Advent Introduction, Jason Sica

On weekdays during Advent we will be posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. Today's post is the introduction written by Pastor Jason. You can download the booklet in its entirety here

 

“They feast on the abundance of your house,
and you give them drink from the river of your delights."
 
Psalm 36:8

An abundance of food and drink was before us. Around the table were those we call family—both biological and spiritual. There were also those we refer to as neighbors. Despite our differences in background and skin color, we shared in common the need to eat and drink and experience belonging around the table. There’s something about a feast that brings people together, isn’t there?

This scene has unfolded in our dining room at holiday meals over the past few years. It’s a scene that points me to the abundance of God’s Kingdom. Feasting imagery abounds in Scripture. The Kingdom is described as a banquet spread for those who recognize their need. Why do we eat and drink? Because we get hungry and thirsty. Eating and drinking makes us aware of how dependent we are on God. And because of his abundant goodness, God invites us to feed on his provision regardless of race, class, or status. He’s the giver of all good gifts. There’s enough in his Kingdom for us all. 

Approach this guide as a banquet of sorts, as an opportunity to feast on God’s abundance. We often overlook the abundance in our lives because we dwell on what we don’t have as opposed to what we do have. Arthur Brooks writes about this tendency and the need for gratitude:

“For many people, gratitude is difficult, because life is difficult. Even beyond deprivation and depression, there are many ordinary circumstances in which gratitude doesn’t come easily. But we are more than slaves to our feelings, circumstances and genes. Evidence suggests that we can actively choose to practice gratitude. Choosing to focus on good things makes you feel better than focusing on bad things. In the slightly more elegant language of the Stoic philosopher Epictetus, ‘He is a man of sense who does not grieve for what he has not, but rejoices in what he has.’”

Gratitude is restored for people of faith by reflecting on who God is and what he’s done for us. Advent is an ideal time for such reflection since it focuses our attention on how God came in Jesus to offer us abundant life. Feast on these stories of abundance in the lives of your brothers and sisters so that you might practice gratitude for God’s goodness. 

Pastor Jason

Preparing for Sunday Worship: November 29, 2015

Here is the worship guide for the first Sunday of Advent.

Advent means “coming” or “arrival.” It’s a four-week period leading up to Christmas in which we celebrate the first coming of Jesus and look forward to his promise to come again. The theme of our Advent celebration this year is “Abundance.” At the heart of all reality is God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. This Three-in-One God enjoys abundant life within himself and overflows with goodness, love, and delight. The gospel is the good news that Jesus came to make that life accessible to us, to invite us into the very life of God. Our hope is that this Advent season would be a time of renewal in your life.

Rev. Nick Owens will be with us this Sunday to share about Reformed University Fellowship at the University of Delaware. He will also continue our "Abundance" series by preaching on "Abundant Kingdom." 

Jesus, Everlasting King

O Come, O Come, Emmanuel

Exalted (Yahweh)

Here I Am to Worship

Let Your Kingdom Come

Angels We Have Heard on High/Build Your Kingdom Here

 

Preparing for Sunday Worship: November 22, 2015

Here is this Sunday's worship guide.

Our order of worship is designed to tell God's Story by moving us through the main acts of the biblical narrative: Creation, Fall, Redemption, and Renewal. The goal is for us to rehearse the drama of redemption and celebrate who Jesus is and what he’s done. Sunday worship is a powerful tool that God uses to form us as his people. We craft the worship guide with this in mind, but also with the intention that it be used throughout the week as an aid to help us walk authentically with God. 

This Sunday Pastor Jason will continue our "Abundance" series by preaching on "Abundant Forgiveness." We will also hear from Jamie and Sara Carty about their adoption experience as part of our participation in orphan awareness month. Below are the songs that we will sing:

Grace Alone

Love Came Down

10,000 Reasons (Bless the Lord)

Lead Me to the Cross

Before the Throne of God Above

Mighty to Save

Online Giving

Many of you have asked over the years about an online giving option at City Church. We are excited to announce that this option is now available. Giving online allows you to set up automatic recurring contributions through an electronic funds transfer (EFT) from a checking or savings account, or to donate with a debit or credit card. Keep in mind, however, that if you give using a card, City Church will incur 2.75% of the total transaction amount in fees.

Simply follow these steps to set up online giving:

1. Go to citychurchwilmington.com/give/
2. Click on the Give button at the bottom of the page
3. Click on the Create Profile button
4. Follow the instructions to create an online profile and to schedule your recurring contributions

Please note that we will continue to take up a weekly collection during Sunday worship. The act of placing your offering in the basket is a meaningful part of the worship experience for some of you. Others of you rarely write checks or carry cash so the online giving option will make giving much more convenient. 

