Easter Egg Hunt 2015

Approximately 48 adults and 20 children attended the 2015 Easter Egg Hunt. We had neighbors from two households attend merely from seeing a sign in the yard. Jeddi and Judah invited friends from school, and families who attend Grace Falls were joined by their friends and families. Children enjoyed an Easter Egg Hunt, a visit from the Easter Bunny who led the Hokey-Pokey dance to get everyone warmed up on the beautiful 33 degree morning. Children who found an egg with a face on it redeemed that special egg for a prize!

We then sat down to enjoy a hot dog/hamburger lunch, which provided an opportunity to get to know our new friends! The Lord was glorified and He blessed this opportunity to build a bridge of friendship in our community.

View the entire album on Flickr

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My Job Is To Plant and Water

IMG_4312 You can get bogged down with a lot of ministry activity but it all boils down to this.

What, after all, is Apollos? And what is Paul? Only servants, through whom you came to believe—as the Lord has assigned to each his task. I planted the seed, Apollos watered it, but God has been making it grow. So neither the one who plants nor the one who waters is anything, but only God, who makes things grow.

1 Corinthians 3:5–7

It is so easy to get overwhelmed with strategy and plans for ministry but Paul tells us to keep it simple.

Maybe I am the one to plant the seeds or maybe I watered the seeds that someone else has planted. Either way, I don’t grow anyone … ever. God does. Whether someone grows exponentially through my ministry or whether he or she takes only one small step of faith is God’s responsibility. I’m just there to serve him. He’s the one in charge.

This mindset shifts the focus from my agenda for Grace Falls Church to my relationship with God. Leading this church plant becomes something that God and I are doing together. Experiences that used to frustrate me become opportunities for God to grow me.

The Difference A Year Makes

by Brandon Stephens

Brandon

In her 1970 hit single, "Big Yellow Taxi," singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell proclaimed to the world, "Don't it always seem to go that you don't know what you've got 'til it's gone..." While many of you are finishing Joni's classic lyric in your heads, my reflection upon the events of the past twelve months has got me thinking, "When it comes to life and life abundant, you don't know what you're missing 'til you get it!"

Who could complain? With the wreckage of over a decade's worth of substance abuse all but cleared away, my loving wife and two beautiful children and I secured a mortgage in a 2 bedroom/2 bathroom condo in the historic town of Smithville, NJ where town is spelled with an "e" at the end. Life was good. Or so I thought.

In comparison to the first 5 years of our relationship, Andrea and I were experiencing periodic bouts of stability and normalcy. Gone were the sleepless nights of her wondering if I’d make it home from Atlantic City. A successful working man is at the beck and call of his employer. Addiction was my full-time job and when the boss man called, I came a' running.

But now drugs are no longer my god. In 2009, a brief stint in rehab allowed my borrowed faith in Jesus as Lord and Savior to become my own. After attending a Bible study one evening, I discovered the Addict's Transitive Property of Christianity and had a breakthrough: if sin equals death, and addiction equals death, then sin must equal addiction!

Through this lens, Jesus' sacrifice on the cross became personal. The person I was as an active addict died with Him on the cross. My sins were covered with His righteousness and washed with His blood. I shared in His resurrection and received a new life freed from the bondage of addiction.

Andrea's faith journey began in 2009 to appease the post-rehab religious zealot that I had become. Initially my weekly church attendance with my then fifteen month old son, Oliver, gave Andrea an opportunity to have two hours alone in a quiet house without a whiny child or a Bible-thumping husband to interrupt her thoughts.

Raised by her non-practicing, Jewish mother and her Iranian-born, Armenian father (who is Christian by nationality more than belief), Andrea grew up with no concept of God, no exposure to prayer, and no experience with the Bible.

I was so excited about my new found faith and I was incessant at evangelizing Andrea but it was less than transformative. Slowly but surely she began to attend church with Oliver and I on a routine basis. Emphasis on ROUTINE.

Fortune literally found us in Smithville, that’s where we bought a house and settled down after Andrea's mom hit the jackpot in an Atlantic City casino and gave us the money for the down payment on our home. We began attending a small, local church, filled a pew, and routinely volunteered in the children's ministry. Emphasis once more on ROUTINE.

Venturing home one Sunday morning after church, Andrea and I experienced a distinct sense that something in our walk was missing, we realized our Christianity was compartmentalized and stored in a bin labeled, "Sunday Morning."

Last April, a string of God-ordained interactions and events found my two kids and I at an Easter Egg Hunt on the front lawn of Buff and Cissy McNickle. The family at Grace Falls Church made us feel welcome and immediately at home like a member of the family. I was overwhelmed by the hospitality and joy emanating from everyone that I interacted with.

Racing home and busting through the door, I took Andrea's ear hostage and spouted off about how great a time we had and how nice everyone I met was. My bubble burst as Andrea stated emphatically, "We are not switching churches."

