Church Blog

Family Sunday Is This Week!

Family Sunday is an opportunity for Austin City Life to pause and celebrate evidences of grace in our church. This is a time to hear stories of how people in our church are being changed and encouraged by the Gospel, and how the people in our church are living on mission in the city.Family Sundays also include extra time devoted to singing and prayer. Come ready to celebrate God's generosity to our church as we hear stories from people who's lives are being radically changed by the Gospel!

Family Sunday, April 29th, 10 am Ballet Austin


Join An Austin City Life Creative Team!

  The Austin City Life Creative Teams exist to serve the city and their church through the different artistic and technical gifts they have been given. Read more below to find out what teams need help and how to sign up to serve!

 Design

  • We need designers/artists/illustrators to join our team! The design team creates all the artwork for events, sermon series, resources, and our website. The time commitment is 2-3 hours a week. Contact Andrew Prewitt  if you would like to join the team. 

 Web

  • Our web team is responsible for building and maintaing our website. They use their skills in web design and content mnagement to help ACL maintain an effective web presence. The time commitment is 2-3 hours a week. Contact Chris Adams if you are interested in joining the team.

 Video

  • We are starting a video team! if you are interested in using your skills as a film maker to create videos that tell the story of the Gospel and our church in creative and innovative ways then this team is for you. The time commitment is 2-3 hours a week. Contact Matt Oakes if you are interested in joining the team. 

 Sound

  • Our sound works hard to setup and run sound for us every Sunday. If you have experience mixing audio in either churches or venues we would love for you to join our team. The time commitment is  4 hours a week on1-2 sundays a month. Contact Matt Oakes if you are interested in joining the team. 

 Slides

  • Our slides team makes sure we have lyrics to sing along to on Sunday morning. They also create sermon and announcement slides and coordinate any other media used on Sunday morning. Contact Aaron Brumit  if you would like to join the team. 

 

Celebrate Easter With Us!

 

 

This week Austin City Life is remembering Christ's death and celebrating His resurrection with two gatherings.

 

  • Good Friday, April 6, at 6:30pm we will be holding a short Good Friday Service at the Austin City Life Offices as we reflect upon the gravity of Jesus' death on the cross on our behalf.  We will share Communion, hear the story of the Crucifixion and respond in prayer, song and contemplation.  

 

  • Easter Sunday we hope you will join Austin City Life this year on April 8, at 10 am at Ballet Austin! This will be a great day to invite friends, neighbors, and coworkers as we celebrate the resurrection of Christ and the new life we have in him. Also, we will be handing out free copies of Jonathan's new book Gospel-Centered Discipleship!

 

 

 

Road Closures This Sunday - March 25th

This Sunday, portions of Enfield/15th, Winsted, Cesar Chavez, and Congress will be closed due to the Statesman Capital 10K.  Road closures for the race will begin at 7:00 AM and will reopen periodically from 8:45 until 10:30 AM. Please be aware of the following closures and consult the attached map in order to find the best route for your Sunday commute!

 

CLOSED

Enfield/15th Street -- closed from San Jacinto to Winsted Ln.

Winsted Ln. -- closed from Enfield Rd. to W. Cesar Chavez

W. Cesar Chavez Street -- closed from Winsted Ln. to Guadalupe St.

Congress Ave. -- closed from Riverside to 15th St.

 

The Downtown area can be entered from the north by Lamar Boulevard and from the south by S. 1st Street.

 

MAKE SURE TO ARRIVE EARLY IN ORDER TO ENSURE PARKING AVAILABILITY

 

This Week Our Sunday Gathering Is At 6pm!

Our Sunday gathering this week is not at the usual time of 10am, it is at 6pm and will look a little different!

SXSW is here to take over Austin for 2 weeks and to kick it off we are partnering with local non profit Music For the City to bring 4 bands to Ballet Austin for a free show!

So on Sunday morning sleep in, grab a late breakfast, and enjoy your morning! At 6pm be at Ballet Austin to hear music from Lamar Stockton and The Mourning Doves, Brennen Leigh, Penny and Sparrow, and Little Brave! There will also be cheeseburgers for dinner, ice cream to help those experiencing homelessness, a new live concert experience with Vivogig, a photo booth, and more.

See you Sunday and remember to bring your friends, neighbors, and co-workers.

Here is a SNEAK PEEK!

An Inside Look Into Kid's Life

  Last Sunday we presented our need for more volunteers in our Kid's Life ministry. We wanted to give you all an insiders look at our Kid's Life Ministry. Below you will find a great post by Erin Tyrrell about what it's like to volunteer in Kid's Life and some videos by Pastor Jonathan and Kids Life Director Joanie Oakes explaining why and how we do children's ministry. You can sign up to serve in Kid's Life here.

Check out this great testminonial by Erin Tyrrell!

  "Since becoming involved at ACL, I chose to volunteer with the Kid's Life Ministry.  This was a simple decision for me because of my love for children and background in teaching, but I wanted to serve in this area for more than just it being easy for me.  I truly believe it is important for us all to gather and share in the responsibility of raising the future church.  I served in this area before I had children because I feel a great burden to support these kids and their parents as they navigate life together.  As a Kid's Life teacher on Sunday mornings, preparation involves an hour or so before Sunday and then loving & hanging out with kids during the service.

 I serve in this capacity for many different reasons.  Most importantly is that I want to know God's people, and to really do that, for me, it means to serve them.  Not only do I get to know the future of our church, but I am able to meet other parents, learn more about God through teaching the curriculum, and have fun. I often feel as if I'm learning more than the kids are. 

 

I have been blessed by serving at ACL in so many ways.  It's a team effort, and I enjoy knowing we are all working together to help these  little ones know Jesus."

-Erin Tyrrell 

 

 

 

 

 

Creation, Evolution, and Further Study

This is a brief summary (and resource list) from the message “Is Christianity Compatible with Evolution?

Renown evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins wrote: “It is absolutely safe to say that if you meet someone who claims not to believe in evolution, that person is ignorant, stupid or insane (or wicked, but I’d rather not consider that).” Dawkins offers his naysayers four wonderful options--ignorant, stupid, insane, or wicked! Although brash, his statement reflects the dominant position of science and Western culture on the history of human origins--evolution through natural selection. To hold any other position, particularly if you are a Christian, is to be considered arcane and ignorant. Should Christians embrace evolutionary theory as an explanation for human origins? Can it be squared with the biblical accounts in Genesis? I will succinctly present both a conservative and progressive view. Then, offer a view that reconciles evolution and Christianity but rejects naturalism and Christian faith.

Young Earth, Anti-Evolution 

Conservatives argue that we should deny evolution because the science doesn’t fit with a literal interpretation of the Bible. They point out that the earth can't be billions of years old since the Bible says the world was made in six days (read 24 hour periods) and that the biblical the genealogies put the earth at 6-10 thousand years old. They protest that there is not enough archeological or geological evidence to support an old earth. As for evolution, they protest the scarcity of transitional life forms in the fossil record. Despite recent advances in genetics, which claim to have found "genetic fossils" in the shared junk DNA of higher organisms which point back to a common ancestor, conservatives are quick to point out that this theory has been overturned and that what was once considered "junk" is actually active in coding for proteins. Should Christians embrace evolution? In the words of Norman Nevin, Professor of Medical Genetics and editor of Should Christians Embrace Evolution: "Our answer is an unequivocal 'no'!"

Old Earth, Pro-Evolution

Many noted evangelical leaders and scholars do not exclusively accept the old earth theory. Both the day-age (day does not equal 24 hours) and the Framework hypothesis provide alternative readings of Genesis 1 that permit an old age view. We should point out that some evolution is undeniable. Some have used the term "microevolution" to describe mutation within species, which is a documented fact. However, Francis Collins, leader of the Human Genome Project, points out that the distinction between micro and macro evolution is arbitrary. All evolutionary activity is micro, small, and stretched out over vast stretches of time. Consider the evolution of the Ford Model T to the Toyota Prius hybrid. Henry Ford could have never imagined his vehicle could evolve into something as advanced as a Prius, and yet, it did.

