In quietness and trust is your strength.
Monday, April 07, 2008
Shhh . . .
In quietness and trust is your strength.
Friday, March 28, 2008
Thinking About Prayer: Part 2
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Location, Location, Location!
Once when talking about our church with another pastor, he commented that our church is actually in a terrible location. It should instead be at the bottom of the road that leads into our community where people would immediately see it rather than in a spot that requires a handful of left turns. As it is, our church lacks a certain obvious visibility. It's not about blinking and missing it. It's more about being situated where even if you keep your eyes peeled you're just not likely to drive by casually on the road where our church is.
Some churches, in order to improve their ministry, will take steps to improve their location. I know of one church which is currently engaged in such a re-location project. But of course not all churches have either the calling or the ability to take such measures. For some churches, ours included, our location, whatever it may be, is something with which we simply have to contend.
Take me, for instance. What is my location? I am geographically located in a small LSD (local service district) where I currently serve as the full-time pastor of a small, rural Baptist church. The area in which I live is not even large enough to be considered a village or town. We have no local municipality. I hadn't even heard of this place before being called as pastor! And of course my being located here has to do with not only with physical location, but a whole plethora of factors.
Monday, March 17, 2008
Everything is Green!!
On Palm Sunday . . .
Yesterday was Palm Sunday. It’s the last Sunday before Easter and officially kicks off what many churches refer to as holy week—the last week of Jesus’ life before his death and eventual resurrection. And in previous years as a pastor I’ve never made the effort to recognize Palm Sunday. I’m not sure why. When I was growing up Catholic we celebrated Palm Sunday with the distributing and waving of palm branches. But throughout all of my years as a Baptist I can only recall one occasion when Palm Sunday was actually recognized and celebrated, even if not with palm branches. So I sought, this year, to rectify this.
Now the whole deal with Palm Sunday is that it commemorates the occasion of Jesus’ entrance into Jerusalem just prior to his Passion—his arrest, trial, beating, and crucifixion. In fact, his passion is his reason for entering Jerusalem. He knows what’s coming. And he still, as Scripture says, set his face toward Jerusalem. And the reason it’s called Palm Sunday is that the gospel accounts tell us that as Jesus was entering Jerusalem on a donkey, people broke off branches and laid them on the road as Jesus was proceeding in. And they sang, “Hosanna! Hosanna in the highest!” Though the crowd of disciples and other people was likely small, this unlikely contingent of followers were proclaiming Jesus as the promised Davidic king who would also be the Messiah. No doubt they were expecting not humiliation and death for their king but glory and victory as he triumphed over their Roman oppressors. But this was not to be.
So with all that in mind, I thought that this year we ought to celebrate Palm Sunday more explicitly. Much of our attention gets divided between Christmas and Easter and very little attention is usually given to the lesser Christian feasts or holidays. While I love celebrating these other occasions, I’m glad we took the time to put more effort into Palm Sunday this year. We had palm branches for everyone in the congregation and several of the kids in our church danced to the front of the church at the beginning of our service while we sang “Hail Jesus! You’re My King” to hand out the branches. We sang songs that focused on Jesus as our king and his entrance into Jerusalem. And then when we sang “Hosanna” we invited people, if comfortable in doing so, to wave their branches while we sang.
Sometimes I think joy needs to be more concretely expressed and lived. I know that Christian joy is deep and doesn’t always show up in effusive expressions of jubilation but I think it’s also true that we can benefit from the sheer physical gesture of waving branches while praising Jesus. The spiritual and physical are not separate. And even if we don’t naturally express our joy outwardly so that others can see, taking even a moment to practice such an expression of joy can teach us and help us to understand the deeper meaning of celebration and joy, something which the coming of our king and Messiah ought to evoke.
