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		<title>First Southern Baptist Church | Pomeroy, OH</title>
		<description>irst Southern Baptist Pomeroy is a Bible-preaching, family-friendly church in Pomeroy, OH. Join our small-town church family as we know Jesus, grow together, and live sent.</description>
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			<title>The Pursuit of Joy Is Not Optional </title>
						<description><![CDATA[Christian joy is not emotional decoration. It is obedience, warfare, witness, and worship.
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			<link>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/05/14/the-pursuit-of-joy-is-not-optional</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 14 May 2026 20:28:43 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/05/14/the-pursuit-of-joy-is-not-optional</guid>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<section class="sp-section sp-scheme-0" data-index="2" data-scheme="0"><div class="sp-section-slide"  data-label="Main" ><div class="sp-section-content" ><div class="sp-grid sp-col sp-col-24"><div class="sp-block sp-image-block " data-type="image" data-id="0" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><div class="sp-image-holder" style="background-image:url(https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/24339319_1280x720_500.png);"  data-source="9XNXQV/assets/images/24339319_1280x720_2500.png" data-fill="true"><img src="https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/24339319_1280x720_500.png" class="fill" alt="" /><div class="sp-image-title"></div><div class="sp-image-caption"></div></div></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="1" style="text-align:left;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style="">Listen On <a href="https://youtu.be/8tj451IVoRI?si=2JybMXWtE7DR6Zzo" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank"><b>YouTube</b></a> or <a href="https://open.spotify.com/episode/4qLcjzReAXiPHDUqQIfPvL?si=HDc01CAJSOybbnfJ6uJ9MQ" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank"><b>Spotify&nbsp;</b></a><br><br>There is a kind of joy that cannot survive a bad Tuesday.<br><br>It lives on convenience. It needs the schedule to behave, the bank account to cooperate, the body to feel strong, the people around us to affirm us, and the future to look manageable. It is real as far as it goes, but it does not go very far.<br><br>Then there is another kind of joy.<br><br>A joy that can sing in prison.<br><br>A joy that can endure loss.<br><br>A joy that can sit beside a hospital bed and say through tears, “The Lord is near.”<br><br>A joy that does not deny pain but defies despair.<br><br>That is the joy Scripture commands.<br><br>And yes, commands.<br><br>That is where many of us stumble. We tend to think of joy as something that happens to us, not something God commands from us. We think holiness is required. Obedience is required. Serving is required. Prayer is required. But joy? Joy feels optional. Joy feels like a bonus for people with naturally cheerful temperaments.<br><br>But the Bible does not treat joy that way.<br><br>“Delight yourself in the Lord.”<br><br>“Rejoice in the Lord always.”<br><br>“Serve the Lord with gladness.”<br><br>“The joy of the Lord is your strength.”<br><br>These are not decorative sentences. They are not stitched on pillows to make our lives feel softer. They are commands from God to His people.<br><br>Christian joy is not optional because God is not optional.<br><br><b>Joy Is Obedience</b><br><br>At first, it may sound strange to say joy is obedience. How can God command a feeling?<br><br>But Scripture commands the heart all the time.<br><br>God commands love. He commands hope. He commands fear. He commands gratitude. He commands trust. He commands worship.<br><br>God is not merely after external compliance. He is not satisfied with hands that serve while hearts remain cold. He wants the whole person. He wants worship.<br><br>Imagine a husband brings flowers to his wife on their anniversary. She smiles and says, “Thank you.” He replies, “Don’t mention it. It was my duty.”<br><br>Something is wrong. The action may be correct, but the affection is absent.<br><br>Now imagine he says, “I brought these because I love you, and it brings me joy to honor you.”<br><br>Same flowers. Very different meaning.<br><br>God is not honored most deeply by begrudging obedience. He is honored when obedience says, “You are better than sin. You are better than comfort. You are better than applause. You are better than life itself.”<br><br>Joy tells the truth about God.<br><br>When we rejoice in Him, we declare that He is satisfying, beautiful, and enough. When we make peace with spiritual dullness, when we nurse bitterness, or when we live as though God is merely useful but not delightful, we are saying something too.<br><br>We are saying He may be true, but He is not treasure.<br><br>That is why joy matters.<br><br><b>Joy Is Warfare</b><br><br>The enemy does not have to make every Christian an atheist. Sometimes he only needs to make us bored with God.<br><br>He does not have to convince us Jesus is false. Sometimes he only needs to convince us Jesus is less exciting than our distractions.<br><br>Every sin makes a promise. It promises relief, pleasure, control, affirmation, revenge, escape, comfort, or freedom. But sin always lies about joy.<br><br>When we sin, we are not merely breaking a rule. We are believing a false promise about satisfaction.<br><br>We are saying, “This will satisfy me more than God.”<br><br>That means the fight against sin is not merely the fight to stop doing bad things. It is the fight to desire better things. It is the fight to believe that God is better.<br><br>You cannot merely say no to darkness. You must turn on the light.<br><br>You cannot merely say no to lust. You must see Christ as more beautiful.<br><br>You cannot merely say no to greed. You must see the Father as more generous.<br><br>You cannot merely say no to bitterness. You must see the cross as more satisfying than revenge.<br><br>The soul will not be freed from cheap joy until it is captured by greater joy.<br><br>Psalm 16:11 says, “In your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore.”<br><br>Fullness of joy.<br><br>Pleasures forevermore.<br><br>Christianity is not the rejection of pleasure. It is the rejection of tiny, poisonous pleasures because we have found eternal pleasure in God.<br><br><b>Joy Is Witness</b><br><br>A joyless church makes Christianity look false even when its doctrine is technically true.<br><br>That does not mean truth is secondary. Doctrine matters. Conviction matters. Faithfulness matters. But when people who claim to know the God of glory live irritated, fearful, bored, and sour lives, the watching world has reason to ask, “Is your God really as good as you say?”<br><br>The world has seen religious duty.<br><br>It has seen moral performance.<br><br>It has seen outrage wearing Christian language.<br><br>It has seen people who are loud about being right but thin on being radiant.<br><br>What the world needs is not fake happiness. It needs blood-bought joy.<br><br>It needs to see Christians who grieve differently.<br><br>Christians who suffer differently.<br><br>Christians who forgive deeply.<br><br>Christians who repent quickly.<br><br>Christians who give generously.<br><br>Christians who are holy without being harsh and joyful without being shallow.<br><br>When Paul and Silas sang hymns in prison, the other prisoners were listening.<br><br>That sentence matters.<br><br>People are listening to your suffering.<br><br>Your children are listening to your stress.<br><br>Your coworkers are listening to your disappointment.<br><br>Your neighbors are listening to your grief.<br><br>Christian joy shines not because life is easy, but because Christ is precious even when life is hard.<br><br><b>Joy Is Worship</b><br><br>This is the center: joy is worship.<br><br>God is not glorified when we use Him as a means to something greater. He is glorified when He is seen and treasured as the greatest good.<br><br>Many of us want God as assistant, not treasure.<br><br>We want Him to fix the marriage, grow the business, calm the anxiety, heal the body, restore the child, bless the plan, and open the door.<br><br>And God is kind. He does help. He does heal. He does provide. He does restore.<br><br>But Christianity is not using God to get the life we always wanted.<br><br>Christianity is getting God, even if life does not go the way we wanted.<br><br>That is the great dividing line.<br><br>Can we say with Habakkuk, “Though the fig tree should not blossom… yet I will rejoice in the Lord”?<br><br>Though the diagnosis comes.<br><br>Though the business fails.