Navigating Everything

(Don't) Follow Your Heart (and other mixed messages)

So here’s what I want you to do, God helping you: Take your everyday, ordinary life—your sleeping, eating, going-to-work, and walking-around life—and place it before God as an offering. Embracing what God does for you is the best thing you can do for him. Don’t become so well-adjusted to your culture that you fit into it without even thinking. Instead, fix your attention on God. You’ll be changed from the inside out. Readily recognize what he wants from you, and quickly respond to it. Unlike the culture around you, always dragging you down to its level of immaturity, God brings the best out of you, develops well-formed maturity in you.
— Romans 12:1-2, The Message

While Romans 12:1-2 are deeply helpful in the NIV and other translations, The Message paraphrase brings something out of this passage that is important to not miss. "Don't become so well-adjusted to your culture that you fit into it without even thinking." Huh. How often is that the case?

If I'm going to be "transformed by the renewing of [my] mind" (v.2, NIV), I need to be able to recognize what messages are true (align with scripture) and what messages are from the culture. I find that many of the world's messages are so familiar that it's hard to even notice them.

Over the next few Sundays, we're going to work together to really notice. We'll set up some of the most popular messages we hear against the Bible and see what happens. I'm sure it's not a spoiler to let you know that there are some big differences between them.

Is God trying to make things difficult for us to follow His way? Not at all. We're going to talk about some of the reasons why He instructs us the way that He does and, again, no surprise, they are for our benefit and flourishing, now and for eternity.

We're starting off with the plot of countless feel-good movies and some of the most common advice you've heard: Follow Your Heart.

Is it a good idea to follow your heart? Give it some though and let's get into it on Sunday!

See you then,
Pastor Tracy


THIS SUNDAY

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 5 @ 10am
MIXED MESSAGES
Follow Your Heart
Tracy Dunham

Join us for our IN-PERSON SERVICES OR
LIVESTREAM on Sunday!

10:00 - Live Service & Kids Church (+Church Online)

Follow along with the message on YouVersion.

Celebrating (& Needing) One Another (5th Sunday Generation Service!)

This 5th Sunday, Frank Patrick will be our guest speaker. We're celebrating the older generation in the church and how vital they are to us all. Frank has an article coming out next month in SAGE magazine that I've asked permission to share here as a primer for our time together on Sunday. I trust it (and our service) will encourage you all, regardless of the generation you're a part of!

Blessings,

Pastor Tracy

________________________________

I’ve noticed something recently. I’ll be seventy-six years old this coming March, and a number of people aged twenty and thirty-something are willing to include me in their company, both individually and as a group.

The reason that I was a little surprised at first is that my generation, the so-called Baby Boomers who were born from 1946 to 1966 (Canadian stats), largely came of age in the fifties and sixties.

During that era I remember well listening to the Beatles as they sang tunes like “Will you still need me, will you still feed me, when I’m sixty-four?” Another popular group told high school students “don’t trust anyone over thirty!”. Teens of that day ‘spoke’ the language of the music that they listened to, and very often took the lyrics to heart.

There were many other contributing factors, of course, but the fallout from the overemphasis on youth led to what became known as the “Generation Gap”. This phenomenon was largely found in western Europe, the United Kingdom, and North America, and grandparents, parents, teachers, authority figures of any kind, and pastors were viewed with suspicion. Teens and young adults relied on what they heard from their peers to guide them, and the idea of having a mentor was out of the question. Teen-only youth groups were popularized.

Fortunately for me, I served in the Army Reserves and the Regular Forces during my teen years and experienced the tremendous value that came from having older and more experienced people in my life to guide me. Coming from a broken home I especially benefitted from those influencers in my life. Many of my peers didn’t have any input of that nature in their lives, and it showed.

Ever since my early twenties I have sought out godly women and men for their advice and encouragement. I wouldn’t be who | am today without their influence in my life.

Here’s an example: I was asked by the late James MacKnight, who was the General Superintendent of the PAOC at the time, to attend a special committee meeting at our head office. At the coffee break, I asked Bill Griffin how it was that about eight leaders in their own right could sit at the table and make major decisions together without open conflict.

His reply wasn’t what | expected. “Do you see that door?” he asked. “When you come through that door, you leave your personal agenda out in the hallway and you ask yourself this question ‘What's best for the Fellowship?’”. In that moment he mentored me, and over forty years later I can still recall what he said. Powerful!

In our senior years, it’s easy to sit back and say that ‘we’ve done our bit’ for the kingdom. May I suggest something to you? That’s called peer mentoring, by the way.

We have untold millions of younger Canadians, both in the church and not, who’ve reaped the whirlwind of our generation insisting that ‘drugs, sex, and rock and roll’ was what life was all about. Many are not only from broken families, their peers are as well. So where do they go for guidance?

