The Direction We Are Moving

The Direction We Are Moving

“Today’s message was written by Dial Hope founder, the Rev. Dr. Roger Kunkel.” -Joe

Listen carefully to these words from Walden by Henry David Thoreau, and think of the last few words of it. “I went into the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to confront only the essential facts of life, and see if I could learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived.”

Friend of Dial Hope, it would be a shock to learn at the end of life that we “had not lived.” But we will come to such a discovery, that we have missed life in its highest sense, “the life which is life indeed,” if we have not had the height experience of knowing God through Jesus Christ and become his disciple. That is the highest prize that life has to offer.

The late Ed Safford shared this quote from Oliver Wendell Holmes: “I find the great thing in this world is not so much where we stand, as in what direction we are moving! To reach the port of heaven, we must sail sometimes with the wind and sometimes against it – but we must sail, and not drift, nor lie at anchor.”

Let us pray: O God, how great Thou art! Walk with us day by day. By your grace enable us to see possibilities rather than problems, windows of opportunity rather than closed doors, persons rather than things, life rather than mere existence. In Jesus name, who came not to make life easy, but to make us equal for life. Amen.

How to be Joyful

How to be Joyful

Sometime back in a Daily Walk devotional, there was an interesting list within a message titled, “How to be Miserable.” Sounds like good reading doesn’t it? Here’s part of the list: “Think about yourself. Talk about yourself. Use “I” as often as possible. Expect to be appreciated. Be suspicious. Be jealous and envious. Be sensitive to slights. Never forgive a criticism. Trust nobody but yourself. Insist on consideration and respect. Never forget a service you have rendered. Do as little as possible for others.”

In his letter to the Philippians, the Apostle Paul seems to give us the opposite advise. How to be joyful. In fact, this has to be one of his most joy-filled letters – in spite of the fact that he is writing from jail!

In chapter 2, Paul writes, “…make my joy complete… Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility regard others as better than yourselves. Look not to your own interests but to the interest of others.”

Something happens when we move beyond our own issues and concerns and reach out to help others. We often have a change of perspective. And as we shift our energy and thoughts away from ourselves, we make room for a deeper joy and fulfillment.

Let us pray: God of Hope, some of us today are hurting very deeply. Some of us can’t even begin to imagine moving beyond the pain of the moment to have enough energy to take on other people’s problems. For those in dire straights, we ask you to meet them at the point of their deepest need. Surround them with your healing grace, and begin to show them the light of a new day. Lead each of us to the point where we are instruments of your peace, fulfilled in your service. For we pray in the name of the One who came that we might have abundant life. Amen.

Easter Dreams

Easter Dreams

In a recent sermon, the Rev. Leonard Sweet wrote, “Because the Good Friday nightmare was transformed into the Easter Dream, the way has been opened for ending all nightmares and incarnating all dreams. The Resurrection means that Christians can expectantly:

– dream of plenty in the midst of poverty;
– dream of compassion in the midst of poverty;
– dream of justice in the midst of inequity;
– dream of holiness in the midst of hell;
– dream of love in the midst of hate.

I thought that was powerful. It reminds me that our hearts and minds and energy follow our dreams. If we have no dreams, our lives become dull. If our dreams are self-centered, then our lives become small and skewed. However, if our dreams are in tune with the love we know in Christ, then our lives become rich with meaning and hope, and everything becomes possible.

May you dream bold dreams, dreams that will make a difference to you and to the world around you.

Let us pray: Give us great dreams, O God, dreams that are worthy of you and the hope you offer to the ends of the earth. Attune our hearts to your, and our life to your life. Through Jesus Christ. Amen.

Stop the World

Stop the World

In the Broadway musical, “STOP THE WORLD, I WANT TO GET OFF,” actor Anthony Newley sang a powerful song: “Once in a Lifetime.” It contains these poignant words: “This is my moment… I’m gonna do great things.”

Sadly, we must confess that we know the empty feeling of “missing our moment,” letting the moment pass. All of us, because of fear or timidity, or insecurity, have let special opportunities, special moments slip by us. Psychologists tell us that if we do not act every time we have this kind of feeling, we are less likely to act later when other such moments present themselves. Each time we fail to act, we become more hardened, more desensitized, more emotionally paralyzed. We trick ourselves by substituting emotion for action, by thinking that just because we felt it, it has been cared for.

