanded to be transformed-a work that only God can do.  However, that work of transformation is a process-the renewing of the mind.

Theology is an exercise of the mind.  Theology is also an exercise of the heart.  Theology should always stoke the fires of devotion and contribute to transformed living.  Theology is not ultimately about the information of God in our heads, but the transformation of God in our lives.

Join us this summer in the Great Room beginning Wednesday, June 1, for Summer MIDWEEK as we do theology together.  Dr. Wayne Grudem, Research Professor of Theology and Biblical Studies, Phoenix Seminary, will lead us by DVD as we strive to grow in Christ's grace and knowledge (2 Peter 3:18).  Put on your thinking cap and come spend time with our faith family as we examine questions like, "What is the Bible?", "What is creation?", and more.

Supper is at 5:00 pm.  Singing and study begins at 6:00 pm.

Come.  Think.  Grow.  Be transformed.

Pastor Todd

Friday, May 27, 2011

Guilt, Conviction, and Looking to God



Christians often struggle discerning between guilt and conviction.  Sometimes church goers say they feel guilty if they are not doing what those across the pew may be doing.  Whether it be a particular type of Bible Study, a particular type of mission project, listening to a particular type of music, spending money in a particular way, or more, obsessing on feelings related to what other Christians are doing is less than helpful.

Guilt and conviction are close cousins.  “Guilt” is defined as “a feeling of responsibility or remorse for some offense, crime, wrong, etc., whether real or imagined.”  “Conviction” is the act of convicting which may be defined “to prove or declare guilty of an offense” or “to impress with a sense of guilt.”

While guilt and conviction may have family ties, there is a fine line between the two.  We will grow spiritually, experience Christian freedom and enjoy our lives more when we know the difference.

All Christians should be engaged in prayer, Bible reading, fellowship, and ministry.  If a believer is not actively involved in these four activities, there are serious concerns. 

Do you see Christians living out their faith in particularly different ways than you are seeking to live?  Do the good and different actions of others sometimes cause you to feel “guilty,” or to feel as though you are not “doing enough?”  While each of us is called to “work out our own salvation” (Philippians 2:12), the way we individual believers collectively “work out” our own salvation should in fact be a shining example of Christian diversity. 

God has made his body to be just that—a body. All are not hands and all are not feet.  In the same manner, all are not knees, and all are not tongues.  Among God’s people, there is beautiful variety.  God has designed it to be so.

The Bible does in fact prescribe certain actions.  God’s people are commanded to sing, love, seek the things that are above, grow, assemble together, have no other gods before them, and more.  These are nonnegotiable commands which Scripture places before us.  However, applying our Christianity in moment-by-moment living involves making decisions which are both a matter of obedience to God and personal preference. 

Well-meaning orthodox Christians will not differ on matters of murder or adultery or stealing or lying.  All believe Christians should read their Bibles, care for one another and love God.  Related to matters of particularly fleshing out the Christian faith, there are and should be differences among God’s people.

Some English speakers say to“may”to, and some say tom“ah”to.  In the same way, some Christians physically serve the poor in a “hands on” way while others influence policy makers and write legislation to benefit the poor.  Some Christians like to do missions by getting in an airplane and flying to another country while other Christians like to do missions by going to another other state.  Some Christians get up to pray at 4:00 A.M. while others of us do not.  Some Christians choose of have big families while other Christians choose to have smaller families.  Some Christians refuse to watch rated-R movies.  Some do not.

“So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God” (1 Corinthians 10:31)

Such differences of application among God’s people are good and right.  How boring the world would be if all God’s people were the same.  How imbalanced and drab the world would be if we all applied the Christian faith in precisely the same ways.

So, how do we discern between guilt and conviction when good, well-meaning, godly people around us are doing so many different good and God-honoring things? 

Looking to one another for cues as to how to flesh out our faith can be unhelpful.  Let us look to God.

Guilt and conviction among Christians seems to me to be not so much a matter of who is doing what, but Who is serving as Judge.

