Showing posts with label Jesus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jesus. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 11, 2017
AC3 VB137 The Resurrection Truth
With Easter coming up this Sunday Pastor Rick talks about how there are real facts and proof that Jesus did in fact live, die and raise from the dead. Check it out here. Enjoy! :)
Tuesday, March 8, 2016
AC3 VB104 The Real Jesus
Check out this edition of AC3's Video Blog #104. Rick and Dan discuss our current series The Real Jesus. Enjoy! :)
Wednesday, March 2, 2016
Who's Your Legacy PAL Connection?
There has been a growing desire at AC3 to partner with and encourage families to grow and walk out their faith in Biblical community. But how?
Wendy Fahrney, a fellow AC3'r, has felt the nudge to be part of the answer. She's been wanting to do something that can help connect, encourage and grow AC3 families; young and old. Something that requires a minimal time commitment, is easy and focused. Something with a 'Secret Pal' element in it to keep it engaging and fun. Something like Legacy P.A.L. Connections 2016!
Legacy PAL Connections was born out of a desire to help nurture a growing culture of PRAYER for the next generation in an ALLIANCE of adults, parents and youth who want to LIVE OUT their legacy of faith together.
There are a couple different ways to get plugged into Legacy PAL Connections 2016:
1. Become a Legacy PAL. (PAL Info Flyer) Legacy PALs are individuals who care about the next generation and come in many different shapes and sizes. Some PALs may be young adults, while others are older. They may be single, while others are married. Even high school students who want to pray for, encourage and surprise a younger child at AC3 may be a Legacy PAL.
2. Nominate your child to have a Legacy PAL. (PAL Info Flyer) At the following link, you will find an easy and fun application form to fill out with the child. It will help your Legacy PAL to get to know your child and your family better so they can personalize their letters. Please complete and turn applications in at the Kreek Kids Check-In Desk promptly and no later than March 31st. PALs will be assigned on a first come, first serve basis starting in March.
Legacy PAL Coordinator: Wendy Fahrney 425-761-1021
Kreek Kids Director: Twila Crain 360-659-7335 EXT. 202
Youth Directors: B&B Crain 425-231-2364
Graphics used by Permission Kellie Ade: http://jumpseatpixie.blogspot.com/

Legacy PAL Connections was born out of a desire to help nurture a growing culture of PRAYER for the next generation in an ALLIANCE of adults, parents and youth who want to LIVE OUT their legacy of faith together.
There are a couple different ways to get plugged into Legacy PAL Connections 2016:
1. Become a Legacy PAL. (PAL Info Flyer) Legacy PALs are individuals who care about the next generation and come in many different shapes and sizes. Some PALs may be young adults, while others are older. They may be single, while others are married. Even high school students who want to pray for, encourage and surprise a younger child at AC3 may be a Legacy PAL.
2. Nominate your child to have a Legacy PAL. (PAL Info Flyer) At the following link, you will find an easy and fun application form to fill out with the child. It will help your Legacy PAL to get to know your child and your family better so they can personalize their letters. Please complete and turn applications in at the Kreek Kids Check-In Desk promptly and no later than March 31st. PALs will be assigned on a first come, first serve basis starting in March.
If you would like to join us in this venture, be sure to download your application. The plan is to launch our Legacy PAL by April 1st, 2016.Imagine the impact a Legacy PAL might have on each child by praying for them regularly.
Imagine the curiosity and wonder a child might feel as they envision who their Legacy PAL might be.
Imagine warming the hearts of AC3 families and creating rich soil where the seeds of friendship can grow in biblical community at AC3.
Imagine you, yes YOU, being an agent of change by saying yes to the nudge God may be giving you:)
Legacy PAL Coordinator: Wendy Fahrney 425-761-1021
Kreek Kids Director: Twila Crain 360-659-7335 EXT. 202
Youth Directors: B&B Crain 425-231-2364
Graphics used by Permission Kellie Ade: http://jumpseatpixie.blogspot.com/
Wednesday, October 21, 2015
Who are the Monsters in Your Life?

During our first ever Market Mentorship Project
(MMP) Celebration Brunch, we ate, we laughed, we remembered, we
cared for and we shared in the celebration of each individual's success. This was a time to celebrate and to encourage one another, to drive stakes securely in the ground so that when we lose our footing, we have something to grab and hold on to, keeping us moving forward and in the right direction.
As our celebration came to a close (just a few weeks before Halloween), it seemed like the perfect opportunity to ask them, "Who are the monsters that knock on their door, whisper in their ears and asks if they can come in and stay a while?"

