Our latest sermon series, beginning April 15, 2012.
Here is the reading, based on Colossians 1:15-20, that Matt used to close the message yesterday morning. It was taken, and slightly adapted, from Jesus Manifesto by Leonard Sweet & Frank Viola.
The One who is the visible image of the invisible God;
the One in whom all the fullness of the Godhead dwells;
the One who is the living residence of the Trinity;
the One in whom eternity lives, breathes, and has its being;
the One who is before time;
the A to Z, Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end;
the One who rose from the dead never to die again;
the Conqueror of death, sin, and the grave;
the Creator, Savior, Redeemer, and Forgiver;
the One who holds all creation together in himself;
the One who is the power of glory and might;
the Head, authority, and source of the church;
the One through whom and for whom all things were created;
the One in whom all things find their meaning and reality;
the One who reconciled all things in heaven and earth to God
the One who nailed to His bloody cross every law, rule, and regulation that would condemn the beloved people of God;
the One who is supreme in every realm and holds the first place in all things – the Son of the Father’s love;
the One whose significance is unmatched in human history;
the One who holds the title deed to the universe
this glorious, limitless, amazing, incredible, expansive,
incomparable, marvelous, stunning, staggering, majestic,
mighty, matchless, spectacular, outstanding, tremendous,
immense, infinite, vast, grand, triumphant, victorious, precious
radiant, peerless, wonderful, magnificent Christ has chosen to place all his fullness…where?
inside of you…and not only does Christ live in you, but more importantly: you are able to live by His life…you are made utterly, totally, and fully complete in Him…here and now.
He is more than enough.
Our latest sermon series, beginning April 15, 2012.
We are really excited about our upcoming series of messages in Servant 923 – we’ll be digging deep in the parables of Jesus. These were short stories that Jesus told to help shape our imaginations and challenge us to grasp what it means to live as members of God’s incredible life-transforming Kingdom
Yesterday in the Chapel service and at Servant 923 we joined together in a special prayer called “Wesley’s Covenant Prayer.” There are several different versions of this prayer of devotion and consecration the Methodists have used over the years, and it is part of a larger liturgy for worship, but this is the simple one we used in worship yesterday:
I am no longer my own but yours. Put me to what you will, rank me with whom you will. Put me to doing, put me to suffering. Let me be employed for you or laid aside for you, exalted for you or brought low for you. Let me be full, let me be empty. Let me have all things, let me have nothing. I freely and wholeheartedly yield all things to your pleasure and disposal.
And now, glorious and blessed God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, you are mine and I am yours. So be it. And the covenant which I have made on earth, let it be ratified in heaven. Amen.
I hope 2012 is a year that you grow more deeply in love with God and more passionately committed to serving your neighbor for the sake of God’s Kingdom. Blessings & Peace!
We’ve finished up our first month of worship services at Servant 923! We will be joining with an all-Church worship service on Christmas Day at 10:00AM in the Celebration Center. All of our worship services: 8:15, 9:15, 9:23, and 10:45 will join together that day with 923′s lead minister, Dr. Matt Judkins, preaching.
So far we’ve been averaging approximately 180 people in the Chapel of the Cross each week. We’ve had two baptisms, and we’re seeing lots of new faces as the Core Team and others invite, invite, and invite some more! With that being said, here are some pics of what’s happening in Servant 923!
John Gilstrap and Brooke Gebb leading our community in worship.
Matt Judkins sharing a message with the 923 community.
Stella’s baptism.

Last week Servant 923 launched with our first official worship service!
After a preview and one week of “official” weekly services, we are averaging just under 190 people in worship. For a little perspective on this, our newly renovated chapel seats about 180 people comfortably (don’t worry, we bring in chairs and there will be room for you!).
The Servant 923 worship band has led us in worship in a powerful way and we’ve started a series called “More” on how to experience more during a season where we sometimes get caught up in the hectic pursuit of more events and more stuff instead of celebrating the incredible gift God gave us in and through Jesus.
This week in Servant 923 we will celebrate our very first baptism, with a precious little girl who was, believe it or not, born on September 23rd. Yep, 9.23!
As terrific as it is that we’ve started gathering on a weekly basis, this is just a beginning and not an end. We will work hard as we enter 2012 to provide opportunities for people to experience what it means to be the Church. Sunday worship is an essential part of our life as the Church, but it is only part of our lives together. We will begin to offer ways to join together in mission and community in a way that transforms individuals and the world by the grace and power of Jesus.
If you don’t have a place to gather with the people of God in worship, come join us at Church of the Servant in the Chapel of the Cross at 9:23 AM!
