Gathering Recap | Downtown | 2.22.15

Songs:

There Is A Fountain by Citizens And Saints

The Solid Rock by The Dispatch

Come Thou Fount by King's Kaleidoscope

Fix My Eyes by King's Kaleidoscope

Sermon Tweets:

Busyness is not just a practical problem; it’s an identity problem.

Much of our struggle with busyness is a struggle for importance.

Busyness comes from believing our productivity gives us an identity.

We busy ourselves because being alone with our thoughts is a scary place.

Some of our busyness comes from believing our productivity gives us security.

The world is filled with great opportunities; most of which God has not called you to.

If you’re not certain of your priorities, you’ll be a slave to the tyranny of the urgent.

Gathering Recap | Downtown | 2.15.15

Songs:

All I Have Is Christ by Summit Worship

Rock of Ages by Page CXVI

White As Snow by Jon Foreman

Man of Sorrows by Hillsong

Sermon Tweets:

Being a Christian is way more beautiful than passively avoiding a list of bad behaviors.

Apathy is not just an emotional problem; it’s a disconnect from our purpose.

True Christians tend to do well with adversity; they struggle more with affluence.

Because of the gospel, we are no longer enslaved to our apathy.

Grace doesn’t just train us to deny bad things; it trains us to care passionately about good things.

Gathering Recap | Downtown | 2.8.15

Songs:

Just As I Am by The Modern Post

Psalm 18 by Citizens

The Solid Rock by King's Kaleidoscope

How Deep The Father's Love For Us by The Dispatch

Sermon Tweets:

Part of the trouble with worry is that it tells us partial truths about ourselves and our world.

Anxiety occurs when good things we care about meets brokenness in our world.

Worry and anxiety tell us the truth about our world, but omit the truth about God.

The goal of prayer in the midst of anxiety is to bring God back into focus.

The prerequisite for casting our anxieties on God is humility.

One antidote to worry about God’s provision in the future is recalling God’s goodness in the past.

Gathering Recap | Downtown | 2.1.15

Songs:

Psalm 18 by Citizens

Praise To The Lord by Citizens

Be Thou My Vision by Ascend The Hill

In Tenderness by Citizens

Sermon Tweets:

Everyone gets angry; the difference is in how we express it.

At the root of anger is thinking "reality as it stands is unacceptable to me." 

A healthy Christian life is not one absent of anger, but one absent of sinful anger.

We're righteous when we're mad that God's will isn't done. We're unrighteous when we're mad that our will isn't done.

We can find comfort in the fact that ridding the world of injustice does not rest solely on our shoulders. 

Gathering Recap | Downtown | 11.25.15

Songs:

Grace Alone by Dustin Kensrue

The Word by The Dispatch

Doxology by Citizens

O Love That Will Not Let Me Go by Ascend The Hill

When I Survey The Wondrous Cross by Page CXVI

All I Have Is Christ by Summit Worship

Sermon Tweets:

Greed believes the lie that more will fix what’s wrong with us.

Envy is greed directed at a person, with a little bit of malice sprinkled in. 

Envy leads us to a place where we can no longer rejoice in the success of others.

We look at others and say “I want what they have.” Jesus looks at us and says “I want them to have what I have.”

Greed turns our attention so entirely towards what we don’t have, that we forget what we do have.

It’s possible to even use tithing as a tool to feed our greed.

Correction to What's Killing Me e-Book

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In reading through our What's Killing Me e-book, we noticed one small error that needed changing. The only change is on page 12 of the book: the "Abuse & Victim Shame" inventory had been copy and pasted from elsewhere in the book instead of being its own inventory. For your convenience, we've updated all the links on our website, and provided both links below for you.

Sorry for any inconvenience, and thanks for going through this series with us!

View corrected page 12

View entire corrected e-book

Gathering Recap | Downtown | 11.18.15

Songs:

Noting But The Blood by Citizens

There Is A Fountain by Citizens and Saints

None But Jesus by Hillsong

White As Snow by Jon Foreman

Rock of Ages by Page CXVI

Sermon Tweets:

Guilt is when we feel like we do something wrong; shame is when we feel like we are something wrong.

Left undealt with, your guilt and shame will destroy you.

We don’t just need our record cleared; we need our shame cleansed.

As a result of God cleansing our shame, we get right relationship with Him, as well as with each other.

Guilt and shame tell you stories about yourself that don’t have to be true.

Jesus takes your shame and transforms it into a beautiful testament to his incomprehensible grace towards you.