<br><br>Though the relationship ends.<br><br>Though the door closes.<br><br>Though the prayer seems unanswered.<br><br>Yet I will rejoice in the Lord.<br><br>Not in the pain. In the Lord.<br><br>Christian joy does not call evil good. It calls God good in the presence of evil.<br><br><b>How Do We Pursue This Joy?</b><br><br>Start here: behold God before you inspect yourself.<br><br>Many of us begin the day by checking our emotional temperature. How do I feel? Am I anxious? Am I motivated? Am I tired? Am I discouraged?<br><br>There is a place for self-examination. But if you begin every day staring into the mirror of self, you may sink before you stand.<br><br>Begin with God.<br><br>Before you analyze your weakness, behold His strength.<br><br>Before you rehearse your failure, behold His mercy.<br><br>Before you measure your circumstances, behold His sovereignty.<br><br>Then confess lesser joys. Do not only confess obvious sins. Confess the false treasures beneath them.<br><br>“Lord, I ran to comfort because I did not believe You were enough.”<br><br>“Lord, I craved applause because I forgot I am accepted in Christ.”<br><br>“Lord, I envied because I doubted Your goodness to me.”<br><br>And preach to your soul. Do not only listen to your emotions. Speak truth to them.<br><br>Soul, hope in God.<br><br>Soul, bless the Lord.<br><br>Soul, remember His benefits.<br><br>Soul, this sorrow is real, but it is not final.<br><br>Build rhythms of delight. Read Scripture not first to find a task, but to see a Person. Pray honestly. Sing when you do not feel like singing. Walk outside and remember you are not holding the universe together.<br><br>And sometimes, obey your way into joy.<br><br>You may not feel like forgiving. Begin forgiving.<br><br>You may not feel like praying. Begin praying.<br><br>You may not feel like worshiping. Begin worshiping.<br><br>That is not hypocrisy. Hypocrisy is pretending to be what you have no desire to become. Faithfulness is moving toward God even when your emotions are limping behind you.<br><br><b>The Invitation To You</b><br><br>Rejoice in the Lord.<br><br>Not because your life is easy.<br><br>Not because your emotions are simple.<br><br>Not because every prayer has been answered the way you hoped.<br><br>Rejoice because Christ is enough.<br><br>Rejoice because your sins are forgiven.<br><br>Rejoice because death is defeated.<br><br>Rejoice because your name is written in heaven.<br><br>Rejoice because the Father is near, the Spirit helps, the Son intercedes, and glory is coming.<br><br>And when you cannot rejoice loudly, rejoice weakly.<br><br>When you cannot sing with strength, whisper truth.<br><br>When you cannot feel fullness, turn your face toward the fountain.<br><br>The pursuit of joy is not optional because God is not optional. He is the fountain. He is the feast. He is the treasure. He is the reward.<br><br><b>Listen to the full episode of Truth in Pursuit wherever you get your podcasts.</b></div></div></div></div></div></section>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>The Theology of Work, Part 2 The Logic of Providence</title>
						<description><![CDATA[Leadership in the valley often feels like a high-wire act without a net. Whether you are managing a team or a caseload, we often default to a brittle, self-reliant fortitude. In this installment, we explore the intellectual framework of Divine Providence. Drawing from Joel Beeke’s Systematic Theology and the ESV Expository Commentary, we move from the fragility of the "Lonesome Leader" to the security of the "Providentially-Placed" Steward. Your responsibility is faithfulness; God’s responsibility is outcomes.]]></description>
			<link>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/05/07/the-theology-of-work-part-2-the-logic-of-providence</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 07 May 2026 12:59:39 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/05/07/the-theology-of-work-part-2-the-logic-of-providence</guid>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<section class="sp-section sp-scheme-0" data-index="2" data-scheme="0"><div class="sp-section-slide"  data-label="Main" ><div class="sp-section-content" ><div class="sp-grid sp-col sp-col-24"><div class="sp-block sp-image-block " data-type="image" data-id="0" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><div class="sp-image-holder" style="background-image:url(https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/24254923_2784x1504_500.png);"  data-source="9XNXQV/assets/images/24254923_2784x1504_2500.png" data-fill="true"><img src="https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/24254923_2784x1504_500.png" class="fill" alt="" /><div class="sp-image-title"></div><div class="sp-image-caption"></div></div></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="1" style=""><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><b>Leading Others When You Feel Unsupported</b><br><br>Leadership in the professional world often feels like a high-wire act performed without a net. You are expected to be the source of vision, the arbiter of conflict, and the pillar of stability. When the system fails or the support evaporates, we often default to a frantic, self-reliant fortitude.<br><br>But fortitude built on self is a brittle shield. What you need is not more “grit,” but a deeper “Grip”—that is to say the grip of Divine Providence.<br><br><b>The Inadequacy of Man: The Myth of the “Lonesome Leader”</b><br><br>The world tells you that “it’s lonely at the top.” This is a half-truth that leads to burnout. It is only lonely at the top if you believe you are the one holding the mountain together. When you feel unsupported by your superiors, your board, or your peers, you begin to operate out of a “scarcity mindset.” You stop leading out of a desire for excellence and start leading out of a fear of exposure.<br><br>You feel like an imposter because you are trying to exert a level of control that no human being was ever designed to possess.<br><br><b>The Sovereignty of God: The Intellectual Framework of Providence</b><br><br>In his Systematic Theology, Joel Beeke defines Providence as “that continued exercise of the divine energy... whereby the Creator preserves all His creatures... and directs them to their appointed end.”<br><br>This is the “War Map” for your leadership. Providence means that there are no “accidental” budget cuts, no “random” HR crises, and no “unforeseen” market shifts in the eyes of God.<br><br>The ESV Expository Commentary on Romans 8:28 notes that the “good” that God works toward is not always your professional comfort, but your Christ-like character and His ultimate glory. For the professional or the '“pull yourself up by the bootstraps” individual, this is a massive intellectual relief. It means your responsibility is faithfulness, while God’s responsibility is outcomes.<br><br><b>The Mindset Shift: The Psychological Security of Providence</b><br><br>If God is sovereign over the macro (the universe) and the micro (your specific workplace insecurities), then your security is “ex-centric”—it exists outside of yourself.<br><br>Think of it this way: If you were “elected” to your position by God’s decree before the foundation of the world, then no earthly lack of support can unseat His purpose for you. John Piper put it this way: “God is most glorified in your leadership when you are most satisfied in His sovereignty, especially when the earthly pillars are crumbling.”<br><br>When you feel unsupported, you aren’t being abandoned; you are being invited to stop leaning on broken reeds and start leaning on the Rock.<br><br><b>The War Map for this week:&nbsp;</b>When you feel the weight of leadership today, shift the burden. Tell yourself: “The outcome of this meeting/case/surgery does not rest on my sovereignty, but on His. I will be precise, I will be diligent, but I will not be anxious. I am a steward, not the Owner.”</div></div></div></div></div></section>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>The Debt That Never Expires: Living a Life of Unconditional Love</title>
						<description><![CDATA[When Jesus summarized the entire law into two simple commands—love God with everything you are, and love your neighbor as yourself—He wasn't making things easier. He was making them clearer. If we truly love God and love others, we won't need to constantly reference a checklist of dos and don'ts.]]></description>
			<link>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/05/04/the-debt-that-never-expires-living-a-life-of-unconditional-love</link>
