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Big Changes in Mesa Ministries!

East Valley Bible Church is flexing in Mesa! Here are the big pieces of news…

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MESA AREA MINISTRIES: John Bell, who has been the Area Pastor for Tempe and Phoenix, is adding the city of Mesa to his already long list of duties. He does this joyfully, however, especially because he himself is a long-time Mesa resident. As Area pastor, John will be working with Area leadership, overseeing Home Group Shepherds, and putting together Area-wide events which will include fellowship opportunities, baptisms and child dedications. Mesa is blessed to have John and his wife Leslie serving us in this way. For more information about Mesa Area Ministries, contact John Bell (johnbell@evbc.org), or the Mesa administrative assistant, Ellen Marrs (ellenmarrs@evbc.org).

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Church Planting – CHRISTCHURCH: A new church is emerging in East Mesa! Under the leadership of Bill Hartley, a growing group of men, women and children are gathering to pray, study the scriptures, and develop strategic plans to launch Christchurch this fall. No official location has been established yet for the church, but the target area is east of the 202 loop freeway, near US 60. Interested in knowing more? Visit their website at ChristchurchMesa.org.

85204: Did you know that the entire congregation of EVBC is going to be investing in Mesa? For a number of reasons, EVBC leadership has determined that the 85204 zip code, a blighted portion of Mesa just 3 miles north of our Gilbert campus, will be the focus of our church-wide community efforts. We currently have a team developing a strategic plan that will guide our community engagement there for a number of years. This plan will be shared with all of you as it gets developed, and your interest and participation will be vital to its success. Do you want to be involved? Contact Tyler Johnson and his administrative assistant, Danielle Bannister, to find out how. DanielleBannister@evbc.org.

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Mesa…Let’s Celebrate the 12 Days of Christmas!

Well, we’ve finally made it to the 12th Day of Christmas. A great time was had last night at the O’Brien’s, and tonight we have our finale at the Long’s. Haven’t been to one yet? Why not come and join us!

12th Day: Monday, January 5th, 6:30-8:30p – The home of Matt & Danielle Long, 5555 E. Dolphin Ave. (Higley and Southern) * dlonghomes@gmail.com

Two families have been to 9 of the 10 open houses! We’ll find out tonight who wins the prize for attending the most.

We hope that the celebration of the 12 Days of Christmas has been a fulfilling expression of your heart for God in gratitude for the sending of His Son. Even 12 Days of parties doesn’t seem like enough! As you finally put away the trees, the lights and the garlands, know that you don’t have to put away the most important thing…your love for Christ! That’s year-’round, and we’ll keep that celebration going strong into the months ahead.

God’s best to you,

Bill

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Happy Holidays, Mesa Area!

Thank you for checking into the Mesa Area blog. Between now and January, please head over to our Advent blog at:

evbcadvent.wordpress.com

See you there!

Bill

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Protestants…and the Rosary?

I got an interesting email this week, and thought I’d answer it via blog, since it might be of interest to others of you as well.

A brother writes, “Lately I’ve been tossing around the idea of wearing a rosary as a tangible aid in meditative prayer. Obviously I’d change the prayers up a little bit, but I was wondering what you thought about that. Where did the concept of the rosary come from? Is it merely a religious external or do you think there’s a little validity to it? Just wondering…”

First, a bit about the Rosary, for those not familiar with it. This, from catholic.com: “The word rosary comes from Latin and means a garland of roses, the rose being one of the flowers used to symbolize the Virgin Mary…in recent years the rosary has made a comeback, and not just among Catholics. Many Protestants now say the rosary, recognizing it as a truly biblical form of prayer—after all, the prayers that comprise it come mainly from the Bible.”

Though I am not personally aware of this increase in protestant usage of the rosary, it actually makes some sense. Many in our day are longing and looking for some connections to the heritage of Christianity – something more formal, more structured. As a result, many liturgical elements are making a comeback (check out the candles at Sunday Six at EVBC, for example).

