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Live Streaming

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Recently ESBC has begun live streaming of Sunday morning worship gatherings. We’ve updated and sped up our internet speed to improve quality of the video streaming and audio. Right now we are still in an experimental arena and using the free service of YouTube. At some point as we work out the bugs we may begin to host the video at our SermonAudio site. For now, you can still listen to our sermons in mp3 files at SermonAudio.

The purpose of live streaming is simple. It is primarily to allow those who would normally gather at ESBC on Sunday mornings but are unable to for any number of reasons. It is not intended to be a substitute for normal, regular gathering. It could also serve as an outreach for those you know. You could send them a link, share on your social media, invite others to hear.

I began preaching through Philippians on December 4, 2016.

Past video messages are archived HERE.

From Behind the Pulpit (FBP-002)

This short video has ideas and suggestions on what heads-of-households can do to prepare themselves and their families for the coming Lord’s Day gathering of Eastside Baptist Church in Twin Falls, Idaho.

Lord’s Day, December 11, 2016
Sermon Text: 2016: Philippians 1:1-7
Sermon Title: Prayer for the Good Work of Grace

From Behind the Pulpit (FBP-002)

Live Video Streaming is now available HERE. (new service available – thank you for your patience as we work out some details.)
Audio Sermon Archive for Current Sermon Series: Philippians; There is Joy in the Lord
Video Sermon Archive for Current Sermon Series: Philippians; There is Joy in the Lord
philippianstest

Introduction to the Letter of Paul to the Philippians

On December 4, 2016 at 10:30 a.m. I will begin the preaching through the letter of Paul to the Philippians.

There are parts of this letter that are familiar to all believers. This is perhaps the most encouraging, uplifting, hope-filled letters the Apostle Paul ever wrote.

I have been looking forward to preaching through this 4 chapter book in the Bible for some time.

I rarely post a full preaching outline of a book but thought it appropriate to do so this time. The risk in doing so is that I may change my mind on how a section of the text should be preached. But maybe it will help knowing the basic preaching plan. I currently have an 18 sermon outline for the full letter. (I may make adjustments as the unfolding of the preaching actually takes place.)

Where there are many themes in the letter and the Apostle speaks of them, I’ll let this statement govern the theme of the whole of the letter.

The reason God is pleased to give suffering and faith to His people is that they might take pleasure in magnifying Christ to those opposed to the Gospel through bold fearlessness of faith and humble grace.

Chapter One
1.    Introduction
2.    Thanksgivings and Prayers for the Good Work of Grace. (vv. 1-7)
3.    Affection and Prayers for all. (vv. 8-11)
4.    Don’t Let Suffering Cast You Down. (vv. 12-20)
5.    Stand Prepared for Glorifying Christ by Life or Death (vv. 21-26)
6.    Zeal and Constancy in Proclaiming the Gospel (vv. 27-30)

Chapter Two
7.    Description of  a Kind, Humble Spirit and Godly Behavior (vv. 1-4)
8.    The Example of Christ (vv. 5-11)
9.    Diligence in Salvation and an Example to the World (vv. 12-18)
10.  A Great Hope (vv. 19-30)

Chapter Three
11.  Cautions Against False Teachers and Putting Aside Former Privileges. (vv. 1-11)
12.  Source of desire to be found in Christ; (vv. 1-11)
13.  Pressing on Toward Perfection. (vv. 1-11)
14.  What Kind of Example to other Believers Are You? (vv. 12-21)

Chapter Four
15.  Stand Fast in the Lord (v.1)
16.  Directions to some and Directions to All. (vv. 2-9)
17.  Contentment in Every Condition of Life (vv. 10-19)
18.  Conclusion with Prayer to God the Father. 

philippianstest

The breakdown of the outline is primarily influenced by Matthew Henry and the Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary.

Dear Kirby Woods Baptist Church

Dear pastor Collier and Kirby Woods Baptist Church,

My name is Paul Thompson, pastor of Eastside Baptist Church in Twin Falls, Idaho.

