Christmas 2024

Make King’s Grant a part of your Christmas celebration:

The musical presentation will feature our own Sanctuary Choir, Praise Team, and some of the finest musicians in our area. The performance will be at 6:30 followed by a Christmas Fellowship in the Fellowship Hall.

On Christmas Eve, we will have two identical services, a bit earlier this year, to make them more family friendly. This will be a wonderful time of celebration and reflection in remembrance of the birth of the Savior.

Holy Week 2024

Palm Sunday
Sunday, March 24 at 9:30 and 11:00
This gathering will focus on the events of the Sunday before Easter, during that passion week (the triumphal entry).

Service of Remembrance
Thursday, March 28 at 7:00 pm
This gathering will focus on the events of Thursday evening in the life of Jesus, during that passion week (the upper room, the betrayal, the Lord’s supper). We will be meeting in the fellowship hall for this special gathering.

Good Friday Reflection
Friday, March 29 at 12:00 pm
This gathering in the sanctuary will focus on the events of Friday in the life of Jesus, during that passion week (the garden and the cross).
Join us on your lunch break for this brief service in the sanctuary.

Easter Sunday Celebration
Sunday, March 31 at 9:30 and 11:00
This gathering will focus on the events of Sunday in the life of Jesus, during that passion week (the empty tomb with the joyous announcement and celebration).
Our flower cross will be up on Easter Sunday, so please remember to bring your flowers to decorate. The Sunday School and worship schedule is normal.
We hope you’ll join us for these very special worship experiences.
Invite your friends and neighbors!

Godly Stewardship of Life

At the last Family Meeting (on December 3), we discovered that receipts are just keeping up with current expenses, however, when we put this information into context, it paints an interesting picture. If we plan to hire a new lead pastor and a full-time worship pastor (not to mention an office secretary) our current giving level will not sustain these desired positions.

So, your discipleship leadership team (in partnership with the finance committee) encourages you to be a part of a personal Bible study series on the stewardship of your life, which includes these important topics:

1) God’s Ownership Over All
2) Examples of Perfect Giving
3) Stewardship of Our Time
4) Stewardship of Our Bodies
5) Stewardship of Our Talents and Gifts
6) Stewardship of Our Possessions
7) Trusting God with Our Finances
8) Our Accountability to God

These lessons are not going to be taught in your Sunday class (like we did with the ReFocus Series). Rather, this series of lessons is for personal and family use. Perhaps many of our members have never studied in depth the topic of stewardship, which includes being good stewards of our time, talents, and treasure.

These lessons are now available at the church in the Welcome center and in the adult classrooms. We recommend going through one lesson each week (which has plenty of Scripture to read and reflect upon), allowing the Holy Spirit to guide your thoughts, your convictions, and your spirit regarding worshipful and intentional giving through your local church.

[ CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD A DIGITAL COPY RIGHT NOW ]

Holy Week Events for 2023

Along with these three worship and reflection events, we are providing the traditional flower cross on Easter Sunday. Please come prepared to add your flowers to the cross, and get your annual family photo in front of the flower cross.
THURSDAY REMEMBRANCE ON APRIL 6 @ 7:00pm – in Fellowship Hall
This gathering of the church will focus on the events of Thursday evening, in the life of Jesus, during that passion week (the upper room, the betrayal, the Lord’s supper).
FRIDAY REFLECTION ON APRIL 7 @ 12:00pm – in the Sanctuary
This gathering of the church will focus on the events of Friday, in the life of Jesus, during that passion week (the garden and the cross).
SUNDAY EASTER CELEBRATION ON APRIL 9 @ 9:30 and 11:00 – in the Sanctuary
This gathering of the church will focus on the events of Sunday, in the life of Jesus, during that passion week (the empty tomb with the joyous announcement and celebration).

The Church of 2032 – Carey Nieuwhof

Carey Nieuwhof gave a talk at the BGAV on November 15, 2022, and he had us take a look at the church in 2032, to see what that church did in order to survive and thrive in the decade prior.

A key lesson is that everything has changed. The methods of the past will not take us to where we must go in the future. Will we adapt or die?

It’s 2032. Here’s What’s Left of the Church.

  1. Christian America Died. And the leaders who kept looking back never moved forward.
  2. Growing churches are now digital organizations with physical locations. Dying churches saw digital church as an obstacle, growing church saw it as an opportunity.
  3. The majority of church attendees are no longer in the room. Dying churches confined ministry to the building, growing churches did not.
  4. On-demand access now greatly surpasses attendance of live events, on-demand access reaches people when they’re ready, not when we’re ready.
  5. Growing churches shifted their focus from gathering to connecting.
  6. Community and connection matter more than content consumption.
  7. Growing churches staffed for digital.

Here is the Full Article with his Seven Main Points ]

Join the Audio-Visual Team

We all enjoy arriving at church each week and everything seems to run so smoothly, but in reality, nothing happens in the sanctuary that is not accomplished by faithful volunteers.

Think about all the things we never think about…

Who makes the coffee and has it ready on time?
Who blows the leaves and twigs off the sidewalks?
Who sets up the microphones?
Who operates the soundboard?
Who advances the slides while we sing hymns?
Who creates those announcement slides each week?
Who records the service and gets that online?
Who mixes the sound for the online recording?

There is no hand-picked special secret club, its accomplished by people just like you but have learned what to do and how to do it, and faithfully show up each week so all of us can attend a well-planned, quality worship experience.

May we have this attitude, same mind, intent on one purpose… to seek a place to serve before we seek a place to sit and soak.

[ Click HERE to ASK TO JOIN the AV Team or CONTACT to ask a question ]

New Class Times and Locations

After your faithful discussions in class, here are the results of the Sunday School class meeting times, and locations.
Our New Schedule began on August 7, 2022

Worship Services:
9:30 – Traditional with choir and hymns.
11:00 – Modern with the worship band leading.

