Category Archives: jesus

…almost forgot (lifechurch.tv visit)

when we visited the edmond campus, we sat through the entire service and watched the message. senior pastor craig groeschel absolutely brought the thunder. by far and away one of the better messages on the church i’ve heard. if the following quote doesn’t grab you, i don’t know what will… the whole message is worthwhile (and embedded after the quote).

“…and let me just say, to those of you who are self-centered and small-minded and say ‘this church is too big for me,’ don’t come back. I mean, get your whining butt out of here. Seriously. Let me just say this to you as well, when you go to a small church that meets your needs, make sure they’re not reaching people for Jesus. Make sure they’re not, because if they are they’re going to grow too and they’ll be too big for your self-centered little butt again! Oh yeah, welcome to LIfeChurch, we want to make you feel comfortable and happy with yourself. You know, I’m serious… quit your self-centered whining. Do you think that the Church exists for you? No, you’re the Church. You’re the Church. As long as there is someone who doesn’t know Christ, don’t ever say any church, any where is too big.”

…a very cedarcreek christmas

wow.

yeah, just… wow.

what a weekend. eleven straight services at the perrysburg campus, where i directed and ran switchers. three services out at our whitehouse campus, for a total of fourteen services in three days. it was a marathon to be sure, but oh so incredibly worth it.

first, the numbers…

i really believe a live remote broadcast from the local cbs affliate in town helped our attendance quite a bit. the total attendance (every man woman and child who was not volunteering or on staff) for the entire weekend at both campuses was 16,464. this absolutely shattered our wildest dreams, and previous record attendance set at last years christmas, which was 13,300. our 4:00pm service on monday the 24th was by far and away our best-ever attended single service, with a total attendance of 2,300… in a 1,400 seat auditorium! we had every single space in the church that was set aside for overlow; the chapel, south atrium, classroom 201… filled with people, and even a room that wasn’t meant for overflow, the jr. high ministry room had people in it.

the biggest number of the weekend though, is 928. 928 people stood up at the end of the service, acknowledging a commitment to christ following a salvation prayer led by our senior pastor lee powell. that’s 928 reasons to believe that all the stress, anxiety, and crap that’s been going on for the last month leading up to this was absolutely and one hundred percent completely worth it. i am absolutely in awe of what god has done, and is continuing to do through a bunch of broken and silly people here at cedarcreek, including myself.

a very special thanks to trent austin and the music team down at lifechurch.tv, who graciously helped us cover a couple of songs they did for their christmas service last year. we changed up christmas, which appeared to be a cardinal sin at cedarcreek in the months leading up to it, but i think the overwhelming majority were very much in favor of the new package.

the band was amazing, the teaching was amazing, the volunteers were all amazing, and i may be biased, but my live video team did an amazing job and it was such an honor serving with them for three days.

now, i couldn’t do this post without including some serious media, so here you go. a few pictures (all of which can be found on my flickr page), and a video of our performance of little drummer boy. enjoy!

airtime

rock your face off...

bringin' the thunder

silent night

it's snowing...

we played our drum for him

bursting at the seams v1

bursting at the seams v2

…restoring christmas

i’ve been thinking a lot about christmas lately. obviously, i have my reasons; it’s my job, i have a lot of responsibility at christmas-time, figuring out how to afford christmas presents for everyone, ecstatic that i was at least able to get my wife something for christmas for the first time in our three-year (thus far) marriage, so on and so forth.

in the midst of all this, i’ve spent some (little) time wondering why i’m so worried about all these things, and not really at all thinking about what christmas is (really) all about. i am trying very hard not to type “the reason for the season,” but seeing as how i just did… oh well, it’s out there.

seriously though, all my time spent thinking about christmas is spent on all the worldly, consumer-driven aspects of it. even in regards to my job, i worry about making everything perfect for the services… not to honor god, but to try and make sure the twelve to fifteen thousand people who will attend services at cedarcreek.tv loves it.

advent.jpg

i recently heard about this thing rick mckinley (one of my favorite pastor’s in the whole wide world) started out at his church (imago dei) and it finally got my headed in the right direction. he started a group with some other pastors and his wife called “advent conspiracy.” the basic idea of the group is restoring christmas to what it really needs to be. taking the focus off the consumerism, and putting it more into worship and loving our neighbor. now that’s something i can get behind.

i read an article yesterday on beliefnet.com (believe me, this is not normal), and the opening of the article was enough for me to get sold out on the cause:

The Christmas contradiction gives Pastor Rick McKinley a headache.