			<pubDate>Mon, 04 May 2026 17:14:29 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/05/04/the-debt-that-never-expires-living-a-life-of-unconditional-love</guid>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<section class="sp-section sp-scheme-0" data-index="1" data-scheme="0"><div class="sp-section-slide"  data-label="Main" ><div class="sp-section-content" ><div class="sp-grid sp-col sp-col-24"><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="0" style=""><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><b>The Debt That Never Expires: Living a Life of Unconditional Love<br></b><br>Life is full of debts. We work tirelessly to pay off mortgages, car loans, credit cards, and countless other financial obligations. We mark our calendars, set up automatic payments, and count down to that glorious day when we can finally say, "Paid in full." Every worldly debt has an expiration date—a finish line we can cross.<br><br>But what if I told you there's one debt you'll never finish paying? A debt that, rather than being a burden, is actually the most freeing obligation you'll ever have?<br><br><b>A Debt Without Expiration<br></b><br>In Romans 13, the Apostle Paul presents us with a startling reality: we owe everyone a debt of love. "Owe no one anything," he writes, "except to love each other, for the one who loves another has fulfilled the law."<br><br>This isn't the kind of debt that weighs us down or keeps us up at night worrying about interest rates. This is the debt that fulfills every other commandment, the obligation that never expires because it reflects the very heart of God.<br><br>When Jesus summarized the entire law into two simple commands—love God with everything you are, and love your neighbor as yourself—He wasn't making things easier. He was making them clearer. If we truly love God and love others, we won't need to constantly reference a checklist of dos and don'ts. Love becomes the living law that guides our every action.<br><br><b>The God Who Loves Through Our Mess<br></b><br>Consider for a moment the kind of love God shows us. He doesn't keep a running tally of our failures. He doesn't bring up our past mistakes every time we approach Him. He doesn't say, "Here we are again with the same problem. When are you going to get your act together?"<br><br>God already knew every mistake you'd make before you made it, and He loved you anyway. He knew you'd be stubborn, hard-headed, and difficult at times—and He still gave His Son for you.<br><br>This is the kind of love we're called to show others: unconditional, unrelenting, and unearned.<br><br><b>When Love Meets Reality<br></b><br>The challenge, of course, is that people aren't always easy to love. Some are cantankerous. Some rub us the wrong way. Some wound us deeply. And as we get older, it can feel like our capacity for patience shrinks while the noise of the world gets louder.<br><br>But here's the truth we must grapple with: we don't know the whole story. We see people's reactions, their difficult moments, their worst days—but we rarely see what they face behind closed doors. We don't know the burdens they carry home every night or the battles they fight in silence.<br><br>Only God knows the complete story.<br><br>And while that doesn't excuse bad behavior, it should give us pause before we judge. It should remind us that the person sitting next to us, the one who's hard to deal with, might desperately need someone to love them regardless of their circumstances.<br><br>Think about the woman at the well in John 4. No one else would sit with her. Her reputation preceded her everywhere she went. But Jesus sat down beside her anyway. He didn't ignore her sin—He spoke truth about her five husbands and her current situation—but He did it with love. He gave her truth wrapped in grace, and it changed everything.<br><br>We need to learn to talk to people, not just about them. To speak truth in love, not condemnation.<br><br><b>The Urgency of Now<br></b><br>Paul adds an urgent dimension to this command: "You know the time, that the hour has come for you to wake from sleep. For salvation is nearer to us now than when we first believed."<br><br>Time is being spent. Every day that passes is a day we can never get back. We can't reclaim the years we thought we'd have once things "settled down"—once we got married, once the career was established, once the kids grew up, once retirement came.<br><br>The truth is, time never settles down. It just keeps moving forward, pulling us along with it.<br><br>How many of us have become like Martha, worrying and toiling over many things, unable to be present in the moment because we're constantly running to the next event? We miss the God-moments because we're consumed with making everything perfect.<br><br>Mary chose the better thing when she sat at Jesus' feet. Not because serving wasn't important, but because she recognized that having Jesus physically present was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. No one would remember if the dishes were clean or the house was orderly. But they would never forget that Jesus was there and spoke to them.<br><br><b>What Cannot Be Taken Away<br></b><br>When we leave this world, we take nothing with us. Not our cars, our houses, our possessions, or our professional accomplishments. None of it crosses over into eternity.<br><br>But the lives we've touched? The people we've loved? The moments we've invested in eternal things? Those remain.<br><br>When we love our neighbor as ourselves, when we walk with people through their valleys, when we help lead someone to know their Savior—that's something that can never be taken away. Those people will be in eternity, and the investment we made in their lives will matter forever.<br><br><b>Putting On Christ<br></b><br>Paul's call is clear: "Put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh to gratify its desires."<br><br>Like an athlete preparing for competition, we must apply discipline to our spiritual lives. Athletes give up things that aren't necessarily bad—they're just not the best thing for their goal. They change their diet, their routines, their schedules. Everything becomes aligned with their ultimate objective.<br><br>Are we willing to do the same? To set aside even good things if they're keeping us from the best thing?<br><br>The best thing is seeking first the kingdom of God. It's trusting that if God can handle our eternal souls, He can certainly handle our daily needs. It's choosing to invest in what lasts rather than what passes away.<br><br><b>The Help We Need<br></b><br>The beautiful reality is that we don't have to manufacture this love on our own. When we put on Christ, we're not just trying harder—we're being clothed in His victory. We're aligning our character with His example.<br><br>When loving someone feels impossible, we can pray: "Lord, help me love them the way You do. Give me a heart like Yours."<br><br>God is faithful to answer that prayer. He flows through us as vessels, showing His love to others through our words, actions, and presence.<br><br>The debt of love never expires, but it's the most freeing obligation we'll ever have. It's how we fulfill the law, honor God, and invest in eternity—one person, one moment, one act of grace at a time.</div></div></div></div></div></section>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>The Theology of Work, Part 1: The Idolatry of Industry</title>
						<description><![CDATA["You are successful on paper, but spiritually gasping for air. The 'self-made' myth is a psychological death sentence because if you are the root of your own success, you must be the source of your own security. Explore how the 'God-ness of God' transforms your career from a crushing taskmaster into a beautiful servant of stewardship. It’s time to stop trying to be the foundation and start being the branch.]]></description>
			<link>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/04/15/the-theology-of-work-part-1-the-idolatry-of-industry</link>
