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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
51 w

“Friends” Isn’t Getting A Reboot—But It Is Getting A Gameshow
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www.inspiremore.com

“Friends” Isn’t Getting A Reboot—But It Is Getting A Gameshow

If you are a Friends superfan you have a chance to put your knowledge to good use. While you will likely never get your reboot, it looks like you will be getting a Friends gameshow. “Friends” Gameshow TODAY shared that the gameshow will begin production next month. It will be a four-part show available for streaming on Max. Fans of the franchise will have to answer “trivia questions, solve puzzles, and participate in challenges that take place in the exhibit’s re-created sets from the show.” The studio shared that fans will have to visit favorite spots from the show. Varying from “Rachel and Monica’s apartment” to “Joey and Chandler’s bachelor pad” to the infamous “Central Perk.” The goal of the Friends gameshow will be to get through all the challenges the fastest. Only then can they receive the title of “Ultimate Friends Fan.” No “Friends” Reboot, No Problem Although fans of the show will not be getting their long-request reboot, they are still excited to be getting the consolation prize. The Friends gameshow will be titled “Fast Friends” and will have participants “answer trivia, solve puzzles, and participate in games related to the show.” This exciting announcement comes out right in time to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the show’s premiere, which took place on September 22, 1994. The show will be filmed at the Friends Experience in New York. The Friends Experience is “an interactive exhibit featuring set re-creations, costumes, props, and more from the series.” While the premiere date has yet to be announced, fans are looking forward to testing their Friends knowledge. The source of the featured image is here. The post “Friends” Isn’t Getting A Reboot—But It Is Getting A Gameshow appeared first on InspireMore.
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
51 w

Relinquishing Control
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Relinquishing Control

If you have trouble not being in control, then here are a couple ways on how to relinquish control.
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
51 w

Lessons from Mark Dever’s 30 Years at Capitol Hill Baptist Church
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www.thegospelcoalition.org

