Sunday, January 27, 2013

Do we need church?



What is church? What is the purpose of the Church?

Why do people need a church?

I have met many people who tell me they don't need a church, they can do it on their own. They believe in God and that is enough. But is it?

Let's hear the story in Nehemiah this week.

All the people are gathered at the Water Gate – a place where all are welcome, and no one is excluded. The people ask Ezra to to bring the book of the law of Moses which the Lord had given. They were asking Ezra to be their representative in reading and interpreting the Torah. It wasn't that he did it because it was his job – technically his job was in the temple not on the street. His job was inside walls in areas that not everyone could access, yet they asked him to read it to them and he did. He read and read and read to all the men and the women and the children. In the temple only the men would hear. They stood much like we do when we listen to the gospel, they bent their heads to the ground in a humble way showing they were ready to listen. Ezra read, and interpreted what they read so people could understand it. Even then they found it helpful to read together, to be together and to listen with open hearts. Even then they needed help hearing a message from God in the readings that was meant for them right in that moment. I am willing to bet just like today that everyone who walked away from that reading and sermons got something a little different out of it!

The people responded. They didn't just hear the word and leave. They cried and I imagine there were prayers too. This is what we do as well. We listen to the word, we have someone interpret the word and then we respond with our prayers and offerings. This is the model for the church. Then Ezra dismissed them, telling them not to cry because they were so moved by the readings of the Law, but that this day is holy to the Lord our God. Rejoice in it. Go and eat and drink and share with those who do not have any. He tells them do not be grieved for the joy of the Lord is your strength.

I think that this story is the story of the church. The church is not a building, it is not a place that only a few can come, it is the wide open world. It is inviting all to come and hear and see God. What does it mean to you that you are a Christian? If we do not understand how different our lives our with God then how are we to share that with others. The people hearing the word knew that it was meant for them. That their lives were different from then on. They were in a hard time, they did not have much joy or strength left to go on, and yet Ezra reminds them that the Lord is your strength.

Isn't that true for us today. The Lord is our strength. Hearing, reading, and coming together as a church reminds us of that. It helps us to help one another when we stray from the path. It does not have to be in a building, it has to be together with all people welcome. Do you think that the people would have had the same response if they had read the scrolls by themselves. If they didn't read and just thought about God? It brings us back to those important questions that you have to answer.

What is church?

What is the purpose of the Church?

Why do people need a church?  

Saturday, January 26, 2013

More than Water


Click on the verse to read the text.

God is always reaching for us, pulling toward him.
In baptism we outwardly and publicly accept that pull, but the act of Grace we receive and is confirmed in the act of baptism is purely God's.

When we pour water or submerge someone and bring them up we remind everyone that when we accept this gift we die to our own selfishness and sin (separation from God). We rise out of the water we are born a new and washed clean from our sin. This does not mean we don't sin anymore, but that we now have agreed to unleash the Holy Spirit in our lives. To let the Holy Spirit guide us and work within us. That we no longer have to be controlled by sin because Jesus conquered all sin.

Baptism does not mean that we no longer feel the pull of sin. It doesn't mean that we don't sin, or that we don't feel the pull, but the good news is that we don't have to be. We have help if we choose it and if we allow the Holy Spirit to do its work we are not alone. Not ever.

