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This morning I am doing something that will be different for you as well as for me.
Our annual meeting is today following the service, and as part of my duties as pastor, I am to provide a report.
I have found that when the report is done in written form, very few people outside the governing board read the report.
Sometimes even the members of the board do not read the entire report in its written form.
So this year, the pastor’s report is being given right now, in the form of a hybrid sermon, report of things to celebrate from the past year, and also a look forward to where we are going as God’s church here at Oasis.
There are several reasons I have chosen to do it this way.
For one, it will make the member’s meeting following the service a bit shorter.
But perhaps more importantly, we have many people who attend our services who are not members and may not stay for the meeting, and also there are people online who can hear this but will be unable to observe our member’s meeting.
Of course, anyone is welcome to attend our member’s meeting, although they may not vote if they are not members, but nevertheless, they can attend the meeting as an observer.
Many Sundays, we have visitors who may wonder what Oasis church is all about, so if that is you, or if you are visiting our church online to see what we are all about, y hope is that you will have a better understanding of what Oasis church is all about, and if your heartbeat for the things we are about matches our heartbeat, then perhaps we may be a step closer to you becoming more involved at Oasis with us.
What we can learn from Candy Canes
Now, you may see this next slide about Candy Canes, and you may be thinking, oh, he is going to tell us about one of the legends surrounding the candy cane, what the stripes mean, and so on.
No.
If you haven’t already heard something about that, or seen an article on social media, you can look it up and learn stuff like that.
What I am interested in is a question I asked myself recently that may seem weird, but I ask myself all kinds of weird questions.
I’m just a weird sort of guy, but often I make an observation that becomes a question, and that question becomes a focus of research.
Now, usually, if I am talking to you about these questions, it has something to do with a doctrine or a scripture passage, but this particular curiosity I developed actually on its face has nothing to do with the Bible, but nevertheless, I thought it could be used as an illustration to flow through this report.
The question I was pondering was this: Why are the colors red and white associated with Peppermint?
The peppermint plant, or leaf, has no red or white, it is a green leaf.
And yet, if I handed you a red and white candy cane, or one those round little candies, or one of the softer red and white candies, you would have a certain expectation of what it should taste like.
If I handed you a piece of candy with that well-known shade of red against white, and it tasted like something other than peppermint, you would be surprised.
I’m not sure if it is the same in other countries, but I can tell you, having traveled to many states in this country, that whenever I see a red and white hard candy, whether one of those little round ones, or a candy cane, or a peppermint stick, I know before I put it in my mouth what I should expect it to taste like.
If I was handed a round red and white candy, such as those they used to give sometimes after your meal at a restaurant, and it tasted like licorice, or like Dr. Pepper, I would feel a fraud had been done on me.
On the flip side, if I handed you a purple candy, or a black or yellow piece of candy, and told you to try it, it tastes like peppermint, you would probably be very suspicious.
And why would these things be?
Because for some reason, in our culture, the peppermint flavor, at least when it comes to candy, is in our minds and senses completely linked to those colors, red and white.
As I pondered why this was, I could not find a definitive answer.
One article I found said that a candy maker had always made his peppermint candies white, and for a change added some red stripes.
Or some say it was a happy accident, that some candy maker spilled some red coloring into the mix and liked it.
And some say that the red was to represent the blood of Jesus and the white his purity.
But I could not find a conclusive reason that satisfied me about why the colors white and red are so linked with peppermint that we would all feel put out if they were suddenly unlinked.
What does this have to do with Oasis Church, or us, or anything?
Well, here is what I have been thinking.
If we, Oasis Church, would have some quality that was so clearly linked to us, as individuals, as a church body, that like peppermint with the colors red and white, people would know us with certainty, and connect us clearly with our Lord Jesus, what would that be?
What traits, what characteristics, should we have such that people, whether other faithful believers in other churches, or unbelievers we encounter in our families, our workplaces, our schools would say, “Oh yes, I have heard of Oasis Church, and when I see you, when I talk with you, when we are together, I am always reminded that you are in Christ and part of Oasis Church?
What should we be known for?
What should stick to us like red and white on a peppermint stick?
I think it is this: A love for God’s Word and desire to grow in God’s Word and a passion to share God’s Word with others.
You see, what I love, when I am thanking God in my prayers, to thank him for the work He is doing in your hearts and giving you a common love for these things.
Just as Paul told the church at Corinth about something he thanked God for in 1 Cor 1:4-9
So let us thank God together for a moment as we reflect on some things he has done in and through the believers at Oasis Church this past year.
