Sunday, December 30, 2018

Audience Of One


While I am not a Philadelphia Eagles fan, I am impressed with the quarterback who led them to a super bowl championship last year, Carson Wentz. 

Carson is a strong Christian and he was instrumental in leading many of his players to Christ.  Last year there were several stories of players being baptized in hotel pools and training room tubs.  Carson also leads a mission and ministry called, Audience of One or AO1.


The AO1 Foundation was founded in 2017 with the goal of uplifting individuals and communities around the world by demonstrating God's love for His people.  They do this through sports and outdoor adventures as well as distributing free food to those who are hungry.  While he plays football in front of millions of people during the season, Carson says he really lives his life for God alone, an audience of one.   

I first heard the phrase, audience of one, from my sister over 10 years ago.  She was a youth leader at a church in Lancaster and every few years that church sent out their youth choir on a tour.  It was always a highlight for the students and through the years they had not only performed at nursing home and churches, but one year they were featured on TV.  The director was in her last year of leading the choir and felt a calling to do a tour and concert for an Audience of One.  With my sister’s help, they found an amazing spot along the Blue Ridge Parkway where they could pull off, set up all their sound equipment, and perform a concert for God alone. 

It was a pretty radical idea.  There could be no spectators for the concert, so all chaperones had to sing in the choir and even the bus driver who took them there had to agree to stay on the bus.  Everyone in the choir had to commit to not only being at all the rehearsals but to also doing a yearlong devotional to prepare their hearts and lives for that day.  Some parents objected to this unique tour because it just didn’t seem like the right thing to do, and some of the students struggled to understand the concept.  They said it didn’t seem right to put in all that work and then have no one hear them.  Those parents and students kind of missed the concept. 

When it came time for the tour, nothing seemed to go as planned.  They didn’t know there would be a fee for taking a bus on the Blue Ridge parkway, so the students had to decide if their concert was worth chipping in extra money.  They took up a voluntary collection among themselves and got more than what they needed to pay the fee.  The day of the concert arrived and it was so foggy that they couldn’t see anything on the drive or at the location they had picked.  Not only couldn’t they see more than a few feet in front of them, but when they got off the bus they found the ground to be so wet that they worried about setting up all the electrical equipment.  Everyone was soaked from the knees down as they set up, but they got ready and began to sing. 

During the concert a few deer walked through the adjacent field.   They didn’t seem fazed by all that was going on and would often turn their heads to listen to the music.  Then some turkeys arrived and then the sun broke through the clouds.  Their Audience of One had shown up and poured out his blessing upon them.  My sister said she had never experienced anything like that in her life, and hasn’t since.  She said there was a very clear presence of God that moved among them.  She said there was a heaviness in the air, a spirit that moved her to tears and others to their knees, and they sang like they had never sung before.  As my sister shared the story with me again a few weeks ago, she spoke with such a profound sense of awe that I knew it had been a very moving and truly holy experience. 

As we sit at the end of 2018 and look to begin a new year, I ask myself if I can live 2019 for an Audience of One.  In this coming year can I, like Carson Wentz, make my motto, Colossians 3:17Whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus.  Do it all for an Audience of One.   Can I live my life this way and experience the awe and blessing of God’s presence throughout the year. 

To live for an audience of one means that I have to stop thinking about what is good for me and how to make myself look better in the eyes of others and how I can get ahead in this world and just focus on living for and pleasing God.  It means getting up every morning and dedicating the day, the schedule, the pain and problems, the hopes and dreams of my life to God.  It means going to bed at night thanking God for everything that has happened and asking God to shape the day to come.  It means setting Godly priorities for my life and committing my family to God, my job to God, my free time to God, my rest and my reflection to God.  It means truly living for God alone.  An Audience of One. 

There are two people we find in the New Testament who lived their lives this way, Simeon and Anna.  Both of these people had lived most of their lives in and around the Temple in Jerusalem.  In fact, in Luke 2:37 it says that Anna never left the temple but worshiped night and day.  Both of them were living their lives for the same thing, they were waiting for the Messiah.  They had been living for God alone, an audience of one, and they had been waiting for the Messiah to appear.  And then one day, without warning, Jesus arrives in the arms of his mother, Mary.  Luke 2:22, 25-32

Simeon had been told he would not die until he saw the Messiah and he had been living for that moment all his life.  He was living for an audience of one, and then it was as if the clouds parted and that One showed up.  At the very moment Simeon is praising God for the gift of the Messiah, Anna arrives.  Luke 2:38.  For 60 years Anna had lived in the Temple worshipping God, living for an audience of one, waiting for that One to appear and then on this day, at this moment, God in the flesh arrives, and she knows that her faith has been fulfilled, the redemption of Israel had come in Jesus.  Her Audience of One appeared. 

On that day, Simeon and Anna literally welcomed their audience of one – Jesus – into their lives, but they only had that experience because they had spent a lifetime living for God alone, and we learn from them some of what it means for us to live for an audience of one.  The first thing we learn is that living for God alone means waiting.  Luke 2:25. 

Simeon had been waiting for the consolation of Israel.  He had been waiting for the Messiah to come and save God’s people.  Waiting means patiently sitting and watching.  It means preparing and persevering.  It means not giving up when things don’t happen right away but being willing to keep going in faith even when we don’t see anything happen.  The picture that always comes to my mind when I think of someone waiting well is my mom. 

Throughout high school, my mom did a lot of waiting.  She waited for me after youth group because I would always hang around and talk to my friends after it was over.  She would wait for me at piano lessons and tuba lessons, quietly sitting in the car reading, knitting or grading papers.  She waited for me at band practice, choir rehearsals, youth retreats, and more events than I can remember.  She waited with patience and love, being willing to place my needs, my wants, and my life before her own.  This is how we are to wait for God.  Patiently, quietly, and faithfully putting God’s life and will before our own.

Waiting is not passive, however, it needs to be active.  Waiting for God means that we prepare our lives by doing all we can to grow closer to God.  Simeon didn’t just go to the Temple and hang out.  He would have studied God’s word, shared his faith by teaching and preaching, and he would have observed all that was going on around him in order to see the movement of God.  Waiting is not passive, it is active.  It is a time of preparation and growth.  Can we make 2019 a year of active waiting and commit to study, spiritual growth, prayer, and reflection? 

I want to invite you to live of an Audience of One and wait every day by committing to what I am calling a 5X5.  5 days of reading and 5 minutes of prayer.  We have included a 5 day reading plan that will lead you through the entire Bible in 2019, and while it only requires you to read 5 days a week, which can be a helpful schedule, I want to challenge us to pray for 5 minutes every day.  The prayer can be silent, reflective, the reading of God’s word, asking for help, praying for others, or praying for the world, but can we pray for 5 minutes every day.  This practice is one way we can train ourselves to live for an Audience of One and wait on God.

The second thing we see in Simeon is that he was full of the Holy Spirit.  In Luke 2 it says that the Holy Spirit was upon him, that the Holy Spirit spoke to him, and that the Holy Spirit moved him.  Living for an audience of one means asking God to fill us with his Holy Spirit.  Living for God alone is not easy.  When we commit to this way of life we will begin to find that many things will start to try and pull us away, so the only way for us to be faithful and follow through is if the Holy Spirit helps us and leads us.

Now here is what is amazing, for the Holy Spirit to rest upon us, fill us up, speak to us, and move us through our day, all we have to do is ask - Luke 11:11-13.  If we ask for the Holy Spirit to fill us and guide us, God will provide.  Part of our 5 minutes of prayer should be a simple request for God to send his Holy Spirit into our lives. 

The last thing we learn from Simeon and Anna about living for an Audience of One is that we need to commit ourselves to worship.  Anna worshipped God day and night.  She was committed to worship.  She committed herself to giving thanks and praising God and lifting up her needs and the needs of others.  She focused on God all through her day and she made worship a priority. 

Can we make worship a priority in 2019?  Studies show that most people who attend church regularly do so less than twice a month.  While this is a good place to start, this is not what it looks like to live for an Audience of One.  While corporate worship with God’s people might not always be possible with our schedules, can we make it more of a priority? 

Can we commit to not just being here, but maybe stepping out to serve and give while we are here?  From child care, to teaching, to greeting inside and outside, to running sound and multi-media, and to sharing our gifts of music and art, the talents and service of God’s people are needed to make weekly worship happen.  How can your commitment to live for an Audience of One shape your commitment and involvement in worship?  Like the trip my sister took where there could be no spectators, worship really is not a spectator sport.  We all need to be actively engaged and involved.  If you want to commit to serving in worship in some way during 2019, just take out the information card in the pews and let us know! 

While living each day for an Audience of One will involve so much more, as it will touch every thought, word, decision, and action, this is a great place to start. 
Can we wait for God each day and listen for God to speak through his word? 
Can we ask God each day to guide us by his Holy Spirit? 
Can we make worship in 2019 a priority and give our gifts of time, talent, and service to the worship life of the church? 
If we do this, God will show up in our lives in very real ways and fill us with the power of his presence. 





Next Steps
Audience of One

1.  As you look back over 2018, what audience have you been living for?  If you were to live for an Audience of One – God – what would it look like:
at home
at work 
with your use of time
with your use of money

2.  What did living for God alone look like for Simeon and Anna?  Read Luke 2:22-40.

3. Memorize Colossians 3:17
Whatever you do, whether in word or deed,
do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus.

