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Yet I Will Rejoice…

I’ve got more pictures, more personal reflection, and even a challenge or two I want to throw out there to you before this day is over. But, first, I want to share with you this thing that’s killing me right now….

Amid all the excitement and energy and enthusiasm of this week, all the hustle and bustle, all the ceremonies and dedications, all the special bulletins and articles, all the planning, all the people, all the anticipation, I’m devastated by news I received early this morning. David Hunter, the preacher at the Robinson Church of Christ just south of Waco, is walking through a dark, dark valley right now.

David is in our group of ten preachers who meet once a month down in Waco at the Crestview church. Around here I refer to our group as the “Waco Alliance.” We spend that day every month praying together, studying the Word together, and sharing with each other the ups and downs of life as congregational preachers. David’s one of these guys with a sly, dry sense of humor. Almost every single thing out of his mouth is funny. You just have to be paying close attention to get it. Always upbeat. Always positive. He’s preached longer than any of us in the room. And he’s seen more and experienced more than any of us. And he never has a negative word to say. About anything. We all share the normal frustrations that come with being preachers. People. Attitudes. Roadblocks. Politics. And every time we come to David, he tells us he doesn’t have anything bad or negative going on his life. No struggles. No confusion. No problems. Of course, he makes the occasional joke about an elders’ meeting—that’s a requirement. But he always seems almost embarrassed to admit to us that his life is great, everybody’s healthy, everybody’s good, everything’s wonderful, and God is blessing him abundantly. He has a beautiful wife. Outstanding son at Pepperdine. Wonderful daughter beginning her freshman year at ACU. Perfect.

I’ve always believed his attitude comes from his time in the Word and in the Church. He sees the big picture, maybe, better than anybody else in the room. He’s able to step back and survey the landscape and see our God forgiving sins and saving souls and robbing hell. Instead of the mess that sometimes clouds my vision, all he sees is God healing people and restoring people and using people to redeem the world. I’ve come away from every meeting of the Waco Alliance wishing David were closer than two hours away. 

His wife, Denise, suffered a major stroke late Wednesday night. She’s 48. She’s thin. She’s in great shape. She runs two miles a day. There’s no history of this anywhere in her family. But she’s in trouble. The news yesterday was bad. Lots of brain issues. Parts of the left side of her brain are dead. Other parts have experienced damage. Significant swelling everywhere. She’s still unconscious and unresponsive. The neurologist told David yesterday Denise would have “significant impairment for the rest of her life.” Last night David acknowledged to us that, regardless of the outcome, there was a long, long road ahead. He was optimistic that most of the swelling would go down this weekend and most of her brain would resume its normal activity.

It got a lot worse overnight. David was in the middle of an email this morning, trying to update all of us at once, and the email abruptly ended this way: “…I have to stop for now. Just got a call from the neurologist…it’s not good. She’s taken a turn for the worse, her swelling increased during the night and they are putting her on a ventilator.” 

I just got off the phone with Jim Martin, the preacher at the Crestview church who put our little group together. It’s not good. David’s asking that we pray. I’ve been praying for David and Denise and their kids since yesterday. Please join me in lifting this great family up to our loving Father.

In our Oasis class here Wednesday night we talked about how, in the middle of all the excitement and optimism and enthusiasm of our new building and all the activities that go with it, we are still surrounded by people who are hurting. People who are in a very, very dark place. People maybe right next to us. My friend David is there. Please pray for them.

“Hear my prayer, O Lord;
listen to my cry for mercy.
In the day of my trouble I will call to you,
for you will answer me. ~Psalm 86:6-7

At The Cross

“To us who are being saved it is the power of God.” ~1 Cor. 1:18

Just a few of the dozens of kids here for the placement of the 40-foot cross on the new Legacy Worship CenterConstruction crews began to lift the cross into place at 6:45 this morning. 

 When I survey the wondrous cross on which the Prince of Glory died,
my richest gain I count but loss and pour contempt on all my pride.

Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast save in the death of Christ, my God;
all the vain things that charm me most I sacrifice them to his blood.

