Friday, June 1, 2012

The Preacher's Fellowship — Outlining the Text

This Saturday the Preacher’s Fellowship meets yet again at Christ Fellowship Bible Church. This small group of men meets regularly for a time of teaching on homiletics (=preaching), then a man preaches, and finally we conclude with a time of discussion on the sermon we just heard and how it could be improved.

God is raising up men who love Him, love His Word, walk in integrity, and who desire to take the meaning of Scripture and proclaim His Word clearly, boldly, persuasively, and biblically to His people!

To God be the glory!

2 Timothy 2:15 Be diligent to present yourself approved to God as a workman who does not need to be ashamed, accurately handling the word of truth.

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Biblical Pictures of the Servant Leader in the Church

Biblical Pictures of the Servant Leader in the Church:
By: Geoffrey R. Kirkland
Christ Fellowship Bible Church

1. A Shepherd (1 Pet 5) — The Apostle Peter calls the leaders to shepherd — tend and care for — the flock of God among them. They are to exercise oversight not under compulsion but willingly. And not for shameful gain but eagerly as proving to be examples of Christlikeness to the body of believers. Furthermore, these leaders must never dominate and lord their authority over the flock but rather they should prove to be examples to the flock. This leader, then, is one who leads, serves, feeds, tends, carries, loves, and ministers to his very own flock entrusted to His care.

2. A Watchman (Ezek 3:17) — This text reveals how God in his great wisdom called Ezekiel to be a watchman and a guard for the House of Israel. He was appointed to teach and dispense God’s truth to God’s people. Indeed, whenever Ezekiel heard a word from God, he was commissioned to warn God’s people. Thus, a watchman is a man who keeps diligent watch and at the first blush of incoming enemies he raises the battle cry and warns the people of invasion. The leader of God’s flock must see himself as a watchman — and one who proclaims the Word of God as warnings to people.

3. A Guard (Acts 20:28) — This text explicitly states that those who lead the local Church as shepherds, teachers, and students of the Word are called overseers. Part of the overseer’s responsibility rests in the duty to always be on guard against false teaching, false converts, dangerous wolves. Indeed, the greatest thing an overseer can do is care for the church of God and, as this verse reveals, one way this is accomplished is by guarding his own doctrine, life, and character in addition to those who are allotted to his care.

4. A Defender (Titus 1:9) — An essential qualification for one who holds a leadership position in the local Church is a firm defender of God’s Truth. He must hold firmly to the trustworthy word which is taught in Scripture. He must know it, be familiar with it, be acquainted with it, be daily fed from it, be regularly discipling other men from it, and be shepherding his wife and discipling his children from it. This is two sides of the same coin. He must, first, be able to give instruction in sound doctrine. That is to say, he must know doctrine — what is sound, right, accurate, and biblically supported — and know how to clearly present it. Furthermore, he must be willing, able, and competent enough to refute those who contradict this sound teaching that does not fall in accord with Scripture.

5. A Herald (Jer 11:6; Acts 13:5) — A foremost duty of OT prophets and NT apostles — and a continuing command throughout the entire NT — is for men to be heralds, that is, proclaimers of God’s Word. God appointed Jeremiah to go into all the cities of Judah and proclaim the words of the covenant of God. And in the NT, on Paul’s missionary journeys, his custom consisted of entering a city and going immediately to the synagogue and proclaiming the gospel. Thus, the man of God who leads the flock of God must be a herald of the Word of God with all passion, conviction, certainty, persuasion, urgency, compassion, and humility.

6. A Messenger (Phil 2:25; 2 Tim 2:25) — The leader in a local Church must see himself as a messenger. He is one sent by the Living God who made heaven and earth to convey a message to an audience. He cannot change the message. He must not alter, fabricate, or downplay the King’s orders. He must instruct those who oppose sound teaching so that God may, in His wisdom and power, grant repentance to the deadened sinner. When the leader in the church envisions himself as a messenger sent by God with a primary purpose of teaching, feeding, protecting and disseminating the truth of God, he embraces this responsibility and faithfully discharges his duty in the context of the local assembly.