4.  Wait on God. 
Commit to the 5X5 Plan in 2019. 

5. Ask God for the Holy Spirit to fill you and guide you.

Almighty God, you have promised to those who ask that you will give the gift of the Holy Spirit.   Give me the gift of your Holy Spirit this day so that I may hear your voice, move according to your will, and find the courage to do all things for your glory.  For it is in Jesus name I pray.  AMEN


6. Make worship a priority in 2019. 
Offer the gift of your time and talent to the worship life of Faith Church.
Fill out an information card in the pew, or contact the church at office@bellefontefaith.com to get involved. 

Monday, December 24, 2018

Christmas Eve - The Light of God

I love nativity scenes.  I have a lot of them, and I enjoy taking out a few each year, and setting them up.  One of the things I enjoy the most about Nativity scenes are the animals.  I have a Native American scene that includes a wolf, but I don’t think there was a wolf at the first Christmas, but chances are good that there was a donkey, a sheep, and a camel.  What is interesting about these animals is that each one is connected to a person found in the Christmas story, and each person came to Bethlehem following some kind of light.  Tonight we come to this place looking for a light, a that can fill us and change us and brighten our world, and we are not disappointed because in Jesus we find the light of God’s plan, the light of God’s purpose, and the light of God’s promise – and it is this light that guides us to new life.

So let’s go back to the animals, the donkey is associated with Mary and Joseph, who made a long journey from Nazareth to Bethlehem.  We don’t know that Mary and Joseph actually had a donkey on their trip, but considering Mary was pregnant at the time of their journey, chances are good that they used the help of a donkey.  But the donkey, and Mary and Joseph, didn’t follow the light of a star to Bethlehem, they followed the light of God’s plan. 

Nine months earlier, God spoke to both Mary and Joseph through an angel and it was that message that shed some light on their lives.  God told them that His plan was for them to help bring the Messiah, God’s Son, into this world.  Neither Mary, nor Joseph, was expecting this would be the path for their lives.  They were ordinary people, living ordinary lives, but suddenly God revealed that He had something else in store for them, another plan.  Mary and Joseph listened to God and said yes to His plan.  Mary became pregnant by the power of God, and Joseph took her as his wife, and together they raised the son of God.

But God’s plan for them wasn’t finished because the Messiah was to be born in Bethlehem, and Mary and Joseph lived in Nazareth.  So a census was called, which meant that Joseph had to return to his hometown of Bethlehem.  He took along Mary and as luck would have it, or as God had planned it, the child was born while they were there.  The light of God’s word again revealed God’s plan for Mary and Joseph, the child was to be born in Bethlehem, and it was a donkey that helped make that plan become a reality.

So the donkey reminds us that God has a plan for us.  We might feel like our lives are pretty ordinary, and that God can’t, or won’t, use us for anything significant, but the light of this story, a light of God that can fill us and changes us tonight, is knowing that God does have a plan for us.

For Joseph, the plan for his life was simple, be the best father you can be.  Watch over Mary and raise Jesus well.  This meant Joseph needed to be a good husband, work hard to provide for his family, and set a good example in life and faith for his children.  In many ways, the plan for all of us is to be focused on our family.  God’s plan is for us to being the best husband, wife, parent, child, grandparent, aunt, or uncle we can be.  Being a parent, and investing in the life, faith and future of children is perhaps the most significant work we can do because we are shaping the future.  If this is God’s plan for you, if you are in a season of life where you are helping care for children, see this as God’s plan for you and embrace it.  Live into it and God will fill you and guide you with all the light and strength you need.

For Mary, however, God’s plan was more personal.  Giving birth to Jesus was something Mary alone had been called to do.  There are times when God’s plan for us involves something unique and personal.  God often has a plan that only we can fulfill, and when we say yes to God, we begin to see the power of God’s light shine on our path and show us the way.  When we say yes to God, we begin to see the power of God’s light shine through us into the world.

Tonight’s offering came about because one person, sitting at a State College Spikes ballgame, heard God say, get to know these players, and it was through those relationship that a way was developed for us to give hope to a community struggling in darkness.  God often has a very specific plan for our lives, and if we learn to listen for God’s voice, and follow where it leads us, God can accomplish great things in us and through us.

Now the sheep in the nativity scene points us to another kind of light and another group of people.   On the night Jesus was born, there were shepherds out in the fields watching over their flocks.  When an angel appeared and told them that the Savior had been born, the light of heaven exploded across the skies.  That light, and the angels’ message, didn’t just proclaim a child’s birth, it also revealed the purpose for this child.  Luke 2:11.  The purpose of Jesus was to save people from their sins.  It wasn’t just a child that was born, it was a savior. 

The purpose of this story hasn’t changed in 2,000 years, God has come to save us.  What we couldn’t do for ourselves, God has done for us.  We can’t live the perfect life, we can’t forgive our sin, and we can’t set ourselves right with God, so God sent Jesus to do all that for us.  John 3:16.  The purpose of Jesus is to save us from our sin, and to give us the gift of a full life here and an eternal life to come.  Christmas isn’t just a nice story about the birth of a baby and a group of shepherds who went to visit him, it is the powerful story about a child whose purpose was to save humanity.

The sheep reminds us that no matter who we are, no matter what we have gone through, no matter how unworthy we might feel right now, the purpose of Jesus is to forgive us, and to set us free from guilt and shame.  Through Jesus, we are set right with God tonight, and forever.  The purpose of Jesus is to shine a light into our lives that assures us that our sin has been forgiven, and that all that tries and hold us down in life can be overcome, and we can experience God’s peace and the power of a new life.

And then there is the camel.  The Wisemen had a long journey, through a dry and desert land, carrying with them all they needed for days and weeks on end, so they most likely would have used camels for their trip.  These camels followed the light of a star – or at least they were guided there by the Wisemen who followed that light.  But the real light they were drawn to wasn’t in the sky, it was the promise of a better life and a better world.

The star that appeared in the sky told the Wismen that a new king had been born in Israel.  This king was so powerful, and his kingdom was going to be so good, that the heaven’s declared his birth.  The light of this star carried with it the promise that the future was going to be better.  The story of Jesus we celebrate tonight continues to shine God’s promise into our lives.   The promise is that through Jesus, our lives and our world can be better.

Life can be better for us because in Jesus, God is with us.  God has come to love us, and save us, and God has come to fill us with a light that shows us how to live a better life.  The baby born in Bethlehem grew up to be a man who showed us how to live according to the principles of God.  He showed us the power of love in relationships, the power of joy lived out in our community, and how God’s peace can change the world.  The life of Jesus shows us how to overcome fear, how to establish new habits, and how to turn our pain into possibility and purpose.  These are some of the game-changers we are going to explore in January, and I want to invite you to join us in the New Year as we keep looking at how the light of God’s promise can make our lives better.

Tonight isn’t just about celebrating an event that took place 2000 years ago, it’s about coming to the light of God found in Jesus.  It is this light that reminds us God has a plan for us, that tells us God’s purpose of Jesus is to save us from our sin, and where we can stand firm on the promise that through Jesus, our lives and our world can be better and brighter.  A donkey, a sheep, and a camel – they help lead us to the light of God and the love of Jesus.

Sunday, December 23, 2018

The Star - PEACE

Together we have been on a journey this Advent and Christmas season following a star.  Not an actual star in the sky like the Wisemen followed, but the light of God that we can find in Jesus.  The light we have followed has shown us that with Jesus as part of our lives, we have the hope that our lives and our world can be better.  In Jesus, we find more than enough love for our own lives, which means we have God’s love to share, and we have also found that when we find Jesus, we find a joy that gives us the fuel we need to keep going, even when things aren’t going our way. 

Today we will see how following Jesus can give us the most elusive gift God offers, the gift of peace.  On the night Jesus was born, the angels sang about this peace when they said, Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace, good will toward all.  The sad reality, however, is that our world has never known peace.  While we sing about it, pray for it, and long to experience it in our live and world, finding and creating this peace is elusive, but it is possible. 

Let’s go back to the night Jesus was born and think about the scene around the manger.  Because of the census that has drawn Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem, the city is crowded.  It is so full of people that there was no place for Mary and Joseph to stay in any home or inn, so they made their way to a stable, a place that would have been filled with all kinds of animals that had come to the city with the people.  Goats, sheep, chickens, donkeys, cattle, oxen, camels and many other animals would have made the stable a very chaotic and noisy place. 

Mary gives birth in this midst of this chaos, which I’m sure, just added to the confusion, and then, out of nowhere, a group of shepherds arrive.  Now, I have never given birth, obviously – that would be the true Christmas Miracle – but I did a very unofficial poll of women who have given birth, and they all agreed that the last thing they would want to see after giving birth, would be a group of shepherds wandering into their room asking questions about their baby.  But here they come, fresh from the fields, and all worked up because of the fear of seeing a heavenly host of angels and the excitement in finding a baby that just might be the Savior of the world.  This is hardly a peaceful scene, especially for Mary, but then it says this in Luke 2:19, Mary treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart.  In the midst of the confusion, chaos, and crowds, we have a picture of Mary at peace.  She is sitting quietly, pondering in her heart all that is going on. 