The act of putting water on someone's head does not complete our act of baptism. We all have a part in baptism, not just the person being baptized. It is a community event. We as the congregation have a part. The thing with this crazy journey with the Holy Spirit is you can't do it alone. You forget, you loose sight, you become frustrated, you succumb to your own sin (or separations from God) sometimes unconsciously. It is so easy to do. You can easily loose sight of your commitments in baptism. The thing is God doesn't. God does not loose sight of it at all. God loves us still and yearns to forgive us when we are side tracked and bring us back to him. God tugs at our consciousness, but we have to accept it. We have to repent, or turn away from that. This can be very difficult to do alone. This is why we are in community. We (as Christians) make a commitment to support one another on our journeys – not just at the high points, births, baptisms, weddings but at the low points when life is not easy. When one of us feels lost, alone, broken. This is when we need to follow our collective commitments to uphold one another, support each other and give freely of our gifts and talents (see UMH p.44).
Let's face it – life is a hard road. It is easy to become side tracked, to loose hope, to feel alone, and to become isolated. In our baptism though we are not only accepting God's grace, but by being blessed in the Holy spirit we are unleashing the Holy Spirit in our lives. There is nothing that is too big, too bad, too far, too horrible for God. There is nothing that is so dark that Christ's light can not shine through and help us with. This is the glory of our baptism. Every time you see water, drink water or experience rain remember your baptism. Remember you are not alone, you are part of a family of other Christians that you have promised to nurture and that have promised to nurture you. Remember your vows (UMH pg 40) to reject sin and commit yourself to Christ, accept the freedom and power God gives you to resist evil, injustices and oppression in what ever forms they take. Remember that you confess Jesus Christ as your Savior and that you promised to put your whole trust in his grace, to serve the Lord with all the church which is open to all people, ages, nations and races. Remember your promise to nurture one another by your teaching and example so that all maybe guided to accept God's grace for themselves and profess their faith openly. These are our commitments and God's promise to us is to always pull us, guide us, love us and help us on this journey called life. God's promise is to help us to overcome our separation to rest in his peace. Remember that in the water.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Lorax and How Bad Can I be


This was NOT a sermon, just a reflection.  I did a little bit of it for the kid's service, but just felt like I needed to send it out there.  Click on the purple links to listen to the song or read the scripture from this week.  Please feel free to leave comments.
Missy




We were watching the Lorax tonight...again... with the kids and the song "How bad can I be" came on.  Besides being incredibly catchy it has a lot to say to Christians let alone a five year old 

I am drawn to this song in particular because we are celebrating Jesus baptism this week.  I keep thinking about what we can end up like if we just continue to do what "comes naturally" as the song says.  We are a selfish people who seem to try and fill ourselves up with everything else in the world, but what is drawing us - God .  We don't always look at the long term consequences, nor do we know them.  We can't usually see around our selves and our own ideas and wants to see that there may be something better, not only for ourselves in the long run, but for everyone, for the collective community that we share this planet with.

How bad can it be when we do what comes naturally?  Well in many places you can't drink the water. In our own dear Hudson River you don't want to eat the fish, and please do not fall off your kayak into it.  Our planet wastes 1/3 to 1/2 of the food it produces and we have millions starving to death.  We have places where our search for precious metals to create faster cell phones and computers have caused the land, the air and the water to be not only unusable but to be poisonous   We cut down our trees without replacing them, dump poisons into the environment and produce so much carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels that our global temperature keeps rising.  And then we have the audacity to complain when the weather is all messed up or we are hit by floods and storms we have never seen the likes of. I think sometimes the question should be "How bad does it have to get?"  How bad are we willing to let things get before we take a stand, before we shake ourselves out of our sugar induced stupors to respond?  I am not sure.

We could also look at it like this as well - how bad can it be when we do what comes naturally in our own lives? More people are dying of strokes, heart attacks and stress related issues than ever before.  We no longer take a Sabbath and no one has time to spend with family or friends.  The computer has replaced conversations and although we are connected to at least two or three devices for extended periods of time constantly communicating with one another more people are depressed then ever before. We are fixated by machines, novelty and new things and that seems to trap many people into constantly upgrading and playing and becoming ever more isolated.   How bad can it be to do what comes naturally?

I do know however that God is letting us have our free will.  We have the free will to destroy ourselves if we so choose.  Yet God is calling us, pulling us towards God.  We have a God sized hole in the middle of our souls and God pulls us toward him.  Do we fight it or do we accept it?  That truly is the question.  As a Christian who accepts that pull we accept it by becoming baptized.  We publicly give God free reign over our beings.  This is not a private act in most cases.  It is not supposed to be a private act.  Jesus didn't get baptized by himself so no one could see.  There were witnesses.  People heard God.  It was big! God claimed him publicly - just as he does for each of us who gets baptized. It is not a private act because we are a communal people.  We are agreeing to let the Holy Spirit in to our lives and our hearts.

This is also not just a safe little routine.  Have you ever experienced a severe rain storm?  Have you felt wind that could blow off a roof?  Have you watched flames consume anything?  These are the elements used in a baptism. It isn't a small thing, it is a big thing.  These are all things that mean the difference between life and death for us and we can not control them.

