November 22, 2011 
In This Issue
Web Design
Missionary Moments
Thanksgiving Facts
Annual Church Profile
Simple Church Training

WEB DESIGN

 

Does your churches website need to be freshened up, or does your church need a web presence?  Please fill out the questionnaire and submit it to iba@interstatebaptist.org and let us help you find the best solution and pricing.

 

Web Design

MISSIONARY MOMENTS 

 

November 21-27, 2011

 

On any given day, in the largest maximum-security prison in the U.S., you're likely to find North American Chaplain ROBERT TONEY. He serves at Angola Prison in Louisiana, home to some of the worst criminal offenders in our nation. In the midst of seeming hopelessness, Toney offers them an eternal hope that can transform them, even from behind bars. Toney is just one of over 3,400 chaplains endorsed through the North American Mission Board. Jesus reminds us that ministry to those behind bars is actually a ministry to Him (Matthew 25:39-40). Your prayers and sacrificial gifts through the Cooperative Program help remind prisoners of God's love and forgiveness. This week, pray for all of our chaplains serving at home and around the world.

___________________________ 

 

Last year, 12 new churches were started among the Samburu of Kenya, and more than 500 new believers were baptized! Recently, however, missionary CHARLIE DANIELS held up his Bible in front of a small group and asked, "Does anyone know what this book is?" Only one woman answered yes. There are no churches in this remote area, and the village chief says his people have been forgotten because no one has come to help them. Your love for people and commitment to fulfilling the Great Commission through the Cooperative Program will bring the Good News to the Samburu people along with the assurance that God has not forgotten them. Charlie and his wife, SANDRA, need your prayers this week as they serve the Lord in this rural area of sub-Saharan Africa.

 

 

Follow-up Links

Always Have A Reason To Be Thankful! 

 

I hope and pray that everyone has a wonderful Thanksgiving as they take the time to spend with family and friends remembering and focusing on all the things that God has blessed us with, and His consistent love that is never failing, and for that I believe we can all be thankful! 

 

There is a song that helps me to remember this very thing, and I have added it here to share with you.

 

Chris Tomlin - All The Way My Savior Leads Me
Chris Tomlin - All The Way My Savior Leads Me

Happy Thanksgiving

God Bless

Brent

"Churches Coming Together To Help One Another!"

HISTORICAL THANKSGIVING FACTS
 

  Thanksgiving_Turkey

 

One of America's Founding Fathers thought the turkey should be the national bird of the United States.

Fact
: In a letter to his daughter sent in 1784, Benjamin Franklin suggested that the wild turkey would be a more appropriate national symbol for the newly independent United States than the bald eagle (which had earlier been chosen by the Continental Congress). He argued that the turkey was "a much more respectable Bird," "a true original Native of America," and "though a little vain & silly, a Bird of Courage."

  

In 1863, Abraham Lincoln became the first American president to proclaim a national day of thanksgiving.   

 

Fiction: George Washington, John Adams and James Madison all issued proclamations urging Americans to observe days of thanksgiving, both for general good fortune and for particularly momentous events (the adoption of the U.S. Constitution, in Washington's case; the end of the War of 1812, in Madison's).

  

Macy's was the first American department store to sponsor a parade in celebration of Thanksgiving.   

 

Fiction: The Philadelphia department store Gimbel's had sponsored a parade in 1920, but the Macy's parade, launched four years later, soon became a Thanksgiving tradition and the standard kickoff to the holiday shopping season. The parade became ever more well-known after it featured prominently in the hit film Miracle on 34th Street (1947), which shows actual footage of the 1946 parade. In addition to its famous giant balloons and floats, the Macy's parade features live music and other performances, including by the Radio City Music Hall Rockettes and cast members of well-known Broadway shows.

  

Turkeys are slow-moving birds that lack the ability to fly.

 

Fiction (kind of): Domesticated turkeys (the type eaten on Thanksgiving) cannot fly, and their pace is limited to a slow walk. Female domestic turkeys, which are typically smaller and lighter than males, can move somewhat faster. Wild turkeys, on the other hand, are much smaller and more agile. They can reach speeds of up to 20-25 miles per hour on the ground and fly for short distances at speeds approaching 55 miles per hour. They also have better eyesight and hearing than their domestic counterparts.

 

The movement of the turkey inspired a ballroom dance.