Americans will spend about $475 billion this year on gifts, decorations and parties that many won’t even remember next year. They will run themselves ragged — shopping, wrapping and celebrating. And some won’t pay off their Christmas debt until March, if they’re lucky.

“We celebrate Jesus’ birthday by giving ourselves presents,” McKinley says. “We don’t give him anything.”

…and then this from the adventconspiracy.org website:

Advent Conspiracy is an international movement restoring the scandal of Christmas by worshipping Jesus through compassion, not consumption.Christ tends to get overlooked at Christmas. Let’s be honest. December comes and you think, “OK, this is the year.” This time you’ll swear you’ll slow down and take it all in. Make the most with family. Help the needy. Zero in on what it really means to be a Christ follower during this holy season.

the bus/train has already left the station this year. there isn’t much i can do to change what’s already been set in motion, but next year… next year i anticipate a few conversations with friends, family, and co-workers about starting a “new” tradition at christmas. i mean honestly, wouldn’t christmas be that much more of an amazing time if we took all that stress that comes directly from the consumerism aspect of it, and replaced it with the things that truly matters? a saving gift from our amazing god, spending time with our family, laughing with friends, and instead of giving our finances away in the forms of presents that:

a.) nobody really needs, and
b.) a lot of times end up in the re-gift pile in a closet

instead lets give those resources to those in the world who are victims of nothing else other than a curse of longitude and latitude. give it away to those who’ve fell on some hard times in your local community. what an amazing and completely (un)original idea. i don’t think that when god had the amazing coming of christ in mind, he wanted us to celebrate it in the way we currently do.

listen, i don’t want to get all “holier than thou.” really, if it’s your thing to overspend on friends/family/grandkids/pets (please no)/whatever… then that’s fine for you. don’t get me wrong, i would hope that you’ll come around eventually… but for me, i think it’s time for a change. i hope i can talk my own family and friends into as well… but if not, well… we’ll see ;-)

…amazing weekend with patrick henry hughes

patrick henry hughes

this weekend at cedarcreek, we brought in a couple very special guests to perform and speak at each of our weekend services. patrick henry hughes, and his father patrick john hughes both agreed to come out for the weekend and share their amazing story.

patrick henry hughes was born without eyes, unable to extend his limbs, obviously unable to walk. over time, he taught himself how to play piano (and very well) as well as trumpet. he is now on the university of louisville marching band. how? his dad… his dad pushes him in his wheel chair. it really, really is an amazing story and you really should take some time to at the very least watch this six-ish minute video that espn did on them.

but, the real magic happened this weekend at cedarcreek. i’m not just saying that either. find some time, click this link to go to the cedarcreek video page, and make sure you click on 111807 in the video player to watch the interview with the hughes’.

there was a lot of talk about gratitude, being grateful for the blessings in our lives instead of focusing on the difficult situations.

what are you grateful for this thanksgiving season?

i will post a list of things i am grateful for either tomorrow or wednesday… it should be lengthly!

…a couple (old) new videos

I realize I haven’t posted any videos I’ve created lately. That’s mostly because I haven’t made any… seeing as how I’ve been wrapped up in the website.

Well since I am (still) stuck at work at 11:35pm on a Saturday night, and probably won’t be out for another hour, I decided to dig up some old videos I really liked. I added them already to the “My Videos” tab, but to save you a click (lazy bums) I’ve embedded them here in this post as well. For the record, the first one I had nothing to do with. It was actually directed by Brent Pirolli, and the video was done by Nick Lanciaux. But it’s still awesome enough to post. The second one, I edited but Bryan Croninger shot it.

Enjoy, let me know what you think!

 

CedarCreek.tv // U2 “Where the Streets Have No Name” Cover

CedarCreek.tv // Changed Lives - Production Team