The SHINE Blog

Glenwood Presbyterian Church

Why Do You Want To Go To Heaven?

I read a quote today from John Piper who was quoted in another blog that just blew me away…

“If you could have heaven, with no sickness, and with all the friends you ever had on earth, and all the food you ever liked, and all the leisure activities you ever enjoyed, and all the natural beauties you ever saw, all the physical pleasures you ever tasted, and no human conflict or any natural disasters, could you be satisfied in heaven, if Christ were not there?” -John Piper

Are we living the Christian life just so we can get into heaven and enjoy Paradise, or is it the relationship and love for Jesus Christ that motivates us?

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July 31st, 2008 Posted by Glenwood Presbyterian | Religious Ramblings | no comments

What Is There Left?

Sunday Morning Sermon for July 27, 2008 – delivered by Pastor Vernon McDaniel

What Is There Left? (Haggai 2:1-5)

Feel free to right-click and select Save Target As… to download to your computer, or simply hit the small button to the left of the title to play!

Pastor Vernon McDaniel filled in this week for Pastor Charles, who was in Chicago on Presbytery business. He graduated from Wake Forest University SW Baptist Theological Seminary and lived on Gregory Street in Glenwood while attending Wake Forest.

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July 28th, 2008 Posted by Glenwood Presbyterian | Glenwood Presbyterian Church, Sunday Sermons | no comments

A Historical Night

This is part three in a series of posts following the search for a new pastor at Glenwood Presbyterian Church. You can find the table of contents here.

Since Pastor Charles was called as our interim pastor, our transition team has been hard at work in starting to complete a mission study. One of our first goals was to come to terms with our history here at GPC. What that actually means is that we look back and consider how God has worked in our past to bring the particular people that are here to this place at this time. Once we have that perspective we are better suited for determining where God is leading us in the future.

Pastor Charles suggested a fun way to do this was to have a fellowship gathering and have people share stories about major events in the church and things they remember. Last Sunday night, we had an ice cream social in place of SHINE, and put up newsprint around the fellowship hall along with pictures of our previous pastors all the way back to the 1930s. We then had everyone there go around and write on the newsprint the dates of some important things that happened to them. For example, I wrote when I joined the church, when I was married in the church, when I went to UNC and law school, when I became choir director, and so forth.

After the ice cream was knocked out, we had several people speak about different eras of church history. I thought it was a lot of fun and people really seemed to enjoy the walk down memory lane. This will be an ongoing project – we left the newsprint up on the walls – and once we’re finished filling in our important dates, we’ll write a brief summary of the history of our church.

One very interesting thing that happened: while reading out loud from the first minutes of the sunday school meeting that would become GPC from back in 1908, Pastor Charles discovered that his great grandfather may have been a charter member of our church. God works in mysterious ways!

The next task of the transition team is to re-examine our church missions and mission statement. Please continue to pray for us as we try to determine God’s will for our church.

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July 25th, 2008 Posted by Glenwood Presbyterian | Glenwood Presbyterian Church, Pastor Search | no comments

A Shift In Vision (Part 3)

Ok – this will be my last post on Ed Stetzer and Mike Dodson’s book Comeback Churches. In this post, we look at three faith factors necessary for a comeback church:

  1. Renewed belief in jesus Christ and the mission of the church: Missional leaders and churches are ones that are thinking and acting like missionaries. Comeback leaders helped their churches grow to love the lost. Most churches love their traditions more than they love the lost.
  2. Renewed attitude for servanthood: Comeback churches led people to care more about their communitites than their preferences.
  3. More strategic prayer effort: Comeback churches are praying churches.

While I think GPC could emphasize prayer more, if you read my first post on this, you know that #1 holds the key to it all, in my opinion. Changing our focus, or shifting our vision to become a church who’s number one priority is winning the lost (right here in our own community) is the most important catalyst to being a comeback church. I was talking earlier this week to a good friend as we were sharing some links to articles about worship leaders and worship preferences. He said (very truthfully) that the Christian life doesn’t have to be so complicated – it is mostly about loving other people. I couldn’t agree more – Love the Lord and love others as much as yourself. If you do those two things, you are going to see the urgency of reaching out to a lost world. Because what better way is there of loving others than showing them where they can find salvation? May God bring us to that point.

