Our Prayer

Our Prayer

Heavenly Father, I know that I have sinned against You and that my sins separate me from You. I am truly sorry. I now want to turn away from my sinful past and turn to You for forgiveness. Please forgive me, and help me avoid sinning again. I believe that Your Son, Jesus Christ, died for my sins, that He was raised from the dead, is alive, and hears my prayer. I invite Jesus to become my Savior and the Lord of my life, to rule and reign in my heart from this day forward. Please send Your Holy Spirit to help me obey You and to convict me when I sin. I pledge to grow in grace and knowledge of You. My greatest purpose in life is to follow Your example and do Your will for the rest of my life. In Jesus' name I pray, Amen.

Friday, September 4, 2020

Class Lesson September 6, 2020

 Hey Gang,

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Back in our old classroom

9:50AM


We are continuing in our series with the church called Oneness Embraced




Click Play to Watch


Oneness Embraced by Tony Evans

Click Here to Read the Book

Hey everybody, I have purchased the ebook for you to read above, if you’d like to read along with the study - just click on the link above for the book.


Week Two

Pastors Wayne and Alex Teaching (FBS-UC/KLC) – Session One: Embracing Racial Oneness

9/2 @ 7pm on Facebook and YouTube (Video above)

Discuss in Groups – Week of 9/6

We will watch Tony Evans’ Video Session One to start our lesson Sunday. 



For our Group Discussion:

What is a hard thing you’ve done before and were so glad you did?

Share a time when you were on a great team. (sports, work, marriage, etc.). What was wonderful about it?

 

Discussion Questions:

  1. Dr. Evans says the goal of racial unity is not sameness, but oneness.  Define “oneness.”  How is it different from sameness? 
  2. Read Ephesians 2:13-22.  Dr. Evans used the analogy of the emulsifier in mayonnaise to discuss what unity means.  Have you experienced real unity within diversity?
  3. Dr. Evans said that the church is blocking the Glory of God by its division.  James 2:1-10 describes sinful discrimination in the early church that was strongly condemned.  How do we consciously or unconsciously discriminate?
  4. In what ways is the body of Christ not “one” today?
  5. What is the impact to the church’s witness of not having oneness?
  6. Dr. Evans talked about how the Kingdom of God values our diversity more than our culture does.  What does it look like to value diversity?

 

Reflection:  How might I be blocking or advancing the Kingdom of God?

 

Challenge: Prayerfully consider conversing with someone outside this group about this topic. It could be a spouse, a friend, coworker, or other trusted person.






 


Looking forward to seeing everyone!!


We love you and God Bless,


David & Susan


Teacher Notes





Click Play to Watch

Embracing Racial Oneness

 

FOCUS:  

a) To recognize the importance of oneness, 

b) to operate/live from the perspective of God’s Kingdom, and 

c) to see the beauty of ethnicities created by God.

  

Tony Evans’ Video highlights:

  • The plague of racial divisions in the U.S. and in the Christian Church

  • Operating from a Kingdom perspective and agenda

  • Racial amalgamation vs God’s design:  Not sameness but oneness

  • Why is unity important?

  • Jesus’ high priestly prayer

  • Solving the issue of unity by the Church

  • Breaking down the dividing wall

  • The process of emulsification

  • The blood of Christ as the unifying agent

 

For Group Time

 

Discussion Questions:

  1. Dr. Evans says the goal of racial unity is not sameness, but oneness.  Define “oneness.”  How is it different from sameness? 

  2. Read Ephesians 2:13-22.  Dr. Evans used the analogy of the emulsifier in mayonnaise to discuss what unity means.  Have you experienced real unity within diversity?

  3. Dr. Evans said that the church is blocking the Glory of God by its division.  James 2:1-10 describes sinful discrimination in the early church that was strongly condemned.  How do we consciously or unconsciously discriminate?

  4. In what ways is the body of Christ not “one” today?

  5. What is the impact to the church’s witness of not having oneness?

  6. Dr. Evans talked about how the Kingdom of God values our diversity more than our culture does.  What does it look like to value diversity?

 

Self-Reflection:  How might I be blocking or advancing the Kingdom of God?

 

Challenge: Prayerfully consider conversing with someone outside this group about this topic. It could be a spouse, a friend, coworker, or other trusted person.


"We are only as strong as we are united, as weak as we are divided." JK Rowlings

"Sameness is the absence of individuality. Oneness acknowledges and harnesses diversity for the same purpose."


We Need Oneness, Not Sameness

By Chris Borah|June 5th, 2020

 

“We are all the same.”

 

This is a rallying cry we see again and again as we sift through the wreckage of our conflicts over differences. It’s a phrase that’s trying to take away pain, but it isn’t telling the truth. Differences are real. Declaring that differences don’t exist doesn’t just erase the beauty of diversity, it also offers the wrong solution to what our problems truly are. We don’t all need to be the same. We need to be one in Christ.

 

Creation can be described as the wedding, the joining together of difference. Heaven and earth, light and dark, land and sea, male and female. Creation is diverse both within and beyond the human community.

 

Our Failed, Comfortable Answer: Sameness

The natural human answer to the perceived problem of difference is sameness. For most of human history, we have separated ourselves into groups, building up comfortable walls to protect our sameness, to achieve mastery over others, and to protect ourselves from differences. Other times we have tried to conform everyone around us into the same image, eliminating all distinctions. Like prisoners in a jail, we lose ourselves in the collective.

