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News from Missionaries Travis & Teri Snode

How to Lose Your Child Before He is 5 Years Old

I just read the following article from David Cloud and J. B. Buffington and wanted to pass it on to you, so that you could profit from it:

HOW TO LOSE YOUR CHILD BEFORE HE IS FIVE YEARS OLD

The following is edited and adapted from a message preached by the late J. B. Buffington (1923-2009) at Calvary Baptist Church, Lakeland, Florida, in the early 1970s.

Rearing a family ought to be a thing of joy. You ought to sit down at home and laugh about all the little things that happen. You ought to be happy.

I can talk about teenagers because I have had four of them. My youngest daughter is 23 years old, so I know a little bit about teenagers.

I’ve heard people say, “Everything went along alright until my children became teenagers and then something happened.” But I beg your pardon, that’s not the case. Most of it happened before five years old. That’s why I exhort mothers, “Don’t let anybody be a baby sitter of your children except you and other godly people.” Those first five years, attitudes, security, goals, and many other things are already developed, and they will come into full blossom in teenage years. A child is like a computer. What you put in comes out. You can put something into a computer and pray that something else will come out, but it won’t happen.

I urge you not to waste time, to start early.

Following are some of the ways that parents can lose their teenagers before they are five years old.

1. Use worldly counsel instead of God’s Word about rearing children.

“Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly,” (Psalm 1:1). The world can’t tell you how to raise your boy or girl. I don’t care how well they are trained; God knows human nature better than anybody else. He made the children, and you need to stick by the Word of God. It works! Following worldly counsel is the way to lose them.

Hosea 4:6 says, “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge…” Hosea 8:12 says, “I have written to him the great things of my law, but they were counted as a strange thing.”

Why do teenagers smoke marijuana? They do it to escape reality, to enter a fantasy world. Now ladies, that soap box opera on the television in the afternoon is not reality, and if you expect to rear your children and to be the kind of wife that you ought to be, you better turn off those programs and forget those things. That is not reality. That is escapism; that’s dreaming. That is much a flight from reality as a kid on marijuana.

2. Consider children a burden, a blight, a curse, a robber of your time and pleasure.

A child knows how you feel toward him and reacts toward you in the same manner. Even a baby knows whether you love him or not.

If you think your children are a blight and a burden and that they are in your way, the best thing you can do for them is to give them away because you will have many heartaches when they get to be teenagers. You program into their hearts that they are in your way, that they take your time, that they are just trouble, that they aren’t valuable, and when they get to be teenagers, all of that resentment comes pouring out.

We need to consider our children “an heritage from the Lord” and “his reward” (Psalm 127:3), because they will live and act like what we have told them they are by our attitude toward them. If I have told them that they are the joy of my life, that is the way they will live.

3. Make your possessions more important than your children; don’t make the home a place of fun.

You tell them, “Get out of the house; get off my carpet!” and then you wonder when they are teenagers that they don’t want to come home. Now, I don’t believe that the children should break things and I believe they should learn how to clean up their messes, but there is something more important than the home and the furniture and the carpet and the piano, and that is the people who live there. I like to live at home. That is where I can kick off my shoes in the living room. That’s where I can relax and enjoy myself; and Mom and Dad, you need to make sure that your children feel that way. There have been very few nights that my children have asked to stay away from home. If the home is a place of joy, they will bring their friends there. Before a child is five years old, he knows if the home is a place of happiness and a place where he can enjoy himself.

Now, I don’t believe in a dirty house. There is a difference between a dirty house and a house that is comfortable and a bit “messed up.” A house that is dirty hasn’t been cleaned, but a house that is messed up is lived in.

When your children become teenagers, what will they think about the place called home? Laughter? Joy? Home ought to be the place where you can bring your friends and have fun. The most important thing for parents to do is assure their children that they are more important than anything in that home. Sure, you teach them how to take care of things, but they must understand that they are the really important things to you.

4. Compare one child unfavorable with another.

“Why can’t you be like sister?” “Why can’t you be like that boy down the street?” I’ve got news for you, that’s the last thing they will be. If that other kid is an A student, your child will say to himself, “I’m not going to be like him; I’m going to be a failure.” If you don’t know that, you better wise up. You never compare children. The only Person we are to compare ourselves with is Jesus Christ. He is the comparison.

