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Archive for Bible

Jun
02

Renewal of the Mind

Posted by: Kyla Gleason | Comments (0)

Google’s Approach

Last fall while surfing the net, I stumbled upon a video from a recent Google conference introducing their new product: Google Wave.  Having long joked that Google was going to “take over the world,” I’m always curious about their new developments.  As I watched the developers describe the new communication website, I was intrigued.  The design seemed awesome: user-friendly, incorporating of many different elements, and overcoming several problems I’ve experienced in email.  I was glued to my computer screen, eagerly watching the presentation of what this new communication platform had to offer. But I think the thing that most captivated me about this was the creators’ statement of its development: The question that sparked this project was simple: “what might email look like if it was invented today?” From there, these developers threw out all prior knowledge, history, and traditions of email and started from scratch, utilizing today’s technology and addressing today’s communication needs.

My Recognition

I’ve come to recognize that many areas in my own life–be it attitudes, opinions, ways of doing things, responses, or philosophy of ministry–have been greatly shaped by experiences and traditions of key influencers.  Maybe some of these have been good, and some not so good.  But the fact is that I, much like the developers working for Google, recognize the need for a fresh start, the need for my thoughts, attitudes, and ways of life to be made new.

Several months ago I began to intentionally re-examine things, asking myself self-reflecting questions like, “If all I had to go on was God’s Word in this matter, what would my viewpoint be?”  As I did so, I began to recognize the far-reaching extent to which my worldview is not based on Scripture, but rather my own cleverly devised schemes or philosophies of man.  I began to pray for renewal!

To the Word and To the Testimony!

I respect the centuries of Church fathers and theologians who have laid a foundation of understanding Scripture and fought (and even died) for key Biblical doctrines.  My endeavor to return to the drawing board, so to speak, in my own understanding is not to throw these out, but rather to evaluate everything under the careful scrutiny of Scripture, to accept nothing just because “that’s the way its always been,” but rather to seek to develop a comprehensive Biblical Worldview.  My desire is to avoid becoming guilty of the sin of the Pharisees and scribes that Jesus talks about in Matthew 15:6 when He says, “For the sake of your tradition you have made void the word of God.”  I desire everything from my knee-jerk reactions to circumstances, to my overarching approaches to life, ministry, and education, to have their firm foundation in the word of the Lord.

Additional Scriptures also indicate that we are to be on guard against simply accepting the teachings of others, or traditions handed down to us, or even our own immediate opinions on issues:

“See to it that no one takes you captive by philosophy and empty deceit, according to human tradition, according to elemental spirits of the world, and not according to Christ.” Colossians 2:8

“Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.” Romans 12:2

“We destroy arguments and every lofty opinion raised against the knowledge of God, and take every thought captive to obey Christ…” 2 Corinthians 10:5

A Fresh Start

Taking this approach creates a true fresh start with joyful possibilities.  The Psalmist writes “I shall walk in a wide place, for I have sought your precepts.” (Psalm 119:45).  God’s Word teaches us how to live as He created us to, and His spirit enables us to do so.  This is great freedom and has become my personal goal.

What about you? What areas of your viewpoints have you allowed to be shaped by traditions of man rather than Gods’ Word?  Will you join me in this endeavor and allow our minds to be renewed by His Truth?

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Categories : Bible, Education
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For Instructions in Righteousness: A Topical Reference Guide for Child-Training, by Pam Forster fiir

I’ve now suggested two books which are really helpful in providing the framework and practical instructions for using Scripture in teaching and training your children.  But knowing where to find Biblical examples and specific verses addressing various behaviors may be challenging, even to the person who’s been reading the Bible for years! Well, allow me to introduce you to an excellent resource for just such endeavor, a spiral-bound book called: “For Instruction in Righteousness: A Topical Reference Guide for Biblical Child-Training” by Pam Forster of Doorposts.

This manual divides common sins of children into seven categories: Sins of a Proud Heart; Sins of Discontent; Sins of Unbelief; Sins of an Undisciplined Life; Sins of the Tongue; Sins of an Unloving Heart; and Sins of Relationships.  Within each category are three to thirteen specific issues, such as arguing, selfishness, anger, lying, revenge, and poor manners.  The book then provides a thorough and categorized list of Scriptures for each sin, including general commandments regarding the sin; what happens or should happen to the person committing this sin (as well as helpful ways to implement these consequences in your family); Biblical examples of people experiencing consequences of this sin; and helpful verses to memorize to avoid this sin.  Of particular note is that each section also includes the blessings that come from having the opposite attitude or behavior.