Anywhere that our shame whispers “dirty,” the gospel whispers back “not any more.”

Recommended Reading for What's Killing Me

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Jon Ludovina, the author of this post, serves as a pastor at our Downtown church. He serves as one of our primary teaching pastors. To find out more about our leadership, visit our Leadership page.

 

 

There are many helpful books and resources available to dig deeper as our family works through the What’s Killing Me? campaign. As always with books, sermons and teachings we receive their instruction in light of 1 Thessalonians 5:20-22:

Do not despise prophecies, but test everything; hold fast what is good. Abstain from every form of evil.

Paul provides us with four aspects of gospel discernment:

  1. Practice gospel humility. Don’t scoff at teaching with a critical spirit that thinks you know everything and are smarter than everyone.
  2. Test everything. Do however take what is being taught and hold it up to the lens of scripture and the gospel.
  3. Keep the good. Is it Biblically sound? Is Jesus the hero? Does it point to Jesus’ finished and final work for us in the cross? Does it stir your heart’s affections for Jesus?
  4. Throw out the bad. Does it blatantly contradict scripture? Does it emphasize you as the decisive power for change? Does it encourage moralism instead of gospel dependency?

General help during What’s Killing Me:

  • You Can Change by Tim Chester
  • Counsel From the Cross by Elyse Fitzpatrick and Denis Johnson
  • Death by Love: Letters from the Cross by Mark Driscoll and Gerry Breshears
  • The Mortification of Sin by John Owen
  • How People Change by Timothy Lane and Paul David Tripp

Week 2: Guilt & Shame

  • Shame Interrupted by Edward T. Welch
  • Explicit Gospel by Matt Chandler
  • Rid of My Disgrace by Justin and Lindsey Holcomb
  • (specifically for shame connected to sexual abuse)
  • The Bruised Reed by Richard Sibbes

Week 3: Envy & Greed

  • The Treasure Principle by Randy Alcorn
  • The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment by Jeremiah Burroughs
  • Counterfeit Gods by Tim Keller

Week 4: Anger

  • Uprooting Anger by Robert D. Jones
  • Anger: Escaping the Maze by David Powlison
  • A Loving Life: In a World of Broken Relationships by Paul Miler

Week 5: Worry & Anxiety

  • Overcoming Fear, Worry and Anxiety by Elyse Fitzpatrick
  • Running Scared: Fear, Worry, and the God of Rest by Edward T. Welch
  • All Things for Good by Thomas Watson

Week 6 - Apathy

  • To Live is Christ: To Die is Gain by Matt Chandler
  • Rescuing Ambition by Dave Harvey
  • The Biblical View of Self-Esteem, Self-Love, and Self-Image by Jay E. Adams
  • Don’t Waste Your Life by John Piper

Week 7: Busyness

  • Crazy Busy by Kevin DeYoung
  • What's Best Next: How the Gospel Transforms the Way You Get Stuff Done by Matt Perman

Week 8: Lust

  • Undefiled by Harry Schaumburg
  • Sex and the Supremacy of Christ John Piper
  • Finally Free by Heath Lambert
  • Purity is Possible by Helen Thorne (purity for women)

Week 9: Fear of Man

  • When People Are Big and God is Small by Edward T. Welch
  • Boundaries by Henry Cloud and John Townsend
  • Knowing God by J.I. Packer

How to Not be a Jerk during What's Killing Me

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Jon Ludovina, the author of this post, is one of the pastors of our Downtown church and oversees all of our Sunday teaching and preaching. To find out more about our leadership, visit our Leadership page.

Our What’s Killing Me series is going to be really helpful for our church family, and due to the nature of the series, it is going to drag up some heavy stuff in your LifeGroup. Anytime someone digs down into their root issues and tells you what they are dealing with, they are giving you an opportunity and a responsibility. The opportunity is for you and your group to be a tangible picture of Jesus’ love, grace and truth in how you respond. The responsibility is that in a vulnerable moment of confession, you can crush a person who already feels weighed down under the weight of their sin.

In light of that, I want to give you helpful ways to not be a jerk in your LifeGroup and in conversations you have with people throughout What’s Killing Me:

1. Keep everything centered on the gospel, Scripture, and the healing and freedom that only Jesus brings. Help people see that Jesus is the decisive power for victory and change in the depths of our souls. Help them see how Jesus’ finished work in the cross brings freedom to change and motivation to change. Heaping moralistic, religious guilt and pressure onto people is a great way to be a jerk, but it won’t ever bring the long lasting change God desires for His people.