Some Great New Beginnings
I have said before, that in a sense, Oasis Church is like a church in redevelopment.
A lot of transition in a fairly short time.
A big change was pastoral transition.
Pastoral Transition
It can be rough on a church any time there is a pastoral transition.
For Oasis Church, you went through two pastoral transitions in less than two years.
First, Pastor Randy and his wife Alicia felt called back to their role as international workers in Uruguay.
In the wake of Pastor Randy leaving, Pastor Michael was brought on as a transitional, or interim pastor.
Eventually the church offered him the position to stay, but he was unable to stay, and so the pastoral search team began the process all over again.
They eventually called me and I got here last June.
You who have been here throughout these transitions deserve to be recognized, because you beat the statistics.
You see, the normal statistics are that roughly 1/3 of the church body will leave when the pastor leaves.
Now, I would argue that should not be the case, but inevitably, people will leave during pastoral transitions.
For a church that had 2 such transitions in a short time, the potential was there for the church to go into dramatic decline.
However, our sovereign God is not yet done with Oasis Church, and so he had appointed some of you to be here throughout the transition, and many of you helped with keeping the ministry going, whether keeping facilities maintained, or helping with administrative tasks, or serving on a board.
I especially want to recognize your elders, including Winston, Ron, Kevin, and Brandon, for staying the course, and also for the Pastoral Search team, who did months of work before offering Pastor Michael the permanent job only to find out he needed to move out of state for family reasons.
They then got back to work, and in a very careful and deliberate process filtered through many candidates.
Many of you may not realize how much work these board members and committee members did, and they deserve your thanks.
Re-starting after Covid
Churches around the world faced many challenges with the pandemic.
These challenges included how to respond, for some churches, to unreasonable government demands to not meet, or distancing requirements, or mask requirements, and so ojn.
The biggest challenge among this, however, was that many members within the body of Christ disagreed about the best way to live with the Corona Virus.
Sadly, many people have had bitter disagreements about these things, from mask use, to vaccinations, to church functions and activities.
I have spoken with pastors who had people leave the church because they asked people to wear masks.
Other pastors had people leave the church because they chose not to require masks.
I’m thankful that at Oasis Church, where I know there remains disagreement on the handling of the virus, yet there remains unity in the main things.
That is, our unity comes from being in Christ, not what camp or tribe we fall in, whether it comes from our understanding of the virus and how to live with it, or from other disagreements that are secondary to our main focus, which is that we are one in Christ.
We are those Paul wrote of Eph2.13-16
While we have chosen not to be legalistic regarding virus protocol, I believe we can all agree that to the extent possible, we need to be in comunity with one another, remembering Heb10.24-25
So I want to thank all of you, some who are well aware of the disagreements some may have regarding those things, because being one in Christ, we can show the world how we can live among each other, even in unity, even when we disagree on matters that are not doctrinal.
Obeying Scripture with D6
Perhaps one of the biggest things I have been thanking God for is the participation of many of you in our D6 program.
We have chosen to make this a pillar of our ministry.
One of the things that I hope will stick to our Oasis family like red and white on peppermint is that we, as obedient servants of Christ, are going to continue to make the teaching, explaining, and challenging through the Word of God among our highest priorities.
Of course we are choosing to obey the scripture that D6 is named for, but here is something to keep in mind if someone asks you what Oasis Church is all about.
Here is what I have been telling people.
In fact, just a week or two ago, I shared with a visitor as we spoke in the foyer, do you know what Oasis church is all about?
That - and I pointed to the poster out there with Deut6.4-9
This is what we are committed to obeying, and already, I have had many of you tell me that you are growing, and parents telling me that their kids are engaged in the learning,
Celebrating New members
We were also blessed this year to welcome 11 new members, and I have already heard form others who are interested in membership as well.
We will have a connections class after the holidays for those interested in membership.
Adding new members is a great sign of health.
Of course, only the adults are members, so along with the 11 new members we also welcome several children as well.
3 couples that became new members have young children, and this is a wonderful thing.
Oasis’ Ministries in 2022
OCC
Prison Ministry
Bible Studies
Youth Ministries
Deacon Ministry
Deaconesses
We Must Continue our Faithfulness to Scripture
Taking One More Step
Go One Step Deeper into Scripture
Get involved in D6 or a Bible Study if you haven’t already.
Develop a reading plan if you haven’t.
Plan a discussion about what you are learning about the Lord each week.
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