			<pubDate>Wed, 15 Apr 2026 05:47:54 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/04/15/the-theology-of-work-part-1-the-idolatry-of-industry</guid>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<section class="sp-section sp-scheme-0" data-index="1" data-scheme="0"><div class="sp-section-slide"  data-label="Main" ><div class="sp-section-content" ><div class="sp-grid sp-col sp-col-24"><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="0" style=""><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><b>Why Your Career is a Beautiful Servant but a Terrible God</b><br><br>In the quiet hours, before the emails flood the screen or the you even have your first cup of coffee finished, there is a lie that whispers to the high-achiever: “You are what you produce. Your worth is the sum of your billable hours, your patient outcomes, or your annual reviews.”<br><br>Somewhere along the way, work has ceased to be a vocation and has become an identity. We have moved from "working to live" to "living to prove we deserve to exist."<br><br><b>The Inadequacy of Man: The Weight of the "Self-Made"</b><br><br>The professional world prizes the "self-made" individual. But "self-made" is a theological impossibility and a psychological death sentence. If you are the source of your own success, you must also be the source of your own security.<br><br>When you sit at the center of your professional universe, the <b>"Imposter Syndrome"</b> you feel is actually a hidden realization of a deep truth: You are not enough to sustain the world you’ve built. If your career is your "God," it will eventually demand a sacrifice you cannot afford to pay - your peace, your family, and your soul.<br><br><b>The Sovereignty of God: The Great Decentralization</b><br><br>To find "Serious Joy" in our labor, we must look to the Sovereignty of God. Using the lens of theology, we look at the doctrine of Providence. As Joel Beeke notes in his study of the mechanics of grace, God does not merely "watch" our work; He sustains the very breath that allows us to perform it.<br><br>The Scripture reminds us in Colossians 3:23 that we do not work for a partner at a firm or a school board. We work for a Master who has already "attained" everything on our behalf.<br><br><i>"Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men..."</i><br><br><b>The Shift: From Identity to Stewardship</b><br><br>Your career is a <b>beautiful servant</b>. It is a way to love your neighbor through excellence, to bring order to chaos, and to reflect the creativity of the Creator. But it is a <b>terrible god</b>. A god of "Industry" never says, "Well done." It only says, "More."<br><br>The Gospel offers the high-achiever a "Great Exchange." Christ took the "failure" of the cross so that you could have the "success" of His righteousness. This means you no longer work for an identity; you work from one.<br><br>The Challenge for this week: When the weight of the "Self-Made" myth begins to crush you, repeat this: “I am not the Root. I am a branch. The Root is Christ, and He is not shaking.”</div></div></div></div></div></section>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>Why Assurance Is Built on Christ, Not Feelings</title>
						<description><![CDATA[Why assurance is built on Christ, not feelings, and how believers can rest in God’s promises instead of emotional instability.]]></description>
			<link>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/03/13/why-assurance-is-built-on-christ-not-feelings</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 12:38:30 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/03/13/why-assurance-is-built-on-christ-not-feelings</guid>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<section class="sp-section sp-scheme-0" data-index="6" data-scheme="0"><div class="sp-section-slide"  data-label="Main" ><div class="sp-section-content" ><div class="sp-grid sp-col sp-col-24"><div class="sp-block sp-image-block " data-type="image" data-id="0" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><div class="sp-image-holder" style="background-image:url(https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/23515610_1280x720_500.png);"  data-source="9XNXQV/assets/images/23515610_1280x720_2500.png" data-fill="true"><img src="https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/23515610_1280x720_500.png" class="fill" alt="" /><div class="sp-image-title"></div><div class="sp-image-caption"></div></div></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="1" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h3'  data-color="#000000" data-size="2.4em"><h3  style='font-size:2.4em;color:#000000;'>Few struggles run deeper in the Christian life than the struggle for assurance. There are sincere and earnest believers, people who genuinely love Christ, who mourn their sin, who long for God who nonetheless find themselves shaken by fear, worn down by inward instability, and haunted by the suspicion that their doubts disqualify them altogether. Others have learned, perhaps without realizing it, to treat emotional intensity as the true measure of their standing before God. And so when joy fades, as it inevitably does, everything begins to feel uncertain.<br><br>But assurance built on the weather of the soul is a fragile thing. Feelings rise and fall. Moods are subject to fatigue, circumstance, temperament, and ten thousand ordinary pressures. Christ is subject to none of them. He does not rise and fall. And it is in that unchanging Person not in the fluctuations of inner experience that the believer’s confidence must find its resting place.<br><br><br><br><b>The Foundation of Assurance<br></b><br>Assurance is best understood as the settled confidence that we belong to Christ and are fully accepted before God through Him. It is not the product of prolonged introspection, nor does it emerge from searching oneself until sufficient emotional certainty is discovered. It comes, rather, from turning the gaze outward away from the self and toward the finished work of Jesus Christ on behalf of sinners.<br><br>This is precisely where Solus Christus ceases to be a mere doctrinal formula and becomes daily comfort for trembling saints. Our acceptance before God rests not on the steadiness of our emotions but on the obedience, the blood, and the imputed righteousness of Jesus. The ground beneath us is His merit, not our mood.<br><br><br><br><b>Why the Tender Conscience Struggles Most<br></b><br>It is worth noting that the believers who struggle most acutely with assurance are not always the most careless. Often they are the most conscientious. A tender conscience sees sin clearly and grieves it with genuine sorrow and that sensitivity, rightly ordered, is a mark of grace. But when the eye remains fixed on the sin rather than on the Savior, that same sensitivity can become a place of prolonged torment.<br><br>The answer, here, is not to soften one’s view of sin or to look away from it too quickly. It is to see sin honestly and to see Christ more clearly still. The believer’s peace does not rest on the discovery that he has little sin. It rests on the knowledge that Christ is a great and sufficient Savior one whose work is not diminished by the magnitude of what He came to redeem.<br><br><br><br><b>The Promises of God as Steadier Ground<br></b><br>Assurance deepens as the believer learns to rest not in felt experience but in what God has actually promised. The Gospel does not declare the believer secure because he always feels strong, always prays well, or always walks with unbroken consistency. It declares him secure because Christ has accomplished a complete redemption and God is perfectly faithful to His own Word.<br><br>This is where the doctrines of grace reveal their profoundly pastoral character. If salvation depends ultimately on the strength and perseverance of man, then lasting assurance is impossible, there is always another failure waiting to undo it. But if salvation belongs to the Lord, then the most trembling of saints has reason for steady hope. The foundation is outside of us, and it is stronger than us. That does not make assurance automatic or without effort; it does mean the effort is one of returning to a foundation that has never once moved.<br><br><br><br><b>Shepherding the Emotions Rather Than Enthroning Them<br></b><br>There is a temptation, in reacting against emotionalism, to dismiss feelings altogether to treat them as irrelevant noise to be suppressed in the name of doctrinal fidelity. That overcorrection is its own kind of error. God has made us whole persons, and our emotions are not incidental to our inner life. They frequently reveal what is genuinely happening in the heart, and they deserve honest attention.<br><br>But emotions must be shepherded by truth rather than given the final word. When feelings bring false accusations, Scripture must correct them. When feelings expose genuine drift and coldness, Scripture must redirect them. When feelings collapse entirely under the weight of suffering or grief, Scripture must sustain what feeling can no longer hold. The mature believer is not the one who has no emotions, he is the one who has learned, slowly and imperfectly, to bring his emotions under the authority of God’s revealed truth.<br><br><br><br><b>Assurance Grown in Ordinary Soil</b><br><br>It is also worth observing that assurance is most often deepened not through dramatic spiritual crisis and resolution, but through ordinary, faithful persistence in the means of grace. The believer who sits regularly under the preached Word, who partakes of the ordinances, who maintains a life of prayer and honest confession, who remains knit to a local congregation, that believer will find that confidence in God’s promises tends to deepen quietly over time, like roots going deeper without visible drama above the ground.