2. Make sure people feel heard and understood. As people offer vulnerable details from their past, failures and struggles in their soul, we want to respond in a way that affirms; I hear you. I understand what you’re saying. And I care. Silence with a few awkward, “Oh”s and “Huh”s communicates you are weird and dirty and/or we don’t care that much about what you just said.

There will be times when you don’t know what to say, and there are some really helpful go to responses:

“So what you’re saying is…”

“We’re so glad you’re part of our group and we get to walk through this together.”

“Thanks for letting us know what’s really going on.”

“I’m really sorry that happened to you.”

3. Ask good questions. Questions are your friend when trying to dig deeper into what’s going on with someone. Good questions communicate I hear you, I care and I want to know more. Questions like:

Why do you think you did that?

What were you chasing after in that moment?

What did your heart desire?

What is the deeper need you think this behavior is meeting for you?

What were you afraid of?

What does that reveal you believe about God and yourself?

How does the truth of the gospel reshape these beliefs?

4. Do away with distractions. Half paying attention while you check twitter, instagram and scores on your smart phone during group time? Nuh-uh. Practice active listening. Communicate your love for them by giving them your full and undivided attention.

5. There will be times when you don’t quite know what to say, and that’s okay. You will at some point feel like you are in over your head. Someone will share something and you will be having an inward panic attack because you don’t know exactly how you should respond. It’s okay. Breathe.

Our church is equipped with Recovery, LifeGroup coaches and pastors available to help your group handle anything that comes up no matter how big or scary it seems. An appropriate response is always, “I have no idea what that feels like. Honestly I don’t even know what to say, but I’m glad Jesus has you here and we will figure it out together.”

At the end of the day, push everything back to the gospel through community. Pray like crazy. Trust the Holy Spirit and His guidance to give you appropriate words to say at the right time. It’s going to be messy and it’s going to be worth it. It’s going to take faithful work to press into Jesus but His perfect love and grace will be the decisive power to grow and change us more and more into His image.

15 Things to Help During "What's Killing Me"

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Brandon Clements, the author of this post, is a pastor of Midtown Fellowship. He oversees LifeGroups and  Recovery. To find out more about our leadership, visit our Leadership page.

The What’s Killing Me series is going to be a really helpful series for our church family, and due to the nature of it, it is going to drag up some heavy stuff in your group. In light of that, we wanted to send you guys some help & encouragement in advance. So read through the following document and as always, reach out to your coach with any issues or questions you have.

Important Things to Remember

1. There will be times when you don’t quite know what to say to someone, and that’s okay.

You will at some point feel like you are in over your head. Someone will share something and you will be having an inward panic attack because you don’t know exactly how you should respond. It’s okay. Breathe. Push everything back to the gospel and community. Pray like crazy. Trust the Holy Spirit and His guidance to give you appropriate words to say at the right time. Also, “I don’t know quite what to say but I will find out and get back to you” is an acceptable response.

“And when they bring you before the synagogues and the rulers and the authorities, do not be anxious about how you should defend yourself or what you should say, for the Holy Spirit will teach you in that very hour what you ought to say.”
Luke 12.11-12

Also, be okay with silence. Don’t feel the need to cover every awkward moment with words. Get comfortable with silence and know that God is working. In talking through things as deeply rooted as these inventories, there will be some awkward moments.

2. Make sure people feel heard and understood.

When someone shares something, ensure that someone responds in an appropriate manner that communicates the fact that they are loved. Your presence, listening, and physical demeanor can communicate the gospel more than you realize.

a. Some possible responses:

i.    Re-state what they said. “So what you’re saying is…”

ii. “Thanks so much for sharing that with us.”

iii.“We are so glad you are a part of our group.”

iv. “I’m really sorry that that happened to you.”

v.  “Thanks for being honest and filling us in on what’s really going on with you.”

vi.  When appropriate, stop and ask someone to pray for them on the spot.

3. Do away with distractions.

That person who is always on their phone during group time? Nuh-uh. This is a great time to reinforce that we should give each other our full attention. Looking at Twitter while someone is spilling their deepest junk is not an acceptable thing to do. Remind your people of this every week if you need to.

4. Ask good questions.

Questions are your friend when trying to dig deeper into what’s going on with someone. When in doubt of what to say or ask, “What,” “How,” and “Why” are helpful tools:

a. What did you base that decision on?

b. What is the deeper need you think this behavior is meeting for you?

c. What were you trying to accomplish by _______?

d. How did you arrive at that decision?

e. What does that (behavior, thought, etc.) reveal that you believe about God/yourself?

f. Why do you think you keep returning to _______? Why do you expect the results to be different from the same behavior?

g. What are you forgetting or failing to believe about the gospel in this?

