Freedom

Freedom

Today is Independence Day. Many of you will celebrate with pool parties, cookouts, and fireworks. I hope you will pause to give thanks to God that we live in a country where we are free to worship God, free to choose where we live, free to choose the type of work we will do, etc, etc. What a gift!

Freedom is one of the central themes of the gospel. The Apostle Paul wrote to the church in Galatia, “For you were called to freedom, brothers and sisters; only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for self-indulgence, but through love become slaves to one another. For the whole law is summed up in a single commandment, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.”

In Christ we are free from the bondage of guilt, free from our past mistakes, free from our failures, free from legalism, free from having to earn God’s love.

Again, this freedom from is a tremendous blessing. However, Paul tells us, most importantly, we have the freedom to…. We are free to love and to serve other people. A natural expression of our freedom should be love.

Let us pray: You have blessed us so richly, Lord. We live in a time and place of great abundance, and great freedom. Yet we still see the need. Remind us that we are blessed to be a blessing. Show us everyday ways in which we can use our freedom and our resources to bless others. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

Love that Will Not Let Us Go

Love that Will Not Let Us Go

Today’s message was written by, Rev. Roger Kunkel, the founder of Dial Hope.

Some years ago, a young man named George Matheson entered Glasgow University. He had a keen mind. His hopes were high. Soon he and his fiancée would be married. He dreamed of a bright future. But then the bottom dropped out. He lost his eyesight. Because of his misfortune, Matheson was rejected by his fiancee, who said she couldn’t marry a man who was blind, and she left him. His world crumbled at his feet. Devastated, afraid, and worried, he turned to God as never before, and God was there!

Struck blind, hurt, and rejected, George Matheson reached out in the darkness and found that God’s unconditional love was there. And he wrote what has become one of our most beloved hymns, a hymn sung by Christians everywhere that says it all, a hymn of praise to God:

“O Love that wilt not let me go,
I rest my weary soul in thee;
I give thee back the life I owe,
that in thine ocean depths its flow, May richer, fuller be.” (1882)

Let us pray: Loving God, who loves each of us as a parent loves a child, we pause to remember your amazing grace. You are our refuge and strength and are present with us, both in good and in difficult times. Because you love us and always are with us, in gratitude, we rededicate ourselves to following Jesus’ commandment to love you with heart, soul, mind, and strength, and our neighbors as ourselves. Through the grace of Jesus. Amen.

Jesus’ Open Arms

Jesus’ Open Arms

In the Gospel of Mark chapter 6 (30-34), we read: “As Jesus went ashore, he saw a great crowd, and he had compassion for them… and he began to teach them many things.” And then, not that long after, Mark tells us that when Jesus and the disciples crossed over the sea of Galilee: “When they got out of the boat there, people at once recognized him and rushed about that whole region and began to bring the sick… to wherever they heard he was” (6:53-56).

As we look at these two stories together, we get this picture of tremendous need – maybe even desperation. People were obviously drawn to Jesus. And I have to wonder: Did they know he was the Savior? Or were they simply moved by his teaching? Had they heard of others being healed by his hands? Could they sense his compassion? Did they know God was at work within him?

What did they see in him?

What do you see in him? Why are you drawn to him?

Over the years, I’ve seen people drawn to him for many different reasons. And drawn closer to him at different times in their lives.

I know I’ve shared with you all before about my friend who battled addiction in high school – and finally hit rock bottom while on the street – with nowhere to go. And in a state of desperation, he fell to his knees and began to pray…

I can’t do this on my own…

And then, I also remember early one December morning, I was down on the beach in Saint Augustine. It was one of those foggy cool mornings, just before low tide. And I noticed something written in the wet sand, right above the tide line. It was a prayer that read, “Jesus, please, please fix our marriage.”

I’ve known what it is like to have that level of need… And you probably have too… whether it was worrying about a child, or you struggled with an illness or physical impairment, or whether you felt the weight of some other burden on your shoulders, or whether you were desperate for forgiveness…

One of my favorite images of Jesus is Jesus the Redeemer – with open arms. As if he is saying: “Come unto me all you who are weary and heavy ladened…”

Mark tells us that when Jesus saw the crowds he had compassion on them. He has compassion for you as well.

Let us pray: Loving God, thank you for your love and compassion for us. We ask for your healing grace to fall afresh on our lives, even now. We ask in Jesus’ name. Amen.

God Is Love

God Is Love

Back in the early spring on Wednesday nights, we took a class through Renovare on Spiritual Formation. And in the very first class, the question was asked, “What is your image of God?” Because your image of God shapes not only your faith – but also your world view, and often how you live. 

For example: If our image of God is a judgmental angry God, then we are much more likely to be angry and judgmental. And if your view of God is wrathful, vengeful, or vindictive, you are much more likely to see every illness, every accident – as an act of punishment. Why is God doing this to me?

Through that class we were invited again to see God through the lens of Jesus… who forgives, who heals, who has compassion. 

