Pastor’s Paragraphs: Friday, May 20, 2016

Congratulations to the High School Scholarship recipients and the new Helen Cain Memorial Award winner. Eastern Hills has been blessed each year with such outstanding students and this year certainly was not an exception. You will see the names of those students on the right. We are proud for each of them and their families.

Likewise, this year we are blessed to have a number of students serving in Summer Missions assignments. It was such a joy to recognize and commission them this past Sunday evening. As you read inside this publication please note their names and places of service. Remember them in prayer. In particular, let me mention Matthew Burkhart and Ben Crocker as they begin service in the Student Ministry in area churches.

This week is also designated as Montgomery Baptist Association Emphasis Week. Eastern Hills has a valuable role in the cooperative work of Montgomery Baptists. We are grateful for the ongoing work of Dr. Kline Johnson as Director of the Family Resource and Counseling Ministry. His work provides a valuable professional resource across this region for families and churches in meeting family and individual needs. His Assistant in that office is Dinah Bundrick. We also commend the work of Lisa Rose in Community Ministries and Ken May as Director or Missions.

Montgomery Baptist Association also extends our ministry through partnerships with the BCM at AUM, the Forest Park Ministry Center and Samaritan Inn Ministries. Almost 3.5% of our budget supports ministries through Montgomery Baptist Association. In addition, a number of our members serve on a number of committees or volunteer time through the Association. George Ray serves as the Lay Member from EHBC on the Executive Board of our Association. Please remember the work of our Association in prayer and the DOM Search Committee. As most of you know, Ken May has announced his retirement and a search is in progress for the next Director of Missions.

We do many things well at EHBC. One of the things we need to improve most on is personal outreach and evangelism. It is not just the minister’s job, but rather, part of every Christian’s responsibility. Each of us knows people who do not have a church and do not claim a personal relationship with Christ.

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FOCUSED

One of the casualties of aging to which I find myself a victim is the dimming of the eyes.  Ecclesiastes 12 counsels the young person to remember God, their Creator, in their youth before the aging process takes over and various faculties, as listed in verses 1-7, are diminished.

Clear eyesight when we are young may be something we take for granted. However, as we age the realization that our vision is not as sharp as it once was takes hold. “Readers” become standard fare for all intricate tasks. Our once keen laser sharp focus is now blurry and in need of help to restore its youthfulness. That restoration is found through glasses or some sort of rejuvenating surgery. Especially in the early stages of this degenerative eye problem we may be able to fake it and get by, but eventually we must relent and do something to correct the problem.

There is a parallel between physical and spiritual vision. “Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus” was written in the early 20th century. The hymn writer, Helen Lemmel, was strongly influenced by the artist and later little-known missionary, Lilias Trotter. Miss Trotter started off as an aspiring artist but early on felt a call from God to reach the lost. She began her ministry by rescuing prostitutes from the streets of London. Later she went to Africa, without missionary funding, and served for over forty years. While there she penned a poem that would greatly influence the writing of the hymn “Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus.”  The poem was entitled “Focused: A Story and Song.” 

The poem centers around focusing one’s attentions fully and completely upon God. She writes that Satan knows that if a person uses all their powers of concentration on being led by God’s Spirit, they will have a great intensity and impact upon those to whom they are called to minister. Lilias Trotter, writing in a more formal use of the English language than we are accustomed, shares some timeless insights which could very easily have been written today but with a different accent. She writes: “Never has it been so easy to live in half a dozen good harmless worlds at once—art, music, social science, games, motoring, the following of some profession, and so on. And between them we run the risk of drifting about, the ‘good’ hiding the ‘best’ even more effectually than it could be hidden downright frivolity with its smothered heartache at its own emptiness.”

The “good” hiding the “best” leads us to emptiness.  Could this be true of us today especially as American Christians? Have we sought the “good” while missing the “best”? The chorus of the hymn, which we will be singing in worship this Sunday, says it best.

                Turn your eyes upon Jesus, Look full in His wonderful face,                                                                                                                                        And the things of earth will grow strangely dim in the light of His glory and grace.

Keith Pate

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