Archive for December, 2017

This Week at Cross Church | Christmas and More

Christmas is Always Special at Cross Church

Christmas Eve 2017-twacc

Christmas is always a special time of year at Cross Church. I love Christmas time, and am so thankful we get to celebrate it together as a church family. As we conclude our Home for the Holidays series, we will observe our Christmas Lord’s Supper on all campuses on Sunday, December 17. This is always a powerful time of worship and reflection, and you will not want to miss it.

Christmas Eve is just ten days away. Have you made your plans yet? We have the privilege of celebrating Christmas Eve on a Sunday this year, and it will be a special day on all of our campuses. Our Christmas Eve Worship Services will be special for the whole family. Plan now to attend and bring friends and family with you.

  • Springdale – 9:15 a.m. (Español – 10:55 a.m.)
  • Pinnacle Hills – 10:55 a.m.
  • Fayetteville – 9:00 & 10:30 a.m.
  • Neosho – 9:00 & 10:30 a.m.

Year-End Faithfulness

We praise God for His wonderful blessings and your generous giving. Cross Church, we need you; we believe in you; and, we thank you for your continued generosity. As we come to the end of the year, we each need to make sure we have honored God with at least the first tenth of all he has given us. When we give to the Ministry Budget, our giving priority, these funds are used to help us each be part of reaching Northwest Arkansas, America, and the world for Jesus Christ. People need Jesus. People change the world.

Do not forget the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering for International Missions. 100% of this offering through the Southern Baptist Convention goes to support missionaries all over the world.

21 Days of Prayer

21 Days-twacc1

Beginning January 1, we will again have 21 Days of Prayer together as a church. This has been a significant spiritual marker in the lives of our members and the life of our church. Each day, you will be able to participate in our brief time in the Word at 6:30 a.m. via Facebook Live or phone at (563) 999-1422. You can also sign up now for daily texts by sending “21days” to 313131. Join us!

Join us on Sunday as we continue our series on the family. You don’t want to miss it!

Ronnie W. Floyd

 

Guest Post | Just Say What the Bible Says, by Nick Floyd

NickToday, RonnieFloyd.com welcomes guest writer, Dr. Nick Floyd. Nick is the Lead Teaching Pastor & Staff Leader at Cross Church.

Every pastor deals with a certain reality every single week. I’ve heard it referenced as the “relentless return of Sunday.” You preach your heart out, pour yourself empty, and exhaust yourself physically and emotionally only to wake up on Monday or Tuesday and realize the process begins for another week. In many ways, it is equivalent to writing and presenting a research paper every single week.

Any honest pastor will tell you there are days when you stare blankly at a certain passage of Scripture and have the thought, “How do I preach this?” We question how to make it into an outline. We wonder how we can apply this to our people’s everyday lives. Sometimes we even wonder what in the world the passage means!

I’ve discovered a secret that has been more helpful to me in sermon preparation than any other principle. I also believe it’s the key to personal discipleship, to counseling burdened people, and even to sharing the Gospel with a lost friend. Here’s the principle: Just say what the Bible says.

That may sound overly simplistic. In fact, I bet when you read that statement, you thought it was an extremely elementary thing. I understand that. I really do. I also believe that sometimes we complicate preaching, discipleship, counseling, and evangelism. I want to encourage you to begin implementing this simple principle in your everyday life. Here’s how this statement affects the following areas.

Preaching

There are passages that are difficult to preach. Shocker, right? Some texts are hard to understand, difficult to work into an outline, or tough to try to apply to a group of people. My guiding principle throughout this is to just say what the Bible says. I believe it was Paige Patterson who once said, “Expository preaching is getting your people to read their Bible.” There is perhaps no better way to implement expository preaching than to just say what the Bible says. No more, no less. It’s important to notice that the most important question in sermon preparation is not, “What does the commentary say?” God wrote a book. Let that book speak to the people of God.

Discipleship

What is successful discipleship? People would probably answer this in a myriad of ways. I believe all successful discipleship has one thing in common: an intensified passion and focus on the Word of God in the life of the person being discipled. If that happens, then it truly will affect all other areas of his life. In other words, if we can get that person to begin to just say what the Bible says, we have helped put him on the path toward an abiding walk with Christ.

Counseling

The Word of God affects all of counseling. It doesn’t matter if it is a professional counseling environment or one friend counseling another over coffee. We have all had those difficult times in the midst of counseling someone else or simply giving advice to a friend where we have come to that line. You know, THAT line. Do I take a step out and tell him what he really needs to hear? Do I tell him what God’s standard is for his life? Or do I cower back in fear and just say something to appease him? We should maneuver through these times by simply saying what the Bible says.

Evangelism

The reality of heaven and hell are tough things for a lost culture to grapple with. If we’re honest, it is a difficult message to deliver to people who don’t believe the same way we do. Some, in an attempt to be loving and inclusive, change what the Bible says to make it more palatable to a lost person. How unloving! The most loving thing we could ever do is say what the Bible says. The Bible speaks of repentance, of faith, of surrender, of taking up your cross, of following the Lord Jesus Christ. Those words are life. Just say what the Bible says.

I truly believe that if you’ll begin to practice this principle in your everyday life, you’ll see the Lord do some amazing things. God loves to work in the lives of those who hold His Word as the source of life and truth in the world. Will you take God at His Word? Will you just say what the Bible says?
Lead Teaching Pastor, Staff Leader, Cross Church

This article was originally published on December 5, 2017 at TheologicalMatters.com. Used by permission of the author.