12/23, Laura Williams Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here.
 

Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good
     His love endures forever

To him who alone does great wonders
     His love endures forever
Who by his understanding made the heavens
     His love endures forever
Who spread out the earth upon the waters
     His love endures forever

He remembered us in our low estate
     His love endures forever
And freed us from our enemies
     His love endures forever
He gives food to every creature
     His love endures forever
Give thanks to the God of heaven
     His love endures forever
                                                     From Psalm 136

He made us and said that we are good
     His love endures forever
He loves, pursues, forgives us when we turn from him
     His love endures forever
He died for us
     His love endures forever
He calls us his sons and daughters
     His love endures forever
He is teaching us what this really means
     His love endures forever

He heard our prayers and answered
     His love endures forever
He has multiplied love in our home beyond our understanding
     His love endures forever

Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good
His abundant love endures forever

12/22, Heather Tansley Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here.
 

“I know that when I come to you I will come in the fullness of the blessing of Christ.”
                                                                                                                                        
Romans 15:29

I am an individual that can certainly attest to God’s abundance over the past year. I transitioned from a time of great loss and loneliness to finding my true love, getting married, and being surrounded by new babies that I get to spoil. Yet I find myself wanting more things to complete my happiness—well, four things specifically. I find that I lie to myself saying, “You’ll finally be happy if you get these four things.” For those of you that are wondering, the four things are a baby, a cleaning person, a vacation trip, and a set of dressers. (All of which I think are extremely reasonable desires.) However, the other day when I was particularly loathing my existence because I was faced with the despicable task of cleaning the bathroom, it struck me that not all that long ago I was telling myself I would just be happy if I could find the love of my life and get married. Then I realized how wrong I had been (Sorry, Rich - Love you, XOXO). Even though I am extremely happy being married, it has not fulfilled all of my wants and desires and it certainly has not kept me from wanting more. So while I still want those four, very sensible, things, I am hoping to use this advent season to remind myself that they will soon be replaced different things and that I cannot place my hope for fulfillment in those things. Meanwhile, I will thank God that He sent Jesus to give true joy and fulfill every one of my desires more abundantly than I can ask or imagine.

12/21, Katie Sica Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here.
 

“I lift up my eyes to the hills. From where does my help come? My help comes from the Lord, who made heaven and earth. He will not let your foot be moved; he who keeps you will not slumber. Behold, he who keeps Israel will neither slumber nor sleep.”
                                                                                                                                            Psalm 121:1-4

There’s a ton of laundry yet to be done. Somehow the hamper is staying at a constant full this week. Clean dishes to unload. Dirty dished to wash. When did all these leaves fall? Someone will have to rake those. Hundreds of photos to edit. Hundreds more to take. Meals to make. I need quality time and good conversations with my husband and kids! Lunches to pack. Bills to pay. The girls need help with homework. An abundance of “stuff” to do. Some of it good and enjoyable. Some if it humdrum but necessary. All of it overwhelming at one time. I’m tired before I’ve even begun!

I need to look up from the everyday stuff of life to the One who is my strength. His strength is mercifully abundant. My help comes from the One who created all things. Who made Heaven and Earth from nothing. He has no need for sleep! Can you imagine?! This God loves me. He is my keeper (vs. 5). Brothers and sisters, He is your keeper as well! Draw from the wells of His abundant strength! 

Preparing for Sunday Worship—December 20, 2015

Here is the worship guide for the fourth 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.

Pastor Jason will continue our "Abundance" series by preaching on "Abundant Hope." We will sing the following songs:

Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus

Emmanuel (Hallowed Manger Ground)

God With Us

Hope of the Nations

Hark the Herald Angels Sing/King of Heaven

12/18, Sandi Shidner Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here.
 

I have been greatly blessed by God’s abundance. It is hard to stay within the boundary of one year for the measure of this abundance because God’s blessings on me are a lifetime of gifts. He showers blessings on me in all of my days and sometimes it takes a while for me to recognize the abundance. 

Just recently I have been thinking about what to give my children as Christmas presents this year and I am coming up mostly empty. I spoke to them and they too say “I don’t know because I have so much.” It was tradition in our family to give limited gifts at Christmas so we could focus on its true meaning, the gift of Jesus Christ to all of us from the Father. Even my chore list is a measure of the abundance of God. My sink of dirty dishes yells out the great gift of food that God has provided for me. My pile of laundry speaks to the blessings of clothes the Lord has gifted to me. My dusty and cob-webby rooms reminds me of the shelter my Father has provided me. And then I go to my home, which is wherever my family is at any given time. My daughters are the joy of my life. Their abundance of success is my abundance of success. They are smart, funny interesting people and that is because God is alive in their hearts and minds. And then beyond that, I am blessed in abundance with my husband, who is kind and loving, who brings an abundance of laughter and fun into my world. He came with children and they came with more love for me to give abundantly and receive. And I could spend the rest of my days telling you about the abundance that comes along with my grandchildren. If you know me, I probably have already done that to you. 