How many letters never have been written?
How many phone calls have never been made?
How many compliments have been left unsaid?
How many “I’m sorrys” remain unspoken?
How many “Thank yous” have never been said?
How many “I love yous” are still unexpressed?
How many commitments are still not made?
because we missed our moment!

If there is an emptiness, a void, a vacuum, a hunger in your life, remember: Jesus offers you life. Don’t miss this moment! If there’s any kindness or love you can show, show it now. Seize the moment! Live today fully and make it a masterpiece!

Let us pray: God of love, we know you are always with us and you love us. How patiently you tutor us! Straighten the backbone of our beliefs, strengthen our resolve, move us to action, so that the roots of faith will reach the center of our hearts. Grant us peace that comes from your love…that whether we walk through fields of flowers or stumble along streets of sadness, we will walk beside you. Be close today to those who are experiencing grief or loneliness. Surround the men and women serving our country in Iraq and Afghanistan with your wraparound love. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

Earthly Examples

Earthly Examples

The Apostle Paul wrote, “Follow my example as I follow the example of Christ.”

Early on in life, I looked to my grandfather as a role-model, someone I admired. Not that he was perfect – my grandmother makes it perfectly clear that he was not. But, he obviously cared deeply for others, and he served the Lord with dedication. He never had a lot of money or fine things, but he had a deep love of life itself. And from a young age, he was someone I looked up to, and I often thought, “I want to live like that.”

We all need role-models. Of course, for Christians, Jesus is our ultimate example, but we need other earthly examples too. We need people who are walking this path of faith with us. It is worth considering, who are my role models?

Let us pray: God of all generations, I give you thanks for Popsi – my grandfather, and for the many others who have influenced and shaped my life for the better. We each give you thanks for the positive role-models we’ve had in the past. And we ask that on this journey of life, you would surround us with those who would show us the path and draw us closer to you. Grant us teachers and leaders who are worthy of following. And, grant us wisdom and discernment so we may choose them wisely. Amen.

In Response

In Response

The late humorist and author Lewis Grizzard once told about a time when he was being visited by his minister in the hospital. Grizzard was scheduled to have open-heart surgery the next morning, and he confessed to his pastor that he had not exactly led a virtuous life. He asked if there were still time to repent. The minister looked at his watch and replied, “Yes, but I’d hurry if I were you.”

We can be grateful that God is a God of second chances! In response to that grace may you and I live in such a way that the generosity, compassion, understanding and grace of God flows through us – to the world around us. Remember that you have been blessed in order to be a blessing to others.

Let us pray: God of Grace, thank you for second chances. Thank you for opportunities to start over, to begin again, to live differently. We remember today that life is short – and that there are no guarantees of tomorrow. Help us not to put off another day – what we know we should do today. If there are steps we need to take differently open our eyes to them. We love you, Lord and ask for your grace, mercy and peace to rest on us now. Amen.

Our Resurrection Hope

Our Resurrection Hope

In the first century in the Roman Empire, the early Christians practiced a really interesting custom. They would take laurel wreaths out to their graveyards and place them on the graves. These were the same wreaths that had been used in Greek and Roman culture to crown the victors of athletic contests. For these first Christians, the ritual symbolized their belief that in Christ we have received victory even over the power of death.

Charles Kingsley was a very gifted and beloved Anglican pastor of the 19th century. He was also a well known historian and author. Near the end of his life, both he and his wife lay terminally ill in different rooms of the same hospital. They communicated by writing notes. One day his wife had a message sent to him that read: “My darling, is it cowardly of me to tremble before the unseen reality of death.” He wrote back “Do not be afraid! It will not be dark, because God is light. There will be no loneliness, for Christ will be there.”

I thought that was beautiful. And that is our resurrection hope.

In his first letter to the Corinthians, the apostle Paul wrote:

When the perishable has been clothed with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality, then the saying that is written will come true: “Death has been swallowed up in victory.”

“Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?”

The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.

Therefore, my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor in the Lord is not in vain.”

Let us pray: Eternal God, before whom generations rise and pass away, we thank you that through the resurrection of Jesus you have overcome the powers even of sin and death. Help us to live fully – here and now – trusting that in life and in death we belong to you. Amen

The Power to Change Lives

The Power to Change Lives

In my last year of seminary – one of the last classes I took, was a kind of nuts and bolts class of the ministry – how to make a budget, how to run a session meeting, how to run a stewardship campaign. Just the kinds of things a pastor needs to know before they get out of school and into a church.

