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http://colossians316.org/index.php/feed/atom/colossians316/practical 2024-05-02T02:20:21+00:00 Joomla! - Open Source Content Management Guiding Principles of Worship Programming 2014-08-11T16:08:56+00:00 2014-08-11T16:08:56+00:00 http://colossians316.org/index.php/item/guiding-principles-of-worship-programming corb <div class="element element-textarea first"> <div><p> </p> <p><em>Some Guiding Principles for Worship Services</em></p> <p>1) <strong>Gospel-oriented and Scripture-centered–</strong> Gospel is preached, taught, nuanced, and reinforced constantly because of the public reading and singing of the scriptures throughout every service. By underscoring the Gospel, this will naturally reinforce the theme or message preached because of the inherent Gospel woven throughout all of Scripture. The Word of God should be preached and proclaimed throughout every service. The gospel unifies us as a church.</p> <p>This does not mean that all services must bend or force scripture studies to fit an overt gospel theme. Preaching the scriptures exegetically will reveal the Gospel inherently to the glory of God, enjoying Him forever. I Tim. 4:13</p> <p><strong>2) God-honoring and God-exalting-</strong> all worship is for the glory of God alone. Every aspect and element within a church service should be programmed to exalt the Godhead for His glory.</p> <p>It does not mean that the worship should be only done one way or another; it may have a somber, reverent tone at times and a joyful zeal at others. It does not mean that people should not enjoy what they participate in during the worship service.</p> <p><strong>3) Engages mind, body and spirit of the saints –</strong> we should worship by engaging our emotions with our intellect covered in God’s Word. We are free to respond to God. Worship is reciprocal. It prompts us to ascribe worth to His name. We are worshipping God and He edifies and matures His saints. His Holy Spirit guides and teaches us. By worshipping God in “spirit and truth” will sometimes motivate us to physically respond (ex. kneel, clap, raise our hands, etc.). These types of biblical responses are encouraged.</p> <p>This does not mean that we worship Him to get something out of it. God is the purpose of our worship and the end result is He is glorified and we will be blessed as a side benefit. This also does not mean that the church service is to only be a mental exercise. This also does not mean that an individual should respond to God in a distracting way<br />drawing attention to himself but should physically respond submitting to the saints around him.<br /><em>Hebrews 5:11-14, I Cor. 14:14-15, 1.Ps. 95:6; 3:3; 123:1, Hab. 3:2; Ps. 4:4, Ps. 121, Phil. 2:10; Ps. 95:6, Ps. 141:2; 143:5-6, Rev. 4:10; Ps. 95:6, Ps. 149:3; 150:4, Ex. 15:20, Ps. 98:8; 47:1, Is. 55:12</em></p> <p><strong>4) Thematic -</strong> we want all of our service elements to tie together and support the sermon of the day. Clarity is the rule. Sometimes this can be executed in a simple way and sometimes it can be done in a complex way. But the “packaging” of any theme should always be done with clarity. All service elements are either thematically synchronized or unified around the sermon theme.</p> <p>It does not mean that a theme drives the decision over choosing a message or sermon series. Programming is always geared towards the glory of God, enjoying Him forever.</p> <p><strong>5) Multigenerational -</strong> worship styles and service elements should reflect the four generations represented in the church body. Musical variety expresses God’s heart for all people groups. All aspects of service should be representative of the Christian values,<br />culture, and generations involved in the service to the glory of God, enjoying Him forever.</p> <p>This does not mean that we do demographic or token programming to appease a certain group versus another or be motivated by sentimentalism invoking an emotional response.</p> <p><br /><strong>6) Value in utilizing multiple musical forms –</strong> Because we are multi-generational and thematic, the songs chosen will be taken from various biblical musical forms including hymns, psalms, and spiritual songs. Musical style should not become a stumbling block<br />in our worship but it is important to pull from the valuable songs of the present day as well as songs written hundreds of years ago so the present church can be edified by the saints of old and understand the historicity from which we come as well as sing new songs to the Lord expressing even greater clarity of our beliefs due to the wealth of<br />writers and theological thinkers that have gone before us. We submit to our brothers and sisters in Christ and appreciate the music that ministers to them to the glory of God, enjoying Him forever. <em>Col. 3, Eph. 5</em></p> <p><br />This does not mean that the music supplants the Word. It also does not mean that we place musical form above lyrical content.