Speaking to believers in his day, James said “There is only one lawgiver and judge, he who is able to save and to destroy.  But who are you to judge your neighbor?” (James 4:12)

When someone looks to another person as his Judge, there will undoubtedly be feelings of guilt.  Not only is pleasing another person impossible, we will never know all others might be thinking about us or expecting of us.  Christians looking to others for the leading that only God’s Spirit can provide will often end up feeling frustrated and eventually guilty.  It’s not God’s design, and it’s a bad thing.

When Christians look only to God as Judge, his leading may in fact be conviction, and the conviction of God is never a bad thing.  It is a work of sanctification in our lives.  It's a good thing.

Someone who is rarely convicted by God is probably not walking with God.  Someone who does not welcome God’s conviction probably does not want to walk with God. 

All believers must obey God.

All believers must make their own decisions before God about the particular applications of Christian faith.

All believers must continuously be about finding the fine line between guilt and conviction.

“There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus” (Romans 8:1).

Pastor Todd Brady

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Living for Others

As we prepare to observe Memorial Day, let us remember the many who have died in the Lord and who lived their lives so that we might live ours.




It is the righteous man who lives for the next generation.

                                   Dietrich Bonhoeffer





Pastor Todd

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Is It Right?




Cowardice asks the question, Is it safe?  Expediency asks the question, Is it politic?  Vanity asks the question, Is it popular?  But conscience asks the question, Is it right?

             Martin Luther King Jr.




Pastor Todd

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

2011 Graduate Recognition at FBC--Pics

 We celebrated our faith family's high school graduates Sunday morning.  How encouraging it was to think about all that God has for them as they journey into the next chapter of their lives.  A significant milestone indeed!

We reflected on these students' lives and sang Great is Thy Faithfulness together.  As we prayed for their future, we also sang Be Thou My Vision.  This is our prayer for them in the years to come.
















Be Thou my Vision, O Lord of my heart;
Naught be all else to me, save that Thou art.
Thou my best Thought, by day or by night,
Waking or sleeping, Thy presence my light.

Be Thou my Wisdom, and Thou my true Word;
I ever with Thee and Thou with me, Lord;
Thou my great Father, I Thy true son;
Thou in me dwelling, and I with Thee one.

Riches I heed not, nor man’s empty praise,
Thou mine Inheritance, now and always:
Thou and Thou only, first in my heart,
High King of Heaven, my Treasure Thou art.

High King of Heaven, my victory won,
May I reach Heaven’s joys, O bright Heaven’s Sun!
Heart of my own heart, whatever befall,
Still be my Vision, O Ruler of all.

God's got great things in store for you!

Jeremiah 9:23-24.

Pastor Todd

Friday, May 20, 2011

Sunday Night----ALL PRAISE

All Praise is this Sunday night at 6:00--an evening of worship celebration led by our adult muscians, children's choirs, and guest musicians in the orchestra.  It promises to be a wonderful evening of praise to our great God.  Musical selections have been chosen from the Prestonwood Baptist Church Music Ministry in Dallas, Texas.

What a great time to come together as a faith family and worship God!  What a great time to bring a friend!  What a great time for us to close out the spring by singing praises to God!

See you Sunday night at FBC.

Pastor Todd

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Awana Recognition and the Heart of the Gospel

After recognizing a slew of children who walked through the AWANA program on Wednesday nights at FBC this spring, I found myself praying that God might take the Word which we have all so strategically tried to plant in our children's minds (as our church partners with parents for the discipleship of children) and that he might make them "oaks of righteousness, the planting of the LORD, that he may be glorified"  Isaiah 61:3.

My prayer is that our children, students, and adults might realize that following God is not about rules, regulations, do's and dont's, but that we all might live freely in the wonderful truth that knowing God is about a relationship with Jesus Christ.

Thomas struggled to know the way to God. Upon asking Jesus the way to the Father  (a process? a program? a list of behavioral expecations? rules and regulations? etc...), Jesus said, "I am the way, and truth, and the life.  No one comes to the Father except through me" John 14:6.

The first word out of the mouth of Jesus is "I."  He is the "I am."

Jesus did not say "this is the way."  Rather, he was showing that a relationship with himself is what knowing God is all about.

May the children, students, families, and adults of FBC live in this truth.