It is this picture that needs to help us define peace.  Peace is not the absence of war, it is not the absence of confusion, chaos, and conflict.  Peace is being able to experience the presence of God in the midst of it all.  Peace, for Mary, was quietly looking at her son, who she, more than anyone, knew was Immanuel, God in the flesh, the Savior of the world.  It was in holding Jesus that she realized everything was going to be ok.  No matter what was going on around her, she knew God was with her.  No matter what was going on around her, she knew God was for her.  No matter what was going on around her, she knew God loved her and that he had come to share that love and grace and power with all the world.

So while we think that our world has never known peace because we have never known a time when there has not been conflict and violence, the truth is that peace has been present every day because peace is God’s presence with us – and God is present with us every day.  While God has always been present in the world, in Jesus we see the presence of God in a very unique way.  In Jesus, God came as one of us to not only walk with us but to show us how we can live in a way that will allow us to experience peace. 

When we look at the life of Jesus, we see is that the secret to experiencing peace is to stay focused on God.  There is only one story we have of Jesus as a child, and in that story Jesus stayed behind in Jerusalem when his family returned to Nazareth.  When asked why he did that, Jesus replied, I had to be in my father’s house.  As a boy, Jesus was focused on God.  All through his ministry, Jesus would seek out time alone to pray so he could keep his focus on God. 
When Peter said he didn’t want Jesus to take up a cross and die, Jesus said to him get behind me Satan for you do not have your mind on the things of God, but on the things of man. Jesus always kept his heart and mind turned to God which allowed him to always be at peace.  Even when Jesus was arrested, tried, beaten, and led away to be crucified, he remained amazingly peaceful, and it was because he kept his focus on God.  That is the key to finding peace - keeping our hearts and minds focused on God. Isaiah 26:3 God will keep us in perfect peace when our minds are steadfast and fixed on God. 

So peace is not found in a specific time or place, or when the circumstances of the world are just right, peace is found in a person, the Prince of Peace.  In the Old Testament, the Messiah was often talked about with images that projected a peace on earth. 
Isaiah 9:6-7a.  Isaiah 11:1-2, 6-9.   Isaiah 2:3-4. 

The peace God offers isn’t found outside of the Messiah but only in him, so peace in our lives is not going to be found in the circumstances around us, and it isn’t going to be found by achieving some kind of meditative spirit inside us, peace is only found when we are able to turn our hearts and lives toward the prince of peace – Jesus.  When we fix our eyes on him, and when we follow his way of living and loving, we begin to find a peace that truly surpasses our understanding and endures through all things.  When we are fixed and focused on Jesus, some of what seems to upset us, leads us into arguments, or creates chaos and confusion in our lives and in our world, simply falls away. 

So while peace seems elusive in our world, and fleeting in our lives, we can experience it every moment of every day if we will fully focus on Jesus and that happens when we fully surrender to him.  This is what Mary did.  Mary fully surrendered herself to Jesus.  Mary gave her life and future to Jesus when she said yes to God’s plan, but God’s peace didn’t come in the first moment of that surrender.  Mary faced some very difficult days.  She had to work through the relationship with Joseph, make a long trip to Bethlehem in her ninth month, and deliver a child alone in a stable, but each day she surrendered to God she found more and more peace.  Are we willing to take that same journey?  Are we willing to surrender to God day after day in order to find peace?

Like Mary, surrendering to God means giving God our plans.  Mary thought she knew what her life was going to look like.  Get married, settle down, have a child, and be a good wife, but God turned that around when he invited Mary on a journey to be the mother of the Messiah. God’s plan was going to be different and more difficult.  God’s plan put her relationship with Joseph in danger, it changed their plans and their future, and she had to trust that God would work out the details and help her.  Surrendering to God often means letting go of our plans and accepting God’s plan for us, but God’s plan is not always easy. 

Surrendering to God also means letting go of our pride, and nowhere is this more difficult than when we need to forgive and extend grace to others.  When we have been deeply hurt by others, it is not easy to let go of that feeling of being offended.  We are living in a world where people seem to love being offended.  People like it so much that they go looking for it.  This year we have heard of people being offended by the lyrics to old Christmas Songs, and even classic Christmas TV specials.  It is pride that tells us we need to hold on to being offended and demand apologies.  It is pride that keeps us from forgiving those around us.  Surrendering our lives to God means opening our hearts to forgive. 

Forgiveness doesn’t mean we minimize the pain others have caused in our lives, and it doesn’t excuse the hurtful words and actions, but it does mean we let go of the offense and we stop looking for revenge or restitution.  Peace comes when we set aside our right to be offended and offer forgiveness.

Surrender also means using our lives for God’s glory.  Surrender means looking at all the opportunities we have been given and finding ways we can use them for God’s will and purpose.  It means looking at our talents, our abilities, our interests, and our resources and asking God to show us how to use them for his benefit and not ours.  This is where the journey of following the star gets messy, because it may lead us in a new direction. 

Following Jesus means that while we save up for a family vacation, we might also start saving up to serve God on a mission trip.  It means while we set aside money for the eventual new car we are going to need, we also set aside money for people who are hungry now, both here and in places like Venezuela.  Surrender means I don’t just think about what is good for me and my family, I start asking how my life and family can be a blessing to others.  When we fix our eyes on Jesus in every area of life, we begin to find peace, but as Mary said, it is not an easy road.  Jesus also said that the road to life is a narrow road – but it is the road to peace. 

The peace that comes with Jesus is not just for us, however, it is also for the world.  That’s what the angels said 200 years ago and that message still stands.  Jesus, the prince of peace, brings peace on earth.  When the Wisemen saw a star in the sky, they knew it announced the birth of a great leader whose reign would bring peace on earth.  Jesus was that king, and the peace he offers is possible for the world if we, the body of Christ, can live in that peace and model that peace for the world. 

Picture what the world would look like if everyone who said they believed that Jesus was the prince of peace took seriously the call to fix our eyes on Jesus, surrendered fully to God, and lived in the peace that Christ makes available.  There would be more love in families and more care for people in communities.  There would be more sharing of resources in our world so that no one would be hungry, thirsty, or in need.  If we were willing to forgive and put the needs and desires of others before our own, then the community of the church would be so engaging and powerful that people would want to be part of it and the life and faith we share would spread like wildfire and our world would change. 

While it is living in peace that helps spread peace across the world, there is one more thing we can do to help establish God’s peace on earth and that is to pray.  We need to passionately, persistently, and personally pray for the peace of Christ to be known by all.  God invites us to pray for peace in Psalm 122:5-9.  When we pray for peace, the world might not change right away, in fact we might not see any change at all, but if we will continue to pray for peace, we will change.  We will experience peace within our walls - in our family and among our friends.  When we pray for peace we will also see those dark places where peace is needed and as we surrender to God, we will go to those places to allow God’s peace to be known. 

Our journey following the star does not end on Christmas Eve, or Christmas Day, or New Year’s Eve, or New Year’s Day.  Following the Star, following Jesus, is the journey of our lives.  We start right where we are, in the darkness of fear, loneliness, and sin,  but the star leads us to Jesus who offers us hope, love, joy, peace - peace with God and peace with one another.  Let us stay committed to this journey with Jesus for days and weeks and years to come so that out of the abundance of our lives - hope, love, joy and peace may overflow into our world, for that is the real gift of Christmas.  That is what the angels proclaimed. 

Behold, I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people, for unto you is born this day in the city of David, a Savior who is Christ the Lord.  Glory to God in the highest heaven and peace on earth, good will toward all. 



Next Steps
The Star – PEACE

1. Focus on these scriptures which tell us that peace came into the world with Jesus the Messiah.
Isaiah 2:3-4 - Isaiah 9:5-7 - Isaiah 11:1-2, 6-9

2. Peace comes when we fix our minds and hearts on God. Begin each day by reading Isaiah 26:3-4

3. Peace grows as we surrender to God, like Mary.
What plans do you have that need to be surrendered to God?
What pride can you identify that needs to be surrendered to God?

4. Read Psalm 122:5-9.  Daily pray this week for the peace you need and for peace to share.


Sunday, December 16, 2018

The Star - JOY

This Christmas Season we have all been on a journey following the star, not an actual star, but the light that God sent into the world when he sent Jesus.  As we allow the life of Jesus to shape our lives, and as we allow the unconditional love of God to fill us, we find hope that our lives and our world can be a better place.  What is also amazing about God’s love is that it is always MORE than enough for what we need, which means that we have love to share, and love to give. 

The light of Jesus, and the love of God, not only lead us to hope and love, but they also lead us to places where we can experience great joy.  Not just some joy, not a little joy, but great joy, because that is what the angels said.  On the night Jesus was born the angels said, Behold I bring you good news of great joy.  But let’s be clear about what joy is and what it isn’t.  Joy is not the absence of pain. Joy is not a place where we experience no problems or hardships.  The truth is that joy and pain often go hand in hand.  Joy doesn’t come to us when we are experiencing the fullness of light; joy often comes to us when we are in the dark.  That is what happened with the Shepherds.  Luke 2:8-12.

So the shepherds were in the dark when the angels appeared, and it doesn’t say they were filled with joy, in fact, the appearance of the angels brought fear.  The explosion of the heavens and the appearance of a host of angels scared the shepherds, and shepherds were not men who were scared easily.  Shepherds were rough and hardy men who knew how to fight and stand strong in the face danger.  That was their life.  Shepherds had to fight off wild animals.  They had to take on people who might want to steal the sheep, and they always had to be on their guard at night when these dangers would be more likely to appear.  Shepherds did not scare easily, but this event filled them with such a great fear that they were literally in pain and afraid for their lives.  It was into this pain and fear, into this darkness, that the angels told these men that they could experience great joy, but that joy didn’t come by staying where they were, they had to make a journey to Bethlehem to find the baby that had just been born. 

