RAs and GAs Activity Weekend

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This past weekend was full of excitement and growth as our Girls in Action spent the night in our Mission and Fellowship Center and our Royal Ambassadors spent time together camping at the Davidson River Campground. For the past few years, our RAs and GAs have been meeting during After School to provide some overlap with our 1st Explorers Ministry and church. By my account, this has created an opportunity for our larger church to become more involved with our After School ministry through building relationships with children and our college student staff.  

On Friday, there was a buzz among girls as they prepared to spend the night eating pizza, painting nails, having a pajama fashion show and growing closer to one another. A similar buzz was happening as boys were preparing for an exciting evening and morning camping at the Davidson River Campground. Our boys spent time playing whiffle ball, making hamburgers, singing, hanging around the campfire, touring the Cradle of Forestry and growing closer together as well.

Both of these events were spearheaded by individuals from our church who felt called to share with our children as they grow in the faith. The success of these events and many others are a testament to our commitment to pass on the faith to our children and their families. It’s my prayer that we will continue to find authentic and creative ways that we can learn, share and grow together in Christian community.

WMU NC Missions Extravaganza Trip

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Linda Phelps, Shirley Kool, Sandra James, and friend Marsha McQueen recently attended the WMU NC Missions Extravaganza at the Ardmore Baptist Church in Winston Salem.
 
Sandra described this event as a homecoming and a revival. It was a homecoming because we connected with ladies we had met in the past and look forward to seeing each year.  It was a revival because the services were very inspiring, the music joyful and emphasis put on many topics.  Former missionary and author, Rosalie Hunt, gave an uplifting history of our first missionary wife, Ann Judson.
 
All of this made us want to share Christ and help our neighbors around the world. Mark your calendar for the last weekend in April, 2019 and go with us.

WNC Baptist Home

WNC Baptist Home is located in Asheville.  It offers multiple levels of care from Assisted Living to Health Care.  Tia has a packet of information about this facility for those who may be interested in learning more about this opportunity.  Eight of us traveled last week to visit Elois Clegg who is a resident, church member, and wife of Robert Clegg, a former pastor.  She gave us the grand tour, introduced us to some of her friends, shared all the amazing ministries in which she participates/developed (teaching Sunday School classes, room visits, Coloring Club, etc.)  She is doing well and is very happy.  She sends best wishes to our congregation.

Elois will celebrate her 90th birthday on May 28th.
Let's send lots of well wishes!  Her address is:
    Elois Clegg
    WNC Baptist Home
    213 Richmond Hill Dr.
    Asheville, NC 28806

Linda Minor, Deacon Chair

UCM Fundraiser at Krismart Fashions

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Krismart Fashions at 56 East Main Street (beside Kelsave) is again sponsoring a FUNDRAISER FOR UNITED CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES. 
For A $10 donation, you can receive 50 percent off any 1 item at Krismart. Your purchase must be made on Thursday, May 31 or Friday, June 1 only. Sale hours will be 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. on both days. LIMIT 1 TICKET PER CUSTOMER. THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING UNITED CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES.

Garbage In, Garbage Out

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“The eye is the lamp of the body. So, if your eye is healthy, your whole body will be full of light; but if your eye is unhealthy, your whole body will be full of darkness.”

-Jesus, Matthew 6:22-23

Not too long ago, a major telecommunications giant inadvertently made the search history of over half a million people available to the public. According to Tim Challies, this data contained over 21 million internet searches.

The company responsible for this breach of privacy claimed that they had changed the users’ personal information, but it didn’t take long for hackers to decrypt the account holders’ identities.

One can easily deduce what was discovered.

The leaked data showed that people live separate lives—one public and one private. As Challies puts it, one could “reconstruct a person’s life, at least in part, from what they searched for over a period of time.” The author of The Next Story reflects, “What is remarkable is the way people transition seamlessly from the normal and mundane to the outrageous and perverse.”

Our collective ability to be exposed to whatever we wish for or desire raises a unique challenge. But being able to access this world of information, images and far-reaching content in secret, without accountability, can have lethal consequences for our families, our communities and ultimately our souls.

