2008-08-24 - Marshall Taylor - Reading Your Bible Daily

 
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Reading Your Bible Daily
By Marshall Taylor
Benchley, August 24, 2008

  • Why is this habit important?
    • James 1:21 - God’s word has the power to help save our souls.
    • Romans 15:4 - Because of the power of God’s word to comfort us.
    • Because we are creatures of time and habit.
      • James 4:14 - We are creatures of time subject to the limitations of time that are put on us.
      • We are creatures of habit whether good or bad.
  • How do we make it a habit?
    • By making it a positive addiction.
      • It will help you maintain the practice of reading your Bible.
      • If you miss a few days it will make you yearn for the word.
      • How do we make it a positive addiction?
        • By making the experience a pleasurable one.
        • Look forward to it as a pleasurable experience instead of something you have to do.
    • How do we avoid burning out?
      • Start slow!
      • Set attainable goals.
    • How should we study?
      • Start each session with a prayer. Psalms 119:18
      • Read slowly and carefully.
      • Make use of study aids.
      • Discuss what you have read with others.
      • Read with the intention of doing. James 1:22-24
      • End each session with a prayer. Psalms 119:10-11

2008-08-24 - Jesse Jenkins - Religious Worldliness

 
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Religious Worldliness
By Jesse Jenkins
Benchley, August 24, 2008

  • II Timothy 4:10 - Demas was overtaken in worldliness
  • Premillennialism:
    • The theory of:
      • Jesus came, but was unable to set up his kingdom. He is coming back to reign 1000 years on earth.
    • Refutation:
    • The appeal of premillennialism is an utopia in this world.
  • Unitarians
  • Disciples of Christ
    • “You sow them how to die; I will show them how to live.” - Bill Alexander
  • So-called churches of Christ
    • Church sponsored recreational camps
    • Church schools that teach secular subjects
    • Church kitchens
    • Ball teams
    • Talent shows
    • Puppet shows
  • Religious worldliness is the concept that it is the church’s responsibility to function in every area of human life.
    • Domestic:
      • Children’s homes
      • Old folks’ homes
      • Unwed mothers’ homes
      • Hospitals
      • Retirement homes
    • Economic
      • Farms
      • Fees for youth camp attendance
      • Fees for teaching
      • Churches loaning money
      • Rental property
      • Money in CDs
    • Social
      • Lake Trail church orchestra
      • Youth centers
      • Youth camps
      • Singles’ night out
      • Fun and food
    • Political
      • Use buildings for elections
    • Religious
      • Church functions according to the scriptures
        • Assembly for worship
        • Edification (Acts 20:28)
        • Evangelism
        • Benevolence under some circumstances
        • Discipline under some circumstances
      • Many churches have pushed these into the background in favor of social functions.
  • “Let the church be the church.”

Sheikra

Having the weekend off, I had time to go down to Busch Gardens today and got to ride the Sheikra rollercoaster a couple of times.  This one has to be up there near the top of my all time favorites.  Check it out:

Overview video:

Video from front row (earmuffs, everybody!  You can hear some cussing in the background on this one, so just mute it and enjoy the ride.):

Dramatic Lemur (in THX!)

Nicole sent this to me and it’s too funny to pass up.  Thanks, Nicole!

 

2008-08-17 - Jesse Jenkins - Time

[Sorry - no audio recording available for this lesson.]
Time
By Jesse Jenkins
Benchley, August 17, 2008
  • Psalms 9:1 - God is eternal
  • Each has all the time there is.
    • 8760 hours per year
    • 525,600 minutes per year
  • Properly used, we can have time for:
    • God
    • Family
    • Work to provide for our own
    • Others
    • Leisure
  • In the way we use our time, we are laying up treasure somewhere.
  • We must redeem the time.
    • Time is now, use it for:
      • God, family, brethren, others
      • Counting your blessings
  • We waste too much time by letting time slip away.
    • What can we do in one minute?
      • Pray
      • Read five to ten verses
      • Call to encourage someone
      • Say, “I love you.”
  • Time is brief and uncertain.
  • Busy people are the only ones who make time to serve.
    • Look at what Paul accomplished in less than thirty years.
    • Look at what Jesus accomplished in three years.
    • The only ones Jesus ever called to serve were busy people.
      • Peter and Andrew, James and John
      • Matthew
    • Ecclesiastes 9:10
  • Time properly used will include time for rest.

