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Talbot Davis

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Top Five Tuesday — Top Five Hymns From The Cokesbury Hymnal
August 13, 2013 at 7:16 am 4
I am spending each evening this week preaching the annual revival services at Bethel United Methodist Church in Midland, North Carolina.


Bethel's pastor, Mark Clontz, is a long-time friend of mine and we actually pastored the same two churches:  he served Mt. Carmel & Midway in Monroe, NC from 1984-88 while I pastored those same two congregations from 1990-99.



Bethel is large church by Methodist standards -- 450 people in average worship attendance -- and has a rich history.  They have been doing Homecoming and Revival services every August since . . . well, since longer than anyone can remember.

And while Bethel's sanctuary is only six years old (meaning, two years younger than Good Shepherd's!), it gives more than a passing nod to the form and the architecture of the churches of yesteryear.


(It is interesting that for a church with such an obvious interest in history, its 8:30 a.m. contemporary service is much larger than its 11:00 a.m. traditional one.)

Anyway, we opened the revival services last night with an extended period of singing from the old Cokesbury Hymnal.  If you are not familiar with the Cokesbury hymnal, it is a treasured collection of older, American-based hymns that reflect the theology and values of both rural living and revival religion.


It was the only hymnal we used at Midway United Methodist -- where both Mark and I would preach at 9:45 in the morning before driving 13 miles over to the "big" 11:00 church, Mt. Carmel.  Midway averaged about 30 people upon my arrival in 1990; under my visionary leadership I had grown that to 20 by the time I left in 1999.

Well.  That's a long introduction to say that the singing last night brought back some memories for me.  Memories of songs that I didn't learn as a child, songs that Methodist (traditional or contemporary) rarely sing anymore, songs that harken back to a simpler time and a more basic theology. 

Some of my five favorite below may take you on your own memory lane.  Others might be completely unfamiliar to you.  I have tried to choose hymns that are best suited to old-time revival services and that did not make it into the 1989 United Methodist Hymnal.

In any event, here they are: my top five hymns from the Cokesbury Hymnal.

5.  Revive Us AgainRevival means that dead Christians wake up.  Hurry, Lord.


4.  Jesus Saves.  I have heard that joyful sound too.


3.  The Church In The Wildwood.  Come, come, come, come, come . . .


2.  When The Roll Is Called Up Yonder.  The bass echo makes this one.


1.  Love Lifted Me.  You're never too sophisticated to believe this.


And for a slightly less reverent version of that one, from the opening clip of Bernie, here's Jack Black:

 
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Best. Note. Ever.
August 12, 2013 at 7:55 am 1
I finished my sermon yesterday by telling about a note I received in my box on a recent Sunday morning.  Here's a picture of the original:


You get a note like that -- from an eight-year-old who wants to be baptized, gives his phone number, and says he is "looking forward to talking with you" -- and you call that day.

So I did.  And we celebrated the baptism a short time later.

It's the kind of faith that mom and dad have grown at home and then gets strengthened at church. 

Not the reverse.

That's what Home Based is all about.
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Home Based Launch — Family Jewels
August 9, 2013 at 1:00 am 1


A Jewish rabbi one time put it this way:
 
In the church, you all believe that a family comes to church and finds faith there.  Then you bring that faith from the church back to home.
 
In Judaism, we do it differently.  We believe that faith starts in the home and then when we worship together, families bring their faith from home to the synagogue.
 
Interesting.

Did you know that our faith was founded by and is named after a Jew?  Don't you think Jesus knew a thing or two about a faith that is based at home and not in a church building?
 
Home Based.  A series where we try to get the order right.
 
August 11:        Family Jewels
August 18:        Master Bedroom
August 25:        Room Temperature
September 1:   The Home Based Experience
September 8:    Privacy Fence


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Grandparenting By Grace
August 8, 2013 at 6:24 am 0
Last Sunday's sermon ("After The Storm") included this litany from the book Grandparenting By Grace, authored by Irene Endicott and C. Ferris Jordan:


We are teachers of God’s plan of salvation to our children and grandchildren.

 

We are witnesses of how God has proven faithful to his people and to our family.

 

We are family historians, holding keys to learning about family roots and experiences for generations to come.

 

We are a safe refuge for our grandchildren in times of trouble.

 

We are a soft shoulder in sorrow and an encourager of new beginnings.

 

We represent stability to young families in dealing with change.

 

We undergird our grandchildren with faithful prayer.

 
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Crisis Mode & Consistency Mode
August 7, 2013 at 1:00 am 0
During my time in pastoral ministry, I have become relatively comfortable and effective at dealing with people who are in crisis mode.

Not perfect by any stretch.  But by and large I have been able to be a "non-anxious" presence in people's lives when they are faced with issues around grief, marriage, addiction, trauma, and even assault. 

There are some seasons, in fact, when it seems like the only time I meet with people is when they are going through a crisis.

Yet I am realizing that for our church to make the kind of quantum leaps in discipleship that I so long for, I will want to devote more time to people who are in consistency mode.

By that I mean people who have no particular trauma going on other than they need someone to show them the next steps in their living relationship with Jesus Christ.  Which moves me away from the role of counselor and into the role of discipler.  Out of pastoring and into leading.

It's why I've got two guys I meet with one-on-one, studying the book of Romans together on the one hand and the Apostles' Creed together on the other.  It's why I'm going to be meeting with a teen later in August to read through Not A Fan together.

It's why the most important thing I can do here these days is to help our team recruit, select, train, equip and lead new LifeGroup leaders.  So that they can be the de facto disciplers for the rest of the people in the church.

Who knows?

Perhaps as people at Good Shepherd become more consistent they will have fewer crises.
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