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Family Matters

1/23/2018

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​Family Matters
Genesis 29  January 21, 2018

    I like reading about our beginnings in the book of Genesis.  It is interesting to read about the relative chaos out of which God brought his people into the nation that God calls God’s people.  As I read chapter 29, I saw the family dynamics out of which we were called.
    In chapter 29, we enter into a story that is already in progress.  Jacob (the grabber) is on the run from his older twin brother Esau.  Jacob got his name because he was born second, grabbing on to Esau’s heel.  He continued to earn his name when he stole Esau’s birthright in exchange for a bowl of lentil stew.  Now he was on the run because together with his mother Rebecca he fooled his father into giving Jacob the blessing that was reserved for the firstborn, for Esau.  This was the last straw for Esau and he swore that he would kill his brother as soon as their father Isaac was dead and buried.  When Rebecca heard of this she convinced Isaac to send Jacob back to the old country, back to Uncle Laban to find a wife and to be safe from his brother.  On the way, Jacob dreamed that he had found the gate of heaven and named the place Beth-El.  At Beth-El Jacob made a conditional agreement with God that if God would bless him, Jacob would worship God.  Jacob was bargaining with the God of his father to see if that God would be his own.
    When Jacob arrived in Haran, he met Laban’s younger daughter, Rachel and they fell in love.  Laban welcomed Jacob into his house warmly as a long lost family member.  Laban probably remembered when Abraham’s servant had come to Haran and had taken Laban’s sister Rebecca to be Isaac’s wife.  The servant came because Abraham forbade Isaac from returning to the old country and being taken in by the old way of life out of which God had called Abraham.  Laban probably remembered the gold and other gifts that Abraham’s servant gave in exchange for Rebecca’s hand in marriage.  He probably remembered the stories of how God had blessed Abraham and Laban probably decided then that if he ever got the chance, he would get some of those riches for himself.  So when he saw Jacob the grabber, the deceiver, coming, I think that Laban saw his chance.  He welcomed Jacob as a family member and asked him to work for him as a shepherd.  Jacob agreed to work for seven years in exchange for the privilege of marrying Rachel.  Laban agreed and Jacob hard as he looked forward to the marriage.  At the end of seven years Jacob got married and Laban threw a huge wedding feast.  The only problem was that the morning after the wedding night, Jacob found out that he had married Rachel’s older sister, Leah.  Jacob complained to Laban, and Laban explained that in the old country, the rule was that the older daughter had to be married first.  The Deceiver had been deceived! He had been deceived in the same way that he had deceived his father to grab  his older twin’s blessing.  
    Laban allowed Jacob to marry Rachel as well as Leah in exchange for another seven years of work.  While Jacob got what he wanted, the resulting marriage to two sisters resulted in rivalry where the sisters competed for their husband’s love.  Since Jacob loved Rachel more, God intervened and gave four sons to Leah.  These four sons grew up to be the heads of the first four tribes of Israel.
    This story explains the origins of the nation of Israel and helps us to understand why the tribes often didn’t get along, but there are lessons that apply directly to us as well.  
    Families have been dysfunctional since—well, since forever.  We often think as we argue with brothers and sisters and put up with the failings of parents, aunts, uncles and other family members that we are alone.  We think that ours is the only family with problems.  The story of Jacob and Laban shows that these problems and these arguments are a part of what forms all families.  
    These problems come from many of the same sources.  Unequal love from parents and other family members results in strife and jealousy between brothers and sisters and an unhealthy competition to be the one best loved.  While we expect these problems in our human families, we rejoice that as children of God, our heavenly father love us based on our popularity or our beauty, but on the fact that we are all God’s children.
    This story also shows us the danger of returning to our old ways.  Abraham forbade Isaac’ return to the family God called Abraham to leave because he knew how great the temptation would be to resume the old way of life.  Jacob learned that lesson the hard way as he did return and got caught up in the old, deceptive ways.  
    Jacob is only one example our desire to return to the old places that seem safe. The Israelites longed to return to Egypt when life got difficult.  They were willing to exchange their freedom for the comfort of the old familiar ways.  
    We do the same thing when we encounter uncertainty in our future, in our finances, in our traditions and our way of life.  We want to return to the old ways.  We want to return to our worldly ways when our spiritual lives become difficult.  We want to abandon the God’s ways and return to the ways of the world.  We remember the comfort of the old country, but we forget that its ways were based on greed, and power, and status.  We forget that the old ways were based on prejudice and exclusion.  We forget that the old ways are self-centered and only accept God conditionally—we loved God only in proportion to God’s blessing.  We want to go back, but we can’t.  When we chose to follow God, we made a clean break.
    But God commands us to make disciples.  For that we need to go to the old country, to people who are still living in the world.  We need to go carefully, realizing that those who live in the world are experts at playing worldly games.  We cannot let ourselves get drawn in. We go back to bring others out and show them the better way; the way of Christ.  The only way we can do this is by imitating Christ in our lives and in our love for others.  We are here for one purpose: to call others to live in the Kingdom of God.  We can only do this through the grace of God in our own lives.  Amen.
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In the Name