Francis Collins avers that genetic research has proven the theory of evolution. He compares the genome to a genetic fossil, which can trace the mutations in human DNA proving evolution. He points out that our DNA and the DNA of other vertebrates is so similar that we have to have come from a common ancestor. It’s not just that we look alike; it’s that our DNA is alike. As for the claim that new genetic studies refute this claim, Collins points out that unlike most mammals, primates and humans require a dietary source of vitamin C. The reason for this is a broken gene. He argues that the shared genetic makeup is due to our common ancestry (the alternative is that God gave us broken DNA). When asked how compelling the evidence is, Collins a Christian, replied: “The evidence is overwhelming. And it is becoming more and more robust down to the details almost by the day.”

What if Evolution is True?

If evolution is true, where does that leave us? Are we to conclude that we have a generally meaningless existence? Reflecting on the implications of evolution, cognitive scientist and philosopher, Daniel Dennett, author of Darwin’s Dangerous Idea, writes: “An impersonal, unreflective, robotic, mindless little scrap of molecular machinery is the ultimate basis of all the agency, and hence meaning, and hence consciousness, in the universe.” In other words, Dennett asserts that evolution has nothing to do with a personal God and divine meaning. Dennett is a naturalist. Naturalism infers that our ability to love, act, think, form beliefs, use language, have moral convictions, put faith in God, and do art and philosophy—all originates in random genetic mutation not in universals ideals that have meaning.

This is a worldview that has staggering implications. It is a step away from science into a kind of scientific religion. It is one thing to affirm evolution as a biological process, but it is quite another to make it into a life philosophy. Religion philosopher, Alvin Plantinga, argues for evolution and against naturalism in his dense but insightful book Where the Conflict Really Lies. He asserts that divinely guided evolution, not unguided, random mutation, is what is at work in the evolution of humanity. Plantinga points out that the precise number and kind of mutations to occur from an unthinking, single cell organism to the complexity of a thinking human being is highly improbable. Therefore, there had to be divine guidance in the process. He unites evolutionary biology with divine purpose. To not affirm divine guidance and purpose in evolution is to render all our activities meaningless, fit only for survival. Human mothering, music writing, service to others, sense of connection in marriage and relationships—all meaningless. Naturalism begins to address religious questions like why we exist. There is an awful risk in taking the leap from biological evolution to naturalism because it provides no real basis for morality, for justice, for relationships, and for religion; we simply do those things to perpetuate the human race.

Now, there is a fatal flaw to the naturalist worldview. It asserts that even our thoughts, our religion and philosophy, are simply constructs created to help us survive. They have no true meaning. The flaw in this line of thinking is that if our thoughts are meaningless and a product of survival, who is to say that any of them are correct? Who’s to say that the evolutionary atheists are right? Who’s to say that we can trust any of this naturalist philosophy? Darwin himself had this fear: With me the horrid doubt always arises whether the convictions of man’s mind, which has been developed from the mind of the lower animals, are of any value or at all trustworthy. Would any one trust in the convictions of a monkey’s mind, if there are any convictions in such a mind?” Darwin himself doubted the implications of naturalism. Naturalism defeats itself; it is not reliable. If naturalism makes it impossible to trust our minds, then it also makes it impossible to trust naturalism! When evolution answers religious questions it reduces us to a collection of purposeless enzymes and cells. Christianity, even with evolution, offers are richer, more meaningful and philosophically coherent life and worldview, anchored in genuine truth, beauty, and virtue.

 

For Further Study (easy to hard):

Adam & Eve


Does the Bible Have Errors?

Does your Bible contain errors? Yes. The Bible that most people possess is a translation of the Greek and Hebrew copies of copies of the original documents of Scripture. As you can imagine, errors have crept in over the centuries of copying. Scribes fall asleep, misspell, take their eyes off the manuscript, and so on. What kind of errors have crept in? Dan Wallace, New Testament scholar and founder the Center for the Study of New Testament Manuscripts, lists four types of errors which he details in Understanding Scripture: An Overview of the Bible's Origin, Reliability, and Meaning.

Types of Errors

1) Spelling & Nonsense Errors. These are errors occur when a scribe wrote a word that makes no sense in its context, usually because they were tired or took their eyes off the page.Some of these errors are quite comical, such as “we were horses among you” (Gk. hippoi, “horses,” instead of ēpioi, “gentle,” or nēpioi, “little children”) in 1 Thessalonians 2:7 in one late manuscript. These errors are easily corrected.

