
03.20.20 | Discipleship | by Jake Bennett
In this unprecedented time the Church has a rare opportunity to love our neighbors in unprecedented ways.
In this unprecedented time the Church has a rare opportunity to love our neighbors in unprecedented ways.
As we endure the effects of the Coronavirus, let us contemplate the biblical wisdom of lament.
Martin Rinkart – the Thankful Pastor
Lessons learned from Martin Rinkart, author of the hymn "Now Thank We All Our God".
This week I’d like to share some worthwhile resources. We know that the Holy Spirit guides us in prayer (Rom. 8.26; Gal. 4.6; Jn. 14.16), and we know that Scripture warns against praying mindlessly (Mt. 6.7) and growing lax in our prayer...
I always love hanging around a large gathering of men from our church. I’ve been around here for a while, so I have enjoyed a great number of opportunities to reconnect with guys I’ve worshiped with for years and also fellowship with...
“A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another. By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another." John...
Congregational Meeting for Nominated Officer Candidates
A congregational meeting is scheduled for Sunday, August 18, immediately following the worship service. Members of CPC will be asked to vote on three candidates for the office of deacon and one candidate for the office of elder. These candidates...
“The good news for the members of the graduating class who plan to enter the ordained ministry is that you don’t have to invent your own Gospel. All of the church hopes you will be imaginative and resourceful. It doesn’t...
Over the past weekend, I joined a large television audience to watch the USGA golf championship taking place in Carmel, California. There was much to admire in the telecast. The course, itself, is stunningly beautiful as it stretches along cliffs...
It's Good for You That They Are Better than You.
On Sunday, I shared I had just returned from a visit in Southern California and caught myself thinking of the poem of Suzanne Lummis, “Shangri-La,” in which she contends that Los Angelinos are always young, always suntanned, and...