Today is Boxing Day and contrary to what we might think; Boxing Day has nothing to do with boxing up all the gifts we didn’t like or the ones that didn’t fit in order to return them to the mall. The tradition of Boxing Day goes back to England and there are two stories about how the day after Christmas came to have that name. One story says that on Dec. 26th the priest of the community would open the offering box which gathered money for the poor throughout Christmas season and then distribute that money to those in need. Another story says that because all the household servants had to work on Christmas Day, they would celebrate Christmas with their families on Dec. 26th and the Lord of the Manor would fill boxes on that day with food and gifts for all his servants and their families. Either way, Boxing Day isn’t about returning gifts, it’s about keeping the gift of Jesus alive by giving gifts to others and by reaching out to help those in need.
Just because the celebration of Advent and Christmas are over doesn’t mean we let go of the gifts we have been talking about all month, actually, today is the day we need to keep these gifts close and have them ready to use in the days ahead. It can be easy in these long cold days of winter after the excitement of Christmas is over to let go of the hope and joy that we have been feeling and it is too easy to let go of the renewed faith and love that we know God brings to us in Jesus – so today is the day to keep these gifts close to our hearts. Today is the day to keep these gifts working in our lives. We need to keep the gift of God’s word, the gift of worship, the gift of purpose, the gift of God’s Spirit and most of all gift of Jesus at the forefront of our lives and if we do this we will find the blessing of the abundant life that Jesus came to offer us. If we let go of these gifts, however, we run the risk of missing God’s presence and power in our lives all together.
Think about the days after Jesus was born. The shepherds worshipped him and then it says they went out and told everyone what they had heard from the angels and what they seen with their own eyes Look at Luke 2:17 & 20. They told everyone that the Messiah had come, but do you notice that no one went to look for him. In fact, when Mary and Joseph enter the Temple 8 days after Jesus was born to offer the sacrifices that were required after a child had been born, no one was there waiting for them. There weren’t crowds of people to behold the new born king. There were only two people who even noticed the gift of Jesus in the temple that day, Simeon and Anna, and the reason they recognized Jesus and the reason they got the blessing of being able to worship him was because they kept these very gifts we have been talking about alive in their lives.
Look at what we know about Simeon, he was righteous and devote – he was a man of worship and the word. He kept these 2 gifts alive in his heart – he meditated on God’s word, he worshipped in the temple, he was faithful to God in his daily walk and because he kept those gifts and used them he was there when Jesus entered the Temple. It also says he was filled with the Holy Spirit. Three times it talks about how the spirit was working in Simeon’s life, it says the Holy Spirit rested on him, it revealed to him that he would see the Messiah, and then it was the Spirit of God who guided him to be in the Temple when Mary and Joseph brought in Jesus. Clearly Simeon kept the gift of God’s Spirit and he made sure he trusted in it and relied on it everyday. All the gifts we have been talking about were gifts that were actively used in Simeon’s life and because he kept those gifts and used them – he was one of only 2 people who had the blessing of being able to see Jesus.
The other person who received that blessing was Anna and Anna also kept these gifts alive. It says that Anna never left the Temple, but she didn’t just hang out there, it says she fasted and prayed daily. She was a woman of worship and her fasting and prayer shows us just how serious she was about her devotion to God. And like Simeon she was also filled with the gift of God’s Spirit, how else can we explain how she happened to walk up to Simeon as he was holding the child and how she knew to praise God for the gift of the Messiah that she saw in Jesus.
Simeon and Anna kept the gifts of God and because they did they didn’t just see in Jesus a baby, they recognized him for who he was, they knew he was the Messiah, the one who would bring redemption and salvation to Israel, the one the people had been waiting for. Lots of people saw Jesus that day, they saw a couple holding a baby, but only Simeon and Anna recognized him as the Messiah and because they did they were blessed by God and the reason they received that blessing was because they kept the gifts God had given them.
If we want to see God at work in our hearts and lives in the new year then we need to keep the gifts God has given us. If we want to experience all the blessings God has for us then we need to keep these gifts that God has given us. Now in many ways I feel like I’m preaching to the choir here because you do keep these gifts and I know that because you are here in worship today. Even though we gathered here just about 36 hours ago to celebrate the gift of Jesus – and I know many of you spent a long day here yesterday serving Jesus by feeding 10% of our community, you are back here today because you know you need the gift of Jesus everyday and we know we need to keep the gift of worship and God’s word living in our hearts and lives. These are gifts to keep and when we do then like Simeon and Anna we will see Jesus and when we see Jesus we will experience the power of his presence and the peace of his love and grace.
My hope in the new year is that we will encourage one another to keep these gifts of God alive and at work in our lives. I’m sure that there were times Simeon and Anna must have gotten tired of being faithful and maybe even questioned why they worshipped when God never seemed to show up, or why they fasted and prayed when the Messiah and his kingdom never seemed to come. It had been a long time since God had spoken through the prophets, it had been a long time since there had been any kind of new word of God to the people of Israel and while many people had given up, Simeon and Anna kept the gifts of God. They persisted. I wonder what it was or who it was that kept them going. I wonder if Simeon and Anna maybe knew each other from spending so much time in the Temple and so maybe the encouraged each other to stay faithful.
For many of us it may seem like a long time since God has spoken and we may wonder when we will see the movement of God or the outpouring of God’s spirit or the coming of God’s kingdom and as we wait and watch, it can be easy to lose hope and give up on these gifts – so how can we encourage each other. Those are the questions I want us to think about as we head into this new year.
How can we encourage one another and others to keep the gift of God’s word?
How can we encourage one another and others to keep the gift of worship?
How can we encourage one another and others to keep the gift of God’s purpose for their lives?
How can we encourage one another and others to keep the gift of God’s Holy Spirit and the gift of Jesus?
As we answer these questions and as we live out our answers we become the church God wants us to be. Think about what the church is – it’s a group of people who not only follow Jesus but we help each other follow Jesus and we do that by encouraging one another to keep the gifts God has given us. We can become a stronger church, a more devoted and vibrant church, a more faithful church if we will encourage one another to keep these gifts of God every day.
And when we encourage others to see these gifts in their own lives and maybe accept them – accept Jesus and the power of Christ and the purpose God has for their lives – when we encourage people to accept these gifts – the church grows and lives are changed and when lives are changed the world is changed. I hope we will keep these questions before us in the new year and I hope we will keep these gifts of God alive and at work in our hearts and lives today and everyday.
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Saturday, December 25, 2010
The Gift of Jesus
Aiden Welch hadn’t started school yet so when his mom came in for our Thursday morning women’s Bible Study a week before Christmas they asked if I would watch him. Aiden and I went to the children’s department at our church so I could get a video for him to watch and when we got there he immediately noticed that we had put up the Nativity scene since he was last there. Aiden asked if he could touch the pieces and since that is the fun of having a nativity scene I said sure go ahead. I went to get a video and when I returned Aiden had moved every single piece of that nativity scene into one big crowd around the baby Jesus. When I asked why they were all bunched together like that he told me with great seriousness, they all just wanted to get close to Jesus.
Sometimes there can be profound wisdom in little boys. They all just wanted to get close to Jesus. I’m sure on that night Mary & Joseph just wanted to be close to Jesus, what parent doesn’t want to be close to their new born child. They wanted to be close to him so they could care for him, watch over him, protect him and simply love him, but I also wonder if they wanted to be close to him because they knew who this child was. For 9 months they had contemplated the message of the angels, they had been told that the child to be born was holy, the son of God. Joseph was told that this child was going to save people from their sin. I’m sure Mary & Joseph had no idea what all of that meant, but it must have added to their anticipation and excitement at his birth. How much more would they want to hold him and care for him and be close to him knowing this was the son of God. How much closer they must have wanted to be to him, not just to love him, but to receive his love as well.
When the shepherds heard that the savior of the world had been born as a child in Bethlehem they just wanted to be close to him. We heard from Luke that they went with haste to see this thing that had taken place. They ran to be close to Jesus. They wanted to see and experience this amazing event. Like Mary & Joseph, they didn’t know what to expect – a king born in a stable, the son of God wrapped in strips of cloth and lying in a manger? They didn’t know what they would find, all that they knew was that they wanted to be close to him.
When the Wisemen in the east saw the star in the sky announcing the birth of a king, they didn’t know the child’s name was or his place of birth, but what they did know was that they wanted to be close to him, so they began their journey, a journey that many believe took a few months, maybe even several years, but a journey they continued until their search lead them to the Christ child. Like all the rest, they just wanted to be close to Jesus. Aiden had it right; they all just wanted to be close to Jesus.
I don’t think it is any different for us tonight. We are here because in some way, we want to be close to Jesus. We may not know exactly what that means for us, we may not even know why we feel the way we do, but we are here not just out of tradition, not just to be with family, and not just because it’s a quiet place to be before the hectic pace of Christmas Day, we are here because there is something deep inside of us that wants to be and needs to be close to Jesus. There is a longing in all of us to be closer to God and it keeps us searching until we find him. The philosopher Blaise Paschal talks about a God shaped hole in our lives and we will try to fill that hole with many things, but nothing will fill it except God. We just want to be close to Jesus because that is where we find fulfillment and life. They all just wanted to be close to Jesus, sometimes there is profound wisdom in little boys.
There was another little boy who lived in NYC and he would often hang around the Church of the Holy Trinity. The pastor, Clark Oler, said that the little boy often came around the church and he always wore a red stocking hat pulled over his ears, torn sneakers, and a ragged jacket. Several times Pastor Oler would speak to the boy and try to find out who he was and where he came from, but each time the boy would just looked at him with great big eyes and without a word, run away.
It was Christmas Eve and the snow had been falling all day. Pastor Oler looked out the church window and the only light he saw was the one that came from their own nativity scene set up in church courtyard. Life-sized figures of Joseph, Shepherds, Kings and Angels surrounded the baby Jesus and on the ground was a thick covering of straw with Mary kneeling by the manger. It was in the glow of that nativity scene that the pastor saw him again, wearing that unmistakable red hat. He was peering through the fence looking at the nativity. As he watched, the little boy ventured timidly into the courtyard and for a long time just stood before the manger and then suddenly, the he climbed inside and curled up in the straw with Jesus, sometime there this profound wisdom in little boys.
How many of us, if we could, would climb into the manger to be close to Jesus? How many of us tonight want to feel the touch of the holy child and experience the love and power of that most holy night? We come seeking to be close to God because we want to experience the touch of forgiveness and the hope of being able to start over with a clean slate. We come because we want to touch the power of heaven and tap into a peace that will last no matter what we are going through. We come because we want to know in our own hearts and lives the love that brings life.
We come because we just want to be close to Jesus, but what the gift of Jesus tells us is that God just wanted to be close to us. The good news of great joy which the angels sang out over the hills of Bethlehem was not that the shepherds could run off to be close to God it was that God had come in the gift of Jesus to be close to them, and that is really what this moment is all about. That is what this celebration is all about. That is what this gift of Jesus is all about. For unto you is born this night, a savior who is Christ the Lord. In the gift of Jesus, God has come to be close to you and me.
The amazing truth of this night isn’t that we come to be close to God but that God in Jesus has come to be close to us and he has come to be close to all of us. My theory of why Jesus was born in a stable and laid in a manger on the night he was born was because God wanted to make it clear that he comes to be with all of us and he comes right into the full mess of our lives. While our nativity scenes are sanitized and attractive, a stable is not a clean environment and a manger, a feeding trough for animals is not a nice place to lay your child – but think about this, is was the best option they had.
This past summer on our mission trip a few of us worked on a horse farm and we spent several hours cleaning out water troughs. These troughs were rubber tubs that held 100 gallons of water and they had not been cleaned out for quite some time. During the heat of the summer, algae grows in those tubs and it was our job to get the algae out. I don’t know if you know this or not, but Algae does not come off of rubber easily and you can’t use any bleach or detergent because it will harm the animals, so we spent hours scraping that black goo out of the water troughs and not only was it hard work, it was smelly work. When I read the nativity story this year I thought about those water troughs and I wondered if the manger smelled any better or if the community stable that housed Mary & Joseph was any cleaner. My guess is that it wasn’t.
I believe that God first entered this world in a messy place to let us know that God is willing to enter into the mess of our lives. If your heart is broken tonight, if your life is not what you thought it would be, if your dreams are shattered, your health uncertain or you are struggling financially – then receive this gift - God is here for you. If you are lonely, hurting or living with doubt, fear or guilt – receive this gift - God is here for you. In the mess of our lives – God is here for us, but you know what… in the joy of our lives God is here for us. When we can see the hand of God’s blessing like Mary must have when she held her first child and like Joseph must have when he heard the shepherds confirm that this was indeed the son of God – in the midst of their joy and blessing - God was there.
So it doesn’t matter who we are or what we are going through, or where you have been, God is here for us and God loves us so much that he wanted to be close to us and he wanted us to be with him forever and that is why he offers us this gift of Jesus, the one who saves us from our sin and the one whose death and resurrection brings us life.
If you just want to be close to Jesus, if you are needing and wanting to feel the touch of God’s power and love then take heart, because the gift of Jesus has been given to you. God so loved the world that he gave us the gift of Jesus so that all who receive him, all who believe in him shall perish but have everlasting life, a life with God forever. When we accept this gift of Jesus and when we allow his love to hold us, we will be changed. When we receive the gift of Jesus and trust in God’s love for us our lives will be changed. Despair can be overcome with a flicker of hope, guilt removed by the assurance of forgiveness; doubt wiped away by the power of faith and when we accept the gift of Jesus our joy and peace is increased beyond measure. Receive this gift of Jesus and allow God to come close to you.
They all just want to be close to Jesus.
There is profound wisdom in little boys.
But the greater truth and the greater love by far is that God has come to be close to us. In a little boy, God climbed into the flesh and blood and the mess and the joy of our lives in order to give us the gift of salvation, the gift of forgiveness, hope, joy, love, and life eternal. We are here tonight because we all just want to be close to Jesus and God is here tonight in the gift of Jesus because he wants to be close to us. There is profound wisdom and there is life changing love found in little boys.
Sometimes there can be profound wisdom in little boys. They all just wanted to get close to Jesus. I’m sure on that night Mary & Joseph just wanted to be close to Jesus, what parent doesn’t want to be close to their new born child. They wanted to be close to him so they could care for him, watch over him, protect him and simply love him, but I also wonder if they wanted to be close to him because they knew who this child was. For 9 months they had contemplated the message of the angels, they had been told that the child to be born was holy, the son of God. Joseph was told that this child was going to save people from their sin. I’m sure Mary & Joseph had no idea what all of that meant, but it must have added to their anticipation and excitement at his birth. How much more would they want to hold him and care for him and be close to him knowing this was the son of God. How much closer they must have wanted to be to him, not just to love him, but to receive his love as well.
When the shepherds heard that the savior of the world had been born as a child in Bethlehem they just wanted to be close to him. We heard from Luke that they went with haste to see this thing that had taken place. They ran to be close to Jesus. They wanted to see and experience this amazing event. Like Mary & Joseph, they didn’t know what to expect – a king born in a stable, the son of God wrapped in strips of cloth and lying in a manger? They didn’t know what they would find, all that they knew was that they wanted to be close to him.
When the Wisemen in the east saw the star in the sky announcing the birth of a king, they didn’t know the child’s name was or his place of birth, but what they did know was that they wanted to be close to him, so they began their journey, a journey that many believe took a few months, maybe even several years, but a journey they continued until their search lead them to the Christ child. Like all the rest, they just wanted to be close to Jesus. Aiden had it right; they all just wanted to be close to Jesus.