I want to express appreciation to you and your congregation of Kirby Woods Baptist Church. This past week Dr. Frank Jones has been with us teaching through the book of Ephesians. Pastors from four churches in our area were present and a total of 28 people attended the EQUIP training for churches on mission. Thank you for sending him.

I was pleased to spend several days with Dr. Jones. He speaks fondly of his home church and family. He was a blessing to Eastside Baptist, the Magic Valley Baptist Association, my family and especially me.

He labored diligently while here speaking a total of 9 sessions through the book of Ephesians and preaching on Sunday morning. I was able to show him around the area between his teaching duties.

On Sunday morning, Dr. Jones preached from Ephesians chapter one on the glory we give to God in all circumstances of life. It was a powerful message. Listen here…

dr-jonesThis is a picture of Dr. Jones at the Shoshone Falls (about 4 miles from our church)

In the spring water flows over these rocks in a spectacular manner as the snow melt from the nearby mountains begin to flow.

 

dr-jones02

This is Dr. Jones pointing out the ramp from Evel Knievel’s 1974 failed attempt to launch himself across the Snake River Canyon (about 3 miles from our church).

Dr. Jones is pointing to the ramp on the canyon rim in the distance.

 

dr-jones03This is Dr. Jones watching B.A.S.E. jumpers jump from the Perrine Bridge spanning the Snake River Canyon.

The days with Dr. Jones was an encouragement to us. Please greet him for us when he returns home this week.

Thank you for your kindness and investment in our gospel work here in Twin Falls, Idaho.

 

 

Equip: for the Church on Mission

I just wanted to remind of of an opportunity next week for seminary level training through the book of Ephesians with Dr. Frank Jones of Kirby Woods Baptist Church and Mid-America Baptist Theological Seminary hosted at Eastside Baptist Church in Twin Falls, Idaho on October 13-15.

This is open to all pastors, Sunday School teachers, men, women, boys and girls (anyone). The attached flyer has some additional details. There is no cost for anyone attending. Please consider joining us.

It would be helpful if you would communicate with us if you plan to come to be sure we have plenty of food.
Contact Eastside Baptist at 208-734-7041

October 13 – 5:30pm meal provided (free) teaching begins at 6pm
October 14 – 5:30pm meal provided (free) teaching begins at 6pm
October 15 – 8:45am breakfast items (free) teaching begins at 9am

equip-eastside

Open Letter to the Twin Falls Police Department

TFPD
Photo: TFPD Facebook Page

Dear Twin Falls Police Department,

I don’t know many of you by name but I see you all throughout my home town. You are appreciated.

It’s hard to not get tangled up in the weeds of all the national buzz about our city and the unfortunate way some have spoken to you and about you.

I’m always thankful to be at a city council meeting when you are being introduced, awarded a promotion, or being recognized for your duty to the citizens.

Where I don’t speak for anyone but myself; I want you to know that we are thankful to God for you.

My gratitude is for the department you represent and the duty you serve. It must require of you something that few are willing to take on. Thank you for your display of bravery that makes my general journey through life a safe and pleasant place to live. You choose to take on dangerous situations, confusing situations, complex relationships and you make way into some of the most sinful conditions any could imagine.

As a pastor I have worked with many in our community that have had encounters with you; thank you for being so compassionate, kind and tender to women and children and victims of abuse. Thank you for choosing to answer the dispatch call to walk into the middle of complex, messy situations and still be there and try to do the right thing.

So many of you operate under extreme pressure with professionalism, restraint, and show respect to those who do not always return the favor is a credit to the department as a whole. And that you do this not knowing that your life may be in danger is yet more than a credit, it is a mercy you give to every citizen.

I want you to know that I pray for you and I pray for your families. I pray for your safety, for wisdom, for courage.

Thank you for your care for all in the community, without prejudice.

With respect,

 

Paul Thompson
Pastor at Eastside Baptist Church, Twin Falls, Idaho

 

What Does It Take To Be Happy?

On a regular basis for the past several years I have been given the opportunity to be part of writing a column, with others, in the Twin Falls Times News newspaper.

