How Low Was Our Redeemer Brought

This Lord’s Day we will be singing a new hymn entitled “How Low Was Our Redeemer Brought.” I encourage you to meditate on its words and listen as we prepare to sing it together in worship this week.

How Low Was Our Redeemer Brought

1 How low was our Redeemer brought,
The King who held the stars
Lay helpless in a maiden’s arms
And pressed against her heart
While sheep and cattle raised their voice
The babe could speak no words
The ever flowing Spring of Joy
Had come to share our thirst

2 How low was our Redeemer brought,
The Lord the worlds obeyed
Would stumble as He learned to walk
Upon the ground He’d made
The One the angels bowed before
Would kneel to wash our feet
And be at home among the poor
Though He owned everything

CHORUS
Gloria, gloria in the highest
Gloria, gloria in the highest

3 How low was our Redeemer brought
To raise us from our shame
And now the highest praise of all
Belongs to Jesus’ name
The Healer wounded on a tree
To bear our grief and sin
The King gave up His crown so we
Could ever reign with Him. (Chorus 2x)

Music and words by Matt Boswell, Bob Kauflin, Nathan Stiff, and David Zimmer, CCL# 11359088

The Truth About Giving

Bleak and colorless.  November calendar photos are invariably the blandest of the entire year.  October boasts vivid fall colors.  December is trimmed in bright red and green.  But November is muted grey and brown with somber landscapes and usually fog.   You might expect January to be the least interesting, but November always takes last place.  

As a child something else characterized November.  It was “Stewardship Month.”  To avoid the unpleasantness of preaching on ‘giving,’ our church confined the topic to the month of November.  The rest of the year preachers and hearers were off the hook and could rest easy.   No one invited friends to church during November.  And we all girded up the loins of our minds for the deep dive into ‘stewardship.’ 

‘Stewardship’ was our euphemism for the giving of tithes and offerings.  The November series resembled a spiritualized fundraising campaign preparing us for the new year’s budget.  Stewardship month jaded us that the topic of ‘giving’ was an unpleasant but necessary part of the Christian life.  And so, we missed out on one of the most joyful aspects of covenant life and treated ‘giving’ as an embarrassment to our apologetic for a life well lived.

Along with “all Christians are hypocrites” the other darling mantra of skeptics is “all they want is your money.”  Without a proper view of the grace of giving, we cower apologetically at these slogans.  Thrown back on our heels, we treat the topic of giving as anathema and only refer to it tangentially, quick to translate giving into convenient service not sacrificial gratitude.  

But the Bible is very clear that giving tithes and offerings is an indispensable part of our Christian life.  Indeed, “God loves a cheerful giver.”  By cheerful giving, we celebrate all the attributes of a giving God, his grace, his provision, his faithfulness and his goodness.   Our practice of giving is a powerful barometer of our delight in our God and faith in what we profess to believe about him.

As God brings Israel out of Egypt, the most important part of their deliverance is preparing them to abide in him.   Only slightly less than half the entire story of the Exodus is focused on the Tabernacle and the priesthood.  God gives the ethos of covenant life in the moral and civil law.  In the ‘Book of the Covenant’ the people are taught to live with one another.  But the Tabernacle teaches the people how to live with their God. 

In Exodus 25 instructions for the Tabernacle begin with ‘giving.’   It was the first sermon in the series.  Not tucked away in November. Giving is the starting point.  The abiding life in Christ begins and consists in a recurring pattern of grace and gratitude.  Gratitude expressed through giving and worship.   Giving that is voluntary, joyful, and Christ-centered.  Are you giving? Is your giving voluntary, joyful, Christ-centered?

Join us this week as we examine Exodus 25:1-9 and consider voluntary, joyful, and Christ-centered giving.   We meet on the square in Pottsville, right next to historic Potts’ Inn at 10:30 am for worshipGet directions here or contact us for more info.  Or join us on Facebook Live @PottsvilleARP or YouTube

Pattern for Life

A child’s play takes the mundane and makes it magical.  Cooking, going to work, driving to the store, mowing the lawn and even vacuuming.   Adults long to finish all these.  To move on to better, more important, things.  But these are the very works children treasure in their play.   They spend hours enjoying what their parents spend hours lamenting, avoiding, and despising.