I don’t think it is any different for us tonight. We are here because in some way, we want to be close to Jesus. We may not know exactly what that means for us, we may not even know why we feel the way we do, but we are here not just out of tradition, not just to be with family, and not just because it’s a quiet place to be before the hectic pace of Christmas Day, we are here because there is something deep inside of us that wants to be and needs to be close to Jesus. There is a longing in all of us to be closer to God and it keeps us searching until we find him. The philosopher Blaise Paschal talks about a God shaped hole in our lives and we will try to fill that hole with many things, but nothing will fill it except God. We just want to be close to Jesus because that is where we find fulfillment and life. They all just wanted to be close to Jesus, sometimes there is profound wisdom in little boys.
There was another little boy who lived in NYC and he would often hang around the Church of the Holy Trinity. The pastor, Clark Oler, said that the little boy often came around the church and he always wore a red stocking hat pulled over his ears, torn sneakers, and a ragged jacket. Several times Pastor Oler would speak to the boy and try to find out who he was and where he came from, but each time the boy would just looked at him with great big eyes and without a word, run away.
It was Christmas Eve and the snow had been falling all day. Pastor Oler looked out the church window and the only light he saw was the one that came from their own nativity scene set up in church courtyard. Life-sized figures of Joseph, Shepherds, Kings and Angels surrounded the baby Jesus and on the ground was a thick covering of straw with Mary kneeling by the manger. It was in the glow of that nativity scene that the pastor saw him again, wearing that unmistakable red hat. He was peering through the fence looking at the nativity. As he watched, the little boy ventured timidly into the courtyard and for a long time just stood before the manger and then suddenly, the he climbed inside and curled up in the straw with Jesus, sometime there this profound wisdom in little boys.
How many of us, if we could, would climb into the manger to be close to Jesus? How many of us tonight want to feel the touch of the holy child and experience the love and power of that most holy night? We come seeking to be close to God because we want to experience the touch of forgiveness and the hope of being able to start over with a clean slate. We come because we want to touch the power of heaven and tap into a peace that will last no matter what we are going through. We come because we want to know in our own hearts and lives the love that brings life.
We come because we just want to be close to Jesus, but what the gift of Jesus tells us is that God just wanted to be close to us. The good news of great joy which the angels sang out over the hills of Bethlehem was not that the shepherds could run off to be close to God it was that God had come in the gift of Jesus to be close to them, and that is really what this moment is all about. That is what this celebration is all about. That is what this gift of Jesus is all about. For unto you is born this night, a savior who is Christ the Lord. In the gift of Jesus, God has come to be close to you and me.
The amazing truth of this night isn’t that we come to be close to God but that God in Jesus has come to be close to us and he has come to be close to all of us. My theory of why Jesus was born in a stable and laid in a manger on the night he was born was because God wanted to make it clear that he comes to be with all of us and he comes right into the full mess of our lives. While our nativity scenes are sanitized and attractive, a stable is not a clean environment and a manger, a feeding trough for animals is not a nice place to lay your child – but think about this, is was the best option they had.
This past summer on our mission trip a few of us worked on a horse farm and we spent several hours cleaning out water troughs. These troughs were rubber tubs that held 100 gallons of water and they had not been cleaned out for quite some time. During the heat of the summer, algae grows in those tubs and it was our job to get the algae out. I don’t know if you know this or not, but Algae does not come off of rubber easily and you can’t use any bleach or detergent because it will harm the animals, so we spent hours scraping that black goo out of the water troughs and not only was it hard work, it was smelly work. When I read the nativity story this year I thought about those water troughs and I wondered if the manger smelled any better or if the community stable that housed Mary & Joseph was any cleaner. My guess is that it wasn’t.
I believe that God first entered this world in a messy place to let us know that God is willing to enter into the mess of our lives. If your heart is broken tonight, if your life is not what you thought it would be, if your dreams are shattered, your health uncertain or you are struggling financially – then receive this gift - God is here for you. If you are lonely, hurting or living with doubt, fear or guilt – receive this gift - God is here for you. In the mess of our lives – God is here for us, but you know what… in the joy of our lives God is here for us. When we can see the hand of God’s blessing like Mary must have when she held her first child and like Joseph must have when he heard the shepherds confirm that this was indeed the son of God – in the midst of their joy and blessing - God was there.
So it doesn’t matter who we are or what we are going through, or where you have been, God is here for us and God loves us so much that he wanted to be close to us and he wanted us to be with him forever and that is why he offers us this gift of Jesus, the one who saves us from our sin and the one whose death and resurrection brings us life.
If you just want to be close to Jesus, if you are needing and wanting to feel the touch of God’s power and love then take heart, because the gift of Jesus has been given to you. God so loved the world that he gave us the gift of Jesus so that all who receive him, all who believe in him shall perish but have everlasting life, a life with God forever. When we accept this gift of Jesus and when we allow his love to hold us, we will be changed. When we receive the gift of Jesus and trust in God’s love for us our lives will be changed. Despair can be overcome with a flicker of hope, guilt removed by the assurance of forgiveness; doubt wiped away by the power of faith and when we accept the gift of Jesus our joy and peace is increased beyond measure. Receive this gift of Jesus and allow God to come close to you.
They all just want to be close to Jesus.
There is profound wisdom in little boys.
But the greater truth and the greater love by far is that God has come to be close to us. In a little boy, God climbed into the flesh and blood and the mess and the joy of our lives in order to give us the gift of salvation, the gift of forgiveness, hope, joy, love, and life eternal. We are here tonight because we all just want to be close to Jesus and God is here tonight in the gift of Jesus because he wants to be close to us. There is profound wisdom and there is life changing love found in little boys.
Sunday, December 19, 2010
The Gift of God's Holy Spirit
At the beginning of the Charlie Brown Christmas special, Charlie Brown is just not in the Christmas Spirit. To help him get that spirit Lucy suggests that he become the director of the Christmas play, but as we all know - that didn’t turn out well for Charlie Brown. If you are like Charlie Brown today and are just not in that the Christmas Spirit, don’t worry, there is a website that gives you step by step instructions on how to get the Christmas spirit and just about everything it says we need is in this box. Now the first thing it says we need is not in this box and that is children. They say if we don’t have any children of your own you can to borrow some. Their suggestion is to offer to baby sit some children so that their parents can enjoy some peace and quiet, or they suggest you just hang out with those adult friends who still act like kids. The next thing we need to do is get some Christmas music and then bake some gingerbread (which I don’t understand at all because I don’t like GB), and then we need to get some Christmas beverage – and their suggestion is hot chocolate. Now while the GB is baking we are to work on making a Christmas ornament which we can then place on our Christmas tree. Once we have done all of this we are supposed to sit down and watch a Charlie Brown Christmas eating GB, drinking hot chocolate and sitting in the glow of the tree with our children or the children we have borrowed. I’m really not kidding, these were the step by step instructions on how to get into the Christmas spirit quickly and easily.
Beyond the absurdness of all this, there is an underlying truth here, what this all reveals is that the peace on earth and goodwill toward men that we think of as the Christmas Spirit is fleeting. The Christmas spirit doesn’t last. Once the cartoon is over, the music ends, the GB is eaten and the Hot Chocolate has gone cold and the tree and ornaments put away, the reality of life returns and the warm glow of the Christmas spirit is gone. There is a powerful story from WWI that illustrates how the spirit of Christmas just does not last.
During the Christmas season of 1914 there were a series of truces that sprung up along the western front in Europe between the British and Germans. On Christmas Eve and Christmas Day both sides would call a truce and soldiers would leave their trenches and meet in the fields between them. The soldiers would gather together and exchange greetings and food and sing Christmas carols together. In one field the British soldiers brought out their football (soccer ball) and a game of football started between the two sides. Now it was said that the British won that game, but it was a British soldier who told that story so we can’t be sure, but the picture of peace on earth that we envision here is close to what the prophet Isaiah talked about in 11:6-9. But the problem was that this peace didn’t last. The day after Christmas the truce was over and the fierce and bloody fighting started all over again.
The Christmas spirit can produce a truce during a war, but it doesn’t bring lasting peace on earth, and while the Christmas spirit can bring good will toward men and women as we show extra kindness and forgiveness toward our family and friends, it doesn’t heal our hurts and restore relationships, and while the Christmas spirit can fill us with a sense of meaning and joy as we help those in need in around us we aren’t able to keep up that level of service and sacrifice throughout the year. What often happens is that the week after Christmas arrives and we are back to our old way of living. What all of this shows us is that the Christmas spirit doesn’t last so instead of looking to get into the Spirit of Christmas by eating GB and singing carols, what we need is the spirit of Christ to enter into us. If we want experience transformation, if we want this Christmas to be the beginning of a new way of living and a new way of loving, then what we need to do this Christmas is accept God’s gift of the Holy Spirit.
While the Holy Spirit has been around since before the beginning of creation, it was particularly active during the time of Jesus birth. Think about all the ways the Holy Spirit was at work in the events surrounding the birth of Jesus. It was the spirit of God that brought Joseph and Mary together as a couple long before there was any message of a child being born and it was the Holy Spirit that helped keep Mary and Joseph together during a difficult and uncertain pregnancy. It was the Holy Spirit that helped Elizabeth and Zechariah conceive a child in their old age and that child was a sign to Mary that the child she carried was indeed from God.
It was the Holy Spirit working in Caesar Augustus that issued a decree for a census to take place which is what forced Joseph to take Mary to Bethlehem which was where according to the prophets the Messiah was to be born. It was the Holy Spirit that gave the angels a song to sing and told them where to find a group of shepherds on the hills outside of Bethlehem. It was the Holy Spirit that even filled the Inns of Bethlehem so that Jesus had to be born in a stable and laid in a manger. Think about it, if God had wanted Jesus born in the Inn he could have reserved a room in some way, after all nothing is impossible for God, but I believe that God wanted Jesus born in a stable and laid in a manger because the humbleness of that birth reveals to us that Jesus came for everyone. It is the Holy Spirit that from the beginning made it clear that God’s love and grace was going to be extended and offered as a free gift to everyone.
It was also the Holy Spirit that placed a star in the sky that directed the Magi on their journey and the Holy Spirit that protected Jesus by sending the Magi home a different way which kept them from returning to Herod who was looking to kill Jesus, and the HS sent Mary, Joseph and Jesus to Egypt again to protect Jesus from Herod. So while there isn’t a HS figurine in our nativity scenes, the birth of Jesus would not have taken place the way it did without the work of the Holy Spirit. There would never have been a Jesus if it were not for the Holy Spirit because when Mary asked how the child was going to be conceived the angel said to her, the Holy Spirit will come upon you. It was the Holy Spirit who brought the gift of God’s divine presence to Mary and it is still the Holy Spirit who brings us the gift of God’s presence and power to us today, the question is will we receive it? Will we receive this gift of God’s Holy Spirit?
While we don’t often look to the Christmas story to teach us about the Holy Spirit, there are some things we learn about the Holy Spirit from the events around the birth of Jesus and probably the single most important thing we learn about the Holy Spirit is that it comes to us as a gift. Mary did not ask for the Holy Spirit to come upon her. Joseph did not ask the Holy Spirit to give him guidance on what to do with his life. The shepherds were not looking for a message from the angels and the Magi weren’t expecting to find a star when they searched the skies. The Holy Spirit took the initiative and came to the people – God’s power and presence were not forced on them, it was offered to them and revealed to them and it was up to them accept them and the spirit of Christ works the same way today.
The Holy Spirit is a gift from God that is offered to people who are open and willing to receive Him. Joseph, Mary, the Shepherds, the Angels and the Wisemen were all open to God and in one way or another they each accepted the gift of the Holy Spirit and when they did things changed, their lives changed - the world changed. There can be lasting change in our lives and there can be significant and lasting change in our world if we will be willing to receive the gift of God’s Holy Spirit. Are we willing, like Mary, allow Christ to be born in us. That’s what accepting the Holy Spirit is all about, it’s allowing the life of Christ to be formed in us so that our lives look more like the life of Jesus. This doesn’t happen on our own, it is the work of God when we accept God’s gift of the Holy Spirit.
As we think about what this gift of God’s Holy Spirit means for our lives we need to go back to the day of Pentecost when the Holy Spirit was given to the church. On that day the disciples were all gathered together and we know they were open to God because they were being obedient to the word of God. Jesus had told them to wait in Jerusalem until they were clothed with power and so they were following his instruction, they were waiting in Jerusalem and when the Holy Spirit comes upon them 3 things happen, there is the sound of a mighty rushing wind, there were tongues of fire that rested on them and they were able to speak in different languages. What some people see here is that the gift of the Holy Spirit change the disciples and the world through inspiration, purification and communication. The inspiration is the rushing wind that breathes new life into the disciples, the purification is the fire which cleanses and renews the disciples and the communication is the gift of being able to speak in different languages and as they do, the disciples spread the good news of Jesus to people from around the world. So that’s how the Holy Spirit changes us, it inspires us – it breathes new life into us, it purifies us, it cleanses us from sin and refines our faith, and then through us the Holy Spirit changes the world as we communicate God’s love and grace to others.
What I find interesting is that if we look at the Christmas story we can also see there that gift of the Holy Spirit brought inspiration, purification and communication. The Holy Spirit brought inspiration to Joseph by giving him the wisdom he needed to understand all that was taking place in Mary and clearly God inspired Mary, literally breathing new life into her. The Holy Spirit also brought purification to Mary and Joseph through the fire of trials. It was not easy for Mary and Joseph to go through all they did, but each step of faith refined their hearts and helped purify their faith, and then the angels and shepherds and even the Wisemen, God communicated his message to the world. So long before the day of Pentecost the gift of the Holy Spirit was bringing inspiration, purification and communication which makes me think that this is simply the work of the Holy Spirit.
Think about what we heard from the Prophet Isaiah this morning, his message was spoken hundreds of years before the birth of Jesus, or the day of Pentecost, but did you notice how it talked about the Holy Spirit bringing inspiration, purification and communication. In 11:2 it says that the Spirit of the Lord was going to come and rest on the Messiah and bring wisdom, understanding and counsel another way of looking at that is to say that the Spirit of God was going to inspire the Messiah. The Spirit of God was also going to bring a fear of the Lord – not a fear that terrifies but a fear or an awe that ignites a fire of passion and worship in our hearts that refines our lives, or a fear of the Lord that purifies us. And the Holy Spirit resting on the Messiah was going to bring a new order of peace and justice and righteousness. In other words the Messiah was communicate to the world that there is a better way to live and a better way to love. And then perhaps most important of all the Spirit was going to make that new way of life possible. I don’t think this image of peace and justice and righteousness was just a heavenly vision, I think it was to communicate the truth that God has a new way for us to live today and if we will accept the gift of the Holy Spirit and allow the divine power and presence of Christ to be formed in us that new way of live will come.
The spirit of Christmas is that warm sentimentality that comes with gingerbread and Christmas carols but it doesn’t last, the spirit of Christ comes with power to inspire us and to purify us and then to communicate through us that the peace and love and power of God are able available to us today. When we accept the spirit of Christ we are allowing God to breathe into us. Inspiration brings purification and as we accept God’s spirit and allow Christ to be born in us and formed in us we will find ourselves wanting to share God’s love and power with others. I’m not sure the Shepherds really thought about what they were doing when they left the stable, I think they were simply so filled with the gift of God’s spirit that they couldn’t help but share what they had seen and experienced for themselves. When we are filled with the gift of God’s Holy Spirit we will also share God’s love with others, we simply won’t be able to stop.
So the gift of God’s Holy Spirit is not the spirit of Christmas – it is the spirit of Christ and when we accept it – it will change us and then through us God can change our world. So let us accept this gift of God.
