"Of Course I Forgive You"

"Of Course I Forgive You"

From the exhortation by Pastor Brian Phillips on Sunday, June 11th

1st John 1:9 says, “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” There are some promises in Scripture that become so familiar, some verses that become so comfortable, that we forget just how truly astounding they are. If we “confess” our sins to God, He is faithful and just to forgive us? To us, that sometimes seems too easy. Isn’t there something else we must do?

Yet, there it is. A promise.

My children have taught me just how true this is. I can’t speak for your house, but in our house, we have sinners living there. So, rarely does a day go by when one of us does not have to ask forgiveness for something we have done. I am impatient, or inattentive, or short, or I raise my voice – and I have to ask my children or my wife to forgive me.

Mind you, my children have been raised up hearing this verse – 1st John 1:9 – recited to them nearly every time they get “reminders” for some wrong they have done. And those same children, when wronged by me, and I ask their forgiveness, reply, “Of course I forgive you.” Without fail.

Their forgiveness to me is so sure, so faithful, that it has taught me greater trust in God’s forgiveness. If my own children can offer forgiveness so freely, how much more does God forgive me when I confess my sins to Him? Still further, if my children can forgive me so quickly and freely, and if a perfectly holy God can forgive my sins so faithfully, how could I dare withhold forgiveness from those wrong me?

Let us be like little children, who are wise enough to trust and live out the promises of God. Let us forgive and seek forgiveness as they do.

Let us confess our sins to the Lord…  

Helping Little Ears

Helping Little Ears

By Pastor Brian Phillips

What is the most important part of a worship service? Is there one aspect of the liturgy that stands out from the rest?

Not too many years ago, I believe I would have said, "The sermon." As a pastor, that answer would surprise almost no one. After all, I spend more time preparing that aspect of the liturgy than any other part. Writing a sermon takes far more time than delivering it - even on my most "long-winded" Sunday mornings. And delivering a sermon takes far more time than any other aspect of the liturgy - even on my most "short-winded" Sunday mornings. 

But, that is not my answer today, and has not been for quite a while. So, what is the "high point" of the liturgy? That is hard to say because the liturgy is a conversation between God and His people. He speaks, and we respond. So, claiming one part of the liturgy misses that the liturgy is a conversation, and thus it cannot be so neatly divided. Rather, it comes as a whole, with each movement connected to the previous and the next. 

Thus, the sermon is not the "high point" of the liturgy, but it is one of the many tools God has given to equip and teach His people. It is also a time of intense work - study, preparation, and delivery by the pastor; focus and attentiveness by the congregation.

This can be particularly challenging for little ones, who are a great number in our congregation! It is also one of the few aspects of the liturgy that changes each week. Children so quickly memorize responses, prayers, confessions, and creeds, but the sermon cannot be memorized. It is new each week.

So, to help these little ears in their great task, I venture to offer a word or phrase to listen for in each week's sermon. These will be sent out to the congregation in the Midweek Update and posted in our church Facebook page. Make sure to look for them, then pass them along to your children, asking them what they learned about that word or phrase in the sermon.

Vespers & Bible Study for May

Vespers & Bible Study for May

On Wednesday, May 3rd, we will continue the series, "Saints & Sinners: Stories from Church History", with a study of Charlemagne - King of the Franks and eventual Holy Roman Emperor.  

Charlemagne was known as a fierce warrior, and a powerful man, but he was also devoted to education, committed to protecting the Church, and concerned for the poor and needy of his kingdom 

Join us as we explore the life, work, and lingering questions of Charlemagne!

Where: Holy Trinity Reformed Church (3747 Trinity Church Road, Concord, NC)
When: 6:00 pm (dinner) & 6:45 pm (Vespers & Bible Study)

Christ Is the Garden

Christ Is the Garden

By Brian Phillips

Excerpt from the sermon on April 23rd, 2017 (Second Sunday of Easter) 
Also posted by The CiRCE Institute

In John 20, Mary Magdalene goes to Jesus’ tomb twice. The first time, she goes to anoint the body of Jesus (Mark 16:1), only to find the stone rolled back. Assuming that the enemies of Jesus had moved the body as one last insult, Mary ran to find the disciples, bringing Peter and John back with her.

