Palestine Global Methodist Church

Palestine Global Methodist Church Bring a friend!

You are invited to Palestine Methodist Church- A Global Methodist Congregation, each Sunday for fellowship and breakfast at 9 AM, Sunday School at 9:30 AM, and worship at 10:45 AM.

05/21/2026

Don't forget this Sunday, May 24 is the International Day of Prayer for the Unreached, in partnership with A Third of Us Alliance. Make plans to pray individually, with a group or with your entire church.

One-third of the world still has little to no access to the Gospel, and together we are joining believers around the globe in unified prayer, asking God to make His name known among all peoples.

To learn more visit their website at https://missionexus.org/a-third-of-us/

Will you join us in praying so that all may hear?

The church office will be closed Monday, May 25 for Memorial Day.
05/21/2026

The church office will be closed Monday, May 25 for Memorial Day.

Join us Sunday, May 24 for breakfast at 9 AM, Sunday School at 9:30 AM, and worship at 10:45 AM.  It is Pentecost Sunday...
05/21/2026

Join us Sunday, May 24 for breakfast at 9 AM, Sunday School at 9:30 AM, and worship at 10:45 AM. It is Pentecost Sunday, so wear red for Pentecost or red, white, and blue for Memorial Day. Pastor Kevin's message will be "One Spirit, Many Gifts" from 1 Corinthians 12:1-11. Join us and bring a friend!

05/18/2026

A message from Bishop Leah Gregory:

When the Church Gathers…

Recently I sat with a young couple. One of them is clergy, called by God and trying to serve faithfully. The other is doing everything he can to support her and help carry the weight of ministry.

They were heartbroken by the behavior of a very small group of people. At one point they said, “The church isn’t supposed to be this way.”

And they were right.

But the Church has always been made up of people who are still being redeemed.

That is why the Church gathers.

We do not gather because we are perfect. We gather because we are not. We gather because we need grace—prevenient grace that awakens us, justifying grace that saves us, and sanctifying grace that makes us holy.

From the beginning, the Church gathered around the means of grace. Acts tells us the believers “devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers” (Acts 2:42). They gathered to worship God, receive the Word, share the table, pray together, and learn how to live as disciples of Jesus Christ.

Worship reorders us. It reminds us that Christ is Lord, and we are not. Paul writes, “Present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship” (Romans 12:1).

We also gather because holiness is not formed in isolation. John Wesley understood that the Christian life is deeply personal, but never private. We are saved by grace through faith, and then drawn into a community where grace continues its transforming work.

“This is the will of God, your sanctification” (1 Thessalonians 4:3).

Sanctifying grace is the ongoing work of the Holy Spirit making us more like Jesus. And one of the ways God sanctifies us is by bringing us together.

We learn together.
We grow together.
We stumble together.
We repent together.
We forgive together.
And by grace, we knock off one another’s rough edges.

It is easy to imagine we are patient until someone tests our patience. It is easy to believe we are forgiving until we are wounded. It is easy to claim we love the Church until the Church becomes difficult to love.

But this is often where sanctification happens—not in an idealized community, but in the real gathered Body of Christ, where imperfect people are being made holy together.

For shepherds, this is especially important to remember: sometimes the sheep bite.

That does not make the bite right. Unhealthy behavior should not be excused or ignored. Boundaries, accountability, repentance, and truth-telling matter deeply in the Church.

But every pastor learns that loving people is not theoretical. Shepherding means loving real sheep—with wounds, fears, histories, immaturity, grief, resistance, and sometimes teeth.

And learning to love them through it makes us more like Christ.

When I served as a children’s pastor, I learned that often the most ornery child in the room was the one who needed me the most. The child who interrupted, tested limits, or pushed every button was often the child most in need of patient love, steady presence, and faithful boundaries.

I have found the same thing to be true as a pastor.

Sometimes the most difficult person is carrying the deepest fear. Sometimes the loudest critic is desperate to be heard. Sometimes the person resisting change is grieving something they do not know how to name.

Again, this does not excuse harm. The fruit of the Spirit still matters. But pastors are called to see with the eyes of Christ.

Jesus saw the crowds and “had compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd” (Matthew 9:36). He saw them truthfully, and still He loved them deeply.

Hebrews reminds us not to neglect meeting together, but to encourage one another toward “love and good deeds” (Hebrews 10:24–25). Sometimes that encouragement is tender. Sometimes it is corrective. Always, it is meant to draw us nearer to Christ.

So yes, the young couple was right. The Church is not supposed to be this way.

But the answer is not to give up on the Church.

The answer is to let Christ make us holy.

Jesus did not give up on His Church. He gave Himself for her “in order to make her holy” (Ephesians 5:25–26).

So we gather.

We gather when the Church is beautiful, and when the Church is painful. We gather not because everyone in the room is already holy, but because God is making us holy.

We gather to worship the Triune God, receive grace, grow in sanctifying love, and be sent into the world as witnesses of Jesus Christ.

The Church is not always what she is supposed to be.

But by the grace of God, she can become more and more what Christ died to make her:

holy, loving, faithful, and full of His Spirit.

This the full quote from John Wesley that Pastor Kevin used this morning. You can read the entire “Letter to a Roman Cat...
05/17/2026

This the full quote from John Wesley that Pastor Kevin used this morning. You can read the entire “Letter to a Roman Catholic “ here: https://goodnewsmag.org/john-wesleys-letter-to-a-roman-catholic/

“In the name, then, and in the strength of God, let us resolve first, not to hurt one another; to do nothing unkind or unfriendly to each other, nothing which we would not have done to ourselves. Rather let us endeavor after every instance of a kind, friendly, and Christian behavior towards each other.

Let us resolve secondly, God being our helper, to speak nothing harsh or unkind of each other. The sure way to avoid this is to say all the good we can both of and to one another; in all our conversation, either with or concerning each other, to use only the language of love to speak with all softness and tenderness, with the most endearing expression which is consistent with truth and sincerity.

Let us, thirdly, resolve to harbor no unkind thought, no unfriendly temper, towards each other. Let us lay the axe to the root of the tree; let us examine all that rises in our heart, and suffer no disposition there which is contrary to tender affection. Then shall we easily refrain from unkind actions and words when the very root of bitterness is cut up.

Let us, fourthly, endeavor to help each other on in what­ever we are agreed leads to the kingdom. So far as we can, let us always rejoice to strengthen each other’s hands in God. “

DUBLIN July 18, 1749. 1. You have heard ten thousand stories of us who are commonly called Protestants, of which, if you believe only one in a thousand, you must think very hardly of us. But this is quite contrary to our Lords rule, “Judge not, that ye be not judged”; and has many […]

Join us Sunday, May 17 for breakfast at 9 AM, Sunday School at 9:30 AM, and worship at 10:45 AM.  Pastor Kevin's message...
05/14/2026

Join us Sunday, May 17 for breakfast at 9 AM, Sunday School at 9:30 AM, and worship at 10:45 AM. Pastor Kevin's message will be "One Big Happy Family?" from 1 Peter 3:8-17. Join us and bring a friend!

Address

306 Tioga Road
Ball, LA
71405

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 12pm
Tuesday 8am - 12pm
Wednesday 8am - 12pm
Thursday 8am - 12pm
Friday 8am - 12pm
Sunday 9am - 12pm

Telephone

+13186409024

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