Sunday, December 12, 2010
The Gift of God's Purpose
This Advent we are looking at some of the different gifts God has given us. Too often during this season we only think about the gift of Jesus and the forgiveness, grace and life he brings, and while that is a great gift to focus on, there are other gifts that God gives that we need to acknowledge and receive and one of those gifts is the gift of purpose. The good news for all of us today is that God did not just give us life and then leave us alone to figure life out by ourselves; God didn’t create us and then set us adrift in this world, God created us and then gave us a purpose. Each and every one of us has a purpose in life. That purpose may change as we find ourselves in different situations and relationships, but God does have a purpose for us. No matter who we are or what we are going through God has a plan for our lives and that purpose and plan is given to us a gift.
We know that purpose is a gift from God because in Jeremiah 29:11, God says, I know the plans I have for you, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future. So God does have a plan for our lives and ultimately that plan is for something good. God’s plan is to prosper us, to grow us. God has a plan to use us and give us a future filled with hope. God has a purpose for our lives and if we want live out that purpose then the first thing we need to do is accept it as a gift.
To help us think about how to receive this gift of purpose I want us to think about Mary and the purpose and plan God had for her life. God had a purpose for Mary’s life; it was to be the mother of Jesus. God’s plan for Mary was to use her faith, love and life to bring Jesus, the Messiah, into this world. Mary was the one who would give flesh and blood to God’s heart and soul and spirit. What an amazing purpose for a young Jewish girl. In fact, in Mary’s day most young Jewish girls dreamed of being the mother of the Messiah, it was the highest honor any young girl could imagine and yet while God’s purpose was wonderful; his plan to accomplish this purpose was going to be difficult because while Mary was engaged to Joseph they were not yet married and so if Mary were to conceive a child by the spirit of God before the wedding, people were going to talk. And then what about Joseph, would God let him in on this plan or was Mary going to be left alone trying to explain it all to him? While the purpose God had for her life was wonderful and honored, the plan God had to accomplish that purpose was not exactly what Mary was thinking it would be.
As we look to receive the gift of God’s purpose for our lives we have to be willing to accept God purpose and plan even if it might not be what we want it to be. God’s purpose is a gift which means we don’t get to choose it – we simply need to receive it. It was during my second year of college that I began to discover God’s purpose for my life. I began to understand that God wanted me to serve him in some kind of full time ministry. I was sure this was what God wanted for me and I was eager to accept this purpose but I wanted to accept it on my terms and according to my plan. I was clear with God that I would serve him in mission and ministry, I would accept this gift and do whatever God wanted me to do, except be a local pastor. I even remember standing in a classroom at MS and saying to a friend of mine, I will do anything for God except work in the local church. She kind of laughed and said, but what if that is what God wants for you? In my ignorance and arrogance, I said, I know that’s not what God wants for me. I didn’t know that, I was just putting my own agenda on God’s plans.
If we want to receive God’s purpose for our lives we have to be willing to accept it all. What if Mary had said, OK God, I will be the mother of the Messiah, but only after Joseph and I are married. Come back a few months after the wedding so that people won’t talk. My guess is that if Mary had put conditions and limitations on God, God would have moved on and found a more willing servant. Accepting God’s purpose for our lives means accepting God’s full plan as well and there may be times when that plan makes no sense to us, and there may be times when God’s plan appears to be everything we don’t want, if in those times we say no to God, we will pass up his gift of purpose. If we say yes to God, if we are willing enough to trust God and his plan for our lives we will not only find God’s purpose but we will in time experience the peace and joy and that sense of fulfillment that comes when we walk in God’s purpose.
When I finally acknowledged that God’s purpose for me was to serve him in full time ministry and also accepted the God’s plan of serving him in and through the local church, I not only found God’s peace, but joy as well. As much as I might struggle at times and even doubt myself at times, God reminds me in so many ways that this is his purpose and plan for my life and most of the time there is no where else that I would rather be. As hard as it must have been for Mary during this time of her life, I don’t think there was any place else she would rather have been. In fact, during her pregnancy she goes to visit her cousin Elizabeth and it is during that trip that she sings a song of praise to God that is filled with confidence and assurance, listen to what Mary says, Luke 1:47-55.
So Mary accepts the gift of God’s purpose and surrenders herself to God’s plan and when she does this she finds the blessing of God and the fullness of life even as she walks a difficult road. If we are willing to accept God’s purpose and surrender ourselves to God’s plan we will also find the blessing of God and the fullness of life and the gift of God’s peace even if the road we walk is difficult. God’s purpose is not always easy – Mary’s life was not smooth sailing and even after she said yes to God things didn’t get any easier. At first Joseph was going to dismiss her quietly, he was going to grant her a quick divorce and move on, but then an angel convinced him that his purpose was to be the father of Jesus so they moved forward together, but still things weren’t easy. They had to travel to Bethlehem right before Mary’s due date and she gave birth to Jesus while they were away and the only place available to them the night Jesus was born was a stable and the only place they had to lay Jesus after he was born was in a manger. Not exactly the way Mary dreamed it would be, but the picture we get of Mary through it all is one of quiet faith and trust. After Jesus is born, it says she simply pondered all these events in her heart. She didn’t question God, she accepted all that was talking place and found it all a sense of peace.
God has a purpose for our lives. God says he has a plan for us and we can receive it as a gift if we are open to God’s ways and don’t insist on our way, but still the big question we all face is how to know what that purpose and plan is? How do we figure out God’s plan for our lives? How do we actually open this gift of God’s purpose? Well, if we use Mary and Joseph as an example then we see that God shares his purpose with us by telling us. An angel came and talked to Mary and an angel spoke to Joseph in a dream. So God spoke to each of them in a slightly different way, but God still spoke to them. God may speak to us in a different way than he did to Mary and Joseph (at least an angel has never come and spoken to me) and God may speak to each of us in a slightly different way, but God still speaks if we are willing to listen. Do you remember the first gift we talked about? It was the gift of God’s word. If we will take the time to listen and read and open ourselves up to the spirit of God, God will speak to us and when God speaks part of what he shares with us the purpose he has for our lives.
So we have to accept the gift of God’s word, we have to listen to God before we can understand God’s purpose but we also have to accept the gift of worship, think again about Mary. In Luke 1:28 it says that the reason God chose Mary was because Mary had found favor with God. Mary was close to God, she honored God, she glorified God - she worshipped God. Because Mary surrendered herself to God in worship God was able to speak to her and share with her the purpose for her life. If we want to know God’s purpose for our lives then we need to make sure that we have surrendered ourselves to God in worship, and that doesn’t mean just attending a worship service for one hour on Sunday, the kind of worship God is looking for is complete surrender of heart, mind, soul and strength. It involves actively opening ourselves up to God and his word and gathering together with the expectation that God is going to speak to us and move in us in ways that will not only reveal to us his heart but his purpose for our lives as well.
We need to actively worship God because we can only receive the gift of God’s purpose when we are close enough to God to reach out and take it from his hand. I don’t think God is going to toss us this gift from afar, I think God wants to place it in our hands, more than that, I think God wants to place it in our hearts and that can only happen if we are walking with God, and if our hearts are open to Him in worship. God was able to reveal his purpose to Mary because Mary worshipped Him; she had found favor with God. It was because Mary and Joseph walked with God that God was able to reveal to them the purpose for their lives and that is how it will happen with us, we need to spend time in worship so God can reveal to us his desire and his plan for our lives.
So for us to discover our purpose we have to first be willing to receive the gift of God’s word, and this gift of worship, but there is something else that we need to keep in mind if we want to receive the gift of God’s purpose and that is that God’s purpose will always involve an element of sacrifice and service. Mary had to sacrifice her reputation and Joseph his good name in order to accept God’s plan for their lives, and that was just the beginning. After Jesus was born Mary and Joseph had to flee to Egypt to protect their son, and then later in her life Mary had to watch her son struggle and then die. Mary was one of the few people at the foot of the cross when Jesus died, so while accepting God’s purpose blessed Mary and filled her with joy and peace, it was not an easy life and it called her to a life of service and sacrifice.
It wasn’t just Mary and Joseph who faced that kind of life, the plan God had for Jesus also involved sacrifice and service. Jesus served people throughout his life and clearly the cross was his ultimate sacrifice for others. Now if the purpose of Jesus’ life involved sacrifice and service then as followers of Jesus it only makes sense that part of God’s purpose for our lives will involve sacrifice and service. Whether it is a full time vocation or a volunteer ministry, the purpose God has for us will always involve lifting up those in need and loving those around us. Jesus said, if anyone wants to come after me, they must take up a cross and follow me so part of the purpose for our lives as followers of Jesus means taking up a cross, it means being willing to live for others and serve those around us.
In a world of great uncertainty, there is one thing we can be sure of, God has a plan for our lives, I know the plans I have for you, God says and God wants to give us those plans as a gift. As we reach out to accept this gift of God we need to remember that we also need to listen to God’s word and surrender ourselves to God in worship. In the busyness of this season, let’s not crowd out these gifts of God, let us receive them and open them and use them so that we can experience all the blessing and fullness and power of life.
We know that purpose is a gift from God because in Jeremiah 29:11, God says, I know the plans I have for you, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future. So God does have a plan for our lives and ultimately that plan is for something good. God’s plan is to prosper us, to grow us. God has a plan to use us and give us a future filled with hope. God has a purpose for our lives and if we want live out that purpose then the first thing we need to do is accept it as a gift.
To help us think about how to receive this gift of purpose I want us to think about Mary and the purpose and plan God had for her life. God had a purpose for Mary’s life; it was to be the mother of Jesus. God’s plan for Mary was to use her faith, love and life to bring Jesus, the Messiah, into this world. Mary was the one who would give flesh and blood to God’s heart and soul and spirit. What an amazing purpose for a young Jewish girl. In fact, in Mary’s day most young Jewish girls dreamed of being the mother of the Messiah, it was the highest honor any young girl could imagine and yet while God’s purpose was wonderful; his plan to accomplish this purpose was going to be difficult because while Mary was engaged to Joseph they were not yet married and so if Mary were to conceive a child by the spirit of God before the wedding, people were going to talk. And then what about Joseph, would God let him in on this plan or was Mary going to be left alone trying to explain it all to him? While the purpose God had for her life was wonderful and honored, the plan God had to accomplish that purpose was not exactly what Mary was thinking it would be.
As we look to receive the gift of God’s purpose for our lives we have to be willing to accept God purpose and plan even if it might not be what we want it to be. God’s purpose is a gift which means we don’t get to choose it – we simply need to receive it. It was during my second year of college that I began to discover God’s purpose for my life. I began to understand that God wanted me to serve him in some kind of full time ministry. I was sure this was what God wanted for me and I was eager to accept this purpose but I wanted to accept it on my terms and according to my plan. I was clear with God that I would serve him in mission and ministry, I would accept this gift and do whatever God wanted me to do, except be a local pastor. I even remember standing in a classroom at MS and saying to a friend of mine, I will do anything for God except work in the local church. She kind of laughed and said, but what if that is what God wants for you? In my ignorance and arrogance, I said, I know that’s not what God wants for me. I didn’t know that, I was just putting my own agenda on God’s plans.
If we want to receive God’s purpose for our lives we have to be willing to accept it all. What if Mary had said, OK God, I will be the mother of the Messiah, but only after Joseph and I are married. Come back a few months after the wedding so that people won’t talk. My guess is that if Mary had put conditions and limitations on God, God would have moved on and found a more willing servant. Accepting God’s purpose for our lives means accepting God’s full plan as well and there may be times when that plan makes no sense to us, and there may be times when God’s plan appears to be everything we don’t want, if in those times we say no to God, we will pass up his gift of purpose. If we say yes to God, if we are willing enough to trust God and his plan for our lives we will not only find God’s purpose but we will in time experience the peace and joy and that sense of fulfillment that comes when we walk in God’s purpose.
When I finally acknowledged that God’s purpose for me was to serve him in full time ministry and also accepted the God’s plan of serving him in and through the local church, I not only found God’s peace, but joy as well. As much as I might struggle at times and even doubt myself at times, God reminds me in so many ways that this is his purpose and plan for my life and most of the time there is no where else that I would rather be. As hard as it must have been for Mary during this time of her life, I don’t think there was any place else she would rather have been. In fact, during her pregnancy she goes to visit her cousin Elizabeth and it is during that trip that she sings a song of praise to God that is filled with confidence and assurance, listen to what Mary says, Luke 1:47-55.
So Mary accepts the gift of God’s purpose and surrenders herself to God’s plan and when she does this she finds the blessing of God and the fullness of life even as she walks a difficult road. If we are willing to accept God’s purpose and surrender ourselves to God’s plan we will also find the blessing of God and the fullness of life and the gift of God’s peace even if the road we walk is difficult. God’s purpose is not always easy – Mary’s life was not smooth sailing and even after she said yes to God things didn’t get any easier. At first Joseph was going to dismiss her quietly, he was going to grant her a quick divorce and move on, but then an angel convinced him that his purpose was to be the father of Jesus so they moved forward together, but still things weren’t easy. They had to travel to Bethlehem right before Mary’s due date and she gave birth to Jesus while they were away and the only place available to them the night Jesus was born was a stable and the only place they had to lay Jesus after he was born was in a manger. Not exactly the way Mary dreamed it would be, but the picture we get of Mary through it all is one of quiet faith and trust. After Jesus is born, it says she simply pondered all these events in her heart. She didn’t question God, she accepted all that was talking place and found it all a sense of peace.
God has a purpose for our lives. God says he has a plan for us and we can receive it as a gift if we are open to God’s ways and don’t insist on our way, but still the big question we all face is how to know what that purpose and plan is? How do we figure out God’s plan for our lives? How do we actually open this gift of God’s purpose? Well, if we use Mary and Joseph as an example then we see that God shares his purpose with us by telling us. An angel came and talked to Mary and an angel spoke to Joseph in a dream. So God spoke to each of them in a slightly different way, but God still spoke to them. God may speak to us in a different way than he did to Mary and Joseph (at least an angel has never come and spoken to me) and God may speak to each of us in a slightly different way, but God still speaks if we are willing to listen. Do you remember the first gift we talked about? It was the gift of God’s word. If we will take the time to listen and read and open ourselves up to the spirit of God, God will speak to us and when God speaks part of what he shares with us the purpose he has for our lives.
So we have to accept the gift of God’s word, we have to listen to God before we can understand God’s purpose but we also have to accept the gift of worship, think again about Mary. In Luke 1:28 it says that the reason God chose Mary was because Mary had found favor with God. Mary was close to God, she honored God, she glorified God - she worshipped God. Because Mary surrendered herself to God in worship God was able to speak to her and share with her the purpose for her life. If we want to know God’s purpose for our lives then we need to make sure that we have surrendered ourselves to God in worship, and that doesn’t mean just attending a worship service for one hour on Sunday, the kind of worship God is looking for is complete surrender of heart, mind, soul and strength. It involves actively opening ourselves up to God and his word and gathering together with the expectation that God is going to speak to us and move in us in ways that will not only reveal to us his heart but his purpose for our lives as well.
We need to actively worship God because we can only receive the gift of God’s purpose when we are close enough to God to reach out and take it from his hand. I don’t think God is going to toss us this gift from afar, I think God wants to place it in our hands, more than that, I think God wants to place it in our hearts and that can only happen if we are walking with God, and if our hearts are open to Him in worship. God was able to reveal his purpose to Mary because Mary worshipped Him; she had found favor with God. It was because Mary and Joseph walked with God that God was able to reveal to them the purpose for their lives and that is how it will happen with us, we need to spend time in worship so God can reveal to us his desire and his plan for our lives.
