Douglass Blvd Christian Church

an open and affirming community of faith

n open and affirming community where faith is questioned and formed, as relationships are made and upheld. 

The Bread We Need (Luke 11:1-13)

But Jesus says that in the reign of God, following him toward Jerusalem, we don’t get that kind of assurance. All us type A’s are going to have our worlds turned upside down, because we’re on an adventure—not a tour group.

In a world where too many go to bed hungry at night, where too many wake up to uncertainty about whether their children will make it home safely from school, where too many look for a friendly face among those who claim to follow Jesus but find no one . . . it’s going to be especially tough to make the sorts of things that typically go on a spreadsheet the measure of our success.


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A Faith that Means Something (Amos 8:1-12)

Derek Penwell

Derek Penwell

Amos is here to tell us that God’s not happy—not only with the systems of power that use people’s labor, abuse their hope, crush their dreams, steal their children and then ignore the lives that are lost, but also with a world in which people go to church every Sunday and sing about loving Jesus, but then stand idly by and say nothing.


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Prayers of the People: Claire Bridges

A prayer by Claire Bridges on June 10, 2016

LORD, we come today with heavy hearts, weary from news of senseless violence with feelings of hopelessness, anger, fear, guilt, and confusion. Let us pray for the lives lost this week. Let us send out light & love for Alton Sterling & Philando Castille. For the Dallas Police Officers: Brent Thompson, Patrick Zamarippa, Michael Krol, Michael Smith, & Lorne Ahrens. We send out light & love. Let us be LIGHTS. Let us be LOVE. Let us spread that light & love wherever we go--to the ends of the earth. Finishing today with words by Yogi Kino MacGregor:

No matter how complex life gets there is always the earth below and the sky above, the thread of your breathtaking tethers you to the spirit, the simplicity of wonder, grace, & faith, the promise of love's ultimate triumph over even the darkest valleys.

Amen.

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The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly (Luke 10:25-37)

Rev. Candi Cubbage

Rev. Candi Cubbage

Rev. Candi Cubbage is back in the pulpit. Y'all listen up.

This is war, Folks. Am I scaring you? If you came to church this morning to forget about what is happening outside in the street, you’ll be disappointed. This is war, and what is the cause? I’ll sum it up for you in one word. The cause is SIN.


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Lambs in the Midst of Wolves (Luke 10:1-11, 10-20)

Derek with his son, Samuel.

Derek with his son, Samuel.

Here’s the thing: All the bumper stickers laid end to end, all the electric guitars and synthesizers stacked to the sky, all the studied beauty of grinning ministers in the world can’t make Jesus cool. Jesus isn’t cool—he’s the embodiment of the God's desires for humanity; the church’s job isn’t to sell him—it’s to live like him.

The gospel is pretty clear: Some will respond; some won’t. And that's the difficult part—being sent like lambs into the midst of wolves makes us vulnerable, it reveals the fact that we're not in charge. It demonstrates that the only control we have is whether or not we're going to live like Jesus said to live.


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MX Reflex 2016

We made it back from Mexico! And oh what a trip it was. As is tradition, we all give a bit of a reflection about our experiences from a prompt:

What did you give, and what were you given?

We had some really special responses.


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Where Do You Go? (Luke 7:36-8:3)

Derek and his son, Dominic.

Derek and his son, Dominic.

Rather than be a home for the homeless, the church has too often been a collection of like-minded individuals committed to the idea of its own moral superiority. The church has done great harm to people because they’ve been deemed different, rather than extend the open arms of welcome and embrace.

But we follow Jesus, the one who left behind the safety of convention and received the gift given by a woman whom everybody else was convinced should be forgotten. We don’t get to stand on a mountaintop looking down on everyone else and say, 'You, you, and you . . . you all make it. But you . . . there’s no hope for you.'

The whole point of following Jesus is that we who’ve been shown love and acceptance are in the best possible position to know how badly others need it—how badly we still need it.

A bit of the scripture was lost. Apologies. If you'd like, you can read it in full.


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The Gift of Life (Luke 7:11-17)

Derek and his son Dominic

Derek and his son Dominic

Jesus knocks down the walls of death, all right—but the death he conquers is bigger than just human morbidity. He conquers the death that enslaves the folks most of us don’t ever even have to look at—safe as we are in the illusion of our own security.

