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❣️ Sermon Reflections & Discussion // 30 Nov 2025

As we step into Advent, we remember that Christmas is God’s move toward us — a love that never fails, a relationship that holds us steady and invites us to declare its joy. In 2 Corinthians 5:14-20, Paul reminds us that this love doesn’t just comfort us; it changes us. It shapes how we live, how we see people and how we respond in a world that can feel rushed, divided and discouraged. Christ’s love compels us, reshapes our vision and redirects our actions.

1. Christ’s Love Compels Us
“Christ’s love compels us” means His love doesn’t just inspire — it holds us together and pushes us forward.
The greek word for 'compel' — sunecho describes something that closes a wound or keeps things from falling apart. That’s what His love does for us. Before knowing Jesus, our lives were driven by ego, success, money and self-preservation. But His love narrows our lives to one clear purpose: living for the One who died and rose for us.
Even when we feel stressed, stretched, or overwhelmed, His love is the steady force holding our hearts together.

2. See Others Differently
Because Christ’s love shapes us, we no longer look at people the way the world would. Whether it’s a slow cashier, a reckless driver cutting our lane, relatives with difficult questions, or someone who seems “not very useful” — our natural reaction is to judge or dismiss.
However, Advent teaches us to develop “manger eyes” — eyes that see people the way Jesus sees us. God looked at our broken world and moved toward us with compassion.
Many around us struggle during Christmas with feelings of loneliness, grief and exhaustion. Instead of seeing people as interruptions, we remember: Christ died for them too. We ask God to help us see others with His eyes, even those who have hurt us.

3. Act Differently
Seeing differently leads to living differently. As people reconciled to God, we are now His ambassadors — people who take the first step to restore peace. Reconciliation means choosing to close the gap, just like God did for us.

Christmas often brings up old tensions, family wounds, or awkward gatherings. However, followers of Jesus aren’t thermometers that simply reflect the room’s dynamics — we are thermostats that set the atmosphere with grace, patience and forgiveness. The Christmas story breaks all boundaries when shepherds and magi stood side by side at the manger when Jesus was born.

As ambassadors of Christ, every space we enter becomes an embassy of the King. We represent His character, His compassion, and His message of reconciliation. Don’t just sing of His love, live transformed and compelled by it.

💬 Reflection Questions:
1
. Where is Christ’s love holding me together or redirecting me?

2. Who do I judge easily, and how does remembering Christ’s sacrifice for them, change my view?

3. What step can I take to reconcile or comfort to someone forgotten this Advent?

Revisit the sermon in our library:
🔗 plmc.org/sermon
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📣 PLMC UPDATE – 6 Dec 25, 9.00am

Worship Services Online
🔗 English:
live.plmc.org (Sun 9am)
🔗 Mandarin:
ms.live.plmc.org (Sun 11.15am)
🔗 Youth:
youth.live.plmc.org (Sat 4.30pm)

🎄 Christmas 2025
It’s December and we are gearing up for a joyous Christmas Season at PLMC. The highlight is of course our Christmas Village from 19 to 21 Dec. Other festivities are as shown – please pray and invite loved ones and friends to come for the events, for hearts to be touched to receive the joy of Jesus’ birth and the Good News He brings. Tap
here to download the Event Guide, where there will be more information about the Christmas Village.

👧 Inclusive Discipleship of Children
The church is mandated to disciple our children by teaching them everything the Lord has commanded us. This responsibility includes discipling children with special needs and disabilities. A special two-session course is being organised to equip children’s ministry leaders and volunteers with biblical insights and an understanding of common special needs among children. It will be conducted by the Koinonia Inclusive Network (KIN), which will share ways to adapt teaching methods and activities as well as useful behavioural management strategies to help us show love, engage the children meaningfully to foster belonging in the church family.
📅 31 Jan & 14 Mar 2026
🕗 9am - 12.30pm
📍 Jordan Hall
🔗 Register
here by 25 Jan 2026