1/17/2018

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 In the Name
Mark 1:4-11 January 14, 2018

    John came into the world to prepare the world for the coming of the Christ, the Messiah.  He appeared out of the desert dressed like one of the prophets of old.  He preached a gospel of baptism for the repentance of sin in preparation for end times.  We’ve read it so many times that it doesn’t seem strange that people would come to John to be baptized. But from a first century Jewish perspective, this would have been unusual if not almost blasphemous.  It was not that baptism was unfamiliar to the Jews; it was just that it was not for them.  For a first century Jew, the only way to forgiveness was through sacrifice in the Temple.  Of course Jews bathed ceremonially in preparation for worship, but that was not the same as baptism.  Baptism was reserved for Gentiles who chose to convert to Judaism.  This baptism symbolized a death to their old life and a taking up of their new faith.  Jews did not need this cleansing.  They were already God’s chosen, special people.  But the Bible tells us that the people went to the wilderness and willingly received John’s baptism and its promise of forgiveness.  Why would they do that?  Maybe those who came to John were the same people who were excluded from the Temple and therefore had no access to the usual means of forgiveness. Or maybe it was something else.  Luke tells us that John was filled with the Spirit.  Have you ever noticed how people begin to listen when the Holy Spirit speaks?  Things change.  People listen even if the message is not something they want to hear.  I believe the people were responding to the Spirit, not just to John.
    All along John said that his baptism of repentance was incomplete.  What the people needed was new life.  Life lived under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.  When Jesus came to receive John’s baptism things changed.  John baptized for forgiveness of sin, but Jesus had no sin.  His baptism was not an act of repentance; it was an act of obedience to God’s call.  And through that obedience, Jesus received confirmation of what he had known all along.  More importantly, we received a vision of the oneness of God.  God the Father spoke and revealed Jesus as His son.  God the Son received the blessing of His Father, and God the Holy Spirit rested on Jesus.  When Jesus was baptized, the whole Trinity got involved.
    As we listen to ourselves talk about baptism, we make it sound like baptism is something we do.  We talk about surrendering our lives to God.  We say, “I have decided to live my life according to God’s will.  We claim that we are accepting the sacrament of baptism out of our great love for God.  Some faith traditions even go so far as to claim that baptism is only for those who can understand its meaning and make an informed decision about how we will live.
    I think in this type of discussion we have our understanding almost right.  We do receive baptism out of love.  We do begin to live according to God’s will.  But baptism is not something we do. Loving God and living according to God’s will are not things that we can do on our own.  Our sin nature, inherited in the Garden of Eden, prevents us from loving anyone but ourselves. We are even, or maybe especially incapable of loving God.  We may be able to put on a show of love and obedience for a while, but eventually when we are given the choice between following our own will and obeying God, we will choose our own selfish way.  It’s just the way we are.  But God has never given up on us.  God has continued to reach out to us to restore the loving relationship that God always intended for us.  God loves us so much that God sent Jesus to restore our ability to love and obey God.  Only through God’s grace can we respond to God’s love.  When we do respond by realizing and accepting the justifying grace that is the life, death, and resurrection of Christ, God claims us as God’s own; just as God claimed Jesus as his own.  In baptism, God works first through God’s grace to give us the ability and the will to respond.  Baptism is a gift from God.  And as a gift, we don’t need to understand it; we simply need to accept it.
    God is the primary actor in our sacrament of baptism, but God in God’s grace invites us to participate.  First, the person being baptized or their sponsor is asked to reject evil and sin and is invited to rely on God’s grace to order their lives.  Next, the entire congregation does the same and commits to teaching and modeling what it means to be a Christian.  In baptism God claims each of us as a child of God. God welcomes us to God’s family.  Then God expects us to act like a family and nurture each other in love with God.
    Today we are invited to remember our baptism and be thankful.  Many of us who were children or infants when we were baptized may not be able to remember the actual event, but that’s OK.  We are not remembering the act, but the effect.  We remember that God has claimed us as God’s family.  And for that we are thankful.  Amen.    



