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	<title>Dallas Area Businesses News and Information Blog &#187; Churches</title>
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		<title>Prairie Creek Baptist Church in Dallas Texas</title>
		<link>http://www.dallas-area.com/334/prairie-creek-baptist-church-in-dallas-texas/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Dec 2010 16:03:19 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Prairie Creek Baptist Church 1013 Dowdy Ferry Road Dallas, TX 75217 (214) 398-8223 Prairie Creek Baptist Church is located in the southeast part of Dallas in a little area known as Pleasant Grove. It was founded back in the early 1930&#8242;s and the main building was constructed in the 1970&#8242;s. The congregation is small. There [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p><a href="http://www.dallas-area.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/prairie-creek-baptist-church-dallas-tx.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-335" title="prairie creek baptist church dallas tx" src="http://www.dallas-area.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/prairie-creek-baptist-church-dallas-tx-300x248.jpg" alt="prairie creek baptist church dallas tx 300x248 Prairie Creek Baptist Church in Dallas Texas" width="300" height="248" /></a>Prairie Creek Baptist Church</p>
<p>1013 Dowdy Ferry Road</p>
<p>Dallas, TX 75217</p>
<p>(214) 398-8223</p>
<p>Prairie Creek Baptist Church is located in the southeast part of Dallas in a little area known as Pleasant Grove. It was founded back in the early 1930&#8242;s and the main building was constructed in the 1970&#8242;s.</p>
<p>The congregation is small. There are probably less than seventy people all told. And the congregation is a mixture of older whites (most over sixty) and middle aged Hispanic families. There have been a few church splits over the years which is partly why the congregation is so small. But most of the people their are very friendly and welcoming. In some ways it&#8217;s like a family even if it is a dysfunctional one at times like most families.</p>
<p>The pastor of the church is Norm Taylor. He is white but he grew up in Peru with his missionary family. He is fluent in Spanish and delivers his sermons in both English and Spanish. He&#8217;ll say a few lines in English for the English-speakers and then a few in Spanish for the Spanish-speakers. Pastor Taylor is a really caring guy with a real heart for people and for God.</p>
<p>Prairie Creek Baptist Church also has a children&#8217;s ministry and a small youth group. Most of the children and teens are Hispanic. I was the youth pastor at the church for a couple of years before my family and I moved on. I enjoyed working with the teens and taking them to summer camp each year.</p>
<p>Their are a lot of really good people at this church. If you are looking for a small church with somewhat of a family feel to it you&#8217;ll probably like Prairie Creek Baptist Church. And the great thing is they&#8217;re not a cult. If you visit and find that you don&#8217;t like it you are free to leave.<strong>Similar Posts:</strong>
<ul class="similar-posts">
<li><a href="http://www.dallas-area.com/272/youth-with-a-mission-dallas/" rel="bookmark" title="November 11, 2010">Youth With A Mission Dallas</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.dallas-area.com/197/lake-ridge-bible-church/" rel="bookmark" title="September 28, 2010">Lake Ridge Bible Church</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.dallas-area.com/138/dallas-tx-new-st-peters-presbyterian-church/" rel="bookmark" title="June 30, 2010">New St. Peter’s Presbyterian Church</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.dallas-area.com/400/dallas-childrens-theater-2/" rel="bookmark" title="January 30, 2011">Dallas Children&#8217;s Theater</a></li>
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		<title>Lake Ridge Bible Church</title>
		<link>http://www.dallas-area.com/197/lake-ridge-bible-church/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Sep 2010 21:29:18 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Lake Ridge Bible Church 1020 Northwest Drive Mesquite, TX. 75150 972-613-2222 www.lakeridgebiblechurch.org Several months ago, our family was looking for a good church to join. We had gone to Scofield Memorial Church and liked it but when we moved to Balch Springs near Mesquite we wanted to find a church closer to us. Some of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p>Lake Ridge Bible Church</p>
<p>1020 Northwest Drive</p>
<p>Mesquite, TX. 75150</p>
<p>972-613-2222</p>
<p>www.lakeridgebiblechurch.org<br />
