Mid-Week Memo

Hi Five Oakers,

I have a few things I want to share with you today.

#1 - I loved the third service last weekend. The other two didn't impact me as much. Seemed a little disjointed and irrelevant. But the third service engaged my heart and helped me focus on God. I connected with God in that service.

#2 - Oh yeah, maybe I should tell you why the third service connected with me? It's the only one I attended from start to finish. It's the only one where I heard the call to worship, prayed a Scriptural prayer of confession, sang all the songs and participated in the response stations with my heart engaged and seeking God. It's the one Lois attends (she teaches 5th-6th graders on Saturday nights), so it's the service I attend from start to finish. I was in and out of the other two at various points (mostly in the back of the worship center), and I could hear most of what was happening in the green room, but there's nothing like being in there from start to finish. And, for me, it's important to sit toward the front where there are less distractions. Do I need to spell out the moral of this story? I think you get the point.

#3 - Here are some of the comments on the Com Cards from this last weekend:

  • Female vocalist that led song has a beautiful voice. Thanks for sharing your gift and obvious heart for worship. 
  • Thank you for telling us what we need to hear. Not what we want to hear. Pastor Henry called out the “ritual” followers – awesome! Do you mean it, when you invite Jesus? Loved it! 
  • Great drum work this a.m.! 
  • I liked that prayer, the corporate prayer. 
  • Thank you for the worship set. Really great message Henry – very well constructed. Great closing song. Cool video Tim! [I love the video. Tim made it in one piece and from what I hear, the conference was quite impacting on the students.]
  • Pastor Henry, thank you for your love of God’s word and your desire to share that with all of us. You and your family are in our prayers for wisdom, protection and the daily filling of the Holy Spirit. Thank you for all you do! 
  • Thank you Henry, for the “picture” reminder of putting/letting Jesus get in the driver’s seat.[You'll be hearing that one more and more. It's a great illustration of spiritual maturity I picked up from the REVEAL team when I went down to Chicago a few weeks ago. We'll be unpacking that one for some time to come.]
  • Thank you for your excellent teaching on this passage.
  • Excellent illustration of Jesus in the car!
  • Henry, your lesson today came at the perfect time for me. It’s so amazing how God continues to work in my personal life. I will be sharing your lesson with a young man [from Africa] that my husband and I have been mentoring. It will be a good spiritual lesson that I hope helps in an area our friend has been struggling in. Thank you. [The more spiritually mature you are in your faith, the more sharing what you've learned with someone else (to help and mentor them) will impact you more than learning it.]
  • Thank you Worship Band! Henry, thank you for exposing my gods and revealing God’s desire more fully in my life. Thank you. 
  • Henry, powerful sermon. Thanks for speaking into our lives.
  • Henry, one of your best sermons ever. Thanks! Jon – great to see you on the bass again.
  • We enjoyed the dinner at church last week. Any way to make it a regular event! [Maybe. It's something we have begun to consider, but I have no idea if we will.]
  • What version was being used today? Didn’t seem to be ESV. [I double checked and it was. Let me know if you notice it again. I wonder if there are differences in the edition I'm using and the one you had.]
  • Flickering lights during response too much.

#4 - I received this message from a Five Oaker on Facebook: "My 'Timehop Abe' service that tells me what I was doing a year ago today informs me that last year on this date I was in church, and we were just starting into the book of Luke! I think the last year has been awesome, btw." I had no idea. Looks like it will be a two-year journey since we're about halfway through it.

#5 - My nickle collection is growing! Thank you all who are praying for me and letting me know by giving me a nickle. I want you all to know that I pray for you too. I pray through the prayer requests with the Elders, but then I take it home and continue praying for you every day. If you let me know how to pray for you, you can be assured I will.

