April 1, 2018—Easter

This Sunday is Easter Sunday, and we’re excited to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus with you at Park Church. Here are a couple ways to prepare for our service together:

1. Read through our text, Philippians 3:7–11.

All the hopes and expectations of Christians are realized in the resurrection of Jesus Christ from dead. This day is the culmination of all that the Gospel is about, causing us to desire with Paul to “know Him and the power of His resurrection.”

2. Read, pray and sing through the service:

BAPTISM & PROCESSIONAL

Roll Away The Stone (Latifah Alattas, David Wilton)
Jesus Paid It All (Elvina Hall, Kristen Stanfill)
Break Every Chain (Will Reagan)

CALL TO WORSHIP: Psalm 57:8–9, Welcome (From Immanuel Nashville):

To all who are weary and need rest,
To all who mourn and long for comfort,
To all who feel worthless and wonder if God cares,
To all who fail and desire strength,
To all who sin and need a Savior,
This church opens wide her doors
with a welcome from Jesus Christ,
the Ally of His enemies, the Defender of the guilty,
the Justifier of the inexcusable, the Friend of sinners,
the Conqueror of the grave, the resurrection and the life.
Welcome!

Christ The Lord Is Risen Today (Charles Wesley)
O Praise The Name (Anástasis) (Benjamin Hastings, Marty Sampson, Dean Ussher)

CONFESSION OF SIN: From The Worship Sourcebook:

Almighty God, You have raised Jesus from the grave
and crowned Him Lord of all.
We confess that we have not bowed before Him
or acknowledged His rule in our lives.
We have gone along with the way of the world and failed to give Him glory.
Forgive us and raise us from sin,
that we may be Your faithful people,
obeying the commands of our Lord Jesus Christ,
who rules the world and is head of the church, His body. Amen.

Nothing But The Blood (Robert Lowry arr. Page CXVI)

Man Of Sorrows (Matt Crocker, Brooke Ligertwood)

ASSURANCE OF PARDON: From Ephesians 2:4–7

GREETING & SERMON
RESPONSE: Song & Prayer

In Christ Alone (Stuart Townend, Keith Getty arr. Kings Kaleidoscope)

BENEDICTION

Dan Bartol

Our guest is Dan Bartol. He’s a part of Metro Church in Olomouc, Czech Republic.

Listen

Listen to the show Subscribe in iTunes

Show Notes

3:00 – The Dan Bartol Story 4:30 – How He Met His Wife 6:15 – How He “Left The Military And Moved Into A Crack House” 9:30 – Why They Started Thinking About Moving To The Czech Republic… 15:00 – The State Of Religion (And Superstition) In The Czech Republic 18:30 – What They’re Doing With The Church In Olomouc 20:30 – What It’s Been Like Learning The Language (For Them, And Their Kids!) 22:10 – The Difference Between Immersion And Submersion 24:20 – Have They Thought About Leaving? 25:50 – How We Can Pray For Them 30:45 – Favorite Book, TV Show, And Movie He’s Read/Watched Recently 33:15 – Favorite Meal He’s Had Recently 34:15 – Nerdiest Thing He’s Into Right Now 35:50 – Where He’d Put A Billboard And What It’d Say

Links

March 25, 2018

It’s Palm Sunday and our eleventh week of Genesis at Park Church, discussing God’s foundational worldview for His people and their purpose in His world. Here’s how you can prepare for worship:

1. Read through our text, Genesis 17–18.

It’s been 25 years since God told Abram to leave his country and family and settle in Canaan, promising that Abram’s descendants would fill the land. At this point, while Abram has selfishly fathered Ishmael by his wife’s servant Hagar, Sarai has remained barren and is now closing in on age 90. After thirteen years of silence, God appears again and invites Abram into a new way of life—and confirms again His covenant.

