


“And hope maketh not ashamed; because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us.” Romans 5:5, KJV
It’s hard to believe it’s been five years, and for many good reasons. When I tell my story of how I arrived at Community, I share there are various points of measuring time one could use. One could use when I united with this body as a seminarian in 2014. Another could use when I joined the staff in 2015. Still one could use when I was elected interim pastor in 2016, elected senior pastor in 2017, or installed in 2018 (the point we use to mark this anniversary). However, as the pandemic has demonstrated for us, time is not always linear, and as the experience of the children of Israel wandering in the wilderness exemplifies, God sometimes leads us in a “roundabout way” (Exodus 13:18).
One could say these past five years have been similar. Who would have thought on Installation Sunday 2018, less than two years later, and then for almost another two years thence, we would not be able to sit shoulder-to-shoulder as we did that day, much less be in the presence of any assembly due to rightfully taken COVID-19 precautions? To be sure, much has changed these last five years, maybe at a more rapid pace of which many of us are not accustomed and do not prefer. It has seemed like at many points, everything that could go wrong, went wrong from elections, to policies, to mass shootings, to pandemics, to social distancing, to re-opening, and so on. We have suffered much loss, collectively and individually. Our sense of normalcy, along with so many other things I do not have space to mention, have been taken from us. Yet, one thing remains and can never be taken from us, and that is our hope (see Romans 5:5 above).
This hope that we have is the same hope that has propelled our church for nearly 78 years, and it is this hope that will continue to promote us for eternity. In these last five years, our hope did not make us ashamed when we began Community Groups, a virtual ministry, and then a hybrid ministry. Our hope did not make us ashamed when we became a clinic for our community. Our hope did not make us ashamed when we partnered with Lincoln-Bassett Community School to provide for students and families in need. Our hope did not make us ashamed when we passed historic landmark legislation with CONECT. Our hope did not make us ashamed when we began a capital campaign to strengthen the house of God. Our hope did not make us ashamed when we continued to fulfill Christ’s Matthean mandates to feed, to take in, to clothe, to visit, to go, to make disciples, to baptize, and to teach (Matthew 25, 28).
Looking back on five years, today, I do not see the same church or the same pastor, but I still see that same hope and, because of that same hope, I believe and declare it doth not yet appear what we shall be as pastor and people (I John 3:2)! Let’s keep hope alive as we continue to Worship the Christ, Equip the Church, and Serve our Community.
Rev. Dr. Daniel Corrie Shull is the Senior Pastor of the Burnett Avenue Baptist Church in Louisville, Kentucky a congregation committed to creating compelling environments in which people are developed into totally committed Disciples of Christ. Under his leadership, the congregation has experienced tremendous growth through the addition of hundreds of families into church membership, creating relevant ministries, implementing TwentyFirst century technology and embracing new and dynamic ways of engaging ministry for the purposes of life transformation.
In 2013, Rev. Shull led the Burnett Avenue congregation to purchase and renovate a new church campus which currently facilitates four weekend worship services and a myriad of church and community activities. In addition to preaching four times per weekend and providing leadership to a thriving congregation, Pastor Shull serves on a number of Boards for community organizations and institutions of higher education, mentors youth and is the author of a new book, Detours to Greatness. A proponent of education, Rev. Shull holds degrees from Fisk University, Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary, and Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School.
In 2019, he was elected to the Board of Education for Jefferson County Public Schools, representing the 6th district. His tireless advocacy for racial and economic justice in public education has earned the support of Jefferson County teachers for his work to provide a safe and welcoming learning environment, equitable access to resources, as well as his support for a strong voice for parents in their children’s education.
He is the proud father of Daniel Harrison and Zoe Elizabeth.
Worship is subject to the discretion, direction, and disruption of the Holy Spirit
COUNTDOWN TO WORSHIP & VIDEO ANNOUNCEMENTS
PROCESSIONAL
CALL TO WORSHIP
DEA. GLORIA JOHNSON
INVOCATION MIN. QADRY HARRIS
PRAISE & WORSHIP
ALTAR PRAYER
HYMN
DEA. WILLIAM AYRES
CHAIR, DIACONATE MINISTRY
WELCOME
INTRODUCTION OF GUEST PREACHER
SIS. KATRINA RICE
TREASURER, FINANCE MINISTRY
SIS. CAROLYN BAKER
MINISTRY OF MUSIC MASS CHOIR
PROCLAMATION OF THE GOSPEL
REV. DR. DANIEL CORRIE SHULL
SENIOR PASTOR, BURNETT AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH, LOUISVILLE, KY
INVITATION TO CHRISTIAN DISCIPLESHIP
WORSHIP THROUGH GENEROSITY
PRESENTATION OF GIFTS
PASTORAL REFLECTIONS
REV. DR. SHULL
BRO. BERNIE FORD
VICE- CHAIR, TRUSTEE MINISTRY
PASTOR ANDAL
DOXOLOGY & BENEDICTION
Worship the Christ. Equip the Church. Serve our Community.
A connected, caring, and committed Christ-centered Community.
Prayer is the work of the church and the disciple. Prayer always precedes God’s movement among people.
We were created to worship God. We value regular corporate worship.
God was so generous to give us His Son. We are give our entire lives because of Him.
As Christ served His disciples, we serve each other and we welcome all.
God’s story is still unfolding around us. We want to be a part.