Celebrate the Ascension with a Night of Worship and Intercession

This Wednesday night, May 29th, Church of the Messiah will celebrate the Ascension of Our Lord with a night of praise & worship and intercession.  Forty days after Our Lord rose from the dead, He went out with His disciples to a mountain and ascended into Heaven.  This Wednesday night, Church of the Messiah will commemorate that event with a night of prayer and praise as we prepare our hearts for the coming of the Holy Spirit on Pentecost in ten days (June 9th).  There will be prayer and praise all through the evening, culminating in the Holy Eucharist.  Childcare will be provided and the service will end at approximately 8:30 so that everyone can prepare for school and work the next morning in a timely manner.  For more information contact Fr. Scott Melanson or Cathie Shimp. This service will also be Church of the Messiah’s last Wednesday night service until school resumes in the Fall.  Be sure to attend and send Wednesday nights out with a blast.

Church of the Messiah to Host Financial Peace University

Church of the Messiah is excited to announce that this summer we will be hosting Financial Peace University by Dave Ramsey.  FPU is a nine-lesson course designed to help participants build a budget, dump debt, grow wealth, and leave money stress behind.  Each lesson, taught by Dave Ramsey and his team of financial experts, is based on biblical wisdom and common sense. In every FPU group, participants are motivated and encouraged by others who have gone through the same struggles and have succeeded using FPU’s proven methods. Whenever someone signs up for FPU, they receive a member workbook and one free year of Financial Peace Membership, with access to exclusive online tools to help them on their journey to financial security.  The first of the nine sessions will begin Wednesday night, June 12th, starting at 7 o’clock.  To sign up for the sessions now, click THIS LINK!  Contact Fr. Scott Looker or call the parish office at 904-721-4199 for more info.

Church of the Messiah Welcomes Kim Hunter This Sunday

This Sunday, May 5th, Church of the Messiah is blessed to host Kim Hunter and her students from The Unity Christian Arts/JCAC.  Kim and her students will participate in the service and have a special offertory as part of the worship that morning.  Kim Hunter was the long-time head of Church of the Messiah’s Dance Ministry and Jacksonville Christian Arts Center (JCAC) was a part of Church of the Messiah for many year.  Kim’s students are also preparing for their annual Spring concert, which will be Saturday, May 11th, at UNF’s Lazzara Performance Hall beginning at 6 o’clock.  Those who come to Church of the Messiah, this Sunday at 10 o’clock, will get a sneak peek of what they can expect at the Spring Concert.  Please join us this Sunday as we welcome home Kim Hunter and watch her students praise the Lord with the dance.

Holy Week at Church of the Messiah

Holy Week is the most incredible time of the year for churches throughout the world and Church of the Messiah is no exception.  We are so excited to share with you all that we have planned as we relive the events of Christ’s betrayal, death, and, ultimately, His Resurrection!  We want you to join us for all of these remarkable services.

Palm Sunday: Holy Week begins with the fanfare and celebration of Our Lord’s Triumphal Entry into Jerusalem.  We celebrate this momentous event in Jesus’ life by gathering in the church’s courtyard, blessing the palms, and processing into the church together.  During this service there is also a special dramatic reading of the Passion Gospel.  The service begins in the church courtyard at 10 o’clock

Maundy Thursday: Join with us as we commemorate Jesus celebrating the Last Supper with His Disciples on the night He was betrayed.  This deeply moving service includes the once-a-year foot washing service as well as the solemn stripping of the altar in remembrance of Christ’s betrayal.  Prior to the service we will have our regular mid-week soup supper from 6-6:45.  The Maundy Thursday service itself begins at 7 o’clock.

Good Friday:  Without a doubt, one of the highlights of the church year is Church of the Messiah’s annual Good Friday service.  From noon til three o’clock we reflect on the Passion of our Lord taking inspiration from seven different meditations each coupled with solemn prayers and contemplative songs and dance offerings.  The service also includes the reading of the Passion Gospel and the Veneration of the Holy Cross.  While the service is three-hours long, it is structured in such a way as to accommodate those who are only able to attend a portion of the service.  Come for the whole service, come for thirty minutes.  For whatever amount you can attend, you will be blessed.

Holy Saturday: While Our Lord may have rested from His labors, the abortion industry does not rest from its and Saturday is one of its busiest days.  We will take a prayerful stand for those who are condemned to die that day and pray the Liturgy for the Pre-Born outside A Woman’s Choice clinic.  We encourage everyone to join us on this very solemn occasion.

Easter Sunday: Celebrate with us the most glorious and triumphant of Feasts, the Feast which makes all other feasts possible, the Feast of the Resurrection of Our Lord!  Death has been defeated and the grave has been overthrown!  This year we are especially blessed to welcome Archbishop Craig W. Bates, the Patriarch of the International Communion of the Charismatic Episcopal Church back to Church of the Messiah to preach and celebrate Easter Sunday.  Also that morning, be sure to bring spring flower for the annual “flowering of the cross.”  Help beautify our Easter cross by bring your own flowers to help decorate.  The service itself begins at 10 o’clock and, as always, we pull out all the stops for the most glorious day of the year.  Immediately following the service we will have an Easter egg hunt in the courtyard outside the church.