And we who follow Jesus, we have a responsibility—if not to raise dead bodies, then to go into the heart of a world filled with the living dead, and bring life and hope, announcing to them that death no longer calls the shots.


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'Fancy Dinner' silent auction sponsors

As you know, we're having a 'Fancy Dinner' to raise money for Casa Hogar de San Juan, where our youth group and others are headed in a few short weeks.

Along with that dinner, there will be a silent auction, where lots of cool stuff has been donated from a number of awesome, local businesses.

Silent auction donors

Among gifts from the aforementioned, we also have: An estate planning package for two, a pie making class, Churchill Downs Clubhouse box tickets, a basket of fancy teas & tea accessories, and two paintings.

Thanks to all these rad places for their gracious support. Come out and get in on the action!

The Remedy (1 Kings 10:1-15)

Derek and Dominic

Derek and Dominic

There once was a time when the whole world had played out its hand, humanity’s isolation was real and without hope. God heard the cry of despair from under the broom tree, and instead of magically fixing it, or even taking humanity out of the world, God came near.

God heard our cry and came to us, a Jewish carpenter, abandoned by virtually everyone in the end and nailed to a tree—all in the name of political expediency. That’s God’s idea of fixing things.


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'Fancy Dinner' fundraiser by the Youth Group

You're invited to a Fancy Dinner brought to you by the youth group!

We'll kick the evening off at 7pm with wine, appetizers, and some good ol' fashioned mingling. Dinner will be served at 7:30.

A $20 suggested donation will go to the mission trip to Mexico, and the silent auction will be full of gems so be ready to bid! Feel free to submit your donation through Eventbrite or in person on the night of the event. Any checks should be made out to DBCC with "Fancy Dinner" as the memo.

Proceeds will go toward supplies, projects, and general donation for Casa Hogar de San Juan.

Get your ticket!

Just a Little Peace (Romans 5:1-11)

When we were determined to be at war with God, when we’d set our minds on settling for the suffering, God proved God’s love for us in that while we were content to be separated from God, God made a way through Christ to be reconciled to us.

When we were yet isolated and alone, surrendering to the suffering of maintaining hostilities with God, God came to us in the person of Jesus. God has a history of showing up when the going gets roughest—not to pull us out of our suffering, but to give us the courage and strength to stand up under it—to look it straight in the eye not as a failure of our competence, but as an opportunity to see that God doesn't need our competence to change the world.


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When Knowing Isn't Enough (Acts 1:1-11)

Preaching isn’t just about trying to get us to think differently; preaching is about trying to get us to live differently. If what we say and do in here doesn’t translate into our business dealings, our friendships, our families, our support for those who’ve been kicked to the sidelines, an increased commitment to advocating for peace and justice in a rigged world, then no matter how interesting it is, it isn’t the gospel.

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Imagining a New World (Revelation 21:10, 22-2:5)

Apocalyptic literature can serve an important function. Because people who are in real trouble know what we who live in relative comfort cannot know—that in order to keep your head above water, you’ve got to believe there’s something worth keeping your head above water for, something not yet apparent to everyone else, but something just over the horizon that is even now breaking in upon us. And a little glimpse of that can transform your life, or at least give you a reason to hang on for a little while longer.

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The Resurrection Moment (Acts 9:36-43)

And that’s the thing: The world, as chaotic and torn as it is right now, needs a little resurrection—needs people like you and me to get up and bring new life to folks who feel like everybody else has given up on them.

LGBT kids are dying, waiting for someone to care about them. Traumatized refugees are languishing in camps, waiting for someone to notice them. African Americans are literally dying in jail, waiting for someone to realize that we seem to live in a system designed not to deliver but to thwart justice. Single parents are trapped in low paying jobs, waiting for a few people to stand up with them and say that you can’t live on $7.25 an hour. Muslims, who live right next to us in fear, are waiting for people like you and me to wrap our arms around them and treat them like sisters and brothers.


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Sometimes They Do (Acts 9:1-20)

Too often I settle for a cheap, painless version of Christianity. As long as my faith doesn’t cost me anything, I’m cool with sticking it out. But as soon as I’m called to stand up and begin to love the people I’ve always been so sure God doesn’t approve of, it’s easier to fade away.

Our lives, our words mean something . . . and not just for one light-filled moment on the Damascus road. How can we remain the same after the lives we thought we lost have been given back to us?


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