Worry, Worship & The Word of God

We have completed our series on the Sermon on the Mount.  What a journey! But, like all good joineries, it has come to an end.  Moving on.

Tomorrow, we will begin a topical series called: Worry, Worship and the Word of God.  This is a topical series that reveals how worry impacts our lives.  When worry begins to weigh us down, we will also discover how worshiping our God results in overcoming the oppression of worry in our lives.  Finally, we will learn how the Word of God becomes the staying place for our anxious hearts.
Our central passage throughout this series will be 1 Peter 5:5-7, which states: “In the same way, you younger men, be subject to the elders. And all of you clothe yourselves with humility toward one another, because ‘God resists the proud but gives grace to the humble.’ Humble yourselves, therefore, under the mighty hand of God, so that He may exalt you at the proper time, casting all your care on Him, because He cares about you.”

We will pick this passage apart and learn how to allow it to navigate us through seasons of worry.

I love you. I love journeying through the Word of God with you.  I count it as one of my greatest joys.

Join us,

Rob

Closing the Sermon on the Mount Series

Highland Family,

We bring our Sermon on the Mount Series to a close tomorrow.  For year and a half, we have centered our time on these words of Jesus.  I hope that we have considered His words and our ways. It is my greatest desire that we would love His Word more than this World; for His Word is life to us. I pray that our love for His Word results in our repentance and leads us to rejoice over Jesus - our Redeemer. As we bring this series to a close tomorrow, we will look at the two foundations and consider our current estate. I hope you can join us.

Grateful to serve you,

- Rob

Season of Harvest

PART 1: A CLEANSING

If you were at Highland Community Church this past Sunday, then you heard Rob and I communicate that we believe God is getting ready to usher our church and our community into a new season - a season of harvest. For those of you who were unable to attend, we wanted to put in writing what was said and prayed for so that as the body of Christ we can begin asking God, in unity, to fulfill His promise.
We started the service by reminding ourselves of the promise God gave our family 12 years ago from Ezekiel 36:33-36. The difference this year, as opposed to years past when we have looked at this verse, is that we believe the fulfillment of this promise is now upon us. In this passage, the Lord says that He is going to bring about a cleansing among the people, and then, after the cleansing, He will begin rebuilding all that is desolate and broken.
We believe the cleansing the Lord is referring to will look like a time of revival within our church and our community. We started the service with a time of personal prayer and reflection because we realize that before God can bring about a cleansing within the community He must first start with His church. We asked God to reveal anything within us that was not of Him and that as a church we would desire truth in our innermost being. We got on our knees before the Lord and begged Him for forgiveness of our sins and asked that He might return to us and show us His mercy and bring healing to our community.
After our time spent asking God to cleanse us as individuals we then moved into a time of reflecting upon John 15. I explained to the church that I started last January going through a study on John 15. What I thought was simply going to be a month long study on that portion of scripture ended up lasting throughout the entire year. Every time I would think that I was ready to move to another part of Scripture, God’s spirit would pull me back to John 15 letting me know that He was not yet finished teaching me and awakening me to the truth and the power of those words. So for an entire year, I read and reread John 15. What God did in me throughout last year is something that cannot easily be explained in words. All I can really say is that God awakened in me an overwhelming desire for my life to be a fulfillment of the words spoken in John 15. A desire for my life to bring forth fruit, much fruit, and fruit that remains. A desire to be the embodiment of John 15:16, which states, “I chose you, and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit should remain; that whatsoever you ask of the Father in My name, He may give it to you.” For several months I earnestly prayed that scripture over my life, my family’s life, and the life of our church. As I continued to pray, the Lord began to reveal to me what was hindering us from producing “more fruit and fruit that remains” in the North Highland community. The answer was found in Mark 9.
Mark 9 tells the story of a father who has a child possessed by an unclean spirit. Jesus inquires about the situation and the father replies that he has a son who has a mute spirit and that the spirit causes his son to try and destroy himself. The father asked Jesus’ disciples to cast it out, but they could not, to which Jesus replies, “You unbelieving generation...bring the boy to Me”. Out of desperation, the father cries out to Jesus, “If you can do anything, take pity on us and help us!” Jesus responds by saying, “‘If You can?’ All things are possible to him who believes.” Jesus then rebukes the unclean spirit and says, “You deaf and mute spirit, I command you, come out of him and do not enter him again.” At the end of the story the disciples come to Jesus in private and ask Him why they were unable to cast out the unclean spirit. Jesus’ response to His disciples was, “This kind cannot come out by anything but prayer.” As I read this passage I sensed the Holy Spirit leading me to understand that the
same unclean spirit that possessed that boy is the same unclean spirit that hovers over the North Highland community. In the story the father told Jesus that the boy had a mute spirit that caused him to try and destroy himself, but notice what Jesus said when He rebuked the unclean spirit: “You deaf and mute spirit, I command you, come out of him...”. I cannot tell you the countless conversations Rob and I have had with people living in our community who with all sincerity tell us that they no longer want to let alcohol consume them, and no longer want to abuse drugs, and no longer want to be part of unhealthy relationships. But day, after day, after day, they are doing that which they do not want to do. I also cannot tell you how many times Rob and I have literally begged and asked our neighbors, “Do you know the Lord? He is your only hope!” More times than I can count the conversation ends with Rob or I praying on their behalf, only to see them the next day doing exactly what they said they no longer wanted to do. When I read Mark 9 it was like the Holy Spirit turned the light on and I could finally see what was really happening. The reason our family and Highland Community Church have not been able to bring forth the “much fruit and fruit that remains” Jesus refers to in John 15 is because the North Highland community has a deaf and mute spirit that hovers over it whose influence also brings about a desire to destroy oneself. What does God’s word say about faith and salvation? It says, “faith comes by hearing and hearing by the Word of God” (Romans 10:17). Many times in Scripture, you will hear God describe a group of people as “having ears, but cannot hear; having eyes, but cannot see; mouths, but cannot speak”. You also see in Scripture that the Lord is searching among His people for someone who will INTERCEDE on their behalf (Ezekiel 22:30).
This past Sunday morning as our church got on our knees before the Lord, my hope is that as God was searching the Earth that He looked upon Highland Community Church and was well pleased. Because this past Sunday, our church took the authority we have in the name of Jesus through the promise found in John 15:16 and we began to intercede on behalf of the North Highland community, and we began to ask God for greater things. We began to ask God to bind the deaf and mute spirit that hovers over our community and to bind the spirit of destruction. We began to beg that in return He would loose the Holy Spirit to invade our community and convict our streets of sin, righteousness, and judgement and that he would lead us into TRUTH. We began to ask, with one heart and mind, for a harvest of righteousness!
Members of Highland Community Church and/or supporters of Highland Community Church and Truth Spring, I know that this is somewhat of an unusual blog. However, I am convinced that the words found in this blog are the key to us having spiritual victory here in the North Highland community. I am also convinced that our victory will be directly connected to our prayer life. I beg you to please pray. May we find much encouragement and boldness from Jesus’ words found in John 15, “Ask anything in My name and it will be given to you. My Father is glorified by this that you bear much fruit.” This is it! This is the season of harvest! May the Lord fulfill all His promises to the North Highland community as His people, through much prayer, ask for His Spirit to be loosed among us.
How to pray for North Highland in 2018:
1). Ask for God to start cleansing our community, starting with Highland Community Church.
2). Ask God to bind the deaf and mute spirit that hovers over our community whose influence brings about a desire to destroy one’s life.
3). Ask God to loose His Holy Spirit in our community and that the Holy Spirit would convict us of sin and lead us into truth.
“This kind cannot come out by anything but prayer.” Mark 9:29

