Embracing Our Legacy: The Saturate Vision

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to know where you're going you need to know where you've come from at First Baptist we have an incredible history as a church. We come from small beginnings and the people that built this place were people that believed that God wanted to use their life and their story to make a difference. They said, God, we want you to remember us for good. First Baptist Spartanburg started in 1839 in a room that looked a lot like this one. This is a replica of our very first house of worship that was built to celebrate our 150th anniversary as a church. And in this place, believers began to dream that God could use them to change their community for Jesus. [00:25:22] (36 seconds) Edit Clip


But it survived and it thrived. Around the same time, a group of bold dreamers began to look at a new type of technology that was beginning in the community. Television was beginning to sweep onto the scene and some forward -thinking leaders within the church each pledged to give $2 a week for the church to start having its services broadcasted. And over the past 186 years, we've continued to see people far from Jesus choose to trust Christ and grow in their faith. And the church began to be filled with families and people from all over the county as a vibrant church in the heart of the city until one fateful night in 1962. [00:26:05] (41 seconds) Edit Clip


Today I'm standing on the roof of that vision, which we call The Hangar. We're standing on the shoulders of giants, of the people who went before us. People who dreamed that God wanted to do great things in our city and attempted to do great things for the glory of God. And so today we're starting a new chapter in the history of Spartanburg. Saturate. We're going to saturate Spartanburg, the Carolinas, and the world with the gospel of Jesus Christ. And we believe that the buildings are a key way for us to be able to do that. Our buildings are not the goal. They are a tool that we can use to reach people far from Jesus and help them experience a family that will love them and care for them and help them find their purpose and identity in Christ. And we're doing this not for us, but because God wants to use us and we want to be available for his purpose so that our children, our grandchildren, our neighbors who need a church home, will experience that here at First Spartanburg. More than anything else, we want to hear God say, well done, good and faithful servant. [00:29:44] (63 seconds) Edit Clip


Nehemiah finishes the walls. It takes them 52 days, roughly two months. They overcome adversity. They advance anyway. They build the walls, even though their enemies are attacking them. They fight on. They have a shovel in one hand, a sword in the other. And they finish the task. And at the end, what does it say? It says two things. Number one, all their enemies were dismayed. Their enemies shook with fear. And everyone realized that the task was accomplished not by the people, but by the Lord. And that's my desire for us as we step into this, that we would partner with God, that God would get all the glory, because ultimately all of this is always for Jesus, isn't it? [00:35:01] (55 seconds) Edit Clip


It's because of Jesus that we're here. It's because of his sacrifice and his name and his renown that we're doing all of this. It's not for us that people would say, man, you guys got an awesome building. It's because we want to see people come home. It's because of worship, not walls, that we're doing this. Habakkuk 2 14 is one of the verses the Lord's just placed on my heart in this season for our church. And it says, for the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of God as the waters cover the sea. What a statement. [00:35:43] (40 seconds) Edit Clip


So one of the things that we've been talking about a lot internally is we want this value of having excellence without extravagance. That we want it to be excellent, but we are not looking for extravagance. We want it to glorify God, but our buildings are ultimately a tool for us to reach people. And so we want to be both excellent without being extravagant. And I talked to you guys about this idea last week about how I look at the world, specifically in my personal life, but then also in leadership. So there's three buckets I kind of put all things into. One, things that are must do, things that are should do, and things that are nice to do. You guys remember this last week? Must, should, and nice. And I gave you some examples of this in my personal life. So things that I must do, or things that I must do, are being a great dad and being a great husband, right? The Lord has given me a family, and this is my first group of people that I need to disciple and train up to know and love the Lord. There are people I need to invest my life in. If I don't do this right with my kids, I'm not doing that right with anybody else. [00:39:04] (66 seconds) Edit Clip


We're investing in the future. We're going to be putting in new adult life group spaces. So, life groups are a big part of our church. If you're not in a life group, you need to get in one. We want to continue to study the Bible and provide community because life groups are the place where people make friends, and friendships change people's lives forever. And so, we're investing in our life group spaces. Our current life group spaces, many of them have deteriorated dramatically. And so, we're going to be updating those. We're going to be building in new connection spaces in our church. So, we're going to be looking at all of our entrances and our connection spaces. We need a new lobby because if you go through these doors afterwards, what do you find? It's jam -packed. You almost need like an offensive lineman clearing the way to get through it, right? [00:41:38] (51 seconds) Edit Clip


And when we think about worship, some of us think like, hey, worship's just free. It's easy. But it wasn't free for Jesus. Jesus gave up everything. Gave up heaven. Gave up his life. Gave up all his privilege so that we could be also children of God. It cost Nehemiah. Nehemiah left his hometown. He left his family. Left his job. Never went back to being a cupbearer because he had a calling on his life. He was threatened and attacked. And it cost him. It cost Jesus. It cost Peter. It cost Paul. Paul gave his life for the gospel. It always costs us to advance the kingdom of God. And that's okay. And listen, if you're overwhelmed by that and if that's hard for you to hear today, know this. We've all been there where we've said, you know what? It's hard for me to open my hands to the Lord. To have an open hand and open heart to the God of the universe. But here's the thing. The God of the universe has given us everything. [01:16:01] (61 seconds) Edit Clip


And we can advance his name and renown so that the city is saturated with the good news of Jesus Christ. Because what we're trying to do through this campaign is create a home for prodigals. Your neighbor, your children, your grandchildren, your best friend to have a place to know that there's a God in heaven that loves them. That's why. So Saturate, it's a three -year financial pledge to rebuild the walls of First Baptist so that worship will flourish in Spartanburg. And we can do it together. And together, we can make our enemy Satan tremble because of what God is going to do in this city because it's always and only been Jesus doing the work. And he gets the glory and we get to watch him do it. So be praying with me. Our next steps look like this. Next week, we're having our pledge day. If you want to give a firstfruits offering that Sunday, that would help us out a ton. [01:17:42] (71 seconds) Edit Clip


Let's commit this to the Lord. From the first moment I got here, I said, well, this has got to be something in prayer, not something we can do ourselves. So let's just pray. Would you put your hands in a posture of openness before the Lord? God, today we come with open hands and open hearts to what you want to do in the city of Spartanburg. And God, we pray that your dream for our church would be far greater than our dream. And we release this church to you yet again. It's not Pastor Mike's church or the deacon's church or the member's church. It's your church, Jesus. So build it up. Use our money money to change lives. God, I pray that the legacy of what happens in these buildings that are built would amaze us as we see thousands of people choose to follow you. [01:19:23] (62 seconds) Edit Clip


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