</p> <p><br /><strong>7) Creative</strong> – Both inside and out, we are all fellow image bearers of the creative God of the universe. Within the constructs of His design, we emulate God by trying to do the same as He: to create. Our church services should reflect that reality. We should model God’s creativity and be good stewards of the giftings and talents available and represented within our church body. This encourages service opportunities and underscores the value we place on the corporate gathering of the saints.</p> <p><br />This does not mean that our creativity should cloud or drive the message nor does it mean we are mandated to “push the envelope” artistically. Our creativity should not distract the onlooker from the worship of God and become the focus of attention. All should be done to point us to the glory of God, enjoying Him forever.</p> <p><br /><strong>8) Spirit-led planning and spontaneity –</strong> All aspects of executing our church services should be Spirit-led. The Holy Spirit works through our planning and spontaneous action; we are prompted by His guidance. We should be well prepared yet open to Him at all times to do what His Spirit directs us to do as long as it does not contradict His Word. All aspects in the service should be done in an orderly way.<br />This does not mean we plan so much that we are entrenched in our agenda and quench the Spirit. It also does not mean we shouldn’t plan at all and shoot from the hip “trusting the Lord” to simply let the Spirit lead. <em>I Cor. 14:36-40</em></p> <p><br /><strong>9) Undistracting excellence –</strong>All aspects should be performed well, selected in good taste, and done to the best of our skill level. All public up-front ministry should be done for the applause of God alone. All platform ministry should be performed for the glory of God, enjoying Him forever.</p> <p><br />This does not mean that excellence drives what we do or should trump the spiritual integrity or shepherding of those involved in the ministry. It also does not mean that we are driven by the performance to receive the applause of men.</p> <p><br /><strong>10) Efficacious in outreach –</strong> The service should be efficacious to the non-believer. Because of the Gospel laced throughout any given service it is not only for the saints but zealously evangelical in its content. A non-believer observing the service will know that he is missing something that he wants. Preaching Christ crucified will be compelling.</p> <p><br />This does not mean that every Sunday is an outreach service driven to be overly sensitive to a non-believer. <em>I Cor. 14:16-17</em></p> <p><br /><strong>11) Measurable –</strong> Since various perceptions and opinions can rise up within a group of diverse people, it is important that we establish ways to quantify certain aspects of our services so truth about opinionated and sometimes volatile subjects can be properly evaluated. Making objectivity out of subjective material will aid us to understand the true<br />reality of what we observe. And this will encourage us to submit our opinions to proper reality even when our perceptions don’t match what is actually happening. We should always be open to evaluation by observers and consider their point of view.</p> <p><br />This does not mean that we quench the Spirit by being driven by the “measureables” or certain people’s observations. We should always program according to the Spirit’s leading and then measure it to see what He did through us and make any necessary adjustments because of our own inadequacies.</p> <p> </p></div></div> <div class="element element-relateditems last"> <br /> <b>Deprecated</b>: Function create_function() is deprecated in <b>/home4/felgenh1/public_html/colossians316/administrator/components/com_zoo/helpers/renderer.php</b> on line <b>230</b><br /> <h3>Author</h3>Corb H. Felgenhour</div> <div class="element element-textarea first"> <div><p> </p> <p><em>Some Guiding Principles for Worship Services</em></p> <p>1) <strong>Gospel-oriented and Scripture-centered–</strong> Gospel is preached, taught, nuanced, and reinforced constantly because of the public reading and singing of the scriptures throughout every service. By underscoring the Gospel, this will naturally reinforce the theme or message preached because of the inherent Gospel woven throughout all of Scripture. The Word of God should be preached and proclaimed throughout every service. The gospel unifies us as a church.</p> <p>This does not mean that all services must bend or force scripture studies to fit an overt gospel theme. Preaching the scriptures exegetically will reveal the Gospel inherently to the glory of God, enjoying Him forever. I Tim. 4:13</p> <p><strong>2) God-honoring and God-exalting-</strong> all worship is for the glory of God alone. Every aspect and element within a church service should be programmed to exalt the Godhead for His glory.