Oasis Covenant Fellowship Blog


Conferences & Seminar Schedules 2008
April 21, 2007, 1:30 pm
Filed under: Upcoming Conferences

April 2008

15-17     Together for the Gospel

May 2008

24- 27th  New Attitude Conference

July 2008

31-August 02   Worship God Conference

August 2008

03-09   The Clash

  • where: Messiah College, Grantham, PA

Fall 2008



T4G 2008 - Mark your Calendars!!!
April 20, 2007, 1:45 pm
Filed under: Conferences, John Piper, Upcoming Conferences

When: April 15th -17th

Where: Kentucky International Convention Center

Speakers: Al Moehler, John Piper, CJ Mahaney, Ligon Duncan, Mark Dever, RC Sproul,  John Mac Arthur

Together 4 the Gospel Website       

Register Here

I had the wonderful opportunity to attend T4G- 06. It was an incredible blessing and I look forward to attending next year!

Eric



Caring for those who are Suffering
April 18, 2007, 1:10 pm
Filed under: John Piper, Prayer, Suffering

Given the recent Murders that took place in Virginia, I believe we need to prepare ourselves for ways to care for those who are in the midst of Suffering. Please pray often for those who are in the middle of it right now and be ready to serve if tragedy were to appear in our area. Be blessed this week and remember our prayer on Sunday:

“Fill me up to overflowing, and pour me out”

In His Grace,
Eric

21 Ways to Minister to Those Who Are Suffering
By: Dr. John Piper

1. Pray. Ask God for his help for you and for those you want to minister to. Ask him for wisdom and compassion and strength and a word fitly chosen. Ask that those who are suffering would look to God as their help and hope and healing and strength. Ask that he would make your mouth a fountain of life.

2. Feel and express empathy with those most hurt by this great evil and loss; weep with those who weep.

3. Feel and express compassion because of the tragic circumstances of so many loved ones and friends who have lost more than they could ever estimate.

4. Take time and touch, if you can, and give tender care to the wounded in body and soul.

5. Hold out the promise that God will sustain and help those who cast themselves on him for mercy and trust in his grace. He will strengthen you for the impossible days ahead in spite of all darkness.

6. Affirm that Jesus Christ tasted hostility from men and knew what it was to be unjustly tortured and abandoned, and to endure overwhelming loss, and then be killed, so that he is now a sympathetic mediator for us with God.

7. Declare that this murder was a great evil, and that God’s wrath is greatly kindled by the wanton destruction of human life created in his image.

8. Acknowledge that God has permitted a great outbreak of sin against his revealed will, and that we do not know all the reasons why he would permit such a thing now, when it was in his power to stop it.

9. Express the truth that Satan is a massive reality in the universe that conspires with our own sin and flesh and the world to hurt people and to move people to hurt others, but stress that Satan is within and under the control of God.

10. Express that these terrorists rebelled against the revealed will of God and did not love God or trust him or find in God their refuge and strength and treasure, but scorned his ways and his Person.

11. Since rebellion against God was at the root of this act of murder, let us all fear such rebellion in our own hearts, and turn from it, and embrace the grace of God in Christ, and renounce the very impulses that caused this tragedy.

12. Point the living to the momentous issues of sin and repentance in our own hearts and the urgent need to get right with God through his merciful provision of forgiveness in Christ, so that a worse fate than death will not overtake us.

13. Remember that even those who trust in Christ may be cut down like these thousands who were in New York and Washington, but that does not mean they have been abandoned by God or not loved by God even in those agonizing hours of suffering. God’s love conquers even through calamity.

14. Mingle heart-wrenching weeping with unbreakable confidence in the goodness and sovereignty of God who rules over and through the sin and the plans of rebellious people.

15. Trust God for his ability to do the humanly impossible, and bring you through this nightmare and, in some inscrutable way, bring good out of it.

16. Explain, when the time is right, and they have the wherewithal to think clearly that one of the mysteries of God’s greatness is that he ordains that some things come to pass which he forbids and disapproves of.

