Month: August 2020

  • Order of Worship – August 9 2020

    Call to Worship: Romans 11:33

    Oh, the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments and how inscrutable his ways!

    Prayer of Adoration:

    Song: How Sweet to Wait Upon the Lord – CCLI#5543210 

    How sweet to wait upon the Lord, while He fulfills His gracious word
    To seek His face, and not in vain, to be so loved, and love again

    CHORUS: Amen! Our hearts with rapture cry, may we with reverence look so high
    Ascended Savior, fix our eyes, by faith upon this glorious prize

    With this delightful prospect fired, we’ll run, nor in thy ways be tired
    And all the trials here we see, will make us long to reign with Thee

    To see, while prostrate at His feet, Jehovah on the mercy seat
    And Jesus, at the Lord’s right hand, with His divine atonement stand!

    “Father” he cries, “I will that these before thee on their bended knees
    for whom my life I once laid down, be with me soon on this my throne.”

    The Old Testament Lesson: From Job 38

    Prayer of Confession: From Psalm 51

    Have mercy on me, O God, according to Your steadfast love; according to Your abundant mercy blot out my transgressions. Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin! For I know my transgressions, and my sin is ever before me. Against You, and You only, have I sinned and done what is evil in Your sight.  Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me. Cast me not away from Your presence, and take not Your Holy Spirit from me. Restore to me the joy of Your salvation, and uphold me with a willing spirit.

    Assurance of Pardon:  Jeremiah 20:15

    “For I am with you to save you and deliver you,” declares the Lord.

    The New Testament Lesson: Romans 10:5-10

    Prayer for the Church:  Crawford Dillon, Ruling Elder.

    The Sermon: “The Cross and Our Relationships.  1 John 3:16. Dr. Michael Calvert, Teaching Elder.

    Confession of Faith: The Westminster Confession, 25/1

    The catholic (that is, universal) church, which is invisible, consists of all the elect who have been, are, or shall be gathered into one, under Christ its head. This church is his bride, his body, and the fullness of him who fills all in all.

    *Communion:

    Song: He Leadeth Me: O Blessed Thought!Hymn 600 v.1,3-4

    1 He leadeth me: O blessed thought!
    O words with heav’nly comfort fraught!
    Whate’er I do, where’er I be,
    still ’tis God’s hand that leadeth me.

    Refrain:
    He leadeth me, he leadeth me;
    by his own hand he leadeth me:
    his faithful foll’wer I would be,
    for by his hand he leadeth me.

    3 Lord, I would clasp thy hand in mine,
    nor ever murmur nor repine;
    content, whatever lot I see,
    since ’tis my God that leadeth me. [Refrain]

    4 And when my task on earth is done,
    when, by thy grace, the vict’ry’s won,
    e’en death’s cold wave I will not flee,
    since God through Jordan leadeth me. [Refrain]

    The Benediction:  1 Peter 5:14

    Peace to all of you who are in Christ.  Amen!

  • Announcements – August 7 2020

    Dear Brothers and Sisters in the Lord,

    This coming Lord’s Day we will continue moving along in our series of messages on ‘ The Church Under the Cross.’ And we will consider another dimension of our life together as God’s people, a people who are called to follow our Savior in this world, to walk just as He once walked, and to do so as ‘under the cross.’

    The specific dimension of our discipleship that we will think about on this Lord’s Day is how the cross of Jesus impacts and totally transforms our relationships, and especially our relationships with each other in the Body of Christ. Our sermon text will be taken from 1 John 3:16-18:

    By this we know love, that he laid down his life for us, and we ought to lay down our lives for the brothers. But if anyone has the world’s goods and sees his brother in need, yet closes his heart against him, how does God’s love abide in him? Little children, let us not love in word or talk but in deed and in truth.”

    In the first part of our message we will look especially at where we go to discover what love actually is. And you can see that in these verses the Apostle John does not refer us to a dictionary for a definition of Christian love, but to an event in history!

    Then, in the second part of our message (for Sunday August 16) we will consider how the cross of our Lord and Savior is not simply the one and only means of our eternal salvation, but is also the very pattern that we must follow as we relate to one another.

    Before I go, I want to express once again how thankful I am for each of you! Even though we have all experienced some very difficult and equally confusing days since early March, you have remained so faithful to the Lord and to His Church. My heart is strengthened and encouraged to see your faith in action!

    Thank you for remaining loyal to our Savior, to one another in His Church, and for worshipping and serving Him so faithfully in these very unusual and trying times.