Is it the 'Monster' of negative self talk? The one that tells you that you can't change, you don't deserve it and even if you do take positive steps forward, no one cares so don't bother." This monster talks to us daily. Even the most positive individuals I know deal with the 'Monster of the Mind' on a daily basis.
Or will it be the 'Monster' of greed that deceives them? Encouraging them to get 'more stuff' and then they will be truly happy. Although this monster can be convincing, the accumulation of stuff only weighs one down. Individuals, rich and poor, may have lots of stuff but 'more stuff' never makes one happy. These days I do my best to make choices in light of eternity. Building relationships always trump doing tasks or getting more stuff. To quote Francis Chan, “Our greatest fear should not be of failure but of succeeding at things in life that don't really matter.” Seeds of Grace recently said goodbye to a dearly loved client and a
retired volunteer reminding us that it's relationships that matter! Choose this day to do things in 'light of eternity' and you will not be disappointed.

Although the monsters of negative self talk, greed and deceptive pride can be a very real distraction in life, we don't have to fear their demands when we walk in Truth. 2 Timothy 1:7 We can be ready when we see them sneaking around us, ready to devour who we are now and what God wants us to one day become. 1 Peter 5:8
Over the years, a few of my friends and acquaintances may think that I 'do' good things to earn brownie points with God, to get to heaven or that I 'do' things out of fear of God. But nothing can be farther from the truth. I DO things out of a love for God, who first loved us, and what he has DONE for us on the cross. John 3:16-17
HE>I,
Twila
2 Timothy 1:7 - For God has not given us the spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind.
Monday, June 8, 2015
Wednesday, February 4, 2015
Some Superbowl Perspective
WARNING: stretched application of bible verse
ahead. Now, I’m normally a stickler for
not taking a verse out of context to make it say something it isn’t
saying. And, in this case, I still think my conclusion
fits the principle set forward by Jesus, but I might be the only one who would make
the connection I made yesterday.
What could go wrong?

Bummer.
OK, so enough hedging, get to the point!
Yesterday (AKA, Black Monday) I was, as were most of you, lost
in a post Superbowl coma, suffering from a sort of PTSD of the sports fan
variety. We lost the game. I mean, we HAD the game won, handed to us on
a silver platter and then, as if it were too simple to just take the game so
offered up, (on the one yard line with the best running back in the NFL in our
backfield), we handed the trophy back and said, “first, we’d like to up the
level of difficulty, if you don’t mind.”
Oh, right, that. Oops.
For the next 12 hours of consciousness, which stretched well
into Monday, I couldn't help returning to the game, and saying under my breath,
“just run the ball”. Over and over. Each time with an emphasis on a different
word. JUST run the ball! Just RUN the ball! Just run the BALL!! Remember the Dolphin placekicker, Ray Finkle,
from Ace Ventura? He/she (long story,
rent the movie) went crazy after losing the Superbowl on a botched field goal,
and wrote obsessively, “laces out, Dan!” – over and over and over.
Ya, it was a bit like that.
(Side note: if you
had several reasons to think it was destiny for the Seahawks to win based on
the miraculous plays leading up to the end, I have one more. During the last quarter – this is no lie, I
swear on the legacy of Steve Largent – I opened up the Bible app on my phone
and started to read. Why you ask? No, not
trying to be holy, not trying to invoke the Almighty into an athletic contest of
overpaid superstars. No, I was just
trying to be less caught up (read: angry) in the fact that we were blowing a 10
point lead in the 4th quarter.
This actually was working, so I kept reading between plays, even as we
started mounting a drive with time expiring.
This is what I read [again, I swear on the grave of Chuck Knox this happened]: “with
man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible”. Huh. Just
then, I look up and see Wilson cock his arm and unload. Deep.
Kearse jumps, he bobbles, he falls, but before the ball can land, he somehow
cradles the magic bean between his legs, tips it up to himself, rolls, and finally,
miraculously, secures it – 1st and goal at the 5! What!?!?
Things
that are not humanly possible are happening – again! I mention this simply to underline how the interception
2 plays later hit me like a Kenworth.)
On Monday morning, I’m back to my routine, but on the way in
to work, no sports radio in the car - the normal therapy won’t help this patient - plus our recent media fast made it
easier for me to turn off the chatter. I had a meeting, did some reading, email, and
off to the Y to burn off steam and play some ball. Afterwards I sit down to rest and a guy I’ve
been getting to know sits next to me. He
knows I’m a pastor. And we’d had a
couple of conversations but nothing significant.
