Saturday, August 31, 2013

End of Summer

   Hello brother and sister pilgrims on a journey of faith. We come up on the end of our summer and begin to make plans for what God will show us in this fall season. I'm really sorry the summer is over for once again, my list of things I wanted to do didn't really happen the way I wanted it to. But I did get one or two surprises along the way.

   Best surprise in the midst of challenges, we flew to Florida because Elaine's mom is having some health challenges. We did accomplish a lot while we were there, so that was good, and we had an afternoon to ourselves. We ran down to Disney's Buena Vista Marketplace shopping area. From highway 4 we saw a huge hot air balloon floating above the trees from a long way off. Now, I've always wanted to go up in a hot air balloon, but this was totally unexpected. Lo and Behold, the balloon was tethered at Buena Vista Marketplace. And it had a very short waiting line. Elaine took a chance and agreed to go with me.

   It rose up 400 feet above the lake, and we could see in all directions, what an awesome view. And it was quite safe. Turns out to be a very great ride and we got some awesome pictures up there. I am thankful that Elaine was willing to go with me. HINT, God can give us a great perspective on life if we connect and focus on God's gift of the Holy Spirit and allow God to lift us up when we pray and gain a view of what may be ahead, or at least a view that tells us that what troubles us so much, is really much smaller than we imagined. So take time to pray and meditate on Scripture a lot more can be seen and understood from that altitude and attitude with God's help.

   Our grandson turned six this August and his dad came up with a fantastic party. Andy discovered that Oscar really likes the star wars story now that he has finally seen some of them. Andy discovered that you can invite Star Wars characters in costume to come and visit your party. So.... Darth Vader came and surprised Oscar. It was an awesome party. And... The Darth Vader character is a volunteer and the cost of the visit goes to a charity of your choice, how awesome is that! Great idea and a lot of fun for a party.

   Now the fall season is upon us, new schedules, new efforts to try to help people discover what God is doing in our midst, and an invitation to join God's plan, not asking God to bless our plans. There is a big difference. It's not easy sometimes because it can look like the opposite of what we have in mind.  But God is able to do far more than we can even imagine! (Eph.3:20) So our journey of faith is to ask God to show us how we ought to go in life, in faith, in service, and adjust our expectations to God's plans, as difficult as that might be.

   This fall I've decided to change some things I've done for years, you can teach and old dog new tricks... I've decided to do a series of topics and themes for sermons, as usual, but this time I've divided them up to only once a month. For instance, on the second Sunday of each month, I'm preaching on a section of Colossians, a letter from Paul that most clearly highlights the work of Jesus. On the third week of the month I'm preaching on some of John Wesley's greatest thoughts for our faith. On the fourth Sunday I'm preaching on a HOT TOPIC, something that happens during the month that deserves some sermonic (big word) reflection. I've found a great resource called Wired Word, a weekly lesson for Sunday School and preaching that highlights up to the minute events and situations and provides scripture and study material to go with the topic. I'm looking forward to that part.

   On the occasional fifth Sunday we are going to spend time praying and asking for strength to meet the challenges we face and may even pray for healing for those who would be interested. That would happen in September and December this year.

   Blessings on your going back to school and regular schedules this fall. Try including something new that will enhance your journey with God. Pray more often or for longer periods of time, worship more often, find a new devotion to help your Bible reading, share your faith with a friend, serve your community or your congregation in a way that will bless others.  Happy September everyone!

Pastor Jeff

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Prayer Retreat

   I scheduled a Prayer Retreat for most of this week. I needed an extended period of time to pray and reflect and to ask God for specific guidance in my live and work. It's been a very interesting couple of days. God does answer prayer, we just don't slow down long enough to be quiet enough to listen.

   To help me do this I am using the Upper Room book called A Guide to Prayer for Ministers and Other Servants. There is a section in the back for Monthly Retreat, and I've been using one each day. It calls for 30 minutes of silence, then some reading, reflection quotes, prayer, journaling and more prayer and reflection and like shampoo, Repeat.... The 30 minutes of silence is very, very hard. I set my iPad count down clock and the time just sits there. I must really need to pray even more.

   I had the chance to pray going over the entire membership roster, praying for work, for family, for relationship to the congregation etc. I normally just do the birthday people, but this was for the whole group A to Z. I'm going to plan to do that more often.

