Archive for November, 2013

This Week at Cross Church | Blessing Basket Ministry

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Doug Sarver, Minister of Global Missions

For 21 years, Cross Church has held an annual community outreach ministry around the Thanksgiving holiday season, called Blessing Baskets. As a church we have seen God do some amazing things through this ministry.

  • Over 10,000 volunteers
  • 38,000 families provided with food
  • 9,000 Professions of Faith

Cross Church is pleased to announce that our Blessing Baskets ministry is transitioning to a weekend-only model. Each campus will host one distribution service the weekend before Thanksgiving. I’d like to encourage everyone, from all campuses, to join us for Assembly on Saturday, November 23, at 9 a.m. on the Pinnacle Hills campus, where we will assemble 3,700 bags. Service times for each campus will be as follows:

  • Pinnacle Hills at 12 p.m. – Saturday, November 23
  • Fayetteville at 2 p.m. – Saturday, November 23
  • Springdale at 1:30 p.m. – Sunday, November 24

How you can help:

We need more volunteers than ever in order to prepare for our first weekend-only distribution. This is a great way for families to serve together. Go here to volunteer.

Please consider supporting our Blessing Basket ministry by making a special donation. A gift of $25 will sponsor one family in need. Please support as many families as you are able. You can do so in your worship service, or online.

Thank you, Cross Church, for faithfully supporting this community ministry for more than two decades and for helping us make this year the best one yet!

Doug Sarver

Minister of Global Missions, Cross Church

Pastors: How You can End the Year Faithfully

dec-31-calendarWith the holiday season looming, how can you end the year faithfully? In other words, Pastor, what should your focus be for these last few days of the year? You can lead aimlessly to nowhere or aim purposefully.

I would like to challenge you personally and professionally. Here are some challenges that I believe will help you end the year faithfully.

Personally

I want to challenge you to end the year personally in the highest way possible. How can you do this?

1. Evaluate where you are with God.

Pastor, draw aside to insure all is right with God. Deal with yourself.

Talk to God about your sinfulness and challenges honestly. Practice repentance. Seek fresh empowerment from the Holy Spirit.

2. Examine your relationship with others.

In this hop and shop church culture, relationships can often get messy and misunderstood. As Pastors, we frequently run fast, and usually that is not to our advantage. Therefore, we need to use this season to examine all relationships again. Pastors, do not underestimate the influence of a personal call, email, text message, visit, or even a hand-written personal note. The holiday season is the time of year many of our people are hurting and need a special touch. So pull your troops in closer to you and let them know you need them with you to launch the new year.

3. Elevate your walk with Christ.

Use this season of the year to elevate your walk with Christ. Read more of God’s Word and spend additional time with Him in prayer. Use your personal time with God to begin to pray about what He has before you in the new year, personally and professionally. Spend extra time with God to concentrate on your personal walk with Christ. Be ready personally to launch into the new year in a powerful way.

Professionally

Now that I have suggested four steps to take personally to end the year in the highest realm of faithfulness to God, let me do the same for you professionally. How can you do this?

1. Consider the status of your church spiritually.

Just as you would have your vital signs checked at your annual physical, stop long enough to check the vital signs of your church. Pastor, honestly before God, how is your church doing? Is your church healthy? If it is healthy, how do you know? If your church is not healthy, what will you do about it? Determine to end the year faithfully.

2. Sharpen your leadership for the future.

As a Pastor, once you have considered the status of your church, you should know more about how to lead it. Where will you lead it? What will you lead the church to do? Consider having a demographic study done on your community to understand how to better reach people. If you have already done this, is it time for another study? Are you leading strategically to minister to your community compassionately, all for the purpose of making disciples of all the nations? Sharpen your leadership for the future. If you will do this, you will lead faithfully.

3. Commit yourself to teach the Word of God faithfully.

As the Pastor-Teacher, your highest call is to bring glory to God by teaching and preaching the Word of God accurately and faithfully. This means you have to draw aside to consider what you are going to preach in the year ahead and how you are going to preach it. Will you teach through a book of the Bible, or several books of the Bible? Are you going to deal with subjects like marriage, family, finances, the future, and do it driven by the text of Scripture, leading people to walk in the depths of God’s riches? Or will you do a combination of the above? Whatever you do, commit yourself to teach the Word of God more faithfully than ever before in your ministry.

4. Challenge your church to finish the year with financial faithfulness.

I am convinced that Pastors need to challenge the people of God to finish the year with the highest level of financial faithfulness to God. It is incumbent upon us to do so for the people themselves, but also for the work of the church. A person cannot say they are walking in faithfulness to Jesus without practicing biblical stewardship. As Pastors, we need to step up and challenge God’s people to:

  • Honor the Lord with the first ten percent of all God has entrusted to them throughout this year
  • Honor the Lord with gifts of generosity above the first ten percent, giving to international missions, church vision specifics, or benevolence.

If we want God’s people to walk with Jesus faithfully, we need to challenge them to be faithful financially.

As the pastor of your fellowship, plan now to finish the year both personally and professionally, with the highest level of faithfulness.

Yours for the Great Commission,

Ronnie W. Floyd