A real blooper appeared in...
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A real blooper appeared in a church bulletin involving the title of the Easter sermon. The staff of this particular church planned out their worship services several months in advance. They would write everything about the service on a worship-planning chart that included sermon titles, scripture passages, and hymns. The office staff would then use this chart to prepare the weekly bulletin.
Not long after Christmas, the pastor began thinking about the upcoming Easter season and what topic he would preach on for Easter Day. It was still too close to Christmas to shift his thinking, and -- try as he might -- he just couldn't get his mind in gear to think about Easter. Finally, he gave up. He simply wrote into the appropriate box on the chart, "I don't know yet."
Well, you can probably figure out what happened. On Easter Sunday, the ushers were handing out bulletins with the following sermon title: "I Don't Know Yet." Here in 2 Corinthians, Paul makes it clear that there's no place in Christian proclamation for equivocating. God's answer to us is never "Yes and No," but always "Yes."
Not long after Christmas, the pastor began thinking about the upcoming Easter season and what topic he would preach on for Easter Day. It was still too close to Christmas to shift his thinking, and -- try as he might -- he just couldn't get his mind in gear to think about Easter. Finally, he gave up. He simply wrote into the appropriate box on the chart, "I don't know yet."
Well, you can probably figure out what happened. On Easter Sunday, the ushers were handing out bulletins with the following sermon title: "I Don't Know Yet." Here in 2 Corinthians, Paul makes it clear that there's no place in Christian proclamation for equivocating. God's answer to us is never "Yes and No," but always "Yes."
