There is a buzz around Clarkston ? some mysterious event is happening on Tuesday nights at Old Village Caf?.
Well, I’m here to tell you those rumors are true.
Actually, the event is no mystery at all ? it’s Life Tree Caf? ? a place where people from all walks of life gather together for an hour in a casual, comfortable setting, to share stories about life and faith and to discuss issues that affect our daily lives.
Although the Life Tree team is comprised of people from several Christian congregations, we welcome folks from all faith backgrounds.
Whether you are faithfully devoted, spiritually curious, or do not believe, at all, Life Tree is a warm and welcoming place where people can gather over coffee to discuss a variety of topics ? topics such as What Makes You Afraid? and How to Handle Forgiveness, to things we all are curious about, like Do Pets Go to Heaven?
The evening begins with coffee and snacks as guests gather around their tables, introducing themselves and chatting informally.
The moderator for the week then introduces a video on that week’s topic, viewed in short segments.
Following each segment the moderator asks a question for each table to discuss ? questions are often fun, as well as thought-provoking.
A verse of Scripture or some faith-based question is usually introduced, as well, so participants can discuss how they verse might apply to the week’s topic.
Life Tree is, after all, sponsored by people of Jesus, and, while we welcome those with different beliefs, we do want participants to at least consider how God and His promises are relevant to our daily lives.
Life Tree Caf? meets Tuesday nights from 7-8 p.m. at Old Village Caf?, 2 Main St., Downtown Clarkston. Much thanks to Ann and Pete Beishaj, owners of the caf?, for providing such a wonderful place for people to gather and chat!
For more info, call 810-694-9351, or email tgpconnection@gmail.com. We are looking forward to seeing you at Life Tree Caf? this Tuesday. Come and see what the buzz is about!
Pastor Bob Scott is director of Outreach and Connections at Faith Lutheran Church, Grand Blanc, Mich.
Spiritual Matters
A husband and wife drove for miles in silence after a terrible argument in which neither would budge.
The husband pointed to a mule in a pasture. ‘Relative of yours?? he asked. ‘Yes,? she replied, ‘by marriage.?
How happy is your marriage? Is your spouse really your Valentine?
The Apostle Paul gave us a key to a happy marriage.
He said, ‘Each one of you also must love his wife as he loves himself, and the wife must respect her husband.? (Ephesians 5:33)
Modern studies show that men’s number-one need is respect. They want to be respected. The number-one need for women is love. They need to know that their husband cares for them more than anything else.
A woman came to a lawyer and said, ‘I want to get a divorce. I really hate my husband, and I want to hurt him. Give me some advice. I want to get his gold. I want to give him the shaft. I want to hurt him everyway I can.?
The attorney said, ‘All right. For the next three months while we’re going through the divorce proceedings, don’t criticize your husband. Only speak kind words to him. Build him up. Every time he does something, commend him for it. Tell him what a great guy he is, and do that for three months. After he thinks that he has your respect, tell him you were just yanking his chain and it will hurt him good.?
The woman thought, ‘I can play that game!?
So she complimented her husband for everything he did. For three months she told him what a great man he was.
Guess what? After three months, they forgot about the divorce and went on a second honeymoon!
Want a Happy Valentine’s Day? Show respect. Give love.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
You, who are reading this article, are one of the most intelligent, kind and loving people in the world. I know this is true because I believe that I am and so you must be. My survey of the one person I know who reads this column, me, proves it.
By the time you read this the results of the Iowa caucuses will be in.
The process of narrowing down the field of possible presidential candidates will have entered a new phase; the voters are now having the chance to participate in the process. Pollsters will continue to spew their statistics; and, the one thing I know about statistics is they are not truth.
Mark Twain, Benjamin Disraeli and a slew of others are quoted as saying there are three kinds of lies, ‘Lies, damn lies and statistics.? Statistics can only be understood in relation to the question being asked.
Having participated in more than one telephone survey where I could not agree with the facts that the questions were based upon, I am sure the results of those polls proved whatever point the pollster wanted to prove.
My favorite part of the election process so far has been the debates and checking in with the fact checkers afterward. There is no lack of misinformation being shared by the candidates.
Whether the topic is global warming, immigration, campaign contributors, or whatever; stated facts aren’t. Opinions are stated as facts, facts are denied as opinions and statistics are framed in a way that misrepresent facts.
It’s a little scary to think that one of these people will become our next president. Will the next president lead us forward into greater prosperity and worldly prestige or back into another major recession/depression and worldly isolation? And, are these the only choices? Probably not.
The truth will turn out to be what it is, not what I want it to be.
One thing I do know is that God’s will for me is greater than anything I could want for myself. I look at the laws of nature, of physics and recognize them as the outer expressions of the laws of Spirit.
Nature is continually increasing, growing and expanding in its abundant expression of beauty, just as Spirit is desiring to increase, grow and expand in its abundant expression of beauty through me. So my job is to be open to what this greater expression, the greater reality, is for me.
I am currently in the process of surveying friends and associates regarding a new opportunity in my life. The response has been overwhelmingly supportive. And, I have learned over the years to not jump to conclusions too quickly. I check the facts, ask opinions, and tune into what my higher power, which I call God, has to say to me. When I get a yes, yes, yes then it is pretty obvious what I need to do.
Sometimes I am only looking at some of the facts or incorrect information, friends and associates can help me look at the whole picture. Sometimes I may paint a biased picture for my friends and associates, leaving out important information or unrealistic expectations that skews their opinions.
The final layer of decision for me comes from connecting with my center: that point of being where God is and I am. When in my heart where God lives it feels right, when I have the support of friends and family, when all appearances are that it is the right thing to do then I can go forward with confident assurance all is well. If not, then I can let it go and move forward with confident assurance that all is well.
Truly, we live in a time of great opportunity. We can choose to enjoy the process of life and living. We can choose to consciously participate in the process of unfolding and living in the Kingdom of Heaven here and now. So it is and so it shall be.
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior minister for Peace Unity Community
Over the years I have prayed a lot of prayers for others, for myself and for situations in the world.
Right now I am praying for those impacted by the Flint water crisis and the blizzard, as well as for our new grandson born in late October at just 26 weeks, and now doing very well.
Sometimes these prayers clearly seem to have been heard and answered. Sometimes the situation I was praying about was resolved or the person got better. And there have been times I’ve experienced answers to prayers that can only be explained by a miracle.
I believe in the power of prayer and I have many experiences that lead me to believe even more deeply God has heard and answered my prayers.
However, I have also had occasions when I have prayed and prayed, and nothing seemed to happen. I have prayed for situations that didn’t change and for people who didn’t get better.
I know some of these unanswered prayers were probably self-serving or short-sighted on my part. But others at least seemed to be about good things God teaches us to care about.
I think most people at some point along the journey of faith will wonder if God has heard them.
Most of us will wrestle with the question that if God can do anything, then why doesn’t he?
Perhaps you’ve asked questions like these or are even asking them now.
Maybe you have been praying for a job, your marriage, your kids, the health of a loved one, or peace in our world.
Maybe you’ve wondered if you are praying the right way or with the right motivation.
Maybe you’ve wondered if you have enough faith or even that God is somehow withholding an answer because of something in your past.
So how do we deal with all of this? If we believe God always hears our prayers (and I certainly do), then the real issue is God doesn’t always answer our prayers the way we think he should or on our timetable.
In Mark 9 Jesus is speaking with the father of very sick boy who comes to him and says ??’if you are able to do anything, have pity on us and help us.? And Jesus said to him, ‘If you are able!’All things can be done for the one who believes.? Immediately the father of the child cried out, ‘I believe; help my unbelief!??
This really seems to suggest that it is ok to struggle with believing sometimes and that Jesus is able and willing to help us even when we have just a little faith. Yet the kind of help we receive, and that is promised, is not always what we expect.
In my life unanswered prayer reminds me God is God and I’m not, and we have different perspectives. In fact, while I may not always like it, some unanswered prayers have really shaped me into the person I am today.
It seems to me the question is really, what is prayer all about?
As I once read, prayer is ‘not a vending machine in the sky where we put in a prayer and get out of God what we want or think we need.?
I have come to realize prayer is first of all not so much something to be answered as an ongoing conversation with God about things that matter. It is about deepening our relationship with God in all the seasons of life and really spending time with God.
Prayer is less about informing God or instructing him about how to run the universe as it is building a relationship. Prayer changes me and grows me as a child of God.
Prayer opens me to being the ‘answer? to someone else’s prayer.
And ultimately my experience has been when I am open to God in prayer, while I may not get what I want, God provides what I really need.
And what I need is to know that ‘come what may,? I am safe with God and that he will walk with me, even ‘through the valley of the shadow of death.? (Psalm 23)
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
This past week, President Obama gave his final State of the Union address.
In the Republican response, given by Nikki Haley of South Carolina, she talked about the anger so prevalent in the present political debate.
The president himself talked about the issue of being able to get along and work together.
Everyone is talking about the need to get along with each other; the problem is, everyone takes their stand on issues and points out the fault of those who are opposite them.
In reality, getting along sounds very good and civil, but we are in a time of great intensity’the likes of which has not been seen in our country for a very long time.
Our problems are many, and they are multifaceted. We need healthy debate to come up with the solutions our country so desperately needs.
The question is, ‘How can we debate with the needed intensity and not become angry, or say the wrong things??
We are all reminded of the exhortation of our mothers, ‘If you can’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all!?
So, do we need to be nice all the time? What does that look like? It sounds good to create a world where everyone is nice to one another, doesn’t it?
In our politically correct world, we are certainly admonished not to cause offense or conflict with other people.
From a Christian perspective, we could easily think this is an appropriate attitude as well.
After all, wouldn’t Jesus want us to be nice so people will like us? How can we win people to Christ if we are being offensive? What sort of marketing plan would include offending people?
W. W. J. D.
I would say the best person to answer this question is Jesus Christ Himself. Did Jesus ever offend people?
If you ask the religious establishment of His time, you would probably hear them say how ‘unkind? He was. They would say, ‘He called us a brood of vipers!?
If you were to ask Peter, the disciple of Jesus Christ, he might say, ‘Yeah, one day I was trying to show my concern for Him and He said, ‘Get behind me Satan.? How could He call me Satan? I was only trying to help.?
There was a woman from Canaan who could have chimed in with her story. Her daughter was tormented with a demon, so she went to Jesus for help. His response was not at all sympathetic, ‘But He answered and said, ‘It is not good to take the children’s bread and throw it to the little dogs.?? (Matthew 15:26)
Jesus told His disciples to send her away because He was not called to people outside of the children of Israel. Jesus compared her to a little dog’so much for being nice!
Speaking Truth Without Offense?
As with all of us, there is a time for nice and there is a time to speak the truth. Truth can be very painful, and even make people angry; however, sometimes displays of anger are necessary to make a point.
This was what Jesus did when He went into the Temple and saw how it was desecrated through merchandizing. He turned over the tables of the money changers and corrected them.
I would be very surprised if the people saw a ‘nice? Jesus that day.
Was Jesus compassionate? Absolutely! Did Jesus go the extra mile with people? Yes, He did, and He encouraged His followers to do the same; however, when tough situations demanded a tough response, Jesus responded accordingly.
The Bible says, ‘Be angry, but sin not.? We should never be directed by our emotions; however, we should never pretend God created emotionless creatures either.
We should not pretend we do not have human responses to life’s situations. Jesus had very human responses to the life He was involved in, and He alone is our example.
Let’s not compromise truth just so we can say we were being ‘nice,? or even because we don’t want to offend anyone!
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church
Writing this on Jan. 6 I am focused on Epiphany. Yesterday was the 12th day of Christmas. Today we, in our church, begin the season of Epiphany.
On Epiphany we remember the coming of the Magi to worship the Christ-child, thus another name for the day: The Gentile Christmas.
Epiphany means to show forth or to reveal. During the Season of Epiphany we focus on the mission of the Church.
True, it is something that should always be in the forefront of our ministry but, especially at this time, we focus on sharing the hope we have in Jesus.
One of the old traditions of the church was that all the members would take down their Christmas decorations and gather at the church that evening for a special service.
They would bring the trees that had decorated their homes. They would meet outside, sing carols and read Bible lessons while they watched the trees burn. The light cast would be visible for some distance and others would be drawn to the light.
In the same way, it is our prayer that many are drawn to the Light of Christ. Do we often burn with passion to serve our Lord, sharing the hope and blessings we have received from God?
Maybe we would be like the Magi who followed the star from the distance to find Him Who has been born king of the Jews. (Matthew 2:2, ESV) Or, maybe, even more-so, like the disciples on the road to Emmaus who, upon recognizing Him after the resurrection, being instructed by Jesus concerning the Messiah said: Did not our hearts burn within us while He talked to us on the road, while He opened to us the Scriptures? (Luke 24:32)
Do our hearts burn within us? Do we have that strong desire to learn and to grow and, more importantly for those around us who do now know the gift of salvation as His gift to them, in sharing the hope and joy we have received?
Maybe it happened to you. You were returning to your normal routines after the celebration and someone asked: So, what did you get for Christmas?
Were we reluctant to tell others of the special gifts given and received? We wanted to share the joy! How much more should we not want to share the joy of the forgiveness we have been given, of sharing the hope of that Baby, born in Bethlehem, and revealed to us?
Did you made a resolution at the beginning of the year? Have you kept it? We are only a few days into the new year.
One thing I hear about resolutions is how quickly we forget them or break them. But, as with sharing our faith or any part of our Christian life, I have learned that, when we fail, we need to repent and get back at it.
During Epiphany let the Christ in your life be revealed! Let His light shine ? in and through you!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
Ever walk through a cemetery and really study the headstones? I have on several occasions.
Once in a cemetery in Pennsylvania, my dad showed me the graves of my great-great grandparents and extended family. Wow.
Ever notice the dash? On most headstones there’s a birth date, a death date, and a dash between them. That dash represents their lives. For some of them, that dash represents 90 years. For others, it represents two months.
I wonder’how did they live their dash? For most of them, a bundle of hopes and dreams, struggles and joys are concentrated in that dash.
I wonder’how are you living your dash? The older I get, the more I realize how precious life is. Time is literally running out.
I suspect you are a lot like me. You want your life to count. You don’t want to live with regrets. You don’t want to look back and say, ‘I wish I had done it differently.? I wish. I regret. If only.
This New Year’s, I invite you to join me in living a No-Regrets Life! Let’s live full out! Full throttle! Loving God and loving people!
As one paraphrase of Philippians 3 puts it: ‘I’m off and running, and I’m not turning back.
So let’s keep focused on that goal, those of us who want everything God has for us. If any of you have something else in mind, something less than total commitment, God will clear your blurred vision’you’ll see it yet! Now that we’re on the right track, let’s stay on it.?
‘Stick with me, friends. Keep track of those you see running this same course, headed for this same goal. There are many out there taking other paths, choosing other goals, and trying to get you to go along with them.
I’ve warned you of them many times; sadly, I’m having to do it again. All they want is easy street. They hate Christ’s Cross. But easy street is a dead-end street. Those who live there make their bellies their gods; belches are their praise; all they can think of is their appetites.?
‘But there’s far more to life for us. We’re citizens of high heaven! We’re waiting the arrival of the Savior, the Master, Jesus Christ, who will transform our earthy bodies into glorious bodies like his own.
He’ll make us beautiful and whole with the same powerful skill by which he is putting everything as it should be, under and around him.?
Yes! Happy New Year!
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
Our church has gone full bore for weeks.
In a season of giving and receiving, our giving was able to bless so many families. Our receiving was measured in joy and deeper relationships with each other, the community and God. That was our Christmas 2015.
How was your Christmas? Or how will it be when it arrives in the days to come?
Christmas is not a date. It is the experience of God coming into our life and our willingness to receive the divine gift.
I hope you experienced this in the days of Christmas past.
The great news of the season is that the gift it offers is not limited to a season or our measurement of time.
To put it simply, the gift of Christmas continues to be given to us all. If you do not know the joy, peace, hope and love that Christ places in our hearts, I offer to you the hope of a Christmas yet to come.
I am privileged in my work to be present with people in the critical moments of life.
Some are joyous like the birth of a child and others grief filled with the death of loved ones.
I can tell you that the gift of Christmas is real in every moment of life. God is present with us to help us rejoice in moments of great joy and to carry us when life seems to have broken us.
Of course, I do not have any ability to predict your future. However I do know whatever the New Year will bring, Christmas could occur at any moment.
The Bible tells us that on the first Christmas night, some were changed forever by his arrival and others were unaware anything special happened. But Christmas came to all. It still does.
So Merry Christmas for the one past and I pray for the gift of Christ to come to you in the days to come.
The Rev. Richard Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church
Merry Christmas! Yes, it is ok to say Merry Christmas. And it is also ok to say Happy Holidays, which is all the more inclusive.
Personally, I like to say either and usually add Happy New Year! Or sometimes just Merry Merry, and Happy Happy, and let people fill-in the blanks. Occasionally I’ll throw in a Blessed Kwanza or Joyous Saturnalia, Happy Solstice or Merry Yuletide. I certainly don’t want to forget to say, Happy Hanukkah. Of course, I am somewhat of an odd duck in that I like to think for myself; I look to follow the spirit of my religion rather than just the letter, ‘for the letter kills, but the spirit gives life.? 2Cor 3:6
A great example of following the spirit is the story of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:29-37.) The religious figures in the story, the priest and the Levite, could not be bothered to help the injured man.
The Samaritan, a religious outcast considered inferior by the religious elite, was the good neighbor who helped the injured man. ‘Go and do likewise!? Follow the spirit!
‘Go and do likewise!? This is my goal everyday: to find some way to be helpful to others. This is my purpose for living today. And everyone, no matter what religion or doctrine or faith or creed that they profess, who lives by the universal Golden Rule of giving unto others is doing the work. In this work I am inspired, amazingly enough, by my mother-in-law.
Sharon had a rough start to life, growing up in a series of foster homes, she was unable to complete high school before getting married and having children in her teens. In her 40’s my mother-in-law went back to school to get her GED. She then went to the university and began working toward a degree in Sociology. She never completed her degree because she got busy doing the work.
A class project of studying the homeless problem became a passionate work. She established a transitional housing project for homeless people to get them off the streets. Later she ran a transitional safe house for women escaping abusive situations. Her next project was to end homelessness through literacy. The Bridge School helped people pass their GED’s, taught English as a Second Language and gave people living on the streets an address and a phone number. It is not easy to get a job when you can’t put an address or a phone number on an application form.
This women with no money, limited education, no government assistance, relying upon public donations and volunteers helped hundreds, if not thousands, of people to live better lives. This woman who smoked, drank, and was known to use rough language, with no religious affiliation, is the shining example of a good neighbor.
I am humbled when I think of her and the millions of others like her who make the work their goal in life; most of these people receive no honors, rewards nor recognition for the great works they have accomplished. For the most part, you and I are busy earning a living, supporting our families and dealing with the busyness of life. We can do our part by keeping our eyes and ears open and finding ways to support the good neighbors in our community who are doing the work.
My present to my mother-in-law this year has been to go through the stack of VHS tapes, recordings of news broadcasts and interviews from her days at the Bridge School, and transfer them to digital media. This has been a labor of love, a tearful journey through the past. And, it has served to reinforce my desire to be about the work.
In Clarkston, The Lighthouse is a nonprofit agency that is busy doing the work. And there are many other individuals and organizations who are establishing transitional housing projects, literacy projects, helping our neighbors to live better lives.
Your assignment is to seek them out and support their efforts. I hope you accept your part in the work. Merry Christmas!
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
for Peace Unity Community
While getting ready for Christmas this year at Calvary we have been reflecting each week on the figures of the familiar manger scene and what significant role they played in the Christmas story.
So far we have explored Jesus? family tree, Mary and Joseph. This weekend we consider the shepherds. After Christmas we will talk about the angels and the magi or wise men.
I am particularly fascinated by the story of the shepherds, who were on the very edge of society as they tended the sheep in the wilderness away from home and outside the towns.
There was very little respect or prestige for this job, important as it was, and the shepherds were considered ‘unclean? since they were not able to keep all of the ‘rules? of proper society or proper religion.
Yet these are precisely the ones who received the first birth announcement about Jesus from the angels in Luke 2.
They, not the religious leaders or the wealthy or powerful people, were the ones who were invited to come and see the baby with Mary and Joseph that first Christmas Day. Since he was born in a stable, they were welcome to ‘come as they really are? for a visit, sheep and all.
This tells us a lot about God and those whom God will make sure are invited to get to know him.
If the lowly shepherds were given this special privilege, then those who feel on the outside of things in our world today are also given a special invitation. And when we find ourselves lost, alone and afraid, or when we have made a mess of things, Jesus is there for us too.
Love comes down at Christmas. The God of the universe born as a baby in Bethlehem. God stepping out of the heavens and taking on flesh so he can walk with us on earth as one of us.
Love comes down at Christmas. This baby is especially Good News to those who are hurting or in need or outcast or who have made big mistakes. God cares…deeply.
Many of us know the beginning of Psalm 23. ‘The Lord is my shepherd…? It is very interesting that even though it was such a lowly profession, shepherding is nevertheless frequently used as an example of how God cares for us.
Shepherds live with the sheep to lead them and protect them. Shepherds aren’t afraid to face dangers or to get dirty doing whatever needs to be done to keep the sheep safe and sound.
The shepherd could recognize each unique sheep and ‘calls his own sheep by name and leads them.? When one was lost, the shepherd would leave the others in a safe place to go and try to find the lost one to bring it home.
Jesus says, ‘I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep.? (John 10)
That is the Christmas Story: Love comes down at Christmas…to shepherds keeping watch over their flock by night. And into our world, into our lives.
Once we realize that the birth announcement for Jesus went first to the shepherds and that they found God in a stable, a barn, we can never again be quite sure where God will appear next. God’s holiness is found in the lowliest and least likely places, like among shepherds, in a stable’and on a cross.
The real Christmas story assures us that God is with us in the messiness and real stuff of our lives today. In our joys and in our challenges there is God with us and for us as a Good Shepherd who cares for the sheep and knows each one by name.
Love comes down at Christmas. This is the real gift of Christmas. I pray you don’t miss it!
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran
And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying: ‘Glory to God in the highest, And on earth peace, goodwill toward men!? Luke 2:13-14
The verses in Luke 2 are well known among Christians who celebrate Christmas.
For us, Christmas is about the ‘Christ? child born in the city of Bethlehem of Judea. This was no ordinary child, He was a child promised through prophetic words spoken many years prior.
The prophet Isaiah declared, ‘For unto us a Child is born, Unto us a Son is given; And the government will be upon His shoulder. And His name will be called Wonderful, Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.?
This child was a gift from heaven. He was the ‘Son? of the almighty God, destined to greatness!