Play is often where children learn to cultivate the important rhythms of ‘real life.’  Rhythms that are drudgery to us.  But rhythms that represent the bulk of our living.  We try to escape them, complete them quickly, delegate them so that we can focus on more quality time with our families.  Not realizing that the normal routines of life are the quality time.  

Our children learn to do important things in life by watching and imitating us in our routines.   Imitation is more than a sincere form of flattery.  It is the way we learn to be and do what we are made to be and do.  Especially in our spiritual lives.  The Bible reminds us in Ephesians 5:1 that the key to discipleship is to “imitate God as dearly loved children.”

In God’s Word, he does not merely command or commend a way of life to us.  Rather, he provides a pattern based on infinite, eternal, and unchanging realities.  He gives us the law to teach us to imitate his holiness, goodness, wisdom, and truth.   And he gives us worship as a pattern for how we are to know and draw near to him.  God reveals himself to us in covenants -promises He makes and guarantees by his word.  And we are to approach him by receiving and renewing his covenants.  

Over and over in the scriptures, God’s people worship him through the renewal of covenant vows.   Week in and week out, day in and day out, covenant renewal is the pattern, the rhythm of God’s grace and his people’s gratitude.   Tabernacle and Temple worship followed this pattern.  And this pattern still directs the trajectory of Christian worship. A trajectory of worship and life that glorifies and enjoys God.  

We see this pattern first unfolded to the people, through Moses, at the foot of Sinai.  First in the giving of the law in Exodus 20-23.  Then in the people’s formal commitment to the Covenant in Exodus 24.  And finally in the description, building, and dedication of the Tabernacle and the priesthood, described in Exodus 25-40 and then in Leviticus. Often these parts of Exodus and Leviticus seem little more than tedious and uninteresting footnotes to the narrative of deliverance.  Yet the pattern for worshipping and for living is the climax not the appendix to the Exodus.  

Exodus 24 is a powerful moment.   The Law in all its terror and depth has been given.  How will the people respond?   Before they heard it, they cried out, “all that the Lord requires we will obey.”  But what about now?  Will they continue in covenant with the Lord, or turn back and return to Egypt?  In this moment we see their commitment and God’s acceptance.  They commit to obey all He requires.  And he provides a gracious pattern for approach that accommodates their inevitable failures but marks them as men and women, boys and girls accepted by him as his own.  

All our worship follows this same pattern.  Acknowledging God’s call and its requirement, confessing our failure, letting God’s means of grace consecrate us, finding acceptance with God through communion, and then receiving his commission to “go and make disciples of the nations.”   This pattern shows us how we are to approach the inapproachable God.  How we may truly love him and be loved by him.   And provides a weekly reminder that our calling, confession, consecration, communion, and commission are the pattern of life in union communion with Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Join us this week as we examine Exodus 24 and consider the pattern God has given us for worship and for life.   We meet on the square in Pottsville, right next to historic Potts’ Inn at 10:30 am for worshipGet directions here or contact us for more info.  Or join us on Facebook Live @PottsvilleARP or YouTube

07/16/2023 | “Important Reminders” | Exodus 23:20-33

In Exodus, God instructs Israel to apply the moral law to daily life. But ethics are not enough. Only God’s presence & promises make them his people. In Exodus 23 He explains how He will bring them into the land and gives us a map for the Christian life. Join us as we examine Exodus 23:20-33 as we unpack God’s plan to bring His people into promised rest and consider what this plan teaches us about the Christian life. 

07/09/2023 | “Pressed Down, Running Over” | Exodus 23:10-19

Pressed down, shaken together, running over, falling into your lap and down the hem of your robe. This is how the Lord delights to give joy, grace, peace, and rest as the communion of the saints takes visible shape in Lord’s Day worship. Are you ready?  

Join us as we examine Exodus 23:10-19 and consider the blessings the Lord intends for the worship of the gathered people of God. 