🙏TRAC Prayer Conference
This is more than a prayer meeting.
It’s a movement – one heart, one voice, one family – saying “Yes, Lord” to His call. Join all 21 TRAC churches as we gather in a united moment of worship, prayer, and surrender, seeking God’s leading for our churches, our communities, and our world. This significant event welcomes pastors, leaders, and members to stand before the Lord as one family.
Registration is now open and you are encouraged to sign up early, as registration will close once capacity is reached.
Together, as one body, let us respond to God with one heart and one voice: “I Say Yes.”
📅 Sat 14 March 2026
🕘 2pm - 6pm
📍PLMC
🔗 Register he
re

View more announcements, stories and resources on our website:
🔗 pl
mc.org

Please do not reply, send any messages or call this number as this phone is unmanned.
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❣️ Sermon Reflections & Discussion // 7 Dec 2025

The season of Advent is about hope in waiting for our Lord Jesus’ coming, both for His incarnation and His promised second coming. And the theme of hope is apparent throughout the passage in Romans 15. We can see in Paul’s writing how there is a need for hope in our lives, we have the certainty of this hope and lastly, how we can live a hope-filled life.

The Need for Hope
Paul establishes our need for hope in Romans 3:23. Because we have all sinned and missed the mark in our lives, we all need the hope Jesus Christ offers on a universal level, so we can be who God wants us to be. Paul also writes about this need on a personal level, where believers, upon receiving hope, need to give hope and help others find that hope (v1).

The Certainty of Hope
The English use of the word ‘hope’ in phrases such as “I hope so” has an element of doubt and uncertainty, but the biblical point of view of hope implies confidence in something that one knows is going to take place. There is a certainty about biblical hope, because God is the source of hope (v13). When we have faith in the God of hope, the power of the Holy Spirit will enable us to abound in hope. We have this certainty also because God has confirmed and fulfilled His promises (v8). He is a faithful promise keeper and can be trusted so we can hope in Him. But now comes the important question: How does it look like to have this hope in our lives?

A Hope-Filled Life
There is a common understanding that hope is a type of battery or energiser that fuels our endurance for the challenges in life. But Paul flips it around in stating that it is endurance that produces hope. In Romans 5:1-5, he writes that suffering produces endurance, endurance produces character, and character produces hope. In our difficult times, Jesus teaches us to turn to Him. When we are yoked to Him, He walks with us through the suffering, shaping and forming our character, producing hope in us as we experience His power with us.

This Advent, may we continue to hope in Jesus who not only gives hope but is our living hope.

💬 Reflection Questions:
1. Who are the people around you who need the hope in their lives? How can you be a help to them?
2. What promises of God are you hoping in for your situation now? Share and pray for each other.
3. How has God used the challenges in your life to shape your character and produce hope?

Revisit the sermon in our library:
🔗 plmc.org/sermon
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📣 PLMC UPDATE – 13 Dec 25, 9.00am

Worship Services Online
🔗 English:
live.plmc.org (Sun 9am)
🔗 Mandarin:
ms.live.plmc.org (Sun 11.15am)
🔗 Youth:
youth.live.plmc.org (Sat 4.30pm)
🔗 Filipino:
facebook.com/plmcfs (Sun 2pm)

🎄Countdown to Christmas Village
Tis the week before Christmas, and five days to our Christmas Village, which will be from Friday to Sunday, 5.30pm to 9.30pm nightly.
Do familiarise yourself with the
event guide so you can host your guests well. Check out the timings for the light-up, snowfall and performances, and the five featured zones to collect stamps to exchange for a free goodie bag. There are also arcade games, bubble play, medieval market, photo booth and photo spots, the Alpha Cafe for a quiet chat about the Gospel, and plenty of food – Ramly burgers, hotdogs, popcorn, candy floss. It’s all free – because Christ has paid the price for all. So invite your pre-believing loved ones and let’s create and deliver joy at our Christmas Village.

📆 19-21 Dec
🕔 5.30pm - 9.30pm
🔗 More details h
ere

Do note: There will not be Youth Service on Saturday 20 Dec, and no Silver Boxes, Filipino Service, Coffee Corner or Breakfast Counter next Sunday, so do BYO (Bring Your Own) on 21 Dec.