These verses do not just tell of who He would be, but they imply a progression. The following verse of Isaiah says, ‘Of the increase of His government and peace there would be no end…?
The ultimate end is His designation as the ‘Prince of Peace.? If there is one thing our present world needs, it is the Prince of Peace.
Violence is prevailing in the earth among the nations, ethnic groups, and individuals. As Christians in this season, we must remember not only the occasion of the Nativity, but also the purpose. It was not just a happening’it was a beginning!
Let’s Go Forth as His Peacemakers!
When the angels announced the birth of Christ to the shepherds in the fields, they were announcing God’s intervention in the affairs of man.
Since the time of Adam, man had rebelled against God’s government. The results were immediate, not only in the consequences suffered by Adam and Eve, but the ensuing battle that resulted within the family when Cain killed his brother Abel.
Violence was an ongoing problem that was actually a result of the alienation from God. God reached out to man with the olive branch of peace, His only begotten Son.
He demonstrates to us a very important principle of reconciliation. If you want peace, you do not offer it from your world or vantage point, you must go to the source of the problem and offer yourself as a necessary part of the solution.
True peace can only come when you are willing to give of yourself as God has given us the example. He could have sat on the throne of heaven and demanded our compliance; instead, God came up with the plan for peace that would bring us out of our captivity and into His family!
Christmas is a season for families to gather. For some, it will be a very traumatic time as they face conflicts and hurts from the past.
The greatest gift we can offer is the gift of peace. As you gather this year, remember the words of Jesus Christ, ‘Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the sons of God.? Don’t let your Christmas just be an event; make your Christmas the beginning of something. Don’t merely take another white elephant gift; take the gift that will cost you something’go as a ‘son of God.?
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion
It seems to come earlier and earlier every year, doesn’t it? While growing up I can remember the anticipation!
The day after Thanksgiving was the day we put up the Christmas tree, decorated the house and baked all the cookies for the holiday season. It seemed like there were hundreds of cookies to decorate and several other varieties that would be enjoyed throughout the season.
Then, when it was all done, we would walk down to town and meet with Santa.
What has happened? It seems like the anticipation is gone. Stores began decorating this year back in October!
Many in my neighborhood have had the lights on for several weeks. Artificial trees make it easier to set them up early and leave them up later. If you turn to the right channel on television or the right station on the radio you would have been able to listen the Christmas music for quite some time.
We have just begun a season in the Church year called Advent. It is a time of preparation and anticipation.
We are getting ready for a celebration, for a birth. It is not just any birth, be a remembrance of the birth of God’s Son, a Savior for us.
We will hear the words spoken by the angel, For to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, Who is Christ the Lord; and the angels, Glory to God in the highest and peace to His people on earth! (Luke 2)
But until then we wait. We anticipate. We get ready. We don’t want to hold the party before the day, do we? Too often, by the day Christmas is here, people say they are ready to take down the tree, put the decorations away and they are glad the Christmas music is done.
The truth is we should just be starting the celebration and rejoicing in God’s gift to us.
So what might we do to get ready? A few suggestions would include:
? Spend extra time in worship, hearing the Word of God read and proclaimed and singing hymns and songs that focus on preparing for the Word made flesh;
? Take some time each day for family devotions. You might use four candles, lighting one each week to show that we are getting closer to the day of celebration. On Christmas day light a white candle to show that the joy and celebration has arrived!;
? Pick an Advent hymn and focus on how the words are preparing for Jesus? first (and second) coming;
? Decorate a little each week.
Whatever you might do to prepare, keep the focus on preparing. And then, on Christmas day, join your voice with those around the world in celebrating God’s gift, as Son, for us. Celebrate His love and share His hope as we look forward to that day. As we do, to quote Tiny Tim in ‘A Christmas Carol?: God bless us, everyone.
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
I saw a church sign that read, ‘Don’t let worry kill you, let the church help.? It’s sad that the church sometimes adds to your worries, when in fact, Jesus came so we don’t have to worry anymore!
The English word ‘worry? comes from an old German word that means ‘to strangle.? Isn’t that what worry does to us? We worry about our kids. We worry about our parents. We worry about our jobs. We worry about our finances. We worry about our health.
Worry can choke the life right out of us!
In Luke 12 Jesus explains the roots of worry. We worry about our needs, such as food and clothing. We worry about our future. ‘What if I lose my job? What if I get cancer??
Sometimes we worry about our past. ‘If only I had decided this instead of that.? The ‘what if’s? and ‘if onlies? can strangled us!
A 14-year-old boy, Jason Lehman wrote a piece called ‘Present Tense?:
It was spring
But it was summer I wanted,
The warm days,
And the great outdoors.
It was summer,
But it was fall I wanted,
The colorful leaves,
And the cool, dry air.
It was fall,
But it was winter I wanted,
The beautiful snow,
And the joy of the holiday season.
It was winter,
But it was spring I wanted,
The warmth
And the blossoming of nature.
I was a child,
But it was adulthood I wanted.
The freedom,
And the respect.
I was 20,
But it was 30 I wanted,
To be mature,
And sophisticated.
I was middle-aged,
But it was 20 I wanted,
The youth,
And the free spirit.
I was retired,
But it was middle age I wanted,
The presence of mind,
Without limitations.
My life was over.
But I never got what I wanted.
Some of us live our lives like that! We fret and worry and think ‘if only? I were younger or older or were married or were single! If only, if only, what if!
We become so guilt ridden about the past and so fearful of the future that we can’t live in the present!
Jesus says, ‘Stop it! I don’t want fear and anxiety to dominate your life! Let me dominate your life! Instead of making a god out of your ‘if onlies? and ‘what if’s?, worship me as God! Let me dominate your life!
One of my favorite promises is Philippians 4:6-7 ‘Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.
And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.? This Thanksgiving give thanks. Read Luke 12:22-34. Be thankful not anxious. By God’s grace you can do it!
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
Happy Veterans Day! Thank you to all who have served our country. Today and always we remember to stop and pray for everyone who is in harm’s way overseas and for those who are in need of protection; ‘The light of God surrounds you, the love of God enfolds you, the Power of God protects you and the Presence of God watches over you; wherever you are God is!?
Wherever we are God is! Or, as we will sometimes share with the children, there is not a spot where God is not. ‘If I ascend to heaven, you are there; if I make my bed in Sheol (Hell), you are there.? Psalms 139:8.
Even in the midst of our darkest days there is a loving, guiding, sustaining presence and power that is with us and within us, mighty to attract our good and to radiate good to others. We need but remember to call upon these deep inner resources, our connection to God, to Spirit, to Life.
A friend of mine gave me the phrase, ‘If God seems far away, who moved?? I need this gentle reminder at times to practice the presence of God, rather than the absence of God.
When we worry or are afraid, when we hang onto anger or resentment, when we plot and scheme, when we lie or bend the truth, we are practicing the absence of God. We are saying we are in charge, that there is no force in the universe greater than us, we alone have created the world and all that is in it. We are like children covering our eyes with our hands saying, ‘you can’t see me.?
‘Repent (think again with a new level of understanding) for the kingdom of God is at hand (within our reach here and now.)? Matthew 4:17.
This is the Gospel of Jesus, this is the good news of the New Testament, the vision of the Psalmist, the promise of Revelation and the message of the Prophets: God, good orderly direction, universal presence and power, infinite spirit, divine beingness, cosmic consciousness, whatever name or concept of God and Heaven that we have is available to us in this now moment. The Kingdom has come! Matthew 6:10.
Prayer and meditation are our keys to the kingdom. This is how we practice the presence of God; we practice the presence of peace, of love, of good out working in our world and in our lives. God is not only our father but a friend, a friend who wants to hear from us, a friend who wants to have a conversation with us, a friend who wants to listen and to speak and be heard. This is what prayer and meditation is: a conversation with God.
Effective prayer is not about informing God of our needs. God is omniscience: all knowledge, omnipotence: all power, omnipresence: all presence. Omniscience already knows all.
Effective prayer is about remembering there is a God and we are not it. The words we use are optional. We can memorize the Our Father or Lord’s Prayer, the Shepherd’s Psalm or 23rd Psalm, the Prayer of St. Francis, the Prayer of Protection above in the first paragraph, or any other words that speak to us.
There are only three words necessary for effective prayer. The first is: help, and the other two are: thank you. ‘I can do nothing on my own.? John 5:30.
We need help, we need guidance, we need strength, we need the deep inner resources arise out of humbly accepting our mortal limitations and opening ourselves to receive God’s blessings in our lives.
An attitude of gratitude, giving thanks in advance of the demonstration,is a necessary ingredient in our realizing our blessings. It strengthens our bond with the infinite potential and possibilities for being that are now being made manifest within us, around us and for us.
Meditation is listening. It can begin with contemplation on the scriptures, the words of prayer or a mantra. It is creating the space for us to hear what spirit has to say to us. It can be time in the silence, in the secret room of our minds. Matthew 6:6.
Or it can be in nature, walking through the woods or sitting by the lake. Any time and place where we can quiet the drunken monkeys of thoughts and feelings and bodily sensations we are creating the possibility for listening to God; we are practicing the presence of God.This is where we not only know but realize that; wherever we are, God is!
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is pastor of Peace Unity Community.
A woman prayed, ‘Dear Lord, so far today I’ve done all right. I haven’t gossiped, haven’t lost my temper, haven’t lost my patience, haven’t been greedy, grumpy, nasty, selfish, or over-indulgent. I’m really glad about that. But in a few minutes, God, I’m going to get out of bed, and from then on I’m probably going to need a lot more help! Thank You, Amen.?
Ever feel like that? Even though I’m a pastor and I’m supposed to be ‘spiritual? all the time, there are times (more times than I care to admit) when I’m in a rut. Over the years I’ve discovered two ways to get out of that rut.
First, I reaffirm my faith in Jesus Christ. I take some extra time for Bible reading, prayer, and private worship.
I’m currently learning Spanish, and I love to listen to a Marcos Witt or Jesus Adrian Romero song on YouTube.
Singing and worshiping almost always changes my attitude. I face my grumpiness and nastiness and take it to God. I ask for forgiveness and cleansing.
Second, I force myself to thank God for his many blessings. Yes, I say ‘force? myself, because when I’m in a bad mood, I don’t want to thank God. I don’t even want to read the Bible. Sometimes we get so focused on our problems that we forget our blessings.
An old hymn tells us to ‘Count Your Many Blessings? to see what God has done. I’ve learned that my attitudes will follow my actions. If I DO the right things, my feelings will follow.
Maybe you need a fresh start with God. Why not put these two habits into practice in your life?
Maybe you have never invited God into your life. If so, I want you to know that God loves you.
Maybe you have really messed up your life. God still loves you and he offers you forgiveness, cleansing, and a fresh start. That’s why Jesus died on the cross ‘to take away our sin!
So ask Jesus into your life. The Christian faith is not about rules, rituals, and regulations. It’s about a relationship with God through faith in Jesus Christ.
You know what else I find refreshing? Friends who know how to encourage me. Did you know that God wants his followers to come together and relate to one another on the basis of their common commitment to Christ?
As followers of Christ we are to form mini-societies (churches), where we show the big society what God intended society to be.
As others look at us relating in love they will ask, ‘Hey, I like that! Can I get in on that?? And we’ll say, ‘Sure! There’s plenty of room in the family!?
So, do you need a fresh start with God? Participate in a church that is purposeful in being the family God wants it to be. Receive God’s love.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
It is officially fall. The orange cones have exponentially multiplied over the summer. Yesterday, as I drove about, it seemed as if every road I was on had some construction activity occurring.
It is as if there is a mad rush to start and complete as many projects as possible before winter shuts everything down. Stuck in traffic, detours, lane closures, flaggers blocking the road, late for appointments, waiting, waiting, waiting; a good time to receive the gift of presence.
It is easy to get impatient, anxious, even angry or upset when faced with delays. I know that feeling of anxiety that comes with being in a hurry, rushing to catch up or to get to somewhere on time.
I know of people who like to honk their horns, ride the bumper of the car in front of them, yell and scream and make hand gestures as if they have control over the person in front of them. We can be pushy, demanding, controlling and manipulative, intolerant and intolerable. Personally, I don’t want to live like that.
Yesterday is history, tomorrow is mystery; the gift is in the now, that is why they call it the present.
Now is all we have, we can’t change the past nor control the future, we can only trulybe and act in the moment.
Yet we spend most of our time either glorifying or regretting the past and worrying about or wishing for the future. With one foot in yesterday and one foot in tomorrow we are wasting today.
There was once an old monastery that had fallen on hard times. The monks were worried, fearful, and anxious about their future. They were critical and always complaining about something.
There had been no new monks joining for quite a while and the monastery was in danger of folding. One day a nearby Rabbi came to visit, to share tea and conversation with the monks. Before he left he gave them this gift. He said, ‘The Messiah is one of you.?
A long story shortened, the monks began to treat each other as if they each were the Holy One. They were, kind, thoughtful and helpful.
The people who still came to picnic on the grounds began to feel the renewed spirit of the place, they would stay longer and visit with the monks. Soon young men began to ask to join their order and the old monastery was reborn.
Today, this now moment, is what we have to work with; it is the raw material that shapes and forms our lives. Our experience of today is the result of the beliefs, ideas, feelings and emotions that we held onto yesterday. Tomorrow will be the result of the beliefs, ideas, feelings and emotions that we choose to hold onto today.
The key is in the choosing, which only happens in the now.
We are made in the image and after the likeness of God (Genesis 1:26.) ‘God is Spirit? (John 4:24), we are inherently spiritual.
‘What is man that thou are mindful of him? thou hast made him little less than God.? (Psalms 8:4,5.) We are not the totality of God, we are expressions of God, the spirit made manifest. The gift of God is life, what we do with it is our gift to God.
‘God so loved the world that he gave it to his only begotten Son.? (John 3:16.) ‘Israel is my first-born son? (Exodus 4:22.)’He (God) said to me (David), ‘You are my son, today I have begotten you.? ‘I am father to Israel, and Ephraim is my first-born.? ‘Peace among men with whom he (God) is pleased!? (Luke 2:14.)
‘God so loved the world? and is ‘pleased? with us. Maybe it’s time to do and be the same. May you accept the gift of presence this day.
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
for Peace Unity Community.
I used to think God was a judgmental, harsh, old guy with a lightening bolt in His hand. Honestly, I think a lot of people do. When you see Him like that consequently there is a natural distance present.
As a Christian I tried my best to love him, but it was so much work continually striving to please an astringent God. Half of the time I wondered if I was on his good side or if He was ready to strike.
Then one day the unexpected happened. I found out what God is REALLY like. Someone told me that God is love and that He loved me like a daddy loves his precious little girl.
And, something in me started to come to life, because true love makes the heart soar. I opened my thoughts to wonder, could it be true? Could the lens I’d been viewing God through all these years be tainted?
It was then that I heard “God is like an IKEA couch.” ~ Judah Smith. Say what?! You read that right, an IKEA couch.
You know the couch you buy that you don’t mind if your kids get their sticky hands on it, or smear butter into the fabric (which in case you were wondering has TOTALLY happened in my house), the couch that is in your family room that you actually use.
The IKEA couch is not a fancy piece of furniture in a special living room that you keep preserved for special occasions.
This is the couch your family does life in and you aren’t afraid to use it or if it will get too much wear and tear. It is designed and purposed for daily use.
Like the IKEA sofa, God wants you to feel comfortable to do life with Him. He doesn’t want to be a special occasion, once in a while God. He wants to be your every day, come to him with your sticky situations Father.
God does not require you to clean yourself up to be close to Him, he loves you just like you are.
The bible says For God so LOVED the world that He gave his only son (John 3:16)….it does not say he so JUDGED the world, he’s so ANGRY at the world or that he’s so DISAPPOINTED in the world. What word did he use to describe how he felt for ALL people in the entire world? LOVE.
God desires for every person on the planet to experience His real love for them.
Would you dare to believe that the creator of the universe is actually deeply in love with you, cares about each detail of your every day and wants to do life at your side?
If you open your heart once more he will show you, like He did with me, what He is REALLY like.
Amber Grace of Clarkston is an author at letloveinvade.com.
One of my favorite scenes comes from the movie ‘Bruce Almighty,? when Bruce, played by Jim Carrey, is given the responsibility to answer everyone’s prayers for the day.
It doesn’t take long for Bruce to become very overwhelmed by so many requests. So, Bruce devises a plan. He will give everyone exactly what they want by having the prayer request hotline set on auto pilot.
What Bruce quickly learns is that giving everyone what they prayed for is not always a good thing.
When I first saw the scene, I reflected on how difficult it is to desire God’s will to be done in our lives.
We want what we ask for to be answered quickly and with a yes. One of the most rewarding things we can do is to thank God that He loves us enough to know what is best for us and sometimes respond differently than what we expected because His will is truly better than our own.
There are certain things we pray for where we may not have clarity on what is best but there are other things we can have confidence in that the best answer is yes.
These are what I refer to as kingdom prayers. 1 John 5:15 says: And if we know that he hears us’whatever we ask’we know we have what we asked of him.
When you read that did you just picture the bird on the keyboard constantly hitting yes for whatever prayer that was just sent to heaven?
A lot of people are confused with this verse because they know there are definitely things they have prayed for where the answer was a no or a not yet.
To understand what John is writing we need to view the verse in its proper context. 1 John 5:14 says: This is the confidence which we have before Him, that, if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us.
So the progression is that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us, if He hears us we know we have whatever it is that we ask because it is in line with His will.
So what is God’s will for your life and for others? God’s will is Jesus. It always has been and always will be. Ephesians 1:4-5: For he chose us in him before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight.
In love he predestined us for adoption to sonship through Jesus Christ, in accordance with his pleasure and will.
What all of this means is that whenever your prayers center around glorifying God through Jesus you already have your answer, yes!
If I pray for God to send someone into my life this week I could share Jesus with, the answer is yes. I promise you someone will show up. If you don’t believe me, try it. It works.
So, God the Father heard your prayer, the Father responded to your prayer, because your prayer is in line with His will, so the answer is yes.
Here is another angle to look at your prayer life when it comes to a personal need.
Let’s say the need is to go to college so you can earn a degree. The prayer is: Lord, help me to get accepted to the University of Michigan.
What is the answer to this prayer going to be? I don’t know. I have no confidence in how God might respond to that prayer.
However, here is a prayer not focused on self but focused on others and growing the kingdom. Lord, help me to get accepted to the college/place where I will have the most impact for your kingdom.
The answer is yes. Switch your prayers to kingdom prayers and you will be amazed at how God will answer that prayer and do more with the answer than you could ever imagine.
The Rev. Dr. Matthew Webster is pastor of First Congregational Church of Clarkston.
It was a case of mistaken identity.
I was sure it was him, a friend from of old. I called out his name and there was no response. When I realized my mistake I was rather embarrassed. But then I realized this is something that often happens.
I often reflect on mankind’s mistaken identity of Who (or what) God is.
We have designed God in our own, neat, little box. Cafeteria style theology leads us through life. We read the Bible and, if it fits our idea, we follow it; otherwise we discard what the Bible says. Mistaken identity?
What do we really know about God? Everything we need to know is in the Bible or revealed in His creation.
Our world, and many who are involved in science, would have us believe all things came into being by chance, something they have named evolution. Mistaken identity.
Psalm 139 reminds us Where shall I go from Your Spirit? Or where shall I flee from Your presence? If I ascend to heaven, You are there! If I make my bed in Sheol, You are there! If I take the wings of the morning and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea, even there Your hand shall lead me, and Your right hand shall hold me. (7-10) (ESV)
We also read in Psalm 19:1 The heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky above proclaims His handiwork. (ESV)
Think about Paul, in the New Testament. It was a case of mistaken identity.
He was on his way to Damascus, armed with a letter to arrest the followers of Jesus, when he was knocked to the ground and asked: ‘Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting Me?? And he said, ‘Who are You, Lord?? And He said, ‘I am Jesus, Whom you are persecuting. (Acts 9:4b-5) (ESV)
Just think of the great plans God had in store for Paul! Later he would write But who are you, O man, to answer back to God? Will what is molded say to its molder, ‘Why have you made me like this?? Has the potter no right over the clay, to make out of the same lump one vessel for honorable use and another for dishonorable use? (Romans 19:20-21, ESV)
Mistaken identity.
Too often the created becomes the god and we put God aside. We hear mottos about looking out for number one, the importance of me, our individual rights, and the such.
But God has a greater outlook! God NEVER mistakes our identity. He knows every one of us, even knowing the number of hairs on our head. And He cares for us and about us. That is why He sent His Son, Jesus, to shed His blood on the cross. It was not a mistake. It was His plan; it was Him showing His love for us.
God doesn’t, won’t, make mistakes. He made you to love you. He calls you to be His servant, ever-faithful, ever-loving. Remain rooted in Him!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
This summer I am putting a new railing on my deck, the deck that I built two years ago from the dead ash trees on our property.
I don’t encourage anyone to follow this example for it is not the easier softer way. I spent much of my time sorting and sizing, ripping and treating, fussing and hollering, that summer. But the result is a beautiful and unique work of art. It also works well as a deck.
Much of the lumber for the railing has sat out in the weather, the exposed areas have turned gray and the grain has swollen. Much of the wood had not been run through the planer when I had one and it still has saw marks in it. Without a planer I am left to sanding off the saw marks and weathering with my belt sanders.
This was not an unenjoyable task, yet it was time consuming. It seemed to take forever. Until I came up with a new technique. A technique that goes against everything I know about finish carpentry from wood shop classes and working in the garage with my dad as a kid. A technique that contradicted many strongly held beliefs. A technique that I ran from in my mind as I would a hot flame. Until I tried it.
I began sanding in an X pattern across the grain first. This served to take off the bulk of the material that needed to be removed. I’m sure many of you reading this are aghast.
‘Always sand with the grain!? is a truth that was drilled into my head so strongly as a young man that I feel guilty with every board I sand this way. But it works!
What is truth? It is generally defined as that which is true: in accord with fact or reality. But not always. It is also that which is accepted as true.
Whether by an individual or as common sense, something can be considered true even when it has no basis in fact or reality. Take our political debate for example.
2016 has come early this year. We’ve already had a presidential candidate’s televised debate while we are still fifteen months away from the general election. And the misstatements of fact escalates.
Fact seems to be the main casualty of politics. If you repeat a lie often enough and enough people believe it, then it becomes a truth even though it has no basis in fact or reality.
Whether the topic that candidates spoke on was immigration, climate change or economic policy or whatever, fact checkers had a field day pointing out the multitude of false statements.
I’m realizing that it is not that the candidates lie necessarily. I understand that they may even believe what they are saying is true. But, they are misinformed as to the facts and the reality of the topic. We do ourselves a disservice if we believe politicians without checking into the facts ourselves.
