Monday, March 24, 2008

First Easter Recap

I try to be honest on this blog with victories and defeats, celebrations and disappointments.

And I have to say I'm NOT disappointed with our first Easter service.
  • I thought the energy and excite was the best yet!
  • I was so proud of our team when we blew a breaker in the theatre and they literally FLEW into action. In less than 5 minutes they had everything back running- awesome!
  • Mike's rendition of "My Hero" by the Foo Fighters was jaw-dropping. I was ready to say "amen" and wrap it up.
  • I had to start kicking people out of the theatre at 11:45am.
  • The response to the welcome packets was amazing. So the bags are a little girly- real men embrace the tote! Or maybe they give it to their wife/girlfriend/mom.
  • The feedback we received is enough to make you shout for joy!

My only disappointment:
I really wish more than 200 could have been there to experience God's presence and the fellowship of so many wonderful folks. I can honestly say I don't want to grow for the sake of numbers. I want us to grow because I believe in this mission more than ever! Folks need to experience what's happening at Connections.

The people of our church simply amaze me!
If there is no resurrection of the dead, then not even Christ has been raised. And if Christ has not been raised, our preaching is useless and so is your faith. 1 Corinthians 15:13-14
Our faith is FAR from useless, and so was our service yesterday.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

The Anointed One

Series: Vantage Point
Sermon: The Anointed One
George J. Saylor
March 23, 2008

I think there is an unwritten rule in advertising that states that all perfume ads have to be totally bizarre. Maybe some have you have noticed this too. Doesn’t it seem that perfume ads are without exception…strange. I think it all started with the Calvin Klein ads from a few years back, but from there is has only gotten worse. Now I can hardly think of an actress or singer that doesn’t have her own perfume- Brittany Spears, Paris Hilton, pretty soon Hillary Clinton is gonna have her own perfume. It’s even seeped into men’s ads- have you seen some of these ads for AX cologne? Talk about feeding men’s’ fantasies- put on some cologne and women will throw themselves at you- what a lie- I know, I’ve tried, it doesn’t happen. I finally realized the genius of these ads- the weirder they are, the better I remember them.

Well if the goal and standard of perfume advertising is making it memorable, one perfume ad stands out above all the rest. It is so memorable it has endured to some 2000 years, capturing the attention of men, women, and children. More than just capturing attention, it has even capture the affections, the hearts and minds and devotion of millions.

Read the whole sermon at cccsermons.blogspot.com

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Easter Sunday

Folks have asked if we're making a big deal of Easter at Connections.

They seem surprised when I tell them no.
But I go on to tell them that we make a big deal out of worship EVERY Sunday.

For us, it's always Easter.
I pray hard, and work hard, and listen attentively to craft a meaningful message.
The band practices and prays and practices more to present amazing music.
The Media Team works throughout the week to pull it all together.
The Drama Team (Andrew is a team of one) pours over scripts.
The Family Ministry Team makes sure everything is prepared to give kids an amazing experience.
The First Impression Team makes sure the coffee and snacks will be fresh and tasty.
The set-up team gets out of bed at the crack of dawn to make everything perfect.

For Connections, every Sunday is a celebration of the life we have in Jesus.
Every Sunday is a big deal.
Last Sunday is in the past.
Next Sunday isn't promised.
All we have is THIS SUNDAY.
And THIS SUNDAY is going to be the best service ever!

So this Sunday come and worship.
This Sunday bring a friend.
This Sunday all first time visitors will receive a Connections Bag with a CD and information packet.

So yeah, maybe we do have something special planned for Easter. And maybe God does too.

Connecting with the Cross




As I look around the city I'm surprised by how many businesses and organizations have announced they'll be closed for Good Friday. I hope and pray many will take the time to remember and honor this day that is only good in light the this coming Sunday.

Good Friday is unique among all days of the Christian Year. It is the only day where we remember Christ's death, and not his resurrection.

From the earliest of days, followers of Jesus told the story of his passion, death and resurrection. When pilgrims came to see Jerusalem, they were anxious to see the sites where Jesus was. These sites become important holy connections with Jesus. Eventually, following in the footsteps of the Lord, along the way of the cross, became a part of the pilgrimage visit. The stations, as we know them today, came about when it was no longer easy or even possible to visit the holy sites. In the 1500's, villages all over Europe started creating "replicas" of the way of the cross, with small shrines commemorating the places along the route in Jerusalem.

An online version with nice art work is available here.
http://www.cptryon.org/xpipassio/stations/index.html

If you've never done anything like this before you can go to "How to do the Stations" for a more detailed explanation.