Pastor Todd

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Different From the World

"When the church is absolutely different from the world, she invariably attracts it. It is then that the world is made to listen to her message, though it may hate it at first." -Martyn Lloyd-Jones

Monday, May 16, 2011

Sunday in Romania




 




 




A very long, tiring, wonderful and God-blessed day! 

We began with a baptismal service at Grace Baptist Church in Moldova Noua--a high time indeed in the life of this congreation.  Daniel Barnut from Resita drove in to participate with us in the service.  How good it was to be with Pastors Barnut and Damian after their having been in Paducah.

The house was packed as we worshipped together, gave attention to the Word and experienced the celebration of baptism.  14 people were baptized!

We then travelled to Belobresca where Rex spoke again and we shared the service with a group of college students who were from Timisoara and were doing fundraising work for poor children in northeastern Romania.  What a great time of worship we had together. 

Two woship services began simultaneously in two different churches that evening.  Rex spoke at Grace Baptist Church while I was at Maranathana Baptist Church.  After preaching there (the same college students had come there that evening), I then got in a Dacia and drove over to Grace Baptist Church to preach the evening message there. The service lasted an hour and 40 minutes.

After many pictures, Paces, and hugs, we said our goodbyes and went back for a late supper of Sarmali and chicken and fries.

Thank you Lord, for the reminder that ministry is not something we do for you but that ministry is something You do through us.

Pastor Todd

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Saturday in Romania

Up and at ‘em with a breakfast of salamis, cheese, bread, tomatoes and bell peppers.  Our gracious guests were good to also give us Americans yogurt and cereal.
Our first appointment was the area business leaders’ conference where men and women came to hear Rex give his Christian testimony and talk about the practice of faith and the operation of a business.

First, we spent the morning investigating things in the city andThe business mens’ conference was encouraging, and there was most considerable discussion when the door was opened for those with questions and comments.  Rex gave his testimony in a beautiful way which honored God, and all learned much about maintaining Christian principle even in the midst of personal challenges.
 looking at business opportunities.  We plan on doing more of this kind of thing on Monday.



Saturday evening, we worshipped in a youth rally at Grace Baptist Church in Moldova Noua.  Rex again gave his testimony and Todd preached Christ.  How the Lord blessed! 





     Ministry is not something we do for God.  Ministry is something God does and allows us to be a part of.

Indeed, God is at work!

Pastor Todd

Saturday, May 14, 2011

We Made It!

From Nashville to D.C. to Munich and finally to Timisoara...we eventually got to the Peninsua Elias where we're staying.  

Tonight, we enjoyed a fish dinner on the Danube River (begun by a bowl of delicious fish soup) and made plans for economic and busines exploration tomorrow, leading our business leaders conference in the afternoon, and being a part of the Youth Rally tomorrow night.

After dinner, Tom and I went to a young couple's house to witness to the wife and young mother who is not saved.  I know these dear folks, and the fact that an American from the other side of the planet showed up to her house to evangelize her caused me to feel alot like Navy Seal Special Team 6 going to "do the job."

Although we prayed for her to believe tonight, and although we carefully laid the gospel out to her, she did not believe.  Nor did she get upset that we and the the others in the room  had "put her on the spot."

She did say she understood somethings better as we left and that she and her husband would be coming to the church tomorrow night for the speacial service!

Pray for Julia that she might come to Christ, trusting him in his sovereign goodness.  Pray for Rex tomorrow as he shares his testimony and speaks to the many men who are gathering for the business men's conference.  Pray for me as I preach to the youth of this area.  (We're 8 hours ahead of Paducah time.)
Pastor Todd

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Loving God, Loving People . . . In Romania

Todd Brady, Tom Unici, Rex Smith and Sammy Smith embark on their trip to Romania this morning to further the Kingdom and work with fellow brothers proclaiming Christ as King.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Welcome Josh Hancock!


Josh is one of Dale and Cathy Hancock's three sons and the fiancee of Mandy Hodges.  He is serving FBC as a pastoral intern this summer.  Josh plans to enter vocational pastoral ministry, and we are praying that his time among us might indeed be beneficial for him and used by God for His glory among and through us. 

Plan on seeing Josh around a lot this summer, and make an opportunity to welcome Josh and Mandy to our faith family!
Pastor Todd