- Carrie Strickland

An Abounding Joy.

All,

Being part of the Highland family is one of the greatest joys of my life. I consider it an honor to point you toward the 'enduring love of Christ', as we, together, navigate through the sobering truths of Scripture, seeking to mature, in Christ.  It is my ongoing hope and desire to serve each of you well, in honor of our Lord. Sharing life with each you leads to an abounding joy in my life that is just difficult to put into words.  But I hope you know that it is there.

I thank the Lord for the team He has placed around me.  Starting with my family, to the church leadership, church membership, plus the partitioners and volunteers, then our church partners.  I am grateful for each of you. I remain before the throne of God on your behalf!  I love each of you and I hope that you know that I am here for you, always.

Merry Christmas to each of you, and yours. May the God of salvation draw near to each of us, causing us to realize that each breath we take is a gift He has offered us. May we use this gift to respond in adoration, to Him, alone, who is worthy.

Your Servant,

- Rob

 

The Christmas Season Schedule

Highland Family,

This Saturday is the Christmas Carnival.  It will begin at 11am.  If you would like to help, please plan to arrive at 10:30.  Check in with Rosalyn at the Sign-in station.

This Sunday, our children will put on the 2nd Annual Christmas Performance during the 11am service.  All are welcome to attend.

Saturday, December 23rd, is our 6th annual Boxes of Love Packing and Pass-Out day.  Please plan to come at 9am that morning to enjoy a time of giving.  All are welcome to come and help.

The following Sunday, which is December 24th, we will hold our annual Christmas Brunch.  We will all eat from 9am-10am, then hold an 10am-11am service.  We will not hold any Children’s Ministries that day.  It will be a service of singing and celebrating the birth of Christ.

I will be back in the pulpit Sunday, December 31st.  We will enter into the new year by unpacking the directive Jesus gives us to 'build our house upon the rock.'  This passage provides us clear, Biblical direction, as we move into 2018, together.  Once we complete this Sermon on the Mount Sermon series, we will start a short topical series on Worship.

Merry Christmas.

I love you,

Rob

A Letter From The Roper Family.

To the many people, friends, neighbors, co-workers, family, brothers and sister in Christ who have poured blessings over us by means of prayer, food, gifts, cards, financial support, kind words, love, music and hospitality.  We do not have the words to thank you, so we think and speak the Word of God over you, as you have displayed it over us.

Ephesians 1:15-16: “For this reason I, too, having heard of the faith in the Lord Jesus, which exists among you and your love for all the saints, do not cease giving thanks for you, while making mention of you in my prayers.”

Proverbs 11:24-25: “There is one who scatters and yet increases all the more and there is one who withholds yet it results in only in want.  The generous man will be prosperous and he who waters will he, himself, be watered.”

Philippians 4:13: “I can do all things through Christ, who strengthens me, yet it was kind of you to share in my troubles.”

This journey is not pleasant but it has brought so many blessings from people we have known all through the years and through many walks of life; from childhood friends to friends of our own children.  We love and cherish you all; no act has gone unnoticed.

Finally, I have believed with my whole heart that this is (and was) a journey that God has placed me on in His goodness and understanding.  His timing is without fault.

Philippians 3:10: That I may know Him and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings… vs 12: “Not that I have already reached the goal or am already fully mature, but I make every effort to take hold of it because I also have been taken hold of by Christ Jesus. 13 Brothers, I do not consider myself to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and reaching forward to what is ahead…”

Pat Roper