The shepherds made the journey.  In their pain, fear, and almost certain doubt about what they just heard, they travel to Bethlehem, found the baby, and realized that what the angels had said was true.  It was then that they are filled with joy.  Not just a little joy, but great joy because it says they returned to the hills praising God for all that they had seen and heard.  Think about that journey back to the hills and fields and sheep.  It was still dark.  It was still dangerous.  The situation around them had not changed.  Their circumstances did not immediately get better, but their hearts were filled with joy so they could keep going.  So we see here that joy doesn’t mean everything will go well, and it doesn’t mean everything will immediately get better.  Joy comes into darkness and while it doesn’t always remove our pain, doubt, or fear, it does give us what we need to keep going. 

We have all seen the images of children receiving OCC boxes and the joy on their faces.  The joy in receiving that gift did not remove the hardships that they faced.  They still battle hunger, sickness, and violence.  Their lives are still difficult and painful, but in the midst of it, they have found a joy that helps them keep going.  For these children, and the shepherds, joy is simply the reminder that we are not alone and that we are not forgotten.  Joy comes is in knowing that God is with us. 

When the shepherds made their journey to Bethlehem, they found a baby, and while they didn’t know exactly who, that child was, they did know that the message they heard from the angels had been confirmed.  God had sent a savior and God shared that news with them.  They had not been forgotten.  In a world where shepherds were often overlooked and forgotten, God had not only remembered them, but included them in the event.  The joy they found in the baby is the joy of knowing that God is with us, and that God is working in us, and in the world around us.  This is what helped them keep going in the darkness. 


The more we are able to hear God’s word speaking to our lives, the more we walk with Jesus and see the power of God moving in our lives, and the more we are able to see God at work in the world around us, the more we find joy, because like the shepherds, we realize that we have not been forgotten.  God is with us.  God is speaking to us.  God is working in us.  God is using us in the world.  It is in knowing that we are not alone, and that we are not forgotten, that fills us with joy.  The God of the universe has come for us, for you and for me.  This joy doesn’t always take our problems away, but it brings a light that helps us through them.   

Joy comes in knowing we are not alone and forgotten by God, but joy also comes when we come together in community.  Part of the joy the shepherds experienced came when they gathered with Mary and Joseph.  They were able to see the people God was using to bring the savior into the world, and what an encouragement it must have been for them to see two ordinary people.  They were in a stable, not a home or an Inn where the shepherds would not have been welcome.  While coming together gave the shepherds joy, think of what it must have done for Mary and Joseph. 

Up until this point, Mary and Joseph had been alone in their journey.  They knew what was going on and what God was doing, but other than a few family members, no one else did.  I have to believe that there were days during those long 9 months when they must have doubted that God’s message was true.  I’m sure they must have struggled to believe what they had heard so long ago.  Alone in Bethlehem, Mary and Joseph were filled with doubts and fears about their child and life, but when the shepherds suddenly appeared and told them what the angels had said, it was confirmation that what God was doing was real.  The presence of the shepherds must have given Mary and Joseph great joy. 

Joy is experienced most powerfully when we come together, which is why it is so important for us to gather together during this holiday season and make sure we invite others to join us.  For many people, the holidays are not joyful times.  The pain of loss, the grief of broken families, the financial struggles people face, and the reality of loneliness, is all magnified during this season, and the antidote to all of this is the joy we can experience when we come together.  When we reach out to people in any way, we are sharing joy because we are reminding them that they are not alone.  Sending a note, sharing a plate of cookies, giving a simple gift to someone who might be feeling forgotten, is a powerful gift of joy, because it tells people they are not alone and they are not forgotten. 

My very first Christmas as a pastor was spent in Altoona, and my closest family was in Lancaster.  Christmas Eve that year was on a Friday, which meant Christmas was on Saturday and I had to be in town for worship on Sunday, so I wasn’t able to celebrate Christmas until Monday.  Christmas Day I was prepared to be alone.  I was really ok with it, and not feeling too sorry for myself, when my neighbors called me and said, come to our house for dinner and we will not take no for an answer.  So I walked over and experienced a deep sense of joy because I wasn’t alone.

In so many ways, this is the power of our Christmas Dinner.  While many people might think the gift of that day is the food (and the pies all of you will make!), the real gift of the day is the joy we are able to share by simply reminding people they are not alone.  The people who deliver the meals often tell us that the people who receive them say, you are the first person I have talked to today.  The gift isn’t the meal, it is the joy that person feels in knowing that they are not forgotten and alone.  Many of the people who eat with us in the dining room don’t have any other place to go, so the gift isn’t the food, it is the joy they find because they are not alone. 

If you have never volunteered for the Christmas Dinner, I want to invite you to be part of it this year.  Take an hour or two out of your day to share the real gift of Jesus, which is the joy that we can share with others.  You can give just a few hours of your day, just about any time during the afternoon or evening, and the gift you receive will be greater than the gift you give because you will also find joy.  Joy is expanded and experienced when we come together. 

The last thing we learn about joy from the Shepherds is that the only appropriate response to joy, beyond sharing it, is to worship.  Everyone in the Christmas story who was filled with joy ended up worshipping God.  It said that the shepherds glorified and praised God for all they had experienced.  They found great joy when they found Jesus, and their response was to worship God.  When the Wisemen arrived, and found Jesus, they also worshipped, it says they bowed downed and worshipped the New Born King. 

Corporate worship, when we come together to sing our praises to God, is important because it is an opportunity for us to not only worship, but also share our hope and love and joy with one another.  We are working hard to make sure that every person who comes to worship here on Christmas Eve experiences great joy.  From donkeys and sheep, to special music, to simple songs and candles, we want everyone in our community to feel the hope, love, and joy of Jesus.  We need your help to share this joy, which is why we provided you a card last week to invite someone to worship with you.  We have more cards, or a generic invitation card available in the lobby.  Joy leads to worshipping together, and we need to invite others to join us. 

The second part of worship that we cannot forget is personal, it is humbling ourselves before Jesus, like the Wisemen who bowed before Jesus and offered him gifts.  The worship God desires isn’t always joyful songs of praise, and it isn’t always large gatherings where we proclaim our love, and it is not always the gifts we give like gold, frankincense and myrrh.  Many times the worship God wants is the silent, personal moments when we reflect on God’s love for us seen in Jesus, and give him the gift of our hearts. 

There is a beautiful Christmas carol called, in the bleak mid-winter and one of the verses says it best.
What can I give him, poor as I am?  
If I were a shepherd, I would bring a lamb. 
If I were a Wiseman, I would do my part.  
Yet what I can I give him, give my heart.  
That is what God ultimately wants when we come to worship him, our heart.  A simple turning of our hearts to God. 
In the middle of all that, people who came to worship Jesus as a baby-sat Mary.  It says she watched it all and pondered these things in her heart.  She silently reflected on all she had seen and heard.  This too is worship.  Can we find moments when we can be silent before God and ponder what the story of Jesus’ birth is all about, and what it means for our lives?  Can we reflect on how the love of God, given in Jesus, is always more than enough to forgive us and set us free?  Can we give thanks that this story tells us that we are not forgotten, we are not alone, and that we are loved unconditionally, so there is always hope for our future? 

Joy is a gift that doesn’t always take away our pain, it doesn’t always solve our problems, and it doesn’t always fill our emptiness, but it does give us what we need to keep going.  Joy is a light that shines into our darkness and helps us keep walking through it.  Our response to this joy is to humble ourselves and worship God, and it is to share this joy with others. 


Next Steps
A Journey Toward Joy
1.  Read the words to these Christmas carols and identify the source of joy and our appropriate response. 
Away in a Manger
Little Town of Bethlehem
In the Bleak Mid-winter

2. How can you share this joy with someone who is feeling alone or forgotten? 

3. Joy is experienced in community.  Identify which Christmas Eve service you will attend and invite someone to sit with you. 

4. Share the joy of Jesus on Christmas Day by signing up to volunteer at our Christmas Day Dinner. 

Monday, December 10, 2018

The Star - LOVE

Last week we were invited to make some time in our busy lives to take a journey.  While we start in places of darkness where we struggle with doubt, fear, failure, and depression, the light that appeared when Jesus was born leads us to places of hope because that light tells us that our lives and our world can get better.  The Wisemen followed that star because it told them that a king had been born in Israel, who was so great, and whose kingdom would be so good, that the heavens proclaimed his arrival.  The Wisemen followed the star with the hope of finding a better life, and a better world, because of the greatness of this new king. 

We still follow that light, which is the light and light of Jesus, because we know that the life he offers is better than anything we can or will find in this world.  No matter how dark things seem appear in our lives, and in our community, and in the world around us, the light of Jesus life and love gives us hope that things can get better.  So the Wisemen set out on a journey, but it didn’t take a week, or a month, or even a year, it was a long journey that required patience, perseverance and commitment, but they kept going because they had this light of hope.

I hope this past week we have allowed God’s light to shine into our darkness to bring hope.  With the light of Jesus, with the understanding that God is always with us, our lives can get better – even if our situation doesn’t immediately improve, our lives can get better.  No matter what we are going through, knowing that God is with us can give us strength and peace, which makes things better.  Today, our journey continues, and to see where it leads us we once again need to go back to the star and ask an important question.   Why did God put a new star in the sky on the night Jesus was born? 

