Asheville Tourists Baseball Game on Sunday, July 24

Travel with us after worship on Sunday, July 24 for an afternoon Tourists baseball game in Asheville. For ultimate convenience, drive yourself or carpool with friends. Grab lunch on the way or at the stadium. Game time is 2:05 PM and kids run the bases after the game. 

Here's how you can make it to the game: 
-Purchase your own tickets either beforehand on-line (theashevilletourists.com) or by calling their box office (828-258-0428). Tickets are $8 for adults, $6 for children and seniors. 
-Request seats in section GG, and as close to Row F, as possible--the Mathises will be in section GG, Row F, seats 1,2,3,4 . By purchasing tickets in this (shaded from sun and rain!) section, we will all be able to sit together. Don't delay in getting your tickets! Play ball!

Singing Ourselves Strong - Jeff Mathis

For as long as I can recall, music has always accompanied my faith.
 
I must have been around five years old at the time. It was Sunday night worship and we met in our church’s chapel. I was thrilled at what was unfolding—we were going to have a hymn-sing! Little did I know then that the pastor simply wanted a night off. And praise God for that! Our evening was filled with music. Those in our attendance could request the next hymn and we would all lift our voices in worship through song. At one point, I was able to corral our music minister’s attention and I requested a more modern hymn: “Pass It On.”
 
“I’ll shout it from a mountain-top!,” the chorus rang out. “I want my world to know the Lord of love has come to me, I want to pass it on.”
 
I don’t have a clear memory of any other Sunday evening worship service from my childhood. But I remember this moment because the entire service was filled with congregational singing.
 
With the exception of the National Anthem, or ‘Take Me Out to the Ballgame,’ we rarely sing together in public. Outside of church, people do not sing together as we once did. And that’s a shame. Music, and singing in particular, is such a communal activity. When we sing together, we feel a part of something bigger than ourselves. We can make harmony, together. We can get lost in a melody. We can digest rich words of meaning as we sing them. There is power in our shared voices.
 
Church, then, becomes one of the last few places that we can sing together. Congregational singing is a transcendent experience and is one that we must preserve. Unlike concerts, where the function of the event is to receive the music by listening to the artist, congregational singing places the emphasis on our corporate offering. This shared experience has a name. We call it church.
 
This Sunday in worship, we will celebrate how music makes us stronger. We will sing our praises to God, hear testimonies about how hymns have touched our lives, and will marvel at the way God is present in our singing. Indeed, God roots us together in Christ by weaving His song into our own.
 
One of my favorite hymns is, “For All the Saints.”
 
Although I had grown up with this song, it took on a new meaning for me during my first week at Princeton Seminary. The seminary’s chapel, nearly 200 years old at the time, had extraordinary acoustics. The high ceilings, the marble floors and the uber-powerful pipe organ all worked to reveal God’s glory in music.
 
It was the downbeat that got me.
 
I wasn’t expecting it and I certainly wasn’t expecting the power that accompanied it. The note, cloaked in power from the depths of the musical scale, cleared the way for what was to come. The chapel shook. The pew in front of me rattled. The hairs on the back of my neck stood up, and I gasped. What kind of majesty was this?
 
Triumphant, glorious, evocative, 200 seminarians sung as loud as their voices would carry them, and the familiar tune marched us through the 19th century lyrics of encouragement and consolation.
 
“Thou wast their Rock, their fortress and their Might; Thou Lord, their Captain in the well-fought fight; Thou, in the darkness drear, their one true light. Alleluia! Alleluia!”
 
Today, this hymn seems perfectly crafted for funerals and memorial services. No, it is not a mournful song. No, it does not soothe a heart wounded by tragedy. Instead, this hymn rouses us to lift our heads to heaven. It is a toast (!) to those who have gone before us into life eternal. The song is a victory march that functions as a confession of our faith in Jesus Christ.
 
"And when the strife is fierce, the warfare long, Steals on the ear the distant triumph song, and hearts are brave again, and arms are strong. Alleluia! Alleluia!”
 