Who can argue with Jesus in his Sermon on the Mount? “If your eye is healthy, your whole body will be full of light; but if your eye is unhealthy, your whole body will be full of darkness.”

What we see and what we are exposed to affects us. If what we look at is darkness, our true selves will be pitch as night. Alternatively, if we surround ourselves with sources of light, we will be true to Christ’s commandment that we are to be the light of the world. As one of our staff members recently shared, Jesus’s warning to us here in Matthew 6 reminds him of the admonition from the early days of computer technology: garbage in, garbage out. That is, if you put trash into a system you can expect a similar outcome.

As Jesus’s teaching to the crowds in Galilee highlights, this is not a new phenomenon. However, our 21st-century reality creates a new wrinkle. Unlike any other time in human history, you, me, our children and our grandchildren have access to a galaxy of information with a touch of a finger. It once took great resolve and courage to find and research the things that we were curious about and/or desired. Now we can have immediate access to it with little personal risk all within a fraction of a moment. Our technological prowess and ability to access whatever we wish to learn about or see pours gasoline on Jesus’s observation. Our personal devices enable our eyes to be overwhelmed by darkness. And this, in turn, has a cost.

Oh, it’s worse than you think, y’all.

Members of the House Intelligence Committee recently released the roughly 3,500 Facebook ads that were created by a foreign-based entity to influence domestic politics. How did they do it? They created and posted content that made its way on to social media. The content was divisive to say the least. The posts highlighted issues that tear the fabric of our communities apart. They played on fears and terrors of personal safety. They initiated racial and ethnic suspicions. They demonized people groups and sowed seeds of discord in an attempt to divide the American people.

Those who created this content were far more successful than we want to give them credit for. No, I’m not talking about a particular political outcome. I’m talking about the hate that these ad buys yielded. I’m talking about the anger that the images and stories prompted. I’m talking about how our exposure to these messages made us collectively less and less like Christ.

What we see and what we are exposed to can have devastating effects on us. It can lead to infidelity to the ones we love and pervert our sensibilities. What our eyes see and what our ears hear can lead us into the ever-present temptation to damn one another and to create walls between us that prevent us from loving our neighbors. The entertainment that we watch can normalize hate and justify terror. If we immerse ourselves in darkness, why would we be surprised that we’ve become what we see?

The remedy, of course, is easily attained. By being aware of the impact that information, images, and other content has on us, we can choose to limit our exposure to that which has the power to poison our souls. By setting boundaries on what our eyes see and what our ears hear—whether it’s the delicious gossip that is exchanged in the church parking lot, or the fringe news outlet that fuels discord—we can choose light over darkness. By choosing to be thoughtful with our spouses, co-workers, church family, and friends, we can place ourselves in environments that will make us more accountable to Christ’s expectations and commands.

Think about it now, because what seems unthinkable today may be commonplace tomorrow. If your entire digital footprint were exposed and made public, would you want your children to see it? How about your spouse? How about your employer?

Choose light over darkness. For our sake, if not your own.

Knowing and Being Known

"When I walk down the street of my neighborhood in the inner city, I do not see thugs, delinquents, or terrorists. I see my friends, people I know. When we seek to know the other and understand who they are as people and we let ourselves be known and understood, it is virtually impossible to stereotype. You can't lump everyone together because you know the person and you know how that person is different from others you know. So the next time you see a person you would normally shy away from, just say hello. It will go a long way towards knowing and being known."

-  Nell Green, CBF field personnel, Houston, Texas

Will you share your gifts with us?

The Pastoral Care Team is one of service, caring for elderly members who are homebound or in a nursing home.  Our goal is to help alleviate loneliness and to let them know that they are being remembered by their church.  We send cards, visit, and make phone calls.  We need your help.   There will be a brief meeting immediately after church on Sunday, May 20 in the 3rd-floor conference room where you can see how to put your gifts to work.  If you have questions, call Shirley Kool at 586-5066 or e-mail at kooldean_nc76@frontier.com