What is Truth? Pilate asked this question of Jesus during his trial (John 18:38.) Jesus? answer still reverberates down through the centuries.
He said nothing. For what can you say to a ruler, a politician, a soldier, whose life depends upon maintaining control and the status quo? For them, the truth is whatever will keep them in power, whatever will maintain order, whatever serves their purpose.
The Truth is that which sets you free (John 8:32.) What binds us, keeps us from realizing our potential for peace, wholeness and abundance, is our rigid attitudes and false beliefs.
Feelings of insecurity, selfishness, doubt and fear, negative thoughts of lack and limitation, believing that we could ever do anything that would separate us from God, separate us from our good; these all serve to keep us from realizing the Truth.
Sometimes the Truth goes against the grain of what we believe to be true. ‘The kingdom of God is at hand? (Mark 1:15) this is the good news, Heaven is within our reach right here and now! Reach out with your heart and mind to accept it and it is yours.
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is pastor of Peace Unity Community
If you are like me, you have never struggled with coming up with ideas of what you would do if you were given a million dollars.
Over the years, as I have periodically thought about that question, my answers have changed.
As a youth, my thoughts were full of ideas of things I believed would serve to enhance my own life.
As I have gotten older and matured and God has grown the generosity in my heart, my thoughts about what I would do has centered on glorifying God.
I have come to the understanding people’s needs are met as a result of introducing them to our great provider, Jesus. Because everything good we have in our lives has come from God (James 1:17).
So, (before reading any further) grab a pen and paper and write down your own ideas of what you would like to do if I were to give you one million dollars (insert Dr. Evil’s laugh from Austin Powers).
The only stipulation is the money has to be used to bless others. I’d love to read some of your ideas.
The good news is your dreams of blessing others can still become a reality. When you dream million dollar dreams, it will probably involve working with others, as the body of Christ together.
Who knows how God might work through this exercise, pairing up people to accomplish extraordinary things for His kingdom through a simple question. Email me your ideas at revmwebster@gmail.com
Did you know that over the course of our lifetime, the majority of us will in fact earn more than a million dollars?
So maybe the better question isn’t what would you do if you won a million dollars? The better question is: What are you going to do with the million dollars plus you are already going to earn in your lifetime?
What do you do with the time and the talent and wonderful resources you are blessed to have? How do you invest your resources for the greatest impact?
Generosity flows from within. If you are generous with what you have now, you are going to be generous, as you are given more.
I can’t tell you how many times a church parishioner has told me if they win the lottery, the church is really going to be in a good spot.
I politely tell them, God has given His people everything they need to accomplish His plan and purposes.
We need an awareness of just how blessed we are. This happens as we focus on the greatest gift God has given us, His only Son.
The results are seen in the early church in Acts 4: ‘God’s grace was so powerfully at work in them all that there were no needy persons among them.?
If children of God would grow in the gratitude for what they already have we wouldn’t have to dream of one day what we could do but would instead begin that journey today.
The Rev. Dr. Matthew Webster is pastor of First Congregational Church of Clarkston
I love the classic story that C.S. Lewis tells of a young boy playing in a mud puddle.
Imagine this boy who has never been to the beach. He’s playing in a mud puddle. There’s the mud and there’s the water. He’s playing with his cars and trucks in a dirty little mud puddle.
As his parent, you come up to him, and you say, ‘We’re going to the beach.?
He has never seen the beach. He says, ‘I can’t go to the beach. I’m having too much fun here.?
You sit down. What can you say to your child? All you can say is, ‘You have to trust me. The beach is so much better than this mud puddle! The fun you’re trying to find in this mud puddle is nothing compared to the beach! You have to trust me. Come on! Let’s go to the beach!?
Your son doesn’t understand. He just thinks you are a grouch. Your son doesn’t trust you or believe you. So he throws a fit because he wants to keep playing in the mud puddle.
You and I are like little kids. We like our mud puddles. We like our sins. Sexual sins. Gossiping sins. Ego sins. We find a certain fun and satisfaction when we play in those mud puddles.
Our Father says, ‘I have so much more for you than this mud puddle. I love you! I want you to trust me! Come on! Let me take you to the beach!?
When you and I sin, we are basically saying, ‘God, I don’t trust you. I like this mud puddle and I choose this over you.?
When you and I sin, we are basically saying, ‘God, I think you are a grouch. I don’t think you really want what’s best for me. So let me alone. Let me play in my mud puddle.?
Do you realize that God is a good and beautiful parent? He wants to get you out of your mud puddles and to the beach.
Jesus said, ‘If you keep my commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commands and remain in his love. I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be complete. (John 15:10-11)
Notice the connections. Loving God is not a reason to disobey him. Rather, if we love God, we will keep his commands. If we keep his commands, we will experience more joy. Do you see how that flows? Love leads to obedience. Obedience leads to joy.
So the next time you’re tempted to sin, say, ‘God created me for more than this mud puddle! He’s taking me to the beach! I trust him. He’s no grouch. He has something better for me than this mud puddle.”
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
What a summer we are having! Are you enjoying all the warm weather?
True, it has not been as warm as we might like, nor is it as warm as normal, but think of all the money we are saving on air conditioning! As I am writing this I looked at my thermometer and it was 62 degrees at noon!
What is happening? I often hear that question asked. My answer is that it is part of the cycle of the earth.
Will it get warmer? Yes. It will also get cooler. As we are reminded in Ecclesiastes 1:9, What has been is what will be, and what has been done is what will be done, and there is nothing new under the sun. (ESV)
Nothing new? you might ask. What about all the inventions and the pace of technology around us, going by so fast you cannot keep up with it? Don’t you remember when computers were first coming out and how s ? l ? o ? w they were? Look at how we have progressed today!
Have we really progressed? Have we come to the point where we are able to make something out of nothing? No. Have we come to a point where we are able to design the intricacies of a human being without anything to begin with? No. We may be able to clone something but the clone is compromised from the original. We fall short.
Again, turning to God’s Word, we are reminded that all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God. (Romans 3:23, ESV). We can never accomplish what God has done because if we do then we become God and no longer need Him.
The story is told of a scientist telling God that He wasn’t needed anymore; science could do all He could. So God invited the scientist to make a man out of dust.
The scientist bent down and began gathering dirt together when God said: ‘What are you doing?? The scientist responded that he was going to make man out of the dust. God’s response was ‘Get your own dirt!? Left to our own devices we come up short.
This is where God’s great promise brings us comfort and hope. Solomon also wrote For to the one who pleases Him God has given wisdom and knowledge and joy, but to the sinner He has given the business of gathering and collecting, only to give to one who pleases God. This also is vanity and a striving after wind, (Ecclesiastes 2:26, ESV). Paul continued in Romans with these words: [They] are justified by His grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, ‘Whom God put forward as a propitiation by His blood, to be received by faith. (3:24-25)
What has changed? Maybe the way we look at things and react to them but definitely NOT God in His wisdom and in His loving supply to us.
Trust Him. He will lead you.
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
I took a week off last week. My wife and I
experienced our first vacation alone together
in 22 years, since before children.
We drove to the Upper Peninsula,
camping mostly; we stayed in a couple motels
when the weather was not conducive to
pitching a tent. Hiking to see water falls,
canyons and rocks, flora and fauna, eagle,
osprey and swan nests, we received the gift
of renewal that comes with touching into
the natural environment.
Heading south out of the Manistique area
Thursday morning evidence of the UP’s
popularity became obvious.
We encountered a steady
line of traffic, mainly trailers
and motorhomes, first just
the one lane until we
crossed the bridge then
two lanes and then we
witnessed a four lane
parking lot as we passed by
Saginaw, all headed north
for the holiday weekend. I
was very happy to be
heading south.
Thinking back over my
life how often I seem to be going in the
opposite direction to the majority of people
around me. The most significant being the
decision 30 years ago to leave the high paying
prestigious corporate controller, financial
vice-president, board of directors, positions
I held at the time. Would I do it again? You
betcha! I may not have the money and
collection of stuff I would have had if I had
stayed in the corporate world, but I have a
wealth of experiences, depth of relationships
and the sense of self and of well-being that I
otherwise would not have.
As a minister in a church I faced what
most ministers in small to medium sized
churches face, the need for additional
income. Most churches do not pay ministers
enough to support a family. Either the spouse
is the main money earner or the minister has
a second job to pay the bills.
In the 1990s, one of my sources of
additional income was as a partner in an
organic farm cooperative. At the same time I
served on the Ecumenical Ministries of
Oregon’s Food Security Project.
We mapped out the sources of locally
grown and distributed food items, farms,
cooperatives, etc. Back then we were looking
ahead to a time of reduced dependence upon
long distance shipping of food which is not
as healthy and wasteful in so many ways
compared to local produce.
About the same time my wife and I began
what has now become Unity Worldwide
Ministries Earth Care Ministry. The evidence
of Global Warming driven Climate Change
fueled by human activities has been
generally accepted by a majority of Climate
Scientists since the 1970s.
The scientific community began writing
about the disastrous effects of pumping CO2
into the air in the early 1800’s. Studies now
show we have been affecting the global
climate since we began clearing forests for
farming over ten thousand years ago. With
the release of the Pope’s Environmental
Encyclical last month, responding to the
threat of Climate Change is now officially a
moral and spiritual imperative.
There are many myths surrounding this
issue. Some say there is no consensus, some
say there is no warming, and others say
natural factors are causing the warming. All
of these myths are false and have no basis
in fact.
Ninety-seven percent of climate
scientists agree humans are driving Global
Warming. Last year was the warmest year
on record and 9 of the 10 warmest years have
been since 2000.
The natural factors that have caused
heating and cooling in the past, volcanoes
and solar activity being the most
pronounced, would have produced another
ice age by now if we had not been increasing
the levels of CO2 in the atmosphere.
Now that we have looked at the facts,
what do we do about them? This is where
we should be in the discussion. One thing
I’ve learned is it is usually cheaper and easier
to fix something earlier rather than later. The
longer we wait to begin the changes
necessary the more we will pay in lives lost
or displaced, rebuilding infrastructure, and
otherwise mitigating the disastrous effects.
Remember, we are in this together. The
more we choose to work together the easier
it is to adapt to change. Change is natural
and we have the inherent ability to grow and
unfold through the changes in our lives.
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
for Peace Unity Community
A woman came to a lawyer and said, ‘I want to get a divorce. I really hate my husband, and I want to hurt him. Give me some advice. I want to get his gold. I want to give him the shaft. I want to hurt him every way I can.?
The attorney said, ‘All right, here’s what you do. For the next three months while we’re going through the divorce proceedings, don’t criticize your husband. Only speak kind words to him. Build him up. Every time he does something, commend him for it. Tell him what a great guy he is, and do that for three months.
After he thinks that he has your confidence and love, tell him you were just yanking his chain and it will hurt him good.?
The woman thought, ‘Perfect! I can play that game!?
So she complimented her husband for everything he did. For three months she told him what a great man he was.
Guess what happened? After three months, they forgot about the divorce and went on a second honeymoon!
Words are powerful! We shape our words and then our words shape us. The Bible says, ‘If you claim to be religious but don’t control your tongue, you are just fooling yourself, and your religion is worthless.? James 1:26 (NLT)
How’s your home life? How’s your marriage?
Maybe you’ve been a Christian for years, but you have no control over your tongue. Maybe you swear and use profanity. Maybe you and your spouse are verbally at war with each other. Criticism and harshness are common.
God says, ‘If you want my power in your lives, you’ve got to get control of your tongues, because the words you use are powerful and shape your life!?
Fathers, this Father’s Day use the power of words to bless your family. Mothers, tell your husband how great he is, and see what happens.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
We often hear people speaking about living in the end times. Interestingly, this has been the thought of generations from the time Jesus ascended into heaven.
We can look at the signs described in the Book of Revelation, see many of them having occurred, and wonder if the time really is near.
True, we are living in the end times. We, as Lutherans, believe the end began when Jesus ascended.
But are we to stand about gazing into the sky waiting for His return? Absolutely not!
As He was meeting with His disciples on the mount from which He ascended Jesus spoke words that are famous to most Christians. In Matthew 28: 19-20 Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,’teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.? (ESV)
How important that first word, go. We do not sit by idly. How many people are dying and are lost for eternity because Christians do not go and bear witness of the faith they have been given?
We are in a battle! It is not against any other church body or denomination. It is much greater a battle.
St. Paul says, in Ephesians 6:12, For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers over this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places. It is a spiritual battle that will continue on until the end of time.
Is the end near? It is closer today than it was yesterday, but we do not know when it will be.
As Jesus reminds us: ‘But concerning that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, nor the Son, but the Father only. (Matthew 24:36, ESV)
When I read that someone has predicted when Jesus will return, I smile. We do not know when, we cannot predict when, but we need to be ready.
I recently read a quip about a couple at a University graduation who walked into the parking lot and saw a car with two bumper stickers.
When the owner approached the car they said he might want to remove one of the bumper stickers. The one read ‘Jesus is coming.? The other said ‘Escape to Wisconsin.?
There is no escape, only rescue through the faith we have in Jesus as our Savior. He says: No one comes to the Father except by Me. (John 14:6 ESV)
The battle is being waged for your soul. It is a battle that will continue your whole life long. Satan wants you to spend eternity with him in hell, suffering for your sins. God wants you in heaven to rejoice in glory with Him.
The battle wages. But, if you read the end of the Book you find: We win!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
I was pleasantly surprised to read an article in the Huffington Post where Stan Van Gundy discussed the potential for burn-out in the N.B.A.
The reason Stan gave for burn-out is the demanding travel schedule that is placed upon the players. I enjoyed the article because it reinforced to me that no one is exempt from the possibility of burn-out.
Burn-out finds people of all different vocations, and of all different types of faith. Burn-out doesn’t discriminate between the star players on the team or even the role players.
Burn-out can be found on the coaching staff or the catering team.
If burn-out is such a strong potential danger in everyone’s lives where it robs us of our joy, sleep, potential success, and even our health, wouldn’t it be beneficial for us to know what causes it and how we can prevent it?
Lisa M. Gerry, in an article in Forbes magazine, defined burnout this way? ‘Burnout is when the demands placed on you exceed the resources available to you.?
I love this definition because it very simply, yet profoundly, tells us what burn-out is and how it takes place within the complex varied situations we experience daily.
If we live any length of time where the demands exceed the resources we have, we end up burned out. In the N.B.A., the recipe for burn out is several back-to back games, injuries, and overtime minutes where players are forced to play more than their bodies can take.
Burn out doesn’t have to be the reality of our lives. There is something very powerful that is available for those who will receive the free gift God gives through Jesus that makes burn-out not just preventable, but impossible.
As you continue to receive resources/ grace from God that is greater than the demands placed upon you, you will never burn out. As God’s child you are never going to be in a situation where the demands placed upon you exceed the resources that He has made available to you.
If God’s presence is inside of you (Galatians 2:20) ? you have unlimited resources. Burn-out is not possible when we continually access the amazing, unlimited supply of grace.
In the life of a follower of Christ, in order for burn-out to happen, an individual has to see his or her situation in the wrong light for this to even be a possibility.
When we look at our lives in the wrong/weak light, we see things that aren’t really there or aren’t as they truly seem. When our focus is on what appears as lack, or the great demand upon us, we lose sight of the abundance and the victory of Jesus.
Christ lives in us. Christ has overcome what is coming over you. So, in this life may we focus on God’s Word that brings us into the right light to see our situation as it truly is.
‘Now all glory to God, who is able, through his mighty power at work within us, to accomplish infinitely more than we might ask or think? ? (Ephesians 3:20 NLT).
May you allow the power of God to work mightily in and through your life. May God be glorified as He guides your path away from burn-out and into the abundant life.
The Rev. Dr. Matthew Webster is pastor of First Congregational Church of Clarkston.
Happy Mother’s Day! Moms, here’s a little humor to brighten your day. Children were asked the following questions, and here are their answers:
How do you decide who to marry?
You got to find somebody who likes the same stuff. Like if you like sports, she should like it that you like sports, and she should keep the chips and dip coming.? Alan, age 10
How can a stranger tell if two people are married?
‘You might have to guess, based on whether they seem to be yelling at the same kids.? Derrick, age 8
What do most people do on a date?
On the first date, they just tell each other lies, and that usually gets them interested enough to go for a second date.? Martin, age 10
When is it ok to kiss someone?
‘When they’re rich.? Pam, age 7
Is it better to be single or married?
‘It’s better for girls to be single but not for boys. Boys need someone to clean up after them.? Anita, age 9
How would the world be different if people didn’t get married?
‘There sure would be a lot of kids to explain, wouldn’t there?? Kelvin, age 8
How would you make a marriage work?
‘Tell your wife that she looks pretty even if she looks like a’truck.? Ricky, age 10
How do we make marriage work? For sure, it’s tough! On this Mother’s Day I plan to share a message with my congregation called ‘Secrets of a Satisfying Marriage.? Here are just a couple of reflections from that message.
One day Charlie Brown learned that his grandparents had been married for over 50 years. Charlie said, ‘Wow, grandma, you sure are lucky.? Grandma said, ‘A good marriage isn’t luck; it’s skill!?
I don’t care who you marry. Good marriages just don’t happen. Many people think that if they just marry ‘the right person,? then everything will come easy! Not so! I don’t care who you marry, a good marriage takes time, commitment, and effort.
For example, one secret to a good marriage is communication. Experts say that 85% of all marriage problems have to do with poor communication. Newsweek released a statistic that said, ‘The average couple talks to each other alone four minutes a day. The average couple spends 47 hours a week in front of the television and spends about 30 minutes total in communication per week.
Another secret to a satisfying marriage is consideration. The Bible says, Always be humble and gentle. Be patient with each other, making allowance for each other’s faults because of your love. (Ephesians 4:2)
Consideration means paying attention to what they say, showing common courtesy, and treating them with respect. Consideration means you go out and bring in the groceries, even if it is the 4th quarter. Consideration means you wait until she has both legs in the car before you pull out of the driveway.
It is amazing how quickly consideration vanishes once we get married. When we’re dating we are so considerate and thoughtful and helpful. Once we put the wedding band on it’s as if that gave us permission to be rude and crude to each other.
The biggest secret to a satisfying marriage is Christ. The Bible says that we are made in the image of God. We were created to love and be loved, to know and be known.
The Bible also says we are fallen, damaged goods. The image of God within us is distorted. Our love so easily becomes lust. Our desire to be known effortlessly becomes selfishness.
The Bible also says that Christ is the answer. Christ is our power. Christ is our deepest need. If we truly have Christ, he brings a power and a healing that touches even our marriage.
I encourage you as we approach Mother’s Day, the best gift you can give to your family and to yourself, is Christ. Get Him in your life. Ask Him to put His Spirit within you. Commit your life, including your marriage, to Christ. See what happens. A satisfying marriage does not have to be a secret.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
This past weekend was a wonderful experience! Many churches in the area went into the community to put their faith in action.
Families needing work done in their yard found able and willing people cleaning up the leaves from last fall and getting everything ready for spring.
An area care center that is often forgotten and neglected was visited, food was shared, and people were enlightened with gifts bearing Detroit Tigers themes to help them celebrate the season ahead.
Others from our congregation gathered to prepare hygiene kits that will be distributed at Open Door outreach.
Faith in action. Isn’t that what it is supposed to be? In James 2:18 we read: But someone will say, ‘You have faith and I have works.? Show me your faith apart from your works, and I will show you my faith by my works. (ESV)
We, as Christians, are called to live the faith we proclaim, showing that faith by reaching out to those in greater need, sharing what God has given us to make their life a little better.
Are there times we fail? Yes, we all do. It is called sin. It is then that we repent of our sin, seek to make amends with the person against whom we have sinned, and lay those sins at the foot of the cross knowing we have been forgiven and those sins removed from us.
Why is it we share our faith? Imagine you found an instant and immediate cure for cancer. Would you keep that discovery to yourself?
We have been given a cure from sin and everlasting death in Jesus, God’s Son, our Savior. How can we keep this to ourselves and not share the hope we have received?
As Jesus is preparing to leave this earth after His resurrection from the dead, after His spending 40 days with His disciples and other followers, while standing on the mountain, tells them to go and make disciples of all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. He also gives a promise that He is with us always.
These words, known as the Great Commission, remind us that there is work to be done. We have been given a co-mission, a mission of sharing God’s love shown upon a cross where His Son died to pay the penalty for our sins, and sharing the hope we have received in learning that the tomb is empty, that Jesus was raised from the dead.
We, in the church, are still in the season of Easter. We continue to remember the day of the Resurrection.
We also remember His resurrection every Sunday when we have a little taste of Easter.
Most important of all is the remembrance of living that Easter hope as a certainty based on the promises of God’s Word and living those promises by building others up, by helping them when they need a word of encouragement ? living our faith in Him!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
A story that could be true of any of us’one day a woman was shopping with her young daughter. She was very busy and had many errands to run. The crowds and traffic were terrible that day, so they even had to skip lunch to get everything done.
Towards the end of the long day the woman was tired and hungry, her feet were aching, and she was more than a little irritable.
As they left the last store to finally head for home, the woman said offhandedly to her daughter, ‘Could you believe the nasty look that salesman gave me??
Without skipping a beat her young daughter innocently answered, ‘Mommy, he didn’t give that nasty look to you. You already had it when you went in.?
Knowing the young girl spoke truth, the woman paused, said a silent prayer and gave her daughter a hug as she said, ‘Thanks, I really needed that!?
Like it or not, intentionally or unintentionally, carefully or carelessly, we share what we have with others. It’s true, whether we are aware of it or not, that what we do has an impact on our world and on those around us ‘for better or for worse.? We are not islands unto ourselves.
Every time we encounter another human, no matter who they are or what they’re doing, we have an opportunity to build up or tear down. Wherever we go we can share joy, peace and love, or we can sow anger, anxiety, frustration and despair.
Life can be very difficult and yet in the midst of all things I really want to build others up and share goodness. Often it is in the little things and in the common everyday experiences that we have our greatest impact ? and our kids, and others, do watch what we do more carefully than we are usually aware.
I can imagine Jesus? disciples and others watching him very carefully to see how he handled things ? how he treated people along the journey of life. Was he consistent? How did he deal with interruptions and difficult people? How did he handle those different from him? How did he react to those who made mistakes? What did he really care about most? How was he generous with all that he had?
We have so many ways to build one another up in our everyday life. This week I am particularly excited about all that is happening through My Habitat Clarkston.
MHC is a local initiative drawing together people from all sectors of our community to work together to build a better habitat for all.
As part of the Spring Community Impact Weekend we will bless Shannon Chatman’s new habitat home in Springfield Township built by the generous dollars, efforts and prayers of our community. And the movement is growing as the Spring and Fall Impact Days have grown into Impact Weekends. You can check out the myriad of serving projects this weekend at www.impact-weekend.org and learn more about MHC at the MyHabitatClarkston Facebook site.