Peter and John ran to the tomb, John arriving first, and there is something to this beyond St. John just wanting to point out his blazing speed. Remember the last time Peter had seen Jesus? It was after denying he even knew Jesus. Upon the third denial, Luke 22:61 says, “And the Lord turned and looked at Peter.” Perhaps those eyes slowed Peter’s feet?

The disciples both entered the tomb and found the folded grave clothes. They believed Mary’s report, but did not yet understand that Jesus had risen, so they went home. Mary, however, went back to the tomb. She “saw Jesus standing, but she did not know it was Jesus. Jesus said to her, ‘Woman, why are you weeping? Whom are you seeking?’ Supposing him to be the gardener, she said to him, ‘Sir, if you have carried him away, tell me where you have laid him, and I will take him away’” (John 20:14-15).

Mary assumed Jesus was the gardener because He had been buried in a garden. John 19:41-42 says, “Now in the place where he was crucified there was a garden, and in the garden a new tomb in which no one had yet been laid. So because of the Jewish day of Preparation, since the tomb was close at hand, they laid Jesus there.” Jesus was crucified, died, and rose again in a garden.

Jesus was also betrayed in a garden. John 18 tells us that Judas betrayed Jesus “across the Kidron Valley, where there was a garden” – the Garden of Gethsemane. Later, in the same chapter, Peter denies that he had been with Jesus “in the garden” (John 18:26).

Gardens have particular significance in Scripture. Genesis 2:8 begins, “And the Lord God planted a garden in Eden, in the east, and there he put the man whom he had formed.  And out of the ground the Lord God made to spring up every tree that is pleasant to the sight and good for food. The tree of life was in the midst of the garden, and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.  A river flowed out of Eden to water the garden, and there it divided and became four rivers…The Lord God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden to work it and keep it.  And the Lord God commanded the man, saying, ‘You may surely eat of every tree of the garden, but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die.’”

Adam was given two sets of tasks. As the king over creation, Adam was to subdue and have dominion, bringing the creation into order for the glory and pleasure of God (by naming the animals, for example). As a priest, Adam was to “work” and “keep” the Garden – both words used for priestly service. It was in the Garden that Adam met with God. In other words, the Garden of Eden was a temple, a house of meeting and worship.

But, Adam failed in both his kingly and priestly duties. He failed to keep the Garden, allowing the Tempter to come in, to deceive his wife, and to take part in that deception as well. Rather than working and keeping the Garden, he submitted himself to the Garden’s one forbidden fruit. Rather than serving the God of that temple, he contented himself with the fruit (much like the Pharisees and money-changers who preferred the physical Temple in Jerusalem to Christ the Temple who dwelt among them). 

Because Adam failed, he was exiled from the Garden, removed from the temple. In 3:23 – “therefore the Lord God sent him out from the garden of Eden to work the ground from which he was taken.  He drove out the man, and at the east of the garden of Eden he placed the cherubim and a flaming sword that turned every way to guard the way to the tree of life.” Man could not enter that garden temple again. But, then Christ came. He alone could enter the garden temple, because He was the garden temple.

Adam betrayed God in the Garden, he was sentenced to death in the Garden, he was separated from God in the Garden, and then exiled from the Garden. Jesus was betrayed in a garden, killed in a garden, buried in a garden, but He rose again and left the garden – not in exile as Adam did, but in the triumph of resurrection. The first Adam lost the Garden, but the second Adam kept it and took dominion over it, a faithful King and High Priest.    

Vespers & Bible Study for April

Vespers & Bible Study for April

On Wednesday, April 5th, we will continue the series, "Saints & Sinners: Stories from Church History", with a study of Pope Gregory I, also known as Gregory the Great.  

Gregory turned away from a life of comfort and wealth for the monastery, eventually being appointed as Pope against his will! He was a skilled theologian, hymn writer, and preacher, and was greatly concerned for the training of pastors and missionaries. And, he did it all in the midst of one of Rome's most trying times. 

Join us as we explore the life and work of Gregory the Great!

Where: Holy Trinity Reformed Church (3747 Trinity Church Road, Concord, NC)
When: 6:00 pm (dinner) & 6:45 pm (Vespers & Bible Study)

New Literature Guide by Pastor Phillips!

New Literature Guide by Pastor Phillips!

