Greening Up the Mountains

Hello church family, we are in need of your assistance. Greening up the Mountains is coming up and we need some volunteers to assist in providing hospitality for our community. We are going to have a table set up with popcorn and sno-cones, we need people to help us pass these treats out. We will be opening our bathroom facilities and need help directing people to the bathrooms. We are hoping to open a face painting table for the kids and need some people to help assist with their artistic side. If you can only help for an hour to an hour and a half that is awesome. Any time you can spare to help our church provide to our community would be greatly appreciated. Also, we would like to ask for any donations for popcorn kernels and the oil to cook for the popcorn.  I'm sure if everyone pitched in a bag we would have more than enough to pass out to Sylva. Please assist in any way you can. You can contact myself Chris at 828-507-8854 or email me at Gallagher.christopher1@gmail.com or contact Tia in the church office and she will be glad to pass the information on to me. Thank you folks, let's come together and show our community how we are being church. 

 

1st Explorers Staff Appreciation Week

1st Explorers Staff Appreciation week will be April 24 - 28, 2017

Angie Powell is helping coordinate ways that we can say thank you to our staff below is a list of what is planned for each day. 

Monday- Donuts and Coffee
Tuesday- Cookies and Drinks
Wednesday- Adult Goodie Bags
Thursday- Chocolate from Baxleys
Friday- Provide a late lunch for them when they come to work. 
Our staff is very dedicated to making sure children are learning about God and learning - this is an opportunity to say thank you to them for all of their hard work. Please join us in saying thank you! 
If you would like to assist Angie in providing gifts for our staff contact her at  229-314-9923 or by email at ajpowell1068@gmail.com

 

Sign up here to receive e-mail updates about our 1st Explorers program! http://eepurl.com/b4h7nr

More Than I Could Ever Ask or Imagine

It was a cold and dreary Saturday in January. Rebecca and I had made arrangements for childcare and we were preparing to go to a local restaurant. We had scheduled a meeting with some individuals who wanted to spend a couple of hours getting to know us. I was both excited and unsure. Our conversation around the table could have a significant impact on our future. The year was 2012. The restaurant was in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

For the better part of a year, I had been discreetly pursuing a call to serve as a pastor of a church. A ten-year veteran of associate ministry—primarily to college students and young people—I had begun to sense a shift in my vocational identity. I was proud of the work that we had accomplished in my 6 years of developing a ministry to 20-Somethings in Chattanooga, and I was curious to see if what I had learned in young adult ministry could be replicated at the broader congregational level.

Rebecca and I loved our time in Chattanooga. We loved our church. The church that I served at had been encouraging and supportive throughout my ministry and it was hard to imagine leaving it. And yet, I felt called to preach more regularly and to serve in a capacity where a church could cast a new vision together, taking risks and seeing what was possible in Christ’s Name.

As the associate pastor in Chattanooga, I preached every other month or so. When it became apparent that I was slated to preach one Sunday in January of 2012, I shared this news with a church that had expressed some interest in my candidacy as their pastor. Actually, I shared this news with two churches. At that time, Rebecca and I were considering two church possibilities—both of which could not have been in more different contexts. One church was located in a large southern city in a suburban setting. The other church was nestled in a beautiful valley, on Main Street in a Western North Carolina mountain town. Both churches had sent representatives to meet with Rebecca and me that Saturday, albeit a couple of hours apart but at the same restaurant. That next day, I would preach to three distinct congregations at the same time—our home church, and members of the search committees from these other two churches would be present. Simply put, all of this felt disorienting. The weekend felt like a game show.

And yet, I will never forget what our conversation with the members of the search committee from the First Baptist Church in Sylva felt like. It was our first real contact with the church, but our time together had a unique quality to it. It seemed like we were old acquaintances. The timing of our laughter worked. The conversation had a natural ebb and flow to it. Our informal interview felt unforced and natural. The result of our visit was unmistakable to both Rebecca and me. The Holy Spirit was present in our time together, and it was the moment that I began to fall in love with you. Although I had not met anyone else from the First Baptist Church of Sylva, I sensed an inimitable pull toward you. Even though our conversation lasted little more than a couple of hours, you were already becoming home to me.