One final interesting tidbit from the book about worship styles: comeback churches valued worship. Almost all comeback churches identified their mood of worship as celebrative and orderly (96% and 95%, respectively) with a significant emphasis on being informal and contemporary (81% and 69%). Churches often rediscovered their passion for God and His mission by examining their worship. When we create a God-centered and culturally appropriate worship service, it helps us begin the process of seeking God for other changes that need to take place. The vast majority of American churches are not contemporary; the majority in this study would seem to be, and that should make us take notice.

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July 24th, 2008 Posted by Glenwood Presbyterian | Glenwood Neighborhood, Glenwood Presbyterian Church | no comments

A Shift In Vision (Part 2)

Yesterday, we talked about three things that comeback churches should be. Today, again from Ed Stetzer and Mike Dodson’s book, Comeback Churches, we look at how churches get stuck. Do any of the following describe GPC?

Institutionalized Church: Many churches have regressed into a state of merely functioning as an institution. An institutionalized church focuses on and is more committed to the forms and programs of ministry.

Voluntary Association Church: VAC has unwittingly modeled its organization after a democratic government rather than New Testament principles. It is a church of the people, by the people, but most importantly for the people. Due to an overwhelming need to keep everyone happy, the VAC ends up bound, at the mercy of a rotating vocal minority, and ineffective.

“Us 4 and no more” church: They have determined that if they get any larger, they will lose their sweet fellowship. They want a family feel, which means a group small enough to relate like a family

“Square peg in a round hole” church: In this congregation, people are enlisted for leadership and service, not by their gifts or passion, but by other criteria. You might hear, “We’ve got to fill this position. Who can you think of that we’ve not already talked to?”

“My way or the highway” church: This is the stereotypical church wherein the senior adults are given the new van to use on their apple orchard trips while the student ministry is asked to drive the old van because “those teenagers are so messy.”

Chaplaincy Church: The church hired its minister and expects the “chaplain” to be busy about meeting needs and making the church grow. It’s not uncommon to hear “Preacher, you need to visit Mrs. Gray. She hasn’t been feeling well.” The members identify the needs and the prospects and expect their pastor to respond. Despite the fact that the church’s ministry impact is limited to the staff’s time and abilities, the church body remains committed to an employer/employee model. They want a hired “chaplain,” not a leader.

I can see Glenwood Presbyterian in several of these categories, but less so in the first three categories and more so in the last three. We are deeply ingrained in the “square peg,” “my way or the highway,” and “chaplaincy” pitfalls.

In the next post, we’ll look at three faith factors which help a church regain a missional focus and according to this book are always necessary to lead a comeback church.

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July 23rd, 2008 Posted by Glenwood Presbyterian | Glenwood Neighborhood, Glenwood Presbyterian Church | no comments

A Shift In Vision

Glenwood Presbyterian Church was started back in 1914 (or 1908, if you count the Sunday School that started in a house on Gregory Street). Before you doze off thinking this is simply a history lesson, think about how much the Glenwood community has changed in that time. For about 50 years, GPC was made up mostly of people that lived in Glenwood. Now, we have a very small percentage of attenders and an even smaller percentage of members that call the Glenwood neighborhood home. There is currently not one elder that lives in the community or even within say, 5 miles. We have many older members that USED to live in the community and have stayed in the church even as the neighborhood became a foreign land. I would say that for the last 25 years, at least, most of the members at GPC would drive into the neighborhood to attend church, then drive out again, never looking around and hoping not to be noticed.

This paragraph tells you most of what you need to know about why GPC has struggled in growth over the years. Somewhere our focus turned inward on taking care of each other inside the church and stopped being about saving those in our community who don’t know Christ. What we need is a shift in vision.