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The Greatest Treasure

1/8/2018

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​The Greatest Treasure
Matthew 2:1-12
January 7, 2018
    The whole world was expecting a new king.  William Barclay names many sources that something was happening.  A new king was coming and would be born in Judea, the land of the Jews.   When the three wise men, the scientists of their day, arrived in Jerusalem, they did the natural thing, they went to the palace and asked where the new king was to be born.  Having understood the predictions and the signs in the sky, they brought gifts appropriate for the occasion:  Gold for Christ the King, Frankincense for Christ the High Priest, and Myrrh for Christ the sacrifice who would die for the sins of the world.  The wise men came and worshipped.  They celebrated the birth of God’s greatest gift.   
    But not everybody was celebrating.  The Roman appointed King of the Jews, Herod, was worried.  First of all, his rule was very tenuous.  The Jews were a hard people to rule.  Their strange customs and their refusal to follow the approved religion of Rome meant that they were constantly at odds with their rulers.  It took great diplomacy and sometimes harsh punishment to keep the peace.  Herod was chosen to be king partly because he had Jewish blood and understood the Jewish customs.  But the peace he kept was very weak and Herod was very thin skinned.  He constantly felt that his place was threatened.  So talk of a new king of the Jews particularly scared him.  He knew that new kings often eliminated the competition by putting to death the former king and his family.  For Herod, this talk of a new king was a threat.  Dealing with it was a matter of life and death.  Herod chose to do the only thing that he thought would save his life.  He chose to get rid of this baby that threatened his way of life.  It is too bad really, because if he had chosen to worship instead he would have found that the baby had come to save him as well.
    We look at the actions of Herod and think, “How could he ever do something like that?  How could he put his own interests in front of the interests of the world?”  But if we’re honest, we often do the same thing.  We measure goodness based on whether or not it lets us keep our way of life.  Think about the recent tax bill that was passed.  The big question for most of us was how will it affect me?  Will my taxes go up or down?  That’s how we decide whether it is good or bad.  Think about our politics.  Approval of congress as a whole is consistently low but our own senators and representative get re-elected because of what they do for us.  We often choose our friends and colleagues based on how they make us feel and what they can do for us.  We do this because the world tells us to take care of ourselves first and to get rid of anything or anyone who brings us down.
    As we read through the Bible this year we will encounter readings that confuse us, that upset us and that even call us to change our way of life.  When this happens we have two choices.  We can respond like Herod or we can respond like the wise men.  Many people have responded to scripture like Herod responded to Christ.  Marcion an early theologian got rid of the whole Old Testament.  Thomas Jefferson literally cut out portions of the Gospels that he disagreed with.  Today groups like the Jesus Seminar still decide for themselves what parts of the Gospel are valid and what are not.
    We can be tempted to do this as well.  When we encounter scripture that calls us to deeper personal and social holiness through obedience to God’s law—not because it leads to salvation-- but because it pleases God, we put it away by reminding ourselves that God’s love is great. When we encounter scripture that calls us to a deeper sense of love and forgiveness for those who have wronged us—for our enemies-- we ignore it and remind ourselves that God is a God of justice.  We look at God’s love and justice as an either or situation, but really God’s love and justice only work when they work together.  Only when we try and fail to live in obedience and realize how we are subject to justice can we truly understand How great God’s love is.  Jesus put it this way:  Love God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength, and love your neighbor as yourself.
    Our other response to these challenging scriptures is to respond like the wise men, like any wise person, and worship God by putting God first.  This also requires us to put things away, to get rid of things.  We need to put away the things in our lives that keep us from living as God wants us to live.  We need to pray and ask God’s help in understanding the Scripture as God intends for it to be understood not how it allows us to keep our way of life.  We need to ask God to help us understand how this reading fits with other seemingly contradictory readings and how they all fit into the Gospel that God loves the whole world and wants us all to return to God.  Finally we need to ask God for the grace, the strength, and the will to change our lives from what they are to lives that glorify God.
    As we read through the Bible this year, we have a choice.  We can be like Herod and put away those things we fear, or we can be like the Wise men who bowed before The King of Kings and received the greatest gift.  Amen