Important Reminders

Strings on fingers, dates circled in red, and desktops shingled with sticky notes are old-school.  Now we depend on digital calendar, app, and text reminders to prompt us to be where we should be and to do what we should do.  As our knowledge and activity increase our ability to remember diminishes.  The more we know and do, the less we remember.   I now appreciate the maxim of an aged mentor who decried, “I don’t need to learn anything new.  I just need to remember half of what I already know.”

Remembering is important.  Without memories we lose our mooring, identity, and purpose.  Anyone who has experience with dementia knows this all too well.  God has made our world for remembering.  The fabric of time is woven in the warp and woof of celestial and biorhythmic cycles designed to help us remember.  Weekly sabbaths and annual holidays are memory prompts.  And the ability and desire to record information, history, and expression teaches us that ‘remembering’ is a core distinctive of what it means to be human.  

But remembering transcends time.  The Bible tells us that even when we stand outside of time in eternity we will still remember.   The songs of the redeemed are inextricably tied to experience, to the epic story of redemption. And throughout scripture both Old Covenant and New Covenant worship are rooted in a command to remember.   To remember what God has done.   Remember what God has said.  Remember what God has promised. Remember who God is.  And who is God.

We are easily tempted to make faith and worship about us.  Prone to place ourselves at the center of all things.  So, the Bible calls us back to our chief end; to glorify and enjoy the one who is the center, the source, the purpose, and the end of all things.   Week in and week out, biblical worship is a covenant renewal; a remembering of God’s covenant of grace.  We are too apt to forget; to forget who is God and who God is.  To forget what He has done, what He has said, and what He has promised.

In the Book of the Covenant in Exodus 21-24, God explains how the Ten Commandments are lived out in community, what it looks like to be ‘the people of God.’  But a community ethic is not enough.   What makes them his covenant people is God’s presence, promises, and purposes.   As he wraps up the Book of the Covenant in Exodus 23, the Lord explains how He will bring Israel into the inheritance He promised and gives us a road-map for the Christian life.

Join us as we examine Exodus 23:20-33 as we unpack God’s plan to bring His people into promised rest and consider what this plan teaches us about the Christian life.  We meet on the square in Pottsville, right next to historic Potts’ Inn at 10:30 am for worshipGet directions here or contact us for more info.  Or join us on Facebook Live @PottsvilleARP or YouTube

Humming

Nine months.  Only nine months and our little corner of the world becomes and international hotspot, an epicenter in the path of totality.   At 1:30 pm on April 8, 2024 we will experience a total solar eclipse.  Friends old and new will flock to central Arkansas to get a front row seat.   Are you ready?

The last total solar eclipse visible to Norte Americanos was in August 2017.   Our family traveled to St. Louis and navigated many adversities for 3 minutes of celestial glory.   A total solar eclipse is not to be missed.  As it begins colors in the landscape become more vibrant, contrasts sharper.  Shadows cast through leafy trees cover the ground with hundreds of tiny crescent shaped images of the advancing eclipse.  

At the height of the eclipse, temperatures drop and birds fall silent.   It is eerie but glorious.  And for a brief moment you can take off your ISO 12312-2  approved eclipse glasses, put down your pin-hole projector, and behold the heavenly declaration of God’s glory.  The God in whom there is never a “shadow of turning,” whom nothing can eclipse.  

Our trip to view the eclipse of 2017 included a brief camping stop at Crowley’s Ridge State Park.  Every hotel along our trek had no vacancy.  I could not believe we were able to secure a spot at the park’s campground.    But I soon discovered why.   Crowley’s Ridge, like all our Arkansas State Parks, is a beautiful place in the world and a lovely place to camp.  But, and I repeat, NEVER in August.   Surrounded by northeast Arkansas rice fields, its vibrant, thriving mosquito culture rivals the ancient plague of gnats.   We had only one tent.  The manly men planned to sleep in hammocks.  It was the sleep of the undead.   The perpetual hum of the mosquitoes was at once torturous yet glorious.  