So for us to discover our purpose we have to first be willing to receive the gift of God’s word, and this gift of worship, but there is something else that we need to keep in mind if we want to receive the gift of God’s purpose and that is that God’s purpose will always involve an element of sacrifice and service. Mary had to sacrifice her reputation and Joseph his good name in order to accept God’s plan for their lives, and that was just the beginning. After Jesus was born Mary and Joseph had to flee to Egypt to protect their son, and then later in her life Mary had to watch her son struggle and then die. Mary was one of the few people at the foot of the cross when Jesus died, so while accepting God’s purpose blessed Mary and filled her with joy and peace, it was not an easy life and it called her to a life of service and sacrifice.
It wasn’t just Mary and Joseph who faced that kind of life, the plan God had for Jesus also involved sacrifice and service. Jesus served people throughout his life and clearly the cross was his ultimate sacrifice for others. Now if the purpose of Jesus’ life involved sacrifice and service then as followers of Jesus it only makes sense that part of God’s purpose for our lives will involve sacrifice and service. Whether it is a full time vocation or a volunteer ministry, the purpose God has for us will always involve lifting up those in need and loving those around us. Jesus said, if anyone wants to come after me, they must take up a cross and follow me so part of the purpose for our lives as followers of Jesus means taking up a cross, it means being willing to live for others and serve those around us.
In a world of great uncertainty, there is one thing we can be sure of, God has a plan for our lives, I know the plans I have for you, God says and God wants to give us those plans as a gift. As we reach out to accept this gift of God we need to remember that we also need to listen to God’s word and surrender ourselves to God in worship. In the busyness of this season, let’s not crowd out these gifts of God, let us receive them and open them and use them so that we can experience all the blessing and fullness and power of life.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
The Gift of Worship
While in this season of the year our focus is on the gift of Jesus, God has given us other gifts that we need to recognize, receive and celebrate. Last week we saw how the word of God is a gift that brings life and we have the opportunity each and every day to allow the word of God to shape us if we will take the time to read it and allow God to speak to us. Another gift that God gives us is the gift of worship. We may not think of worship as a gift because as part of the law we were commanded to worship God. The first commandment says “you shall have no other gods before me”, which means we are to worship God and God alone. The second commandment is similar when it says that you shall not make for yourself an idol, you shall not bow down to them or worship them. So the law is clear, we are commanded to worship God, so if worship is a commandment, how can it also be a gift? I think the shepherds in the Christmas story help give us the answer.
On the night that Jesus was born the very first thing God did was send an angel to a group of shepherds to tell them that the Savior had been born and through the angel God gave these shepherds directions on where to go to find the Messiah. Jesus would be the babe not just wrapped in cloth like every other child in Bethlehem, he would be the one lying in a manger. God didn’t just want the news of Jesus’ birth to be proclaimed, God in the flesh wanted to be found, God wanted to be worshipped, so in giving the shepherds directions on how to find Jesus – God was giving the invitation to come and worship Him.
The shepherds were not commanded to go and find Jesus, they weren’t ordered to worship him, they were invited. Worship is a gift. That the shepherds were able to worship God that night was because God invited them into his presence. That we are able to worship God and enter His presence is because God invites us, worship is a gift and it always has been. In Jeremiah 29:13 it says, when you search for me, you will find me; if you seek me with all your heart, I will let you find me. So God is the one who allows himself to be found. God is the one who invites us into his presence and so our ability to worship God is a gift.
Sometimes I think we get this backwards and we feel like our worship is a gift to God and on some level it is, God wants the gift of our hearts and lives centered on him and lifted up to him, but really – worship, or our ability to enter into the presence of God and experience God’s love and grace and joy and peace and power is God’s gift to us and like all gifts from God, it is a gift that we need to receive. More importantly it is a gift that we all can receive.
What I like about the shepherds being the first ones to receive the gift of worship on the night that Jesus was born is that it shows us that this gift is open and available to everyone. God doesn’t exclude anyone from worship, quite the opposite; God wants everyone to worship him and that is part of the reason I think God chose a group of shepherds to first announce the news of Jesus birth. While the idea of being a shepherd in Jesus day may have been noble because Moses and David, the two greatest men of Israel’s history both worked as shepherds, the reality of being a shepherd was quite different.
In Jesus day, shepherds were near the bottom of the social ladder. They had bad reputations and were known as being notorious liars. In fact, shepherds were not able to give testimony in a court of law because they were not recognized as men who were able to tell the truth. Shepherds were social outcasts because they spent so much time away from the community tending to the sheep and because they worked in unclean environments they were not able to follow all the religious laws of they day and so were considered religious outcast as well. All in all the life of a shepherd was not highly regarded and if the angels had tried they could not have found a more unlikely group of people to invite to worship God, and yet because they were the first ones who were given the gift of worshipping Jesus it shows us that we are all given this gift of worship. We are all invited into the presence of God.
Any gift that is given has to be received and it can often be difficult for us to receive the gift of worship because there are times when we all struggle with feeling unworthy to be in God’s presence. I know there are times when I think to myself, how God could want me to be in his presence after all I’ve done? How could God want me to worship him when I know how far away I am from the life He wants for me? When I think of who God is and who I am, I am humbled and amazed to think that this gift of worship has been given to me, but it has been given to me. The gift of worship has been given to all of us no matter who we are or what we have done or where we are in life and God wants us to receive it. God wants us to come into his presence and know the power of his love.
In 1 John 4:10 it says, this is love, not that we loved God but that God loved us and gave his Son to be the atoning sacrifice for our sin. Again, we see here that God initiates the relationship of love with us. God first loves us and it is God’s love in Jesus that reconciles us to himself. It is through the death and resurrection of Jesus that our sins are atoned for, or forgiven, and it is through Jesus that the door is opened for us to enter into the presence of God, and all of this is a gift because we don’t deserve it. We don’t deserve God’s love and we didn’t earn it – but it is given to us none the less.
So the shepherds show us that worship is a gift – God invites all of us to enter into his presence so that we can experience the love and grace and power of God, but this gift of worship does more than just warm our hearts – it can change our lives and again it is the shepherds of Bethlehem who show us this. While they go to Bethlehem with open hearts and minds to find God – they leave Bethlehem praising and glorifying God for all they had seen and heard. And they didn’t just praise God, they shared with others what they had seen and heard. Notice that they didn’t do any of this after they heard the message of the angels; it was only after they worshipped Jesus that their lives changed.
The gift of worship, the gift of being in the presence of God filled the shepherds until their hearts overflowed and that is what the gift of worship needs to do for us. Worship needs to do more than just warm our hearts; it needs to change our lives from the inside out. Our experience of the living God in worship needs to shine light into the areas of our hearts and minds that are dark. Worship needs to bring hope where there is despair, joy where there is sorrow, acceptance where these is isolation and loneliness, grace where there is brokenness and sin, and love where this fear. What amazes me is that this can all take place if we will let down our defenses and enter into the presence of God. When we tear down the walls of our heart – God can enter in.
The shepherds didn’t have those walls built up in their hearts and lives. For example, they didn’t have that wall of doubt or fear in their lives when they went to find Jesus. They didn’t question what the angels said, they didn’t doubt, they believed. It says they went to see this thing that had happened. They believed it to be true, they had faith and trust that they would find the Messiah lying in a manger and because their minds and lives were open – they found him. And their hearts were open as well because they didn’t say to themselves, well we can’t go because we aren’t worthy, they trusted in the love that was shown when the angels sang to them and when the invitation to worship God was given. They believed they were accepted by God and so the set out to worship Jesus and because they believed, because their hearts were opened, their lives were changed. That is the key to worship, we have to accept this gift with the faith that God wants us to enter into his presence and receive his love. We have to trust that God loves us more than we can possibly imagine and that his love can heal us and forgive us and fill us with all that we need.
On the night Jesus was born the shepherds were given the gift of worship, they were invited into the presence of God through the person of Jesus and their lives were never the same. That same gift is being offered to us today. God extends to all of us this gift of worship, through Jesus we can enter into the presence of God and if we will open our hearts to the spirit of God, our lives can be changed today, in this moment. As we pray, as we sing, as we share in the bread and cup, our lives can be changed, so come and worship, come and worship, worship Christ the new born king.
On the night that Jesus was born the very first thing God did was send an angel to a group of shepherds to tell them that the Savior had been born and through the angel God gave these shepherds directions on where to go to find the Messiah. Jesus would be the babe not just wrapped in cloth like every other child in Bethlehem, he would be the one lying in a manger. God didn’t just want the news of Jesus’ birth to be proclaimed, God in the flesh wanted to be found, God wanted to be worshipped, so in giving the shepherds directions on how to find Jesus – God was giving the invitation to come and worship Him.
The shepherds were not commanded to go and find Jesus, they weren’t ordered to worship him, they were invited. Worship is a gift. That the shepherds were able to worship God that night was because God invited them into his presence. That we are able to worship God and enter His presence is because God invites us, worship is a gift and it always has been. In Jeremiah 29:13 it says, when you search for me, you will find me; if you seek me with all your heart, I will let you find me. So God is the one who allows himself to be found. God is the one who invites us into his presence and so our ability to worship God is a gift.
Sometimes I think we get this backwards and we feel like our worship is a gift to God and on some level it is, God wants the gift of our hearts and lives centered on him and lifted up to him, but really – worship, or our ability to enter into the presence of God and experience God’s love and grace and joy and peace and power is God’s gift to us and like all gifts from God, it is a gift that we need to receive. More importantly it is a gift that we all can receive.
What I like about the shepherds being the first ones to receive the gift of worship on the night that Jesus was born is that it shows us that this gift is open and available to everyone. God doesn’t exclude anyone from worship, quite the opposite; God wants everyone to worship him and that is part of the reason I think God chose a group of shepherds to first announce the news of Jesus birth. While the idea of being a shepherd in Jesus day may have been noble because Moses and David, the two greatest men of Israel’s history both worked as shepherds, the reality of being a shepherd was quite different.
In Jesus day, shepherds were near the bottom of the social ladder. They had bad reputations and were known as being notorious liars. In fact, shepherds were not able to give testimony in a court of law because they were not recognized as men who were able to tell the truth. Shepherds were social outcasts because they spent so much time away from the community tending to the sheep and because they worked in unclean environments they were not able to follow all the religious laws of they day and so were considered religious outcast as well. All in all the life of a shepherd was not highly regarded and if the angels had tried they could not have found a more unlikely group of people to invite to worship God, and yet because they were the first ones who were given the gift of worshipping Jesus it shows us that we are all given this gift of worship. We are all invited into the presence of God.
Any gift that is given has to be received and it can often be difficult for us to receive the gift of worship because there are times when we all struggle with feeling unworthy to be in God’s presence. I know there are times when I think to myself, how God could want me to be in his presence after all I’ve done? How could God want me to worship him when I know how far away I am from the life He wants for me? When I think of who God is and who I am, I am humbled and amazed to think that this gift of worship has been given to me, but it has been given to me. The gift of worship has been given to all of us no matter who we are or what we have done or where we are in life and God wants us to receive it. God wants us to come into his presence and know the power of his love.
In 1 John 4:10 it says, this is love, not that we loved God but that God loved us and gave his Son to be the atoning sacrifice for our sin. Again, we see here that God initiates the relationship of love with us. God first loves us and it is God’s love in Jesus that reconciles us to himself. It is through the death and resurrection of Jesus that our sins are atoned for, or forgiven, and it is through Jesus that the door is opened for us to enter into the presence of God, and all of this is a gift because we don’t deserve it. We don’t deserve God’s love and we didn’t earn it – but it is given to us none the less.
So the shepherds show us that worship is a gift – God invites all of us to enter into his presence so that we can experience the love and grace and power of God, but this gift of worship does more than just warm our hearts – it can change our lives and again it is the shepherds of Bethlehem who show us this. While they go to Bethlehem with open hearts and minds to find God – they leave Bethlehem praising and glorifying God for all they had seen and heard. And they didn’t just praise God, they shared with others what they had seen and heard. Notice that they didn’t do any of this after they heard the message of the angels; it was only after they worshipped Jesus that their lives changed.
The gift of worship, the gift of being in the presence of God filled the shepherds until their hearts overflowed and that is what the gift of worship needs to do for us. Worship needs to do more than just warm our hearts; it needs to change our lives from the inside out. Our experience of the living God in worship needs to shine light into the areas of our hearts and minds that are dark. Worship needs to bring hope where there is despair, joy where there is sorrow, acceptance where these is isolation and loneliness, grace where there is brokenness and sin, and love where this fear. What amazes me is that this can all take place if we will let down our defenses and enter into the presence of God. When we tear down the walls of our heart – God can enter in.
The shepherds didn’t have those walls built up in their hearts and lives. For example, they didn’t have that wall of doubt or fear in their lives when they went to find Jesus. They didn’t question what the angels said, they didn’t doubt, they believed. It says they went to see this thing that had happened. They believed it to be true, they had faith and trust that they would find the Messiah lying in a manger and because their minds and lives were open – they found him. And their hearts were open as well because they didn’t say to themselves, well we can’t go because we aren’t worthy, they trusted in the love that was shown when the angels sang to them and when the invitation to worship God was given. They believed they were accepted by God and so the set out to worship Jesus and because they believed, because their hearts were opened, their lives were changed. That is the key to worship, we have to accept this gift with the faith that God wants us to enter into his presence and receive his love. We have to trust that God loves us more than we can possibly imagine and that his love can heal us and forgive us and fill us with all that we need.
On the night Jesus was born the shepherds were given the gift of worship, they were invited into the presence of God through the person of Jesus and their lives were never the same. That same gift is being offered to us today. God extends to all of us this gift of worship, through Jesus we can enter into the presence of God and if we will open our hearts to the spirit of God, our lives can be changed today, in this moment. As we pray, as we sing, as we share in the bread and cup, our lives can be changed, so come and worship, come and worship, worship Christ the new born king.
Monday, November 29, 2010
The Gift of God's Word
During the next four weeks we will all spend some time thinking about what gifts to give to our family and friends. My hope is that as we do this we will keep two things in mind, the first one is that going into debt to give gifts does not honor or glorify God, so we need to be fiscally responsible as we shop, but I also hope that we will think creatively about how to give gifts that will reflect the gift that God gave us in Jesus. Can we give gifts that will require us to spend time together? The gift of Jesus is the gift of God’s presence; God came to dwell among us. God came to spend time with us so can we give gifts that will require us to spend together? Like god’s gift in Jesus, can we give gifts that will help those in need around us? Can we give gifts that will build up the church and the work of God in the world? As we spend time thinking about gifts to give, we need to make sure the gifts we do give reflect the gift God gave us in Jesus, but the gift of Jesus is just one gift God has given to us and each Sunday leading up to Christmas eve we are going to look at a different gift God has given us.
Long before God gave us the gift of Jesus, God gave us the gift of His word. As we heard in John 1:1-2 it says in the beginning was the word and the word was with God and the word was God. So before the worlds were even created, God and his word were united. They were joined together as one, but God didn’t keep his word to himself, God shared his word, God spoke and when God spoke - things happened. When God spoke – life happened.
In Genesis 1:3 it says, God said, let there be light and there was light. When God spoke, when God shared his word, the process of creation began. When God said, let there be an expanse between the waters – there was a sky. When God said let there be land – the waters of the sea drew back and there was dry ground. When God said, let the land produce vegetation – plants grew. When God said let there be lights in the sky at night – stars and planets were formed. When God said let the oceans teem forth with life – all kinds of fish began to swim and when God said let there be animals – there were animals of all shapes and sizes and colors that began to walk on the land, and when God said let us make mankind in our image – we were created, men and women were formed. When God spoke, when God gave the gift of his word – the world came into being. God’s word brought forth life. But the gift of God’s word didn’t end on the 6th day of creation, God didn’t remain silent – God continued to speak and his word continued to bring life.
