Articles

Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

“I think therefore I am” – A Primer in Creation

This statement by the 17th century philosopher, Rene Descartes, is understood by many as the essence of skepticism. Others point to it as the beginning of rationalism, that is, the existence of everything can only be comprehended by a rational process or it may not exist. What do you think?

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

“As a Man Thinketh in His Heart”

Disciples of Jesus must learn to think as God thinks, not as man thinks. A pivotal point in the Gospel of Mark is when Peter confesses that this Jesus whom he had been following for the past two years was God’s Messiah, the Christ (Mk. 8:27-30). We may imagine that at that point he and the other disciples have solved the question of who Jesus is (4:41). But Jesus began at that same point to teach his disciples that he must suffer, be rejected, and be killed, and he would rise again. Ignoring that last statement, Peter rebuked Jesus, face to face for saying such things about the one he has just confessed as God’s anointed king. Jesus whirls around and puts Peter behind him saying, “Get behind me Satan!” The problem was that Peter and the other disciples were not thinking like God thinks but like humans think. This becomes the focus in Mark, and in Matthew. Jesus, confronts, challenges, and conflicts with his disciple so that they may learn to think and act like God, not humans.

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Deb Rossing Deb Rossing

Freely you have received, Freely Give

When I sat down to compose this article, I looked and searched through Bible verses to find something that would encompass all that we are focusing on for this Missions and Benevolence Sunday. We have a global reach – from Europe to India, Africa to Haiti, to right here in Connecticut. Widows are cared for, orphans receive food and education and health care, the unsheltered and poor in our own backyard of Willimantic receive food and warmth. They have physical needs, yes. But they also need their spiritual needs met as well. I looked up a quote I remembered just a bit of from somewhere. Blaise Pascal said that people have a God-shaped hole in their heart. How do we encompass all of that in this short article?

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

Servant Survivors in Isaiah and Storrs

Last week’s article asked, “Is it possible for this servant-survivor church to be used by God in the way He employed those servant survivors in Isaiah?” The servant of the Lord image is prominent throughout the oracles of Isaiah. We aspire to be servants of the Lord. It is a noble endeavor. An overlooked image in Isaiah is survivors. It appears in the first oracle. If the Lord of hosts had not left us a few survivors we should have been like Sodom and become like Gomorrah (Is. 1:9). And it is in the last oracle of the prophet: The time is coming to gather all nations and tongues. And they shall come and shall see my glory, and I will set a sign among them. And from them I will send survivors to the nations … and they shall bring your brothers from all the nations to my holy mountain (Is.66:18-20). A “survivor mentality” is not what we aspire to be. It is an ignoble goal even when we admit that is what we are: survivors.

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

What God Can Do with a Group of Servant Survivors

Last week’s scripture reading and sermon text ended with these words, The Lord God, who gathers the outcasts of Israel, declares, “I will gather yet others to him besides those already gathered” (Isaiah 56:8). Those who are to be gathered to God’s holy mountain will include foreigners and eunuchs. They are to be joined with the joyful SERVANTS in God’s house of prayer (56:6-7. In addition to Rick’s excellent sermon on God who tears down walls that separate people, my thoughts jumped to the ending of Isaiah’s message where we see a parade of peoples who fulfill God’s promise. All nations and tongues are brought to God’s holy mountain (Isaiah 66:18-20). I was struck by the fact that God sent SURVIVORS to declare his glory and bring nations to Jerusalem in one of the weirdest parades in scripture.

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

Back To The Future

By all accounts last Sunday’s celebration of our fifty years was wonderful. We had forty-eight in attendance, plus four online. We shared memories and hopes galore. So what do we do now? What is our future?

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

HAPPY BIRTHDAY CHURCH

There are birthdays and there are BIRTHDAYS. There is THE BIRTHDAY of the church. There is the BIRTHDAY of a local church. And there is one’s personal BIRTHDAY in Christ to become a member of his church. On the first Sunday in October, 1973, fifty years ago, a community of believers in Christ and their children, 22 in all, assembled in a rented school room to form the Storrs Road Church of Christ. Today, we celebrate that birthday with affirmations of faith and remembrances of those years.

