DAVID PHELPS FREEDOM TOUR TULSA, OK MARCH 25TH, 2016

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Multiple Grammy Award Winning Recording Artist,

David Phelps To Be Featured In Tulsa

At The Eastwood Baptist Church On

March 25th, 2016

The unmistakable sound of multi-Dove and Grammy Award-winning recording artist, David Phelps, will be featured in Tulsa, OK, on Friday, March 25, at the Eastwood Baptist Church. This exciting concert event begins at 7:00pm.

Once a childhood musical prodigy from Tomball, TX, David Phelps earned a bachelor’s degree in music from Baylor University. Since then, he has become a nationally celebrated vocalist, whose gifts and talents are matched by none. Perhaps best known as the powerful tenor for the multiple Grammy and Dove Award-winning Gaither Vocal Band, Phelps is constantly building on a career that has already been groundbreaking. Emerging as a leading voice in contemporary Christian music, Phelps has been winning the hearts of audiences all over the world for more than two decades. He has performed at numerous prestigious venues across the globe, including the White House, New York’s Carnegie Hall and the Sydney Opera House in Australia. With 14 solo albums to his credit, David’s electrifying voice has moved audiences from all walks of life,crossing generational and stylistic barriers.

This March 25 event in Tulsa, featuring David Phelps, will also include talented female vocalist, Charlotte Ritchie, as well as Phelps’ seven-piece musical entourage. Many of the songs featured during this exciting evening are included on Phelps’ recently released Freedom recording. Any music lover, regardless of sytlistic preference, will not want to miss this special evening of worship and community celebration. Make plans now to be a part of this special event with David Phelps in Tulsa, OK, at the Eastwood Baptist Church, located at 949 South 91st Avenue.

Complete information may be obtained about this eventby calling 918-836-8686 or visiting www.eastwoodtulsa.org. Ticket information is available by calling 1-800-965-9324 or by visiting www.itickets.com.

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Family Ministry

Family Ministry

The next several months will be an exciting time for the Family Ministry at Eastwood. There are several families that will be heading to Monarch, Colorado on Spring Break for three days of snow skiing. It will be a great week of fun, fellowship and spiritual renewal. Please pray for travel safeties and a great experience for everyone going.

On Sunday, May 22nd, we will be honoring our high school and college graduates in the morning service.

If you know of any graduates who are church members that would like to attend and be honored that morning let me know as soon as possible.

Faith Week will be held on June 12th – 16th at Camp Wow this year.

Camp Wow is located off highway 75, two hours south of Tulsa. We are excited about the new chapter of Faith Week! This year’s speakers are Brandon Friebe and Doug Robbins. The worship will be led by the Jason Ellsworth Band. We are expecting around 500 campers this year. The cost is $200 a student. To check out the facilities of the camp go to campwow.

pharmacy

com. Please put Faith Week on your prayer list. Pray that God moves in the hearts of all those who attend this year.

Eastwood’s Vacation Bible School is June 27th-30th.

We will host multiple locations this year.

There will be a VBS at Eastwood and another VBS at a nearby apartment complex. Please pray that God will bring us many children to VBS so they can hear the word of God.

In July the Eastwood kids will be heading off to Cross Timbers for a week of camp. The dates are July 5th – 8th. If you know of a child that would like to go contact Ms. Lujean for more information.

And lastly, the youth will be going on Choir Tour on July 15th – 22nd. They will be heading back to Van Cleave Mississippi to minister at the Homes of Grace. This will be an amazing week of ministry. So as you can see there are a lot of things going on in the Family Ministry over the next several months. Please be in prayer for all these great events. Thank you for your love and support to me and my family.

Have a great week!

Love, Bro. Doug

Pray Without Ceasing

Pray

The Holy Spirit led Paul to write to the believers in Thessalonica (1 Thessalonians 5:17), saying after “Rejoice always,” “Pray without ceasing.” I’m not any kind of Bible scholar, but I don’t think these statements are suggestions.

