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New Bethlehem Updates Blog

Our all-church updates have now moved to the Bethlehem Updates Blog.

Easter and Holy Week-Related Information

Donate Easter Flowers (by April 11)

We will display flowers during Easter services in memory of loved ones. To donate money for flowers and have your name and that of your loved one appear in the Easter bulletin at one of our campuses, send $15 per flowering plant. Learn how.

Maundy Thursday Service

April 21, 7:45pm
All campuses
Join us at one of our three campuses for this communion service as we remember the death of Christ. Read more.

Good Friday (Neighborhood Service)

Elder David Mathis preaching
April 22, Noon
Augustana Lutheran Church
704-11th Avenue S, Minneapolis (map)
All of our offices close at noon on Good Friday. Join us as we worship Christ and remember his death. Feel free to park at the Downtown Campus and walk down the street to the service. Questions? Contact Tina Lowe (612-455-3439).

Easter Weekend Services

This year, all services will occur at the regularly scheduled service times:

Downtown Campus in Minneapolis:
Saturday, April 23, 5:30pm
Sunday, April 24, 9:00 & 11:00am, 5:00pm

North Campus in Mounds View:

Saturday, April 23, 6:00pm
Sunday, April 24, 9:00 & 11:00am

South at Burnsville High School:
Sunday, April 24, 9:00 & 11:00am

Spanish & Russian Interpretation

Hear simultaneous interpretation of the sermon by headset, available at the welcome desks.
Spanish interpretation: Downtown Campus, Sunday at 9am
Russian interpretation: South Site, Sunday at 9am

Culto de Celebración de la Resurrección (Resurrection Celebration Service)
5:30pm at the 16/33 Center (1628 E 33rd St, Minneapolis, MN 55407)

Join us as we worship God in Spanish for raising his Son from the dead 2000 years ago! We will celebrate together the hope that we have in Christ, and we will also share a meal together after the service. Invite a friend or relative to attend with you. Childcare is available (ages 0–4), as well as Sunday School for children (ages 5–10). English interpretation is available through headphones.
For more information, contact Kelly Burson (612-455-3478).

Please Note ...

  • No Connection activities on Wednesday, April 20.
  • Bethlehem's campuses close at noon on Good Friday.
  • Sunday school classes will not meet on Easter.
  • Nursery (birth-age 3) is available.

Pray For, Reach Out to Japan

Prayer

Bethlehem has an ongoing prayer time for Japan (which started before the earthquake/tsunami):

Harvest Prayer Japan
Tuesday evenings, 6-7pm
Downtown Campus, Room 214

Contact: Andrew Erickson (952-239-4575).

See Pastor John’s prayer for Japan (and his post Japan: After Empathy and Aid, People Want Answers).

 

From Bethlehem Blogs


If you are interested in how Bethlehem (specifically Bethlehem’s Global Outreach Department and Global Diaconate) are reaching out to Japan, you can see a comprehensive collection of their blogs posts, which cover prayer requests, news about our global partners in Japan, and also how they recommend that you give to Japan.

See all Japan-related posts from Bethlehem blogs.

 

Suggestions for Giving

Here are the organizations that our global partners serving in Japan and Global Diaconate recommend supporting efforts to help Japan:

WorldVenture, the organization some of our global partners serve with, has set up a special fund for the relief efforts.

The Christian Relief, Assistance, Support and Hope (CRASH) is a Japan-based network supporting Christians doing relief work in Japan and around the world. They are endorsed by the Japan Evangelical Missionary Association (JEMA), and efforts are already underway in response to the critical needs arising from the quake & tsunami calamity. Donations can be made through JEMA's PayPal interface on their website.

Converge Worldwide

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Pray For, Reach Out to Japan

Prayer

Bethlehem has an ongoing prayer time for Japan (which started before the earthquake/tsunami):

Harvest Prayer Japan
Tuesday evenings, 6-7pm
Downtown Campus, Room 214

Contact: Andrew Erickson (952-239-4575).

See Pastor John’s prayer for Japan.