So what about this rosary thing? The practice of praying the rosary involves using beads, usually about the size of a necklace, with each bead being a cue to recite a specific prayer. Here are the prayers involved:

Opening: The Apostles’ Creed: “I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Creator of heaven and earth, and in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord, who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried. He descended into hell. The third day he arose again from the dead. He ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father. From thence he shall come to judge the living and the dead. I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy Catholic Church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting. Amen.”

The Lord’s Prayer (1), or the The “Our Father”: “Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us today our daily bread. Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.”

The Hail Mary (3): “Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee. Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death. Amen.”

The Glory Be or Gloria Patri (1): “Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit. As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.”

Closing: The Hail Holy Queen: “Hail holy Queen, Mother of mercy, our life, our sweetness, and our hope! To thee do we cry, poor banished children of Eve. To thee do we send up our sighs, mourning and weeping in this vale of tears. Turn, then, most gracious advocate, thine eyes of mercy toward us, and after this our exile show unto us the blessed fruit of thy womb, Jesus. O clement, O loving, O sweet Virgin Mary.”

THE GOOD: I love the Apostle’s Creed…I think the modern church should recite this regularly. I also (of course) love the Lord’s Prayer. The Gloria Patri is beautiful, too. So, I think a regular diet of these is a great thing. I’m also a fan of finding tangible disciplinary devices to aid us in our prayers. We protestants/evangelicals often pooh-pooh such things as overly formal or traditional. Rather, we just leave it to ourselves to improvise our prayers every time we bow our heads. Personally, I would do better praying what I should pray instead of praying whatever I feel like praying. Rich prayers from scripture, and from our heritage, can provide a rich foundation for our entire prayer experience.

THE BAD: One might argue that the recitation of the first half of the Hail Mary is simply a quotation from scripture. Yes, it is…but it’s a strange thing to quote in our present context. Elizabeth said “Hail, Mary”, because she was standing right in front of her. I can’t, because I’m not. Just like I think it is doctrinally incorrect to say, “Hail, Apostle James”, or “Hail, Luther”, or even “Hail, (my deceased) Dad” … I have no scriptural indication that Mary can hear us right now. So, I fail to see the Biblical logic of addressing her like Elizabeth did.

The second half of the Hail Mary has us asking Mary to pray for us. First, I do not know whether or not Mary can hear requests from earth right now, and, if she can, how many she can hear at once, etc. Besides, even if she could hear me, and then pray for me, I have no reason to believe that her intercession on my behalf is any more influential or effective than the intercession of the people in my Home Group. I ask them to pray for me, because they can hear me, and their prayers are powerful by grace through the Spirit of God. Asking Mary, or any other person who has passed away, to pray for me is at best a mystical substitute, and, at worst, a waste of time.

The Hail Holy Queen is, well, Biblically speaking, a mess, and reflects a theology about Mary that has developed through the ages in the Roman church, and has no Biblical support. Mary isn’t the mother of mercy, our lives, our sweetness, or our hope. She may or not be an advocate for us (I don’t think she can). She may have eyes of mercy, but she can’t see us. And we don’t need her to show us to Jesus when we die.

CONCLUSION: I sort of like the whole bead-idea of the rosary, with each bead reminding me to pray for something specific. I think the Apostle’s Creed and Lord’s Prayer are under-prayed, and need to be used more often, so they would both make good “beads”. But the rosary prayers themselves are problematic, to say the least. Our brother says, “Obviously I’d change the prayers up a little bit.” Yes…and, if the prayers are Biblical, valuable and appropriate, then a rosary-like prayer discipline could prove to be an effective aid to our ongoing spiritual development.

Comments appreciated!

Bill

(Below is some more on the history of the Rosary from catholic.com, for those still interested in learning more…my comments are in brackets.)

