A Blueprint for Living: Live in Light

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A Blueprint for Living: Live in Light

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In this Sunday morning message we take a look at the first chapter of 1st John. What does it mean to be a Christian and to be a group of believers? What does the church of the future look like? Pastor Stephen puts forward the idea that the church should be a spiritual hospital. Hospitals are for healing, not for hiding hurt.

We would love to hear your questions and comments: please leave them in the comments below!

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Imagine if we were a community of neighbours!

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Imagine if we were a community of neighbours!

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neighbours Everyone has an opinion about everything that is wrong in the world, but few will do anything about it. That is how it seems at times. In my experience speaking with people in our own community, I have found it does not take long before someone begins to lament the problems facing Pincher Creek. Low voter turn-outs, a lack of volunteers and community engagement, at-risk youth, thinly veiled racism, drug and alcohol abuse, loneliness, a lack of services and shut-in seniors with no one to visit them: these are just a few of the problems that communities like ours are facing. We know these problems exist—even if we choose to ignore them—but how can we address them?

Most concerned citizens respond to these problems by going to their government and asking for programs and policies to be enacted and funded in the hope that they will solve the problem. Sometimes programs work, but they never work as well as we would like. Yes, programs are easy and they allow us to pass responsibility for our community’s problems onto others, but one need only look around them to see that programs and government funding are not the answer to society’s problems.

Allow me to voice a radical thought: Imagine what Pincher Creek could be if we could just figure out a way to become a community of neighbours. What would Pincher Creek look like if our neighbours were more than those we share a fence with? What kind of place would this be if they were more than the people to whom we politely say, “Hello,” as we walk from our cars to our homes?

Imagine if we knew the names of every person on our block and took the time to talk with them and visit them. Imagine if neighbours invited one another to dine in their homes, or if entire neighbourhoods joined forces to watch out for each other’s children or to work to make their block a better place to live.

My God, Jesus Christ, had something to say about this. He told those who followed Him to love their neighbours as themselves. Those He spoke to marvelled at this and at His response to the question, “Who is my neighbour?” Essentially, Jesus said that our neighbour is everyone we meet and everyone God has placed around us. No matter how good or how awful a person was, Jesus said His followers needed to love them as themselves!

Unfortunately, the sad reality is that Christians—including myself—have often ignored Jesus’ radical command. For that, I apologize, and I commit to make it my goal to love my neighbours. Will you join me in being a true neighbour in your community? Imagine what Pincher Creek could be if we could just figure out a way to become a community of neighbours.

This article appeared first in the Pincher Creek Echo, January 27, 2016. Written by Pastor Stephen Valcourt.

We want to hear your thoughts! Please leave your comments below.

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In the Beginning: the Fall

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In the Beginning: the Fall

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Why is there all this pain and suffering in the world? Could there really be a loving God who allows these things to happen?

Pastor Stephen explores these things in this Sunday morning message.

We'd love to hear from you! Leave your questions and thoughts in the comments below.

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Sunday Morning Message--In the Beginning: Man & Woman

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Sunday Morning Message--In the Beginning: Man & Woman

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Abuse, patriarchy, hyper-feminism...hatred between the sexes, infidelity, divorce, sex outside of marriage...these things are rampant in our world. In this Sunday morning message, Pastor Stephen takes us back to the beginning of creation to see what God originally intended our interactions as men and women to be like.

In the end, it becomes clear that God designed men and women as equal halves of a divine equation.

Take a listen to this message above, and leave your thoughts and questions in the comments below--we want to hear from you!

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