The Light of Jesus

The Light of Jesus

Keith Miller tells a wonderful story about a busy executive in an eastern city who was rushing to catch a commuter train one morning. The executive had an important meeting at the office, and he needed to make this train in order to get there on time. Just as he was about to board the train, he accidentally bumped into a little boy who was carrying a boxed jigsaw puzzle. The box went flying, and the pieces scattered everywhere. What should he do? Should he stop and help the little boy pick up the pieces? Or, should he get on the train? He couldn’t do both; there was not enough time! If he stopped to help, he would miss the train and be late. What should he do? What would you have done? Well, the man stopped and helped the boy pick up the puzzle as the train pulled out. The little boy watched him closely with a kind of awe. The little boy said, “Mister, you missed your train.” “I know” the man said. “Will you be late to work?’ the boy asked. “Yes, but it was more important that I stop and help you.” Then the little boy said, “Mister, can I ask you a question?” “Yes, of course.” “Mister, are you Jesus?” Keith Miller wrote, “And for the moment, the man realized that – on that platform – he had been.” The little boy saw the light of Jesus in that man’s act of Christ-like love.

Friend of Dial Hope, during these difficult days, how is it with you? Can people see in you Christ’s spirit of forgiveness? And can people see in you Christ’s love?

Let us pray: Creator God, you are eagle, you are dove, you are color and sound, you are wind and fire. How great Thou art! Your world is indeed full of pain as well as joy. Be especially with those who can’t sleep, with those who are fearful, who have little hope. Spread your love like a well-worn and beloved jacket over those who need comfort and love. For we pray in the name of the Prince of Peace, our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

Who We Will Serve

Who We Will Serve

I was recently reading back through the story of Joshua. When the Israelites were finally settled in the land that God had promised them, he gathered the community together and he retold the story of God’s providence, God’s deliverance up to that point. Joshua ends his speech by encouraging them to make a decision, to choose to serve the Lord.

This made me wonder, what does it mean to chose to serve the Lord?

Maybe it really is the small everyday decisions we make that add up. Maybe it’s the small decisions that speak to who or what we are actually worshiping. Everyday we do get to decide:

Today: am I am going to make a choice to care – even when every fiber of my being says, “Why bother… You won’t make a difference”?

Am I going to make a choice to look for God’s presence even in people who make me really angry?

Am I going to make a choice to give generously; even when I’m afraid to do so?

Am I going to make a choice to give priority to the activities I believe make a difference to world around me and within me?

Am I going to make a choice to notice that even the toughest, most draining moments of life are actually at the same time alive with the same Power that created the universe, the stars and love and fellowship?

I hope so… And I hope you will too.

Let us pray: We remember, O God, that Jesus said that he came that we might have life – and have it in abundance… Help us to keep you at the heart and center of our lives, that abundant life would be ours; through Jesus Christ. Amen.

Our Refuge and Strength

Our Refuge and Strength

Psalm 46 is one of the most beloved in the scriptures. It begins, “God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, thought the earth give way and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea, though its waters roar and foam and the mountains quake with their surging.”

This Psalm is a reminder that even in the midst of this uncertain, chaotic and sometimes crumbling world, God is with us.

Near the end of the Psalm, the Lord speaks, “Be still and know that I am God…”

One year the children of our church read this verse several times, each time a little abbreviated, each time with a little silence for reflection:

Be still and know that I am God.
Be still and know that I am.
Be still and know.
Be still.
Be.

Let us pray: We sit now in your presence, O Lord, even if only for a moment. And we trust that you are healing and redeeming and putting our lives and even this world back together. May your peace rest upon us – and then reach out through us.

We pray today for all of those who stand in the midst of chaos and uncertainty. We especially lift up peacekeepers, aid workers and women and men in the military. We long with them for the day when your peace will ultimately reign. And we pray in the One who is our refuge, our strength, and our Prince of Peace. Amen.

Christ of the Depths

Christ of the Depths

Please know how much we appreciate your financial giving to Dial Hope. Especially at this critical time, when so many people are feeling isolated, anxious and worried, your gifts will enable us to continue to spread ripples of hope. If you are able to help, please visit our website at www.dialhop.org. Any size gift will make a huge difference.

The Rev. Mark Trotter tells about an underwater statue of Jesus in the port of Genoa that is called the Christ of the Deep. It is a statue of Jesus with his arms outstretched, as if to say, “Come unto me all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.” The statue is placed beneath the surface of the water in the harbor, descended into the depths of the ocean, as a memorial to all of those who died at sea. But Trotter makes the point that it is also a wonderful symbol of the gospel message that Christ has gone into the depths of suffering in our lives in order to give us new life.