Were the whole realm of nature mine, that were a present far too small;
love so amazing, so divine, demands my soul, my life, my all.

One giant crane and two tons of steel The sunrise provided the perfect backdrop and the sounds of God’s people singing provided the soundtrack It only took the singing of When I Survey the Wondrous Cross and The Old Rugged Cross to get it in place

To the old rugged cross I will ever be true, its shame and reproach gladly bear;
then he’ll call me someday to my home far away, where his glory forever I’ll share.

Between 100-150 people there to witness the event (Preacher’s Count) We didn’t know whether to call it a dedication or a ceremony. We knew it was more than a photo op.  A symbol of our God’s power through Christ Jesus and him crucified

For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God…we preach Christ crucified: a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles, but to those whom God has called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God. ~1 Corinthians 1:18-24.

It was early for most, but Parker’s the only one who showed up in his PJs

Drops of grief can ne’er repay the debt of love I owe;
Here, Lord, I give myself away, ’tis all that I can do!

At the cross, at the cross, where I first saw the light,
and the burden of my heart rolled away,
it was there by faith I received my sight,
and now I am happy all the day!

As of 1:00 this afternoon, they’re still cleaning up the welding spots. But our stumple finally looks finished!

For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him, and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through the blood shed on the cross.” ~Colossians 1:19-20

Near the cross! O, Lamb of God, bring its scenes before me;
help me walk from day to day with its shadow o’er me.
In the cross, in the cross, be my glory ever,
’til my raptured soul shall find rest beyond the river.

Nina Dutton & Lillian Haswell reading from Exodus (4 hours down, 71 to go) John & Betty Royse reading from Leviticus. It looks like I’ll be in Joshua this evening and our family will be in Proverbs together tomorrow afternoon

I delight in your decrees; I will not neglect your word. ~Psalm 119:16

  Faith Builders Day Camp. Three days. 44 kids. 5th - 7th graders. Faith Builders Kids and Kipi and me Obligatory Silly Group Picture

How sweet are your words to my taste,
sweeter than honey to my mouth. ~Psalm 119:103

Boys on one side…  …girls on the other.

The grass withers and the flowers fall,  Most of the young people paid attention most of the time.
but the Word of the Lord stands forever. ~1 Peter 1:25

Blessed are those who hear the Word of God and obey it. ~Luke 11:28

From the first moment of Faith Builders at 9:00 Monday morning through this very moment as I’m listening to God’s Word being read by Susan Garrison and her daughter Allie it has been, and continues to be, an incredibly awe-inspiring week. I’m amazed at the power and the love of our God. I’m thrilled that he looks at me in all my sin and shame and loves me enough to save me. I’m grateful he’s put me in the middle of this community of believers who love him and love each other. And I’m humbled that, for some still unexplained reason, I’m the preacher.

Peace,

Allan

Building Faith

Lance and Kipi and I are in the middle of our three-day Faith Builders Day Camp with our 5th, 6th, and 7th graders here at Legacy. And I’m exhausted. From 9:00 to 11:30 am, we’re teaching these kids — 44 of them — the fundamentals of our faith in God through Christ Jesus. Yesterday the theme was “Sin: The Problem.” Today it was “Jesus: The Solution.” And tomorrow we wrap it all up with “Faith: The Response.” We play games together from 11:30 to 12:00 noon. And then Lance and Kipi take the kids in vans to NRH2O today, Main Event yesterday, and a movie tomorrow.

It’s crazy. So much energy in here. 44 of those 10-12 year-olds. Non-stop. Constant. Loud. Interactive. Responsive. Hilarious. And soaking everything up like a bunch of little sponges. It’s funny that we can be talking about what it really means to be made in the image of God and wind up in a riveting discussion about dinosaurs. We can be deeply involved in Jesus as the perfect lamb for our redemption and 30-seconds later arguing about whether our pets are going to be in heaven. But through it all, they’re getting it. When we talk about Jesus radically changing the life of the demon-possessed man in Luke 8, taking Peter back at that beach-side breakfast in John 21, dying for us while we were still sinners, they get it. I love watching all the little lightbulbs go off. I love the interaction with the kids during lunch or inbetween sessions.