17. Express your personal cherishing of the sovereignty of God as the ground of all your hope as you face the human impossibilities of life. The very fulfillment of the New Covenant promises of our salvation and preservation hang on God’s sovereignty over rebellious human wills.

18. Count God your only lasting treasure, because he is the only sure and stable thing in the universe.

19. Remind everyone that to live is Christ and to die is gain.

20. Pray that God would incline their hearts to his word, open their eyes to his wonders, unite their hearts to fear him, and satisfy them with his love.

21. At the right time sound the trumpet that all this good news is meant by God to free us for radical, sacrificial service for the salvation of men and the glory of Christ. Help them see that one message of all this misery is to show us that life is short and fragile and followed by eternity, and small, man-centered ambitions are tragic.



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April 18, 2007, 12:22 pm
Filed under: Care Group-Olson

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Provoking your Children to Wrath
April 17, 2007, 2:24 pm
Filed under: Parenting

I came across this article on “provoking your children.” This is timeless Biblical advice that we should glean from.. Be blessed by learning from those who have gone before us!

In His Grace,
Eric

Friday, April 13, 2007, 3:00:04 AM | Pulpit Magazine
(By John MacArthur)
In Ephesians 6:4, Paul writes, “Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord.” In our series these last two weeks, we’ve looked at both discipline (specifically, spanking) and instruction (specifically, evangelism). Today, we will look at the command to not provoke.

To “provoke . . . to anger” suggests a repeated, ongoing pattern of treatment that gradually builds up a deep–seated anger and resentment that boils over in outward hostility.
Such treatment is usually not intended to provoke anger. Here are eight ways in which parents can provoke their children to anger:

1) Well–meaning overprotection is a common cause of resentment in children. Parents who smother their children, overly restrict where they can go and what they can do, never trust them to do things on their own, and continually question their judgment build a barrier between themselves and their children—usually under the delusion that they are building a closer relationship. Children need careful guidance and certain restrictions, but they are individual human beings in their own right and must learn to make decisions on their own, commensurate with their age and maturity. Their wills can be guided but they cannot be controlled.

2) Another common cause of provoking children to anger is favoritism. Isaac favored Esau over Jacob and Rebekah preferred Jacob over Esau. That dual and conflicting favoritism not only caused great trouble for the immediate family but has continued to have repercussions in the conflicts between the descendants of Jacob and Esau until our present day! For parents to compare their children with each other, especially in the children’s presence, can be devastating to the child who is less talented or favored. He will tend to become discouraged, resentful, withdrawn, and bitter.
Favoritism by parents generally leads to favoritism among the children themselves, who pick up the practice from their parents. They will favor one brother or sister over the others and will often favor one parent over the other.

3) A third way parents provoke their children is by pushing achievement beyond reasonable bounds. A child can be so pressured to achieve that he is virtually destroyed. He quickly learns that nothing he does is sufficient to please his parents. No sooner does he accomplish one goal than he is challenged to accomplish something better. Fathers who fantasize their own achievements through the athletic skills of their sons, or mothers who fantasize a glamorous career through the lives of their daughters prostitute their responsibility as parents.
I once visited a young woman who was confined to a padded cell and was in a state of catatonic shock. She was a Christian and had been raised in a Christian family, but her mother had ceaselessly pushed her to be the most popular, beautiful, and successful girl in school. She became head cheerleader, homecoming queen, and later a model. But the pressure to excel became too great and she had a complete mental collapse. After she was eventually released from the hospital, she went back into the same artificial and demanding environment. When again she found she could not cope, she committed suicide. She had summed up her frustration when she told me one day, “I don’t care what it is I do, it never satisfies my mother.”

4) A fourth way children are provoked is by discouragement. A child who is never complimented or encouraged by his parents is destined for trouble. If he is always told what is wrong with him and never what is right, he will soon lose hope and become convinced that he is incapable of doing anything right. At that point he has no reason even to try. Parents can always find something that a child genuinely does well, and they should show appreciation for it. A child needs approval and encouragement in things that are good every bit as much as he needs correction in things that are not.