Suddenly, he starts to pepper me with questions. “What do you think happens to you right after
you die?” “Who goes to heaven?” “Do people who go to hell, somehow choose
that?” “Are we living near the end of
time?” At about 5 minutes in, I’m
realizing God has put me serendipitously into a high stakes, high importance
conversation that I did not plan for or see coming. But I loved every minute of it. Every word of mine, bathed in a silent
prayer. Every question I returned with a
question, seeking to know this friend, and to give a reasonable answer for my
hope. When it was done, I felt I had
been an instrument in that man’s spiritual journey, just one of many I’m sure,
but one link in his Journey to Christ.
I arose from that conversation renewed, invigorated,
revived, alive!! Superbowl
loss? (Mostly) Forgotten.
OK, so now comes the stretch application of a Bible verse
(oh, you thought it was the “with God all things are possible” thing? No, not going there…). As I drove home, mood renewed, John 4:34 jumped
into my mind. “My food,” Jesus said, “is
to do the will of the One who sent me.” You
see, just before that, the disciples had left Jesus to look for food. The thing everyone wants and needs. The thing we crave. But while they were gone, Jesus was busy in a
high stakes conversation that lead to the eternal destiny of one woman and her
whole village being changed. And so when
the disciples returned with food, Jesus didn't seem interested in it. He says to them, “I have a food you know
nothing about” (vs 32). So now they
think maybe he got food somewhere else.
No, says Jesus, my nourishment, my prime sense of feeling at
peace and satisfied, complete and full and joyful is when the Father is using
me! I just see him beaming as he said it,
relishing being a part of what REALLY matters.
A Superbowl victory feels like it matters; Feels like bread
to a starving man. Just look at how we
reacted last year. We went bonkers, like
we had been starving; a 40 year drought in Seahawk nation – when suddenly,
miraculously food fell from the sky.
Sustenance. What the nutty sports
fan had been craving for so long was finally here.
But then there’s a food we “know nothing about”, a better
food than sports fan ego-enhancement. (Let’s
face it, what else is on the line as a fan?)
It’s the food of knowing we are doing God’s work and God’s will. The thrill of being a part of the victorious
march forward of Christ’s kingdom, the seeking and saving of lost things. That’s
food that satisfies in a whole different way.
I tasted that food again on Monday and it was better, I say, than the
food of football victory.
Just a little something to help keep perspective, Seahawks
fans.
But next time, Carroll, for the love of all that
is holy, RUN. THE. BALL!
Friday, December 20, 2013
The Story, From the Inside
In the beginning was the Word. The Word was with God and the Word was God.
Our Christmas service at AC3 this year will feature 'The Story', an awesome, modernized musical rendition of the Christmas story. In true AC3 fashion it's imaginative, creative and filled with talented people expressing their love of Jesus through song and theatrics.
Our ironic God
For years, I've known that God gave me a voice for singing but I never knew what I was supposed to do with it, and frankly, I shied away from it as I have ZERO technical training and was afraid to get on stage and sing. Well, with some pushing from my immediate family and my church family (you know who you are!), I decided I would put myself out there and see what happens.
The audition was a few months back, I received good reviews and was told that they would let me know when there was a spot for me. A few opportunities arose but there were other family events on the weekends preventing me from singing on stage. When I received that fateful email asking everyone their availability for the month, I looked at the family calendar and realized that the only week in December that was available was the week of Christmas.
This is the way God works in my life, he finds my worldly shortcomings, like this one of being timid about getting on stage, standing behind a microphone and singing and gives me no choice but to put my faith in Him and push strait through my limiting beliefs.
So here we go, a child of the one true God, not singing harmony in the background of a worship service for our church (like I would have chosen), but thrown right in to sing a lead vocal in the musical climax of our CHRISTMAS MUSICAL PROGRAM!!
Thank you Jesus and thank you AC3!
With 3 rehearsals in the books, I feel incredible, like I'm doing exactly what God had intended for me to do, much like loving my family, completely changing my career path and starting this blog have felt since AC3 led me to the truth about our Savior. There's no possible way that I could feel like this without the amazing production team at AC3. It's unimaginable to have a more patient, talented, loving and passionate group of people than these.
The first 3 days, there's been a lot of "hand holding" so to speak, there's no doubt I need it as this is all new to me. On day one, I couldn't find my cues, I was running in the wrong direction half of the time and felt lost yet EVERYONE stayed calm and coached me to where I needed to be.
