Showing posts with label Giving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Giving. Show all posts

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Fan Into Flame



Our church family is thinking a lot these days about a line from an elderly Paul to his young friend Timothy: "fan into the flame the gift of God" (2 Timothy 1:6). For all the "light, heat and energy" we desire for our lives... for all our efforts to "fan" any embers of life into such flame for greater life... what exactly is the "fire"? 

Don't miss this: it's not us. It's not our plans of what we'll do. It's not our hyped-up inspiration to get us doing it. It's not the resources we collect to do it with. It's not "this little light of mine." 

The fire is God. Nothing less. And as the Giver of all gifts, nothing more. 

The fire is the One who spoke blazing light into the dark void of pre-creation. The fire is the One who raised his Son out of the cold night of death into an explosion of new life. The fire is the One who pours out his Spirit to share this light and energy and life, indwelling all who will receive him and let him be free to burn. 

In the words of the old Canadian folk-rocker Bruce Cockburn, here's my prayer for myself, my family and friends, and for the community called Centennial Covenant: 
                           
                                  O Love that fires the sun keep us burning.     

With you in the Fire of Holy Love,

Steve Thulson

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Financial Peace



Sixty-five individuals just finished a 9 week course called Financial Peace University.  It was awesome.

Here are some of the highlights straight from the mouths of our participants.

- "I just saved $1,000 for the first time in my life."
- "Having an emergency fund in place gives me peace."
- "My spouse and I are now communicating regularly about finances, it's wonderful."
- "I did my taxes on my own!"
- "I paid off $2,500 in debt!"
- "My husband and I now have a shared language about money.  Now we can have money conversations instead of money fights."
- "I cut up ALL of my credit cards.  I will NEVER go into debt again."


During our course, we learned the "Seven Baby Steps" of financial peace:
1) Save a $1,000 emergency fund (do this fast, do this now, have a garage sale this weekend!)
2) List all of your debts, smallest to largest.  Pay minimum payments on every debt and then ATTACK the smallest debt with every other dollar you can find.  Once you pay off that smallest debt, roll your payment over to the next smallest.  This is called the debt snowball.
3) Save 3-6 months worth of expenses.  This is a complete emergency fund.
4) Put 15% of your income toward retirement in a 401K, IRA, Roth IRA or other tax-favored accounts.
5) Start saving and investing for your kids college education.
6) Pay off your mortgage early.
7) GIVE LIKE NO ONE ELSE.

During our time together, we regularly looked at one another and said, "I have never really talked to anyone about this before."  Conversations about handling money God's way can be so freeing when they lead to new behaviors, greater purpose and clearer vision about how to handle the resources God has given us.

At the end of the day, it's not about getting out of debt, it's not about saving more for yourself, it's not about giving more to the church.  Rather,

It's about becoming more and more like God.  God is the ultimate giver and he wants you to experience the joy of becoming like him.

If you weren't able to make it to the course, but are interested in learning more, go here.  Also, let us know if you would be interested in going through Financial Peace University and we can point you toward other courses in our area or even consider offering the course again here at Centennial Covenant Church.

Between this course, our Sunday morning connecting hour class on Jesus and finances, and the High School curriculum "Generation Change" more than 90 people have been learning about and growing into lives of handling money God's way. 

Praise the Lord that he is moving in this way in our community.

Friday, March 8, 2013

A Celebration of Generosity




                                     
Senior Pastor, Steve Thulson
When word came – first to our Pastors, then our Elders, and finally our Congregation last Sunday morning – there were jaws dropping, tears, applause, even cheers. When a few days earlier, Ministry Assistant Jamie Durbin had opened the church mail and saw the anonymous check from a brokerage firm, she had to ask Ron Mol if she was seeing the comma and dot in the right places.

For the reduction of our mortgage debt, Centennial Covenant received a gift of $400,000!

We praise God for his gracious provision, and thank these generous friends!

This reduces our debt from $1.2 million to $800,000 which will allow far more of the ongoing generous giving from our other 175 households to be applied to direct people-to-people ministries.

Last Sunday we shared even more beautiful examples of generosity.

-          Each week, our children place coins from their allowances in a basket – gifts for Jesus and his work. Darlene and Stefany have observed, though, that some kids – from a family scraping by at the poverty-line – tend not to put in just coins, they put in dollar bills. They make sacrifices.
-          Last week we received thank-you notes from two families in the community who had been in financial crisis due to unanticipated health problems. We had been alongside them with gifts from our Benevolence Fund.
-          We have been experiencing a gradual but steady growth in ongoing financial support of our core ministries and mission, getting closer to the levels we approved last Fall!

Don’t you think these gifts are from the Spirit and please the Father every bit as much as the extraordinary donation to reduce our debt?

And then there’s the generous grace of God we celebrated last Sunday in Dale Flander’s strong teaching and stories like Donna Osborne’s. She told us how her lost hearing seems to be returning at least in part. And even greater is the powerful freedom she has experienced by God enabling her to forgive a man who kidnapped and terrorized her years ago. Dale’s reminder was to let such “highs” be windows to everything our Lord is doing all the time – even in the “lows” when his goodness is not quite as evident.

God is good. All the time. And all the time, God is good. Right?