Secret Church Simulcast – April 22 with David Platt

Posted in Special Events on April 13th, 2011 by admin – Comments Off
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I received a well written and compelling e-mail from one of our High School teens last week requesting that FBCJAX participate as a host church for the upcoming webcast of “Secret Church”, a ministry of Dr. David Platt and The Church at Brook Hills . We know and love David Platt. He is a gifted, God-anointed, soul-stirring young preacher who has spoken in our Pastor’s Conference. However, due to the timing of the event (April 22 / Good Friday), I thought it was too late to get the word out and make preparations for hosting the meeting. So, I wrote my response to this young lady explaining why we would not be able to participate this time…but the Holy Spirit stopped me from pressing the ‘send’ button, confronted me about my answer, and impressed on my heart that we should press on and do what was necessary to host the event. Thus…this blog entry and an invitation to you to participate in “Secret Church”.

The event will be held in the FBC Dining Room. Doors will open at 6:00 PM. The event starts at 7:00 PM and lasts six hours…yes you heard me. That means a 1:00 AM finish time. BUT…it will be worth it! Everyone that I have ever spoken with about one of these events raves about it. I can think of no better way to spend a ‘Good Friday’ night than in soul preparation for Resurrection Sunday. Check out the info contained in the excellent “Secret Church” web site via the link above. I hope you will join us.

“E-vite” Form

For those who plan to attend, here are some important things to know…

- The event is free of charge and is open to the public. No ticket or registration is required. You are encouraged to ‘go viral’ and invite friends to attend with you.

- A voluntary offering will be received during the meeting to benefit the persecuted church around the world. All offerings will be given to Disciple-Making International via The Church at Brook Hills.

- Parking will be in the Preschool Parking Garage (corner of Ashley and Laura Streets). This garage connects with the building we will be meeting in via an elevated bridge…thus no street-walking late at night in downtown)

- Eat dinner before you come…or bring your own snacks. No food will be provided.

- You will need your Bible. FYI…David preaches from the English Standard Version (ESV).

- Praise and worship will be interspersed through-out the evening, and there will be some built-in ‘stretch’ breaks.

- The first 100 attendees will receive a study guide. We only have 100 of the guides, so the early birds get‘em…

- The meeting location is 125 West Ashley St., First Floor

I look forward to experiencing “Secret Church” with you…

Rev. John Blount
Executive Pastor

Massive Springfield Cleanup

Posted in Missions, Special Events on April 12th, 2011 by admin – Comments Off
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Thank you to all of our members who joined in the massive Springfield Clean-up this weekend! It was a great success and showed an outpouring of love to the community surrounding our church.

“This Saturday the Block Captains organized a massive cleanup effort to clear some of the most impassable alleys in Historic Springfield.  Springfielders were joined by 75-100 volunteers from First Baptist Church who brought commercial mowers, chain saws and a willingness to get sweaty and dirty.  By the end of the day it became one of the largest cleanup efforts in several years.”

- original article from  MySpringfield.org | “Block Captains and FBC Stage Massive Cleanup”

Shane Johns – our new High School Pastor

Posted in High School, Special Events on April 11th, 2011 by admin – Comments Off
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(left - Dan & Marianne Elkins, Middle School Pastor, middle - Shane & Allison  Johns, High School Pastor, right - Steve & Laurie Clifton, Exec. Pastor of Education)

My heart is overflowing with joy as I introduce to our church family our newest staff member, our High School Pastor, Shane Johns. Shane and his lovely wife, Allison (Taylor), were part of our First Baptist family during their youth years. They are coming to us, along with their three children, Seth, 9, Kallie, 7, and Luke 4, from Arlington, Texas, where they have been serving the same church for the past 12 years as the Student Pastor. Shane is an answer to so many of our prayers and is a gift from the Lord to lead our High School ministry.

