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Friday Email
February 26th, 2010 | Posted in Blog | Comments OffWeekly Announcements
February 25th, 2010 | Posted in Blog | Comments OffBookmark this category
Hello everyone,
I'm sorry for sending out the email way late. Here are the annoncements.
This Sabbath is the African-Caribbean Sabbath, you are all invited and please invite other people too. With that in mind, there will be choir practice tommorow at 6pm.
Vespers tomorrow night start with dinner at 6:30 and worship immediately after as usual.
For those who were in the Purity circle: tomorrow will have a ceremonial function during dinner, so please make sure you are there for that.
Happy Sabbath.
–
Adventist Student Fellowship
504 Ann Street
East Lansing, MI 48823
Friday Email
February 19th, 2010 | Posted in Blog | Comments OffBookmark this category Please join us at Lansing SDA Church for Vespers this Sabbath, Feb 20 @ 5:30 as Dane shares his powerful experience of these past months with us. Flexing Faith’s Fibers with Dane Griffin. Sounds easy enough. Faith. Everyone knows about it. Everyone’s used it at least once in a prayer. But what is faith all about anyway? Facing death teaches you a lot about faith. And how to grow it. Is your faith strong enough for the crisis that’s coming? I thought mine was, until….
Field School And African Caribbean Choir Practice.
February 18th, 2010 | Posted in Blog | 1 CommentBookmark this category
Hello ASFers,
Just wanted to remind everyone who is taking part in the African Carribean Choir that there will be practice tomorrow at 6pm.
Athena wanted me to pass this message: Field school is going to be doing a "Come Search with Me" program based on Pandit's book of the same name for the rest of the semester. If anyone needs a copy, Caleb can provide one for $10 and $5 will be reimbursed once the person completes all the dates and the final written and oral projects. I know this is short notice but ideally if people could have the Introduction and first 3 chapters read by this Sunday that would be great. However, in light of how busy this weekend is please show up even if you don't. Field School is this Sunday, February 21st at 10am in C-9 in Owen Hall.
In addition, thanks to everyone who has ever attended and is making the Field School the variegated blessing that it is.
Have a great night
–
Adventist Student Fellowship
504 Ann Street
East Lansing, MI 48823
February 18th, 2010 | Posted in Bulletins for Download | Comments Off
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February 20th, 2010 – Worship Bulletin
WEEKLY ANNOUNCEMENTS
February 14th, 2010 | Posted in Blog | Comments OffBookmark this category
Hello Everyone,
What a wonderful fellowship we had at the retreat. For those who did not go, you missed a lot. Please try to make it to the next one. Here are this week's announcements.
Friday vespers will resume this week at the church. Dinner will still be provided at 6:30pm and worship will follow immediately after.
Tuesday's with Jesus on Tuesday at Akers hall room 136 from 7pm. Please plan to attend and bring a friend.
Announcing the starting of Mondays with Jesus at LCC, TLC Library Building Room number 127, from 7-8;30pm.
African Caribbean Choir Practice on Friday from 6pm, if you are interested to join its not too late.
Reminder that this Friday is Mrs Bellas's Birthday and we are planning to do something special for her, so please if you have any contribution towards that cause get in touch with Renee.
Have a Blessed WEEK
–
Adventist Student Fellowship
504 Ann Street
East Lansing, MI 48823
GYC Experience in Louisville
February 12th, 2010 | Posted in ASF Blog, Blog | Comments Off
Our young people were blessed and inspired by GYC in Louisville. Here’s a clip of David Asscherick’s Appeal Sat. night:
GYC
February 12th, 2010 | Posted in Photos and Videos | Comments OffOur ASF student fellowship had the privilege of attending GYC in Kentucky. Hearts were warmed by the inspiring messages. Here is the closing address given by Chester Clark:
David Asscherick Appeal
Clifford Goldstein
Friday Email
February 12th, 2010 | Posted in Blog | Comments OffBookmark this category I received the following message from Valrie Brooks: “Can you imagine a Jamaican getting stuck in the snow? Well that’s what happened to me. I was about to cry (oh where is my faith) when a lady came over and assisted me. She was my “angel”. One morning I smiled and waved to this same lady; she waved back, but the look on her face was “where do I know her from? I was happy that I had smiled and waved to her that morning. It did not cost me to wave or smile.”
The Life of David Livingstone
February 12th, 2010 | Posted in Pastor's Blog | No Comments(as narrated and paraphrased by Ravi Zacharias)
David Livingstone was born in Blantyre, Scotland in 1813. He was born into a home where his father used to put him on his knees and read to him stories of great missionary exploits, particularly that of Karl Gützlaff, the Dutch missionary who doubled up as a medical missionary too. Young David used to look into his father’s eyes and say, “You know, daddy, one day I’ll be a man like that. I want to be a missionary. I want to be a doctor. I want to serve God.”
David Livingstone got to his knees one day and said this prayer, “Lord, Send me anywhere, only go with me. Lay any burden on me, only sustain me. Sever any ties, but the ties that bind me to your service and to your heart,” and the words of God came to him “Lo, I am with you always, even to the very end of the age.”
He packed his bags and went off to Africa. And when he took one glimpse of Africa from a distance, he penned in his journal these words: “The haunting specter of the smoke of a thousand villages in the morning sun has burned within my heart.”