    My earnest prayer for you today is that you will each be full of the joy of the Lord, that your minds will be at ease, and that, despite what may yet lay ahead, you will be at peace in our Father’s tender and strong hands!

    I love you all so very much! You are “ my beloved brethren” and “my joy and crown” (Philippians 4:1).

    Mike

    Announcements:

    COVID-19 Message:

    For those of you who are attending worship in person on Sunday morning, please practice social distancing as much as you are able and observe the pew markers so that we may keep a safe, 6-ft between families. During this time, we will not have nursery or fellowship time with food and drink. If any family member has been sick, or you have a pre-existing condition, please consider staying home and joining us by watching the recorded service when it is sent out. The Session has asked all congregants, out of love for one another, to wear a mask throughout our worship service if you are able. We hope and pray that if you have any needs, you will let a staff member or deacon know so that we can serve you well during this trying time.

    Message from your Diaconate:

    As we continue through this difficult time, if you have needs of any kind, please don’t hesitate to reach out to the Diaconate. We’re eager to help you or to find someone who can. This is one of the main reasons the church has deacons, to make sure that congregational needs are being met. Please remember that your Diaconate and Session are praying for you, and we’re here to help however we can.

    Senior Fellows:

    The Senior Fellows began a new weekly Bible study on Tuesday, July 21 from 9:00 to 10:00 AM. We use the Zoom virtual meeting application to study Building a Christian Conscience by R.C. Sproul, and the topic is The Razor’s Edge. Church members are welcome to join us. For further information, email us at seniorfellows@christpreshamptoncove.org.

    Future topics include:
    Aug. 4 – “The Distortion of Lawlessness”
    Aug. 11 – “The Degrees of Sin”
    Aug. 18 – “The Creation of Ordinances”
    Aug. 25 – “The Question of Conscience”

    Parenting Conference:

    Please save the dates of August 28th and 29th for our parenting conference!  Our guest speaker is John Perritt, current director of resources for Reformed Youth Ministries.  Please mark your calendars for a Friday evening/Saturday morning event to consider how we might better disciple our children in today’s challenging culture.  Further details will be forthcoming.  For questions, please contact Matthew Elliott at matthew@christpreshamptoncove.org.

    Psummer Psalms:

    Announcing our 3rd year of Psummer Psalms! Everyone, young and old, is invited to memorize one entire Psalm this summer. Then join us for a recitation and light dinner at church on Sunday afternoon, Aug 16. Recitation can be individual, or together in a group or family. New this year: a trophy t-shirt for anyone who recites an entire Psalm from memory! If interested, email darondrown@gmail.com for periodic encouragement and accountability.

    Children’s Ministry:

    Nursery Use – I have been asked if it is okay for parents to take their children into the nursery during the service if need be to alleviate any overcrowding in the cry room. That is not a problem, but please wipe down any surfaces that you encounter during your stay so that others may feel comfortable using it as well. There will be sanitizing wipes on the counters.

    Women’s, Career/Singles, and Youth Ministries:

    Ministry activities have been canceled pending the virus quarantine. Check this space for rescheduled events.

    Men’s Studies:

    The weekly Men’s study of John Calvin’s Institutes is meeting via Zoom, contact Daron Drown for details.

    Prayer Requests:

    Healing: Please pray for the health of the following individuals: Zig and Virdia Jastrebski, Ramona Edwards, Bill Dent, Jacky Haynes, Steve Terry, John Baxter, Bill Cowley, Larrabee Kirkland, Elizabeth Holton, and Nolan Osmer.
    Expecting: Please pray for the Elys, expecting in September.
    Ministries: Please pray for the following missionaries and ministries: Seth and Jessica Lewis (Ireland); Steve and Rita Williams (New Zealand); Noah and Karleigh Stephens (Thailand); Vinnie and Molly Athey (RUF at UAH); RUF at Alabama A&M; Ken and Angie Burnett (FCA); Franky and Alaina Garcia (church plant in Canada); Dieter Paulson (church plant in Scottsboro, AL); The Huntsville Pregnancy Resource Center.