Here are a few more pictures of the remodel in the Chapel of the Cross. The cross has been refinished and the Lord’s Table is undergoing a slight makeover as well. It will be stained soon to match the other pieces in the Chapel.
The next picture is of the sound booth which has been moved to the back of the room. It will be stained to match the kneelers and pews as well. It will provide a great place for our video and sound techs to really help make Servant 923 a wonderful worship experience.

I was doing a little reading yesterday, and I came across a great blog post from Richard Heyduck, a United Methodist pastor in Texas. I shared this portion of Richard’s blog with our Core Team, and I wanted to share it with all of you as well.
I read a blog post by Perry Noble yesterday. He offers the reasons he thinks his church will grow to 100,000. Perry’s not a United Methodist (UM). I don’t know of any UM churches that aspire to be that large. I know my congregation will never be that large (there are only 12,000 in the whole county – and the surrounding counties don’t have that many more). The differences between Perry and myself, between my congregation and his, and between their setting and ours are huge. But the reasons he offers apply here nonetheless.
His first claim is that “found people find people.” When people have a clear and compelling experience with Jesus, they will share with others. The Jesus living in them will be attractive to others and they will be passionate to see others set free as they have been. Can this happen in a UM church? If one looks at most of our churches today, one might think not. Most of our folks were raised in church and lack a sense of ever having been lost. It’s not so much that we’ve ever sensed a need for God as much as God’s always been there. We take God for granted. It’s also hard for us to think of ourselves as being “found.” Once we do that we might think someone else is “lost,” and that goes against our ethos of tolerance and humility. But Methodists have a strong conversionist tradition. We had it in Wesley’s day. We had it in 19th century Methodism. We can’t dismiss it as “unMethodist.” I pray we get it again.
Noble’s second reason is that they “understand that saved people serve people.” This is a little easier for us to understand. We’re pretty good at seeing needs in the community and doing something about them. Whether it’s serving at God’s Closet food pantry, offering ESL classes or doing other outreaches, our people serve.
The third reason is another challenge. He says that they “believe that growing people change.” This conviction is entirely in line with early Methodism. In fact, Wesley’s emphasis on discipleship was easily on a par with his emphasis on evangelism. Today United Methodists still believe in discipleship. The downside is that we’ve too often lost a vision for what it is. We too easily think the only distinction worth attending to is that between members and non-members. Institutional membership is largely irrelevant to our discipleship, however. We too often lack a vision of what God wants to do in our lives, how Jesus wants to refashion us in his own image. Fighting sin? Well that’s just too hard. Nobody’s perfect, right? We’re all sinners, right? God knows how weak and feeble we are – he made us this way, after all! – so surely he doesn’t expect much of us, right? The growth of the church is predicated on the growth first of the believers who inhabit it. If we are not growing in grace, if we are not being transformed, any institutional growth we see will likely be unhealthy growth.
“Because we understand we cannot do life alone” is the fourth reason. The Christian faith is more than mental furniture, more than social social activism, more than being morally upright. Christian faith is expressed with others, in worship and in discipleship. Again, this feature of Noble’s church is directly paralleled in our Methodist tradition. Wesley was a firm opponent of “solitary religion.” The problem is that we’re not. In our niceness and complacency, we want to believe we can be perfectly fine with God whatever we do or don’t do. Hunting season is on so you have to skip worship? No biggie – you’ll be worshiping with the deer and the antelope, I’m sure. Too many sporting events to be regular in worship or in face to face discipling groups? No big deal, you can read an Upper Room devotional once a quarter. Our current practices of neglecting Body Life hurt us in two ways. First, as individuals we miss out on our living connection to the Body with each other. Second, the church as a whole is demoralized by the absence of so many who are counted as members. How healthy can a Body be when half of its body parts are not functioning?
The final conviction Noble shares is one we’ve heard before: “We believe that we cannot out give God.” The expectation is that the extravagant generosity of the people will enable the church to fulfill its mission. We know the theory. We have the heritage in our Methodist tradition. We say we believe it. But we don’t do it. We need the new cars and dream homes (not only as our primary residence but on the beach, at the lake or in the mountains). We need multiple vacations every year. We’re in deep in debt. And now with the economy the way it is, we want to save it all for a rainy day.
Perry Noble is some sort of Baptist. I’m a United Methodist. As a United Methodist I see nothing in his convictions mentioned in this post that are incompatible with “our way.” Instead, I see much that seems drawn directly from our tradition. I believe that if we can recover these convictions – not just as beliefs or landmarks from our past, but as currently operational convictions – growth will happen.
Found people find people, saved people serve people, growing people change, we cannot do life alone, and we cannot out-give God! Servant 923 will be a place where we try to live out these commitments with the help of God’s own Spirit. I hope you take time to come and experience God’s grace with us!