The great Rabbi and scholar Abraham Joshua Heschel said that the word compassion describes the divine pathos. He wrote this: “God does not reveal himself in abstract absoluteness but in a personal and intimate relation to the world. (God) does not simply command and expect obedience; He is also moved and affected by what happens in the world… Indeed, this is the essence of God’s… nature: His willingness to be intimately involved in the history of man.”

I wonder, when you think of God, what image comes to mind?

In Isaiah, chapter 43, we read:

But now thus says the Lord,
     he who created you, O Jacob,
     he who formed you, O Israel:

Do not fear, for I have redeemed you;
     I have called you by name; you are mine.

Then, in the Gospel of Luke, chapter 15:

But while he was still far off, his father saw (the prodigal son) and was filled with compassion; he ran and put his arms around him and kissed him. – Luke 15:20

And then, John tells us: For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son… 

– John 3:16

Let us pray: Gracious God, we thank you for your love for us, a love that is deeper and wider than we can ever imagine. Help us to accept this love and share it with a world desperately in need; in Jesus’ name. Amen.

Turning Points

Turning Points

Today reflect for a moment on the turning points, or stepping stones, in your Christian life that has brought you from birth to this moment. These may be fairly few in number, five to eight, probably not more than twelve. Examples maybe – I was born, I faced an illness, a friend nurtured me, etc. List your turning points with a sentence or phrase saying what each turning point represents to you.

The exciting thing is, you do not have to wait for a turning point! We should not sit around hoping for a change, a break, a winning lottery ticket, for something to happen. We really have it in our power to turn that corner, to make the change, to start things going in a different direction. We should never think we are too old to make a change that it is too late to begin again. We do not have to go along with unhappy conditions nor accept ill-health as our lot. The turning point comes first of all, “in us” not in some outer circumstances. Base this Christ confidence on Philippians 4:13, “l can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.”

Winston Churchill went back to his old public school when he was old and famous, to give the graduation address. All the names were called. Elgar’s “Pomp and Circumstance” was no doubt murdered by the high school band. Sir Winston rose to give his speech about what he had learned in eighty years of public service. He cleared his throat and gave the shortest commencement address on record. He said, “Never give up! Never give up! I say, Never give up!”

Let us pray: God of love, we thank you for turning points that enable us to move ahead and become more like Jesus. Fill us with hope and joy that we may never give up. Bless us so we may be a blessing to others. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

Love in Action

Love in Action

Some time ago, I read about a pastor named Dr. E.V. Hill who served a church in the Watts area of Los Angeles. Back in the 1960s, during the burnings, looting, and community riotings, Dr. Hill did a very difficult thing. He denounced his neighbors who were destroying property and stealing from area merchants. Of course, his criticism brought threats to him and to his church.

One night the phone rang, and his wife noticed how shaken he was after the caller hung up. “What was that all about?” she asked. “Oh nothing,” replied Dr. Hill. His wife did not let up, and finally, he told her, “They have threatened to blow up our car with me in it.” Late in the night, they discussed how impossible it would be to protect their car from wire bombings 24 hours a day.

The next morning when he woke up, the pastor noticed that his wife was not in the house. Neither was his car in the carport, and he became extremely concerned. A few minutes later he saw his car roll into the driveway with his wife at the wheel.

She had driven the car around the block to make sure it would be safe for her husband to drive later that morning.

“From that day,” said Dr. Hill, “I have never asked my wife if she loves me.”

He knew because he saw her love in action.

Isn’t that what the world needs from those of us who follow Jesus – to see our love in action?

In the first letter of John chapter 3, we read, “Little children, let us love not in word or in speech but in truth and in action.”

Let us pray: Loving God, we thank you for people who have shown us their love by their generosity, by their sacrifice, by their actions toward us. May we be the kind of people who show our love for you by the way we treat others. We ask in Jesus’ name. Amen.

Pattern of Prayer

Pattern of Prayer

This week, we’ve been reflecting on the Lord’s Prayer as a beautiful resource. As I mentioned on Tuesday, years ago, a spiritual director invited me to look at the Lord’s Prayer from a slightly different angle, and to use it as a pattern or a model for my own prayers, praying it one phrase at a time, amplifying it as I go along. 

So today, I’m going to try to bring all of this together by using this guide for our closing prayer.

Let us pray:  Our Father, who is in heaven – and who is also on war-torn battlefields, in refugee camps, in the midst of joyful celebrations, in homes that are broken and homes that are full, and who art even right with us, even now. 

Hallowed, holy, sacred, beautiful be thy name and thy ways.  

Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, in my life, in our lives, in our community, and in the world around us – even as it is in heaven. 

We pray for people who need you most now – especially we lift up those who lost loved ones, and those who are struggling. And we lift up too, O God, other people, and situations that are on our hearts… They need you. We need you.

Give us this day our daily bread. Give us eyes to notice your providence for our basic needs. Help us not to take too much, to share when we can, and to receive everything with deep gratitude. 

Forgive us now our debts, our sins, they are many. Grant us time and courage to amend our ways, and to make amends as needed. And then, Lord, as you have forgiven us, help us to forgive those who have sinned against us. There are many too. We turn them over to you now. As we let go, may we feel free.

Lead us not into temptation. But, grant us the ability to recognize it and the strength not yield to it. 