🙏WSCS Prayer Walk 2026
PLMC’s WSCS celebrates its 90th anniversary in 2026. As part of the celebrations, WSCS is organising a series of 4 prayer walks covering the north, south, east and west of Singapore. The 1st prayer walk will be on 3 Jan to locations in the west of Singapore, led by Rev Christopher Chin. Come for a time of prayer and fellowship

📅 Sat 3 Jan 2026
8.45am – 1pm
📍 Meeting Point: PLMC Fellowship Hall
🔗 Register by 15 Dec he
re

View more announcements, stories and resources on our website:
🔗 pl
mc.org

Please do not reply, send any messages or call this number as this phone is unmanned.
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❣️ Sermon Reflections & Discussion // 14 Dec 2025

The shepherds were ordinary people living ordinary lives when God interrupted them with extraordinary news. These men lived and worked in darkness, both literally and socially, yet God’s glory broke into their night with overwhelming brilliance. As with the shepherds, God continues to come to ordinary, messy and imperfect people. The shepherds’ response to Jesus teaches us how we, too, can respond when God’s glory shines into our lives, turning the ordinary into something extraordinary.

They responded with urgency
When the angels left, the shepherds did not hesitate nor delay, but immediately went to Bethlehem. They dropped what they were doing and responded to God’s message with urgency, intention and purpose. Their obedience shows us that when God speaks, the right response is to trust, obey and act. Faith often begins with a willing and immediate step of obedience.

They believed even when things looked ordinary
When the shepherds saw Jesus, there were no angels, bright lights nor crowns, just a baby in a lowly manger. Yet they believed that Jesus was the Saviour, Christ, and Lord as proclaimed to them by the angel, the true sacrificial Lamb to take away the sins of the world. Their faith was rooted in God’s word of love and hope to them, not in what they could see with their eyes.

They shared what they had seen
After encountering Jesus, the shepherds shared what they had seen and heard with everyone around them. They became the first witnesses of Christ, boldly proclaiming the Good News despite having no status or training. Though their external circumstances remained the same, their hearts were transformed through the encounter with Jesus, and they returned with a changed purpose, glorifying and praising God.

God still comes to humble and ordinary people and calls them to experience His extraordinary love. This Christmas, let us not just hear the story, but also step into it. Will you be like the shepherds and run to Jesus, worshipping Him deeply and proclaiming Him boldly? When we encounter Christ, our hearts are changed, and we too can become His extraordinary messengers. May the true King bring His light, peace, and salvation into our lives this Christmas.

💬 Reflection Questions:

1. Where in your life do you feel most ‘ordinary,’ overlooked, or stuck right now? How does God interrupting the shepherds in the field speak into that area?”

2. The shepherds responded with urgency, faith, and proclamation. Which of these responses do you struggle with most and why?

3. The shepherds returned to the same fields, but with changed hearts. How does a transformed heart of peace, hope and joy look like to you?

Revisit the sermon in our library:
🔗 plmc.org/sermon
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📣 PLMC UPDATE – 20 Dec 25, 9.00am

Worship Services Online
🔗 English:
live.plmc.org (Sun 9am)
🔗 Mandarin:
ms.live.plmc.org (Sun 11.15am)

🎄Christmas Village
It's Day 2 of our Christmas Village – which means two more days for us to share the JOY of Christ! Be sure to catch our carollers, Mandarin Service choir, Filipino family, singers, dancers and youths as they perform amidst the games, bubble play, food, fun, lights and snow!

🕔 5.30pm - 9.30pm
🔗 More details
here

Do note there will be no Youth Service today, no Coffee Corner, Filipino Service & Silver Boxes tomorrow.

🎄Christmas Services - Thu 25th Dec
English - 9am & 11.15am (Sanctuary)
Mandarin - 9am & 11.15am (Chapel)

Do note there will be no breakfast counter and Silver Boxes on 25th Dec, and no breakfast counter and Filipino Service on Sun 28th Dec.

🍷Wesleyan Covenant Renewal Watchnight Service
On New Year’s Eve, we will be having our Wesleyan Covenant Renewal Watchnight Service from 10.30pm, followed by a Teochew porridge supper prepared by our WSCS ladies. Please bring condiments to share. Get creative – if you can’t cook, you can dabao your favourite zichar, claypot or cai png dish. Let's look forward to our first fellowship of 2026 as a church family.

💒Vision Sunday Combined Service
We will have a combined celebration service on the 1st Sunday of 2026 (4 Jan).

Do note there will be no Youth Service on 3 Jan, and no Silver Boxes and Filipino Service on 4 Jan.