After Easter, Jesus appears to his disciples a number of times and shares with them the miracle of his resurrection. Because it was so amazing they were always startled by his presence or they didn’t recognize him.
Among Jesus? first words to his friends were, ‘Peace be with you.? Following Jesus? example I wonder how our days would be different if we greeted each new morning and each other with the words or actions that say, ‘Peace be with you.? That is the kind of impact I want to have each day, and with God’s help I really can.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is senior pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
Weeded the garlic bed yesterday. Sometimes it is nice to be able to look back and see that something got done. Two five-gallon buckets full of weeds. Nothing visible but garlic stalks and soil. But, I know the seeds and roots of those weeds are still there and, eventually I’ll have to weed the bed again.
Some say that, ‘weeds are just flowers growing where you don’t want them.? And, I know for me this is true. I’m not as diligent as I could be at keeping the beds weed free. Especially later in the summer when my early spring enthusiasm for gardening wanes and I find other distractions; home repairs, remodeling projects, vacations and back to school preparations all begin to take priority.
When I let the distractions gain priority, that is when the ‘weeds? begin to flower. Pretty little pink, yellow, blue and white flowers scattered throughout the vegetable beds. They quickly go to seed, usually before I can create the time to remove them. Now I know all that beautiful soil is full of the seeds of flowers that I don’t want growing in my garden.
Our minds are the gardens we all have been given to tend. And in every garden of the mind exist the seeds of evil. Now before you stop reading, let me give you my definition of evil. It is to live backward. Turn the word “live” around and you have “evil,” it is to live backward. Life is meant to be lived from the center outward. Yet most of us spend most of our time looking outside ourselves for guidance on how to feel and what to think and what to do. Advertisers, politicians and religions count on this.
In the early 70’s, Kris Kristofferson wrote a song that still resonates with me. It was called, ‘Jesus was a Capricorn? which included the line ‘Reckon they’d just nail him up if he came round again.? It was a radical song in a radical time.
The word radical comes from the same root as radius and means being rooted or coming from the center. Jesus was a radical, he rejected the teachings of the religious authorities, the lawyers and aristocrats of his day. He challenged the Pharisees and the Sadducees and their interpretation of scripture, their holding to the letter of the law while denying the spirit which is life. He questioned authority. He worshiped God as spirit, not religion. ‘Reckon they’d just nail him up if he came round again.?
Jesus simplified the Old Testament law and the prophets for us, he distilled the 10 commandments down into 2; ‘The first is, ‘Hear, O’Israel: the Lord our God, the Lord is one;’you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength. ‘The second is this, ‘You shall love your neighbour as yourself.? There is no other commandment greater than these.?
Jesus quoted the Shema from Deuteronomy, a central teaching of the Jewish faith. The Koran includes 200 verses on compassion, an expression of Love. The Dalai Lama teaches Compassion, Thich Nhat Hanh teaches Mindfulness, another expression of Love. For Lao Tzu, the first Treasure is Love. Virtually all the world’s religions honor love and compassion in their worship of God, Allah, Tao, Chi, Ki, Great Spirit, Infinite Spirit and all the other names for the infinite, unlimited, eternal power and presence that I call God.
And, every religion includes a version of what Christianity calls the Golden Rule, ‘Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.? This is a practical application of the Great Commandment and how we can put it to work in our lives. For me, it encompasses the requirement to allow others to be who and what they are going to be. The last thing I want is for someone to tell me how I am supposed to think, feel and act. I imagine that makes me a radical. Of course, I have a great teacher.
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior minister for Peace Unity Community
As you go through your daily routine, and your weekly duties, do you have a sense that your work is never really done? There is so much to do, so little time.
Time seems to accelerate the older we get. In my life I can’t remember the last time I said I was bored, but when I was younger, it was a regular thought I had.
Holy Week is a time for us to slow down from busyness and reflect on what Jesus has done for us.
However, the opposite is usually true, where schedules are jam packed and we can easily miss the beauty of Jesus? declaration in John 19:30: ‘It is finished.?
In those three words, Jesus declared victory over our past failures, over our sin, shame, and the condemnation the enemy had placed upon us. His work, is a completed work.
‘It is finished.?
I thought about what that means as I recalled some of my past trips to visit the Detroit Institute of Arts I am never disappointed whenever I make a trip there because the artwork is breath taking and I leave feeling very inspired.
It is incredible to see the completed vision the artist had. I have some friends who are artists and when I have looked at a project before it was completed, it was difficult to understand what the vision really was.
But once it was a finished work, I could fully appreciate and enjoy the work that had been done.
When I look in Scriptures and I see Jesus, I am looking at the very face of God. Perfection. When I look to the cross I see the finished work of the Savior of the world. What a beautiful masterpiece.
Now, I would never consider taking a masterpiece at the D.I.A. down and try to alter it in any way. It is a finished work. It was done by a master, whose skill set dwarfs mine.
Jesus’s work on the cross was a finished work. You cannot take something that is complete and complete it. It is already done.
For us, Jesus? proclamation tells us our salvation is won and our sins are all forgiven. We are made forever righteous by His blood.
That is the message of Easter that should bring with it an overwhelming sense of peace. It should give us the ability to rest and receive and to go out into the world with a sense of being a completed project of God.
In Christ, we are a new creation. This means we are not a messed up project God is working on. We are a beautiful new creation in Christ.
The Greek word used in John 19:30 for finished is teleo. So, in the days of antiquity, a servant would use the word teleo when reporting to his master: ‘I have completed the work assigned to me.? (Example: John 17:4).
What we extract from this Greek word is what Jesus declared to His Father in heaven is not only has the work been finished, but it stands finished, and it will always be finished.
Our debt to sin has been paid in full, there will never be another payment needed.
So, my prayer for Easter this year is the message that goes forth from our churches is it is not our works that brings us blessings but it is the work Jesus already did on our behalf.
Malcom Smith once said, ‘The key words of the message of the Gospel are not struggle, try, and try harder but surrender to, yield to, rest in, and believe on the Lord Jesus.?
What a message of good news, a message of grace.
The Rev. Dr. Matthew Webster is pastor of First Congregational Church of Clarkston.
I’ve been reading a fascinating book by historian Rodney Stark. It’s called The Triumph of Christianity: How the Jesus Movement Became the World’s Largest Religion. He makes a compelling case that much of what we think we know about Christian history is mythical. For example, the ‘Dark Ages? really were not that dark. That label was invented by the rather arrogant secular philosophers such as Voltaire and Rousseau.
I’ve been reading this book as background study for my current series on the New Testament book of Acts. For several weeks I brought this question before my congregation: ‘How did this little group of Jesus followers sweep across the Roman Empire and transform it?? They had no military or political or economic power ‘and yet the gospel flashed like lightning across their world until almost half the empire was Christian by 300 AD. How did that happen?
We’ve seen a number of answers. For one, they knew their mission. Jesus had told them, ‘Go make disciples! Go be my witnesses, not just here in Jerusalem, but in Judea, Samaria, and the ends of the earth.? These early Christians didn’t just play church! They were the church! They were radical! They knew their mission! They were a movement of people penetrating and influencing their communities in all sorts of ways. In his book, Stark points out that these early Christians were known for their compassionate caring. People were drawn to their communities of hope and joy.
Another answer is that they were filled with the Presence of Jesus, the Holy Spirit. Jesus said, ‘Here’s your mission: I want you to go and be my witnesses. Go! But before you go, wait! You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you, and then you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and the ends of the earth. Before you go, wait! You can’t fulfill the mission without the Spirit. You’ve got to know me. I’ve got to be in you. Otherwise, you won’t have the power to pull it off.?
Mission and Spirit. That’s why the early church transformed their society. The question is: Are we known for being communities of hope and joy? When people hear the words ‘church? and ‘Christian,? do they think, ‘Oh! Those are the people who bring hope to our cities! Those are the people who are compassionate and caring! Our communities are so much better because they are here??
We identified two problems. We have the problem of ‘mission drift.? We also have the problem of ‘we leak.? We tend to forget our mission and we tend to leak! We can be filled with the Spirit for a while and then we leak! The Holy Spirit leaks out of us and we’re empty. We’re dry. We’ve lost the power. We’ve lost the heart and motivation and the joy. Maybe you’ve been a Christian for years, but somewhere along the way you leaked! You used to be filled with the Spirit but not now! You need filled again!
We’ve learned that not just individuals but even the church as a whole, down through the centuries, can get off mission and can leak. The church itself tends to go through ups and downs. That’s why we need renewal. We need awakening ? to get back on mission and to live in the power of the Spirit again.
My prayer for our congregation, for congregations across Clarkston, and across the land, is that we would be a movement of disciples, on mission, filled with the Spirit of Jesus, bringing hope to our cities.
The Rev. Pastor Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
We have set the clocks ahead. We are watching the snowbanks melt away. The birds are beginning to sing. The temperatures are on the rise.
It can only mean one thing: Spring is here! And, if you are like most, after this winter (and last winter, too) it is a welcome sight.
Spring reminds us of nature coming back to life. It will not be long when flowers will begin to stick up out of the snow or along the buildings where they are a little more sheltered.
Trees will begin budding and the brown substance on the sides of roads and driveways known as grass will change into verdant green. It is also a time when the Church honors the coming back to life in celebrating the resurrection of Jesus from the dead.
What would most people think if we did not have spring? What would happen if the weather did not change, and the flowers did not come out, and the grass did not turn green, and the birds did not sing?
We would probably be disappointed, at the least, maybe even depressed. We look forward to changing seasons in Michigan.
We look forward to changing seasons in the Church, too. We move from the somber and repentant time of Lent, follow our Lord through the rigors of Holy Week with the Last Supper, the prayer in the Garden, the betrayal, the trial, and the crucifixion.
What if that were all there was? There are those who believe that is the truth, but we believe that, on the third day He rose. So, on Easter Sunday, we gather and we celebrate the Resurrection.
I recently reflected on the words of Psalm 19 in a devotion I did. I encourage you to take a few moments, open your Bible, and read the entire Psalm.
I focused, however, on just the first seven verses that remind us of how all of creation is ordered and how it praises God. God sets the course for all that is, for all that happens in all of creation.
It began when He made all things in six days, then rested on the seventh day. It has continued through, and in spite of, sin. We, as mankind, because of our sinfulness, have done great harm to God’s creation and its beauty, but God, always faithful, renews and restores what He has given us.
Think of the beauty around us. Do we not enjoy the many lakes He has given us in the area? Do we not enjoy the gentle (warm) breezes? Do we not appreciate the sun following its pattern or the moon reflecting to us light at night?
How often have you just paused to listen to the sounds of nature all around you? And what are those sounds reflecting? Praise to God.
As you enjoy the warming weather be reminded of God’s love for you. Gather in that love. Gather around that love as you celebrate coming out of hibernation to new life!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
Here is my favorite Lent joke:
A pastor is walking to his car late one evening on his way home from church when someone sneaks up behind him, pokes a knife against his back and says, ‘Give me all your money!?
As the pastor opens his jacket and reaches into his inner pocket to get his wallet, his pastor’s clerical collar is exposed. Upon seeing it, the would-be robber says, ‘Oh, I’m sorry pastor; I don’t want YOUR money.?
Shaken but relieved, the pastor takes a candy bar from his pocket and offers it to the man who replies, ‘Oh no pastor, I can’t take that ? I gave up chocolate for Lent.?
Do you think he might have missed the point of Lent? I believe this church season can be a time of real growth and heart transformation, if we are open to it and give our relationship with God some attention.
Lent, which began on Ash Wednesday will culminate at Easter, and covers a period of 40 days, a count which does not include Sundays, which are always celebrations of Jesus? resurrection.
Lent originated in the very early days of the Christian Church as a time of intense preparation for Baptism at Easter sunrise. For all of us today it can be a time of repentance (returning to God), and renewed spiritual devotion. Some people fast, or ‘give something up? for Lent, such as a favorite food or TV, as a way of focusing attention on God.
The idea is that as we crave the item given up, we are reminded of our primary dependence upon God’s grace and love for us. Other spiritual disciplines often practiced during Lent include renewed devotion to Bible study and prayer, generous giving to those in need, and, my personal favorite, making a commitment to commit at least one random act of kindness each day.
All of these things can draw us closer to God, but they don’t make God love us any more than he already does. ‘For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.? (John 3:16)
It is interesting that the word Lent comes from an old Anglo-Saxon word for ‘springtime.?
That seems to fit well, as Lent can certainly be an occasion for springtime-like renewal of faith. However just as winter never seems to give up to spring without a fight, so too our lives of faith can be a struggle. Our good intentions to grow soon collide with the realities of a too-busy world.
The sin and brokenness of our lives and world comes out even when we don’t want it to. We are not alone, as we learn from Paul who wrote in the Bible, ‘For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I do.? (Romans 7:19)
The Good News is that everyday we have a fresh start ? a new opportunity to receive and live in God’s grace. God never gives up on us. And the really neat thing is that when we do spend some real time with God, we do grow to become more the way God intended us to be all along.
My favorite description of God’s desire for the character of our lives is from Galatians 5:22-23 where Paul writes, ?’the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.?
That’s the way God made us and wills for our lives to look. Lent is for me a time to partner with God so that I allow him to grow my character in these ways ? and I must admit I do have growing to do for my life to look that way every day.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is senior pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
Recently I was reminded of my younger days when I was working on a construction crew. There was one guy who was bigger and stronger than the rest of us. He worked out at the gym and had muscles on top of his muscles. He would boast about how much he could bench press and dead lift, etc., etc., etc.
One day as Mr. Strongman was boasting the Foreman decided to challenge him to a show of strength. The Foreman bet him that he could carry a load in the wheelbarrow over to the shed that Mr. Strongman could not wheel back. He offered a week’s pay if Mr. Strongman could accomplish the feat.
Mr. Strongman thought this was a great deal since the Foreman made twice as much as any of us and there was no way he could be beaten in a show of strength, so he took the bet. The Foreman grabbed the wheelbarrow, rolled it over to Mr. Strongman and said ‘Get in!?
There are some loads we cannot carry by ourselves. There are times when life is too heavy for us to be able to carry on by ourselves. We need our spiritual support network to carry us when we cannot carry ourselves. Illness, injury, financial challenges, conflict, decision making, relationships, etc., life in general requires we receive spiritual support to be the happy, healthy and whole individuals we are created to be; we require spiritual support to be fruitful and multiply our good.
It has been said we are spiritual beings having a human experience. We are made in the image and after the likeness of God (Genesis 1:26) and God is Spirit (John 4:24), therefore we are inherently spiritual. And, we are human beings attempting to realize our spiritual nature. This is what spiritual support does for us; we realize our spiritual nature when we make it real, when we live from a conscious awareness of Spirit in our daily existence.
It is good to go to church, attend 12 step meetings, join the Rotary or Lions or Kiwanis or other beneficial organization. And, we have to invest our time and talents in establishing a spiritual support network within these groups and with individuals we can relate with. For it is in working with and serving others that we can realize our spiritual nature. It is in the small groups, classes, and direct interaction we make the connections with others that can carry us through times of trial.
‘Where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them.? (Matthew 18:20.) This is the spiritual principle of Synergy. As Aristotle said, ‘the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.? When we come together for a common purpose we can accomplish more than working separately.
‘They devoted themselves to the apostles? teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers.? (Acts 2:42.) This is our spiritual guidance system: utilizing spiritual materials, gathering with others for fellowship and meals, plus direct connection with Spirit through prayer and meditation. When all these are in alignment we can be assured of making right choices.
The young man went to his grandfather often for words of wisdom and advice. One day he asked him how he got to be so wise and always knew the right choices to make. ‘Experience?, said grandfather. ‘How do you get experience?? asked grandson. ‘By making a lot of bad choices!? said grandfather.
Every day we make choices, some work out well and some do not. With the help of our spiritual support network, we will always be able to pick ourselves up and move forward in confident assurance that ‘all things work together for good.? (Romans 8:28.)
Blessings of peace, joy and love.
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
for Peace Unity Community
I have been told before that one of the greatest perks to being a professional athlete is the meals after the game. If you want some proof, check out the menus provided for the Seahawks and the Orioles for their plane ride home.
To wake up one day and no longer have all the best tasting, healthy food options at your finger-tips has got to be one of the harshest realities of stepping out of the limelight.
So, it is not surprising when former athletes hang up their cleats and say goodbye to their delectable food, the dietary choices they make fall short of being championship level quality.
Professional athletes have been dependent for so long on other people to structure meal choices for them, that when they are left to do it on their own, they find their skill set is rather undeveloped.
When we switch over to the state of the church, the National Opinion Research Center, found the average percentage of churchgoers who attend on any given Sunday is 38 percent. Many spiritual leaders have pointed to attendance as the reason why people are starving spiritually.
I point to a whole different reason. If I were to spend a lot of time eating from the team buffet line after the big game (church/Sunday) it is entirely possible I would leave feeling full and very satisfied.
The question I have is how am I going to feel on Wednesday if I didn’t eat anything since? To be a healthy individual, I need to be able to eat meals regularly.
In life there is a natural progression that takes place. As we grow from babies into children we begin to learn how to feed ourselves.
Now that I am an adult, and thanks in large part to Food Network, I am making meals for myself I never could have imagined only a year ago. Cheerios and PB& J sandwiches are not regular meals on the menu.
I have learned how to feed myself, and feed myself well. Learning to feed ourselves full healthy meals is supposed to be the same model for the Christ follower (1 Peter 2 &1 Corinthians 3:2)
As we learn how to spend time in God’s Word, rightly dividing it, the sermon/ message the pastor preaches becomes more like the cherry on top of a wonderful desert. We have already been filled with Christ throughout the week.
The foundation, chief cornerstone of the church is Jesus, and we need to invest our time and energy to help our congregants fill themselves with Jesus Christ.
I guarantee you as people are taught how to feed themselves with the Word of God, (John 1), there will be nourishment for their souls, there will be growth, and there will be amazing fruit produce in lives, and others will then be taught to grow into Christ-like maturity.
Truth be told, we all are athletes. The apostle Paul says we are all runners in the race of life. We have prepared before us an amazing feast, let’s dig in take as much as we’d like of the Bread of Life, the Living Water.
The Rev. Dr. Matthew Webster is pastor of First Congregational Church of Clarkston.
Tony Campolo, a well-known Christian speaker and a sociologist, tells a true story about how he was at a conference in Honolulu, Hawaii. Since it was a six-hour time difference, he was wide awake at 3:00 in the morning.
And he was hungry. So he decides to take a walk. He finds a shabby caf?. He sits down and he’s eating. He can’t help but overhear a conversation between two women. He realizes they are prostitutes. One’s name was Agnes.
Agnes was saying tomorrow was her birthday, and the other person was saying, ‘Anything like a party going to happen??
She says, ‘I’ve never had a birthday party in my life.?
Not too long after that they left, so Tony turns to the owner of the diner, a guy named Harry, and says, ‘Do you know those women??
Harry says, ‘Sure. They’re in here every night at the same time. I know them pretty well. I know all the people who come in late at night.?
Tony says, ‘Let’s throw her a party. When she comes in tomorrow night, let’s have a party for her.? Harry says, ‘If you want.?
Tony says, ‘I’ll go out and buy the decorations, and I’ll buy the cake. I’ll buy all that stuff. Do you know any of her friends??
He says, ‘Sure, I know all of her friends.? He says, ‘Well, you invite them.?
The next night at 2:30 they began to decorate the diner, and they decorated the cake. All of her friends started coming in around 3:15.
Of course, as Tony looked around, he suddenly realized all of her friends were prostitutes.
Here he is, a Christian speaker, in the middle of a diner filled with prostitutes.
At 3:30 a.m. Agnes walks in, and everybody screams, ‘Happy Birthday!? Tony describes that she was utterly stunned.
She couldn’t stand up. She sat down and just started crying.
She looked at the cake, but she was crying too much to blow the candles out. Harry blew out the candles and handed her a knife.
As she looked at it, she said, ‘No, wait a minute. Do we really have to eat it right now? Look, I’ll be right back. I live right down the block, and I want to keep the cake. Would it be okay if we just kept the cake? Could I just take it home and keep it? I don’t want to eat it right now. Is that okay??
Tony and Harry said, ‘Well, sure.?
She said, ‘Wait a minute. I’ll be right back.?
She jumps up and runs out. So there is Tony standing in a restaurant full of prostitutes, and they don’t know what to do next.
After an awkward pause Tony says, ‘What do you say we pray for Agnes?? So they held hands and prayed for Agnes. He prayed for her salvation. He prayed her life would be changed and God would be good to her.
When he finished, Harry leaned over and said, ‘You never told me you were a preacher. What kind of church do you belong to??
Tony answered, ‘I belong to the kind of church that throws birthday parties for prostitutes at 3:30 a.m.?
Harry thought a second and with some shock in his face, he said, “No, you don’t. There is no church like that. If there was, I’d join it. I’d join a church like that.?
What kind of church are we? Read through the Gospels and ask yourself, ‘What kind of church should we be??
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
So, did the groundhog see his shadow or not? Will we have another six weeks of winter or is spring around the corner?
If you really stop and think about it, spring does not begin until March 20, about six weeks away! And, with all the cameras and lights, how can the groundhog help but see his shadow?
While it might be a fun tradition there really is not any validity to the weather forecasting ability of this animal that crawls out (or is forced out) of winter hibernation.
There are many traditions that can be attached to Groundhog day, but that is all they are, traditions.
So, what would be the better focus? We live in Michigan, an area that expects snow and colder temperatures this time of the year.
How can we make the best of what we have? Can we enjoy walks in the snow? Can we brave the temperatures for an adventure of sledding down the hill or putting on the skis or the snowboard and appreciating the good health and blessings God brings us?
Maybe you prefer to break out a puzzle and sit in front of the fire place as you are warmed by the flames with a cup of hot cocoa or coffee. Or maybe you travel to the gym to support one of our local teams.
Psalm 104 focuses on God’s action of creating. It speaks of the things He created and how He ordered them. In v. 19 we read He made the moon to mark the seasons; the sun knows its time for setting. (ESV) I always marvel how science will come up with these wonderful discoveries like sun and moon patterns and the affects the moon has on the earth.
Then I go back to God’s Word and find the same thing written thousands of years ago! Is it modern science or ancient history? I prefer to claim the latter based on the evidence God has given me in His Word.
Solomon, the wisest man who ever lived, wrote For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven (Ecclesiastes 3:1).
We watch seasons come and go, people in our lives come and go, things around us change. In the midst of this we have a constant: God. He never changes. He is immutable.
We are the ones who change. We are the ones who turn away from Him and claim myths and fables to be the truth.