I can’t turn around without seeing another gift in my life from God. He has blessed me with more grief and heartache (yes, blessed me, stay with me here) and in that grief and heartache I found friendship, love and reasons to rely on God. I may have felt as desperate as I ever could and He found me and held me in His loving arms. God touched the hearts of people around me to provide me with the things I needed to get through those times, one of which was the gift of my beloved Bernard. And then He gave His grace to me. He forgave me for doubting Him and He forgave me for leaving Him and He forgave me for yelling out at Him and He forgave me for so much more. 

God has abundantly blessed this world with such beauty as the eye could ever want. Take a drive across our beautiful county and see what gifts He put along the way. There is an abundance of love and gratefulness in my heart that is yet another abundant gift from God. I only know love because He loved me first. Probably, more than any other gift in abundance that God has blessed me with is time. I know that in the big scheme of things I am not very old, but God has decided in His great abundance to give me time every day to experience all of the above in abundance. I try every day to remember to thank Him for everything.

12/17, Meg Raby Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here.
 

The Bible tells us not to be anxious about anything. It’s a command to be obeyed.

“But sometimes we need a more compelling reason than obedience. We need to see that what is right is also good for us. And we usually only see these good reasons when we’re in pain. Our pain motivates us to act” (taken from “Boundaries” by Cloud & Townsend). God knew I needed to go through unbearable pain. Not really physical pain but mental pain. 

I’ll never forget when Lee and I up and moved to Minnesota, dontcha know, the day after we returned from our honeymoon in Jamaica. I will always remember waving goodbye to my parents at my childhood home in St. Louis, Missouri and telling my childhood dog not to die on me. I had no idea what to expect in Minnesota. 

Somehow I trusted 22-year-old Lee to determine where we would live in Minneapolis. Yes, he chose the apartment we would live in for our first 2 years of marriage, and I had never been to Minneapolis prior to see it. I had no job lined up, I was wait-listed at the University of Minnesota’s Speech Language Pathology graduate program, I was a new wife with expectations and I was already dreading the copious amounts of snow Minnesota is notorious for. I’m going to lose control on the snowy roads and end up in one of the 10,000 lakes, dead. My whole mindset was full of joy-sucking negativity including fear about not having a job lined up, not immediately being accepted into the graduate program, and the upcoming snow. Life was clearly not how it was supposed to be, I thought.

Not three months into our marriage I received a phone call from my Dad in St. Louis telling me my childhood dog had died. Ouch. Then, the snow came. Who would have guessed that something so white and gentle could add crippling fear-sauce on top of my already extra-large anxiety sundae? 

Enter panic attacks. Enter difficult wife. Enter sleepless nights. Enter desperation for peace.

I was paralyzed by anxiety. 

And that’s the problem. I’m not sure if you’ve noticed, but I have named all things that are “seen” and fixed my eyes on them and removed them from Jesus. Peace was nowhere to be found.

Enter the word of God. Enter reminders of that little baby in a manger who would rock my world. Enter professional psychological help. Enter victory. 

I fell in love. With Him. I began thanking Him for my anxiety knowing full well that the pain of anxiety motivated me to cling to His promises and to crave His presence. Anxiety became a blessing. It really did. To this day I continue to suffer with intermittent episodes of panic and continue to have the diagnosis of Anxiety Disorder, but it’s not the same. Before it was crippling and terrifying and earthly-focused. Now, it points me heaven-ward to Jesus and true peace is found. For I know that I can 

“glory in [my sufferings], because [I] know that suffering produces perseverance, perseverance, character, and character, hope. And hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to [me].”
                                                                                                                                                  Romans 5:3-5

12/16, Doug Perkins Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here
 

Actor Terry Crews recently said in October, “Our deepest desire is to be completely known… and completely loved… at the exact same time. But our deepest fear is that no one could possibly love us, if they knew us completely.”

That’s exactly, for you and me, where God’s glorious “Gospel of the Kingdom” (Jesus’ phrase) comes into serious play… really, for all human beings during Advent. On the one

hand, we truly do fear being fully known—warts and all—because then we conclude we’d be unloveable. (I absolutely felt that way as a bachelor but still feel that way on social media and in social settings.) On the other hand, we might feel loved by some people who don’t really know us well… and then we conclude it’s superficial love, sort of like getting enormous affirmation from Facebook “friends” but realizing they don’t know us well. The vicious cycle continues: “If they really knew the entire truth about me…”

This glorious Gospel of the Kingdom addresses Hollywood’s (and our) “secrets” this Advent season and into the New Year: In  Christ, Who is our all-knowing Creator, we’re completely known AND unconditionally loved—“at the exact same time.” The Lord knows us completely… and still loves us! This union is for eternity. He ain’t gonna divorce us! In the early 1600s this Gospel of the Kingdom captured the hearts of persecuted refugees in Europe known as “pilgrims.” Result: they engaged in Kingdom-living among Americans when:

Modeling a Kingdom lifestyle of Christian counterculture. The Native  Americans of Massachusetts noticed how distinctively different these Europeans were from the merchants who had kidnapped and enslaved some of them (including Squantum). These broken but redeemed folks were the only “Bibles” the natives could “read.” What had the pilgrims read in their own Bible? That this “Good News of great joy for all peoples” made another family on the run to allow dirty shepherds to disturb needed rest (Luke 2:16)! That they could host even a strange entourage of Iranian (Persian) men to adore the Child entrusted to them (Matt 2:11). From 1st century to 17th century to 21st century!