It’s commonly said that St. Dominic, the founder of the Order of Preachers (the Dominicans), instituted the rosary. Not so. Certain parts of the rosary predated Dominic; others arose only after his death. Centuries before Dominic, monks had begun to recite all 150 psalms on a regular basis [that is a cool thing!]. As time went on, it was felt that the lay brothers, known as the conversi, should have some form of prayer of their own. They were distinct from the choir monks, and a chief distinction was that they were illiterate. Since they couldn’t read the psalms, they couldn’t recite them with the monks. They needed an easily remembered prayer [interesting...we're not that sensitive to this, in our very-literate society. How would we pray if we had no Bibles? By memory.]. The prayer first chosen was the Our Father, and, depending on circumstances, it was said either fifty or a hundred times. These conversi used rosaries to keep count, and the rosaries were known then as Paternosters (“Our Fathers”). [A good use of beads, I'd say!]. In England there arose a craftsmen’s guild of some importance, the members of which made these rosaries. In London you can find a street, named Paternoster Row, which preserves the memory of the area where these craftsmen worked. The rosaries that originally were used to count Our Fathers came to be used, during the twelfth century [a time in the history of the church when the doctrines about Mary took some very bold turns away from scripture], to count Hail Marys—or, more properly, the first half of what we now call the Hail Mary. (The second half was added some time later.) Both Catholics and non-Catholics, as they learn more about the rosary and make more frequent use of it, come to see how its meditations bring to mind the sweet fragrance not only of the Mother of God, but of Christ himself. ["Not only of the Mother of God, but of Christ himself"??? The latter is all I need, and all the scriptures urge me to seek.]

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Is Fall Here Yet?

What? It’s supposed to be 110 tomorrow? Oh well…

It can still start feeling like fall, right? Despite the relentless heat, it’s back to school, football games, even a bit of a chill on the overnight lows.

At EVBC, the fall season is in full gear. Here are a few of the highlights:

SUNDAY WORSHIP: Tom Shrader will be back in the pulpit this Sunday, to share a series of messages that bring together the Doctrines of Grace, where our church has been over the past 17 years, and what we see ahead in our future. Whether it’s at 8:30, 10:30, 4:00 or 6:00, we hope you’ll re-up to making regular attendance at our corporate worship time a part of your fall schedule.

HOME GROUPS: All of our Home Groups will be back in action by the end of this month, including a new group near Val Vista & Brown, led by Jason & Theresa Haas. There is a Home Group meeting every week night somewhere in Mesa. If you haven’t chosen to get involved, how about this fall?*

MESA AREA: Your Home Group Shepherds are meeting this Saturday night to put our minds to our Area Ministry activities over the next months. We’re hoping to see some regional community gatherings taking place, followed by another all-Mesa BBQ at the Commons on Sunday afternoon, November 23rd. Stay tuned for more details!

FOURTH SEED (Men’s Ministry):Our September breakfast is Saturday at 7:00a, at the Superstition Springs Golf Club (Power & Baseline NW). Over the next several months we’re going to be focusing on topics under the broad banner of “Men in the Church”. With the prospects of growth, expanded leadership and even church planting on the horizon in Mesa, we need to start ramping up to the tasks ahead. Our Area Ministry will go as far as the men of the Area go…so let’s get after it! See you Saturday…

…AND ON TUESDAYS: Our Paradise Bakery men’s group (Tuesdays, 6:30p, Val Vista & Baseline NW) is launching into a study of the book of Hebrews. This is the perfect time to jump on board for the fall, and join us in this a-little-bit-deeper-but-extremely-applicable study of God’s Word. The muffins are good, too, especially that banana chocolate chip one…

THE INSTITUTE: Did you all sign up for classes at The Institute this fall? It’s not too late.* I would especially like to invite you to my 6-week class covering the history of the Protestant Reformation (Sundays at 4:00p, beginning this week). Go to www.evbc.org/theinstitute for more details about the many courses being offered.

THANK YOUS: Great ministry has been happening throughout the dog days of summer. Special thanks goes to Susanne Lynch, our new Compassion Ministries coordinator, who has mobilized many of you to meet very practical needs of the hurting in our area. And, as always, muchos gracias to Ellen Marrs, who kept all the ministry plates spinning even while her family moved to a new home!

