Online Service

This Wednesday night August 5th, at 7:00pm est we will be having an on-line service.

As you may remember a few weeks ago we hijacked the service from Marty, Well this is the message he didn’t get to preach complete with our rockin worship band.

We would love to have you join us.  Also we would love to have your friends join us.  I have created a link that should help you connect your computer to your tv.  This way you can invite your friends and neighbors over and have a viewing party.  A few drinks, a few snacks, a few friends.  We do it for the Superbowl why not for church?

The link to setup your computer to tv connection is…

http://www.fellowshipholden.com/fctv-hdtv

The link to our service is the same as always…

http://www.fellowshipholden.com/FCTV

I hope to see you all there… Is the internet great?

Billy

Web Pastor@ FellowshiHolden

FC Student: the goal, Part 1

Part of doing the work of the ministry as a leader is helping equip others in how to do the work of the ministry. How and in what direction are some key things to think through in achieving this end. I believe we must be purposeful, strategic, intentional, however you want to say it.

As the Family Ministries Director of Fellowship Church, I’ve been able to work with the student ministry workers in developing our goal or win or success end of mind statement. As of right now, we say it like this:
Our win is when a student has a meaninful participation in authentic service within the context of life groups.

Here are some of the things that came up in making this statement. In an attempt to measure how someone is growing spiritually, I think of James that talks about faith that is without works is dead and how Jesus in John 15 talks about branches that do or do not bear fruit or Jesus’ sermon on the mount that highlights true religion in action (tree bearing fruit describes what kind of tree it is). So it seems that in one sense, we should be able to see something to identify growth.

There are so many passages that talk about humanity’s main objective in pointing everything back to a relationship with God. Throughout the bible there’s the “Love God with all your…” in Deuteronomy, Jesus’ message to Satan, Jesus’ answer of the greatest commandment, etc. And usually following those phrases are descriptions or contexts by which this is played out. Love is described by certain action characteristics. Love is something that one should be able to see and identify as love.

Pastors and teachers role in the church is to equip the people to do the work of the ministry. Ministry means service. Service to God whether directly or indirectly, but all for the service to God. Service describes an action. Worshiping through music describes an action of the body and mind and heart and voice and even hands and arms in praising God, paying service to His greatness. So whether through reading our bibles, giving our money to church, praying, feeding the needy, building friends with unbelievers, sharing our struggles and growth with fellow believers in community, it’s all service to God through action.

Those are some of the things that ran through our minds during this discussion. We could have said in many ways, but for me the word service also carries a connotation of action. Certainly there are things that need to be aware of that could look like service, but the heart or the root of the tree is not in the right place, but that’s another discussion.

I’ll share more of those things that were discussed if you’re interested. Interested?

covenants

At Fellowship church, each small group will create its own expression of comitment and devotion to themselves, each other, the church (and most importantly) God.   The categories that they will explore are the values that we place at the heart of our small groups: Authenticity, Transformation, Outward Reaching, and Multiplication.

To this end, this document expresses parameters within which we expect the groups to operate.  While we clearly don’t want a cookie cutter approach, we also want to have some level of uniformity.  If people wanted to get together every week and do nothing but read scripture, that would be an awesome thing to do.  However, it wouldn’t be a small group.  On the other hand, if a group hung out at a bar weekly to play poker, this wouldn’t be a small group either.  (Again, it’s not that I have anything against drinking or poker in moderation.)

With no further ado, here is the framework for Fellowship Church’s flexible covenants.

 

Value:Authenticity:

 Definition:We are engaged in transparent, supportive, and loving relationships with other members of the group and the church.  Our interactions during group meetings will be confidential.

Question to be answered on the covenant: What should we commit to in order to grow these relationships?

Specific areas that the covenant might express this value:

A) Regular attendance  (examples: we commit to X% attendance; we commit to doing Y whenever we don’t attend)

B) Respectful actions (example: we will give others our full attention during the study time; we will refrain from drinking or watching ‘R’ rated movies as a group because these might be a stumbling block to others…)

C) Accountabality  (example: we invite others into our lives and will intervene in others lives in such-and-such a manner if we see…)

 

Value:Transformation:

 Definition: We are commited to seeking out Christ and conforming ourselves to His image. 

Question: What should we commit to in order to maximize our growth in Christ?

A) Regular prayer for each other.  (examples: we will pray for each other X times per week.)

B) Submission to the needs of the group.  (We will prioritize needs of individuals or activites of the group in such-and-such a way.)

C) Learning and Application of Biblical principles. (examples: we will comitt to __ hours per week of prayer, study, homework, etc. on a regular/semiregular/occasional basis.)

 

Value:Outward Reaching:

Definition:We will work to bring about the Kingdom of God.

Question: What should we do?  How much should we do it?