From the Canon Press website:

Worldview Guide for Meditations of Marcus Aurelius
by Dr. Brian Phillips

"The Worldview Guides from the Canon Classics Literature Series provide an aesthetic and thematic Christian perspective on the most definitive and daunting works of Western Literature. Each Worldview Guide presents the big picture (both the good and the bad) without neglecting the details. Each Worldview Guide is a friendly literary coach -- and a treasure map, and a compass, and a key -- to help teachers, parents, and students appreciate, critique, and begin to master the classics. 

The bite-size WGs are divided into these ten sections (with some variation due to genre): Introduction, The World Around, About the Author, What Other Notables Said, Setting, Characters, & Argument, Worldview Analysis, Quotables, 21 Significant Questions & Answers, and Further Discussion & Review. A free classics test and answer key are also available online."

The Love of St. Valentine

The Love of St. Valentine

by Brian Phillips

St. Valentine was a priest in Rome during the reign of Emperor Claudius II.  According to tradition, Valentine, having been imprisoned and beaten, was beheaded on February 14, about 269 A.D., along the Flaminian Way.  Now, that’s nowhere near a “romantic” tale, but his martyrdom was connected with an enduring and biblical kind of love.

Valentine undercut an edict of Emperor Claudius.  Wanting to more easily recruit soldiers for his army, Claudius had tried to weaken family ties by forbidding marriage.  Valentine, ignoring the order, secretly married young couples.  When these activities were uncovered, it led to his arrest.

Furthermore, while in prison, Valentine continued to express his concern and love for his congregation.  Being deprived of books, it is said that he would pluck leaves from the tree branches that grew near the window of his cell, and would write notes to the church, primarily encouraging them to obey the two great commandments – to love the Lord and love one another.  His last note arrived on the morning of his death and ended with the words “Your Valentine.”

In 496, February 14th was named as a holiday in his honor.  By this time Christianity had long been legalized in the empire, and many pagan celebrations were being replaced with Christianized celebrations.  One of them was a Roman festival named Lupercalia, which was a pagan celebration of love. This holiday, some claim, was replaced by St. Valentine’s Day with its more innocent customs of sending notes and gifts and other expressions of affection.  Perhaps that is true.

While many skeptically say that Valentine’s Day is nothing more than a greeting card conspiracy, it serves to remind us that love is more than mere sentimentalism or overflowing emotions. It is a commitment that pledges my life for yours.  And that is something to celebrate.

Vespers & Bible Study for February

Vespers & Bible Study for February

On Wednesday, February 1st, we will continue the series, "Saints & Sinners: Stories from Church History", with a study of St. Augustine and his mother, Monica.  

St. Augustine's conversion story is particularly inspiring because of the heroic role his devout mother played.  Following his conversion, Augustine would become an influential bishop and defender of the faith, as well as the author of two of Western literature's most significant works. 

Join us as we explore the life and work of St. Augustine, as well as the powerful influence of his godly, praying mother, Monica!

Where: Holy Trinity Reformed Church (3747 Trinity Church Road, Concord, NC)
When: 6:00 pm (dinner) & 6:45 pm (Vespers & Bible Study)

Dependent Creatures

Dependent Creatures

From Pastor Phillips's exhortation on Sunday, January 29th

In Psalm 51:12, David prays, “Restore to me the joy of your salvation, and uphold me with a willing spirit.” This is a significant part of David’s prayer of repentance because here he acknowledges his need to be restored and upheld by God. Like our first parents, we are tempted to believe that we can be self-sufficient, or independent.

But, we are created to need others. A baby is born needing his parents and others to care for him – food, diapers, sleep, protection, teaching, nurture, affection, etc. And, no matter what we tell ourselves later on, we can never be truly independent and self-sufficient without doing great damage to our souls. We need other people.

Of course, more than that, we were created to know God. We are created in His image, made for His glory, destined for eternity somewhere. We are given souls that will never die. And when we live instead for our selves and our sins, our souls feel it.

It is God’s loving and severe mercy that brings us again to a place of dependence, a place where we recognize our need to be restored and upheld. We are dependent on Him, and that is not shameful. It is as it should be. We are made in God’s image - to know Him, to love Him, to dwell in union with Him through Christ.

