September 2, 2018

This is our third and final week of Mission, our annual series on who we are and what we do as a church. Our topic this Sunday will be love for the city. Next week, we’ll begin Ephesians, taking us all the way to Advent. Here’s how you can prepare for this week’s service:

1. Read through our text, Luke 10:25–37.

God empowers His people to put on display His love for the world. You are God’s gesture of love for your neighbors, and you are called not only to “see” them, but to “feel compassion” and move toward them with sacrificial love. If this sounds familiar, remember Luke 15 and the Father who also “sees” us when we are a long way off, “feels compassion,” and “runs” toward us with sacrificial love. Our response is nothing less than reflecting God’s loving heart to those around us.

2. Read, pray, and sing through the service:

CALL TO WORSHIP: Ephesians 3:18–19, 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!

Be Thou My Vision (Mary Elizabeth Byrne, Eleanor Henrietta Hull, arr. Citizens & Saints)
Great Are You Lord (Jason Ingram, Leslie Jordan, David Leonard)

CONFESSION OF SIN: 1 John 4:19–20

All The Poor And Powerless (David Leonard, Leslie Jordan)

I Stand Amazed (How Marvelous) (Charles H. Gabriel)

ASSURANCE OF PARDON: John 3:16–17

GREETING, SERMON, & COMMUNION
RESPONSE: Song & Prayer

O Come To The Altar (Brock, Brown, Furtick, and Joye)
Take My Life And Let It Be (Frances Ridley Havergal, Henri Abraham Cesar Malan)

BENEDICTION

August 26, 2018

We’re in week two of this year’s Mission series, an annual discussion of who we are and what we do as a church. Here’s how you can prepare for this week’s service:

1. Read through our text, Philippians 2:1–11.

Loving the Church can be a hard task. Whether your experience with loving the Church has been muddied or simply hasn’t been interesting to you, caring for other people—Church people—is a real challenge. Maybe the question we should ask before trying to think of how we can love the Church is “How did Jesus love His Church?”

2. Read, pray, and sing through the service:

CALL TO WORSHIP: Psalm 96:2–6, 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!

Beautiful (Phil Wickham)
Steadfast (Leslie Jordan, Sandra McCracken, Joshua Silverberg)

CONFESSION OF SIN: Isaiah 53:4–6

How Deep The Father’s Love For Us (Stuart Townend, arr. The Christian Year)

Jesus We Love You (Kalley Heiligenthal, Hannah McClure, Paul McClure)

ASSURANCE OF PARDON: 2 Corinthians 5:14–17

GREETING, SERMON, & COMMUNION
RESPONSE: Song & Prayer

Broken Vessels (Amazing Grace) (Joel Houston, Jonas Myrin)
Build My Life (Barrett, Kable, Martin, Redman, Younker)

BENEDICTION

August 19, 2018

This Sunday at Park Church, we’re beginning a three-week series called Mission, a discussion of who we are and what we do as a church. Around this time last year, a five-week series by the same name introduced our new mission statement: “We exist to make disciples of Jesus for the glory of God and the joy of all people.” Because we believe that being unified in our mission is critical, we’ll continue to return to this topic around this time each year!

Here’s how you can prepare for this week’s service:

1. Read through our text, 1 John 3:1–3.

“Can you believe the kind of love that the Father has given to us—that we should be called the children of God? And so we are!” This expression from the Apostle John is an emotional outburst from a man who was enraptured by the love of God. Our prayer is that God would give us this same sort of joy as we consider together His love for His children.

In addition to 1 John 3:1–3, we’ll be looking at Luke 15:11–32 where Jesus shows us a picture of a Father who deeply loves His children and runs after them—even when they (we) run from Him in pride and shame. May God awaken our hearts to His breathtaking love.

2. Read, pray, and sing through the service:

CALL TO WORSHIP: Psalm 36:7–9, 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.
Welcome!

Come Thou Fount (Robert Robinson, John Wyeth)
Rejoice (Dustin Kensrue, Stuart Townend)

CONFESSION OF SIN: From The Worship Sourcebook:

God of love, in the wrong we have done and in the good we have not done,
we have sinned in ignorance;
we have sinned in weakness;
we have sinned through our own deliberate fault. We are truly sorry.
We repent and turn to You.
Forgive us and renew our lives
through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.

Yet Even Now (Joel Limpic)
Good Good Father (Anthony Brown, Pat Barrett)

ASSURANCE OF PARDON: Romans 8:14–16

GREETING, SERMON, & COMMUNION
RESPONSE: Song & Prayer

How Majestic (Brian Eichelberger)
Reckless Love (Cory Asbury, Caleb Culver, Ran Jackson)

BENEDICTION

August 12, 2018

It’s the 12th and final week of this year’s Christ in the Psalms, our annual summer series. This week we’ll be in Psalm 89. Next Sunday, August 19, we’ll return to our recurring Mission series for three weeks, discussing who we are and what we do as a church.