I have a feeling I’ll be seeing many of you soon! God’s best to us all as the temperatures drop, but our devotion to the Lord stays hot!

Bill

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Summer is half over!…

I looked at my calendar today, and saw that my oldest daughter begins school in only 23 DAYS! This summer seams to be zipping by, and the fall will be upon us in no time.

With that said, a few summer reminders for you:

HEATSTROKE OPEN – JULY 26th

Here’s a great chance to enjoy the full brunt of summer by playing a round of golf with great friends on a great course. Golf, prizes and a lunch – all for the single price of $70. Mesa Area Ministries is hosting this event, so please do what you can to be a part! You can register on line (evbc.org site).

SUMMER BIBLE STUDY – “Genuine Worship”

We’ve had a great turnout for our first two weeks of studying Genuine Worship together on Thursday nights. The Hartley home is located at 9458 E. Impala Ave. in Mesa, near Crismon & Baseline. Each week will feature a new hallmark of genuine worship, so even if you know you’ll have to miss a study or two, please come! If you have childcare needs, contact the Hartleys at 480.986.2850.

4th Seed Blog: 4thseed.wordpress.com

Join our Men’s Ministry 4th Seed blog this summer for more on the topic of genuine worship!

HOME GROUP SHEPHERDS MEETING – Saturday night, September 6th

More on this in the days to come…but, Shepherds, please plan to join us! We’re encouraging everyone to grab some dinner at The Commons, then join us for a fall kick-off leadership event, featuring leaders from all five of our Areas. Exact time TBD, but rope off 5:00-8:30 (childcare will be provided).

ALSO: If you’re interested in Home Group leadership, please contact Bill Hartley at billhartley@evbc.org. New groups will be forming this fall, and new leaders will be needed. Thanks for prayerfully considering this ministry opportunity.

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Happy 4th of July!

Greetings, and a happy 4th to all of you.

First, apologies once again for the lack of blog updating! For those of you who check in faithfully, thank you. For the next several weeks, you can expect significant bloggage…it will be on the Men’s Ministry site, however (4thseed.wordpress.com). Here’s why:

4th Seed Men’s Breakfast…Tomorrow morning!

The men of Mesa will be having our next 4th Seed breakfast on Saturday morning, July 5th, 7am at the Superstition Springs Golf Club. The topic of the morning will be worship, and will feature some singing, and some sharing from Word by myself, Joel Holsinger and Aaron DeCorte. This should be a rich time…though I’m afraid it might be slimly attended on the holiday weekend. I do hope you’re reading this before the breakfast, and will choose to attend (and invite a friend!).

Summer Bible Study @ the Hartleys – Thursday nights this summer

Last night, we began a 9-week summer Bible study, also on the topic of worship. Over the next two months we will be looking closely at the scriptures, and what they say about how we are to carry out our loving relationship with God, both individually and corporately.

To accompany this study, I will be blogging on the topics on the 4thseed site. My hope is to blog daily…we’ll see how well I do! I would encourage you to make it a habit, to interact over the material with your comments, and help turn this into a community-wide season of growth for our Area.

Heatstroke Open – July 26th

We are only three weeks away from the Heatstroke Open, hosted this year by the Mesa Area, and being held at the Superstition Springs Golf Club. Here’s the link to sign up, and get more details:

http://www.sporg.com/registration?form_id=109745

There are still spots available, so sign up soon!

A quote for you..

Here is a good word for you about worship, from Warren Wiersbe:

“God wants to transform us. He also wants to work through us to transform the people and circumstances that make up our lives. Every Christian is either a “conformer” or a “transformer.” We are either fashioning our lives by pressure from without, or we are tranforming our lives by power from within. The difference is – worship.” (Warren Wiersbe, Real Worship, p. 31).

Do you believe it? Join us as we explore it further…and God’s best to you all,

Bill

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Hello from Venice!

Greetings everyone. I was just looking on our website, and realize that it’s been a LONG TIME since I’ve posted! My apologies…and thanks to those who have chosen to keep checking in regularly to see if there have been any updates.