    Online Donations:

    If you would like to give to Christ Presbyterian, you can do so at the following link:


    Emails:

    general inquiries: admin@christpreshamptoncove.org
    benevolence needs: benevolence@christpreshamptoncove.org
    counsel and ministry needs: matthew@christpreshamptoncove.org
    men’s ministry: men@christpreshamptoncove.org
    women’s ministry: women@christpreshamptoncove.org
    children’s ministry: children@christpreshamptoncove.org
    youth ministry: youth@christpreshamptoncove.org
    senior fellows: seniorfellows@christpreshamptoncove.org

    Address:

    288 Old Highway 431
    Owens Cross Roads, AL 35763

  • Monday Encouragement

    Isaiah 65:17-19

    “For behold, I create new heavens and a new earth, and the former things shall not be remembered or come into mind. But be glad and rejoice forever in that which I create; for behold, I create Jerusalem to be a joy, and her people to be a gladness. I will rejoice in Jerusalem and be glad in my people; no more shall be heard in it the sound of weeping and the cry of distress.”

    My Dear Brothers and Sisters in the Lord,

    With today’s sunrise, we enter the first Monday of the eighth month of the year 2020, a year that none of us will ever forget (and there are four months remaining!!).

    I’m sure that, if the Lord tarries, we will be telling our grand-children and great grand-children all about what happed in the world during this remarkable year, much like previous generations have recounted earlier times of great unrest. We will recall a virus, quarantines, face-masks, civil upheaval and burning cities, kneeling athletes, the ‘cancel culture,’ a tumultuous race for the White House, and seemingly irresolvable controversies about all of the above! We will also remember the anxiety which we all feel to one degree or another.

    And, as seems all but certain now, we will also recall that it was in this year that the Church of the Savior (at least here in the West) entered into another, more painful, season of her sojourn on earth. By virtue of the way our brains have been designed and equipped by our Creator (and in light of what original sin has done to them), disturbing images of this year will flash into our minds until we take our final breaths on this side of heaven.

    I’m sure you have all experienced it at some point this year. You have been awakened in the middle of the night by the recollection of something very painful and upsetting. Or, perhaps in a moment of reflection at work, your mind has drifted into a dark place where you were confronted with terrible scenes from the day’s news, playing themselves out in your head over and over like a broken record. And as this happened to you, your palpitating heart was filled with dread . . . again.

    Our memories are a blessed thing for sure. But because we live in a world that is in all-out rebellion against Christ, we are able to recall, oftentimes with stunning clarity, those terrible things that fallen people do to themselves and to others (what theologians call ‘moral evils’). Along with this, we can also vividly remember those disastrous events that take place in the world of nature, which has also been profoundly damaged by human sin (what theologians call ‘natural evils’). In this way, our ability to remember is both a blessing and a terrible curse.

    Well, this brings me to our source of great encouragement for today, another Monday in this incredible and unforgettable year.

    Just short of twenty-four hundred years ago, the prophet Isaiah, inspired by the very Spirit of the Lord, spoke of a most blessed day, yet future, when all the redeemed of God would forget! Addressing his message to the sinful and wayward nation of Judah, which was headed into exile due to her persistent rebellion against the Lord, Isaiah promised that the Lord’s mercy would one day be most splendidly revealed in the arrival of an entirely new creation! He spoke of a “ new heavens and a new earth,” and of a new “ Jerusalem.”

    In these sacred lines we have Isaiah’s vision of the eternal state, or heaven, which, as Jesus told us, is being prepared for us even now (John 14:1-3). In this new universe, also identified as an eternal ‘city’ which is called by the name “ Jerusalem,” there will be only joy, peace, and eternal life (I would encourage you to read the entire chapter). Isaiah reveals to us that all of the terrible things that resulted from our fall will be gone for good! No temptation or sin, no death, no disease, no tears, and no anxiety and fear! Amen to that!

    But there is something else, another indescribable blessing, that awaits the citizens of the eternal Zion.

    In verse 17, Isaiah says that when we enter that new city “ the former things shall not be remembered or come into mind.” That’s right! We will be blessed with the inability to remember! And it is specifically the “ former things” that will be permanently erased from our minds! The late Old Testament scholar, J. Alec Motyer explains that it is not the “divine mind” in view here, but “the mind of the redeemed” whose “awareness will be of total newness, in which nothing prompts recollection of what once was” ( Isaiah: An Introduction and Commentary, 398).

    Now, these “ former things” that will never be remembered by us in the New Jerusalem are all of those terrible things that have resulted from our sins since the time of Adam, the consequences of all of those transgressions for which our Lord died, and from which we have been fully pardoned. And some of them are actually listed for us by the prophet: “ weeping and the cry of distress” (v. 19); infant death (v. 20); shortened life-spans (v. 20); vain labor (vv. 21-22); “ children for calamity” (v. 23); hostility in nature (v. 25); and destruction of any kind (v. 25).

