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Growing a Family; Remind Them (Sermon 3) Video

March 6, 2018 Filed Under: Bethel Church-Jackson

Growing a Family With A Life-Long Love for God
Remind Them (Sermon Three) Video
Bethel Church-Jackson, Michigan
March 4, 2018 AM
Pastor Ken Pierpont

HOW TO “MEZUZAH” YOUR HOME

March 4, 2018 Filed Under: Faith and Family

The Jews place a Mezuzah on the doorpost of their home to remind them of their love for God and the Law of God. Here are some things that you can do to influence those in your home to love God and regard the law of God:

* Fill your home with reminders of the truths of Scripture and your allegiance to them.
* Listen to good, Christian Radio Broadcasts and iPod, etc.
* Play Christ-exalting, pure, joyful, scripturally-sound music constantly in your home.
* Have a copy of God’s Word featured prominently in your home. (Not a decoration)
* Place good, Christian literature all around your home. (Toilet-tank edification)
* Make craft items that feature Scripture quotations. Place them around your home or use them for gifts “As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.”
* Have a family bookcase and invest in good biographies of Great Christians. Read them to your children in the evening or paraphrase them for smaller children. (Use the highlighter outline method)
* Record your family stories which illustrate the things the Lord has taught you and send them to your children or grand-children.
* Keep a Prayer Book and record answered prayer
* Make a special project of making a Missionary Prayer Book (card collection; stamp collection) (Jer. 5:5)
* Take one of your children on a missions trip.
* Go on an adventure to seek God. -One pastor took his son on his senior year to section hike the AT and taught him the Book of Ephesians on the trail. -North Manitou Island Adventure.
* Be careful not to grieve the Spirit of God with entertainment that doesn’t please Him.
* Have a world map in your home and show where world prayer needs and missionary endeavors.
* Have missionaries in your home.
* Display beautiful, balanced art— with a purpose or a story
* Invite those with needs to your home to help them.
* Bake and cook to give things to others.
* Be sure each child has his own Bible and learns how to treat it.
* Take advantage of difficult situations and see them as “aids to communion” (2 Cor. 12:7-9)
* Dad: Before you leave for work in the morning arouse the children’s curiosity by saying: tonight after dinner, I’m going to tell you “The BB gun mystery” The story of “Skipper the Missionary Dog.” etc.
* Mom: Devote yourself to meaningful homemaking. Turn on your creative skills toward it.
* Get your home neat and organized. Practice jurisdictional leadership, example.
* Have a time of family devotions regularly.
* Use scripture memory charts and small incentives.
* Put scripture memory cards on ‘fridge, shaving mirror, speedometer, wallet etc.
* Carry “ammo” for the devil in areas of temptation.
* Build a good Bible Study Library
Complete Concordance
A Word Study Bible
A good Bible Dictionary (teachers should have “ISBE” or Zondervans Pictorial Bible Dictionary).
A good Bible Atlas
The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge. (TSK)
* Come to prayer meetings as a family
* Worship as a family
* Teach your children to sit quietly in church (how to do it)
* Create a quiet bag
* Have a Saturday night ritual
Quarterly discussion
Shine shoes -this is a good time for the Father to “bless” each member of the family
Wash car
lay-out all clothes
* Have a Sunday Morning ritual (music, Breakfast, no time for selfishness here)
* Dress up and make the Lord’s Day special
* Develop a family ministry (sing in Rest Homes/ Adopt a Widow)
* Teach your children young how to tell others how to be saved.
* Make your own Wordless Book
* Sponsor a neighborhood 5-Day Club
* Teach them to distribute tracts
* Evaluate teaching, but never openly criticize spiritual leaders.
* Father should assume enthusiastic leadership in all these areas
* Mother needs to show great enthusiasm at whatever attempts the father makes in this direction.
* Remember that spiritual things are discerned with the spirit, so don’t worry if you think preaching is “over their head.”
* Cleanse home. Go through your house and ask God to show you anything that could cause your children to stumble… remove it.
* Study Scriptural and spiritual definitions of names and use them to “bless” your children
* Put the children into bed each night with a prayer.
* Have them pray, but don’t have them pray “canned” prayers
* Go on special “adventures”
* Rise early and go on a walk to work on Scripture memory
* Get out on the lake to talk about a biblical principle
* Take “full moon” walks
* Establish scriptural convictions and educate your family to embrace them.
* tell stories of the spiritual journeys of your families.
* Use clothing that symbolizes your devotion to Christ.
* Praying together as a family
* Use your talents for Christ
* Listening to people and acting on needs as a family
* Bible memory
* Use character-building books—Christian
* Center around the local church. Always cast local church ministry in a positive light.
* Have the children serve under people who don’t have the same gifts that you do.

