October – A Month of Missions, Storm Relief
Meanwhile, once the storm hit, we tried our best to see what needs existed in our own community. At least 6 tornadoes touched down in the county, and there were over a dozen deaths just south of us in the Spanish Lakes community. We contacted two of our parishioners in Spanish Lakes, whose home was still standing. Both were in the hospital for unrelated health reasons. Another parishioner’s home was flooded, and some of our members helped in that situation, going so far as providing housing for the couple in need. Several parishioners on the beach had homes that were damaged and are still taking next steps towards recovery– please be in prayer!
Now is the time to Rally! in Christ’s Church!
We are RALLYING our church in September for a new season of ministry and for autumn on the horizon!
We began our journey last Sunday in the book of Daniel, which encouraged us to remain steadfast in changing times, faithful to God in the midst of doubt, and prayerful as God’s people!
We are rallying the church in three ways:
Let’s RALLY in Prayer – We’re calling our church to pray for our church, community, nation, and world. The Ladies’ Devotions last Tuesday, for instance, emphasized prayer and connected people with creative ways to pray!
Let’s RALLY in Generosity – We’re asking everyone to pray and give above and beyond the tithe in September to “catch up” from summer.
- If you have yet to give to FBC, now is the time to begin.
- If you are faithful, please consider giving a little extra this month.
- If God has blessed you financially, then please give a hardy gift to get First Baptist ahead in the game!
Let’s RALLY in Outreach – We’re asking everyone to pray about and participate in our Missions Vacation Bible School, which is on Oct. 4th at 5:00 PM at Birthday Angels in the Indian River Mall! Brochures are available at church for more information.
How is God calling you to RALLY! this season?
Pastor’s Report of the Southern Baptist Convention, June 2024
- …to deal faithfully with the sexual abuse scandals and make things right with thousands of victims in Southern Baptist churches by supporting the Sexual Abuse Task Force and the implementation plan.
- …to promote traditional Baptist values, such as the diversity of churches and Baptist beliefs (which Dr. Jeff Iorg outlined explicitly in his address), by voting against any motions that base a church’s partnership on narrow theological issues rather than mission-minded collaboration.
- …to encourage missions as the highest priority in the Convention (really, to me, the only reason for the Convention to exist in the first place);
- …and to allow churches – in a spirit of the Baptist belief of church autonomy- to call the leaders most appropriate to their local context and to avoid making women in ministry a factor for Convention fellowship.
2024 Missions, “Love Thy Neighbor”, Deepens our Ties to Missions
- How do we articulate the “…so that…” statement? I’d like to know how each ministry connects with our mission, values, and the people we are trying to reach. So, for instance, we can say, “We do the GROW ministry so that we can communicate and pray for people who are unable to be on campus on a regular basis.”
That is great, but can there be more to it, like: “We also do GROW so that we can build connections with new guests and our local community“. Well, if that is the case, what do we need to add to our GROW ministry to reach new people both within and beyond the church?
- Does it bear fruit? Another question to ask is whether a ministry is bearing fruit. Too often, we look at numbers and “returns on investment” when we assess the efficacy of ministries. But those are questions appropriate for the marketplace, not necessarily for God’s mission in the life of our church.
What if we asked, “Is this ministry bearing fruit?” What kind of “measures of success” might we look at? Instead of numbers, we would look at spiritual growth, connections and sharing the Gospel, and engaging our community on mission for God. These are very different ways of looking at success of our ministry.
These are just a handful of goals I have for 2023, and I hope that you are as excited about this New Year as I am. I’m ready to go, and to go where Jesus leads! What about you?
God calls us to be Christ’s Church together and not neglect the fellowship of believers. Meeting as a church is fairly easy, but the real challenge is following God into a world full of diverse beliefs, opinions, and views.
Every month in Vero Beach, an interfaith group meets for lunch and facilitate dialogues to learn about one another. I am often discouraged, however, that there are not more evangelical Christians represented. I pray for more volunteers in this work.
For the last three decades, people “doing church” have been trying to measure growth in a post-Christian age. It is true: for every generation of people that pass, fewer attend church.
by Joe LaGuardia
This small margin–and the divide of electoral politics in our county–shows us the value and deeply held conviction of not getting partisan in the pulpit. Christ’s church doesn’t choose sides, it always chooses Christ because He is our sole Lord and Savior to whom we give ALL allegiance.
by Joe LaGuardia
by Joe LaGuardia
by Joe LaGuarda
Now, after several weeks back into worship, I fear they might be correct: Our institutions and events have been irrevocably interrupted and, with a spike in numbers in Indian River County the last three weeks, we don’t know what the future holds for the rest of the year in case of closures, hospitalizations, and ministry in our community.
- We co-hosted an online Caregiver Support Group on Zoom last month. We had about a dozen people participate from both Georgia and Vero Beach.
- We have maintained our relationship with the interfaith leadership in our county, participating in online interfaith dialogues by way of Zoom. (Our next dialogue is June 29th at 7:00 PM, so if you’re interested in joining us, please email me to get on the invite list.)
- We have been networking with friends in our community. Bryce has been keeping up with FCA, Youth for Christ, and SafIR Indian River County. I have been supporting my peers (and they have been supporting us) in conversations with the Treasure Coast Baptist Association and other clergy in the area, such as Derrick West and Roger Ball.
- Rabbi Michael Birnholtz and I had the honor of being guests on Ralph Oko’s “Veteran’s Radio” to prerecord a show scheduled for June 20 and 21 (10:00 AM, on 101.7), on how faith communities are working together for community outreach and support.
- We are nurturing a partnership with Pillar Community Church and Pastor Biz Gainey. Pillar is on-campus, using the gym for Sunday worship since their host elementary school is closed for the summer. Pillar is a like-minded church, and Biz and I have a lot in common in terms of our theology and liturgical preferences. We are joining other pastors in a small, monthly “lunch and learn”, (beginning next week) about improving or engaging in healthy race relations in our county.
- On campus, we have been burning the candles at both ends with the installation of our new Narthex doors, the building of the new roof on the music building, and outreach in our community. One Sunday School class provided much-needed diapers, wipes, and clothes to a pregnant family in need. Our ladies’ group continue to make 100 blankets a month for the maternity unit at Cleveland Clinic IR Hospital. Our staff has reached out to home-bound and grieving families. A Boy Scout, JT Sorrell, chose First Baptist Church to bless us with new benches for our prayer garden for his Eagle Scout project.
- We have been doing a little professional development–Dr. Carter has been reading up on new music arrangements and liturgy, and I’m currently engrossed in a book on facilitating meaningful funerals. I just finished a book on speaking, teaching, and preaching in times of national unrest, protest, and conflict. Pastor Bryce has been networking with missionaries who are furloughed in Vero Beach. Pat Smith can probably pass the Florida Bar by now because of all the copyright, human resources, and lending laws she’s been reading.
- Masks are required for everyone 12 years and older, primarily in-doors. Please, for everyone’s safety, wear a mask. This cuts down the transference of any infections by 75%. We will have a few masks at the welcome center if you forget it at home or need one.
- Please practice physical distancing–at least 6 feet from other families, and wave hello. Every other pew will be closed off for your safety. There is plenty of room in the sanctuary to spread out!
- The worship service will be abbreviated by a few minutes to reduce exposure. We will not collect offerings by hand, but will have offering boxes near the doors for you to drop off your tithes and offerings.
- We will have directional arrows to provide “entrance” and “exit” aisles in the sanctuary. Doors will be propped open to limit hands-on contact. We will have a staggered approach to dismissal.
- Children’s Church will be held outside in the playground.
- We are having a rotation of singers for the choir. If you are interested in going on a rotation to sing, please contact Dr. Carter.
- This is a NO JUDGMENT ZONE! Please come only as you feel safe to do so–there is no pressure to attend. Remember that you are wearing masks for OTHERS not necessarily for you! Others will show you neighborly love by wearing THEIR masks.