 

From Bethlehem Blogs


 If you are interested in how Bethlehem (specifically Bethlehem’s Global Outreach Department and Global Diaconate) are reaching out to Japan, you can see a comprehensive collection of their blogs posts, which cover prayer requests, news about our Global Partners in Japan, and also how we recommend that you give to Japan.

See all Japan-related posts from Bethlehem blogs.

 

Suggestions for Giving

Here are the organizations that our Global Partners and Global Diaconate recommends supporting in their efforts to help Japan:

WorldVenture, the organization some of our global partners serve with, has set up a special fund for the relief efforts.

The Christian Relief, Assistance, Support and Hope (CRASH) is a Japan-based network supporting Christians doing relief work in Japan and around the world. They are endorsed by the Japan Evangelical Missionary Association (JEMA), and efforts are already underway in response to the critical needs arising from the quake & tsunami calamity. Donations can be made through JEMA's PayPal interface on their website.

Converge Worldwide

SEND

 

Downtown Wednesday Connection Series

'Crazy Love' Series (based on the book by Francis Chan)

Watch/listen to Francis Chan's Wednesday, February 2, talk introducing Crazy Love.

February 9-April 13, 27, and May 4; 6:50pm (Worship begins at 6:15pm)
Downtown Campus
720 -13th Ave S Minneapolis 55415

see map

Crazy Love is the content of a 12-week study taught by Mike Bartlett, TCT Church Planting Resident, who will lead this series in discussing Francis Chan’s material from his book, which challenges our concept of God’s matchless love and what it means for us to live out love of God and love of neighbor.

On Wednesdays Downtown, adults are invited to remain in the Sanctuary after our meal (4:45–6:00pm) and our time of worship for all ages (6:15–6:45pm) in order to join us for the General Adult Session in the Sanctuary (6:50–7:45pm

If you have questions about nursery care (birth–age 3), call Joyce Heinrich at 612-455-3498. Learn about Connection classes for Preschool–Grade 12.

For information about Connection Downtown, contact Jeremy Hermann at 612-455-3480.

Sanctity of Life Awareness at Bethlehem

Sanctity of Life Presentations

Sunday, January 16, 11:00–12:15am

  • Sr High Sunday School, North Campus, Room D502

Wednesday January 19, Connection

To celebrate life, join us for one the following Sanctity of Life presentations as we unpack our theme “Abortion Is About God” and discover what God is doing through Christ-centered Crisis Pregnancy Centers. The presentation will include videos, testimonies, guest speakers, and an opportunity for you to ask questions about this topic.

  • North: While everyone is together for the weekly time of worship in the Sanctuary (6:15–6:45pm), we will see the Sanctity of Life presentation together. Afterward, everyone will go to their regular classes at 6:50pm.
  • Downtown: While everyone is together for the weekly time of worship in the Sanctuary (6:15–6:45pm), we will focus on the Sanctity of Life. Afterward, adults and Sr High students will remain in the Sanctuary (6:50–8:00pm) for a Sanctity of Life presentation, and others will go to their classes.
  • South: During our General Session in the 501 Building, Suite 112 (6:30–7:30pm), we will view a Sanctity of Life presentation.

March for Life

Saturday, January 22

Grab your parka, scarf, hat, and gloves and join others at the State Capitol in St Paul as we march to express to our legislature and the entire State that our desire is for abortion to be banned in Minnesota. 
This annual march is sponsored by Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life. Come and demonstrate that we value the sanctity of life and want to protect the unborn.

  • 11:10–11:25am buses board at the North Campus, Downtown Campus, and South 501 Building
  • Noon–1:00pm March for Life at the State Capitol in St Paul
  • 1:30pm buses return to the three locations

Sanctity of Life Weekend

Saturday & Sunday, January 22/23

  • Pastor John’s sermon will focus on the sanctity of life.
  • Baby Bottles will be distributed after services.
We will be handing out empty baby bottles at our campuses following all services. We ask that individuals and families each take a bottle home to fill with loose change, bills, or checks (Downtown/North made out to “New Life Family Services” and South made out to “Amnion Crisis Pregnancy Center”). Please return filled bottles to church on March 5/6. A little change goes a long way. Last year, we were able to raise more than $20,000 for these centers! Thank you for your continued support.