Shane is a graduate of Trinity Christian Academy, the University of North Florida and Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. He believes that student ministry should be Christ-focused and relationship- driven with a balanced approach to addressing the many aspects of the life of the believer. He knows that good biblical doctrine is absolutely essential to proper discipleship, and wants to build that upon a proper heart foundation of a love relationship with Jesus not the intellect’s foundation of knowledge about Jesus.

Shane has a strong belief that even the youngest and meekest of students can be world changers so he pushes, teaches and holds students accountable just like an adult. He will develop a strong student- led ministry supported by active adults and will seek passionately to teach students what it means to fall head- over- heels in love with the Savior through his personal interaction with them and his leadership of our adult workers in our High School Ministry.

We welcome the Johns’ home to our First Baptist family and look forward to many years of fruitful labor with them on our Educational Ministry Staff Team! I know that you will love on them and tell them how thrilled you are that God led them here to lead us. You can contact them at 366-1216 or send an email.

Serving Jesus with you,
Steve Clifton
Executive Pastor of Education

Japan Relief – Updates

Posted in Japan, Missions, Special Events on March 19th, 2011 by admin – Comments Off
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Japan Crisis Information:
Updates on Baptist Global Response relief efforts can be monitored on Twitter (www.twitter.com/gobgr), Facebook (http://on.fb.me/hKaE6J), and www.gobgr.org.
UPDATED: March 18, 2011
 
TOKYO — The Southern Baptist relief effort in Japan is moving forward, in spite of uncertainties about the ongoing nuclear crisis in the northeastern part of the country, the executive director of Baptist Global Response announced March 18.

A “second wave” team is following the two-member assessment team that arrived March 12, said Jeff Palmer. Two disaster relief specialists are joining the additional two assessment experts, giving the new, four-member team an opportunity to launch the initial Southern Baptist disaster response.

“This initial response team includes members of the Southern Baptist Disaster Relief Network from South Carolina and Alabama,” Palmer said. “They are heading into Tokyo to set up a command center for a unified Southern Baptist disaster relief base.”

Because government restrictions prevent a large-scale overseas volunteer effort, the initial relief projects will be conducted in partnership with Japanese Baptists and other humanitarian groups, Palmer said. The projects will focus on earthquake survivors outside the tsunami zone, where the nuclear crisis is most serious.

“Because so much of the U.S. media coverage is on the nuclear crisis in the tsunami zone, we aren’t seeing how serious the situation is in other areas,” Palmer said. “The area devastated by the earthquake is much larger and the conditions in those areas are very serious. We can do a lot to help people in desperate need because of the earthquake while we wait for the nuclear situation to be resolved.”

The area around Sendai in northeastern Japan has been gravely threatened by a nuclear crisis since the March 11 earthquake and tsunami knocked out cooling systems at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant. Four of the plant’s six reactor units have experienced fires, explosions or partial meltdowns. Emergency responders have been dumping tons of water on the reactors in hopes of preventing a disaster.

Based on the disaster assessment conducted this past week, the initial relief effort will focus on life-essential items: basic food items, water, blankets, hygiene supplies and kitchen utensils, said Pat Melancon, BGR’s disaster management specialist.

“Based on past experience and what we’re seeing on the ground in Japan, things like this will be the greatest help to people who are just trying to survive while the country’s recovery effort gets underway,” Melancon said. “These are the things our on-the-ground partners in Japan are asking for.”

The first round of relief supplies also will include radiation detectors, Melancon added. “We are taking the possibility of radiation exposure very seriously,” he said. “We’re going to be real careful with that part.”

BGR hopes the new team will be able to set up supply channels within a week so Southern Baptist relief supplies can begin moving into the country, said Ben Wolf, who with his wife, Pam, directs BGR work in the Asia Rim.

“We know how anxious our Southern Baptist disaster relief specialists and other volunteers are to come to Japan and help,” Wolf said. “They know people are in desperate need, and they are willing to take whatever risks are necessary to take the love of Jesus to hurting people.

