THE HILLSBORO CHRISTIAN
VOLUME 63 - JUNE 2023

THE HILLSBORO CHRISTIAN
VOLUME 63 - JUNE 2023
“The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the one and only Son, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.” (John 1:14)
“For the law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ.” (John 1:17)
“With truth, Christ made people aware of their hopeless, sinful condition; with grace He offered forgiveness to all who would come to Him in faith.” (Charles
Swindoll)Everyone needs grace. Everyone needs truth. We find both grace and truth in Jesus Christ.
Throughout the Gospels, we see the grace of Jesus in His interactions with others. Full of grace, He dined with tax collectors and sinners. He loved the unlovable. He touched the untouchable. In Matthew 9:36, we see the compassion that Jesus had for people, seeing that they were harassed and helpless. With grace, He invites all who are hurting and burdened to come to Him: “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light” (Matthew 11:28-30). Jesus was full of grace.
Jesus was also full of truth. In John 8:1-11, we have recorded for us an interaction that Jesus has with a woman who was caught in adultery. She is presented to Jesus by the religious leaders, who were using this situation as a tool to get at Him. With one sentence, Jesus dismantles their attempt to trap Him: “Let any one of you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her” (v.7). After her accusers are gone, she is alone with Jesus. He declares to her, “Then neither do I condemn you. Go now and leave your life of sin” (v.11). Jesus was fully aware of what this woman needed. He did not fail to speak to her the truth about her sin. While at the same time, He treated her with gentleness and respect.
Jesus was full of grace and full of truth. As we interact with people, we must follow the example of our Savior and be people full of grace and truth. Kevin DeYoung writes that “We need to be grace people and truth people. Not half grace and half-truth. Not all grace on Mondays and all truth on Tuesdays. All grace and all truth all the time.” As followers of Christ, let us continually offer grace truthfully and share truth graciously.
The theme for this month’s newsletter is GRACE & TRUTH. In this edition, Adam takes some time to expound upon the balance between grace and truth. Also, Micah shares how grace and truth are expressed in our worship as God’s people. May this newsletter be an encouragement and a blessing to you.
One last thing when it comes to grace and truth. The mission of the Hillsboro Church of Christ is “Building bridges of grace that bear the weight of truth.” Our community, our schools, our families, and our relationships need the grace and truth of Jesus Christ. Will you please pray for our church staff as well as our elders as we seek to continue carrying out this mission?
In Christian love, BradBrad Clouse, a Louisville, Kentucky native, graduated from Louisville Bible College in 2010 with a Master's Degree in Sacred Literature after earning his former degrees at the same university. Brad served at smaller churches in Adair County Kentucky while in college before being called to Ohio in 2009. Brad ministered to the New Vienna Church of Christ congregation for 12 years before being called to the Hillsboro Church of Christ as the Senior Minister.
He is pictured here with his wife, Julie.
(Randy Alcorn)
“For God is not a God of disorder but of peace.” (I Corinthians 14:33)
With biblical grace and biblical truth, we are entering into a new series on Sunday mornings entitled WITHIN THE BOUNDARIES. During this series, we will take the time to see what God’s Word has to say about gender, sexuality, marriage, divorce, and purity. When discussing these issues, we must honor and obey what God’s Word says. Whenever man seeks to operate outside of the boundaries of His Word, there will be chaos, confusion, and brokenness.
May 28: “In His Image” – Genesis 1:26-31
June 4: “United as One” – Genesis 2:18-25
June 11: “Haven’t You Read?” – Matthew 19:1-12
June 18: “Family Matters” – Ephesians 6:1-4
June 25: “Undivided Devotion” – I Corinthians 7:1-40
July 2: “At All Costs” – I Thessalonians 4:1-8
As your minister, I am asking you to spend some time reading these passages of Scripture. Specifically, I ask for your prayers in preparing and preaching these timely messages. While doing so, will you also spend some time praying for our church family as we enter this important sermon series – that our hearts will be open and receptive to what God’s Word has to say? Through this series, may we, as believers, also be encouraged to continue standing firmly upon the holy Word of God.
God bless you all!
Brad“Grace without truth is NOT biblical grace, and truth without grace is NOT biblical truth.”
