El Olam – The Everlasting God

For years when I would call upon God I would refer to Him saying, “Lord, you are from everlasting to everlasting.” When I began to learn about God’s names I discovered that El Olam means The Everlasting One. The Hebrew word olam means “for a long time, always, forever.” El Olam reveals God as the Everlasting God without beginning or end. The prefix El is from Elohim (strong Creator).
God continually reminds me that He is the One who does not become weary as I do. He understands all things when my understanding is so limited. Sometimes I become weary and cannot even think things through in an orderly manner, but God, the everlasting God who was before all worlds, and will be, when time and days shall be no more, touches my heart and reminds me that He never gets tired. The Everlasting God’s “Everlasting Energy” ensures every promise – especially everlasting life to His children and comfort from weariness. 
Remember – we all suffer setbacks but El Olam never does, and is always able to help those who are weary and cry out in their time of need. He knows what we feel and what we fear. As the Everlasting God He is adequate to meet our every need. 
Read Isaiah 40:28-31 – and you will discover that God gives strength to the weary. Be comforted in knowing that El Olam, the Everlasting God is “everlasting.” No matter what your fear; no matter how weary you are – God’s wisdom, God’s power, and God’s grace are unchangeable and available to you. Cry out today to El Olam – the Lord who is from everlasting to everlasting. 
Exchange you weariness for El Olam’s strength today.
Pastor Sherry


We are the “God flavors” and the “God colors” in the world

Salt and Light – Matthew 5:13-16 The Message (MSG)

 
“Let me tell you why you are here. You’re here to be salt-seasoning that brings out the God-flavors of this earth. If you lose your saltiness, how will people taste godliness? You’ve lost your usefulness and will end up in the garbage. Here’s another way to put it: You’re here to be light, bringing out the God-colors in the world. God is not a secret to be kept. We’re going public with this, as public as a city on a hill. If I make you light-bearers, you don’t think I’m going to hide you under a bucket, do you? I’m putting you on a light stand. Now that I’ve put you there on a hilltop, on a light stand – shine! Keep open house, be generous with your lives. By opening up to others, you’ll prompt people to open up with God, this generous Father in heaven.”
Hello Church Family!  I love this verse in the Message Bible. We are here to be light, to bring out the God-colors in the world! WOW.  I don’t really know what else I need to add to this. I think these verses from Matthew speak plenty without me adding a single thing. Meditate on what this is saying for today.  First of all how amazing it is that God uses us in this magnificent way on His earth, but secondly think about what “God-colors” look like! I would imagine it looks like the color love, the color peace, the color joy, etc..  All of the “God-colors” of the rainbow are represented in the body of Christ. Are we going to hide them under a bucket, or are we going to allow Him to put us on a light stand?
 
He calls us his “salt and light”, in other words His flavor and colors on the earth. I do not know of a more profound and beautiful picture that he paints of us. What is left in the world without light, colors, and flavor? Just like Pastor Jonathan taught us this past Sunday, the Holy Spirit is our lamp oil and we are the light, He fuels us, but it’s our job to shine. Don’t allow the fears and stresses of this world keep your light under a bucket, extinguished and useless. This is what we are here for, for such a time as this you have been placed in this world with all of its pains and hurts, to be the flavor and the light. What are you going to do this week? Survive another day, or live out this tremendous calling to be his flavor and light in this world. Are you going to encourage others, and be positive? Are you going to pray for those that need prayer, and witness to those that don’t know Him? Are you going to speak to him and include Him in your day?
 
God wants to be in full relationship with us. He wants to be the center of our Pie as Pastor Deb calls it. Are we going to allow Him to be that? Or are we going to be burnt out and flavorless? Now is the time church, to rise up and take our place and start being the change we want to see. Time to stop wasting time in the offenses and stresses that don’t mean a thing at the end of this life, and focus what this scripture tells us is the very reason we are all here.  To be His Flavor and His Light! Be encouraged today, be positive, be thankful, BE LIGHT!
 
Blessings, 
Pastor Ginny


If you love me, feed my sheep

In October my mother left us for her heavenly home. The scriptures suggest that the instant we are absent from this body we are present with Christ. That is a moment she had been waiting decades for. That may sound dramatic to you, but I don’t remember a time when my mother didn’t struggle with health issues. During my childhood she had constant respiratory infections that impeded her life. I remember her crawling to the bathroom because a sinus infection had gotten so bad that the vertigo made walking impossible. Scar tissue from decades of respiratory infections caused the bronchiectasis and COPD that eventually suffocated her to death. A degenerative bone disease resulting in 17 surgeries on her back and neck made travel impossible for Mom, who dreamed of traveling the world to share the gospel. If anyone deserved a pass on serving the Church it was she. Yet, as I wrote her obituary I was amazed at the number of ministries she lead, classes she taught, missions she supported, books she wrote, individuals she mentored and letters of encouragement she sent all while teaching special ed. students, being a supportive pastor’s wife and a mother of 3. Don’t get the impression that she was super human and made all of this look easy. It was a struggle, but God always enabled her to achieve what He had called her to do. Because she was faithful to say yes, He completed the work through her.

