CCOG Newsletter
Weekly Updates
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Reflections from Pastor Jennifer
As we complete our look at the 7 churches of Asia Minor, we can reflect upon the lessons from each one. From Ephesus: return to your first love and your first works for Christ. From Smyrna: you are who God says you are. From Pergamos: God has a new identity in store for you. From Thyatira: God offers repentance to all. From Sardis: keep watch and strengthen what remains. From Philadelphia: there are doors of opportunity that God has prepared for our benefit. From Laodicea: God identifies with us and feels kinship with us. We must hear and respond to what the Spirit is saying to us through each of the churches.
OCC
November is our last collection month for our shoeboxes. Please bring a pair or pack of socks, a shoebox, or money for shipping to finish up our year. Boxing Day will be Wednesday, November 15.
November Focus
Our focus for the month of November is rest and solitude. We are entering a stressful and fast-paced season. Take time to rest with a good book. Books will be wrapped with a short description attached. Please only take one bag at a time, and return promptly when you finish for others who might enjoy the book too!
Thanks Day
Thanks Day is Sunday, November 19. Begin now inviting every person for whom you are thankful. We will have a special service followed by a delicious meal. Everyone reading this announcement is invited to join us!
Laodicea: A Church Needing to Regain Effectiveness
Do you drink your coffee hot or cold? My guess is you don’t drink your coffee at room temperature. That’s the worst. It’s right up there with click bait and long voice mails. Most prefer their joe icy cold or near boiling hot…the same way God prefers His people.
In Revelation 3:15–16, Jesus indicts the Laodicean church for being “lukewarm” (chliaros). The best way to describe what “lukewarm” means is to describe what it doesn’t mean: cold or hot. “Cold” (psychros) often refers to “freezing” and “hot” (zestos) often refers to “boiling.” Used together, they present the idea of being extreme. To be effective for the kingdom, we have to be extreme about the kingdom. Being lukewarm means uninvolved and passive. This attitude made the Laodicean church useless, like tepid coffee.
The Laodiceans would have understood that Jesus was calling them ineffective when He said they were neither cold nor hot, but lukewarm. Jesus was alluding to both their faith and their water system. Although wealthy, Laodicea had an awful water supply. Their neighbors fared differently. Just ten miles southwest of Laodicea was Colossae, which had an abundant supply of cold water that was sweet to drink. Six miles north of Laodicea was Hierapolis, which had hot springs that provided sizzling water that was used for medicinal purposes and healing. Laodicea would pipe water in from around these regions. By the time the water got there, it was neither cold like the water of Colossae, nor hot like the water of Hierapolis. It couldn’t heal and it was repulsive to drink. Laodicea had become like its own water supply: stagnant, lukewarm, and good for nothing. They were no longer a place where people came to be healed and refreshed. They were a dispassionate, comfy social club of wealthy individuals who had no positive effect on the kingdom of God.
It’s important for to remember the Laodicean church when we are tempted to trade being extreme for Christ for an easy Christianity…if that even exists. It’s true many of us live in plentiful societies where life is more comfortable, but that comfort should never become a threat to the extremes we will go to in order to serve God. The kingdom of God should always remain our number one priority, even if we have to sacrifice our comforts.
Today, don’t let your success thaw you out and don’t let your comfort slow your simmer. Stay extreme for the Lord. It may not always be fun, but it sure beats the taste of lukewarm.