</p> <p>It does not mean that the worship should be only done one way or another; it may have a somber, reverent tone at times and a joyful zeal at others. It does not mean that people should not enjoy what they participate in during the worship service.</p> <p><strong>3) Engages mind, body and spirit of the saints –</strong> we should worship by engaging our emotions with our intellect covered in God’s Word. We are free to respond to God. Worship is reciprocal. It prompts us to ascribe worth to His name. We are worshipping God and He edifies and matures His saints. His Holy Spirit guides and teaches us. By worshipping God in “spirit and truth” will sometimes motivate us to physically respond (ex. kneel, clap, raise our hands, etc.). These types of biblical responses are encouraged.</p> <p>This does not mean that we worship Him to get something out of it. God is the purpose of our worship and the end result is He is glorified and we will be blessed as a side benefit. This also does not mean that the church service is to only be a mental exercise. This also does not mean that an individual should respond to God in a distracting way<br />drawing attention to himself but should physically respond submitting to the saints around him.<br /><em>Hebrews 5:11-14, I Cor. 14:14-15, 1.Ps. 95:6; 3:3; 123:1, Hab. 3:2; Ps. 4:4, Ps. 121, Phil. 2:10; Ps. 95:6, Ps. 141:2; 143:5-6, Rev. 4:10; Ps. 95:6, Ps. 149:3; 150:4, Ex. 15:20, Ps. 98:8; 47:1, Is. 55:12</em></p> <p><strong>4) Thematic -</strong> we want all of our service elements to tie together and support the sermon of the day. Clarity is the rule. Sometimes this can be executed in a simple way and sometimes it can be done in a complex way. But the “packaging” of any theme should always be done with clarity. All service elements are either thematically synchronized or unified around the sermon theme.</p> <p>It does not mean that a theme drives the decision over choosing a message or sermon series. Programming is always geared towards the glory of God, enjoying Him forever.</p> <p><strong>5) Multigenerational -</strong> worship styles and service elements should reflect the four generations represented in the church body. Musical variety expresses God’s heart for all people groups. All aspects of service should be representative of the Christian values,<br />culture, and generations involved in the service to the glory of God, enjoying Him forever.</p> <p>This does not mean that we do demographic or token programming to appease a certain group versus another or be motivated by sentimentalism invoking an emotional response.</p> <p><br /><strong>6) Value in utilizing multiple musical forms –</strong> Because we are multi-generational and thematic, the songs chosen will be taken from various biblical musical forms including hymns, psalms, and spiritual songs. Musical style should not become a stumbling block<br />in our worship but it is important to pull from the valuable songs of the present day as well as songs written hundreds of years ago so the present church can be edified by the saints of old and understand the historicity from which we come as well as sing new songs to the Lord expressing even greater clarity of our beliefs due to the wealth of<br />writers and theological thinkers that have gone before us. We submit to our brothers and sisters in Christ and appreciate the music that ministers to them to the glory of God, enjoying Him forever. <em>Col. 3, Eph. 5</em></p> <p><br />This does not mean that the music supplants the Word. It also does not mean that we place musical form above lyrical content.</p> <p><br /><strong>7) Creative</strong> – Both inside and out, we are all fellow image bearers of the creative God of the universe. Within the constructs of His design, we emulate God by trying to do the same as He: to create. Our church services should reflect that reality. We should model God’s creativity and be good stewards of the giftings and talents available and represented within our church body. This encourages service opportunities and underscores the value we place on the corporate gathering of the saints.</p> <p><br />This does not mean that our creativity should cloud or drive the message nor does it mean we are mandated to “push the envelope” artistically. Our creativity should not distract the onlooker from the worship of God and become the focus of attention. All should be done to point us to the glory of God, enjoying Him forever.</p> <p><br /><strong>8) Spirit-led planning and spontaneity –</strong> All aspects of executing our church services should be Spirit-led. The Holy Spirit works through our planning and spontaneous action; we are prompted by His guidance. We should be well prepared yet open to Him at all times to do what His Spirit directs us to do as long as it does not contradict His Word. All aspects in the service should be done in an orderly way.