5. Make a federal case out of them being children.

Paul said, “When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child” (1 Cor. 13:11). Children are children, and there are things they do just because they are children. Don’t make a federal case out of it. Don’t try to make an adult out of a child. Children like to play. It’s not natural for them to sit still long. Some of you Sunday School teachers think that a little kid is going to put his feet on the floor, fold his hands, and focus his eyes on you while you teach him for 30 minutes. You better wise up. The child’s attention span is short.

I think of one of my girls pushing crayons up her nose. I think of another of my girls taking her shoes off at Highland Park Baptist Church and throwing them over her shoulder. I stood up to preach one night and had the various texts marked with paper clips and one of the kids had pulled all of the paper clips out. Another time I stood up to preach and instead of pulling a handkerchief out of my pocket I pulled a pair of little panties out. I caught my boy trying to put the dog in the dryer. He was wet. The kids took a pound of bacon out in the yard and fried it in the sand, playing house. Kids do things just because they are children. They aren’t doing it in rebellion, but just because they are children. There is a vast difference between a child being a child and a child being a rebel. Now, you deal with rebellion, but don’t make a federal case out of a child being a child.

6. Threaten constantly and discipline ineffectively.

Keep on threatening to whip them, but don’t do it. And when you do whip them, just tap them enough to make them angry. I watch parents do that. If you are going to spank them, do it right and you do it until they are happy. When you discipline, you discipline until they are submissive. And if they are still in rebellion, you didn’t do it right. Either your attitude was wrong, or you didn’t keep it going until the plate got warm. If you’re not going to do it right, don’t do it. If you do it right, you won’t have to do it so often.

7. Belittle them.

“You dumb thing; you can’t do anything right; why don’t you get out of the way and let me do that.” So they grow up with an inferiority complex the size of a mountain because you belittled them. There are many kids that learned to be a failure before they were five years old.

8. When they do wrong, talk about how they are killing you and ruining your reputation.

When a parent does this, the child understands that he is not important, that the parent cares more for himself, for his own image, than for the child. His concern is only selfish. When a child discerns this, he will definitely ruin the parent’s reputation!

9. Husbands and wives quarrel in front of the children.

When husbands and wives fight in front of the children, they learn that marriage is a duel rather than a duet. And when they get married, they will fight.

10. When you discipline a child, argue about it.

If the husband starts to whip a child, the mother says, “Do you really think you should do that?” The child quickly learns to manipulate the situation. He or she will risk getting into trouble just to see mom and dad have a fight. When you discipline, the parents must be in harmony and must show the child that they are in harmony. The mom must say, “If daddy said it, that’s right.” The dad must say, “If mommy said it, that’s right.” They must support one another and work out any differences in private.

11. Brag on their talents but not their character, and constantly show them off in public.

The wise thing to do is to brag on character, not talents.

12. Turn on the television or radio or stereo and let worldly music play constantly.

Worldly music produces a worldly environment and creates worldly attitudes. On the other hand, you can program temperament and stability and peace and quietness in your home if you get good sacred Christian music. You can play Bible stories in a room where a little baby is sleeping, and you are programming Bible stories into his little mind. Kids don’t have to learn things formally; you just put it there and they are like a blotter. They absorb it. Put soothing, Christ-honoring, soul-stirring Christian music on and just let it play in your home, and you are programming something of security and tranquility and peace into the children’s hearts. (A list of “Suggested Sacred Music Recordings” can be found at the Way of Life web site.)

13. Teach them to be afraid.

When lightening comes, when storms come, even if you are scared, don’t show it. When a kid falls down, he looks up at his parent to see if he should cry. If he falls down, don’t make a big issue of it, or he will expect that all through life. Every time he has a little trouble he will expect someone to make a big issue of it and fuss over him, and that is not real life. When he falls down, just treat it lightly and encourage him to get up on his own and move on. I know a mother that when her child fell down, she would run and get an aspirin for him! There are many fears that people have that their parents taught them.