Each station is divided into four parts:

  • The first part is a simple description of the scene. It helps us be conscious of what the "meaning" of this station is for us.
  • The second part is the contemplation of the scene. This is a guided reflection on the power of the scene for an individual, to enter it more deeply and to lead to some experience of it personally.
  • The third part is our response. This is expressed in personal words. It is the place where the sorrow and gratitude flow from our hearts.

The First Station: Jesus is condemned to die.

Jesus stands in the most human of places. He has already experienced profound solidarity with so many on this earth, by being beaten and tortured. Now he is wrongfully condemned to punishment by death. His commitment to entering our lives completely begins its final steps. He has said "yes" to God and placed his life in God's hands. We follow him in this final surrender, and contemplate with reverence each place along the way, as he is broken and given for us.

As I view the scene, I become moved by both outrage and gratitude.
I look at Jesus. His face. The crown of thorns. The blood. His clothes stuck to the wounds on his back.
Pilate washes his hands of the whole affair. Jesus' hands are tied behind his back.

This is for me. That I might be free. That I might have eternal life.
As the journey begins I ask to be with Jesus. To follow his journey. I express my love and thanks.


The Second Station: Jesus Carries His Cross.

Jesus is made to carry the cross on which he will die. It represents the weight of all our crosses. What he must have felt as he first took it upon his shoulders! With each step he enters more deeply into our human experience. He walks in the path of human misery and suffering, and experiences its crushing weight.

I contemplate the wood of that cross. I imagine how heavy it is. I reflect upon all it means that Jesus is carrying it.
I look into his eyes. It's all there.

This is for me. So I place myself with him in this journey. In its anguish. In his freedom and surrender. In the love that must fill his heart.

With sorrow and gratitude, I continue the journey. Moved by the power of his love, I am drawn to him and express my love in the words that come to me.


The Third Station: Jesus Falls the First Time.

The weight is unbearable. Jesus falls under it. How could he enter our lives completely without surrendering to the crushing weight of the life of so many on this earth! He lays on the ground and knows the experience of weakness beneath unfair burdens. He feels the powerlessness of wondering if he will ever be able to continue. He is pulled up and made to continue.

We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you.
Because by your holy cross you have redeemed the world.

I stare at the weakness in his eyes. I can look at his whole body and see the exhaustion.
As I behold him there on the ground, being roughly pulled up, I know forever how profoundly he understands my fatigue and my defeats.

This is for me. In grief and gratitude I want to let him remain there. As I watch him stand again and gain an inner strength, I accept his love and express my thanks.


The Fourth Station: Jesus Meets His Mother.

Jesus' path takes him to a powerful source of his strength to continue. All his life, his mother had taught him the meaning of the words, "Behold, the handmaid of the Lord." Now they look into each other's eyes. How pierced-through her heart must be! How pained he must be to see her tears! Now, her grace-filled smile blesses his mission and stirs his heart to its depth. Love and trust in God bind them together.

As I watch them in this place along the way, I contemplate the mystery of love's power to give strength.
She knows the sorrow in every mother's heart, who has lost a child to tragedy or violence.
I look at the two of them very carefully, and long for such love and such peace.

This is for me. Such incredible freedom. The availability of a servant. I find the words to express what is in my heart.


The Fifth Station: Simon Helps Jesus Carry His Cross.

Jesus even experiences our struggle to receive help. He is made to experience the poverty of not being able to carry his burden alone. He enters into the experience of all who must depend upon others to survive. He is deprived of the satisfaction of carrying this burden on his own.

I look into his face and contemplate his struggle. His weariness and fragility. His impotence.
I see how he looks at Simon, with utmost humility and gratitude.

This is for me. So I feel anguish and gratitude. I express my thanks that he can continue this journey. That he has help. That he knows my inability to carry my burden alone.

I say what is in my heart, with deep feeling.


The Sixth Station: Veronica Wipes the Face of Jesus.

Jesus' journey is at times brutal. He has entered into the terrible experiences of rejection and injustice. He has been whipped and beaten. His face shows the signs of his solidarity with all who have ever suffered injustice and vile, abusive treatment. He encounters a compassionate, loving disciple who wipes the vulgar spit and mocking blood from his face. On her veil, she discovers the image of his face - his gift to her. And, for us to contemplate forever.

What does the face of Jesus hold for me? What do I see, as I look deeply into his face?
Can I try to comfort the agony and pain? Can I embrace him, with his face so covered with his passion?

The veil I behold is a true icon of his gift of himself. This is for me. In wonder and awe, I behold his face now wiped clean, and see the depth of his suffering in solidarity with all flesh.


The Seventh Station: Jesus Falls the Second Time.

Even with help, Jesus stumbles and falls to the ground. In deep exhaustion he stares at the earth beneath him. "Remember, you are dust and to dust you will return." He has seen death before. Now he can feel the profound weakness of disability and disease and aging itself, there on his knees, under the weight of his cross.

I contemplate Jesus brought very low. As I behold him there on the ground, with all the agony taking its toll on him, I let my heart go out to him.
I store up this image in my heart, knowing that I will never feel alone in my suffering or in any diminishment, with this image of Jesus on the ground before me.

This is for me, so I express the feelings in my heart.


The Eighth Station: Jesus Meets the Women of Jerusalem.

The women of Jerusalem, and their children, come out to comfort and thank him. They had seen his compassion and welcomed his words of healing and freedom. He had broken all kinds of social and religious conventions to connect with them. Now they are here to support him. He feels their grief. He suffers, knowing he can't remain to help them more in this life. He knows the mystery of facing the separation of death.

I look at their faces. So full of love and gratitude, loss and fear. I contemplate what words might have passed between them.
I remember all his tender, compassionate, merciful love for me. I place myself with these women and children to support him.

This is for me. So, I let this scene stir up deep gratitude.


The Ninth Station: Jesus Falls the Third Time.

This last fall is devastating. Jesus can barely proceed to the end. Summoning all this remaining strength, supported by his inner trust in God, Jesus collapses under the weight of the cross. His executioners look at him as a broken man, pathetic yet paying a price he deserves. They help him up so he can make it up the hill of crucifixion.

I pause to contemplate him there on the ground. The brokeness that makes me whole. The surrender that gives me life.
I pause to experience and receive how completely he loves me. He is indeed completely poured out for me.

As I treasure this gifted experience, I express what is in my heart.


The Tenth Station: Jesus is Stripped.

Part of the indignity is to be crucified naked. Jesus is completely stripped of any pride The wounds on his back are torn open again. He experiences the ultimate vulnerability of the defenseless. No shield or security protects him. As they stare at him, his eyes turn to heaven.

I pause to watch the stripping. I contemplate all that is taken from him. And, how he faces his death with such nakedness.
I reflect upon how much of himself he has revealed to me. Holding nothing back.

As I look at him in his humility, I know that this is for me, and I share my feelings of gratitude.


The Eleventh Station: Jesus is Nailed to the Cross.

Huge nails are hammered through his hands and feet to fix him on the cross. He is bleeding much more seriously now. As the cross is lifted up, the weight of his life hangs on those nails. Every time he struggles to pull himself up to breathe, his ability to cling to life slips away.

I make myself watch the nails being driven through his flesh. And I watch his face.
I contemplate the completeness of his entry into our lives. Can there be any pain or agony he would not understand?

This is for me. Nailed to a cross to forever proclaim liberty to captives. What sorrow and gratitude fill my heart!


The Twelfth Station: Jesus Dies On The Cross.

Between two criminals, a mocking title above his head, with only Mary and John and Mary Magdalene to support him, Jesus surrenders his last breath: "Into your hands I commend my spirit."

I carefully watch and listen to all that is said.
And then, I experience the one who gives life pass from life to death, for me. I console Mary and John and Mary. And let them console me.

This is the hour to express the deepest feelings within me.


The Thirteenth Station: Jesus Is Taken Down From The Cross.

What tender mourning! Jesus' lifeless body lays in his mother's arms. He has truly died. A profound sacrifice, complete.

I behold this scene at the foot of the cross. I contemplate touching, caressing his body. I remember all his hands have touched, all who have been blessed by his warm embrace.
I pause to let it soak in. He knows the mystery of death. He has fallen into God's hands.

For me. That I might love as I have been loved. I pour out my heart to the God of all mercies.


The Fourteenth Station: Jesus Is Laid In The Tomb.

They take the body of Jesus to its resting place. The huge stone over the tomb is the final sign of the permanence of death. In this final act of surrender, who would have imagined this tomb would soon be empty or that Jesus would show himself alive to his disciples, or that they would recognize him in the breaking of bread? Oh, that our hearts might burn within us, as we realize how he had to suffer and die so as to enter into his glory, for us.

I pause to contemplate this act of closure on his life. In solidarity with all humanity, his body is taken to its grave.

I stand for a moment outside this tomb. This final journey of his life has shown me the meaning of his gift of himself for me. This tomb represents every tomb I stand before with fear, in defeat, struggling to believe it could ever be empty.

