Are you rich? by Pastor Andy

Rags to Riches to Rags

Really, it’s a cliche story.

A man starts at the bottom, works his way up, and strikes it rich. Maybe it’s oil or the lottery or a business that takes off. No matter the detail, money pours in…and so do the friends.

The party begins! Money flows and everything is great. People love this guy…he is so much fun! Until the money stops, and the fun is over. With the money, so go the people.

The man is on his own, by himself, at the bottom. Even his dog leaves him. No one likes a poor, loser!


The poor is disliked even by his neighbor, but the rich has many friends.  -Proverbs 14:20


We all want friends. No one wants to be the poor, loser, who doesn’t even have a dog. So the question we should ask is, what does it take to be rich?

Are you rich?

I’m not talking about monetary wealth. There is more than one way to skin a cat. I mean are you rich in personality, depth of soul, and connection with God. This is true wealth. When we have this, we’ll have many friends, and they can’t be easily taken away!

Here’s a quick list of 10 things you can do to be rich in personality, depth and connection with God.

  1. Read the Bible daily.
  2. Pray Scripture.
  3. Read 1 book a month (non-fiction).
  4. Read 1 book a month (fiction).
  5. Try a new meal or drink.
  6. Attend a GROW group.
  7. Learn a new hobby.
  8. Eat lunch with a co-worker you don’t normally talk with.
  9. Watch an art film.
  10. Attend a spiritual conference, seminar or retreat this year.
  11. BONUS – Attend a live sporting event.
  12. BONUS – Visit a local civic counsel meeting.

Do something different! Grow in your walk with God and in yourself. You’ll become rich, and you won’t lack for friends (who can never be taken away).

What one thing can you begin today to be rich in personality, depth or connection with God?

Nehemiah Bible Study

nehemiah studyEXPERIENCE:

Women bring your Bibles and journals and get ready to dig into the Old Testament book of Nehemiah, the government worker in the employ of a foreign king, who became a building contractor and one of the savviest leaders of all time.

STUDY:

What can we learn from a man who contends with danger, villains, and injustice, and in the process brings an exiled nation home?  What has God put on your heart?

CONNECT:

Tuesdays, 7pm, (March 8, 15, 22, 29, & April 5)
Fireside Lounge
Cross Points Church
5 week Bible Study
No DVD, no additional book to purchase, just bring your Bible.

 

REGISTER:

Sign up at the BLOOM! table after church on February 28 and March 6.

Or register online here!  

The Company We Keep – Pastor Matt Shirley

Song: May You Find a Light

Artist: The Brilliance


The Company We Keep

Last week, Pastor David invited us to consider our friendships. It reminded me of a proverb I often turned to when working with teenagers in youth ministry. I think it has particular relevance for our conversation about friendship this week.

Become wise by walking with the wise; hang out with fools and watch your life fall to pieces.

Proverbs 13:20

If I were going to offer a paraphrase, I might put it like this: the company you keep affects the course you take.

The influence of friendships gets a lot of attention during those formative years of adolescence; but that influence continues well beyond adolescence.

A great place to see this truth in action? Small groups.


The Course We Take

Small groups all around Cross Points are bringing together people from different stages of life and at different stages of growth in discipleship.

Some groups meet in homes. We call them GROW Groups. They hang out. Read scripture together. Pray together. Some groups meet around a common purpose. We call them ministry teams. They hang out. Pray together. Serve together. Cross Points is full of them – and all of them are opportunities to walk out your discipleship alongside others.

We don’t celebrate groups at Cross Points just so we can have more groups (though, we’d love more groups!). And we don’t invite you to find a place to create and serve at Cross Points just because we need help (though, we’d love more help!).

We celebrate groups at Cross Points because we know groups are a great way for you to experience this proverb’s promise – and avoid its caution!

Small groups are a way for you to keep company (find friends!) that will help you grow. And in doing so, as this proverb reveals, you’ll affect your course.

My encouragement to you today? Find a small group. Maybe start here, with a GROW Group.  Join a ministry team. Maybe start here, on our GROW Track. Bottom line, find a group – keep company. Create some space in your life to keep company with other disciples and let it chart a new course for your life!

I’m kind of a big deal. – Pastor Andy Bondurant

I’m very important

In the movie Anchorman, Will Ferrell’s character Ron Burgundy humbly says,

I don’t know how to put this, but I’m kind of a big deal.

Later he proclaims,

I’m very important. I have many leather bound books and my apartment smells of rich mahogany.

Why are you reading Anchorman quotes this morning? It’s not because of Will Ferrell or Ron Burgandy, but Jesus really was a big deal. He was very important. Not just Jesus, but his friends, the disciples too.

In Mark 6, Jesus sent the disciples out to minister. He gives very specific instructions (go in pairs, take no money or provision, stay anywhere people accept the truth – verses 7-11). The disciples are obedient, and they have incredible success – demons are cast out and people are healed (verses 12-13).