When we choose to lift our voices together in worship, we are privileged to sing ourselves strong. This Sunday, First Baptist Church, we will do just that.

 

Summer Camp Update

As I sit on my porch and reflect on the past 3 weeks of camp. I can’t help but smile and laugh. It has been great to see close to 50 children in our building at First Baptist each day of the week as campers are actively learning and growing together!  

I have seen campers grow as they have learned the Lord’s Prayer in their camp groups and in chapel each day. Our oldest group, led by Landon Smith and Caleb Bonner, has done a phenomenal job of being an example for our youngest as they have coordinated and led our daily chapel services as well as donated over 60 books to Sylva Linings. Our 2nd through 4th grade group has done a great job of learning how to be community and share with one another and have even adopted a Ugandan child and are hoping to create a garden out of kiddie pools. Our Kindergarten through 1st grade group has been the most fun and caring group as they took thank you cards to the Sylva Police Department and have helped with offering during our chapel services. Our Pre-School age group has been fun to see as they have a weekly water day on the playground and walk to the library to participate in their weekly events. Jose has taught students how to build really cool solar-powered robots. The heart for service and willingness to learn about God has been a gift to witness! 

Our Camp Counselors have amazed me with their willingness to serve, love and lead. They show up every day prepared to engage our children and share God's love with them! I’m overly grateful to serve alongside each of them every day. Please say thank you to them as they lead among us!

Over the next four weeks we will begin preparing for our Lights On Camp Program that will happen on August 11th at 6:00 PM in our Mission and Fellowship Center. This program will be a time that we will share with you about our summer and have a silent auction to benefit our program. I hope you will invite family and friends to join us as we celebrate our summer together! 

I am honored to serve as the leader of such an awesome program with staff, children and families that are willing to learn about God and follow him as we journey together. May the next 4 weeks be as amazing as the first 3 weeks. 

May we continue to grow, learn and share together! 

Kelly 

Supporting Our 1st Explorers Ministry

Our 1st Explorers Ministry continues to grow at First Baptist Church and many have asked how to support this ministry. There are several ways to support this ministry. 

1)    With your prayers! Pray for our staff that care for children daily. Pray for the children and their families. Pray that our programs leadership continues to listen to God and hear where he is calling us. 
2)    With your time! Come volunteer in the program. You could read with a child, assist in a classroom or provide a special program! Contact Kelly Brown our Director about volunteer opportunities!
3)    With supplies! We are always in need to crayons, paint, pencils and more! Check with Kelly Brown our Director to find out what specific needs are. 
4)    Financially. The money that funds our 1st Explorers Ministry is mostly through tuition and contributions. 
a.    While the tuition assists in the overall costs of the ministry we know that it takes more than that to support the good work our staff is doing as the minister to children and their families. You can donate directly to the 1st Explorers Ministry which in turn will assist the annual budget of the program. 
b.    You may donate to the Lou Bryson Memorial Fund which is overseen by our Children’s Advisory Board. Currently this fund has $4,015.16. This fund was created by Lou Bryson’s family as a way to honor her love for children and our community. This fund is used to provide scholarships for families and provide supplies for the 1st Explorers Ministry. 

Backpack Ministry

We need donations to buy backpacks which are expensive for high school students. Those can be dropped by the church office or in the Loving Kindness Room.

Supplies needed are the usual school supplies:
paper
pencils
pens
composition books
mechanical pencils
copy paper
markers
highlighters
calculators
compasses
wipes
project binders
note book subject separaters
glue sticks

Thanks to the Faith Sunday school class, GA's, RA's, and the Dorothy Edwards WMU Circle for making this a major summer project. Much help is needed by all. There will be a designated area in the Loving Kindness Room for leaving supplies. These need to be in by August 7. For questions call Gaye Buchanan 586-5642.

Not Feeling It - Jeff Mathis

em·pa·thy
/ˈempəTHē/
noun
the ability to understand and share the feelings of another.
 
If you blink, you’ll miss it. Jesus was angry.
 
