This Week @ Elim: 2-week Edition: 10-10 thru 10-23-2009

On the Lord’s Day:

9:15 am — Sunday school classes for all ages: Classes for graded age groups meet to learn from the Scriptures. To see Sunday school classes, ages and meeting locations, click on the red “Ministries” button under the category “Pages” (to the right).

10:30 am — Pastor Larry will begin a new series this week on “Seven Ways the Lord Loves”. To prepare for this Sunday’s message, prepare your heart and mind by reading Deuteronomy 7:6-11. For the message on 10-18-2009, read 2 Chronicles 2:11-12.

Hearing Assistance Available

Hearing Assistance Available

Wonderful News!!! The church’s new listening assistance devices are installed and working wonderfully! If you need assistance with hearing, please see one of the ushers for a special headset. We are also printing large print copies of the worship hymns of the day. These are available on the back table in the sanctuary.

During the Week:

  • Special Note: There are no mid-week Bible studies this week (10-11 thru 10-17) or next (10-18 thru 10-24).
  • Wednesday, 6:30 pm: Our Awana Clubs meet with games, activities and learning God’s Word! Be here to join in the fun!
  • The Men’s Prayer Study Fellowship has concluded for now and will NOT meet on 10-17-2009.

Upcoming and Ongoing:

  • If you (or your spouse) are 60 years young or over, you are especially invited to a 60′s Group luncheon on Sunday, October 25th, immediately after the morning service. All food will be provided. Look in this Sunday’s bulletin for details!
  • As you know, transportation issues are a primary concern for some of our seniors. If you are able to pick someone up for church and drive them home, please contact the church office. You could be such a blessing to a brother or sister in Christ!

From the Pastor’s Recent Reading:

For I am already being poured out as a drink offering, and the time of my departure has come. I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Henceforth there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, will award to me on that Day, and not only to me but also to all who have loved his appearing. (2 Tim. 4:6–8).

Here we see the apostle Paul looking three ways: downward, backward, forward—downward to the grave, backward to his own ministry, forward to that great day, the day of judgment!

It will do us good to stand by the apostle’s side a few minutes and mark the words he uses. Happy is that soul who can look where Paul looked and then speak as Paul spoke!

a. He looks downward to the grave, and he does it without fear. Hear what he says: “I am already being poured.” The drink offering, which generally accompanies a sacrifice at the altar, is already being poured out. The last ceremonies have been gone through. Every preparation has been made. It only remains for the sacrifical animal to receive the death–blow, and then all is over.

“The time of my departure has come.” I am like a ship about to unmoor and put to sea. All on board is ready. I only wait to have the moorings cast off that fasten me to the shore, and I shall then set sail and begin my voyage.

These are remarkable words to come from the lips of a child of Adam like ourselves! Death is a solemn thing, and never so much so as when we see it close at hand. The grave is a chilling, heart–sickening place, and it is vain to pretend it has no terrors. Yet here is a mortal man who can look calmly into the narrow “house appointed for all living,” and say, while he stands upon the brink, “I see it all, and am not afraid.”

b. Let us listen to him again. He looks backward to his ministerial life, and he does it without shame. Hear what he says: “I have fought the good fight.” Here he speaks as a soldier. I have fought that good fight with the world, the flesh and the devil, from which so many shrink and draw back.

“I have finished the race.” There he speaks as one who has run for a prize. I have run the race marked out for me. I have gone over the ground appointed for me, however rough and steep. I have not turned aside because of difficulties, nor been discouraged by the length of the way. I am at last in sight of the goal.

“I have kept the faith.” I have held fast that glorious gospel which was committed to my trust. I have not mingled it with man’s traditions, nor spoiled its simplicity by adding my own inventions, nor allowed others to adulterate it without withstanding them to the face. “As a soldier, a runner, a steward,” he seems to say, “I am not ashamed.”

That Christian is happy who, as he quits the world, can leave such testimony behind him. A good conscience will save no man, wash away no sin, not lift us one hair’s breadth towards heaven. Yet a good conscience will be found a pleasant visitor at our bedside in a dying hour. There is a fine passage in Pilgrim’s Progress which describes old Honest’s passage across the river of death. “The river,” says Bunyan, “at that time overflowed its banks in some places; but Mr. Honest in his lifetime had spoken to one Good Conscience to meet him there; the which he also did, and lent him his hand, and so helped him over.” We may be sure, there is a mine of truth in that passage.

c. Let us hear the apostle once more. He looks forward to the great day of reckoning, and he does it without doubt. Mark his words: “Henceforth there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, will award to me on that Day, and not only to me but also to all who have loved his appearing.” In the great day of judgment the Lord shall give this crown to me, and to all beside me who have loved Him as an unseen Savior, and longed to see Him face to face. My work on earth is over. This one thing now remains for me to look forward to, and nothing more.”

Let us observe that the apostle speaks without any hesitation or distrust. He regards the crown as a sure thing, as his own already. He declares with unfaltering confidence his firm persuasion that the righteous Judge will give it to him. Paul was no stranger to all the circumstances and accompaniments of that solemn day to which he referred. The great white throne, the assembled world, the open books, the revealing of all secrets, the listening angels, the awful sentence, the eternal separation of the lost and saved—all these were things with which he was well acquainted. But none of these things moved him. His strong faith overleaped them all and saw only Jesus, his all–prevailing Advocate, and the blood of sprinkling, and sin washed away. “A crown,” he says, “is laid up for me.” “The Lord Himself shall give it to me.” He speaks as if he saw it all with his own eyes.
— from the book, Holiness by J. C. Ryle