JR. Forasteros - April 21, 2013

Church and Baseball

Already/Not Yet

We think of Church as the building we meet in, but in the Scriptures, a "church" is a group of people called together to proclaim the Good News that Jesus has risen from the dead. We can do that anywhere, anytime. Church can - and should - happen every day, all over our community!

From Series: "Already/Not Yet"

Jesus' resurrection wasn't the end of the story; it was the beginning of God's new creation. The Resurrection is God's first step toward reclaiming creation, and we get to be a part of it. By choosing to follow Jesus, we leave the old reality dominated by sin and death and step into God's kingdom, where we find life. This new life has already begun. And yet we're also still waiting, because God's kingdom has not yet come in full. How do we live in the tension between the Already and the Not Yet? This series explores who God calls the Church to be, and how the Holy Spirit enables us to join in God's mission in the space between the Resurrection and the Second Coming. We're not just waiting around for God to show up. God is already here and working, so we're joining in!

Sermon Manuscript     Discussion Guide

More From "Already/Not Yet"

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Listen to each lesson here. Each lesson also includes a downloadable powerpoint and notesheet.

FourHorsemen

The Revelation was never meant to be scary or confusing. It’s a message of hope!

The Revelation to John is the Bible’s scariest, most confusing book.

It’s not meant to be that way. In fact, Jesus himself is giving this revelation to John for the Church. It’s meant to be a message of hope. The problem is that we are strangers to the text. We live 2,000 years away, across a huge culture gap.

But if we are willing to do the hard work to hear Jesus’ revelation through the ears of First Century Christians, the Revelation will come alive for us.

We can hear Jesus’ message of hope to all of us struggling to stay faithful in a faithless culture.

We can learn to hear the Revelation as a beautiful, powerful book, as relevant to day as it was then.

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Additionally, I imagined how John would compose his vision if he were writing to the 21st Century American churches rather than the churches of First Century Asia. Read The Revelation to JR. here.

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