   I've been reading some very powerful books on prayer as well, two by a pastor in Washington DC who's churches are movie theaters. His books, Primal: a Quest for the Lost Soul of Christendom, & The Circle Maker: praying Circles Around Your Biggest Dreams and Greatest Fears. I'm grateful to Mark Batterson for sharing his journey with us. I've been truly inspired. I would recommend them to any of you who would like to be challenged for a deeper faith walk. We need to hear/read from others to get new ideas or to be reminded of significant ways to draw near to God in faith.

   A couple of times this week, I received specific answers to urgent prayer, leading me to resources that just happened to come in the mail or email, that I had not expected or ordered, but seemed to be the direct Word of the Lord to me for my situation. God is Good. All the Time. I am so thankful for the responses that have lifted burdens and worries I was facing, with just the right guidance and influence.

   Another answer to prayer was inspired by another UMC pastor who was reflecting on the important message of Jesus found in John's Gospel, chapters 14-17, so I re-read and prayed over that. The connection to the vine and the resources of the Holy Spirit to help us are awesome gifts we often forget. And then Ch. 17, Jesus prays for the people in the church today, we are prayed for by Jesus when he was in the Upper Room so many years ago. We've been prayed for, we were on his mind, that night just before he died to take away our sins. Thank you Jesus.

   I need to go back to prayer, but I wanted to include you in this experience and to offer you some encouragement as well. You may not be able to do a week, but short prayer retreats are very important and worthwhile. Let me know if I can help point you in the right direction.

Blessings

Pastor Jeff

Monday, August 12, 2013

Life Enriching Practices gets practical

   Hello and welcome to our ongoing journey to be followers of Jesus, which means we are on the road to becoming like Jesus. A very tall order, but what grace is ours in Jesus who gives us examples, gives us the assistance of the Holy Spirit, gives us a community to encourage us and keep us accountable, and gives us the Scriptures to help describe what we should be aiming for.

   I'm a little excited about the new football season that is coming. The news is filled with training camp stories about the trials and tribulations of getting the players into shape, molding them into a team, getting them to follow the plays so that when the games really count, the team can win. Not a bad reminder of what we are to be doing.

   We are to be living the faith we have in our heads and hearts. It's hard to do sometimes, when the voices we hear, coming from the TV, movies, celebrities, and other media tells us the complete opposite of what we should be doing.

   We get way too wrapped up in keeping up with the Joneses, and not these Joneses, I can assure you. WE feel like we ought to have the things we are shown in the commercials, and in those shinny catalogs that come in the mail all the time. It's back to school, so get to the stores... even if we haven't outworn or outgrown what we already have, we are to get more. But our faith should help us hear a voice in our heads, "Are You Kidding Me!" we really don't need all that stuff.

   John Wesley led people to the Lord long enough that he even began to see the prosperity that often came to those who turned their lives around, from ruining their health with bad habits, to becoming valuable citizens and employees, who became successful because they were dependable. He was often hurt by the success of his transformation, which led people away from the faith, in order to enjoy the gains they had made in their lives. So he came up with three simple rules for using our money, and it's still a helpful tool today, but the advice gets drowned out by the noise of buy, buy, buy.

   Rule number one was EARN ALL YOU CAN. He was serious about being paid a proper wage and for the relationship between work and proper reward. He was enthusiastic about helping people find a better wage for their efforts. He thought that an appropriate salary would ensure that you could be healthy and a good family and a good witness to the world by following rules number two and three. If we stop at rule one, we will miss the whole point.

   Rule number two was SAVE ALL YOU CAN. He was not encouraging us to hoard, but to use what we have wisely. The save all you can was about using what you needed until the very end. Don't throw away stuff before it wasn't finished being helpful. Pass it along if it still had some life left in it and you didn't need it anymore. The same advice would come into play now about the recycling encouragement to save our planet. Save it, recycle, pass it along, share it, make sure it has done all it could. That's a challenge when we are told to upgrade all the time, and usually before we actually need to. So try to stretch your stuff out a little longer, get more out of it, use it wisely so it will last longer. Eloise, the adviser on consumer products and uses, has a good point here, you can still use that somehow.

   The third rule was GIVE ALL YOU CAN. John Wesley was famous for living very simply, he ended his life living on 10 percent and giving 90 percent of what he had. He was filled with the hope that God's people, who had earned all they could, and used what they had as well as they could, would naturally be able to be generous and make a difference in the world. Wesley was able to start credit unions to help get people out of debtors prison, he started schools, because that was the best way to advance and to be able to read the Bible for yourself, so God could influence you. He cared about the physical as well as the spiritual, and worked on cleaning up our bodies, our communities and with those folks giving all they could, he started hospitals and clinics to provide healthy resources to those in need.

   So we take our Spiritual life seriously, and apply them to our life style. Earn all you can, save what  you have by using it wisely, and give all you can to bless and help someone else.

   The Empty Tomb, organization, researches human needs around the world, and they figured out that if all USA Christians would tithe, we would have enough money available beyond the local church to take care of EVERY major health concern, water to every village that needed it, food for the hungry, health resources wherever it is needed. Now that's something to think about.

   Blessings on your journey and try looking at  your own rule potential. Earn all you can, save all you can, and please GIVE all you can. The joy of knowing you are doing the right thing will be a glorious feeling.

Pastor Jeff

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Life Enriching Practices

   This past week, we were talking about the value that we should put on Christian Community if we are going to grow deeper spiritually. We are looking for connections, we need to be a part of a tribe or family or something. Look at how many millions are on Facebook. That may be superficial, but it's a connection for this busy life we seem to be chasing. I'm on Facebook, and it provides a lot of reasons for me to pray for people I know, they often share what they are going through and it helps me to send up a quick prayer on their behalf at the moment I've discovered their challenges.

   John Wesley was convinced that meaningful life change, a deepening and serious pursuit of faithfulness, required a community, a body of Christ to nurture and provide the right environment for it. He had the big gatherings of the Societies, but then he encouraged folks to get into classes of 12 to 15 to meet weekly and learn about their faith and learn from others what to do to grow deeper in faith. For those who truly wanted to get serious in their pursuit of Christ likeness, Wesley developed the Bands, a small intimate group of 4 to 6 who met weekly to really covenant with each other to help in the development of faithfulness. That group would ask serious questions about the work of the soul, the temptations being fought, the needs in life to be prayed for. That was a powerful way to get deeply committed people to help each other. From those bands, came leaders who were able to do might things in the community of faith.

   John Wesley suggested that we all wrestle with three General Rules that would help shape our lives of faith. The three rules were, 1. Do No Harm, avoid evil of every kind. A tall order, but one worth thinking about and wrestling with in all things. The second was Do All The Good you Can, to whomever you can. That meant you really applied the Golden Rule, do to others what you would love for them to do to you. It included doing the right thing every time and to anybody, even your enemies. It also included doing the right thing for the environment and the created order. The third rule was attend to all the ordinances of God, and that included, public worship of God, the ministry of the Word, read & expounded, the Lord's Supper, family and private prayers, searching the Scriptures on your own, and fasting, or abstinence. Now there is a challenge for you.

   You might see why you need friends and family of God, the church known as the Body of Christ, to help each other to get there. Three of these ordinances were public in nature, you were gathered with others, and three were private or within your own home. It's not easy to do, and if you have a mentor or guide or coach or someone holding you accountable, it maybe easier to do. And when you share in a class or band how it's going, you are going to get good ideas from others, for solving some of your life's little problems. You might just get the perfect solution for something that has been bugging you for years...

   To review our 8 Life Enriching Practices, let me say that it's not a suggestion or a good idea, it's something serious Christ followers actually do. You might want to decide to actually be a better follower, especially as we gear up for the fall programs and ministries at church, to be committed to doing these exercises in faith development.

   Pray, and remember it's a conversation with the Creator who loves you. It needs to be as much listening to God as it is suggestions ways God can help you and the people you love. Bible Reading, is actually a good way that God can speak to you, and it will identify the things you need to know to be a better example of Jesus to others. It can be really hard to do that on your own, because there are parts of the Bible that will really bog you down, that others might be able to guide you to the really best parts. Worship is essential for keeping a proper perspective on life. That "other" in our lives can direct and encourage and equip us far better than we can on our own. The Worship of God, is giving God the value that is deserved and the reward is a sense of presence and help in every time of trouble. Worship also includes the Lord's Supper, which is a reminder that we have been forgiven. We are separated from the junk that get's in the way with our fellowship with God, and healed and given new life. We need that regularly.

   Part Four of the Enriching practices is that we are renewed and healed. Worship allows us to be in the presence of the one who can restore, renew, redirect, refresh and transform our minds by the work of the Holy Spirit, the power that swept across Chaos in creation and brought forth order, and life and light. Healing is the chance to be re created and made whole, or given the right perspective to deal with what is going on in your life.

   Part Five is Christian Community. Part Six, which comes up next week is how we live, our Lifestyle, which matters to God too. Stay tuned.

Blessings on you all

Pastor Jeff