“The reality, however, is that right now we can’t go ourselves, so we will focus on praying and giving so our partners in Japan can get the job done,” Wolf added. “Because of the scale of this disaster, recovery will be a long-term challenge, and we believe there will be plenty of opportunities to go in months to come. For now, donations to Japan relief, especially to the general fund, are the critical need.”

The senior pastor of Tokyo Baptist Church said he has been amazed at the outpouring of concern from around the world.

“I have been overwhelmed with e-mails from people and churches from all over the world who want to help, people we know and people we don’t know, said Dennis Folds. “These are difficult times but it is a time like this that we can make an impact for the greater good, for the Kingdom.”

The World Team and Kimyal

Posted in Missions on March 17th, 2011 by admin – Comments Off
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As 2010 came to a close, Pastor Brunson asked our church family to move together as one on a spiritual journey for one year, a process we are calling “The Power of God in Everyone.” A key component is to read through the Bible together in 2011. As we wrap up our 11th week, his message this past Sunday revisited the long-standing commitment that First Baptist has had to the importance of the Bible for our ministry as a church, and to life of each Christian.

 

 

In reading from Exodus 24, pastor showed us that God held His word in high esteem and instructed Israel to do the same. God wants us to pay close attention to the instructions in His word, and to apply it diligently to our lives. It is His way to direct us, and the best way for us to understand His character, in particular His holiness.

So, a few questions arise for those of us living a few thousands years after Exodus. Do we have a copy of God’s word– the Bible? Well, most of us do, and many of us have more than a couple. And the even more pointed question – do we read the Bible? And finally, do we really appreciate the Bible that so many of have in our homes, or do we take for granted the treasure of truth, wisdom and revelation that is so readily available to us?

Rather than ask the question, pastor directed our attention to a video from World Team that told the story of the Kimyal people of New Papua, Indonesia. In 2010, after years of prayer, they were finally receiving the New Testament in their own language. We watched as the villagers gathered ‘round the primitive airstrip in the mountains, while a small plane landed with the anticipated teasure. They were singing, dancing, praying and praising God that from the beginning of the world, He had planned to make His word available to them on that very day. And they were weeping as they handled the bundles of New Testaments and the elders passed them on to the younger believers.

Do we weep for joy at the privilege of possessing God’s word? Do we thirst after the revelation of Himself contained in its pages? Do hunger to live according to the holiness He desires? The power of God is in Himself, and His word is our access point … will you join us as we journey together for the rest of the year?

A Generosity Encounter

Posted in Events, Special Events on March 2nd, 2011 by admin – Comments Off
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I did not realize how self-centered and self-reliant I had become. But that day I had to admit that my outlook on life and every day decisions had become much more about self-preservation and self-reliance than about magnifying God in the world. Honestly, I was too interested in what I was doing than what God was doing. But in my self-centeredness, which I thought was necessary and prudent, I was actually creating a lot of anxiety, fear, and frustration in my heart. I no longer imagined or dreamed about what could be…from a spiritual perspective. I only saw what was. I had become a pragmatic pessimist…and was not very happy.

Thankfully, that day was a turning point for me; a spiritual wake-up call; the beginning of a renewed outlook on life and the rekindling of a zeal for what could be accomplished through God’s provision, both in my personal life and in the life of our church. That day a man invited me to imagine what could be if I lived life with a generous heart. The strange thing was that he was not talking about money. He was talking about my heart.

Throughout the meeting I heard personal testimonies and stories from people who had experienced the graciousness of others toward them. They told about the fantastic impact those acts had made on their lives. Then I heard from the people who had been so gracious, and why. They said they were living with an open hand and a generous heart…and were overjoyed at the results of what God was doing in them and through them. That day I was made very aware that my heart had grown dull. It had been a while since I had experienced the joy of lavish graciousness in my life. I came to realize that in living from a self-centered heart I had built-up calluses on my spirit, and had grown lukewarm about life and what God was doing. In living for myself, I had actually hurt myself.

Are you in that place? Are you living with a lot of frustration and pent up anger about life and your circumstances? You do not have to stay there. God has a far better place and far greater plans for you. But you have to be willing to change; to relocate; to move out of that place, toward God.

That is why I am writing this post. I want to help you move from that ungodly, unfulfilling, unproductive place that we can easily find ourselves in. On Friday March 25 at 6:30 PM (register) or on Saturday, March 26 at 8:30 AM (register) you can take a step toward a renewed outlook on your purpose and God’s purpose for you. You are invited to attend “A Generosity Encounter”, and discover once again what it is to live life with an open hand and a generous heart; to love God with all your being; and to love others as yourself. I hope you will take that step. I assure you, you will be glad you did. Please refer to the website for details and registration information. I hope to see you there.

Grace to You…
Rev. John Blount

FBC -Thank you for the service you gave at PC 2011

Posted in Events, Pastor on February 2nd, 2011 by admin – Comments Off
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Dear Staff and Church,

This was my fifth Pastors’ Conference as pastor of FBC JAX.  This year seemed to have more “firsts” than any of the others.  This is the first year of a “new generation” coming to the Conference.  At least one-third of those attending were here for the first time.  They were younger – a lot younger than any of the other years I have experienced.  I was stunned at how many “twenty-somethings” we had.  If we are going to have influence on anyone, the twenty-somethings are a good place to start.

It was the first for a number of our speakers.  In Baptist life we brought together two sides that have been quite antagonistic to one another.  However I think we had, as one of our ladies said to me, the sweetest spirit at this Pastors’ Conference.  Maybe God has used us to help bridge some gaps that have existed between brothers in Christ.

It was the first of the conferences where I sensed a broader hurt than I have ever detected before.  So many men shared how this past year was the most difficult year of ministry for them and how this conference made such a difference in their lives.

I believe we did more ministry this year than we have in the previous five put together.  All we had to do was just be there, listen, pray with them and it seemed to ease their burden and lift their load.  It is amazing how little expressions of love, care, and compassion can help another person.

You all did an outstanding job of “being the church” for a lot of weary pastors and their wives. I think this year the Pastors’ Conference has taken a new direction.  There seems to me to be a fresh wind blowing through our church and through the conference.  These past few weeks the presence of the Lord has seemed more real in my own personal life and in the services.  It could be the concentration of God’s people being daily in the word and in prayer for one another.

I want to thank you for months of hard work that often gets tedious, for going to meetings that often seem senseless, for working on projects that sometimes seem endless.  I want to thank you for being faithful to the Lord’s work.   Thanks to all the maintenance staff that helped set up, breakdown, clean up and kept us looking good.  Thank you to the kitchen crew who cooked up a storm.  Thank you to all of those who worked behind the scenes doing all kinds of necessary things that get overlooked.  Our people deserve our thanks for just being the wonderful people they are.  What a group of ushers we have!  Media, thank you for the tremendous job of pulling all of this off.  The choir and orchestra simply showed out – oh, how we love them!  I realize someone was overlooked by me but not by our Lord.

One pastor shared with me last night, “My church will be better for this because God has done something in my life here.” That is a testimony of a church that pulls together to do one thing once a year – love on God’s servants.


To view an exhaustive photo gallery from the conference, please visit BillThompsonPhotography.com

‘There’s such potential here’

Posted in Pastor on October 27th, 2010 by admin – Comments Off
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Slideshow

(Re-posted with permission from Max Marbut and Jax Daily Record. Originally posted at jaxdailyrecord.com)

The First Baptist Church of Jacksonville was established in July 1838, the third church in the new town. In 1892, First Baptist settled at its present location in the heart of Downtown. The Great Fire of 1901 destroyed the original structure, but in February 1903, the cornerstone was laid for a new building, which still stands at Church and Hogan streets. First Baptist’s campus has grown to encompass nine square blocks Downtown with a congregation of more than 30,000 members who meet in the church’s 10,000-seat auditorium. It’s one of the largest churches in America.On Feb. 19, 2006, Dr. Mac Brunson was unanimously elected as First Baptist’s 23rd pastor. He moved his family here from Dallas and has since led the growth and development of the church and its place in the community.

Daily Record Staff Writer Max Marbut sat down with Brunson recently to discuss where the church is today and where it’s going.

by Max Marbut
Staff Writer

When and how did you receive your calling to the ministry?
It was my freshman year in college, on a Thanksgiving weekend, that I surrendered to the ministry. I was home that weekend and I was dating the girl that I am now married to. I remember very clearly, for two years, without saying anything to anybody, I’d really wrestled with God’s call in my life to ministry. I remember sitting down that Sunday night before church and just sharing with her that I felt like this was what God was calling me to do. I felt like we were getting very serious, and I said, I want to tell you this, in case you, you know, you say, the very last thing I want to do is to be married to a pastor. But I think I’m going to go down tonight, and just surrender to the call of ministry on my life. So it was then, I remember it very distinctly. It was not a quick decision, it was something I had wrestled with for two years.

What did your parents do?
My dad owned a furniture company, and I’m the only boy.

Where was this?
In Greenwood, S.C. I’d grown up in the furniture business. It was a family business and I’d worked there since I was 12 years of age. It was kind of understood that the family business was going to be mine, that it would be turned over to me. But my dad is a very committed Christian, and was far more elated that God had called me into ministry than that I would take on the family business. So eventually he just sold it and retired.

When you first arrived in Jacksonville, you were very excited about being here. Has that changed since then?
Well, if I was excited then, I’m even more so now. This April will be five years since I was called, or since I came here to pastor. I just love the church. This has become home, and this church has become my family.

Is Jacksonville more home to you than Dallas was?
Yes. I think so. Now, I loved the folks there. I loved Dallas, loved the city, all of that, but this is more home to us, and the church here is more family to us. God’s done a great work in our lives and I’d hope that the church would say that the Lord’s done a great work in the church. We just love Jacksonville. It’s one of the most wonderful places on the earth, to me.

I think the city really doesn’t have a clue of the potential here. All of us want to live in Mayberry. You want your hometown to be Mayberry. So we want that, and we’re afraid that progress is going to make it into something other than Mayberry. But there’s such potential here. It’s a great Southern city. It has resources that are phenomenal. And I just don’t think it’s scratched the surface of what the city could do.

The U.S. Census figures are starting to come out, so talk about the church community and its growth and diversity.
It’s been phenomenal. Let me give you just one area, and that’s the area of the Vietnamese congregation. We have just sent off a young man and his family to seminary. Vietnamese, immigrated here to Jacksonville in his early teens, came to know the Lord through the Vietnamese ministry of this church. We educated him at The Baptist College of Florida in Graceville. He got his bachelor’s degree, finished at the top of his class and now we’ve sent him off to seminary. That ministry has grown. During Pastors’ Conference here, they also host the Vietnamese Pastors’ Conference, and Vietnamese pastors from across America come here and meet and attend our Pastors’ Conference, and have breakout sessions that specifically deal with Vietnamese congregations. God’s just really put his hand on that ministry here.

What about other nationalities in the church?
We have a Burmese church here. We have a very good Hispanic church that’s growing. We have a Chinese church, I think Korea. We have one that represents the African tribes. Some of them come from Sierra Leone, some from Nigeria, some have come from various African nations. We also have a Russian-speaking congregation. We have a wide variety. Plus in our congregation, of course we have African-Americans, Hispanics and Asians that are all part of our congregation.

How’s the First Baptist Academy doing?
It is phenomenal. This is its second year. It opened its first year with 270 students, and last year, it went from pre-K through 12th grade. We cut that back because we understood in one year, we need a separate high school. We came to see that you need to put high schoolers in one place and all the others in another. The numbers did not go down that much, we’re still over 200 in school, and the amazing thing is we opened that thing up and it’s been in the black, and it’s been there from Day One. It normally will take you 3-5 years to get a new school up and into the black. We’ve been in the black since Day One.