In their book, Comeback Churches, Ed Stetzer and Mike Dodson studied 300 churches of different traditions that had either declined or plateaued for several years and then made a comeback with growth for several years. They found three things churches that want to comeback should be:

  1. biblical
  2. missional
  3. spiritual

Biblical is fairly self-explanatory; spiritual refered to the finding that comeback churches generally first had a spiritual experience that redirected and reenergized their lives, beginning with their leader; but missional is what really stands out in my mind.

Missional churches are incarnational, meaning they are not focused on the church facilities, but on offering biblical community to a lost world. Missional churches are indigenous, meaning they appropriately their culture. This is more difficult than it sounds. For instance, GPC has a culture that fits with what the Glenwood community culture was 50 years ago, a culture meaningful only to those in the church and not culturally relevant to the present day community. Finally, missional churches are intentional, meaning they intentionally make missional decisions over preferential decisions. They intentionally think like missionaries in their context.

What would happen if the members of GPC starting doing what missionaries do in the context of the Glenwood neighborhood? What would happen if we shifted our vision: if we truly desired to reach lost people with the gospel of Jesus Christ? What would happen if we ate, breathed, and lived in the present day community culture, while sowing seeds of of love, kindness, grace, redemption, and Good News? We wouldn’t have space for all the people that would be filling our building on Sundays and other days during the week.

What will happen if we don’t? Not much. We could probably struggle on for many more years.

More on this, and more from the book Comeback Churches in the next few days.

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July 22nd, 2008 Posted by Glenwood Presbyterian | Glenwood Neighborhood, Glenwood Presbyterian Church | 2 comments

How A Natural Man (Woman) Prays

Sunday Morning Sermon for July 20, 2008 – delivered by Rev. Dr. Charles Howell

How A Natural Man (Woman) Prays (Genesis 28:10-22)

Feel free to right-click and select Save Target As… to download to your computer, or simply hit the small button to the left of the title to play!

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July 21st, 2008 Posted by Glenwood Presbyterian | Glenwood Presbyterian Church, Rev. Charles Howell, Sunday Sermons | no comments

Another Great Sports Story

A couple of issues ago, The Sporting News had a great article about David Tyree, who you may remember made a spectacular catch in last year’s Super Bowl that made the difference in the game. Well, Tyree credits Jesus Christ with the turnaround in his life as well. Here’s a quote from Tyree included in the article:

“God does this. He makes an ordinary guy look like Superman so that He can receive the glory.”

Read the whole article (it’s worth it) right here.

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July 18th, 2008 Posted by Glenwood Presbyterian | Religious Ramblings | no comments

Josh Hamilton’s Story

Did you watch the MLB All-star Home Run Derby Monday night? If so, you saw Josh Hamilton hit the stuffing out of the ball. (BTW, if a guy can hit 100 home runs in the first round and still lose the Derby, some rules need to be changed.) Josh is from North Carolina and his life story is a testimony for Jesus Christ. He was an extremely highly touted first overall draft selection out of high school, but addiction to drugs kept him completely out of professional baseball for four years from 2002-2006. Here is the full text of an article about him which appeared in Sports Illustrated:

“To let you know how far I’ve come, let me tell you where I’ve been.

Not that long ago, there were nights I went to sleep in strange places praying I wouldn’t wake up. After another night of bad decisions, I’d lie down with my heart speeding inside my chest like it was about to burst through the skin. My thinking was clouded, and my talent was one day closer to being totally wasted.

I prayed to be spared another day of guilt and depression and addiction. I couldn’t continue living the life of a crack addict, and I couldn’t stop, either. It was a horrible downward spiral that I had to pull out of, or die. I lay there — in a hot and dirty trailer in the North Carolina countryside, in a stranger’s house, in the cab of my pickup — and prayed the Lord would take me away from the nightmare my life had become.

When I think of those terrible times, there’s one memory that stands out. I was walking down the double-yellow of a two-lane country highway outside Raleigh when I woke up out of a trance.

I was so out of it I had lost consciousness, but my body had kept going, down the middle of the road, cars whizzing by on either side. I had run out of gas on my way to a drug dealer’s house, and from there I left the truck and started walking. I had taken Klonopin, a prescription antianxiety drug, along with whatever else I was using at the time, and the combination had put me over the edge. It’s the perfect example of what I was: a dead man walking.