He married a woman of the famous Moffat Family – Mary was her name. Her father was a great missionary. They went to Africa. But David Livingstone’s life was that of an explorer and he would move from place to place and his only goal was Jesus in the hearts and lives of men and women – thousands of them.
Finally his wife and his young family couldn’t keep up with him anymore. Some of his children were dying out of sickness and disease so he said to his wife, “Mary, why don’t you them home, and I will see you shortly and spend some time with you. It’s too dangerous for us to go on.”
So he sent his dear wife Mary back home and letters would take months to exchange, but some of the fondest letters of love and romance were sent between David and Mary and you know when he saw her the next time? Not five weeks. Not five months. Five years.
Five years later when he set eyes upon his wife, she could not recognize him because at one stage in his jungle travels going to preach he walked into a branch of a tree that had completely blinded him in one eye and marred the other. His face had been burned under the African sun to a crisp of leather and his skin, which had not been pigmented for it, had been roasted to the point that his body could not take it any longer. His face marred and scarred and his eye blinded and at one time he had been attacked by a lion that had torn one of his shoulders apart. He miraculously escaped.
Now she saw her husband hobbling in with a marred face and a disfigured physical countenance. Hours before he arrived, they had buried his father. David wept because he had longed to tell his dad firsthand of the stories his father had only told him thirdhand.
Biographical sketches tell us that when David Livingstone walked into any university in the British Isles, students and faculty would rise to a standing ovation because they knew they were standing in the presence of a giant of a man.
Finally he went back to his wife one day and he said, “Mary, the haunting specter of the smoke of a thousand villages in the morning sun is still burning within my heart. We need to go back.” She decided that he should go – she had to be with the children. She said, “When they are all old enough I will join you again, David.” And he set off on his lonely journey to preach to the African people who was so much within his heart.
Finally after a long time, Mary joined him and the day she set foot on African soil, she contracted a disease they had so dreaded she would contract. The very day she set foot on Africa, she got that disease and a few days later, he was burying her.
Lowered into the soil of the African earth there, an eyewitness said David Livingstone knelt beside the grave, weeping his heart out, and they overheard him praying, “My Jesus, my king, my life, my all, I again consecrate my life to thee. I shall place no value on anything I possess or in anything I may do except in relation to thy kingdom and to thy service.”
Through it all came the words of God to my heart, he said, “Lo I am with you always, even unto the end of the age.”
He picked up his belongings and walked back to his hometown village of Ujiji. When he arrived and went into his little home there, he found that someone had played a cruel joke on him and had stolen his medication that he so needed because his body was racked with pain, untold pain. He walked in constant agony. And they said in one of the very few points in his life, he prayed for himself, he got on his knees and said, “God, you promised you would always be with me! I need that medication if I am to continue preaching the gospel!”
As he prayed, he heard steps, and as the story goes, he saw a pair of feet planted in front of him and his countenance lifted for the first time in a long while – he was looking into the face of a white man who didn’t live in Africa. He said, “Who are you, sir?” And the man replied, “Doctor Livingstone, I presume?” (Those famous words) He said, “Yes, sir.”
“Mr. Livingstone, I’m a press reporter, I’ve been consigned to do a story on your life. I want you to know two things about me. Number one, I’m the biggest swaggering atheist on the face of the earth. Please don’t try to convert me. Number two, somebody sent some medication for you.”
David said, “Give me the medication please.”
So Mr. Henry M. Stanley started to travel with David Livingstone. Four months later, the biggest swaggering atheist on the face of the earth knelt down on African soil and gave his life to Jesus Christ.
One of the best biographies you’ll ever read on David Livingstone – two volumes entitled “Livingstone of Africa” by Henry M. Stanley. Stanley said, “The power of that Christ life was awesome and I had to buckle in. I could not hold out any longer.”
Finally his body began to shrivel with high temperatures and pain (they used to carry him around from village to village on a stretcher). One day, preaching from a stretcher, literally trembling, he finally looked at two of his national brothers and said, “Please take me back home. I am very very ill. I’m very tired, I need some sleep.” They brought him back to his home and were about to spill him on to the bed when he said, “No, please help me on to my knees.”
Livingstone buckled down to his knees by the side of his bed and clasped his hands and started to pray. His prayers were so profound, his sanctuary was so unique that his African brothers felt it was blasphemy to stay in his single union/communion with God and they stepped out of his little room.
Then somebody came running and said, “I need to see Mr. Livingstone for a moment.” They said, “Sshh! Quiet, please. He’s praying.” Five minutes went by, they looked in. He was still on his knees. Several minutes went back, they looked in. He was still on his knees. After a protracted period of time went by, they looked in. He was still on his knees.
One of them felt that the man was too tired to continue to pray. He needed to get some sleep. He walked over to him and one of them shook him by the shoulders and inquired, “Wana? Wana?”
Livingstone fell over. He was dead.
He died exactly the way he had lived – in the presence of his Lord.
He didn’t run from His voice. He didn’t wave a lamp that had no light in it. He didn’t sell a soul for some earthly pleasure. But the haunting spectre of the smoke of a thousand villages had burned itself within his heart so that he could say, “My Jesus, my king, my life, my all, I again consecrate my self to thee.”