 

But sameness cannot resolve our differences. The answer of Holy Scripture to the apparent problem of difference is not sameness; the answer is oneness.

 

 

The Pentecostal Answer: Oneness

Last Sunday, many of us gathered together to celebrate the Feast of Pentecost. We remember that fifty days after Jesus’ resurrection on Easter Sunday, the first disciples were gathered together in a house. Suddenly, there was the sound of a mighty rushing wind, and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit. The Spirit of the living, resurrected, and ascended Christ was poured out on all flesh, on all nations. The reverse of Babel happened and what drove us apart, uncommon language, was turned backward, and everyone heard the gospel in his or her own language.

 

For in one Spirit we were all baptized into one body—Jews or Greeks, slaves or free—and all were made to drink of one Spirit. (1 Cor 12:13)

 

Differences abound. Jews and Greeks (things we can’t change). Slave and free (things we can change). When we are ignorant of another culture’s customs it is normal for us to be frightened. The turbulent deep teeming with sea creatures has scared mariners for ages. We are afraid, like the disciples in the storm.

 

But Jesus calmed the storm. He made peace between people of all nations by his blood. How did Jesus make us one? By the Spirit (Eph 2:18, 22). Jesus has broken down our comfortable dividing walls of sameness. Jesus has killed the hostility, and through him we have access in one Spirit to God. Once we were two; now we are made one.

 

Once we were different and hostile to one another. Now, we are still different, but Jesus has killed the hostility. You cannot eat at King Jesus’ table together on Sunday and then refuse to eat in one another’s homes on Monday (Galatians 2:11ff.). There is no “live and let live” in the Kingdom of God. Killing our hostility with God requires killing our hostility with one another.

 

 

Oneness Requires Difference

The family of God is not a cult drinking the same Kool-Aid, all wearing the same robes and sneakers. Rather, the Body of Christ is a “unity of unlikes” (C. S. Lewis, Membership), a “fellowship of differents” (Scot McKnight). The Church is a community of unique persons.

 

The answer to the problems that arise from our difference is not to eliminate all distinctions, but to gather at one table. Like various parts in a body, we are not the same. If the body has more than one head, it is a monster. You don’t make an engine by gathering together a bunch of bolts. You need nuts and bolts, pistons and cylinders.

 

When you look into the face of another person made in the image of God, you don’t say, “I don’t see color.” White sand and rich black soil are different, but both are the dust of the earth. Both are beautiful and different. The skin of man is beautiful and different. Sameness is not oneness.

 

In the gospel, Greeks must not become Jewish. Jews must not become pagans. But they must eat together at the same table. In the gospel, mothers are not fathers. Children are not grandparents. Multiple wives don’t make a happy family (ask Solomon). We need all kinds of different and unique persons to make this family. We, the family of God, are a “unity of unlikes.”

 

Family is hard and difference is challenging. But oneness in the Spirit requires us to live with each other in understanding ways (1 Peter 4). In the gospel, slave and free become family (Philemon). Male and female are wed. The fatherless are given a Father. The childless are given innumerable offspring.

 

The answer to the problems that arise from our difference is not to make everyone the same. The answer to the problems that arise from our difference is to be united in Christ. Oneness requires difference.

What Must We Have in Common?

We try to protect ourselves by surrounding ourselves with sameness, all dressing the same way, separating ourselves by skin color and class and political party. We separate and sing different songs in different keys. We know this is wrong, but our solutions are neither realistic or ideal. Shouldn’t we all just be the same? No. Sameness will never lead to the common good. We need variety, we must have difference if our aim is unity.

 

Now there are varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit; and there are varieties of service, but the same Lord; and there are varieties of activities, but it is the same God who empowers them all in everyone. To each is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good. (1 Cor 12:4–7)

 

The song of the gospel is not one note. The song of the gospel is many notes in the same key, in beautiful harmony. Variety, differences of gifts, differences of service, differences of activities produce a common good, a shared good, a beautifully diverse unity. We are one in the Spirit, diverse in our gifts, producing our common good. In the Spirit, variety is in harmony, and we all sing the same song:

 

…we hear them telling in our own tongues the mighty works of God. (Acts 2:11)

 

The outpouring of the Spirit at Pentecost was made manifest in the common proclamation of the gospel. To be Spirit-filled requires us to proclaim the mighty works of God. And although we proclaim the same message, each person, every mouth will tell the story in different ways, with a different tone of voice, singing different notes in harmony. The message of the gospel throughout Acts is diverse: tell of the mighty works of God in creation, tell of the mighty works of God in the Law and the Prophets, tell of the mighty works of God in the life, ministry, death, and resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth. Many voices, one common proclamation. Different stories, one gospel.

 

Every time we gather, many different voices harmonize together in one song. On the Feast of Pentecost, on every Lord’s Day, by the Spirit, all nations sing the same song. We share a common liturgy with Nigerians, with Mexicans, with Canadians, with Christians from all nations. We must not fear difference in Christ.

 

And they sang a new song, saying, “Worthy are you to take the scroll and to open its seals, for you were slain, and by your blood you ransomed people for God from every tribe and language and people and nation (Rev 5:9)

 

The Creation requires difference. The New Creation in Christ by the Spirit redeems our differences. Come let us return to the Lord. Let us repent of our comfortable sameness. And with many different tongues and with one voice, let us sing of the mighty works of God.