<br />This does not mean we plan so much that we are entrenched in our agenda and quench the Spirit. It also does not mean we shouldn’t plan at all and shoot from the hip “trusting the Lord” to simply let the Spirit lead. <em>I Cor. 14:36-40</em></p> <p><br /><strong>9) Undistracting excellence –</strong>All aspects should be performed well, selected in good taste, and done to the best of our skill level. All public up-front ministry should be done for the applause of God alone. All platform ministry should be performed for the glory of God, enjoying Him forever.</p> <p><br />This does not mean that excellence drives what we do or should trump the spiritual integrity or shepherding of those involved in the ministry. It also does not mean that we are driven by the performance to receive the applause of men.</p> <p><br /><strong>10) Efficacious in outreach –</strong> The service should be efficacious to the non-believer. Because of the Gospel laced throughout any given service it is not only for the saints but zealously evangelical in its content. A non-believer observing the service will know that he is missing something that he wants. Preaching Christ crucified will be compelling.</p> <p><br />This does not mean that every Sunday is an outreach service driven to be overly sensitive to a non-believer. <em>I Cor. 14:16-17</em></p> <p><br /><strong>11) Measurable –</strong> Since various perceptions and opinions can rise up within a group of diverse people, it is important that we establish ways to quantify certain aspects of our services so truth about opinionated and sometimes volatile subjects can be properly evaluated. Making objectivity out of subjective material will aid us to understand the true<br />reality of what we observe. And this will encourage us to submit our opinions to proper reality even when our perceptions don’t match what is actually happening. We should always be open to evaluation by observers and consider their point of view.</p> <p><br />This does not mean that we quench the Spirit by being driven by the “measureables” or certain people’s observations. We should always program according to the Spirit’s leading and then measure it to see what He did through us and make any necessary adjustments because of our own inadequacies.</p> <p> </p></div></div> <div class="element element-relateditems last"> <br /> <b>Deprecated</b>: Function create_function() is deprecated in <b>/home4/felgenh1/public_html/colossians316/administrator/components/com_zoo/helpers/renderer.php</b> on line <b>230</b><br /> <h3>Author</h3>Corb H. Felgenhour</div> What Is The Real Problem With Today’s Evangelical Worship? 2014-05-28T17:11:42+00:00 2014-05-28T17:11:42+00:00 http://colossians316.org/index.php/item/what-is-the-real-problem-with-today-s-evangelical-worship corb <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><h1 class="post-title entry-title"><img class="alignright wp-image-11853" src="http://www.davidsantistevan.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Hillsong_United_3_1139x541-570x270.jpg" border="0" alt="Hillsong_United_3_1139x541" width="319" height="187" style="border: 0; vertical-align: top;" /></h1> <h1 class="post-title entry-title">What Is The Real Problem With Today’s Evangelical Worship?</h1> <p><span class="the-author"><a href="http://www.davidsantistevan.com/author/dsantistevan1984/" title="David Santistevan">David Santistevan</a></span></p> <p><span class="the-author"> </span></p> <p><a href="http://www.davidsantistevan.com/evangelical-worship/" target="_blank">http://www.davidsantistevan.com/evangelical-worship/</a></p></div></div> <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><h1 class="post-title entry-title"><img class="alignright wp-image-11853" src="http://www.davidsantistevan.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Hillsong_United_3_1139x541-570x270.jpg" border="0" alt="Hillsong_United_3_1139x541" width="319" height="187" style="border: 0; vertical-align: top;" /></h1> <h1 class="post-title entry-title">What Is The Real Problem With Today’s Evangelical Worship?</h1> <p><span class="the-author"><a href="http://www.davidsantistevan.com/author/dsantistevan1984/" title="David Santistevan">David Santistevan</a></span></p> <p><span class="the-author"> </span></p> <p><a href="http://www.davidsantistevan.com/evangelical-worship/" target="_blank">http://www.davidsantistevan.com/evangelical-worship/</a></p></div></div> Are We Headed For A Crash? 