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Several months ago, our family was looking for a good church to join. We had gone to Scofield Memorial Church and liked it but when we moved to Balch Springs near Mesquite we wanted to find a church closer to us. Some of our friends at Scofield Memorial told us about Lake Ridge Bible Church. So we decided to try it out as it was close to us and had a good reputation. I have to say that I was not in the best place emotionally to look for a new church. I had recently and quite suddenly lost my position as a youth pastor at a small church so my disposition towards church was not at an all-time peak, to say the least.</p>
<div id="attachment_198" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 300px">
	<a href="http://www.dallas-area.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/lakeridge-bible-church-mesquite-tx.gif"><img class="size-medium wp-image-198" title="Lake Ridge Bible Church Mesquite TX" src="http://www.dallas-area.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/lakeridge-bible-church-mesquite-tx-300x260.gif" alt="lakeridge bible church mesquite tx 300x260 Lake Ridge Bible Church" width="300" height="260" /></a>
	<p class="wp-caption-text">Lake Ridge Bible Church Mesquite TX</p>
</div>
<p>I liked the church all right at first. In fact the very first time we visited we returned that same night because their was a special dinner for newcomers to the church. We were so eager to find a good new church that we wanted to find out as much about Lake Ridge as we could as fast as we could. The church was definitely a vast improvement over our last church. Lake Ridge is a pretty healthy church. In fact that became part of the problem for me. Everyone was very friendly. The music was fine. The preaching was fine. Everything was just fine and dandy. In fact, nobody seemed to have any major personal problems. People’s big struggles with sin seemed to involve things like listening to too much talk radio or something. So they decided not to listen to so much talk radio and to spend more time reading the Bible instead so that God would shape their thinking and not the media. Most of the things we prayed for in our Sunday school class involved health issues in people families.<br />
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Personally, I was struggling with some real sins and some real doubts as to my faith. But there was no way I was going to mention that in this church. After a while, I just grew weary with the whole experience. After three years of seminary, I felt like I knew everything the pastor was going to say before he said it. It’s nice to be around friendly people, but I needed something deeper and I was having a real hard time connecting. I think a good deal of the problem was just my own personal hang-ups but I still feel that a church needs to let it be known very clearly in words and seen in actions that it exists to be a sanctuary of grace and healing to seriously fallen people. It was never meant to function as a social gathering place for people who have their stuff together and just want to fine-tune their spiritual lives.</p>
<p>Trying to look at this situation from an objective perspective I think that many people would have a deep, meaningful experience at Lake Ridge Bible Church. I just don’t happen to be one of them. My wife liked the church pretty well and she was making attempts to connect with people. It might not have been her ideal church, but it was a good church. My oldest son really loved his Sunday school class and was beginning to make some friends there. That’s one of the reasons I tried to stay there longer even though I didn’t really want to. My two younger boys didn’t really care for their Sunday School class much. They were much more interested in the peppermints they could get from a bowl in the foyer every Sunday.</p>
<p>There are several things that I did appreciate about Lake Ridge Bible Church. One is the fact that they are a very generous church. I remember one occasion in particular when the church needed a big offering in order meet their budget needs. The church came together and gave a large offering which went above and beyond what was needed. This was a good sign of the church’s generosity in itself. But then the pastor did something even better. After thanking the congregation for their generosity he began to talk about how the church should give away the excess money to other needy ministries, organizations etc. Most churches would wisely tuck that money away in the bank for a rainy day &#8211; maybe a day when God would decide not to come through or the people would decide to be stingy. In addition to its generosity, I saw a real level of faith and trust in God and his ability to provide and to move the hearts of his people.</p>
<p>Another thing I like about Lake Ridge is that they are very ministry and missions minded. They want to reach out locally and globally and they are willing to put their money where their mouth is. In fact, Pastor Raymer used to be a missionary before he became a pastor and still keeps his passion for missions alive through church giving and going on missions trips himself. In addition the church tries to do several things each year to reach out to their community with the gospel.</p>