<br><br>This is one reason isolation is so dangerous in seasons of doubt. Doubt grows in the dark, and the soul that withdraws from the fellowship of the church in its most uncertain moments often finds the darkness deepening rather than lifting. Assurance is strengthened where Christ is set before us, week after week, in Word and sacrament and the company of those who share our hope.<br><br><br><br><b>A Word in Closing</b><br><br>The believer struggling with assurance does not need a new foundation. He needs to return again, and perhaps again after that to the only foundation that has never shifted. Your feelings are real, and they are not to be despised. But they are not your redeemer. Christ is. And the soul that rests its full weight upon Him stands, at last, on ground that cannot give way.</h3></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-code-block " data-type="code" data-id="2" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><div class="code-holder"  data-id="126318" data-title="Logos"><iframe id="iframe_671" src="//a.impactradius-go.com/gen-ad-code/7012952/2174289/26054/" width="728" height="90" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" name="iframe_671"></iframe>
</div></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="3" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><b>Ready for a deeper dive?</b><br><br>For a fuller conversation, listen to the Truth in Pursuit podcast on Spotify—we’ll keep it biblical, clear, and practical.</div></div><div class="sp-block sp-button-block " data-type="button" data-id="4" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class="text-reset"><a class="sp-button fill" href="https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/truthinpursuit/" target="_self"  data-label="Listen On Spotify" style="">Listen On Spotify</a></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-button-block " data-type="button" data-id="5" style="text-align:center;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class="text-reset"><a class="sp-button fill" href="/plan-a-visit" target="_self"  data-label="Plan Your Visit" style="">Plan Your Visit</a></span></div></div></div></div></div></section>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>Why Sound Doctrine Is Essential for Spiritual Growth</title>
						<description><![CDATA[Why sound doctrine is essential for spiritual growth and how biblical truth produces stability, maturity, and Christ-centered living.]]></description>
			<link>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/03/08/why-sound-doctrine-is-essential-for-spiritual-growth</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 08 Mar 2026 08:57:00 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/03/08/why-sound-doctrine-is-essential-for-spiritual-growth</guid>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<section class="sp-section sp-scheme-0" data-index="6" data-scheme="0"><div class="sp-section-slide"  data-label="Main" ><div class="sp-section-content" ><div class="sp-grid sp-col sp-col-24"><div class="sp-block sp-image-block " data-type="image" data-id="0" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><div class="sp-image-holder" style="background-image:url(https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/23426428_1280x720_500.png);"  data-source="9XNXQV/assets/images/23426428_1280x720_2500.png" data-fill="true"><img src="https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/23426428_1280x720_500.png" class="fill" alt="" /><div class="sp-image-title"></div><div class="sp-image-caption"></div></div></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="1" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h3'  data-color="#000000" data-size="2.4em"><h3  style='font-size:2.4em;color:#000000;'>Most Christians want to grow. Not many stop to ask what growth actually requires.<br><br>We live in a moment when emotion gets mistaken for maturity. When sincerity gets confused with truth. When a good feeling on Sunday morning gets treated like spiritual depth. But Scripture never separates the heart from the head. You cannot love rightly what you do not know truly.<br><br>That’s why doctrine matters. Not doctrine as a cold academic exercise but rather doctrine as the steady light God gives His people so they can actually know Him, trust Him, and keep their footing in a world that has lost it’s way.<br><br><br><br><b>Doctrine Is Just Teaching. Sound Doctrine Is Faithful Teaching.</b><br><br>Strip away the church vocabulary for a second.<br><br>Doctrine just means teaching. Sound doctrine means teaching that is faithful to what God actually said — who He is, who we are, what sin has done, what Christ accomplished, and what our response ought to be.<br><br>When that teaching is healthy, Christians get stronger. When it is weak or twisted, they become unstable — knocked around by every new preacher, podcast, or trend that tells them what they want to hear.<br><br>A Christian without theological roots is like a fence post set in soft ground. Looks fine until the first hard frost. Then it leans.<br><b><br></b><br><b>Doctrine and Devotion Are Not Enemies<br><br></b>Some people talk like you have to choose between knowing God and loving God. That is a false choice.<br><br>You cannot worship a God you refuse to know. You cannot trust a Christ you barely understand. You cannot hold the line in a real crisis if your faith has no theological weight underneath it.<br><br>Historic Christian orthodoxy is not a museum piece. It is the faith once delivered to the saints — and it still feeds ordinary people in ordinary places. When a believer actually understands the holiness of God, the seriousness of sin, the sufficiency of Christ, and the totality of grace, something changes. They get humble. They get grateful. They get durable.<br><br>Sound doctrine does not produce arrogance in the person who receives it rightly. It drops them to their knees and then builds them back up with something solid to stand on.<br><br><b>A Church That Goes Soft on Truth Goes Soft on Everything</b><br><br>When doctrine gets sloppy, the rest follows.<br><br>Worship becomes about the audience. Discipleship becomes shallow. The Gospel gets blurred until it is barely recognizable. Error rarely announces itself as error instead it shows up dressed in partial truth and warm language that has been quietly cut loose from biblical conviction.<br><br>This is why expository preaching, opening a text and working through it faithfully, is not an academic preference. It is a protective act. It forces the church to sit under God’s Word instead of grazing on whoever has the best stage presence this season.<br><br><b>What Healthy Doctrine Actually Produces</b><br><br>To put it in practical terms:<br><br>A sound view of <b>God</b> produces reverence.<br>A sound view of <b>man</b> produces humility.<br>A sound view of <b>sin</b> produces repentance.<br>A sound view of <b>Christ</b> produces faith.<br>A sound view of <b>grace</b> produces gratitude.<br>A sound view of <b>the church</b> produces commitment.<br><br>The doctrines of grace, the full-weight sovereignty of God in salvation, are not topics reserved for seminary debates. They cut the nerve of self-reliance. They teach the believer to rest in God’s mercy instead of their own performance. The result is not passivity. It is deeper worship and more durable obedience.<br><br><b>What Happens When You Neglect It</b><br><br>Neglect doctrine long enough and believers drift one of two ways.<br><br>Some become unstable always chasing the next urgent teacher, controversy, or emotional experience. Others become practical moralists trying to live the Christian life on borrowed phrases and sheer willpower.<br><br>Neither gets you anywhere worth going.<br><br>The weak Christian does not need less truth. He needs truth pressed deeper. The struggling believer does not need doctrine pulled out of his sight. He needs doctrine applied with warmth and patience by someone who actually knows him.<br><br>The answer to confusion is not vagueness. It is clarity. The answer to a cold heart is not less truth. It is truth set on fire by the Gospel.<br><br><b>Tools Worth Using</b><br><br>For daily study, I use <b>Logos Bible Software</b> — it lets me trace themes, work in the original languages, and see the big picture without losing the details. For believers who want to go deeper without getting lost, the <b>Reformation Study Bible</b> or the <b>ESV Study Bible</b> are worth the investment.</h3></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-code-block " data-type="code" data-id="2" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><div class="code-holder"  data-id="126318" data-title="Logos"><iframe id="iframe_671" src="//a.impactradius-go.com/gen-ad-code/7012952/2174289/26054/" width="728" height="90" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" name="iframe_671"></iframe>
</div></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="3" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><b>Ready for a deeper dive?</b><br><br>For a fuller conversation, listen to the Truth in Pursuit podcast on Spotify—we’ll keep it biblical, clear, and practical.</div></div><div class="sp-block sp-button-block " data-type="button" data-id="4" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class="text-reset"><a class="sp-button fill" href="https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/truthinpursuit/" target="_self"  data-label="Listen On Spotify" style="">Listen On Spotify</a></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-button-block " data-type="button" data-id="5" style="text-align:center;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class="text-reset"><a class="sp-button fill" href="/plan-a-visit" target="_self"  data-label="Plan Your Visit" style="">Plan Your Visit</a></span></div></div></div></div></div></section>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>Sola Scriptura: Why the Bible Alone Rules the Church</title>
						<description><![CDATA[What does it mean that Scripture alone is our final authority? Learn how God’s Word is sufficient, clear, and powerful for faith and life.]]></description>
			<link>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/02/26/sola-scriptura-why-the-bible-alone-rules-the-church</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 26 Feb 2026 21:15:55 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/02/26/sola-scriptura-why-the-bible-alone-rules-the-church</guid>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<section class="sp-section sp-scheme-0" data-index="6" data-scheme="0"><div class="sp-section-slide"  data-label="Main" ><div class="sp-section-content" ><div class="sp-grid sp-col sp-col-24"><div class="sp-block sp-image-block " data-type="image" data-id="0" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><div class="sp-image-holder" style="background-image:url(https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/22914015_4032x3024_500.jpg);"  data-source="9XNXQV/assets/images/22914015_4032x3024_2500.jpg" data-fill="true"><img src="https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/22914015_4032x3024_500.jpg" class="fill" alt="" /><div class="sp-image-title"></div><div class="sp-image-caption"></div></div></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="1" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h3'  data-color="#000000" data-size="2.4em"><h3  style='font-size:2.4em;color:#000000;'><b>The Question Behind Every Question<br></b><br>Every generation of Christians eventually faces the same issue: Who gets the final word—God or us? Not who has opinions, but who has authority. The doctrine of Sola Scriptura answers plainly: God rules His people by His Word.<br><br>This isn’t “the Bible is important.” It’s stronger: Scripture is the final, decisive authority for faith and obedience. Councils can err. Traditions can drift. Teachers can twist. But God cannot lie (Titus 1:2), and His Word stands forever.<br><br><b>What Scripture Claims About Scripture</b><br><br>The Bible doesn’t ask permission to be authoritative. It declares itself as God’s speech:<br><br>• “<b>All Scripture is breathed out by God…</b>” (2 Timothy 3:16–17, ESV)<br>The phrase means Scripture is God-exhaled—His own Word written through human authors. And notice the purpose: that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work. That’s sufficiency language.<br><br>• “<b>Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.</b>” (Psalm 119:105)<br>Not a mood light. A lamp for real steps, real decisions, real obedience.<br><br>• Jesus Himself treats Scripture as unbreakable: “<b>Scripture cannot be broken.</b>” (John 10:35)<br><br><b>Three Foundational Truths</b><br><br>1) <b>Scripture is Inspired (God-Breathed).</b><br>Inspiration means the Bible is not merely religious reflection; it is divine revelation given through human writers. God used their vocabulary, personality, and historical context—yet what they wrote is what God intended.<br><br>2) <b>Scripture is Sufficient (Enough).</b><br>Sufficiency does not mean the Bible contains everything about everything. It means Scripture contains everything necessary for salvation and godliness (cf. 2 Peter 1:3). If God’s Word equips for “every good work,” then we do not need new revelations to obey Him.<br><br>3) <b>Scripture is Clear (Perspicuous) in What’s Necessary.</b><br>Clarity doesn’t mean every verse is equally easy (2 Peter 3:16 admits “some things” are hard). It means the central message—who God is, what sin is, who Christ is, how we are saved—is sufficiently clear for God’s people, especially through faithful preaching and ordinary means.<br><b><br>What About Tradition, Creeds, and Teachers?</b><br><br>Christians don’t despise tradition. We thank God for creeds and confessions because they summarize biblical teaching. But we keep them in the right place:<br><br>•Scripture is the only infallible rule.<br><br>•Creeds/confessions are real helps—but fallible and always subject to correction by Scripture.<br><br>•Teachers serve the Word; they do not stand over it.<br><br>In short: we are not “anti-tradition.” <b>We are anti-equal-authority.</b><br><br><b>The Heart Issue: We Want a Different Authority</b><br><br>The pressure against Sola Scriptura isn’t mainly intellectual. It’s moral. We naturally prefer an authority we can manage—our feelings, our tribe, our era’s consensus.<br><br>But Scripture cuts through all of that with a hard mercy: “The word of God is…living and active…discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart.” (Hebrews 4:12)<br><br>God’s Word doesn’t just inform; it exposes, judges, and heals.<br><br><b>Practical Pursuit: How to Live Under the Word</b><br><br>1. <b>Read with submission, not negotiation.</b><br>Don’t approach the Bible asking, “Do I like this?” Ask, “Lord, what are You commanding me?”<br><br><b>2. Interpret in context.</b><br>Read verses inside paragraphs, paragraphs inside books, books inside the whole Bible. The Holy Spirit doesn’t contradict Himself.<br><br><b>3. Prioritize preaching and the ordinary means of grace.</b><br>God builds His church through Word and sacrament. The Christian life is not sustained by novelty but by truth applied.<br><br><br>A church without Sola Scriptura becomes a church ruled by personalities. A Christian without Sola Scriptura becomes a Christian ruled by emotions. But a people ruled by the Word become steady, joyful, and unshakeable—because they’re anchored to God Himself.<br><br>“<b>The grass withers, the flower fades, but the word of our God will stand forever.</b>” (Isaiah 40:8)<br><br><b>Tools for the Pursuit</b><br><br>I use <b>Logos Bible Software</b> because it helps me compare key passages, consult trusted theologians, and stay rooted in Scripture. If you want a helpful companion, read a concise work on the doctrines of grace alongside Romans and as a gift for you pick up a free 60 day trial of Logos at the link below to deepen your study of the Scripture today.</h3></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-code-block " data-type="code" data-id="2" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><div class="code-holder"  data-id="126318" data-title="Logos"><iframe id="iframe_671" src="//a.impactradius-go.com/gen-ad-code/7012952/2174289/26054/" width="728" height="90" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" name="iframe_671"></iframe>
</div></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="3" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><b>Ready for a deeper dive?</b><br><br>For a fuller conversation, listen to the Truth in Pursuit podcast on Spotify—we’ll keep it biblical, clear, and practical.</div></div><div class="sp-block sp-button-block " data-type="button" data-id="4" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class="text-reset"><a class="sp-button fill" href="https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/truthinpursuit/" target="_self"  data-label="Listen On Spotify" style="">Listen On Spotify</a></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-button-block " data-type="button" data-id="5" style="text-align:center;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class="text-reset"><a class="sp-button fill" href="/plan-a-visit" target="_self"  data-label="Plan Your Visit" style="">Plan Your Visit</a></span></div></div></div></div></div></section>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>Looking for a Church Home? What to Look for in a Meigs County Church Family</title>