Ministering the Gospel of this Kingdom inclusively, even cross-culturally. While other Europeans (mostly men, mostly merchants) became enemies of Native Americans, the pilgrim families embraced them—and encouraged their children to play with the Native American children during their hospitality. Likewise, while lower-class shepherds and ethnically-different foreigners were denigrated in the Roman Empire, Joseph and Mary embraced them as they sought to discover Christ (See Matthew 2 and Luke 2).

“Made Kingdom culture” for generations to come, laying the framework for God’s Redemptive Story to flourish in the future. The missional household of  Jesus in the first century (by God’s Sovereign Spirit) has multiplied missional communities since then.  For example, the pilgrims’ redemptive romance of young widow Priscilla Mullins and John Alden (which parallels the Biblical romance between young widow Ruth and Boaz), and their founding of an academy/resource center (which became known as Harvard College within a few years)—all while learning to speak the natives’ language—shows how we in City Church don’t have to shy away from culture.  As a Kingdom counterculture, we are (God is) making culture when His Gospel—being fully known as broken sinners but being fully loved in Christ—takes root in us this Advent.

I, like Terry Crews, long for it:  “Good news (Gospel!) of great joy, which will be for all…”!

12/15, Wayne Pansa Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here
 

“Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted."
                                                                                                                                           
Matthew 5:4

As I think about how I’ve experienced abundance this year I can’t help but also think about mourning. It may be partially because it was so recent, or maybe because of how shocking it was, but it’s also because I experienced abundance in a unique way this year while in the midst of grief.

I entered work like any other day on October 14th, but it quickly became clear that it would not be an ordinary day. About an hour into my day a coworker pulled a couple of us aside to inform us that a friend who had worked closely with us for several years had her life taken the previous night. In the midst of our shock we wished we could just go home for the day, but that wasn’t an option. We struggled through the day stopping often to talk about our good memories of our friend and our shock that she was gone. We knew that this was not a loss we would be able to get over easily.

As we continue to process our loss over a month later we still don’t have answers. We haven’t found the right way to articulate what we are thinking or feeling. Many of us continue to feel like we are lying even responding that we are ok when asked how we are doing. What I have found though, from the moment I received the news, is an abundance of family. I have been surrounded by people from my family at City Church, my family at work, and my biological family who have checked in with me often and reminded me that they are praying for me. I have seen people go out of their way to invite me to spend time with them to give me a break from thinking about my sadness and grief. My family has been willing to sit and listen when I wanted to talk about my friend and how I am processing my grief, but they have also been willing to help me distract myself when I need a break from talking. Throughout the past month I have had countless reminders that I am well loved by people who won’t shy away or disappear when difficult times arise.

When I think of the word abundance I also think of fullness of life, which I think is well portrayed in Ecclesiastes 3:1-8. Solomon says in verse 1, “For everything there is a season,” and goes on to give several examples of things we face in life. As I’ve gone through the past year I am thankful that I have had the opportunity to experience many of these, including a time for mourning and a time for weeping. I don’t mean to say that I’m thankful for what happened, but I am thankful that God has used a tragic and terrible situation to remind me of how loved I am both by Him and by the people with whom he has surrounded me. I am thankful that in the midst of my mourning I can cling to a promise from my savior that I will find comfort. Most of all I am thankful for my family and my savior who have brought me that comfort even when I didn’t have the energy to seek it.

12/14, Kristina Pansa Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here
 

The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. He makes me lie down in green pastures. He leads me beside still waters. He restores my soul. He leads me in paths of righteousness for his name’s sake. Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me. You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies; you anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows. Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life, and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever.”
                                                                                                                                                  Psalm 23

This familiar passage has at times for me been a gasped, painful question to God: “Are you with me? Will you give me rest?” “I see and feel the darkness and evil; will you protect me?”

This year, it is a celebration; an exclamation of God’s goodness: “My cup overflows!”

While Wayne and I have had a really fun, adventurous, joyful year, these activities alone aren’t the goodness I have felt so abundantly. God’s blessings to me have challenged me at my core. This past year, I have seen and felt God using the people and circumstances in my life to rewire me, the teeniest bit. For the first time, I think, I’ve noticed that the people, places, and circumstances around me are being used by God to alter who I am fundamentally, for the better. My relationship with Wayne has taught me patience, kindness, peace, perseverance. Friends have taught me the power and beauty in transparency, sacrifice (both to give and receive), faith. Circumstances have taught me how little is within my control.

This complete rewiring of my system is so far from complete, it’s painful. And being aware of how utterly spiritually destitute I am makes it all the more painful to experience glimpses of glory. And yet those glimpses are all the more beautiful because of my fallen state. Through God’s abundance, my soul is reclaimed and being renewed, very slowly. And the abundance of peace that comes from trusting in God’s perfect redemptive work is at best, unbelievable.