5) A fifth way provocation occurs is by parents’ failing to sacrifice for their children and making them feel unwanted. Children who are made to feel that they are an intrusion, that they are always in the way and interfere with the plans and happiness of the parents, cannot help becoming resentful. To such children the parents themselves will eventually become unwanted and an intrusion on the children’s plans and happiness.

6) A sixth form of provocation comes from failing to let children grow up at a normal pace. Chiding them for always acting childish, even when what they do is perfectly normal and harmless, does not contribute to their maturity but rather helps confirm them in their childishness.

7) A seventh way of angering children is that of using love as a tool of reward or punishment—granting it when a child is good and withdrawing it when he is bad. Often the practice is unconscious, but a child can sense if a parent cares for him less when is he disobedient than when he behaves. That is not how God loves and is not the way he intends human parents to love. God disciplines His children just as much out of love as He blesses them. “Those whom the Lord loves He disciplines” (Heb. 12:6). Because it is so easy to punish out of anger and resentment, parents should take special care to let their children know they love them when discipline is given.

8. An eighth way to provoke children is by physical and verbal abuse. Battered children are a growing tragedy today. Even Christian parents—fathers especially—sometimes overreact and spank their children much harder than necessary. Proper physical discipline is not a matter of exerting superior authority and strength, but of correcting in love and reasonableness. Children are also abused verbally. A parent can as easily overpower a child with words as with physical force. Putting him down with superior arguments or sarcasm can inflict serious harm, and provokes him to anger and resentment. It is amazing that we sometimes say things to our children that we would not think of saying to anyone else—for fear of ruining our reputation!

In closing, consider the confession of one Christian father,
My family’s all grown and the kids are all gone. But if I had to do it all over again, this is what I would do. I would love my wife more in front of my children. I would laugh with my children more—at our mistakes and our joys. I would listen more, even to the littlest child. I would be more honest about my own weaknesses, never pretending perfection. I would pray differently for my family; instead of focusing on them, I’d focus on me. I would do more things together with my children. I would encourage them more and bestow more praise. I would pay more attention to little things, like deeds and words of thoughtfulness. And then, finally, if I had to do it all over again, I would share God more intimately with my family; every ordinary thing that happened in every ordinary day I would use to direct them to God.
(Today’s article adapted from John’s commentary on Ephesians, published by Moody.)



The Clash - August 3-9, 2008
April 16, 2007, 2:33 pm
Filed under: Upcoming Conferences

This is second time Sovereign Grace event for young adults from upcoming juniors in Highschool to upcoming Juniors in College. It will be held at the campus of Messiah College in PA and the cost is  $550.00 which includes food and lodging.

The Clash
Forging a Mind to Engage the World

For the weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh but have divine power to destroy strongholds. We destroy arguments and every lofty opinion raised against the knowledge of God, and take every thought captive to obey Christ, being ready to punish every disobedience, when your obedience is complete. (2 Corinthians 10:4-6)

The week-long conference The Clash was held in August 2007 at Messiah College, Pennsylvania.

The clash is between worldviews: the worldview based upon the Word of God and any other worldview based on a substitute.

The Clash equipped young people to not retreat from the world but to engage the world with the true claims of Scripture, bringing its insights to bear on every aspect of our culture.

