Monthly Newsletter

Weekly Activities

Sunday
   9:45am Sunday School
10:50am Morning Worship
Wednesday Night
Meal 5:30pm
Kids Club 6:15pm
Wednesday Night Class 6:30pm

Read the Bible Chronologically in 2025

Dec 1: 1Cor 9-11
Dec 2: 1Cor 12-14
Dec 3: 1Cor 15-16
Dec 4: 2Cor 1-4
Dec 5: 2Cor 5-9
Dec 6:2Cor 10-13
Dec 7: Acts 20:1-3, Rom 1-3
Dec 8: Rom 4-7
Dec 9: Rom 8-10
Dec 10: Rom 11-13
Dec 11: Rom 14-16
Dec 12: Acts 20:4-23:35
Dec 13: Acts 24-26
Dec 14: Acts 27-28
Dec 15: Colossians, Philemon
Dec 16: Ephesians
Dec 17: Philippians 1-4
Dec 18: 1Timothy
Dec 19: Titus
Dec 20: 1 Peter
Dec 21: Heb 1-6
Dec 22: Heb 7-10
Dec 23: Heb 11-13
Dec 24: 2 Timothy
Dec 25: 2Peter; Jude
Dec 26: 1 John
Dec 27: 2/3 John
Dec 28: Rev 1-5
Dec 29: Rev 6-11
Dec 30: Rev 12-18
Dec. 31: Rev 19-22

THE MESSENGER

My Advice This Christmas by Pastor Chuck Swindoll
If I may borrow from Charles Dickens’s famous opening line, Christmas can be “the best of times, and the worst of times.” We have them both, don’t we?
Who hasn’t cringed in early October as stores drag out the artificial Christmas trees and put them on display? Who doesn’t dread the extra traffic and the gaggle of people in the shopping malls when you have to go get something that has nothing to do with Christmas? Who hasn’t felt uneasy about the obligatory exchange of gifts with individuals you hardly know? Or sending Christmas cards to people you haven’t written to since the last Christmas card you sent them? And how about feeling the pressure to hang lights on your house in a neighborhood because you’re the only house that doesn’t have lights hung? There’s something about those annual experiences and obligations that seem to make them “the worst of times.” In spite of all the challenges, I prefer to view Christmas as “the best of times.” There’s no better time of the year to enjoy the color that enhances our streets. At no other time of the year do the faces of little children glow with such wonder. And there’s nothing like the music of Christmas! They’re playing our songs in grocery stores, elevators, shopping malls, and on every radio station: “Joy to the world! The Lord is come.” They’re talking about our Savior. It’s our message on their lips. Have you noticed? Don’t miss that!
And I must add, what better time of the year is there to share with others your faith in Jesus Christ? At no other season is the unbeliever’s heart softer toward the message of Jesus. Be aware of that. Stay sensitive to that. Be ready to speak. It’s “the best of times” for it. This is God’s annual reminder to us—luring us, pulling us, encouraging us, in effect: “Feel the warmth in that light bulb? Smell that tree? See those gifts? Hear those songs? My Son came and died for you. I love you.” All these things familiar are reminders of things essential.
“I will always be ready to remind you of these things,” the apostle Peter wrote, “even though you already know them” (2 Peter 1:12). Isn’t that great? Sometimes there are people who will say to me, “Well, you said that before, Chuck” or “You may have forgotten, but you’re repeating yourself.” I’ll think, Good! The best way to learn is by repetition, by saying it again, and by reviewing the truth over and over and over. The apostle Peter continued: “I consider it right, as long as I am in this earthly dwelling, to stir you up by way of reminder” (1:13, emphasis added). Peter was determined to remind them of what they already knew—in order to stir them to action. Paul, in writing to the Philippian Christians, confessed: “To write the same things again is no trouble to me, and it is a safeguard for you” (Philippians 3:1).
Most of us who attend good, Bible-believing churches know more about Christ than most people will discover in a lifetime. We are neck-deep in the truth of God. Our problem? It isn’t knowing the truth; it is living it. If we stopped learning new things this very moment and simply drew from the reservoir of knowledge we already have, that would keep us busy for an awfully long time.
But we need regular reminders of those truths to stir us up to action. In the Old Testament, the Lord used tangible objects and actions as memory-triggers—phylacteries on the forehead, special food at Passover, stones at a body of water, trumpets for the New Year, and sacrifices in the temple—to prompt His people to remember the essentials. “And it shall serve as a sign . . . and as a reminder . . . that the law of the LORDmay be in your mouth” (Exodus 13:9). The sights, the sounds, the smells, the tastes—these seasonal traditions—reignited the passions of God’s people and reminded them of His love, His commands, and His grace.
Christmas can do the same for us this year.
You string up the lights. You trim the tree. You buy gifts. You wrap the presents and place them under the tree. You attend a church service—including a Christmas Eve service. You know the songs by heart. It’s all familiar . . . it’s all routine. It’s just words, just lights, just a tree, just gifts, just songs—Wait a minute!
The holidays needn’t be a rote repetition from last year. Maybe it’s time to use these familiar traditions as reminders of essential truths.
Don’t forget that Jesus was born of a virgin—His very conception, a miracle! Remember  how the angels lit the shepherds’ field with God’s glory that night, announcing the birth of a Savior. A Savior. You and I needed a Savior—One who would and could die for our sins. My advice this Christmas? Allow the traditions of the season to stir you up by way of reminder. Allow the things familiar to point you to things essential.
Don’t miss them!



Our Financial Goals

Weekly Goals:                                $4,665.10
Monthly Goals:                      $18,660.41
Received in November
2nd                                          $       1,722.00
9th                                           $     18,957.00
16th                                          $       1,687.00
23rd                                        $       692.00
30th                                      $     932.00
Total received in November:    $ 23,990.00
Annual Budget:                             $ 223,925.00
Received Year to Date:                $ 246,054.92
Thank you for your generous giving. We appreciate each one who continues to
pray and give to the Church.

Upcoming Events:
December

3rd Wednesday night meal 5:30 and Kids Club 6:15, Decorate Church
7th   Sunday School 9:45am and Sunday Service 10:50pm
10th Wednesday night meal 5:30 and Kids Club 
12th Kids Christmas Party
14th Sunday School 9:45am and Sunday Service 10:50pm
14th Christmas Dinner
17th Wednesday night meal 5:30 and Kids Club 6:15  Adult Christmas Party
21st Sunday School 9:45am and Sunday Service 10:50pm
28th Sunday School 9:45am and Sunday Service 10:50pm

Deacon of the Week

Dec. 7th Joey Woodard          806-273-6688
Dec. 14th Richard Braymer    806-374-5536
Dec. 21st Chris Prock              902-230-7383
Dec.28th  Joey Woodard        806-273-6688
Our Deacon for the week is available for you to call upon
if you have any needs or questions.

Benevolence News

Benevolence Committee have handed out 10 cans of soup and 10 pkgs of Ramon noodles this month... The month of December we are asking for canned goods, can meats, soups, or anything nonperishable. Anything you would like to give
can help those who are in need.

Samaritan's Purse Christmas Child Shoebox

Our Church made around 20 shoe boxes this year. Thank you for giving to this project. We will be continuing this program next year, so keep this in mind.

Church Christmas Lunch

On December 14th we will have our Christmas Lunch after morning services. The Church will provide the meat, potatoes, dressing, and bread. Please bring your
favorite side and/or desert.

Have a Merry Christmas!