Let us, then, confess our sins to the Lord…   

Defending Ourselves or Pleading Guilty?

Defending Ourselves or Pleading Guilty?

From the exhortation given by Pastor Brian Phillips on Sunday, January 8th, 2017.

Psalm 51:1 says, “Have mercy on me, O God, according to your steadfast love; according to your abundant mercy blot out my transgressions.”

David’s great psalm of repentance, written after his sin with Bathsheba, is characterized by brutal honesty. In no way does David try to sugarcoat his guilt, or excuse his sin. Rather, he begins directly and openly – “Have mercy on me, O God…”

This is an important matter for us to remember because, too often, we can be tempted to come to God as our own defense attorney, rather than as people confessing that we are guilty. And, we must learn to practice this kind of spiritual honesty, not just with “big sins” (as we may like to categorize them), but with every sin. After all, most of our lives are affected, not by the major things but by the little things we struggle with day after day.

Paul Tripp wrote, “The character of a life isn’t set in ten big moments. The character of a life is set in ten thousand little moments of everyday life. It’s the themes of struggles that emerge from those little moments that reveal what’s really going on in our hearts.”

Let us, then, honestly confess our sins to the Lord…   

Vespers & Bible Study for January

Vespers & Bible Study for January

On Wednesday, January 4th, we will continue the series, "Saints & Sinners: Stories from Church History," with a study of St. Wenceslaus - most commonly known for the song, "Good King Wenceslaus." 

Sadly, the story of Wenceslaus is generally unknown, and even the details behind the familiar Christmas carol bearing his name are unfamiliar to most.  But his story is inspiring, challenging, and closely connected to Epiphany (which is celebrated this week - January 6th).  Join us as we remember our brother, "Good King Wenceslaus."      

Where: Holy Trinity Reformed Church (3747 Trinity Church Road, Concord, NC)
When: 6:00 pm (dinner) & 6:45 pm (Vespers & Bible Study)

Conference Audio Now Available!

Conference Audio Now Available!

 

We're very excited to bring you these five talks from our LIFELONG Conference, delivered on September 2016, in Concord, NC.

AVAILABLE HERE Only $15!
 

Speakers and Titles:

  • Karen Kern - A Habit Is the Way We Wear Our Days
  • Brian Phillips - Well-Read: The Importance of Imaginative Reading
  • Andrew Kern - What is Learning & Why Does It Matter
  • Matt Bianco - Overcoming the Tyranny of the Blank Page
  • Andrew Kern - The Courage to Think: Speaking & Listening as a Family


Learning does not keep office hours. It does not begin with a bell, or cease with the end of a class period. Rather, learning is a lifelong journey that includes math lessons and dinner conversation, Latin verbs and nature walks. Join us as we consider what it means to cultivate lifelong learning in our homes.

Vespers & Bible Study for December

Vespers & Bible Study for December

On Wednesday, December 7th, we will continue the series, "Saints & Sinners: Stories from Church History", with a study of St. Athanasius - one of the Church's most brilliant and influential theologians.  

St. Athanansius made particularly important contributions to our understanding of the Incarnation, and his work On the Incarnation remains the standard work on the beautiful mystery of the doctrine.  

Join us as we explore the life and work of St. Athanasius, a fitting study as we prepare for Christmas!

Where: Holy Trinity Reformed Church (3747 Trinity Church Road, Concord, NC)
When: 6:00 pm (dinner) & 6:45 pm (Vespers & Bible Study)

Hanging of the Green

Hanging of the Green

On Saturday, November 26th at 10:00 a.m., we will gather for the Hanging of the Greens - decorating the church for the coming Advent and Christmas seasons, including the Advent wreath and the church Christmas tree.

The Christmas tree is deeply rooted in Christian tradition, going back at least to the story of St. Boniface, an 8th century missionary to modern-day Germany, a region controlled by Norsemen who brought their religion with them.  They worshiped many gods, Thor being the chief of them and they consecrated a gigantic oak tree in Thor’s honor at the top of Mt. Gudenberg. They would gather around the tree for feasts, idol worship, and animal sacrifices.

St. Boniface, in the company of these pagans, chopped down the tree. Angry at first, the response of the Norsemen turned to repentance – if Thor could not defend his own holy place, what good was he?