Will winter continue? Maybe for a short time (six weeks?). Will God continue? His faithfulness never ends! He, Who sent His Son, Jesus, to take the nails for us, will continue to pour His love out for us.
When we come to Him He does, and always will, forgive our sins. Just look around.
As the snows begin to melt and life hidden is again revealed, remember our God Who shares all things with us, especially His love and joys. Come and see!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
Even though it was just a few weeks ago, Christmas and New Year already seem like long ago memories.
I’m already used to saying and writing 2015 as if it’s been here forever. Life moves on so quickly. Now its Super Bowl weekend and all of the hype and controversy surrounding that big event makes me stop to think again about what really matters in my life and how I spend my precious time.
It seems like most of us try to pack more and more into the time we have. Of course, even with all of the advances in technology and ‘time-saving? devices, time still moves along as in God’s original design, with 24 hours in a day and 365 days in a year.
We have not figured out a way to make more time, so we are left with the ongoing challenge and opportunity of making good use of the time given us.
Though I did hear that a leap-second will be added in June this year so we stay on track with solar time. Wow, an extra second, wonder how I will use that?
You may have heard about the seminar presenter who placed a jar on a table and carefully filled it with some large rocks and asked, ‘Is the jar full?? The students responded, ‘Yes!?
Next she took some gravel and added it to the jar, filling the spaces between the rocks, and again asked, ‘Is the jar full??
Being quick learners, the students replied ‘Probably not.?
So the presenter dumped some sand into the jar filling in the spaces between the rocks and the gravel and once again asked, ‘Is the jar full?? ‘No!? the students all said.
Finally, she filled the jar completely with water and asked the students what they had learned.
Someone answered, ‘If you try really hard you can always fit more things into your life.?
The presenter replied, ‘No, the point is this, if you don’t put the big rocks in first you will never fit them in.?
I believe this principle can be applied to all aspects of life. The fundamental question for each of us to ask is, ‘What are the big rocks? What are the super bowls, the most important things in life, and have I made room for them??
So I have been thinking and praying about this. For me, my relationship with God is primary, then my family, work, community service, recreation, etc. My participation in church is also very important because it reminds me what really matters and how much we matter to God.
At Calvary this winter we are studying an interesting book with a very long title, ‘Why Nobody Wants to Go to Church Anymore and how 4 Acts of Love Will Make Your Church Irresistible.?
It addresses the issue that for many in the US today, church is not one of the ‘big rocks? of life. Of course going to church and believing in God are not the same thing, and all too often there is a disconnect between Jesus and our experiences or perceptions of the church.
Authors Thom and Joani Schultz lift up the four major reasons their research shows people don’t attend church: ‘I feel judged, I don’t want to be lectured, Christians are a bunch of hypocrites, and your God is irrelevant to my life.?
They then suggest these four responses: ‘radical hospitality, fearless conversations, genuine humility, and divine anticipation.? Interesting stuff.
This has given me some good things to reflect on about my life and our church. Sometimes it’s not just what the ‘big rocks? of life are, but also how we put them into the jar that matters.
I am glad that the bottom line for me is God’s grace and loving acceptance that gives me a fresh start each new year, and each new day!
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is senior pastor at Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
‘If there is to be peace in the world, there must be peace in the nations. If there is to be peace in the nations, there must be peace in the cities. If there is to be peace in the cities, there must be peace between neighbors. If there is to be peace between neighbors, there must be peace in the home. If there is to be peace in the home, there must be peace in the heart.? Lao Tse
The year 2014 was the hottest on record. A dozen people are killed in Paris when terrorists raid a satirical magazine. Pope Francis declares man’s role in climate change. Nigerian rebel/terrorist group kills thousands. Republican takeover of both houses of Congress puts climate change deniers as committee chairs over NOAA, NASA and other scientific organizations. Police raids net hundreds of suspected terrorists in European countries.
Seemingly separate issues and happenings around the globe. The news is full of conflicts, death, destruction and controversy. So what is new about that? Nothing, but it sells newspapers.
Politicians, religious leaders, terrorists, industrialists, etc. control through the spreading of fear. Fear sells medicines, guns and advertising. Fear buys votes, loyalty and obedience. Fear causes us to do that which we would not normally do: lie, cheat, steal and kill. This kind of fear has no place in the spiritual life. It comes from our belief in separation.
We appear to be separate beings with separate bodies, wants and needs. We have individual names and personalities. We are born, we live and then we die. We appear to have a temporary, limited, existence.
At a cellular level we are atoms and molecules, the same atoms and molecules that exist throughout creation.
At a subatomic level we are energy, relationships and probability patterns. At the spiritual level we are expressions of the infinite, unlimited, eternal existence; we are expressions of the Ultimate Reality, First Cause, Cosmic Consciousness; we are one with the One.
‘Most men lead lives of quiet desperation and go to the grave with the song still in them.? Henry David Thoreau.
Are we are too busy making a living to have a life? Do we spend our time and money chasing happiness while rarely catching it in fleeting moments?
True happiness, peace and contentment come not from doing but from being. We can choose to be happy, peaceful and content.
There is nothing that we do that will bring these to us except sharing them with others.
Faith is a power that draws to us that which we focus on; what we believe becomes our reality. When we focus on outer things: doctors, relationships, job, as the source of our healing, happiness and prosperity, then there is reason to fear their loss.
If we focus on the inner, divine, spiritual reality as our source and follow divine guidance we realize peace, wholeness and abundance is our natural state.
There is not much that most of us can do to affect change on a global level. And we can choose to be happy, whole and free, just as we are created to be. This will change the world.
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
The Rev. Matthew E. long is pastor of Peace Unity Community
Statistics have shown by the time you read this article, 20 percent of the people who have made a New Year’s Resolution will fail to keep it. (www.happypublishing.com/articles/self_improvement/top-reasons-people-break-resolutions).
There are many reasons why we don’t end up keeping our New Year’s Resolutions, but the predominant reason happens to also be the very same thing that causes people the most frustration within the Christian faith. So, maybe I can help set free, chronic resolution makers and frustrated followers of Christ all in one article.
Many New Year’s Resolutions are destined to fail from the start because they are based on the all or nothing premise.
For instance, a common resolution might be to stop smoking. Smokers will tell you, your desire to quit will not diminish your craving to smoke. If you were to ever light up another cigarette, you have failed in your resolution to quit smoking.
Resolutions depend on your ability to overcome something that has been stronger than you in your past.
Christians can also land in the same camp, frustrated over something stronger than their own ability to overcome. This is why works-based religion does not work. (Bad pun)
What is the alternative for frustrated resolution makers/Christians around the world? Hebrews 4:11 says; ‘Let us, therefore, make every effort to enter that rest.?
What the writer of Hebrews is referring to is to enter into Christ’s rest. Understand Christ’s work on the cross accomplished victory in your life, for all who will receive what He has done.
So, instead of looking to ourselves to overcome, we look to the One who Overcame.
The key is found in what you believe and where you look. If you don’t believe that God wants to bless you and has already blessed you with every blessing in Christ Jesus, then you will constantly work and never rest.
You will exhaust yourself trying to get what He has already given. You may try and work for rewards from God, work harder to set yourself free from destructive habits (resolutions), but if you are trying (working) instead of trusting (faith/receiving) you will find you are always in want, anxious and insecure, exhausted and ever failing.
Watchman Nee said, ‘you can trust or you can try and the difference is heaven and hell.? Resolutions are all about trying to become the best version of you that you can become (www.usa.gov/Citizen/Topics/New-Years-Resolutions).
In Christ, the best version of you is found. What makes you a holy and righteous beloved child of God is not your actions. It is who you are. It was a free gift to you, purchased by the blood of Christ. Like a great tree, you mature into what God has already made you to become.
That is how sanctification works. So, setbacks come as a result of self-effort when we live in our strength instead of receiving the unlimited supply of the Almighty God.
Israel had to wander in the wilderness because they tried to earn what God wanted to give them and consequently they never entered the Lord’s rest until after a generation had passed.
I pray that your New Year’s Resolution will be to give up self-effort, and abide in the love of Christ. You ‘ll be amazed to discover whatever resolution you have to do, flows out of who you are and not the other way around.
The Rev. Dr. Matthew Webster is pastor of First Congregational Church of Clarkston.
Ever feel like the man who just had his annual physical exam and was waiting for the doctor’s initial report? After a few minutes the doctor came in with his charts in hand and said, ‘There’s no reason why you can’t live a completely normal life as long as you don’t try to enjoy it.?
Some people feel that way about Christianity.
They think that to be a Christian means that you can’t enjoy life. The truth is just the opposite.
Most people settle for too little joy when God wants them to experience tremendous joy.
Scripture is replete with commands to ‘Rejoice always! Be joyful always! Be thankful!?
It’s sad that more Christians don’t experience more happiness. Happiness would help their light to shine.
As we enter into 2015, I want to share with you three keys to a truly Happy New Year. I have found these keys to be a powerful help in my own life.
Key #1: Realize that happiness is a gift from God. It’s fascinating that the Bible commands us to be happy ‘as if we can do something about it! The fact is, we can’t do anything about it, without God’s help.
This world is full of people trying to get happy in all the wrong ways. Joy is a fruit of the Spirit, so as we deepen our relationship with Christ and seek his Presence, we can call on his Spirit to give us joy.
Key #2: Take charge of your attitude. Dr. Swindoll has written, ‘The longer I live, the more I realize the impact of attitude on life. Attitude, to me, is more important than facts. It is more important than the past, than education, than money, than circumstances, than failures, than successes, than what other people think or say or do.
‘It is more important than appearance, giftedness, or skill. It will make or break a company, a church, a home. The remarkable thing is we have a choice every day regarding the attitude we will embrace for that day. We cannot change our past — we cannot change the fact that people will act in a certain way. We cannot change the inevitable. The only thing we can do is play on the one string we have, and that is our attitude — I am convinced that life is ten percent what happens to me and ninety percent how I react to it. And so it is with you — we are in charge of our Attitudes.?
I would qualify that last statement by saying, ‘We are in charge of our attitudes, but cannot consistently change our attitudes without dependence upon the Spirit of Christ.?
Key #3: Develop honest and open relationships. God has wired us to be in relationships. This is why God created the family. This is why God created the church. The church is supposed to be God’s family, where we come together and relate to one another on the basis of our common commitment to Christ.
As we worship together and live the adventure of life together, we learn how to laugh and cry together. Someone has said, ‘A sorrow shared is half the sorrow, while a joy shared is twice the joy.?
Don’t go through life alone! It will double your sorrow and decrease your joy!
I encourage you to try these three keys. They will unlock a HAPPY NEW YEAR for you!
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
Tomorrow is the big day! We have waited, prepared, decorated, ate (and ate), celebrated and we are ready.
After tomorrow the tree can come down, the decorations boxed for another year, we can go to the stores and return what we don’t want or what didn’t fit and, maybe, pick up some of the close-outs for next year. Then everything can get back to normal. (At least that is how many view it.)
In the church, however, the celebration is really just beginning.
Yes, we have prepared but now we begin! Christmas Eve worships remind us that we gather to celebrate a birthday’God’s Son made flesh, come to dwell amongst us.
Christmas Day we see the Baby rejected by the world, laid in a manger’a feeding trough’proclaimed by angels and welcomed by shepherds. But it is only the beginning of the twelve days of the Christmas season, which continues until January 6, the day of Epiphany (to reveal, show forth, display).
On that day, also known as the Gentile Christmas, we remember the Magi coming from the east and sharing their gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh with the Christ-Child.
Three things stand out for me in Luke’s birth narrative. In Luke 2 we read about the proclamation of the angels.
Can you imagine the joy of this Child’s birth? Not even the bounds of heaven were not able to contain the angels from rejoicing and announcing His birth!
Second is the reaction of the shepherds. First, they decide to journey into Bethlehem. They want to see this gift of God to the world.
What do they do with this news? Leaving the manger they share what they have heard and seen with everyone they meet. Again, a joy and enthusiasm that cannot be contained.
It is so unlike the gifts many receive at this time of year that draw great excitement one moment, and the next are all but forgotten.
The third thing that stands out is Mary’s reaction. She is Jesus? mother and has been told what would happen by the angel Gabriel (Luke 1).
As the account unfolds, we read that Mary treasured up all these things, keeping them in her heart. Mothers probably understand this better than fathers do, but many of us know the joys a new child brings to our lives.
Some of us also face the heartaches of our children. Mary, too, would know that as her own. Her son, Jesus, the Son of God, came to die for our sins. Without that death the birth has no importance.
This Christmas season join with other saints of God’angels, shepherds, Mary and the many others, gathering around the manger.
Worship Christ, the new-born King, come to us. Proclaim the joy of His birth. Share the good news. Ponder it in your heart. And know the fullness of His forgiveness that never ends. A Baby, born for you, Christ, the Lord. Joy to the world, He has come!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
I wonder what Jesus wants for Christmas ? for his birthday ? this year?
I have been pondering this question while preparing for my Advent and Christmas sermons at Calvary Lutheran. It’s an interesting question because in most cases the one having the birthday is the one who receives gifts. However at Christmas it seems most of the focus is on what gifts we will either be receiving or giving someone else for Jesus? birthday.
Of course these can be very kind and loving gifts we give to others. And the Bible teaches us that especially when we give to those in need we are giving to Jesus in a very real way. But still, I wonder how often we really stop to ask the question, ‘What does Jesus want from me for Christmas this year??
I heard this little story recently which might make you smile, as well as offer some insights into answering this question:
A couple days before Christmas there was a long line at the post office as people were frantically trying to get things in the mail for loved ones far away. An exasperated woman finally reaches the counter and asks, ‘Can you get this to my dad in California by Christmas??
The clerk responds, ‘Yes we can, but it will cost you to get it there overnight.?
‘How much??
‘It will be $53.25.?
The woman continues, ‘Wow, that is a lot, but I’ve got to do it. This present is for my dad and it has to be there by Christmas’because Christmas is also his birthday.?
To which the clerk responds: ‘What a bummer that is’having a birthday on Christmas day. I sure am glad I don’t know anyone born on Christmas.?
Someone from the back of the line with a quick wit and a vital faith says, ‘I sure am glad I do!?
I believe that Christmas, at its deepest level, is really all about knowing someone born on Christmas day ? really knowing him, and loving him, and living our lives for him. Because of that I am convinced the best gift of all we can give Jesus, and what he wants most, is our hearts and our lives and our first love.
This is what he wants, because he knows when we do put him first, our lives will begin to have more purpose, hope, joy, peace and love ? for God and for others. God sent Jesus to us at that first Christmas to be the gift that would truly keep on giving.
So what does this look like? Here is what Paul writes in Colossians chapter 3:
As God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience. Bear with one another and, if anyone has a complaint against another, forgive each other; just as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive.
Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony. And let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, to which indeed you were called in the one body.
And be thankful. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly; teach and admonish one another in all wisdom; and with gratitude in your hearts sing psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs to God.
And whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.
I think Jesus would jump for joy, do a dance, even some somersaults, if we lived this out as our gift for his birthday this Christmas and into the future.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
Cleveland, Phoenix, Las Vegas, West Virginia, New York, Ferguson, and the list goes on. Grief, outrage, sympathy, media circus, concern, everyone is affected by these events. We open our hearts and minds in prayer for all of us to realize a greater level of peace, wholeness and abundance in divine order and divine timing.
The truth is that historically speaking, the incidence of violent crime is down. Every day around our planet billions of parents love, care and nurture their children. Every day billions of children go to school and learn. Every day billions of people go to their market and purchase what they need and want. Every day billions of people go about their lives in relative peace and harmony. This is the truth.
This does not mean we don’t do anything about these events. What we do we do with love remembering that the news is news because it is the exception; it is the unusual not the norm.
For me, the news is a source for my prayer list. When something in the news stirs a reaction within me, anytime I realize I am mentally or emotionally affected by outer events, I know it is time to pray and once again consciously realize the presence and power of good, of God, active in my life and in the lives of all those with whom I pray.
In Unity, we have a Prayer for Protection that serves as a general purpose prayer and in times when words fail us. ‘The light of God surrounds you, the love of God enfolds you, the power of God protects you and the presence of God watches over you. Wherever you are God is!? We know this truth for ourselves and for all those with whom we pray.
In the midst of current events, life goes on. We are half way through our Advent Season, two weeks before the celebration of the Christ Mass. Everywhere people are preparing for their celebrations honoring the return of the light on the Winter Solstice. In the midst of the darkness is the seed of new light. This is the promise of Christmas.
This can be a time of our awakening to the Spirit of Christ within. It can be a time of turning our minds and hearts to be the light of spiritual awareness that Jesus spoke about, ‘You are the light of the world? (Matthew 5:14.) ‘God is Spirit? (John 4:24 ) and we are made in the image and after the likeness of God (Genesis 1:26). We are inherently spiritual.
The Christmas story is our story. Joseph and Mary represent our thoughts and feelings who have had a spiritual awakening, they were visited by angels. This awakening is bringing forth a new level of awareness within us, this is the Christ child, the progressive growth in awareness of our unity in Spirit.There was no room for them at the inn, this symbolizes our intellect which is full of preconceived ideas and beliefs of what is real. So the birth, the coming forth into conscious awareness, happens in a manger: this is our heart center which is opened to give and receive.
Life is calling for us to awaken to our divinity. Night will pass and day will surely come. Now is the time for our awakening. Now we are called upon to ‘be the change you want to see in the world? (Ghandi.)
A story is told of a man who dreamed he had died and, standing before his creator, was given a choice between heaven or hell. First, he was shown a room labeled Hell, where miserable people sat around a bountiful banquet table with all the delicacies a person could desire. Tied to their hands were spoons and forks that were three feet long, so despite the abundance they could not feed themselves. Next, he was shown a room labeled Heaven. Here was the same scene, same bountiful table, same three foot long spoons and forks. The only difference was that the people were joyously feeding each other.It’s our choice.
Blessings of peace, joy & love
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is pastor of Peace Unity Community
When you think of the word “church” what comes to mind?
For some church brings to mind an image of a quaint country building with a pretty white steeple.
For others perhaps a grand cathedral in Europe or a place you went as a child on a bus to learn about Jesus.
Sometimes churches are in homes or schools or warehouses or theatres and even in pubs or restaurants. Many of us have fond memories of the church we grew up in.
However many people today see the Church as antiquated and having little or no role their lives.
Others have had negative experiences and the very word church brings to mind judgmental and hurtful memories.
Most of us cringe at some of the things in history that have been done by the church. I am pretty sure God does to.
In the Bible the New Testament word for church is a translation of the Greek word ekklesia, meaning a people who are “called out” by God for God’s purpose.
The word church is never used to refer to a building or meeting place, but always to a people who are called into God’s mission.
It has always seemed ironic to me that when someone (including me) is asked what church they attend, we almost always identify the building we go to.
It would truly be more accurate to say something like, “I am a follower of Jesus on a mission from God who happens to gather occasionally at such and such place to learn and grow so that I can be the church in the world right where I am in every moment of every day.”
I know it’s a bit long, but I hope you catch the drift that the church is a people serving God wherever they are, and certainly not a building or a place or a denomination.
Simply put, we don’t go to church, we are the church – or we’ve missed the point!
I really appreciate the way Anglican clergyman Ernest Southcott put it: “The holiest moment of the church service is the moment when God’s people–strengthened by preaching and sacrament–go out of the church door into the world to be the church.”
Just this past Sunday Calvary Lutheran “left the building” on Bluegrass Drive to be the church and serve during Clarkston Community Impact Day.
As part of My Habitat Clarkston hundreds served alongside members of other congregations, Clarkston Community Schools, the Chamber of Commerce, as well as various other community organizations to help those in need and to improve our community.
This is something that happens each fall and spring, and I hope it will grow to include even more in our community.
“Now to him who by the power at work within us is able to accomplish abundantly far more than all we can ask or imagine, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus to all generations, forever and ever. Amen.” (Ephesians 3:20-21)
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
Election Day is next week. My phone keeps ringing with ‘surveys? that are disguised political campaigns. It seems as if every other article that comes to my news feed is ‘sponsored content?, what we used to call advertising, and makes some startling claims about a candidate or issue has little basis in fact. Talking heads on ‘News? channels echo these misstatements of fact or misleading claims, what some people would vulgarly call lies.
As I read, watch and listen to these many campaign advertisements I am reminded of Pilate’s question to Jesus during his trial, ‘What is Truth?? John 18:38. A question that Jesus would not answer.
According to the dictionary, truth is what is true or in accordance with fact or reality; not false.
I would think that finding the truth would be easy. We discover the facts and the truth becomes plain. Yet, two different people or groups take the same set of facts or data and arrive at different conclusions as to what is true.
Is the economy improving or declining, is the earth warming or cooling, are we safer or more vulnerable to terrorism, is the current administration doing enough or too much, are we better or worse off than we were before?
Some say yes, some say no. Reminds me of a Beatles song ‘You say yes, I say no. You say stop and I say go, go, go, oh no. You say goodbye and I say hello.?
In many ways, truth is what is true for you. My truth may not be the same as your truth. This truth is relative; it is relative to this time and place and set of circumstances. What is true today may not be true tomorrow.
We are at peace or at war, the economy is in recession or in recovery, government is not doing enough or doing too much. Today I am a certain height and weight and age, I am healthy or sickly, I am rich or poor or somewhere in between. All these and more are facts that will change.
What does not change is God. Our conception of God changes. Our beliefs about God change. Our ways of relating to God change, for we are growing and unfolding and evolving our spiritual awareness and expression of Truth. Absolute Truth, God, does not change: we do.
Now what do we know about God, about Truth? God is Spirit: Genesis 1:2 & John 4:24, God is good: Genesis 1:31, Mark 10:18, God is Our Father: Exodus 4:22, Jeremiah 31:9, Matthew 6:9, and God is love: Pslams 136:1-21, 1John 4:16. These things are real, infinite, unlimited and eternal as God is real, infinite, unlimited and eternal.
Therefore Truth and God are not material, evil, unrelated, hateful nor fearful.
Those things are not real and have no real existence or truth in them. So when we participate in those negatives we are consciously separating ourselves from God, from Truth, from Spirit, from good, from Our Father, from love. This separation only happens in consciousness. It is not real, only false evidence appearing real.
Life is consciousness: what we believe is true is true for us. Though the world may engage in negativity, we always have the choice not to participate in it. ‘I have said this to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.? John 16:33.
We have the opportunity to sort through the unreal to find the real and to vote with our thoughts, words and action for Truth. Eliminate the negativity, the fear, the belief in separation, of lack and limitation in your life. Embrace Spirit, the good, the loving Source for all that is real including you.
