Category Archives: News

Women’s Revival Painting Event Success

Twenty five ladies gathered as part of Women’s Revival last month to create these cool customized wood creations! A good time of fellowship and bonding was had by all.

Women’s Revival is an opportunity for adult women to come together twice a month (1st and 3rd Thursdays) from 6-8p, for fellowship and fun, and to be able to grow in your walk with Lord. Each night features a blend of devotions, discussion and an activity. There is also be programming for participant’s children (3yrs-5th grade) available.  Interested in trying out Women’s Revival? Register online.

Ash Wednesday 2019

Join us for Ash Wednesday at Cedar Hills –Wednesday, March 6th. A meal will be served prior to the service 5:15-6:15pm, with a short reflective worship service at 6:30pm.

The beauty of Ash Wednesday is receiving the ashes on the forehead and acknowledging that we were made by our Creator out of the dust, and to the dust we will return.  Come prepared to receive ashes at this worship service.  For adults and children alike!

We continue to meet midweek on Wednesday nights for the season of Lent until Maundy Thursday when we will gather on Thursday instead (April 18).  It helps us prepare if you can kindly RSVP to the meal by letting the office know how many to expect. More about Midweek Services

These services are for everyone, whether you call Cedar Hills your church home or not.

Consistory News – March 2019

 

We started our meeting sharing in the grief of losing our friend and teammate, Paul. We prayed together.

Our agenda included:

Approved moving forward to seek candidates to fill the Congregational and Staff Coordinator position. The focus of this position is development of missional community and communication of our mission and vision. We pray that this position will accelerate missional community growth by supporting our strategic focus on disciple-making. Two key goals:

1. Get congregation members heading toward small groups.
2. Having a leader ready to lead each small group.

We reviewed building needs and agreed to move forward on developing a campaign to fund needed improvements that range from updated Audio system to flooring replacement to a new roof to potential HVAC repair to new sidewalks as required by the city. We approve forming a planning team.

We approved hosting the Global Leadership Summit in August. A team of leaders has already been established to offer this event as a way to transform the corridor by helping leaders in our community. Everybody wins
when leaders get better.

We discussed the transition at Noah’s Ark. Leslie will retire at the end of this school year and a team has been formed to find a replacement director to lead Noah’s Ark into the future as a viable ministry to our  community.

Children & Family Ministry March 2019

For March, the Family and Children’s Ministry will be focusing on the concept of creativity! We will be looking at everything that is all around us to see how beautiful and wonderful God’s creation is. He is the ultimate Creator who has made everything all around us, from absolutely nothing. Remarkably by design, God has created mankind to be special in the ways in which we are able to create, and the cognitive abilities to be able to process remarkable amounts of information and feelings.

So, no matter if we are a gifted musician or a math whiz, we have all been given the ability to create! Not only are humans able to create, we have been given a purpose by God to do so. It is not by mistake that you desire to create, you have been given everything by God through His careful and thoughtful design.

Kyle French
Director of Family and Children’s Ministry

Bible Memory Songs (They Ain’t Just for Kids)

Bible Memory Songs (They Ain’t Just for Kids!)

If you grew up attending a church and Sunday School, most likely your childhood included lots of fun and silly songs on various biblical themes.
Many of these were Scripture verses, whether you knew it or not! But then something happened— and suddenly silly Bible songs weren’t cool anymore. As teenagers and adults, we moved on to more sophisticated things, songs, hymns, and the memorization of Scripture is something very few of us do. And if we do, it’s not usually in the form of silly songs. We have to repeat it out loud, over and over, and do it the “grown up” way. This works for some… this sounds like a chore to the rest of us.

That was me until about six months ago when my oldest child started Kindergarten. Part of the curriculum is memorizing a verse every week that corresponds with the alphabet. Being the cool worship-leading-mom that I am, we starting singing the verses at home for fun. This led down a path of setting the entire alphabet of Scripture to
music and turning it into a full album.

