We are currently looking for a gospel preacher to work with us.

If you are interested please contact Joe Cash at (205) 541-4346 OR Wendell Parrish at (205) 365-2622.

 

Welcome to Lay Lake
church of Christ, Columbiana, Alabama

You will be more than welcome at all of our services. Please come and bring your Bible to "search the Scriptures" with us.  

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God’s people ought to be greatly concerned about the condition of the church!   Our physical houses are important, but the spiritual house of God is far more important.  Therefore, each Christian should be willing to exert time and energy to help improve the church.  Today we continue with part two of  “How to Improve the Church.”

Third, We Can Improve the Church by Helping Instead of Criticizing.   In the realm of sports, there are many diehard fans I like to call “lazy boy coaches.”  These are individuals who sit at home in their lazy boy recliners, and from their vantage point, they can criticize every call the coaches decide and disapprove of every action the players make.  They are not on the field playing.  They are also not on the sideline with the difficult pressures of decision making.  They are not involved, but they can criticize everyone who is involved.  Sadly, the church is filled with many people who are “spiritual lazy boy coaches,” and many of these people are professionals of the trade. They will not get involved.  They will not volunteer for a task.  They are not serving as an elder or as a deacon.  They are not preaching, teaching, or at work in any way.   However, they can criticize everyone who is working.  In their eyes, the elders never make the right decision, the deacons are not doing their jobs, the preacher is always doing something wrong, the Bible class teachers are not doing enough, and things are not going the way they think they should be handled.  This is not only sad, but it is sinful.   Individuals who choose to criticize instead of help are actually damaging the church.

However, uninvolved people with a critical disposition are not new among God’s people.  In the days of Nehemiah, God’s great leader endured the criticism of a group of people who only criticized and were not willing to work.  In Nehemiah 2:17-18, the Bible describes Nehemiah and a small group of Jews seeking to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem. Yet, the text continues by describing a man named Sanballat and his friends mocking Nehemiah and the work which needed to be done. In Nehemiah 2:19, the servant of the Lord describes how “they laughed us to scorn, and despised us, and said, what is this thing that ye do? Will ye rebel against the king?” Thankfully, as Bible readers know, the work of God was completed despite the opposition and criticism from this group.  However, it seems like every congregation is still plagued with a Sanballat and his mocking friends.  Look into the mirror and ask yourself who are you more like in the work of the church. Are you like Nehemiah who was willing to work? Or, are you like Sanballat who was only willing to criticize?  It is a fact, if we want to help the church and improve ourselves, we need to stop criticizing and start kicking up the dust in the service of the Lord.

Fourth, We Can Improve the Church If We Never Allow Someone to Work For Us, And If We Never Allow Ourselves to Work For Someone Else.  Most congregations are blessed to have very talented members. However, there are at least two great temptations within this.  For some people, they may be tempted to sit back while others do the work for them. They may even justify their inactivity by believing they are doing the church a favor by allowing the more talented person to take their place and do a certain task for them.  Yet, at the other end of the spectrum, the other temptation is for a person to do everything and never give anyone else a chance to get involved.  This person may feel they can do a better job than anyone else, and because of this, they refuse to share the load of responsibility.  The reality is, both attitudes are not helping the church.

The Bible clearly teaches how it is not God’s desire for one talented or willing member of the congregation to do the work for half of the congregation. The church does not revolve around one member. Paul clarified this in 1 Corinthians 12 when he raised an important question. “And if they were all one member, where were the body? But now are they many members, yet but one body” (1 Cor.12:19-20).  Paul is emphasizing how the church is like a physical body. It is not made up of one very talented member, but it consists of many members each having worth, a purpose, and a place.  If we are willing to sit back while someone else works for us, we are hurting the church.  On the other hand, if we as a member of a local congregation are unwilling to share the work, we are also equally harming the church. Both attitudes refuse to allow the local congregation to operate like the body of Christ. In order to improve the church, every member needs to have a part and do their part for the Lord.

Articles

  Prayers pleasing to God need not be lengthy and must not be filled with “vain repetitions”. The Lord taught His disciples to avoid this common error of the Pharisees who, He said, use “vain repetitions, as the heathen do: for they think that they shall be heard for their much speaking” (Matt. 6:7). The efficacy in prayer is not dependent on the number of words used, or the eloquence of the speaker who chooses them. One of the most poignant and impressive prayers in the Bible has in it only two words! David, facing formidable enemies, deeply troubled, uncertain what course would be best for him to follow and fully aware of his own inability to resolve his problems, cried out, “Help, Lord” (Psa. 12:1). This was no time for speech-making to God! All who face trials in life—and eventually all do—can fully empathize with the embattled Psalmist, and recall those painful occasions when in turning to the Lord, there was the sobering realization that there was no one else to whom to turn. The Bible abounds with these wonderful and precious assurances to the faithful. “All things work together for good to them that love God” (Rom. 8:28). “As thy day is, so shall thy strength be” (Deut. 33:25). “My grace is sufficient for thee” (2 Cor. 12:9). When sin-stricken, burdened, and weary, From bondage I longed to be free, There came to my heart the sweet message: “My grace is sufficient for thee”. Though tempted and sadly discouraged, My soul to this refuge will flee, And rest in the blessed assurance: “My grace is sufficient for thee”. ***

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