To get more information Click Here 

To register  Click Here



A conference blessing
April 12, 2007, 11:38 pm
Filed under: Conferences

Tonight Eric, Laura, Harold and I attended the evening session of the Sovereign Grace Leadership Conference in Gaithersburg, MD.  R.C. Sproul shared a powerful message on the transfiguration of Jesus as told in Matthew 17. I must confess that my only previous experience with hearing Dr. Sproul was through some Sunday school tapes years ago. Those tapes portrayed a deep thinking, but rather dry teacher of God’s Word. Tonight, I saw a mature man of God who is still passionate about the love of God and the sacrifice of Jesus. To hear his portrayal of the holiness of the transfigured Jesus on the mountain with his disciples is to be awestruck with humility. That God would clothe himself in human form and endure for us the torture of the Cross pierces my heart. Sproul used beautiful imagery and timely humor to peal away layers of truth, while he continually displayed his passion for God’s grace. It was wonderful to see the serious teacher from the tapes come alive in person with such a zeal for Christ. He was the perfect compliment to his friend and host, C.J. Mahaney. Mahaney is an emotional and charismatic lover of Christ. Their personalities are so completely different, yet their affection for one another is clear. What a beautiful pair of Kingdom lions these men are. They remind me again how God perfectly uses a diverse body of saints to minister His Word to all peoples (Rom 12:4-8). Tomorrow’s schedule is impressive, but will be hard pressed to match tonight’s wonderful display of God’s grace. I can’t wait…..

Robb



Wonderful Week
April 11, 2007, 10:23 am
Filed under: RECENT POSTS

Good Morning!
It has been a glorious week celebrating the Risen Saviour. I marvel that He would save a “wretch like me”. This week we are, in a much smaller way, celebrating the “going live” of our website. Crystal Herman, has done a beautiful job designing the site. Also, on a personal note, her husband Curt is doing mutch needed repairs on our house. These guys are a wonderful couple we met recently. We (Harold, Robb, Laura and I) are off to the Sovereign Grace Leadership Conference. Just as a refresher, here is a quote from last Sunday:

To put it bluntly and plainly, if Christ is not my Substitute, I still occupy the place of a condemned sinner. If my sins and my guilt are not transferred to Him, if he did not take them upon Himself, then surely they remain with me. If He did not deal with my sins, I must face their consequences. If my penalty was not borne by Him, it still hangs over me. There is no other possibility.
–Leon Morris

In His Grace,
Eric



A God Appointment
April 7, 2007, 11:33 pm
Filed under: Sharing our Faith

All of us have had them. Those chance meetings with strangers that turn into opportunities to share our faith. Today, the Lord offered this blessing as I purchased a cell phone at an out of town mall. The gentlemen in the kiosk is on a work visa from India. He shared some thoughts about his long hours of work, his concern about providing for two kids in college, and ultimately his experiences with the Christian faith. This man was clearly seeking a deeper relationship with the Christian God to whom he was introduced several years ago. I was encouraged that he believes in Christ for his salvation. Our conversation was precious as the Lord continually offered me the admonition to listen and an occasional encouragement from the Word. However, our time together left at least two important concerns to pray for.

First, his interest in Jesus Christ has caused a natural separation from his cultural community. To share a religious experience with his friends includes services that acknowledge thousands of gods. Praise God that he sees the truth found in our Lord Jesus. However, the separation of lifelong cultural and social experiences can be devastating. He reminded me of the sacrifices of the early disciples who left friends and family to pursue Christ. My conversion caused some natural separation, but not the outright rejection that many experience. I had the wonderful opportunity to pray with this man in the mall for God to increasingly reveal Himself. We talked for over an hour as he continually asked for “just a few more minutes” around the interruption of customers. Praise God for his hunger!

My second concern was for his initial introduction to Christian salvation. Some time ago, a local pastor took an interest in my friend and discussed the benefits of following Christ. He appreciated the time and kind words offered, but was later disillusioned and offended when the pastor pressed the issue of “making a decision” for Christ. What a perfect reminder of our approach to evangelism. How easy we can fall into the trap of the “decision” being the goal. I thank God that he calls us into into His Kingdom by His perfect timing (Eph 1). The pastor was certainly an instrument to building this man’s faith and interest,  but ”saving faith” came later after much consideration and increased learning. I hope you will join me in praying for other Christians to build into his life through love and discipleship.

Today’s God appointment was another reminder that we have endless opportunities to encourage others in their faith at every level. Like all of us, my new friend yearns for a faith community that loves him while encouraging his spiritual growth. I pray our young church remains faithful to this principle as God builds His Kingdom. As we love and disciple one another, His light will shine in a dark world and add saints to the Kingdom.