 

Fact: The turkey trot, modeled on that bird's characteristic short, jerky steps, was one of a number of popular dance styles that emerged during the late 19th and early 20th century in the United States. The two-step, a simple dance that required little to no instruction, was quickly followed by such dances as the one-step, the turkey trot, the fox trot and the bunny hug, which could all be performed to the ragtime and jazz music popular at the time. The popularity of such dances spread like wildfire, helped along by the teachings and performances of exhibition dancers like the famous husband-and-wife team Vernon and Irene Castle.

 

On Thanksgiving Day in 2007, two turkeys earned a trip to Disney World.

 

Fact: On November 20, 2007, President George W. Bush granted a "pardon" to two turkeys, named May and Flower, at the 60th annual National Thanksgiving Turkey presentation, held in the Rose Garden at the White House. The two turkeys were flown to Orlando, Florida, where they served as honorary grand marshals for the Disney World Thanksgiving Parade. The current tradition of presidential turkey pardons began in 1947, under Harry Truman, but the practice is said to have informally begun with Abraham Lincoln, who granted a pardon to his son Tad's pet turkey.

 

Turkey contains an amino acid that makes you sleepy.

 

Fact: Turkey does contain the essential amino acid tryptophan, which is a natural sedative, but so do a lot of other foods, including chicken, beef, pork, beans and cheese. Though many people believe turkey's tryptophan content is what makes many people feel sleepy after a big Thanksgiving meal, it is more likely the combination of fats and carbohydrates most people eat with the turkey, as well as the large amount of food (not to mention alcohol, in some cases) consumed, that makes most people feel like following their meal up with a nap.

 

The tradition of playing or watching football on Thanksgiving started with the first National Football League game on the holiday in 1934.

 

Fiction: The American tradition of college football on Thanksgiving is pretty much as old as the sport itself. The newly formed American Intercollegiate Football Association held its first championship game on Thanksgiving Day in 1876. At the time, the sport resembled something between rugby and what we think of as football today. By the 1890s, more than 5,000 club, college and high school football games were taking place on Thanksgiving, and championship match-ups between schools like Princeton and Yale could draw up to 40,000 fans. The NFL took up the tradition in 1934, when the Detroit Lions (recently arrived in the city and renamed) played the Chicago Bears at the University of Detroit stadium in front of 26,000 fans. Since then, the Lions game on Thanksgiving has become an annual event, taking place every year except during the World War II years (1939-1944).

 


"Churches Coming Together To Help One Another!"

ANNUAL CHURCH PROFILE 
Church Administrator


To date, we have received approximately 55% of the Annual Church Profiles from IBA churches. Considering the deadline was October 14 to complete your profile, we would encourage you to do so as soon as possible. This year there are only fourteen questions, and should not require a lot of time to complete. We will be contacting those that have not submitted their ACP this week.
 
Please contact Lila if you need assistance, or would like a copy of last year's profile to use as a guideline. give her a call at 503-452-2930, ext. 21 or e-mail: lila@interstatebaptist.org.
 

"Churches Coming Together To Help One Another!"

SIMPLE CHURCH TRAINING

 

Urban PlantingNWBC would like you to consider and plan on attending the following collaborative event with your network of friends, pastors, planters and churches.  

 

We are grateful to be partnering with FBC Midland and Rivers Church in Colorado to bring you this event in late November. This event is both for church plants and existing churches desiring to increase their presence, practice, and proclamation in their neighborhood and community.

 

Date, location, topics, etc. are in the attached promo piece and web link.  Please go to the   link below to register for the PORTLAND event (the event is FREE due to a generous gift from FBC Midland).  

 

Thanks for your interest in growing as a network of churches, desiring to impact Portland with the gospel through healthy churches and healthy, multiplying, new churches.

 

For date and time and a promo flyer click/view here

 

Here's the web link: www.seattlechurchplanting.com/simple

The design piece is attached. 

 

Wes Hughes, D.Min., Urban Church Planting Strategist - Portland OR

Go to www.portlandchurchplanting.org to learn more on planting new, multiplying churches in the Portland Metro area.

"Churches Coming Together To Help One Another!"

"Pressing Toward The Mark..."  Philippians 3:12-14

Thank you for reading.  If there is something you would like to see and/or would like to add to the IBA Encourager Newsletter please send it to iba@interstatebaptist.org  attention IBA Encourager.  We would love to hear and share how God is working in your churches and communities. 

  

iba@interstatebaptist.org     

PO Box 19960

Portland, Oregon 97280

(503) 452-2930