Letter to the SBC Family from Pastor John

Dear SBC Church Family:

Greetings in the name of our Savior and Lord Jesus Christ! I certainly pray you are doing well and that God is blessing you and keeping you safe in these days. Please continue to pray for our nation in these challenging and uncertain times. As we have shared in our recent services, and I have mentioned in our email updates, this is a time when we must pray for and work for racial unity and reconciliation, pray for peace and unity of our nation, speak with grace and love as the people of Jesus, and pray for our law enforcement and first responders as they deal with multiple issues and situations. Meanwhile, we must continue praying for all those impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

I would like to share that we plan to have our “Re-Gathering Worship Service” in our church building and sanctuary on Sunday morning, June 28, 11:00 a.m. We will not have Sunday School-Small Groups or other services and activities for the near future. We are not speaking of reopening because the church has not closed! The church, that is the Body of Christ, has been open and highly active since mid-March. Only the church building has been closed. So, we will be Re-Gathering to worship.

We have had a Re-Gathering Team working to develop a plan that has been approved by our insurance carrier and approved by a group of around 15 church leaders (consisting of deacons, trustees, safety and security team, and administrative team members). Bro. Daron Vaughn will be coordinating the overall plan implementation and helping everyone follow the plan as closely as we can for the foreseeable future – because at this point, we do not know how long this will have to be followed. As most other churches and organizations, our plan is based on following the guidelines and recommendations of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Kentucky Department of Public Health, Lake Cumberland District Health, Taylor County Emergency Services, etc.

Beginning Sunday, June 28, here are the major things that we will be asking people to follow:

If a person is sick, at risk of becoming sick, or concerned about attending services at the beginning, you are encouraged to exercise caution before returning to worship. This is particularly true for those who are in higher risk categories.

Signs will be posted that remind people to remain six feet apart, to discourage anyone from attending who may be displaying symptoms of COVID-19 from entering the building, reminding people to use basic hand washing for 20 seconds or use of hand sanitizer, coughing into a tissue and disposing of the tissue into a waste basket.

Anyone who is running a temperature of 100 degrees Fahrenheit or higher is asked to stay at home. You are encouraged to take your temperature before coming to church. One of the ushers will have a digital thermometer (one that reads temperatures from the forehead and does not touch the skin) to take temperatures of anyone who would like to have theirs taken. Should a person have a temperature of 100 degrees or more, that person would be asked to go home.

Due to the way that COVID-19 is transmitted and the belief by health professionals that asymptomatic carriers of the virus are transmitters of the disease, we will refrain from some of our traditional practices for the foreseeable future – no handshaking, no hugging, no kissing, etc. Disposable masks will be provided at no cost to those who do not have masks.

The wearing of masks is a recommended practice by CDC and state and local health authorities, but this will be up to each person’s individual discretion. The science behind the wearing of masks is to primarily protect others from becoming infected should you be asymptomatic with COVID-19. The usher who is taking temperatures will also distribute masks to any who would like to wear one.

We will not be serving coffee, food, etc. during this period.

Greeters/ushers will be stationed at the side foyer entrance prior to the beginning of the service. The side door will be propped open. In the foyer, the offer for masks and taking of temperatures will be made. Ushers will wear masks and gloves.

An usher will accompany each family or individual to a seat in the sanctuary. Families/individuals will be seated in such a manner so that social distancing of six feet in all directions is maintained.

Bro. Daron Vaughn will work, as needed, with the usher seating the family/individual so that the social distancing is maintained.

People will be asked to remain in their seats during the service. Members and guests are encouraged to cooperate and follow the usher to the sanctuary to be seated. Stopping to visit and talk in the foyer, during this period, is discouraged in order to keep the flow of people moving and to maintain the social distancing of six feet.

Hand sanitation stations will be placed in the foyer entrance and at the “front door” area by the bathroom. People are encouraged to utilize the hand sanitation stations while entering and existing.

To avoid the handling of paper, there will be no printed bulletins, prayer lists, monthly calendars, etc. for now.

The order of worship, responsive readings, words of hymns, scripture readings, announcements, etc. will be displayed on the screen during worship services, and I will continue to send out regular emails and texts to keep the church family and friends updated.

The hymnals and Bibles have been removed from the pews for now. This is as recommended by the CDC. Why? The same principle applies to these items as to the bulletins, prayer lists, etc. The point is to further prevent the spread of COVID-19. You can certainly use your personal Bible – and, again, the words of the scripture, songs, etc. will be displayed on the screen.

