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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Jeroboam would have fit nicely into the modern religious climate. That’s the climate that approaches church from the marketing viewpoint. The primary goal is to attract the masses. And, in order to attract the masses, you have to give them what they want and avoid anything that might offend their sensibilities.

A church that has adopted an “accepting” atmosphere, decorated its building to mimic a popular television show (complete with a waterfall and bamboo ladders), and added a 300-seat snack bar, is just such an example. Yes, their numbers have swelled in a three-year period to ten times their original size. They are attracting the masses.

Now, back to Jeroboam. His concern was to reach the masses. He thought that his recently-formed kingdom (known as Israel, carved from Rehoboam’s kingdom, which was called Judah) would be in trouble if it’s inhabitants continued to travel to Jerusalem (located in Judah) to worship. So, he provided not just one but two conveniently-located alternative worship centers at Dan and Bethel in the northern and southern ends of Israel. He resurrected an old, popular religion from Egypt and dropped the restrictive and exclusive Levitical priesthood in order to make priests of any who desired (1 Kings 12:25 – 13:34).

These modern religionists have nothing on Jeroboam! What today is promoted as “cutting edge” is actually old hat. It is not a new approach at all. The remarkable thing is mankind’s insistence on returning to this tried and failed formula.

Some say you can’t argue with the numbers. Apparently God doesn’t agree. He “lost” the numbers game in the flood (1 Peter 3:20), with Gideon’s army (Judges 7), after Jesus fed the 5000 (John 6:66), and He’ll “lose” it at judgment, too (Matthew 7:13-14). There was no question as to God’s feelings about Jeroboam’s efforts, no matter what the masses might think.

Jeroboam became the most remembered king of Israel, but it was as the man who caused Israel to sin (stated no less than 21 times). Why? Because he did what “he had devised in his own heart” (1 Kings 12:33). By contrast, David, whose lineage remained on the throne of Judah, is Judah’s most-remembered king. He’s the one whose heart was “wholly devoted” to God (1 Kings 15:33) and was even described as being after God’s own heart (Acts 13;22).

It appears that the question is, “Whose heart will decide what we do?”

 

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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  • 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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