While we don’t know how it happened, there were people like Noah, Abraham, Moses and David who all heard God’s voice and they spent their lives trying to be faithful to what they heard. They knew if they followed God’s word – they would be blessed and experience all the fullness of life. But God didn’t just speak to a chosen few, God spoke to everyone. When God gave the 10 C and the law God was speaking to all the people and God gave the people direction on how to order their lives so that they could experience all the blessing God had to offer. God said that if the people followed his word and obeyed his law, they would be blessed, that’s what it says in Psalm 1.
But the people weren’t always faithful; they didn’t always delight in God’s law or follow God’s word and yet when they got off track, which was often, God didn’t remain silent; God continued to speak and he shared with his people both words of warning as well as words of hope. Through the prophets, God’s word continued to give the people direction, but those words also gave hope that a new day would come when God’s love and power would emerge victorious. God’s word through the prophets gave the people strength to keep going when everything around them seemed so bad. So from the very beginning, God’s word was bringing forth life. The gift of God’s word created life, it sustained life and it gave life direction, but God’s word was so full of life that it could not be contained in the sound of a voice, or in the gathering of letters on a page, the gift of God’s word needed to breathe and move, so again from John 1 we hear that the word became flesh.
In the person of Jesus Christ, God’s word became a living breathing human being and the word of God dwelt among us. In Jesus, God’s word lived with us and spoke to us and touched our lives. Through Jesus, God’s word laughed with us and cried with us and instead of telling us how to live, the word of God showed us how to live and how to love. Thru Jesus the word of God gave us a clear example of how to live life in such a way that we would be blessed.
So God’s word is truly a gift and it’s not just the words of the Bible we are talking about, it is the life example of Jesus and the testimony of those who saw and heard and experienced Jesus. But after Jesus ascended into heaven and was no longer walking this earth with us God did not remain silent; the gift of God’s word continued to be given through the Holy Spirit. In Hebrews 4:12 it says, the word of God is living and active. So the word of God isn’t just what we find written on paper, it is alive and moving in us and in our world. Through the Holy Spirit God’s word still speaks to us in so many ways, we just need to take the time to listen. It is amazing to think that the God who created the universe has shared his thoughts with us and it’s amazing to think that the God who set the worlds into motion so many centuries ago is not silent today but still speaks and gives as a gift words that bring direction and meaning to our lives. We don’t have to try and figure out what God wants from us or what God wants for us – we can read it in God’s word, we can see it in the word made flesh – in Jesus, and we can hear it in depths of our heart through the Holy Spirit if we will take the time to listen.
God’s word is a gift and while our focus in this season is on the word made flesh as we celebrate the birth of Jesus, my hope is that we will take the time to receive God’s word in all its forms. Now when we receive any gift the first thing we have to do is open our hands and receive it. We need to open our hand and hearts and minds to receive the word of God and the prophet Isaiah gives us some direction on how we should receive the gift of God’s word. Look again at Isaiah 2:3, Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob. He will teach us his ways. The first thing we see here is that God wants us to receive His word together. It says; let US go up to the mountain. He will teach US his ways. Receiving the gift of God’s word and learning God’s ways are not just an individual exercise. While personal times of reading and devotion are important and while the HS often speaks to us personally in the silence of our hearts, we are also to receive God’s word together.
It is important for us to receive God’s word together because we have a lot to learn from one another. There is faith and wisdom that comes from experience and we need to learn from the experiences of one another. There are insights into God’s word that you may have that others need to hear, or there might be insights that others have that you need to hear and so we need to come together and share our faith and our knowledge and our experiences and our understanding of how God speaks and what God has said and what God is saying today. The gift of God’s word isn’t just a personal gift – it is a gift given to the community and so God calls us to come together to listen and to learn.
Not only do we need to come together, but we need to come together and receive God’s word in a place set apart from all the distractions of the world. Again the prophet Isaiah said, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob. God called his people to leave the busyness of their lives and the noise of the world to go to the mountain not because the mountain was the only place God would speak, but because the mountain was set apart from the activities of life. The mountain was a quiet place where people could still their hearts and lives and open the ears to hear what God had to say. The mountain and the house of the Lord were holy places, they were places set apart from daily life so people could gather together to listen and learn.
If for no other reason, this is why it’s important for us to come together to worship. When we gather together in these moments, we have the opportunity to leave behind some of the stress and activity and noise of life so that we can focus in and hear what God is trying to say. We have a moment or two here to be still and quiet, and in the presence of God and among God’s people – receive the gift of God’s word. God is still speaking. Through prayer, songs and silence God’s word still brings life but we have to quiet our hearts and lives enough to be able to hear.
As we receive this gift of God’s word we need to remember that it was also given to us for a reason. Look again at what Isaiah said, so we may walk in his paths. And then look down verse 5 let us walk in the light of the Lord. God gives us the gift of his word so that we can follow him and the reason God wants us to follow him is because he knows that it is only walking in the light of his word, walking in God’s will that we find life. Remember, the word of God always brings life – it was God’s word that created life and it is still God’s word that brings life today and it brings life by helping us see how to live. When we learn how to apply the word of God and when we follow the example of the word made flesh in Jesus and when we hear and follow the promptings of the Holy Spirit, we begin to experience the life God wants for us.
God’s word is a life giving gift and it’s not just a gift for this season, it is a gift for every season, and a gift for every day, but it is a gift we have to be willing to receive. Will we come together this Advent to receive the gift of God? Will we come to the house of the Lord in order to listen and learn? Will we open our eyes and lives to the word of God made flesh in Jesus and will we follow the example he set for us? God’s word is a life giving gift; it is the lamp unto our feet and the light unto our path, so let us receive it with joy and in this season let us work hard to listen.
Long before God gave us the gift of Jesus, God gave us the gift of His word. As we heard in John 1:1-2 it says in the beginning was the word and the word was with God and the word was God. So before the worlds were even created, God and his word were united. They were joined together as one, but God didn’t keep his word to himself, God shared his word, God spoke and when God spoke - things happened. When God spoke – life happened.
In Genesis 1:3 it says, God said, let there be light and there was light. When God spoke, when God shared his word, the process of creation began. When God said, let there be an expanse between the waters – there was a sky. When God said let there be land – the waters of the sea drew back and there was dry ground. When God said, let the land produce vegetation – plants grew. When God said let there be lights in the sky at night – stars and planets were formed. When God said let the oceans teem forth with life – all kinds of fish began to swim and when God said let there be animals – there were animals of all shapes and sizes and colors that began to walk on the land, and when God said let us make mankind in our image – we were created, men and women were formed. When God spoke, when God gave the gift of his word – the world came into being. God’s word brought forth life. But the gift of God’s word didn’t end on the 6th day of creation, God didn’t remain silent – God continued to speak and his word continued to bring life.
While we don’t know how it happened, there were people like Noah, Abraham, Moses and David who all heard God’s voice and they spent their lives trying to be faithful to what they heard. They knew if they followed God’s word – they would be blessed and experience all the fullness of life. But God didn’t just speak to a chosen few, God spoke to everyone. When God gave the 10 C and the law God was speaking to all the people and God gave the people direction on how to order their lives so that they could experience all the blessing God had to offer. God said that if the people followed his word and obeyed his law, they would be blessed, that’s what it says in Psalm 1.
But the people weren’t always faithful; they didn’t always delight in God’s law or follow God’s word and yet when they got off track, which was often, God didn’t remain silent; God continued to speak and he shared with his people both words of warning as well as words of hope. Through the prophets, God’s word continued to give the people direction, but those words also gave hope that a new day would come when God’s love and power would emerge victorious. God’s word through the prophets gave the people strength to keep going when everything around them seemed so bad. So from the very beginning, God’s word was bringing forth life. The gift of God’s word created life, it sustained life and it gave life direction, but God’s word was so full of life that it could not be contained in the sound of a voice, or in the gathering of letters on a page, the gift of God’s word needed to breathe and move, so again from John 1 we hear that the word became flesh.
In the person of Jesus Christ, God’s word became a living breathing human being and the word of God dwelt among us. In Jesus, God’s word lived with us and spoke to us and touched our lives. Through Jesus, God’s word laughed with us and cried with us and instead of telling us how to live, the word of God showed us how to live and how to love. Thru Jesus the word of God gave us a clear example of how to live life in such a way that we would be blessed.
So God’s word is truly a gift and it’s not just the words of the Bible we are talking about, it is the life example of Jesus and the testimony of those who saw and heard and experienced Jesus. But after Jesus ascended into heaven and was no longer walking this earth with us God did not remain silent; the gift of God’s word continued to be given through the Holy Spirit. In Hebrews 4:12 it says, the word of God is living and active. So the word of God isn’t just what we find written on paper, it is alive and moving in us and in our world. Through the Holy Spirit God’s word still speaks to us in so many ways, we just need to take the time to listen. It is amazing to think that the God who created the universe has shared his thoughts with us and it’s amazing to think that the God who set the worlds into motion so many centuries ago is not silent today but still speaks and gives as a gift words that bring direction and meaning to our lives. We don’t have to try and figure out what God wants from us or what God wants for us – we can read it in God’s word, we can see it in the word made flesh – in Jesus, and we can hear it in depths of our heart through the Holy Spirit if we will take the time to listen.
God’s word is a gift and while our focus in this season is on the word made flesh as we celebrate the birth of Jesus, my hope is that we will take the time to receive God’s word in all its forms. Now when we receive any gift the first thing we have to do is open our hands and receive it. We need to open our hand and hearts and minds to receive the word of God and the prophet Isaiah gives us some direction on how we should receive the gift of God’s word. Look again at Isaiah 2:3, Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob. He will teach us his ways. The first thing we see here is that God wants us to receive His word together. It says; let US go up to the mountain. He will teach US his ways. Receiving the gift of God’s word and learning God’s ways are not just an individual exercise. While personal times of reading and devotion are important and while the HS often speaks to us personally in the silence of our hearts, we are also to receive God’s word together.
It is important for us to receive God’s word together because we have a lot to learn from one another. There is faith and wisdom that comes from experience and we need to learn from the experiences of one another. There are insights into God’s word that you may have that others need to hear, or there might be insights that others have that you need to hear and so we need to come together and share our faith and our knowledge and our experiences and our understanding of how God speaks and what God has said and what God is saying today. The gift of God’s word isn’t just a personal gift – it is a gift given to the community and so God calls us to come together to listen and to learn.
Not only do we need to come together, but we need to come together and receive God’s word in a place set apart from all the distractions of the world. Again the prophet Isaiah said, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob. God called his people to leave the busyness of their lives and the noise of the world to go to the mountain not because the mountain was the only place God would speak, but because the mountain was set apart from the activities of life. The mountain was a quiet place where people could still their hearts and lives and open the ears to hear what God had to say. The mountain and the house of the Lord were holy places, they were places set apart from daily life so people could gather together to listen and learn.
If for no other reason, this is why it’s important for us to come together to worship. When we gather together in these moments, we have the opportunity to leave behind some of the stress and activity and noise of life so that we can focus in and hear what God is trying to say. We have a moment or two here to be still and quiet, and in the presence of God and among God’s people – receive the gift of God’s word. God is still speaking. Through prayer, songs and silence God’s word still brings life but we have to quiet our hearts and lives enough to be able to hear.
As we receive this gift of God’s word we need to remember that it was also given to us for a reason. Look again at what Isaiah said, so we may walk in his paths. And then look down verse 5 let us walk in the light of the Lord. God gives us the gift of his word so that we can follow him and the reason God wants us to follow him is because he knows that it is only walking in the light of his word, walking in God’s will that we find life. Remember, the word of God always brings life – it was God’s word that created life and it is still God’s word that brings life today and it brings life by helping us see how to live. When we learn how to apply the word of God and when we follow the example of the word made flesh in Jesus and when we hear and follow the promptings of the Holy Spirit, we begin to experience the life God wants for us.
God’s word is a life giving gift and it’s not just a gift for this season, it is a gift for every season, and a gift for every day, but it is a gift we have to be willing to receive. Will we come together this Advent to receive the gift of God? Will we come to the house of the Lord in order to listen and learn? Will we open our eyes and lives to the word of God made flesh in Jesus and will we follow the example he set for us? God’s word is a life giving gift; it is the lamp unto our feet and the light unto our path, so let us receive it with joy and in this season let us work hard to listen.
Sunday, November 21, 2010
A Meal of Thanks-giving
I’ve notice that once you start asking people to name things for which they are thankful, it can be hard to get them to stop. Once our minds and our hearts get going and we begin to think of all the things to thank God for, it can be hard to turn our minds or our hearts off. One of my favorite books is, 10,000 things to praise God for and just about any page I turn to reminds me of more things I can be thankful for.
Many years ago Oprah did a show on giving thanks and she encouraged people to keep a thanksgiving journal and everyday write down 5 things for which we are thankful. That year some friends and I decided to do this via email and each day we would email the group 5 things for which we were thankful. I was amazed at how long we were able to keep this going. Instead of running out of things to thank God for after a week or two, it seemed like each day we found more. Some things were quiet simple, like a favorite food we suddenly thought of like clam chowder, and some things were quite profound like the love of our family and friends or the forgiveness of God, but what amazed me was that we never ran out of ideas. It was like once we started to taste the goodness of the Lord, we couldn’t stop eating! I am convinced that deep inside all of us is the book, 10,000 things to thank God for; we just need to take the time to write it. When I read David’s song of thanksgiving in 1 Chronicles 16, I had the sense that David just started giving thanks to God and once he started he just couldn’t stop.
Give thanks to the Lord, David begins, call on his name, make known his deeds among the peoples. David just starts thinking about God when the flood gates open. In 16:9-13 David is thankful for God’s strength and for presence. He celebrates God’s miracles and his judgments and his words and his offspring and his children. Then in verses 15-18 David remembers God’s covenant, the promise God made with Abraham, Isaac & Jacob and a promise that extends to David and his family and to all the people of Israel. And then in verses 19-22 David remembers and gives thanks for how God helped the people of Israel as they wandered in the wilderness on their way to the Promised Land. David remembers how God watched over the people during this time and how God kept them safe as they made their way through foreign and dangerous lands. And then in verses 23 – 30 it seems like David is simply overwhelmed with thanksgiving as he remembers who God is and what God has done and so his heart just pours out praises to God. Look at the words David uses to thank God, Sing to the Lord, Declare his glory, Ascribe to the Lord glory and strength, worship the lord, tremble before him. It’s as if David can’t contain himself and he can’t hold back his thanks and praise to God, and then as if all that isn’t enough look at the end of this psalm. In verses 31-33 David looks out at all of creation and not only sees God’s handiwork in the world, but he sees and hears all of creation giving thanks and praise to God. The seas roar, the fields exult, trees sing and the people give thanks because the steadfast love of the lord endures forever.
As we read through this psalms it’s as if David’s heart begins with just a nibble, just a taste of giving thanks to God but it quickly becomes a full blown meal of thanks-giving that extends course after course as David celebrates who God is, what God has done and what God has promised to do in the future. It is this heart of thanksgiving that we see in David that we need develop and it is the meal of thanks-giving that David eats that we need to share in today and everyday.