For more information, contact Wayne King (612-716-1751).

Racial Harmony Week: January 12–17, 2011

Focus on Racial Harmony

As people across the country prepare to acknowledge Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, and the work he accomplished to improve race relations, we want to also focus on how the gospel of Jesus Christ restores perfect racial harmony. Join us in the journey of applying the gospel to relationships that cross racial lines.

Wednesday, January 12: Connection

  • Downtown Campus, 6:15–8:00pm, Sanctuary
    Hear a presentation from Spencer Chow, leader of the All Nations Fellowship Sunday School class at the Downtown Campus.
  • South 501 Bldg, 6:30–7:30pm
    Join us as Carl Rogan and Larry Agnew give a presentation on what they have learned about racial harmony at Bethlehem over the past seven years.

Saturday, January 15: Racial Harmony Luncheon
10:00am–1:00pm
Downtown Campus, Room 114

Join us during Racial Harmony Weekend for a presentation followed by a luncheon of ethnic foods, served at this gathering on January 15. We seek to foster a growing understanding of racial issues and to encourage relationships that cross racial and ethnic lines. RSVP for lunch by Wednesday, January 12, by contacting Carl Rogan (651-770-2448).

Saturday & Sunday, January 15 & 16: Worship Services
Pastor Kenny Stokes will be preaching during Racial Harmony Weekend.

Monday, January 17: Martin Luther King, Jr. Day

Bethlehem offices are closed in observance of MLK Day.

2010 Church & Mission Financial Update: January 5, 2011

What shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits to me?
I will lift up the cup of salvation and call on the name of the Lord.
—Psalm 116:12–13

Join us in praising God for his remarkable faithfulness to Bethlehem financially in 2010. Approximately $650K was needed during the last few days of December to meet anticipated 2010 Church & Mission expenses of $8.7M, and an outpouring of generosity from you ($750K) allowed us to more than meet those expenses.

Be amazed (and humbled) by God’s grace to us—through your prayers and gifts that provided more than $1.6M in December to meet Bethlehem’s fiscal needs in a challenging year. More financial details will be available at our winter Quarterly Strategy Meeting on Sunday, January 23, at 6:45pm at the Downtown Campus.

Preliminary 2010 C&M Operating Budget Financial Information:

  • 2010 C&M contributions of approximately $8.8M are 1% more than 2009 C&M contributions of $8,731,149, including year-end 2010 gifts of nearly $200,000 that were received in the mail the first two days of 2011. Note that final 2010 C&M contribution totals are not expected until sometime next week.
  • 2010 C&M expenses are projected to be about $8.7M at the end of 2010. It takes several weeks to process all the remaining invoices, so final 2010 C&M expense totals are not expected until mid-January.

An up-to-date summary of both Church & Mission and Treasuring Christ Together (TCT) giving is included in every issue of the Bethlehem Star newsletter. (Learn more and subscribe.) If you have any questions regarding 2010 or 2011 finances, feel free to contact Jon Grano (Lead Pastor for Operations), Paul Johnson (Financial Secretary), Dave Osborn (2010 Treasurer), or Scott Rebney (2011 Treasurer) by calling the church office at 612-338-7653.

Pastor John’s Report on His Leave of Absence

For eight months of this year (May–December), I was on a leave of absence. That meant I was free from all my pastoral duties. It also meant that all my public ministry was shut down (with a few exceptions): no preaching, no writing for publication, no speaking (except for the Desiring God National Conference and two overseas engagements), no blogging, no tweeting. Therefore, this report will be on the blessings of this leave.

My heart overflows with thankfulness to God and to the elders and staff and people of Bethlehem, and the team at Desiring God. I know that the staff in particular bore a heavier burden because one of the team was missing. Thank you for this kindness.

In March 2010, I wrote to the elders about the goals of the leave:


Noël and I enter this eight-month season of detachment from public exposure and public productivity with a view to serious biblical examination, assessment, nurture, and growth in four areas: 1) our own individual persons, both physically and spiritually; 2) our marriage; 3) our relationship with our children and their families; 4) our pattern of ministry on returning to Bethlehem.