12/11, Melissa L. Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here
 

For if, one man’s sin caused death to rule over all people because of that man. How much more, then, will those people who accept and receive the abundance of God’s full grace and the great gift of being made right with him, have true life and reign in the future life through the one man, Jesus Christ. Just as death ruled in Adam, so believers rule over death through Christ.”
                                                                                                                                          
Romans 5:17

In the darkest night of our soul, we have something incredibly abundant to hold on to. We know Christ crucified. As Christians, even when there seems to be no other evidence of God’s love, we cannot escape the abundance of the cross—Christ’s incredibly abundant love for us: His dying in our place and rising from the dead that we might truly know God and His abundant love and grace that is free for us to receive and hold victoriously onto in the darkest of times. 

We like to ignore death. We often avoid pain and suffering, even that of others, at all costs. To look death in the eye and view our suffering or the suffering of others with empathy is to view a mirror of our brokenness; to acknowledge our own inferiority and frailty; to recognize with humility that we are finite, we are not in control, and we are not God. 

This year I looked death in the eye. The truth I received when I was willing to look was more abundant than I expected. I was suffering from a mysterious, excruciating, and debilitating neuropathic pain. After nine surgeries and an electrical device implanted into the fluid around my spinal cord and hip to improve my quality of life, my condition worsened and I could barely get out of bed without vomiting from the pain. My doctors regretfully informed me there was nothing more they could do for me. The doctors couldn’t locate the source of my pain and my condition would be upgraded to “intractable pain disease.” They explained this meant that my severe constant pain could not be cured by any means known to man, I would be bed-bound on strong pain meds, and I would die an early death, as my bodily organs would start shutting down in response to the severe constant pain. 

On the one hand, this was devastating news. I grieved this news so deep it often felt like a cement block was on my chest. I often sobbed privately in the shower or on the bedroom floor, the kind of sob where the agony is so deep and guttural your mouth-open sobs are without sound. All I could focus on was that my life was over and unfulfilled. I was 32 years old, unmarried, and without kids. I’d done everything I ever wanted to do, except these, and yet all I could see was that I would never get married; I would likely never get out of bed; I would never have children or buy a home—things I had watched my friends do two or even three times. 

On the other hand, I welcomed death and freedom from this excruciating pain. These circumstances seemed so unfair. What did I do to deserve a slow, excruciatingly painful death at a young age? Why did I have to suffer this alone and unmarried? I demanded God’s promises, and yet they remained unfulfilled. Maybe you’ve never experienced this particular devastating suffering, but maybe you can relate. What promise has gone unfulfilled in your life so far?  Marriage? Pregnancy? Healing? A particular promotion or position? Death or salvation for a loved one?  

One afternoon after my second neurosurgery, I sobbed as my mother helped me bathe and dry my hair. I grieved that my body, once beautiful, was now marred with 15 inches of scars, and I was too weak to care for myself. I was broken, and I admitted to God that I couldn’t do this life any longer. With humility I saw myself in the mirror—He was God and I was not. I was not in control of my life, and this pain was too much to bear alone. God spoke words of truth to me in that moment that changed my perspective and unexpectedly brought joy amidst the suffering. He posed a series of questions back to me. “What did I already do for you? If I was willing to suffer undeservedly in your place, can you trust me to show you my purposes? Can you praise what I’ve already done regardless of what you see and feel right now?”

In this life there will be suffering. What’s perplexing is not that we will encounter suffering, it’s that Christ suffered in our place. Why did Christ, the innocent one, suffer in our place for our sins? When we look at Christ crucified and raised from the dead, we can rejoice, knowing the Lord’s strength and abundant love is ours to receive. Because of His abundant love for us in dying on the cross and in His raising from the dead, we can know that the most serious issue and conflict in our lives has already been overcome. Because of His grace and mercy, we will always have a reason to rejoice at our abundance. To find abundance and true joy in the midst of suffering is to recognize that, in this life, our suffering is never as great or as serious as our sins. Regardless of the severity of suffering we experience in life, it will always be less than what we have deserved for our sins. 

God questioned me further. “If I relieved your suffering or answered your unfulfilled expectations, what would you do with your life? How would you respond? Would your life be less about you, and more about what I did for
you—more about sharing with joy the abundant love you received from me with others?” For me it was clear, I needed to give back to Wilmington through Urban Promise to children that weren’t fortunate enough to have parents lovingly looking after them 32 years later. It would take all my energy to get there, but that transformation in perspective gave me an abundance of joy to share life and hope with my mentee, despite my pain and circumstances. I also have found renewed hope, as a third neurosurgery I had this summer in Chicago found a deeply hidden benign tumor growing on a severed nerve. Its removal has significantly relieved my pain. While God doesn’t promise I am healed, and I am admittedly trying not to get my hopes up because the doctors could not guarantee this procedure would be a permanent fix, He does promise abundance. 

In this life we’ll face difficult terrain and overwhelming obstacles, but those mountains of circumstances can be transformed into opportunities to experience an abundance of God’s love, and strength to persevere and to prevail by grace—as we humbly pray, as we humbly wait, and as we humbly rejoice. We can pray for God’s glory and not our own, for His purposes to be made known; we can appeal to Him to be glorified in and through our trial instead of complaining and demanding relief. And with this change of perspective toward humility and praising Christ’s glory and not focusing on our brokenness, we can find abundance—a supernatural abundance of joy, love, grace, mercy, contentment, fulfillment, hope, peace, kindness, and goodness we can’t help but generously share with others. 

