The Joy of Confirmation
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These summer months, I’ve had the joy of leading our confirmation class of (mostly) incoming ninth graders every Sunday afternoon from 12:00-2:00.  It has truly been a joy to hear their thoughtful responses to my questions about the faith, as I often use the Socratic method of questioning and have been known (now and then) to play the devil’s advocate with them. Yet, to be a witness to the profound way they are thinking through the faith at a deep level and wrestling with weighty issues of life and Christianity has been so encouraging to me. 

This group of fourteen has been reading (What is the Gospel? by Greg Gilbert, The Case for Faith, Student Edition by Lee Strobel, and chapters of Presbyterian Beliefs by Donald McKim), memorizing (Lord’s Prayer, 10 Commandments, & the Apostle’s Creed), writing (a one-page statement of faith and their personal testimony), worshipping (filling out six “sermon evaluation forms”), getting mentored (by reading through the book of Philippians), and working through Bible readings on their own. 

My prayer and hope for these students is that they will look back at Confirmation and see one of the foundational pillars of faith has been laid for a life-time of loving Jesus and serving His church.  Like (every) adult, this group of young people is “still in process” in life and faith – and I hope they feel like I’ve given them permission to struggle and doubt and still be “in process” – yet as we put one faith step in front of the other, we begin to be slowly transformed into the image of Christ. 

August 12th is “Confirmation Sunday” – and I hope you will join me in praying for this class and offer encouragement to them along the way as they finish their confirmation class at TWC.

Many of us have also been praying for Randy Gerry, our new Director of Student Ministries and Community Engagement.  Continue to do so!  He got back Saturday (7/28) from the Mission Trip to North Carolina with the Senior High group and leaves tomorrow (7/30) with the Mid-High group for a Rec Camp in Palm Beach, Florida. 

Thankful to be with you on this journey of discipleship,

Pastor Jason

Jason Carter
Control Freak? God Loves You Anyway
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I’m reminded weekly as a pastor that life is messy.  Sometimes, life seems like a series of calculated steps to remind you of one thing:  you are not in control.  We can fight for control, think we’re in control, and even live our lives under the illusion that we’re in control.  But then, a messy situation rears its head right dab in the middle of your life.

This was not the way it was supposed to be. 

And, instead of releasing control to Jesus, we often double-down on maintaining control:

I’ll get it right next time.

Friends, Jesus came in the flesh to show you a better way.

We mistakenly think that peace and control have a direct causal relationship:  more control = more peace.  The more that I can control my life, my family, and my environment, the more that peace will flood my heart.  We are hesitant (and even terrified) of trusting anybody outside of ourselves.  After all, this is my life, and I better get it right! 

The irony is that our love of control (okay, being a “control freak”) is actually the gateway to living a life of constant pressure.  And stress.  And living under the coming rain cloud of potential failure.  What if I can’t keep all these plates in the air?

That is why faith is at the heart of the Christian life.  Faith is resting in the refuge that God provides. Faith is a (childlike) trusting in the goodness of God.  God is for me, not against me.

I experience a release and freedom at the level of my soul when I recognize (and remember) that Jesus truly desires that I experience the fullness of joy

Take this verse to heart: “These things I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full.”  (John 15:11)

What if I could exchange the joy of Jesus for my love of control?  Perhaps that would make all the difference in my life.  Perhaps Jesus could give me exactly what I have been searching to find all of my life.  Perhaps joy is to be found “in Jesus”.  Think about it.

Grateful to be with you in this journey towards joy,

Pastor Jason

Jason CarterDevotional, Joy
Trinity Wellsprings Church: A Community Overflowing and Celebrating
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As the Psalmist put it,:  “Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good. His love endures forever.” (Psalm 136:1)

A few snapshots of our church life are in order: 

(1)  Community Overflowing:  Between our “Day of Service” (Feb. 24th) which culminated our Matthew 25 Challenge and our recent hosting of Family Promise of Brevard, a saint of our church came up to me and said:  “It really feels like we are being a ‘Community Overflowing’ these days!”  I simply pass that encouragement onto the body of Christ – you have overflowed in life-giving ways into our community.  Thanks for wearing your heart on your sleeve and bringing Jesus wherever you go!