Now the meal of thanksgiving I’m talking about isn’t our Thanksgiving Day dinner, it has nothing to do with turkey, stuffing or pumpkin pie, the meal I’m talking about is our ability to give God thanks and praise and it is a meal that has only 2 ingredients. If we want hearts that are filled with thanks and praise like David’s then the first ingredients we need is awe or wonder. Look at 16:9, David says, tell of all God’s wonderful works. God’s works are full of wonder and for us to really thank God for all he has given us we need to see that wonder and be filled with awe, but I’m afraid that we have lost our ability to be amazed by God. When was the last time we just stood in awe because of the beauty of a sunset or stood under a starry sky and felt a chill because of how small we seem in comparison to the vastness of space? This past week there was a news story about a new planet that formed beyond our galaxy but was pulled into the Milky Way by another star. While I found this news interesting, it did not fill me with awe and wonder. In our science-filled world where it seems like we can explain everything away we have lost some of the mystery of life. For example, when we have 24 hour weather forecasts available to us, we lose the sense of awe and mystery that comes when we wake up in the morning to the first frost, and are we never taken by surprise at the first snowfall or do we simply prepare for it?
And with all our advances in medical science – we lose any sense of amazement when our broken bones heal or when we overcome sickness and disease. With all the medicine we ingest and rehab we go through we forget that ultimately it is God who brings healing and restores wholeness and life. And volcanoes and earthquakes don’t fill us with awe anymore, like a new planet they just become news stories that we read or a crisis that we respond to. What we lose in our scientific world is the sense of wonder at the miracles of God’s creation. To really be able to give thanks we need to just stand and be amazed by the snow, awed by our bodies and overwhelmed by the majesty and the mystery and the sheer size and power of God’s creation.
The author Joseph Campbell said, Awe is what moves us on. Awe moves us on in our faith because awe and wonder are invitations to go deeper with God. What happened when Jesus calmed the storms or walked on water? The disciples asked themselves who is this that has such power. What happened was the disciples wanted to know more. Those moments of awe awakened in them a curiosity that helped them look deeper into the heart and mind and words and actions of Jesus. If we want a heart like David’s that really knows how to gives thanks and if we want a faith that hungers to know more, then we need to develop a sense of awe and wonder at the works of God. Twice David talks about God’s wonderful works (16:9, 16:12). Whether it is the miracles David has seen, or remembering how God’s hand guided the people of Israel through the wilderness or just looking around at the beauty and power of creation, David is filled with wonder when he thinks about God and we need to be filled with that same sense of wonder when we think of who God is and what God has done for us and how God has created us and the world around us.
I’d like us to do that for just us a moment. I want us to look at one of the most wonderful things God has created – look at your hands. Look at how amazing they are. Notice how each finger moves. Notice how the thumb is different. It is in a different place and because it is we are able to do so much. From creating music to building skyscrapers, our hands enable us to do so much. And look at the lines and fingerprints – remember that they are unique in all of the world – no one else has hands like yours, no one ever has and no one ever will. And no one else has done with their hands what you have done. If your hands have some wrinkles on them, then think of all the work they have done, all the hands they have held, all the children they’ve helped, all the love they have shared, all strangers that they have welcomed. Our hands are wonderful – literally they are full of wonder and we need to give thanks for that.
Wonder is an invitation into mystery; it is what awakens our hearts to God and to the fullness of life around us. Without wonder the world becomes sterile and rigid and when everything is explained away we find very little for which to give thanks, so wonder is essential to giving thanks, and wonder is key for a deeper faith, but for us to recapture this sense of wonder we need the second ingredient of our thanks-giving meal and that is leisure.
Leisure is a rare commodity today. We feel like we need to fill our days with constant motion and activity and many of us feel guilty if they aren’t working every moment of every day. We feel like we are depriving our children if they aren’t involved in every sport and activity that is offered to them, and yet what we have scheduled right out of our lives is rest and without rest we have no time to reflect. Webster’s dictionary defines leisure as the freedom from hurry. Wouldn’t we all like some of that in this season of the year? Freedom from hurry, and an ancient Chinese definition of leisure says it is the space in which we let the sun shine. In the bible this kind of leisure time is known as Sabbath – a day of rest, but it is not a day to do nothing – it is a day to remember and reflect. After God created the heavens and the earth it says on the seventh day God rested, now I don’t think God did nothing on that day, I think God spent that day of leisure remembering all he had done and looking out over all of his creation and saying, this is good. I think God was filled with wonder and awe and joy at what he saw. We have a wonderful God, which means we have a God full of wonder himself and the only way we can experience that wonder and the only way we can experience the fullness of God and really be able to give thanks to God is if we are willing to take the time to do it.
Leisure is absolutely necessary if we are going to have a heart like David. David took the time to think about God. David took the time to sing praises to God; he took the time glory in God, to seek God, and to remember God’s wonder-full works, and God’s covenant and God’s faithfulness. David took the time look out at all of creation and see in it and hear it in the praise of God. David took time to reflect and remember and it was because he did all this that he was able to rejoice and give thanks. David not only took the time but he shows us that if we want to truly give thanks then we need to take the time as well. This whole psalm is a call for us to take some time to reflect and remember who God is and what God has done. Through David God calls us to sing and remember and declare and worship and tremble before God. Through David God calls us and take a look at all of his creation and be amazed. If we don’t take this time to reflect on who God is and what God has done and what God is doing in our lives, we will never cultivate a heart like David’s that is able to really give thanks to God.
It’s interesting that we seem to take pretty seriously some of the 10 commandments like thou shalt not kill or steal or worship false gods, but we don’t take seriously the call to remember the Sabbath and keep it holy. We tell ourselves that we are just too busy to rest and there is simply no time to reflect and as long as we live that way, we will not experience the fullness of life that God wants for us. God took a Sabbath rest, not because God was tired but because wanted to reflect on his wonderful works and God simply wants us to do the same thing. Please take some time to rest and reflect and take note of God’s works that are full of wonder. When you do, your heart will be filled with thanks and praise to God.
My hope is that in the next few days, in between all the chaotic schedules of families, food and football games that you will carve out some leisure time to rest and remember with family and friends. Make some space in your heart and life to reflect on the way God’s love is shining in your life. Remember the awesome ways God has provided for you; come up with five ways in which God has shown you that he cares for you. There is a thanksgiving meal that won’t leave you feeling bloated and full at the end of the day, in fact, it is a meal that once you start eating you will never be able to stop and it is the meal of thanks-giving. It is a meal which requires us all to take the time and create the space to rediscover all the wonder of God.
Many years ago Oprah did a show on giving thanks and she encouraged people to keep a thanksgiving journal and everyday write down 5 things for which we are thankful. That year some friends and I decided to do this via email and each day we would email the group 5 things for which we were thankful. I was amazed at how long we were able to keep this going. Instead of running out of things to thank God for after a week or two, it seemed like each day we found more. Some things were quiet simple, like a favorite food we suddenly thought of like clam chowder, and some things were quite profound like the love of our family and friends or the forgiveness of God, but what amazed me was that we never ran out of ideas. It was like once we started to taste the goodness of the Lord, we couldn’t stop eating! I am convinced that deep inside all of us is the book, 10,000 things to thank God for; we just need to take the time to write it. When I read David’s song of thanksgiving in 1 Chronicles 16, I had the sense that David just started giving thanks to God and once he started he just couldn’t stop.
Give thanks to the Lord, David begins, call on his name, make known his deeds among the peoples. David just starts thinking about God when the flood gates open. In 16:9-13 David is thankful for God’s strength and for presence. He celebrates God’s miracles and his judgments and his words and his offspring and his children. Then in verses 15-18 David remembers God’s covenant, the promise God made with Abraham, Isaac & Jacob and a promise that extends to David and his family and to all the people of Israel. And then in verses 19-22 David remembers and gives thanks for how God helped the people of Israel as they wandered in the wilderness on their way to the Promised Land. David remembers how God watched over the people during this time and how God kept them safe as they made their way through foreign and dangerous lands. And then in verses 23 – 30 it seems like David is simply overwhelmed with thanksgiving as he remembers who God is and what God has done and so his heart just pours out praises to God. Look at the words David uses to thank God, Sing to the Lord, Declare his glory, Ascribe to the Lord glory and strength, worship the lord, tremble before him. It’s as if David can’t contain himself and he can’t hold back his thanks and praise to God, and then as if all that isn’t enough look at the end of this psalm. In verses 31-33 David looks out at all of creation and not only sees God’s handiwork in the world, but he sees and hears all of creation giving thanks and praise to God. The seas roar, the fields exult, trees sing and the people give thanks because the steadfast love of the lord endures forever.
As we read through this psalms it’s as if David’s heart begins with just a nibble, just a taste of giving thanks to God but it quickly becomes a full blown meal of thanks-giving that extends course after course as David celebrates who God is, what God has done and what God has promised to do in the future. It is this heart of thanksgiving that we see in David that we need develop and it is the meal of thanks-giving that David eats that we need to share in today and everyday.
Now the meal of thanksgiving I’m talking about isn’t our Thanksgiving Day dinner, it has nothing to do with turkey, stuffing or pumpkin pie, the meal I’m talking about is our ability to give God thanks and praise and it is a meal that has only 2 ingredients. If we want hearts that are filled with thanks and praise like David’s then the first ingredients we need is awe or wonder. Look at 16:9, David says, tell of all God’s wonderful works. God’s works are full of wonder and for us to really thank God for all he has given us we need to see that wonder and be filled with awe, but I’m afraid that we have lost our ability to be amazed by God. When was the last time we just stood in awe because of the beauty of a sunset or stood under a starry sky and felt a chill because of how small we seem in comparison to the vastness of space? This past week there was a news story about a new planet that formed beyond our galaxy but was pulled into the Milky Way by another star. While I found this news interesting, it did not fill me with awe and wonder. In our science-filled world where it seems like we can explain everything away we have lost some of the mystery of life. For example, when we have 24 hour weather forecasts available to us, we lose the sense of awe and mystery that comes when we wake up in the morning to the first frost, and are we never taken by surprise at the first snowfall or do we simply prepare for it?
And with all our advances in medical science – we lose any sense of amazement when our broken bones heal or when we overcome sickness and disease. With all the medicine we ingest and rehab we go through we forget that ultimately it is God who brings healing and restores wholeness and life. And volcanoes and earthquakes don’t fill us with awe anymore, like a new planet they just become news stories that we read or a crisis that we respond to. What we lose in our scientific world is the sense of wonder at the miracles of God’s creation. To really be able to give thanks we need to just stand and be amazed by the snow, awed by our bodies and overwhelmed by the majesty and the mystery and the sheer size and power of God’s creation.
The author Joseph Campbell said, Awe is what moves us on. Awe moves us on in our faith because awe and wonder are invitations to go deeper with God. What happened when Jesus calmed the storms or walked on water? The disciples asked themselves who is this that has such power. What happened was the disciples wanted to know more. Those moments of awe awakened in them a curiosity that helped them look deeper into the heart and mind and words and actions of Jesus. If we want a heart like David’s that really knows how to gives thanks and if we want a faith that hungers to know more, then we need to develop a sense of awe and wonder at the works of God. Twice David talks about God’s wonderful works (16:9, 16:12). Whether it is the miracles David has seen, or remembering how God’s hand guided the people of Israel through the wilderness or just looking around at the beauty and power of creation, David is filled with wonder when he thinks about God and we need to be filled with that same sense of wonder when we think of who God is and what God has done for us and how God has created us and the world around us.
I’d like us to do that for just us a moment. I want us to look at one of the most wonderful things God has created – look at your hands. Look at how amazing they are. Notice how each finger moves. Notice how the thumb is different. It is in a different place and because it is we are able to do so much. From creating music to building skyscrapers, our hands enable us to do so much. And look at the lines and fingerprints – remember that they are unique in all of the world – no one else has hands like yours, no one ever has and no one ever will. And no one else has done with their hands what you have done. If your hands have some wrinkles on them, then think of all the work they have done, all the hands they have held, all the children they’ve helped, all the love they have shared, all strangers that they have welcomed. Our hands are wonderful – literally they are full of wonder and we need to give thanks for that.
Wonder is an invitation into mystery; it is what awakens our hearts to God and to the fullness of life around us. Without wonder the world becomes sterile and rigid and when everything is explained away we find very little for which to give thanks, so wonder is essential to giving thanks, and wonder is key for a deeper faith, but for us to recapture this sense of wonder we need the second ingredient of our thanks-giving meal and that is leisure.
Leisure is a rare commodity today. We feel like we need to fill our days with constant motion and activity and many of us feel guilty if they aren’t working every moment of every day. We feel like we are depriving our children if they aren’t involved in every sport and activity that is offered to them, and yet what we have scheduled right out of our lives is rest and without rest we have no time to reflect. Webster’s dictionary defines leisure as the freedom from hurry. Wouldn’t we all like some of that in this season of the year? Freedom from hurry, and an ancient Chinese definition of leisure says it is the space in which we let the sun shine. In the bible this kind of leisure time is known as Sabbath – a day of rest, but it is not a day to do nothing – it is a day to remember and reflect. After God created the heavens and the earth it says on the seventh day God rested, now I don’t think God did nothing on that day, I think God spent that day of leisure remembering all he had done and looking out over all of his creation and saying, this is good. I think God was filled with wonder and awe and joy at what he saw. We have a wonderful God, which means we have a God full of wonder himself and the only way we can experience that wonder and the only way we can experience the fullness of God and really be able to give thanks to God is if we are willing to take the time to do it.
Leisure is absolutely necessary if we are going to have a heart like David. David took the time to think about God. David took the time to sing praises to God; he took the time glory in God, to seek God, and to remember God’s wonder-full works, and God’s covenant and God’s faithfulness. David took the time look out at all of creation and see in it and hear it in the praise of God. David took time to reflect and remember and it was because he did all this that he was able to rejoice and give thanks. David not only took the time but he shows us that if we want to truly give thanks then we need to take the time as well. This whole psalm is a call for us to take some time to reflect and remember who God is and what God has done. Through David God calls us to sing and remember and declare and worship and tremble before God. Through David God calls us and take a look at all of his creation and be amazed. If we don’t take this time to reflect on who God is and what God has done and what God is doing in our lives, we will never cultivate a heart like David’s that is able to really give thanks to God.
It’s interesting that we seem to take pretty seriously some of the 10 commandments like thou shalt not kill or steal or worship false gods, but we don’t take seriously the call to remember the Sabbath and keep it holy. We tell ourselves that we are just too busy to rest and there is simply no time to reflect and as long as we live that way, we will not experience the fullness of life that God wants for us. God took a Sabbath rest, not because God was tired but because wanted to reflect on his wonderful works and God simply wants us to do the same thing. Please take some time to rest and reflect and take note of God’s works that are full of wonder. When you do, your heart will be filled with thanks and praise to God.
My hope is that in the next few days, in between all the chaotic schedules of families, food and football games that you will carve out some leisure time to rest and remember with family and friends. Make some space in your heart and life to reflect on the way God’s love is shining in your life. Remember the awesome ways God has provided for you; come up with five ways in which God has shown you that he cares for you. There is a thanksgiving meal that won’t leave you feeling bloated and full at the end of the day, in fact, it is a meal that once you start eating you will never be able to stop and it is the meal of thanks-giving. It is a meal which requires us all to take the time and create the space to rediscover all the wonder of God.