<p>Several professors and students from Dallas Theological Seminary attend Lake Ridge. This will be plus for some people who want to surround themselves with individuals who are very knowledgeable about the Scriptures. Others are turned off by theologians and seminary students because sometimes they come across as arrogant know-it-alls. I had mixed feelings about it. As a graduate of Dallas Theological Seminary I enjoyed seeing some of my former classmates and professors there. Interestingly, my least favorite professor from DTS and also one of my favorite professors both go to Lake Ridge. I didn’t feel, however, that the presence of so much collective Biblical knowledge really made that much of a difference. Even in classes that were taught by DTS professors I was never blown away by some new insight or challenged in some deep way. A lot of other people might find the teaching quite helpful, though. Just not an arrogant seminary grads like me.</p>
<p>I think the leadership at Lake Ridge Bible Church is quite good. The pastor, assistant pastor and youth pastor are all charismatic, personable, kind, intelligent, and passionate about Jesus, the Gospel, and steering the church in the right direction.</p>
<p>Not only the leadership, but also most of the congregation at Lake Ridge is quite friendly and make you feel welcome right away. This sure beats the icy greeting you get at some churches, or the artificial friendliness, that just makes you feel like an outsider as you squirm in your seat waiting for the moment when you can make a clean get away.<br />
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The last thing that I appreciate about Lake Ridge is somewhat superficial. They have a nice little library full of good resources, books, movies, audio-books etc. for all age-groups. Besides the peppermints, our kids always looked forward to checking out some good books after church.</p>
<p>One of the great things that Lake Ridge Bible Church puts on every summer is their vacation Bible school. Two of our kids just finished a week of vacation Bible school there. The church used a cowboy themed VBS curriculum put out by LifeWay Christian Bookstores called Saddle Ranch VBS. Lake Ridge really goes all out on their VBS’s and does a great job. Our kids had fun with the various activities: singing, story-time, crafts, snack time etc. Picking up the kids was a little chaotic. All the children are kept in the church sanctuary at the end and then all the parents just go look for their kids and take them home. It was a free for all. The aisles were crowded, there was no order to it, and there was no system for making sure that you were really a child’s parent or guardian. If the kid seemed to recognize you and was willing to go with you, that was good enough. As a parent, that is a little disconcerting to me. It seems that there could and should be some simple system in place for the VBS workers to be able to make sure the child goes home with the right person. Lake Ridge has a system for their Sunday School drop off and pick up. The child is given a nametag and the parent is given a corresponding sticker for pick up. So why not do the same at VBS? I was disappointed by this but pleased with the rest of the VBS. The kids got to make fun crafts. One was a rustic looking wooden picture frame with an old fashioned style wanted poster of your child in a cowboy outfit on it. It says something like: Wanted by God &#8211; Reward in Heaven. The children also got to decorate their own cowboy handkerchiefs. The snacks were all named after cowboy stuff. For instance, a  rice crispy tied with a couple pieces of string became a hay bale. Also the music was good. Everyone learned lots of fun songs. At the end all the kids were given several certificates and coupons for free food at places like Pizza Inn, Pizza Patron, Spring Creek Barbeque, and Chick-Fil-A.</p>
<p>I have explained why I don’t feel that Lake Ridge Bible Church was the best place for me. But hopefully my ranting won’t scare you off. The church is definitely worth a visit if you are looking for a new church. You may have a very different experience than I did and fall in love with the place and the people. If you are interested you can try out one of their Sunday morning services. The first worship service at Lake Ridge is at 9:00 am. This is a more traditional service with older songs. The congregation is much smaller than at the later service. The later worship service takes place at 10:30am. It is a more contemporary style and there are a lot more people there. During both of these services there are Sunday School classes going on for adults, and children. Sometimes the Sunday School class you join will determine what service you attend. The parking at Lake Ridge Bible Church can get a little crowded if you don’t get there early. There is an additional parking lot across the street, however, if you can’t get a spot right by the church so you’ll always be able to get some sort of parking spot.</p>