And you know what? It was EASY to remember Scripture! So easy, that I’m convinced these silly songs should not be reserved for kids—these are for all of us. So I talked to our Family & Children Ministry staff and put together a plan to write songs for our Cedar Hills kids to memorize their Scripture, too. We’ve occasionally added these to our worship service—have you noticed??

I can proudly say I’m up to 30 verses memorized because of these silly songs. That’s 30 more verses than I’ve memorized in my entire adulthood.
Ready to learn your Scripture passages to heart? Click to listen to the ABC Bible Verse album.

Leah
Director of Worship & Media

Noah’s Ark – March Update

March 2019 Update

I’ve had a feeling lately… You know, that feeling when the same things look different to you? I feel a change a comin’! I’ve prayed a lot about this and have decided I need to change my focus and say goodbye to Noah’s Ark.

I started in 2003 as a sub, and the next year became an assistant in the classroom. In the spring, I was hired as the Director. I never would have
guessed this path for myself, but what a blessing this journey has been! God has a funny way of leading you where you need to be. The best part has
been the connections. I’m talking about LOVE connections! I have loved so many kiddos, so many families, and of course my teachers and church
staff. What a gift I have been given to lead this ministry! I know God is working on someone who might not even know Noah’s Ark will be in their future.

February was full of fun activities! Everyone learned about what happens to your letter after you put it in the mailbox. We all enjoyed giving and receiving valentines!

Our testing is complete and evaluations sent for our 4– and 5-year-olds. The 3-year-old classes had fun learning about snowmen, dinosaurs, and creation. Second report cards for our younger classes will be sent out before Spring Break.

2019-2020 registration: If you know someone who would like information, have them contact us at 396-3125 or office@noahsarkcr.org. Classes meet: 9-11:30 AM.

Spring Break will be March 18-22.

Mark your calendars for March 11 to donate blood! Mississippi Valley Blood Center will come here and set up in the Gathering Space. Your time from check-in to check-out is less than an hour. Please sign up to donate; our area is in desperate need. Contact me to sign up!

In Christ,
Leslie Clauson
Director of Noah’s Ark Preschool

Lenten Worship Services

“I know your deeds, your hard work and your perseverance. I know that you cannot tolerate wicked people,
that you have tested those who claim to be apostles but are not, and have found them false. You have persevered and have endured hardships for my name, and have not grown weary. Yet I hold this against you: You have forsaken the love you had at first.” ~ Revelation 2:2-4

Sundays in Lent

Lent is the season of 40 days that lead up to Easter. This Lenten Season we will focus on falling in love with Jesus again. Each Sunday, we will look at one part of the passion narrative—that is the story of Jesus’ final days—to discover (or rediscover) why we love Jesus so much!

Wednesdays in Lent

To help us fall in love with Jesus, we will meet midweek during Lent to focus on Jesus “I Am” statements. These statements reveal why Jesus came and how much Jesus loves us.  These nights together are about an hour long, beginning with a meal and followed by a 30-minute reflective worship service. Meal serving from 5:15-6:15 PM, Lenten Service 6:30– 7 PM

2019 Lenten Service Schedule

Wed., Mar 6: Jesus: The Bread of Life (Ash Wednesday)
Wed., Mar 13: Jesus: the Light of the World.
Wed., Mar 20: Jesus: The Good Shepherd.
Wed., Mar 27: Jesus: The Resurrection and the Life.
Wed., Apr 3: Jesus: The Way, Truth, and Life.
Wed., Apr 10: Jesus: The True Vine.
Thurs,. Apr 18: Jesus: The Lamb of God (Maundy Thursday)
Sun., Apr 21: Easter services at 8:30, 9:45 and 11:00am.

To help us plan accordingly for the meals, if possible, please RSVP each week on your Sunday bulletin tear-off or by contacting the office (396-6608) and letting us know you will be dining with us.

LEAD Conference

Want to learn how to develop a culture of service and intentionality within your family? Well we can help, join us for the LEAD Conference on March 15, from 6-8pm (Childcare will be provided). We will hear from speakers who live and work with some of the most impoverished and voiceless.