Tonight, after day 3, I'm filled with confidence and excitement to share 'The Story' of Jesus Christ, our Savior coming to earth in the flesh to redeem us from our sinful bodies. Being a small part of this story, His story in this powerful house of God that my family calls home is a great honor and I'll be praying diligently in the coming days for strength to perform well and to honor God well this weekend.
Go, tell it on the mountain...
So, AC3er's and non AC3er's alike, please join us as we tell this amazing story, the story of Christmas and how Jesus came to us in the flesh to save YOU! These people are amazing and 'The Story' will be enjoyed by all.
Now go! Let's fill this house up all weekend! Make sure everyone you know is invited, in person, on Facebook or wherever else that anyone will listen, it's a story worth knowing....
Click here to go to AC3's website for details on times for encounter services this weekend.
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Is Christmas OK to celebrate or does the "No Christmas" stance border on legalism?
These days, you'll get two groups of people telling you that Christmas is a sham Christian holiday, because it's origins are pagan. The first group are the irreligious agnostics you might know who seem to take some Grinchy delight in exploding your sense of Christmas specialness. The second group are the very religious, very rigid Christians who condemn anything that is directly or even remotely
associated with paganism, witchcraft and spiritualism. Also, the second group is often having a hyper-protestant overreaction to Catholicism. The effect is like
that of the militant ex-addict we all know, who no longer sees any difference
between a beer and a binge. Ironically these two groups share arguments for completely opposite reasons, and yet the result is the same: make everyone feel lousy about celebrating Christmas.
So is December 25th Jesus' actual birthday? No one knows for sure when Jesus was born. Some very creative biblical study can be done to make a case for December 25th. But after reading all the arguments for why Jesus was possibly
born in December or September or even the Spring, you find all of them lack this one
thing: explicit biblical support. They are all cases built on circumstantial evidence and Scriptural inferences. Which doesn't mean these theories have no merit, it just means we DON'T KNOW for sure.
And that means it doesn't matter, for sure.
Clearly, Jesus was really born. Anyone who celebrates that event, is going to be doing so on a
somewhat arbitrary date. We celebrate the births of presidents on days that do not correspond to their actual birthday's. It doesn't mean they weren't born (Mr Agnostic), and it doesn't mean we're being sacrilegious (Mr No-Christmas Christian).
But why on that date, and why with the trappings we do, like trees and holly are yule logs and stars? A lot of these traditions have unclear beginnings. It's true the Romans had a mid-winter celebration, and they lit fires and lights to Saturn. The pagan Germans used evergreen trees at the winter solstice and yule logs and holly. So should we assume that if these things began as part of idolatrous worship they should be forbidden?
Well, the Bible nowhere forbids people to put a tree with lights in their living room in December. The principle some Christians imagine forbids this, is that of God's people separating from pagan beliefs and practices - in Jeremiah 10:1 for example. This is an important Christian principle to honor. But let us have a complete understanding of how this principle played out before we apply it to Christmas. Jeremiah 10:2 says, "do not learn their ways". What were those? The same Prophet lists these in chapter 7:5-9: idol worship, murder, infanticide etc. Idol worship is clearly a huge concern, but are the symbols and trappings of Christmas idols? No one I know, who puts a tree in their home or holly on their door, is doing so to appeal to a god who is not the Lord. They don't do so to gain favor with that god and they surely don't support the immoral practices that God detests in Jeremiah 7 - which pagan idolatry did. So the principles forbidding the occult can't apply to Christmas traditions as MOST people practice them.
Well, the Bible nowhere forbids people to put a tree with lights in their living room in December. The principle some Christians imagine forbids this, is that of God's people separating from pagan beliefs and practices - in Jeremiah 10:1 for example. This is an important Christian principle to honor. But let us have a complete understanding of how this principle played out before we apply it to Christmas. Jeremiah 10:2 says, "do not learn their ways". What were those? The same Prophet lists these in chapter 7:5-9: idol worship, murder, infanticide etc. Idol worship is clearly a huge concern, but are the symbols and trappings of Christmas idols? No one I know, who puts a tree in their home or holly on their door, is doing so to appeal to a god who is not the Lord. They don't do so to gain favor with that god and they surely don't support the immoral practices that God detests in Jeremiah 7 - which pagan idolatry did. So the principles forbidding the occult can't apply to Christmas traditions as MOST people practice them.