Early in their marriage, Mom personally mentored several of the young ladies in my father’s college ministry. One student came by our house almost daily to talk with Mom about her problems and ask for advice. Running a household with two children still in diapers, Mom did not exactly have the time for the frequent visits and was considering asking the young lady to limit them. The next time the young student saw my mother she explained, “I know it must be hard on you to have me come by every day, but my home life is so awful, that I need to experience the peace of your home before I am able to face mine own”. I am still friends with this person and can joyfully say that she has broken the cycle of violence and degradation in her family to raise 6 godly children in a peaceful home with her husband of almost 35 years.

A local juvenal judge in Shreveport knew of my parents’ heart for young people and would frequently ask them to take in a teenager that he felt was better than the crime he had committed. Mom was not thrilled about bringing a juvenal delinquent into her home with young children, but when God confirmed it through prayer, she lovingly cared for them one after another.

Throughout her life a consistent question was raised by those she mentored – How do you hear from God so clearly? So God instructed mom to write a series of books helping others learn how to hear His voice and recognize His activity in their lives. Though her hands had become severely deformed and crippled by rheumatoid arthritis, she answered, “Yes Lord”. Her ability to type was little better than picking out the keys with her index fingers, but when God called her to do something, she did not hesitate to obey.

During the last 6 years of her life the pain from her degenerating spine made sleeping through the night all but impossible. So she began a new ministry during her hours of solitude in the middle of the night. She started packing Christmas boxes for children in the third world. This helped take her mind off of her own pain by focusing on the needs of others. Each box was carefully packed with the toys and goodies she collected throughout the year. Then a handwritten note was painfully penned with arthritic hands and she prayed over each child who would receive the box.

In the end she could expect nothing less than for her Savior to say… “Well done, my good and faithful servant…Come and share in your master’s happiness.”

What are you doing to serve the Church? What specific ministries are you involved in that are building the Kingdom of God? What excuses are you using to remain disobedient to Christ’s instruction to build His Church? I’ve just run out of mine.

Blessings,
Pastor Jonathan


Life in the Pie Tin

At TGPA this past Sunday we talked about Religion vs. Relationship – about how religion builds a ladder and puts us in competition with each one trying to climb higher than the other and constantly comparing our self to each other. We also talked about how Relationship – the kind that God invites us to – is less like building a ladder, and more like baking a pie.
Pie pieces are of equal width and depth, all occupying a common space, and all pointing to one common center. This is a picture of our relationship with God and others. Each of us are like slices of pie around the tin, with Jesus as our common center. There are two things especially important about this image:
  1. We are each equally valuable pieces of a whole. None of us can be the whole pie alone. We are in the pie tin together.
  2. From the space we occupy, we each have a unique perspective of Jesus, who is at the center. If we are going to experience all of who Jesus is, we must rely on the other pieces to share with us what they see from their perspective. None of us can comprehensively grasp who Jesus is. He’s way bigger than any of our minds but we can each bring what He’s given us and together we can see more of who He is than we ever would alone. And together we can be more like Him than we ever could alone.
The Book of James is full of practices that can help us live well in the pie tin. We looked at them briefly on Sunday, and here they are again. Let’s take these to heart, ask the Spirit to teach us how to practice them, and get to work being Christ’s body TOGETHER! (Because that’s the only way it works!!)
Love,
Pastor Deb


What is God’s Will for My Life?

Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you. ~1 Thessalonians 5:18
Jesus answered by saying, Love the Lord God with all your heart, will all your soul, with all your mind. This is the most important commandment, the second is like it: Love your neighbor as yourself. All the Law and the Prophets depend on these two commandments” ~ Matthew 22:37-40
  
