Tuesday, February 26, 2013
A Lenten Invitation: Doing It All in Jesus’ Name
Monday, October 08, 2012
Building Up Our Neighbors
Let us therefore no longer pass judgment on one another, but resolve instead never to put a stumbling block or hindrance in the way of another. … Each of us must please our neighbor for the good purpose of building up the neighbor. — Romans 14:13, 15:2
Monday, August 20, 2012
Our Summer of Manifesting Christ (Acts 2:42-47)
Thursday, August 02, 2012
Are You an Outie or an Innie?
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Praying for Harmonious Work
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
The Ways Faith Comes to Us
Friday, December 09, 2011
Shepherds, Why This Jubilee? Why Your Joyous Strains Prolong?
Riley is a fourth-grader who was cast as a “Shepherd” for Sunday’s Christmas program in church. He also had a solo. He had been practicing “Angels We Have Heard On High,” and he needed someone to accompany him on guitar, so I offered to play. On a chilly afternoon earlier this week, Riley sang for me while I played the chords of the familiar carol. His clear boy-soprano tones filled the rehearsal space, but he was struggling with the words to the second verse. Suddenly, it dawned on me to teach what my drama coach had taught me back in seminary: to read the words with exaggerated meaning and to sustain them from the muscles in the gut rather than the throat. Besides, I thought, if Riley really understood the words, he would remember them and sing them with more feeling. So I shouted to Riley, “Repeat after me! Shepherds, why this jubilee?” He said back, “Shepherds…why…this jubilee?” It became like a game. “Why your joyous strains prolong?” We asked each question of the carol back and forth, as if the shepherds were across the room dancing a jig and jumping for joy: “Say what gladsome tidings be…” We were almost shouting now. “…which inspire your heavenly song?”
The shepherds were dancing and shouting that the Messiah – the child God was going to send to reign over all the world – was about to be born! And there we were: if Riley sang clear enough, and I played well enough, we imagined ourselves joining the jubilant shepherd band as they literally skipped and spun, danced and dashed, toward a birthplace still unseen.
Riley sang it through one more time. Every word was clear and his notes were sharp and true. I smiled knowing this "shepherd boy" had experienced the story for himself. On this Third Sunday in Advent, Sunday, December 11, our worship service will begin at 10:30 as usual, but soon “the usual" will end and “The Christmas Story,” will be told by our children and youth, in word and song! Be there, and watch as the story comes alive for us. You may just return to your life “glorifying and praising God for all you have heard and seen!” (Luke 2:19)
I look forward to lighting candles and singing carols and sharing the world’s greatest story with you in church and in the places where we share ministry together!
"Pastor Paul"
Thursday, October 27, 2011
Precious Moments
“When Jesus realized that they were about to come and take him by force to make him king, he withdrew again to the mountain by himself.” – John 6:15
I “noticed” this verse while leading the Bible Study last Tuesday with some residents of Sunnyview Nursing Home. We were reading the sixth chapter of the Gospel of John. There are two great stories that begin that chapter. John’s version of the Feeding of the Five Thousand (verses 1-14) and John’s account of Jesus Walking On the Water (verse 16-21.) But there was this verse in-between! “When Jesus realized that they were about to come and take him by force to make him king,he withdrew again to the mountain by himself.”
Jesus realized that they were going to make him king so he withdrew? Jesus had been sent by God to liberate the people, to heal, to teach and to guide them. But to be made king by this crowd? It would only distract him from his purpose, so he withdrew. And we can only imagine what he did there on the mountain, in those few precious moments by himself. When we look at other “in-between” verses in the Gospels, we discover that Jesus often went away by himself to pray (Matthew 14:23.) In between the miracles, in between the encounters of the ministry, in between the moments of doing, Jesus spent time by himself in prayer.
This is one of the great but often unnoticed truths of the Gospels: Jesus himself prayed, talking to God as His Father, and apparently gathering insight, strength, direction and purpose from those precious moments. In the midst of our busy ministries as Disciples, we need to notice the “in-between” moments, “sandwiched in” as it were, between the errands and the meetings, the schoolwork, the housework or the homework, between the harvesting and the bookkeeping, between the driving and the visiting. We need to take the precious “in-between” moments for prayer. You can do this when you find yourself in-between things. You may want to join with others who find 9 AM on Wednesday mornings to be a time between the day’s tasks when praying together in the Parlor (our “chapel” setting) seems the most important and best thing we can do.
Prayer Times will begin again on Wednesday, November 9 at 9 AM and at 5 PM at First Christian Church in Trenton, Missouri. If you can't be there, pray with us where you are. Come when you can, leave when you must, but come aside with us to pray, in the in-between times. You may discover that they are the most important times of all!
I look forward to greeting you in the places where we pray and minister together,
Pastor Paul