Every Saturday in the religion section of the paper a local ‘pastor’ pens the words for the “Pastor’s Corner”.

I’m thankful to do so, but from time to time need to give a disclaimer that I am not in biblical agreement with all whom I share in this privilege with.

For example; by writing under the same column title I respect that the paper serves a wide scope of readers who, by the kind of rebuttal email and comments I get, obviously don’t agree with me and take exception with me on many issue. To an informed reader, he is able to spot the difference quickly.

I have never been disappointed with the column writing of Bear Morton, pastor at Magic Valley Bible Church.

Last week’s column by Elizabeth Greene, on the other hand, I am in complete disagreement with the premise and conclusion of the author who is neither a pastor of a New Testament church or a Christian as defined by the Bible. Nor am I in spiritual or biblical agreement with Kathleen McKevitt who writes under the column title of Pastor’s Corner. And I’m not offended if they were to speak of our differences either.

Here is an early look at my contribution to the Pastor’s Column to be published on Saturday, July 23 in the Times News.


What Does It Take To Be Happy?

Have you ever read the entire Bible? It seems like a daunting task when you consider the font size, thin pages, total page count, and the complexity of the language. Obviously the reason for reading it will have much to do with the value one gets from reading it.

When one begins reading it, it becomes clear from Old Testament through the New Testament that God is not interested in being a little part of your life, a clichéd slogan on a t-shirt, a piece of jewelry you wear or a fashionable tattoo. He wants to be your whole life. His requirements for this are rooted in the reality that He has the authority to demand this because of who He is.

Think of it with me from the flow of the Sermon on the Mount, recorded by Matthew in chapters five through seven.
There is a progression from the poor in spirit to those persecuted for the sake of righteousness with talk of those who mourn, are meek, hunger and thirst for righteousness, merciful, pure in heart, peacemakers in between.

All of these instructions are delivered for the benefit of believers to know that the pursuit of happiness is not like unbelievers. Followers of Christ are not doomed to “eat their own dung and drink their own urine” (2 Kings 18:27) they are satisfied with Christ and His deposit of righteousness into their lives.

Jesus informs us that it is best for us to see that sin does not deliver happiness like we think it does. Sin does not bless the nation. Sin does not help the economy. Sin does not strengthen the family. Sin weakens the church.

Sin has a rotting effect.

Anyone promoting sin as an acceptable way of life is not interested in strengthening your family. Anyone encouraging you to change the law of the land to encourage a sinful lifestyle is not interested in encouraging a strong economy. Anyone leading others to adopt sin as normal is no pastor, and any church that leaves that ‘pastor’ in the pulpit is no church.

To be spiritually bankrupt before a holy God will cause one of two responses.

To be told that we are spiritually bankrupt, unable to do anything good, will lead a person to either repent of sin and cry out to God for salvation or grow proud and stiff necked and continue taking others down this same path.

Reader, beware; there are some in our day, in our city, in our churches, deceiving many with the promise of happiness by embracing your sinful nature or following other gods. Not everyone with the title of pastor, bishop, elder, imam is looking out for your spiritual interest. They may come with soothing words that are attractive because they promote sin as natural and even God approved. They are lying to you. They are deceiving you. They are destroying your family. They are causing a burden to the economy. They are doing so with the greatest form of pride and arrogance by using the name of Jesus to advance unbiblical agendas.

If you are indeed a follower of Christ, if you are truly a Christian as defined by the Bible then you can’t help but want to be different. You can’t come to God and want to stay like you once were.

There is good news; there are real churches with biblical preaching across the city of Twin Falls and throughout the Magic Valley.
Let me encourage you to do a few things as you prepare to gather with others on this coming Lord’s Day.