If you are like me, I am sure you have encountered times in your life when you have been unsure of what decision to make or what specifically God wants you to do in a given situation. Most of the times I find we overthink these decisions when really the path is quite clear if we get down to the basics of what God’s Word says. If we make our decisions in the way of love and thankfulness, we will find it will always land us right smack dab in the will of God.  Regardless of what job we take, or choice we make in ministry or service if we are loving people and being thankful, God will use any situation for His glory. Sometimes we think He is more concerned with our job choice or situation than He is with our heart. If we have our heart right, the situation is only just that… a situation. It is nothing that can stop God from completing the work He started in your life. However, if our heart is not right, if we are not more concerned with where our heart is than what life decisions we are making for finances or positions then we limit what He can do just because our focus is on the things that really don’t limit God anyway. What limits Him in our lives is our unwillingness to realize what He is really concerned about is our hearts.  This is what kept the Israelites in the wilderness for forty years! Time and time again we see God’s people in the Bible make choices good and bad, and in all of the scenarios we read about, their job or direction was never really the destination it was their heart He was after. It is our heart He is always after, He can bless any job we take, and He can move any situation we face, it is our heart that He is most interested in.  We get so scared to make decisions because we are unsure of “what His will is”, but His will is quite clear…Love God, Love Others, and give thanks in all circumstances. (Matthew 22, 1 Thessalonians 5)
I am not sure what prompted me to write this to you today, other than maybe you or someone you know needs encouragement to stop stressing over the details of the things God can change in an instant and instead be more aware of your heart. If you find yourself loving people and being thankful, I’ve got good news for you! You are in the perfect Will of God! All of the situations are nothing compared to a heart that is after His. Relax and rest in His peace, love others and be thankful, He will take care of the rest!
If I do not get to see your beautiful face before Thanksgiving, I hope it is a beautiful time for you and you feel all of the love that the Lord has for you and then you go find someone else to share it with. Many blessings to you and Happy Thanksgiving!
 
Pastor Ginny


He who began a good work

Phil 1: 6 ‘I am confident of this, that He who began a good work in you will be faithful to complete it ‘
Is there something God has told you to do that seems just too difficult? You can be sure that if He has called you, He’s going to be faithful to accomplish it; through the Holy Spirit living and working within you. So if you tell Him, “I can’t do that, Lord-what if I fail?” What you are really saying is, “God doesn’t keep His word.” You see our total expectation needs to be in Him and not our own strength, energy or ability. When we doubt God’s trustworthiness, that unbelief becomes a kink in our spiritual armor, and we can be sure that this is exactly where Satan will attack us.

 
That kink in the armor starts with a seed of doubt, which will then grow larger and larger. You might feel that you do not have enough faith to obey, but the Lord isn’t asking you to have faith in favorable circumstances. He’s asking you to trust that He is who He says He is. You see it really is about His character more than it is about ours. It’s really that simple: either He is truthful or He’s not. If you believe that faithfulness is His character, then you can do anything He asks. You’ll be strengthened by your dependence on Him; because He is the true source of our strength.
Blessings,
Pastor Keith


Whose Report Are You Going To Believe?

Once there lived a mighty warrior named Gideon. His story can be found in Judges 6 and 8. He was a hero amongst the Israelites, but not in the beginning. When you read the story you will discover that Gideon doubted his own abilities and was full of fear. He had suffered so many defeats and failures that he felt unqualified for what God wanted him to do. He lacked confidence and was weak. But that’s not how God saw Gideon. God’s report about Gideon was that Gideon was fearless, full of courage and confident! That’s how God sees you also!
God’s report about you is that:
“You are more than a conqueror.” Rom. 8:37
“You are God’s workmanship.” Eph 2:10
“You are an overcomer.” 1 John 2:14c
“You are accepted in the Beloved.” Eph 1:6 NKJV
“You are a special treasure…God’s own possession.” Deut. 14:2
“You do NOT have a spirit of fear; you have power, love, and a sound mind.” ITim.1:7
Today you have three choices regarding whose report you are going to believe about yourself. Will you believe your report, someone else’s report, or God’s report?
Have a blessed week, Beloved……
Pastor Sherry


It’s Gonna Be Worth It

Let’s suppose you woke up every morning, went to your front door and there on the step was your day’s supply of food. You put on the same clothes and shoes everyday but that’s okay because they never wore out. This went on for forty years. You had food, shelter, and clothing – all the basics. How come you don’t feel satisfied?

 
The Israelites experienced such a life after Moses led them out of Egypt. They wandering in the desert four decades and during that time God personally accompanied them and provided for their basic needs. Was this the “Promised Land”?
 
No, but he was getting them ready for it. Before they crossed the Jordan God told them something of why he did things that way. “Your clothing did not wear out on you, and you were not hungry these forty years. You are to know in your heart that the Lord your God was disciplining you just as a man disciplines his son.” (Deuteronomy 8:5)
 
Some of you have had a life that is sufficient but pretty plain. And this has gone on for a long time. Oh yes, you have enough for each day but you had such high hopes there was something more. Don’t give up! Perhaps God has been getting you ready all along just like his chosen people “to do good for you in the end.” (Deuteronomy 8:16)
 
Receive the Lord’s discipline which will prepare you for a greater abundance than you can imagine. When you enter into your promised land, it will be worth the wait!
Blessings,
Pastor Gina


He Lifts the Humble

The book of Numbers helps to chronicle the Israelites journey through the wilderness to the promised land of Canaan.  The journey was difficult and the people frequently took their frustration out on their leader Moses.  Fortunately Moses had his own brother and sister on the journey to support him.  But sometimes, it’s those closest to us who can hurt us the most. 