Did God put the star there just as a message and guide for the Wisemen?  If God did it just for them, what an amazing gift, but maybe the star appeared because this work of God was so great that the heavens simply had to tell the story.  Have you ever been so excited about something that you just had to tell someone?  Have you ever gotten a message that was so good that you just had to share it? The bible says the heavens proclaim the glory of God.  Maybe the coming of the Messiah was so great an event that the heavens simply had to tell this story.  Either way, the work of God was on display for all the world to see, and the reason God shared it was because God loves the world.  John 3:16 says, God so loved the world that He gave his one and only son.  It was God’s love that sent Jesus, so it was God’s love that put the star in the sky to tell the world that the Messiah, the son of God, had come. 

This morning we sang that love came down at Christmas, and it did, literally in the person of Jesus, but God’s love has been present in our world from the beginning of creation.  The world was created in love.  God didn’t create the heavens and earth because he was bored.  It wasn’t a class assignment, science experiment, or an accident.  The world was created in love and we know that because at the end of each day of creation God stopped and said, this is good.  God created the world in love and then God loved the world.  Every star was created in love, and this special star that leads us to Jesus, also leads us to the knowledge of God’s love for each and every one of us. 

But the love of God is not like any other kind of love we experience because God’s love is unconditional, undeserved, and unearned.  The Wisemen didn’t do anything to earn God’s love, they didn’t do anything special to deserve or receive God’s love, and they weren’t required to do anything in response to God’s love.  God’s love is unique in this way and because of its power, God’s love can change our hearts and lives.  Nothing more is needed.  God’s love is enough. 

If we keep walking with God and allowing God’s love to shine into our hearts and lives, we will find that God’s love is enough.  It is enough to forgive our sin.  It is enough to ease our pain.  It is enough to fill the void of loss and heal our broken relationships.  It is simply enough, if we will allow it to shine into our hearts and lives, if we will open our hands and hearts to receive it. 
Joseph was a man who was in need of God’s love.  He was engaged to Mary and his life looked like it was going in a good direction when out of the blue Mary told him that she was pregnant with God’s son.  I can’t begin to imagine the pain that Joseph must have felt in that moment.  There was the pain of betrayal, because Mary’s story was hard to believe.  There was the pain of loss, because his dreams for the future were now broken and gone.  There was the pain of fear, because this news was going to get around town and Joseph’s own reputation was going to suffer.  The world as Joseph knew it had come crashing down around him and he was afraid, and yet what he found was that God’s love was enough. 

In a dream, this is what God said to him, Matthew 1:20b-21.  It was God’s love that reached out to Joseph to calm his fears, assure him of a good future, and show him his own place in God’s plan for the world.  God’s love was enough for Joseph, and it filled his heart and his life.  God’s love allowed Joseph to step out from his fear and into the future God had for him.  God’s love helped move him from darkness to light.  It was enough.

God’s love is always enough to move us from darkness to light.  No matter what we are going through, no matter how dark our present or future seems, the light of God’s love is enough because God’s love for us is deep and wide and high and strong.  God’s love is present today, it was there yesterday, and it will fill our tomorrow.  God’s love for us can never be shaken and it can never be broken.  This is what the Apostle Paul says about the love of Christ.  Romans 8:35-39 

Notice that God’s love does not depend on our situation, our response, our worthiness, our faith, or our actions, the love of God simply comes into our lives because God loves, and God loves us.  If we keep walking with God and allowing the light of God to shine into our lives, we will find that God’s love is enough, in fact it is more than enough. 
God’s love is more than enough to forgive.  It is more than enough to heal relationships.  It is more than enough to give us hope for the future.  It is more than enough to fill our lives with a sense of meaning and purpose no matter where we are or what we are doing.  It is more than enough, and the reason God gives us an abundance of His love is so that we would have enough to share with others.  God’s love flows into our lives and it is God’s plan that this same love then flows out of us to touch the lives of others. 

God created the world because God wanted to share his love.  As children created in the image of God, part of our DNA is to share God’s love with others.  When we allow God to truly love us, we find that slowly God’s love flows through us into world.  John, the disciple whom Jesus loved more than any other, put it this way.
1 John 4:7-12

Joseph allowed the love of God to flow into his life.  Joseph followed God’s word and allowed God’s love to flow into Mary’s life, he took her as his wife.  Joseph loved her and loved the child she carried.  Joseph cared for Mary, led her on a journey to Bethlehem because she was now part of his family, and then he protected her during a dangerous time that followed.  Joseph took Mary and Jesus to Egypt in order to escape the persecution of King Herod, and then Joseph led Mary and Jesus back to Nazareth, where he provided for them a good home.  God’s love was more than enough for Joseph, it spilled over to Mary and Jesus. 

God’s love is more than enough for us as well.  There is more than what we need for the forgiveness of our sin, so we are able to forgive others.  There is more than enough for the healing of our broken hearts, so we can reach out and offer healing in our relationships with others.  There is more than enough to fill our lives with hope and purpose, so we can share that hope with others.  God’s love is not just enough, it is more than enough, which means we can share it with others.  So we need to ask ourselves:
Who needs the love of God that only we have to offer? 
In all of our lives there are people that God wants to love and he wants to love them through us.  Who has God brought into our lives that needs to know that God loves them?  Who needs to know that God’s love can give them hope for a better life?  I want to invite you to think of a friend, neighbor, coworker, or even a family member that may need an invitation to experience the love of Jesus.  Can we allow God’s love to flow through us and simply invite them to attend Christmas Eve worship with us?  Don’t simply ask them to attend, invite them to come and sit with you so that the love of God can flow from your life into theirs.  Maybe this invitation card can help heal relationships and bring families together.  By sharing this card we are sharing the love and light of Jesus. 

Studies show that most people will attend worship if they are simply asked by someone they know and love.  Can we allow the love of God to flow from our lives into the lives of others?  Can we allow God’s love to flow through us to those people in need in other places of the world, like Venezuela?   You may have read in the bulletin this morning that our Christmas Eve Offering this year is going to a church and community in Venezuela.  The reason we chose this mission is simply because of the overflow of God’s love. 

A few years ago, God’s love some ballplayers from the State College Spikes moved through some members of our church.  They reached out to these players to offer love and support and in the process, they began to find out just how difficult life was at home for these players’ families.  Many of them came from Venezuela where life was, and still is, very difficult.  When we see pictures of Venezuela, it doesn’t look like the poverty and hopelessness we see in other parts of the world, but as we listened to these players talk, our hearts were moved.  This is what we heard and learned. 

The world health organization has declared Venezuela to be in a food and medical care crisis, which means there is not enough food or medical care for the people.  Over the past few years, the food shortages have been so widespread and severe that the average person in Venezuela has lost 24 pounds due to hunger.  The inflation rate is in the millions which means that people are not able to buy some of the basic necessities of life.  For example, it is more economical for people to use their money as toilet paper than to use it to buy toilet paper.  For us, this would be like having 2 squares of toilet paper cost more than $1, so it would be cheaper to use the dollar bill as toilet paper.  This is the effect of hyper-inflation.

The economic breakdown of the country means there is often no electricity, which means there is not always clean or running water.  There wasn’t an earthquake or typhoon that destroyed communities and drew the attention of the world to the needs of these people, this has been a very slow economic, social and political breakdown of a nation that has left millions of people hungry, hurting and hopeless.  But God’s love started to flow into these Venezuelan ballplayers, and then God’s love developed deeper friendships, and then God’s love developed a process for us to securely send food, water filtration systems, daily hygiene supplies, and even medicine to those in need.  This year we want to support this work and as a congregation reach out to the people in Maracay, Venezuela, and provide them with what we can so God’s love to flow into their community. 

All of the money we give as a church on Christmas Eve, and all the money directed to this offering, is going to be used to buy and ship resources that the people of this community have told us they need.  Literally, the pastor and the people of this church gave us a list of what they need.  This is truly an opportunity for us to share God’s love from person to person, family to family, and church to church.  This is our opportunity to give to a community who is struggling to stay at home and to stay together.  This is an opportunity for us to say to God and the world that God’s love is MORE than enough for us - which is why we are giving what we have and what we can to those in need. 

This week, I invite you to keep going on this Advent journey.  Allow the love of God to fill you with light and hope.  Allow the love of God to be more than enough for whatever it is you need.  Allow the love of God to flow from you to those who need the love of God around you.  Allow the love of God to move you to give out of the abundance of what you have to those who are in need.  We can do this because truly, the love of God is more than enough. 

Next Steps
The Star – LOVE

1. Take time each day to read one of these passages about the love of God.
Romans 8:31-39
1 John 4:7-21
Isaiah 43:1-5
Zephaniah 3:14-17
Ephesians 2:4-10
Matthew 1:18-25 (God’s love for Joseph)
Luke 1:39-56 (God’s love for Mary)

2.  Where do you need the love of God to fill your life with light and hope?  Ask God to fill you with His love.

3.  Who can you share God’s love with by inviting them to join you in worship on Christmas Eve?  Pray for this person/family and then share today’s invitation card with them.

4. In what ways can you share the love of God with those in need in our community?  How can you and your family share God’s love as part of this year’s Community Christmas Dinner?  Sign up in the lobby or online.  Help is still needed in the kitchen and dining room!