View more announcements, stories and resources on our website:
🔗
plmc.org

Please do not reply, send any messages or call this number as this phone is unmanned.
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❣️ Sermon Reflections & Discussion // 21 Dec 2025

The account of Jesus talking to the Samaritan woman at the well in John 4 comes after the account of Jesus talking to Nicodemus at night in John 3. Both passages are about individuals coming to Jesus and meeting Him alone as He shared about the Holy Spirit and eternal life. However, they were two very different people in society’s eyes. Nicodemus was a Jewish religious leader held in high esteem while the Samaritan was a woman and an outcast on many levels.

The parallels and contrasts strongly suggest that these two accounts are meant to be read as a coherent unit. Most importantly, they show how everyone matters to Jesus, regardless of background and societal standing. Jesus models how we too can meet people where they are.

God often appoints people for us to meet – it is no accident where He has placed us. As we connect with God regularly and as we get to know others better, we can grow in being sensitive to God’s leading to connect others to Him, the giver of life.

Pray regularly. Ask God to give you insights on how to meet your loved ones where they are and show you how to bridge the gap so they will see their need for Jesus. Ask God to help you see how the Good News is Good News for them in their context.

It may just be one person, but we never know the ripple effect that may have: Jesus reached out to the Samaritan woman while she was fetching water, and from that one encounter, she was transformed and went on to reach many more people for Jesus, the source of living water. Our greatest joy will also come from knowing we have reached one more for God, who rejoices over every salvation.

Reflection Questions:
1. Recount a time you encountered Jesus. Share how He has transformed you, and remember in thanksgiving.
2. With whom have you shared Jesus with? Share your experience in reaching out.
3. Who is the one person God has placed in front of you? How will you commit to daily build the bridge to connect him/her to Jesus? Take some time to pray for this person, and ask God to empower you.

▶️ Revisit the sermon in our library:
🔗 plmc.org/sermon
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📣 PLMC UPDATE – 27 Dec 25, 9.00am

Worship Services Online
🔗 English:
live.plmc.org (Sun 9am)
🔗 Mandarin:
ms.live.plmc.org (Sun 11.15am)
🔗 Youth:
youth.live.plmc.org (Sat 4.30pm)
(Do note there will be no breakfast counter and Filipino Service tomorrow.)


🍷Wesleyan Covenant Renewal Watchnight Service
On 31 Dec, New Year’s Eve, we will be having our Wesleyan Covenant Renewal Watchnight Service from 10.30pm, followed by a Teochew porridge supper prepared by our WSCS ladies. Please bring condiments to share. Get creative – if you can’t cook, you can dabao your favourite zichar, claypot or cai png dish. Let's look forward to our first fellowship of 2026 as a church family.

💒Vision Sunday Combined Service
We will have combined celebration services at 9am and 11.15am on 4 January, the first Sunday of 2026.

Do note that there will not be separate Youth Service on 3 Jan, nor Silver Boxes Children’s Ministry, Living Stones Mandarin Services and Filipino Service on 4 Jan.

R.O.A.D. Bible Reading Plan
Start the year by committing to immerse yourself in God’s Word. To help you, we have a two-year reading plan so you can cover the entire Bible in 2 years. As a church family, let’s embark on the ROAD together – to Read, Observe, Apply and Do what the Lord reveals to us in His Word. We are finishing with the Year 1 readings, so from 1 Jan 2026, we will start reading through the Year 2 passages.

🔗 Download it here

View more announcements, stories and resources on our website:
🔗 pl
mc.org

Please do not reply, send any messages or call this number as this phone is unmanned.
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❣️ Sermon Reflections & Discussion // 28 Dec 2025
Living in the “Gap”

The Sunday after Christmas places us in an awkward, liminal space. The celebration has passed and yet the new year has not fully arrived. Emotionally and spiritually, it can feel like a “hangover” between the joy of Christmas remembered and uncertainty of the new year ahead. This mirrors the experience of Israel in Isaiah 63. After the long-awaited return from exile, the people expected glory and restoration, but instead found themselves surrounded by rubble, hardship, and unanswered questions. Like them, we often ask quietly: Is God really with us now, as we face another uncertain year?

