DPC Midweek Update, 01.12.10

DPC Midweek Update, 01.12.10 (early edition)
THIS WEDNESDAY NIGHT
5:30 - THE FEAST
6:15 - KID’S QUEST… DISCOVERY CLUB… STAMPEDE… YBR SMALL GROUPS… ADULT BIBLE STUDY (we’ve got to get a cooler name)


This Semester’s Adult Bible Study:  1st Samuel…
It’s been nearly a thousand years since God called Abraham to be the father of Israel…
There’s still a thousand years to go before the birth of Jesus of Nazareth…
Israel — brused and broken by the fall — looks at their prophet and demands,
“GIVE US A KING!”

Come learn more of the story of your redemption…


Take a Moment to Pray For:
  • Elizabeth Lee… outpatient surgery tomorrow
  • Patti Hammett… Keith Wingard’s cousin; very serious condition

Movie Note:  Amazing Grace
A kind family in the church recently let me borrow their copy of the movie Amazing Grace.  If you haven’t seen it, I would recommend you find a time to watch it.  It does a very good job of telling a wonderful, wonderful story… a story that’s even more wonderful because it has the great advantage of being true.  It’s the story of William Wilberforce.

If you haven’t heard his story, take a moment & read this short piece below.  This was originally written as a post on a blog I once maintained…

One of my favorite lines in church history is this one:  “Well, Henry, what shall we abolish next?” Here’s the story:

In 1780 William Wilberforce was elected to the British Parliament.  In 1785 he became a Christian.  Shortly after that — partly through the influence of his friend, the converted former slave trader John Newton — Wilberforce began his long campaign to abolish all slavery in the British Empire.

In 1788, he introduced the first parliamentary bill to “discuss” the abolition of the British slave trade.  But, as you can imagine, there were many rich and powerful people who were remaining rich and powerful specifically because of slavery (or because they were willing to support slavery).

So, naturally, Wilberforce’s bill was hotly opposed.  Of course, the opposition was careful to make their point of view sound principled.  They espoused principles like these:

“Humanity is a private feeling, not a public principle to act upon.” 
—The Earl of Abingdon

“Things have come to a pretty pass when religion is allowed to invade public life.” 
—Lord Melborne

That was 1788.  The bill was defeated.  But Wilberforce maintained his campaign.  In fact, defeat after defeat, year after year, Wilberforce kept contending for justice and truth until 1807, when his document to abolish the slave trade finally passed.

It took nineteen long years.  Men had grown old fighting for this cause.

But nineteen years into the battle, when word of the abolition of the slave trade finally reached Wilberforce, he turned to his old friend Henry Thorton and said, “Well, Henry, what shall we abolish next?”

And, in fact, this faithful follower of Christ did go on to abolish other evil things.  He worked for another eighteen years to emancipate those who were already slaves!  And then he continued to work for reform in prisons, reform in dangerous workplaces, reform in the laws affecting the poor, and on and on.

Here we have another hole in the fence that allows us to take a peek at the story of the church.  The church is called by God to maintain his cause, even if we must do so in the face of constant discouragement, disappointment, and defeat.

What is his cause?  Well, Jesus, in his first sermon, said this:

“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor.  He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.” 
—Luke 4:18,19

The church has been established to continue the merciful mission of Christ.  We’re called to spend ourselves for the sake of Christ’s Kingdom, making known to this poor, enslaved, blind, oppressed world exactly what Christ accomplished when he walked out of his tomb.

This means that the poverty and slavery and blindness and oppression of sin will have to be opposed.  Such things ruin people, and they must be abolished.  And the scary thing is that these things will need to be abolished in our own hearts first.

But it’s only really scary to those who fear freedom because they’ve grown accustomed to the chains of sin.  Fear not.  Jesus came to break those chains… for you, for your neighbor, and for this world.

So, look upon your life.  What needs to be abolished next?  And then consider how you might proclaim the Lord’s favor to those who are still oppressed.

Membership?
If you are interested in church membership or if you are wondering if your child may be ready to partake of the Lord’s Supper, please see me.


Thought of the Week:

“Four lives dominate the two-volume narrative, First and Second Samuel: Hannah, Samuel, Saul, and David. …
These four lives become seminal for us at the moment we realize that our ego-bound experience is too small a context in which to understand and experience what it means to believe in God and follow his ways. For these are large lives — large because they live in the largeness of God. Not one of them can be accounted for in terms of cultural conditions or psychological dynamics; God is the country in which they live.”

~ Eugene Peterson

“How long will you grieve over Saul, since I have rejected him from being king over Israel?  Fill your horn with oil, and go.  I will send you to Jesse the Bethlehemite, for I have provided for myself a king among his sons.”
~ Yahweh, to his prophet Samuel (1 Samuel 16.1)

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