2014-05-28T15:39:31+00:00 2014-05-28T15:39:31+00:00 http://colossians316.org/index.php/item/are-we-headed-for-a-crash corb <div class="element element-text first"> Reflections On The Current State of Evangelical Worship</div> <div class="element element-textarea last"> <div><h1 class="entry-title"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3040" src="http://jamiebrownmusic.files.wordpress.com/2014/05/1.png?w=558" border="0" alt="1" width="275" height="227" style="border: 0;" /></h1> <h1 class="entry-title">Are We Headed For A Crash? Reflections On The Current State of Evangelical Worship</h1> <div class="entry-meta"><span class="entry-meta">by <span class="author vcard"><a class="url fn n" href="http://worthilymagnify.com/author/jamiebrownmusic/" title="View all posts by Jamie Brown" rel="author">Jamie Brown</a></span></span></div> <p><a href="http://worthilymagnify.com/2014/05/19/crash/" target="_blank">http://worthilymagnify.com/2014/05/19/crash/</a></p></div></div> <div class="element element-text first"> Reflections On The Current State of Evangelical Worship</div> <div class="element element-textarea last"> <div><h1 class="entry-title"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3040" src="http://jamiebrownmusic.files.wordpress.com/2014/05/1.png?w=558" border="0" alt="1" width="275" height="227" style="border: 0;" /></h1> <h1 class="entry-title">Are We Headed For A Crash? Reflections On The Current State of Evangelical Worship</h1> <div class="entry-meta"><span class="entry-meta">by <span class="author vcard"><a class="url fn n" href="http://worthilymagnify.com/author/jamiebrownmusic/" title="View all posts by Jamie Brown" rel="author">Jamie Brown</a></span></span></div> <p><a href="http://worthilymagnify.com/2014/05/19/crash/" target="_blank">http://worthilymagnify.com/2014/05/19/crash/</a></p></div></div> Is Your Worship Music Driven by Complaints or Mission in Context? 2014-03-31T18:42:23+00:00 2014-03-31T18:42:23+00:00 http://colossians316.org/index.php/item/is-your-worship-music-driven-by-complaints-or-mission-in-context corb <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><h2>Is Your Worship Music Driven by Complaints or Mission in Context?</h2> <div class="deck">The motivation behind having different worship services is key.</div> <div class="deck"> </div> <div class="byline">by Ed Stetzer</div> <p> </p> <p>Great perspective here at Christianity Today</p> <p><a href="http://www.christianitytoday.com/edstetzer/2014/march/is-your-worship-music-driven-by-complaints-or-context.html" target="_blank">click here</a></p></div></div> <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><h2>Is Your Worship Music Driven by Complaints or Mission in Context?</h2> <div class="deck">The motivation behind having different worship services is key.</div> <div class="deck"> </div> <div class="byline">by Ed Stetzer</div> <p> </p> <p>Great perspective here at Christianity Today</p> <p><a href="http://www.christianitytoday.com/edstetzer/2014/march/is-your-worship-music-driven-by-complaints-or-context.html" target="_blank">click here</a></p></div></div> How Often Should I Introduce a New Song in Worship? 2013-07-17T13:29:14+00:00 2013-07-17T13:29:14+00:00 http://colossians316.org/index.php/item/how-often-should-i-introduce-a-new-song corb <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><p>A great a practical article on introducing new music in corporate worship by worship pastor friend Dan Leverence.  I concur with many of the observations Dan points out in this article.</p> <p>"There’s a recurring debate amongst worship leaders, lead pastors, band members, church leadership, and congregations at large—should we sing familiar worship songs that our people know or new songs? I think any seasoned worship leader will know that the answer is, “Yes.” Both. Yet in many places, a debate still persists and this is evidence that many churches haven’t yet achieved a balance that helps their attendees connect meaningfully with God in worship..."</p> <p><a href="http://worshipleader.com/how-often-should-i-introduce-new-songs-in-worship/" target="_blank">click here to view entire article</a></p></div></div> <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><p>A great a practical article on introducing new music in corporate worship by worship pastor friend Dan Leverence.  I concur with many of the observations Dan points out in this article.</p> <p>"There’s a recurring debate amongst worship leaders, lead pastors, band members, church leadership, and congregations at large—should we sing familiar worship songs that our people know or new songs? I think any seasoned worship leader will know that the answer is, “Yes.” Both. Yet in many places, a debate still persists and this is evidence that many churches haven’t yet achieved a balance that helps their attendees connect meaningfully with God in worship..."</p> <p><a href="http://worshipleader.com/how-often-should-i-introduce-new-songs-in-worship/" target="_blank">click here to view entire article</a></p></div></div> Modern Hymns, Choruses, and NPR 2013-07-10T14:29:48+00:00 2013-07-10T14:29:48+00:00 http://colossians316.org/index.php/item/modern-hymns-choruses-and-npr corb <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><p>by Matt Boswell</p> <p> "To make hymn-style and chorus-style songs enemies is not wise. The Psalms are filled with many formats of songs that are to be sung. From simple refrains to antiphonal responses, from songs of lament to hymns of remembrance, our hymnal is vast. We must conclude that western worship is <em>one </em>way of orthodox singing, but in no way can we impose on varied cultures around the globe that this is the only way. The modern hymn and the praise chorus are close friends, especially in many churches where the music encompasses both variants of music."