Down but not defeated, I joined a "Real Life Discipleship" study at Grace Falls and went back to the drawing board. Knowing if I could just get Andrea in the same room with my new friends, she would experience the same love I had felt at the egg hunt. Opportunity and desire collided on Good Friday last year when Buff and Cissy's invitation to a local restaurant resulted in my wife's attendance at her first Grace Falls event.

Volumes could be written about the events and interactions that have taken place over the past twelve months. We've come to know God as our Provider. We've seen Him at work in the lives of those around us. A young man I was fortunate enough to pour into gave His life to Christ. The ripples of his decision are still reverberating through his family as the Kingdom continues to be built.

Our knowledge of God's story and recognition of our place within it becomes clearer every day. We've taken our faith out of the box labeled, "Sunday Morning." We've come to find our place in a family of servants who are on mission for God. Realizing that we were saved from the penalty of sin, are being saved from bondage of sin, and will one day be saved from the presence of sin, we've learned to rest in His grace and stop trying to prove ourselves.

Today, we're interested in how we can serve others and be Good News to those in our community. We've come to know that "church" is not a building but a Body. We are the church. Today, our lives are anything but ROUTINE. We have life and life abundant. What a difference a year makes.

 

Relationships Are Everything

5066527221_a0da31642aThis Sunday morning there are a lot of good things going on and there are a lot of jobs that we need to fill but as important as those jobs are none of them are more important than people. Serving people is what the jobs that we want you to fill are all about. If all of us take a task, it will be easy for us to have plenty of time to connect and build relationships with folks. So keep this in mind and I want you to consider these thoughts as we pray and prepare for the weekend.

Have you ever sat in discussions and found it incredibly difficult to get a good conversation going? I've found it can be very challenging to move conversations along, especially when you're trying to get to know someone. Here are a few principles that might help.

Listen to Their Story

In order to promote good gospel conversations in small gatherings, it is important that everyone listens to one another's story well. Don't check out, criticize, or think about your own story but take the time to listen to their story. Our lives are continually changed through conflict, challenges, promotions, relationships, and new experiences. Without asking good questions of one another, we can’t really share in deep community. Good questions help uncover the truth about how people are really doing and open the opportunity to share life and truth together. Ask questions and genuinely listen to one another's stories.

Ask Good Questions

Here are some questions that are great at moving a conversation forward:

[columns] [column width="one-half"] Can you elaborate on that? How did that happen? How does that make you feel? Did you feel alone or supported? [/column] [column width="one-half"] Were you afraid or confident? How did you respond? How are you feeling now? What concerns you the most about this? [/column] [/columns]

Listen in Order to Speak Gospel Encouragement

What does that mean? I am glad that you asked. Based on their story and what you heard or learned:

1 - What grace can you affirm in their life? "That’s a really helpful insight." "It’s been so challenging to hear you talk about your neighbor/co worker or that situation…"

2 - What victory can you celebrate? "Wow that's amazing. I've seen God do something similar in my life…" "Isn't it awesome how God provided this job for you?"

3 - What progress can you see or identify in their faith journey? "You are fighting depression really well" "I’ve really seen you grow in this area"

​You see we believe that the Gospel (Good News) is the answer for everything. It is why we exists and it is our only hope. The goal for you and I is to not only see that reality in our own lives but also being able to see it and speak it into the lives of others.

This is what we want to do Sunday and everyday. Hear one another's stories and be able to recognize who God is and what He has done and is doing. This helps us discover who we are and shapes what we do.

​I hope this helps you not only this weekend but every day. You never know the opportunity God might give you today to bring GOOD NEWS to someone who desperately needs it.

Bartlett's Commissioning Service

10678807_879780142061618_5106285174702573988_nI am so excited about this weekend and the opportunity to meet some new people and also cultivate the relationships we already have with people that God has put in our lives. I want to encourage you to really pray for this weekend and plan on being here to be a part of what I hope is a great day with family. You don't want to miss this opportunity to spend some one-on-one time with Chris, Gen, Isaiah, Maria, Shiloh and Eden, starting at 8:45 am. There is no agenda for that time other than giving you an opportunity to drop-in and see how they are doing, pray with them and wish them well. The Bartlett's are excited to see us again:

We are really looking forward to spending some time together on Sunday Morning. We are excited to see all of you and catch up.

We just finished our training last Wednesday, and we will be visiting with family and travelling for the rest of this week.

We want to thank you for your prayers during training the last 9 weeks. We praise God to report to you that the kids did great during the training and Gen and I learned a whole lot about our new role as missionaries to Niger.

This will be our time to say goodbye as we send them out to spread the gospel to the Dendi people of West Africa. Join in with the Bartlett's ministry by praying for them daily and through your financial support.

Calvary Baptist Church in Egg Harbor has agreed to receive tax deductible donations on their behalf. Calvary has agreed to give 100% of the donations to their ministry. To receive a tax receipt, all charitable donations must be sent to Calvary Baptist Church. Please mail your check made payable to:

Calvary Baptist Church 850 Railroad Dr. Little Egg Harbor, NJ 08087

On the memo line, please write: Chris Bartlett – Africa.