Growing A Family-Tell Them (Sermon 2) Audio

February 28, 2018 Filed Under: Bethel Church-Jackson, Sermons

Series: Growing A Family With A Life-Long Love for God
Title: Tell Them
Text: Deuteronomy 6:7
Bethel Church, Jackson, Michigan
February 25, 2018 AM
Pastor Ken Pierpont

https://kenpierpont.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/Growing-a-Family-Tell-Them-1.mp3

Growing A Family-Show Them (Sermon 2) Video

February 28, 2018 Filed Under: Bethel Church-Jackson, Current Thoughts

Series: Growing A Family With A Life-Long Love for God
Title: Tell Them
Text: Deuteronomy 6:7
Bethel Church, Jackson, Michigan
February 25, 2018 AM
Pastor Ken Pierpont

Bittersweet Farm Journal (Number 4) Around the Table

February 25, 2018 Filed Under: Bittersweet Farm, Current Thoughts

Bittersweet Farm Journal This Week

There’s really not a hint of spring around these parts yet, but the grip of winter is weakening for sure. We’ve been so busy getting adjusted to our new life here that I am embarrassed to admit that Hazard and I took our first real walk today (Saturday). I noticed that the ground around our home is not flat. You notice that more when you walk around than when you drive around. Hazard and I enjoyed a good vigorous stroll. 

My new friend named David is teaching me about birds. I’m learning how to attract them to our little farm and how to identify them by sight and by song. I’m tuning my ear to notice them. On our walk I saw Canada Geese flying overhead in formation honking their way along. I heard a pigeon cooing off in the fence row and down at the edge of a pond I think I heard a red-winged blackbird calling. There were a few others, but I’m still a novice. 

The other night I was driving out to the farm from my study listening to the radio when the announcer said: “Expect delays if you are traveling to the Upper Peninsula tonight. The Mackinaw Bridge is closed due to ice falling from the suspension cables.”

When I arrived home I stepped out of my car and heard a loud bird call overhead. I turned my head up to see a large solitary bird with a long neck and a wide wingspan high over Bittersweet Farm flying easily northwest. The sight of the bird somehow enlivened my spirit and sent me on a mission to discover the name of such a wonderful creature. It had a loud rattle-like call. It was a Sand Hill Crane in flight.

When I am afield with my dog and looking out on woods and fields and looking back on our little farm from far away my heart breaks into grateful worship. My walk was interrupted by a welcome call. A young man who has come to follow Christ since we came to Bethel called. God is setting him free from from drug-addiction. He was eager to meet for some fellowship and encouragement next week. So my worship walk was interrupted by another form of worship. 

As I write its after nightfall and I’m up in my quiet corner of the house. I can hear the wind picking up and rain is beginning to fall. It should rain through the night an then blow through the morning, but by tomorrow evening the sun will be back. Maybe Lois and I will take a drive in the country. Maybe I will take another worship walk. I know Hazard will be willing. I’ll take my new field glasses this time to see if I can see some of the things I hear. 

Around the Table

When we moved to our new farmhouse out on Bittersweet Farm we knew we needed to do something about our oak dinning room table. We’ve had it for well over 28 years. It is still sturdy but the finish needed refreshing. About a week after we moved in Lois went to work on it, bringing a new luster to an old heirloom. Things of value always have a story attached to them, don’t they? It’s been a while since I told the story behind that table. To read it again is remarkable when you see what God has done in the last year bringing us to Bethel and to Bittersweet Farm. Here is the story from almost thirty years ago:

I am privileged to do the pastorate along rural lanes and country-side and in quaint villages and small towns. My parish is a beautiful one. This time of the year the gentle hills and glens of Knox county are ribboned with ripening crops and rich with the colors of autumn.  