I tend to be pretty hard on myself mentally. For a long time, I would evaluate almost every interaction I had with people throughout my day. I would wonder how I was perceived or how the person I spoke to understood what I said. I would wonder if I was too harsh or if I needed to say more than I said. Knowing if I said too much or too little can often be a struggle. If I was too harsh or not harsh enough. Too forgiving or not forgiving enough. Now, this type of thinking can lead to some really painful and unhealthy places, but I think it touches on something that every Christian has to navigate, the balance between grace and truth.
In my experience, we are wired to lean in one direction or the other. For some of us, acting and speaking with truth comes very naturally. We probably enjoy being “right” in an argument. We often tell people the truth even if it hurts a little. We may say things like, “I was just being honest.” We all need people in our life whom we can trust to give us the truth even when we don’t want to hear it. The problem is that if the truth is all we focus on, we will often come across as blunt and mean. We tell people the truth regardless of how it will affect them. We are probably not the best people to speak to a friend going through something difficult or struggling with past mistakes.
Others of us are wired to give grace first. We are more concerned about maintaining the relationship than we are about saying what needs to be said. We will often give the people we are in relationships with the benefit of the doubt. We tend to be empathetic and try to understand the deeper factors in someone’s life. When we see something negative in another person, we try our best to understand the why behind their actions. The problem is that if grace is all we focus on, we often don’t say what needs to be said and will allow people to walk all over us. We may be great at comforting someone who is hurting but struggle to confront someone who needs confronting.
The truth is that there are times when we need to bring truth to bear, and there are times when we need to extend grace. Knowing which is required at which time is the hard part. It is so easy to get it wrong. This is one of the reasons that Jesus is such a great role model. John 1:14,16-17 says of Jesus, “And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth…For from his fullness, we have all received grace upon grace. For the law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. No one has ever seen God; the only God, who is at the Father's
side, he has made him known.” What an amazing description of Jesus that he was “full of grace and truth.” Each of us, by default, tends toward either grace or truth. We are strong in one and more deficient in the other; Jesus was full in both. We see this at work throughout Jesus’ ministry. He always seems to know the proper way to respond to each person he encounters. If you were a Pharisee hiding behind your selfrighteousness, Jesus would deliver some very hard truth. If you were Zacchaeus trying to catch a glimpse of him, he would notice you. If you were a scribe trying to trap him with a tough question, Jesus would often refuse to answer or ask you a question of his own. If you were a person in need of healing, he was always able and willing. If you were the woman at the well or the woman caught in adultery, you would get grace and truth in plentiful supply. Jesus was a master at looking at a person and knowing just how much grace and truth that person needed.
We are called to be like Jesus. Which means that if our default setting is truth, we need to extend some extra grace. It means if we are wired to extend grace, we must be willing to give the people we care about some hard truth when the time comes. Grace and truth are difficult to balance, and we must all struggle with this balance as we mature in Christ. Hopefully, we are more like him today than we were yesterday and more like him tomorrow than we are today. As the Holy Spirit works in us, we will become better and display full truth and full grace. Each of us has been given so much truth and so much grace that we should strive to do the same for others. Let’s be like Jesus and walk in grace AND truth.
Grace and Peace, Adam
Adam Steele is originally from western Pennsylvania. When he was eleven his parents moved to West Virginia where he lived through his time in high school. Adam attended Central Christian College of the Bible in Moberly, MO.
While in college he met his lovely wife April. Adam and April have two children Silas and Sadie. Adam has a passion for ministry and for God’s word and has served as Youth and Families Minister at HCC since 2016.
Special offering for Shalom Orphanage raised over $14,350.00
Butler Spring Christian Camp asked us to donate 100 bottles of assorted condiments you went above and beyond by almost doubling that amount you donated 193 bottles
Gifts in memory of Mary Gall and Eleanor Stephens were given by Don & Sue Gall
AREA 937 is collecting peanut butter for the month of June
• Life Line Screening, the nation’s leading provider of preventive health screenings will be at Hillsboro Church of Christ on Wednesday, August 23, 2023 from 9am-4:30pm. Screenings are fast, painless and affordable. We travel around the country, working with thousands of churches, health clubs and community centers in an effort to screen asymptomatic people for stroke and vascular disease. A stroke occurs every 40 seconds and yet up to 80% of strokes can be prevented. Three key tests check for blocked carotid arteries, an irregular heart rhythm called atrial fibrillation, and high blood pressure, which are the three leading risk factors for stroke. Other tests check for abdominal aortic aneurysms and hardening of the arteries in the legs. A bone density screening to assess osteoporosis risk is also offered and is appropriate for both men and women. Other services include blood tests, including cholesterol, glucose and c-reactive protein screenings, as well as take-home colon cancer early detection tests. For more information regarding the screenings or to schedule an appointment, call 1-888-653-6450 or go to https:// llsa.social/HC.
Where: Hillsboro Church of Christ
When: Wednesday, August 23, 2023
ALL TRUSTEES AND ELDERS WERE
"The woman said to him, "Sir, I perceive that you are a prophet. Our fathers worshiped on this mountain, but you say that in Jerusalem is the place where people ought to worship." Jesus said to her, "Woman, believe me, the hour is coming when neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem will you worship the Father. You worship what you do not know; we worship what we know, for salvation is from the Jews. But the hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is seeking such people to worship him. God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth." (John 4:1924, ESV)
This moment comes from the conversation between Jesus and the Samaritan woman at the well. As they wrestle back and forth, and she is repeatedly confronted with the truth, there are some important things that we need to learn about the tension that exists when we properly worship our God.
"You worship what you do not know…" (v19). The Samaritan people believed themselves to be worshiping the God of Abraham. The problem for them began not simply in error over location but in a complete understanding of who God is. It seems, historically, that they worshiped God in the same manner that the surrounding nations would worship their local deities. They viewed him as the god of their land, and as such, he was diminished far below
his rightful place as the creator of all things, high and exalted in heaven. Because they did not understand the magnitude of the one they worshiped, they were effectively worshiping a small, weak, idolatrous representation of the true God. Of this, we must be careful. When we skew our view away from the truth of the person of God, we fall into a deep and idolatrous false worship. Commentator Matthew Henry puts it this way, "Ignorance is so far from being the mother of devotion that it is the murderer of it" (Vol 5, 170).
The Jewish people, in contrast, were in a much better position because they had a true understanding of whom it was they worshiped. But as it stood, Jesus declared that "the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth" (v23). Now Jesus is confronting the next reality. The Jewish people worshiped in truth; they knew whom they worshiped, but not in spirit. The next challenge we must contend with is the reality that we can be so molded and shaped by the tradition that we are contained within that we view worship only through the lens of "proper practice" rather than an expression of gratitude. Worship is our response to God for who he
is and what he has done, through Jesus, all the time reflected by what we say and do–both personally and corporately. If we fall into the trap of believing that worship can only happen through the confines of "proper religious practice," we can fall into the error of worshiping the One True God but not through the lens of the actual act of the salvation of the Son and the regeneration of the Spirit.
We worship because the King of Heaven brought himself down to our plane and shattered the bondage that held us in sin and despair. He freed us at the cost of his own perfect blood. In light of that reality, our spirits should be in constant awe of His glory and grace. Our worship should not be bound by location or practice but should be a continuous outpouring of our existence because of what he has done to set us free, make us whole, and invite us to be His!
Micah Herrick began ministry in 2012 after being commissioned for ministry by his home church, White Oak Christian Church, in Cincinnati, OH. Micah is currently serving HCC as Worship Minister, as well as leading our Evangelism team and coordinating our online presence. He has served in both Youth Ministry and Worship Ministry in Richmond, IN, and Knightstown, IN, before coming back to Ohio to serve in Hillsboro.
He is pictured here with his wife, Rebecca, kids; Rowan, Luci, Kennedy, and Finn, his mother and father; Steve and Valeri Herrick.
Allie Roush made the decision to be immersed into Christ during our 10:30 service on May 7th. The Holy Spirit has been at work in her life for quite a while and we are so excited to see her be able to respond to His prompting. If you see Allie around in the near future, be sure and congratulate her on this life changing decision.
Welcome to the family, Allie!
Allie RoushLooking for a daily connection to scripture? Grab your Bibles, let’s go through the Word!
We’ve created a daily morning devotional that you can find on YouTube, Facebook, or our website.
Brad, Adam, Micah, James, and Dave have worked hard putting this together. Each day one of the guys breaks down a few verses of the text for us to connect with in more understandable chunks. Each one lasts 3-5 minutes long.
What a great way to start your morning! Check it out!
God has been at work in amazing ways at Hillsboro Church of Christ. As evidence of that fact, on May 21st Jaya Reed and Aubree Miller were both immersed into Christ during our second service. Please join us in welcoming them into the family of God.
Congratulations girls, we are all so excited for you both!
G’Day from Jim and Becky from Australia to the members of God’s church in Hillsboro.
