Thought of the Week


  • Thank God for Sunday Moms

    Let’s paint a familiar picture.  The mother wakes up before everyone else, has kids’ clothes set out neatly for Sunday morning (or she is scrambling through the laundry bin, depending on her week), she prepares breakfast, gets the kids up, fixes her hair, fixes their hair, takes a shower (if she has time), puts on her make-up (again, if she has time), dresses the kids, dresses herself, goes to worship, and then?


  • Help! Our kids are in trouble!

    Jospeh Joubert once said, "Children need models more than they need critics."  The struggle of children in this day and age for most is not who the children are now but who they might be later.  We see the morality and spiritual direction of our kids in this culture going further away from where they need to be going, yet all we seem to be able to do about it is watch and lament.  No matter how much parents try, they cannot guarantee that they will raise Godly offspring, because they cannot make their children choose to go one way or another.  So what are Godly parents,


  • Getting your hands dirty
    In an age where antibacterial soap is as abundant as water, and cleanliness IS Godliness to some, I've often wondered what we would have thought of Jesus.  Here is a man who wrote on the ground, put his spit on a deaf and partially mute man's tongue and his fingers in his ears, hung around the dregs of society, and even took time to heal lepers, who epitomized the image of "unclean." Jesus was not afraid to get his hands dirty in his work here on earth, and it is best demonstrated in John 13.

  • A Family Who Eats Together

    Deuteronomy 11:18-21  "Therefore you shall lay up these words of mine in your heart and in your soul, and bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes. You shall teach them to your children, speaking of them when you sit in your house, when you walk by the way, when you lie down, and when you rise up.


  • Too Expensive

    According to the American Consumer Credit Council, the average American will spend between $800 and $900 on Christmas this year.  That means debt will skyrocket and many families in January will be facing a lot of red ink, even in the midst of a very difficult financial slump.  So why DO people spend so much on Christmas each year?


  • Heart-Deep Atheism

    One of the greatest insults you could throw at a Christian is to say that they are atheists.  Not that we should treat atheists with less respect, love or understanding than anyone else we meet, but to question a person's basic belief in God who professes their belief is downright insulting.  So it may be surprising how the word of God defines atheism in Psalms 14:1-3.

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Meeting Times

Sunday
8:30 AM - Breakfast
9:00 AM Bible Learning
10:00 AM - Passing Time /
Fellowship
10:15 AM Worship
 
6:00 PM Worship /
Small Groups
Wednesday
7:00 PM Devotional and
Classes