They’re all doing 30-minutes of Faith Builders homework each night with their parents. The conversations are happening. The Bibles are being read. God is reaching out to his children. And the faith is being passed on from generation to generation.

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I can’t imagine a week much busier than this one. Ever. And it’s only Tuesday afternoon. I wish it were Tuesday last week. I’m running out of time.

Faith Builders Day Camp through tomorrow afternoon. Oasis tomorrow evening and then a dry-run in our new worship center. Thursday morning at 6:45 we’re going to hold a ceremony outside while construction workers place the giant metal cross on the exterior of our building facing west on Mid Cities Boulevard. At 7:00 that morning the Legacy Bible Reading will begin. Our whole church family — men, women, and children — will read from Genesis through Revelation in 15-minute shifts. The reading will be carried on video and audio monitors all over our campus here. It’ll be streamed live on our church website. And it’ll conclude at 8:45 Sunday morning with a congregational reading of Revelation 22:12-21. After that, Jim teaches our combined adult class at 9:00. Our first worship assembly begins at 10:00. And that’s followed by a catered all-church lunch, a Tarrant-County-wide singing at 2:00, and an Open House at 3:00.

And then we go home and crash on the couch.

What an amazing week. What an inspirational week. Passing the faith on to our kids together. Reading God’s Word together. Worshiping together. Eating together. Singing together.

For well over a year now we’ve been calling things that are not as though they were.

Now they are.

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Thanks so much to Scott Beard, Brittany Bankhead-Kendall, and David Watson for submitting logo designs for “The Kingdom, The Kids, & The Cowboys Top 20 College Football Poll.” Here are the three logos. Now I need a vote. It’ll be one of these three. Vote now as a comment on this post. Or email me at astanglin@legacychurchofchrist.org  Winner will be announced Friday.

Top20ScottBeard

Top20BrittanyBankheadKendall

Top20DavidWatson”Football Pole”

Peace,

Allan

I Need A Logo!

Someone said I should be more assertive. Here goes:

I’m Serious!!!Allright, readers. I give and I give and I give. Day after day I slave over this keyboard doing everything in my power to encourage you, to provoke you to meaningful thought, to entertain you, to make you laugh, to build you up as we walk together in the footsteps of our Savior. I give and I give and I give. And what do I ask in return? Have I ever asked for anything from you?

I need a logo.

You think I’m kidding. I’m not.

Design a logo for The Kingdom, The Kids, And The Cowboys College Football Top 20 Poll this weekend. Get it to me before Monday.

I mean it.

Click on the green “KK&C Top 20” tab at the top of this page for more info.

Dude, I’m serious.

Allan

For Legacy Members Only

ForMembersOnlyWith the exciting move into our new worship center—one church, one assembly, one hectic summer—come exciting opportunities to serve one another in mercy and love. Going to one Sunday morning service (“There is no need for me to write to you about this service.” 2 Cor. 9:1), accomodating untold numbers of visitors (“The people came running from all directions.” Acts 21:30), and picking a brand new pew to call your own (“Here’s a good seat for you.” James 2:3) can all be quite challenging. Here are a few helpful hints and suggestions to make our move into the new facility as smooth as possible and continue putting the needs of others ahead of our own.

(“And when they ask you, ‘Why are you groaning?’ you shall say, ‘Because of the news that is coming.'” Ezekiel 21:7)

~ON VISITORS~

Smile. Be extra friendly. Go overboard to foster a warm and welcoming environment.
(“I will forget my complaint, I will change my expression, and smile.” Job 9:27)

Greet everyone. Introduce people you meet—visitors and members—to others.
(“There I will meet you and speak to you.” Exodus 29:42)

Wear your name tag. Ooops, I mean find your name tag. Then wear it.
(“What is his name, and the name of his son?” Proverbs 30:4)

Walk all visitors to the Visitors Center at the southeast corner of the foyer.
(“They will greet you and offer you two loaves of bread, which you will accept.” 1 Sam. 10:4)

