Dear Crosswalkers,
This Sunday will be a Great Day of Worship filled with choices! At our 9:00 a.m. service we will feature the message How God’s Plan Unfolds in Your Life! This is based on the Parable of the Measure and the Parable of the Seed Growing Secretly. Fascinating insights await you from the teaching of Jesus our Lord! Then at 10:35 we will enjoy The Great Christmas Giveaway! This is an inspiring musical performed by combined kids from Crosswalk and Sunnyvale Christian School. This is a muscial production that promises to rock the house! Two fabulous choices make for a great day at Crosswalk!
THE WORD OF THE AGES
The Word of the Ages is God's Word, the Bible. Here is the KJV of Psalm 119:105 - Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path. While I'm personally partial to the modern and updated translations of God's word, I think we should all paus
e and thank God for the King James Version, which celebrated its 400th anniversary this year. Check this out: More copies have been made of this book than of any other book in the English language! The "genesis" of the KJV began in March 1603. After a long reign as Queen of England, Elizabeth I finally died. The Scottish King James VI, her cousin, was the heir to the throne. At that time, Scotland was one of the poorest kingdoms in Europe. When James heard that he was at last going to inherit the throne of England, it was said that he was like "a poor man … now arrived at the Land of Promise." At his bidding, the new translation was published in 1611. You can read the fascinating back story in a well written article in the National Geographic magazine by following this link:
Here is a quote from the article to see how the KJV has influenced our way of speaking:
"If a child is ever the apple of her parent's eye or an idea seems as old as the hills, if we are at death's door or at our wits' end, if we have gone through a baptism of fire or are about to bite the dust, if it seems at times that the blind are leading the blind or we are casting pearls before swine, if you are either buttering someone up or casting the first stone, the King James Bible, whether we know it or not, is speaking through us. The haves and have-nots, heads on plates, thieves in the night, scum of the earth, best until last, sackcloth and ashes, streets paved in gold, and the skin of one's teeth—all of them have been transmitted to us by the translators who did their magnificent work 400 years ago."
The article quotes the Very Reverend Dr. John Hall, dean of Westminster Abbey. He is the man who conducted the marriage of Prince William and Kate Middleton in the abbey earlier this year (which, by the way, was a very biblical and spiritual ceremony). Speaking of the KJV, he says, "There are moments which move me almost to tears. I love the story, after Jesus has been crucified and has risen, and he appears to the disciples as they are walking on the road to Emmaus. They don't know who he is, but they talk together, and at the end they say to him, 'Abide with us, for it is toward evening, and the day is far spent.' That is a phrase—so simple, so direct, and so powerful—which has meant an enormous amount to me over the years. The language is full of mystery and grace, but it is also a version of loving authority, and that is the great message of this book."
THE WORD OF THE YEAR
Back to our friends from across the pond, we have a news story regarding the Oxford English Dictionary (OED), the granddaddy of all dictionaries. Every year they pick one word or phrase that best defines the most significant social change of the past year. They call it
"the word of the year." This year, OED experts from both the U.S. and from the U.K debated some popular new terms. The list included the following: occupy, podcasting, Arab Spring, and bunga bunga. However, they settled on the "squeezed middle." The OED defines it as "the section of society regarded as particularly affected by inflations, wage freezes, cuts in public spending during a time of economic difficulty …." An OED spokesperson and judge defended the choice, stating that "it's something that, in a way, we all feel we belong to." You can read the full article at this link:
Of course, the Word of the Ages has a lot to say about whatever the Word of the Year happens to be. Staying with the KJV we have this verse: John 16:33- These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world. The word "tribulation" is from a Greek word that means "pressure." It is used in secular Greek of a heavy weight that is used to press the oil out of olives. In the world we will always feel like the "squeezed middle!" But as the world is busy squeezing us and pressuring us, we can be of good cheer, for the Lord has overcome this world for us!
See you Sunday!
Love in Jesus,
Pastor John