2) Minor Changes. These minor changes are as small as the presence or absence of an article “the” or changed word order, which can vary considerably in Greek.

3) Meaningful but not Plausible. These errors have meaning but aren’t a plausible reflection of the original text. For example, 1 Thessalonians 2:9, instead of “the gospel of God” (the reading of almost all the manuscripts), a late medieval copy has “the gospel of Christ.” There is a meaning difference between God and Christ, but the overall manuscript evidence points clearly in one direction, making the error plain and not plausibly part of the original.

4) Meaningful and Plausible. These are errors that have meaning and that the alternate reading is plausible as a reflection of the original wording. These types of errors account for less than 1% of all textual variants and typically involve a single word or phrase

Is the Bible Reliable?

The reliability of our English translations depends largely upon the quality of the manuscripts they were translated from. The quality depends, in part, on how recent the manuscripts are. Scholars like Bart Ehrman have asserted that we don’t have manuscripts that are early enough. However, the manuscript evidence is quite impressive:

  • There are as many as eighteen second-century manuscripts. If the Gospels were completed between 50-100 A.D., then this means that these early copies are within 100 years. Just last week, NT scholar Dan Wallace announced that a new fragment from the Gospel of Mark was discovered dating back to the first century A.D., placing it well within 50 years of the originals, a first of its kind. When these early manuscripts are all put together, more than 43% of the NT is accounted for from copies no later than the 2nd C. 
  • Manuscripts that date before 400 AD number 99, including one complete New Testament called Codex Sinaiticus. So the gap between the original, inerrant autographs and the earliest manuscripts is pretty slim. This comes into focus when the Bible is compared to other classical works that, in general, are not doubted for their reliability. In this chart of comparison with other ancient literature, you can see that the NT has far more copies than any other work, numbering 5,700 (Greek) in comparison to the 200+ of Suetonius. If we take all manuscripts into account (handwritten prior to printing press), we have 20,000 copies of the NT. There are only 200 copies of the earliest Greek work.
  • This means if we are going to be skeptical about the Bible, then we need to be 1000xs more skeptical about the works of Greco-Roman history. Or put another way, we can be 1000 times more confident about the reliability of the Bible. It is far and away the most reliable ancient document.

So, while there are minor errors in our copies, most of them are easily eliminated through comparison with other copies. Those that are meaningful and plausible account for only less than 1% of the errors. Contrary to popluar assertion, that as time rolls on we get further and further away from the original with each new discovery, we actually get closer and closer to the original text. As Wallace puts it, “an embarrassment of riches when it comes to the biblical documents.” Therefore, we can be confident that what we read in our modern translations of the the ancient texts is approximately 99% accurate reflecting the original wording of the New Testament.

For Further Study (ordered easy to difficult):

Church is Gathering at 6pm on March 11 (SXSW)

On Sunday March 11 we do not want you to come to our regular Sunday morning worship gathering. We think you should sleep in and have a late breakfast. 

Why?

Because "South By Southwest" is coming to town!

Every year  "South By " takes over Austin for 2 weeks bringing together artists, entepreneurs, social media guru's, film makers, and fans from all over the world, and we will be joining the "South By" craze by hosting our own showcase!

Local non-profit Music For The City is presenting Lamar Stockton and the Mourning Doves with special guests Brennen Leigh, Penny and Sparrow, and Little Brave! This free show is at Ballet Austin, starts at 6pm, and the Hat Creek Burger truck will be there serving up one of Austins best burgers!

So on Sunday March 11 sleep in, have a late breakfast, and then bring your friends, neighbors, and co-workers out for a great night of music performed by local artists who are making a difference in our city! 

 

 

CITY GROUP (and SUPER BOWL) SUNDAY!

Join us on Sunday February 5th for CITY GROUP (and SUPER BOWL) SUNDAY!

We will gather at 10am at Ballet Austin for our regular worship service, where we will discuss our 3 core values of Gospel, Community, Mission, and introduce our City Group Leaders to you!

At 5pm we would love for you to join us for one of 3 Super Bowl Parties and get to know some other folks who are a part of Austin City Life!

If you have any questions contact Nate Navarro.

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