Boniface then used that tree as an object lesson to tell them of a tree that actually does save, not because the tree was magic, but because on that tree, Jesus Christ died for the sins of men. That tree, Boniface said, is an evergreen, an eternal tree.  Many Norsemen were converted to Christ and it was there that they began the practice of decorating evergreen trees (even in their homes) in celebration of the Savior's birth.  Increasingly, the tree became a focal point in the home and gifts were laid under it, not in honor of the tree, but in honor of the Savior who died on the tree. It is His birth that we celebrate during Advent and it was for our sins that He died on the tree, the cross.

When: Saturday, November 26th at 10:00 a.m.

Vespers & Bible Study for November

Vespers & Bible Study for November

On Wednesday, November 2nd, we will continue the series, "Saints & Sinners: Stories from Church History", with a study of Constantine the Great - an important, but controversial figure in Church history.

We learn from the heroes of the faith, of course (Hebrews 11), but we also learn from the sins and mistakes of those gone before us, whether in Scripture itself or in the history of the Church (1st Corinthians 10:6-13).  But, history also teaches us that some figures defy such black and white approaches.  Constantine the Great was certainly a Christian, but his actions as emperor leave us with many questions.

- What is the relationship between Church and State?
- Should political leaders impose explicitly religious laws?
- And many more!

Join us as we explore the life of Constantine, along with the questions his life leaves us to consider.

Where: Holy Trinity Reformed Church (3747 Trinity Church Road, Concord, NC)
When: 6:00 pm (dinner) & 6:45 pm (Vespers & Bible Study)

Men's Prayer Breakfast: October Edition!

Men's Prayer Breakfast: October Edition!

C. S. Lewis argues that it takes a community of people to get to know an individual person. Reflecting on his own friendships, he observed that some aspects of one of his friend’s personality were brought out only through interaction with a second friend. That meant if he lost the second friend, he lost the part of his first friend that was otherwise invisible. “By myself I am not large enough to call the whole man into activity; I want other lights than my own to show all his facets." If it takes a community to know an ordinary human being, how much more necessary would it be to get to know Jesus alongside others? By praying with friends, you will be able to hear and see facets of Jesus that you have not yet perceived.
- Tim Keller, Prayer: Experiencing Awe & Intimacy with God 

On Saturday, October 15th, we will host our first Men's Prayer Breakfast after our summer hiatus.  All men (and sons) are invited to attend!  We will cook together, eat, talk, and pray for one another. 


When:  Saturday, October 15th at 9:00 am


Where: Church Fellowship Hall (3747 Trinity Church Road)


If you need more information, feel free to contact us HERE!

Vespers & Bible Study for October: "Saints & Sinners" (Part Two)

Vespers & Bible Study for October: "Saints & Sinners" (Part Two)

On Wednesday, October 5th, we will pick up with the second part of our new series, "Saints & Sinners: Stories from Church History", with one of history's most notorious villains: Nero.

We learn from the heroes of the faith, of course (Hebrews 11), but we also learn from the sins and mistakes of those gone before us, whether in Scripture itself or in the history of the Church (1st Corinthians 10:6-13).  And, having first studied the life and martyrdom of Bishop Polycarp, we now move on to the life of Nero, a man whose actions greatly affected the first century Church.  

Where: Holy Trinity Reformed Church (3747 Trinity Church Road, Concord, NC)
When: 6:00 pm (dinner) & 6:45 pm (Vespers & Bible Study)

Nero - taking a break from fiddling and burning people

Nero - taking a break from fiddling and burning people

Saints & Sinners:  A New Wednesday Night Study

Saints & Sinners: A New Wednesday Night Study

Following our summer break, we are ready to launch back into our Wednesday night dinners and Vespers/Bible study.  As we start anew, we open a series entitled "Saints & Sinners: Stories from Church History."  

We learn from the heroes of the faith, of course (Hebrews 11), but we also learn from the sins and mistakes of those gone before us, whether in Scripture itself or in the history of the Church (1st Corinthians 10:6-13).  

We begin with some of the saints - the apostles (after the Ascension of Christ) and Polycarp.

Where: Holy Trinity Reformed Church (3747 Trinity Church Road, Concord, NC)
When: 6:00 pm (dinner) & 6:45 pm (Vespers & Bible Study)