Even today, on this Maundy Thursday, Christ continues to descend into the depths of our pain and heartache and into our problems and burdens. And the invitation is still there for all who are weary and heavy ladened. He will give you rest.

Our prayer today was written by St. Patrick of Ireland. Let us pray: May the strength of God pilot us. May the power of God preserve us. May the wisdom of God instruct us. May the hand of God protect us. May the way of God direct us. May the shield of God defend us. May the host of God guard us against the snares of evil and the temptations of the world.

May Christ be with us, Christ before us, Christ in us, Christ over us. May your salvation, O Lord, be always ours this day and forevermore. Amen.

Scars

Scars

“Our message today was written by my friend, Rev. Roger Kunkel.” -Joe

The poet Robert Frost wrote, “A voice said look me in the stars and tell me truly, men of earth… if all the soul-and-body scars were not too much to pay for birth.

Friend of Dial Hope, take a close look at your “soul-and-body scars.” Center upon one loss, hurt or tragedy. Was it caused from within or without, or both? How did you handle it? What kind of resources were helpful to you? Who stood by you? Have you moved through to the other side? If not, what concerns remain? Are you still hurting? If you wish, visit some more with the scar. Embrace your scar. Be gentle with yourself. Then, when ready, say farewell to it. The Apostle Paul reminds us, “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.” (Philippians 4:13).

Let us pray: God of compassion, cover us with your wings as a mother spreads a blanket of love over a sleeping child. Come into our pain, our loss and make us whole. Hold us close and sing us a lullaby of hope in the darkness. Bless us now so we may be a blessing to others. Through the amazing grace of Jesus Christ we pray. Amen.

Reconnecting

Reconnecting

Something I hear often from my friends outside the church is this: I’m spiritual but not religious… I’m sure you’ve heard this too. I even said it myself. And usually it is said meaning: I’m not into all the rules of religion. But what’s missing in that, is that word religion actually has a powerful origin. It comes from the Latin re-ligio – to re-ligament – to reconnect – to reconnect with God. In Christianity, there is a strong emphasis on re-connecting with other people as a way of re-connecting with God.

In that sense, I want to be religious. I want play a role in re-connecting people with each other and with God. The truth is, in this day and age, we need more people like this. We need more people who are willing to let go of pride and their need to be right. We need more people who can let go of the differences that divide and work instead to bring folks together.

I’m remembering again the astronaut Nicole Stott who spoke at our Dial Hope Friendraiser. She told us that the view from space – a God’s-eye view as it were, made it very clear that our life together as human beings is shared. We are in this together.

In his second letter to the Corinthians (6:17-18), the Apostle Paul wrote:

So if anyone is in Christ, there is a new creation: everything old has passed away; see, everything has become new! All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ, and has given us the ministry of reconciliation…

Let us pray: As you have loved us, O God, help us to love others. As you have reconciled us to yourself, may we work toward reconciliation with others. Use us even now as ambassadors of your grace. We ask in Jesus name. Amen.

The Heart of the Gospel

The Heart of the Gospel

A friend was telling me not too long ago that she has a great aunt who won’t go to church anymore. She went through a terrible divorce and she feels she is no longer worthy to be in worship. Because she is unable to forgive herself, she is unable to believe God forgives her. I felt sad when I heard her story, because forgiveness is at the heart of the gospel. But the truth is many of us do have a hard time letting go of the past. So often, we beat ourselves up over past mistakes and failures.

The philosopher Soren Kierkegaard wrote this prayer: “Hold not our sins up against us, but hold us up against our sins, so that the thought of You when it wakens in our soul… should not remind us of what we have committed, but of what You did forgive, not of how we went astray, but of how You did save us.”

The next time you feel haunted by the past, remember this prayer. Let past mistakes serve as a warning of what not to repeat, but more importantly, let them be a reminder of God’s saving grace.

The Apostle Paul wrote, “God proves his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”

God loves you and has forgiven you. May you forgive yourself.

Our prayer today is taken from the prayer of Manasseh – which is included in the Greek and Slavonic Bibles. Let us pray: O Lord Almighty, God of our ancestors, of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob… immeasurable and unsearchable is your promised mercy. You have appointed repentance for me who am a sinner. For I am weighted down with many an iron fetter.

And now I bend the knee of my heart, imploring you for your kindness. For you, O Lord, are the God of those who repent, and in me you will manifest your goodness. For unworthy as I am, you will save me according to your great mercy, and I will praise you continually all the days of my life. Amen.