Of course, we also celebrated Palm Sunday because I have been preaching a sermon series that made it even more apropos. This was the third week in my series, “Who do you say I am?” This is the question Jesus asked his disciples just before he first told them that he had to suffer and die. And it’s a question he asks each of us. On our answer hangs our present lives and our eternal destiny. So we’ve been looking at different aspects of that question’s answer: Jesus is the Messiah, Jesus is the Suffering Servant and, yesterday, Jesus is the King. On Easter Sunday we’ll be looking at the resurrection and Jesus as the Son of God. And the following week I’ll be looking at Jesus’ ascension and Jesus as Lord. So making more of an occasion of Palm Sunday than usual made a great deal of liturgical sense.
But thinking of the importance of giving visible expression to our joy, as we did on Palm Sunday with our palm branches and praises, another example comes to mind also. Last evening (Palm Sunday evening) was our last session for our adult Bible study. It was a six week study called The Surprising Power of Jesus. The last session was on Jesus’ resurrection and his power over life. What made it special, and what gave it an extra note of joy, was that to really celebrate Jesus’ coming back to life and the victory we have over the grave as a result we counted down . . . 3-2-1 . . . Jesus is alive!!! And then we blew noisemakers and burst party-favours that sent a flurry of coloured pieces of paper raining down on us like snow flurries. And laugh! Boy, did we laugh! It was silly, but did it work! It reminded us of the kind of joy that we have in Christ and that it’s perfectly fine to give outward expression to inward joy. It also made me realize that sometimes we need a little extra incentive to express our joy and delight. We’re not all inclined to show our joy. But then sometimes showing our joy reminds us what joy really is.
So for the first time in years I had the chance to celebrate Palm Sunday. Yesterday was one of the best church services in awhile. It felt joyful. There was a melody of praise and gratitude that ran through our time of worship together. I realize that we can’t determine the worth of our worship by what we feel when we worship, but our worship shouldn’t be entirely exempt of feeling.
Our time in church yesterday—both during our morning worship and our Bible study—also helped me to appreciate once again what it means to be a part of a worshipping people. I was grateful for the sheer joy of having a community with which to celebrate my faith. The sort of joy that came alive in us yesterday wouldn’t have been possible without our coming together. This is because being with one another is a huge part of the joy we experience. We know joy because we know each other. And we know joy in Christ because we are in Christ together with brothers and sisters. And the only thing more joyful than the arrival of Jesus in Jerusalem as king, though scarcely recognized at the time, is Jesus' resurrection--but that's a different day!
Friday, March 07, 2008
A Good Mystery . . . Revisited
Wednesday, March 05, 2008
A Good Mystery
My Confession . . .
Thursday, February 28, 2008
"At least you have your health . . ."
Thursday, February 21, 2008
The Discipline of Devotion
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Thinking About Prayer: Part 1
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Something Extraordinary
Monday, February 18, 2008
A Song
A couple of posts ago, I mentioned that I had written a song that I was then planning on playing in church. I did play it in church yesterday, and I received a few encouraging comments. Some even came in on the chorus! And of course that's the intent. It's a song that works well congregationally. Anyway, someone posted a comment asking if I would post the words to the song on my blog. So, here they are.
Walk With Me
Lord, You are here
Regardless of the circumstances
You are here
You are the God of all second chances
Yes, You are here
So let me worship just as David dances
Chorus:
Lord, You walk with me
You’ve been faithful all these years
Lord, You walk with me
Through the pain and through the tears
Lord, You walk with me
When You speak, help me hear
To know You’re near
Sometimes this life
Can really be overwhelming
So shape this heart
To know that of my trust You’re worthy
Though dark the night
May You show forth Your glory
Chorus:
Lord, You walk with me
You won’t forsake those whom You love
Lord, You walk with me
Fill me with strength from above
Lord, You walk with me
You’re here though I find it hard to see
Lord, You walk with me
Lord, You walk with me
You’ve been faithful all these years
Lord, You walk with me
Through the pain and through the tears
Lord, You walk with me
When You speak, help me hear
To know You’re near
To know You’re near
Expectations vs. Reality
Friday, February 15, 2008
A Week in Ministry . . .
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Weather or Not . . .
Sunday, February 10, 2008
The adventure of a night-time . . .