An Advent prayer: God, you alone are God and I am not. Thank you for sending your son Jesus to die for my sins and to overcome death—to do for me what I could not do for myself. Forgive me my sins and trespasses against You. Forgive me for not empathizing with the suffering of others and for focusing on myself and my unfulfilled expectations and not on the joy of my salvation. Thank you for your mercy in not giving me what I deserved and for your grace in giving me the free gift of eternal life that I didn’t deserve. Show me how to find abundance amidst my brokenness. Bring my soul deep contentment and joy, regardless of the circumstances. Transform my heart to humbly praise You for who You are and what You first did for me. Compel me to generously share the abundance of love I’ve received from you with others, that Your word, good purposes, love, and grace would be perfected through and demonstrated in my brokenness. 

For in a severe test of affliction, their abundance of joy and their extreme poverty have overflowed in a wealth of generosity on their part.”
                                                                                                                                  
 2 Corinthians 8:2

12/10, Brenda Hutchenson Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here
 

“For if the readiness is there, it is acceptable according to what a person has, not according to what he does not have.”
                                                                                                                               
2 Corinthians 8:12

I pondered a submission for this devotional for weeks, but each time I sat down to write, the words would not come. It’s not as if my family hasn’t experienced God’s overwhelming grace and mercy in this past year. In the last 12 months, my mom and brother died within two weeks of each other, our only daughter married and moved away, and on Reformation Day, God gave us a beautiful, healthy grandson! Throughout all these life changes, God also was mercifully healing mine and Keith’s broken marriage, through many hours of Godly counsel and the prayers of our brothers and sisters in Christ. 

But, I only realized what I should write when I received a check in the mail from my late parents’ estate settlement. It is a miracle, and my story of abundance.

My father was called into the ministry of Jesus when he was 21 years old. He pastored small churches until his death, 63 years later. He always worked one or two other jobs in order to make ends meet. There were eight of us children, the oldest being disabled from a birth injury. There were several years my father did not even make enough money to require the filing of income taxes. Some of his early parishioners informed us when Daddy died, that he had often put his church paycheck back into the offering plate. I know this was done as an act of faith, believing that God would supply his family’s needs.

My early years were filled with fears of having our electricity or heat turned off, due to late payments. It did happen, more than once. I have memories of hearing my mother boldly asking for leniency from the electric company and the slew of creditors demanding immediate payment. 

Once, when my father was blocked from adding to our local grocery tab, my mother began praying. God provided food in a miraculous way! On a bright sunny morning, there was a knock on the door of our modest, four-room home. My mom opened it to reveal a sheepish-looking, middle-aged man. Clearly humbled, the stranger related that God had led him to buy a trunkful of groceries and deliver them to our house. He had obeyed in faith. He said, "Ma’am, if you have someone to help me unload this food, it’s yours." My three growing brothers wasted no time in seeing to the task! This is only one of many stories I could share about my parents’ prayers, and God’s amazing provision.

After a long life of continued financial struggles, my father died, miraculously debt-free. But, we seven children waited with baited breath for the creditors to call. None did. We watched the mail, expecting bills for his extended hospital stay. None came. Not even seven years later, when my mom died. We’ve asked questions, but have gotten no reasonable answers. 

Oh, yeah, the check. The sum total of my financial inheritance—$3,463.07. Yes, a miracle in itself! But, my spiritual inheritance from them is far, far more precious! It is the legacy of two lives lived with devout faith in God and His ability to provide. This is the abundance inheritance I have received, and the abundant legacy which I hope to pass on to my children and my children’s children.

12/9, Nick Halfen Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here
 

My family and I started attending City Church in October of 2013. Little did I know, this slight change in our lives would be very significant. We had been stuck in a rut where we weren’t regularly attending a weekly worship service. This was mostly my fault, as I just didn’t feel like getting up on Sunday mornings. I’d been working a job overnight and life was just easier for me to sleep in. However, God knew what I needed and when I’d need it, and He placed us into the life of City Church at exactly the right time—His time.

The past two years since we started attending City Church have been two of the most difficult years Amber and I have spent together. God, knowing what was coming, placed us here because of all of you. Just two months after we started attending City Church, my mom suddenly passed away (just ten days before Christmas). We then lost our house and then I lost my job and didn’t get a new one for several months. We finally got settled and back on our feet before I recently lost my job again.

Despite the hardships, God has had a plan for my family through all of this. He placed us in City Church just before we would begin to suffer most, because He knew how much we would need our new family. We wouldn’t have made it through the past two years without all of your encouragement and support. 

God’s providence and sovereignty touches every aspect of our lives, and He’s had a plan for us since before He made the world. Ephesians 1:4-5 says, “even as he chose us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless before him. In love he predestined us for adoption as sons [and daughters] through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose of his will.”

God shows us His love for us in abundance, even when we don’t see it. I certainly had no idea the impact that attending City Church would have on the life of my family. Yet, God knew and placed us here at just the right time. Which is something He’d been planning since before the earth was even made. Through Christ, God adopted us as sons and daughters and has taken a personal interest in each of our lives. That’s the beauty of our God. He has entered into our lives and gotten His hands dirty taking everything that happens to us, even the real crappy stuff, and making it for our good (Rom 8:28). It’s comforting knowing God’s abundant love has always existed and, because of the grace He’s shown through Jesus, we can endure any season of life.

12/8, Bethany Gregor Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here
 

Dear God, when I think of abundance, I think of a whole lot of something. I know what it’s like to have abundance… but sometimes hard to believe that’s a good thing. I have an abundance of ideas, but they aren’t all good. I have an abundance of relationships that are at various times deep blessings or mountains of stress and regret. I have an abundance of things to do, some I enjoy and some I dread. By the world’s standards I have an abundance of resources and yet I also have an abundance of messages bombarding me saying that I lack a lot. I have an abundance of choices and an abundance of difficulty knowing what to choose. At times I have an abundance of anxiety and fear and others I recognize an abundance of selfishness or self-righteousness has overtaken me. 

The blessing though is that even in all my abundance… Everything I have is but a drop in the ocean compared to You. You are what makes life not just a lot of something, but at the same time real and worthwhile, you give value and purpose and more than we could ask or imagine. You are the one who has opened my eyes to see that an abundant life is indeed one that is full, of both good and bad, but that because there is both the good becomes sweeter and more amazing. 

God, thank you for all of the people who welcome me into their homes and trust me with the details of their lives. Thank you for all of the children I have gotten to laugh with and see grow and pray and reflect you a little more each day. Thank you for the times I have read your word and been overwhelmed by your grace and understanding. Thank you for like-minded brothers and sisters who encourage me, pray for me, worship with me, and inspire me. Thank you for the times you have allowed me to experience your heart and feel your compassion, your anger, your pain, and your joy that flow out of your great love for your children. Thank you for giving my life true abundance and helping me to learn more each day what that means. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

12/7, Margie Comanda Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here


Earlier this year, we experienced a few tough months. It was a time of oxymorons, because while some parts of life were stressful, other pieces of the same situation were delightful. Similarly, God’s gift of abundance was present even as we felt drained, worn, and rattled. God made Himself visible in what was, without a doubt, the hardest part of our year. Because it was so hard, there were moments daily that we asked God to heal and fix the situation. But He didn’t. And I think one of the results of those long months was that we were given the opportunity to rely on God, not ourselves. We were exhausted, but we also glimpsed hope and help along the way. We were given the chance to let friends carry us just for a bit. For our kids to see us ask Jesus for His help.

Of course, what happened is what always seems to happen—this Presence and Comfort could be mistaken for mundane coincidence. The abundance God gives isn’t terribly supernatural. It’s a man with wise counsel. Friends with time to listen late into the night. Pizza delivered by a friend when we’re too distracted to feed our children. An unexpected afternoon nap to calm my frenetic brain. I could go on and on because God’s care for me was so sneaky and omnipresent, if I hadn’t known it was God, I would’ve thought, “well, I’m glad that didn’t go worse.”

I’ve seen it happen differently, though. When I needed God’s care to be less subtle and more bold. Times of abundance that looked like: a miraculous gift of my unborn child being healed in utero. No more signs of the sickness, the deformity. That abundance was flashy, almost. Maybe that year I needed God to write in giant letters so I could see His love. I don’t know. But this year, the sickness of life was not taken away from us. The mystery is that I experienced God’s mercy and goodness while simultaneously experiencing the brokenness of life. 

I imagine that you could ask me: if God gave you His abundance in the midst of that difficult time, why didn’t God just go on ahead and take it and make it disappear? Because wouldn’t that have shown His presence even more amazingly?

Frederick Buechner, in his memoir Telling Secrets, speaks about a hard season in his family’s life saying, “I believe the blessing of God was indeed crowning our house in the sense that the sad and scary things themselves were, as it turned out, a fearsome blessing.” It’s a fearsome blessing to me, personally, to have to be vulnerable about my stress and need for help in front of others. And when every day is hard, my focus on the gifts in my life becomes sharper. Buechner, in the same book, also says, “I think that I learned something about how even tragedy can be a means of grace that I might never have come to any other way.” For better or worse, that ragged season in our family’s life is over. I phrase it that way because I have ambivalence about how easily I slip back into nonchalance and indifference when life gets easy again. I’m less aware of God’s abundant love in my life. It’s embarrassing, actually, that the fearsome blessing of hard things draws me closer to My Father. It’s comforting, too, though! There is comfort in knowing that in the easy days and hard days, stressful situations and refreshing ones, I am covered by God’s gift of abundance.

Preparing for Sunday Worship: December 6, 2015

Here is the worship guide for the second 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.

Pastor Jason will continue our "Abundance" series by preaching on "Abundant Joy." He will also share an end-of-year update during the service. Below is the set list of songs we'll be singing:

Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus

My Soul Magnifies the Lord

Go Tell It On the Mountain

Joy to the World

Begin and Never Cease

12/4 Bianca, Jesse, & Simon Comanda Reflections

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here


BIANCA, AGE 9
I felt an abundance of God’s love this year in:
1. guitar lessons
2. basketball
3. good teachers
4. friends
5. family
6. food
7. games
8. clothes

JESSE, AGE 12
Throughout this year I have felt an abundance of friendship. I have always had friends, but this year I have felt blessed by them. In September our family went on our annual camping trip with our friends the Stouts. I am best friends with the oldest kid, Owen, and we love to play together. When we got to the campsite I was overjoyed to seehim. I have many friends that each add to my joy of life and I am glad for each and every one of them.

Another group of friends I have are adults and that is the Pansas. They are funny and I love to play games with them. They invited us to Maine this year and we went and shared a big cabin! We played in the water and went jet skiing, but my favorite part of the trip was hanging out with the Pansas. I have an abundance of friends and I am blessed by every one of them.

SIMON, AGE 13
When my family traveled to Maine this summer, we experienced an abundance of kindness and space. We stayed in a very nice cabin for free, with a lake and forest surrounding it. The Caldwells allowed us to use all of their lake toys; for example, we played with kayaks, paddleboards, and a jet ski. We had s’mores and food over the fire. My family had enough space to do as we wished without bothering anyone. We could read, play outside, and play games with our family and friends. Even on the way home from Maine were we given an abundance of good weather and safe traveling.

12/3, David Casler Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here
 

I grew up in the church. My mother was a pastor’s daughter, my uncle was a pastor, we went to church every Sunday. On schoolday mornings when my parents were feeling particularly vigorous, we had 6:00 a.m. Bible study, we children huddling together on the couches under blankets, trying to escape the winter chill. In all this exposure to Christianity, to the Bible, to the amalgamation of disparate stories and parables and teachings and proverbs and random occurrences that make up this faith, my least favorite passage was when Jesus told the story of the pearl of great value. 

It’s a short story. Jesus says, in Matthew 13:45-46, "Again, the kingdom of heaven is like a merchant in search of fine pearls, who, on finding one pearl of great value, went and sold all that he had and bought it." That’s it. But like a grain of sand under a contact lens, or a splinter that sticks straight up and down, this parable was both irritating and unignorable. What a stupid merchant. Doesn’t he know that he needs to eat? What’s he going to do for the rest of his life—just look at his pearl like Gollum and then die? Most of the rest of the Bible seemed to at least have an understandable message, if not an applicable life lesson, but this one was so nonsensical and irritating: the Yoko Ono of the Bible. 

And then conversion, and the realization that God is the end-all and be-all of existence and the universe, and the hope that I might one day be with him fully. And with conversion, the revelation that the things around us aren’t the whole story, that there is value elsewhere, and that the tangible cares and worries of my ordinary life don’t make up the complete balance sheet. The best part is off the books; the pearl really is all you need. 

Which brings us to abundance. The paint’s peeling on my car. I’ve been somewhat stymied in the professional context. I’ve been wanting a nice flatscreen to put in my living room, but money’s been too tight. I’m not really sure what I’m doing in the relationship side of my life. Can my life be characterized as abundant? Yes. 

As the Israelites wandered their forty years in the desert, God provided for them manna: an otherworldly substance that would decompose after a single day, unless the next day was the Sabbath, in which case it would last two. Israelites could not bank it up. God could have given them the aggregate manna quantity the first day of their wanderings, just a massive mountain of manna that would’ve anchored them to a spot for 40 years as they watched the manna mountain dwindle and their fellows die of old age. This would’ve transformed the Israelites’ worship of him into worry over their pile of food. That's not what God did. He gave them enough for a day, maybe two, and they had to keep their eyes on him. 

A similar story is seen with Elijah and the widow. The land is gripped by famine. A woman is about to make her last meal. Wait, says the prophet, make me some bread first. She does, and her little jar of flour and her little jug of oil last the whole famine long. She isn't given a mansion and a mountain of produce. She’s given what she needs, for as long as she needs it, and no more. [Yet another story, perhaps not from the Protestant canon, concerns a certain holy menorah for which God provided sacred oil for as long as it took to make more.]

Do I have everything I’ve desired? No. But I do have everything I’ve required. And I do have the most important thing: the abundant ability to call on God, and the abundant hope that I will know him fully, just as I have been fully known. 

"Now to him who is able to keep you from stumbling and to present you blameless before the presence of his glory with great joy, to the only God, our Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion, and authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen."

12/2 Jamie Carty, Reflection

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here



Tonight was a great night. I went on a hayride at Bellevue Park with my son, Elijah, and a bunch of our neighbors. Eli was loving it. He just kicked back and relaxed as we toured the park with our neighborhood crew. Sometimes I just look at him, see him so happy, and get choked up. I get choked up because I have known him for six months, and yet, he has been on this earth for almost 2 ½ years. 

While we aren’t really consistent about it, we enjoy teaching our kids the Children’s Catechism. The other night, Eli started to chime in with our 3-year-old daughter, Grace: “Who made you?” … “God!” … “What else did God make?” … “God made all things!” Stuff like that is just a heavy dose of God’s abundance. I am just blown away by God’s sovereignty when I think of how our little boy, born in Kaifeng, China, gets to praise Jesus with us each week in Wilmington, Delaware, with our City Church family. I get to tell him about our great God, who is a Father to the fatherless, and our Savior King, who gives hope to the hopeless. 

I’ve often heard the argument that the primary reason that children grow up to embrace a particular faith is because their parents or family raised them that way. In other words, religion is a culturally conditioned construct, and you are only a Christian because you were raised in America, and Muslims are Muslim because they were raised in Indonesia or Pakistan. 

Well, I would certainly say that if Elijah were to grow up in China rather than in the United States with us, things would be different for him. But the God of the Bible, who “in love predestined us for adoption as sons through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose of his will,” knew Elijah before time existed. He knew that Sara and I would be his Christian parents and raise him at City Church of Wilmington because He ordained it. When I shift my focus outside of these past few years to an eternal God, who operates outside of time, that argument falls apart.

I think adoption is often romanticized within the evangelical Christian community. Don’t get me wrong, adoption is biblical and everyone who claims Christ should care for the orphan in some way, but adoption isn’t just what you see on my Facebook page. Adoption is full of grief, pain, and sorrow, most of which we, as adoptive parents, didn’t get to witness. It is such hard work and full of stress and exhaustion. But to see pictures of that tired and confused boy on the day we met him compared to the boy we see now with that incredible smile makes it all worth it. 

Even though it is painful to say this now, in a perfect, not-so-broken world, Eli would grow up being raised by his biological mother and father in China. He wouldn’t have to go through what he went through. But God had a different plan for Elijah in this broken world, and a different plan for our family. Is that because God will use our family and whatever covenant community we are a part of to raise him to love and fully embrace the Gospel one day? That is something I hope and pray for often, but ultimately, God is the one who changes hearts and so I put my trust in Him. 

So even though it is hard not to stress about whether I am doing this parenting thing right or if I am checking off all the boxes for being a model Dad, I do know and promise this: I know that Eli will hear more about Jesus than he would have in China. I know that he and his sister will hear often about how their imperfect and frequently-failing parents need Jesus every day. They will hear how we need Jesus not just to raise them, but so our family can fully experience God’s abundance in our home, resulting in an overflow of that abundance to our local community. My prayer is that even though our family will have our share of struggles, I pray that we will all walk by faith and put our trust in God’s ultimate abundance, our Lord Jesus Christ.

12/1 Reflection, Katie Almond

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here

 

Lately I have felt convicted about the amount of things that I own. I far too often fall prey to the happy displays and bright lighting at Target. Last week I went in there to “buy a wide tooth comb” and walked out with a comb, a brush, a baby one-piece, and two beanies for me. Oopsy! I thought that maybe once I had a baby I’d be saving money by not having the time to go out and shop on a whim… turns out it just introduced me to a whole new world of things I must own.

This is not the first time I have felt convicted about it. There are times that I look around at the clutter that builds and think, “I am such a consumer!” I can usually diffuse the conviction by purging the things I definitely don’t use anymore and donating them. But do you know that feeling when you’ve been trying to ignore a conviction for so long that God starts shoving the message in your face? I had a conversation with my sister about how she was moved to action over a book she read that addressed the dilemma of excess in our lives and encouraged radical giving to those in need. Then I came across an article that suggested ways to decrease Christmas gift spending on your kids, and then I remembered a sermon.

Weeks ago Jason said in a message that as Christians we should not hoard God’s blessings but let them flow freely to others with open hands. Now I wonder, am I hoarding the blessings? God has more than provided for Brad and me over the course of our marriage. Last year He allowed us to pay off my school loans and essentially become debt free. I thought that I was already practicing this idea of blessing others by giving monthly financial support to a couple of charitable causes. But all I have to do is look at my overflowing closet to realize that at some point I have allowed God’s abundant provision to feed the excess in my life. God sees the action, but He’s also looking at the heart, and I want Him to be pleased with what He sees. Don’t feed your desires by accumulating stuff. Know God, fill your heart with His truths and let Him change your desires.

This is all stuff I hope to instill in Elliott as he grows. Let’s just hope I have a good three or four years to put all this into practice myself before he starts paying attention to what I do.

11/30 Reflection, Brad Almond

On weekdays during Advent we are posting the daily reflection from our Abundance Advent booklet here on our blog. You can download the booklet in its entirety here
 

I tend to think in pictures. When I close my eyes and think of the word "abundance," I picture something along the lines of a cornucopia, or a bunch of fruit on a tree branch. Why does my mind associate this word with gourds and apples and oranges when these are such common things that rarely give me any real fulfillment? Food for thought. 

When used in context, the term "abundant" applies most accurately to a metaphysical concept... not something I can contain, but something that moves through me.

When I look to the scriptures, this adjective is often used with nouns such as: Life (John 10:10), Peace (Psalm 37:11), Hope (Romans 15:13), Grace (2 Corinthians 9:8), Love (Exodus 34:6). These fruits come from the Holy Spirit. So why then do I continue to feel the need to collect, to build up a stockpile of goods? Like Ariel marvels at her collection of whozits, whatzits, and thingamabobs and it leaves her wanting more, when all around her is a vast ocean... I get caught up in the little things and I easily forget that abundance is quality, not quantity. God’s beauty is fully and deeply rendered artwork. He invites us to step into the painting to experience its depth, yet I’m still trying to look at it from a distance, and decorating my own life with flat comic strips and carbon copies. 

C.S. Lewis wrote in The Weight of Glory: "It would seem that Our Lord finds our desires not too strong, but too weak. We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased."