Wednesday, February 28, 2007

IKA-9 NA ANIBERSARYO NG IGLESIA NG DIOS SA SIGNAL VILLAGE, TAGUIG CITY- Ulat ni Bro. Christian Layante

Pagbati sa mga kapatid sa Panginoon ang aming ipinaaabot mula sa Kongregasyon ng Signal Village at pasasalamat sa lahat ng mga dumadalangin. Ang katatapos lamang na ika-9 na anibersaryo ng Signal Congregation na ginanap noong Feb. 4 ay tagumpay at salamat sa Panginoon na alam nating lahat na ang tagumpay ng bawat Gawain ay bunga rin ng taimtim na pananalangin ng mga kapatid sa iba’t ibang dako na tunay na nagmamahal sa Panginoon.

Ang gawain ng Panginoon ay pinasimulan sa pagpapaawit ni Sis. Lanie Layante para sa Morning Devotion at katulad ng mga sama-samang gawain ngmga kapatid sa iba’t-ibang kongregasyon ay napagpala na ang mga kapatid sa mga awit pa lamang. Sinundan ito ng panimulang panalangin ni Bro. Frank Palencia na tunay na naninindigan para sa ikatatagumpay ng gawain kaya naman ang Iglesya sa Signal ay patuloy na nagtatagumpay sa tulong na rin ng Panginoon.

Ang Sunday School ay pinangunahan naman ng isa rin sa mga magulang sa Iglesya na si Bro. Lino dela Cruz. Ang topic ng pag-aaral ay "Sons of God." Salamat sa Panginoon na marami ang napagpala. Muling nanariwa sa isipan ng bawat isa kung ano ba ang uri ng pamumuhay na dapat makita sa isang nagsasabing Anak ng Diyos. Sa mga nakakalimot, ito’y malinaw na pagpapaalala at magsilbi nawang kalakasan sa mga nanghihina.

Muling napuno ng awit ng mga Kristiyano ang panambahan sa pangunguna ng isa ring magulang na si Sis. Zeny dela Cruz, maybahay ni Bro. Lino dela Cruz. Purihin ang Panginoon! May mga magulang na patuloy na naninindigan sa Iglesya.

Si Bro. Jose Layante ang tumayong deacon. Isang magulang na bunga rin ng gawain sa Saudi Arabia at ginamit ng Panginoon upang kami na mga anak niya ay makakilala rin at tumanggap sa Kanya. Sinundan ito ng panalangin ng isa ring kapatid na si Bro. Bonifacio Jordan na atin pang idalangin na lalo pang pagpalaing ispiritwal ng Panginoon at magkaroon ng matibay na pananalig sa Kanya. Sa pagtatapos ng gawain, si Bro. Boni ay lumapit para sa pagpapasalamat at paghiling ng panibagong kalakasang ispiritwal sa panginoon. Salamat sa Panginoon!

Ang kongregasyon ng Quezon City at Sta. Maria, Bulacan ay naghandog ng tanging awit. Ang kanilang pag-awit ay laging inaabangan ng mga kapatid sa bawat pagtitipon. Nakakahamon ang kanilang kasiglahan sa paglilingkod!

Nagpahayag ng kanilang pagbati at pasasalamat si Sis. Meldy na matagumpay na ginagamit ng Panginoon sa Sta. Maria, Bulacan, si Bro. Manny Romasanta na magulang sa lugar ng San Pablo, si Sis. Nancy na maybahay ni Bro. Nelson ng Marinduque, Sis. Wilma Batalla ng Baguio City at si Bro. Eddie Rodil na lingkod ng Panginoon sa lugar ng Metro Manila.

Si Sis. Sarah Rose Marzan, isang kabataan na bunga nga mga magulang na tapat na naglilingkod ay naghandog ng tanging awit. Marami nawang kabataan ang patuloy na mahamon sa kanya. Ganundin sa mga magulang, mahamon nawa na ang kanilang mga anak ay matagumpay na maakay sa paglilingkod.

Bilang panghuli, si Bro. Jet Batalla ang ginamit ng Panginoon upang magpahayag ng Kanyang mensahe sa kalagitnaan ng Mananampalataya. Ang pamagat ng kanyang mensahe sa araw na iyon ay "Ang Daan na naging Makapangyarihan ang Diyos." Purihin ang Panginoon! Ang lahat ng mga dumalo mula sa mga kongregasyon ng Bicutan, Quezon City, San Pablo, Batangas, Bulacan, Binangonan, Tarlac at maging ang mag bisita ay pinagpala ng Panginoon. Marami ang lumapit. May lumapit para sa kapatawaran, at may mga lumapit para sa pagpapanumbalik ng kalakasang ispiritwal. Ganundin para sa lubusang pagpapakabanal.

Purihin ang Panginoon! Hindi Siya nagkukulang sa atin. Salamat na mayroon Siyang tapat na mga lingcod at salamat sa tagumpay ng bawat gawain!
Amen! Patuloy po tayong magdalanginan sa isa’t isa.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

PRACTICAL THOUGHTS ON PREACHING - J. GRANT ANDERSON

INTRODUCTION

FIFTEEN YEARS of active service in the ministry of the Church of God has not failed to teach me some valuable lessons, a few of which I submit for your consideration, especially to those who areyounger in point of service than myself. God has chosenus to fill the highest calling in life. There is no other career that can compare with the ministry in the rich and satisfying relations into which it brings a man with his fellowmen, in the deep insight it gives into humannature, and also the chance of improving our own Christian character. The study of God’s love, of His workmanship and in nature, leads us into ever widening channels. Its delights never grow old; its interests never wane; its stimulus is never exhausted. Some of the following suggestions have been learned from sad experience, some from kindly admonitions, some from failures, some from successes, and some from hard study. I shall try to pass on to you those that have been especially beneficial to me.

WHAT PREACHING REALLY IS he scriptural idea of preaching is the communication of truth to mankind by men. To effective scriptural preaching there are two essential elements; namely, truth and personality.
CHARACTER OF AN EFFICIENT PREACHER
A successful preacher must necessarily be a successful man; for, relatively, as he lacks moral character he fails as a preacher, and the law of elimination will soon weed him out. He must be able to preach, not only a historical Christ, but also Christ as a mighty, living, moving force in the soul. The Bible states that Philip went to a certain city and preached Christ unto the people. Although a preacher might be able to compare, analyze and elucidate; to describe Christ’s holy nativity and incarnation with words of clearness and eloquence, yet if he were not in possession of the Christlife and his motives fired with a burning love for the souls of men—he were not preaching, but simply lecturing upon Christianity. Preparation for the ministry has endless ramifications, but it does not consist primarily in learning pulpit tricks, pulpit manners, how to sermonize or oratorical grace; it consists in teaching how to form Christian character, how to acquire self-control, how to correctly interpret the Scriptures. Preparation for the ministry consists in the tempering of a person’s whole nature until it becomes of such consistency and quality that is capable of transmitting to man a perfect, free and full gospel, not in words alone but in a living concrete form— as a living epistle, known and read of all men. College titles and degrees affixed or suffixed to a name have only a professional meaning, but only the ability we have to feed the Church of God will open and keep open to us the door of opportunity. Not in word only does true preaching consist; it must come through a man’s character, his affections, his whole intellectual and moral being. We often note the difference between the sermonizing of two different preachers after this manner— The gospel came over one of them to us, but it was tinged with too much of the preacher; the gospel came through the other man to us with all earnestness of his soul. The difference between real preaching and simply talking or lecturing is likely to be found in the object of the preacher. After listening to a certain man preach four or five times, we could almost write his biography, and we go away with a feeling of disappointment. We listen to another man, equally strong in personality, and we lose sight of the man, as in humility and tremendous earnestness he lifts up and exalts Christ. True preaching exhibits the soul culture of the preacher. Never, never allow the thought to come into your mind that you are preaching a great sermon, and never prepare to that end.

THE PURPOSE OF PREACHING

Never for one moment should we forget the solemn fact that we are messengers sent by the almighty God, with a message to a lost and fallen humanity who are tottering on the brink of eternal night and despair. We do not preach to show our skill or range of education, but like successful Paul we preach, “Not ourselves, but Christ crucified.” Who has not seen a man struggle to make a wonderful impression, but who notwithstanding the energy expended and the range and breadth of subject covered, face a restless and unconcerned congregation? Who has not seen such a “great discourse” followed by a talk from an awkward exhorter, who without discipline of mind, or knowledge of pulpit manners, climaxes or elocution, held the listeners spellbound; and all were sorry when he sat down? Wherein lies the difference? The former effort was a splendid treatise on the philosophy of the plan of salvation, and in an abstract way held up Christ before the people. The latter was a message of love and encouragement from our Father to the hungry souls of men. The former preached the ideal; the latter, the living Christ. The greatness of a sermon does not consist in its wide scope of relative matter covered, nor the cleverness of its delivery, but in its power to magnify Christ, to teach man his true relation to God, nature, humanity and duty. Remember then, the purpose of preaching should not be lost sight of, even for a moment, for it determines its character. It will cause one to think soberly when he considers carefully what the object of preaching really is. If the object of preaching is simply to make social conditions better, then lecture upon social science. If it is simply to save men from future punishment, lecture upon economy. If salvation is still in the future and no risk is being run in delay, then whisper softly and soothingly. But if salvation is present, now or never, if it comprehends power to break away from sin, and to live a holy life, if it is a fact that to die in sin is to be lost to God, to the pure and the blest, to all things lovable and desirable while eternal ages roll on and on, we should exert every energy, husband every resource, take advantage of every opportunity, and spend our whole time in active preaching with the burden of lost souls ever upon our hearts. Again, preparation for the ministry that does not have for its major object the bettering, enriching and widening of the moral and Christian character in the minister himself, is apt to cloud the mind as to what and of what a real sermon consists. A candidate for the ministry given only mental and ethical training judges sermons by some human standard of judgment. The good sermon is the one that accomplishes the end sought. One minister worries all the week because he cannot find a sermon that he thinks would be suitable for the following Sunday. That is an index of the lack of the rich graces of God, and shows a limited knowledge of what true preaching really consists. Asecond minister studies all week because he is expected to preach the following Sunday. He does better than thefirst because he does put forth some personal effort in gathering facts and truths, but his efforts show he does not fully understand the purpose of preaching, for he prepares because his congregation expects him to preach. A third is also engaged in study all the week; but his object is to gather truth, to interpret God’s will, and thus to enrich his own soul and enlarge his vision relative to the needs of his fellowmen. He has been storing away in his mental and moral nature a mine of wealth, of deepconsideration, of personal duty, of appreciation of God’s goodness, and this has resulted in deeper love and a broader view of life. Knowing the strong and the weak points of his flock, he does not lack for a message. He steps before them on Sunday morning in possession of a certain richness which they soon detect and which they will strive to obtain. He does not think so much of his sermon as he does of the message that is burning in his heart. His presence and words invite them—“Follow me as I have followed Christ.”

EDUCATION A VALUABLE ASSET

God can use a man if his vocabulary consists of fifty words, but He could use him in a wider sphere if he could use one hundred and fifty words. The minister who is lazy, or who has learned to sneer at “book learning,” is foredoomed to either failure or a narrow field of labor. The church is today face to face with tremendous problems—problems that must be solved—such as a well-balanced attitude relative to church government, matters of conscience, finance, doctrine and of methods of defense with increase of liberty. Increase of knowledge brings an increase of dangers. Religious imitators from without, and from within, those whose conscience will allow almost any act, need attention from men who are capable of careful analysis. To be able to successfully combat the educated religious rickster (Gift of Tongues Movement, Latter-day Saints, Spiritualists, Nazarenes, Christian Science, etc.), a minister must know some things thoroughly and be able to set them forth clearly, not only in a Christian spirit, but logically and systematically. Our greatest danger, however, is from within. On this side we shall have to combat too much liberty of conscience in matters of dress; private interpretations upon certain doctrinal points; too liberal attitude toward other religious bodies; too much self in looking for centralization of power; adding too much human machinery that we weaken our power, etc., etc. We may in a Christian spirit sputter out our remonstrances to defects and but little attention will be given, but men will take off their hats and listen to a minister who has something to say and can say it well. The function of language is to convey ideas, and the better we understand how to say what we have in mind the greater will be our usefulness. Education gives at once variety and a good standing before an audience. Every hour’s study of the Bible, science, literature, language, history and philosophy, with the thought of enriching your own soul and of broadening out your mind that you may be of greater help to others, is necessary, commendable and desirable. The mower does not consider the time occupied in sharpening his sickle lost time.

MISCELLANEOUS SUGGESTIONS

Self-consciousness is a hindrance to effective preaching and should be overcome as quickly as possible. Every added power to master ourselves is an increase in efficiency. A minister who is governed by his feelings, or who is compelled to resort to artificial helps, too often gives his hearers the impression that he is weak. The minister with an undisciplined mind, or one that is super educated, labors at a disadvantage from the beginning of his discourse. He does not know how to begin, for he isaware of the power of first impressions; his mind is watching the movement of his hands, or struggling to make use of the proper word, for a grammatical error will be noticed by a certain man in the audience who has the reputation of being a critic. We pity such a speaker, but his weakness is not inherent. It comes from a lack of knowledge of himself—knowledge that persistent study alone will bring. We may attribute his lack of personal magnetism, but that is not the secret. His weakness is in his self-consciousness. That quality we do covet, called magnetism, which seems as scarce as radium, is not altogether an inherited quality, but primarily it begins to grow the day we lose sight of our sermon, our self, our hands and feet, our grammatical constructions, our rhetoric—the day we get our eyes upon God’s love to man, man’s awful danger, and the day there kindles in our heart a keen joy and appreciation of assisting mankind out of sin’s powerful grasp and of helping them to understand the true meaning of life. Paul’s great power consisted in a broad, educated mind and sympathetic heart, constrained by the power of Christ. The law of growth demands that any faculty or quality outside of duty is capable of culture and expansion. The measure of a preacher’s greatness lies in his ability to get a timely message from God, and to deliver it to hungry souls with everything else out of sight.

SOBERNESS ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL TO SUCCESS

Real preaching consists in handing truths which are as long and deep as eternity to souls that have an existence coequal with God. Whoever loses sight of these solemn facts is liable to introduce trash into his pulpit utterances, and thus temporarily backslide from preaching. A reallyapostolic ministry will give out from the pulpit sound, sober, sensible, earnest discourse about God, Christ, heaven, hell, immortality and eternity. To have a reputation as a pulpit clown is to limit your field of usefulness in no small degree. You may be called clever, but you will not be sought often in times of man’s deepest sorrow and anguish of heart; for, instinctively, if for no other reason, men at such times will desire the company of a more sober-minded man. Beware of joking, because it takes the keen edge off from seriousness and tears down moral fiber. Personal humor goes along with individuality and cannot be separated from the man.

COURAGE NECESSARY

This important quality does not come by deciding to be bold, for that argues egotism. We increase in courage the same as we increase in moral force—by a steady, healthy, normal growth. The thought that we are ambassadors of God, that we are dealing in eternal elements, that we are laying a foundation as firm is the throne of God, naturally begets a humble, holy boldness and courage. If we are a slave to men’s opinions, we should seek other employment.

CONCLUSION

Carefulness upon our part that we keep spiritual, and morally clean, with a passionate desire to be better and more efficient in the work into which God has called, and with which God has trusted us, will be the surest safeguard against the numerous evils and sins with which we are surrounded. The price of success in the ministry, as in any vocation, means tireless activity, eternal trueness, and an unquenchable desire to learn more of God and our fellow beings. I close with quotations from two wise men from two distinct ages: (a) “Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting, get understanding” (Proverbs 4:7).—Solomon the King, B.C. 1000. (b) “If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not: and it shall be given him” (James 1:5).—Apostle James, A.D. 60.
The Way of Truth (January, 2007)
—Reprinted from August, 1975 issue

HOW WE CAN LOVE GOD?

What marvelous results that would take place in the world, if all the populations of earth would simply keep the first great commandment, to love the Lord our God with all our heart, and mind, and strength. No individual can live a real peaceful, happy, and useful life, without being regenerated, and sanctified, and loving his Creator with all his heart. Even since the gospel has been given to the world, only a small proportion of men have willing to submit perfectly to the very law which conduces their highest well. And as to the masses of mankind, sinners are increasing hundreds of times faster than saints are, and all the nations that had the gospel first, such as Turkey, Egypt, Italy, and Spain, having turned away from it, are today the lowest and meanest of all nations, proving that the idea of converting the whole world in the gospel dispensation, is not Scriptural, and only a carnal dream. But if the sons of men would from the heart, keep the first great commandment, what heavenly changes would in a few weeks pass over the face of the world. All the politics of every nation on earth, as they now exist, would entirely cease. Jails, penitentiaries, court houses, police force, armies and navies, would pass away. Thousands of occupations for greed, or ambition, or sinful pleasure, would never more be pursued. The industries of men would be simple, perfectly honest, without guile, without over taxing the workers, and filled with happy labor. The educational institutions would turn the intellect away from false philosophy into the true science of creation, and open up beautiful fields of knowledge in every direction, finding God everywhere. Even though sickness and death should remain, yet so much would be done to care for the poor, and sick, and so many prevailing prayers of faith offered up to God, that trouble and sickness of all kinds would be reduced to a minimum. Only think what immense changes would take place on earth, by the world wide keeping of only one commandment of our God. This helps us to get a larger view of who God is; when one single short commandment, has enough in it to turn this almost demonized world into a veritable paradise. If it had not been that our souls have been degraded by sin, God would never have to command us to love Him. It is sin that has necessitated the giving of a law. When we are properly enlightened, the loving of God with all the heart is the sweetest joy in all creation, and if we only have enough about who God is, and what He is to us, we would be on our knees imploring Him for the privilege of loving Him all we wanted. The reason why so few people love God, is because they do not have in them by nature the kind of love to love Him with. God can only be truly loved with His own love. We must have Divine love imparted into our hearts, by the operation of the Holy Spirit, before we can truly and scripturally love God.

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

THE CHURCH IN BAGUIO MOVED TO THIER NEW HOUSE OF WORSHIP

Muling lumipat ang mga kapatiran sa Benguet ng lugar ng panambahan noong Feb. 4, 2007. Mula sa Asin, Baguio City bumalik sila sa La Trinidad sa bahay na ipinagkaloob ni Bro. Melton. Ang address nito ay LD #72, Lubas Proper, La Trinidad, Benguet. Kung kalooban ng Dios ito na ang permamenteng sambahan ng mga Kristiano dito sa Benguet.