Month: November 2024

November 22, 2024 The Children's Ministry

Beginnings Room

As of September, the Beginnings Room is now open on a weekly basis during the Sunday morning church service! We have 3 regularly attending toddlers, and therefore are able to schedule Beginnings class every week rather than operating it on an “on call” basis.

You may also have noticed that the Beginnings Room has receiving a bit of a makeover recently, with a beautiful new wall, complete with wood trim and a fresh coat of paint. Poke your head in sometime on your way upstairs to see the changes!

The Beginnings Room is for children ages 6 months to 4 years old. It is a place where the church comes alongside parents to teach the Bible to babies and toddlers in an age-appropriate way, to help them learn memory verses, and to begin building in them a biblical vocabulary.

Foundations Room

In September we started using a new curriculum in Foundations that has been well-received by the kids as well as the teachers. The new curriculum (ABC Digital from Answers in Genesis) includes short video clips and PowerPoint presentations to accompany the lessons, which have been helpful supplements as we study God’s Word together every other week.

Along with the curriculum change in September, we implemented a small but important change to our Foundations Room schedule. The Foundations kids are now staying upstairs with their families at the beginning of church so they can participate in worship before heading downstairs together for class.

One other exciting note is that the Foundations class is sponsoring a child this year through the Wisconsin Foster Closet’s Christmas for Kids program. We get to pick out Christmas gifts from our sponsored child’s “wish list” to help brighten her Christmas, and we will also be giving her a Jesus Storybook Bible. God blesses us so we can bless others!

November 15, 2024 Kindred Adults Ministry

The Kindred Singles Ministry offers biblical fellowship (i.e., brothers and sisters) for Christian singles in our area.  We host a variety of events and outreaches throughout the year in Menomonie and the surrounding communities.  We also have regional Christian singles camping weekends and winter retreats, where we discuss biblical curricula geared toward the challenges many Christian singles face in our world today…

And we have a little bit of fun too!

Here’s a smattering of what we’ve been up to this year…

Winter Retreat

  • Winter Retreat
  • Winter Retreat
  • Winter Retreat
  • Winter Retreat
  • Winter Retreat
  • Winter Retreat
  • Winter Retreat
  • Winter Retreat
  • Winter Retreat
  • Winter Retreat

Community Cleanup

Hiking/Bowling/Tubing

Summer Camping

Members Planning Meetings

Blind Munchies Movie Nights

Upcoming on our docket we have another Blind Munchies Movie Night on Friday, November 22nd at 7 pm. We’ll be showing episodes from Season 3 of The Chosen. The Kindred Singles are hosting, but this is open to anyone and everyone! After that we will be hitting the streets in Eau Claire to get the word out about a Community Bible Discussion being hosted at The District. And later in December, we will give away coffee and hot chocolate at the Wolske Bay Winter Wonderland…

Wolske Bay Winter Wonderland

If you are interested in any of our upcoming activities or know someone who might be, don’t hesitate to email us at kindred@jfbelievers.com for more details. We’d love to hear from you!

November 10, 2024 Pastor Jason Gilbert | Menomonie

That’s not a word we typically use. Perhaps after a really bad accident, we might say someone’s form and appearance were transfigured beyond recognition… and not in a good way. But other than that, it’s not a word we are all too familiar with. So, what does it mean? According to the Merriam-Webster dictionary, to be transfigured means “to give a new and typically exalted or spiritual appearance; to transform outwardly and usually for the better.” And in the bible, it is translated from the Greek word metamorphoo, meaning “to change into another form, to transform, to transfigure” (i.e., think of a caterpillar’s metamorphosis into butterfly). But even in the bible it is only used four times, twice referring to Jesus’ transfiguration, and two other times in letters to the churches by the Apostle Paul.

Christ’s Transfiguration

If you grew up in church, your likely familiar with Christ’s transfiguration. The gospels tell us, “Now after six days Jesus took Peter, James, and John, and led them up on a high mountain apart by themselves; and He was transfigured before them. His clothes became shining, exceedingly white, like snow, such as no launderer on earth can whiten them” (Mark 9:2-3). And that “He was transfigured before them. His face shone like the sun, and His clothes became as white as the light” (Matthew 17:2). It was a magnificent moment. And the disciples were dumbfounded.

It’s hard to imagine exactly what happened. The Gospel writers were no doubt limited by vocabulary. And artistic depictions certainly fall short (i.e., the title image). In fact, even Dallas Jenkins, the director of the acclaimed series The Chosen, said, “I have no plan to do that… depictions of angels or other glowing beings in film often fall flat… It’s just hard for filmmakers to take such an alien experience and make it feel life-like.” He is right. This was an absolutely glorious moment. And some things just can’t be faked.

The Christian’s Transformation

Which brings us to a controversial issue. The Greek word for transfiguration is used only two other places in the New Testament. And in both instances, it speaks not of Christ’s transfiguration, but of the Christian’s transformation. In the first, Paul tells the Christians in Rome, “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind” (Romans 12:2). And in the second, he tells the church in Corinth, “We all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as by the Spirit of the Lord” (2 Corinthians 3:18). The word transformed in each of these verses is the same word used for the transfiguration of Jesus. Imagine that. The Christian being transfigured

Biblical Christianity is more than just a set of beliefs, or religious mores, or church participation. Biblical Christianity is a transformation, a transfiguration, of our lives.

Furthermore, Paul tells us in these verses that not only is transformation possible, but what to do and not to do in order to attain to it (see Romans 12:1-2); and where we are to look for the power to receive it (see 2 Corinthians 3:18).

So, if you’re like most of us, and struggling to see such a transformation in your life, let us ask some poignant questions after reviewing these verses:

  • What are we presenting our bodies to?
  • How are we allowing ourselves to be conformed to this world?
  • How can we go about renewing our mind?
  • Where are our eyes? What are we looking at, honestly?

How we answer these questions is critical if we are to experience a transformation, a transfiguration, of our lives.

Gang, just like Christ’s transfiguration, our transformation cannot be faked. No amount of acting will be convincing. It will simply fall flat. But we have been given the keys to unlocking a true, genuine transformation in our life. May we follow the instructions given us to attain it. May we look unto Jesus for the power to receive it. And in so doing, may we genuinely reflect the glory of the Lord to the world around us.

November 1, 2024 Believers Church

Daylight Savings Time ends this Sunday. Don’t forget to set your clocks back one hour!