5. Set aside money each week to help share the love of God with those in need in Venezuela.  Offerings can be given on Christmas Eve, or anytime by marking your gift Christmas Eve Offering.  You can also give online.

Saturday, December 1, 2018

The Star - HOPE

Some of my best memories of Christmas don’t have anything to do with gifts that I received on Christmas morning, in fact, I can’t remember most of them, except that there was always socks and underwear.  The best memories I have center on trips, and while we didn’t travel much over the holidays, there was that one Christmas we went to my grandmother’s house.  To be honest, I don’t remember it, but it is permanently etched in my mind because of the pictures we have.
That's me in the back!

And I still have that satin jacket!
In college, I was the one who travelled home for the holidays, and that journey was always filled with great anticipation because I got to spend time with my family and friends.  But the Christmas journey I loved the most was the one my grandmother would make to come and visit us for the holidays.  She would usually arrive just a few days before Christmas, often the day that school let out, so her arrival meant Christmas was close.  I always looked forward to that visit.

This year, I want to invite you to take a journey.  I know your season is already filled with shopping, decorating, and baking, and I know you have to make time for wrapping gifts, planning dinners, and attending concerts, and I know you may already be stressed out about how you are going to get it all done, and paid for, but I want to invite you to add one more thing to your list.  I want to invite you on a journey because Christmas is all about a journey.

The story of Jesus’ birth is filled with people who were willing to make a journey.  Mary and Joseph took a trip from Nazareth to Bethlehem.  Shepherds travelled from the open fields to a tiny manger, and Wisemen took a long journey from a distant country to the land of Israel.  And let’s not forget that Jesus took his own journey, a journey from heaven to earth, because the baby born in Bethlehem was the God of the universe who came to this world in the flesh and blood of a human being. 

Christmas is all about a journey, and so today I want to invite all of us to take a journey that can not only enrich this season, but might just change our lives, and the lives of our family, and community, and world, because this journey might call us to embrace new ideas, it might change some of our holiday traditions, and it might create some new ones.  The journey I want to invite you on will lead us to the fullness of life God has for us, because the journey will lead us to finding hope, love, joy, and peace.

For this journey we don’t need a map, we don’t need to set a destination in our gps, we simply need to follow the star.   Not any star, but THE star.  In the gospel of Matthew it says that when Jesus was born a star appeared in the sky (Matthew 2:2).  When the light of this star appeared, it brought with it the hope that life could be better because it signaled the birth of a new king, a mighty king, whose reign would be so great that it would literally give light to the world.  This news, this star, gave hope to the Wisemen.

Hope is always that beacon of light shining in the darkness saying things will get better.  The Wisemen set out on a journey to find a king who they believed would usher in in a better kingdom.  They started with hope, they started with the expectation that the world was going to be a better place because of this new king, but their journey began in the dark.

We don’t see stars during the day, but when it is dark.  When it is really dark, stars appear.  So it was in darkness that the Wisemen saw this new star.  It was in darkness that they received the hope that a new king had come to bring about a better world.  It is always in the darkness that light shines the brightest, and it is always in darkness that hope appears.  What is the darkness that you are living in today?

For each of us, this Advent and Christmas journey begins in our own darkness.  It begins where we are feeling overwhelmed?  It begins where we are filled with sorrow, overcome by fear, or looking for a new beginning?  Where, in our own lives, do we need to see that things can get better?  Where do we need to see that things can improve?  Wherever we are today, whatever darkness we experience, is exactly where our journey needs to begin. 

The invitation to come and experience the light of God’s hope always begins right where we are.  The Wisemen started their journey at work.  They were studying the skies, which was part of their job.  The same was true for the shepherds.  They started their journey at work, they were in the fields keeping watch over their flocks at night – in the dark once again – doing their job.  Mary and Joseph started their journey in the course of their daily lives, because that is where God called them to be part of his plan to bring the Messiah into the world.  Each one of them started right where they were, in their own darkness of doubt, fear, sin, shame, brokenness, pain and disappointment.  They all started in darkness.  We all start this advent journey in darkness. 

In fact, we can’t see the hope of God’s light until we acknowledge the darkness.  We can’t understand the hope God wants to give us until we can name those places in our hearts, and lives, where we struggle to see new life, and a better future.  Too often, during this season of Christmas, we think we have to ignore all our sorrow, and pain, and paint a smile on our face for the world to see, but that is not what this season is about.  Christmas is about a journey from those dark places to places of hope, so we start right where we are.

We start in our sin, hoping for forgiveness and freedom.
We start in broken relationship, hoping for a love that will heal.
We start in crushed dreams, hoping for a new vision.
We start in the darkness of failure, hoping for a new beginning.
We start in the darkness of fear, doubt, debt, loss and pain, hoping that God can lead us to the light of a better life. 

The good news is that our journey starts right where we are, we don’t have to clean up our lives, or work things out before we start, we can start today, but the bad news is that we aren’t going to get to our destination today.  This journey will take some time, which means we are going to have to be patient, and maybe at times, be still, and wait.  None of us like to wait, but the journey God invites us to take with him, this journey of finding hope in the darkness, will require us to go slow, take steady steps, and stop often so that we can look to God to make sure we are following his way.

The Wisemen didn’t make their journey overnight, in fact, some scholars believe their journey took several years.  Imagine the patience they had to have, the tenacity to keep going, and not give up.  And they couldn’t travel during the day when they could move quickly because they needed to follow the star, which meant moving slowly at night.  We cannot rush this journey, we need to learn to go slow, and trust that each step we take with God will lead us closer to the hope, love, joy and peace God has for us.

The steps along this journey are simple ones.  We talk about them often.  We pray.  We worship God in our hearts, and lives, and we worship God as a church.  We serve.  We study and learn.  We read God’s word.  We give.  We love.  This journey is not filled with difficult steps but faithful ones we can all take, but steps we need to take daily.  This journey calls for commitment. 

The Wisemen made a commitment when they followed the star.  They took all they needed for a long trip, as well as gifts to give the King.  I never thought about it before, but the Wisemen had gifts to give the new king because they fully expected to find him.  They knew their hope of finding a king would be fulfilled before they left home, which is why they took gifts with them.  That is the kind of commitment we need to make to this journey.  We take this journey fully expecting that we will find God along the way because God has promised to reveal himself to us.  The Bible says when we search for God with all our heart we will find him.  If we set out on this journey to find the presence and power of God – God will light our way and guide us to him.   

Today I want to invite you on a journey, a journey to a better life, a life lived in the light of God’s hope and a journey to finding Jesus.  We start in our darkness, right where we are, and we commit to a journey that will seem slow at times, but with each step, we will find more of the light and life God has for us.

If we commit to this journey, the hope we find will not just shine in our lives, but through us it will shine into the lives of others.  So as you commit to this journey, I want to invite you to also go to the dark places of this world, and offer the hope, and light, of Jesus.  Where can you go, and where can your family go, during this holiday season, to be a light of hope for those living in darkness?  Can you adopt a child, or a family, and begin to change their situation?  Can you give to toys for tots, reach out to a neighbor who lives alone, visit in the nursing home, or give to the food bank? As we find the light of hope we need to find ways to share it with those living in darkness.  Find a new tradition for you and your family where you can be the light of Christ shining in the darkness.

I  know it is a busy season, I know you are already stressed out, and feeling like you cannot add one more thing to your life, but please, accept this invitation, and a take a journey with God that will lead you to finding hope, love, joy and peace.  Take this journey, commit to it, and each day you will be able to experience the power of God, and feel the presence of God, and see the true light of God’s hope.  Take this journey and each day we will be come closer and closer to the light and power and love of Jesus.


Next Steps
THE STAR ~ HOPE

Identify the dark places in your life that need the light of God.

Read one passage each day and reflect on the hope it brings.
Isaiah 9:2-7
Isaiah 11:10-11
Isaiah 40:1-11,
Isaiah 60:1-7
John 1:1-8

Commit to these steps of faith during the Advent Season:
Prayer, Worship, Service, Giving, Loving

Look for the dark places in our community.
Ask God to show you how you can bring the light and hope of Jesus.

Commit to one activity this month that will help shine the light of Christ.

Saturday, November 24, 2018

Exponential Gratitude

I am thankful that once again this year we have this extra Sunday between Thanksgiving and the beginning of Advent, because it gives us a chance to just breathe deeply before the crush of holiday activities.  Next Sunday we will begin an advent journey that will lead us to finding the hope, love, joy and peace that comes with the light of Jesus, and I hope you will join us and invite others to be part of this advent-ure, but for now, we can simply pause for a moment and give thanks. 

What are you thankful for?  I hope you were able to think of 2 or 3 things immediately when I said that, and I hope that you took some time these past few days to give thanks for family, food, friends, faith, fun and all that God has given us to fill our lives.  Here is the amazing thing about gratitude – once we start to practice it, it grows exponentially.  Once we start giving thanks intentionally and consistently – the more we see in our lives and world for which we can give thanks.  Gratitude really does grow exponentially, and God made it this way because gratitude literally rewires our brains so that we become more and more grateful. 