We need water.  This is our main symbol in baptism.  We use it daily.  We wash in water, we drink it, we clean with it, we spray it on our gardens, we watch it fall from the sky.  Yet this life sustaining water is dangerous.  Just as easily we can drown in it, it can destroy entire towns, it can create slippery roads on a winters evening.   This tension in the gift of water is supposed to be there.  God is bigger than we know.  God can control these elements when we can not.  God can harness a flood, and yet provide water in the desert for his people to drink.  This tension is important because when ever we see water we are supposed to remember our baptism and God.

We are to remember that God is bigger than we know and more powerful than we can imagine.  When we are submerged or sprinkled with water we are told that in baptism we share in Christ's life and death and resurrection   With this act we die to our selves, to our own selfish ways and are given freedom from doing "what comes naturally".  We can choose life, we can choose to do something else, and if we don't we know it, we feel it, the pull is there.  When we are baptized we are born anew in Christ.  We are not trying to fight the pull of sin or separation from God on our own any longer, we are teaming up with a God who is bigger and more powerful than any sin can be who loves us and accepts us as we are.  God who walks with us even when we make poor choices, gives us strength and courage and continually pulls us towards him and his path.  This is baptism.  This is freedom.  This is a whole new life.  This is our journey.

Friday, January 11, 2013

New items on the Good Stuff tab!

Check out the good stuff tab if you are interested in making prayer beads to help you stay focused while praying!

Saturday, January 5, 2013

Time to soak up some light



Epiphany! - “Sudden, surprising happening that changes everything completely!”1

I love the definition of Epiphany that I found above from the GBOD worship planning web site this past week. Usually the only reference many of us have to Epiphany is the Scare-a-crow in the Wizard of Oz declaring he has an Epiphany, or if we have been in church for a while perhaps the idea that it has something to do with wise men. We use the word Epiphany to describe the 12th day after Christmas. Often times the idea that Epiphany changes everything completely gets drowned out by the three wise men and the gold, frankinsense and myrrh. We think of the traditions and forget that this Sunday marks the beginning for us in the church to start to grapple with what Jesus' birth really means for us. It is time to seek our own Epiphanies – our own realizations about Christ that are surprising and changes everything completely! It is time to begin anew, to seek, to listen to God and to pray.

It is also a time of healing. Isaiah 60:1-2 especially reminds us that it is time to “soak up” some God no matter where we are in life. For the people of Israel this was the time period when they were returning to home. The people felt lost, broken, isolated. They had been forced into exile and were finally allowed to return home. When they did they found it destroyed, and what was standing had either gentiles living in it, or those Jews who were too poor for the government to bother to move them to exile. There were power struggles between those who stayed and those who left and everyone else. Not to mention just pure misery. (Isaiah 59:8-10). Yet God breaks in. God gives them hope about what is to come and God heals.

God does not break into the scene because anyone deserved it. God does not bring light into the darkness of this situation because anyone repented. God does not come because of anything they did or anything we do. God comes because God comes. God comes because we are his people and he pulls us to him. He calls us and beckons us and we get to bask in the light. God is the one that heals, that gives them the strength to rebuild and figure out how to be a nation once more. God comes and then they repent, and then they change, and then they become a collective people again.

This is an important lesson in this season of Epiphany. It is time for us as a hurting people, as a hurting church to just allow God to come. To stop struggling for power, for authority for control and allow ourselves to see the light, to turn our faces towards the light and away from the darkness that surrounds us. It is time for us to “Lift up your eyes and look about you.” As we begin this new time, as we experience the life changing good news of God let us pray for the light. Let us pray for each other and for our own Epiphanies. Let us bask in the light and glory of the Lord before we do anything else. Maybe, just maybe then we truly will be able to share the Good news of Christ. If we do not take the time to truly see what a difference following Christ makes in our lives, how are we to be a light for anyone else? If it does not make our communities any different than the rest of the darkness how is anyone else going to believe us?

So let us stop our hectic races to see who can be the first to fill up their calendar. Let us not even begin to think about what the church needs to do. Let us just listen. Let us just soak up some light and listen to what God is whispering for us to do next. Then we can repent – change the direction of what we are doing and be the light that calls out to the rest of the world.