2008-08-17 - David Watson - Cain and Abel

 
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Cain and Abel
By David Watson
Benchley, August 17, 2008

2008-08-10 - David Watson - By Way of Reminder

 
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By Way of Reminder
By David Watson
Benchley, August 10, 2008

2008-08-10 - David Watson - Studying the Whole Bible

 
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Studying the Whole Bible

By David Watson

Benchley, August 10, 2008

When we want to find the truth on a given topic, we shouldn’t just find one verse that mentions it and then assume we have a comprehensive knowledge of the topic.  The best way to study any topic is to examine any and all related passages so that we get the full picture of God’s Word.  Let’s study the topic of salvation, especially the conclusion many have drawn—that faith, without works, is all we need to be saved.

 

  • Faith saves!
  • But does faith save by itself?
    • Does any passage say that faith is the only thing we need to be saved?
    • Someone might argue the point that faith is all we need, but the argument and the verses don’t match exactly.  The verses say that faith saves.  The argument is that faith alone saves.
    • James 2:14-26.
      • Are the demons saved?  They certainly believe.
      • The only verse in the Bible where the words “faith” and “alone” appear together is James 2:24, and it teaches the opposite of salvation by faith alone.
    • John 12:42-43, Mark 8:38.  Were the rulers saved at this point?
    • Does faith save?  The Bible says Yes.  Does faith save by itself?  The Bible says No.
  • Study the whole Bible.
  • IV)  Questions.
    • By accepting one point, do we deny another?
      • If we read a verse that says baptism saves, does that mean God doesn’t save, or grace, or Christ’s blood?  No.
      • If we read a verse that says faith saves, does that mean baptism doesn’t save, or repentance, or God?  No.
      • The reason the answer is No is that none of these passages have used the terms “only” or “alone” or “by itself” or some synonymous term.
      • None of the passages about faith/baptism/grace/blood of Christ/etc. teach us that they are the only things necessary to salvation.
      • The Bible is not contradicting itself.  It is giving us all the pieces of the puzzle.
      • We make a mistake any time we pick one thing, such as faith, and declare that that’s the only ingredient necessary for salvation.  It’s just not true, because that ignores and contradicts what the rest of the Bible has to say.
    • Do works earn our salvation?
      • The answer is No.
      • Remember what we read in James 2:21-22, “Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered up Isaac his son on the altar?  You see that faith was working with his works, and as a result of the works, faith was perfected.”
      • Now read what at first may seem to be a direct contradiction, Romans 3:28, 4:1-3.  Was Abraham justified by works or not?
      • It depends on what kind of works you’re talking about, and this is the point that is so often missed and which leads to wrong conclusions.
      • The context here in Romans is talking about works of merit, or works by which a person would earn salvation for themselves, without God’s help.
      • If Abraham was justified by works of merit, living so perfectly that God owed him salvation, verse 2 says Abraham has something to boast about.
      • Romans 4:4.  If you go to work for 40 hours one week, your employer owes you 40 hours worth of wages.  When he gives it to you, it’s not a gift.  You earned it, through your works all week.  So verse 4 is telling us what kind of works are being discussed.
      • We definitely know that God is not saying something in Romans that contradicts what He says in James.
      • James is talking, not about works of merit, but works of obedience.  Verse 21 refers to Abraham’s offering of Isaac on the altar.  Was that a work that would earn him a place in Heaven?  No.  God told him to do it, and he obeyed.  It was a work of obedience.
      • When we read the Bible and understand that we are supposed to get baptized, or repent, or love God, or obey God in any number of ways, that doesn’t mean that by doing so we are earning salvation—that now God owes it to us.  Heaven is still a gift, which God says He will give to those who obey Him.  And so we do works of obedience.
      • Do you believe you must do God’s will to enter Heaven?  Jesus said, “Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father who is in heaven will enter” (Matthew 7:21).

Psalm 119:160, “The sum of Your word is truth, And every one of Your righteous ordinances is everlasting.

Evernote on Attack of the Show

I keep telling people that Evernote rules, but no one seems to listen to me.  Attack of the Show did a nice little review video of it that does a pretty good job of explaining why it is so awesome.

Owen Video Blowout

I just got around to getting some of these videos edited together, so I thought I’d just post them all at once.  Enjoy!

Owen and the Hale Cousins:

 

 

Owen Learns to Dribble:

 

 

These Boots Are Too Big for Walkin’:

 

 

Walkin’ and Ballin’: