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Talbot Davis

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And The Number IS . . .
November 29, 2013 at 7:12 am 0
Good Shepherd's most recent Radical Impact Project was our #FillATruck effort with Operation Christmas Child shoe boxes.

Last year, as some of you know, we had a goal of 2,000 and the people of the church filled and returned 2,800.

So this year, our goal was more than 2,800 . . . in other words, enough to fill a truck.

Did we make it?  What's the number?  How'd it happen?

You'll find all that out on Sunday, December 1, at our 8:30, 10, and 11:30 worship gatherings.

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Speaking of our Sunday worship gatherings, here's the Christmas series we begin on that day.


Whether you’ve been dreaming of a white Christmas or you have dreams of sugar plums dancing in your head, you know that the Christmas season is all about the power of dreaming.

It’s been that way from the beginning.  

In the way that Matthew tells the story of Mary’s pregnancy, Jesus’ birth, and Joseph’s obedience, dreams are a primary method God uses to communicate with his people. 

And most of what he tells the holy family we wouldn’t have thought of in our wildest dreams.

Wildest Dreams.  Join us for a ride into REM sleep this Christmas. 

December 1:      Broken Dreams
December 8:      The Dream Police
December 15:    Follow The Dream
December 22:    Dream Come True
December 24:    Sweet Dreams (Christmas Eve services at 5, 7, and 9 p.m.)
December 29:    Dream On
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Some Random Things I’m A Little Embarrassed About . . .
November 27, 2013 at 2:00 am 3
I'm treating this day before Thanksgiving as a day of confession.

And you, my readers, are my de facto confessional booth.

So here are some random items that cause me just a little embarrassment . . .

1.  I really like Katy Perry's song Roar.  Really.



2.  I get a little panicked if I can't locate some cottage cheese and a Nutrageous when I'm eating lunch.

3.  I get nervous trying to operate a digital camera and miss the days of 35mm.

4.  Having unanswered emails in bold in my in-box fills me with anxiety.

5.  Sometimes on Sunday mornings I'll run into my office in between services to swallow some Close-Up toothpaste.

6.  In 6th grade, my favorite song was Seasons In The Sun.


7.  It's taken me until now to realize that a lot of people in church probably have sermons welling up inside them, yearning to be expressed.

8.  I wish I'd gotten braces on my bottom teeth.

9.  I don't like the end of Daylight Savings Time for living but I love what it does to church attendance.

10. I don't really like to hear myself speak but I do like to read myself write.
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Top Five Tuesday — Top Five “Thankful” Songs
November 26, 2013 at 2:00 am 0
It is that week, after all.

A week full of running to the airport, raking leaves, eating well, and giving thanks.

So what are some musical touch points for those who want to give thanks?  In particular, what songs we sing in church contribute to this season of gratitude?

Here they are: my five favorite songs that give thanks.

5.  Count Your BlessingsI remember hearing Henrietta Mangum teach this song in Monroe and even though it's not our typical style these days, I still really like the song.  It's not a bad way to live, either, you know -- naming and celebrating all the blessings that have come your way.


4.  Give Thanks.  An early contemporary Christian classic.


3.  Come Thou Fount, Come They King.  The ancient and the modern come together beautifully.


2.  Forever.  I first heard this at The Church On The Way in Van Nuys, California in 2002.  Came back to Charlotte and discovered it was already in the queue here.  Great stuff.


1.  Blessed Be Your NameThis song never gets old, primarily because its truths never fade away.  I love the robust way it doesn't avoid difficult chapters of life but instead finds a way to praise God even in their midst.

 
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When A Teenager Delivers The Word Of God
November 25, 2013 at 7:56 am 2
Yesterday, we did not have what's often called "Youth Sunday."

Nope.

We had a regular "Adult Sunday" with our adult band leading worship, regular greeting team providing the hospitality, and even an 11:30 believer baptism. 

Yesterday was unique, however, in that I did not bring the sermon.  Instead, I wanted to conclude the Not A Fan series by having one of the most spiritually vibrant people in our church deliver the message.

And in looking for that spiritual vitality, I happened to settle in on a teenager, Amber Carter.


I've known her since she was in pre-school (!) and have watched first-hand as she has developed into a young woman of deep faith and uncommon poise.  So when I asked her in early September to give this November sermon, I was almost certain it would be really, really good.

And I wasn't disappointed.  Neither were the people who crowded into our 8:30, 10, and 11:30 worship gatherings.

I am including a manuscript of Amber's words below.  If you like to see what it looked like -- and to understand the confidence and serenity with which she delivered the message --  simply click on this link. 

If she is what it means to be not a fan, count me in.
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Good morning!  My name is Amber Carter, I’m a senior at Olympic High School, and I am not a fan.

Bratty Kid:
I started out as a brat.  Yep, I admit it, a b. r. a. t. brat.  My family and I have been coming to good shepherd since I was about three and I’m not gonna lie, I hated it.  Those long hours listening to Talbot talk drove me crazy.  The only place I like going was the bawl room, not so I could cry, but so I could play.  Sometimes I would fake being sick just so I wouldn’t have to go to church, and let me tell ya it worked too.  My dad has played the drums on the praise team for about 13 or 14 years, and I used to work my way around going on some of those Sunday’s too.  Believe me, it was bad.   

Good Shepherd Summer Camp:
When I was nine years old, about to enter 4th grade, my parents enrolled me into the summer camp program here at the church, as I look back I can honestly say that it was the best decision they ever made.  It was that summer that I learned how to pray, to worship, and about God in general.  I learned about the cross and what it meant for our sins, I learned that we need to be constantly forgiven, and most importantly I learned what it meant to be saved, what it meant to live a God honoring life.  Finally, I was not a brat. 

Saved:
It was at the end of that summer, probably around August, that I was saved.  My teachers that summer were Allison Trotter and Jamarl Clark whom we knew as Mr. J, and every day we would have some kind of Bible lesson in our class.  One morning they taught us that in order to be a true Christian we had to accept Jesus as our Savior so that He could come live in our hearts.  Since then I have learned that being a follower of Christ means so much more than that, but at the time those truths changed my life.  Mr. J asked us at the end of the lesson if there was anyone who had not yet been saved.  I knew I had never done anything like that so I raised my hand.  He took me, along with another boy, to the side and prayed with us asking Jesus if He would enter into our hearts.

Now being little nine year old me, I didn’t realize that the first time was the charm, so I prayed the same prayer about every night for a year just to make sure that I was really saved.  In that time my mom began to pray with me every night before I went to bed and she taught me the Lord’s Prayer.  I soon realized that God hears us the first time, and I didn’t need to question Him.

 Started Big House:
At that time the Big House ministry was open to kids from 5th grade to 12th  grade.  Now after being saved the summer before 4thgrade I was really excited to start in the youth group, but I had one more year to wait.  One Sunday evening, my friend and I decided that we didn’t want to wait a year before starting Big House so we asked my dad to drive us up there so we could go.  We were so excited, but as soon as we stepped in the lobby they stopped us, asked my dad how old we were, and made us turn around and go home.  Can you believe that??  It was as if we were trying to sneak into a movie, only we were trying to sneak into church.  But luckily I was able to attend that next fall and God took a hold of my faith and ran with it.

Baptism:
The next two summers I continued to attend the Good Shepherd summer camp, and I grew more and more serious about my faith.  The summer I was to enter 6th grade was my last year, but it just might be the most memorable, because that year I was baptized!  Near the end of the summer I was helping set something up for the Sunday service that week, and I was in this big room with two other girls and an amazing man named Mr. Bob.  We were about finished with our task and we were resting on the stage when we started talking about baptism.  He was telling us what a huge step baptism was in our faith walk, and told us that it was a public declaration of what we believed, so I mentioned that I’d like to be baptized one day.  Now I was imagining in maybe a couple months, when I planned it out with my parents and everything, but I guess God had a different plan because little did I know, but that day Mr. Bob told Talbot that I wanted to be baptized, and later that week Talbot came to bring me to his office so we could talk about it further.  Whoa! Talk about a wakeup call.  I was content doing things like this on my own time, and Talbot was ready to set a date.  So he gave me some scriptures to study, and I realized that this is what God wanted me to do.  Thanks to Mr. Bob, I was baptized August 17, 2007.

I remember that the week before I was going through a bad cold, and my ears were so clogged I was having trouble hearing.  I got this idea in my mind that once my head went under, my cold would completely vanish and I would be able to hear again.  Low and behold, when Talbot pulled me out of the water guess what happened?  I was still sick and I could still barely hear!  But it didn’t matter, my soul was brand new, and I was spiritually healed.

YCI/Bible:

As middle school started I was invited to join the Christian club at school called YCI.  We met every Wednesday morning for half an hour.  We used to play games, listen to testimonies, listen to John sing, and have Bible studies.  One day I remember more distinctly than all the others.  A girl was giving her testimony and it really moved me.  She claimed that her relationship with God did not truly begin until she started reading her Bible regularly.  That hit me hard because at the time I wasn’t a very dedicated Bible reading 12 year old.  I read the scriptures on the screen at church, but that was about it.  I knew this was not enough so I decided I would try reading on my own.  It was really confusing at first, but God slowly used his word to speak to me.  I can remember one year, at a big house winter retreat, I, a friend of mine, and the assistant youth leader at the time named Amy Berryhill decided to read through the Bible in a year.  I planned on reading it cover to cover, from Genesis to Revelation.  Let me tell you this right now: That is not the way to read the Bible!  And I found that out the hard way.  For one, I wasn’t reading and taking the time to listen to what God had to say, I reading more out of guilt.  I thought if I didn’t read exactly 3 chapters a night I was a failure as a Christian.  Little did I know, that’s not how it’s supposed to work at all.

U- Haullelujah:

As I’ve gotten older, serving has been an important part of my faith.  Opportunities I’ve had to serve through Big House have shaped me into the person I am today.  One summer we went on a trip called U-Haullelujah.  We set out for four days in four vans filled with food, love, and teenagers eager to serve the Lord.  We had no destination, no plan, and no idea how miraculously God would show up over that next weekend.  My group ended up in downtown Raleigh by the second day.  We served lunch to homeless people in the park, and then drove around looking for ways to serve.  We ended up at a church where we met a woman named Shanti who told us about a prominent food shuttle ministry nearby.  It was closing time when we arrived there so they invited us to come back in the morning. 

That next morning we followed the food shuttle to a Latino community to distribute and pack food.  The man leading us to the community warned us that this group of people preferred to do everything themselves, without the help of outsiders.  To our surprise, they welcomed us with open arms and put us to work.  They all spoke in Spanish as they instructed us on what to do.  Luckily a wonderful leader in our group, Vanessa Gordon, spoke fluent Spanish and was able to translate directions.  We worked diligently sorting and packing food, and when we finished up we were able to speak with some members of their community.  They told us the name of their church, and Vanessa later revealed that their church’s name translated to English was Good Shepherd!  In that moment God seemed so much bigger and greater than anything I could have imagined before.  It was then that we knew that God had planned for us to be there with our new Good Shepherd friends long before we ever set out on the trip.  I learned that when nothing is planned, nothing can go wrong.  And when we give God free reign to lead us as we serve, He shows up in the most remarkable of ways.     

“Loved” Series:

One of the most memorable moments in my faith was during a sermon series called “Loved”.  The series was all about being loved by God.  They handed out little buttons that said “Loved” and I remember walking around my middle school and everyone wearing one.  One of the last Sundays of that series I remember April Geiger coming up at the end of the service and singing How He Loves.  It was one of those moments where the whole congregation was sitting, and we were supposed to just take in the music.  But for the first time I remember feeling totally and completely surrounded with God’s love, and I stood up.  I was the only standing and God was moving through me.  My dad soon stood up with me.  It was a powerful moment.  But God wasn’t done amazing me yet that day, when my dad and I got in the car, he told me something I will never forget.  He said “Amber, I love you, but Jesus loves you so much more.”  I don’t know if he knows this, but I cried after hearing those words.  That’s when I knew, God had my heart and he was never letting go.
 
My name is Amber Carter, and I am so loved that I am not a fan.
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Not A Fan Fan & #FillATruck
November 22, 2013 at 7:31 am 0
Think of it.

There is a young girl in Guatemala who in a few weeks will open the Operation Christmas Child shoebox you are preparing.

Or a little boy in Tanzania.

Or a set of siblings in India.

You get the picture.

What you prepare today will literally be in some eager young hands next month.

A box full of love, truth, and Spirit.

As we said a few weeks ago in church, normally you can't put God in a box.

Except this is one time you can.

The number of boxes already on the GSUMC Moss Road campus is astounding.

As you come on Sunday for the final message of Not A Fan, please bring your God-box(es) with you.

And together we'll do something remarkable:  we will #FillATruck.

Sunday.

8:30.  10.  11:30.
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