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
for Peace Unity Community
‘And you will hear of wars and rumors of wars; see that you are not alarmed; for this must take place, but the end is not yet.? Matthew 24:6
The news is full of war. Iraq, Syria and the Ukraine, are the latest headliners that have caught the world’s attention. And war is raging in Mexico, Sudan, Afghanistan, Israel, Somalia, Nigeria, Pakistan, Egypt, Libya, Central Africa, and dozens more. Some current conflicts have been ongoing for over 60 years such as the Israeli Palestinian conflict that can trace its roots back over 3000 years. War is the way of the world.
‘I have said this to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.? John 16:33
Being in the world but not of it is the great work of every Overcomer. Come over to the side of spirit. Come over to peace of mind, love, patience, tolerance and forgiveness. Come over to the life abundant and fulfilling.
‘For what will it profit a man, if he gains the whole world and forfeits his life?? Matthew 16:26
Now I do recognize the need to be in the world, to understand the ways of the world and to participate in daily life. And, as we realize and recognize the activity of spirit in our daily life, we can be at peace in the midst of the conflict around us.
‘If you were of the world, the world would love its own; but because you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you.? John 15:19
And, as we learn to focus on the positive, uplifting, creative expressions of life rather that the negative, downputting, destructive expressions, we may not fit in with our old friends and associates who like to focus on the negative.
There is much pressure to go along with the crowd. We need to be strong in our faith in a higher way, a divine path that leads to fulfillment, peace, love and joy.
‘This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you.? John 15:12
‘Love is the way, I walk in gratitude? is the title of a song written by my friend Michael Stillwater. It came from his reading of spiritual materials. It reminds me that I have so much to be grateful for. God love is my path, the way I walk, the home in which I abide; it is the source of my peace of mind, the source of my joy and fulfillment with life and living; it is the greatness with which I am filled. I am grateful.
‘If any one hears my sayings and does not keep them, I do not judge him; for I did not come to judge the world but to save the world.? John 12:47
We can save the world. Not by changing it or other people but, as Gandhi said, when we’Be the change you wish to see in the world.? We are in the world and we are not of it. We are spiritual beings living in a physical world and we are physical beings learning to express our spirituality. Our source is spiritual, God. When we come from a conscious awareness of love, peace and joy, an awareness of patience, tolerance and forgiveness as our ground of being, we change the world around us by being the change we wish to see.
It is said that insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. Resentment is just that. It is the drinking of a poison and then expecting the other person to die. It is resending or reliving the hurt, pain and injustice. The only way out is through forgiveness: to fore give or give for. To give love for whatever has been received.
We all want to be loved. We all want people to be patient with us. We all want to receive tolerance and forgiveness. So ‘Be the change you wish to see in the world,? overcome the world, be love: save the world.
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior minister for Peace Unity Community.
The kids have gone back to school. I saw on Facebook Yates Cider Mill started making fresh cider from this season’s apples.
Labor Day came and went. It is the start of a new school year. As a kid it was always a time of excitement. Something new was beginning.
A new teacher, new classroom, some old friends and some new ones. And it was time to buy folders and pencils.
Now we are entering into the fall. As an adult this seems more a commemoration of the end of summer and a goodbye to great weather.
Just as there are seasons in nature, so also in the church, according to the liturgical calendar last weekend was just ‘the twenty-third Sunday of ordinary time.?
Ordinary time always seemed to me to be a strange name for a liturgical season. Ordinary time is the space in the year not Advent, not Christmas, not Lent and not Easter.
Those are times of celebration or preparation. Ordinary Time is about when Life happens.
The time of neither fasting nor feasting. The ordered times when we are unknowingly moving toward something.
Even during ordinary time there are changes and transitions. But they are subtle and often unspoken.
Ordinary time is not a time of just doing the same old same thing over and over again. It is ordered/ordinary because the days are numbered.
There is a sequence. But it is not just a repetition of what came before. Week after week we are slowly changing. Something organically unfolds in this ordinary time of life.
Then, before we know it we are getting ready for Christmas, Christ’s Mass, and Advent is here.
Each fall we at St Daniel Parish do a few things. Catechism classes resume. There are Confirmations with the bishop. ‘Time and Talent,? when we figure out how we will volunteer in the upcoming year.
We also start RCIA, of which I am a part. RCIA stands of Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults. This is the process by which a person becomes Catholic.
If you or anyone you know are considering becoming Catholic or is just curious about exploring the faith we invite you.
We are meeting in the Cushing Center with some light refreshments to discuss the process this Thursday, Sept. 11 at 7 p.m. at St. Daniel Parish.
Garrett Garcia is a member of the RCIA Team at St Daniel Parish, former catechist and student at SS. Cyril and Methodius Seminary, Orchard Lake, graduated from Ave Maria School of Law in 2009, and grew up in Clarkston
When Jesus proclaimed, ‘you shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free? (John 8:32), that day did not turn out to be a good one for Him, or for truth, because the people ended up harassing Him, claiming He was demon possessed.
Sometimes the truth doesn’t make you free’it makes you mad! Of course, the difference is how we handle the truth. The Scriptures tell us that truth is very valuable and ‘we should buy truth and sell it not? (See Proverbs 23:23).
This implies a very important lesson about truth: it will indeed cost us something. In fact, truth can be very liberating, but often, it will cost us more then we are willing to pay.
For the religious leaders of Jesus? time, the cost would have been letting go of traditions they held very dear.
People love their traditions! There is something about our traditions that give us comfort and security. While the future can be emotionally unsettling because of the unknown, our past is at least without unforeseen surprises. Although we may not fully understand our past, it does give us a sense of security simply because of familiarity.
Notice that most human conjecture over the future has a very negative spin. Most new things, like the advent of technology, typically set in motion our thoughts of its dangers more than its benefits.
Letting Go of Control
Growing up, I remember reading the book (and seeing the movie) 1984. You can probably guess that I grew up before 1984, and truthfully, it was my thirtieth year of life. The book, written in 1949, tells the story of a future world where a world dictatorship’s use of technology would make it possible for ‘big brother? to watch our every move and as a result, control our life.
Because we have no control of the future, this explains why the thought of it is often fearful. Having lived through the times when technology has far exceeded what the book could ever have portrayed, I have also witnessed how technology has had the opposite effect. When the Soviet Union fell, the facsimile made communication quick and the spreading of information more widespread.
This made the dictatorship powerless in controlling the people. Today, computers and social media have made an even greater impact upon society, which has led to the downfall of many totalitarian governments in the Middle East and has resulted in what is known as the ‘Arab Spring.?
Who Wants to be a Winner?
Usually when we refer to the opposite of truth, we label it a lie. However, this is not necessarily true. The opposite of truth can be a half-truth, and the greatest hindrance to truth is our resistance to the fullness of truth.
What Jesus experienced was not opposition from people telling lies as much as it was people wanting to be right. We can be right with a half-truth, however, it can easily make us comfortable with our position of opposition to truth and resistant to the truth that will inevitably ‘set us free.? As a minister, I have been in a position of counseling through many arguments and disagreements between people, including married couples, and I have found truth usually comes from hearing both sides of a disagreement.
I recently taught my congregation how they can be a winner in every debate and argument in which they are involved (notice I did not say win every debate and argument). We can always be winners if we enter a dialogue with the motivation that we are looking for truth, not looking to be right. If we look for the truth, we can be winners every time! How? In the words of Jesus, ‘you will know the truth and the truth will set you free? (John 8:32).
To know the truth and in turn experience freedom, we must be willing to pay the price. At times, we may have to admit that we are in bondage to our traditions or mindsets that keep us imprisoned to our past, and it may cost us our sense of security we have from our own understanding and logical analysis of our life. The way of truth is actually a way of faith. This is why Jesus declared, ‘I am the Way, the Truth and the Life? (John 14:6).
Jesus spoke those encouraging words to His disciples as He was preparing to leave them. Their future would now be uncertain from a logical perspective because they couldn’t manage their future based upon their past experiences.
However, if they would believe, they could be free, understanding that the best of life was right in front of them. Will you seek the truth in earnest and walk with the peace of His plan yet unfolding in your situation and in our world?
The Rev. Loren Covarubbias is pastor of Mt. Zion Temple
‘Where has the summer gone?? It seems like just yesterday that we couldn’t wait for warm weather after such a tough winter.
Now we are starting school again and conversations have already turned to what kind of winter will we have this year. Life turns very quickly and summer seems so fleeting.
I have found that we sometimes try to pack so much fun and activity and relaxation into summer that it can work against actually experiencing these things. So perhaps we could ask another question?
‘What are we going to do now/today?? I believe this question is a far more productive one that we can actually do something about, at least in part.
First, I believe that it is essential to build some ‘summer? into the rest of the year ? some intentional time to rest and relax and play and spend precious moments with family and friends and God.
This is really the biblical concept of ‘Sabbath? time and it is designed to help us rest and refocus on God’s good gifts to us in creation.
Sabbath ‘summer? time reminds us that we are not ultimately in charge and that everything comes to us as gift.
It’s one way of saying that ‘God is God, and we’re not!?
In addition, I also believe that the end of summer is a time to reflect on life’s priorities just as ‘regular? activity resumes.
Some questions to consider include: Does life really have to be so frantic? What will I choose to do and what will I choose not do? Can I simplify my life and focus on what matters most? Will the people I love most really know how much I care? Will I get enough exercise or sleep? What new thing will I learn? How will I grow spiritually? Will I take time to serve and love others, such as with the My Habitat Clarkston build this fall? What will I generously give to? Will I take time for worship and prayer?
What a privilege we have to live every day as the gift that it is, no matter what the season.
And each day we have an opportunity to prioritize our days according to God’s design and the values we hold.
One of my favorite Bible passages reminds me of the value of each and every day no matter what does or doesn’t happen: ‘This is the day the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it.? (Psalm 118:24)
So often we live in either the past with regret or the future with anxiety, rather than in the present with thanksgiving and joy.
Of course living in the day is not always an easy thing to do. Yet when I do, I experience more joy and peace. The Bible says that we should ‘Cast all your anxiety on (God), because he cares for you.? (1 Peter 5:7)
I believe that God, in his amazing grace, wills to redeem our past (no matter what it holds) and to assure us about the future (no matter what it holds).
But most of all I think God wants to journey with us today, and for us to give our lives over to his control. I want to encourage you (and me) to make this our number one priority this fall.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
Christian values are important to many of us. We were brought up in a world that seems so different from our world today.
Wars and violence create anxiety. We watch what is taking place in other parts of the world and wonder at the looks of anger and hatred we see on the faces of the people, then see the look of anguish at the loss of loved ones. Has life really changed?
As we approach the end of another summer we will soon find, in many ways, a different world.
Children will return to school. Our vacation schedules may be over for another year and we face the long periods of work before us. We will find the days a little cooler, the nights a little longer, and the trees begin to change color.
My wife and I were amazed a few days ago that some sumac trees were already changing to a brilliant red color! This is a reminder of the sleep of winter soon approaching.
The sleep of winter for the earth and for many animals often reminds me of the Christian view of death.
St. Paul writes these inspired words in 1 Corinthians 15: Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?
We might wonder about those words as we stand at a grave site with strong memories of the loved one laying at our feet because the sting is real and the victory seems so finite. Our sin convicts us.
St. Paul also reminds us that the wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23). He continues by telling us that the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Earlier he had written Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into His death? We were buried therefore with Him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life. (6:3-4)
What a glorious victory it is! It is Easter Sunday re-lived every day as we awake from sleep and begin a new day. It is celebrating the life we are given every day as we take another breath of air. It is remembering all the blessings God brings to us as we feel the warmth of the sunshine, a kind word, another’s forgiveness, and a welcome embrace.
So how do our Christian values play into all this? We hold out the word of hope for those struggling.
We pray for those whose lives are embattled by the war around them (after all, we are all in battle with sin!). We lead through Christ-like examples in sharing the love of God in Christ Jesus. We lead others to His peace.
Join us beginning Sept. 24 as Dave Ramsey guides us to Financial Peace Wednesdays at 6:30 p.m. Call 248-625-4644 for information.
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
You are driven by something. Right now you may be driven by a problem or a deadline. You may be driven by guilt or fear or the need to impress and succeed.
You think, ‘If I could just have that, if I could just get there, then I would be happy.? Really? How’s that been working for Jesus told us that he can free us from what drives us. He said that if he sets us free, we are genuinely free. (John 8:36) Free to love. Free to enjoy. Free to give and live truly productive lives.
Maybe you’ve heard the news. My Habitat Clarkston, in conjunction with Habitat for Humanity of Oakland County, is building a new home in Springfield Township, near Andersonville Rd. Our church is privileged and excited to be a part of this great cause. And it is exciting to see how the word is spreading and many businesses and people are participating as well.
But a caution about our motives: Why do we give money and take time to serve? Is it because we are driven to impress people? Is it to pat ourselves on the back and feel better about ourselves? Perhaps. (We are all a mixed bag of motives and emotions, aren’t we?). But from a faith perspective, our Lord Jesus taught us that we do not have to impress people or earn brownie points with God.
If we receive Christ into our lives, we know that we are already accepted, forgiven, and loved. Then why bother to do good ‘like My Habitat Clarkston? The Apostle Paul tells us, Our people must learn to devote themselves to doing what is good, in order to provide for urgent needs and not live unproductive lives. (Titus 3:14)
Once we know Christ ‘really know him ? life becomes an adventure of loving, enjoying, caring, and making a difference. We don’t have to be driven. Instead we are now called ? called to find joy in living productive lives and helping others to live productive lives.
So what drives you? Have you asked Christ to free you? Accept his forgiveness. Receive his love. And then go and love someone.Whether you follow Christ or not, this Habitat for Humanity Build is a great way for all of us to make life in Clarkston better for everyone.
Information on the Habitat for Humanity house build can be found on Facebook. Go to My Habitat Clarkston. You can serve in many different ways or make a donation.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
The Greeks and the Romans referred to the Dog Days of Summer as an evil time “when the sea boiled, wine turned sour, dogs grew mad and man became hysterical.” They were generally talking about the sultry days of summer most commonly experienced in the months of July and August. According to the 1552 edition of the Book of Common Prayer the “Dog Daies” began July 6th and ended August 17th. On the modern calendar that would be July 16th to August 27th.
Named after Sirius the “Dog Star”, the brightest star in the constellation Canis Major (Large Dog). Sirius is also the brightest star in the night sky. The Dog Days originally were the days when Sirius rose just before or at the same time as the sun. Owing to changes in the earth’s rotation July 3rd to August 11th are the days Sirius rises with the sun this year, the ‘Dog Days? of summer.
For some people this is the best time of the year, for others the worst. Some thrive in the heat, the outdoor activities, swimming, boating, fishing, etc. Others take shelter in the comfort of their air conditioning awaiting the cooler weather before venturing out during the day. As I grow in years I find that my tolerance for hotter weather has decreased while I am more tolerant of a little hysteria.
One constant in life is change. Our individual responses to change range from denial to overreaction. We go to great measures to resist change; we cherry pick ‘facts? to support our prejudices such as those who point to the increase in the extent of the Antarctic ice shelf while ignoring the overall decrease in its density.
And we take extreme measures to combat threats that may or may not exist; we project doom and gloom such as those who focus on the possible catastrophic effects of sea levels rising in greatly increased rates beyond the current level of change.
A cooler and wetter than normal summer plus a colder and snowier than normal winter raise doubts in people’s minds as to the reality of global warming.
And, these local effects are offset by the observations of global temperatures rising, the overall shrinking of ice caps and glaciers, plants and animal species migrating north with the increased length of the growing season, record heat, drought and wild fires out west, etc., etc., etc.
Last weekend Toledo’s water supply was threatened from an overabundance of algae caused by a combination of over fertilization of lawns, rising water temperatures in Lake Erie and a multitude of other factors. Evidence is growing that changes are at hand. Do we deny, react or respond to the changes in our lives?
Jesus ushered in a change in consciousness to our planetary body. The time for waiting for heaven are over, the belief in a heaven out there above the clouds is no longer valid, the idea that we have to earn our way into heaven is cast away. He sent his disciples out into the world saying, ‘As you go, proclaim the good news, ‘The kingdom of heaven has come near.?? Matthew 10:7.
Jesus located heaven as being ‘within you? (Luke 17:21), ‘at hand? (Mark 1:15) or within your reach here and now. He likened it to a man who sowed good seed, a grain of mustard seed, leaven in the flour, a merchant in search of fine pearls, a treasure hidden in the field, a net which was thrown into the sea (see Matthew chapter 13) and other actions. It is not a place to go but an experience to live here and now.
This is our opportunity, to live ‘in the world? (see John 17:16) conscious of our connection with God: Heaven, and not ‘of it? caught up in the worldly appearances of doom and gloom. We are neither in denial of nor overreacting to the appearances; we do respond appropriately. We respond with confident assurance that Divine Order, Divine Timing and Divine Guidance are active in our lives and affairs.
Thank you God for it is so!
Rev. Matthew E. Long is pastor of Peace Unity Community
This past fourth of July, I did what the majority of pastors do, I took that Sunday off and I spent time with my family in Florida.
One of the things that we planned to do when we were in Florida was to visit Universal Studios.
My wife and I have a lot of history at that park, in fact, in 2003 we won the grand prize, a free trip to Universal Studios in Hollywood.
Our past history told us two things, we could count on the fact that it would be very hot and there would be a lot of people.
What we failed to realize was the day that we decided to go, happened to be the same day that the new Harry Potter ride would open.
A man that I met that day told me his family paid extra money to be able to enter the park early, before the gates opened to ride the new ride. The update that he gave me was that after 8 hours of waiting in line they still hadn’t been on the ride yet. Now, that is some serious devotion.
In my time at the park I was able to do a lot of people watching. My daughter and I would camp out in the gift shop waiting for my wife and my son to exit from the ride.
I use to think the idea of having riders pass through the gift shop after a ride ended was a brilliant money making idea but what I noticed was the ones who were actually doing most of the purchasing, usually weren’t riders getting off a ride but those who were drawn into the store from the heat.
Those who had just been on the ride, had waited in an air conditioned building, and with adrenaline still pumping through their bodies they passed right through the gift shops onto the next ride.
The majority of those who spent any time in the shop at all, were either family members waiting for their loved ones who had plenty of time to waste in the shop, or passer’byers who had not planned on entering the store until the feeling of air conditioning drew them right in.
It is amazing that they actually keep the air conditioned store doors open the entire time the park is open. Once you are overheated, and you are in that air conditioned room you don’t want to leave, so you stay and you shop and eventually you buy.
Before you know it you have just purchased an E.T. stuffed animal that you get to lug around the park, which gets you hotter faster and then the process of finding yourself in another gift shop starts all over again.
The Universal Studios gift shops reminds me a lot of what the church Jesus established should be like. In life, there are many who are weary, who have been beaten and battered by the hardships of life.
They are searching everywhere for relief from the demands of life and every passing day they go without finding rest for their souls, they become more and more drained.
C.S. Lewis said ‘Most people, if they had really learned to look into their own hearts, would know that they do want, and want acutely, something that cannot be had in this world. There are all sorts of things in this world that offer to give it to you, but they never quite keep their promise.?
What believers in Jesus have found is life, and in becoming a believer, the Holy Spirit enters our hearts so that wherever we go, we can help those who are far from God experience life in Christ. For those who are seeking peace, we know who the Prince of Peace is.
For those who feel there is no hope for them, we can share with them that they can have a relationship with the God of hope, who promises to fill you with all joy and peace, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in the hope that you lack. May we as the church, the people of God, be for others, like the air conditioning to the tired theme park goers, drawing in the tired and the weary so they experience the refreshing new life that is found in Christ.
The Rev. Dr. Matthew Webster is pastor of First Congregational Church of Clarkston.
Maybe you’ve heard the news.
My Habitat Clarkston, in conjunction with Habitat for Humanity of Oakland County (HFHOC), has secured vacant land on Hogback Lake Road, near Andersonville Road.
If you are familiar with the old school building that used to house the former Springfield Township library, the property is directly behind the old library.
Habitat for Humanity requires families to provide their own ‘sweat equity hours? in their home build.
In addition, this family will be making affordable zero profit mortgage payments back to HFHOC as part of their partner family requirements for home ownership.
The family also is educated on how to handle their finances and maintain a home.
It bugs me when I hear people complain about how bad things are and how something needs to be done.
Typically, I ask, ‘Ok, what are you doing about it??
Most of the time, the answer is nothing. People just like to complain.
So OK Clarkston. We’ve started My Habitat Clarkston to be a vehicle for anyone to do something about it.
Our dream is we can collaborate in all sorts of ways to make Clarkston a better place to live. This HFHOC build is simply one, important way.
It’s almost build time! So let’s do this ‘together! How? For starters, check out our Facebook Page (My Habitat Clarkston).
There you will find lots of info on who we are and what we’ve been doing. Second, rally your friends or co-workers to sign up for a time to help build.
Third, make a donation.
Encourage your club or group to give as well. If many people give what they can, surely Clarkston is able to raise $130,000 to make this happen.
For every dollar given, Consumers Energy will give 50 cents (if given through the proper channel online).
Go to www.habitatoakland.org to sign up and to donate. The groundbreaking is scheduled for Monday, Aug. 4, at 10 a.m.
Let’s do this, Clarkston! Together!
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
In the good old summer time. Yeah! Summer is finally here. The cold and the snow are a fading memory. The sun and the water are calling us forward to enjoy the fruits of our labors.
I have been investing a lot of time in my garden as I do each spring. Now we are beginning to enjoy the benefits.
Strawberries, lettuces, peas are making their way to our dinner plates. Tomatoes, peppers, carrots and much more are on their way.
So are the weeds. It is a continual process of plucking out the weeds so that I can water and nurture the seeds that I want to see grow.
Our lives are the same way.
This is why biblical writers repeatedly drew upon images of the seed, sowing and reaping.
‘Collect the weeds first and bind them in bundles to be burned, but gather the wheat into my barn.? Matthew 13:30.
We have to be alert to the thoughts, feelings and actions that are not beneficial to our lives and to the lives of those around us. These we gently pluck out of our minds and hearts, cease participating in them, so that the good seed may grow within us.
My friend Sam was a very successful business man, he ran a fortune 500 company and was well respected in the business community.
He had a big house, fancy cars, plus more money than he knew what to do with. His wife loved spending his money. She was always taking trips overseas, back east and out west.
His children were gone as well. His son had moved out west and never made it back home even for the holidays, his work kept him very busy.
His daughter was in trouble with the law and was constantly dealing with the legal system, in and out of jail, court, rehab, on probation. It never seemed to end.
Sam’s health was not well. He dealt with heart, lung and kidney issues. Between his cholesterol, diabetes, infections, etc. ad infinitum, he was always popping pills, injecting himself, monitoring his vitals, getting treatments, doctor appointments, hospital visits.
But he always seemed to have enough time to tell me what I was doing wrong running the church. And, since he was on the board, I was compelled to listen.