7. A Servant (Matt 20:26; 1 Tim 4:6) — One who wants to be great must always be a servant. The path to greatness is the path of service. No one can be exalted who exalts himself. It is the true servant — not just in outward show or actions but one who serves as a joyful act of heartfelt obedience to Jesus Christ — who willingly, joyfully, frequently, and privately serves (even if no one else ever recognizes and praises him). A servant of Christ Jesus is one who faithfully points out God’s truth to the brothers. The greatest act of service can be to obey the Sovereign King of all and his commission is to appoint His Word to His people. A servant must obey his master. If not, he is an unfaithful servant and is unworthy to even be called a servant.

8. An Example (Titus 2:7; 1 Tim 4:12; Phil 3:17) — Godly leaders show themselves to be examples of good works. They model Christlikeness. In the teaching, they demonstrate integrity and dignity. The leader must always strive to be an example for the flock in life, love, faith, speech, and purity. It is this man of God who can reiterate the words of Paul to the flock to imitate him in so far as he follows Christ. This leader in the local Church can be examined, scrutinized, and subject to testing and his life will show that it is one worthy of close imitation.

9. An Instructor (2 Tim 1:11; 1 Tim 1:3) — An essential element of a leader in Christ’s church is that the man be an instructor of the Word of God. He must embrace the doctrines of the faith, the biblical gospel, and he must instruct those who are unbelieving, wayward, or apostate. These men must call folks to teach no other doctrine in the local church other than that which is true, biblical, and in accord with all of Scripture. He must teach from God’s Word. He must teach about God’s Word. He must live out God’s Word. He must declare how to instruct his children in the truth of God’s Word. He must show how to shepherd one’s wife in God’s Word. He must commit himself to the relentless task and bottomless well of prayerful study of God’s divine revelation so as to instruct others with it.

10. A Father (1 Thess 2:11) — As Paul dealt with the Thessalonian believers as a father would his own children, so every Godly leader ought to care for the flock of God with this fatherly care, concern, & love. Just as Paul exhorted, encouraged, and charged each one in the flock to live holy lives worthy of God and His election of them, so the leader of the Church must exhort, encourage, and charge every person to know Christ, pursue Christ, cherish Christ, believe in Christ, and walk obediently to Christ. Just as a father lovingly counsels and encourages his son, so this is the mindset of a leader in Christ’s church.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Fight Hard Against Sexual Sin — Especially Pastors & Leaders in the Church!

This is a needed reminder for those of us in full-time pastoral ministry. God's Word demands that we be above-reproach & integrity-filled when it comes to our sexual purity. 

Here are Armstrong’s eight suggested ways that pastors should plan to prevent sexual sin (pp. 174–81):
  1. “Understand the nature of sexual temptation.” “In two areas, traveling and counseling, a pastor must take precautions.” [Cf. Josh Harris on how guys and girls are “wired” differently sexually.]
  2. “Understand the power of the seductive woman.” “The pastor must be especially careful to guard himself when he detects the first mannerisms that indicate a woman may have feelings that are beyond those of a healthy and pure relationship.”
  3. “Guard your mind.” “The pastor must guard his mind by staying away from explicitly erotic material, as well as television programs and images that fuel the fires of lust. . . . Pornography surrounds us, acting as a poison that corrupts healthy sexuality.” [Cf. Joe Tyrpak, "Help for Fighting Lust: A Meditation Plan"; Mike Salvati, "The God of Truth and the Lies of Porn."]
  4. “Cultivate and protect your own marriage.” “This seems to be the plainest meaning of the wisdom given in Proverbs 5:15–23: You must enjoy your wife physically and her alone.”
  5. “Take precautions as you minister.” “The wise pastor cannot be overly careful.” [Cf. Mark Minnick, "Maintaining Moral Purity in the Ministry."]
  6. “Maintain relationships where accountability is real.” “Every pastor needs several relationships where he is mutually accountable for his actions and relationships with others.” [Cf. Phil Gons, Matthew Hoskinson, and Andy Naselli, "Accountability."]
  7. “Cultivate your spiritual, emotional, and physical well-being.” “You must know yourself and take care of your body and soul to remain strong.”
  8. “Consider regularly the consequences of sexual sin.” “What will this sin mean to your wife? Your children? Your congregation? Your closest friends? Your future ministry? We need to do this because the outcome of this particular sin is so deceiving.” [Cf. Randy Alcorn's "purity principle": purity is always smart; impurity is always stupid.]
From: John H. Armstrong. The Stain That Stays: The Church’s Response to the Sexual Misconduct of Its Leaders. Fearn, Scotland: Christian Focus Publications; Reformation and Revival Ministries, 2000.