Everyone is welcome to attend all of our services and childcare is provided at all events.  To help facilitate inviting others to join us, we have created Facebook events for each of these services.  To find these events, simply go to Church of the Messiah’s Facebook page and click on the “events” tab or click on the each event’s bold name.

Confession Available Every Sunday Morning Through Lent

Starting this Sunday morning, March 10th, and running throughout the season of Lent, there were will be a priest available to administer the Sacrament of Reconciliation every Sunday morning.  If you would like to have a priest hear your confession, someone will be available from 9 o’clock until 9:45 prior to our Sunday morning services.  A special place has been prepared in the first classroom during this time, or you may always reach out to one of Church of the Messiah’s clergy and schedule and appointment for confession on your own.

Fr. Scott Melanson to Begin New Bible Study Wednesday Night

Beginning Wednesday night, February 6th, Fr. Scott Melanson will be leading a four-week Bible study entitled “The Holy Spirit: the Lord, the Giver of Life.”  This exciting study of the operation of the Holy Spirit throughout the Scriptures will be a part of Church of the Messiah’s regular Wednesday night worship services which begin at 7 o’clock.  Our mid-week services not only includes this powerful time of teaching from one of our talented priests, but also consists of praise and worship, prayer, and the Holy Eucharist, as well as our Youth Group (grades 6-12) and a special activity for children who attend.  Be sure to join us throughout the month of February as Fr. Scott Melanson dives into the Holy Spirit throughout Scripture and gives us insight into this incredible ministry.

The Patriarch’s Message on Sanctity of Life

Dear brothers and sisters,

As I am writing this letter, the news is consumed by and obsessed with a “caravan” of persons from Latin America seeking to enter the United States. Whether they are fleeing from poverty or from violence or both, they envision a new and better life for themselves and their families by crossing the border between Mexico and the United States. It doesn’t matter whether we call them refugees, aliens, legal, illegal, or asylum seeking. It doesn’t matter whether they are male or female, older or younger — they are, in many ways, the face of the poor.

I refuse to enter into the discussion of how to resolve the issue on the United States border. I pray for the government officials of Mexico and the United States hoping they will see in these people as desperate humanity and respond with compassion and mercy, rather than using them as political pawns in the next election cycle. I pray for an end to fear.

The plight of the refugee or the migration of ethnic groups is not something unique to the United States border with Mexico. I have walked through refugee camps in Africa. Some of the camps have existed for 30 years. Even today there are refugees fleeing civil war and unspeakable violence in parts of Africa, the Middle East, and Asia. I have listened to women who have held starving and dying children in their arms because the governments are holding back basic necessities as a means of war.

The majority of the world is hungry and without basic needs. Most children will not receive healthcare or an education. Poverty gives birth to crime, addiction, and prostitution. Poverty causes parents to sell their pre-adolescent sons and daughters to sex traders so the other children in the family can have a shelter over their heads or enough cash to buy seeds to plant.

I could go on and on about the plight of the poor and the large gap between the world’s rich and the world’s poor. And, I could also talk about the thousands upon thousands of people who are deeply distressed by any number of these concerns and have given generously, and continue to give generously, to alleviate poverty. There are people who have been motivated to spend their lives ministering to the poor, and I pray for them.

I am also concerned about the violence in our cities (and even outside the city). The fear that has been created by mass shootings is of particular concern. I can’t imagine the pain of parents who have lost a child in either a drive-by shooting or at the hands of an armed mentally ill person walking into a school and shooting innocent children.

The inner cities of the United States, but also around the world, are in the midst of a pandemic of opiate addiction. The death rate from addiction has increased dramatically. Prisons are overflowing with young men and women incarcerated for drug-related crimes. I know the plight of parents who cry themselves to sleep because the baby they once held in their arms now lives on the streets, stealing money or selling their bodies to obtain drugs. Every day the people dealing with recovery are aware that addiction is a life and death issue.

I could go on and on writing about the suffering of persons around the world, particularly the poor. And, I am thankful that many from all political and religious backgrounds are working to resolve some of these issues. But there is one group of persons who are victims of the most horrific procedure ever imagined in the history of mankind. ABORTION. Worldwide, over 150,000 children are aborted every day. That is just short of 56,000,000 children a year — nearly the population of California and Texas combined. In the United States, more than 1,280,000 children are killed by abortion every year. That is larger than the population of most cities in the United States. These children, made in the image of God, are sacred.

These murders are not only happening in distant countries, or in civil-war-torn areas dominated by corrupt governments; they are happening within driving distance of most American or European homes. These children are the silent victims of a culture of death consumed by materialism, hedonism, and greed. A culture that is ready to blame children — innocent preborn children — for poverty and the results of poverty around the world. These children are a victim of a culture that has convinced women in the West that their freedom and civil rights hang on their freedom to murder their own offspring.

