CCOG Newsletter
Weekly Updates
Follow our Instagram @churchofgodcornelius and our FB @corneliuschurchofgod
Reflections from Pastor Jennifer
The season is changing quickly. It seems like just a week ago we were talking about how hot it was. Now the leaves in our neighborhood are beginning to become colorful and fall off. That, of course means raking leaf piles (and jumping into leaf piles!), and hoping that the wind doesn't ruin your efforts. Soon we will be bundled up in coats, hats, and mittens.
Each season brings with it blessings and aggravations. Pollen and rain attacks in the springtime. Yet the April showers bring May flowers. The summer is hot and humid, but it is a time for fireworks, cookouts, and visits to the beach. Fall includes raking leaves, week after week - working hard bagging or mulching or burning them. It is also bonfires and football games and Thanksgiving! Winter brings with it icy roads, and bitter chill. But what about the joys of a fireplace and Christmas lights?
Each season in our lives will bring pain or aggravation, but there is also potential for great joy! The changing of the seasons is a reminder that God did not bring us this far to leave us. Choose to change your perspective today.
OCC
Thanks Day!
This is your personal invitation to join us on Sunday, November 19th for Thanks Day! We will have a great service followed by a great time of food and fellowship. Start now inviting those for whom you are thankful. Also, plan to attend the LKN Community Thanksgiving service later that night. It will be at 6pm at the Cain Center.
November Focus: Rest & Solitude
One of the ways that we will enjoy a time of rest is having a blind date with a book. In November, there will be books available for all genders, ages, and interests. Pick a book (without judging its cover), and spend some alone time during a potentially stressful season.
Philadelphia: A Church Needing Peace
Today, more than ever, society is looking to itself for peace and inner security. We’ve put a man on the moon, flown planes at Mach 6, and grown body parts in petri dishes, but we’ve yet to engineer a way to satisfy the yearning of our hearts for fulfillment and well-being.
Achieving our highest ambitions can never satisfy the deep longings we have inside. Peace and security come only from having a relationship with God and being in His presence.
Jesus tells this to the church of Philadelphia in Revelation 3:12. Despite their trials and circumstances, God promises them a future of peace and security that would come from continually being in His presence. Jesus illustrates this by comparing them to “a pillar in the temple of my God.” The Greek word for “pillar” (stylos) refers to an extremely strong supporting beam. Because they are so hard to move, columns represented security—in this case, security in the presence of God.
Because their Philadelphian lives lacked security, this illustration would have made a lot of sense. Philadelphia was located in the Lydian valley, where earthquakes were abundant. In 17 A.D., the city was devastated by one of the most powerful earthquakes up to that point in human history. The damage was substantial. Tremors went on for years. These shocks made most of Philadelphia’s citizens paranoid and ruined their sense of peace. They were always on edge, waiting for the next quake to destroy their buildings and homes. It wasn’t unusual for people in Philadelphia to cower in fear and bolt from the city into open spaces when they felt shaking.
Yet, God was assuring the Philadelphian believers that their peace did not come from this world. True peace comes from having a permanent fixture next to God. The whole city could be crumbling, but as long as the Philadelphians had their position near the throne, nothing could cause their peace to crumble.
It’s important to remember that your peace and security will never be found in this world. Peace is supernatural, and it is found in God. Lay down every relationship that you are looking to for acceptance, put away habits that you are using to provide satisfaction, and get away from vain imaginings that you hope will somehow bring fulfilment. Instead, seek the presence of God. You’ll be at peace standing on that which can’t be demolished.