The next unusual occurrence happened after I finished this sermon. Like I said, I finished preparing the sermon late last night/early this morning and when I finally settled in our bed it was somewhere in the vicinity of 1:30am. And I had no sooner settled down (for a long winter's nap?) when our three-year old daughter woke up with what sounded like the croup. Poor girl, she sounded absolutely miserable. Exposing her to lots of steam by taking her into the bathroom with the shower water on hot and full didn't seem to break it. Neither did covering her up except for her face and taking her out in the cold. That's when the tele-care nurse suggested we take her to out-patients or emergency just to be safe. So we did. At 2:30am.
Emergency proved fruitless. After an hour and a half of waiting with no visible end in sight, we decided to take her back home. This was around 4:30am, and our decision was in part prompted by another young woman who let us know that she had been waiting since 9pm! Yikes! At that rate, we would have been there until sometime late morning. So we left for home and arrived, after a sleepy drive during which my wife diligently made sure I stayed awake, at around 5:30am. And then we crashed, pretty sure that if the storm didn't result in a cancelled Sunday school that we would not be going. But there was snow--and so we didn't have to make that choice.
The strangeness of the day didn't fully end there. I left my wife and little girl home while I trudged tiredly off to church to preach, and when I got there found out that my pianist would not be coming either because of the roads. Understandably so, since they were very messy. Our hymns, therefore, were improvised and sung a cappella. It more or less worked, but with the frame of mind I was in, it left an odd tint on the service. My mind was not entirely present to the proceedings.
I did the funeral. My wife sang at the funeral. Ultimately, all went fine. Except for such glitches as forgetting the hard copy of some hymn lyrics, which my wife had to then sing by memory, and my knocking the TV power cord from the socket during the deceased's video tribute while slipping a note to the organist (which sounds rather clandestine, doesn't it?). Oddly, that caused little disturbance. One of the deceased's daughters more than graciously accepted my quick but sincere apology.
Through it all, I hope and pray that God was still at work, even though my ministry was performed through layers of exhaustion. Oddly enough, despite my lack of complete satisfaction with my own "performance," people who attended the funeral seemed genuinely appreciative of our ministry. That certainly says something about how God can use despite ourselves, especially after the adventure of a night-time when you're awake into the early hours with your sick little girl.
Friday, February 08, 2008
We are not alone . . .
Thursday, February 07, 2008
In these earthly vessels
So many people in this world live only for this life. They put all their eggs in the same earthly basket. Considering how unreliable most things in this life are, including our own bodies, that's a scary thought. I know that when I look at all the people around me who are sick, it can almost overwhelming. It can be discouraging. Sickness, disease, illness, injury, and, ultimately, death. None of it seems natural to me. It seems, instead, profoundly wrong.
I think of those Jesus healed, of the throngs of disease and demon ridden people who swarmed him: "When Jesus heard what had happened, he withdrew by boat privately to a solitary place. Hearing of this, the crowds followed him on foot from the towns. When Jesus landed and saw a large crowd, he had compassion on them and healed their sick (Matt. 14:13, 14)." Even Jesus couldn't get away from it. Yet he had compassion. Well, he was the Son of God; he is compassion in bodily form. Jesus, too, it seems, recognized the profound incongruity between God's intent for creation and creation as it was: fallen, broken, misshapen, and in need of redemption.
I don't usually go about my days with a profound sense of my own mortality. I'm not sick. I feel mostly well. I have no major health problems. My physical body faces few limitations beyond those common to most. But I never really know. I could find myself facing MRIs and frightening diagnoses at any time. The funny thing is, I'm not sure why it seems to take something life-threatening to make us realize how frail we actually are. With rare exception, we live as though we are immortal, as if nothing we do to our bodies will ultimately bring us harm. No wonder those occasions when death is staring us straight in the face, whether in the mirror or through the eyes of a loved one, we find ourselves so much more vulnerable. And open. Open to the fact that God has something better in mind for us. Between creation and new creation there is a great groaning, a waiting for God to renew and remake, remold and reshape, to bring his purposes to completion. Paul speaks of this: "We know that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time. Not only so, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption, the redemption of our bodies (Romans 8:23)." And so the only way that I can see to put up with all this groaning--the pain, trials, illnesses, frailty, physical sufferings, diseases--is to trust that God, through Christ, will indeed redeem these earthen vessels in which we live. It's also the only way to deal with the groanings of those around, those whom we love, who in reminding us of our mortality also point the way to our hope, and "if we hope for what we do not yet have, we wait for it patiently."
