Today marks the anniversary of Pastor Buddy (John) Suitor’s celebration of going home to be with our Lord. 

Please pray for our Loving Pastor Buddy Suitor’s family. He certainly had a wonderful heart and so much to offer. His passing impacted so many people for he was truly a man of God and was loved by all. Please hold up our Church family also. He will miss him deeply.  God’s great servant has come home. Love and peace and comfort to all.

Care pastor

May 3, 2016

Our Care Pastor Pete enjoying some baby time. #fbccorona, #fbcc, #Community, #carepastor FB: @FBCCORNA

We’re now on Instagram: @FBCCORONA & Twitter: @CORONAFBC

  

Christmas Eve service (2014)

December 12, 2014

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CBU, Men’s Chorale

April 8, 2014

California Baptist University Male Chorale
April 13, 2014 @ 6PM @
First Baptist Church of Corona

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Dear Congregation,

Someone once said, “The past isn’t our past if it is still
affecting our present.” A personal past, and we all have one,
and sometimes they are not very glorious. In some cases,
a painful past is the consequence of our own bad choices.
I call this “self-inflicted wounds.” Often, however,
the heartache from the past has been caused by others:
Betrayal, unfaithfulness, deceit, broken trust, slander.
They become like wounds. Did you know it is impossible
to reach and stretch for the future when we live
in the pain of the past?

At age 30 (thirteen years after his brothers sold him into slavery),
Joseph is given Asenath, the daughter of Potiphera,
priest of On (Gen. 41:50).  The name of his firstborn son was Manasseh
(meaning “made to forget.”) For he said, “God has made forget
all of my hardship and the loss of my father’s home.”
The name of his second son was Ephraim (fruitfulness).
“For God has made me fruitful in the land of my affiliction.”
(Gen. 41:1-52.) Joseph determined that he would not be a
prisoner of his past. He learned all that had happened in the past
prison season of his live was nither fatal nor final.
I like what the Apostle Paul shared in Phill, 3:13-14:
“One thing I do forgetting what lies ahead.
I press toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of Godin Christ Jesus.”

Let go of the past.
Press toward the future.
It just could turn your life around.

Pastor Harry

Women’s Ministry is having a Steak Fry on July 30, 2011.

Ladies, be sure to mark your calendars and plan to attend this event,

which will be held on the FBC patio from 5-7PM.

Dear Congregation,

Please join me in fasting one day a week for the next seven weeks.
We are facing a new day and a new time for First Baptist Church
as we wait for God to show the Search Team who He has for His church. In our lifetime, we only have one life cdycle to be born, grow and die. But His Church has many life cycles and we are in one now.

Remember, with any birth there is pain and discomfort, but the end result is worth it. Let us keep the Faith and pray
for unity for His Church.

Pastor Harry

Dear Congregation,

if you read today’s  headlines in the newspaper or watch TV,
you can get pretty depressed. Yes, at time life looks pretty hopeless.
But if we keep our eyes on our Lord, Jesus Christ, we can have hope
even in the midst of difficult circumstances. We can be comforted
by Paul’s words found in Romans 8:31, “If God is for us, who can
be against us?” God is for us and through His love we can find hope.
Here are four Reasons why we can remain hopeful in the midst
of confusing circumstances:

– Jesus Will win the final victory. I don’t know everything,
but I have figured out that Jesus wins and that is comforting to know
because I’m on his side.

– Jesus sets us free. Jesus said, “You will know the truth and
the truth will set you free.”  In Christ, you can have hope because
you have been set free from your sins. We are free to be all that God desires us to be without the constraints of our past. We can know thate meaning of abundant life because of what Christ did for us on the cross.

– There is no condemnation for those in Christ. In Christ, we are a new creation. Romans 8:1-2 puts it best, “There is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit of life set me free from the law of sin and death.”

A word From The Pastor

Dear Church Family,

As we face each day, we should be asking,
“Am I moving forward or standing still?
Do I love what I am doing in my Career?
Am I pleased with my relationship with
my spouse, our kids?
Do I have healthy lifestyle?”

The root word for motivations “move” and movement is change. Truthful answers to the above and the other questions will tell you whether you want or need to change. the key to successful change
is discipline and reprogramming our mindset. Sometimes our
inner voice will tell us not to rock the boat, to stay on the path
of least resistance, but our heart is telling us otherwise.

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