Lessons from Mark Dever’s 30 Years at Capitol Hill Baptist Church

In January 1993, Mark Dever received a letter from Carl F. H. Henry informing him of a recently vacated pulpit on Capitol Hill. Dever wasn’t immediately enthusiastic—he thought he was preparing for the professorship, not the pastorate. He’d recently completed a PhD in ecclesiastical history while serving as associate pastor of Eden Baptist Church in Cambridge, England. Nevertheless, he accepted the offer to preach that summer at the once-prominent Washington congregation that had been Henry’s home church since 1956. And in one of those remarkable and providential turn of events—not unlike William Farel’s convincing John Calvin to remain at Geneva—God turned Dever’s heart to the congregation on Capitol Hill. It happened the first time he preached to them. “During my quiet time the next morning,” Dever shared, “God just unmistakably turned my heart toward the church.” September 25, 2024, marks the 30th anniversary of Dever’s installation as senior pastor of Capitol Hill Baptist Church (CHBC) in Washington, DC. What lessons are there to glean from a ministry that has spanned three decades and influenced thousands? One answer comes from a response Dever gave in a pastoral candidate interview with the congregation in November 1993. Asked what his vision for ministry was, Dever gave an answer that has become a staple of his ministry: preach, pray, love, and stay. Preach “When I came to CHBC,” Dever explained, “I was very clear with them that I was happy for every aspect of my public ministry to fail, if necessary, except for the preaching of God’s Word.” The hyperbole was intentional. Dever wanted the church to understand the primacy of the preached Word in the congregation’s life. The night before his installation, Mark Dever introduces a panel discussion on the state of the evangelical church / Courtesy of Caleb Morell “Preaching is central to the pastoral ministry,” Dever explained at the congregational Q&A in 1993. “A lot of churches in America don’t think that. I think they’re wrong.” Dever began by preaching expositionally through Mark’s Gospel. From his time studying the Puritans, Dever realized that in a “Christian culture,” the way you preach evangelistically to self-conscious Christians who may not be converted is by constantly repeating the same truth in sermons: This is what a Christian is like. The Gospels provided the perfect lens to do so through Jesus’s words. Early on, Henry offered a mild criticism of Dever’s preaching: “You know, Mark, you’re supposed to feed the sheep, not just the giraffes.” In other words, don’t preach so academically that your audience can’t understand you, or push too hard on deep theological concepts. Dever listened respectfully but disagreed. “I was going to feed the sheep,” he explained. “But I was going to feed the regenerate sheep. That is what I knew would create a healthier church.” For decades, Dever has heeded the apostle Paul’s instruction to “preach the word” (2 Tim. 4:2). Since 1994, Dever has preached 827 sermons at CHBC, alternating every preaching series between Old and New Testament books. Surveying the church’s spiritual and numerical growth over the past 30 years, Dever often recalls the words of Martin Luther: “I simply taught, preached, and wrote God’s Word; otherwise I did nothing. . . . The Word did everything.” Pray The second aspect of ministry Dever emphasizes is prayer. Prayer means realizing everything we do is dependent on God. “This church began in a prayer meeting in 1867,” Timothy George recounted in his sermon at Dever’s installation as pastor on September 25, 1994. “And out of that emerged a Sunday school, which was the nucleus of what became Metropolitan Baptist Church. And through these years, God has sustained this church through the prayers of his people.” Connie Dever, Mark Dever, and Al Mohler at Mark Dever’s installation reception / Courtesy of Caleb Morell Shortly after arriving, Dever turned the Sunday evening service into a prayer meeting to emphasize corporate prayer’s significance in the life of the body. He selected topics for prayer that would lead the congregation to Christian maturity, asking God to do what they were powerless to do in their own strength. “We should pray so much in our churches,” Dever likes to say, “that non-Christians are bored at praying to the God they only pretend to know.” Prayer also shapes his private devotion. Early on in Dever’s preaching ministry, his uncle told him that “prayer is the best commentary on Scripture.” That contrast between prayer and commentaries stuck with Dever and informed his pulpit preparation. Additionally, Dever adopted the habit of praying through a few pages of CHBC’s membership directory every morning. “This is my most important book,” Dever likes to say, holding up his Bible. “And this is my second most important book,” he’ll say, holding up his directory. “Time spent in prayer is never time lost,” Dever reflected. Love When Dever applied for the pastorate of CHBC, one quality stood out among others in his references: he made disciples everywhere he went. “If I had to emphasize one gift above others,” Don Carson wrote to the church, “it is his continuing ability to challenge others, in the context of genuine friendship.” Love involves sacrificially pouring oneself out for the sake of others. It means slowly but surely building relationships to help others grow as Christians. In Dever’s life, the love of good friends has been the foundation for not only the strength of the CHBC body but also the expanding work of 9Marks and the successful years of the T4G conference. For Dever, focusing on the good of others and even other churches is a basic aspect of pastoral ministry. He has often said, “I am not qualified to be the pastor of Capitol Hill Baptist Church if I am only concerned with Capitol Hill Baptist Church.” Of course, a pastor needs a special concern for his church, just as a husband needs a special concern for his wife and children. Yet a pastor’s disposition cannot be competitive but focused on gospel expansion in his area of influence. One small example of this at CHBC is the public prayers offered each week for other local congregations. Stay The fourth quality Dever emphasized with the pulpit committee in 1993 was patience: “I wouldn’t want to necessarily see something happen quickly,” he told them back then. “Often, things that happen quickly don’t last very well.” Pictured (left to right) at Mark Dever’s installation service on September 25,1994, are Roger Nicole, Al Mohler, Timothy George, and Harold J. Purdy / Courtesy of Caleb Morell Five years into Dever’s ministry on Capitol Hill, the church’s membership roll had declined to its lowest number since 1892. But under the surface, the tide was turning. The church was slowly moving toward a plurality of elders, more biblical church membership, and a culture of discipling—all of which prepared the church for growth in the 2000s. Patience is a spiritual superpower that makes pastoral longevity possible. Young preachers often think they don’t need to preach twice on the same topic. But pastoral ministry is more like parenting in the sense that patient correction and repetition are the main tools. “True success,” Dever has often said, “cannot be defined in terms of visible results. Success must be defined in terms of faithfulness to God’s Word. This brings true freedom. If you learn this, you will be released from the demands of immediately observable results.” Shaped by Dever I’ve known Dever for more than a decade as my pastor, mentor, boss, and friend. I speak for hundreds, if not thousands, when I say he has shaped my delight in the church and desire to serve in pastoral ministry more than anyone I know. First Thessalonians 5:12 tells us, “Acknowledge those who work hard among you, who care for you in the Lord” (NIV). Pastoral longevity by a faithful pastor is a priceless blessing to a church. For however many additional years the Lord gives Dever in the ministry, my prayer is that he, and the pastors he has poured his life into, will preach, pray, love, and stay.
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
51 w

Why Did Elisha Allow Naaman to Bow to an Idol?
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Why Did Elisha Allow Naaman to Bow to an Idol?