The media? Social networking? Their friends, who are usually no better off than they are? There is another option, of course. Us!

The Bible is replete with examples of younger women and men benefiting from the guidance of those older than themselves. Unfortunately, many of our churches do virtually nothing in terms of intergenerational relationships (one of the things that I notice, in my work as a church consultant), so the possibility of developing quality mentoring relationships is difficult. Unless...unless we do something about that ourselves, outside of the structure of our church.

This weekend take a moment and notice, I mean really notice, those who are attending your Sunday services. Are there any younger singles, or couples? What about single parents, or students? Don’t assume that they are already connected in some way with your congregation. Many are not. Invite them out for lunch following the service, or during the week. Offer to be of assistance to them in some way. Find out what their needs are, and help them with those. Most importantly sit with them and really listen to their story. Ask leading questions. Don’t judge them. Love them. My young friends say that it’s precisely because of my age and life experiences that they seek me out, and once they know that you really do care about them they’ll want to be with you as well.

Author: Rev. Frank Patrick
To Be Published: SAGE, February 2023


THIS (5th) SUNDAY

SUNDAY, JANUARY 29 @ 10am
MIXED MESSAGES
Listen Up
Frank Patrick

Potluck to follow the service!

Join us for our IN-PERSON SERVICES OR
LIVESTREAM on Sunday!

10:00 - Live Service & Kids Church (+Church Online)

Follow along with the message on YouVersion.

Church Isn't Meant to Be Lonely (let us help you connect, train and impact!)

I want to take a moment to remind you today that church is not meant to be lonely. Church, by definition, is us working together, learning together, growing together, and encouraging one another. We can't organize or program that into your life but we do our best to create opportunities for this to happen intentionally.

And so, Connecting Point. CP is what we call our small groups. It's a strategic point in your week to connect with God and others. It's also a place to train to be like Jesus and find ways to impact your world for Him.

New groups are launching in a couple of weeks and I strongly encourage you to be a part of one. The lineup has lots of options our hope is that there is one that makes sense for you this winter.

Speaking of new things... our CP format now has two streams: Connect Groups and Life Groups.

  • Connect Groups meet for one session (February-March) and group members will choose a new group in the fall.

  • Life Groups meet for the duration of the school year (October-May) and group members will have the option to continue on or choose a new group in fall 2023.

Be sure you make note of whether the CP group you're interested in is Connect or Life.

Ready to see for yourself? Everything is ready for you on our website including how to sign up and how to get the book or study materials that you need.

We also have some more exciting things available this winter... find out more on the same page on our website:

  • Alpha

  • Sunday Night Conversations: Media - Navigating Everything (February 5)

  • Women's Mentoring + Women's Prayer Group

  • Frontline: Men of Freedom

It's going to be a great season of growing together, church! Don't hesitate to reach out if you have any questions. We are here to equip you to connect with God and others, train to be more like Jesus and impact the world for Christ.

Pastor Tracy


THIS SUNDAY

THE BIBLE SAYS WHUT? SPIRITUAL WARFARE EDITION
January 22 @ 10AM
Prayer & Fasting
Erin Jamieson

Join us for our IN-PERSON SERVICES OR
LIVESTREAM on Sunday!

10:00 - Live Service & Kids Church (+Church Online)

Follow along with the message on YouVersion.

Navigating... Everything (living with media in a healthy way)

I accidentally sat in on a seminar last fall and I was so glad I did. Planned for our youth to participate in Media: Navigating Everything with Brett UlIman and I dropped a carful of youth off at the church that was hosting. I grabbed a coffee, the Wifi password, and settled into the back row planning to get some work done on my laptop while the students learned something. I accomplished almost nothing.

I know that the students got a lot out of the content from the conversations we had on the way home. But I knew that what I had just heard was important for everyone who is navigating a culture that is dominated by technology and social media - so, everyone.

Let me invite you to our next Sunday Night Conversation with Brett as our guest presenter - Media: Navigating Everything - on Sunday, February 5 at 6pm.

My generation is the first to raise kids who are digital natives. Honestly, we don't always know what we're doing. This seminar is geared toward parents and kids but will be insightful, practical and applicable for everyone who uses technology (i.e. all of us!).

For more information, check out Brett's website.
You can also download a poster and invite someone to join you.

Looking forward to learning with you!
Pastor Tracy


THIS SUNDAY

THE BIBLE SAYS WHUT? SPIRITUAL WARFARE EDITION
January 15 @ 10AM
Silence & Solitude
Tracy Dunham

Join us for our IN-PERSON SERVICES OR
LIVESTREAM on Sunday!

10:00 - Live Service & Kids Church (+Church Online)

Follow along with the message on YouVersion.