5. Keep everything centered on the gospel, Scripture, and the healing and freedom that only Jesus brings.

If conversations aren’t going there then we are failing at our job. We can heal no one…only Jesus can!

Always keep the gospel as the lens. Looking at ourselves deeply can be tough. Digging without the gospel leads to despair and hopelessness, but looking at self through the lens of the gospel leads to worship because we are fully known and fully accepted because of the work of Jesus. Nothing to hide or cover, fully exposed and fully loved and accepted.

We have to apply the gospel to all areas of life (idolatry, chasing satisfaction, value/worth/approval, deep wounds, etc.) Apply the gospel and the implications of Jesus’ righteousness, obedience, performance and approval that are imputed to us through faith. How is Jesus good news for your people?

6. Do everything you can to prepare in advance.

Read the content in the ebook and do your inventories in advance. Pick the questions that will be your go-to if discussion is slow. Study related passages that you might want to share during the group, etc.

7. Celebrate the wins…even the small stuff.

People need all the encouragement they can get when digging deep into things like this, and you will need all the positive news and encouragement that you can get. So celebrate the good stuff, the steps in the right direction, the growing honesty & vulnerability, the changing hearts and desires. Clap, cheer, hug…do whatever you can think of to celebrate Jesus’ work in people’s lives.

8. Try to end each group meeting on a positive note.

Again, this stuff can feel heavy. We want people walking out the door thinking about how Jesus is working and how faithful He is even in our waywardness, not about how much they suck.

Before you end in prayer every week you could ask, “What is one positive thing or evidence of spiritual growth that you have noticed recently? How is Jesus good news for you this week?”

9. Pray and stay rooted in Scripture.

What we say has little effectiveness if not backed up by the truth of God’s word and the moving of the Holy Spirit through our words. So pray for and depend on that because you can never go wrong. Share as much Scripture as you’d like with people in groups as you are discussing. Stop and pray for things as much as you think is beneficial.

10. Give others the gift of going second.

There is so much power in speaking truth to someone out of your own struggle and brokenness. They will respect you more, trust you more, and be willing to listen to you more if they know you are a real person with real issues.

11. Figure out ways to go deeper if it is needed in your group.

There simply won’t be time for everyone in your group to talk about everything they wrote on their inventory in detail, unless you plan to spend many more weeks talking about these things than the series lasts. Acceptable options are:

a. Hit the highlights each week.

b. Pair people up to meet during the week and go deeper into covering inventories than you are able to go during group time.

c. Talk through the inventories for longer than the series will last (depending on your group schedule and rhythms).

12. Handle people who talk too much with grace and firmness.

Sometimes when people get a chance to air their struggles openly they unintentionally think the whole group meeting should be devoted to them. There may be times where the majority of a group meeting needs to be spent on a particular individual or two, but regular domination of group conversation should not be allowed.

There is a saying that “Grace to 1 cannot be tyranny to 10.” You may need to wrap up someone’s time by cutting in and saying, “Thanks so much for sharing—we need to move on to make sure others have time to share.” Of course, if this needs to happen you should have an individual conversation with them about being considerate of the others in the group. Shepherd them well through that if this becomes a necessity.

13. Feel more than free to ask for help.

Contact your coach about anything that feels uncertain or over your head.

14. Pray for relational awareness and Holy Spirit guidance your group time.

This is essentially asking the question, “What does this person need right now?”

Gathering Recap | Downtown | 1/11/15

Songs:

There Is A Fountain by Citizens and Saints

Hail The King by Citizens and Saints

All Glory Be To Christ by King's Kaleidoscope

Father You Are All We Need by Citizens and Saints

Fix My Eyes by King's Kaleidoscope

 

Sermon Tweets:

We cannot fix what’s killing us on our own.

What’s killing us is primarily internal, heart-level, and Godward.

One of the biggest obstacles to growth is blaming external factors to avoid being honest about ourselves.

This year we don’t need to turn over a new leaf; we need to be given a new life.

Regeneration brings new desires, not just new behaviors.

Regeneration brings a holy discontentment with sin that remains in our lives.

Regeneration knows that real change is possible.