Problems are Opportunities

Problems are Opportunities

Friend of Dial Hope, I have a confession to make. Are you ready for this? I am an in-curable hoper and I want you to follow suit. I have a bias that no problem on earth is ever truly insoluble; problems are opportunities filled with possibilities. I do everything in my power to solve problems rather than create them. And I firmly believe that hope is our sustaining friend. It keeps us going through the good times and the restless nights
of our souls.

To be sure, you will be sorely tempted to despair at times. Some of you listening to or reading this message are terminally ill, some of you are lonely and depressed, some of you are learning how to live with physical and emotional pain. I advise you: ward off cynicism and cultivate hopefulness. It is a choice you will be called to make daily. The cynic says, “Blessed are they who believe in nothing, for they shall not be disappointed”. The hopeful person says, “Despite all of life’s ills, pains and problems, it is still a beautiful world.” Such an attitude will make all the difference in your world. For the hoper, unlike the wishful thinker, is willing to work his or her head off that it might just come to be. We live as we hope. Good friends Kathy and Harry Dodge reminded me that Emily Dickinson wrote, “Hope is a thing with feathers that perches in the soul, and sings the tune without the words, and never stops at all.”

Let us pray: Loving God, it’s morning again…another day knocks. The tide of light rises, slides down the walls, across the ceiling, into my eyes, purging the darkness, slowly smoothing the crinkles of sleep. A particle of light has pierced our heart reminding us to begin again, to get up and go. You promise to bless us so we may be a blessing to others. You give us contagious enthusiasm, so we can go on limping, hoping on every step a testament of gratitude. We scratch the ears of dogs, laugh at the ballet of cats and Pelicans, and dolphins. Help us this day to hear the cry and gurgle of the newborn, to learn from hundreds of teachers, some of them homeless, poor, and uneducated.

Awaken us to the beauty of the mockingbirds, the Milky Way. For You alone, O Lord,
are our hope. You alone are our safety, our strength. May we – even with our fears and
anxieties, our insecurities and uncertainties – trust, totally trust in your loving care and
plan for our lives. Thank you for hearing this prayer. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

Out of the Darkness

Out of the Darkness

Last October, our church celebrated our Scottish roots with a ceremony called “Kirking of the Tartans.” We were reminded that when Scotland lost it’s freedom to England in the 1700’s, they experienced great loss – even a sense of oppression. They were forbidden to speak Gallic, or to play the pipes or even to wear the colors that symbolized their family heritage. For many, there is no doubt that this was a dark and difficult time.

On the other hand, amazing things happened in Scotland during this time period. In his book, How the Scots Invented the Modern World, Arthur Herman makes this crystal clear. He makes the case that in part, because the Scots no longer had to worry about defending their borders, they were able to put more time and resources into developing their education – especially the University system. Out of these schools came the men and women who were most influential in developing many of our modern inventions, and in the enlightenment. Many of these men and women went on to influence – directly or indirectly – the birth of our democratic nation.

All of this just reminds me that even in the darkest moments of life, God is present. And though it is often impossible to see it in the moment, there is is potential for great good and beauty and truth to emerge.

Let us pray: When darkness and uncertainty surround us, it is tempting to give up, to grow bitter or cynical. Give us eyes to see beyond the darkness. Give us faith to trust that you are at work and that your love will ultimately prevail. Grant us courage and strength to look for the good and to move forward in faith. We ask in Jesus name. Amen.

Look to Christ

Look to Christ

In a recent sermon, the Rev. King Duncan told a story of a British soldier in the First World War who lost heart for the battle and deserted. Trying to reach the coast for a boat to England that night, he ended up wandering in the pitch black night, hopelessly lost. In the darkness, he came across what he thought was a signpost. It was so dark that he began to climb the post so that he could read it. As he reached the top of the pole, he struck a match to see, and he found himself looking directly into the face of Jesus. He realized that, rather than running into a signpost, he had climbed a roadside crucifix. Then he remembered the One who had died for him . . . who had endured . . . who had never turned back. The next morning the soldier was back in the trenches.

Duncan made the point, “Maybe that’s what you and I need to do in the moments of our distress and darkness – strike a match in the darkness and look on the face of Jesus Christ. For Christ is here…” Christ is with you.

In the book of Hebrews we read these words of encouragement:

“…let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith. For the joy set before him he endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. Consider him who endured such opposition… so that you will not grow weary and lose heart.”

Let us pray: O God, Immanuel, In moments of darkness and despair may we remember that you are indeed with us. Grant us light enough to see. May the same courage, perseverance and strength that empowered Jesus also empower us. We ask in his name. Amen.