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
Things Beside the Point . . .
One of the most conspicuous features of Mark's Gospel is its pace. Things happen quickly. Amongst the four evangelists, Mark's work is akin to an action movie. Not a moment is wasted. There is little actual teaching in Mark. We see more of Jesus doing and moving than Jesus saying. He's heading toward Jerusalem, and more specifically, the cross. We learn this as readers in Mark 8:31: "Then he began to teach them that the Son of Man must undergo great suffering . . ." This occurs roughly midway through the narrative. No wonder many scholars refer to Mark as a passion narrative with an extended introduction. Jesus has a destination and proceeds toward it--and please pardon the pun--with a relentless passion. It seems, then, that Jesus is very goal-minded. The whole point of his ministry is to reach Jerusalem, the cross, and the destiny that he came to fulfill for us all.
Some of his disciples, it would seem, were also very goal-minded. They too were looking to the future and to what they thought the point of Jesus' ministry ought to be. In Mark 10 James and John, Jesus' second pair of converts, approach Jesus with a request: "Grant us to sit, one at your right hand and one at your left, in your glory." Jesus' response, though oblique, proves that they had no idea who Jesus really is and what it will take for them to sit with him in his glory. They wanted power, influence, authority. A certain greed was rearing its ugly head. No surprise, then, that the rest of the apostles were angry with them once they found out. And as usual, the dull-headedness of the disciples provides Jesus with significant opportunity to teach them what service truly means. He ties his mission and identity directly to what he expects of them: "Whoever wishes to be first among you must be slave of all. For the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve . . ."
What specific difference does this make? Look at Mark 10. In one story his disciples tried to prevent little children from approaching him. Jesus, they think, has more important things to do. "Don't disturb the Master," they say, "with such insignificant people!" Children had no status in Jesus' day. They were people beside the point. But precisely for this reason, Jesus admonished his disciples sternly and let them know that this children were precisely the point. A little later in the same chapter, a blind man cries out to Jesus for mercy. Many there try and shut him up. We don't know for sure if the disciples were among them. Whatever the case, the man just cries out louder. And Jesus stops. Jesus shows mercy. Jesus stops at the side of the road to heal a blind man crying out desperately for his touch. And then we are told that after he regained his sight he "followed him on his way."
People that many thought were incidental, distracting to the real work at hand, unimportant, and beside the point, Jesus treated as worthy of attention, time, and energy. Jesus often treated what people considered beside the point as the point. Yes, Jesus had an agenda. This agenda, this mission, meant proceeding towards the cross. But not at the expense of people; in fact, he proceeded toward the cross--a destination even his closest disciples did not yet understand--precisely for these very people. "The Son of Man came not to be served but to serve . . ."
What his disciples didn't get in their immature and hungry grab for power was that power was not on Jesus' "to do" list. They were only concerned for themselves. James and John, in vying for positions alongside Jesus, missed the point entirely. The little children were the point. The blind man crying out desperately for mercy and for his sight was the point. Jesus was giving up his life for "the least of these."
How often do I do the same thing? How often do I overlook and shove aside that which Christ wants front and center? How often do I do that because I am more interested in personal gain and self-interest than I am in the needs of those around me? We can make fun of those disciples (duh-ciples!) all we want, but we are more often like them than Jesus. Do I have an agenda that pushes away the least of these or do I allow my agenda to be shaped by the least of these? Jesus' passion and mission was restoring fellowship between God and anyone interested in that restoration, and this meant treating with respect, dignity, and a fierce love many that we normally see as beside the point when we're preoccupied with ourselves and our own self-important agendas. May we be more like Jesus, willing to stop at the road side to assist those crying out, knowing full well that doing so is a part of the journey along the road in the first place.