And now, as I stand on the green grass of a major league outfield or walk to the batter’s box with people cheering for me, I repeatedly ask myself one simple question: How did I get here from there?

I’ve been in the big leagues as a member of the Cincinnati Reds for half a season, but I still find myself taking off my cap between pitches and taking a good look around. The uniform, the ballparks, the fans — it doesn’t seem real. How am I here? It makes no sense to anybody, and I feel almost guilty when I have to tell people, over and over, that I can’t answer that one simple question.

I go to sleep every night with a clear mind and a clear conscience. Every day, I walk into an immaculate clubhouse with 10 TVs and all the food I can eat, a far cry from the rat-infested hellholes of my user past. I walk to my locker and change into a perfectly clean and pressed uniform that someone else hung up for me. I grab a bat and a glove and walk onto a beautifully manicured field to play a game for a living.

How am I here? I can only shrug and say, “It’s a God thing.” It’s the only possible explanation.

There’s a reason my prayers weren’t answered during those dark, messed-up nights I spent scared out of my mind. There’s a reason I have this blessed and unexpected opportunity to play baseball and tell people my story.

My wife, Katie, told me this day would come. At my lowest point, about three years ago, when I was wasting away to skin and bones and listening to nobody, she told me I’d be back playing baseball someday. She had no reason to believe in me. During that time, I did nothing to build my body and everything to destroy it. I’d go five or six months without picking up a ball or swinging a bat. By then, I’d been in rehab five or six times — on my way to eight — and failed to get clean. I was a bad husband and a bad father, and I had no relationship with God. Baseball wasn’t even on my mind.

And still Katie told me, “You’re going to be back playing baseball, because there’s a bigger plan for you.” I couldn’t even look her in the eye. I said something like, “Yeah, yeah, quit talking to me.”

She looks pretty smart, doesn’t she? I have a mission now. My mission is to be the ray of hope, the guy who stands out there on that beautiful field and owns up to his mistakes and lets people know it’s never completely hopeless, no matter how bad it seems at the time. I have a platform and a message, and now I go to bed at night, sober and happy, praying I can be a good messenger.

Addiction is a humbling experience. Getting it under control is even more humbling. I got better for one reason: I surrendered. Instead of asking to be bailed out, instead of making deals with God by saying, “If you get me out of this mess, I’ll stop doing what I’m doing,” I asked for help. I wouldn’t do that before. I’d been the Devil Rays’ No. 1 pick in the 1999 draft, supposedly a five-tool prospect. I was a big, strong man, and I was supposed to be able to handle my problems myself. That didn’t work out so well.

Every day I’m reminded that my story is bigger than me. It never fails. Every time I go to the ballpark, I talk to people who are either battling addictions themselves or trying to help someone else who is. Who talks to me? Just about everybody. I walked to the plate to lead off an inning in early May, minding my own business, when the catcher jogged out to the mound to talk to his pitcher. As I was digging in, the home plate umpire (I’m intentionally not naming him) took off his mask and walked around the plate to brush it off. He looked up at me and said, “Josh, I’m really pulling for you. I’ve fought some battles myself, and I just want you to know I’m rooting for you.”

A father will tell me about his son while I’m signing autographs. A mother will wait outside the players’ parking lot to tell me about her daughter. They know where I’ve been. They look to me because I’m proof that hope is never lost.

They remind me that this isn’t really about baseball. It’s amazing that God allowed me to keep my baseball talents after I sat out three years and played only 15 games last season in A-ball. On May 6, I hit two homers against the Rockies at home, and I felt like I did in high school. I felt like I could do anything on the field.

I’ve been called the biggest surprise in baseball this year, and I can’t argue with that. If you think about it, how many people have gone from being a crack addict to succeeding at anything, especially something as demanding as major league baseball? If I hadn’t been picked up by the Reds after the Rule 5 draft, which opened up a major league roster spot for me, I’d probably still be in A-ball. Instead, I’m hanging around .270 with 13 homers through 60 games with Cincinnati; not bad for a 26-year-old major league rookie. But the way I look at it, I couldn’t fail. I’ve been given this platform to talk about the hell I’ve been through, so it’s almost like I need to do well, like I don’t have a choice.