  • Listen closely to the preaching.
  • Listen closely to the reading.
  • Listen closely to the praying.
  • Listen closely to the music.
  • Stay steadfast at the place you are if it is true with the Holy Bible.
  • Walk away from the false doctrines that promote salvation through any means but faith in Jesus the Christ, the only begotten son of God, repent of your sin.
  • Walk away from any mosque, ward, temple, fellowship, hall, church house gathering that does not call out sin or is actively promoting the embracement of sin.
  • Walk away from any spiritual leader who is preaching happiness outside of following Christ Jesus as described in the Holy Bible or any perversion thereof.

You can do what is right in your own eyes or you can repent today and do what is right in Yahweh’s eyes.
I plead with you to repent!

A Bad Government is Better than No Government

“Beloved, I urge you as aliens and strangers to abstain from fleshly lusts which wage war against the soul.
Keep your behavior excellent among the gentiles, so that in the thing in which they slander you as evildoers, they may because of your good deeds, as they observe them, glorify God in the day of visitation.
Submit yourselves for the Lord’s sake to every human institution, whether to a king as the one in authority, or to governors as sent by him for the punishment of evildoers and the praise of those who do right.
For such is the will of God that by doing right you may silence the ignorance of foolish men.
Act as free men, and do not use your freedom as a covering for evil, but use it as bondslaves of God.
Honor all people, love the brotherhood, fear God, honor the king.” (1 Peter 2:11-17)

I’ve been attending Twin Falls City Council meetings over the past 15 years as matters arise that I believe I want to understand better of what is going on or to speak for or against proposed ordinances.

Recently, over the past month, I’ve been attending weekly to see if what is being reported in traditional media and social media is accurate.

If all one was doing was responding accordingly to all media (traditional or social) reports, one would think Evil Kinevel was in town to jump the Snake River.

At every city council meeting the public is given an opportunity to speak about any matter of interest to the city council. Wow, this is an amazing country we live in. Every citizen has an opportunity to address any issue of interest on a weekly basis. WOW.

I’ve been attending Twin Falls City Council meetings the past several weeks primarily to listen. Over the years I have spoken out, for and against, on matters that I think I must speak toward. I’ve learned that I must exercise discipline in the liberty to do so and resist the tendency to abuse my liberty.

I have a personal code of conduct for how I engage in the public square. Here are some suggestions I have and lessons I’ve learned.

  • I am responsible to the Lord for every word I say.
  • I represent  myself, my wife, my church (by the nature of being the pastor), my Lord.
  • I am responsible to respect the authority of those I am before.
  • My attire will be in respect of honor due to those I’m addressing.
  • I go prepared to be a blessing to civil magistrates.
  • I go prepared to obey every rule of fair engagement given by those in authority.
  • Every word I speak at a public meeting to public officials are subject to public domain and may be interpreted and reported differently than I think I deliver my words.
  • I write out my intent of what I intend to say so I am sure to say something of value and avoid looking foolish.
  • I expect to be limited by time at all public hearing meetings. (usually 2 – 5 minutes is my experience.)

Five things are sure:

  1. I pray for my government leaders and appreciate the duty they have to serve all residents, even the residents I disagree with.
  2. A bad government is better than no government.
  3. When a right is given to the citizens to speak and address matters of interest, followers of Christ must especially exercise that right with boldness and with respect .
  4. If I can live in a pluralistic community such as this with peace, I can do the same without fear of a Muslim neighbor so long as my government does not impose religious tests on any of us.
  5. Where I want my local government to be fully aware of the danger of open immigration I will take up my Gospel duty for every people group in my home town.

In conclusion; to the Gospel plow, sometimes that plowing work takes us through public forum meetings like city council, state legislation, national hearings. When that happens, we must be the same principled, disciplined, duty obeying followers of Christ. When the fever pitch of emotion begins to boil take a deep breath, bless the Lord for His grace, speak boldly, be respectful, honor all people, love the brotherhood, fear God, honor the [government] but don’t put down your gospel plow, don’t waste the day, don’t waste words spoken with unvetted, undisciplined, dishonorable emotions.

Lost in the Conversation

For more than a week the conversation of the local community is about some refugee children who have been charged with sexual assault. At this point, it is an open investigation and we must trust the law enforcement and prosecution process to do its duty.