						<description><![CDATA[Searching “Baptist churches near me”? Here’s what to look for—plus what to expect when visiting First Southern Baptist Church in Pomeroy.]]></description>
			<link>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/02/01/looking-for-a-church-home-what-to-look-for-in-a-meigs-county-church-family</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 01 Feb 2026 15:57:25 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/02/01/looking-for-a-church-home-what-to-look-for-in-a-meigs-county-church-family</guid>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<section class="sp-section sp-scheme-0" data-index="3" data-scheme="0"><div class="sp-section-slide"  data-label="Main" ><div class="sp-section-content" ><div class="sp-grid sp-col sp-col-24"><div class="sp-block sp-image-block " data-type="image" data-id="0" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><div class="sp-image-holder" style="background-image:url(https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/22914226_2240x1260_500.png);"  data-source="9XNXQV/assets/images/22914226_2240x1260_2500.png" data-fill="true"><img src="https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/22914226_2240x1260_500.png" class="fill" alt="" /><div class="sp-image-title"></div><div class="sp-image-caption"></div></div></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="1" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h3' ><h3 >Searching for a church can feel surprisingly stressful. If you’ve typed “Baptist churches near me” or “churches in Meigs County Ohio” into Google, you might be hoping for more than a service—you’re looking for a place where your family can belong.<br><br>At First Southern Baptist Church in Pomeroy, we understand that. Walking into a new church can bring a lot of questions:<br>• Will my kids be safe?<br>• Will anyone talk to us?<br>• What if I don’t know what to do?<br>• Will they actually teach the Bible?<br><br>We’re a Bible-preaching church family, and we want to make your first visit simple and welcoming.<br><br>What to Look for When Choosing a Church Home<br><br>Every family is different, but here are a few helpful “green lights” when you’re searching in Meigs County, Ohio.<br><br>1) A church that teaches the Bible clearly<br><br>A good church doesn’t just mention Scripture—it explains it and applies it.<br><br>When you’re visiting, ask:<br>• Is the sermon rooted in a Bible passage?<br>• Does it point to Jesus and the gospel?<br>• Is it more than opinions and stories?<br><br>A Bible preaching church will leave you thinking about what God says not just what people think.<br><br>2) A welcoming environment (without pressure)<br><br>Many people search for “church welcome” because they’re nervous about being singled out or pressured.<br><br>A healthy church will:<br>• greet you kindly<br>• give you space to observe<br>• help you know where to go<br>• invite you back without making it awkward<br><br>At FSBC Pomeroy, we genuinely want you to feel comfortable—especially if you’re bringing kids.<br><br>3) A place that cares for your children and teens<br><br>If you have a family, this matters. Our First Kids ministry exists to serve children with clear Bible teaching, safe care, and loving leaders.<br><br>Parents often tell us they want:<br>• a safe check-in process<br>• clean rooms and caring volunteers<br>• Bible lessons kids can understand<br>• consistency week to week<br><br>We take that seriously because families matter to God—and they matter to us.<br><br>4) A church family, not just an event<br><br>Church isn’t a performance; it’s a people. A healthy church will feel like a community over time.<br><br>Look for signs like:<br>• members who pray for one another<br>• people who serve joyfully<br>• a spirit of kindness and truth<br>• opportunities to connect beyond Sunday<br><br>What to Expect at First Southern Baptist Church in Pomeroy<br><br>If you visit FSBC, here’s what a typical Sunday can feel like:<br>• friendly greetings at the door<br>• clear direction for kids’ check-in<br>• worship through singing and prayer<br>• a Bible-centered sermon that points to Jesus<br>• a relaxed, small-town feel<br><br>You don’t need to dress up. You don’t need to know all the church “words.” Just come as you are.<br><br>If You’re Unsure About God…<br>Some families searching “Baptist churches near me” aren’t sure what they believe yet. That’s okay.<br><br>We want to be a place where you can:<br>• ask honest questions<br>• hear the gospel clearly<br>• learn what the Bible teaches<br>• take your next step at a comfortable pace<br><br>Next Step: We’ve Saved a Seat for You<br><br>If you’re looking for churches in Meigs County Ohio and want a warm, Bible-preaching church family in Pomeroy, we’d love to welcome you.</h3></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-button-block " data-type="button" data-id="2" style="text-align:center;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class="text-reset"><a class="sp-button" href="/plan-a-visit" target="_self"  data-label="Plan Your Visit" style="">Plan Your Visit</a></span></div></div></div></div></div></section>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>Why Verse-by-Verse Teaching Matters: A Guide to Expository Preaching</title>
						<description><![CDATA[Learn what expository preaching is and why verse-by-verse Bible preaching helps families grow in faith at FSBC Pomeroy.]]></description>
			<link>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/02/01/why-verse-by-verse-teaching-matters-a-guide-to-expository-preaching</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 01 Feb 2026 15:27:32 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/02/01/why-verse-by-verse-teaching-matters-a-guide-to-expository-preaching</guid>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<section class="sp-section sp-scheme-0" data-index="3" data-scheme="0"><div class="sp-section-slide"  data-label="Main" ><div class="sp-section-content" ><div class="sp-grid sp-col sp-col-24"><div class="sp-block sp-image-block " data-type="image" data-id="0" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><div class="sp-image-holder" style="background-image:url(https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/22914015_4032x3024_500.jpg);"  data-source="9XNXQV/assets/images/22914015_4032x3024_2500.jpg" data-fill="true"><img src="https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/22914015_4032x3024_500.jpg" class="fill" alt="" /><div class="sp-image-title"></div><div class="sp-image-caption"></div></div></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="1" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h3' ><h3 >If you’ve ever searched for “expository preaching churches near me”, you’re probably looking for something simple: a church that opens the Bible and explains what it says—clearly and honestly.<br><br>At First Southern Baptist Church in Pomeroy, we’re a Bible-preaching church family serving Meigs County, Ohio, and we believe verse-by-verse teaching (often called expository preaching) is one of the best ways to help people grow in Jesus—whether you’ve followed Him for years or you’re still figuring out who He is.<br><br>What Is Expository Preaching?<br><br>Expository preaching means the main point of the sermon is the main point of the Bible passage.<br><br>Instead of starting with our opinions and then hunting for a verse to support them, we start with the Scripture and ask:<br><br>• What did this passage mean to the original hearers?<br>• What does it reveal about God?<br>• How does it point us to Jesus?<br>• How should we live in response today?<br><br>That’s why you’ll often hear teaching that moves verse-by-verse through a book of the Bible. It’s not flashy, but it’s faithful—and it builds a strong foundation for everyday life.<br><br>Why Verse-by-Verse Teaching Helps Real Families<br><br>Life in Meigs County can be busy. You’re juggling work, school, schedules, and stress. The last thing you need is more confusion.<br><br>Expository preaching helps because it offers:<br><br>1) Clarity you can trust<br><span class="ws" style="margin-left: 40px;"></span>When the Bible drives the message, you can open it yourself and follow along. That builds confidence especially for parents who want to lead their kids well.<br><br>2) The whole counsel of God<br><span class="ws" style="margin-left: 40px;"></span>When we teach through Scripture, we don’t skip <span class="ws" style="margin-left: 40px;"></span>the “hard parts.” We learn what God says about forgiveness, marriage, anxiety, parenting, suffering, and hope straight from His Word.