#6 - The nickle and prayer idea came from Stephen Kendrick. I love seeing people applying what they learned when he was here. I'd like to know if some of you have started using his family devotions idea. The Elders and I were talking this morning about prayer and Kendrick's sermon and it got me thinking about all the ways we pray as a congregation:

  • We pray for people far from God at the Light station.
  • Our prayer team and Elders keep busy praying for people who come for prayer during the response time.
  • Several other stations focus on prayers of one kind or another.
  • We often pray Scripture together in the call to worship, confession and assurance times at the outset of our worship services.
  • The worship team prays over every chair every week (representing the people who will sit there) before the Saturday service, and they have several other prayer times each week during rehearsal and during the services.
  • We have prayer partners for all of our Kid's Hope mentors. My prayer partner is in regular contact with me. When she drops her daughter off at school on Mondays (the day I mentor), they pray together for the kindergarten boy I'm mentoring at Woodbury Elementary. On Sunday the prayer partners went out to lunch, shared ideas and then went to the school for a "prayer walk."
  • The Student Ministry is doing one of the twice a year prayer nights tonight. Justin will lead on acoustic, candles will line the worship area, the kids will have an open mic for sharing requests, and a lot of praying will be happening.
  • The Prayer team also prays through the Communication Card prayer requests and sends notes out to the people they prayed for.
  • Our daily Group Life integrates prayer into the Bible reflection time for each day.
  • All of our small groups spend time praying for each other.

That is just scratching the surface. God invites you to pray. He calls you to prayer. I wish there was a way to pray in your place, reflect on Scripture for you daily and provide substitutionary prayer on your behalf, but there isn't. Only you can do it. And only commitment to it daily will help you grow spiritually. Praying once a week in corporate worship won't cut it (even if you add a second time at your small group meeting.) You simply won't grow into deeper love with God that way. Offering more prayer ministries in our church won't cut it. You have to pray...daily! At some point you need to grow up enough to pray without a pastor leading  you or a program at church facilitating your prayer time. You don't know how? Well Paul Miller gives very practical advice on how to develop a daily prayer habit toward the end of A Praying Life. Get the book. Or meet with someone who knows how to pray and ask them to teach you.

#7 - Here's the only comment we received back this week from the cards we send first time attenders:

  • My first impression of Five Oaks was extremely positive.  After one service, I felt I had found a new church home.

#8 - I just downloaded a book from one of the Summit speakers from last year: Humilitas. It cost me $2.99 and I will read it on my Kindle app on my iPad or iPhone. I knew it was on sale because I subscribe to a daily email that announces special deals (I have already downloaded a couple of other books for free this week). Go to Gospel eBooks and get on their mailing list right here. Most deals disappear after 24 hours!

#9 - See if you can detect the order in our worship this coming week. I've been hinting at changes we've been incorporating for weeks now. Nothing different this week from the previous weeks. But when we plan, there is a general movement to the service. Below is what guides our decisions on what to do for each element of the service. All killer; no filler. (At some point in the not-to-distant-future we will begin to offer a worship guide that spells this out, but we're going to keep on just doing it before we start showing it.)

There are basically four movements. There are also movements within movements. But the basic pattern is Revelation and Response. We hear from God through his Word and we respond to his revelation.

So our worship begins with prayers and songs inspired from the Scripture to PREPARE our hearts to hear the Gospel of Jesus Christ proclaimed from the Bible (this includes hearing God's call to gather and worship, confession and assurance of God's forgiveness). As we hear the Gospel of Jesus Christ, we experience his REVELATION through his Word and the inner, mysterious working of the Holy Spirit. Our RESPONSE to this revelation (and it is crucial that we response) is accomplished through songs, prayers, and practices facilitated through our stations. We close by celebrating the witness to the Gospel of Jesus Christ, that is, God's church at Five Oaks through stories, testimonies and announcements about our church family life; SENDING us off with a benediction reminding us of how we can live in the blessing of God's grace.

Come ready to worship this weekend and God bless you.

In God's love and grace, Pastor Henry

Mid-Week Memo

Hi Five Oakers,

I have a SEVEN things I want to share with you.

#1 - "All killer; no filler." (Bill Hybels quoting Willow's worship director at the Leadership Summit) That's the best description of last week's worship gathering in my opinion. Every element had a purpose and supported other elements--the call to worship, Scripture prayers of confession and assurance, songs, response stations, the video faith story and so much more. And every element effectively supported our purpose--to help everyone worship God personally and authentically. We geek out a bit on seeing certain threads run through various elements whether planned or not. This was one of those weeks where those threads were in clear relief. SO worshipful.

