Staff Spotlight!

Get to know our First Explorers staff with "Staff Spotlight!" Every week, we will highlight a 1E staff member so that everyone can get to know our team a little bit better.

Meet Alyssa Montgomery!

Alyssa works on our 1st Explorers Ministry Staff in our After School Ministry.

Where are you from? Polk County, North Carolina
If you are in school, what year are you in and what is your major? Senior at Western Carolina, Sociology Major with Minor in Psychology
When you were in Kindergarten, what did you want to be when you grew up? I wanted to be Santa when I grew up.
Now, today, what kind of a career do you want to have? I’m still looking for ideas of what career I want, but as of now my plan is School Counseling and hope to Coach Volleyball, Basketball, or Softball
Favorite Bible verse or story (and why?): “When my heart is overwhelmed, lead me to the rock that is higher than I. Psalm 61:2” Sometimes I get overwhelmed with everyday life things; whether it’s making the best grades, staying organized, wondering if I am making the right career choices, or if I’m really being the best version of myself I can be. This verse reminds me that thankfully, we have a God that will see us through it all, he is our ROCK. 
"I spend a lot of my free time doing...": I spend a lot of my free time outside, puzzling, exercising, and spending time with my friends and family.
"One thing I love about living in Western North Carolina is...": getting to experience all four seasons. We have all four seasons, and we get to watch the seasonal changes of the beautiful Blue Ridge Mountains, and it doesn’t get much better than that!
"One thing I want to do before graduating is...": start a blog or website, because as I get older, I want to be able to look back and read and remember all the precious memories that I’ve made!

Western North Carolina Baptist Fellowship Fall Gathering

Join us for this inter-generational gathering which will focus on intentionally sharing our faith in our daily lives and vocations...."as you go." Rick Jordan of CBFNC will lead us in a large group time which will include a panel of testimonies from a diverse group of Christians sharing their faith in their daily walk. There will also be break-out groups and a time of food, fellowship, and music to close our time together. Cost is $5 per adult (children and youth are free). Free child care provided for ages 3 and under. Adults will enjoy heavy h'ors d'ouvres and there will be free pizza for youth and children. Please pre-register at cbfnc.org/events/upcoming-events-/as-you-go. An offering will be taken to enhance the WNCBF ministry budget (which includes campus ministries at WCU and UNCA.)

United Christian Ministries Needs

Old Mother Hubbard went to her cupboard to get her poor dog a bone. And when she went there, the cupboard was bare.....BARE! How can that be?

For 27 years we have supported UCM's cupboard, helping to feed the hungry of Jackson County. Yes, we do help financially to keep the doors open, but lately our donations of food have been nearly nonexistent.

Make buying a little extra each week as you shop for your groceries a priority.  BOGO....give the free one to UCM.  Or make certain that you have included 10% of your bill to donate to UCM....spending $60 on yourself while spending $6.00 on UCM.

We have a UCM box in the Kindness room where it is convenient for collecting your food items. Don't let Old Mother Hubbard find it bare!

Kelly Brown to Join Homegrown Leaders Program

Kelly Brown, 1st Explorers Director, has been selected participate in the Homegrown Leaders Program provided by the Southwestern Commission and N.C. Rural Center. Homegrown Leaders provides rural community leaders with skills in community and economic development while understanding economic transitions in their communities. Kelly will attend three sessions in Sylva, Cherokee and Franklin during the fall. 

The Day No One Showed Up for Church

We would call it, “The Day No One Showed Up for Church.”
 
No, it would not be a weather-related cancellation.
 
No, it would not be because the pastor began a new 24-point preaching format.
 
And no, it wouldn’t be because of some flu outbreak, or some other incapacitating plague.
 
Although I could be wrong, the reason no one would come to Sunday morning worship would be the announcement that we would be taking the instruction from James 5:16 seriously.
 
For those who don’t have it memorized (what?), James 5:16 admonishes us to: “Confess your sins to one another.” Yes, I suspect that, ‘Confess-Your-Sins-Aloud’ Sunday would be poorly attended.
 
Clearly, James was not interested in having a high attendance Sunday. Why in the world would you encourage the faithful to confess their sins to one another?
 
Dietrich Bonhoeffer seems to have a pretty good rationale for confessing our sins to one another. In his aptly titled book, Life Together, Bonhoeffer argues that when we confess our sins—yes, our particular sins and not just a generic grouping of disobedience to God’s commands—to one another, we are gifted with what he calls, “A breakthrough to new life.”

Quoting Proverbs, the German theologian believes that the confession of sins is key to the renunciation of sins. In short, confession to another believer creates a humbling—if not humiliating experience—that leads to our working hard to give up that vice.
 
He’s got a point. Proverbs 28:13 reads: “No one who conceals transgressions will prosper, but one who confesses and forsakes them will obtain mercy.”
 
Ah, but I’m prone to concealing my transgressions. And I suspect that I’m not alone. Bonhoeffer clears his throat on the matter by stating, “Sin wants to be alone with people…Sin wants to remain unknown. It shuns the light. In the darkness of what is left unsaid sin poisons the whole being of a person.”
 
We are all sinners, true. But we’d rather not talk about it. In fact, if an actual sinner showed up in worship on a Sundaymorning, I daresay that I’m not sure we’d know what to do about it.
 