Naaman’s story in 2 Kings 5 opens like many other Bible passages. A sick man gets an undeserved miracle. He’s then convinced the God of Israel is the one true God and declares he’ll worship the Lord from now on. God’s grace and power are on display in this happy ending. But what Naaman asks for next turns a familiar storyline into a curious one. As part of his job as the Syrian king’s right-hand man, Naaman has to attend Syrian worship. So he asks Elisha if the Lord would please forgive him for bowing his knee to the false god alongside his boss. Was Naaman already coming up with excuses to sin? Had he not seen previous headlines about God’s jealousy and holiness? I turn the page and brace for Elisha to bring down an Old Testament hammer. Instead, I’m shocked when he responds, “Go in peace” (v. 19). Peace? On the surface, Elisha seems to be condoning false worship, but there’s more to the story. Let’s consider what Elisha’s response means and what we can learn from it as we read the books of Kings today. Elisha’s Response Shows God’s Compassion If we understand that the original audience is God’s people living years later in Babylonian captivity, this odd twist starts to make more sense. Just as Naaman wanted to worship God on foreign soil, God’s people wanted to worship God despite their relocation to Babylon. I can only imagine how sweet it would have been to hear this story and feel understood—to realize that God knew how awkward and stuck they felt between the world they missed (where they could worship him freely and obediently) and the world in which they lived (surrounded by pagan culture and no temple worship). God knew their predicament. Naaman’s story showed them that the Lord understood they were caught between their faith and their workplace responsibilities. The exiles must have struggled to know how to respond as their Gentile bosses threw around Babylonian curse words, served pork at workplace parties, and decorated their shops for pagan holidays. Commentator Peter Leithart writes, “Elisha’s response is remarkable and shows something of God’s gentleness in dealing with believers in tricky moral and political circumstances.” Living in today’s society can be a lot like the Israelites living in exile then. We struggle with various questions: Should I teach a school curriculum that goes against my beliefs? Should I quit a job that has LGBT+ stickers on its storefront window? Will my boss understand if I ask for the Lord’s Day off? In this story from the ancient world, we sense God’s compassion for us as we try to figure out how to be in the modern world but not of it (John 17:14, 15). Gehazi’s Sin Highlights Naaman’s True Worship Naaman’s sort of worship—his heart worship of the true God—is what God wants over knee worship. David explained this in Psalm 51:17: “The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not despise.” In this story from the ancient world, we sense God’s compassion for us as we try to figure out how to be in the modern world but not of it. To underscore this truth, the script flips when Namaan departs and Elisha’s servant Gehazi chases after him. Here we see a stark comparison between Naaman, right-hand man to the Syrian king, and Gehazi, right-hand man to Elisha. Though Elisha refused to accept presents from Naaman, Gehazi secretly acquired expensive goods from Naaman and lied about it to Elisha. Gehazi bent his knee toward God while bowing his heart to beautiful clothes and silver. Elisha—who’d just pronounced peace on Naaman—cursed Gehazi’s disobedience. As a consequence, leprosy clung to him and his descendants, keeping them out of worship forever. The contrast is noteworthy. Both Naaman and Gehazi claimed to worship God, yet God saw past their knees to their hearts (1 Sam. 16:7). We need to ask ourselves what God sees in ours. Many Gehazis sit in our church pews, bowing the knee to God while their hearts run after the financial and fashionable gods of today such as full social calendars, expensive houses, political power, or Instagram notoriety. Or, like the Pharisees of Jesus’s time, churchgoers may cloak obedience in their tribal rules of what feels biblical to them. These Christians are less understanding than Elisha as they critique their brothers and sisters who struggle like Naaman in the tension of obeying God while figuring out how to be a team player at work or a loving friend in the neighborhood. If you’re walking in the tension of loving God as you work and live where God has put you, let Naaman’s story encourage you that God has compassion for us as we navigate these situations. Don’t Rule Out Bold Obedience Yet Naaman’s peaceful ending is the biblical exception when you look at the myriad of men and women who obeyed the Lord and experienced persecution because of it: Daniel met hungry lions. Esther faced an “off with her head!” moment as she broke palace norms. Paul’s body showed scars of beatings before dying for his obedience. John the Baptist preached against King Herod’s adultery and lost his head. Naaman’s peaceful ending is the biblical exception when you look at the myriad of men and women who obeyed the Lord and experienced persecution because of it. Today too, many believers are called to give up possessions, status, and health in the name of bowing the knee as well as the heart to God. So how do we know if we can “go in peace” or if we should take the risk of bold obedience? Naaman points the way. Ask a godly friend. When faced with a big decision, my mind can get fuzzy. I need someone outside of the situation to help me process. A godly friend can ask good questions, help decipher what’s going on in my heart and mind, and offer biblical wisdom. Just like Naaman asked Elijah for help, we can seek godly counsel. Ask God. Go to his Word. As a prophet, Elisha was the source of God’s Word for Naaman; the Bible is ours. Dig into it. Ask the Holy Spirit for wisdom in big theological questions and everyday applications of them (James 1:5). But be sure to bring your heart, not just your knees, to God. As we’ve seen in Naaman’s story, that’s the kind of question he delights to answer.
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
51 w