In the fullness of faith in the Risen One, given by his own Holy Spirit, I express my gratitude for this way of the cross. I ask Jesus, whose hands, feet and side still bear the signs of this journey, to grant me the graces I need to take up my cross to be a servant of his own mission.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Radio Interview



I just had a great phone call.

Word got wind of Connections Community Church to "News Talk 1290 AM."
(I think a friend named Hilke put a bug in somebody's ear.)

I'll be interviewed on air at 9:45 am tomorrow, Thursday March 20.

Apparently a church meeting in a movie theatre is just innovative enough to be categorized as "news." Also, they wanted to highlight some "church stuff" for Holy Week and we're the church!

Just goes to show what we keep experiencing- ask and you will receive. Someone loves Connections enough they thought it would be great if we made the news. They followed the one connection they had to a radio station, and next thing you know, I'm scheduled for an interview.

I love our church!

So tell your friends and if you're in London ON, tune in to 1290 AM at 9:45am!

PS, say a prayer that your pastor doesn't put his foot in his mouth!

Monday, March 17, 2008

Happy St. Patty's Day/ Passion Week



If you're wearing green I suppose you're hoping to be kissed.

If you're not wearing green I get to punch you if I see you!
If you wearing orange today- Ha! You're probably a history buff, perhaps Dutch, definitely Reformed.
If you have know idea what I'm talking about go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_III_of_England

Anyways...
For those following the "Christian Calendar" (which has always struck me as an odd title) we have entered into Holy Week, or Passion Week. It began yesterday with Palm Sunday and goes through the final week in the earthy ministry of Jesus, culminating in our celebration of Resurrection Sunday, aka, Easter.

But hey, I don't have to rewrite what others have already done.
Here's a nice article outlining the details.

My only addition is this-
I hope you take the time this week to read through final chapters of the the Gospels,
Matthew 21f
Mark 11f
Luke 19:28f
John 11f (Yeah, it's a lot!)

I hope you find somewhere to remember the crucifixion this Friday.
I hope you find somewhere to celebrate this Sunday.
We're praying to break 200 at Connections and raise the roof!

Question: "What is Passion Week?"

Answer:
Passion Week (also known as Holy Week) is the time from Palm Sunday through Easter Sunday (Resurrection Sunday), so named because of the passion with which Jesus willingly went to the cross in order to pay for the sins of His people. Passion Week is described in Matthew chapters 21-27; Mark chapters 11-15; Luke chapters 19-23; and John chapters 12-19. Passion Week begins with the triumphal entry on Palm Sunday on the back of a colt as prophesied in Zechariah 9:9.

Passion Week contained several memorable events. Jesus cleansed the Temple for the second time (Luke 19:45-46), then disputed with the Pharisees regarding His authority. Then He gave His Olivet Discourse on the end times and taught many things, including the signs of His second coming. Jesus ate His Last Supper with His disciples in the upper room (Luke 22:7-38), then went to the garden of Gethsemane to pray as He waited for His hour to come. It was here that Jesus, having been betrayed by Judas, was arrested and taken to several sham trials before the chief priests, Pontius Pilate, and Herod (Luke 22:54-23:25).

Following the trials, Jesus was scourged at the hands of the Roman soldiers, then was forced to carry His own instrument of execution (the Cross) through the streets of Jerusalem along what is known as the Via Dolorosa (way of sorrows). Jesus was then crucified at Golgotha on the day before the Sabbath, was buried and remained in the tomb until Sunday, the day after the Sabbath, and then gloriously resurrected.

It is referred to as "Passion Week" because in that time, Jesus Christ truly revealed His passion for us in what He willingly went through on our behalf.
What should our attitude be during Passion Week?
We should be passionate in our worship of Jesus and in our proclamation of His Gospel!

Read more at http://www.gotquestions.org/Passion-Week.html

Sunday, March 16, 2008

If Only...

Series: Vantage Point
Sermon: If Only...
George J. Saylor
March 16, 2008

We’ve been having some fun with vantage points the past two weeks. Now the real test begins. Let’s see what your vantage point really is- what do you see?



A bunny, or a duck, or both?

Our vantage point determines how we see something, or someone. Sometimes what we first see, or believe, changes. Sometimes we get to a place we can see a person or situation from several vantages points. In pictures like these we often see one thing right away. But after time or closer inspection, we see something else, we see something more.

Read the rest of the sermon at cccsermons.blogspot.com

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Easter Preparations

Easter is still two weeks away, and I'm already looking ahead.

That's because I love what comes after- the book of ACTS.

Acts quickly becomes a very special book to everyone planting a church. It literally picks up where the gospels leave off, immediately following Jesus' resurrection. Just when all looks lost, Jesus defeats death, and instead of his movement being wiped out, it just begins. The mantle is passed on to us, the followers of Jesus, and the church is born.

Acts chapter 1 ends where a lot of churches start, and end…a group of 120 people praying and seeking God. That's a great start to a church and a movement, but it's just the start. In the next chapter we see 3,000 people receiving Christ and being baptized. It's interesting that someone counted. But more interesting, and wonderful, is how it happened. It all began with people praying. Then they gathered a crowd. Then they shared the good news of Jesus. THen the Holy Spirit showed up and did his thing.

Prayer isn’t just a good idea when we can’t think of anything else to do. It isn’t something to tack on to every Christian meeting to make us feel better about ourselves. It should never take a backseat to anything…it should be THE THING that guides the people in the church on a personal basis.

Prayer works–we've already seen it at work at Connections. When we've really needed something, we've prayed, and when we've really prayed, God has provided. I believe that prayer is what's going to take us to the next level. And I hope we can get there this Easter.

So I invite you to pray with us, invite some friends, hear the good news, and watch as the Holy Spirit does his thing.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Vantage Point- Week 2

Series: Vantage Point
Sermon: iamwhoiam
George J. Saylor
March 9, 2008

Last week I made a bet with my wife that if I called Jesus the "Che Guevara of Israel," folks would catch the reference. I lost. But you’ll know exactly what I’m talking about when you see the pictures:





Now it all makes sense doesn’t it!

The point is that we don’t have to look too deeply into culture to see that this man named Jesus who lived 2000 years ago transformed our world and continues to transform lives. There are as many vantage points on Jesus as their are people in the world. People have turned him into just about anything they want.

Walk through the mall and you’ll find this shirt.

Walk into a library and you’ll find countless books.
Glance over a magazine rack and you’ll find him on a cover.
Walk into a video store and you’ll find everything from Mel Gibson’s “The Passion,” to “Jesus of Montreal,” and even “Jesus Christ Vampire Hunter,” a proudly made Canadian film! (You just know that some group of students are going to rent that movie tonight!)

Read the whole sermon at cccsermons.blogspot.com

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Superwoman


I have a secret.
I'm married to Superwoman.
I even know her true identity...

Robin Saylor.
Today is her birthday.
And I'm the most blessed man in the world to call her my wife.

Somehow she manages to:
  • Love me, which is a full time job in itself. Jesus said my yoke is easy and my burden is light, but being married to me has to be the biggest burden ever on a woman!
  • Home school our three most awesome kids. But this is the easy job, they are perfect little angels.
  • Keep our home in shape, and even paint whole rooms while I'm gone.
  • Be creative. All those cool graphics we use for our church- she makes them.
  • Be available. She always finds time to be there for folks.
  • Just do it. All those little things that just seem to get done at church- she does them.
On Sunday we had a Connecting Point lunch and an insane amount of people showed up. I had folks introduce themselves and share how they came to Connections. More than anything else the number one reason folks in that group ended up at Connections was because Robin invited them. Really.

I don't know where she finds the time to meet and invite these people.

Then yesterday I was meeting a friend for lunch yesterday and bumped into a neighbor. She said (not me), "George's wife is like Superwoman- she home schools three kids and still bakes homemade bread!" I was not going to disagree. She is like superwoman.

Maybe I'll even buy her the cute outfit with red leather boots!

Happy Birthday my Love!

Sunday, March 2, 2008

whatsyourvantagepoint?


Series: Vantage Point
Sermon: whatsyourvantagepoint?
George J. Saylor



H.G. Wells wrote,
“More than 1900 years later a historian like myself, who doesn’t even call himself a Christian, finds the picture centering irresistibly around the life and character of this most significant man…The historian’s test of an individual’s greatness is ‘What did he leave to grow? Did he start people thinking along fresh new lines with a vigor that persisted after him?’ By this test Jesus stands first.”

It has long been understood that even if the bible didn’t exist we still have historical documentation from other sources that verify there was a man named Jesus who called Nazareth his home, he gained a following as a teacher and the reputation of being a miracle worker. At the height of his popularity he has a following of hundreds. But he ended up dying a criminal’s death on a cross. His followers then, instead of moving on, claimed that Jesus rose from the grave, and then the movement that Jesus started began to truly take traction, and has, without exception, continued to grow with each successive generation.

Read the ret of the sermon at cccsermons.blogspot.com