</p> <p> <a href="http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/tgcworship/2013/07/09/modern-hymns-choruses-and-npr/" target="_blank">for entire article, click here</a></p></div></div> <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><p>by Matt Boswell</p> <p> "To make hymn-style and chorus-style songs enemies is not wise. The Psalms are filled with many formats of songs that are to be sung. From simple refrains to antiphonal responses, from songs of lament to hymns of remembrance, our hymnal is vast. We must conclude that western worship is <em>one </em>way of orthodox singing, but in no way can we impose on varied cultures around the globe that this is the only way. The modern hymn and the praise chorus are close friends, especially in many churches where the music encompasses both variants of music."</p> <p> <a href="http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/tgcworship/2013/07/09/modern-hymns-choruses-and-npr/" target="_blank">for entire article, click here</a></p></div></div> Architecture and Acoustics: 2013-05-20T15:43:52+00:00 2013-05-20T15:43:52+00:00 http://colossians316.org/index.php/item/architecture-and-acoustics corb <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><p>Excerpt from Donald Hustad's <em>Jubilate II</em>. This has a great section on acoustics and architecture. pp. 346-349</p></div></div> <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><p>Excerpt from Donald Hustad's <em>Jubilate II</em>. This has a great section on acoustics and architecture. pp. 346-349</p></div></div> First Things-Tragic Worship 2013-05-20T14:21:38+00:00 2013-05-20T14:21:38+00:00 http://colossians316.org/index.php/item/first-things corb <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><h1><span class="caption">First Things-Tragic Worship</span></h1> <p>by Carl R. Trueman</p> <p>June/July 2013</p> <p>"Tragedy as a form of art and of entertainment highlighted death, and death is central to true Christian worship."</p> <p> </p> <p>"Perhaps it is ironic, but the church that confronts people with the reality of the shortness of life lived under the shadow of death prepares them for resurrection better than the church that goes straight to resurrection triumphalism without that awkward mortality bit."</p> <p><a href="http://www.firstthings.com/article/2013/05/tragic-worship" target="_blank">click here to view entire article</a></p></div></div> <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><h1><span class="caption">First Things-Tragic Worship</span></h1> <p>by Carl R. Trueman</p> <p>June/July 2013</p> <p>"Tragedy as a form of art and of entertainment highlighted death, and death is central to true Christian worship."</p> <p> </p> <p>"Perhaps it is ironic, but the church that confronts people with the reality of the shortness of life lived under the shadow of death prepares them for resurrection better than the church that goes straight to resurrection triumphalism without that awkward mortality bit."</p> <p><a href="http://www.firstthings.com/article/2013/05/tragic-worship" target="_blank">click here to view entire article</a></p></div></div> An Open Letter to Pastors (A Non-mom speaks about Mother's Day) 2013-05-07T17:16:48+00:00 2013-05-07T17:16:48+00:00 http://colossians316.org/index.php/item/an-open-letter-to-pastors-a-non-mom-speaks-about-mother-s-day corb <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><p>An interesting perspective posted by Amy Young</p> <p><a href="http://messymiddle.wordpress.com/2012/05/10/an-open-letter-to-pastors-a-non-mom-speaks-about-mothers-day/" target="_blank">click here to view entire article</a></p> <p> </p></div></div> <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><p>An interesting perspective posted by Amy Young</p> <p><a href="http://messymiddle.wordpress.com/2012/05/10/an-open-letter-to-pastors-a-non-mom-speaks-about-mothers-day/" target="_blank">click here to view entire article</a></p> <p> </p></div></div> Don't Be Late 2013-05-07T16:07:39+00:00 2013-05-07T16:07:39+00:00 http://colossians316.org/index.php/item/don-t-be-late corb <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><p>Love this!</p> <p> </p> <p><a href="http://www.joethorn.net/blog/2013/4/15/dont-be-late" target="_blank">click here to see entire article</a></p></div></div> <div class="element element-textarea first last"> <div><p>Love this!</p> <p> </p> <p><a href="http://www.joethorn.net/blog/2013/4/15/dont-be-late" target="_blank">click here to see entire article</a></p></div></div>