Deliver us from evil. Watch over us,  guide us, and protect us. 

For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. With you all things are possible. Amen.

The Three Requests

The Three Requests

Over the past few days, we’ve been looking at the Lord’s Prayer, reflecting on how each line in and of itself might be a resource for our own prayer life. We continue today with the last three petitions. 

Jesus gives us three requests: for bread, forgiveness, and deliverance. All three are significant reminders that we are not as self-sufficient as we’d like to think.

Give us bread for today. 

This is hard for us to get our minds around as most of us have freezers packed full of 

food. Maybe for many of us, this is a call to keep our eyes and hearts open to those who lack daily bread and to find ways to share from what we have. Maybe we could pray: God, we have way more than we ever need. Open our hearts; Open our hands…. 

And then: Forgive us our sins…as we forgive those indebted to us… 

Just as surely and desperately as we need bread, we need forgiveness, and we need to forgive… This is perhaps the place where we name the ways in which we have missed the mark. The ways in which we’ve hurt other people… We’ve gone astray…

God, I’m not perfect. I need you. Forgive me. Help me to forgive…. Here we might pray for the people who have hurt us or wronged us… 

And finally, the last petition – do not bring us to the time of trial. Keep us anything that will hurt others, or hurt ourselves. Protect us. Watch over us. Guide us.

It’s amazing to think that this prayer has been handed down to us over almost 2,000 years. Jesus gave this prayer to his disciples so they would have a deeper connection to the source of life – a source of hope, renewal, and strength. It was a resource for them and a resource for us.  

Let’s join our hearts in prayer again using the prayer Jesus taught us: Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name; thy kingdom come; thy will be done; on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our sins, as we forgive those who sin against us. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen.

Hallowed

Hallowed

Over the past couple of days, we’ve been looking at the Lord’s Prayer, reflecting on how each line in and of itself might be a resource. We continue those reflections today.

In the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus begins the prayer, our Father… in heaven. 

Our Father, who is above and bigger than all that is, but who is as close and intimate as a parent – as near as your next breath. Hallowed be your name. 

In Hebrew thought a person’s name was their character, their identity.  To say that something is holy or sacred is to say it is not mundane but other. I always think of this as adoration – to begin our prayer by recognizing that God is awesome and holy, beyond anything we can imagine. 

You are merciful, loving, generous, good. 

To me, this phrase sets things in perspective. This is simply a reminder that I’m drawing close to God who is far beyond me, so much bigger than all of my issues and struggles.  Even though I know that God will not always answer my prayers when and how I want, I trust that God is good. 

You are holy. Hallowed be your name.

The next line is: “Your kingdom come.”  

God set things right. 

This is a recognition that things are not the way God wants them to be. There’s still pain, and war, and hunger, and broken relationships.  You can think of this phrase as an invitation to pray for the world. 

What’s broken…? What’s hurting…? What needs tending…? In here? In your family? In your church? In your community? And in the world?

In the gospel of Matthew, Jesus adds, “Your will be done, on earth as in heaven.”  The idea here is that we would begin to pray, “God help us to care about what you care about, help us to want what you want. That’s not an easy prayer.  But it is a prayer that relieves us of the burden of believing the weight of the world rests on our shoulders.

Let’s pray today with that in mind. Let us pray:  You are holy and majestic and good, O God. May your kingdom come, and your will be done, in our hearts, in our lives, in our families, and in the world. Help us respond to you. In Jesus’ name. Amen. 

 How do you want me to respond, O God? 

As He Taught Us to Pray

As He Taught Us to Pray

Yesterday we spoke about the Lord’s Prayer as a beautiful resource. But we have to be careful, don’t we? Because, I don’t know about you, but with something I’m very familiar with, I can sometimes say the words without ever even thinking about them, They never hit here inside.  In fact, sometimes we can say the words and still be thinking about a million other things.

Years ago, a spiritual director invited me to look at the Lord’s Prayer from a slightly different angle, and to use it as a pattern or a model for my own prayers, praying it one phrase at a time, amplifying it as I go along. Both CS Lewis and Saint Francis used this same method.

Over the next few days, I want to look at just a few lines of this prayer with you and reflect on how we might expand on them as a resource for our own prayer lives.  

Jesus begins: When you pray, say, Our Father…

Now this would have been a huge shift for the early disciples, who would not have thought about God in these intimate terms.  And really, it is pretty amazing to think that Jesus is telling us we can stand before a holy and awesome God, like a child standing before a loving father.

I know that some people who didn’t have a good relationship with their own fathers – they struggle with this metaphor. For some people, it’s hard to put loving and father in the same sentence.  I also know some people who will pray to God as our Mother. And, there are in fact images of God as a mother in the Bible. 

In any case, the idea here is that God is like a loving parent in the very best sense of that word. And, that we can have this relationship with God in the way that a child would be with a loving parent. Trusting… trusting… 

Let us pray: O God, like a good Father, you are loving, compassionate, and just. And like a good Mother, you are fierce and strong, and faithful.  Help us to ever rest in your strong and gracious arms; through Jesus Christ. Amen.