In the Gospel according to Mark (1:40-42), the author tells this familiar story: “A leper came to [Jesus] begging him, and kneeling he said to him, “If you choose, you can make me clean.” Moved with pity, Jesus stretched out his hand and touched him, and said to him, “I do choose. Be made clean!” Immediately the leprosy left him, and he was made clean.”
 
The phrase, “Moved with pity,” comes from translators who grappled with the Greek word, orgistheis. Although they get the essence of orgistheis correct, their translation lacks the punch and power of the original Greek. The Koine Greek word orgistheis literally means, “to be angry.”
 
Jesus was mad at the leper’s condition and he allowed himself to be moved to action. So he touched the man and made him clean. Jesus had empathy for the man with a horrendous disease and healed him.
 
“If you choose, you can make me clean.” Moved with pity, Jesus stretched out his hand and touched him, and said to him, “I do choose.”
 
How about us? When we come in contact with people who are hurting, do we choose to help? Perhaps, if we don't feel concern for others, it gets us off the hook to help them. 
 
Some have argued persuasively that empathy is not a choice, but is rather like a gift—you either have empathy or you don’t. I’ve even heard people report that they’re not good at empathy—as though empathy is like shooting free throws from the charity stripe.
 
The implications are significant. If empathy is an attribute that people have or don’t have, then it gives humanity an out when we come face to face with people who are hurting. 
 
“Sheriff, I didn’t help her because I didn’t feel pity for her.”
 
Are we to be okay with these kinds of statements? Is our lack of emotional concern a good reason to not help others in need? In a compelling argument entitled, “Empathy Is Actually a Choice,” published in the New York Times on July 10, 2015, the authors (Daryl Cameron, Michael Inzlicht and William A. Cunningham) state authoritatively that it is not.  
 
Make no mistake, empathy fails us. We are moved by some tragedies, and unmoved by others. We’re not just parsing words, here. There is something at stake. For you see, when we feel empathy we are typically moved to help. When we don’t feel empathy, we don’t do anything.
 
“Not only does empathy seem to fail when it is needed most, but it also appears to play favorites. Recent studies have shown that our empathy is dampened or constrained when it comes to people of different races, nationalities or creeds. These results suggest that empathy is a limited resource, like a fossil fuel, which we cannot extend indefinitely or to everyone.” (Daryl Cameron, Michael Inzlicht and William A. Cunningham)
 
But empathy is not a limited resource. We have a choice between caring and not caring. This is a moral issue. “The ‘limits’ to our empathy are merely apparent, and can change, sometimes drastically, depending on what we want to feel.” (Daryl Cameron, Michael Inzlicht and William A. Cunningham)
 
The key phrase there is, “what we want to feel.”
 
People of faith have language ready-made to describe this. When an individual chooses to not care about the pain of others, the Bible tells us that their “heart is hardened.”
 
Empathy is not a gift, it’s a discipline. It is a choice. Like many other disciplines, empathy has its challenges and needs to be practiced to be mastered. Empathy requires time to listen to others. Empathy requires emotional space that is pliable. Empathy demands a willingness to hurt—or be angry!-- on behalf of others.
 
Empathy can be thwarted by our biases and our laziness. Our lack of emotional response can be sabotaged by our self-righteousness and secret desire to condemn others for their mistakes and failings.
 
A hardened heart is not easily moved. The Bible is clear on this point and one other: It never ends well for that individual (just ask a fella by the name of Pharaoh).
 
Let’s covenant with one another to do some homework this week. Let’s choose to become more aware of the individuals who do and do not receive our concern and empathy. And then, in that moment, let’s ask the reflective question: Why is that so?
 
This exercise will require courage to see what’s going on beneath our surface. True, some of us may not feel up to it. Just the same, we might just be convicted by our findings.
 
And yet, the witness of Jesus’s life and ministry here is deeply compelling. Jesus chooses to help. God commands us to love and to care for our neighbors. And God doesn’t care one ounce if we're not 'feeling it.'