#2 - If you missed it, check out this faith story. Even if you saw it on the weekend, it's worth seeing again. Talk about weaving a beautiful story and all the elements coming together! And talk about a whole family being impacted by our ministry. Beautifully told, Charlie. And great cinematography, Jonathan. 

Faith Story - Charlie Cain from Five Oaks on Vimeo.

#3 - Here are some of the comments from the Communication Cards:

  • What a fun, creative and spirit-filled Women’s Ministry event this morning! Jeni’s message was meaningful, relevant and convicting. Thanks to all who made it happen!
  • Beautiful opening with only the guitars. Clint, you will be missed. Response time, beautiful. [Justin and Clint's playing was truly amazing and skillful. Filled the whole room with just two guys playing guitar for the whole service. Loved it too!]
  • What amazing musicians! Wow! What about the celebrities/politicians who use God’s word to promote hate? Thank you for a great sermon. Pastor Henry – Sherlock is also streaming on Netflix, three episodes a season! [I don't have NetFlix. Maybe one more reason to consider it. Lois and I loved the 1980's PBS Sherlock series. I wonder if they stream that.]
  • Thanks for the great music this morning. 
  • Really enjoy reading Pastor Henry’s blog site mid-week, it is a blessing to hear all the positive comments, it strengthens my resolve for Him – Christ.
  • Clever quote from Oswald.  Very comfortable Saturday night service.  Loved the “mood” with the acoustic worship.  Liked the references to our Mission Field.
  • Awesome music and message!
  • Very touching/humbling time of adoration (Justin and Clint).
  • I loved the quiet change-up in the worship set. Beautiful job guys. Nice job with announcements Tim, staying in the low key approach to the morning. Great, great message Henry. I loved the explanation of not delivering inspiring messages, but covering scripture and letting it inspire us. Loved the closing worship set! [Here's approximately what I said: "I’m no longer satisfied with preaching biblical sermons that inspire. I used to be. I want you to understand the Bible itself and let that message—it’s life-giving, God-inspired message—give you something solid and reliable to serve as a foundation for your life. I want his Word to inspire you and drive your life. But not just here on the weekend. I want this message to inspire you to turn to God’s Word every day on your own to hear from God. It’s why we do Group Life. But if you don’t use the Group Life daily study, find something else that works well for you to read and reflect on the Bible every day.]
  • Thanks for “Nothing But the Blood”! Awesome!
  • I loved the acoustic music! Be not afraid, I will follow you.
  • Loved the message – great reminders! Loved the acoustic set – so worshipful!
  • I know Pastor Henry fears God, because he said all the right things. We have an awesome God!
  • Love the acoustic set-up! So cool to listen to the guitar highlighted. We have amazing musical talent in our church.
  • Music fit tone of service. Reflective and thoughtful.
  • Thanks for the beautiful worship today – excellent.
  • Henry – thank you for having the courage to talk about consequences and the experience of judgment and hell. I appreciate the straight talk – hard hitting, relevant, and impactful context! I wish the communion music was acoustic every week.
  • Loved the two guitars!
  • Awesome to hear my daughter (7) sing “Christ has died, Christ has risen, Christ will come again”! It was a great teaching moment to explain what Redeem means.
  • Thanks for the acoustic worship song sets. Very nice and contemplative, especially for the response time.  My wife and daughter also appreciate not having the spinning/blinking backgrounds.
  • Awesome worship.
  • I always enjoy every week worship here at Five Oaks and the talents of all the people who play for the worship team, but it was wonderful this morning hearing the voices of the congregation while we were singing. It reminded me of when I was younger. Thanks for the unplugged service and looking forward to whatever you plan for next week. [Music to my ears when we hear the congregation singing praises. You might notice that from time to time (almost every week) the vocalists all pull away from the mics so we can hear each other.]
  • Henry’s been answering/commenting related to what people write here. So those of us who see the blog, see his responses. Many comments are from newcomers, or others that don’t see the blog. What about adding a prompt to check out the blog in this section. Somewhere, rather than just on the front of the worship program?  [Great idea. We do send notes to guests or new folks pointing them to the Memo if I address one of their questions.]
  • I’d love to hear “deeper” prayers before the sermon. [One of the things I've been doing over the last couple of months or so is what's often called "A Prayer of Illumination." It's a regular part of most "high church" liturgies. Sounds ominous for those of us from "low church" traditions. But it doesn't have to be high churchy. I simply talk about why we look at the Bible and then pray for God's illumination of his Word and the message from his Word. I'll consider your suggestion. Thanks.]
  • If you want the scriptures to teach us, speak to us, why do you show movie clips or other quotes? I think God will reveal what he wants us to know thru His word. [Thank you for this comment. It's a very complex subject and I'll just address one small aspect of it. The Bible not only gives us the words of God, it also teaches us by example. What we see in the Bible is that Jesus and other teachers always illustrated their messages with stuff from life. Think about Jesus illustrating evangelistic concepts by talking about a sower who sowed seed on hard ground, etc. As he spoke people would look up and see a field or a farmer working. His messages were mostly given in the outdoors. It's not hard to imagine him even pointing to what they were looking at. Jesus teaches us to use what pastors call "illustrations." Unfortunately, we are confined to a room for most of our teaching so we can't point, but we can bring stories and scenes from everyday life into our teaching. I don't know of any pastor that doesn't illustrate their messages in one way or another in order to drive home biblical truth, make it understandable or apply it to life. Movie clips and quotes are just two ways of doing it. I guess I'll only mention one more thing. The Holy Spirit gives gifts to build up the body and one is teaching. Teaching is more than simply reading the Word together. It requires unpacking it in a variety of ways. Well, there's a lot more I could say, but I hope that helps. Thanks again for raising this question.]

