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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Way back years ago, my wife was trying to kill a fat fryer so we could have fried chicken for supper. She grabbed the fryer by the neck and began spinning him around and around at arm's length, without twisting his neck at all. When she threw him on the ground, he 1ay there befuddled and groggy for a minute or so, then hopped up and ran off. Trouble was, she hadn't killed a chicken ... she had only disturbed him for a short while.

I recall another incident in which a city girl had always enjoyed fried chicken until she saw her farmer uncle lay a chicken on the chopping block and whack his head off with an ax.  Her statement subsequent to that episode was, “I’ll never eat another piece of chicken as long as I live.”

In dealing with sin, one of the great tragedies in the Lord’s body today is that of brethren (elders, deacons, preachers and members alike) who decide that it’s high time to do something about sin in their 1ives, or in the lives of others, but, like my wife's “chicken killing,” they start out wrong, continue the same way, and eventually end up wrong. They don’t crucify the old man of sin and death; they merely shake him up a bit as they pussyfoot around issues, soft-soap their way past clear-cut decisions and whitewash the blatant wrongs, so they’ll appear respectable and acceptable.

Another tragedy is that of witnessing the complete exposition of sin and reacting like the city girl by refusing to accept the simple truth -- if you want fried chicken, somebody has to kill a chicken. If we desire pure and undefiled religion, we've got to “kill” sin where we find it. If we don’t have the stomach for that kind of action, we might just as well make up our minds to the fact that we’ll be living in and with sin for the rest of our lives.

Visiting a delinquent member and telling him, in love, that hes wrong is neither unkind nor unscriptural. Labeling wrongdoing by individuals or “churches” as sin is what God requires. To do less is to do less than we should. Brethren, let’s quit slinging sin “round and round.” Let’s kill it where we find it.

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”. ***

  • 1. We are not conscious of soul winning opportunities and we don’t take advantage of those we have.  2. We assume public preaching will accomplish the task.  Research shows that “Friendship Evangelism” converts over 80% of the people. 3. We have left the task of “seeking the lost” to the…

  • Is attending Bible class on Sunday morning and Wednesday evening important? Is it just an old tradition that is hanging on? Some, it seems, don’t think that Bible study is important and they choose not to attend. Years ago, we used to hear the expression, “As goes the Bible School,…

  •   "And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the…

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