All that we have is a gift from a generous God. We get to express his generosity by being good stewards of these gifts and by using them to bring his Kingdom to life around us. Thank you for your generous giving to City Church, which supports the family life and mission of our church!

If you have questions about giving, please email our bookkeeper, Laura Williams

A Redemption Story in "Murder Town"

The graphic above was used as the splash page for City Church's website preceding our launch in 2010. Our vision remains the same almost six years later. 

Local social media has been buzzing this week due to the announcement that ABC will air a TV drama called "Murder Town," which will be set here in Wilmington. The announcement follows last year's Newsweek article, "Murder Town USA (aka Wilmington, Delaware)." Not good press for our city to say the least. It's been apparent for quite some time that "Wilmington, our broken city, must be saved." I remember seeing a play at the Delaware Theater Company a few years ago called, 10 Months: The Wilmington Voices Project. These lines stuck with me:

"Everybody's got plans. A plan for this neighborhood. A plan for that one. Problem is, we got a broken heart. That's right. We're a city with a broken heart. And we just can't get over it. We just can't get past it."

The "narrative of brokenness" in Wilmington is undeniable and pervasive. It's visible on the streets and highlighted by local news outlets. The pain of so many people here in our city is not the stuff of TV shows and movies—it's the stuff of everyday life. 

There's obviously a great deal that could be said about the problems that plague our city and what should be done to address them. That's not my interest in this post. I simply want to say this: while the "narrative of brokenness" is real, it's not the only narrative unfolding in our city. The "narrative of redemption" is just as real despite the fact that it's often overshadowed. We're naive if we deny the brokenness, but we're cynical if we overlook the redemption. Since it's easier for me to dwell on what's negative, I want to highlight some of what's positive.

There are lots of wonderful people in this city who are working hard to improve it. I've had the privilege of partnering with some of them. Over the past year I've participated in several peace rallies and marches with folks whose love for Wilmington has inspired me. Just two weeks ago I attended the annual banquet for UrbanPromise along with 700 other people. We heard incredible stories of how God is at work and how lives are being transformed. There are other organizations, churches, and ministries that are serving and investing in our city. I live in the Cool Spring/Tilton Neighborhood. Those who know me know I love my neighborhood—the old homes, the festivals, the farmers market, and the community garden. Most of all, I love my diverse neighbors. I’m not blind to the problems, however. Like most urban neighborhoods, drugs, crime, and poverty are issues. I’m hopeful though. There are countless neighbors and organizations unified in their efforts to make this place that we call home a better one.

As the pastor of City Church, I'm most familiar with how the "narrative of redemption" is unfolding in our midst. So let me encourage you with what I see from my perspective:

  • Thirteen individuals or families (that I am aware of) from our congregation have purchased homes in the City of Wilmington since City Church started. Several more have made the choice to rent homes or apartments here. Others lived here before the church began.
     
  • Four City Church community groups have formed in the city (Cool Spring, Tilton Park, Trinity Vicinity, and North Side). These groups are devoted to seeking the good of their communities. 
     
  • We started offering English as a Second Language classes this year to serve our neighbors who are learning to navigate life in a culture that is unfamiliar to them.
     
  • We launched The 3rd Place this summer as a community gathering space. Neighbors are using the space. Our first three art exhibits attracted over 50 people to each. Later this month we will host our first house concert. 
     
  • There are City Church members who travel to Sunday worship from Maryland, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. While they don't live in the city, they recognize Wilmington's importance to the region. Some of them sought to avoid Wilmington before they connected to City Church. Now they are involved in serving the city. 
     
  • The generosity of people at City Church has allowed us to host festivals for our neighborhood, to walk alongside those caught in addiction, and to demonstrate the mercy of God in tangible ways to neighbors.

That's enough of the narrative for now to encourage you. Yes, our city is broken. But God is at work to redeem it, and he's using us. What does the label "Murder Town" change for us as a congregation in Wilmington? Absolutely nothing. We're to remain faithful in loving God and seeking the welfare of the people and places around us. Throughout church history authentic followers of Jesus have always moved toward brokenness, not away from it. At the heart of the Biblical Story, after all, is the announcement that Jesus left the comfort of heaven in order to enter our world and redeem what's broken. We're called to follow in our Savior's footsteps. He's gone before us. He's with us now.