A) Social justice (Example: Over the course of the small group we will engage in projects to benefit cause X; we will purchase/not purchase product Y;  We will pray for…)

B) Evangelism (Example:  we will aim to invite X# of people to church/small group; we will seek opportunities to witness to those around us with words and actions; we will be particularly focused on the environments of work/neighborhoods/schools…)

C) Formal service projects  (Example: we will commit to ___ # of service projects; we will commit to ___ hours on service projects…)

D) Informal, spontaneous help

 

Value: Multiplication

Definition: We are committed to growing small groups through out New England.

Question: What steps can we take toward multiplying?

A) Shared leadership to develop gifts (We will each/many of us will lead a discussion, plan a service project, take on individualized tasks for the life of the group.

B) Apprentice others in things we do within the group (Person A will develop the gift/talent/knowledge about ___ to ____ people.)

C) Seek out to be apprenticed by someone else.  (___# of people will develop the gift/talent/knowledge of ______ )

D) Participate in multiplying groups.  (Specific timeline: by Jan. X will have occurred; by April Y will have occurred, etc.)

 

 

Discussion Questions from the Sermon, September 21

The Big Picture
We are currently going through a series on Paul.  This week, we focused on Jesus’ confrontation with Paul.  Marty shared the idea that when God confronts us we have a choice: we can run away from God, we can run over God, or we can respond to what God says.

 

Questions from this week’s sermon

1.  How do you respond to confrontations with other people?  Does this impact the ways you respond to God when he confronts you?

 

2.  Describe some times that God has confronted you or some one you know.

 

3.  Why is so tempting to “run over God”; to focus the attention on ourselves and our actions rather than God?

 

4.  Why is to so tempting to run away from God? 

 

5.  Which tends to be a bigger temptation for you: Running away from God or running over God?

 

Read Acts, 9:1-9

 

6.  God speaks to us in many different ways.  What are some ways that He has spoken to you?  What has he said?  Are there any ways that God has spoken to others, that he doesn’t seem to speak to you through?  Why do you think that is?

 

7.  Marty challenged us in his sermon to slow down and try to discern what God might be saying to us.  Have you done this?  Why or why not?  Overall, what do you think God is saying to you, right now?

 

8.  Marty also observed that sometimes God speaks through the people around us.   Is God speaking to you about anyone in the group?  (Obviously, some discernment and tact ought to be used here.  If a small group discussion isn’t the best place to share what God has placed on your heart, please find a different venue to share with the person)

 

A possible extension

Sometimes God speaks to us in silences.  Many of us fill up our lives with noises and activities for this very reason.  Spend some time in silence as a group.  Perhaps instead of praying “out loud” tonight, you’ll spend some time in prayerful silence.  I’d encourage you to push the envelope a little bit, spend a little more quiet time than people feeel comfortable with.  It can be really powerful to do this and spend some time sharing what God put on your hearts afterwords.

This week’s Message – 6/8/2008

This week’s message was preached by Pastor Steven Furtick of Elevation Church in Charlotte, NC.  Enjoy!

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The most important question

Consider the following:

A small group leader is frustrated.  His members are passive during discussion time.  They wait eagerly but they won’t participate.

In another group within the same church, the leader spends hours each week preparing.  But after a time of eating and fellowship, nobody is ready to settle down and listen.

In yet another group, someone feels lost and alone.  He is waiting for the leader to notice his pain.  All the while ignoring the overtures of the other members.

Quite seperate symptoms.  These, and so many other problems beside, all point to a common cause.

That cause is a failure to understand an answer to one of the most important questions that a small group ministry can answer.  The question is this:

Where is the holy spirit?

That kind-of question can be off-putting.  It seems pie in the sky.  It seems so theoretical and so theological.  It’s the sort of question that can be devisive.  It’s the sort of question that we can spend our whole lives arguing about and not feel like we’ve made any progress on.

I’m not going to offer an easy answer.  I don’t think there is a single correct answer at all.  But I do believe it’s critical that a small group within church has an answer to that question, has committed to some sort of guiding belief.  I believe that the process of asking this question and being consistent about the answer will guide nearly everything a group does.

There are two extremes that a person might take on this question, in terms of small groups.  On one side is the position that the Holy Spirit resides within the leader alone.  The other extreme is that the Holy Spirit resides right in the middle of the group, between the interactions, discussions, and debates.

If we believe that the Holy Spirit is working mostly though a leader then that leader is (among other things) a teacher.  Wisdom is coming from this persons understanding.  Training this kind of leader involves helping him to communicate and discern God’s intent.  Training this kind of group involves teaching them to be good students and listeners.

This is a fairly traditional model.  Adult Sunday school classes usually operate on this sort of idea.  Some churches call their small groups “cell church” or “mini church”.  The idea seems to be that the leader is quite similiar to the church pastor except that his or her flock is much smaller.

At the other end: all people bare a responsibility for finding the truth.  Interaction is much more important than teaching.  Disagreement is critical to success.  The leader of this group is less a teacher and more a facilitator, working at bringing the best out of everyone.

This kind-of model is sometimes identified with post-modern or emergent mind sets.  It is emphasizes the importance of the relationships.  There are fundamental differences not only between the scale that church pastors and small group facilitators operate on.  There are also fundamental differences between the nature of what they do.