My friends, we must face our fears. One of my girls was scared to death of dogs. One day she came into the house screaming, and I thought a tiger was after her, but it was just a little dog. You can’t talk fear out, so I got a dog. I didn’t necessarily want a dog; I got a dog in order to help a little girl face her fears. One of my boys learned to swim but was afraid to swim across the deep side of the pool. One day I said, “You are going to swim across there before we go home.” He swam across and got rid of his fear. Had I ignored that, his fear would have grown. Fear dwelt upon can paralyze. Don’t run from your fears; face them. Don’t instill fear in the heart of your boy or girl. When they look up at you, they need to see confidence and assurance (but not pride). Many parents have taught their child that they can’t go to sleep without a light on. If they are afraid of the dark, go in there with them in the dark and show them that there is nothing to be afraid of.

14. Don’t take time to listen to them and talk with them.

If you are too busy to talk to them when they are little, when they get older they will go to someone else for counsel. By the time they are five years old, they already have an idea about you, whether you take the time to listen to them or you are too busy. Take time to listen to them when their little conversation doesn’t mean anything, so that when the conversation is serious they will talk with you and listen to you.

15. Be a duel personality.

If you are one personality at church and another personality at home, the children know you are a fake and they don’t like it. That hypocrisy will ruin them.

16. Criticize the preacher in front of them.

If you do criticize the preacher in front of them, you shouldn’t be surprised when the children refuse to obey authority and refuse to take the preacher’s exhortations to heart.

17. Mother, teach your little girl rebellion.

We teach by action, and the mother teaches a daughter rebellion by her own stubbornness and disobedience to her husband and to the preacher and to other authorities. She teaches rebellion by not caring how she looks for her husband. Mother, the little girl gets an idea of what a lady is like from you. If the mother is in love with her husband and devoted to him and in submission to him, her daughter will grow up to follow that example and she will follow her husband to the jumping off place, and not shove him off but jump off with him. Many men that God has called to the ministry are having great problems because their wives are not in submission. Their wives are more committed to their mothers than to their husbands. They are not willing to leave their relatives to go to the place of God’s calling. One question I ask every young woman that sits in my office for counsel before a wedding, “Do you love this man enough to leave your mother and father?” I ask the same thing of the young men. If you can’t answer yes to that, you aren’t old enough to get married. Mother, look in the mirror, because the little girl that grows up in your home will probably be just like you in her attitude toward authority and men in general and in her attitude toward her husband in particular. If you are thinking about marrying a girl, you should take a look at her mother and her attitude toward these things.

18. Dad, treat your wife disrespectfully.

Treat the wife with disrespect and a lack of compassion, and you will raise a boy that does the same thing. Before you marry a young man, you had better take a long look at his father and at the attitude of his father toward the wife. If a dad talks about other women all the time, about blonds and brunettes and red heads, the little boy will follow that example. The dad needs to teach his son that he is committed to his wife and that he would die for her, and then when the boy grows up and says at his wedding, “till death do us part,” he will mean it. The dad must teach his son how to be treat girls with kindness and how to be a gentleman toward women and how to have a proper respect for the opposite sex. And it must start early.

19. Dad, teach your son to be wimpy.

Do you know that there is difference between how you raise a girl and how you raise a boy? With a girl you treat her with gentleness; with a boy you trip him when he walks past! A boy needs roughness. You want to grow him up to be a man, not a sissy. Get a pair of boxing gloves and swap licks with him. Wrestle with him and let him get the best of you sometimes, but sometimes put a scissor grip on him so he can learn reality. Life is rough, and a man must learn how to deal with it. He must learn that life has pain, that there is give and take, and he must know how to take. Teach him to walk like a man, work like a man, think like a man. The predominate figure in a boy’s life needs to be his father. The predominate figure in a girl’s life needs to be her mother. There are boys that have gotten so attached to their mothers that they can’t have a successful marriage.

20. Teach your children that you don’t trust them.

We know that foolishness is bound in the heart of a child and that children are children and that they have to learn how to be dependable and honest, but we need to have the objective of letting the children know that we trust them. Early in life we need to tell our children that we don’t want them to break our trust. “I trust you son; I trust you daughter; don’t lie to me. If you lie to me I can’t trust you.” Teach them from the earliest age, “Tell the truth; tell the truth; tell the truth.” My daddy died when I was in high school. When I would get ready to go somewhere, my mother would say, “Son, I trust you.”  Boy, that kept me out of a lot of things. Now if she had said, “I don’t trust you son,” I would have acted out her distrust.