    Can you just imagine such a thing? When we close our eyes in death and open them in the Heavenly City, we will not remember anything about our former days of alienation from our Lord! It will be as if we were never lost, and had never suffered any of the effects of our sin! Everything will be “ new” in the New Jerusalem, even our thoughts! Nothing from the old life will be left over.

    Some, with good intentions, have suggested that our entrance into heaven will be like waking up after a terrible dream. But this is not what Isaiah is saying at all. After a nightmare we tremble upon awakening precisely because we do remember it! But not so when we behold our Savior on His throne!

    On that Day, the day of our resurrection to eternal life, we will all experience a glorious ‘re-booting’ of our ‘systems’! Everything will be restored to ‘original factory specs’! Nothing will enter our renewed and perfected minds that is connected in any way to our “ former” lives as sinners! The memories of our own sins against the Lord and against others, the memories of the sins of others against us, the memories of all of our broken relationships, the memories of suffering in body, soul, and in mind, those memories of disease, tragedy, and death, and those of every evil event ever to transpire on this earth will all be gone!

    I can’t imagine it! And I can’t wait!!

    So, as long as we are on this side of heaven we will remember this year (and everything that is yet to come in it). But soon, perhaps very soon, it will all be forgotten as the painful memories of our journey in this life are washed away forever in the glory of our Savior’s dear face!

    Weeping may last for the night, but a shout of joy comes in the morning” (Psalm 30:5).

    I love you all with all of my heart, and I never forget to pray for you!

    Mike

  • Order of Worship – August 2 2020

    Call to Worship: From Psalm 136

    Pastor: Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good, for his steadfast love endures forever.
    People: Give thanks to the God of gods, for his steadfast love endures forever.
    Pastor: Give thanks to the Lord of lords, for his steadfast love endures forever;
    People: It is he who remembered us in our low estate, for his steadfast love endures forever;
    Pastor: and rescued us from our foes, for his steadfast love endures forever.
    People: Give thanks to the God of heaven, for his steadfast love endures forever.

    Prayer of Adoration:

    Song: All Creatures Of Our God and King – Hymn 115 v.1,2,5

    1 All creatures of our God and King,
    lift up your voice and with us sing
    alleluia, alleluia!
    Thou burning sun with golden beam,
    thou silver moon with softer gleam,
    O praise him, O praise him,
    alleluia, alleluia, alleluia!

    2 Thou rushing wind that art so strong,
    ye clouds that sail in heav’n along,
    O praise him, alleluia!
    Thou rising morn, in praise rejoice,
    ye lights of evening, find a voice,
    O praise him, O praise him,
    alleluia, alleluia, alleluia!

    5 Let all things their Creator bless,
    and worship him in humbleness,
    O praise him, alleluia!
    Praise, praise the Father, praise the Son,
    and praise the Spirit, three in one,
    O praise him, O praise him,
    alleluia, alleluia, alleluia!

    The Old Testament Lesson: Isaiah 55:1-5.

    Affirmation of Faith:  The Apostles’ Creed. Trinity Hymnal p. 845.

    The New Testament Lesson: Romans 9:6-13

    Prayer for the Church:  Dr. Bud Lancaster, Ruling Elder.

    The Sermon: “Evil, Suffering, and the Cross: Part Three.  1 Peter 4:13; Colossians 1:24. Dr. Michael Calvert, Teaching Elder.

    Prayer of Confession:

    Assurance of Pardon:  From James 2:13

    Mercy triumphs over judgment.

    *Communion:

    Song: Before the Throne – CCLI# 2306412

    Before the throne of God above, I have a strong and perfect plea
    A great High Priest whose name is love, who ever lives and pleads for me
    My name is graven on His hands, my name is written on His heart
    I know that while in heav’n He stands, no tongue can bid me thence depart
    No tongue can bid me thence depart

    When Satan tempts me to despair, and tells me of the guilt within
    Upward I look and see Him there, who made an end of all my sin
    One with Himself, I cannot die, my soul is purchased by His blood
    My life is hid with Christ on high, with Christ my Savior and my God
    With Christ my Savior and my God

    Behold Him there, the risen Lamb, my perfect, spotless Righteousness
    The great unchangeable I AM, the King of glory and of grace
    Because the sinless Savior died, my sinful soul is counted free
    For God the Just is satisfied, to look on Him and pardon me
    To look on Him and pardon me

    The Benediction:  From 2 Thessalonians 3:18

    The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen!