A History of Grace

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I want to write a few articles that touch on Calvary…where we’ve been, where we are, and where we are going. It is basically a recap of what I shared on Sunday night (12-28-08). To begin I wanted to share the entire letter written by R. G. Turner (Chris Paxton’s Grandfather):

"I am glade to be able to pay tribute to Rev. Vermillion by telling some of the facts of the Tabernacle Days and the building of our present church. I have always admired Mr. Vermillion who was a comfort to me when I went to him with my problems. I am glade that we were fortunate enough to have a man with the foresight to help build our great church.

"[The] lot [was] purchased in February 1925 for $12,000.00. [The] Cyclone Mach Tabernacle which was located on the corner of Magnolia and College was going to be disposed of when. When we learned of this we bought his Tabernacle [for] $3,500.00, tore it down and rebuilt it on our lot on my right. We had [an] auditorium with several Sunday school rooms behind and on [the] side of the auditorium. The entire floor was covered with sawdust. We worshiped in this building from February 1926 untile June 1936. The lot and Tabernacle together cost $15,500. We paid this debt off in November 1929.

"Under Mr. Vermillion’s leadership our membership grew and we realized the need for a larger place to worship. A building fund was started in November of 1929 and kept untile 1933 when the banks and building loan were closed. We never did get but 50 per cent of our money back. However we did not lose our faith.

"There was very little money raised from 1933 to 1935 but during 1935 and 1936 we managed to raise $30,000 and our present building was started. It is hard to determine exactly how much the church cost because many of the members contributed materials and came down in the late afternoon and worked on the building (late).

"The church started a pay as you go plan and we didn’t borrow any money untile April 1936. We entered this building in June 1936 and we owed $1,700.00 on it. The actual cash we had in the building [was] $50,496.46. [We were] raising money each week.

"Under Mr. Vermillion’s guidance six other men served on the building committee. They were R. H. Hines who was [the] building contractor, W. W. Miller (Chairman), Z. L. Madden, J. E. Taylor, J. B. Brown, [and] W. C. Smith.

"Mr. Vermillion worked hard and it was through his early efforts that our work at Calvary has been a success.”

This letter was not dated, but it stands as a testament to the faith, perseverance and hard work of the early days of Calvary. To God be the glory! What will be written about our generation?

Grace & Peace,
Scott

God's Favorite Christmas Memory

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This past Sunday night (12/14/08) some of the folks at Calvary shared their favorite Christmas memory. The service was both touching and funny. It is amazing what is locked up in our brains, and probably even more amazing what comes spilling out of our mouths! Something came to my mind as I was sitting there. No, I’ll not share everything that came to my mind…that would be ecclesiastical suicide, but I will tell you the most captivating thought:

What would be God’s favorite memory of Christmas?

The only time the Almighty Creator of the universe really celebrated Christmas was the first one (if indeed we could call it the first Christmas). Reading the account of His Son’s birth in Luke 2 proves that it was a celebration in the Father’s sight. He sent His angels to announce this great event, and the invitation went to the last people on this little ball of dirt it should have gone to—the shepherds. The focus of the birth announcement was on the glory God would receive in giving this gift:

Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among men with whom He is pleased. (Luke 2:14)

As the years passed there are no other grand celebrations surrounding Jesus’ birthday. It was only when God the Father gave the gift of His Son that we have this celebration. God was celebrating His gift to His creation even though He was fully aware of the outcome in giving this gift. (He did plan it all.) He knew His gift would be rejected. In fact, Christ would be rejected to the point of being put to death! Yet, God gives the gift anyway!

Now why would I say this was God’s favorite memory of Christmas? Precisely because it summed up what was in God’s heart for the human race from the beginning: He would receive honor through a relationship with His most prized creation!

For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish, but have eternal life. (John 3:16)

You see, God doesn’t want a temporary relationship with us; His intention is to have a relationship that is permanent. The only way this could be accomplished is through giving His Son, even though the end result of that gift is the death of His Son. So God accomplishes what He set out to do when Jesus was born. I believe this is why there was such a celebration at the birth of the Son, and thus God’s favorite memory of Christmas!

Grace & Peace,
Scott

To See the Son Is to See the Father

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The most profound influence on my thinking about Christmas in recent years has been what Jesus said in John 14:9 (cf. John 6:46):

Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father!

That is an astounding truth that should permeate every fiber of our thought and action. I just can’t get over the truth that Jesus fully explains the Father to us. In a day when we are trying hard to explain God to the world and are looking for every nugget to pull out of the Bible to show what God is like, Jesus has said it all. To “see” Jesus is to “see” the Father, now just what does it mean to “see”? Glad this is on your mind.

Does seeing mean observing with the eye and perceiving with the senses? I believe it definitely can imply that, but I also believe it goes further than that. Seeing is equivalent to knowing. Let me explain…Jesus fully describes who God is because He is God. He tells the story of God, and those who believe in Him come to know Him through that faith experience. The ones who remain ignorant of God plainly don’t know the Son…they have not “seen” Jesus.

We must also keep in our thoughts that all of this affects what we do everyday; it changes our behavior. A faith that does not change behavior is not a faith worth having. God is not satisfied with stagnant children; He wants our relationship with Him to be dynamic. It is not change for the sake of change, but change because of the intimate and awesome relationship we have with our heavenly Father. Remember, He is the one who took the initiative by sending His Son before we sought Him. That is why we have a weekly celebration of Christmas…a time of worshiping God because He is such a great and wonderful gift-giving God.

Grace & Peace,
Scott

The Way We Get In Is The Way We Stay In

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By now the turkey has been picked clean to the bone. We’ve all had the leftovers…warmed up turkey dinner in a plastic container that will just keep eating a bigger hole in the ozone, turkey sandwiches, turkey mash, turkey casserole, turkey soup, turkey tetrazzini, turkey stir fry, etc. I hope you had as great a week as I have…church, family, friends, shopping at the Yellow Mall, movies, and looking for my “next-size up jeans.” This is a fabulous time of year for me personally, something I look forward to even more than my birthday. It has an allure to me and I fixate my mind on all the possibilities that these few days of Thanksgiving will present to me. I only have about 360 more days until next year…can’t wait!

The older I get the more my “thankfulness” takes on a deeper and more meaningful dimension. I used to be thankful just for the break from school, food, or a couple of days off. Now I don’t go to school, I can’t eat the way I used to, and I basically dictate the days I take off for the holiday. What I am truly thankful for now is the grace that God gives to me in everyday moments…the grace of life, love, family, friendship, worship, encouragement, unity, forgiveness, eternity, and so much more. I am now seeing everything and everyday as a gift of God’s immeasurable grace. I am experiencing these everyday moments as something that I truly have not earned or even deserved.

I am learning everyday that since I was saved by amazing grace that is how I need to live, by God’s amazing grace. Paul said it well,

As you therefore have received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in Him. (Colossians 2:6)

The way we got in is the way we stay in! That is a lesson I am growing in daily. This is not just something I want to learn for myself, it something I want my family to grow in and something I want Calvary to learn well as a church. We never stop learning and growing in the amazing, marvelous grace of God.

Grace & Peace,
Scott

A Ministry of Restoration

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It is at the cross where we are restored; God did a marvelous thing for lost humanity at Calvary. In giving His Son He gave us a chance at getting things right with Him. Jesus, in giving His life, paid the price it would take for this restoration with our Father. This is wonderful grace…marvelous grace…amazing grace! But once we become a child of God what happens when we mess things up? After all no one is perfect, right? Glad these things are on your mind because they’re on mine as well.

People are looking to be restored and I believe we have a part to play in that restoration process. Paul instructs us in Galatians,

Brethren, even if a man is overtaken in any trespass, you who are spiritual restore such a one in a spirit of gentleness; each one looking to yourself, let you too be tempted. (Galatians 6:1)

The word Paul uses for restoration is a surgical term. The word means “to set a broken bone.” Now, I’ve never broken a bone before but in the nine years I worked with teenagers I had plenty of opportunity to see broken bones and they are painful, but “fixable.” This is how I see the Christian life. When we sin (“overtaken in any trespass”) it is painful to God, us and those around us, but every relationship can be put back into place (“restored”) just like a broken bone. It is the obligation of fellow believers (you and me) to surgically help people to rebuild their relationships. This will involve many actions on our part which include prayer, counseling, Bible study, and just being a good friend. It is when the church refuses to do these things that believers become discouraged and give up trying to be “restored.”

Casualties lie all around us evidenced by believers who are spiritually cripple because the church refused to get involved in their lives. I also realize this is a two-way street. Some of the cripples are that way because they refused the biblical correction offered, and that is a whole other tragedy.

So, are you scrubbed up and ready for surgery?

Happy Thanksgiving,
Scott

A "Fearful Prayer"

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Martin Luther called the Lord’s Prayer a “fearful prayer.” When we seriously ponder the words of our Lord when He prayed, “Your kingdom come, your will be done” we begin to understand why he labeled it in this way. It is always a fearful feeling when we bow our own will to the will of another; the implications are even more fearful when we submit our will to the Creator of the universe. Why?

First, because we are saying that we are willing to follow in the footsteps of the only perfect human who ever walked the face of the earth. When Jesus submitted His will to that of His Father’s He fully knew where that would lead…to the cross. He knew the Father’s will for Him included giving His life for others. He knew it meant pain, rejection, and death. I must always ask, “If the fate of my King was pain, then what makes me think I will experience anything else?” When we pray “Your will be done” we are saying, “I bend my will to Yours, I will not argue with Your will. If it brings me joy then I will celebrate, but if it brings pain into my life, then I will trust you and suffer and continue to love You.”

This is also fearful so because we are putting the fate of our personal joy in the hands of another. Can we seriously do this? Our joy must be placed in the hands of someone we trust, and who can we trust better than God? Only God has our best interests in mind and only He can bring us a joy that will last longer than just when the good times are rolling. The good times will end and then we will be left holding onto creaturely comforts that are at best temporary and at worst illusionary.

God has put a song in my heart this week…You Are My All in All.

You are my strength when I am weak
You are the treasure that I seek
You are my all in all
Seeking You as a precious jewel
Lord, to give up I’d be a fool
You are my all in all

Grace & Peace,
Scott