2. Read, pray and sing through the service:

CALL TO WORSHIP: Matthew 11:28–30, Lenten Welcome (From Immanuel Nashville):

To all who are weary and need rest,
To all who mourn and long for comfort,
To all who feel worthless and wonder if God cares,
To all who fail and desire strength,
To all who sin and need a Savior,
This church opens wide her doors
with a welcome from Jesus Christ,
the Ally of His enemies, the Defender of the guilty,
the Justifier of the inexcusable, the Friend of sinners.
Welcome!

King Of My Heart (John Mark McMillan, Sarah McMillan)
O Praise The Name (Anástasis) (Benjamin Hastings, Marty Sampson, Dean Ussher)

CONFESSION OF SIN: From The Worship Sourcebook:

Lord, you have called us to worship You. We gladly gather! As we praise You, though, our own inadequacy reminds us of how we have broken our relationship with You. Because we have sinned against You, even our worship fails to be what it could. We often treat it as a show. We simply go through motions, failing to recognize that You want to engage us deeply. Renew us, we pray, according to Your steadfast love. Remind us of Your covenant faithfulness and have mercy on us in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.

Nothing But The Blood (Robert Lowry arr. Citizens & Saints)

Through And Through/Set A Fire (Will Reagan)

ASSURANCE OF PARDON: From Romans 5:8, Colossians 1:13–14, Romans 5:1, NIV:

God demonstrates His own love for us in this:
While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.
For He has rescued us from the dominion of darkness
and brought us into the kingdom of the Son He loves,
in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins.
Therefore, since we have been justified through faith,
we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.

GREETING, SERMON, & COMMUNION
RESPONSE: Song & Prayer

Great Is Thy Faithfulness (Thomas Obediah Chisholm, William Marion Runyan)
Hosanna (Praise Is Rising) (Paul Baloche, Brenton Brown)

BENEDICTION

March 18, 2018

This is the tenth week of Genesis at Park Church, discussing God’s foundational worldview for His people and their purpose in His world. Here’s how you can prepare for worship:

1. Read through our text, Genesis 13–21.

The story of Sodom and Gomorrah in Genesis 18-19 stands as a disturbingly dark narrative in the midst of a longer section about God’s gracious promise to restore the world. Why is this story here in Genesis and what does it have to do with God’s promise? The story serves as a declaration that God’s unbreakable promise to restore the world includes both the just judgment of sin and the merciful deliverance of those who turn to Him.

2. Read, pray and sing through the service:

CALL TO WORSHIP: Matthew 11:28–30, Lenten Welcome (From Immanuel Nashville):

To all who are weary and need rest,
To all who mourn and long for comfort,
To all who feel worthless and wonder if God cares,
To all who fail and desire strength,
To all who sin and need a Savior,
This church opens wide her doors
with a welcome from Jesus Christ,
the Ally of His enemies, the Defender of the guilty,
the Justifier of the inexcusable, the Friend of sinners.
Welcome!

Come Thou Fount (Robert Robinson, John Wyeth arr. Shane & Shane)
Yet Even Now (Joel Limpic)

CONFESSION OF SIN: From The Worship Sourcebook:

Most merciful God
whose Son, Jesus Christ,
was tempted in every way,
yet was without sin,
we confess before You our own sinfulness;
we have hungered after that which does not satisfy;
we have compromised with evil;
we have doubted Your power to protect us.
Forgive our lack of faith; have mercy on our weakness.
Restore in us such trust and love
that we may walk in Your ways and delight in doing Your will. Amen.

His Mercy Is More (Matt Boswell, Matt Papa)

Reckless Love (Cory Asbury, Caleb Culver, Ran Jackson)

ASSURANCE OF PARDON: Romans 5:8–10

GREETING, SERMON, & COMMUNION
RESPONSE: Song & Prayer

Man Of Sorrows (Matt Crocker, Brooke Ligertwood)

CHILD DEDICATIONS

BENEDICTION

March 11, 2018

We’re in our ninth week of Genesis, discussing God’s foundational worldview for His people and their purpose in His world.