At the end of the service, ushers will come to the midpoint of the sanctuary and proceed to dismiss the back half through the front door and the other half through the foyer area. The ushers will dismiss people so that social distancing is maintained while exiting. Just as with the foyer door when people are entering, both doors will be propped or held open for those exiting at the end of the service.

The upstairs bathroom will be available for use if needed. No more than one person should enter the bathroom at a time. Bathroom use should be minimized to the extent possible. The bathroom will be disinfected after each use by a member of the Re-Gathering Team after each use. The cleaning person will wear a mask and gloves.

The basement and Fellowship Hall areas will be closed during this period.

The water fountain in the bathroom will be turned off and covered.

No childcare and nursery will be provided.

The church has purchased a new iPad Pro 4th Edition and a tripod. It is our plan, at this point, to live-stream the sermon portion of the service on Facebook Live. Additional information will be forthcoming on this – it will enable those who are at home, plus those who have been joining us during this interim period out of town, to still follow us and participate in our worship. These sermons can be archived as well. I plan on still doing a weekly video to be posted on Facebook and the website as well. These two steps will be a significant step in increasing our presence in the virtual world of worship and ministry. Members of our Re-Gathering Team will be helping with this as well.

With a decision made this past week by the state, we will be able to have occupancy in the sanctuary up to 50% of our seating capacity. Prior to this decision, churches were being limited to 33% of capacity. The 33% rule presented a definite challenge for us. Why are we undergoing these measures as we re-gather for in-person worship on June 28? Because we care about one another – because we care about and love the most vulnerable among us – because COVID-19 is a real threat to the health and safety of people and it has not gone away – because God gave us the Great Commandment where He said we are to love Him “with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength…” and “we are love our neighbors as ourselves…” And because he taught us in Matthew 25 to care about the “least of these our brothers and sisters” and that as we do “unto them, we have done unto Him…” There are several documented instances in Kentucky, and around the country, where there have been COVID-19 hotspot outbreaks because of churches gathering and not following the recommended best practices and health standards.

Pray for us as we prepare for our Re-Gathering of Saloma Baptist Church on Sunday, June 28. I look forward to seeing many of you for the first time – face-to-face – since the second Sunday of March. Saloma Baptist Church has maintained a strong and ever-present witness during this pandemic – I am thankful for all that is being done, and I pray that we will move forward stronger and more committed than ever before. Please contact me anytime that you have any questions, or as we may be of assistance. The most direct ways to contact me are to call or text me on my mobile phone at 270-403-3610, or email me at jechowning@windstream.net. May God bless you and keep you in these incredibly challenging days.

In Christ,

John E. Chowning, Pastor

Pastor’s Blog for May-June 2020

For the past two months, we have been contending with the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. Not since the so-called Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918-1919 has there been a global health threat of such major consequence and impact. Our 21st century lives have been turned upside down in short order, and we have gone from a late February and early March of relative calm and economic stability to an early May of pandemic, healthy at home/shelter in place, economic earthquake, record levels of unemployment, and great uncertainty in all sectors of our community, state, and nation.

The COVID-19 pandemic has been no respecter of any sector of our lives, including invading the comfort and regularity of our worship and church life. We have gone from the comfort and regularity of every Sunday morning Bible study and worship in our sanctuary, Sunday evening Bible study, and Wednesday evening Bible study and prayer, as well as periodic fellowship and outreach ministries, to a “new normal” of virtual worship via Zoom and communication by Flocknote text messaging and email, weekly video devotionals by Facebook and website, and a deep desire for a return to normalcy. We have had to learn to communicate and be a church in new ways in a very short period of time.

There is a unprecedented uncertainty, at least for my generation and for those who are younger, about the future and what comes next. People are genuinely concerned about how long the pandemic will last, what the long-term health impacts will be, whether there will be a late fall or early winter reoccurrence at pandemic levels, when a vaccine will be available, what type of treatments will be available in the near future to increase the chances of recovery for the more critically ill, if COVID-19 will emerge like the flu and become a seasonal illness with an eventual annual vaccine required, etc.

Similarly, there are the questions that come to mind with regard to the economy. When will businesses be able to open again, and what restrictions will be required for those businesses to reopen? How long will it take for the economy to recover and return to some level of full production? When will those who have lost their jobs be able to go back to work? And on goes the list of unanswered questions regarding the socioeconomic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Our Christian faith is impacted as well. As already stated, we have not been able to worship face-to-face for several weeks as this blog is written. We are uncertain as to when we will be able to return to our sanctuaries and houses of worship. Like businesses, schools, hospitals, and other institutions, churches will most likely have to undergo mitigation measures even after returning to our buildings – possible restrictions on numbers of people per service/gathering, face masks and social distancing possibly required, commercial/industrial grade cleaning measures utilized, hand sanitizing stations, etc.

There has been some evidence that increased numbers of people have watched/participated in worship services during the pandemic due to the increased number of virtual and online broadcast services. Will there be increased attendance after we return to our houses of worship? Will there be lasting and positive spiritual impacts resulting from the pandemic? Are we on the brink of another Great Awakening? Are we experiencing the beginning of a great revival in this country and around the world? These are unanswered questions that only God can now know – and only we can answer in the long run by our responses and our willingness to allow God to use this pandemic experience to renew His people and to move us to greater heights of witness, ministry, service, and missions. 

Will we respond in this time and turn to Him with humble hearts, allow Him to use us in this time and in the days ahead, be moved to minister to “the lost and the least” in His name, work to build bridges across lines of race and ethnicity, and to carry out the Great Commission in the spirit of the Great Commandment?

 

Pastor’s Blog for March - April 2020

The months of March and April are an exciting time of year as we experience the end of winter, the coming of spring, and the eternally true message of the Crucifixion and Resurrection of Jesus Christ. A favorite season of mine, spring brings a renewal of the beauty of God’s creation as we witness the emerging flowers, trees budding and bursting into leaves, and within six to eight weeks, the landscape will be a bright array of green. Some of the most beautiful days of the year will be witnessed during April with the unfolding of the splendor of God’s bountiful creation. Be sure you take some time to break away from the day-to-day grind of life and enjoy the handiwork of God that is most evident during the spring season of the year.

It is also a time to prayerful contemplate and study the last days of the earthly life of Jesus as he moved toward the culminating events of leading to his passion and crucifixion. He was fully aware of what was to come, and at any point, he could have chosen to remove himself from the course of events that clearly led to his death on “the old rugged cross” at Calvary. But Jesus remained faithful to the course that the Father had set for him. And more than 2,000 years later, we are people of the Cross and Resurrection because of his faithfulness and willingness to give his life sacrificially on the cross for the redemption of my sins – and your sins – and the sins of all people – without regard to race, color, ethnicity, or any other classification. 

He died for all – and he arose on the third day for all – the tomb was empty on Sunday morning! Over the course of 40 days following the resurrection and leading up to his ascension into heaven, the resurrected Jesus made several appearances to his disciples and to others. We are people of the Cross and Resurrection – and we are people empowered by the presence of Jesus in our lives through the indwelling of the Holy Spirit – the presence of Jesus/God in our lives today and until Jesus returns some day for his church or until we are called home to be with the Lord.

To my friends in the church, this is something to be excited about. This is something to celebrate. This is something to shout to the world. This is something to share with a world that is in desperate need of the Good News of Jesus Christ. Will we be faithful in working to reach the “lost and the least” in the name of the Resurrected Jesus? Will we live as people of the Cross and the Resurrection? Will be live as Christians are called to do – to follow the Great Commandment – to love God with all our “heart, soul, mind, and strength” and to “love our neighbors as ourselves?’

What an exciting message we have to share to the world!

Pastor’s Blog for January – February 2020 – Pastor John E. Chowning

We have begun a new year and a new decade as of January 1, 2020. In many ways, it seems that we live in pivotal days with dramatic changes underway and change occurring at an unprecedented pace. If we focus too much attention on the news of the day, we can easily become anxious and unnerved about what lies ahead in the course of world events and human history. There are certainly many troubling trends that we witness in our culture today, and it is easy to become preoccupied and overly involved with what is the latest headline.

While we are certainly to be in the world and aware of what is going on around us, we as Christians are to not be “of the world.” Our ultimate loyalties do not lie with earthly powers and ties, but rather with the King of Kings and Lord of Lords. We belong to One who is eternal and everlasting – not just temporal and passing. There is but one constant in this world – and that is the love of God and His grace as manifested in Jesus Christ. It is in Jesus Christ that we are given eternal and abundant life and through which we persist and persevere in this life and move to our eternal award in heaven. And we are to be about His work in the here and now – serving and ministering to the “lost and the least” in the name of Jesus Christ, sharing the Good News with all people, and building bridges rather than barriers in the name of Jesus.

With a new year and a new decade, we have the opportunity to impact our community and world for Jesus Christ. That is our call – that is our charge – that is our mission. Join us in 2020 in pursuing that calling and making that commitment.