As I type, I am in Italy, where I am teaching Early Church History at Saints Bible Institute. The student body is a group from Liberty University. We’ve been wrestling through the ups and downs of life in the church from its inception on the Day of Pentecost to the crowing of Charlemagne a few days shy of 800. You know what you find out when studying the history of the church?

1. Man is a piece of work.

2. God is amazingly faithful.

How in the world did a religion based on the belief that a Palestinian peasant is the messiah of the Jews, and that he is now the resurrected savior of the world…how did it ever catch on with savvy, Roman-Empire pagans? The odds were long…but God made it happen! Then, with the fall of the Rome, what chance did the disgruntled empire residents have of conveying that gospel to the invading Goths, Huns, Lombards, Franks and Vandals that were taking over their lands? Well, God made that happen, too!

Sometimes I wonder, “how will the gospel ever be received by the people of Mesa?” Or, while doing missions work here in Italy, “how will the gospel ever penetrate Catholic Italy?” The answer? The same way it has always happened…because God superintends its advance, because He promised, “I will build my church” (Matthew 16:18). We’re not building it. He is. And He is a masterful builder, in whom we should have the greatest confidence. He’s asked us to work hard to help this pursuit. I think we should say “yes sir,” and join Him…don’t you?

NEWS: Karen and I are looking forward to hosting as many of you as would like to come at our home, beginning in July, for a Bible study on the topic of worship. The studies will take place over nine consecutive Thursday evenings in July and August, from 7:00-8:30p. There are many thoughts and opinions about worship out there…but my interest is in truly seeking out the heart of God in the scriptures concerning most important church enterprise. I hope you can make it! (If you can’t make every Thursday, that’s fine…each week will be a free-standing topic, so come when you can!).

By the way, it’s 77 and sunny here. As I sit in a canal-side cafe in Venice tomorrow, I’ll be wishing I was with you, enjoying the 113 day in Mesa! You think I’m kidding…but I’m not! Looking forward to being back in the fellowship soon.

God’s best to you all…and arrivederci!

Bill

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Mesa BBQ Photos!

Sunday the 18th was a great day for the Mesa Area!

Below are some photos from our first BBQ in the Commons!

Thanks again to all who made this possible…we all had a wonderful time!


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Big BBQ Tomorrow!

Just a quick plug for the Mesa Area BBQ tomorrow at the EVBC Commons. It all starts at 12:20, after the usual post-10:30-service crowd has its chance to get its lattes. Here are some reasons why you should make it a point to be there:

1. All the meat has been donated by Town & Country foods – exceptional quality and variety, including chicken, seafood and beef. In other words, GREAT eats!

2. Prizes and giveaways! We have a number of special baskets we’ll be raffling off, no purchase necessary! So, you may go home with some goodies!

3. We’ve specifically asked for people new to the Mesa Area to be there, so we can more formally welcome them to EVBC. So, you might think you don’t need to go, but they need to meet you, and get to know as many from the Area as possible. So, your attendance is truly an act of service.

4. Ellen Marrs, the Mesa Area Administrator, has gone to great lengths to make this event spectacular. Those of you who missed the Truck Rally last month have heard all the stories about how great it was — don’t make the same mistake again! Make it a point to be a part of this one…

5. We’ll be collecting “Adopt a Bathroom” baskets for the East Mesa House of Refuge. This is a terrific service project being taken on by our Mesa Home Groups, and the fruit of their labors will make for an impressive stack of baskets in the Commons. You won’t want to miss that, either!

6. You’ve gotta eat anyway, so what better place to grab lunch than the Commons? (And, the price is right! We’re just asking each family to chip in a few bucks to help defray the minimal costs we have.) Even if you’re going to church in the afternoon or evening, come have lunch, then spend a few hours lingering, or shopping someplace nearby.

7. There’s nothing like fellowship in Christ. Food, fun, prizes, yes…but something grand happens when people filled with the Spirit gather together in Jesus’ name. That alone should make this a can’t-miss event!

See you tomorrow? I sure hope so…

God’s best to you all,  Bill

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