Millions of mosquitoes were gathered in joyful assembly for their nightly ritual of feeding and singing together.  The hum of any one was almost imperceptible, but together their buzzing was pervasive, inescapable.   In the hours of suffering, I recalled what was written of Scottish Praying Societies whose collective prayers on the Friday night of each Communion Season sounded to one Scottish traveler like the buzzing of bees throughout the countryside.  

The sound of saints in joyful assembly should always be like this.   One of my pastoral delights is to hear this hum before and after worship on the Lord’s Day. And to hear the tiny voices of the smallest children singing the Doxology and joining in with the Lord’s Prayer.  How joyfully, thankfully, excitedly do we gather for worship? 

The rest God gives on the Day of Rest should never be anesthetic or palliative.  It should energize our minds, our bodies, our souls, our aspirations, our hopes, and our assurance.  God ordained worship to draw us powerfully into His glorious triune life.   A mentor once defined worship as “work of the Holy Spirit in the Body of Christ to the glory of God the Father.”  Simple, yet profound.

As God prepares his people Israel to move from life as a fellowship of sufferings in Egypt to a communion of the saints in a land of Promise, he gives them, through Moses, a blueprint for life-together in covenant community.  This Book of the Covenant, found in Exodus 21-24 begins and ends with instructions regarding worship.   As the blueprint concludes in Exodus 23, the Lord bookends practical instruction about how to love and live with others with our worship. 

For the covenant child, our loving and living with others is never mutually exclusive of our loving and living with the Lord, our God.   Without worship, the Christian life is hollow, wraithlike, vaporous; a vanities of vanities.  God intends worship that is joyful, thankful, redemptive, and restful not dull, drab, or tedious. 

A church billboard invites attenders to “Expect and Experience!”   And some preachers report, “the Lord showed up and showed out today.”  While these statements reflect some problems, in both orthodoxy and orthopraxy, the reminder to come expectantly to worship is needful.   What do you expect?  How eager are you for the Lord’s Day?  Of giving, including our worship, Jesus taught.

“Give, and it will be given to you. Good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap. For with the measure you use it will be measured back to you.”

Luke 6:37-39

Pressed down, shaken together, running over, falling into your lap and down to the hem of your robe.   This is the kind of joy, grace, peace, and rest the Lord delights to give as the communion of the saints takes visible form in public worship on the Lord’s Day.   Are you ready?  

Join us as we examine Exodus 23:10-19 and consider the blessings God intends for the worship of the gathered people of God.  We meet on the square in Pottsville, right next to historic Potts’ Inn at 10:30 am for worshipGet directions here or contact us for more info.  Or join us on Facebook Live @PottsvilleARP or YouTube

06/25/2023 | “Property Values” | Exodus 21:28-22:17

Does our love for our neighbor as ourselves extend to our fences, dogs, shared spaces, care for things borrowed? Does neighborliness identify us as covenant people of God? Or confirm the world’s suspicion that our faith is a hypocritical cover story? Join us as we examine Exodus 21:28-22:17 and examine what the Bible says about our responsibility to love our neighbors by the way we use our things, what happens when we fail to exercise this love, and why it matters.

06/18/2023 | “An Eye for and Eye” | Exodus 21:18-27

An eye for an eye! Moderns assume this is a sanction for revenge. But what if it is a safeguard to keep personal offense from becoming a blood feud. To guard against revenge, not foster it. And to help assess what sin destroys and repentance requires. Join us as we examine God’s law concerning personal injury in Exodus 21:18-27 and consider the important difference between justice and vengeance. 

06/11/2023 | “Test Time” | James 1:1-4, 12

Anxiety, fear, palpitations, amnesia, ‘going blank.’  Responses to test-taking are diverse, but rarely pleasant.  Whether tests of strength or skill, diagnostic or vocational tests, or final course exams, no one likes to be tested.  We may enjoy the results, but never the process.  Yet, testing is God’s great means of growth for us.  Join us as our guest, Rev. Shannon Stokes, leads us to examine James 1:1-4, 12 in a sermon entitled “Test Time.”