This makes Jesus and his friends very important, and the result is a crush of people.

Mark 6:30-33:

30 The apostles returned to Jesus and told him all that they had done and taught. 31And he said to them, “Come away by yourselves to a desolate place and rest a while.” For many were coming and going, and they had no leisure even to eat. 32And they went away in the boat to a desolate place by themselves. 33Now many saw them going and recognized them, and they ran there on foot from all the towns and got there ahead of them.

As I read this passage the other day, I saw it in a new light. If you read on, you’ll find this is when Jesus feeds the 5,000 followed up by walking on water. Those acts overshadow what Jesus does to be a friend in verses 30-31. Read them again.

Friendship Do’s

Monday, Pastor David shared 2 friendship don’ts –

  1. Don’t eat alone.
  2. Don’t run alone.

Today, let me share with you 2 friendship do’s.

1. Be available.

I can imagine the scene when as the disciples returned to Jesus. There were of course some highs (casting out demons and healing the sick), but I’m guessing there were some lows – kicked out of communities, cursed, etc. I also imagine there were some funny moments.

Jesus wanted to hear their stories. He wasn’t above it. He was available, and He cared.

Are you available for your friends? Available to share their ups, downs and funny moments?

2. Be honest.

Through the disciples sharing, Jesus saw something. He saw they were tired. He realized they needed a break.

So, Jesus is honest with them. He tells them to get in a boat, push away, and go somewhere no one else is.

It didn’t work. The people followed them, and they ministered anyway, but Jesus tried. He tried to give them a break, even when it was probably to his disadvantage – spreading His good news.

Are you honest with you friends, even when it may be to your own disadvantage?

This past week, I spent some time with friends old and new in the photography industry. In both group and personal settings, I had an opportunity to practice these both. I was available and honest, and it opened doors. People are hungry for someone to be available and honest with them. What better place to start than with our friends?

As you evaluate your friendships this week, ask yourself how you can be available and honest with these people.

Selfishness – Pastor Chris Horsley

“Selfishness is the making a man’s self his own centre, the beginning and end of all he doeth.”

– John Owen

Selfishness.  When it comes to friendships, and how to ruin one, this is the first thing that comes to mind.

Definition of selfishness is having or showing concern only for yourself and not for the needs or feelings of other people.

We are naturally selfish.  Just look at an infant, toddler teenager–or adult.  The world revolves around them, or so they think.

It’s even easier in today’s age with Facebook, Twitter, etc.  We think everyone should know what we are doing, when we are doing it, and our opinion on the whole matter.  Because we are numero uno!!

Even as we grow older, it is easy to fall into the trap of focusing on what we need before anyone else.

How do we combat this?

Paul addresses this in Philippians 2:3-4.

 Don’t be selfish; don’t try to impress others. Be humble, thinking of others as better than yourselves. 4 Don’t look out only for your own interests, but take an interest in others, too.

 

Looking to the needs of others goes totally contrary to how the world would view life.  It also goes contrary to how how our “self” feels.

The Second Greatest Commandment tells us: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’

The Amplified Bible says to “unselfishly seek the best or higher good for others”.

It obviously doesn’t come naturally, or it wouldn’t be addressed!

When Jesus commands His followers to take up our cross, first He tells us to “turn from our selfish ways”, i.e… abandon the attitude of self-centerdness.

If we are going to be servants of Christ, we need to get rid of me.

If we are going to be the kind of friend that people need, we need to get rid of me.

If we are going to be a light in this dark world, we need to eliminate our selfish ways–and look around!

There are opportunities that we may miss with our friends because we are too singularly focused on “me”!

Paul continues on in Philippians 2:5: “Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus…”

This is a powerful little verse!  Think if we as followers of Christ would begin to adopt this mindset more and more.  Jesus was first and foremost thinking of others above Himself.  He washed His disciples feet.  Fed a multitude even after preaching all day.  Died for you and I although He was innocent.

In a word, selfless.

Give of your time,

Give of your resources.

Ultimately, give of yourself.

Make a conscious effort to be there for others.

I love reading in Philippians 1 where Paul is debating whether or not he would rather depart and be with Christ or stay for the benefit of the people.

He unselfishly decides to stay.  For the benefit of them.  He states how he longs to be with Christ, “which would be far better for me.”

Wow!  What a choice.  Seems a lot more difficult than having to decide if I want to help someone move or not.

A good marriage is a great picture of unselfishness in action.  It only works when two people are able to care about the needs of each other.  If not, somebody in the relationship is going to be disappointed, or hurt.

You have to look out for the needs of your spouse, at times putting them above your own.

All good and true friendships have this give and take.  A willingness to see the other person succeed, and, when necessary, help along the way.  Think about Jonathan, and all the help he gave David.

Simply begin asking others how they are doing and actually listen.  Pastor Dave gave a great example of that during Sundays sermon.  If you don’t remember, go listen to it!!!

“Selfishness has never been admired.”

C. S. Lewis