<p>If your are happy with the whole Bible church scene and are looking for a good Bible church then you will probably be quite happy with Lake Ridge Bible Church.<br />
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<li><a href="http://www.dallas-area.com/334/prairie-creek-baptist-church-in-dallas-texas/" rel="bookmark" title="December 21, 2010">Prairie Creek Baptist Church in Dallas Texas</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.dallas-area.com/138/dallas-tx-new-st-peters-presbyterian-church/" rel="bookmark" title="June 30, 2010">New St. Peter’s Presbyterian Church</a></li>
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		<title>New St. Peter’s Presbyterian Church</title>
		<link>http://www.dallas-area.com/138/dallas-tx-new-st-peters-presbyterian-church/</link>
		<comments>http://www.dallas-area.com/138/dallas-tx-new-st-peters-presbyterian-church/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Jun 2010 20:47:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[New St. Peter’s Presbyterian Church Worship Location: Dallas Children’s Theater 5938 Skillman Dallas, TX. 75231 Administrative Offices: 6116 North Central Expressway, Suite 1060 Dallas, TX. 75206 (214) 438-0120 www.newstpeters.org Looking for a new church is a difficult and often daunting enterprise. Maybe you have had a bad experience at your last church and are wary [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p>New St. Peter’s Presbyterian Church<br />
Worship Location: Dallas Children’s Theater<br />
5938 Skillman<br />
Dallas, TX. 75231<br />
Administrative Offices:<br />
6116 North Central Expressway, Suite 1060<br />
Dallas, TX. 75206<br />
(214) 438-0120<br />
<a href="http://www.newstpeters.org/">www.newstpeters.org</a></p>
<p>Looking for a new church is a difficult and often daunting enterprise. Maybe you have had a bad experience at your last church and are wary of getting burned again. Or perhaps you loved your last church but you had to move and are concerned that you’ll never find one as good.</p>
<p>There are several things to consider when looking for a new church home. First, church is not about you. It doesn’t exist to cater to your every need and just make you feel good all the time. It’s about seeking and worshipping God as a part of a community of believers.</p>
<p>That said, you don’t want to go to just any church. You should look for one where you feel you and your family can serve, grow, learn, help and be helped, hear truth, and experience God and his people. Our family had been searching for a church for a few months when we found New St. Peter’s Presbyterian Church.</p>
<p>We attended a couple of other churches prior to that, but they just weren’t a good fit for us for various reasons. We have now been attending New St. Peter’s for six weeks and are really enjoying it. Let me tell you a little about it.</p>
<p>My wife and I have three young boys under the age of eight, and it is important to us that a church be very family oriented. I’ve never found a church that is more packed with young families than New St. Peters. There are young children and parents all over the auditorium.</p>
<p>And for the most part, the children are quite well-behaved, which is important, since all children over the age of five sit through the entire service with their parents. Kids five and under go to Worship Training class (like Sunday School) shortly before the sermon begins.</p>
<p>It’s neat to be around so many people who are at the same stage in life as you and can relate to the things you are going through. There are some singles and older people at New St. Peter’s, but not a lot. So if you’re single and you want to find a church where you can meet that special someone, this probably isn’t the best place for you. We’ve found the people at the church to be very friendly and welcoming.</p>
<p>There is no unofficial dress code there. You can wear what you want. Some people prefer to dress up and others prefer to go casual or semi-casual. It really does not matter. No one will look down on you if you wear shorts and flip-flops or if you come in a three-piece suit.</p>
<p>The worship service at New St. Peter’s begins at 9:30am and goes until 11:00am. You know it has officially begun when a couple of cute children go on the stage and ring a couple of hand bells. New St. Peter’s is a Presbyterian church, sister church of Park Cities Presbyterian.</p>
<p>It is part of the Presbyterian Church in America and has a certain form and structure to its worship. I have several friends who grew up in liturgical churches such as Catholic, Lutheran, Episcopal or even Presbyterian churches. In many cases, they are now turned off by the liturgy at churches where certain prayers, actions, and sacraments are repeated each week.</p>
