Lincoln Church of the Nazarene to celebrate
centennial Oct. 5
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[September
25, 2008]
Tucked away on a quiet knoll on Lincoln's
growing west side is a little brick building where a family of
believers meet each Sunday. It has been there for almost 30 years,
but if you ask the average person where to find the Church of the
Nazarene, they'd be hard-pressed to give you directions. The old
address -- Route 10 West -- isn't much help, though occasionally the
use of a landmark, like being next to Xamis Ford or across from
Culver's jogs the memory.
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When you find them, they might be together inside worshiping Christ
or outside working or playing in the yard. But when they part and
drive away, these folks know they've still got important work to do
-- to be the hands and feet of Jesus to show his love to people.
This is what the Church of the Nazarene has been doing for the last
85 years in Lincoln. "A fellow minister once quipped, 'When I first
came to town, I drove by your church with a friend who said, "Those
people know where Jesus came from, but they don't know why he
came."' At first that remark irritated me," says Pastor Greg Wooten.
"Now I let it guide my focus. I'd rather equip a small congregation
to serve quietly than have us spend all our time trying to make
headlines. That's the difference Jesus has made in my life. And, if
I read the Bible correctly, that's the difference Jesus would have
us make in the world."
This little church family is part of a much bigger family that
will be celebrating a major milestone on Oct. 5 -- the 100th
anniversary of the birth of the denomination known as the Church of
the Nazarene. In 1908 in the little town of Pilot Point, Texas, two
holiness church groups merged. Both groups believed that God calls
his people to be holy -- to be like Christ -- and that he also makes
this possible by the real presence of the Holy Spirit within the
hearts of fully devoted believers. These Northern and Southern
Christians put away years of unhealed divisions dating back to the
Civil War and sealed their union with a time of worship and
celebration that ended in a "Hallelujah March" around the tent where
they were meeting as they sang a song of unity to the tune of
"Dixie":
With forces all
united,
We'll win! We'll win!
We'll preach a gospel o'er the land
That fully saves from sin!
Praise God! Praise
God!
Praise God for full salvation!
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Now, 100 years later, the Church of the Nazarene serves Christ and
his kingdom in 151 world areas in more than 20,000 local
congregations made up of over 1.5 million people. Lincoln Church
of the Nazarene will join in this
centennial celebration with a day full of special events on Oct.
5. At 9:45 a.m. there will be a special lesson highlighting the
history of world missions in the denomination. During the worship
hour at 11 a.m. the church will unite with every Nazarene
congregation across all 24 times zones by sharing communion, reading
the same Scripture and hearing the same message preached. Included
in the service will be highlights of denominational history as well
as local church history, as several special families will be honored
whose faithfulness and commitment have made the church's existence
possible today.
Following the worship hour will be an old-fashioned potluck
dinner. Then, finishing the day's activities on a high note, a
concert featuring Barry Wilson from Bourbonnais will begin at 2:30
pm. Wilson is a Nazarene pastor-turned-recording artist with a great
sound and a great sense of humor.
Lincoln Church of the Nazarene invites all their brothers and
sisters in Christ to join them for any or all of the day's
festivities.
For more information on the centennial celebration of the Church
of the Nazarene, call Pastor Greg Wooten at the church office at
732-8362 or e-mail him at
pgw@netzero.com.
[Text from file received by Greg Wooten, pastor, Lincoln Church
of the Nazarene]
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