In Unity we teach the Law of Mind Action, which simply stated is, thoughts held in mind produce after their kind.
Our outer world is a reflection of our inner world. Derivatives include the Law of Cause and Effect, Giving and Receiving, Karma and Retribution.
Essentially, our inner world causes the outer effects, as we give so shall we receive, what goes around comes around, and what we put out comes back.
One day Sam suffered a massive heart attack, the doctors did not know if he would pull through.
When he was finally well enough for visitors, I went to see him. What he said was a surprise to me, although I might have expected it. It was such an insightful comment I had to write it down.
He said, ‘You know, I’ve been lying here thinking about all you’ve said over the years about the Law of Mind Action and I think maybe I’m beginning to see how it works. I have to think about what physical effects I want to see out picture in my life and then figure out what mental causes I have to dwell on to achieve those effects.?
He got it. Before long his wife and children were spending more time at home. The constant complaining had ceased and he was much more pleasant to be around.
Our lives today are an out picturing of the seed thoughts and feelings that we planted, watered and nurtured yesterday.
The seed thoughts and feelings that we plant today will determine how our lives out picture tomorrow.
‘Seek ye first his kingdom and his righteousness (right-use-ness) and all these things will be added unto you.? Matthew 6:33.
God’s kingdom is love, ‘God is love and he who abides in love abides in God and God abides in him.? 1John 4:16.
I invite you to sow seeds of love, to water and nurture them by remembering to affirm, ‘God is love, I am loved and loving.? Then be the love you wish to see.
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Community.
When learning to drive, my father told me to keep my speed to five miles an hour over the speed limit. I followed his instructions.
Later in life, while talking to my sister-in-law, she asked how I, a pastor, could willfully break the law by doing that.
This became a dilemma. Do I listen to the authority of my father or the authority of the law of the land? I chose the latter. It was a matter of respect.
When I drove fast, if I saw a patrol car, I would immediately take my foot off the gas even when going five miles an hour under the speed limit.
Why? I knew I was guilty, I had broken the law.
Some people see God like a policeman waiting to catch us doing something wrong, flip on the lights and punish us.
Too often we remember the words God spoke when He said ‘I the’Lord’your God am’a jealous God,’visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children to the third and the fourth generation of those who hate Me? (Exodus 20:5b). He wants our service and our devotion.
God has given the Law so we might respect Him and all His creation. Just like the laws of the land are there to keep us in check, to give us a guide and opportunity to reflect on what we are doing, so God’s Law gives the same opportunity.
If we focus on the negative aspects of the Law we might see the Christian faith as a punishing, restrictive and binding religion. That is not what God offers. Instead He offers freedom and joy.
Exodus 20:6 reflects God’s good and gracious nature.
Here He says ‘but showing steadfast love to thousands of those who love Me and keep My commandments.
This is the God I know, a God of love! He knew no one could ever keep His commandments’perfectly’so He had a plan to send His Son to take the punishment for our sins.
It is a great gift to us. He suffered and died and we are given a gift of forgiveness and living with Him in heaven forever.
We should take God’s Word seriously, take it to heart.
God wants our full devotion.
God wants all our love.
God wants us to respect Him.
What has happened in our land? We mourn for days gone by. Reflect on the last half century and what do we find? Respect has continued to decline.
Think of what could happen in our nation if we took more time to show respect to others.
Think about the good of building one another up instead of tearing one another down.
Think of all the positives that could come as we share God’s never-ending love with one another.
Think of all the possibilities! But don’t just think about them, try them, join in the joys of loving God’s love and respect.
Join in as we grow in sharing His blessings.
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
I absolutely love this time of the year in Michigan. We get to celebrate another winter being behind us, and there are great holidays to enjoy with family; such as Mother’s Day, Memorial Day, Father’s Day, and my birthday.
Alright, so my birthday isn’t a national holiday, but chances are you were very mindful of Mother’s Day at least.
This year I watched as four generations of my family, enjoyed being with one another, great grandparents playing with their great grandkids.
As I was enjoying every minute of watching four generations interact with one another, I began to think about all the various people who have made a difference in my life.
I wish there was a special day to recognize the people who have given of themselves and invested into our lives beyond the usual holidays that place people into specific categories.
As I began to reflect even more deeply into the lives of those I truly admire, I began to realize each individual is vastly different from one another.
They are all individuals who represent different socio-economic statuses, educational levels, ethnicities, and home lives.
Although, there were many differences among them, there were also some common denominators as well. What they all shared in common was that they all invested a lot of quality time in my life, and displayed to me, love, grace, and forgiveness as needed.
I have learned an important lesson in life you can’t give what you don’t have. So, I am going to apply that same logic to the people who have had the greatest impact on my life.
In order to love, they must have received love, in order to invest time in someone’s life, they need to have time to give, in order to forgive, they must have been forgiven.
The problem with my list was I knew there were some who didn’t grow up with love in their homes.
Others had their past, constantly brought up before them, so how were they able to forgive?
I decided I needed answers to my questions and that could only be done by asking the individuals directly themselves, ‘how can you love after growing up in the home that showed you no love??
‘I am able to love because I have received the love that God gives.?
The same type of answer came from a friend who had overcome a troubled past, ‘I am able to forgive because I understand just how forgiven I am.?
I went through the list of the most influential people a second time and recognized they were all individuals who because they had received what they did not deserve from God, known as grace, they were able to extend to others what they might not have deserved too.
James 1:17 says: ‘every good gift comes from above.?
God doesn’t give bad gifts. The kind of stuff God gives; the love, joy, peace, forgiveness, grace, that is found in Him, is what was needed to overcome their lack in that area of their lives.
God had transformed their lives into the people they have become; forgiven people who forgive, loved people who love, healed people who no longer hurt, and who introduce people to the Great Healer of our souls.
I am grateful for the people whom God has redeemed, restored and used as beautiful reflections of His light and His love. So, I am wondering, who are the people who have impacted your life? How can we show our appreciation to them? Maybe we all should rally together and start a new Holiday, a You Made a Difference in My Life Day.
The Rev. Dr. Matthew Webster is pastor of First Congregational Church of Clarkston.
What? A Habitat for Humanity build in Clarkston? Why in Clarkston? Isn’t Clarkston a rich town?
Well yes, in many ways Clarkston is a wealthy town and blessed with many resources.
But did you know that according to The Lighthouse of Oakland County’s report on poverty, a seismic shift has occurred in Oakland County since 2005?
‘In Oakland County, the state’s wealthiest county, the number of individuals in poverty has grown to more than 118,000, an increase of 77% between 2005 and 2012.?
Poverty is no longer an urban issue. Many suburbs, like Clarkston, have a growing number of people in poverty.
I was in a meeting with Tim Ruggles, CEO of Habitat for Humanity Oakland, and he mentioned that the average age of a homeless person is nine years of age.
I’ve heard that some are disputing the numbers, but whatever the exact numbers are, the need is here even in Clarkston.
That’s why I’m so excited for our Habitat for Humanity build this summer. Property has been purchased.
A family has been selected. And we’re ready to move ahead. The cost of the project is $130,000.
Some lead gifts have already been committed.
But this is the time for OUR ENTIRE COMMUNITY TO COLLABERATE TOGETHER.
Can you give financially? Do you have some kind of building skills? Can you give ‘in kind? gifts? Can you volunteer to serve food on a certain day?
More information will soon be available on our Facebook page ‘My Habitat Clarkston.?
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
As I write this article, we are preparing to celebrate Mother’s Day. My sons and I will be taking Mom out for our annual visit to the greenhouse for a selection of perennials and annuals that will bring the joy of color to our home for the summer. In our churches we will be honoring our Mothers with a breakfast, flowers and affirmations of love and support.
As you read this, Mother’s Day for this year will have past; so, now that the gift buying and card giving are done, maybe we can talk about what Mother’s Day was originally intended to represent before Hallmark got ahold of it.
In the wake of the Civil War when more Americans were killed than in all the other wars before and after, nearly 2 percent of the population, a call went out to Mother’s everywhere, “Arise, then, women of this day! Arise, all women who have hearts, whether our baptism be of water or of tears! Say firmly: We will not have great questions decided by irrelevant agencies. Our husbands shall not come to us, reeking with carnage, for caresses and applause. Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn all that we have been able to teach them of charity, mercy and patience. We, women of one country, will be too tender of those of another country, to allow our sons to be trained to injure theirs… As men have often forsaken the plough and the anvil at the summons of war, let women now leave all that may be left of home for a great and earnest day of council.” (Julia Ward Howe, 1870)
This movement towards a day of peace, a day for women to take council as to affect peace in our world, evolved into the suffrage movement which brought women the right to vote and to equal education.
Even though Mother’s Day became officially recognized as a national holiday in 1914, it had already begun to lose its original flavor and intent. The original advocates quickly denounced the rampant commercialization and degradation of meaning that followed.
Yet, women did win the right to vote and for equal education. And, the United States at least has not gone to war since without there being a national debate. We were slow to enter both world wars, entering only after we were attacked. The anti-war movement of the 60’s and 70’s took strength from these early advocates for peace. That movement has also evolved into movements for environmental and social justice making.
Peace is a noble cause, and even though one conflict ends another inevitably begins. Eventually we realize that changing things in the outer never produces a lasting change.
As Lao Tse wrote, “If there is to be peace in the world, there must be peace in the nations. If there is to be peace in the nations, there must be peace in the cities. If there is to be peace in the cities, there must be peace between neighbors. If there is to be peace between neighbors, there must be peace in the home. If there is to be peace in the home, there must be peace in the heart.”
“Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives.” (John 14:27) Peace is not the absence of conflict, it is the awareness of an infinite, unlimited, eternal existence of life and love, God, active in your life; it is an intuitive knowing that Spirit is active in your mind, heart and body. It is a sense of Divine guidance, a confident assurance in Divine order and Divine timing, that all will be well.
“Think again, with a new level of understanding, for the Kingdom of Heaven is within your reach.” (Matthew 4:17) Heaven is a state of mind, a level of consciousness, an awareness and a realization of a greater reality than this three dimensional existence that we are currently participating in. Take time today to be holy, to realize your wholeness by practicing the presence of the Divine. You are worthy.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior minister at Peace Unity Community.
At Calvary Lutheran we have a saying we share often: “We are better together!” We believe that is way God made us for life in community, not as lone rangers. One Body of Christ with many parts, each uniquely gifted and all vital to the health and effectiveness of the Body.
Of course this image extends beyond a single congregation to the whole church.
At the National Day of Prayer breakfast last week I was profoundly reminded of this by the 2014 theme, “One Voice United in Prayer.”
The spring and fall Community Impact Days are another wonderful expression of working together. Simply put, we get more done for God and our community with more hands and hearts helping share the load.
Even though I believe we all know this is true, I lament that as churches we can find it so hard to make “better together” a real priority.
All too often we find it hard to set aside the time and/or our differences so that we can really work together as Christians for the sake of the world. We are called to build up the kingdom of God, not just build our own castles.
I trust each congregation in our community has vital life-giving ministries to spread the Good News and to reach out to those in need. I also believe it is important to come together sometimes so the world can see us working and focusing together on the love, compassion, justice and mercy of God. As the old song goes, “They’ll know we are Christians by our love…”
My Habitat Clarkston offers us a wonderful opportunity to do just that. It is an invitation to our various faith communities to come together with our schools, civic and service groups, the Clarkston Chamber of Commerce, local businesses and caring individuals to build a “better habitat” for all.
We will soon be officially announcing the details of our first Habitat for Humanity house build project in the Clarkson vicinity.
We hope and pray that this will serve as a catalyst for all shapes and sizes of projects to build that better habitat. We also hope it will serve as a catalyst to establish a much-needed volunteer clearinghouse. This will facilitate matching those interested in volunteer service with projects to build up the community or to assist those in need.
This is a big vision that requires us to share with one another – share some of our time and talents, share some of the spotlight and credit, share some of the resources, share some of our lives – so that others may see the light of Christ shine brightly and so that we can accomplish more, “better together!”
My hope and prayer is that our churches will be the early adapters and leaders in moving this vision forward.
To learn more about My Habitat Clarkston visit us on Facebook or let me know as I am very passionate about this opportunity to move beyond ourselves and our self-interest to building a better habitat for all. I believe that “better together” is our calling.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is Senior Pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
We heard it many times in our worship yesterday as we celebrated in our Easter worship: He is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia! But what do those words really mean when we take time to think about them?
First, it means that the One we worship as God’s Son, the Christ, fulfillment of the Old Testament prophecies, is not laying in some tomb.
The major religions of the world, the philosophies, and the governments will take you to a place and will show you the grave of their founder or former leader. There you will find a body’with the exception of the Christian faith. He has risen!
Even the Bible records how the people in Jesus? day tried to cover it up. In Matthew 27:62-65, we read ‘The next day, that is, after the day of Preparation, the chief priests and the Pharisees gathered before Pilate’and said, ‘Sir, we remember how that impostor said, while he was still alive, ‘After three days I will rise.? Therefore order the tomb to be made secure until the third day, lest his disciples go and steal him away and tell the people, ‘He has risen from the dead,? and the last fraud will be worse than the first.?
Pilate said to them, ‘You have a guard of soldiers. Go, make it as secure as you can.??? After the resurrection Matthew records: ‘While they were going, behold, some of the guard went into the city and told the chief priests all that had taken place. 12’And when they had assembled with the elders and taken counsel, they gave a sufficient sum of money to the soldiers 13’and said, ‘Tell people, ‘His disciples came by night and stole him away while we were asleep.??? (28:11-13)
Second, it means that these words are true fact to us. The word indeed is a solid statement that what we speak we believe to be true. Synonyms include surely, positively, undoubtedly, certainly and truly.
We, as Christians, believe that Jesus is alive, that He has defeated the power of death, and that, because of the resurrection we will live with Him in heaven forever!
Third, it is a reason for praise. Alleluia, literally Praise the Lord, is a response heard throughout the Christian church, especially on a day of celebration like Easter.
It becomes a song of praise on the lips of believers and a word of hope for those in despair as we think about all God has done for us.
Finally, it is our reason for hope.
St. Paul writes: ‘But we do not want you to be uninformed, brothers, about those who are asleep, that you may not grieve as others do who have no hope. 14’For since we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so, through Jesus, God will bring with him those who have fallen asleep.? 1 Thessalonians 4:13-14) We believe that, as Jesus lives, so shall we.
He is risen. He is risen indeed. Alleluia!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
‘The Barna Group, found that 69 percent of U.S. adults celebrate Easter as a religious holiday.? This is indeed great news because what that means is there is a great opportunity for the churches in and around Clarkston to live out the good news of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
Which means the gospel has got to be preached by both the pastor and the congregation.
It needs to be preached in word and through our actions as well. People need the Gospel because the message of the Gospel overwhelms us with the love God gives. It compels us to love others.
The Gospel is this great message of hope, that in Christ, we have been forgiven, we are the beloved children of God. Our relationship with God has been restored, there is no more condemnation over our lives.
When we understand that adoption into God’s family is a fixed position in Christ it means we can get rid of the vicious cycle of trying to do more and more in order for God to accept us.
We already are accepted as a result of receiving the grace of God through Christ by faith.
The two verses that I have been focused on this year for Easter is 1 Peter 1:3-4: ‘Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In His great mercy He has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, 4 and into an inheritance that can never perish, spoil or fade. This inheritance is kept in heaven for you?
Gabriel Marcel adds insightful commentary to these verses when he says, ‘hope is for the soul what breathing is for the living organism.?
Biblical hope is not some sort of superstitious uncertainty, instead it is alive and certain because of the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.
Life without Christ is a hopeless end, whereas life in Christ is an endless hope.
What we have to offer as the Christian Church is endless hope in Christ Jesus. Isn’t that something you would want to be a part of? Isn’t that something worth sharing and devoting your life to?
Thomas Brooks, a Puritan writer says ‘hope can allow us to see heaven through the thickest clouds.?
So my prayer for our community is God will use the people of our churches to help people encounter the Resurrected King this Easter.
What I know is that people need to come alive with a living hope that can only be found in the Easter message and through the power of the Resurrection.
The Rev. Dr. Matthew Webster is pastor of First Congregational Church of Clarkston.
Do you know why Clarkston is a great place?
I’ve lived in Clarkston now for 20 years. My wife and I were so impressed when we moved here. We loved the small town feel and how friendly everyone was around town. After all these years, we still feel the same way.
I have the privilege of being on the Clarkston Community Awards Committee. We plan the Awards Breakfast that happens every May. The goal is to honor and recognize the people who help to make Clarkston such a great place to live.
Because really ? and we dare not take this for granted ? what makes Clarkston a great place is the people.
I am excited for this year’s Awards Breakfast on May 13. Here are the people we will honor:
Citizen of the Year (tie): Jeanne Molzon and Jim Evans;
Business Person of the Year: Shari Schulz, owner of Birdfeeder/Clarkston Flower Shoppe/Bonnie & Clyde;
Adult-Youth Volunteer: John Coleman, cubmaster for Cub Pack 192;
Youth of the Year (tie): ‘Camron Razdar and Kelley Fitzpatrick;
Community Collaboration: My Habitat Clarkston – Pastors Jonathon Heierman, Dan Whiting, and Greg Henneman;
Community Beautification/Preservation: Neiman’s Family Market, John Schmidt;
Community Enhancement: Clarkston Optimist Club, Robin Brose.
We will enjoy a nice breakfast together, and then have a brief program where we recognize these beautiful people for helping to make Clarkston a great place to live.
I encourage you to join us. It’s open to the community. Go to www.clarkstoncommunity.com to purchase tickets.
Let’s not take what we have for granted. Let’s celebrate it, and let’s work together to make it even better.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
Mudslides in Washington State, dozens killed plus dozens more missing and presumed dead. An Airliner disappears, hundreds are presumed dead. Friends are losing their lives to cancer, heart disease and other causes.
Our hearts and our prayers reach out to these people, their family and friends to receive comfort in this time of adversity. May they realize ‘the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.? Philippians 4:7
A pop singer’s concert is protested by a religious group prompting me to ask the question, which group was acting more Christian? ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the greatest and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself.? Matthew 22:37-39
One group is protesting against a lifestyle that they abhor based upon their interpretation of Old Testament scripture; an interpretation which may be valid for them but I believe has been taken out of context in modern times to promote a limiting religious view point. ‘Do not judge, so that you may not be judged. For with the judgment you make you will be judged, and the measure you give will be the measure you get.? Matthew 7:1-2
A counter protest by the singer’s fans responded with compassion for the death of the religious group’s founder, ‘Sorry for your loss? read one banner, plus hope for the future, ‘Live your life and be awesome? read a second banner. When I first read this article I had to chuckle. I turned to my wife and said, ‘There is hope for the future.?
‘Do not judge by appearances, but judge with right judgment.? John 7:24
These two apparently contradicting statements of Jesus, ‘judge not? and ‘judge with right judgment? are reconciled within the context of Spiritual Growth. When we are judging others, we are focusing on the outer physical or material plain of existence: the level of appearances.
Our judgment of the outer world is a reflection of our inner world, what we see is what we are: our sense of being. One person sees beauty where another sees ugliness. One person sees love where another sees hate. The Truth is that there is only God; all that is seen came from the unseen: God; all that exists came into being through God; all there is to know is God; ‘For in him we live and move and have our being.? Acts 17:28
In the context of Spiritual Growth, I learn to ‘not judge by appearances, but judge with right judgment.? I look beyond the outer appearances, the effects, to the inner causative level of thoughts and feelings. Realizing peace and love are our inner work.
Acting out of peace and love to make our world a better place for all is our outer work. Whether we are waiting tables or running a corporation, if we are not doing so in an awareness of peace and love we are under paid; we are short-changing ourselves. ‘God is love, and those who abide in love abide in God and God abides in them.? 1John 4:16
Our outer world is reflecting the Spiritual Growth of our collective consciousness. In my lifetime we have experienced major shifts in consciousness. Martin Luther King graduated from seminary the year I was born; when I was 18months old Rosa Parks sat on a bus; now we have a black man in the white house.
When I was born, lead based paint was the norm. Since then we have stopped belching leaded gas fumes into the atmosphere. ‘Go ye into all the world, and preach the good news to every creature.? Mark 16:15
In the 1970’s we cleaned up rivers and lakes only to see many of them threatened again in recent years. Fracking, in addition to all the other negative consequences, bonds poisonous chemicals to water molecules making this increasingly precious resource unusable for future generations.
The good news is that there is still hope for the future. We are continuing to see the changes in consciousness necessary for us to live in harmony with each other and our environment, to protect our right and ability to survive on this planet.
Live your life and be awesome!
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is pastor of Peace Unity Community
It has been a very long winter and I am so ready for the snow to melt and life to spring forth again.
The signs of spring and hope are all around, even the temperature is still cold. Buds are forming on trees, the cranes have returned, and we can even see some grass in our lawn.
This is the season in the church calendar we call Lent, a word that comes from an old Anglo-Saxon word for ‘springtime.? That seems to fit really well, as Lent can be a time of spring-like renewal of our faith and coming back to life, even if it has been dormant for awhile.
However just as winter never seems to give in to spring without a fight, so too our lives of faith can be a struggle. Our desires and good intentions to grow soon collide with the realities of a too-busy world, competing priorities, and sometimes, frankly, a lack of discipline to do the life-giving things we know are really good for us.
However, just as we can count on the return of spring, God promises to shower us with his grace and love today as we allow him to draw us close and show us the way.
By God’s grace I believe Lent can be a time of real growth and transformation in our lives no matter how hard the winter has been.
Lent, which began on Ash Wednesday (March 5) and culminates at Easter, covers a period of 40 days plus Sundays. It originated in the very early church as a time of intense preparation for Baptism at Easter.
Today Lent can be a time of repentance (which means ‘turning or returning to God?), and renewed spiritual devotion. It’s not too late to get started. Some people fast, or ‘give something up? for Lent, such as a favorite food or video game, as a way of focusing attention on God.
The idea is that every time we crave the item given up, we are reminded of our dependence upon God’s grace and love. Other spiritual disciplines practiced during Lent include adding something to your life, such as renewed devotion to Bible study and prayer, generous giving to those in need, and my personal favorite, deciding to commit at least one random act of kindness each day.
And you might want to stop by Calvary and walk the unique version of the Stations of the Cross we have set up for a powerful experience. All of these things can draw us closer to God, but they don’t make God love us any more than he already does.
‘For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.? (John 3:16)
Lent culminates in Easter ? new life ? and that Good News is always in season. Each and every day we have a fresh start ? a new opportunity to receive and live in God’s grace.
God never gives up on us. And the amazing thing is that when we do spend some real time with God, we do grow to become more the way God intends us to be. My favorite description of God’s desire for the character of our lives is from Galatians 5 where Paul writes, ?’the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.?