I will say a few words about each of these. But please know that the depth and magnitude of the value of these months will take the rest of my life to unpack. For example, I kept a journal which is now 265 single-spaced pages and has 214 entries. Most of these are personal reflections on what God has been doing in our lives. Perhaps I will write a book someday called The Leave.

So this report is a tiny fraction of what needs to be said, and what, Lord willing, will be said over the next months in conversations and sermons and blogs and books. I will mainly speak for myself here in the expectation that in various ways Noël will speak of her own experience. I know she is thanking God with me for the value of these months. She has read this report, made tweaks, and given approval.

Soul
I have been able to linger longer in the word and prayer than in any other eight-month period in my life. These times have been sweet. The insights and changes in ourselves that we have seen are owing deeply to these meetings with God in his word. I am jealous that these encounters not become hurried or mechanical on my return.

Our normal place of corporate worship has been Sovereign Grace Fellowship, led by Rick Gamache, who used to serve on the Desiring God staff and is one of the best preachers in the Twin Cities.

This was a soul check: Will I flourish spiritually in corporate worship when I am not leading or preaching? O how sweet to experience the answer to this question! I sang and I soaked. And it was not a chafing to be on the front-side of the precious pulpit of God.

I love the word of God, and to have it cascade over me with clarity and depth and power has been authenticating to my faith and my calling. My faith, because I really did enjoy communion with Christ in worship. I experienced afresh that I love God, not just talking about God. And my calling, because I was on the joyful receiving end of the power of the preached word. Yes, I want to preach like this. I want to do this for people.

Marriage
The crucible for refining my soul is marriage and family—even more so than the challenges of ministry. So I turn to these now, knowing that I am still talking about the effects of the leave on my soul.

On December 21, Noël and I celebrated our 42nd wedding anniversary. It was peaceful, happy, memory-laden, sober, and sweet. We are in a good place.

I would label my decades-long, besetting (and I hope weakening) sins in this relationship as selfishness, self-pity, anger, blaming, and sullenness (all of them species of pride). There are others, but these are close to the root of our troubles. I put my gun-sights (Romans 8:13) on these with increasing focus as the leave went on.

Time will tell, and Noël will tell, whether the progress I have made is deep and durable. I pray it is. How these changes happened and what God has used to bring them about, will, no doubt, be subjects of messages and writings in the months and years to come.

For now, I should simply say that in the refining process God has used a combination of things:

  1. private soul-work in the word and prayer,
  2. formal counseling,
  3. the faithful personal ministry of David and Karin Livingston, who have been more deeply in our lives than anyone else,
  4. much reading about the relational shape our sins take on,
  5. research into the peculiar (dis?)orders our brains bring to the relationship,
  6. corporate worship,
  7. endless conversations (time!),
  8. new physical efforts to be strong and healthy (sleep, exercise, diet, leisure), and
  9. new, more rigorous applications of Philippians 2:12–13 (“Work out your salvation with fear and trembling, for God is the one at work in you”). 

The upshot for our marriage of this sanctifying work has been

  1. less withdrawal, more engagement,
  2. less moodiness and sullenness, more hope-filled emotions,
  3. less brooding over past disappointments, more dreaming from God’s promises,
  4. less of a critical spirit, more verbal affirmation,
  5. more tenderness, kindness, and touch,
  6. more intentional time together,
  7. more patience with (genetic?) personality traits without assuming sin,
  8. more of a spirit of forgiveness,
  9. more gratitude and less taking for granted,
  10. more courage to name sins (our own and each other’s) without sounding hopeless or condemning,
  11. a fresh sense of God’s gracious fatherhood over us, who, when he disapproves, does not hold us in contempt—and our learning to do this for each other.

Relationally, perhaps the most crucial text has been Ephesians 4:31–5:2.

Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you, along with all malice. Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you. Therefore be imitators of God, as beloved children. And walk in love, as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us, a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.

God has been very patient with us.