HT: Andy Naselli

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Lust is Greed; Porn is Greed.

Great lines from Ed Welch:

Sexual "looking", whether we are looking at a real person, a digital one, or an imaginary one, is about greed.

What I “see” is what I want to possess. Porn is not about our vision. It is about our hearts. I am saying, I WANT THAT AS MY OWN, which is exactly what the picture promises. The person in the photograph wants to belong to you and you alone. Sexual "looking", whether we are looking at a real person, a digital one, or an imaginary one, is about greed. I want to accumulate for my own kingdom.

Amen & amen. Ephesians 5:1-5 confirms this.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Resources on the Will of God & Biblical Decision Making

Here are some helpful resources on biblical decision making & the will of God.

Gary Friesen, Decision Making & the Will of God: A Biblical Alternative to the Traditional View.

Colin Hamer. Finding God's Will: Reaffirming the Sufficiency of Scripture.
 
John MacArthur, Found: God's Will, God Wants to Give Your Life Direction & Purpose.

James C. Petty, Guidance: Have I Missed God's Best?

Stuart Scott, A Study of Decision Making God's Way (DMin Dissertation)

M. Blaine Smith, Knowing God's Will: Biblical Principles of Guidance.

Bruce K. Waltke, Finding the Will of God: A Pagan Notion?

The most helpful ones if I had to pick two:
Colin Hamer, Finding God's Will (short & very readable)
Gary Friesen, Decision Making & the Will of God (much longer, thorough, & practical!) 

Friday, May 18, 2012

The Bottom Line of a Christian as a MISSIONARY

This puts it so well:

Rather than waiting for some kind of mystical 'call' from God, every believer should respond to the revealed will of God (in Scripture) by giving serious consideration to becoming a cross-cultural missionary.
The command to "make disciples of all nations" was given to the disciples of Christ and remains in effect even until the end of the age (Matt 28:19-20). For the believer, personal involvement in the cause of world missions is not optional. We don't need a call -- we've already been commissioned. Every single Christian is to be making some contribution to the objective of world evangelization and discipleship.

From Gary Friesen, Decision Making & the Will of God, p.330.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

The role of Scripture in decision making...

Here are some helpful reminders on making biblical decisions.

1. Studying Scripture deepens your consciousness of God.

2. Studying Scripture also brings us into contact with God.

3. Scripture informs us of God's principles.

4. Biblical passages may also confirm a particular decision.

5. The Bible can be an invaluable aid in praying for guidance (Ps 143:8, 10; 51:10-12; 5:8; 19:12-14; 25:4-5, 21; 27:11; 31:3-4; 86:11; 119:5, 10, 35-36, 80, 133, 176; 141:3-4).

From M. Blaine Smith, Knowing God's Will: Biblical Principles of Guidance, 57-59.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Family Worship — A Necessary but Culturally Dead Practice.

Family worship is so 'out of date' that many hear of it and what it may entail and quickly think that you are still living in the 17th century Puritan era.

But I think that the principle of FAMILY WORSHIP ought to be regularly practiced by all Christian households.

John Knox, the Scottish Reformer, wrote:

Dear brethren, if you look for a life to come, of necessity it is that you exercise yourselves in the book of the Lord your God. Let no day slip or want some comfort received from the mouth of God.
Open your ears, and he will speak even pleasant things to your heart. Close not your eyes, but diligently let them behold what portion of substance is left to you within your Father’s testament. Let your tongues learn to praise the gracious goodness of him, whose mere mercy has called you from darkness to life. Neither yet may you do this so quietly that you admit no witness. No, Brethren, you are ordained of God to rule your own houses in his true fear, and according to his word.
Within your houses, I say, in some cases, you are bishops and kings; your wife, children, servants, and family are your bishopric and charge. Of you it shall be required how carefully and diligently you have instructed them in God’s true knowledge, how you have studied to plant virtue in them, and [to] repress vice. And therefore I say, you must make them partakers in reading, exhorting, and in making common prayers, which I would in every house were used once a day at least.
But above all things, dear brethren, study to practice in life that which the Lord commands, and then be you assured that you shall never hear nor read the same without fruit. And this much for the exercises within your homes.