Our weekly Christ in the Psalms artwork is an oil painting by Irwin Peralta for Psalm 89. One of the ways we study and enjoy the psalms each year is by having different artists do a new piece from week to week for whichever psalm we’re in as a body. Learn about Irwin’s piece and all the preceding Christ In The Psalms artworks right here.

Here’s how you can prepare for this week’s service:

1. Read through our text, Psalm 89.

Psalm 89 is marked by tension. The psalmist begins with overwhelming praise to God for His steadfast love and His enduring faithfulness. He also praises God for the incredible promises that He made to David—that his Kingdom would endure forever. But then the tone shifts, and the psalmist essentially says “if all that is true, then why is David’s Kingdom in ruins!?” How do you respond in the gap between promise and fulfillment? This Psalm reveals both emotional honesty and an unwavering commitment to what the psalmist knows to be true about God.

2. Read, pray, and sing through the service:

CALL TO WORSHIP: Lamentations 3:22–23, 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!

It Is Well With My Soul (Horatio G. Spafford, Philip P. Bliss)
Man Of Sorrows (Matt Crocker, Brooke Ligertwood)

CONFESSION OF SIN: 1 John 1:5–6

ASSURANCE OF PARDON: 1 John 1:7–9

Steadfast (Leslie Jordan, Sandra McCracken, Joshua Silverberg)
Yes and Amen (Anthony Brown, Chris McClarney, Nate Moore)

GREETING, SERMON, & COMMUNION
RESPONSE: Song & Prayer

Come All Ye Pining (Anne Steele, arr. Red Mountain)
O Praise The Name (Anástasis) (Benjamin Hastings, Marty Sampson, Dean Ussher)

BENEDICTION

Psalm 89—Artwork

Learn more about Christ in the Psalms artwork and download artwork guides here.

Person: Irwin Peralta

Irwin Peralta is an oil painter that mainly works with the figure.

Piece

Oil painting.

PROCESS

Psalm 89 starts with praise and the blessing of God’s covenant. However, the mood shifts as the psalmist states that God has brought His anointed low and exalted the right hand of his foes.

First, I observed and sketched from reference that I found. Then, the difficult process of sketching layouts from imagination began. I converted select sketches to digital in order to make monochrome and color thumbnails. As the actual painting began, I applied thinned down paint to get the overall placement. A few tries were needed for me to get the figure in the back to have the feel of light bending around him. The odd colors are to set the figures apart from each other, set the mood, and allow various people to identify with the characters. As always, my intent was to leave the brush strokes showing as much as possible to give the painting life and energy.

Casey

A Struggle with Chronic Illness

as told by Liz Grant

The Beginnings of Chronic Illness

I started to have stomach issues five years ago. I thought, “Oh, I’ll just stop eating dairy,” like maybe it was an allergy. That seemed to help for a while. Then, a year later, I moved to Colorado and many life factors were difficult, and I noticed that my stomach stuff became an issue again. I would always feel a pressure in my lower abdomen. I wondered if my pain was caused by anxiety, and I even took anxiety meds, but that didn’t help. I started to realize, this is every week that I feel bad. That’s when I tried everything: diets, colonoscopies, I went the endometriosis route—had surgery for that a couple times. All the supplements, all the heavy metal detoxes. I even thought, maybe it’s bees wax in my Burt’s bees, so I stopped using that. But then you go that far and literally anything could be the cause—like something in my house—and that will drive you insane, which makes you more anxious, which causes more stomach aches. At this point, I’ve tried everything that I, my doctors, or anyone else can think of, and still I have no answers.

What It’s Like to Live with Chronic Pain

Now I’m always in pain; I haven’t seen any real change in symptoms in five years. I can feel fatigue, drowsiness, stomach pain, digestive pain…How I feel just depends on the day. I plan when I eat, how I eat, when I’ll sleep, when I’ll rest, when I’ll work out, and even if I do plan everything out, I’m still going to struggle. Even resting doesn’t solve it—though I wish my body would take a rest day every once in a while. What gets me through my days is lots of prayer. Of course, I’m definitely in a better headspace when I feel better, and then it’s easier for me to talk to God; I might pray, “Give me strength.” But when I’m not feeling well, my prayers are just, “I can’t handle this anymore. Can you do something?” The last thing I want to do when I don’t feel good is to be with other people—like thinking of going to Gospel Community group on a Thursday night when I just don’t feel good, and I’m in a bad mood and being a jerk to my husband John, and I need time to myself—that’s when I need to get out of myself. Once I’m around other people I can focus on their lives, and it can sometimes bring me out of the emotional pit. (Though sometimes being around people can be worse.)

