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Author Archives: chadzaucha

What A Mess

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In this month of Thanksgiving I am thankful for all of the messes in our church…

 1. The clutter of kitchen equipment on the patio symbolizing continued movement in updating our facility for ministry (see below).

 2. The thawed cornish game hens left overnight in the parking lot after a Wednesday night youth activity of turkey bowling which symbolizing a vibrant youth ministry.

 3. The scattered papers in the worship team area on which are printed the “road map” for worship each week symbolizing the growth of worship ministry.

 4. The overflowing receptacle for recycling water bottles in my office symbolizing God’s provision of clean drinking water, an urgent need in much of the world.

 5. The plastic cups left in the landscaping from our Sunday fellowship time after the worship service symbolizing our deepening relationships as a church family.

 6. The orange cones surrounding the hole in the ground where the well project continues symbolizing vision for the future. 

 7. The boxes of donated books in the library symbolizing our congregation’s hunger for growing in the knowledge of God’s Word.

 8. The landfill that is John and Zac’s office symbolizing a flurry of ministry activity and engaging people in ministry. (see above)

 9. Stains on the carpet in Smith Hall symbolizing the fact that we are a spiritual hospital and not a museum.

 10. The toys scattered on the playground symbolizing growth in children’s ministry.

 11. The messes in all of our lives that we bring before the cross each Sunday, symbolizing that God is at work creating something beautiful in us individually and as a family. 

 
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Posted by on November 11, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Sermon Podcast For October 30, 2011

\”Looking At God Through The Wrong End of the Telescope\” – Romans 9:14-33

 
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Posted by on November 2, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Helpful Video on CIDP

CIDP Video

 
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Posted by on October 19, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

So, I’m Not Completely Crazy

What a year it has been.  Pain in my elbows.  Numbness and tingling in my hands.  Ulnar nerve transposition surgery.  Slow, painful recovery.  Physical therapy.  Fear and anxiety.  Numbness and tingling in my feet and legs.  An evening in the ER.  MRIs.  CT scan.  Lots of blood work.  Spinal Tap.  Muscle biopsy.  Neck pain.  Hip pain.  Weakness in arms and legs.

More than once I have thought that I am going crazy.  I am sure that others have probably agreed.  Is this all in my head?

The answer seems to be, “No.”  I was diagnosed last week with CIDP (Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyradiculoneuropathy).  I cannot even say it, let alone spell it.  In short, my immune system thinks that my nervous system is something bad and acts accordingly.  Thus, the many symptoms of the past year.

So, in the short term we are first attacking this conservatively with daily Vitamin B12 injections, meds, and supplements.  If we don’t see progress we will move to a more aggressive treatment involving IV infusions.

Thanks for your patience over the past year and for your continued prayers.  I have certainly grown in my empathy for those who struggle physically.  God continues to take me to deeper levels of dependence.  He is good.

 
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Posted by on October 14, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Link To Pocast For Sermon From October 2, 2011

Link to Sermon from October 2, 2011 – Romans 8:31-39 – \”Certainty and Security\”

Sorry about the hum.  We are working on it.

 
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Posted by on October 4, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Grit

This letter to pastors encouraged me today:

October 2011

Good Morning,

In the autumn of 1912, presidential hopeful Teddy Roosevelt was in Milwaukee to deliver an important campaign speech. Throngs of well-wishers lined the motorcade route, hoping for a glimpse of the American icon. Roosevelt was only too happy to accommodate them, waving his hat and flashing that famed “bully grin” from his open-air motorcar.

But from out of nowhere, a deranged man stepped to the edge of the car and aimed a pistol at Roosevelt. From point-blank range he fired a single bullet deep into Roosevelt’s chest. The blast knocked TR across the car and into a crumpled heap. Blood was everywhere. Chaos reigned. The police gang-tackled the gunman. All eyes focused on the fallen hero.

Immediately, TR’s handlers discussed contingency plans and the quickest routes to nearby hospitals. But the wounded Rough Rider would have none of that. “You get me to that speech. It may be the last one I ever deliver, and I’m not going to miss it.”

A man with a message is a powerful force.

Minutes after the shooting, Teddy Roosevelt stood before his appreciative, albeit unaware audience. And without a microphone, the usually robust TR, meekly said, “Friends, I shall ask you to be as quiet as possible. I have just been shot, and even now the bullet is in me. So I cannot speak for long, but I will do my best.”

As Roosevelt opened his coat to retrieve his handwritten notes, he exposed for the first time his blood-soaked shirt. The crowd gasped. Doctors rushed to the stage, only to be held off by Roosevelt. Medical attention would have to wait. The message was the priority.

That night TR’s speech was more candid than scripted, more urgent than routine. It was driven by passion, not politics. It contained no campaign rhetoric, no jockeying for votes, no idle promises. Instead, he spoke with deep resolve to cure the nation’s problems, even at the risk of his own. The truth had to be told. Political correctness took a beating. Winning an election was less important. Declaring his deepest beliefs was the issue.

Even the many detractors who had come to jeer and protest sat silently.

Ninety minutes later, an exhausted and colorless Roosevelt was finished. He had done what he came to do. Slowly he turned to the nearby doctors and said, “Now, we can go to the hospital.”

A thunderous applause erupted and continued until the motorcade was out of sight.

It’s interesting that audience reactions tend to change when they sense the urgency of a message; they evaluate it differently. Truth is more acceptable. Vision is caught. Passions are stirred. Even Roosevelt’s greatest critic, the New York Herald, saluted him in the next day’s headline: “WE’RE AGAINST HIS POLITICS, BUT WE LIKE HIS GRIT.”

A man with a message is a powerful force.

The same thing could be said of the prophets. Some were called upon for only one or two messages, while others were called for a lifetime. Either way, a prophet’s singular job was to pass on the words of God—whether they were received or not.

The same could be said of the apostles whose most obvious task was to preach repentance for “the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” And for it, all but one died a martyr’s death.

All these spokesmen willingly waved their white-knuckled fists in the face of hard-heartedness proclaiming a revolutionary message of repentance and hope. They were often attacked, but they were never ignored.

And, in every successive generation, God has raised up other faithful communicators who bucked the trends and defied the odds. They were gifted leaders whose message could not be silenced; faithful servants who chose obedience over compromise.

Today the torch has been passed to us. We’re next in a long line of faithful teachers of God’s word. Our message comes from “the Book without peer” which reveals the mind of God, the state of man, the way of salvation, the doom of sinners, and the blessedness of believers.

That’s our message. And it’s a powerful force. 

Blessings,

 


Ron Walters
Vice President Church Relations

© Copyright 2011 by Ron Walters

Ron Walters

 
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Posted by on October 4, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Currently Reading

The Stronghold of God by Francis Frangipane

“Our goal is not to tell the world about Christianity but to reveal the glory of Christ.  We are not called to imitate Jesus in detached obedience but to actually let Him shine through us to mankind (127).”

 
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Posted by on September 29, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Currently Reading

Strengthening the Soul of Your Leadership: 

Seeking God in the Crucible of Ministry

by Ruth Haley Barton

“I realize today that the best thing I can be for the people I work with is to be able to say, ‘It is well with my soul.'” (9)

“God is not in any particular hurry to get us to the Promised Land (10).”

 
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Posted by on September 28, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

“See You At the Pole” – Matilija Jr. High School

 
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Posted by on September 28, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Links to Updated Sermon Podcasts

September 18, 2011 – Romans 8:26-27 – \”The Groaning of the Holy Spirit\”

September 25, 2011 – Romans 8:28-30 – \”All Things For Good\”

 
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Posted by on September 27, 2011 in Uncategorized