To help you multiply, invite visitors to your Small Groups Church.
(“Now I have become two groups.” Genesis 32:10)

~ON PARKING~

When possible, please use just one vehicle per family.
(“They came with one Accord.” Acts 12:20)

Please park as far away from the building as possible.
(“His command is that you walk in love.” 2 John 6)

Please go ahead and park in the grass if you’re able.
(“Open your eyes and look to the fields!” John 4:35, “Let me go to the field!” Ruth 2:2)

~ON THE NEW WORSHIP CENTER~

No food or drink in the new worship center.
(“Don’t you have homes to eat and drink in?” 1 Corinthians 11:22)

Make use of the new drinking fountains in the new foyer.
(“Here is water! What doth hinder me?” Acts 8:36)

Please sit in the middle of the pews, not on the ends. Scrunch together. Make room.
(“We are hard pressed on every side, but not crushed.” 2 Corinthians 4:8)

Take advantage of the nursery and training rooms at the back of the worship center.
(“The sound of weeping and crying will be heard no more.” Isaiah 65:19)

Peace,

Allan

Outside The Box

“And Eli’s two sons, Hophni and Phinehas, were there with the ark of the covenant of God.” ~1 Samuel 4:4

OutsideTheBoxEli’s unholy sons represent the unholy people of God in 1 Samuel 4. Their actions and their disregard for the Lord and for other people reflected the fact that God’s people at this time were all doing what was right in their own eyes. And when the Lord sends the Philistines in to defeat his people, the Israelite elders decide they just need to go get the ark of the covenant, the visible symbol of the presence of God, out of the Tent of Meeting and parade it into the next battle.

They had the box. But they didn’t have God. It never occured to them that God’s not in the box. God is outside the box. And he cannot be bought or sold. He cannot be persuaded or tricked or controlled or managed by manipulating a symbol or a ritual or a set of words and motions.

The lives of the people did not reflect the glory of God. The lives of the leaders were in open defiance of the covenant of God. And it didn’t matter if they brought in ten thousand thrones of God, he was not going to give them victory under these circumstances. It’s not wherever the box is, God is. God’s not in the box.

The Israelites were putting their faith in the symbol of their relationship with God instead of in the God of the relationship.

Whether I’m stealing meat that belongs to God or not using the gifts he’s given me; whether I’m taking things from people by force or not giving them what they deserve; whether I’m having sex with temple prostitutes or not changing the channel when I should. I can do what’s right in my own eyes as long as I have the box. I’ve got the symbol. I’ve got the ritual. I’ve got the building. I’ve got the proper interpretation of church government. I’ve got the right name. I’ve got the correct order of worship. I’ve got the box.

How arrogant and foolish. Why do we do this?

We build this box. We’ll take the name on the outside of the building, support it with one songleader (acappella), elders and deacons (in that order), weekly communion, baptism by immersion, and then we’ll close it with the lid of our favorite songs and favorite Bible translation. And before you know it, we’ve got God in this box. This is where he is. And we take this box into all our battles: our battles against Satan and our battles against each other. And pretty soon, when everything that’s right about God is in our box and everything outside our box is wrong, you open it up and it doesn’t matter what I do on Saturday night as long as I’m in here on Sunday morning.

Or worse, it doesn’ t matter how pure and genuine my neighbor’s relationship is with God and others, if he says the words out of order at the Lord’s Table, he’s wrong.

Don’t misunderstand me. Some of the things I’ve mentioned are important. Very important. And we uphold these things and teach them and stand strong for them. But just because we take ownership of certain doctrines and practices never means for one second we have a monopoly on God. We don’t. He’s not in the box. He acts in ways we’ll never understand. He moves in ways we cannot comprehend.

There’s an old story about Augustine walking along the beach one day when he came across a little boy running back and forth pouring water from a bucket into a hole in the sand. Augustine asked him what he was doing, and the boy replied, “I’m trying to put the ocean in this hole.”

Who are we to try to contain and control an infinite and eternal God in our finite minds and limited understanding?

Who do we think we are? Our God’s not little. He’s huge.

He’s outside the box. Way outside the box.

Peace,

Allan

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