Conclusion

In the book of Proverbs, the ideal woman is not a businessman; it is a mother and wife at home. The home is not the woman’s dungeon; it is her throne. Daddy, in Psalm 128, God talks about the home in this manner:

“Blessed is every one that feareth the LORD; that walketh in his ways. For thou shalt eat the labour of thine hands: happy shalt thou be, and it shall be well with thee. Thy wife shall be as a fruitful vine by the sides of thine house: thy children like olive plants round about thy table. Behold, that thus shall the man be blessed that feareth the LORD” (Psalms 128:1-4).

The thing that God gave to Job after all his travail was his home re-established and letting him see his children to the fourth generation.

I know parents that are just looking forward to when their kids get old enough to get out of the house. You know why that is? Because before the children were five years old they programmed the wrong things into their hearts and modeled the wrong things before them.

November 6, 2009 Posted by Travis Snode | Children | | No Comments Yet

Summer Celebration in Limavady

We had a very good time this week in Limavady at the Summer Celebration 4 Kids & Teens.  It started on Tuesday and ran through Friday from 4.00 – 5.30 PM each day.  The Lord blessed us with a great group of young people who came to the club. 

We had a high of 25 children, 10 adult workers, and 4 teen workers.  The theme of the week was “David: God’s Champion”.  We taught the children about having a good heart, humility/serving, trusting in God for strength, and doing God’s will. 

Sunday, 23 August is the Graduation Ceremony.  We will present all of the young people with a certificate and allow them to redeem the points they earned for prizes.  All parents and family members are welcome to come to see their young person graduate.

I wanted to say “Thanks” to everyone who helped out this week.  You all did a great job, and we could not have done it without you.  Below is a photograph of the group that was there on Friday.

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August 22, 2009 Posted by Travis Snode | Children, Update | | No Comments Yet

Pictures from Bible Club Graduation

Here are some pictures from this past Sunday with all the children who came to our Summer Celebration 4 Kids.  What a great group!  We praise the Lord for each of them, and trust that the truths they learned last week will stay with them a lifetime.

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August 13, 2009 Posted by Travis Snode | Children, Church | | 1 Comment

Summer Celebration 4 Kids Graduation

Today was the culmination of a lot of prayer, hard work, and outreach.  We invited all of the children who were at the Summer Celebration 4 Kids to come back today for the service with their parents to a special graduation.  We had 25 children from the Summer Celebration come back today to take part.

We presented them with a certificate and let them redeem the points they earned for prizes after the service.  Also, we enjoyed hot dogs and lunch together.

It was such a blessing to see 43 people there and 15 first-time visitors!  It was good to see parents and grandparents come out as well to see their young people be honoured.

I cannot say enough about how grateful and pround I am of our workers who worked so hard today.  It was trully a wonderful day and real team effort.  I pray that the Lord was glorified and that the seeds of the gospel that were planted today will bring forth fruit.

I will try to post photographs later.

August 9, 2009 Posted by Travis Snode | Children, Update | | No Comments Yet

Summer Celebration – 4th Day

Yesterday we finished up our Summer Celebration 4 Kids with a great time.  We had 31 children on the last day with probably 50 different children over the whole day.  The lesson was on “David the King” and the verse was 1 John 2:17 “And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever.”  Below are some photographs that Gail Smyth took of the week.  As you can see we had a great time, and I know we will see fruit from the seeds that were sown this week.

I want to thank all of our workers who helped out, especially David & Tracey Laverty, Fiona Hamilton, & Gail, Rachel, and Sarah Smyth, and my wife Teri.  You all worked very hard and deal with some tense, stressful situations, but you all did a great job.  I am so proud of how God used you, and I know the Lord will bless you for all you did.

 

August 8, 2009 Posted by Travis Snode | Children | | No Comments Yet

Summer Celebration – 3rd Day

Yesterday was our third day for our Summer Celebration 4 Kids.  We had a great time together.  The weather has been good and we have been able to get outside and play.  We had 28 young people yesterday.  Our workers are doing a great job, and I appreciate so much each of them sacrificing their time to help out with this very special week.

The lesson yesterday was on “David the Giant Killer” and our verse was from Philippians 4:13 “I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.”

Today is our last day.  We are having pizza and the winning team will get to throw pies in the face of the other team’s workers.  Please be in prayer for God to work through the lessons, and to give all of our workers strength.

I will try to get some pictures out later on of the week.