(2)  Last Fiscal Quarter:  The income from our last fiscal quarter (Jan-March) represented our largest non-December quarter of giving since 2015.  You are responding in sacrificial ways to the call of God on your lives.  Again, thank you for giving all of YOU – your talents, time, and treasures to making LIFE and LOVE happen on campus and in our community and world through the efforts of Trinity Wellsprings Church.  I know the Finance Team wants to whisper in our ears: “let’s hope this upward trend continues!”, but I think it’s valuable to pause and celebrate the small victories along the way in our journey together.

(3)  We asked; you responded.  Thanks for showing up in a big way for Easter.  Several of you, after attending the sunrise Easter service, came back on campus to greet and be a welcoming face to our visitors.  Thanks for going the extra mile.  I personally saw the difference that made in our congregational singing and in our hospitality to new folks.  Again, thank you for being the body of Christ!

(4)  Jim Hollis, our resident TWC statistician (and sage), recently wrote: “What a GREAT EASTER! We had a record 1417 at the Sunrise Service. We had 526 at the 9 and 11 Services. The total at these 3 services was 1943 which is a record.”  Amen. It was a great Easter for our church family and for our community! Yet, forget for a second that 1400+ people came to the beach and remember for a moment that what we are about -- pointing people to Jesus and sowing seeds for the gospel -- is incredibly difficult to categorize or numeritize. It's incredibly difficult to ever know whether our love and service challenges/encourages a man to love his wife more engagingly or comforts a widow grieving the death of a long-time husband or plants small seeds in the lives of students or children to begin to embrace a more robust faith.  Who knows whether encouraging someone to join a Life Group leads a person to say, “who knows, I’ll just give it a try” which leads to significant life transformation years later.

All in all, we want to be a church that celebrates the small victories along this long path of discipleship.  (Isn’t that a good idea for the Christian life as well?  We often need our spiritual eyes and ears to recognize God’s presence and blessings in our lives, as we often are rather quick to recognize life’s challenges but slow to thank God for his blessings.)

So, church: Be grateful.  Be thankful.  Celebrate the good times.  If we don’t celebrate the small victories in the life of faith, we’ll be prone to miss the faithfulness of God!  I’m certain there will be challenges ahead, times that will challenge us to band together in ways that stretch our capacity to believe, to act, and to respond in faith.  Yet, the good news is that we always can rest in the faithfulness of God.  Why?  “…for he is good.  His love endures forever.”  Woo-hoo! 

Be encouraged,

Rev. Dr. Jason  Carter

Senior Pastor/Head of Staff

Jason Carter
Worship: Supernatural, If Not Always Spectacular
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“Worship gatherings are not always spectacular, but they are always supernatural. And if a church looks for or works for the spectacular, she may miss the supernatural. If a person enters a gathering to be wowed with something impressive, with a style that fits him just right, with an order of service and song selection designed just the right way, that person may miss the supernatural presence of God. Worship is supernatural whenever people come hungry to respond, react, and receive from God for who He is and what He has done. A church worshipping as a Creature of the Word doesn't show up to perform or be entertained; she comes desperate and needy, thirsty for grace, receiving from the Lord and the body of Christ, and then gratefully receiving what she needs as she offers her praise-the only proper response to the God who saves us.” (Matt Chandler, Creature of the Word: The Jesus-Centered Church)

It is difficult not to be a consumer in our day and age. We are raised from children to be careful consumers so that life works for us. Our every whim and desire are constantly being targeted by market researchers. We are accustomed to having it “our way”.  We deserve it! 

Yet this kind of mentality is catastrophic for our spiritual lives and typically brings dysfunction into the church. When consumerism hovers over our church experience, we expect the spectacular when we really should be looking for the supernatural. 

God placed a longing for his supernatural presence into our hearts, yet we are often content with much less – a spectacular experience that impresses us or entertains us.

