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We Experience It Together
Topic: Sermons on Church: General
Scripture:
Acts 2:42-2:47
Sermon Series: It: Finding It, Keeping It, and Sharing It
Denomination: Christian/Church of Christ
Date Added: May 2010
Audience: General Adults (31 - 49)
SERIES: IT: Finding It, Keeping It, and Sharing It
(freely adapted from Craig Groeschel’s It: How Churches and Leader Can Get it and Keep it)
“WE EXPERIENCE IT TOGETHER”
ACTS 2:42-47
OPEN
We’re in our third message in our series, “IT: Finding It, Keeping It, and Sharing It.” The first message was called, “What Is It?” We defined it this way – “It is what God does through a rare combination of certain qualities found in his people.” Those qualities are: 1. A passion for his presence 2. A deep craving to reach the lost 3. Sincere integrity 4. Spirit-filled faith 5. Down-to-earth humility 6. Brokenness.
Last week we started to investigate the traits that marked churches that had it and see how we can develop those traits in our congregation The first quality was a God-given, God-breathed vision and we said that “You Can See It Clearly.” This morning we’re going to look at becoming a tightly-knit team because “We Experience It Together.”
Dwight D. Eisenhower – “It is better to have one person with you than three people working for you.” Churches that have it enjoy it together. They have an unmistakable camaraderie. Anyone close to them can see it. They can feel it. There is affinity, community, fraternity, and sincerity. It is Christianity at its best. The people love being together.
Pollster George Barna conducted an interesting study which revealed that 92 pecent of Americans claim to be independent. For many people, independence is a goal. They want to be financially independent – I don’t need to depend on anyone for money. They want to be professionally independent – I don’t want to report to anyone. And they want to be relationally independent – I don’t need anyone or answer to anyone.
A business man or woman wants to believe they’re a self-made man or a self-made woman. Many athletes are more concerned with their own performance than with the results of their teams. Even in marriages, people are often more concerned with what they can get instead of what they can give.
Relational scars contribute to the desire to function alone. Maybe you’ve opened yourself up to someone and you’ve been hurt in exchange. You’ve shared your personal hurt but have had others belittle your pain. You gave your heart to someone who walked away and rejected you. So you’ve decided to be independent, not needing anyone. Like Simon and Garfunkel, you sing the classic folk song: “I have no need for friendship; friendship causes pain. It’s laughter and it’s loving I disdain. I am a rock. I am an island.” After being burned, now you live like so many others as a rock or an island.
As long as you’re afraid of intimacy and spiritual partnership, you won’t likely experience it. To have it, you have to share it with each other. Just as there’s no I in team, there is no it in independence. Craig Groeschel said, “When it walks alone, vultures circle and obituaries are written.”
This morning, I invite you to look with me at the early church. They had it in Jerusalem. Acts 2:42-47 – “They devoted themselves to the apostles'
(freely adapted from Craig Groeschel’s It: How Churches and Leader Can Get it and Keep it)
“WE EXPERIENCE IT TOGETHER”
ACTS 2:42-47
OPEN
We’re in our third message in our series, “IT: Finding It, Keeping It, and Sharing It.” The first message was called, “What Is It?” We defined it this way – “It is what God does through a rare combination of certain qualities found in his people.” Those qualities are: 1. A passion for his presence 2. A deep craving to reach the lost 3. Sincere integrity 4. Spirit-filled faith 5. Down-to-earth humility 6. Brokenness.
Last week we started to investigate the traits that marked churches that had it and see how we can develop those traits in our congregation The first quality was a God-given, God-breathed vision and we said that “You Can See It Clearly.” This morning we’re going to look at becoming a tightly-knit team because “We Experience It Together.”
Dwight D. Eisenhower – “It is better to have one person with you than three people working for you.” Churches that have it enjoy it together. They have an unmistakable camaraderie. Anyone close to them can see it. They can feel it. There is affinity, community, fraternity, and sincerity. It is Christianity at its best. The people love being together.
Pollster George Barna conducted an interesting study which revealed that 92 pecent of Americans claim to be independent. For many people, independence is a goal. They want to be financially independent – I don’t need to depend on anyone for money. They want to be professionally independent – I don’t want to report to anyone. And they want to be relationally independent – I don’t need anyone or answer to anyone.
A business man or woman wants to believe they’re a self-made man or a self-made woman. Many athletes are more concerned with their own performance than with the results of their teams. Even in marriages, people are often more concerned with what they can get instead of what they can give.
Relational scars contribute to the desire to function alone. Maybe you’ve opened yourself up to someone and you’ve been hurt in exchange. You’ve shared your personal hurt but have had others belittle your pain. You gave your heart to someone who walked away and rejected you. So you’ve decided to be independent, not needing anyone. Like Simon and Garfunkel, you sing the classic folk song: “I have no need for friendship; friendship causes pain. It’s laughter and it’s loving I disdain. I am a rock. I am an island.” After being burned, now you live like so many others as a rock or an island.
As long as you’re afraid of intimacy and spiritual partnership, you won’t likely experience it. To have it, you have to share it with each other. Just as there’s no I in team, there is no it in independence. Craig Groeschel said, “When it walks alone, vultures circle and obituaries are written.”
This morning, I invite you to look with me at the early church. They had it in Jerusalem. Acts 2:42-47 – “They devoted themselves to the apostles'
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