If we are honest with ourselves, it can be difficult to develop a culture in our families of being intentional about the gospel and being a willing servant of the Lord. Especially when the “needs” of the world seem to be so daunting, where do we begin? Is a transformation even possible? Well we might have an idea of where to begin and what it could look like. We hope you’ll be able to join us at Cedar Hills Community Church to participate in the discussion!

View the Facebook event.

Jesus, the Woman, and the Pharisee

Jesus, the Woman and the Pharisee
by Alan Crandall, Pastor of Care

“Now one of the Pharisees invited Jesus to have dinner with him . . . .  When a woman who had lived a sinful life in that town learned that was Jesus eating at the Pharisee’s house, she brought an alabaster jar of perfume, and as she stood behind him at his feet weeping, she began to wet his feet with her tears.  Then she wiped them with her hair, kissed them and poured perfume on them” (Luke 7:36-50).

Here’s a woman with a crumpled heart, and a Savior with a heart of mercy.  Here’s a woman scorned by judgmental moralizers, but valued by Jesus.  Here’s a disreputable, tainted woman who crashes an exclusive banquet for the upright, and Jesus honors her for it.  She’s already fallen in love with the Galilean rabbi who unconditionally accepts shunned ones like her.  Now she falls at the Savior’s dusty feet, and drenches them with tears of gratitude.

To fix an awkward situation she lets down her hair to dry those feet and anoints them with expensive perfume.  Jesus tolerates her impulsive act, and the disgusted host condemns both Jesus and the woman.  The  Pharisee mutters, “Doesn’t he know what kind of woman is touching him?”  Meanwhile, a sweet fragrance fills the room, permeating the senses of all those gathered around Simon’s table.  Jesus tells his shocked companions that Mary loves much because she was forgiven much.  Nobody, then or now, can miss the magnitude of her love for Jesus.

We have reason to think the forgiven woman is Mary Magdalene, who went on to join Jesus’ band of followers.  She gave her time and treasure for God’s kingdom.  Along with Jesus’ mother, this Mary was keeping watch near the cross when he died.  She was the first to know Christ’s tomb was empty, the first to hear the risen One speak, the first to bear witness to his resurrection.

In this story, I identify with Simon the sanctimonious Pharisee.  By nature, I’m conservative.  I wear socks with my sandals and avoid bright colors.  I’m in bed by ten and don’t like spending money.  I steer clear of wild parties and people with questionable lifestyles.  I have a four-drawer cabinet full of alphabetized theology notes to keep myself on the straight and narrow.  I love boundaries.

Jesus is my friend, but he’s a problem for me.  I mean the way he surrounds himself with cripples, misfits and scoundrels.  People like Simon and me are restrained by common sense, but Jesus’s generosity goes to extremes.  I’m cautious with my time, Jesus is extravagant.  I keep a lid on love, he’s over the top.  Simon and I believe in God’s grace, but Jesus goes overboard.  Like a tsunami, his grace overruns all boundaries.  He’s crazy.  It’s love on steroids, and it makes me nervous.

Jesus’s compassion for lost ones is extravagant because he was sent by a God who passionately wills to heal every part of his broken creation.  The God of Jesus is a Niagra Falls of inexhaustible mercy.  He channels God’s irresistible love to everyone—rich/poor, Jew/Gentile, religious/irreligious, lovely/obnoxious, hero/schmuck, Simon the Pharisee and Mary the adulteress.  Jesus is on a mission for God, backed by omnipotent Power that sooner or later reaches everywhere and penetrates everything.

This is clearly a story of three extremes: 1) the immensity of God’s grace to this woman, 2) the woman’s extravagant response, and 3) the explosive  mission that resulted from this alchemy of grace and love.  For short, let’s call these extremes Hyper-Grace, Hyper-Love, and Hyper-Mission (or H3).

The word hyper means “over” or “above” as in hyperactive or hypersonic.  In the Bible it us used to describe the incomprensible greatness of God’s grace.  The church is where Hyper-Grace (the experience of salvation) and Hyper-Love (the experience of Christian community) propel God’s people into Hyper-Mission (the experience of being God’s agents to transform everything).

