Easter Sunday Live Stream Worship Service: April 12, 2020

Join us at 10:45 a.m. for a webcast of our Easter Sunday worship service. Worship Guides, Bulletins, and Sermon Notes can be found by going to the Bulletins page.

Only those participating in the production of the webcast may attend at the church building. The building remains closed to the public. Please do not come to the building unless you have been invited by a member of session. All are welcome to join the worship service via webcast at: http://www.sermonaudio.com/spriggsroadpca orhttps://www.spriggsroad.org/SRPCwp/live-webcasts/ 

A Call for a Day of Prayer and Fasting – Good Friday, April 10, 2020

Consider joining with many others in a day of prayer and fasting on Good Friday.

The Call: For all believers in Christ in the Presbyterian Church of America (PCA), the Evangelical Presbyterian Church (EPC) and the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) to set aside Good Friday, April 10, as a day of prayer and fasting to cry out for God’s help in addition to a Holy Day of worship.

More details can be found in this article.

Live Stream Worship: Sunday, April 5, 2020

We will live-stream a modified worship service this Sunday, April 5, 2020 beginning at our usual Sunday worship time of 10:45 a.m.

The live stream will be accessed here or directly through Sermon Audio.

Bulletins, Worship Guides, and Sermon Notes are available on our Bulletins Page.

Please do not come to the church facility. The church facility remains closed to the public. We will utilize a bare-bones crew (Elders, AV personnel) for the live stream and will stay under the requested ten (10) person limit for public meetings.

Easter Communion Services 2020

There will be multiple communion services offered for Easter. Any are welcome to attend, however, these services are by appointment only in order to comply with the governor’s 10-person limit regarding public gatherings. Please read the email that Pastor Michael Mang sent out for a detailed explanation. If you did not get the email or if you have questions you may contact any of our pastors or elders. Please use the sign up link below for to make an appointment to attend.

Sign Up!

Teen Night Zoom Meeting: Saturday, April 4, 2020

Teens are invited to meet with Pastor Matt using Zoom this Saturday at 4pm! We’ll study Philippians and try out a few Zoom games together! We’ll be done just in time for you to have dinner. (In your own home of course). See you Saturday! Meeting ID and password can be found in an email that was sent to church members. If you did not get the email, or if you would like more details feel free to contact Pastor Matt.

Phases of Quarantine

I hope this ends sooner then we think, but in case this drags on for sometime I think some observations from the church in China might be useful for us. (This is the counselor side of your assistant pastor coming out)

The following is a list of phases that missionaries observed (you may have seen this) people go through over time in quarantine. It helps just to know so you think you’re not the crazy one feeling this way…as in “no temptation has seized you except what is common to man…” 1 Corinthians 10:13
Also so you can mention it without shame as well as ask for prayer.

Let’s continue to be in prayer for one another!

Here are are the phases as related to me by an unnamed missionary in China:

Phase 1: Anxiety – this is the time the family/individuals are most focused towards a common threat, the sole aim is to prep enough food and supplies to ensure the family’s physical needs are met with the uncertainty ahead. Fear is prevalent, and thus possibly more prone to violent and hostile behaviors based on survival instincts and concerns for families well-being.

Phase 2: Isolation – after awhile the reality of the quarantine, constant seclusion in residence and severed social networking hits hard with constant media dooms-day predictions, lack of information on what to do, etc. which causes stress and anxiety to escalate. Common issues we’ve observed are increases in anxiousness, conflicts/arguments, anger and/or violence.

Phase 3: Helplessness – uncertainly of when will it end makes people feel like life’s losing control. Continual fear of contagion, infection, illness and death cause stress and anxiety to increase exponentially. Shock, numbness, confusion, depression, grief, anger, and frustration results. For some they will be more prone to temptations of sinful behaviors and activities to escape, or an attempt to seemingly regain control in life. Great spiritual battles during this phase.

Phase 4: Hopelessness – with seemingly no end in sight individuals may start to act or think in extreme ways. Loss of faith in government, health institutions, and trust between peoples. More prone to conspiracy theories and believed to be treated unfairly (victim of unfairly distributed medical care and daily needs) and blame-shifting. Very prone to sins and temptations.

Not all people may go through all 4 phases, and some may even go forwards and backwards (phase 1 to 2 to 1 to 2 to 3 to 2 to 1). Reminder for us that at these tough times to keep a strong prayerful life, constant daily devotions with family members to minister to one another, and remind ourselves the Lordship of Christ and our daily reliance on Him and Him alone.

As the churches and Christian community prepping for the economical and physical effect the virus will have on us, let us not forget even when we are healthy physically one may not be healthy spiritually. Let us all pray and rely on Christ to carry our burdens through the storms ahead, and navigate us to the bright radiant sunshine of God’s glory.


Matteson Bowles, Assistant Pastor