Ken Pierpont's Blog, page 44

June 18, 2019

Bittersweet Farm Journal (Number 49) When the Tent Collapsed

It’s been a wet spring out on Bittersweet Farm, but it was dry enough to mow last night. Bt evening, I enjoyed the solitude of riding the tractor and the satisfaction of a job well done. After dinner Lois and I sat out on the east-facing porch looking out over the lawn feeling grateful to God for our little place and for our life.


We had Laela, Aspen, and Gunnison with us for the evening. They are delightful little people. It is a reminder to us of those sweet, brief years when our house was full of life and noise and laugher and chaos. Last night little Gunnison got in bed with us and started to fuss. I pulled up a video of his Dad, Chuk, playing the guitar and singing. He cooed along and drifted off to sleep. I hope you are sleeping well and you have a few minutes each evening to reflect on what you have accomplish and what God has done for you.


When the Tent Collapsed


Our family attended an annual meeting of our fellowship of churches when I was about 14. Dad was a bi-vocational pastor. At heart he was a pastor. To support his ministry he taught school. Dad was not a school teacher who pastored on the side. Dad was a pastor who taught school to pay the bills. He is still a pastor but he has not taught school for many, many years.


That summer he and mom decided we would attend the national conference in Kansas City. Mom and Dad wanted to strengthen our faith and our resolve to serve the Lord more than anything in the world. They wanted us to have a happy and enriching experience. They wanted to take advantage of the trip to broaden our exposure to our nation’s history and heritage and natural beauty. We did not have a lot but they did not want us to be uncultured.


We would make a vacation of it by seeing some places of historic interest and we would save money and make it a bit of an adventure by camping out in a tent. A family of six, we filled every seat of the Chrysler and packed the truck full with a tent and gas stove and sleeping bags and bibles and suits and dresses and everything you might need for a vacation to the annual meeting and Bible conference.


It must have been humorous to the other families who were vacationing at the crowded campground out along Interstate 70 that week to see the family of six emerge every morning, Dad brothers and I wearing suits and ties, Mom and Melony in dresses, Scofield Bibles tucked under our arms, off to the conference. The meeting was held in a convention center and attended by thousands.


Things went fairly well until the day it rained all day, I mean all day long. By the time we returned to the campsite, the drenching all-day rains had stopped and the the sky had cleared but our tent had collapsed in the storm and lay pitifully under pools of water. I could tell Dad was discouraged. Mom was really trying her best to be a good sport but camping was not an adventure to her, it was an economic necessity. It was difficult for her to sleep on the ground. She had a great spirit and loved the things of the Lord. She longed to enjoy Bible preaching a music so much that she was willing to endure the camping, but now everything we had was rain-soaked except the outfits we were wearing. We did our best to get our things together and we all went to sleep in a soggy tent with wet sleeping bags.


Dad was discouraged. We agreed never to try to camp out and attend a Bible Conference again and made our way home agreeing that it was probably a bad idea. I know Dad felt defeated. He was discouraged that he did not have the means to put us up in a nice hotel and have sit-down meals at restaurants. I happen to know that he felt like a loser and a failure. In unguarded moments he wrestled with feelings of defeat. I’m sure he felt deeply that he failed at all of his objectives for his family that summer, but he did not fail. He succeeded.


At the time dad pastored a new church plant that was small. We had no pipe organ, no large choir. We had simple gospel singing lead by one of the men and accompanied by the piano back home. At the conference the music was moving. Mom and Dad would sing from their hearts. Well-known, respected national leaders preached. We took notes. It was a good conference. There were displays of christian books which always captured my interest. There were many other families. There were displays and presentations from missions organizations and colleges and seminaries.


I remember the evangelism seminary with Robert Sumner. It stirred my heart win people to Christ. I remember the book my Dad bought me from the book table. I remember tears flowing down Mom and Dad’s faces as they sang with thousands of others. I remember the powerful preaching stirring my heart to one day preach the Word with that kind of confidence, conviction and power. I remember the joy of a few simple meals out and treats at night on the way home from the conference. I have joyful memories of getting back to the campgrounds and night and changing into my swimming trunks that week and learning to swim in the little pool. That summer I was able to jump of the high-dive and swim to the side of the pool. I had never been able to two that before.


Today my sister is a pastor’s wife and has been for many, many decades. I have been a pastor serving the Lord with all my heart for forty years, singing and preaching and teaching and writing and doing everything I can to pour my heart into the Lord’s work. My little brother Kevin, who on those long vacation trips sat between me and my sister Melony with his feet on the “hump” is a faithful pastor and serves full-time today at Camp Barakel making fine Bible Conference and Camp experiences possible for hundreds and hundreds of people every year. My little brother Nathan who sat in front between mom and dad in the old Chrysler has also been a pastor for many years, a fine, faithful, passionate musician, teacher, and preacher with a beautiful Christian family.