<br><br>3) A steady diet for spiritual growth<br><span class="ws" style="margin-left: 40px;"></span>A healthy church family needs more than quick inspiration. We need truth that shapes us over time week after week.<br><br>“Baptist Preaching Online” vs. Being There in Person<br><br>Many people also search for “Baptist preaching online” because they want to listen before they visit. That’s a great first step.<br><br>We love providing messages online so you can hear our teaching style and get a feel for our church. But we also want you to know: church is more than content. It’s a community.<br><br>When you gather in person, your kids meet caring leaders, you find friendly faces, and you’re reminded you’re not alone. Our First Kids ministry is designed to help children learn the Bible in a safe and encouraging environment while parents are fed, too.<br><br>How to Know If a Church Is Truly “Bible Preaching”<br><br>A lot of places claim to be a Bible preaching church, so here are a few helpful signs:<br><br>• The sermon text is read and explained (not just referenced).<br>• The message points to Jesus and the gospel.<br>• The application matches what the passage actually teaches.<br>• The tone is both truthful and loving.<br><br>That’s what we aim for at FSBC Pomeroy, grounded in historic Christian beliefs consistent with the Baptist Faith and Message (2000).<br><br>Next Step: Watch or Visit This Sunday<br><br>If you’re searching for “expository preaching churches near me” in Pomeroy or Meigs County, Ohio, we’d love to meet you.<br><br>• Join us Sunday at 10:45 AM<br>• Or start by watching a recent message online<br><br>Most importantly: Plan your visit so we can welcome you well.</h3></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-button-block " data-type="button" data-id="2" style="text-align:center;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class="text-reset"><a class="sp-button" href="/plan-a-visit" target="_self"  data-label="Plan Your Visit" style="">Plan Your Visit</a></span></div></div></div></div></div></section>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>Crossroads Wisdom: Trusting God for Direction</title>
						<description><![CDATA[Feeling stuck at a crossroads? Proverbs 3:5–6 offers Bible-preaching direction and hope for families in Pomeroy, Ohio.]]></description>
			<link>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/01/27/crossroads-wisdom-trusting-god-for-direction</link>
			<pubDate>Tue, 27 Jan 2026 21:21:13 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://fsbcpomeroy.org/blog/2026/01/27/crossroads-wisdom-trusting-god-for-direction</guid>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<section class="sp-section sp-scheme-0" data-index="18" data-scheme="0"><div class="sp-section-slide"  data-label="Main" ><div class="sp-section-content" ><div class="sp-grid sp-col sp-col-24"><div class="sp-block sp-image-block " data-type="image" data-id="0" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><div class="sp-image-holder" style="background-image:url(https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/22852036_2000x1332_500.jpg);"  data-source="9XNXQV/assets/images/22852036_2000x1332_2500.jpg" data-fill="true" data-ratio="sixteen-nine"><img src="https://storage1.snappages.site/9XNXQV/assets/images/22852036_2000x1332_500.jpg" class="fill" alt="" /><div class="sp-image-title"></div><div class="sp-image-caption"></div></div></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="1" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h2' ><h2 >This Week at Hope at the Crossroads | Pomeroy</h2></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="2" style=""><div class="sp-block-content"  style="">Some weeks feel like you’re standing at a crossroads—trying to make the best choice for your family, your schedule, your work, or your next step. Life moves fast, and families across Meigs County carry a lot.<br><br>If that’s you right now, you’re not alone—and you’re not without help.</div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="3" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h2' ><h2 >Bible-Preaching Encouragement</h2></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="4" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h3' ><h3 ><b>Scripture for the Week<br>Proverbs 3:5–6<br>God’s Word gives clear direction when our minds are full and our hearts are tired. This is one of the simplest, strongest promises for people who need wisdom.</b></h3></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="5" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h3' ><h3 ><b>One Big Takeaway</b></h3></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="6" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><b>God guides people who trust Him more than they trust themselves.</b><br><br>That doesn’t mean you’ll always get a map with every turn labeled. But it does mean you’ll never be walking alone.</div></div><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="7" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><b>What This Means (Plain and Simple)<br></b>Proverbs 3 tells us to:<br>Trust the Lord with all your heart (not halfway, not “just in case”)<br>Don’t lean on your own understanding (because we can’t see everything)<br>Acknowledge Him in all your ways (invite Him into the everyday stuff)<br>He will make your paths straight (He will guide you where you need to go)</div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="8" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h3' ><h3 >3 Simple Ways to Live It This Week</h3></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="9" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style="">Pray first—before you decide.<br>Even a short prayer counts: “Lord, I need Your wisdom today.”<br>Open your Bible before you open your phone.<br>Start with Proverbs 3:5–6 and read it slowly. Let it set your direction.<br>Take one next right step.<br>You don’t have to solve the whole future today. Obey what God is showing you right now.</div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="10" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h2' ><h2 >Faith at Home: First Kids + Families</h2></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="11" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style="">If you’re trying to lead your home well, remember this: God doesn’t ask parents to be perfect—He asks us to be faithful.<br>This week, talk with your kids about what it means to “trust God” when we can’t see what’s next. At First Kids, we love helping children learn that God’s Word is true and that Jesus is trustworthy.<br><b>Quick Family Question:</b><br>“What’s one thing we can ask God to help our family with this week?”</div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="12" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h2' ><h2 >Community &amp; Local Happenings in Meigs County</h2></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="13" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style="">As a church family, we want to be present in real life—not just on Sundays.<br>Here are a few simple ways to practice “crossroads faith” right here in Pomeroy and Meigs County:<ul><li>Pray for local schools, teachers, and students this week.</li><li>Check on one neighbor who might be lonely or overwhelmed.</li><li>Encourage a first responder or caregiver you know—many carry heavy loads quietly.</li></ul><br>If you have a local need you’d like us to pray about, we’d be honored to pray for you.</div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="14" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h2' ><h2 >A Short Prayer for Pomeroy</h2></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="15" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style="">Lord, thank You that You guide Your people.<br>For every family in Pomeroy and across Meigs County, Ohio, give wisdom for decisions and peace for anxious hearts.<br>Help us trust You with our whole hearts and follow You with simple obedience.<br>In Jesus’ name, amen.</div></div><div class="sp-block sp-heading-block " data-type="heading" data-id="16" style="text-align:start;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style=""><span class='h2' ><h2 >Next Step</h2></span></div></div><div class="sp-block sp-text-block " data-type="text" data-id="17" style="text-align:center;"><div class="sp-block-content"  style="">If you’re looking for a Bible-preaching church family where your kids are welcomed and safe, we’d love to meet you this Sunday.<br><br><a href="/plan-a-visit" rel="" target="_self"><b>Plan a Visit</b></a><br><br></div></div></div></div></div></section>]]></content:encoded>
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