God’s Hesed as Our Anchor
Rather than looking forward with anxiety, Isaiah looks backward with intention. He responds to uncertainty not by speculating about the future, but by recalling the unchanging nature of God as revealed in the past. At the heart of this remembrance is hesed—God’s steadfast, covenant-keeping love. Hesed is not a fleeting emotion or seasonal warmth; it is a deep, loyal commitment grounded in who God is and what He has promised. When circumstances feel unstable, Isaiah teaches us that hope is anchored not in what lies ahead, but in who God has already shown Himself to be – a God who abounds in hesed love and faithfulness.

Love that Remembers (v7)

Isaiah begins by deliberately recounting “the kindnesses of the Lord.” This act of remembering is not sentimental nostalgia but an act of faith. In the midst of ruins, Isaiah chooses to recall God’s past faithfulness—His compassion, goodness, and saving acts throughout Israel’s history. Remembering becomes a spiritual discipline that resists despair. When present realities threaten to overwhelm us, recalling God’s faithfulness reminds us that the same God who acted before has not changed.

Love that Believes (v8)
In verse 8, God calls Israel “my people” and speaks of them as children who will not deal falsely despite their long history of unfaithfulness. This reveals a surprising dimension of hesed: God relates to His people not according to their failures, but according to His covenant and their God-given identity. God believes in who His people are called to be. His love speaks identity before behaviour is corrected. This is grace that names us not by our worst moments, but by God’s redemptive purpose for us.

Love that Carries (v.9)
Finally, Isaiah declares that God does not remain distant. “In all their affliction, He was afflicted.” God enters into the pain of His people, empathises with them, redeems them, lifts them up, and carries them through their weakness. This hesed finds its fullest expression in Christ—Immanuel, God with us. God does not merely give strength from afar; He carries His people when they are unable to walk on their own. As we step into a new year, may we be assured that we are not asked to face what lies ahead alone or in our own strength, but are carried by our loving God.

💬 Reflection Questions:
1. What does the Hebrew concept of hesed reveal about God’s character and love that is most meaningful to you?
2. How has remembering God’s past faithfulness helped you when you faced uncertainty, disappointment or transition? Recount moments in the past year when God provided hesed love when you were in need.
As you step into the new year, what is one specific challenge you will be facing? What aspect of God’s hesed love will you hold onto to carry you forward?

▶️ Revisit the sermon in our library:
🔗 plmc.org/sermon
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📣 PLMC UPDATE – 3 Jan 26, 9.00am

Worship Services Online
🔗 English:
live.plmc.org (Sun 9am)
🔗 Mandarin:
ms.live.plmc.org (Sun 11.15am)

🏕 Ohana Camp 2026
PLMC will be having our Ohana Camp in June this year, at Berjaya Times Square Kuala Lumpur. Registration for the camp will begin in two weeks’ time, on 18 Jan and there will be early bird promotional rates till 28 Feb so do get ready to sign up then! Your camp fee will include a camp jacket instead of the usual camp T-shirt. Sample jackets will be available for trying from next Sunday 11 Jan at the Fellowship Hall (and Chapel for MS).

🔗 More details h
ere
For enquiries, please email plmc.ohana26@gmail.com
or WhatsApp 8857 7078

Alpha Course
Are you or your loved ones curious about whether there is more to life than what you are experiencing, and why Jesus makes a difference? Do you want to share the gospel but do not know how? The Alpha Course is for you. Explore the basics of the Christian faith, and ask all the questions you’ve always wanted answers to in a relaxed environment. The sessions are interactive with small group discussions and registration is now open.

ALPHA (conducted in English)
Dates: Sat, 28 Feb – 25 Apr 2026
Time: 10am-12.30pm
Registration closes on 22 Feb 2026

ALPHA (conducted in Mandarin)
Dates: Sat, 7 Mar – 25 Apr 2026
Time: 9am-12.30pm
Registration closes on 01 Mar 2026

Invite a friend and sign up together her
e!

️ GYM Outing
Our Glowing Years Ministry is organising an outing on 22 Jan to view the "T5 in the Making" exhibition. Transport is provided and registration can be done at the Fellowship Hall tomorrow, 4 Jan & 11 Jan.

More details he
re.