Family

There has been a lot more spontaneity and availability in these months than usual. We have tried to be intentional about being in the lives of our sons and daughters-in-law and to our 12 grandchildren. That has meant helping with house-painting, yard-cleaning, lots of babysitting, some really wonderful times of unhurried leisure together, and some weighty conversations as I tried to share with my sons some of the things I was learning about my own soul and marriage.

Talitha has been a great joy during these months. She has flourished in two home-school co-ops, and in worship leadership in the youth group at Bethlehem. We have drawn her into as much of our personal, marriage, and family issues as seemed appropriate, and she has been sensitive, wise, and affectionate to all concerned. I am a very fortunate father.

Ministry

In the latter weeks of the leave, attention has turned toward thinking through the pace and pattern of ministry for 2011. The aim is to be proactive in not overloading the weeks with outside speaking engagements, and not piling too many Bethlehem responsibilities on top of each other so that body, soul, and marriage are overburdened.

A subcommittee of the elders has been vigilant over Noël and me during this leave and has been involved in helping us think through what the new year should look like.

Future

Eleven days after I return to ministry, I turn 65. One could look at this two ways: 1) it’s the age most people retire, or 2) it’s the age Winston Churchill became Prime Minister and led England and the Western World to victory over Hitler’s aggression. I find Churchill much more inspiring than retirement.

In the days ahead I hope to work with the elders toward a plan for Bethlehem’s long-term future, including a succession plan for my leadership in the next few years. My deep desire and firm commitment is to stay at this post long enough to see Bethlehem on a solid footing when I am no longer the Pastor for Preaching and Vision.

And when I am no longer in that post, I hope (if the elders agree) for Bethlehem to be my base as I do more writing, and continue to serve as Chancellor and Professor in Bethlehem College and Seminary, and as founding contributor to Desiring God.

I believe that Bethlehem’s greatest days are ahead. God is as sovereign and gracious as ever. And I find myself chastened, humbled, and perhaps more useable now. It is good to be back.

2010 Church & Mission Financial Update: December 27

Give online.

Thank you so much for your faithful, generous giving to Bethlehem’s many ministries in 2010. With four days remaining in our 2010 fiscal year, we need about $650,000 by midnight this Friday, December 31, to meet anticipated 2010 Church & Missions expenses.

2010 C&M Operating Budget Financial Details:

  • 2010 C&M contributions of $8,065,784 are currently 3.5% less (about $300,000 less) than 2009 C&M contributions of $8,360,570 at this same time last year.
  • 2010 C&M expenses are projected to be about $8,700,000 at the end of 2010. We need about $650,000 before midnight this Friday, December 31, to meet anticipated C&M expenses before the end of the year.

God has faithfully provided for our needs in so many ways at Bethlehem—may we continue to trust him to enable us to bountifully sow the seed of the gospel in our Twin Cities and around the world.

The point is this: whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully. Each one must give as he has decided in his heart, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver. And God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that having all sufficiency in all things at all times, you may abound in every good work.
—2 Corinthians 9:6–8

Our end-of-year financial need is great, but our God is greater. Please pray for hearts of cheerful generosity as 2010 concludes, and as the Lord leads, consider how you might participate in meeting this need. To be credited toward 2010 expenses, gifts that are mailed must be postmarked by 12/31/2010. If it’s more convenient, you may also give via e-check or credit card online at hopeinGod.org.

Note:

Here’s one example of how all our year-end gifts together might add up to meet 2010 C&M expenses (601 gifts totaling $650,000):

  • 100 gifts of $25: $2,500
  • 100 gifts of $50: $5,000
  • 100 gifts of $100: $10,000
  • 100 gifts of $250: $25,000
  • 100 gifts of $500: $50,000
  • 50 gifts of $1,000: $50,000
  • 25 gifts of $2,500: $62,500
  • 16 gifts of $5,000: $80,000
  • 4 gifts of $10,000: $40,000
  • 2 gifts of $25,000: $50,000
  • 2 gift of $50,000: $100,000
  • 1 gift of $75,000: $75,000
  • 1 gift of $100,000: $100,000

 

© 2012 Bethlehem Baptist Church