<p>They long for something more free and less formal, such as extemporaneous prayers and sermons. I, however, am headed in the opposite direction. I grew up in a very charismatic church and have seen the abuses which occur when worship is based more on emotion than on scripture and proper doctrine. I appreciate the fact that many of the prayers we recite together have also been spoken by past believers for hundreds of years.</p>
<p>I like the fact that though many of them are old, they are still as relevant today as when they were first written, because they were composed out of deep thought, prayer, and the study of God’s Word.</p>
<p>Each service begins with a song, as people make their way to their seats. Then there is a call to prayer where the minister and the congregation take turns reading portions of a scripture. Then there is a prayer and we sing two hymns. Growing up, I never dreamed that I would be fond of singing hymns. At the church I grew up in we did not sing many of them and I was grateful for that.</p>
<p>I later discovered that many of the choruses of our worship songs were take directly from hymns. I never knew that they were only a small part of another song which had many other words to it. At some other churches I later attended, we sang hymns but we usually only sang the first and last verse, or some variation, in an effort to speed up the service or squeeze in more songs or something.</p>
<p>At New St. Peter’s we sing the hymns all the way through as they were meant to be sung. Many of the hymns were composed in the eighteenth or nineteenth century. On the surface, singing all the lines of an old hymn sounds dreadfully boring to me. But I find that I really enjoy it and find it very meaningful. The words and the music (played by some wonderful musicians) engages both my heart and my mind.</p>
<p>There is deep theology and powerful sentiment in these old songs. I have nothing against contemporary worship music in general. I like some of it a great deal and enjoy singing it in worship, but I’m glad that these meaningful hymns of the faith that have stood the test of time are being rediscovered and brought back into churches that gave them up a long time ago.</p>
<p>After the hymns, the congregation recites together the confession of sin and plea for pardon. Together we acknowledge how we have done wrong and where we have failed to do what is good and right. Then there is a time of silence when everyone individually recalls their specific sins. After that, we all read the assurance of pardon when we recall what Christ has done for us on the cross and remember his promise of forgiveness.</p>
<p>Following the confession of sin, there is a reading from the Old Testament. Right now we are going through the book of Leviticus. It seems strange that we read some of these passages and rarely offer any explanation of them. This is the part of the worship service that seems the most formulaic and unmeaning to me. As I said, I don’t come from a Presbyterian or liturgical background so I would like to find out more about the reason for this part of the service.</p>
<p>The four and five year old children are dismissed at this point to go to their worship training class. Then we have the sharing of the peace of Christ. The minister says, “May the peace of Christ be with you,” and the congregation responds, “And also with you.” This signals the time for everyone to greet those around them and say hello to friends. It’s a good time to reconnect and meet new people. I’m naturally somewhat shy and introverted, so this isn’t easy for me but I find it rewarding to step out and get to know others in this way.</p>
<p>Following the sharing of peace we read the doxology together. A doxology is a recognition of God’s glory and awesomeness. In it we express our awe at the majesty and mystery of who God is and what He has done. Sometimes following this there will be an infant baptism. This may be a problem for some people who come from a Baptist background or some other tradition which does not believe in infant baptism.</p>
<p>For Presbyterians, (as I understand it, anyway) infant baptism does not mean that the child has become a Christian necessarily. But it is a sign that they are part of a covenant family of believers. And when they come to understand and embrace Christ they may look back to their baptism as a means of God’s grace in their lives.</p>
<p>Next we sing another song. Then everyone stands while the pastor reads the text from which he will preach. After that he delivers his sermon. Rich Lambert is the head pastor at New St. Peter’s and is a fine preacher. You can tell that he has put a lot of thought and preparation into his sermons and that he deeply cares about what he is saying, as well as about God and his people.</p>
<p>Colin Peters and Aaron Morris are the associate pastors and they are also very sincere, thoughtful, and well-spoken. As a Presbyterian church, the theology of the church is of course Calvinist and is perhaps best laid out in the Westminster Confession. This is a theology which I hold too, but I understand that not everyone does and that it may cause discomfort for some people to hear about things like election and predestination.</p>