The tent caved in and we were not rich. We didn’t have a fancy camper or money for a suite in the hotel. Dad was not a nationally-recognized leader with a position in the fellowship of churches. But the man who put together that trip to Kansas City was not at all a failure. He wanted to do something that would encourage his family to love and serve Jesus and, by God’s grace, he succeeded. All of his children are serving the Lord today and each of them have labored in the same way to raise their children to know and love and serve Jesus too.


The tent collapsed and the family looked a little odd emerging from the tent in suits and ties and dresses on their way to the Bible Conference, but God was at work in the hearts of my parents and I will always thank God for them and try to do with my life what they have done with theirs.


Bittersweet Farm

June 18, 2019



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Published on June 18, 2019 03:30

June 17, 2019

Chuck Swindoll on Stories

In 1979 Lois and I were newly-married. To pay for our living expenses and try to get to college to continue to prepare for the ministry I drove a lunch wagon affectionately referred to as “The Roach Coach.” I listened to Christian radio continually. New on the radio that year was a young pastor with a fresh approach. His name was Chuck Swindoll. I loved his style. He was a faithful Bible teacher. He was an expositor. He was a story-teller. Recently he wrote on the power of story:




Stories

by Chuck Swindoll


Matthew 13


Stories transport us into another world. They hold our attention. They become remarkable vehicles for the communication of truth and meaningful lessons that cannot be easily forgotten. If a picture is better than a thousand words, a story is better than a million!


Some of the best stories are those spun from everyday life or from our past. Family histories are held together and handed down from generation to generation in stories. And these strong cords of memory actually become the ties that bind.


Biographies drip with interesting accounts worth passing on. For example, Human Options by the late Norman Cousins is a treasure house of his recollections, impressions, and encounters distilled from his dozen or more trips around the world. He calls it an “autobiographical notebook.”


Stories, real and imagined, told with care and color, can say much more than a planned speech. It is probably not surprising, then, that the use of story was Jesus’ favorite method of preaching: “he did not say anything to them without using a parable” (Matt. 13:34, NIV).


In fact, I’ve never heard a great preacher who couldn’t tell a good story. Woven into the tapestry of the strong message is the ability to communicate solid stuff through an attention-getting story.


Had I lived in Spurgeon’s day, I would no doubt have subscribed to his material. He published one sermon per week for every year of his ministry, from 1855 until his death in 1892. So prolific was this prince of the pulpit, that at his death there were still so many unpublished Spurgeon sermons, they continued to be printed at the same rate for twenty-five more years. Many include wonderful, memorable stories.


Are you interested in getting truth to stick in your child’s head? Use a story.

Can’t seem to penetrate your teenager’s skull? Try a story.

Need a tip for making your devotional or Sunday school lesson interesting? Include a story.

Want to add some zest to your letter-writing ministry? A brief story will do the trick.

Want to learn how to tell them so folks will stay interested? Listen to Paul Harvey.


Best of all, read your Bible. His Story is one you won’t be able to put down.


Grandparents (and parents, too) need to be reminded that our little ones love to hear about how it was and what it was that brought us to this moment. Tell your stories! Consider recording them or writing them down for future generations.


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Published on June 17, 2019 12:39

June 16, 2019

Building Better Relationships II (Sermon) Audio


Building Better Relationships II (Honor)

Bethel Church–Jackson, Michigan

June 16, 2019 AM

Ken Pierpont, Lead Pastor



https://kenpierpont.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/2019-06-16AM-Building-Better-Relationships-II-online-audio-converter.com_.mp3
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Published on June 16, 2019 10:24

Building Better Relationships II (Sermon) Video

Building Better Relationships II (Honor)

Bethel Church–Jackson, Michigan

June 16, 2019 AM

Ken Pierpont, Lead Pastor



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Published on June 16, 2019 10:11

June 15, 2019

The Simple Pen

Write words on paper…


Form sentences—well-crafted sentences.


Cluster them into paragraphs.


Gather the paragraphs into stories… or essays or speeches.


Weave them together and bind them into books…


…books that warm people on winter nights,


…or make good company at the lake house,


…or expose the plight and pain of the poor and oppressed…


…books that the give the common man or woman a taste of opportunity or culture or beauty…


…books that move people to noble deeds or inspire them to live in a more honorable way.


This is the way nations rise and fall.