In the mean time; there are many things lost in the conversation.

  • the depravity of humanity is active in the corrupt heart of all citizens. This is not a condition that is owned exclusively by men or women. Obviously it’s not something that U.S. Citizens are immune to.
  • any sexual assault acted out on a child is of serious weight in any community. This happens more in our neighborhoods than most know about and is not a new problem just because of the refugee center. Listen, you don’t even have to be an active church goer to be sickened by the sexual perversion.
  • this is first a sin issue – first and before it being a psychological issue, long before this being a refugee issue, or an Islam issue, this is a sin issue.
  • It’s even possible that your sons and daughters are exposed to sexually deviant behavior this summer at any given church camp.

Church, where are you in the conversation? Parents, Hopefully you’re not lost in the weeds of this being the kind of thing that other people’s children do.

Sin did not come to the city gates because of refugees. Press the law enforcement to do her duty, expect the city council to not be naive, but hold your church accountable to preach the word and your pastor to be the pillar and buttress of truth.

Sexual deviancy will not flee because you’ve signed a petition to shut a federally funded agency down (and I support the shutting down of federally funded agencies that don’t allow the citizens the privilege of accountability.) Sexual assault isn’t snuffed out because law enforcement and judicial prosecution exist (and I’m in favor of both.) But do not expect any change in the heart condition of humanity without the faithful proclamation of the gospel by biblically faithful preachers in God glorifying churches filled with forgiven sinners seeking the face of God.

Preacher, to your pulpit! Church, to your duty! Christian, be an ambassador of Christ’s reconciliation. All men, everywhere, repent!

Backyard Buffet and Some Autumn Solitude

At meal time in my house we are blessed to have guests. Sometimes those guests are birds of a feather or even this frequent visitor that inspired Renee’s entry into the annual Art & Soul of the Magic Valley art contest.

Feel free to share this and encourage others in the area to vote for the Backyard Buffet on display at God Inspired Clothing and Special thanks to Phil and Linda Brugger for sponsoring Renee’s entry in the Art & Soul of the Magic Valley art contest.

Backyard Buffet - #
Backyard Buffet – #6-135; Renee Thompson

The piece Renee entered is in the ceramic category. The official ceramic page is HERE. When I vote I will vote category # 6-135

Feel free to share this and encourage others in the area to vote for the Autumn Solitude on display at Rudy’s, A Cooks Paradise and Special thanks to C.Loren Butler for sponsoring Silas’ entry in the Art & Soul of the Magic Valley art contest.

Autumn Solitude
Autumn Solitude #6-035; Silas Thompson

The piece Silas entered is in the painting category. The official painting page is HERE. When I vote, I’ll be including #6-035.

The contest is largely decided by popular vote. Winners are selected by art critics like you and me. The process is rather complicated and requires more voter security than a presidential election process. So let me help you navigate the process. Full instructions for online voting is HERE.

Step one: Register in person at the Twin Falls Center for the Arts headquarters (195 River Vista Place, Twin Falls, Idaho). Voting headquarters is open Monday – Thursday noon – 6 pm and Friday/Saturday noon – 8 pm. At the registration you will be given your individual voter ID and password, voting instructions are online after you get your voter ID and password.

Step two: Everyone voting is required to vote for your top 13 choices. (that’s a lot of choices.) There are 13 categories of art to choose from but you’re not required to vote in each category. You are not required to vote in each category but my suggestion is that you only vote for one in the ceramic category and one in the oil category (but that is only my suggestion, you should do what ever you want to do.)

Step three: Submit your vote before the deadline on April 30.

Step four: Enjoy the great art pieces throughout the city for the next few weeks.

If traveling here from out of town to vote consider a few other things: Shoshone Falls, Chick-fil-A for lunch, Happy Hour with Paul at Sonic from 2pm-4pm everyday of the week and visit us at Eastside Baptist on Sunday if your visit from out of town requires you stay the night on Saturday night.

For the curious: here is the dinner guest that inspired the Backyard Buffet.

 

 

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