This may sound crazy, but I wouldn’t change a thing about my path to the big leagues. I wouldn’t even change the 26 tattoos that cover so much of my body, even though they’re the most obvious signs of my life temporarily leaving the tracks. You’re probably thinking, Bad decisions and addiction almost cost him his life, and he wouldn’t change anything? But if I hadn’t gone through all the hard times, this whole story would be just about baseball. If I’d made the big leagues at 21 and made my first All-Star team at 23 and done all the things expected of me, I would be a big-time baseball player, and that’s it.

Baseball is third in my life right now, behind my relationship with God and my family. Without the first two, baseball isn’t even in the picture. Believe me, I know.

***** I’LL NEVER forget Opening Day in Cincinnati. When they called my name during introductions and a sellout crowd stood and cheered, I looked into the stands and saw Katie and our two kids — Sierra, who’s nearly 2, and my 6-year-old stepdaughter, Julia — and my parents and Katie’s parents. I had to swallow hard to keep from breaking down right there. They were all crying, but I had to at least try to keep it together.

I pinch-hit in the eighth inning of that game against the Cubs, and Lou Piniella decided to make a pitching change before I got to the plate. The crowd stood and cheered me for what seemed like forever. It was the best sound I’ve ever heard. When I got into the box, Cubs catcher Michael Barrett looked up at me from his crouch and said, “You deserve it, Josh. Take it all in, brother. I’m happy for you.” I lined out to left, but the following week I got my first start and my first hit — a home run.

Whether I hit two bombs or strike out three times, like I did in a game against the Pirates, I never forget that I’m living with addiction. It’s just part of my life. Johnny Narron, my former manager’s brother, is a big part of my recovery. He’s the Reds’ video coordinator, and he once coached me in fall baseball when I was 15. He looks after me on the road. When they pass out meal money before a trip — always in cash — they give mine to Johnny, and he parcels it out to me when I need it.

I see no shame in that; it’s just one of the realities of my situation. I don’t need to be walking around with $400 in my pocket.

I know I’m different, and my teammates have been very accepting. Being a rookie in the big leagues, there are certain rituals involved, and one of them is carrying beer onto the plane. My teammates gave me that job on one of the first road trips, and I didn’t do it. I didn’t think it would be a good idea for me to be seen carrying beer onto a plane. They respected my decision.

I get a lot of abuse in visiting cities, but it only bothers me when people are vulgar around kids. The rest I can handle. Some of it is even funny. In St. Louis, I was standing in rightfield when a fan yelled, “My name is Josh Hamilton, and I’m a drug addict!” I turned around and looked at him with my palms raised to the sky. “Tell me something I don’t know, dude,” I said. The whole section started laughing and cheering, and the heckler turned to them and said, “Did you hear that? He’s my new favorite player.” They cheered me from that point on.

I live by a simple philosophy: Nobody can insult me as much as I’ve insulted myself. I’ve learned that I have to keep doing the right things and not worry about what people think. Fortunately, I have a strong support group with Katie, my family and Johnny. If I ever get in a bad situation, I know I would have to get out of it and give Johnny a call. The key is not getting myself into those situations, but we’ve talked about having a plan for removing myself just in case. It’s all part of understanding the reality of the addiction.

In spring training, when I hit over .400 and made the team, there was a lot of interest in my story.

I decided to be open about what happened to me; early on, I was doing long interviews before my first game in every city. It’s been amazing how people have responded, and I think being honest helped. I can’t avoid my past, so I don’t try. It’s not always easy, though. I got sick in late May and ended up on the disabled list after going to the hospital with a stomach problem, and I knew I’d have to answer questions about whether I was using again. I can’t control what people think, but the years of drug abuse tore up my immune system pretty good. I get tested three times a week, and if it comes back positive, I know I’m done with baseball for life.