We constantly need to check our motivations: to be sure we are sitting under the Word of God, engaging with God in worship. Consumerism kills worship. Consumerism blocks the pathway of our hearts to God’s heart.

Grateful to be with you on this journey of worshipping the Living God,

Pastor Jason

Jason Carter
Blog Tidbits for March 2018
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Here are two blog posts from the land of the blogosphere plus the Christian Satire of the Babylon Bee. Enoy!

What Your Kids Need From You

J.D. Greer writes: "One of the most helpful pieces of parenting advice I ever received was this: Be their dad, not their pastor. The pastor is always busy telling them what is wrong with them; a dad is just excited about who they are. You can’t force the affections of their heart to grow. Only the Holy Spirit can do that, and he does it in the security of unconditional love.

If you focus on your kids’ hearts and not their behavior, it’s going to change everything—including how you discipline, how you pray, and how you celebrate success."

The Evangelical Center After Billy Graham

This is a thoughtful historical look at the centrist Evangelicalism of mid-20th century which Billy Graham and John Stott helped forge.

Jake Meador writes: "By largely defining themselves relative to the Protestant groups to their left [mainline] and right [fundamentalists], they essentially acquired their key principles from the two wings—a high view of Scripture and the cross from the right and a concern for society and the intellect from the left. Thus the problem is not simply that the old right and left wings of Protestantism provided evangelicalism with its frame of reference; they also supplied it with its key principles, which were snatched out of their context from the other schools."

Back Pew Voted Best Spot in Church Fifth-Eighth Year in a Row

The Babylon Bee brings us the lost art of Christian satire:  "Over 92% of those polled stated that sitting in the very back pew is the perfect spot: far enough away that the pastor can’t effectively gaze into your soul, but close enough that you feel good about yourself for showing up unlike those heathens who are playing hooky."

 

Jason Carter
A Spirituality of Imperfection
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On the Family Camp-Out, our theme was "A Spirituality of Imperfection", an idea that I borrowed from the title of a biography of Henri Nouwen.  In contrast to our "I'll accept you if you perform for me" culture, we dove into the idea that authentic spirituality travels the narrow path of brokenness where God meets us in the messy reality of our lives.  By embracing a spirituality of imperfection, we begin to meet the God of limitless grace and find the rock-solid love of Christ sustaining us in our woundness, struggles, and brokenness. 

Spirituality is not about perfection; it is about connection. The way of the spiritual life begins where we are now in the mess of our lives. Accepting the reality of our broken, flawed lives is the beginning of spirituality not because the spiritual life will remove our flaws but because we let go of seeking perfection and, instead, seek God, the one who is present in the tangledness of our lives.” (Mike Yaconelli)

RESTLESS SEEKER:  A spirituality of imperfection always embraces our identity as a "restless seeker". 

“Living as resident aliens in a strange land, citizens of a secret kingdom, what other kind of peace should we expect? In this world, restlessness, and not contentment is a sign of health.” (Philip Yancey)

In a spirituality of imperfection, we embrace restlessness as a way to drive us to prayer.  If I am overly content, odds are that I will have a tough time praying.   A spirituality of imperfection embraces the restless nature of our souls.  Perfect contentment only awaits our arrival in glory; restlessness is part and parcel of our everyday Christian life. 

FAITHFUL STRUGGLER:  A spirituality of imperfection also recognizes that authentic Christian spirituality is not primarily about self-help or solely about "getting rid of my flaws", but about being faithful in the up and down existence of the Christian life.  Perhaps the Christian life is as much about "getting up after sin" as "sin avoidance".  

“The great secret in life is that suffering, which often seems to be so unbearable can become…a source of new life and new hope.” (Henri Nouwen)

As Nouwen observes, "We...like easy victories: growth without crisis, healing without pains, the resurrection without the cross.”

A spirituality of imperfection recognizes that growth and maturity often come via the avenue of our restlessness and struggle.  As Christians, we want to be "seekers" in the midst of our restlessness and "faithful" in the midst of our struggles. 

Jason Carter