This reference guide is sure to be a great resource for you as you apply the Scriptures in your children’s lives–in fact, you’ll even find these to be helpful in addressing sin in your own life!

“For Instructions in Righteousness” is published by Doorposts.  And speaking of Doorposts, let me just say that this company, which was begun by a homeschooling family 20 years ago, has a host of other helpful products! If you’re not familiar with them, take some time to look at their website and see what’s available! However, this is a US company, and I couldn’t fin information about the extra shipping costs for Canada. But I did find that many of their products are also available through the Ontario based website JOY Center of Learning.

I also have a copy of this reference guide that I’m happy to lend out to anyone in the Kamloops and Logan Lake area!

Part 5: Email Parenting Tips

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Mar
15

The Promised Shepherd

Posted by: Joshua Claycamp | Comments (0)

In my personal devotion time with the Lord this morning, I came across a passage from Jeremiah 3:15 which says, “And I will give you shepherds after my own heart, who will feed you with knowledge and understanding.” This is a great passage for me, and for you as well, because it is a promise that brings tremendous hope and encouragement for the future. I know that many have searched for a place to call home, and many here at The Bridge come from church backgrounds and religious traditions that have left them disillusioned about the future and the possibility of actually having a family in Christ. Take courage, friends! God has promised to be with you, and to provide Shepherds for you after His own heart.

Allow me to expand on this promise for a moment.

1. God promises to give you shepherds. The first observation I have is this: shepherds must be rather important from God’s view of things, or else He wouldn’t have wasted His time promising them to us. Therefore, it is very important that you find a man to be your shepherd. God says so! Having a shepherd is critical to God’s eternal redemptive plan for your life, so you need to make it your top priority to find one. Some may say that this passage is teaching about Jesus being our shepherd. While that is certianly true, I dont think that’s what this passage is saying. The noun, “shepherds” is in the plural. While Jesus is our great Shepherd, this passage is clearly indicating that there will be multiple shepherds. I’m tempted to use this passage to argue for a plurality of elders in the church, but to be fair to the text I think I would be pushing it a little too far if I did that. I safely conclude, however, that God is talking about modern day pastors and elders -not Christ, and He promises that you need them, and that He will give them to you. What about those who have taken the time to look for one, but have come up empty handed? Good question. There are many, even now, who may be wandering around looking for a place to be cared for, looked after, and nourished –where they know they will be loved and taken care of. This may have been going on for years, and they just might be on the brink of despair. Don’t despair! God promises that He will give you a shepherd. Do you need to stress over whether or not such a man exists? No, because God has spoken and promised that He will provide such a shepherd for you. The man exists; you merely have to trust God and search for him. God says that He will give him to you. The man exists, and he is a gift from God. There’s nothing you need to do but love and trust in God. You don’t need to do the Christian equivalent of a rain dance to make the sky pour down rain, or a pastor-chant for a pastor to pop up out of nowhere. All you need to do is love God, trust God, and wait on God. Maybe you have already searched for a man to call Pastor and have not found him yet. Maybe you have been through all the churches in Kamloops, and still you have not found him. Be patient. God will keep His promise. He will give you a Shepherd.

2. God promises to give you a Shepherd. God has promised to give you a shepherd. Do you want a place to be loved and cared for? Do you want the gift of having a man in your life who will look after you? Do you want someone around that will offer counsel and guidance, a stirring and encouraging word in times of distress, a friend that will love you and take care of you no matter what mess you might inadvertently get yourself into? Do you really want that? Most people will say “Yes, I’d love to have a friend like that.” But, truthfully, they really don’t. A friend like that will love you in such a way that he will not be able to bear it when he sees that you are making decisions which have as their inevitable outcome the sure destruction of your life and the harm of many of those around you. A true friend will speak. He must speak if he loves you. Like a shepherd, he will use a rod and a staff (Psalm 23:4). What’s a rod for? It’s for whacking the sheep when they need some motivation. What’s the staff for? The staff usually has a crook on it so that the shepherd can loop it around the neck of the sheep from a distance and tug him in the right direction. The Psalmist says that the rod and staff are comforting to him. Here’s a modern day translation: “The whackings and neck-jerks that you give me are a comfort to me. Thank you for whacking me and jerking me by the neck on occasion.”  I find it incredibly odd that so many should pine away longingly for a shepherd convinced that God hasn’t provided one for them when clearly He promises that He will. Could it be possible that you’ve said “no” to God’s shepherd due to your hard and rebellious heart? Could it be that you’ve said “no” to God’s shepherd in your life because you refused to listen to the warnings and admonition that he gave you? Could it be possible that you’ve said “no” to God’s promised shepherd because you didn’t want to be shepherded?  God promises to give you a shepherd. If you really want to have a shepherd in your life, and you want to see God keep His promise of giving you a shepherd, then perhaps you should get busy being a submitted sheep. Perhaps you need to work on your humility a little bit, and try a little harder to being open to the gentle corrections and appropriate admonitions from a Godly shepherd.