 [button label="Listen to the Sermon" link="http://midtowncolumbia.com/sermon-series/whats-killing-me" shape="default"]

Adam is Joining Two Notch

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Adam Gibson, the author of this post, is one of our pastors and serves on our vision team together with Allen Tipping. To find out more about our leadership, visit our Leadership page.

From the beginning, our church has had a passion to love and serve the city of Columbia. From the suburbs to the inner city, upper class to lower class, students, professionals, and families. When we say we care about our city, we mean everyone in our city.

A few years ago we began to put the pieces in place to plant a church in the inner-city Two Notch area of downtown Columbia. In January 2014, our Two Notch church began gathering weekly on Sunday afternoons to study the bible together, pray and share what God is up to in their LifeGroups throughout the week. Two Notch's Gatherings are often followed by a neighborhood block party, as a way of getting to know people and building relationships.

No One Should Have to Pay for the Gospel

An unfortunate reality is that in church world ministry often follows money, leaving the inner-city to fend for itself. This is one of the many reasons why I am so proud of our Two Notch church. To be honest, planting a church in a low-income area of our city is a bad business decision, but it’s a beautiful kingdom decision.

To help with this process, Midtown Fellowship became "a family of churches." Two Notch and our Downtown church continue to share as many resources as possible (business operations, website, Recovery ministry, LifeGroup resources, etc.), while remaining united in our vision of being Jesus-centered family on mission. Our hope in doing this is to have a sustainable way of assisting a very under-resourced area of our city.

Why I'm Joining Two Notch

As we operate as a family of churches, we not only get to share organizational resources, but people resources as well.

With that in mind, for the next four months or so I plan to help the leadership of Two Notch in whatever ways I can. I want to assist with leadership development and getting some systems in place that will allow the church to continue its ministry even more effectively. I will still fulfill my “city-wide” responsibilities, and my family and I will remain in our current LifeGroup and attend Downtown Gatherings on Sunday mornings. However, any preaching that I do will be with Two Notch, at the request of Ant Frederick, lead pastor of our Two Notch church.

I've always been blown away at the pastors God has raised up in our church family. Because of that, I'm happy to say that I won’t be missed at all Downtown.

I'd love it if you could join with me in praying that Jesus would make this a fruitful season as I serve and lead with Two Notch, and that God would use it to help more people in inner-city communities hear the gospel.

Gathering Recap | Downtown | 12/14/14

Songs:

Come Thou Long Expected Jesus by King's Kaleidoscope

Prepare Him Room by Sovereign Grace

O Holy Night by Sovereign Grace

How Deep the Father's Love For Us by The Dispatch

 

Sermon Tweets:

Christmas is the only time of year where we as a culture demand nothing but a happy ending.

We all live discontented lives, apart from the Holy Spirit's intervention.

We're all story fanatics, and we all believe some type of story about life.

Every story is either a shadow of the gospel story or a longing for the gospel story.

The gospel of Jesus is better than the gospel of blind opportunism that comes with Christmas.

We all long to be "home." And the good news of Jesus is that we are headed there.

We're rallying together as a church to serve families dealing with pediatric cancer. Find out about how you can help:

 [button label="Listen to the Sermon" link="http://midtowncolumbia.com/sermon-series/luke" shape="default"]

Gathering Recap | Downtown | 12.7.14

Songs:

O Come O Come Emmanuel by Citizens

Grace Alone by The Modern Post

Joy Has Dawned by King's Kaleidoscope

Father You Are All We Need by Citizens

 

Sermon Tweets

God loves lowly, humble, broken people so much that He became one of them.

God never picks people based on their impressiveness.

Christmas brings with it an incredible temptation to act like you've got it all together. Don't fall for it.

If our hearts don't break for lowly broken people, then our hearts don't look like God's.

A gospel-driven heart consistently looks around for the people who need the most help, and joyfully befriends them.

 [button label="Listen to the Sermon" link="http://midtowncolumbia.com/sermon-series/luke" shape="default"]

Gathering Recap | Downtown | 11.16.14

Songs:

Come Thou Fount by King's Kaleidoscope

Rock of Ages by Page CXVI

Father You Are All We Need by Citizens and Saints

Jesus Paid It All by Kristian Stanfill

Man of Sorrows by Hillsong

Sermon Tweets

Love for God is a knee-jerk response to the forgiveness He offers us. 

If you will not see yourself as a sinner, you can not love God. 

External sin repented of is better than internal sin not repented of. 

We will love God to the degree that we recognize the magnitude of our sins and God’s grace to forgive them. 