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

Basic Beliefs

The following is the epilogue by Dr. Jack Lewis to his book, Basic Beliefs, published shortly before his death. The thirty-nine chapters of this book range from “Belief in God” to “Heaven.” His words speak to us and to all generations until the Lord Jesus comes. I recommend it for our study. “WARNING: This book will pull you into God’s Word and challenge you to think.”

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

As I Remember Singing

The first song I remember singing in church was 80+ years ago in Jefferson City, MO — We’re Marching to Zion. I was excited to be in a real church and hear all those singing voices. The second stanza said, “Let those refuse to sing who never knew our Lord.” Standing in the pew beside my mother I said in a voice too loud, “Why isn’t that lady singing?”

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

We Are What We Sing and We Sing Who We Are

Today I begin a series of studies on the tradition of acapella singing in Christian worship. I say “the” tradition not just “our” tradition in Churches of Christ. Historically the practice of unaccompanied singing in Christian worship continued for many centuries in the church. Witness the word “acapella” which means “in the manner of the church.” For now, permit this old codger to have his say, rather than argue the issue.

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

On the Saving of Souls

What do we mean when we speak of saving our souls or saving the souls of others? We may sing, “A charge to keep have I … a never dying soul to save and fit it for the skies” but to what do we pledge? Is our life a private endeavor to save ourselves?

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

Quest for Christian Unity, Peace, and Purity

In 2000 Thomas Olbricht was an editor of a study of Thomas Campbell’s Declaration and Address (D&A) entitled above. I cite from two of the several studies in that book including their own citations from the D&A. Don Haymes describes the occasion of that document.

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

A 19th Century Call to Be a New Testament Church

Many times throughout its 2000 years history, churches have been called to become more like the church in its beginning. In our own restoration heritage, Thomas Campbell issued such a call in a document entitled Declaration and Address.

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

The Kingdom and the Church

What is the relationship of the Kingdom and the Church? Is it Jesus proclaimed the Kingdom but the church came instead. Thus, “give me Jesus not the church.” Or is I kingdom of God and the Church, two different realities. Now we live in a totally mundane realm called the Church, but there is coming a wonderful heavenly Kingdom. Or is it the reverse?

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

Please Write Us A Letter, Paul

Paul, we have read your letters to churches which you evangelized and where you were personally known. As we read your letter to the Colossians, we noticed that you had never been there and did not know them personally, nor the church in Laodicea, yet you wrote them letters. Since you have a wide and deep concern for churches everywhere (Col. 2:1), we ask you to write to us here in eastern Connecticut. We promise to read it when we assemble at our meetinghouse (Col 4:16).

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

Searching for That Mysterious New Testament Church

We first see the word church in Colossians when Paul declares that Christ is “the head of the body, the church” (1:18). Paul’s ministry is for the sake of “his body, that is, the church” (1:24). He concludes with greetings to “Nympha and the church in her house” and instructions that his letter be read “in the church of the Laodiceans” (4:15-16). Our search is for that mysterious church but for Paul the great mystery is Christ in his relationship to the church, “Christ in you, the hope of glory” (1:26-27). All this written 30 years after Jesus of Nazareth was crucified.

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

Gracious Words about the Body of Christ, the Church

Paul commends speaking to everyone gracious words seasoned with salt (Col. 4:6). The metaphor of “salty speech” suggests healthy words that grab the imagination of listeners and capture their lives as well. Paul follows his own advice in his gracious words to the church in Colossae as he counters the empty speech of false teachers who were trying to capture them with “sound bites” of their philosophy.

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Rick Rossing Rick Rossing

What Kind of Faith Can Move a Mountain?

Not long ago, I preached a sermon about the fig tree that Jesus cursed in Mark 11. It’s an odd story, to be sure, but when the disciples questioned Jesus about the withered tree, he told them that they could do even more astonishing things than that. They might even cause a mountain to fall into the sea, if only they had faith in God as small as a mustard seed (cf. Mark 11:22-25).

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Tom Yoakum Tom Yoakum

The Mystery of Reading the Word of God

Paul believed that something happens when churches read his letters or hear them read aloud. Something happens to the readers. More than transmitting information, there is a transformation of the readers/hearers both then and now. For example, we are not told what the letter from Laodicea is. Nor are we told what prison Paul is in when he writes. That information is known to those “insiders” but not to us “outsiders.”

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