Works Cited
Barclay, W. (2001, 3 22). StudyLight.org. Retrieved 12 9, 2017, from https://www.studylight.org/commentaries/dsb/mark-1.html



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Something Special

1/4/2018

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​Something Special
Luke 2:22-40 December 31, 2017

    Babies are special.  Something happens when we meet a baby.  Even though we don’t know them we feel the need to play, to interact with the baby.  How many times have you played peekaboo with a child at the next table in a restaurant or in line at the grocery store?  How many times have you stopped the mother or father to tell them how beautiful their little one is?  Babies are special because they seem to bring out the love in all of us.
    As special as all babies are, the babies brought to be redeemed at the temple in Jerusalem were even more special.  God declared that all first born sons were not only special, they were holy.  But Jesus was even more special.  Simeon had seen hundreds, maybe even thousands of babies presented in the temple.  You can be sure that he had talked to all of the parents and to each baby.  He was seeking the answer to God’s promise that he would not die until he had seen the savior of the world.  He greeted each child hoping this was the one.
    I suppose that he was becoming weary of waiting when Mary, Joseph, and Jesus entered the temple.  But his weariness faded when he heard the Holy Spirit tell him, “This baby is the one you’ve been waiting for!”  In response, he did something that would get us in trouble today.  He took Jesus from his mother’s arms and started talking and praising.  He spoke not to Mary and Joseph, or even to Jesus. He began praising God for the answer to His promise.  Only when he was done thanking God did he turn to Mary and Joseph and explain to them that their son was the savior and the judge of the world. Of course he also had a warning that a sword would pierce Mary’s heart as well.
    Anna was also waiting for the fulfillment of the prophecy of the Messiah.  As a prophet, she was inspired by the Holy Spirit to be the first to proclaim in public that this child of Mary’s was the promised savior. (This should be a lesson to those who say women should not preach).  
    It wasn’t a coincidence that the truth of Jesus’s identity was proclaimed by these two humble servants of the Lord.  For both of them, the truth came from the revelation of the Holy Spirit.  Think about that for a minute.  The Holy Spirit came upon Elizabeth and made John the Baptist leap in her womb, recognizing Christ for the first time.  The Holy Spirit sent the angels to the shepherds who came to Bethlehem to meet the baby Jesus.  The Holy Spirit revealed Jesus to Simeon and Anna.  It was the Holy Spirit who revealed to Peter that Jesus was the Messiah.
    We read about Jesus in the Bible, but it is only through the work of the Holy Spirit that we can truly know Jesus as our personal savior and the savior of the world.   So how do we invite the Holy Spirit into our lives?  We should imitate Simeon and Anna by constantly worshipping through prayer, study, fasting, and praising God.  In United Methodist language we practice these and other Means of Grace.  We order our lives according to the three General Rules; Do no harm, Do good, and Attend to the ordinances of God.  Happy New Year!
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Good News!