Many of us lack love because we lack repentance. 

The only thing that can humble proud people and lift up broken people is the gospel. 

 [button label="Listen to the Sermon" link="http://midtowncolumbia.com/sermon-series/luke" shape="default"]

Gathering Recap | Downtown | 11.9.14

Songs:

Oh God by Dustin Kensrue

Psalm 18 by Citizens

Praise To The Lord by Citizens

Father You Are All We Need by Citizens

Sermon Tweets

The gospel says that life is fundamentally about God; not about us.

If your identity is completely defined by your desires, it will be impossible to give them up.

Jesus does not owe you your dreams.

If Jesus is who he says he is, and did what he says he did, then everything in our lives is on the chopping block.

No matter what Jesus asks us to give up, he always gives us the peace of his presence.

We're less than two weeks away from our Baptism at . Get all the details here:

 [button label="Listen to the Sermon" link="http://midtowncolumbia.com/sermon-series/luke" shape="default"]

Gathering Recap | Downtown | 11.2.14

Songs:

Psalm 18 by Citizens

Grace Alone by The Modern Post

Savior King by Hillsong

Rock of Ages by Page CXVI

Be Thou My Vision by Ascend The Hill

 

Sermon Tweets

The hope we have is not that God will always change our circumstance, but that he can be trusted in any circumstance.

The peace of Christ will rule in your life when you realize that nothing compares to his power.

Jesus does not trivialize our circumstances. He simply declares that he is bigger.

The cross of Jesus is an anchor for the soul in the midst of life’s scary, unmanageable circumstances.

If you find yourself following a Jesus that you have no fear of, you’ve not found the historical Jesus.

Following Jesus means knowing that he is powerful enough to calm storms, and powerful enough to have reasons not to.

Resting in Jesus' power is all about understanding that through the cross, his power is for you and not against you.

  [button label="Listen to the Sermon" link="http://midtowncolumbia.com/sermon-series/luke" shape="default"]

Gathering Recap | Downtown | 10.19.14

Songs:

Made Alive by Citizens

Out Of The Mud by Seeds Family Music

Psalm 18 by Citizens

Nothing But The Blood by Citizens

All I Have Is Christ by Summit Worship

Amazing Grace by Citizens

 

Sermon Tweets

Our external actions are inextricably tied to the condition of our hearts.

If we want our actions to change, we need a changed heart.

We don't just need more accountability; we need new hearts.

Difficult circumstances only reveal soul-level problems, not create them.

Families need the family of God to become better families.

Parenting is a community project.

  [button label="Listen to the Sermon" link="http://midtowncolumbia.com/sermon-series/luke" shape="default"]

Gathering Recap | Downtown| 10.12.14

Songs:

Dear Refuge Of My Wear Soul by Trinity Grace Church

10,000 Reasons by Matt Redman

I Will Exalt You by Hillsong

The Word by The Dispatch

 

Sermon Tweets

 Every time we see sin in others, it should be a reminder to examine ourselves first.

To be forgiven by God will invariably cause me to become a forgiving person.

In your relationships, you are either cultivating a gospel culture or a sinful culture.

There's a way to clearly state right and wrong without being a judgmental person.

Gospel humility is to be more aware of my own sin than I am of someone else's.

We have plenty of sin to be concerned about in our own lives.

Calling out sin in others is an easy diversion tactic to distract from our own sin.

 [button label="Listen to the Sermon" link="http://midtowncolumbia.com/sermon-series/luke" shape="default"]

Gathering Recap | Downtown | 10.5.14

Songs:

Come And Stand Amazed by Citizens

All I Have Is Christ by Sovereign Grace Music

Fix My Eyes by King's Kaleidoscope

Rock Of Ages by Page CXVI

Kingdom Come by Elevation

 

Sermon Tweets

 Just because some of us don't have enemies doesn't mean we don't have people who are difficult to love.

If Jesus says to love our enemies...it's safe to assume that includes people who disagree with us.

If Jesus says to love our enemies...it's safe to assume that includes people who annoy us.

If Jesus says to love our enemies...it's safe to assume that includes people we don't have much in common with.

If Jesus says to love our enemies...it's safe to assume that includes people who we think are immature.

At the core of Jesus’ call to love our enemies is the story of a God who died for His.

Jesus turned his enemies into friends and we're called to do the same.

Immaturity is living life in response to others. Maturity is living life in response to God.

 [button label="Listen to the Sermon" link="http://midtowncolumbia.com/sermon-series/luke" shape="default"]