Be Diligent
1 Timothy 4:13-16, New International Version -- Until I come [that is
Saint Paul], devote yourself to the public reading of Scripture, to preaching
and to teaching. Do not neglect your gift, which was given you through
prophecy when the body of elders laid their hands on you. Be diligent in these matters; give yourself
wholly to them, so that everyone may see your progress. Watch your life and
doctrine closely. Persevere in them, because if you do, you will save both
yourself and your hearers.
Despite summer not officially being until June 21st, many have started
attending to summertime events. Marilyn and I took advantage of the beautiful
weather on Memorial Day to visit the Golden Spike Historical Site, the Bear
River Bird Refuge and the Spiral Jetty. It was a full day we thoroughly
enjoyed. We have not traveled in Utah as much as we should have, and hope to
take some time this summer seeing the incredible beauty that exists here. But this past Memorial Day was a time of
growth: spiritual and intellectual. We plan to have other times this summer
where growth will continue to be a primary focus.
The First Timothy speaks to public reading of scripture followed by
preaching and teaching. In fact, we are encouraged to be diligent in these
matters. Paul is rejecting in this pastoral letter an attitude of complacency;
rather it is an advocacy towards a culture of growth.
Your Sunday attendance is important for growth. When I thank people for
a first time attendance at Hilltop, I use nourishment as an image: “I pray you
were spiritually nourished.” Just as our bodies need a regular dose of rest,
fluids and food, our soul requires regular spiritual nourishment. My car needs
to be topped off with fuel periodically, and our soul needs to be topped off
with spiritual fuel in the same way. I will go so far as saying that if you are
at home, the place you are called to be on Sunday morning is Hilltop. Here is
where you are supposed to be. If you are on the road, I pray you avail yourself
of a chance to experience worship in a different setting or location, and see
how others might be fed or refueled. But your Sunday attendance is important
for your spiritual growth and health. How are you going to grow spiritually if
you are not spiritually fed or fueled? Pleases continue to make it important to
you and your family and be fed and fueled at Hilltop.
Your continued financial participation is important for sustainment,
and potential growth, at Hilltop. Many summers see an economic downturn in
giving leading to anxious moments by those in financial leadership (see Galen
Ewer’s article from the Newsletter below). With a drop in attendance, the members’ checkbooks
are not brought to church, and anxiety is born out of that downturn. What
happens is that instead of a culture of plenty, we enter into a culture,
induced by a history of low attendance and giving in the summer that sees only
scarcity. An enormous portion of our monthly spending is for staff and
non-discretionary expenses, e.g. mortgage.
We might take a vacation, but servicing the mortgage, for example, does
not. I would pray that if you plan on being gone for much of the summer, take
some steps to get your pledge or programmed contribution over onto automatic.
The sustainment of key activities of your church depends on it.
Paul in his letter to Timothy above speaks to being diligent. To be
diligent suggests we will attend to life in a way that shows care and
conscientiousness in our duties. I pray
you show care and are conscientious in your weekly attendance at Hilltop and
supporting her with your time, talent and treasure. It is important. It is
important to sustaining a culture of growth.
Paul says to “give yourself wholly to them.” I think that is excellent
advice, and I pass it on for your consideration and possible
implementation.
Thank you for attending to this issue of great importance.
Vision Casting
Our Proposed Vision: Hilltop –
An inclusive community of hospitality, healing, help, and hope, leading hearts
to Christ.
Our Proposed New Vision Statement! |
We are getting close to looking for congregational buy-in on our
proposed Vision. Belong, believe, and
become has served us well, but your leadership believes it is time to cast a
new vision from which to navigate the next ten to fifteen years. The amount of
time we might use the proposed vision above is “God knows.”
On May 27th, I spoke to the idea of allowing the Holy Spirit to be the
wind in our sails and we use the testimony of God to pick our destination.
There were two other options mentioned that morning, one of which was to row
like it all depends on us and the other was to get on board a raft and allow
ourselves to be blown by the winds. One says it all depends on God, and the
other says it all depends on us. What
about opening our hearts to a biblically ordained destination, and allowing
God’s holy breath to blow us along towards that destination.
We pray that is the plan we follow.
Selah, Pastor Dennis
Don’t Forget Hilltop Over the Summer
By Galen Ewer, finance committee chair
I am nervous. Each year as the
summer months come Kathy Wheeler, our treasurer, and I get nervous about
Hilltop’s cash flow. Last year the congregation was good about keeping up
pledge commitments during the summer but that has not been the case in prior
years. Some of the past years we have
had to skip our obligation to the conference or stretch out other bills. Not good business practices!
As we enter the vacation months please do not forget the needs of your
church. If you noted the monthly report
in the 3rd Sunday bulletin we are about $10,000 in the red for the year. If giving slows over the next three months
our financial situation could begin to look bleak.
Please keep up on your pledge and giving. Remember the bills do not take a vacation in
the summer!
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