3. God wants you to have a shepherd after His own Heart. This is where the Word of God begins to cut both ways. It’s easy from a pastor’s perspective to exhort people to find a place of worship and get involved in a local church, and it would be too easy for me to recommend that they come to the Bridge. Before any such recommendation can be made two pivotal questions must be asked: What does it mean to be a shepherd after God’s own heart?Are the pastors here at Bridge Church shepherds after God’s own heart?  I think I’ll save the previous questions for another post for another day. I think that the encouraging word that we can draw from this portion of the text is that God promises to give godly shepherds who are men after God’s own heart. I know that God has demonstrated Himself faithful in this regard. All throughout history the shadows of deception have threatened to plunge humanity into a dark age where there would be no understanding of God, yet God has always preserved a spokesman to speak to His people on His behalf. ALWAYS! So we can trust that if He did it once in the past, He will do it again in the future. He has, and He will! From my own personal experience, I can’t begin to tell you how many times I’ve seen the leadership from one church stray from God’s heart and suddenly another is lifted up to a position to speak truth to God’s people. God always begins a slow and tedious process (slow and tedious to us because it usually takes four or five years at a minimum, but five years is nothing from God’s perspective of eternity) of removing the offending shepherd and raising up a new shepherd in his place.  So if you find yourself in a church where it is apparent that the leadership has strayed from God’s heart, then take courage in the promise of God to provide a shepherd after His own heart and start searching for a man who follows God’s heart. He’s out there! And if you haven’t found him yet, then be patient because God will keep His promise. **For me, this is a special moment of introspection. Am I a man after God’s own heart? I hope and pray that this is the case. As Paul says, “I am not aware of anything against myself, but I am not thereby acquitted.” (1 Corinthians 4:4) Likewise, I am not aware of anything against myself. But what should I do if the day comes that I fall before the Lord in failure? What should I do if, after preaching to others, I myself become disqualified? (1 Corinthians 9:27) I have watched so many pastors, deceived by the allure of sin, insist in the middle of significant moral failure that they still deserve to shepherd God’s people. They have clearly fallen from the Heart of God, and they now insist on continuing in a position of leadership. These men only further compound the problem. The church is always harmed, and the advance of the gospel is always slowed down in such situations. Here’s what I’ve decided to do if I am ever caught in moral failure and it is necessary that I must resign my position (I pray that I will follow through with this plan if that day, God forbid, should ever come.): I will use what standing I have left to guide the church towards the shepherd that God has promised to raise up, the shepherd that is a man after God’s own heart. If I sense that God has departed from me and has chosen to raise up a new leader, I want to get on board with God’s plan. I don’t want to be consumed with murderous rage like King Saul. I hope that I will have the heart to trust in the promise of God which is to give a shepherd after His own heart. I pray that I will have the heart to believe this promise and to obey this promise by guiding others towards the shepherd that God lifts up. It is this desire that actually prompted me to put my morning devotion into writing via this blog post, because I would like others to be able to use this blog posting as a tool of reasoning with me should the day, God forbid, ever come that I need to step down. If I fall from being a good pastor, a shepherd after God’s own heart, then may I have grace enough to guide others towards the promised shepherd who will replace me. When you, the members of Bridge Church, pray for me, please pray that I will always strive to be a man after God’s heart, and pray that I will always have the grace to step aside, should the day come, but still use my God-given intellect and knowledge of scripture to guide us toward the promised Shepherd. This is what I want you to pray for me for.