Saul of Tarsus was once the sort of Pharisee who could line up with Simon in condemning a sinful woman.  He was the strictest of the strict.  His boundaries were tight.  He was certain that Jesus was preaching heresy by granting divine mercy outside the Jewish law and temple regime.  But one day while Saul was righteously persecuting the followers of an obviously “fake” messiah, Jesus himself appeared on the road and overwhelmed Saul’s stubborn unbelief.

Saul had always believed that God is gracious, for God’s loving-kindness is a theme found throughout the Torah.  But for Saul, grace had to be “balanced” with Torah observance.  The kind of grace Jesus offered, grace without works, grace without boundaries, seemed utterly insane to this pious Pharisee.  Until, in a flash Saul realized that his supposed righteousness was like filthy rags, that his prideful goodness was the blackest evil.  The very Torah that was supposed to reconcile him to God had made him the chief of sinners.  Christ must save this wretched Pharisee by grace apart from law, by grace alone.

After that, Saul, re-named Paul, became a missionary to the far reaches of the Roman Empire and developed a special vocabulary to describe Christ’s redeeming work.  He calls it “hyper-grace.”  In science fiction, hyperspace is a faster-than-light, insanely fast, method of time travel.  English Bibles translate “hyper” as “super-abundant,” “overflowing,” “incomparable,” and “immeasurable.”  And this is not science fiction.

In Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, we hear him praying that people will be enlightened to know “the immeasurable (hyper-abundant) greatness of his power toward us who believe according to the working of his great might . . . ” (1:19).  He exults that God raised us up with Christ “so that in the coming ages he might show the immeasurable (hyper-abundant) riches of his grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus.  For by grace you have been saved through faith.  And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God” (2:7).  He wants us to comprehend “what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ that surpasses (hyper) knowledge . . . . who is able to do immeasurably (hyper) more than all that we ask or think, according to his power that is at work within us. . . .” (3:20-21; cf. Rom. 5:20-21).

Like the sinful woman, Paul recounts how he was once a hyper-blasphemer and persecutor of Christ’s followers, “but I received mercy . . . and the grace of our Lord (hyper) overflowed for me . . . .  The saying is trustworthy . . . that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am the foremost” (1 Tim. 1:13-14).  For Paul, Jesus is the hyper-gracious Savior of hyper-sinners.

Too often, like Simon and Saul, we have a shrunken view of God’s grace.  Although we felt overwhelmed by God’s mercy when we first became Christians, we’re doing quite nicely with our religion now, thank you very much, and we don’t need grace anymore.  Consequently, our love for God is micro instead of hyper. Everything in moderation!  We love little, because we are forgiven little.  Our teensy-weensy sense of need for God generates micro-giving and micro-mission.

But we don’t need to despair.  Jesus intends to transform all the big sinners like us.  He did this for Simon by showing him how far his micro-love was from the mega-love of God.  Then he, too, could repent of filthy self-righteousness and join Jesus’s community of unconditional grace.  Simon couldn’t avoid the irresistible odor of love that filled the dining room that day.  We have reason to believe he became part of Christ’s reconciling kingdom (that’s why his name is memorialized in Scripture).

I’m hoping we’ll all be swept along by God’s infinite grace in a community of crazy love that transforms our world into an unbelievable new creation.  Let’s be extreme!   Maybe if we trust Jesus to make us H3 Christians, “they’ll know we are (hyper) Christians by our (hyper) love.”

Untitled Poem

May you be a clown and a fool
in all that you give to the world.
May you love unreasonably,
wastefully and unjustifiably.
Let there be whimsy and improvisation in the grace of your gifts–
spontaneous, joyful, laughable and unpredictable.
Love weirdly in ways that surprise and subvert.
Stand before the calculus of this world
and be accounted a shock and an embarrassment,
the circus of your life a scandal among those with proper, tamer tastes.
May your love be wrong in all the ways that are right.

–Richard Beck,
ExperimentalTheology.blogspot.com