It is hard to believe we are more than a quarter of the way through 2023 and into our twentieth year of service to the people of the Oceanic islands of Australia, New Zealand, and Tasmania.
We have been unable to find a suitable meeting location since we had to leave the building we were renting since 2020.
During our annual general business meeting, the vast majority said they preferred gathering in homes. Our attendance has remained strong, and we are filling every seat in the library with overflow into the living room.
Three families have offered their houses as meeting
locations as the church grows. Though Jim and Becky enjoy having the church meet in their home, and the library is the biggest room anyone has for a meeting, it is important to get other people involved.
The Eastern Downs Church of Christ’s giving has increased significantly over the past year. At our annual general meeting, we voted to raise our international mission by giving 15% of our income with the goal of increasing this amount annually. We are supporting a work in Pakistan with these funds. Several members support other mission efforts around the world.
In 2022 the church donated 62% of the offerings to Australian Christian Training Ministries and the Southern Cross Bible Institute. For 2023, the church has added support for the Australian Bible College with what will amount to another 8% of our giving.
On Sundays, Jim has preached through a series on the Seven Churches of Revelation, Philemon, and Ruth thus far in 2023. We have a prayer meeting on Sunday afternoon, followed by our Bible study of the Book of Revelation. The evening group attracts about thirteen and occasionally more.
Youth groups have seen some changes in 2023. We had some graduates who have moved on to university studies. Others have moved from the primary age group to the high school group. Some new kids are coming to the younger age group. As has been the case in the past, half of the attendees are from somewhere other than our congregation.
The Wednesday homeschool student class is going well with seven students. After our study of where we got the Bible and how we can know it is true, we have started a survey series of the New Testament.
A men’s breakfast convenes on Thursday mornings at a local café. Currently, five men attend regularly, but we expect this number to increase. The morning includes a general conversation, a Bible reading, a short discussion, and prayer.
Jim has been invited to speak at the Person-to-Person Family Camp in July. In addition, Jim is looking forward to visiting with his mom. Jim will be accompanied by one of the Eastern Downs Church elders. The five-week trip will be an excellent opportunity for Jim to meet with supporting churches.
If you would like to receive notices about prayer requests, you can do so by texting @hccprayer
to the number 81010. This will add you to the list.
Any prayer requests we send out will come as a text from HCC Prayer Requests.
Health and Other:
Chuck Chaney
Denver Conley
Candy Matthews
Ohio Mission Bible Training Center
Janet Pence
Shalom Orphanage
Don Watson
Sharon Webb
Wayne Wiedenbein
The 25 souls for Christ
Family Loss:
Missions: The Brittons, The Millers, The Newmans
Shut Ins:
Barbara Boris
Jewel Calmes
John Porter
Carol Setty
Cancer:
Jeffery Aurigema
Ken Aurigema
Rob Butler
Kari Crafton
Judy Roush
Mark Sears
HCC Leadership:
Steve Allen
Brad Clouse
Roger Epley
Dan Fauber
Micah Herrick
Mike Labig
Adam Steele
Richard VanZant
Military:
Tyler Amos
Ryan Burns
Mark Conover
Thadeus Conover
Corey Hughes
Alex Klein
Phillip Mycroft
Average attendance for the month of May was 346
Average weekly giving for the month of May $12,626.00
Our weekly need is: $11,229.13
06-04-23
Congregational meeting in between services about the check-in system and safety for HCC kids area
06-04-23
Special offering for Kamp Dovetail
06-04-23
Vacation Bible School - 9:00 am to 11:30 thru
06-09-23
06-11-23
Congregational meeting in between services about the check-in system and safety for HCC kids area
06-11-23
PARENT MEETING RIGHT AFTER SERVICE FOR PARENTS INTERESTED IN DOWNLOADING THE NEW CHURCH CENTER APP FOR THE CHECK IN OF YOUR CHILDREN
06-12-23 CIY “MOVE” for Sr. High youth thru
06-16-23
06-15-23
06-18-23
MISSION Team meeting at 6:30 in the Connection Café
FATHER’S DAY
Baby bottles are due back to the church
06-18-23
KAMP DOVETAIL at Rocky Fork Lake thru
06-24-23
06-22-23
Peanut butter and Jelly sandwiches for Kamp Dovetail everyone welcome to come help. We start at 8:00 am. If you can’t make it that early, please come when you can to help.
06-22-23
MomConnect 5:30-7:00 in the Connection Café