A call is a mysterious experience. I have little doubt that you have experienced it yourselves. Whether it was a job, or a relationship, or even the purchasing of a new home, I suspect that you had a moment where, inexplicably, you were being led to a particular calling.

The genesis of my calling to serve as your pastor began that weekend some five years ago. My prayers changed as a result of it. I began to pray that if this was God’s will that God would finish what He had started. Throughout the interview process, the follow-up phone calls, my visits to Sylva, and my initial conversations with you, I felt this call grow within me.

Calls, of course, are not one-sided. A call to a particular place or form of ministry must be a shared decision. Like any relationship, mutuality is necessary for a healthy union to develop. I was honored and deeply humbled to learn from you that this calling was confirmed in your decision to extend an invitation for me to serve as your pastor.

And that sense of call has not changed these past five years. In truth, I suspected that it would. I had enough experience in church life to enough to know that congregational ministry can be uniquely hard. While there is no doubt that my calling to serve as your pastor is challenging, I can tell you in full honesty that it is absolutely where I long to be. My love for you is stronger than at any time of my tenure as your pastor. I am privileged to preach from our pulpit. I am touched by your trust when you are hurting. I am awed by your good heart, and your servant-filled motives. I am thrilled to represent you locally and beyond. I am proud of our heritage and the legacy of our church’s work. I love serving as your pastor and count it as a gift from God.

Thank you, First Baptist Church, for recognizing and celebrating my five years of service with you. I am deeply moved by your gift for me and my family. Thank you for your support and well-wishes. Thank you for walking alongside me as we listen for God’s direction for the living of these days. Thank you for your patience with me when I make mistakes, and for your encouragement to me when I am not at my best. Thank you for loving my family and for choosing to be church with us. Thank you for inspiring me with your stories of a steadfast faith that is stronger than you know. Thank you for being my church home and my family of faith.

“Now to our God who by the power and work within us is able to accomplish abundantly more than we could ever ask or imagine, to God be the glory in the church and to Christ Jesus to all generations, forever and ever. Amen.” –Ephesians 3:20-21

 

Easter Sunday Worship Service

Christ is Risen! He is Risen Indeed!

Celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ with us at the First Baptist Church in Sylva on Easter Sunday morning, April 16th at 10:30 AM. An Easter Egg Hunt for children will take place on our playground immediately following our service. Bring your family to worship and to hear the story of Easter on Sunday, April 13th at 10:30 AM.

Christ is risen! He is risen indeed!

Passover Seder Experience on Maundy Thursday, April 13 at 6:00 PM

Join us on Maundy Thursday, April 13th at 6:00 PM for a unique Holy Week experience. Maundy Thursday is the day that Christians remember Jesus’ Last Supper with his disciples on the night before he was crucified. Traditionally, it is a time when the church shares communion together. This year, we will be offering a Passover Seder experience in order that we might better understand Jesus’s last night with his disciples. Jesus and his closest followers would have had a Passover meal (known as a Seder, which means “order”) before Jesus retreated to the Garden of Gethsemane. We will gather on Maundy Thursday in our Mission and Fellowship Center at 6:00 PM to have an experience that more nearly matches what Jesus and his disciples were doing. Although the experience will not be a meal as we know it, we will be sampling small items of familiar foods. Our one hour, Passover Seder will be appropriate for families with elementary school children, grades 1 and up. A nursery will be provided for infants up to Kindergarten. Please email us (fbcsylva@gmail.com) or call the church office to let us know that you will be attending so that we can be prepared for our time together.

A Note from Joseph and Jessie Moon

First Baptist family,

Jessie and I are overwhelmed by the kindness and generosity shown towards us and our Moon babies by you. Not only at the shower, but in the 4 years that we have been here. 

It was not an easy decision for us to leave First Baptist, but we are so thankful for the time we've had with you all.  We are already looking forward to visiting in the future. 

We know that the opportunity for us to be in Asheville is part of God's plan for us. We are very appreciative of everyone's support and encouragement.

Love always,
Joseph and Jessie (and the Moon babies too!)