Remembering Together
The Lord\’s Supper is at once intensely personal and completely communal.
The Lord\’s Supper is at once intensely personal and completely communal.
Psalm 27 teaches us how to think more rightly about God in prayer, recognizing his greatness and increasing our commitment to him.
\”Train up a child in the way he should go. When he is old he will not depart from it.\” – Proverbs 22.6
\”Do not forget to show hospitality to strangers, for by so doing some people have shown hospitality to angels without knowing it.\” (Hebrews 13.2)
The book of Hebrews exhorts us to be loyal to Jesus over all because Jesus is better than all.
Christians are commanded to gather for worship to encourage one another in their faith (Hebrews 10.19-25). God has designed those worship activities to be effective. The task of saints is to understand and follow the instructions he has given.
\”The grace of God has appeared\” (Titus 2.11) so that those who receive it can see everything in a brand new light.
It isn\’t the mighty and most noble that do the great things of God. It is those that quietly serve sometimes without being noticed or known by anyone but God himself.
Every group of people requires leadership. The trick for God\’s people is to lead and be led in the way he prescribes rather than the way the world would suggest.
God wants his saints to operate together as local bodies, not as independent actors in the world. It is essential that God\’s people learn how he wants his churches to work together.