I would call each man to examine himself in his leadership in the home with the following heart-searching questions:

1) Do you feed your own soul daily with the food of God's Word?
2) Do you passionately pursue and tenaciously frequent the secret closet of prayer to God?
3) Do you shepherd your wife & children in the Word of God, the ways of God, prayers to God, and catechism? If so, how?
4) Do you feel confused and unable to perform this spiritual practice?

Let me help by proffering a few suggestions:

Read — Open the Bible with the entire family together and read a portion of it.
Sing — Sing a hymn and teach the family a verse/stanza of solid theology.
Pray — You as the head of the household pray for the family (or, go around and ask each member of the family to pray)
Catechize — Go through a catechism and teach yourself, your spouse, and your children solid theology.

Two essential attitudes in a godly marriage.

In this article I am by no means saying that these are the only two essential attitudes that can make a marriage function. But what I am saying is that with the many commands and attitudes that must be enveloped in a Christian marriage, these two must be evidenced. The two key attitudes that I am referring to are self denial and self-giving. Allow me to deal with each one individually so we may be those who have these essential attitudes in marriage for the honor and glory of God.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Behold the Omniscience of God!

1 Chronicles 28:9    "As for you, my son Solomon, know the God of your father, and serve Him with a whole heart and a willing mind; for the LORD searches all hearts, and understands every intent of the thoughts. If you seek Him, He will let you find Him; but if you forsake Him, He will reject you forever.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Passion Week of Christ Conference with Dr. Doug Bookman UPDATE

For those planning to attend the Passion Week of Christ conference with Dr. Doug Bookman, the first session has been CANCELLED for tonight only due to a flight delay.

We will begin the conference TOMORROW, May 1st, at 6:30pm at Christ Fellowship & then resume as planned.

The *REVISED* schedule —

Tuesday, May 1        
6:30-7:30pm    Session 1
7:45-8:45pm    Session 2
Wednesday, May 2    
6:30-7:30pm    Session 3
7:45-8:45pm    Session 4

Location:
2501 Rockford Ave.
St Louis, MO 63144 (map here)

More info at the CFBC website.

Friday, April 27, 2012

2012 — What Will Happen in the End Times? A Biblical Perspective

If you're in the St Louis area, join us tonight at 7pm as we examine the issue of 2012 — WHAT WILL HAPPEN IN THE END TIMES? A BIBLICAL PERSPECTIVE.

When: Friday, April 27th at 7pm
Where:
5182 Golf Ridge Lane
St. Louis, MO 63128
What: A lecture & discussion on what the Bible teaches about the end of the world.

See you there!

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

What do you do with sexual immorality in the local church?

When the apostle Paul heard that there was immorality in the Corinthian church, he was shocked. The brand of immorality was of such a kind that the sensibilities of the pagan world would even be offended—"a man has his father's wife". But his amazement was mostly because the church tolerated it as a badge of honor. The church had so distorted the meaning of love that it was proud of its acceptance of such persons. "And you are arrogant. Ought you not rather to mourn?" exclaimed Paul.

This revealing episode in early church history, found in 1 Corinthians 5, could not be more relevant.
As Paul said, "Your boasting is not good." The idea that some associations of professing Christians actually lead out in the fight for same-sex unions, homosexuality in the priesthood, and other practices mitigating against sexual purity and the bond of marriage, would certainly evoke Paul's righteous indignation if he were alive today.

The church is not a volunteer club made up of people of any persuasion or behavior, an amorphous entity, accepting anyone who wishes to join in the fun and excitement. It is a serious society with boundaries. It is for those who have been given life from God, have confessed that change openly through baptism, and are committed to walking in obedience and repentance all the days of their lives. It is a union full of love, but not mere sentimentality. It is a love that demands holiness. (2 Tim. 1:9; Gal. 5:13; Rom. 6:1)

Paul lists some of the boundaries of a Christian fellowship in this passage. Among those the church should remove and "not associate with" are ". . . anyone who bears the name of brother [that is, a 'so-called brother'], who is guilty of sexually immorality, or greed, or is an idolater, reviler, drunkard, or swindler . . ."