 
 Numbers chapter 12 tells us that Moses’ sister, Miriam, didn’t like the woman that he had chosen to marry.  So she begins to question is judgment and undermined his leadership behind his back.  After all Moses wasn’t the only one who heard from the Lord.  Hadn’t God spoken to her and Aaron as well?  Perhaps Moses wasn’t the best person for the job anymore.  So, God stepped in to have a “pull the car over” kind of conversation with the three siblings.  You know what I’m talking about.  Those times you were acting up in the back seat and your parents warned you, “don’t make me pull this car over”.  And then the dreaded moment when they had had enough of your behavior that they actually jerked the car to the side of the road.  Yep, it was one of those kind of conversations.  God told the three of them, “meet me in front of my tent”.  And God came down in a pillar of cloud to speak with them and said: 
 
“Listen to my words: When there is a prophet among you,
I, the Lord, reveal myself to them in visions,
I speak to them in dreams.
But this is not true of my servant Moses;
he is faithful in all my house.
With him I speak face to face,
clearly and not in riddles;
he sees the form of the Lord.
Why then were you not afraid
to speak against my servant Moses?”
 
The anger of the Lord burned against them, and he left them. (Numbers 12: 6-9)
Moses had been vindicated!  Now was the chance for him to gloat over them.  Or maybe some good old fashion self-pity was in order.  After all, his most trusted partners, his own family, had talked about him behind his back, attempting to derail his ministry.  Whatever Moses chose to do, he could at least find some comfort in knowing that those who had stabbed him in the back were now being punished by God.  So, what does Moses do?  He falls to his knees and pleads with God not to punish them.  How does he bring himself to this response?  Surely God is just in the punishment He chooses.  Shouldn’t Moses find just a little satisfaction in knowing that they were getting their comeuppance? 
 
I think this passage tells us how Moses was able to respond this way.  In Numbers 12:3 the author deviates from the story to add this side note: “Now Moses was a very humble man, more humble than anyone else on the face of the earth.”  Apparently this bit of information was critical to the narrative.  I believe it explains why Moses reacted as he did.  The bible tells us that God lifts up the humble and shows them favor, but he opposes the proud.  (Psalm 147:6; James 4:6).  One way He “lifts the humble” is to help them rise above their fleshly responses, allowing them to react with spiritual maturity and compassion. 
 
Humility comes from exalting God in your mind.  Worshipfully meditating on God’s greatness helps to bring our self-image into the correct perspective.  When we humble ourselves before the Lord we are filled with the wonder of His glory and there is no room for offense or self-pity.  But when we are self-absorbed (thinking more about our own emotions, desires and disappointments than we are thinking of Him) our reactions are from the flesh. “Humility is the fear of the Lord; it’s wages are riches and honor and life” (Proverbs 22:4).
 
In Isaiah 66:2 God says: “…these are the ones I look on with favor, those who are humble and contrite in spirit and who trembles at my word”. 
 
Does your perspective of God bring you such humility that it causes you to tremble when reading his word?
May God’s favor shine on you in your humility,
Pastor Jonathan


In This Together

Romans 12 (Just read the whole chapter. It’s good and speaks to every aspect of this writing.)

 
Do you ever feel down for no reason? Have you ever spent hours or maybe even days with a sense of heaviness? Have those times ever been accompanied by finding out that someone you know is going through a difficult time? Maybe you’ve even taken a feeling of heaviness to God in prayer and He brought someone to your mind to pray for. Maybe God even gave you an encouraging word to share with that person that totally lifted them during their trial.  

These times may seem a bit overwhelming, but this is part of what it means to be the body of Christ. When one part suffers, all the rest are affected, and the same goes for when one part rejoices. The very nature of our relationship to each other demands that we share the burdens and blessings of each member of the body. And because I am often led to pray for others during their trial, I can be confident that when I experience difficult times, the Spirit is leading others to pray for and encourage me as well. What a treasure God has given us in each other!  So here’s my challenge to us today: 

1. Read Romans 12. The whole thing. It’s so good!

2. The next time you feel heaviness, ask God about it in prayer. Maybe God will give you insight about a situation, an encouraging word for someone, or maybe He will just fill you with compassion for someone and you will continue to lift them up in prayer.  

3. The next time you go through a difficult time, remember that you are part of a body that is called to experience life together. Remember that God is leading people to pray for you and to reach out to you. Keep your eyes open for who those people might be. (I wonder sometimes if God sends people to help us but since they’re not who we were expecting or hoping for, we totally miss it.)

We are meant to bear one another’s burdens and blessings. We are meant to cry and laugh together. Like it or not- we are in this together!  

Love,
Pastor Deb