12/27/2017

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​GOOD NEWS!!!
Luke 2:1-20  Christmas Eve 2017
    We often look at the shepherds in the story of Christmas and think, “What a peaceful, wonderful life.”  But the life of a shepherd was really anything but peaceful and wonderful.  They were in danger from the same predators that hunted the sheep.  The people of the towns didn’t trust them and looked down on them because they lived a nomadic lifestyle.  If the angels had come today, they might have come to one of the many homeless encampments to make their announcements.
    Despite, or maybe because of their low position in society the shepherds looked forward to the time when the Messiah would come and restore the kingdom of David.  We still look forward to the time when the King of Kings returns to establish God’s Kingdom.  I think the story of the shepherds is our story when we receive the good news of Christ’s coming.
    Even though the shepherds looked forward to the Messiah with Joyful anticipation, when the time came, Luke tells us that they heard the good news with fear and trembling.  Isn’t that how we respond when we first hear the Gospel?  Oh, we celebrate the idea of God’s love, of God’s kingdom, but when it comes to living that Gospel we become afraid because the message is so different from what the world has taught us.  We are afraid because we know that no matter how good we become, we can’t be good enough to deserve the love that God gives us when he gives us his son.  But that fear turns to joy as we begin to understand that God’s love is not based on our goodness, but simply on God’s love.  God loves us before we even realize that we are in need of a relationship with God.  When we realize that God loves us and all we have to do is to accept that love, we can experience almost the greatest joy imaginable.  We have to find out more.  We have to investigate and see whether these things are true.
    When we investigate we experience God’s love even more.  We know God’s love is true because it is true for us.  We discover that God’s love is real!  We discover that God loves us-- even us-- in our own lives.  This is the greatest love.  It is the love and the peace that passes all understanding.  It is the love that calls us back to God.
    When we experience a love like that, we must do more than just accept it.  Like the shepherds who left rejoicing, we must share the good news of God’s love with everyone we meet.  The love of God, the light of the world changes us so that we can change others.  Because the love of God, the light of Christ has come to us we can share that love with all we meet.  That’s how God’s love spreads.  It is shared from person to person, until the whole world is ablaze with God’s love.
    But God’s love is not just a one-time thing.  It is renewed every day, every minute as God surprises us with God’s love in ways we can’t imagine.  The Bible tells us that Mary, Jesus’s mother pondered all these things in her heart as she added the events of the first Christmas to all of the other ways God had blessed her.  She pondered after all the ways God loves.  I think after they returned to their flocks, the shepherds pondered as well.  They pondered the meaning of all they had heard and experienced in this night of God’s love.  They pondered what they would be called to next.    We too have the privilege of pondering the meaning of God’s love.  We can ponder what type of call God has for us to share God’s love with the world.
    So this Christmas, Fear not!  Rejoice at the coming of the King of Kings!  Tell the world of God’s love.  And take time to ponder what all of this means in your life.  Amen.
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The Lord’s Servant