Asking God for Healing

Once when I was at this conference, a girl I’d just met was standing next to me, and during worship, she looked over and asked, “Do you need prayer for healing?” I said, “Yeah, I do,” and so she prayed for me. God didn’t heal me then, but to have a stranger turn to me, having no idea what I was going through, and ask to pray for me—that made me feel like God was saying, “I see you.” A few times since then, people have prayed over me and I’ve felt hopeful. And then it’s the next day and I’m still not healed. That’s when you ask yourself, okay, what was that about? That can be really hard. But I also know that every prayer will be answered, even if it’s not this side of heaven. My physical body is wasting away—everybody’s is. It’s never going to be perfect, not even if I am healed.

For the Person Walking through Chronic Illness

Pick running buddies: people you’re close to that you can be honest with, with whom you can share the depth of what you’re experiencing. These are the people who go to war with you, for your heart, who you can text and say, “Hey, I’m really struggling today—yes, I don’t feel good, but also I’m really struggling emotionally.” Some of those people might be folks who are also suffering. Listening to or reading stories of struggle also really helps me to remember that there are so many other people going through the same thing as me. I even have a “when it hurts” playlist—it can be powerful to listen to truth in music for me.

For the Supporters of the Person with Chronic Illness

I have learned how I want to be approached as a suffering person, so that’s made me more aware of how to approach people who are suffering. It just drives me crazy sometimes… I’ll have a dentist appointment scheduled, and someone will say to me, “Well, maybe that dentist will have all the answers for why you’re feeling bad.” And I want to say, “No, it’s only a dentist appointment. It has nothing to do with how my stomach feels.” Or maybe they’ll say, “Well, at least you have your husband.” Or they’ll come with a list of all the ways to fix what I’m going through, asking me, “Have you tried…?” That can feel like people are dismissing my pain—like they feel uncomfortable that there are no answers for me, and they want to fix their own discomfort somehow. It can even be hard for me to stay in the discomfort sometimes if someone asks, “How are you feeling?” Even if the true answer is “Still not good,” I might want to add a “but…” Of course, fostering a heart of gratitude will help me, but I don’t need other people to find the bright side for me. Instead, I need a friend that can rest in the “this sucks” with me.

A Theology of Suffering

I believe God wants to heal me, but if He really wanted to heal me now, He would have—but He hasn’t. I don’t want this to be my story, but it is. And it’s important to rest in the “grey,” because that’s what most of life is. Everybody you come across is going to be suffering in some capacity, and we all have to learn to live fully in our suffering, even when we don’t understand why it’s happening to us. Our life isn’t supposed to be comfortable; you weren’t called to live a comfortable life. Everyone knows that, but I think we all want that happy, healthy life. God has promised to be with us, but He didn’t promise to give us all the answers, or to heal us always, or to make us comfortable; He just promised that He would never leave or forsake us. So as people who are called to live like Jesus, that’s what we’re called to do, too, for each other—to be with people. I guess that’s something that I’m still learning about God. God is not outside of the pain, He’s bearing it with me.

August 5, 2018

It’s the 11th week of Christ in the Psalms, our annual summer series. This week we’ll be in Psalm 88.

For a few years now, one of the ways we study and enjoy the psalms is by having different artists do a piece each week for the respective psalm we’re in. Our artwork for Psalm 88 is a collage by Jeremy Grant. Learn more about Jeremy’s piece and all the preceding Christ In The Psalms artworks right here.

Here’s how you can prepare for this week’s service:

1. Read through our text, Psalm 88.

In Psalm 88, the author writes from a place of intense darkness, holding back no emotion from God and the human hearers of his song. His final line reads, “darkness is my only friend.” Jesus entered into our darkness that we might have hope in Him. Though darkness can last a long time, it shows us God’s grace and can teach us to have an indomitable spirit. Our Savior, no stranger to darkness Himself, meets us there.

2. Read, pray, and sing through the service:

CALL TO WORSHIP: Psalm 121:1–2, 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!

God Is Able (Ben Fielding, Reuben Morgan, arr. Shane and Shane)
King Of My Heart (John Mark McMillan, Sarah McMillan)
How Deep The Father’s Love For Us (Stuart Townend)

CONFESSION OF SIN: From Every Season Prayers by Scotty Smith:

Dear Heavenly Father, we love You because You first loved us and gave Jesus as a sacrifice for our sins. We humble ourselves before You today because of Your promise to complete Your work in our lives. We praise You for Your loving welcome, daily mercies, and sufficient grace.

Forgive us for treasuring the pleasures of the world more than the riches of grace.
Forgive us for dwelling too much on our fears and too little on Your beauty.
Forgive us for rehearsing the failings of others more than the truths of the Gospel.
Forgive us for being quick to whine and slow to worship.

We offer our confession in Jesus’ name and for Your glory. Amen.

Oh God (Zach Bolen)

ASSURANCE OF PARDON: Romans 8:1–4

GREETING, SERMON, & COMMUNION
RESPONSE: Song & Prayer

Come Ye Sinners (Joseph Hart, arr. Robbie Seay)
Jesus Paid It All (Elvina Hall, Kristen Stanfill)

BENEDICTION