Sunday, November 14, 2010
The Earth Is The Lord's
We are entering into the most wonderful time of the year, and yet it is also probably the busiest time of the year and in the midst of all the activity it can become difficult to keep our focus on God. It’s ironic if you stop and think about it, because it seems like Thanksgiving and Christmas should be an easy to stay focused on God, after all the holiday’s are centered on giving thanks to God for all the gifts he has given us, including the gift of Jesus that we celebrate in Christmas, but it just isn’t that easy. While Thanksgiving is all about thanking God for all that we have, we lose that focus as we fill our homes with food and family and football, and then we immediately jump from Thanksgiving into an all out blitz of shopping. It’s sad how we go from Thanksgiving to Black Friday in just a few short hours, and then the pace never stops. The next month is a blur of shopping, setting up the tree, decorating the house, baking the cookies, wrapping the presents and getting ready for Christmas cantata’s, Christmas programs and Christmas vacations. Even in the midst of a holiday that is all about Jesus it is easy to lose our focus on the reason for the season, so I want us to take a moment today before things get all crazy to find a passage that can help us keep our focus during these next 6 weeks, and the passage I am going to suggest is Psalm 24:1, the earth is the Lord’s and everything in it, the world and all who live in it. We need to commit this verse to memory and repeat it often so we can keep our eyes and the eyes of our heart fixed on Jesus.
As we approach this season of Thanksgiving we need to remember that the earth is the Lord’s and everything in this world was created by God and comes from the hand of God. The food we will eat on Thanksgiving has come from God. So as we cook the turkey and bake the pies and mash the potatoes can we say to ourselves over and over again, the earth is the Lord’s and everything it. Can the very breath we take become a prayer of thanksgiving for all that God has given us? Can we look around at the faces of family and friends gathered at our tables and see each one as a gift from God? Everyone who lives in this world has come from God. God created us all and in love God placed us in families and gathered us together in circle of friends and communities and a church so that we can share his love and grace together.
All through the Thanksgiving season we need to say to ourselves over and over again, the earth is the Lord’s and everything in it, the world an all who live in it (say it with me). This verse can help keep us grounded because it reminds us that the most important part of the celebration isn’t the turkey, stuffing or pumpkin pie; it is giving thanks to God for it has all come from him.
But let’s stop and think about this for a moment, if it has all come from God and it if all belongs to God then we need to ask ourselves, are we using it all the way God wants us to? Are we being good stewards of God’s creation? Did God give us the gift of food so we can fill our tables and eat all we can until we can’t eat anymore? Is the gift of family just for us or has God called us to share what we have and care for those who might be in need around us? Remember it says in Psalm 24:1 that all who live in this world belong to God, which means all those who are hungry belong to God. All those who are hurting and lonely belong to God. All those who the world has forgotten belong to God and God does not want them forgotten or lonely or hungry, God wants them remembered and loved and fed and God calls us to do it.
So part of giving thanks to God has to be making that sure we are using the gifts God gives wisely and according to God’s will. As we sit around tables overflowing with food will we make sure that others in our community have enough food? In the Old Testament strangers who were hungry were to be welcomed to the table and fed by God’s people as if they were family. Jesus calls us to feed the hungry and he told his disciples to feed the crowds even when they didn’t think they had the means to do it. I was thinking about this and I have decided this year that I am going tithe my Thanksgiving Day dinner. I am going to figure out how much money I will spend on food for my family on Thanksgiving Day, the entire day, and I am going to send a tithe of that amount to the blessing basket ministry so that others can have food on Thanksgiving, and I want to invite you to join me. Figure out what you will spend on your Thanksgiving Dinner, or on the food your family will eat during the entire day and then give 10% of that to the blessing basket ministry which is going to help provide food this year to 40 families, that’s twice as many as last year. Or if you want, you can figure it out after Thanksgiving and send your tithe to the food bank. Or you could do both, 10% to the food-bank and 10% to the blessing baskets and then as you faithfully give, watch God bless you. Isn’t that what it says in Psalm 24:4-5?
We will be blessed when we have clean hands and a pure heart. In other words we will be blessed when we live the way God calls us to live and the way God calls us to live is not just by saying thank you, but by living a life of thanks and gratitude that touches the lives of others because we are willing to share and give. So I invite you to tithe your Thanksgiving Day dinner, and when God blesses you in that faithful giving, step out in faith and tithe again during Christmas and then make tithing a way of life in the new year.
But it is not just about the money. As we sit down with family and friend on Thanksgiving can we invite others to join us who might not have a place to go? Do we have an empty chair at our table that could be filled by someone who lives alone and has no family in the area? Can we take some time during the holidays to visit those in the nursing home or those going through rehab during this season who might not have people to visit them. A couple of years ago when someone was delivering our Christmas dinners a woman asked the driver to stop and talk with her for a moment because he was the first person she had seen all day. There will be people who will spend Thanksgiving alone, can we remember them, visit them, invite them to join us? Again, in the OT one of the most important laws was the law of hospitality which said you welcomed strangers and those in need into your home, it’s God’s desire for His people to reach out to all those God has created and make sure they are remembered and loved and fed, will we do this?
Psalm 24 can help us keep focused during this Thanksgiving season, but it can also help us stay focused during the Christmas Season. It is believed that Psalm 24 was written when the Ark of the Covenant was carried into Jerusalem and then later used during times of worship when the people remembered that event. The thought is that when the ark moved into the city the people on the city gates would cry out Psalm 24:7 – 8a and then the people with ark would say Psalm 24:8b. Then the people on the city walls would say, Psalm 24: 9-10a and the people with the ark would respond again with Psalm 24:10b. And then the walls of the city would open wide and the Ark of the Covenant, the very presence of God entered the city. So this psalm remembers the moment that God entered the city of Jerusalem and as people recited these words and used it in worship it reminded them not to open the city gates, but to lift up the heads and open their hearts and lives to allow the king of glory to enter into them.
As we prepare for Christmas we need to remember that the entire celebration is about God coming to us in the person of Jesus. God comes to us just as he came to the people of Jerusalem, so will we open our hearts and lives to receive him. One of the carols we love to sing at Christmas is O Little Town of Bethlehem and there is a line in that carol that goes, to meek souls who receive him still the dear Christ enters in. Will we allow Christ to enter into our hearts and lives during this season? And if that is what we want, what will that look like? What will it mean for Christ to enter our hearts and lives during the busyness of this season? I don’t think God will be content to enter into our lives and then be told to sit and wait until the celebration is over for us to listen to him and respond to his leading. God wants to enter into our hearts and lives today to shape how we celebrate this season and how we celebrate the gift of Jesus.
If we go back to Psalm 24 we see that allowing God to enter into our heart and lives means having clean hands, a pure heart and then listen to this, not lifting our souls up to idols. If Christmas becomes a time when we go into debt because we think we have to buy the latest and greatest gifts for everyone we know, then we are lifting up our souls to the idol of materialism and greed. If the season is only about shopping and what to buy, then we are lifting up our souls to an idol, and it is so easy to do this. This past week, a full two weeks before Thanksgiving one of the big news stories I read was about how Target leaking their black Friday sales flyer so that people will be ready to run out and buy all the latest electronics and toys on the day after Thanksgiving. When that becomes an important news story, we are in danger of worshipping the wrong god. As we head into this frantic holiday shopping season, here is the verse we need to remember, do not lift our souls up to an idol.
Now I always feel the need to give this disclaimer here, not buying into the materialism and greed of this season doesn’t mean we don’t give any gifts at all, we can, and maybe we even should, give gifts at Christmas because what we are celebrating is the gift of Jesus given to us by God, but we need to think about how to give gifts that truly honor and imitate the gift of Jesus. God gave his son, not an ipad. God gave himself not a HDTV. God gave his time and love, not an xbox360. While all of those electronics might be great gifts to give, they do not reflect the gift of Jesus, so how can we give the gift of our selves, the gift of our time, the gift of our love in a way that reflects the gift of God? If you remember last year we learned how we can celebrate this season more faithfully when we are willing to spend less but give more. We need to spend less at target and amazon and walmart and give more of ourselves to others and to God. What relational gifts can you give? What gift can you give in Jesus name that will help the future of the church? What gift can you give in Jesus name that will lift up a community in Africa, or a family in Bellefonte? These questions need to guide us as we make our way through this Christmas season.
It will be a challenge to turn away from the idol of greed and materialism that says we need to get all the latest stuff for family and friends, but we need to turn away from the world and give the way God has shown us and in the way God has given to us and if we will do this – we will be blessed, again look at Psalm 24:4-6.
So if there is one passage that can guide us through this busy season of the year and help us to stay focused on what it is really all about, maybe it is Psalm 24 and these 2 verses:
The earth is the Lord’s and everything in it, the world and all who live in it.
Do not lift up your soul to an idol… and you will receive blessing from the Lord.
As we approach this season of Thanksgiving we need to remember that the earth is the Lord’s and everything in this world was created by God and comes from the hand of God. The food we will eat on Thanksgiving has come from God. So as we cook the turkey and bake the pies and mash the potatoes can we say to ourselves over and over again, the earth is the Lord’s and everything it. Can the very breath we take become a prayer of thanksgiving for all that God has given us? Can we look around at the faces of family and friends gathered at our tables and see each one as a gift from God? Everyone who lives in this world has come from God. God created us all and in love God placed us in families and gathered us together in circle of friends and communities and a church so that we can share his love and grace together.
All through the Thanksgiving season we need to say to ourselves over and over again, the earth is the Lord’s and everything in it, the world an all who live in it (say it with me). This verse can help keep us grounded because it reminds us that the most important part of the celebration isn’t the turkey, stuffing or pumpkin pie; it is giving thanks to God for it has all come from him.
But let’s stop and think about this for a moment, if it has all come from God and it if all belongs to God then we need to ask ourselves, are we using it all the way God wants us to? Are we being good stewards of God’s creation? Did God give us the gift of food so we can fill our tables and eat all we can until we can’t eat anymore? Is the gift of family just for us or has God called us to share what we have and care for those who might be in need around us? Remember it says in Psalm 24:1 that all who live in this world belong to God, which means all those who are hungry belong to God. All those who are hurting and lonely belong to God. All those who the world has forgotten belong to God and God does not want them forgotten or lonely or hungry, God wants them remembered and loved and fed and God calls us to do it.
So part of giving thanks to God has to be making that sure we are using the gifts God gives wisely and according to God’s will. As we sit around tables overflowing with food will we make sure that others in our community have enough food? In the Old Testament strangers who were hungry were to be welcomed to the table and fed by God’s people as if they were family. Jesus calls us to feed the hungry and he told his disciples to feed the crowds even when they didn’t think they had the means to do it. I was thinking about this and I have decided this year that I am going tithe my Thanksgiving Day dinner. I am going to figure out how much money I will spend on food for my family on Thanksgiving Day, the entire day, and I am going to send a tithe of that amount to the blessing basket ministry so that others can have food on Thanksgiving, and I want to invite you to join me. Figure out what you will spend on your Thanksgiving Dinner, or on the food your family will eat during the entire day and then give 10% of that to the blessing basket ministry which is going to help provide food this year to 40 families, that’s twice as many as last year. Or if you want, you can figure it out after Thanksgiving and send your tithe to the food bank. Or you could do both, 10% to the food-bank and 10% to the blessing baskets and then as you faithfully give, watch God bless you. Isn’t that what it says in Psalm 24:4-5?
We will be blessed when we have clean hands and a pure heart. In other words we will be blessed when we live the way God calls us to live and the way God calls us to live is not just by saying thank you, but by living a life of thanks and gratitude that touches the lives of others because we are willing to share and give. So I invite you to tithe your Thanksgiving Day dinner, and when God blesses you in that faithful giving, step out in faith and tithe again during Christmas and then make tithing a way of life in the new year.
But it is not just about the money. As we sit down with family and friend on Thanksgiving can we invite others to join us who might not have a place to go? Do we have an empty chair at our table that could be filled by someone who lives alone and has no family in the area? Can we take some time during the holidays to visit those in the nursing home or those going through rehab during this season who might not have people to visit them. A couple of years ago when someone was delivering our Christmas dinners a woman asked the driver to stop and talk with her for a moment because he was the first person she had seen all day. There will be people who will spend Thanksgiving alone, can we remember them, visit them, invite them to join us? Again, in the OT one of the most important laws was the law of hospitality which said you welcomed strangers and those in need into your home, it’s God’s desire for His people to reach out to all those God has created and make sure they are remembered and loved and fed, will we do this?
Psalm 24 can help us keep focused during this Thanksgiving season, but it can also help us stay focused during the Christmas Season. It is believed that Psalm 24 was written when the Ark of the Covenant was carried into Jerusalem and then later used during times of worship when the people remembered that event. The thought is that when the ark moved into the city the people on the city gates would cry out Psalm 24:7 – 8a and then the people with ark would say Psalm 24:8b. Then the people on the city walls would say, Psalm 24: 9-10a and the people with the ark would respond again with Psalm 24:10b. And then the walls of the city would open wide and the Ark of the Covenant, the very presence of God entered the city. So this psalm remembers the moment that God entered the city of Jerusalem and as people recited these words and used it in worship it reminded them not to open the city gates, but to lift up the heads and open their hearts and lives to allow the king of glory to enter into them.
As we prepare for Christmas we need to remember that the entire celebration is about God coming to us in the person of Jesus. God comes to us just as he came to the people of Jerusalem, so will we open our hearts and lives to receive him. One of the carols we love to sing at Christmas is O Little Town of Bethlehem and there is a line in that carol that goes, to meek souls who receive him still the dear Christ enters in. Will we allow Christ to enter into our hearts and lives during this season? And if that is what we want, what will that look like? What will it mean for Christ to enter our hearts and lives during the busyness of this season? I don’t think God will be content to enter into our lives and then be told to sit and wait until the celebration is over for us to listen to him and respond to his leading. God wants to enter into our hearts and lives today to shape how we celebrate this season and how we celebrate the gift of Jesus.
If we go back to Psalm 24 we see that allowing God to enter into our heart and lives means having clean hands, a pure heart and then listen to this, not lifting our souls up to idols. If Christmas becomes a time when we go into debt because we think we have to buy the latest and greatest gifts for everyone we know, then we are lifting up our souls to the idol of materialism and greed. If the season is only about shopping and what to buy, then we are lifting up our souls to an idol, and it is so easy to do this. This past week, a full two weeks before Thanksgiving one of the big news stories I read was about how Target leaking their black Friday sales flyer so that people will be ready to run out and buy all the latest electronics and toys on the day after Thanksgiving. When that becomes an important news story, we are in danger of worshipping the wrong god. As we head into this frantic holiday shopping season, here is the verse we need to remember, do not lift our souls up to an idol.
Now I always feel the need to give this disclaimer here, not buying into the materialism and greed of this season doesn’t mean we don’t give any gifts at all, we can, and maybe we even should, give gifts at Christmas because what we are celebrating is the gift of Jesus given to us by God, but we need to think about how to give gifts that truly honor and imitate the gift of Jesus. God gave his son, not an ipad. God gave himself not a HDTV. God gave his time and love, not an xbox360. While all of those electronics might be great gifts to give, they do not reflect the gift of Jesus, so how can we give the gift of our selves, the gift of our time, the gift of our love in a way that reflects the gift of God? If you remember last year we learned how we can celebrate this season more faithfully when we are willing to spend less but give more. We need to spend less at target and amazon and walmart and give more of ourselves to others and to God. What relational gifts can you give? What gift can you give in Jesus name that will help the future of the church? What gift can you give in Jesus name that will lift up a community in Africa, or a family in Bellefonte? These questions need to guide us as we make our way through this Christmas season.
It will be a challenge to turn away from the idol of greed and materialism that says we need to get all the latest stuff for family and friends, but we need to turn away from the world and give the way God has shown us and in the way God has given to us and if we will do this – we will be blessed, again look at Psalm 24:4-6.
So if there is one passage that can guide us through this busy season of the year and help us to stay focused on what it is really all about, maybe it is Psalm 24 and these 2 verses:
The earth is the Lord’s and everything in it, the world and all who live in it.