By words thus employed, destinies are forged and people rise up from hopeless despair… and men and women find their way to God, forgiveness, meaning, mercy and hope…


…all this with the simple pen.


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Published on June 15, 2019 04:24

June 10, 2019

Bittersweet Farm Journal (Number 48) Sweet As Watermelon

A lot of very bad things happen in the world every day. One of the ways to keep our hearts from breaking is to know where in the world to look for good things. One such place is Ada Bible Church in the Grand Rapids, Michigan area.


Our oldest son, Kyle is the campus pastor of the Cascades Campus (the main campus) of 13,000 member Ada Bible Church near Grand Rapids. Sunday evening watched him baptize about fifteen new believers. Their stories are heartening. Before each baptism the story of the one being baptized is read and from the stories you can see that God is at work for good. Where do you see God at work for good around you?


One night, deep in Mexico, I saw something good. That’s the story this week:


Sweet As Watermelon


Our whole family (except Kyle, who was married) spent the month of May 2006 traveling in Mexico on a bus with about 50 college-aged young people. We sang, told stories, preached, juggled and did skits balloons and chalk art—anything we could to connect with the people. We had conversations and shared food. We visited churches and schools and orphanages.


The village plazas across Mexico fill up with people every night. It is joyful atmosphere of celebration. The setting is perfect and the people are eager for conversation and socializing.


Our trip to Mexico took us to some of the most beautiful places in the country and sometimes involved very beautiful, fancy affairs in large haciendas with manicured grounds and catered meals. Other times we visited places of stark poverty.


One night we had an evening free so we took our bus-load of fifty bright and beautiful young people into a tiny village long the north shore of Lake Chapala. It was a very humble village. The main street was cobblestone. The side streets were dirt.


An old man sold ice-cold bottled Cokes from the half-door of an adobe building.


“Coka?” He asked me.


“Gracias,” I smiled. It was a wam evening and Coke never tasted so good. I stood aside with my Coke and watched the scene in front of me.


When our young people arrived in the village afoot, children poured out of the houses and into the street curious about the fair-skinned visitors from the U.S. We made conversation as much as possible, laughed and gestured. We practiced our Spanish on them and they practiced their English on us. One of our team make balloon animals. They were very popular with the children. Some of the boys juggled tennis balls. One of the skits we employed the use of a watermelon— it was a humorous skit which actually involved destroying a watermelon.


Before the skit started someone alertly said; “Wait, let’s not do the watermelon skit. I have a better idea. Let’s just cut it up and hand it out.”


Someone found a knife and began to slice the watermelon. Quickly the beautiful little barefooted children formed a line and soon every little child was eating his or her own little chunk of cold, sweet melon.


After the melon we played soccer in the streets and talked and laughed until the sun set. When it was time to go I walked back into the village to be sure everyone was on the bus. What I saw that night rests in a sweet place in my heart to this day many years later.


The last of our group to leave were two beautiful, devoted, Christian young ladies. They were standing on the cobblestone street taking turns explaining the gospel to a half-circle of little girls, faces up-turned, eyes bright with admiration.


I prayed and still do that the name of Jesus will always be as sweet as cold watermelon and a warm summer night to those precious little girls.


Bittersweet Farm

June 10, 2019












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Published on June 10, 2019 11:44

June 9, 2019

Building Better Relationships I (Sermon) Audio


Building Better Relationships I (Love) 1 Cor. 12:15

Bethel Church–Jackson, Michigan

June 9, 2019 AM

Pastor Ken Pierpont



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Published on June 09, 2019 20:02

Building Better Relationships I (Sermon) Video


Building Better Relationships I (Love) 1 Cor. 12:15

Bethel Church–Jackson, Michigan

June 9, 2019 AM

Pastor Ken Pierpont



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Published on June 09, 2019 19:54

June 8, 2019

As You Age

Most of us are tempted to be judgmental and critical—to examine other people’s sins more than our own. It starts out as a bit of an indulgence—just yielding to a little innocent temptation to drop a word of criticism and cynical barb—a little witty jab into the conversation. It feels good and it draws a laugh from shallow people.


Before long it becomes a way of life, we are characterized by it. By the time a few decades have passed that critical spirit has lined our face and darkened our eyes and people are eager to avoid us.


Do not yield to this sin—yield to the impulse to love and kindness and mercy and when you are old there will be joy in your eyes and people will gather around you for a life-giving word.


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Published on June 08, 2019 16:59

June 4, 2019

Jesus People VI (Sermon) Video


Jesus People (Matthew 7:13-29)

Bethel Church–Jackson, Michigan

June 2, 1019 AM

Pastor Ken Pierpont



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Published on June 04, 2019 05:56