Christmas Story Video for Kids
By Jonathan Dodson | November 30th, 2009 | Category: Gospel and Culture | Comments Off[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v__QaCsdvQk&feature=player_embedded]
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v__QaCsdvQk&feature=player_embedded]
We are releasing an upgraded version of our website this week. It will have six boxes on the homepage instead of three. Each box will contain a dynamic click-through blog area, where you can comment, interact, and share on areas such as City Groups, Fight Clubs, and Sermons. Keep your eyes peeled!
P.S. Will release early this week!
We will be observing Advent the next four Sundays at Austin City Life. Working through the first two chapters of Luke’s Gospel, we’ll explore the biblical themes of Hope, Faith, Joy, & Peace.
Here are the free videos by Tedd Tripp from a recent conference.
Drivers on I-35 were confronted with a great holiday inquiry: “Thanksgiving to Whom?” On Thanksgiving we’re supposed to be thankful, but why? Who or what are we supposed to thank on this holiday? When we get together with our families and say: “I am so thankful for ____.” Where is our thanksgiving pointed? Thankful to the cosmic energy? Thankful to the kindness of impersonal fate? Thanksgiving to our hard work that ascertained all those blessings?
Thanksgiving to whom?
The big banner that stretched across the top of my church building, Bethlehem Baptist, begged an answer: thanksgiving to God. Apart from a beneficent, personal, knowable, providential Creator, we only have ourselves to thank, which makes Thanksgiving awfully narcissistic. Or with faith in God in steep decline, we could opt for fate, but that’s awfully irrational, as fate isn’t personal or providential, it’s impersonal and deterministic.
Thanksgiving, the act and the holiday, require a Giver to whom we can give our thanks. And in directing our thanks to our Creator, we settle into the satisfaction of being a created person designed to thank and praise. Thanksgiving to whom? Thanksgiving to God.
Oh come, let us sing to the LORD; let us make a joyful noise to the rock of our salvation! Let us come into his presence with thanksgiving; let us make a joyful noise to him with songs of praise!
For the LORD is a great God, and a great King above all gods. In his hand are the depths of the earth; the heights of the mountains are his also. The sea is his, for he made it, and his hands formed the dry land. Oh come, let us worship and bow down; let us kneel before the LORD, our Maker! – Psalm 95.1-6
Here are some gospel-centered family resources to follow up our Sunday sermon on Gospel-centered Parenting. This is a buffet of resources. Just start with a couple. Don’t order everything and try to start all of these rhythms overnight. Start with the Bible and a book and move out from there. And remember, you can’t change your children, only the Spirit of Jesus can, so pray!
Parenting Books
Develop Gospel Family Rhythms
I am now on Twitter. I will not send out meaningless, narcissistic tweets or narrate my life story in the misguided hope that if someone folllows me, I have value. Jesus is my value.
I had the privilege of watching this interview with Ted Haggard live at the Q Conference this year in Austin. It was powerful, gripping, convicting, inspiring. The Haggard’s respond with grace regarding his sex scandal. A stand-out quote:
If people judge me, hate me, and despise me, and write bad things about me, and reject me, they are just. If people are kind, gracious, and loving, and forgiving, and gentle, that’s grace.