Don Carson Answers Questions About Hermeneutics and Introduces Exegetical Fallacies
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Don Carson Answers Questions About Hermeneutics and Introduces Exegetical Fallacies

Don Carson explores spiritual rebirth through Jesus’s conversation with Nicodemus in John 3, emphasizing the distinction between natural and spiritual birth and God’s essential role in salvation. He teaches on the following: Spiritual birth and its relationship to natural birth The importance of connecting expository preaching with broader biblical truth Modeling good Bible study and application, rather than just teaching it Understanding the semantic range of words in different languages The evolution of words in the Bible and their changing meanings over time
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Homesteaders Haven
Homesteaders Haven
51 w

Homemade Spaghetti Sauce To Savor Or Store For The Holidays
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homesteading.com

Homemade Spaghetti Sauce To Savor Or Store For The Holidays

Looking for a delicious spaghetti sauce recipe? Get ready to raid your pantry and make this incredibly simple and ridiculously tasty homemade spaghetti sauce to savor or store. The next time pasta is on the menu, give this homemade spaghetti sauce recipe a try! Anyone can definitely whip up a great family dinner after reading this. And that’s a promise! Image via susan-thinkingoutloud.blogspot Homemade Spaghetti Sauce To Savor Or Store For The Holidays With homemade spaghetti sauce, you can get a great down-home flavor that's familiar and comforting. It is not only incredibly easy but also unbelievably delicious! Another good thing about this sauce is that it's so versatile: not only it is perfect with pasta, but it also works great on pizza or as a dipping sauce for appetizers. This recipe is very simple so there’s practically zero chance to mess it up. Try our family’s all time favorite recipe and it's sure to become your family's new favorite, too.   Ingredients: 1 onion, chopped 3 cloves garlic, minced 2 tablespoons olive oil 1 (28 ounces) can whole peeled tomatoes 2 (6 ounces) cans tomato paste 2 tablespoons dried basil 1 tablespoon dried oregano 2 bay leaves 1 tablespoon white sugar 1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes 1/4 cup red wine 1 pound Italian sausage (optional)   Directions: Step 1: Chop Start by chopping some onion and mincing some garlic.   Step 2: Sauté Heat olive oil in a large saucepan. Sauté onions and garlic until golden yellow.   Step 3: Simmer Add remaining ingredients (except sausage links). I prefer my sauce meatless. However, if you want it meaty, remove casing from sausage links and cut into slices then mix it into the sauce. Stir well to combine and let simmer over low heat for 3 hours.   Step 4: Cook Sausages With one hour cooking time remaining, cook and brown sausages in a skillet. When browned, place in sauce and continue to simmer.   Step 5: Serve Remove bay leaves before serving. Serve over hot cooked pasta, with sausages either on top or mixed in.   Still want to see how it’s made? Then go ahead and watch this quick video tutorial from Allrecipes! This homemade spaghetti sauce is incredibly delicious and tastes so fresh. It has such deep flavors from the garlic, spices, tomatoes, and red wine. I love how adding a pinch of sugar softens the acidity of the tomatoes. This homemade spaghetti sauce recipe is a staple in our home. I know you won’t be disappointed! Will you give this easy recipe for homemade spaghetti sauce a try? Let me know below in the comments! Follow me on instagram, twitter, pinterest and facebook! For more quick and easy recipes, click here.    
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
51 w ·Youtube Music

YouTube
Winning - NEFFEX, Positive Fuse - French Fuse
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
51 w

This Man Hosting Tim Walz Would End The Harris Campaign If America Were Still Sane
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This Man Hosting Tim Walz Would End The Harris Campaign If America Were Still Sane

This Man Hosting Tim Walz Would End The Harris Campaign If America Were Still Sane
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YubNub News
YubNub News
51 w

Idaho Man Faces Charges For Allegedly Threatening President Trump’s Life
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Idaho Man Faces Charges For Allegedly Threatening President Trump’s Life

[unable to retrieve full-text content]The following article, Idaho Man Faces Charges For Allegedly Threatening President Trump’s Life, was first published on Conservative Firing Line. There’s been…
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
51 w

Study of 'Slap Fighting' Reveals Signs of Brain Injury in 78% of Participants
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Study of 'Slap Fighting' Reveals Signs of Brain Injury in 78% of Participants

There's no protection.
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