Aside from our struggles as a team, this season has been a dream for me. And that’s fitting, because in a way I had to learn how to dream all over again. When I was using, I never dreamed. I’d sleep the dead, dreamless sleep of a stalled brain. When I stopped using, I found my dreams returned. They weren’t always good dreams; most of the ones I remember were haunting and dark. They stayed with me long after I woke up.

Within my first week of sobriety in October 2005 — after I showed up at my grandmother’s house in Raleigh in the middle of the night, coming off a crack binge — I had the most haunting dream. I was fighting the devil, an awful-looking thing. I had a stick or a bat or something, and every time I hit the devil, he’d fall and get back up. Over and over I hit him, until I was exhausted and he was still standing.

I woke up in a sweat, as if I’d been truly fighting, and the terror that gripped me makes that dream feel real to this day. I’d been alone for so long, alone with the fears and emotions I worked so hard to kill. I’m not embarrassed to admit that after I woke up that night, I walked down the hall to my grandmother’s room and crawled under the covers with her. The devil stayed out of my dreams for seven months after that. I stayed clean and worked hard and tried to put my marriage and my life back together. I got word in June 2006 that I’d been reinstated by Major League Baseball, and a few weeks afterward, the devil reappeared.

It was the same dream, with an important difference. I would hit him and he would bounce back up, the ugliest and most hideous creature you could imagine. This devil seemed unbeatable; I couldn’t knock him out. But just when I felt like giving up, I felt a presence by my side. I turned my head and saw Jesus, battling alongside me. We kept fighting, and I was filled with strength. The devil didn’t stand a chance.

You can doubt me, but I swear to you I dreamed it. When I woke up, I felt at peace. I wasn’t scared. To me, the lesson was obvious: Alone, I couldn’t win this battle. With Jesus, I couldn’t lose.

***** I GET cravings sometimes, and I see it as the devil trying to catch me in a weak moment. The best thing I can do is get the thought out of my mind as soon as I can, so it doesn’t turn into an obsession. When it happens, I talk to him. I talk to the devil and say, “These are just thoughts, and I’m not going to act on them.” When I talk like that, when I tell him he’s not going to get the best of me, I find the thought goes away sooner.

Believe it or not, talking to the devil is no harder to explain than many other experiences I’ve had since that day last December when my life changed. I was working for my brother’s tree service in Raleigh, sending limbs through a chipper, when I found out I’d been selected by the Cubs and traded to the Reds in the Rule 5 draft.

But there is one story that sticks with me, so much so that I think of it every day. I was driving out of the players’ parking lot at Great American Ball Park after a game in May, with Katie and our two girls. There’s always a group of fans standing at the curb, hoping to get autographs, and I stop to sign as many as I can.

And on this particular night, a little boy of about 9 or 10, wearing a Reds cap, handed me a pen and something to sign. Nothing unusual there, but as I was writing the boy said, “Josh, you’re my savior.”

This stopped me. I looked at him and said, “Well, thank you. Do you know who my savior is?”

He thought for a minute. I could see the gears turning. Finally, he smiled and blurted out, “Jesus Christ.” He said it like he’d just come up with the answer to a test. “That’s exactly right,” I said.

You see, I may not know how I got here from there, but every day I get a better understanding of why.”

Final note on the All-Star Game: Yankee fans should be ashamed of themselves for how they treated the Red Sox players, especially Papelbon. It’s obvious they realize their team isn’t coming anywhere close to the World Series this year. Did the Red Sox fans behave that badly back in 2004? I honestly don’t remember.

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July 17th, 2008 Posted by Glenwood Presbyterian | Religious Ramblings | no comments

How To Avoid Arguments

SHINE! Lesson for July 13, 2008 – delivered by Brian Beasley

How To Avoid Arguments (James 4:1-10)

Feel free to right-click and select Save Target As… to download to your computer, or simply hit the small button to the left of the title to play!

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July 15th, 2008 Posted by Glenwood Presbyterian | Glenwood Presbyterian Church, SHINE | no comments