Studies have shown that even a simple gratitude exercise, like writing down what we are thankful for, builds lasting neural sensitivity to more positive thinking.  This means that the more we practice gratitude, the more we default to thinking positively and seeing more things for which we are grateful.  And the benefits are long lasting.  A Harvard Medical School study said “in positive psychology research, gratitude is strongly and consistently associated with greater happiness.  Gratitude helps people feel more positive emotions, relish good experiences, improve their health, deal with adversity, and build strong relationships.”  Gratitude grows exponentially, and it improves our lives dramatically. 

Last year in a series on the good life, we learned from research by Dr. Robert A. Emmons that people who kept a weekly list of what they were grateful for ended up being healthier.  They exercised more, had fewer physical problems, and illnesses, felt better about their lives, and were more optimistic.  Young adults who kept lists of things they were grateful for reported being more alert, enthusiastic, determined, and attentive to what was going on around them, and they helped others more often.  Children who practiced giving thanks daily had more positive attitudes toward school and their families.  And listen to this, a study done on people who were sick, both physically and emotionally, found that those who intentionally gave thanks for 21 days ended up with better moods, a greater sense of feeling connected to others, and they slept better.  They were healthier.  Gratitude doesn’t just grow exponentially in our hearts and minds, helping us see more things to be thankful for, it expands outward and improves every area of our life.

Learning to be grateful helped people place less importance on material goods; they were less likely to judge in terms of possessions accumulated; they were less envious of others, and they were more likely to share what they had with those in need.  Less greedy, less envious, more giving; practicing gratitude makes us more and more like Jesus.  Every time I read an article or hear about a study about the power of gratitude, I am amazed at how something so simple can make such a profound and lasting difference.  And all we have to do is take one small step toward gratitude and God will take it from there.  I like to think that this is what happened with King David when he wrote Psalm 103.

As we read this psalm, I get the feeling that David just wanted to say something simple, like thank you God, but once he said that, his mind began to go from one thing to the next.  His gratitude started to grow, and then it was like a floodgate opened up and his gratitude for God grew exponentially.  Psalm 103:1-22

David starts by saying don’t forget all that God has done for you.  Don’t forget to say thank you to God for his forgiveness, and then he adds, and for his healing, and because he rescues us from adversity, and how he satisfies us with so many good things, and how he works for justice and righteousness for all those who are oppressed, and for his hand that has guided us since the days of Moses, and for his compassion and love, and once again for his forgiveness, because God literally removes our sin from us, which means there is no sorrow or shame connected to our sin – forever.  And we need to give thanks that God formed us, which means that God knows we are weak at times, and frail, and need his help.  And we need to give thanks that God’s love is always there for us, and how he is faithful to all his promises.  And if that isn’t enough, David goes on and says, and we need to give thanks that God is eternal in heaven, and that all of creation, heaven and earth, will worship him. 

David started with a simple – let’s thank God, and that step toward gratitude exploded in David’s heart, and mind, and life, and it grew exponentially.  And this is what happens when we practice gratitude – it grows in us, and it changes us, and it can change every one of us because gratitude doesn’t depend on everything in our lives going well.  Gratitude is not just saying thank you when we get some big gift, it is appreciating what we see in life as being meaningful.  We can train ourselves to constantly be grateful for the little things we have and value in life.  We can train ourselves to give thanks to God, daily. 

Each one of us is different, which means, we each might grow in gratitude in different ways, so let me give a few different ways we can learn to build gratitude in our lives. 

1. Keep A Gratitude Journal. 
Write down what you are thankful for.  Keep a gratitude journal or list and every day write down what you are thankful for.  The more we see what is on that list, the more we will see what can be placed on that list.  It was this simple practice that researchers often used in their gratitude studies, and it was this simple practice that led to people feeling happier, healthier, and having stronger relationships with family, friends, and coworkers.



2. Take Time To Rest And Reflect.
Many times, in order to see what we can add to that gratitude list we have to slow down and take time to rest and reflect.  We need time and space to see what we have been given by God, to see the blessings of our lives, and to have our hearts opened by God.  God built rest and reflection into our lives for a reason when he gave us the Sabbath.  When God rested at the end of each day, what he did was reflect on his work and call it good.  He saw the value of it, he gave thanks for it.  If we take time rest and reflect, we will being to see all that we have been given and give thanks. 

3. Power Down And Turn Off
In order to give thanks, we might need to power down our computers and tablets and turn off our phones.  When we can disconnect from all that tries to distract us in this world, we are able to see the gifts and opportunities God has given us that can enrich our lives.

4. Live Simply
It might seem counter-intuitive, but sometimes the less we have - the more we have to be thankful for, because we begin to see those things that are really important, and those things that really matter. This is an important practice to keep in mind as we move into this holiday season.  If we can live simply through the holidays, and maybe spend less with our money, we might be able to give more of what is really valuable, like our time and service.  When we see what is truly valuable in life and go after that, we will appreciate so much more, and give thanks.

5. Look For The Positive In The Negative
While we don’t give thanks for the bad things that happen, within every difficult situation there is something positive we can find.  The Bible says that God works for the good in all things.  Not all things are good, but God works for the good in all things, which means there is something positive in all things, and if we will look for the positive, we will find it and when we find it we can be thankful. 
The devastating fires we have seen in CA are not good, but we have seen people give, and share with those in need, and we have heard victims of the fires who have lost everything give thanks that they have what is ultimately valuable, their lives and families.

6. Share With Others
You can take this two ways.  We can share what we have with others, that will often make us more grateful for what we have, but what I really mean here is that we need to make it a priority to share with others what you are thankful for.  Ask your children, or grandchildren, each night what they are thankful for as you put them to bed.  At a family meal each week ask people what they are thankful for.  Don’t make this a yearly Thanksgiving tradition but a weekly family tradition.  Maybe you can post on social media each day one thing you are thankful for, or make it a habit to do a Thankful Tuesday and post what you thankful for near the beginning of each week to help others see what they have as well.  The more we share, the more our gratitude grows and the more we help others learn to be grateful.  This is another way gratitude grows exponentially. 

7. Write A Letter
Let me close with a quote from a study by a psychologist at the University of Pennsylvania.  He found that when a person wrote and delivered a letter of thanks to someone they had not previously thanked, this what happened:  Participants immediately exhibited a HUGE increase in happiness scores.  This impact was GREATER than that from any other intervention, with benefits LASTING for a month.  In other words, writing and delivering a letter of thanks increased gratitude exponentially. 

Maybe that is what David was trying to do in Psalm 103, write a letter of thanks to God.  Maybe the letter we need to write this week is to God.  Maybe the letter we need to write is to our parents, our spouse, our children, a teacher who made an impact in our lives, a friend we have never properly thanked, a neighbor who inspires us, a veteran who has served, a manager, a coworker, or an employee.  Is there someone we need to thank for their role in our lives that we have never thanked?  If we can write, and deliver that letter, it might make all the difference in our lives, and our future.

As we prepare for this busy and full holiday season, what can keep us calm, joyful, focused and faithful is allowing gratitude to grow exponentially in our lives.  It can absolutely happen because God wired us in such a way that if will just take that first step toward gratitude and find some way, a new way, another way to practice gratitude, it will grow in our lives exponentially. 



Next Steps
Read Psalm 103. 

List all the things that for which David was giving thanks. 
Review this list every day to spark your own gratitude.

Choose one of the following to help cultivate gratitude this week.

Start A Gratitude Journal
Take Time To Rest And Reflect
Power Down And Turn Off
Simplify Your Life
Look For The Positive In The Negative
Share Your Gratitude With Others
Write A Letter Of Thanks

Join us next week as we begin an Advent-ure, following The Star.
Invite Someone To Join You!

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Exponential Giving

This morning, as you look at the shoe boxes collected right now, how many lives do you see changed?  If I told you there were 257 boxes here right now, how many lives do you see changed?  If you said 257, you still haven’t grasped this idea of living exponentially.  When we live exponentially, we see God taking our lives, our opportunities, and yes our gifts, and multiplying them for his purpose, and power, and kingdom.  We usually think too small.  While we think addition, God thinks multiplication.  So these 257 boxes won’t just touch the lives of 257 children, but 257 families, which might have 3 people per family, which would be 771 people, who will share their story of God’s love with 10 people, that’s 7,710, who then share the story of God’s love with 10 people, now we are at 77,100 people.

But even that might be thinking too small because each box might change 1 child in a village of 100 people, so now 25,700 people are touched by God’s love and they each travel to a village of 100 so now 2, 570,000 people’s lives have been touched by the love of God.  But, what if, just one child was to become an evangelist like Billy Graham, and another a nun like mother Theresa, and a third one becomes a crusader like Nelson Mandela? The number of people whose lives might be changed by just these 3 children would be in the 100’s of millions and then that number would grow exponentially as people are inspired and changed by their example.  We think addition, God thinks multiplication.  In these boxes we see one child changed, but God sees the world-changing power of giving.  If you want to put together a shoe-box, you can do it online here.



Exponential living begins when we start to see what is possible if we will live sold-out lives for God, and when we make the most of every opportunity we are given.  Today, I want us to focus on the exponential power we can see in our own lives, and in our world, when we start to give the way God calls us to give.  When we give, God doesn’t add our gifts together, God multiplies them so even more is available for God’s work.  To learn why and how to give, we are going to look at a parable of Jesus found in Matthew 25. 