We Baptists belong to a rich tradition, and our allegiance to the truth of Holy Scripture is well-documented. But the prospect of confessing our sins (like those other traditions do) to someone else in such a bold, detailed and vulnerable fashion makes us recoil. Bonhoeffer and James—I can imagine—would say that our repulsion and fear of coming clean with God and others is the result of sin further poisoning our hearts.
 
It’s a tough word, I know. Trust me, I am equally as convicted by this.
 
Yet, I think James and Bonhoeffer have got me cornered on this. The German theologian who single-handedly took on the Nazis says: “The root of all sin is pride, superbia. I want to be for myself; I have a right to be myself, a right to my hatred and my desires, my life and my death.” This is freedom run amok. This is the textbook definition of Adam and Eve’s desire to be like God in the garden of good and evil.
 
All is not lost, however. Bonhoeffer says: “Sin that has been spoken and confessed has lost all of its power.”
 
Could it be that the practice of confessing our sins to one another might be good for both the individual and the community? Jesus clearly grants his followers the authority to forgive sins in his name (John 20:23). Maybe, just maybe, full transparency with God and our neighbor might just lead to our renunciation of our particular sins.
 
Perhaps the most demoralizing realization in all this is not that we do not practice confession, but that we don’t have someone in our lives that we can trust with our confession. In all fairness to the institution of church, we may be providing opportunities as a church to walk humbly with God. But we’ve collectively chosen to walk with Him alone because we think it’s easier than traveling as a tribe.
 
The book, Life Together, is about Bonhoeffer’s attempt to shape the Body of Christ into a more, ‘New Testament’ expression of the Church. It is a convicting and difficult read because it suggests that the church should be a community that is real, vulnerable and honest with one another.
 
I am not afraid to confess that this is a frightening prospect. But it may just be the key we’ve been looking for that will open the gates of the Kingdom of God.
 
In our context, this is a very hard sell. By inviting people into such intimacy, we may ironically be creating an empty sanctuary. 

1st Explorers Receives Grant

The 1st Explorers Ministry at First Baptist Church of Sylva has received a Grassroots Arts Program Sponsorship Grant for $1,000. This grant will provide art supplies for students in our Wee Explorers and After School Ministry to learn about art from Ann Melton, a former Art Teacher and School Administrator.  Periodically we will post pictures in our Newsletter an on Social Media showcasing student’s art work and what they are learning.  For more information about this project please contact Kelly Brown, 1st Explorers Director.

"Jesus Is So Lucky to Have Us"

We chuckle at the cartoon because it seems preposterous. In light of the many church councils, schisms, schools of thought, reformations and denominational fracturing over the last 2,000 years, the suggestion that we have the monopoly on God’s truth is laughable.
 
“Jesus is so lucky to have us.”
 
When I look back on my seminary career, I sometimes find myself scratching my head. The three-year experience of earning a Master of Divinity required a broad range of study. Included in the course of study were language requirements, systematic theology, Biblical studies, pastoral care classes and a wee bit about congregational life (Somehow, I must have missed the classes on budget and finance, non-profit human resources and how to develop an internal network for our church’s technology needs).
 
But there was one other area of study that the seminary mandated that we take. It was church history.
 
“Church history? Really?,” many of us said aloud.
 
With so many challenges facing the church of the 21st century, the seminary wanted us to focus on the history of the church from Christ to the present? How would the study of 21 centuries of crusty old decrees and doctrinal disagreements prepare us to pastor and lead churches today?
 
It turns out, there’s a lot to learn. Most of the challenges and issues that we face today (yes, today), have been studied, prayed over and debated on long before we appeared on the scene. Like any study of history, we can learn from the successes and failures of those who have gone before us so that their plight was not wasted.
 
In truth, I enjoyed my study of church history. I found it fascinating to see how God worked through the lives, ideas and hopes of people from so many different eras and cultures. We are not the first to wrestle with the challenges of cultural relevance and indifference. We are not the first to wonder how the church and the state should properly interact. We are not the first to consider how empire-building affects the global Christian witness.
 
And we will not be the last.
 
This realization that our (relatively young) Christian tradition doesn’t have it all figured out motivates me to respect other Christian traditions and to find ways to learn from history and from one another. The word ecumenism is defined as “the principle or aim of promoting unity among the world’s Christian churches.”
 
As a study in Western Civilization will tell us, the story of the Christian Church is one of fracture. We are a splintered family, broken and mended time and time again. For me, our long story does two things: It gives me hope, and it makes me humble. The fact that God would choose to work in so many different ways among so many different people to reveal the truth in Jesus Christ is nothing short of miraculous. Personally, I am not threatened by this suggestion. Indeed, I am inspired by it.
 
You’ve heard this one before, but it’s worth retelling:

A woman died and found herself at the Gates of Heaven with St. Peter. He intended to show her a tour.
 
“There,” he pointed, “is where the Roman Catholics are located,” noting the people genuflecting and making the sign of the cross together.
 
“And over there,” he motioned, “are the Pentecostals,” clearly identified by their hands in the air and their ecstatic expressions.
 
But then he got very quiet and put a finger to his lips as they approached another group of people.
 
“Shhh,” St. Peter told her. “Those are the Baptists. They think they’re the only ones here.”
 
We have so much to learn from one another. When we make space to listen, we will find ourselves humbled at God’s work in different places and in a different ways.
 
But perhaps most importantly, we’ll learn that we’re not alone.