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Prayer
New Sermon Series, Back to the Basics.
Revisit Vision Framework we laid out last year for our church (I hope that rings a bell!).
What do I mean by Vision Framework?
Elements that we’ve laid out that help us frame our Vision for the church
Mission - clear, concise statement of what we’re supposed to be doing (Leading others into the abundant life that comes through Jesus)
Values - expression of why we’re doing what we’re doing, core convictions that guide our decisions and move us to action
Strategy - answers how, how will we engage in our mission (Spiritual Formation Groups, Worship rooted in practices of Acts 2)
Finally, Measures - this is our self-evaluation.
How will we know that we’ve done what we set out to do?
That we hit our target?
That we lived out our values / core convictions?
My hope and prayer is that this Vision Framework will be so familiar to us that all of us will be able to articulate it - so that if someone asked you what PCC is about, you’d be able to tell them - Our Mission, Our Core Values, Our Strategies.
Last year, I gave an overview of each of the four sides that make up the frame of our vision.
This year, I want to take one of the sides - Values, and go into depth into each one of them
First question to consider is, what is a value?
Values are the basic and fundamental beliefs that guide or motivate attitudes or actions.
It’s the big why’s in our lives.
Those core convictions that guide how we think, react, what we do.
Everyone has values.
You and I, all of us - have values that we’re operating out of on a day to day basis.
There’s some belief, some narrative, some core conviction that drives us - whether we recognize it or not (often, we don’t realize it).
Let me give you some examples
What you believe constitutes personal happiness (perfect love relationship, life of leisure - don’t have to work too hard, have what I need, success - achieving some great goal, security, feeling safe, being a good person - and what being good looks like).
That’s going to drive your actions.
Those are all values: security, my personal comfort, close family, education
Several months ago I shared story of Suze Orman, personal financial expert - her story of watching her dad’s business burn down, him running back in and grabbing the scalding hot cash register and scorching his hands carrying the register out.
He valued money.
And that incident impacted her - she valued money…and because money was such a high value, she worked hard to earn lots of it.
Until she realized that wasn’t value she wanted to live by.
Shared stories of Ben Jacobs and John Wooten, men who both were born in 1910 but lived very different lives because they had very different values.
Ben Jacobs - he lived for power.
He wanted to have money, to be in control, to have things his way.
His motto was “take all you can from whoever you can.”
That led to successful business with thousands of employees, a lot of sway in state politics, adulterous affairs, willingness to lie, cheat and do whatever it took to be on top.
It also left him very alone when he got old.
John Wooten was also incredibly successful - but in a very different way, and with very different values.
Wooten decided, at the age of 25, he would live by a very different set of principles based on the teachings of Jesus: he values courage and honesty and hard work, character and loyalty, virtue and honor.
He was the most successful college men’s basketball coach ever.
Died a dearly beloved man whose life impacted many.
Hugely important to be clear about our values - even more so, to be honest about whether or not that’s what’s really driving us (we often say things are important to us, what if we dig down, there’s a more fundamental belief that’s motivating us).
That gets revealed when decisions have to be made
How you deal with money will reveal whether you most value security or generosity or personal happiness or power.
Whether you value integrity more or avoiding negative consequence will reveal whether you tell plain, simple truth.
This happens in churches as well.
Church that values their building more than mission will limit their ministry for sake of preserving their building.
Or their own survival - they’ll become inwardly focused, because survival of the institution or what it does for me is more important than serving those outside church.
I’m finding this true in my own life.
I value following Jesus.
More and more I want that to be the central value in my life, that my life belongs to him.
But as I pursue that, I’m finding more and more how much I value my own personal comfort and desire to live life on my own terms.
As a church, we want to state our values clearly.
This is what we’re about as a church - to pursue that together.
And to keep coming back to it to ask ourselves hard questions - are we really living out what we say our values are?
Are these the things that guide our decisions and motivate our actions - or are we really more concerned about something else?
Here are our 4 core values that we’ll be looking at over this 4-week sermon series: Kingdom First, Lived Obedience to Jesus, Shared Life Together & Heart Transformation
This morning: Kingdom First
Main Point: That as a church we would value the Kingdom of God above everything else.
That we would be guided and motivated by the fundamental belief that God’s Kingdom comes first.
Our priority, personally and collectively, is to orient the fullness of our lives toward God and his Kingdom.
Which is what Jesus commands us to do: Matthew 6:33 - But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.
If you look at our full Vision Framework we have this teased out a little bit, what it means for us to hold to this core belief, Kingdom First.
Demonstrated by our commitment to seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness
We believe that Abundant life that comes through Jesus permeates every area of our lives.
In other words, the claims of our Kingdom involve every aspect of our life
And it means that we are willing to proclaim the good news of Jesus and His Kingdom in word and deed - which is exactly what Jesus did.
Jesus came proclaiming the good news of the Kingdom of God.
Spend some time - what does this look like to hold this core conviction?
How does it play out in our lives and in the life of our church?
Best way to do that is to look at how Jesus talked about Kingdom of God (which he did - a lot).
Pictures of Kingdom - Parables Jesus taught
Parable of the Sheep & Goats, Matthew 25:31-46 -
Note how it begins: When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, he will sit on his glorious throne.
32 All the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate the people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats.
33 He will put the sheep on his right and the goats on his left.
34 Then the King will say to those on his right, “Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world.”
Jesus, the King, is on the throne, is determining who is part of the Kingdom and who is not.
Who belongs and who doesn’t - based on whether each person lived in way that reflected heart of kingdom
This is a parable that paints an image of what it looks like to live Kingdom First.
Sheep come into Kingdom because they fed the hungry, gave something to drink to thirsty, took stranger in, providing clothing for those without any, cared for the sick, and visited those in prison.
People who live with humble generosity (when did I?).
People who offer attentive love - notice needs of others - the least of these - and then move to provide those needs.
Jesus is teaching here what those who hold conviction, “Kingdom First” will do.
So, when you and I do these simple acts of kindness and generosity, we are displaying that this is core value for us.
Seek Kingdom first.
(Goats don’t - value something else more).
Also in Matthew 25, Parable of Bags of Gold (or Talents)
Master goes on a journey, leaving his servants with various amounts of gold (talents) and after a long time, returns
Each servant then comes to give account to the King with what they did with what they were given (two of them invested gold, earning more while the last one just buried his in ground).
To be in Kingdom is to be a servant, a steward, to be given gifts, placed in our care.
How you and I use those gifts, those resources, reveal whether we’re Kingdom First (we honor King) or our hearts are focused on another kingdom (perhaps our own).
If Kingdom First is a core value for us, our motivation will be to use what we have for sake of God’s kingdom
Open our home up as place of hospitality or even to house someone in need.
Skills / Talents - leadership, musical or artistic or creative gifts, building / repairing, knowledge or skill we’ve developed
We have financial resources to give for sake of kingdom, time to serve and care for others, to involve ourselves in ministry.
Someone who is Kingdom First will seeking to use whatever they have in life for the sake of the King and his Kingdom.
For Jesus.
Go on and on.
The majority of Jesus’ parables are explicitly about the Kingdom of God
Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard, where all workers - regardless of what time of day they were hired to work, are paid the same wages.
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