A case might be made that the commercialism we attach to
Christmas IS idolatrous, since it elevates acquisition and materialism above
God in our heart's affection. There's plenty of Scriptural principle forbidding that. And in that area, we might say Christmas
gift giving can lead us into real temptation. But in and of themselves, that, and other traditions are harmless. As
music is harmless, depending on how it's used.
Both Christian and non-Christian Christmas debunkers admit a certain amount of strategic thinking on the part of the church as it accepted and changed pagan rituals and infused them with Christian meaning. One author claims, "the Church said, 'bring your gods, goddesses, rituals and rites, and we will assign Christian sounding titles and names to them...'". Well, let's be clear: the church, even at it's lowest point, never told people to bring their gods into the church to worship along side of Christ! It did however, accept many pagan rituals. Rather than the great compromise, this has to be seen as great genius on some level.
Without compromising the truth about Christ, it showed that the Christian message had deep relevance to the spiritual lives of pagan hearers. It showed (as Paul did with the Athenians in Acts 17) that what they did in ignorance, the Gospel would fully explain/fulfill.
So for example, having Christmas at the winter solstice, might have been done because the Church retained a distant memory of the actual date, or it might have simply been done for strategic reasons. But if the latter, what shame in that? Since no one can deny it's a beautiful natural expression of what Jesus birth represents: Light coming to a dark world. What a great teaching vehicle! Same with taking the German's evergreen tree and seeing in it the promise of eternal life, or taking holly and seeing the blood of Jesus and the crown of thorns. Same with the lights and fires that point to the Light of the World, and same with gift giving showing us how God so loved the world that he GAVE his only Son.
In this way, the Church was saying the Gospel didn't repudiate paganism as a whole
but rather FULFILLED it. A more liberal view perhaps, but a better one for making converts, and also a view more attuned to the reality that God is the author of the Nature pagan's worship.
Yes, many perversions about God are in paganism - but it's basic instinct was to see spiritual reality in the cycles of nature the Creator made. Well, do we think it's for no reason that Resurrection is celebrated in Spring? The date of that event is known with certainty (unlike Christ's birth) and I see God's perfect touch in the timing. God is a romantic! We propose to our girlfriends in the place we first dated, or first kissed or first saw each other. You can propose anywhere, why do it there? Because the time and the place and the setting add weight, symbolic significance to the moment - which enhances memory and affection. That God was raised from the dead in Spring is perfectly consistent with that same God calling for New Moon festivals, the sacrifice of animals, and who had palm trees and flowers carved into his Temple, and who created festivals around the cycles of the harvest.
We follow in His example then, when we freely use symbols, settings, and rituals to add weight to our memory of his work and his love.
Yes, many perversions about God are in paganism - but it's basic instinct was to see spiritual reality in the cycles of nature the Creator made. Well, do we think it's for no reason that Resurrection is celebrated in Spring? The date of that event is known with certainty (unlike Christ's birth) and I see God's perfect touch in the timing. God is a romantic! We propose to our girlfriends in the place we first dated, or first kissed or first saw each other. You can propose anywhere, why do it there? Because the time and the place and the setting add weight, symbolic significance to the moment - which enhances memory and affection. That God was raised from the dead in Spring is perfectly consistent with that same God calling for New Moon festivals, the sacrifice of animals, and who had palm trees and flowers carved into his Temple, and who created festivals around the cycles of the harvest.
We follow in His example then, when we freely use symbols, settings, and rituals to add weight to our memory of his work and his love.
Uptight Christians have this lesson to learn: because a thing is from nature, doesn't automatically make it pagan, or demonic. And the truth is, just because the devil will use some natural thing, animal worship or a physical ritual to imprison people to himself, or expose his power or dumb down our view of God (Romans 1:23) nature finally doesn't belong to him!! If he is using it to promote his power or obscure God, then it is the right and privilege of the people of God to relieve him of it! If it's the devil's rituals, they are stolen goods and we, the children of God, rightly steal them back! He holds no ground in this world that's rightfully his. He only perverts what isn't his originally. Evil is a merely a parasite, as Lewis once said.
So I would not approach the use of formerly pagan trappings with fear, cowed by their former meaning, former owner, former usage, or former evil associations. The earth is the Lord's and I am the Lord's and so the earth is mine. So a Yule log is mine to burn in the fireplace and my redeemed heart remembers the warmth of God's grace coming to a cold world. A wreath is mine to hang on the door and say to my neighbors, eternal evergreen life is promised!
Yes, I think the no-Christmas stance not only borders on
legalism, it marches right on in!
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