At the very end of the class, the professor brought in a retired minister who had years of ministry experience. He was in his 70’s at that time – a lot of wisdom. And he shared with us about the need to persevere and the need to be out visiting people. He covered all the ins and outs the good, the bad and the difficult. And at the very end of his speech, he said, “Here is the most important thing. If you remember nothing else, please don’t ever forget the power of Jesus Christ to change lives – even yours.”

I have never forgotten it. In fact, in the 20 years since, I have seen it happen again and again and again. I have seen lives changed, prayers answered, situations turned around, redemption happen. So much so, that today, no matter what what the situation, no matter what the person might have done, no matter what happened, I always hold out for redemption. I hold on to the possibility of change. And, I hold on to hope.

I don’t know what you might be going through in your life, but I pray that you would never forget the power of Jesus Christ to change lives – even yours.

Let us pray: Loving God, today we lift up to you our anxious, worried hearts. Calm our spirits and help us to trust that your love will prevail. And may you peace which surpasses all understanding guard our hearts and our minds in Christ Jesus our Lord. Amen.

More Beyond

More Beyond

In preparing to lead a memorial service for my friend Rev. Herb Meza, I read an Easter sermon that he had written entitled, “More Beyond.” In this sermon, Herb reflected on the eternal dimensions of our faith. He noted that if our eyes are open, there are all kinds of hints pointing to something more beyond us. He wrote about how science has discovered that there is a tremendous range of colors beyond what the eye can see; there are scales of octaves way above and below what the ear can hear; And there are discoveries in the field of physics that stretch the imaginations of even the greatest scientists.

He went on to write this:

“Everywhere we turn there are hints that there is more. Hints of life and power and energy.

“But even if there were no hints, there is that instinct within humans that points to more…. Pascal once said that God had planted this instinct in our very souls and no matter how much we try to disbelieve it, it keeps creeping up and out when we come face-to-face with the mystery of death… Easter is the triumphant affirmation of something we have never proved but instinctively know…. That our little world of time and space is but a small fragment of something much larger than we can perceive with our eyes, or hear with our ears, or touch with our senses…”

In his sermon, he went on to reflect on how death seems scary, but in reality it might be more like a birth. Near the very end of the sermon, Herb got very personal about the Christian hope of what lies beyond:

“I believe that one day every bruise, every cancer cell, every blind eye, every limp and every lump will be set right. One day every embarrassment and every rejection and every hurt we have suffered will give way to glory. I do not know how God will deal with all the shabbiness, failures and betrayal. It surely must hurt God, but I know God is loving and forgiving. One day, every moment of hoping against hope will be rewarded.”

Let us pray: We are grateful, Loving God, that in life and in death we belong to you. Help us to trust your healing, forgiving, embracing grace; now and always. Amen.

Make it a Beautiful Life

Make it a Beautiful Life

One of my favorite artists John Severson – said that his personal mission statement was this: Make it a beautiful life. Make it a beautiful life for yourself and everyone else you meet. He meant that beyond the art he created; but to make it a beautiful life for himself and others – simply by the way that he lived…. through his generosity….hospitality… having open ears… open heart…. open hands….

In 1972, shortly before his death, Abraham Joshua Heschel said in an interview: “I would say to young people a number of things… I would say, let them remember that there is a meaning beyond absurdity. Let them be sure that every little deed counts, that every word has power, and that we can do — every one — our share to redeem the world despite of all absurdities and all the frustration and all disappointments. And above all, remember that the meaning of life is to live life as it if were a work of art… When you are young, start working on this great work of art called your own existence.”

I wonder what it might look like for you to live your life – to craft your life – as though it were a work of art…

I wonder what it might look like for you to make life beautiful not only for yourself, but with everyone within your sphere of influence….

As my friend Roger Kunkel used to say, “Today – this day… is an unrepeatable miracle. Let’s make it a masterpiece!” May it be so.

Our prayer today was written by John Philip Newell. Let us pray: In the morning light, O God, may I glimpse again your image deep within me, the threads of eternal glory woven into the fabric of every man and woman. Again may I catch sight of the mystery of the human soul, fashioned in your likeness, deeper than knowing, more enduring than time. And in glimpsing these threads of light amidst the weakness and distortions of my life, let me be recalled to the strength and beauty deep in my soul. Let me be recalled to the strength and beauty of your image in every living soul.