They are obviously imperatives—commands.

I can at least vaguely understand how I might be able to rejoice all the time, but pray all the time? Impossible! – At least as I had always understood it. I had a living to make, a house to keep up, and a husband and children to care for. I couldn’t be kneeling down, bowing my head, or whatever requirements there might be to be praying all the time.

Surely preachers and Sunday School teachers had tried to teach me better for years, but I never quite got the message. Until…until, as it so often happens, a circumstance, an occasion or an event comes along to make things clear.

                My daughter died in a vehicle accident. I was devastated and I cried out,

“My child, my daughter, my first-born, my, my, my!”

God spoke to me, not just a feeling inside, but translated to me in words inaudible to anyone else, “What’s this my business? I let you in on the fun of placing this little person on earth, but she never belonged to you. She was mine from the beginning because I was her creator and then she was mine multiplied over when she accepted my son Jesus as her Savior and Lord.

You had a great 33-year loan but I didn’t have to ask your permission to bring her home to me.”

His words were stern but not harsh. He was taking part in the dialogue of prayer.

Dialogue? Yes! Without intention or even recognizing what I was doing, I had engaged in true prayer.

His words were stern but not harsh

That prayer is a dialogue rather than some kind of monologue from me was the first lesson I learned. The second was perhaps even more wonderful. Prayer needn’t be an event with boundaries of time or place, but more of a state of being. It should be an ongoing, unceasing state of communication. At any moment I can reach out to my Dearest Abba Father and whisper, “I love you,” “I need you, please help me,” “I can’t understand this, would you please instruct your Holy Spirit inside me to teach me,” and most powerfully, “I don’t know how to pray right now. Please let your Holy Spirit know my heart and speak for me.

I guess these things are from my side again but with an open door for God to speak to me, sometimes in answers to what I have said, but often without my beginning any dialogue. Perhaps I can be looking in a mirror, frowning at what seems to be an obvious flaw or sign of aging to me, and I hear His gentle voice saying, “You are just as I made you and I love you just the way you are.” To my best-intentioned but still mid-excellent singing, “Trust me, one day you’ll do better up here.” At some time when I’ve really tried to do something which has been unnoticed by all the humans around me, simple words of encouragement: “Good job!” At a season of personal despair: “I cherish you.”

“I cherish you.”

Sometimes I forget the prayer lessons I’ve learned an unwittingly go back to those earlier misguided days, but it only takes a moment for His gentle reminder that our prayer time together is real and unceasing.

Do I pray for God’s guidance? Of course, I do, and sometimes I even do so in the same way I formerly thought was the only way to pray—a set-aside time either early in the morning or the last thing at night looking forward to the next day—asking His direction and blessing on that time to come.

I’m not trying to disparage this kind of action, but even asking for direction, I find that I now am more likely to follow the immediate and constant contact that has been given to me.

Whenever big decisions or events are imminent, I say, “Go before me, Lord, I always want to be following you. Open doors, but just as importantly, close doors before me. I would even prefer that you slam them to make your will clear to me. Help me remember that I want to follow only your will. That I would not be led off in trying to follow my own when I know that is hardly wise.”

Sometimes this prayer for guidance can even be for something simple or minor, yet remembering that the Father wants to hear about the little things of my life, too. My husband thinks my prayers can be kind of silly, but God and I don’t think so. “Lord, I just lost one of the lovely blue earrings that I’m so fond of.

If it’s your will, please lead me to it.” However much some bystanders might scoff, the number of times He has graciously answered such prayers is astounding.

Sometimes this prayer for guidance can even be for something simple or minor, yet remembering that the Father wants to hear about the little things of my life, too.

Praying without ceasing covers all areas of communication with God: guidance, protection, healing, provision, deliverance and intervention. Yet guidance actually covers them all and I have been so gifted to have this privilege of communication with the master and creator of the universe, my Dearest Abba Father.

-By Trudy Graham