As a quick reminder, we’re still in the season of Lent, the 40 days leading up to Easter where we make our hearts ready for remembering Jesus’ passion and celebrating Jesus’ resurrection. As you pray and worship during Lent, check out The Christian Year for some resources we’ve created and curated—we’ve finished and added a new song for you since the beginning of Lent! In the meantime, here are a couple ways you can prepare for this Sunday at Park:

1. Read through our text, Genesis 12–23.

Keeping promises and commitments is a perpetual challenge. Our world is always full of “new” options and believable opportunities for increasing our potential. There usually appears to be greener grass that we could run toward instead of what we’ve already said “yes” to. This week in Genesis 15, we get a glimpse of how God, at all costs, keeps His commitments. Period.

2. Read, pray and sing through the service:

CALL TO WORSHIP: Matthew 11:28–30, Lenten Welcome (From Immanuel Nashville):

To all who are weary and need rest,
To all who mourn and long for comfort,
To all who feel worthless and wonder if God cares,
To all who fail and desire strength,
To all who sin and need a Savior,
This church opens wide her doors
with a welcome from Jesus Christ,
the Ally of His enemies, the Defender of the guilty,
the Justifier of the inexcusable, the Friend of sinners.
Welcome!

Great Is Thy Faithfulness (Thomas Obediah Chisholm, William Marion Runyan)
Grace Alone (Dustin Kensrue)

CONFESSION OF SIN: From The Worship Sourcebook:

Merciful God, You made us in Your image,
with a mind to know You, a heart to love You,
and a will to serve You.

But our knowledge is imperfect,
our love inconstant, our obedience incomplete.
Day by day, we fail to grow in Your likeness.
In Your tender love, forgive us through Jesus Christ, our Lord, amen.

Oh God (Zach Bolen)

One Thing Remains (Christa Black, Brian Johnson, Jeremy Riddle)

ASSURANCE OF PARDON: Lamentations 3:22–25

GREETING, SERMON, & COMMUNION
RESPONSE: Song & Prayer

Reckless Love (Cory Asbury, Caleb Culver, Ran Jackson)
Yes And Amen (Anthony Brown, Chris McClarney, Nate Moore)

BENEDICTION

March 4, 2018

It’s the eighth week of our Genesis series at Park, discussing God’s foundational worldview for His people and their purpose in His world. Here’s how you can prepare this week:

1. Read through our text, Genesis 12.

Against the backdrop of the Fall and the consequential destruction of the world (Genesis 3–11), God makes a promise to Abraham that shines as a beacon of hope. As we read the text, we see two things that show us how God pursues us by sovereign grace: First, God’s promise to His people is unconditional. Second, feeble faith does not threaten God’s promise.

2. Read, pray and sing through the service:

CALL TO WORSHIP: Matthew 11:28–30, Lenten Welcome (From Immanuel Nashville):

To all who are weary and need rest,
To all who mourn and long for comfort,
To all who feel worthless and wonder if God cares,
To all who fail and desire strength,
To all who sin and need a Savior,
This church opens wide her doors
with a welcome from Jesus Christ,
the Ally of His enemies, the Defender of the guilty,
the Justifier of the inexcusable, the Friend of sinners.
Welcome!

All Creatures Of Our God And King (William Henry Draper, St. Francis of Assisi)
King Of My Heart (John Mark McMillan, Sarah McMillan)

CONFESSION OF SIN: Ephesians 2:1–3

ASSURANCE OF PARDON: Ephesians 2:4–10

Yet Even Now (Joel Limpic)
Yes And Amen (Anthony Brown, Chris McClarney, Nate Moore)

GREETING, SERMON, & COMMUNION
RESPONSE: Song & Prayer

It Is Well (Horatio G. Spafford, Philip P. Bliss)
Jesus Is Better (Aaron Ivey, Brett Land)

BENEDICTION