Didn't attend the May forum? See what you missed!

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  • Friday, June 29, 2007

  • Tyler Engel kept us on track as emcee.

    The Trexel family provided musical entertainment.

    Some of the FBC guys provided other entertainment.

    Pastor George once again blessed us with his teaching.

    Deb Lockyer also had some words of wisdom for the women.


    Don't miss out once again! Join us Friday, July 13th at 7:30 pm for the next forum when we have a panel of three couples from Faith with nearly 200 years of marriage between them. This is your chance to ask those who have paved the path before us just how they have maintained a happy, God-centered marriage and perhaps some of the mistakes that they have made along the way. Tickets are required, so sign up this Sunday in the worship center to join us for fellowship, teaching, music, and dessert.

    Take Courage and Stand Strong In Your Faith

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  • Wednesday, May 30, 2007
  • From Chapter 6 of Men and Women: Equal Yet Different by Alexander Strauch
    "I’m sure glad we took the time to study the Scriptures together," Tom comments. "I didn’t realize how much the Bible says about gender. I didn’t know how clear it is about this subject. That’s what has impressed me the most." "Tom, let me repeat what I’ve been saying all along. If the Bible is allowed to speak for itself, it plainly teaches that God created men and women equal in His divine image but different in their respective role functions. One has to twist the Scriptures to eliminate gender role differences from the Bible."

    "You’re right, but people believe in gender equality so strongly that they won’t accept role differences no matter who says it." "
    I know! We’re standing against a worldwide wave of opinion."
    "It’s tough to stand against the tide," Tom says.
    "True, but we’ve been called to be faithful to Jesus Christ and His Word, not to popular opinion."
    "Pray that I’ll have the courage to stand for what I believe."
    "I will. Here are some final thoughts to encourage and strengthen your faith."

    First, if you believe God created men and women as equal yet different, you stand firmly on sound, honest biblical scholarship. You are faithful to the biblical record. You allow God to speak for Himself and the Bible to say what it means. You protect the Bible’s credibility to speak plainly. You believe what God’s people have believed since the beginning of human history. You follow in the footsteps of Jesus Christ and His holy apostles. So be encouraged. "Heaven and earth will pass away," Jesus said, "but My words will not pass away" (Matt. 24:35).

    Second, some top evangelical, Bible-believing scholars are boldly speaking out against the unsound interpretive methods and conclusions of feminist scholars. They are producing exciting new books and journal articles that challenge feminist strongholds and confirm the truth that the Bible teaches headship and submission. If you are open-minded and seek biblical truth on gender, vital, new research information is now at hand for you to study. 1 So "be diligent to present yourself approved to God as a workman who does not need to be ashamed, accurately handling the word of truth" (2 Tim 2:15; italics added).

    Third, in spite of the overwhelming cultural pressure to obliterate God-created, gender-defined role differences, millions of local churches and Christian leaders worldwide adamantly refuse to bow the knee to the false idol of egalitarianism. They refuse to accept feminist notions of equality--not because they are wooden-headed literalists, blind traditionalists, or because they fear women--but because God says something different. They also recognize this debate for what it really is--spiritual warfare over the Creator’s sovereign design for marriage, the family, the church family, and godly manhood and womanhood:

    For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places (Eph. 6:12). Take courage from the strength, faithfulness, and uncompromising courage of your brothers and sisters to follow the Word of the Lord, and to be truly counter-cultural.

    Fourth, those who follow God’s blueprint for marriage will build happier, stronger marriages, and their children will benefit. Those who know God’s plan for marriage and the sexes can help protect their families from a secularized culture that is super-saturated with rebellion against God’s laws, with sexual promiscuity, with divorce, fatherlessness, lies, loneliness, and heartache. Furthermore, following God’s design for gender will help keep churches doctrinally strong and enable them to grow according to God’s plan. So, I say, as the Lord said to Joshua, “This book of the law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate on it day and night, so that you may be careful to do according to all that is written in it; for then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have success” (Josh 1:8).

    Fifth, complementarians will not give up appealing to our feminist brothers and sisters. Minds have been changed. Unlike secular and theologically liberal feminists, evangelical feminists believe God to be the author of Scripture, God’s book. This provides us substantial common ground on which to continue to communicate and persuade. Thus we want to appeal to our feminist brothers and sisters and warn you as friends. The best minds can be blinded by egalitarian philosophy that looks fair and just but contradicts the Creator’s decision to make people the way He has.

    Sixth, those who follow God’s plan for the sexes, marriage, and the church family glorify God. By following His plan, they allow God to be sovereign Lord over His creation. This brings God pleasure, and nothing is more important to a child of God than that.

    1 John Piper and Wayne Grudem, eds., Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood: A Response to Evangelical Feminism (Wheaton: Crossway, 1991); Mary A. Kassian, Women, Creation and the Fall (Westchester: Crossway, 1990); Wayne Grudem, "An Open Letter to Egalitarians," in Journal for Biblical Manhood and Womanhood 3:1 (March, 1998); Jack Cottrell, Gender Roles & The Bible: A Critique of Feminist Biblical Interpretation: Gender Roles and the Bible: Creation, the Fall, and Redemption (Joplin, Mo.: College Press Publishing Company, 1994); Wayne Grudem, "The Meaning Source Does Not Exist," Journal for Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, 2:5 (Dec. 1997); Andreas J. Kostenberger, Thomas R. Schreiner, and H. Scott Baldwin, eds. Women in the Church: A Fresh Analysis of 1 Timothy 2:9-15 (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1995); S. M. Baugh, "The Apostle Among the Amazons: A Review Article," Westminster Theological Journal 56 (1994): 153-171.

    YET ANOTHER TESTIMONY FROM THE LAST FAMILY FORUM

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  • Tuesday, May 29, 2007

  • We both enjoyed our time at May's Faith Family Forum. We appreciated both George's devotion and Deb's thoughts on the Biblical design for husbands and wives. We were challenged in several issues and affirmed in a few others. We were thankful that the Forum wanted to tackle this issue. The format allowed us to meet several Faithgoers who were at various stages in their lives and there was also time for fellowship with friends that we had known before the evening. Our time went by quickly as skits, music, and small group discussion time were all well planned and worthwhile. This evening was definitely worth the price of a babysitter.


    Keith & Karin Peters

    Men Are From Mars and Women Are From Venus

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  • Thursday, May 24, 2007
  • This is a post I have taken from Thabiti Anayabile who has a tough pastoring assignment in the Grand Cayman Islands. ....

    I just had a Mars/Venus kind of experience with my wife and thought I'd share the laugh.Here's a simple illustration in how men and women (pardon the stereotypes) view money differently. My wife just walked into the office and asked, "Do you have any change?"I began to open the desk drawer for the cup of coins I keep there. Looking into the drawer, I ask, "How much?""Fifteen dollars," was her reply.Fellas, when did fifteen whole dollars become "change"? It's expensive living in Cayman... but my word! This helps to explain why when we're in the mall and I ask "do you have any money?" she always says "no." But then three stores later, she "finds" $20-40 (in her change purse) to purchase the blouse on sale. When I say, "I thought you didn't have any money?" She says, "You asked if I had money. Oh, that wasn't money." Apparently, being from Mars, I'm not dealing in big enough denominations! That was just "change"!I will have been married to my wife for 16 years on August 31st, Lord willing. And not until this moment did I realize how different our perspectives on money can be.We had a good laugh (and she gave me permission to post this). But from now on, I'm recalibrating my understanding of what "change" and "money" are. Anybody with me?