Bible Study Times and Locations:

Early Schedule:
7:45 a.m. – Early Men’s Group: Morning Watch meets in Room 8
8:30 a.m. – Early Adult Bible Study [ Get Information ] (without children’s activities)
Foursquare in Room 1
Spiritual Journey in Room 18/20
9:30 a.m. – Early Worship in the Sanctuary (Traditional with choir and hymns)

Bible Study Then Worship:
9:30 a.m. – Bible Study for ALL AGES [ Get Information ]
Kainos (meaning new) meets in Room 5
Young Adults meet in Room 8
Special Needs meets in Room 13
Crossroads meets in Room 15
Legacy Builders meets in Room 17
Agape meets in Room 18/20
11:00 a.m. – Morning Worship in the Sanctuary (Modern with praise band)

Worship Then Bible Study:
9:30 a.m. – Early Worship in the Sanctuary (Traditional with choir and hymns)
11:00 a.m. – Adult Bible Study Classes [ Get Information ]
Koinonia (meaning fellowship) meets in Room 3
Joy meets in Room 5
Mary and Martha meets in Room 7
Good News meets in Room 10
Special Needs meets in Room 13
Bread of Life meets in Room 15
Bible Study Fellowship meets in Room 17
11:00 a.m. – Worship Kidstyle (for kids K-Grade 3, in Room 201) [ Get Information ]

Additional Information Regarding Classes at 8:30:
1) These classes must understand there are no activities for children, therefore, these classes are for adults without kids at home.
2) These classes must end by 9:20 since another class may be coming to that room for Sunday School at 9:30, not to mention, your class members need to get to the sanctuary on time.
3) These classes do not need to miss out on fellowship opportunities between the services at 10:30 (since they should already be in the sanctuary until 10:30) unless they choose to head to the parking lot right after the service.

Green Eggs and Ham – a Parable

Your pastor of discipleship had an epiphany in the middle of the night not all too long ago… making change in the church can often be like reading one of my favorite books as a child, Green Eggs and Ham. Let’s look at the two characters in this story.

Sam-I-Am is a pushy little pastor who embodies the spirit of global evangelism, relational discipleship, and life transformation by encouraging his people to always ask the question, “How can we make this church better than it already is?” and reach more people with the gospel. The summer of 2022 may appear to be an endless barrage of “time for change” and “something new is about to happen” language that the average church member may feel like the other character in the story. In Dr. Seuss’ story, Sam-I-Am is essentially breaking down the other character’s will to resist green eggs and ham by pestering him endlessly. I trust that “pestering” is not your actual feeling, but your discipleship leadership team is hoping that the congregation will see the ultimate benefit of this new schedule, which puts the church in a position of growth and simplicity. Sam-I-Am’s marketing scheme is simplicity itself: he keeps asking the other fellow whether he would like to try his strange, unappealingly colored product in a number of various and increasingly preposterous scenarios: here or there, in a box or with a fox, in a house or even with a mouse. How many of our people in your classroom have simply discounted the time change all together, even before we have done one day of the new schedule? They’re saying, “I do not like green eggs and ham, Sam-I-Am, you leave me be.” I seem to remember a line from my past, regarding the seven last words of a dying church — “We’ve never done it that way before.”

The other character in the story is twice as tall as Sam-I-Am but otherwise remarkably similar in appearance. His first words are that he doesn’t like Sam-I-Am, which seems to indicate that he has been the target of the little marketing genius’ advertising strategy before. It appears that from the start, Sam-I-Am is the enemy to be avoided, like he’s saying, “I’m not buying what this guy’s selling.” Pastors are like that. We come up with all sorts of ideas to reach people with the gospel and make church a better experience for outsiders, always asking the question, “What can be done to make church better” and “to reach more people?” The larger character starts out with a cold resistance to Sam’s non-stop sales pitch, but ultimately makes the worst mistake any consumer can ever make: agreeing to try the product as a means of getting the sales guy to finally stop. After tasting the unpleasantly colored ham and eggs, he discovers it tastes delicious and becomes a devoted and, likely, a lifelong raving fan of future ideas by Sam-I-Am.

I hope that months and years down the road, we can look back at the summer of 2022 and come to the conclusion that all the turmoil surrounding time changes, class schedules, worship style, and church leadership, perhaps seeing that none of these brought down the church like we feared it would. Perhaps the changes made this summer will actually benefit the vast majority of the congregation. We feel this schedule fixes the problems discovered with the 2021 schedule. We are positioning ourselves for growth. We will become proactive rather than reactive when it comes to people showing up because they sense God is at work here. We have to ask ourselves the hard question, “Will God show up here if we don’t follow his leadership?” Are we not really saying, “We just want to go back to Egypt no matter what may be waiting for us in the Promised Land.” So, here is the parable, “Try green eggs and ham, maybe just try them. You may just like them, we will see.” My friends, maybe, just maybe, this new schedule will work out very well, so the question that each of us must ask ourselves, “Why am I so unwilling to give it a go?”

I hope that Sam-I-Am, the pastor who is trying to help the congregation experience something new (to see if this schedule really does work better), that perhaps he will have earned your trust, acknowledging that he had your back all along, just encouraging all of us to grow in faith, follow Jesus closer, look at the needs of others more than ourselves, to reach people who have not yet walked through our doors, for us all to serve enthusiastically in ministry, and to intentionally welcome people with the love of Jesus as they enter this place. Even Jerry said, “The best is yet to be.” He did not say, “This is the best it will ever be.”

[ Borrowed from an idea from Timothy Sexton, at gradesaver.com ]

[ Read More About the Classes, and Times, with Locations ]