The church communities have obviously supported it.
We’ve got young people coming here from everywhere. From every direction. So it’s going really well. I’m really thankful for that.

Talk about technology and social media and how that has changed the church and how churches interact with the community.
We were HDTV (high-definition television) before the television stations were. We have to hire 12-year-olds now to run everything. None of the rest of us know how to run it. We have to get 12 and 13 and 14-year-olds. They seem to know more technology than the rest of us. We have a media staff here that is second to none. In fact, this past summer our media group won an Emmy for a commercial that it did for the local market.

What about social media? Do you tweet?
I do. I swore up and down that I never would, but then I did. Now, I have not gone on Facebook, and don’t think I will. But I do tweet out little things God’s put in my heart, principles that the Lord shows me in Scripture. I don’t talk about ‘I’m here eating tonight,’ or ‘I’m there doing this.’ I don’t want it to be about me, I want it more to be about something the Lord has put on my heart to say.

We have a whole new area of our ministry here that’s called FBC-TV, where you can get on and you can get any archived sermon, you can get streaming audio and video. Eventually we’re going to put on manuscripts, so you’ll be able to download manuscripts of the message. You can get video, you can get audio, you’ll be able to get manuscripts, you can get the whole series of things that I’ve done. Of course you get the live service.

We’re getting thousands of hits a day on these things, from around the world. It’s not just local folks, it’s people literally around the world that get on and follow us.

What does that bring to the church?
I don’t know. It’s a good question. We look at it as a ministry. We can get the Word out there, in somebody’s hand, in somebody’s ear, in somebody’s heart, that’s what we’re responsible for. And we feel like we’re doing that. We’re committed to teaching the verse by verse, chapter by chapter, book by book.

We have a huge audience out there. There was a guy who wrote out of some place in Italy, and said, ‘You are my church.’ Somebody in Cambodia wrote and said, ‘We listen to you regularly.’ There is a military post, I won’t say where it is, where they’re downloading my messages on iPods and they’re giving them to the soldiers as they’re out running every day. While they’re out running, they have the option of listening to a sermon. It’s humbling.

What thrills me is that they’re out there and they’re hungry for it. That that’s what they want. That’s what I want to do.

How has the economy affected the congregation?
Well, we’ve got a lot of folks that have lost jobs. We have a good number of folks that have had to move away to find employment. But I want to tell you an incredible story. Giving, of course, is down. It’s down for everybody, everywhere. But you know, this church has taken in over $1 million in the last two weeks. We’re renovating the auditorium, and people have given almost half a million dollars to the renovation, and half a million dollars to the budget. We’re doing more by way of missions, and giving to missions, and doing hands-on missions around the world, than we have ever done before. Even in the middle of financial downturn.

We’ve heard some incredible stories of folks that have committed to tithe and how God has provided and taken care of their needs. I’m not saying that people have gotten Cadillacs and Mercedes, but how God helps them meet the power bill and helps them meet the rent and God provides all the way for all our needs.

What’s in the future?
We’ve opened a south campus. It meets out at the high school at Ponte Vedra and we’re averaging about 300 attendance out there. It’s First Baptist South. We have a small staff out there and 40 to 50 percent of the people who come on Sunday are visitors. We’re seeing real growth in the teenagers out there. We started out with six, and we’re averaging over 30 now. It’s pretty neat what God’s doing out that way. So we’ll look to open another campus, probably in another year or so.

Is there a minister out there?
No, I go out there and preach, and then I get in the car and drive back downtown and get here about the time for me to preach here.

It’s almost like you’re riding a circuit.
About like a circuit rider. When we open the next campus, and we don’t know which direction, whether it will be west or north, when we open that, what we’re going to do then is probably ‘video in.’ I’ll be one place and we’ll video in to the other place. We’re still working on how that will work.

You can’t be two places at once.
I’ve worked hard on it, but I still can’t do it.