<p>But as far as I can tell, the church simply believes and teaches its doctrine without trying to bash you over the head with it. We recognize that the church is made up of all kinds of different people and our primary goal is to love one another and to glorify God together. That doesn’t mean that the truth gets watered down at St. Peter’s (quite the contrary) but there is also a spirit of grace and love that accompanies it because New St. Peter’s recognizes that the church is full of flawed, wounded, sinful people who need grace.</p>
<p>Following the sermon we give our offerings and alms. Offerings are the gifts which we give to the Lord for the work of the church, and alms are given to the needy such as ministries or families and individuals who really need help. Last Sunday the alms went to a Presbyterian church in Denton which is going through severe financial difficulties. The offerings and almsgiving are seen as an act of worship, and are given while we sing.</p>
<p>Instead of passing an offering plate around, we get up and go down to the offering box or to the deacons holding the bowl for the alms and give our gift.</p>
<p>This is not to show off how generous we are but to exemplify that we are actively worshipping God and not just passively sitting in our seats receiving.<br />
Finally we sing a couple more hymns and then read the parting liturgy and receive the benediction (words of blessing) from the pastor. Then everyone is dismissed to leave and pick up their children, if need be.</p>
<p>At least once a month we celebrate the sacrament of the Lord’s Table (Communion or Eucharist). At many churches I’ve been to, the sacrament of communion has felt next to meaningless. At St. Peter’s, it is the most meaningful experience of this sacrament I’ve ever had.</p>
<p>It is not just some ceremony when we vaguely remember what Christ did for us on the cross, try to feel bad for our sins, and then pass around some crackers and grape juice. There is a definite feeling of sinners being called to receive the love and forgiveness of Christ and to experience Him together as his body. There are three tables set up in front, and we all go forward to receive the body and blood of Christ.</p>
<p>The minister explains how this sacrament is for us and for our forgiveness. He prays a blessing over each child, which always touches me. Like many parts of the service, it is something which needs to be experienced more than described to get a real picture of it.</p>
<p>In order to allow people to get to know each other better, connect more deeply, and grow together in the Lord, New St. Peter’s has several home groups who meet together who meet at different times. Some groups meet once a month. Others meet more often.</p>
<p>Some meet to share a meal together, while others get together for a Bible study. You can find out more about these groups at <a href="http://www.newstpeters.org/">www.newstpeters.org</a> or by calling (214) 438-0120. The church also has a School of Life and Doctrine available during the academic school year. It offers classes dealing with theology and practical ministry for all ages.</p>
<p>There is also a Reformed Youth Fellowship which focuses on teenagers and has gatherings in order to disciple these young men and women and to spend time with them. You can also find out more about the School of Life and Doctrine and the Reformed Youth Fellowship at the website or phone number listed above.<br />
New St. Peter’s is currently meeting in the main theater at the <a title="Dallas Texas Childrens Theater" href="http://www.dallas-area.com">Dallas Children’s Theater on Skillman</a>. It is hoping to one day get its own property east of the I-75 corridor, but that may be a long way down the road. Meeting in the Dallas Children’s Theater can be a little distracting sometimes.</p>
<p>For instance, right now there are several props from one of the children’s plays right behind where the pastor speaks. Still, the distraction is not overwhelming and my wife and I have enjoyed our time at New St. Peter’s very much.</p>
<p>One of the most interesting things about the church is its name and logo. New St. Peters seems to suggest that there was an Old St. Peter’s church. There wasn’t. The logo of the church features a rooster clutching on to a cross. The rooster represents the apostle Peter and how he denied Christ.</p>
<p>That is the old St. Peter. But as he turns back to Christ, clutches on to the cross and receives forgiveness, he is transformed into the new St. Peter. It is a good symbol of how we have all sinned and betrayed Christ but can still become new creatures through his forgiveness and work on the cross.</p>
<p>If you’re currently looking for a church in the Dallas area and any of this sounds appealing to you I would encourage you to stop by New St. Peter’s and check things out for yourself.<strong>Similar Posts:</strong>
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