In the examples given at the beginning of this post, there was a disconnect.  That disconnect existed between the ideas of the leaders and the ideas of the members about where the Holy Spirit resides.  A leader who believes that the Holy Spirit resides in the middle of all of them will place a high value on interaction and will expect interaction.  A group that disagrees with this leader is waiting, quietly and attentively, to be taught.

On the other hand, a leader who believes that he is charged with teaching, with dispensing knowledge, might easily work hard at preparing.  If the group is interested in finding truth among them, he is likely to be quite stressed out.

A member of a group might expect the leader to minister to his pain.  The leader of that group, though, might think about the priesthood of believers.  He might believe that the members are all ministering to each other and that it is not his sole responsibility to be taking care of individual needs.

There are countless plusses and minuses, hundreds of ramifications to the question, “Where does the Holy Spirit reside?”  It’s not easy.  In the act of saying “We believe that the role of a small group leader is…” we open ourselves to all sorts of criticism.

There are problems with whatever model a small group is operating from.  There are valid criticisms of the most leader-centered model and the most group-centered model.  There are problems with every single compromise between the extremes.

But not admitting our position doesn’t prevent us from taking a position.  Every one already has a belief about where the Holy Spirit is, whether they realize it or not.  Members have expectations on leaders regardless of whether this is discussed.  Leaders have expectations on members, regardless of whether or not these have been admitted.

In the end getting everyone on the same page is incredibly important.  Over the long haul, it minimizes conflict and increases satisfaction. 

 

 

This week’s message – 5/18/2008

Family Matters


This week at Fellowship Church we’ll be starting a new series called “Family Matters”.  The focus will be on the family, and I’m looking forward to highlighting throughout the series this important God-ordained institution of the home.  Here is a list of the message titles at FC for the next several weeks:
(by the way, if these don’t necessarily pertain to you, that’s okay. At Fellowship, we want to be kingdom-minded, which sometimes means moving outside our comfort zones and seeing things through the perspective of others)

April 27 – Family Matters:  He said/she said
May 4 – Family Matters:  Parenting – An Orange perspective
May 11 – Family Matters:  My mom – The Golden Compass
May 18 – Family Matters:  Outlaws/Inlaws

If you have a family, or if you want to have a family, or if you know someone who has a family, then come and invite someone who you know that will be interested in what the Bible has to say about the family.

Sunday Mornings @ Fellowship (10:30 am)
325 Bullard St
Holden, MA 01520

Who’s gonna be there?

Partnering with Parents: Kids Town

Nap times, milk and cookies, seeing the world in wonder, and testing the boundaries…

Characteristics of young children and what most adults aspire to do everyday.

Last time I mentioned what the Son Light City is doing as they partner with parents to provide intentional Christian nurture for our youth. This time I wanted to mention our Kids Town (3-5 yrs old). What’s great about this age group is that there is some dynamic growth that happens in just a few years. There are physical changes, independent changes (being able to dress themselves, go to the bathroom themselves, etc.), intelligence changes, personality changes, social changes, and spiritual awareness changes. To me, this is the age group that there begins that innocent and pureness when it comes to spirituality. Having a son who’s 5, it amazes me to see how he thinks about things and how he prays. It’s this age that is important to teach them about God and to learn a few lessons ourselves from our children.
Our Kids Town does a great job at doing just that. We use FirstLook curriculum which helps these short attention spans get a grasp of three things: God made me, God loves me, and Jesus wants to be my friend forever. They know that it takes repeating for these children to really understand the concept (we care more about understanding, then just gaining knowledge) so they have only one memory verse the whole month and only one song to learn, but uses different bible stories and activities to keep them engaged.

For the parents, they hand out “Small Talk” cards that describe the basics of what was discussed that Sunday and gives the parents a few challenges in reinforcing the concept throughout the week. This is where the real influence happens and if both the parents and the church is saying the same thing, the better chances are that they are understanding what it is that God wants them to learn.

So go ahead and take a nap, eat some cookies with your milk and join our Kids Town to see the world in wonder and we’ll let them test your boundaries!!

I became a Christian and all I got was this lousy t-shirt

“Little Emily looks cute in her souvenir shirt that proclaims “My parents went to Florida and all I got was this lousy T-shirt.”  But there’s something sad about it.  Emily missed out on the journey… as I’ve gone to church and met Christians and lived as one, I’ve realized something. 
We are all Emily.
When I read about the lives of the first Christians in the New Testament, I see people who actually went “on vacation to Florida” who truly experienced the ups and downs of the trip.  But when I look around at Christians today, I see people who just wear a T-shirt for a journey they missed out on.”
 
The quote above is from the book we will be reading as a church and in our small groups.  It explains where the title comes from.

I posted it here because I wanted to generate some interest and discussion about the book.  I’ll post some more interesting quotes from it over the next couple days.

Check the book out!  Or scope the website: http://lousytshirtbook.com