Seek the welfare of the city where I have sent you into exile, and pray to the LORD on its behalf, for in its welfare you will find your welfare.   Jeremiah 29:7

Grace & Peace,
Pastor Jason

 

Preparing for Sunday Worship: November 15, 2015

Here is this Sunday's worship guide.

Our order of worship is designed to tell God's Story by moving us through the main acts of the biblical narrative: Creation, Fall, Redemption, and Renewal. The goal is for us to rehearse the drama of redemption and celebrate who Jesus is and what he’s done. Sunday worship is a powerful tool that God uses to form us as his people. We craft the worship guide with this in mind, but also with the intention that it be used throughout the week as an aid to help us walk authentically with God. 

This Sunday Pastor Jason will continue our "Abundance" series by preaching on "Abundant Generosity." Below are the songs that we will sing:

You Have Won Me

All That I Am

All the Poor and Powerless

What the Lord Has Done in Me

All I Owe

I Surrender All

Preparing for Sunday Worship: November 8, 2015

Here is the worship guide for this Sunday.

Our order of worship is designed to tell God's Story by moving us through the main acts of the biblical narrative: Creation, Fall, Redemption, and Renewal. The goal is for us to rehearse the drama of redemption and celebrate who Jesus is and what he’s done. Sunday worship is a powerful tool that God uses to form us as his people. We craft the worship guide with this in mind, but also with the intention that it be used throughout the week as an aid to help us walk authentically with God. 

This Sunday Pastor Jason will continue our "Abundance" series by preaching a sermon on "Abundant Virtue." We will also get to hear from a family that God is calling to be missionaries in another country. 

Below are the songs that we will sing:

Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise

Here I Am to Worship

Overcome

Oh! Great Is Our God!

Beautiful

Preparing for Sunday Worship: November 1, 2015

Here is the worship guide for this Sunday.

Our order of worship is designed to tell God's Story by moving us through the main acts of the biblical narrative: Creation, Fall, Redemption, and Renewal. The goal is for us to rehearse the drama of redemption and celebrate who Jesus is and what he’s done. Sunday worship is a powerful tool that God uses to form us as his people. We craft the worship guide with this in mind, but also with the intention that it be used throughout the week as an aid to help us walk authentically with God. 

This Sunday Pastor Jason will kickoff our "Abundance" series by preaching a sermon on "Abundant Life." We will also celebrate covenant baptism and sing the following songs:

Love Came Down

Mourning Into Dancing

Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing

The Wonderful Cross

Mystery 

Preparing for Sunday Worship: October 25, 2015

Here is the worship guide for Sunday, October 25. Our order of worship is designed to tell God's Story by moving us through the main acts of the biblical narrative: Creation, Fall, Redemption, and Renewal. The goal is for us to rehearse the drama of redemption and celebrate who Jesus is and what he’s done. Sunday worship is a powerful tool that God uses to form us as his people. 

This Sunday Pastor Jason will finish our "Exiles" series by preaching a sermon from 1 Peter 5:6-14 titled, "Realistic Faith." We will also celebrate covenant baptism and sing the following songs:

10,000 Reasons (Bless the Lord)
All Creatures of Our God and King
Rising Sun
O My Soul, Arise
Lord, I Need You
How Great Is Our God

Advent Devotional

 

Advent is a word that means “coming” or “arrival.” It’s a four-week period in which the Church remembers the first coming of Jesus and looks forward to his second coming. Advent begins this year on Sunday, November 29. 

In past years we have made available an Advent devotional written by members of the City church family. The theme of this year’s devotional is “Abundance.” At the heart of reality is the Triune God who enjoys abundant life within himself. He overflows with goodness, love, and delight. The gospel is that Jesus came to make that life accessible to us, to invite us into the very life of God. “I came that they may have life and have it abundantly,” he declared. Write a reflection describing how you experienced the abundant life of God this past year. Maybe it was through your conversion, through God’s provision, through what you learned from His Word, or through the experience of receiving or extending hospitality. 

You have until Monday, November 16 to submit your reflection. Reflections should be no more than ONE page in length. You are welcome to make more than one submission. Please email them to Laura Williams.

The "Abundance" sermon series will actually begin on November 1 and run through December 27. Below are the themes that we will cover. These might feed your imagination as you think about writing a reflection for the devotional. 