This is a long story, and I encourage you take time to read it, but let me just tell you what it says.  A rich man was going away on a journey, but before he left he entrusted all he had to his servants.  To one he gave 5 talents, to one he gave 2 talents, and to one he gave 1 talent.  Now the word talent is the same word we might use to talk about our gifts, skills, and ability, but it was also a unit of measure that was often connected to gold and silver, so a talent was also seen as a type of currency.  So a talent here is the combination of one’s gifts, skills, and abilities, as well as financial resources.

Once the man gave away all he had to his servants, he left, but when he returned, each servant had to give an account of what they did with the talents they were given.  The one who got 5 talents doubled that amount and made 5 more.  The one who got 2 talents also doubled it and made 2 more, but it says that the one who received the one talent was afraid, so he buried what he had in order to give it back in full.  And this is what the rich man said to that servant, you wicked and lazy servant.  These are harsh words, but they show us just how seriously Jesus takes the issue of stewardship, because that is what this parable is about.  It is about stewardship, our stewardship of God’s resources. 

There are three big ideas in this parable that we need to understand if we want to experience the exponential life God has for us, and learn the power of giving.  The first has to do with this idea of stewardship:
#1. God Owns Everything.  In this story, it is the rich man who gives his property to the servants.  Matthew 25:14.  The wealth belongs to the man, not the servants.  It all belongs to the rich man.  If we are going to learn how to live, and give, the way God wants us to, then we need to get this idea firmly in our hearts and minds.  What we have does not belong to us – it belongs to God.  Our homes, our cars, our clothes, our TV’s, our investments, and bank accounts don’t belong to us, it all belongs to God, and as God’s children, we are called to use these resources the way God uses His resources.  So what does God do with all his stuff?  He gives it away, he shares it with us.  So the first thing we need to do is make sure that giving is part of our lives.

The reason we give to God is because that reflects what God does with all the wealth of this world.  God gives away all he has, so we need to learn to give.  When we talk about giving a tithe, which means a tenth, or 10%, we are NOT talking about a law to follow in fear of being punished, we are talking about an act that helps us see that everything we have has come from God.  We need to think of our gifts, and tithes, and offerings as a declaration of God’s ownership of all things.

So a question to wrestle with this week is this, what would be different in our lives, and in our giving, if we really believed that God owns everything?  How would this big idea change how we live, what we give, and what we keep for ourselves?  Would we start to give because we realize that it is not ours in the first place?  Would we give more because we want to be more like the God who gives?  Would we give more because we know that this is the kind of life God wants for us, and therefore, the kind of life God will bless?  What would be different in our living, and giving, if we believed that God owns everything?

The second big idea we find in this parable is this:
#2. We will all give an account of what we did with God’s resources.  Matthew 25:19.  Now let’s be clear, the account we will give will not be to the church, or to any person (except maybe your spouse), and it will not even be to the IRS, although they do ask for a lot of information, the account we will give, will be to God, because it all belongs to God.  But we need to understand that we don’t give an account so that God can judge us and punish us, we give an account so God can encourage us and cheer us on.

2 of the 3 servants gave an account of their stewardship, and the rich man cheered them on.  He encouraged them, and honored them.  If we knew God would cheer us on in our giving, would we give more faithfully and joyfully?  Here is the question we need to ask ourselves, How would we live differently, if we knew that we had to give an account, but it wasn’t to an angry judge, but a loving God?

And then the last big idea is this:
#3. When we give faithfully to God, God multiplies our giving.  When the servant with 5 talents used those for the rich man, he doubled what he had.  When the servant with 2 talents used those for the rich man, he doubled what he had.  When we think addition, God thinks multiplication.  When we take what we have, and give it to God, and use if for God’s kingdom, and God’s work, God doesn’t add to it, God multiplies it.

During the time of Elijah the prophet, there was an extreme drought that left many people in need.  God sent Elijah to a small town and told him that a woman there would feed him until the drought was over.  Elijah went and found the woman who was in the process of taking the very last of her flour and oil and making a final meal for herself and her son.  Elijah told her to first make him a small cake, and then to do what she had planned to do.  So the woman took a small amount, from the small amount that she had, and basically gave it away.  She made Elijah a small cake, and then God multiplied it, because she had enough for the next day, and the next, and the next.  It says that she not only fed Elijah, but herself and her family for years.  When we are willing to give to God what belongs to God, God multiplies what we have.  This kind of giving not only blesses us, but others as well, because it multiplies what is available for the work of God in the world.

Now please hear this, giving to God doesn’t mean God will multiply what we have to spend on ourselves, so that we can live extravagantly.  God multiplies what we give, and makes sure we have what we need, and then multiplies the resources available for the work of God in the world.  In other words, our simple gifts to God are blessed, and multiplied.  In time, we find that we have all we need, and God is able to do more and more in this world.  This is our story.

As you heard earlier today, we are celebrating that we are debt free!  This is really a wonderful accomplishment, and we paid off this debt, not by one or two people giving large sums of money, but by all of our faithful gifts and offerings.  The $5, $25, $100, $300 gifts we give each week as a tithe, or offering, has been multiplied though the years so that our mortgage of over $700,000 has been paid off in 10 years.  But then God blessed this giving and multiplied it, because during those same 10 years, we have also spent $480,000 on more work around the church like:
Lighting
Carpet
Electrical Work
Room Remodeling
Sound System Upgrades
Parking Lot Paving
New Heating/ AC Units
New Parsonage
And all of this is outside of what we budgeted each year on building improvements.

But remember, God is a God of multiplication, so during this same time, God multiplied what we gave so that we could be faithful to God’s mission and ministry in the world.  Beyond the missions we support in our budget, over the past 10 years we have been able to send out over $358,000 to help support:
Sierra Leone Churches and Pastors
Belize
UMCOR Disaster Relief
World Refugee Crisis
Ebola
Africa University Scholarships
Mission Trips
Local Mission Work and Care for the Needy

So, in 10 years, our giving to God has been multiplied.  We paid off a mortgage of $700,000 and God more than doubled that as we invested in ministry here and supported missions around the world, all outside of our yearly budgets.  I’ll be honest, I can’t explain this, other than God has taken what we have given and multiplied it, and this is what exponential giving looks like.  When we are faithful stewards of what God gives us, and when we give back to God a portion of what God gives to us, God multiplies it, and God makes more and more available for the work of the church in the community and world.

While we are now living debt free, that doesn’t mean our giving comes to an end, because nothing has changed.  It all still belongs to God, and we will still give an account of how we used God’s resources, and if we will continue to give to God, God will multiply our giving and bless our own lives, as well as our church, and the work we are able to do in our community and world.   So we need to keep giving to God.

If you have never given before, I want to invite you to give today for the first time.  Take this step to exponential living and see what God can begin to do in your life and faith.  The rewards are huge.  You can give online, you can send in money during the week, you can make the commitment and give next week, or you can direct your bank to give to the church, whatever way is good for you to give - you can give.  For more information on giving to Faith Church

And if you are already giving, I want to challenge you to think about giving back to God just a little bit more.  If you give a percentage, like a tithe, remember that 10% was not the maximum, but the minimum, God called for.  Can you give more?  One dollar more per week becomes at least $23,000 over the course of a year.  $100 more per year becomes $44,000, and when that is given to God, it accomplishes more than we ever thought or imagined.  To become this kind of exponential givers, we have to see ourselves as Kingdom Investors, not Earthly Spenders.

We can spend money on a new TV, the latest iphone, or another kitchen appliance or household gadget, or we can invest that money in the work of God’s kingdom.  That money can add a little bit of pleasure to our lives. or it could be used to reach dozens of people in our community for Jesus Christ, and be multiplied by God to bring help, hope, and life to thousands around the world.
We could spend $2 a day to buy a cup of coffee, or we could invest that $2 in the kingdom of God, and have over $45,000 to give to our work in Sierra Leone, or Belize.  While all our giving may seem small, there is no small gift when we give in faith to God.  When we give as God calls us to give, God blesses us exponentially, and God multiplies what we give to bless the world.

Let me leave you with this final thought.  Imagine what Faith Church might look like a year from now, imagine what our community might look like a year from now, and imagine what kind of an impact we could make in the world during the next year if each one of us moved from being an earthly spender, to a kingdom investor.  Think of the amazing, God given, life changing opportunities that would open up before us if we would all step up our giving, because when we give, God takes our gifts and multiplies them, exponentially, so that together we can be blessed and in turn be a blessing.


Next Steps
Exponential Giving

1. Read the parable of the talents - Matthew 25:14-30.
What does this parable tell us about God?  About ourselves?  About what we own?  About the stewardship of our finances, time, and talents?

2. God Owns Everything.
What would be different in your life, and in your giving, if you believed that God really did own everything?
Would you spend less on yourself?
Would you start giving, or give more, to God?
Would you be more generous?

3. We will give an account of what we did with God’s resources (our finances, time, and talents).
What would be different in your life, and in your giving, if you believed that you would have to give an account?
Would you spend less on yourself?
Would you start giving, or give more, to God?
Would you be more generous?
How can knowing God is there to cheer you on help your giving?

4. When we give faithfully to God, God multiplies our giving.
When has God blessed you because of your giving?
How did these blessings help you bless others?
When have you seen God multiply your giving?
How can these stories encourage you to give more faithfully and generously?

5. Commit to stepping up your giving to God and the church.
Start giving faithfully to God’s work at Faith Church?
Increase your giving to Faith Church by 1%.
Set aside money to support special missions during the holiday season?  (Faith Church Christmas Dinner, Faith Church Christmas Eve Offering, Toys for Tots, etc.)