12/27/2017

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​The Lord’s Servant
Luke 1:26-38 Dec 24 2017
    Mary was “Much perplexed” by Gabriel’s greeting.  It’s no wonder.  Here she was, alone with a man who was not family—that alone was scandalous.  During the betrothal period, she was not even allowed to be alone with Joseph¸ her husband.
    This is an annunciation story  like the story about the birth of John the Baptist that comes right before it, and like several other stories in the history of Israel.  This man who called himself the angel Gabriel was with her and telling her that she would have a child who would be the Messiah.  What an honor.  To be the mother of Messiah was the greatest honor a Jewish woman could receive!  And the privilege fell on a virgin in Nazareth.
    But this was not only an annunciation, it was a call to be a servant of God. Mary would be the mother of the Messiah.  His father would be the Holy Spirit.  This baby would be both God and man and iIt would be Mary’s job to teach the Son of God how to be human.  
    This call came with a cost.  Mary was a virgin who would soon become pregnant.  She had to know what that meant.  There was a socially acceptable process for these things.  First was the betrothal, then the marriage, and then came children.  Mary’s pregnancy, no matter how divinely ordained would be scandalous.  It would bring shame on Mary and her family, on the child, on Joseph, and on his family.  Mary had to wonder whether a child born into such a scandal would ever have a chance to be accepted in society, let alone to be the prophetic voice of the Messiah.  She had to wonder whether her loved ones would even allow her to carry the baby to delivery and what would happen to her.  She remembered that the punishment for adultery was death.  Accepting this call was taking a huge risk.
    Even though she knew the consequences  Mary replied to Gabriel, "Here am I, the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according to your word." (Luke 1:38 NRSV).  Her faith and submission to God’s will are reflected in Jesus’s words in Gethsemane, “not my will but yours be done." (Luke 22:42 NRSV). It’s one thing to pray for God’s will when we think it aligns with our desires.  It is completely another to know that obeying God will bring shame and suffering and obey. Mary taught her son well.  
    Mary taught Jesus well. Throughout history many who love Jesus have answered God’s call to challenge the social norms.  Peter and John were commanded by the Sanhedrin to stop preaching about Jesus and they refused, preferring to obey God rather than humans.  Stephen was stoned to death for preaching the truth that the Jewish leaders had killed the Messiah.  In the 1500’s Martin Luther challenged the teaching of the church. He was convicted of heresy and excommunicated, but his protests reformed our church—even the Catholic church that he protested.  In the 1700’s John Wesley was refused the privilege of preaching in many Anglican churches because of his obedience to God’s call.  Eventually he chose to become “more vile” and preach in the highways and coal fields.  His obedience was the beginning of our church today.  And even more recently in the late 1900’s Agnes Bojaxhiu (Agnes Boy-a-ju) left her home to serve the poor in India.  We know her as Saint Theresa of Calcutta or Mother Theresa.
    Today we are called to live out God’s call on our lives.  This comes at a price as we act and speak counter to the social norms.  People will question our motives and even reject us as we answer God’s call to love those who the world says we should hate; to accept those the world has rejected; to give all we have of our riches, our power, and our pride, instead of seeking more riches, power, and pride; to care for the world and for all in it rather than simply exercising using it up; and to encourage others to do good rather than criticizing their failures.  You see, we will be going against the ways of the world because God calls us to cast a new vision in the world—a vision of the Kingdom of God.  We are called to do God’s will.
    In this Christmas time, let us answer God’s call with the words that Mary taught Jesus.  I am the servant of the Lord.  Let it be with me according to your will.  Amen



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The Voice

12/19/2017

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The Voice

Isaiah 61:1-4, 8-11    Psalm 126 (UM847)    1 Thessalonians 5:16-24    John 1:6-8, 19-28