4. Who will feed you knowledge and understanding. This is where the Word makes things easy for both of us. What should you look for in a pastor? What should I try to do as a pastor? There are a lot of different items involved with the job description of a shepherd, but first and foremost is this: a shepherd after God’s own heart should always strive to preach the Word!!! A godly shepherd’s first order of business is to always be ready to proclaim the truth of God’s Word! This passage of text reveals to us that a sheep who loves God and wants to be a sheep after God’s own heart is going to be a sheep that searches diligently for a shepherd who preaches the word and seeks to give knowledge and understanding of the text. A good sheep is hungry for God’s Word. A good shepherd will find a way to deliver a tasty morsel of Word for the sheep to eat. Both the sheep and the shepherd are intricately bound to God at this point because as the one is, after God’s own heart, striving to feed knowledge and understanding of God through His Word, so the other should be striving to consume and digest knowledge and understanding of God. What a wonderful way to arrive at an understanding of godly shepherds and godly sheep: both the shepherd and the sheep, if they share a passion for God and can be described as individuals with a heart after God’s own heart, will be consumed with a love for the text of Scripture, for knowledge of the text, and for understanding of the text. Wow!  This passage makes me want to study scripture even more, and helps me pray that the members of the Bridge would have an ever increasing and insatiable appetite for knowledge and understanding of God!

 I want to close with an exhortation. For those of you who have not found a church home, I’m not exactly recommending us, but I know our church will love and care for you. For those of you who are searching for a pastor after God’s own heart, I’m not saying that I am that man, but I do strive to be that man every day. But here’s my real exhortation: you must be hungry for God’s word. You must have a soul craving for it! If you lack a soul craving for knowledge and understanding of God, then you need to get busy cultivating a healthy appetite, and you need to be in the hunt searching for a shepherd who can feed you. So get hungry, and then get busy looking for a good shepherd.

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shepherding_350x350Shepherding a Child’s Heart, by Tedd Tripp

Scripture teaches us that the heart is the “wellspring of life” (Proverbs 4:23, ) further explaining that:

“The good person out of the good treasure of his heart produces good, and the evil person out of his evil treasure produces evil, for out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaks” (Luke 6:45).

For this reason, it is absolutely essential for parents to focus on their children’s “heart”, not simply aiming for external goals of good behavior.

And this is exactly what Tedd Tripp seeks to teach parents to do in “Shepherding a Child’s Heart.”  Here’s what he has to say concerning the issue:

“Your child’s needs are far more profound than his abberrant behavior.  Remember, his behavior does not just spring forth uncaused.  His behavior–the things he says and does–reflects his heart.  If you are to really to help him, you must be concerned with the attitudes of heart that drive his behavior” (Shepherding, pg. 4)

“Shephering a Child’s Heart” is divided into two parts: Foundations for Biblical Childrearing and Shepherding Through the Stages of Childhood, each with Biblical priniciples and practical applications.  In particular, the second part of the book provides characterics of children at each stage an specific Biblical goals in parenting that age group.  This will be a challenging and beneficial text for parents of children of any age as you learn Biblical perspectives on parenting.  Click here for an Amazon link to the book.  I also have a couple copies of this book that’d I’d be happy to lend out!

Join us on facebook as we discuss this book!

Part 1: Family Driven Faith, Part 3: Teach Them Diligently

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Feb
23

Life Group

Posted by: Kyla Gleason | Comments (0)
February 23, 2010
7:00 pmto9:00 pm
February 25, 2010
6:30 pmto8:30 pm
March 2, 2010
7:00 pmto9:00 pm
March 4, 2010
6:30 pmto8:30 pm

Life Groups are an important part of life in Bridge Church as we value authentic relationships and time together in God’s Word. In Life Group, we continue to discuss the passage from Sunday morning, unpacking it as a group and seeking to apply it in our lives.  Each Life Group is an open group with people from a variety of stages and walks of life who strive together to build genuine community. Here’s the details about our three current Life Groups:

Tuesdays at 7 PM, the Ganton Life Group meets in the home of Clay & Carolyn Ganton close to downtown Kamloops. Discussion is led by Clay.

Tuesdays at 7 PM, the Vandean Life Group also meets.  This is held at the home of Tyson & Charlene Vandean in Logan Lake and discussion is led by Joshua.

Thursdays at 6:30 PM, the Betker Life Group meets in Aberdeen at Cheryl Betker’s home and discussion is led by Michael. In the Betker Life Group, Melissa & Kyla also lead a Children’s Life Group.

We invite you to participate in a Life Group this week! You’ll discover the timeless truths of Scripture and develop eternal relationships.  Feel free to call the office for more information or directions to any Life Group!

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Contact Info.

Mailing Address:
Unit 256 230-1210 Summit Dr
Kamloops, BC V2C 6M1
Phone: 250-828-2512

Worship Location

We gather for worship every Sunday morning at 10:30 AM. You are welcome to join us at 1393 Ninth Ave. We are located across the street from South Kamloops Secondary School.