Do not lift up your soul to an idol… and you will receive blessing from the Lord.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Legacy
What kind of a legacy do you want to leave for your children or grandchildren? What kind of legacy do you want to leave the church you have been a part of and the community in which you live? A legacy is what we hand down to future generations and the most valuable legacy we pass on isn’t money or property, it is the witness of our lives. The legacy of my grandmother is best summed up not in words but in a picture of her I keep at home.
This picture sums up the legacy my Grandmother left in me. In this picture you can see that she is riding on a camel and the picture was taken on a trip she took to the Holy Land when she was in her late 70’s. Now what you need to know about my Grandmother is that she didn’t like to fly, but she flew half way across the world because she wanted to experience first hand the history of the Holy Land. While faith was important to my Grandmother, what I love about this picture is that it reminds me that it was later in her life that she began to explore the person of Jesus. I remember talking to her about the Shroud of Turin and she was fascinated thinking that it could have been the burial cloth of Jesus. I think going to the Holy Land helped take her faith in God and trust in Jesus to a new place – and that happened in her 70’s and she overcome her fear of flying to be able to experience it.
Part of the legacy of my Grandmother’s life is that she shows me it is never too late to build a stronger relationship with God, but the picture reveals even more of her legacy because she is riding on a camel. My Grandmother didn’t just leave a legacy of faith; she left a legacy of how important it is to live a full and active life. From riding a camel to helicopter rides into Hawaiian Volcanoes, my Grandmother rose above many of her fears to experience all she could in life. She was not going to let things pass her by. Even though she didn’t like to fly, she wanted to see new places and experience new things. That desire to experience all of life was also see in her love of learning. During a time when many women didn’t go to college, she graduated from Vassar College with a degree in math and horticulture. Part of the legacy she left behind was a passion to learn and to experience all there was to experience in life.
Even when she moved into a retirement center in her 80’s she continued to learn and experience new things in life. She started to volunteer in school and it was from working with elementary school children that she learned how to use a computer; in fact, they were the ones who taught her how to use a computer. The legacy my Grandmother left in me was to not be afraid to step out and experience new things in life and to embark on new adventures. The legacy of her life inspires me and the witness of her faith encourages me to keep building my own relationship with God and to remember that it is never too late to experience more of God’s love and grace.
What kind of legacy are we forming today in our children and grandchildren? How is the witness of our lives shaping the lives of those around us? What kind of legacy are we leaving behind in the church? These are important question because God calls all of us to leave behind a strong legacy. The last recorded words of Jesus before he was taken up into heaven are found in Acts 1. Jesus says, you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth. So we will be a witness to Jesus Christ. Jesus doesn’t invite us to be a witness, he says we will be one; it is a statement of fact. In one way or another we will be a witness to Jesus; the question is what kind of witness will we be?
In Hebrews 12 we heard that we are surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses and the lives of these people inspire us to run the race of faith with perseverance and strength. Now the witnesses that the author of Hebrews talks about are the great men and women of faith from Israel’s past that he had just outlined in Hebrews 11, and as we reflect on their lives we begin to see the kind of legacy we need to be cultivating today. The first section of Hebrews 11 (v. 1-28) contains the names and the stories of men like Noah, Abraham and Moses. When we think of these 3 great men of faith there is one thing that jumps out at us, each one of them was willing to leave behind a way of life that was safe and secure to follow God.
When God called Noah to build an ark he was calling him to leave behind his quiet and ordinary life. Can you imagine the ridicule that Noah must have endured when he suddenly starts building an ark in his backyard? And when people ask him, hey Noah what you doing? What are you going to do with that big boat? Can you imagine how hard it must have been for Noah to tell them that he was going to fill it with two of every animal and wait for a world wide flood to come and destroy the earth? It is not easy to be teased and misunderstood and you have to believe that Noah was teased and misunderstood. How much easier it would have been for him to just continue to go about his safe and quiet life, but he didn’t. Noah heard the call of God and he followed Him, and so did Abraham and Moses.
Both Abraham and Moses were called by God to leave the safety and security of their homes in order to follow God into a new life. God called Abraham to leave his home and his family and go to a land that god would show him. In other words, God didn’t say, here is the map that will lead you to your new home, God said, leave your home - start your journey and then I will show you where you are going. How hard it must have been to leave behind the security of what he knew to step out into the great unknown, and yet he did.
Moses was also called to leave behind safety, comfort and security to become the leader of God’s people. When God calls Moses to lead the people of Israel, Moses was living with his wife and her family in the mountains and he was quietly living the life of a shepherd. Moses had already given up all the rights and privileges of Pharaoh’s palace that he had enjoyed earlier in his life, and now God was calling him to leave behind the quiet and secure life of tending sheep to go back to Egypt and lead the people of Israel out of slavery. So the legacy Moses leaves us, the witness of his life is a willingness to leave behind wealth and privilege and safety and security in order to faithfully follow God. That’s the common witness of Moses, Abraham and Noah. Their legacy is one of being willing to give up comfort and security to follow God. That’s the witness that not only surrounds us today but needs to inspire us in our own lives and faith. Are we willing to leave behind comfort and security in order to step out in faith and trust?
Now the second section of Hebrews 11 contains the names of people like Gideon, Barak, Samson, Jephthah, David and Samuel and what these men have in common is that they were all great leaders in Israel’s history. Gideon, Barak, Jephthah and David all led armies into battle and many times they led their armies into seemingly impossible situations with only their faith and trust in God to help them be victorious. These men were asked to do the impossible by simply trusting in the power of God – and they did. .
That’s the story of Gideon. Gideon was called by God to lead the people of Israel against their enemy the Midianites. When God called Gideon the army of Israel numbered 32,000 men. So Gideon had a good sized army to go to into battle, but God said it was too big, so 22,000 men went home leaving Gideon with 10,000 men. While that was still a sizable force, God said again there were too many men, so Gideon separated them out again and this time sent 9,700 men home. Gideon now has an army of 300 men, about 1% of his original army and with those men God tells Gideon to go into battle and trust in the power of God to help them win. Gideon does and Gideon wins. The legacy of Gideon and the witness of these other men of faith is that we can find victory when we step out and attempt great things for God not because we are strong but because God is strong and God is with us.
So according to Hebrews 12 we are surrounded by this witness. The legacy given to us by these great men and women of faith is to set aside what is comfortable and embrace a life of faith that stretches us and challenges us to trust God more. But there is another witness we need to consider, look at Hebrews 12:2-3. To be strong in our faith we also need to consider the legacy given to us by Jesus and there is no better place to see that legacy than in communion.
Communion is a time where we reflect on the life of Jesus and part of what we need to do while we share in this meal is figure out how we can follow this example in our own lives. Think back to the night that Jesus celebrated the last supper with his disciples, before he broke the bread and gave the cup he first washed their feet and after he did he said, I have set for you an example, you should do as I have done. I don’t think Jesus is saying that we should wash each other’s feet, I think he is saying that we need to serve one another and be willing to humble ourselves in love and sacrifice ourselves for the needs and well being of others. That’s the legacy Jesus leaves behind when he washes feet and breaks the bread and shares the cup, and it is the legacy he leaves when he carries a cross.
The legacy of Jesus is a legacy of love, service and sacrifice and we need to consider how to make that way of life the foundation of our own lives. What will it look like for us to wash the feet of those around us? What will it look like for us to become the bread and the cup for the world today? What does it mean for us to deny ourselves and take up a cross? This is the legacy given to us by Jesus and this witness needs to give light to how we order and live our lives.
Today we are surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses. There are those who have been part of our lives and shown us how to live, but there are also those ancient men and women of faith whose lives continue to be an example for us to follow, and then there is the legacy of Jesus that we see in this meal. Will we use all of their lives as inspiration and guidance as we consider the legacy we are creating today? In Hebrews 13:7 it says, Remember your leaders, those who spoke the word of God to you. Consider the outcome of their way of life and imitate their faith. Can we step out in faith like Noah, Abraham and Moses? Will we attempt great things for God like Gideon, Samson and David? Will we serve, give, sacrifice and love like Jesus? We have a great cloud of witnesses who have spoken the word of God to us, may we imitate their lives and leave behind a strong legacy of faith for all who will follow us.
This picture sums up the legacy my Grandmother left in me. In this picture you can see that she is riding on a camel and the picture was taken on a trip she took to the Holy Land when she was in her late 70’s. Now what you need to know about my Grandmother is that she didn’t like to fly, but she flew half way across the world because she wanted to experience first hand the history of the Holy Land. While faith was important to my Grandmother, what I love about this picture is that it reminds me that it was later in her life that she began to explore the person of Jesus. I remember talking to her about the Shroud of Turin and she was fascinated thinking that it could have been the burial cloth of Jesus. I think going to the Holy Land helped take her faith in God and trust in Jesus to a new place – and that happened in her 70’s and she overcome her fear of flying to be able to experience it.
Part of the legacy of my Grandmother’s life is that she shows me it is never too late to build a stronger relationship with God, but the picture reveals even more of her legacy because she is riding on a camel. My Grandmother didn’t just leave a legacy of faith; she left a legacy of how important it is to live a full and active life. From riding a camel to helicopter rides into Hawaiian Volcanoes, my Grandmother rose above many of her fears to experience all she could in life. She was not going to let things pass her by. Even though she didn’t like to fly, she wanted to see new places and experience new things. That desire to experience all of life was also see in her love of learning. During a time when many women didn’t go to college, she graduated from Vassar College with a degree in math and horticulture. Part of the legacy she left behind was a passion to learn and to experience all there was to experience in life.
Even when she moved into a retirement center in her 80’s she continued to learn and experience new things in life. She started to volunteer in school and it was from working with elementary school children that she learned how to use a computer; in fact, they were the ones who taught her how to use a computer. The legacy my Grandmother left in me was to not be afraid to step out and experience new things in life and to embark on new adventures. The legacy of her life inspires me and the witness of her faith encourages me to keep building my own relationship with God and to remember that it is never too late to experience more of God’s love and grace.
What kind of legacy are we forming today in our children and grandchildren? How is the witness of our lives shaping the lives of those around us? What kind of legacy are we leaving behind in the church? These are important question because God calls all of us to leave behind a strong legacy. The last recorded words of Jesus before he was taken up into heaven are found in Acts 1. Jesus says, you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth. So we will be a witness to Jesus Christ. Jesus doesn’t invite us to be a witness, he says we will be one; it is a statement of fact. In one way or another we will be a witness to Jesus; the question is what kind of witness will we be?
In Hebrews 12 we heard that we are surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses and the lives of these people inspire us to run the race of faith with perseverance and strength. Now the witnesses that the author of Hebrews talks about are the great men and women of faith from Israel’s past that he had just outlined in Hebrews 11, and as we reflect on their lives we begin to see the kind of legacy we need to be cultivating today. The first section of Hebrews 11 (v. 1-28) contains the names and the stories of men like Noah, Abraham and Moses. When we think of these 3 great men of faith there is one thing that jumps out at us, each one of them was willing to leave behind a way of life that was safe and secure to follow God.
When God called Noah to build an ark he was calling him to leave behind his quiet and ordinary life. Can you imagine the ridicule that Noah must have endured when he suddenly starts building an ark in his backyard? And when people ask him, hey Noah what you doing? What are you going to do with that big boat? Can you imagine how hard it must have been for Noah to tell them that he was going to fill it with two of every animal and wait for a world wide flood to come and destroy the earth? It is not easy to be teased and misunderstood and you have to believe that Noah was teased and misunderstood. How much easier it would have been for him to just continue to go about his safe and quiet life, but he didn’t. Noah heard the call of God and he followed Him, and so did Abraham and Moses.
Both Abraham and Moses were called by God to leave the safety and security of their homes in order to follow God into a new life. God called Abraham to leave his home and his family and go to a land that god would show him. In other words, God didn’t say, here is the map that will lead you to your new home, God said, leave your home - start your journey and then I will show you where you are going. How hard it must have been to leave behind the security of what he knew to step out into the great unknown, and yet he did.
Moses was also called to leave behind safety, comfort and security to become the leader of God’s people. When God calls Moses to lead the people of Israel, Moses was living with his wife and her family in the mountains and he was quietly living the life of a shepherd. Moses had already given up all the rights and privileges of Pharaoh’s palace that he had enjoyed earlier in his life, and now God was calling him to leave behind the quiet and secure life of tending sheep to go back to Egypt and lead the people of Israel out of slavery. So the legacy Moses leaves us, the witness of his life is a willingness to leave behind wealth and privilege and safety and security in order to faithfully follow God. That’s the common witness of Moses, Abraham and Noah. Their legacy is one of being willing to give up comfort and security to follow God. That’s the witness that not only surrounds us today but needs to inspire us in our own lives and faith. Are we willing to leave behind comfort and security in order to step out in faith and trust?
Now the second section of Hebrews 11 contains the names of people like Gideon, Barak, Samson, Jephthah, David and Samuel and what these men have in common is that they were all great leaders in Israel’s history. Gideon, Barak, Jephthah and David all led armies into battle and many times they led their armies into seemingly impossible situations with only their faith and trust in God to help them be victorious. These men were asked to do the impossible by simply trusting in the power of God – and they did. .
That’s the story of Gideon. Gideon was called by God to lead the people of Israel against their enemy the Midianites. When God called Gideon the army of Israel numbered 32,000 men. So Gideon had a good sized army to go to into battle, but God said it was too big, so 22,000 men went home leaving Gideon with 10,000 men. While that was still a sizable force, God said again there were too many men, so Gideon separated them out again and this time sent 9,700 men home. Gideon now has an army of 300 men, about 1% of his original army and with those men God tells Gideon to go into battle and trust in the power of God to help them win. Gideon does and Gideon wins. The legacy of Gideon and the witness of these other men of faith is that we can find victory when we step out and attempt great things for God not because we are strong but because God is strong and God is with us.
So according to Hebrews 12 we are surrounded by this witness. The legacy given to us by these great men and women of faith is to set aside what is comfortable and embrace a life of faith that stretches us and challenges us to trust God more. But there is another witness we need to consider, look at Hebrews 12:2-3. To be strong in our faith we also need to consider the legacy given to us by Jesus and there is no better place to see that legacy than in communion.
Communion is a time where we reflect on the life of Jesus and part of what we need to do while we share in this meal is figure out how we can follow this example in our own lives. Think back to the night that Jesus celebrated the last supper with his disciples, before he broke the bread and gave the cup he first washed their feet and after he did he said, I have set for you an example, you should do as I have done. I don’t think Jesus is saying that we should wash each other’s feet, I think he is saying that we need to serve one another and be willing to humble ourselves in love and sacrifice ourselves for the needs and well being of others. That’s the legacy Jesus leaves behind when he washes feet and breaks the bread and shares the cup, and it is the legacy he leaves when he carries a cross.
The legacy of Jesus is a legacy of love, service and sacrifice and we need to consider how to make that way of life the foundation of our own lives. What will it look like for us to wash the feet of those around us? What will it look like for us to become the bread and the cup for the world today? What does it mean for us to deny ourselves and take up a cross? This is the legacy given to us by Jesus and this witness needs to give light to how we order and live our lives.
Today we are surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses. There are those who have been part of our lives and shown us how to live, but there are also those ancient men and women of faith whose lives continue to be an example for us to follow, and then there is the legacy of Jesus that we see in this meal. Will we use all of their lives as inspiration and guidance as we consider the legacy we are creating today? In Hebrews 13:7 it says, Remember your leaders, those who spoke the word of God to you. Consider the outcome of their way of life and imitate their faith. Can we step out in faith like Noah, Abraham and Moses? Will we attempt great things for God like Gideon, Samson and David? Will we serve, give, sacrifice and love like Jesus? We have a great cloud of witnesses who have spoken the word of God to us, may we imitate their lives and leave behind a strong legacy of faith for all who will follow us.
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