View more announcements, stories and resources on our website:
🔗 pl
mc.org

Please do not reply, send any messages or call this number as this phone is unmanned.
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❣️ Sermon Reflections & Discussion // 4 Jan 2026

We give thanks for how the Lord has seen us through the Year of Expansion with PLMC going out to bless the community and the nations.

Jesus said in Acts 1:8 (ESV): “But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth.” All disciples of Jesus are to be His witnesses in the community and the nations. Hence, the goal of the Year of Expansion was for PLMC worshippers to receive God’s heartbeat for the world.

In 2026, the Year of More, let us step out more, keeping faith in our God who is able to do abundantly more than we can ask or imagine. How can we participate with Him in releasing more of His power through us, and receive more from Him?

1. More in outreach and missions – Ministry to the community will expand as we reach people in more areas around, even as we deepen connections with the people whom we have been blessing the past years.

2. More connections in the PLMC family – Join a cell group if you don’t belong to one, so you can be connected with others in the church family. This year, there will be Cluster Gatherings for opportunities to meet people from different cells. Make an effort to avail yourself to connect.

3. More of what you need – The God of More not only provides more for the body of Christ, the church but also provides to His followers more of what you need. Will you step out in faith to ask God to meet whatever you need in 2026?

4. More of God – The Year of More is also about each of us growing more in discipleship, in outreach, and in missions. One key event to help us experience and grow in God together is the Ohana Camp, to be held from 14-17 June 2026. Early bird registration opens on 18 Jan 2026!

The most important aspect of More that we want to experience in 2026 is encapsulated in the words of John the Baptist in John 3:30 (ESV): He [Jesus] must increase, but I must decrease. When Jesus has more authority in our lives, we desire more of what He wants and become more like who God means for us to be.

If you desire more of God in 2026, may this be your prayer: “Jesus, increase in my life, while I decrease.”

💬 Reflection Questions:
1. How have you expanded in your mind, heart and faith in the Year of Expansion? How did you bless the community and the nations? Share and remember with thanksgiving.
2. In what areas of your life do you need more of God (financially, relationally, physically?)
3. How will you be more involved in blessing the community and the nations? Whether it is an outreach opportunity, or to pray, help prepare or to go on missions, commit this to the Lord for the year ahead.

▶️ Revisit the sermon in our library:
🔗 plmc.org/sermon
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📣 PLMC UPDATE – 10 Jan 26, 9.00am

Worship Services Online
🔗 English: live.plmc.org (Sun 9am)
🔗 Mandarin: ms.live.plmc.org (Sun 11.15am)
🔗 Youth: youth.live.plmc.org (Sat 4.30pm)
🔗 Filipino: facebook.com/plmcfs (Sun 2pm)

🏕️Ohana Camp 2026
PLMC will be having our Ohana Camp in June this year, at Berjaya Times Square Kuala Lumpur. Registration for the camp will begin next Sunday. Enjoy early bird promotional rates from 18 Jan to 28 Feb. Your camp fee will include a lightweight jacket for adults instead of the usual T-shirt. Sample jackets and children’s T-shirts will be available for trying after the service at the Fellowship Hall so you can indicate the size when you register.
🔗 More details and updates here

💞 YA Talk
Dating today is complicated—but God’s wisdom isn’t. On 7 Feb, our Ministry to Young Adults is organising an event titled "Modern Love, Ancient Wisdom," which will dive into what the Bible really teaches about singleness, dating, and marriage, and how to apply it in a modern world. This will be followed by a panel with speakers from varied relationship backgrounds. Get answers. Get perspective. Get encouraged.
📅 Sat 7 Feb
🕑 10.30am - 12.30pm
📍Chapel
🔗 Register
here by 1 Feb

💜 Inclusive Discipleship of Children
The church is mandated to disciple our children by teaching them everything the Lord has commanded us, including discipling children with special needs and disabilities. A special two-session course is being organised and will be conducted by the Koinonia Inclusive Network (KIN). Learn how to adapt teaching methods and activities as well as useful behavioural management strategies, so we can better show love and engage special needs children meaningfully to foster belonging in the church family.
📆 31 Jan & 14 Mar
🕗 9am - 12.30pm
📍 Jordan Hall
🔗 Register
here by 25 Jan

View more announcements, stories and resources on our website:

🔗 plmc.org

Please do not reply, send any messages or call this number as this phone is unmanned.
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