Robert Frost wrote of “being versed in country things…”, that is an ambition of mine. I love the old places in the country best. Bank barns and big family homes back long, tree-lined lanes. Houses with character and a history. Not cookie-cutter track-houses but unique homes with their own personality and atmosphere.  

Our good neighbors, the Wheelers, have a home like that. It is nestled in a ravine back a quarter-mile lane in the middle of a one hundred acre farm. On the back porch is a sturdy wrought iron triangular dinner bell.  

I can imagine little children, grimy with play, running for the house at the sound of that bell. Their daddy, coming in from the field, hangs his cap on a hook inside the back porch and rolls up his sleeves. He scrubs for dinner then cups his hands to drink the cold water. He takes his place at the head of the table and with all the family holding hands bows his head and says a humble, sincere prayer of thanksgiving. The aroma of good food and coffee is on the air. The home is marked by the bounty of God.  

We don’t live at the end of a lane in a spacious farm house. We don’t have a dinner bell. I don’t work in the fields. But there are a couple things about his little scenario that we have been able to duplicate.  

Every time we sit down to eat as a family, we join hands around a beautiful solid oak dinning-room table. I think if I tell you the story behind how we got that table and what we plan to do with it you will be strengthened in your resolve to have a godly home.  

It is an unusual story involving the Amish and the Japanese, Athens and Tokyo, a lady who calls herself Anne, A niece of Sam and his cousin, the Honda Motor Company, and Disney World.  

The table didn’t cost me a penny. Lois doesn’t have a job but she paid for it. One day, looking for an outlet for some home-made craft items, Lois called a friend named Joanna (who calls herself Anne). Anne/Joanna put her in touch with a lady from Athens (Ohio) who had a contract with the Honda Motor Company to supply American-made dolls for a promotion sponsored by Disney World in Tokyo. Lois called the lady from Athens, who told her she would buy all the dolls she could make. There was, however a stipulation. The deadline for the order was less than a week away.  

We set a goal to make sixty dolls in three days. The whole family worked together. The oldest children stuffed doll arms and legs and torsos with polyester batting. I stuffed and stitched doll pantaloons. Lois did the rest. I helped with meals. We stayed up all night most of two nights. I carefully maintained my office hours and took care of my calls and study and meetings and administrative duties, but when the deadline came we delivered on our end of the bargain. Thirty days later a check for over six-hundred dollars arrived in the mail.  

We went shopping for a table. The retail stores wanted more than we could afford but I could tell the tables were made locally. Not knowing how to locate the Amish man who make the tables, I stopped an Amish lady on the street in Sugarcreek and asked if she knew anyone who built custom furniture. She said; “Oh yes, my cousin, Sam Mast does. He lives near Mount Hope.”  

We drove to Mount Hope. At a little country store we stopped again. I asked the girl at the counter if she knew where Sam Mast lived. From the middle aisle of the store a voice said; “Sam Mast is my uncle.” She told us how to find his house.  

We drove to his home and described the table we wanted. Solid Oak. Five legs. Simple but sturdy. Bow-back chairs on the ends and benches on the sides. Light finish. Five leaves so it would open to ten feet. We held our breath as he looked up the price. All together it came to $600.00 dollars!  

The man who custom-built our table was named Sam Mast. He signed and dated our table on August 10, 1990. We loaded the whole family in the van and went to beautiful Holmes County to pick it up. The big table should be in our family for generations. 

So you see, it’s not just a functional thing. Our table is a testament to the goodness and the faithfulness of God to our family. Maybe you can join us some day out on Bittersweet Farm and gather with us around our table. 

Ken Pierpont
Bittersweet Farm
Summit Township, Michigan
February 25, 2018

Camp Lesson #15; Salvation is a Gift (Three Questions)

February 24, 2018 Filed Under: Current Thoughts

If you heard me speak at camp you know I did my best to make the gospel plain. One of the ways I have learned to do that is with three questions, three clear passages from the Bible and three stories from the Bible that prove salvation is a free gift. In the next three Camp Lessons I will share the three questions, three passages, and three stories.

Learn them well and use them as the Lord directs you in gospel conversations with others or to strengthen your own faith and understanding.

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