#4 - As I am writing, Tim Bubar is walking from the church building to Rochester in two days and one evening to raise money for the Challenge youth trip and because ... how can I say it ... he's a little different, eccentric, adventurous, slightly off.... And we love it! Go Tim! Only 37 miles today and 25 tomorrow. Last night he went as far as Hastings. Pray for safety and great adventures along the way. Follow him on Facebook or Twitter. Also pray for your students who will spend the weekend in Rochester at our denomination's district conference with several thousand students from around the state.

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#5 - Our Staff Leadership Team spent a few days away this week working on our strategic plans for the coming ministry year starting in September. Maybe the best and most productive we've ever had. I can't wait to start sharing ideas for input from our leaders. Here's the bottom line: We know what brings spiritual growth (i.e., what grows disciples) and what is only marginally helpful. This is based on clear teaching in the Bible and rigorous empirical studies. Therefore we want to structure our ministry with what works and drop what is good but not great. Once again, "all killer and no filler" in all of our ministries. Getting there will not be easy, but it's not rocket science either. It requires God's power and all of us working together in cooperation with him.

#6 - We're two weeks into our Story of God small group experience. The new elements we added this time are going great. For one, the reading guide is in book form. I'm also giving a mini-lecture at the end of our time together, rather than assigning everyone to listen to the Story of God message series messages during the week. We have a great group of people going through it. Many have never understood the Bible and some are looking for a renewal of spiritual passion. I'm having a blast!

#7 - My message this weekend is on a familiar passage from Luke 12. Take a look at this confession (based on Deuteronomy 7) we'll be praying together in all of our services. I asked Dan Lukas to prepare it so that we can be prepared to listen to what Jesus teaches us. You can start praying it even now:

Merciful Father,

we think we can live without you.

In our pride we have said:

we are great.

we are strong.

we are self-sufficient.

we admit we often forget you,

even as we follow you.

Holy Spirit,

we live on the word you speak;

on the scriptures you've given.

our life is tethered to you.

Jesus, Son of God,

we want to live like you did;

connected and dependent on the Father.

confident that when we admit our need,

you will be our help.

Come ready to worship. Jesus invites us to gather. This is not our idea. He calls us to gather and worship as the body of Christ.

Blessings to you, Pastor Henry