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05/29/2022 Newsletter

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Pray for One Another


To request prayer, email mosaicnazarene@gmail.com

or call/text (520) 709-0815


Our pastors and their families

Our new board:

Walt Ballard

Shelley Butler

Rick Foss

Dee Jones

Clarence McGinnis

Bonnie Strunk

Lillita Watts


Talmas nephew, Renault Kay

The future of LoveWorks

Doretta Allison

Debbie Jones

Dee Jones

Patti Rupp

Barbara Keeler

Debbie Jones

Barb Gionfriddo's Nephew, Brandon

The family and friends of the late Frank Sundstum


The many unspoken requests


Make sure you're a part of our Facebook group to get prayer requests as they come in: https://www.facebook.com/groups/21109057279


 

Bible Reading Plan


Week 22

 

Verse of the Week




Click below to read the verse in context.

 

Coming Up...






 

Holiness Today


Authenticity in Christ

So much has changed in the last one hundred years. Imagine being born in 1920, and being alive in the year 2020. In just a single century, the cultural context in every region of the world has moved from industrial to informational (Gutenberg to Google), from rural to urban, and from modern to postmodern. These are tectonic cultural shifts that remained unchanged in the previous 500 years. What had been an environment of the kind of change that could be expected, anticipated, and managed for half a millennium has quickly moved to an environment of rapid change that feels disruptive and unanticipated.[1] We are in mostly uncharted waters.


These foundation-shaking changes have generated new situations that challenge old presuppositions of how the world works. As a result, Christians’ view of the nature and structure of the church and how the church engages the mission of God has by necessity become adaptable, though not compromised. What remains constant in this time of rapid, discontinuous change is the eternal declaration of the earliest Christian confession: “Jesus Christ is Lord.”


Whom we deem “Lord” is a bedrock essential for a believer’s identity as he or she journeys in grace. If we say, “[FILL IN THE BLANK] is ‘lord’” (and it really doesn’t matter whether it be another person, another thing, or oneself), it changes the entire narrative of our lives, including the ultimate goal and final outcome. But if we truly believe Jesus Christ is Lord, ordained to be so from everlasting to everlasting, there is only one rightful response: discipleship. Richard John Neuhaus reminds us that lordship is “not only an assertion of fact but a pledge of personal and communal allegiance.”[2] Because Jesus Christ is Lord, we want to be like Him. We want to do what Jesus did and live like He lived. In Him alone, we find our identity and purpose. That is the definition of Christian discipleship and is still the way Jesus gets into His church.


Self-actualization is a popular spirituality today. When I did a quick Google search of “how to get in touch with my inner self,” I discovered 683,000,000 results. Scanning a few of these sites, I was encouraged to explore my identity by meditating, taking yoga classes, or keeping a soul journal.


There is a problem with these approaches: popular spiritualities that invite me to get in touch with my true self will never succeed, primarily because the only voice speaking is my own—a perpetual echo chamber. No matter how many strategies I employ to find my “real self,” and no matter how sincere I may be, it all falls short apart from an intimate relationship with my Creator.

Self-actualization is different from Christian authenticity. The former is based in self; the latter is based in Christ. Contrary to what some may think, to be “in Christ” is not to lose our unique self-identity. It is to discover that our identity can only be completely fulfilled in relationship to Him. Said differently, we come to know ourselves as we come to know God.


The spirituality of self-actualization directs one’s attention inward and downward. The pathway to true authenticity turns one’s attention outward and upward through prayer. This distinction is important. The reason we must pray is that only through prayer are we offered the possibility of hearing from Another who is not me, but who knows me.


There is no path to authenticity in Christ apart from prayer. It is true that as we pray, we come to know the heart, mind, and nature of God. It is also true that as we come to know God, we also come to know ourselves. In prayer, we are not merely talking to ourselves (looking inward); we are speaking to Another who is unique from us (looking upward). Even better, as we look to God in prayer, we find that the Spirit of God is also praying within us, communicating the will of the Father and laying bare the deepest secrets of our hearts. When we stake a claim to our identity in anything or anyone outside this relationship, it is idolatry. For, in Him, we live and move and have our being (Acts 17:28).

God is the only person from whom you can hide nothing. Before Him, you will unavoidably come to see yourself in a new, unique light. In truth, prayer may be the only reliable entryway into genuine self-knowing and authenticity of the heart.


When we come face to face with God, we are confronted with what is most true about us. In God’s presence, we experience real change. In this holy encounter, by grace, we finally find our true identity, and we are freed to live as God intended.


So the goal of our walk with Christ is not self-actualization (“I need to find my true self and what’s best for me”) or resignation to the forces of determinism (“I can’t help it; that’s just the way I am.”). In fact, from the perspective of Christianity, being true to oneself is to be true to the self we are called by God the Father to be, remade in the likeness of His Son. Following Jesus and becoming like Him is the unapologetic goal of our life’s journey. John the Gospel writer goes to great lengths to tell us that Jesus looks and acts like His Father: “If you have seen me, you have seen the Father” (14:9), and that Jesus is the Word made flesh and, having come from His Father, is full of grace and truth (1:14). Who Jesus is and what Jesus does are two sides of the same coin, a reality that has important implications for our lives as Christ followers.


What if every Nazarene experienced true authenticity in Christ?


How would our families be different?


How would our churches be changed?

How would our villages and cities be impacted?


The peoples of the world await a church fully alive with authentic holiness disciples of Jesus.


Holiness Today, May/June 2022

By David Busic

 

Opportunities to Give and Serve


Mother's Of Preschoolers would like to thank everyone who volunteered, donated, and prayed for this ministy this session.

We are on break for the summer and will resume in the fall!


Contact - Bonnie Strunk (480) 296-1831.

 


Dear Church family,


As you probably know, the Loveworks building has sold and we don't yet have a new location. Many heartfelt thanks to all of those who helped in the cleaning out of the old facility. It was a daunting task made easier by all who helped. We are praying that God will lead the Loveworks ministry to a new location where we can continue to serve those in need. In the meantime, we will not accept donations as there is not enough storage to hold them. Continue to keep this ministry in prayer as we look for a new location.


Yours in Christ,

Barb Keeler

Contact Barbara Keeler: (520) 709-8925


 


You may always designate how you would like your offerings to be used for Mosaic Ministries besides our general fund. Here are some ministries in which you may want your offerings to go:


✎ LoveWorks ✎ Children's Ministry ✎ MOPs ✎ Prison Ministry

✎ Outreach ✎ Women's Ministry ✎ Facilities Upgrade Fund


 

Information


Check our UPDATES page for new things.


For our live Google calendar go HERE


 


~ Remeber to check our UPDATES page

(for all your Mosaic news)


 

~ See our services on YouTube! RIGHT HERE

 

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M O S A I C K I D S

This week's lesson is:

Be Generous


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Social Distancing Guidelines



Please practice social distancing on the church property as much as possible


Sanitizer and masks are available at the front table


If you feel sick or have a temperature, please stay home


Communion elements will be available on a table as you enter the church 


Offering will be taken as you exit the church after service 


Surfaces will be regularly cleaned and sanitized 


Thanks for respecting the guidelines and one another!


 


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