Sun, Nov 1st
ABUNDANT LIFE

Sun, Nov 8th
ABUNDANT VIRTUE

Sun, Nov 15th
ABUNDANT GENEROSITY

Sun, Nov 22th
ABUNDANT FORGIVENESS

Sun, Nov 29th (1st Sunday of Advent)
ABUNDANT KINGDOM

Sun, Dec 6th (2nd Sunday of Advent)
ABUNDANT JOY

Sun, Dec 13th (4th Sunday of Advent)
ABUNDANT PEACE

Sun, Dec 20th (3rd Sunday of Advent)
ABUNDANT HOPE

Sun, Dec 27th
ABUNDANT GRACE

Sunday Worship Preview for October 11, 2015

Here is the worship bulletin for Sunday

Join us on Sunday for a special service as Pastor Abou from West Africa is coming to share God's word with us. Abou was born and raised in a Muslim home in West Africa. As a young man he had questions about Christianity, leading him to seek answers from missionaries. After becoming a Christian he was rejected by his birth family. He attended seminary in the Philippines and then returned to Gambia to begin a new church planting movement. Today that work includes 31 established churches and 7 presbyteries. Under Abou's leadership new works have also begun in two neighboring countries. Pastor Abou and his wife have three children and have started two children's homes to protect children from entering the sex trade.

We will worship together singing these songs:

Lord of Lords
He Reigns
Guide Me O Thou Great Jehovah
Oceans
God of This City
Isaiah 60

 

Sunday Worship Preview for September 20, 2015

Click to download the PDF of the worship bulletin

This Sunday, Pastor Jason will preach on the end of 1 Peter (1 Peter 4:12-19), exploring the theme of "Redemptive Suffering." As a church family, we will celebrate the covenant baptism of Julia Clare Scott. And we will worship God together through singing these songs:

Blessed Be Your Name

Sovereign Over Us

Stronger

It Is Well With My Soul

Desert Song

Sunday Worship Preview for September 13, 2015

Download the 9/13 Worship Bulletin

What does it look like to live as God's family? This is the question we'll consider tomorrow morning from 1 Peter 4:7-11. We'll also have the opportunity to hear about how God was at work through English as a Second Language classes this summer. 

Here are the songs we'll sing together:

I Surrender

Oh, How I Need You

All That I Am

Lord, I Need You

I Surrender All

Love Came Down

Sunday Worship Preview for September 6, 2015

Download the 9.6.15 Worship Bulletin

Pastor Jason will be preaching on 1 Peter 4:1-11, "The Death of Self." We will hear how we must die to self in order to overcome sin, how we must die to self in order to invest in others, and how Christ is the model for us in dying to self. We will sing these songs together:

Only You Can Satisfy

A Mighty Fortress

Here I Am to Worship

All I Have Is Christ

All That I Am

From the Inside Out

Sunday Worship Preview for August 23rd

8.23.15 Worship Bulletin

Pastor Jason, back from West Africa, will continue our "Exiles" series on 1 Peter by talking about how to commend the Faith in a post-Christian culture. Below are the songs we'll sing together when we gather:

"Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing"
"Those Who Trust"
"Guide Me, O Thou Great Jehovah"
"Oceans"
"O Love That Will Not Let Me Go"
"How Great Is the Love"

Pastor Jason's West Africa Update #5

I'm home! 

I arrived home safely yesterday morning despite a period of anxiety over whether I would be able to board my flight. I stood in the check-in line at the Dakar airport for over an hour only to find out at 1:30 AM along with 30 other people that the flight was overbooked and no open seats remained. Eventually two folks in front of me were invited to go through, leaving me as the next in line. What a bummer! I couldn't wait to see my family after being away from them for 10 days. Just as the airline began making hotel arrangements for us, an airline official informed me that there was one more open seat so I could pass through to board. Major relief! Not only was I invited to board, but I was upgraded to business class which made for a super comfortable flight home!

I spent my final two days in West Africa in Dakar, Senegal. All the churches in the Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Senegal are currently located in more rural villages so the denomination is making plans to establish a city center church in Dakar that would strategically plant other churches in urban centers throughout West Africa. A highlight for me was visiting a girls home associated with the denomination. The girls who live in this particular home are taken in because they are deemed to be at high risk for being sold into the sex trade or other forms of slavery. The home is located on the lower level of where the president of the denomination and his family live. One of the churches also gathers there for worship on Sunday mornings. It was a special moment watching the girls receive school supplies and others gifts from churches in the U.S. These girls are being cared for and loved beautifully by Jesus' people.

There is so much more I could write about my trip, but I'll have plenty of opportunities to share in sermons and other communications in the coming weeks. I am incredibly grateful for the experiences I gained during my time in Senegal and Gambia. I look forward to going back for sure. We are one people in the family of Jesus with our brothers and sisters in West Africa. We are engaged in the same work of church planting and making disciples as they are.