​December 17, 2017

    According to the Christian calendar this is known as Gaudete Sunday.  Gaudete means Rejoice. The Advent candle we light today is known as the candle of Joy.  It is interesting to me that we celebrate a time of rejoicing during this darkest and often saddest time of the year.  While many of us are trying to celebrate the joy of the nearness of Christmas, we often find ourselves depressed by the decreasing sunlight, by the absence of those we have lost or who are away from us for the first time, or simply by the stress of trying to make the time perfect.  Because of this natural depression, many churches hold a “Blue Christmas” service to acknowledge our mixed emotions during this holiday season.
    So how do we, how can we, rejoice in the midst of this time of darkness?  I believe that we rejoice because we remember that God sent God’s Word, the Light of the World into a world that was suffering in darkness.  Jesus came into a world just like ours to give light to the world.  He came to remind us of God’s love.  He came to show us how to live.  He came to save us from our sin.  He came to restore the loving relationship with God and with our neighbor that God originally intended for us.  He came to be the light of our lives.
    John the Evangelist tells us that John the Baptist came to be a witness to God’s light.  He tells us that John was not the Light, but he was simply a voice calling in the wilderness, “Prepare the way of the Lord.”  John the Baptist’s voice was different from the others who came claiming to be prophets or even claiming to be the messiah.  According to the Gospel of Luke, John was inspired by the Holy Spirit, and his words reflected that.  Even more, there were a few things about John that teach us about our faith today.  He knew who he was. He never claimed to be   Messiah or even a prophet.  He knew he was the voice crying in the wilderness, “Prepare the way for the Lord.” He knew his purpose was to baptize listeners with water signifying cleansing from sin. He knew his importance.  He knew that as great as God had made him, he was still unworthy to do the most menial tasks for the true light that had come into the world. As John’s gospel reminds us, he was not the light, but he came to prepare the world to receive the true light.
    I believe that we are called to be like John.  We are called to be witnesses to the power of Christ in this world.  We are empowered and emboldened by the Holy Spirit as soon as we accept the grace of God offered by Jesus. Like John we are now voices crying in the modern wilderness, “Prepare the way for the Lord.”  Like John we have a purpose in the world.  Our purpose is to point others to the return of Christ.  We do this by sharing the love that God has for us.  We share that love that always calls us and the world back to our original state of loving relationship that God has always intended for us.  We know who we are, but we also know whose we are.  We confess that the light we let shine before all people is not our own light but the light of Christ that shines in and through us.  
    In this time of seasonal darkness we realize that we are still a people who live in darkness.  But even in this darkest part of the year we rejoice!  We rejoice because even now the light of Christ shines in the darkness and the darkness will NOT overcome it.  And we have the privilege of being witnesses to that light!  Thank God.  Amen.
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Prepare the Way

12/14/2017

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Mark 1:1-8

1 The beginning of the good news of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. 
2 As it is written in the prophet Isaiah, "See, I am sending my messenger ahead of you, who will prepare your way; 
3 the voice of one crying out in the wilderness: "Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight,' " 
4John the baptizer appeared in the wilderness, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. 
5 And people from the whole Judean countryside and all the people of Jerusalem were going out to him, and were baptized by him in the river Jordan, confessing their sins. 
6 Now John was clothed with camel's hair, with a leather belt around his waist, and he ate locusts and wild honey. 
7 He proclaimed, "The one who is more powerful than I is coming after me; I am not worthy to stoop down and untie the thong of his sandals.
8 I have baptized you with water; but he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit." 

    John the Baptizer, Jesus’s cousin and the first one to recognize Jesus as the savior of the world was sent into the world to prepare the way for the saving work of Jesus.  He proclaimed a gospel of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.  His message tells us that we prepare to enter into the kingdom of God by repenting of our sin and receiving God’s forgiveness.  But we have questions. How do we repent?  What assures us of forgiveness? And how is a call to repentance good news?
    William Barclay reminds us that repentance begins with being honest with ourselves, with those we have wronged, and with God. We start by examining our lives and seeing where we have allowed our will to replace God’s will, where we have placed our desires ahead of God’s offer of a loving relationship, and where we have allowed other gods (money, status, power, etc.) to fill the God-shaped hole in our hearts.  We also become aware of the things we have allowed to get in the way of our relationships with those we love and those who love us.  Once we realize where we stand, we need to confess our sins—to ourselves first, then to those we have sinned against, and finally to God(i).   Repentance begins with conviction and confession.
    But to repent means more than just being sorry for our sins.  The Greek word Metanoia means to turn around.  It means to turn away from our past and to turn toward a better way of living.  Repentance means that we abandon the path we are walking and begin again on the path that leads us into the presence of God.  Repentance changes our perspective on our own life, our outlook on the world, and our relationship with God.  Because of the great change, others can see the fruit of our repentance in how we act and react toward others.
    How do we know that our repentance leads to forgiveness?  In this we need to trust the word of God. 1 John 1:9 says, “If we confess our sins, he who is faithful and just will forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness.”(NRSV).  We can trust God, after all, it is God who loves us so much that he sent his son so that we would have eternal life.
    So here is what makes this such good news.  As many people who have tried to turn their lives around can tell, repentance is nearly impossible when we try to do it by ourselves.  Our power to truly repent is not ours.  We cannot change our ways alone.  We can only do it through the grace of God.  It is God who convicts us of our sin.  It is God who emboldens us to confess that sin to ourselves, our loved ones, and to God.  It is God, only God, who empowers us to turn away from that sin and toward God. And it is God who forgives our sin, welcomes us into God’s presence and walks with us to show us how to live.  That’s the good news; that God’s grace never abandons us and constantly draws us closer to God’s kingdom.  Thanks be to God!
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​(i){Barclay2001}
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The Same Old New Light