So what should we do when we find immorality in the church? There really cannot be any mistaking the answer:
  • "Let him who has done this thing be removed from among you."
  • "you are to deliver this man to Satan [that is, by removing him you are to leave him in the world and under Satan's control]"
  • "Cleanse out the old leaven."
  • "I am writing to you not to associate with anyone . . . who is guilty of sexual immorality, greed," etc.
  • "[you are] . . . not even to eat with such a one."
  • "Purge the evil person from among you."
In the case of such notorious sins as immorality, church discipline is to be done quickly and decisively. Why?

"Do you not know that a little leaven leavens the whole lump?" is the explanation. The longer leaven (yeast) remains in a lump of dough, the more it spreads. Paul uses the Old Testament Passover feast to make his point. At that feast all leaven was to be taken out of the home since it was a symbol for sin. Paul says that the Passover Lamb has been slain (that is, Christ has been crucified). We as the church should "celebrate the feast" (that is, live out our lives to the full in Christ) without the old leaven of evil.

Paul passionately argues for the purity of the church. On the one hand we discipline because it is the best for the individual. It is really the only loving thing to do. To allow a church member to continue in sin is like allowing a child to abuse himself and his siblings without correction. But on the other hand, we discipline because God has called the church to purity.

When a chicken becomes rotten and maggot-infested, are you able to make it better by putting a fresh chicken in the same bag with it? Of course not. The infested and rotten always spoils the fresh, not the other way around. As Paul wrote in the same letter, "evil company corrupts good morals."

Have you fallen for this old Corinthian problem of boasting in indiscriminate toleration?

One pastor said, "I could never lead our church to discipline its members. There are so many immoral people among us at present that it would cause a huge conflict."

This mindset is precisely the reason why so many churches are ineffective in changing the culture and in bringing people into a lifestyle that is radically different.

From: Jim Elliff, What Do You Do With Immorality?

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Passion Week of Christ with Dr Doug Bookman

Christ Fellowship Bible Church is excited to host Dr. Doug Bookman for a conference on the Passion Week of Christ.

Here is the conference information:
Theme:
“Behold, the Lamb of God!” A Detailed and Devotional Study of the Passion Week of Jesus Christ

Schedule:

Monday, April 30    
7:30-8:30pm    Session 1
Tuesday, May 1        
6:30-7:30pm    Session 2
7:45-8:45pm    Session 3
Wednesday, May 2    
6:30-7:30pm    Session 4
7:45-8:45pm    Session 5

Location:
2501 Rockford Ave.
St Louis, MO 63144 (map here)

Info:
No cost; no sign ups; just come & enjoy a conference on the Passion Week of Christ if your schedule allows!

Questions:
Contact us at CFBC for more information!

The Challenge to Pray

Be exhorted and challenged to more fervent & frequent prayer in preparation for heaven's praises.

JC Ryle writes:
We must pray on earth, or we shall never praise in heaven. We must go through the school of prayer, or we shall never be fit for the holiday of praise. In short, to be prayerless is to be without God -- without Christ -- without grace -- without hope -- and without heaven. It is to be in the road to hell.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

The assured efficacy of the preached Word

What does God’s Word accomplish when it is preached?

1. It  converts  the  sinner  so  that  God’s  glory  is  supremely  manifested  in  his/her  salvation.
2. It  encourages  the  regenerate  to  grow  in  their  faith.
3. It  equips  the  saved  to  evangelize,  walk  in  holiness,  and  grow  in  sanctification.
4. It  reminds  believers  of  the  sovereignty  of  God  and  the  salvation  He  has  given.
5. It  confronts  believers  living  in  sin  to  repent,  change,  and  begin  to  walk  in  newness  of   life.
6. It  comes  across  as  foolishness  to  the  unredeemed  sinner  who  walks  away  from  the   gospel  unchanged.
7. It  further  hardens  the  reprobate  so  that  God’s  glory  is  supremely  manifested  in  his/her   judgment.
8. It  takes  the  hardened  sinner  to  the  point  where  he  is  “beyond  redemption”  and  is  an   apostate.