How are we to resolve the problem of immigration, the plight of the poor, the gun violence in schools and on the street, the senselessness of civil wars, the sexual exploitation of children, the lack of adequate healthcare around the world, or the destruction of the family if we cannot end the horror of a child burned and mutilated in her mother’s womb? We will never see the face of Christ in the poor unless we see Him in the womb of Mary and hold Him in the manger of our hands at the Eucharist.

CEC for Life alone is not going to end abortion. However, CEC for Life is our voice in the wilderness. Fr. Terry Gensemer and Sarah Howell have traveled around the world speaking to Bishops, clergy, churches and particularly young adults about the sacredness of life, particularly the preborn, and how to impact their own churches, communities and nations for life. Many of these young adults are now committed to giving their entire lives to ending the holocaust of abortion.

I don’t like writing this letter. I don’t like praying in front of abortion mills. I don’t like talking about abortion. I don’t like hearing the pain and shame of women who have had abortions, or men who have participated in abortion. I pray daily for an end to abortion so that this horror will end in my nation and around the world.

Every January, on the third Sunday in January, we celebrate the Feast Day of Our Lord the Giver of Life. On that day, every church in the ICCEC is asked to take up an offering and send it to CEC for Life. It is also the time when every church and every clergyman renew their membership in CEC for Life, and every layperson is asked to partner with CEC for Life through a one-time donation or monthly pledge. This allows our pro-life ministry to continue, and we remain part of the increasing number of persons calling for an end to abortion. We cannot remain silent while the screams of the unborn go unheard.

The 2019 Feast Day takes place on Sunday, January 20th. Please take the time to pray and to give. Your giving has done and will continue to do so much.

Under His mercy,
The Most Rev. Craig W. Bates
Patriarch, ICCEC

Wednesday Night Services Resume This Wednesday Night

Now that Christmas Vacation is officially over and the kids are all headed back to school, we are ready to restart Church of the Messiah’s Wednesday Night Services this Wednesday, January 9th.  Our service will begin at 7 o’clock and will include a time of praise and worship, a Biblical teaching, prayer, and Holy Communion.  Additionally, our youth group (6th – 12th grade students) meets during this time and our children have special planned activities as well.  Fr. Looker will be beginning a new teaching series on January 9th entitled: “Prophet, Priest, and King: Jesus and Our Mission.”  Because we are aware that there is a lot to accomplish to get everyone ready for work and school on time, we are committed to have the service end promptly by 8:30.  Please note that, in a change from previous weeknight services, we will not be having a community dinner prior to these services for the time being.  After almost two months on hiatus, we are very excited to resume our mid-week fellowship and can’t wait to see everyone again on Wednesday nights.  Be sure to invite your friends and we will see everyone on January 9th!

Christmas at Church of the Messiah

We invite you to join us as we celebrate the birth of our Messiah, the Lord of Lords and the King of Kings, Jesus Christ! We will have two services this year. Our Christmas Eve Family Service begins Monday evening at 7 o’clock and will have a special children’s presentation and sermon as well as traditional Christmas carols by candle-light. On Christmas morning, beginning at 10 o’clock we will have a brief, said Mass to celebrate the Feast of the Incarnation. We invite everyone to join us at either or both of these services and would love for you to invite your friends and loved ones to join you as well. Whether we see you this season or not, we wish you all a blessed and holy Christmas season!

Church of the Messiah Welcomes Dr. David Kyle Foster

This Sunday, November 11th, at our 10 o’clock service, Church of the Messiah is blessed to welcome back Dr. David Kyle Foster.  Dr. Foster founded Mastering Life Ministries and Pure Passion Media in 1987, and for 10 years produced and/or directed the award-winning “Pure Passion” TV program. He is also the producer and/or director of the award-winning documentaries, “Such Were Some of You”, “How Do You Like Me Now?” and “Tranzformed.”  He is the author of several books including Love Hunger: A Harrowing Journey from Sexual Addiction to True Fulfillment, Sexual Healing: A Biblical Guide to Finding Freedom from Sexual Sin and Brokenness, and Transformed Into His Image: Hidden Steps on the Journey to Christlikeness.  His articles have appeared in numerous journals and magazines and he has been a guest on countless television and radio programs at home and abroad – witnessing to the power of God to set anyone free from anything. Dr. Foster has spoken on five continents for ministries such as Youth With A Mission, Ellel Ministries and others.  Dr. Foster is in Jacksonville to minister and teach the clergy of the southeast at the Archdiocesan Clericus and graciously agreed to stay in Jacksonville a few days extra and preach at Church of the Messiah on Sunday.  His life is a story of God’s transforming overwhelming grace and love and he is sure to preach the Gospel in power and in truth.  Come expecting to hear an amazing word from the Lord about the power of God’s love and His ability to heal and restore.  It is certain to be an amazing message.