August 7, 2009 Posted by Travis Snode | Children | | No Comments Yet

Summer Celebration – 2nd Day

We just finished the second day of our Summer Celebration 4 Kids.  We had a great time.  There were 27 children and 6 adult workers.  Several of our regular children were not there.  10 of the children were there for the first time.

The lesson today was on “David the Skillful Servant” from 1 Kings 16.14-23 and how he learned to be humble and serve even though he was anointed king.  The verse was James 4.10 “Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and he shall life you up.”

We had a tremendous time together, and we are looking forward to the rest of the week.  Come and bring your friends.  Tomorrow will be more fun for everyone.

August 5, 2009 Posted by Travis Snode | Children | | No Comments Yet

Summer Celebration – 1st Day

We had a good first day yesterday at our Summer Celebration 4 Kids & Teens.  We had 25 young people there and 6 adult helpers.  The lesson was on “David the Good-Hearted Shepherd” and the verse was Proverbs 15:3 “The eyes of the Lord are in every place beholding the evil and the good.”

We ran a 17 -seater minibus to collect people and the bus was completely full.  Last night after church, we passed out more flyers.  Hopefully, we will have to make two trips today to bring all the young people.

Please pray for this outreach.  This is a great opportunity to give the gospel and reach new families for Christ.

If you would like to see what is going on, just come by Northwest Baptist Church at 10 Fountain St., City Centre from 2.00 – 3.30 PM today through Friday!

August 5, 2009 Posted by Travis Snode | Children | | No Comments Yet

Communicating Christ to Children

The following notes come from Will McRaney’s book The Art of Personal Evangelism.  I hope they will be a help to you.

Developmental Makeup of Children

  1. Until age 12, it is difficult for a child to handle abstract thoughts such as those involved in salvation.  Children need us to draw a picture to see, not just expound on, theological concepts.
  2. Children have basic psychological needs: to belong, to achieve, freedom from fear, love and affection, freedom from guilt, and ability to contribute.  Each need can be an effective tool for evangelism, but a witness can easily abuse each one during an evangelistic encounter.
  3. Keep in mind that each child is an individual.  We should be sensitive to the particular developmental stage of the child to whom we are witnessing, and continue to check for understanding at each major aspect of the gospel message.

Accessing Readiness

  1. There is no single way to assess readiness, but there are some good questions you can ask and some signs to look for in a child.
  2. Ask children open-ended questions, not yes-no questions.
  3. Rather than ask questions such as, “Do you believe Jesus died and rose again to pay for your sins?” ask questions such as “Who is Jesus?  Why did He have to die?  What happened to Jesus after He died?  What do you want Jesus to do for you today?”
  4. Other questions that may be helpful:
    • What would you like to talk to me about?
    • What do you think it means to be a Christian?
    • What made you think about this?  When do you think about this?  How long have you been thinking about this?
    • What else do you know about being a Christian?
    • How would you describe God?
    • How do you think God feels about you?
    • Who do you think God is?
    • Why do you think a person needs to become a Christian?
    • Let’s pretend that a friend of yours at school asks you to tell him what it means to become a Christian?  What would you tell him?
    • What other things are you wondering about?
  5. Several signs may indicate a growing readiness to receive Christ:
    • A change in disposition.  Serious meditation, sober thoughts, or expressions of worry could evidence a conviction of the Holy Spirit.
    • An inquiring mind.  Questions concerning church membership, baptism, forgiveness, the resurrection of Jesus, or death could indicate an interest in salvation.  Be aware that such questions may only indicate a growing interest and not immediate readiness.
    • The development of concepts.  An ability to explain adequately the person and work of God, Christ, or the Holy Spirit, or a clear understanding of sin may indicate readiness.

What Must Children Understand?

  1. Because many children are eager to accept Christ in order to please an adult or to copy the actions of a sibling or friend, they must clearly understand their own personal need for Christ.
  2. They must understand that Jesus is the only way of salvation. 
  3. They must know what it means to trust Christ.
  4. A witness should explain the gospel clearly to a child, being careful and flexible with terminology.
  5. Concepts such as faith and belief should be thoroughly explained, perhaps even terms such as trust or receive.
  6. Some basic to discuss when witnessing to children include:
    • The nature of sin and need of the individual
    • The person and work of Christ
    • God’s requirement for salvation
    • Results (what God does through salvation)

Guidelines for Child Evangelism

  1. Never assume anything; always start at the beginning.
  2. Use word and concepts the child can understand.
  3. Children think in concrete, literal terms.  (i.e. “invite Jesus into your heart.”)
  4. Ask open-ended questions and listen to the answers they give and do not give.
  5. We do not want them to give answers they have heard from church leaders or parents if they don’t understand what the words mean.
  6. Children may not answer with standard Christian terms, but may understand.
  7. Stick to the basics when explaining the gospel, because understanding is gained through previously explained concepts and truths.
  8. Assist children as they ask questions and the Holy Spirit moves, but do not pressure a child.