7/6/2015

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When we let the light of Christ shine through us several things happen:

1.  We begin to see ourselves more clearly.  This is sometimes scary because the cleansing light of Christ shines more brightly than any other light.  It shows us as we are, imperfections and everything.  Many of us don’t want to see that, but it is necessary for us to see our sins so we can repent and be forgiven.  It is easier to let Christ’s light shine through us when we remember John 3:17, "Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.”(NRSV)

2.  Others are drawn to us.  When the light of Christ shines through us, others see the light and want to be a part of what we are doing.  Even those who may not believe see the peace of God and the love for others that comes from the Holy Spirit and want to share in our joy.

3.  We light the path for others to follow.  Modern life is confusing.  Even the simplest of decisions sometimes seem hard to make.  We live in a time where people call good evil and evil good.  But the light of Christ shows us the path of truth, the path to true love for God and for each other.

4.  We encourage others to shine as well.  I believe that there are many people in the world who only need a little bit of encouragement to begin to let their lights shine.  When we shine with the light of Christ we provide that encouragement to new Christians who are just learning to share God’s love and we provide renewed energy and hope to those who have shared God’s love before us.

So,  “let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven. “ Matthew 5:16


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The Lenten Season

3/2/2015

 
The Lenten season is upon us and it is truly a time to look inward instead of outward.  Who are you?   We are currently studying the "I AM's" of Jesus Christ from the book The God We Can Know. 

"I AM the Bread of Life" -- what truly satisfies you and nourishes you?
"I AM the Light of the World" -- we are on a journey from darkness to Light which is why we need to look deep inside of ourselves to discover what darkness there is in order for the Light to shine through that darkness. 
"I AM the Good Shepherd" -- we all want to be loved and Jesus loves us and genuinely cares for us. 
"I AM the True Vine" -- we need to stay focused on Jesus Christ and prune that darkness away. 
"I AM the Way, the Truth, and the Life" -- Jesus invites us to follow him.
"I AM the Resurrection and the Life" -- we need to fully believe and trust in Jesus Christ.
This Lenten season is a time to look deep within yourself and discover the person God created in you which will give you a closer relationship with God.  Many people give up something for Lent, but is it something you will need to rely on Jesus to get you through?  If you don't want to give up anything, add to your life by doing an act of kindness every day, or read the Bible and reflect on what you have read, or come to one of our Sunday school classes or Bible study classes, come and worship.  Start journaling your life to see where God has lead you.

There is so much happening in the world today, we need to trust and believe in Jesus Christ.  Living the life Jesus wants us to live is putting our faith and trust in Jesus always.  Let people see the Light through you.  So many times we fail to see God at work because our focus is on our own lives.  Give your life to Jesus and begin to follow him this Lenten season.  I pray for each one of you.  May your relationship with God grow closer together this season.
























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