What have you been doing for fun? Have you been on any vacations?
Well, we’ll be taking a group to Israel at the end of February or in March. This year I took a group to Europe. But only a small part of my group was able to get in at that time, because of the volcano.

Have you developed any new hobbies since you came to Jacksonville?
No. I’ve always loved to fish, but I never get to fish. And I have played nine holes of golf twice in the 4 1/2 years I’ve been here. So no, not with a congregation this size and a staff this size. When I have any time off, I feel like I need to be with my family. Studying is my hobby, I guess.

Are you thinking about retirement at all?
It’ll be a little while. Like everybody else, I lost most of my retirement when the market fell. My wife says I’ll be able to retire when I’m 103.

Do you think you’d want to live and work anywhere but in the South?
No. I don’t. I am Southern-born, and Southern-bred, and when I die, I’ll be Southern-dead. Cornbread and collards. This is home.

mmarbut@baileypub.com | 356-2466 

Journey Class

Posted in Uncategorized, Womens Ministry on September 30th, 2010 by Gina Ford – Comments Off
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Ellie Waldron, a member of FBC for more than 20 years, will be leading a new class for widows called the Journey Class.  God has been preparing her heart and life for many years and has called her to minister to the widows in the church and around the Jacksonville community.   Waldron have been widowed twice in her lifetime and is well-acquainted with the special needs of women who have lost their husbands through death.  She believes there is a tremendous need for a ministry to widows of all ages, having lost a spouse early in adult life and then again only two years ago.

In 2 Corinthians 1:3-7 Paul tells us that God comforts us in our trials and pain so that we, in turn, can comfort others with the same comfort we receive from Him.  This does not mean that we can only minister to those with like circumstances, but it does mean that when we experience the same trials and pain, we are better equipped to understand and empathize with their circumstances.  We believe this ministry with God’s healing touch will help widows find the answers they seek – together.

Be on the lookout for more information about a fellowship for widows in the coming days. If you are interested in this class, please contact womensministry@fbcjax.com for more information or call 904.366.1242.

Message from Pastor – Renovations Offering 10/3

Posted in Pastor, Renovations on September 29th, 2010 by Gina Ford – Comments Off
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For months now we have watched the subtle changes taking place around us Sunday by Sunday.  In just a few weeks, our Senior Adults will be moving into new classrooms.  Over the years, they have watched others get new rooms, facilities, equipment, while they have given faithfully to support the ministry that made that possible.  Now our precious senior members are going to be on the receiving end and it is a joy to see that happen.

We have been able to pay for all of the renovations that have been done up to this point and for that, we give thanks to the Lord and rejoice.  Now comes the time to do the final one-third of the work and payment will be due.  We need one million dollars to complete the work which should be finished by late December – just in time for the New Year.

This coming Sunday, we will take a special offering to finish the renovations in the auditorium.  I am asking that you be in prayer daily about this, and hope that you plan to be a part of meeting this need.  I am confident in our Lord that He who began a good work, will be faithful to complete.  All of us have an opportunity to be a part of what God is doing at First Baptist Jacksonville.

Paul writes to the Corinthians and states that “Each one must give as he has made up his mind, not under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver.” The word used here is one that speaks of predetermination.  In other words, God does not want us to give carelessly or casually but with great thought and planning.

At the same time Paul says that giving should never be done remorsefully, with regret or reluctance.  He states, “God loves a cheerful giver.” Let me quote a rather well-known theologian at this point:

God loves the world in a general sense (John 3:16), but He has a deeper, more wonderful love for His own (John 13:1; 1 John 4:16), and a special love for each one of His who gives cheerfully. – John MacArthur

I am calling us, as a church, to be in prayer over these next few days about what God would have each one of us to do – and then for us to do it cheerfully.

I look forward to seeing you this Sunday with God’s word in one hand, and an envelope in the other.

Pastor Mac Brunson

If you need an envelope on Sunday, please see one of the ushers and they can provide that for you. You may also give using our online form, and notate “Special Auditorium Renovations” as the fund.


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