In light of the recent events uncovering systemic injustice, human trafficking, and sexual assault in our community, we double down in seeking to provide a sacred and holy space in our neighborhood that fosters liberation for the oppressed and justice and due process for oppressors.
We stand in solidarity with our city and our neighbors in decrying the oppression and shame this has brought upon our county, and we hope that our advocacy and prayers will help bring healing and comfort to those in sorrow. We will remain vigilant in being accessible–of nurturing a safe haven–to those who are in need and have been affected by human trafficking–to the families of both the victims and the accused. And we hope that our belief and convictions born from the Gospel of Christ will be transformative for renewal and redemption.
We also join our local partners in ministry and other non-profits in collaborating together for the sake of healing. Together we seek a deeper call for social justice that corrects the most heinous situations of exploitation in our midst. We pray that there exists a balm in Gilead and spiritual nourishment for a dry and weary land.
- The Worshiping Church: First Baptist values the worship of God in spirit and in truth, engaging people through ancient traditions, liturgical rhythms, the Christian calendar, and contemporary creative arts.
- The Discipling Church: First Baptist values the discipleship of all people–men, women and children–who long to obey God, grow in Christ, and live by the power of the Holy Spirit.
- The Teaching Church: First Baptist values passing on the legacy of Baptist community by fostering the gifts of the Spirit, mentoring believers along the journey of faith, and including both men and women in leadership.
- The Missional Church: First Baptist values participating in God’s mission to the world, being the presence of Christ by advocating for the impoverished, and standing in solidarity with those who seek justice and reconciliation.
- Paul says we are to be “in agreement.” I prefer the King James Version here: “We are to speak the same language.” That does not mean that we all have to speak the same things or even believe everything the same way, but it does mean nurturing the habit of speaking out of shared values that unite our church. Sure we may differ on various theological views, but as a church family, we hold several core values in common–its what makes us First Baptist Church!
- Paul says we are to be of the same mind. Again, that does not mean you have to think like I think, or that we have to fight trying to change each other’s minds. Rather, we are to seek the mind of Christ (1 Cor. 2:16). It means coming to a place where we seek to understand one another, but move beyond our own limited insights to seek the deeper things of the Holy Spirit.
- Paul says we are to be of the same purpose. The worst question anyone can ask at church is, “How do I get my way!” Jesus did not intend for His church to be the sum of any one person’s agenda. Rather, Jesus establishes each church to fulfill a specific mission. This mission transcends any one person, group, or generation–it lasts for the life of the church. We have a mission at First Baptist that is sound and worth uniting behind:
Our mission is the worship of God. In obedience to Him, worship includes reaching out and sharing the good news of Jesus Christ, equipping our members for discipleship, and demonstrating Christ’s love through ministry and fellowship.
One Sunday morning during the collection of tithes at First Baptist Church of Vero Beach, Florida, Randy (not his real name) reached in, dug deep, and padded all of his pockets in order to find money to put into the offering plate. His pants, too big for his lean body and too old to wear anywhere else, hung loosely and flapped about him as he struggled to find his treasure. The plate passed by, and Randy was disheartened, unable to contribute.
Just four months ago Randy was someone who often asked for an offering. As one of many marginalized and displaced persons in quaint Vero Beach, Randy is well known in these parts for hanging around churches, borrowing a few bucks to get McDonald’s cheeseburgers, and getting in deep with the wrong people related to his on-again, off-again drug addiction.
Randy was one of the first people I met last May when I began as senior pastor to First Baptist. We sat and talked a while in my office, about the area, his trouble with holding a job and getting along with family.
I got to know him well, as well as some two-dozen other displaced individuals we serve every Wednesday with hot supper at the church. This ministry is called “Wednesday Without Walls” (WWW). In addition to a meal, there is a clothes closet, seasonal items like bug repellent and blankets available, and a time for a sermon or devotion by guest speakers from around town… [Read more at the Patheos Blog].