Archive for September, 2008

Sermon from September 21, 2008

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

“The Importance of Truth” (Daniel 8) 
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Sermon from September 14, 2008

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

“The Grand Anticlimax” (Daniel 7) 
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Sermon from September 7, 2008

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

“Divine Protection” (Daniel 6) 
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Marianne Yadon’s Baptism

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

Marianne Yadon and Pastor Eugene Curry          On August 10, 2008, Marianne Yadon was baptized at the First Baptist Church of Granada Hills.  Well, it took a while but we finally have the video online!  The shakiness makes it feel like you’re watching the Bourne Ultimatum at times but that just adds to the excitement–plus the audio is great. To watch the video while it streams to your computer just click on “Watch”; if you would rather download it to your system first and then watch it over and over and over again, right-click on “Download” and click on “Save Target As…”

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Homecoming

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

photo by Meridian Productions Inc.              For many youth, the month of September means one thing above all else: the return of school.  After weeks upon weeks of enjoying the warmth of summer and all the freedom that goes with it, once again these students will enter the halls of learning to recommit themselves to reading, writing, and arithmetic—not to mention physics, chemistry, French, calculus, European history, graphic design, and so on.  The old cycle will begin again in which lethargy is replaced with studiousness and ignorance with knowledge.  And despite the desperate pleas of some children, parents will remain firm—after all, it’s for their own good: no matter how difficult, no matter how tedious, education is worthwhile.

            Of course, to speak approvingly of education is merely to speaking approvingly of knowledge and thought.  For education is merely the systematic impartation of knowledge and the systematic honing of thought.  And with these two things, a sharp mind and good grasp of the world around us, there’s really no limit to what one can do, from building a better mouse trap to building a fortune.

            And as much as we may benefit from serious thought applied to matters of finance, health, relationships, and so on, we mustn’t forget that another aspect of our lives deserves meaningful intellectual exertion, that is, our faith.  To put it another way, when you go off to church, remember to bring your brain along with you.

            Far from the monstrous and willfully ignorant caricature of spirituality so often bandied about skeptics, God prefers an active intellect in his worshippers.  To quote Jesus’ profound paraphrase of the Torah, when asked concerning the greatest commandment of all, “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind” (Matthew 22:37).  And again, when we look to the Apostle Paul’s advice to new believers we find these striking words, “Test everything. Hold on to the good” (Thessalonians 5:21).  It would seem then that a spirituality without thought is somewhat deficient, that is, it isn’t the sort of faith that God desires.  Rather, just as God seeks to have a relationship with the whole person, so the whole person (thoughts, doubts, questions and all) needs to be brought into the conversation.

            Keep this in mind that next time you find yourself in prayer, or worship, or in the study of Scripture and an uncomfortable question arises.  Rather than shove the question out of mind, consider it, discuss it, and ultimately seek an answer to it.  For in so doing, in bringing your mind into your faith, you honor the One that gave it to you in the first place.

 

 

 

Sermon from August 31, 2008

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

“Learn from the Past” (Daniel 5) 
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