The  point  is  this:  the  preacher  doesn’t  know  what  God  is  sovereignly  doing  with  each  person   in  the  audience  at  that  particular  time.  But  one  thing  is  for  certain:  God  is  working  and  His   Word  never  returns  void.

Isaiah 55:11 — So will My word be which goes forth from My mouth; It will not return to Me empty, Without accomplishing what I desire, And without succeeding in the matter for which I sent it.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

The Preacher's Fellowship — CFBC

Here is one of the ways that we at Christ Fellowship Bible Church endeavor to equip, teach, and see men that God has gifted and called to teach & preach in various capacities.

It is called THE PREACHER'S FELLOWSHIP. There are men at CFBC that know God's Word, have been in pastoral ministry, desire to be in pastoral ministry, or have a heart for being a Godly leader. And one such element that that Scripture brings out is a leader should be equipped to teach God's Word. One way that this can evidence itself is through THE PREACHING of God's Word.

We plan to meet every other Saturday morning from about 8-9:30am at the church for a time of teaching, preaching, critiquing, and dialogue.

PURPOSE? This is to help you understand what is involved in preaching, how to prepare a sermon, and how to improve at the preaching of God's Word so that we can grow in our ability to teach & preach God's truth to God's people (2 Tim 4:2 - "preach ... be ready in season & out of season"). America & the Church needs more POWERFUL, FIERY, URGENT, BIBLICAL, and ENGAGING preachers!

FOR WHOM? This Preacher's Fellowship is for any man who aspires to know how to preach God's Word, construct a sermon, & actually preach & receive helpful encouragement & critique.

WHEN? The Preacher's Fellowship would meet every other Saturday morning from 8-9:30am (or earlier if you wish) so we are done & you can get home to be with your families for the day.

TYPICAL FORMAT:
8:00-8:20am    TEACHING on sermon prep, delivery, construction, etc.
8:20-8:40am    SERMON #1
8:40-9:00am    SERMON #2
9:00-9:30am    CRITIQUE & FEEDBACK on the two sermons that were preached.

WHAT IS REQUIRED? You would have the opportunity to prepare & preach a 20 minute sermon before the men (depending on how many men commit to this, you'd probably preach once a month). The benefits: you would be IN God's Word during the week, studying a given text, working through an outline, the intro, the conclusion, application, illustrations, etc. Then you would deliver it & we as your brothers would encourage you in what you did well & provide constructive criticism of the sermon as well.

Follow us on Twitter as we post frequent updates about the Preacher's Fellowship!

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Guard against hypocrisy!

Jesus confronted the religious leaders of the day and called them hypocrites (ὑποκριταί) because they offered lip service to God but by their actions they showed that their hearts were far from Him. Jesus said:

Matthew 15:7-9   7 "You hypocrites (ὑποκριταί), rightly did Isaiah prophesy of you:  8 'THIS PEOPLE HONORS ME WITH THEIR LIPS, BUT THEIR HEART IS FAR AWAY FROM ME.  9 'BUT IN VAIN DO THEY WORSHIP ME, TEACHING AS DOCTRINES THE PRECEPTS OF MEN.'"

JC Ryle puts it so well:
I do not deny that there are many hypocrites in religion. There always were, and there always will be, as long as the world stands. As long as there is good gold and silver coin in the realm, so long there will be forging, coining, and counterfeit money. The very existence of bad coins is an indirect proof that there is something which it is worth while to imitate, and that there is such a thing as good current money in circulation. It is just the same with Christianity! The very fact that there are many false professors in the churches is an indirect proof that there are such people as true-hearted and sound believers. It is one of Satan’s favorite devices, in order to bring discredit on Christianity, to persuade some unhappy people to profess what they do not really believe. He tries to damage the cause of our Lord Jesus Christ in the world by sending out wolves in sheep’s clothing, and by raising up men and women who talk the language of Canaan, and wear the coat of God’s children, while they are inwardly rotten at heart.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Easter Sunday at CFBC



Here are the songs that we plan to sing this Easter Sunday as we worship the Lord together at Tilles Park in St. Louis. Come join us at 10:00am! For more info, check out Christ Fellowship Bible Church's website.

1. Come, Christians join to sing

2. Come people of the risen King

3. O Church arise

4. In Christ alone

5. Mighty to save

Click on the links & listen. Prepare your hearts! See you there!