Christian Terms Made More Understandable

  1. Sin: Sin is when you choose your way instead of God’s way.  Sin is when you know what you are supposed to do, but you choose to do something else.  Sin separates you from God.
  2. Repent: Repent means that you decide to do things God’s way instead of your way.  You are sorry for the wrong choices you have made.
  3. Obeying God: Obeying God means choosing to live God’s way.
  4. Christian: You are a Christian if you have asked God to forgive you for the wrong choices you have made (sin) and asked Him to be in charge of your life.
  5. Saviour: Jesus is my Saviour because He does for me what I cannot do for myself.  He saved me from being separated from God forever because of my sin.
  6. Righteousness:  Always doing and saying what God would do and say.
  7. Holy Spirit: God is the Boss and the Holy Spirit is the One who tells you what the Boss wants you to do.

Do’s and Don’ts

DO…

  1. Do be available to talk with children and be a safe person to them.
  2. Do clarify incorrect or inadequate understanding.
  3. Do stick to the basic issues.
  4. Do use the Bible (the child’s if possible) within the intellectual limits of the child.
  5. Do teach the need, concept, and urgency of faith without pressure.
  6. Do encourage the child to communicate with the Lord Jesus.
  7. Do verbally affirm desires for baptism and the taking of the Lord ’s Supper, even if the child is not ready to receive Christ.
  8. Do distinguish between receiving Christ and subsequent baptism and church membership.
  9. Do allow children to receive Christ as they demonstrate readiness.
  10. Do inquire about and review what the child did and said in receiving Christ.
  11. Do communicate with the parents as soon as reasonably possible.
  12. Do beginning follow-up whenever possible.
  13. Do provide reasources for Christian parents of new children who are believers.
  14. Do share the gospel with lost parents of the child.

DON’T

  1. Don’t lead a child into a decision he or she is not ready to make.
  2. Don’t just use a memorized presentation.  Children are unique.
  3. Don’t ask questions with the answer in or implied in the question.
  4. Don’t confuse the children with too many illustrations, Scripture verses, or concepts.
  5. Don’t expect adult Christian terminology from the child.
  6. Don’t assume the child is unsaved.  Some children who respond to a personal invitation may already be saved and are seeking assurance.
  7. Don’t overemphasize fear and the threat of hell.
  8. Don’t tell the child everything you know about the Bible or sanctification.
  9. Don’t insist the child get saved now.
  10. Don’t tell the children he or she is saved.  Let the Word of God and the Holy Spirit do that in due time.
  11. Don’t think your responsibility is over when a profession of faith has been made.
  12. Don’t baptize a child or allow a child to join a church without the permission of parents.

August 1, 2009 Posted by Travis Snode | Children | | No Comments Yet

Sunday Report

We had a wonderful day yesterday at both churches.  At Northwest Baptist Church, we had Friend Day with a BBQ after the morning service and then an afternoon service.  It was a great time of fellowship.  It was great to see a good crowd there, and I appreciate everyone who worked hard to invite their friends.

At Roe Valley Baptist Church, we were blessed to hear a song in Swedish from some girls that are visiting the Evans for a few weeks.  Also, Hannah and Samuel Neilly gave a report of their trip to America and how God worked.

The messages yesterday were on “Saved by Grace” from Acts 15:1-20 and “Lawful but not Expedient” from Acts 15:19-35.  We talked about how salvation is by grace alone having nothing to do with our good works.  We also talked about how we don’t have to do anything to keep our salvation, but our behavior can either expedite the gospel or be a stumbling block to people accepting the gospel.

This is the final week of preparation before we start our Summer Celebration 4 Kids and Teens next week.  If you would like to be involved, just let use know.

July 27, 2009 Posted by Travis Snode | Children, Update | | No Comments Yet