That’s the way God made us and wills for our lives to look no matter what is happening around us. Lent is for me a special time to partner with God so that I allow him to grow my character in these ways ? and I’m pretty sure that all of us have at least a bit of growing to do.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
Whether you are religious or not, there is in every life challenges and burdens we carry that weigh heavy on us.
Some of those are what I call holy crosses. They are the burdens we bear because they are the right thing to do.
They can include but are not limited to carrying for aging parents, fully engaging in the highs and lows of marriage, parenting and all significant relationships.
Holy crosses can be the work we do to improve our community such as volunteering. All of these take work and on some days are joy-filled and on other days feel draining.
What makes moments like these holy is that we do not give up on them.
We keep recommitting our lives to these efforts because the results are not best measured on any given day. They are better evaluated over the long course of time.
The blessing of marriage and family as well as the efforts in improving community are greatest after a life of carrying those crosses.
There are unholy crosses. These are the burdens we carry that diminish life. They are the crosses of attitudes and behaviors that over a period of time make spirits brittle and drive away hope.
These can include but are not limited to guilt, shame, inability to give or receive forgiveness, living with fear, apathy or hate. Unholy crosses kill the soul, destroy community and instill cynicism and despair.
The inability to forgive and be forgiven, for example, freezes us into a cycle of hostility and dysfunction.
When there are wrongs committed between people, it is natural to feel pain. Lashing out and retreating are natural human responses.
However this behavior only creates more brokenness and makes justice and reconciliation impossible to achieve.
In a chapter on Forgiveness, I recently wrote there are three critical truths that can help us lay down the unhealthy cross of withheld forgiveness. They are:
? Forgiveness that heals hearts and relationships begins before transgressions occur. Forgiveness is a decision of the character that determines who we will be. It is not about what was done to us. It is more about what kind of person are you.
? The offering of forgiveness and its acceptance determines whether we will live tomorrow imprisoned or free. The person affected by our gift of receiving or giving forgiveness more than anyone is us. How do you want to live?
? Real forgiveness is the courage to let go so something better can emerge. When we hold on to wrongs done to us or the guilt we carry for our mistakes, we remove the chance to hold on to new blessings and possibilities.
This season of Lent, our congregation is focused on the Crosses We Carry. For all, perhaps now is the time to reflect on the emotional, spiritual and relational crosses you are carrying. It is a great time to recommit to the holy ones and lay down the ones do not bring new life.
The Rev. Richard L. Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church
Today, March 5, is the beginning of Lent, a penitential season in the church.
On this particular day, Ash Wednesday, it is customary in many churches to apply ashes to the forehead in the shape of the cross.
Ashes were used in the past to show one’s great sorrow for what they had done, to show humility, and to seek God’s favor.
As the ashes are applied the words are spoken: ‘From dust you have come and to dust you shall return.?
Because of our sin that we shall all die. Paul tells us: The wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23).
Unless Jesus returns before that time to judge all mankind each of us will die because each of us is a sinner. If that was all there was how tragic it would be! But, St. Paul continues: but the free gift’of’God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.
God loved us enough to send His Son into the world to save us from our sin! He loved us enough to send Him to the cross to die for us. Do you know of anyone who would do anything like that for you? God did!
During our season of Lent and through Holy Week our congregation is going to emphasize prayer. Prayer is such an important part of our faith but, too often, is a neglected part of that faith-walk.
We seem to pray when we are facing difficult times and, maybe offer a prayer of thanks when things are going well, but often forget to pray when things are on an even keel.
But prayer is vital in our Christian walk! Prayer is our way of seeking God’s will, God’s plan, God’s desire for our life. Prayer is our line of communication to our heavenly Father. Prayer is setting our own self aside and allowing God to take control as He shapes and molds us to the people He would have us become.
Our focus on prayer will lead us to look at prayers of Confession (admitting our sinfulness to God and one another), Faith (reminding us of the trust we have in God to supply our every need), Supplication (seeking the fullness of God’s bounty in our serving Him and fellow-man), Intercession (placing the needs of others before God), Petition ( seeking to have needs fulfilled), Consecration (being set apart as His holy people), Forgiveness (being reminded that our sins have been removed through Jesus? death and merit), and Praise as we celebrate His resurrection from the dead and look at all the blessings He brings us through our time of prayer.
Would you like to join us in prayer? Our focus includes a devotional booklet, weekend worships (Saturday at 6 p.m., Sunday at 8:15 and 11 a.m. and Wednesdays at 7 p.m.) and Bible Study (Sunday at 9:45).
We would be glad to share our devotional guide with you by mail or email. Contact us at 248- 625-4644 or at sttrinity@comcast.net
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
As I look out my office window, I see a snowdrift that is over three feet tall. In a 24-hour period recently, our region experienced snow, rain, ice and even ‘thundersnow.? It seems this winter has dished-out every conceivable scenario for bad weather. Whether record-breaking snowfall or extremely cold weather, we have been hammered!
As a pastor of a local church, it seems the worst comes on Sunday (or Saturday night), but I am sure it is only my perspective. I often think about the warm winter of two years ago and reminisce about the ‘good old days.? I also contemplate how nice it would be if the global warming I have heard about throughout my life would finally take place. I know it would not be good for polar bears, but it would be good for me!
At this point in time, I can only hope. It is hard to believe that spring could actually arrive in four weeks. Having lived in Michigan all my life, I know that anything is possible when it comes to the weather.
The Bible tells us, ‘To everything there is a season, a time for every purpose under heaven? (Ecclesiastes 3:1 NKJV). The Scripture goes on to teach about those seasons. It says there is ‘a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up what is planted.?
It also says there is ‘a time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance.? These are but a few of the seasons of life mentioned. As you study the list, similar to the four seasons we experience in Michigan, I am sure that you can say, ‘I like this season? or ‘I don’t like that season.?
The problem is that every season will eventually come. Our attitude in each season can be to merely endure or we can choose to flourish no matter what comes our way. Either way, we must always understand that every season is temporary. When we understand this concept, we can be prepared for the seasons as they come. In doing so, we will receive the best that season has to offer. This perspective will also cause us to seek out the good that season has to offer, even when it might seem to offer nothing of benefit.
I have always disliked the winter. Growing up, people would say, ‘You need to find something you like to do in the winter.? I finally took up the advice and used it as a time to vacation in warm-weather destinations.
Recently, I heard that winter seasons are good for killing off insects and make our summer season more enjoyable. Now I encourage myself by looking out the window, saying, ‘Die bugs, die.? However, no matter how hard I try, I am still just anticipating spring.
As a Christian, I have found that the best antidote for the seasons of life is to look for God’s purpose. After Solomon (the author of Ecclesiastes) teaches about the seasons, he mentions the ‘time for every purpose under heaven.?
I have found that in every season of life, there is evidence of the Lord’s purpose if I am willing to look for it. It is not just a comfort to know that God’s Kingdom reigns over the affairs of mankind; I have also found that God has made each and every one of us for a specific purpose.
When we take time to see and engage ourselves with His plan, we can find an inner compass steering us through the difficulties and giving us peace and strength to help us through. Do you know the Scripture declares that we are chosen and created with God’s purpose in mind?
Ephesians 1:11-12 (NKJV) proclaims, ‘In Him also we have obtained an inheritance, being predestined according to the purpose of Him who works all things according to the counsel of His will, that we who first trusted in Christ should be to the praise of His glory.?
Let’s take a step today to embrace the season of our life and operate in the fullness of His purpose!
The Rev. Loren Covarubbias is pastor of Mt. Zion Temple.
‘One sabbath he was going through the cornfields; and as they made their way his disciples began to pluck heads of grain. The Pharisees said to him, ‘Look, why are they doing what is not lawful on the sabbath?? And he said to them, ‘Have you never read what David did when he and his companions were hungry and in need of food? He entered the house of God, when Abiathar was high priest, and ate the bread of the Presence, which it is not lawful for any but the priests to eat, and he gave some to his companions.? Then he said to them, ‘The sabbath was made for humankind, and not humankind for the sabbath; so the Son of Man is lord even of the sabbath.?? Mark 2:23-28
We love to make rules, some we call laws or regulations or codes or guidelines, legislation, commandments, etc.; but rules are made to be broken, otherwise there would be no rules. Someone is doing something you don’t like so you make a rule to stop them or to punish them if they don’t stop.
Some of this is necessary in a civilized society. We define the boundaries of civilized behavior. Lying, cheating, stealing, etc., are not to be tolerated; unless, of course, you are a talk show host or politician or religious leader and you are telling us what we want to hear.
The other day I heard someone attacking a political leader and a program they instituted. Having studied the issue, I knew that their comments had no factual basis. I asked if they knew whether what they were saying was true or not. They informed me that they had heard it on TV so, of course, it must be true.
Politics and religion are two areas where we are always going to have disagreement. They are inventions of man, constantly changing and evolving. They are reflections of our personalities and our understandings of reality which are constantly changing and evolving. What doesn’t change is God.
God doesn’t make rules, God’s absolute laws cannot be broken. Like gravity, we cannot break the law of gravity, we can learn to work with it to fly above the worldly limitations we have set for ourselves. God, by whatever name you choose to call it, is ever propelling us upward when we open ourselves up to it.
Charles Fillmore, co-founder of Unity, once wrote, ‘We are not punished for our sins, but by our sins.?
If you step off the roof of a ten story building you are going to suffer the consequences of your action. If you lie, cheat and steal you will reap the rewards of that action which includes guilt and fear. If you are angry with another you will feel the burning waste this life consuming emotion brings. If you choose to be patient, loving and kind you will realize the peace, wholeness and abundance that is ours to experience.
Jesus repeatedly challenged the religious authorities of his day: regarding the Sabbath in the example above as well as in the healing of the man born blind, etc.; the healing of the official’s son, a non-Jew; the cleansing of the Temple; cavorting with harlots and tax collectors; etc.
Moses, Mohammed, Buddha, Lao Tse, Confucious, Luther, Calvin, Smith, etc., all challenged the religious authorities of their day. For, religion is a poor substitute for spiritual awakening. And rules are a poor substitute for Spiritual Law.
It is just as illegal for a rich man to sleep on a park bench as it is for a poor man; we all have an equal right to petition a politician or religious leader, but a sizeable donation will get you a personal audience; the golden rule: whoever has the gold rules, is all too true in our republican democracy. And, Spirit has a better idea.
Spiritual Law transcends, or rises above, man-made laws. As Abraham Lincoln once said, ‘Most people are as happy as they make up their minds to be.?
Outer circumstances do not dictate our happiness and satisfaction with living. Our inner awareness does.
Conscious contact with the Divine aligns us with Spiritual Law allowing us to soar above the inevitable conflict of worldly existence to realize peace, wholeness and abundance as our ever present reality. So it is and so it shall be.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long, Peace Unity Community
With Valentine’s Day near our thoughts turn to love. I remember falling in love with my wife – oh what a feeling such romantic love is. And now 35 years later I still feel that love, but I have learned that lasting love in marriage is commitment and action more than a feeling. Such love takes intentional time and energy to grow and maintain.
Love means a lot of other things too. We say everything from ‘we love pizza? to ‘we love our kids? to ‘we love God.? The Bible has a lot to say about love. Here are a few of my favorites:
‘God is love…. since God loved us so much, we also ought to love one another… By this we know that we abide in him and he in us.? 1 John 1
‘God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.? John 3:16
‘Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant’or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful;’it does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but rejoices with the truth. Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.? 1 Corinthians 12:4-8
‘Let love be genuine; hate what is evil, hold fast to what is good; love one another with mutual affection; outdo one another in showing honor…Contribute to the needs of others; extend hospitality to strangers…Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep. Live in harmony with one another; do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly; do not claim to be wiser than you are… so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all.? Romans 12
‘Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you,’that you may be children of your Father in heaven.? Matthew 5:44
There is a wonderful story of a young boy late getting home from school. His mom was anxious and met him at the door to ask where he had been. The boy replied, ‘On my way home I saw a little girl crying because a wheel had come off of her tricycle, so I stopped to help her.? His mom replied, ‘But you don’t know how to fix your own bike so how could you help her?? And he said, ‘I know Mom, I couldn’t fix her trike, but I could stop and help her cry – I know how to do that.?
Another story illustrating love as action comes from the life of Jackie Robinson, the first African-American to play Major League baseball. While the exact timing and details of this event are unclear the power of the story is not. For crossing the ‘baseball color line? Robinson frequently faced intense racism. Pitchers threw fastballs at his head. Runners spiked him on the bases. Brutal things were said. As the story goes, during one game the taunts and racial slurs seemed to reach a peak.
To make matters worse Robinson committed an error and stood at second base humiliated while the fans hurled insults at him. Another Dodger, a Southern white man by the name Pee Wee Reese, called timeout. He walked from his position at shortstop toward Robinson at second base, and with the crowds looking on, he simply put his arm around Robinson’s shoulder. The fans grew quiet. Both men showed great love and courage that day.
Feelings of love are wonderful, but commitments and actions of love keep relationships strong and can even change the world!
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
res’o’lu’tion [rez-uh-loo-shuh] Noun, ‘a formal expression’of opinion; a decision’or a determination.
Ever seen a resolution made by a city council that thanks someone? They look something like this:
– WHEREAS that because, people like baseball, and
– WHEREAS that baseball is fun and
– WHEREAS that baseball is good for kids? that
– RESOLVED Coach Johnson is the best baseball coach this town has ever seen!
The ‘WHEREAS? is what is known to be true ? the ‘RESOLVED? is the response.
So going into this new year ? what ‘WHEREASes? do you know? And does it matter?
Well for Christians a few things are true. How about these?
– WHEREAS Before you get up in the morning your sins HAVE BEEN completely forgiven
– WHEREAS You may have to earn you way in the near future here ‘your eternity with Christ is already paid for.
– WHEREAS you have been adopted into a new family ? forever!
– WHEREAS You can do nothing to earn the gift God joyfully gives you.
– WHACEREAS the peace and hope and glory of God is handed to you
RESOLVED, (your signature here).
2014 is here and Christ is with you. Do you have a resolution?
Bill Northend is a Lutheran Pastor at TheGatheringPlace in Davisburg.
I listened to a conversation on the radio the other day where a woman was talking about a new friend of hers, ‘I knew she was enlightened when I saw her drinking coconut water and holding a yoga mat.?
It was my first good laugh of the day. I have nothing against coconut water, I understand it is one of the new healthier drinks, and I love yoga but these do not necessarily evidence enlightenment. The superficial level of spirituality pervades all the world’s religions and spiritual paths.
I have my own theory about enlightenment. When I was a teenager I knew everything. As I gain experience (my way of saying ‘getting older?), the more I know I don’t know.
Eventually I will know that I know nothing and that will truly be enlightening. I believe Sgt. Shultz (think Hogan’s Heroes) had it right all along, ‘I know nothing.? As they say, the reason angels can fly is because they take themselves lightly.
Just because you have your plastic Jesus on your dashboard, or Buddha, or Moses, or Mohammad, or Krishna, or fill-in-the-blank: that doesn’t make you a true Christian, or Buddhist, or Jew, or Moslem, or Hindu, or whatever. It is living the teachings of the master; it is putting them into practice in your daily life that makes you a true believer.
We are at the end of the first week of a new year. This is a new year, a new beginning, with new opportunities to be and do and achieve. For many our resolutions have already begun to waiver if not completely abandoned. Each day is a new opportunity to begin again, to be born anew.
‘Unless one is born anew (from above), he cannot see the kingdom of God.? (John 3:3) The new birth is a change that comes here and now. It is not a once and done experience. It is a continual awakening to the Son of God, the anointed one (Christ) within, the enlightened one (Buddha), the divine nature (Spirit) that we made in the image and likeness of.
Epiphany, January 6th, celebrates the Wise Men’s visit to the baby Jesus. (Matthew 2:1-12) Epiphany means ‘to show forth? or ‘to appear?, it is also a term to describe those ‘Eureka? moments when the veil is lifted and we see beyond the surface level to the Truth within. The new birth is a present day epiphany that opens the door ever wider to a realization of the kingdom of God within. ‘I will put my law within them, and I will write it upon their hearts.? (Jeremiah 31:33)
‘The kingdom of Heaven is like a mustard seed? yeast? a treasure hidden in a field? a merchant in search of pearls? a net? ? (Matthew 13), it is a here and now experience of the blessings that opening our minds and hearts to the presence and power of a greater reality (God) have to offer.
‘He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. To him who conquers I will give some of the hidden manna, and I will give him a white stone, with a new name written on the stone which no one knows except him who receives it.? (Revelations 2:17)
To us who have the ability to see beyond the appearances of separation and can overcome our beliefs in lack and limitation, all we need and desire will be provided.
We will know our true nature as Sons and Daughters of the most high God and live in the awareness of our unity with God and all of God’s expression in earth as it is in heaven.
May the new year treat you kindly; blessings of peace, joy & love
Rev. Matthew E. Long is pastor of Peace Unity Community
While getting ready for Christmas this year at Calvary we have been reflecting each week on the figures of the familiar manger scene and what significant role they played in the Christmas story. Before Christmas we explored Jesus? family tree, Mary, Joseph, and the shepherds. After Christmas we will talk about the angels and the magi or wise men.
I have been particularly moved by the story of the shepherds, who were on the very edge of society as they tended the sheep in the wilderness away from home and outside the towns.
There was very little respect or prestige for this job, important as it was, and the shepherds were considered ‘unclean? since they were not able to keep all of the ‘rules? of proper society or proper religion.
Yet these are precisely the ones who received the first birth announcement about Jesus from the angels in Luke 2. They, not the religious leaders or the wealthy or powerful people, were the ones who were invited to come and see the baby and Mary and Joseph that first Christmas Day.
Since he was born in a stable, they were welcome to come as they really were for a visit, sheep and all.
This tells us a lot about God and those whom God will make sure are invited to get to know him. If the lowly shepherds were given this special privilege, then those who feel on the outside of things in our world today are also given a special invitation. And when we find ourselves lost and alone and afraid, Jesus is there for us too.
Love comes down at Christmas. The God of the universe born as a baby in Bethlehem. God stepping out of the heavens and taking on flesh so he can walk with us on earth as one of us.
Love comes down at Christmas. This baby is especially Good News to those who are hurting or in need or outcast or who have made big mistakes. God cares…deeply.
Many of us know the beginning of Psalm 23. ‘The Lord is my shepherd…? It is very interesting that even though it was such a lowly profession, shepherding is nevertheless frequently used as an example of how God cares for us.
Shepherds live with the sheep to lead them and protect them. Shepherds aren’t afraid to face dangers or to get dirty doing whatever needs to be done to keep the sheep safe and sound.
The shepherd could recognize each unique sheep and ‘calls his own sheep by name and leads them.? When one was lost, the shepherd would leave the others in a safe place to go and try to find the lost one to bring it home. Jesus says, ‘I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep.? (John 10)
That is the Christmas Story: Love comes down at Christmas…to shepherds keeping watch over their flock by night. And into our world, into our lives. Once we realize that the birth announcement for Jesus went first to the shepherds and that they found God in a stable, a barn, we can never again be quite sure where God will appear next.
God’s holiness is found in the lowliest and least likely places, like among shepherds, in a stable’and on a cross. The real Christmas story assures us that God is with us in the messiness and real stuff of our lives today. In our joys and in our challenges there is God with us and for us as a Good Shepherd who cares for the sheep and knows each one by name.
Love comes down at Christmas. This is the real gift of Christmas.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
It is less than a week to go. It is crunch time. That may either bring you joy, relief or panic. But the calendar will not slow down or speed up. Christmas is on the horizon, just out of touch but coming into focus.
In the original story, we can imagine two figures making the first Christmas holiday trip home.
Traveling pregnant and poor in first century Palestine had its own challenges.
There would be no upgrades, or lost baggage, or delayed flights. It was just a long walk with plenty of time to think about what was happening.
There were so many things to consider and not a little trepidation about the arrival of the new child. Where they would stay, what they would eat, how would the birth process go and a thousand other thoughts occupied their minds.
The first Christmas was anticipated by a couple who were weary, anxious, excited, and scared all at the same time. They had never experienced Christmas before, but then no one had.
All they knew was that life was about to change and then keep changing forever. Christmas was on the horizon, just out of touch but coming into focus.
I look around this community and see a world that is preparing for a Christmas different than any other.
I share with families who in the past year have lost loved ones or gone through painful changes in relationships making this a difficult holiday.
I celebrate with couples who are beginning their life together and pregnant either literally or figuratively as they know the future is unfolding in new and wonderful ways.
We enter this Christmas still on the high of being State Champions and know that knowledge will bring joy to this Christmas and be a point of pride for years to come.
We live in a time of uncertainty with global and local issues promising that the past will give way to changes we do not fully understand.
There are many reasons why we need to be a part of this Christmas story.
Christmas has an eternal truth to it. It comes always to a changing world and changing lives.
We celebrate Christmas traditions as if they are timeless.
But the only timeless thing about Christmas is the simple truth that it comes to us wherever we are and whatever we are going through. It comes to all people and is often celebrated in the least likely places.
Christmas comes continually, whether you want it or not, believe in it or not. Christmas comes and comes back again until it surrounds you and brings our life and our world into holy focus.
I pray you have a blessed Christmas. Whatever your situation or expectation, know this Christmas is given for you and for all.
It is your free gift of divine grace calling you to new horizons and giving to us a way of seeing the joy, hope, peace and love that you, we and all were always intended to share. Merry Christmas.
The Rev. Richard L. Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church
This past week, we celebrated the holiday we call Thanksgiving Day.
For many, this is the day to get well-nourished in order to have the strength for Black Friday. The deals on Black Friday are so enticing that people will stay up all night and camp outside their favorite store to catch the early specials.
The retailers are so excited about the success of Black Friday that they decided to start even earlier, actually opening up their doors on Thanksgiving!
Friday night, I drove by the mall and the parking lot was full. The retailers have found a way to get themselves more in the black for the year. I have already heard complaints from many who say that this has infringed on the holiday; however, those complainers will most likely be the people watching football on their flat screen, high-definition television that they bought at a sale on another day.
Whereas for many, Thanksgiving is the day to see their favorite team score a touchdown; for others, scoring the big deal will bring the greater excitement.
America is motivated by two cultural forces. The first is the culture of our founding fathers and early pioneers, the other being ‘pop? culture. Pop culture represents the trends promoted through the media and entertainment world.
Thanksgiving, as a holiday, comes from our basic culture, founded by hardworking pioneers who committed their strength to the endeavor of founding a nation; but ultimately gave glory to God for its success.
Pop culture represents our pursuit of pleasure, whereas our basic culture has always been the vehicle that made pleasure a possibility.
As a nation, we must be very careful to recognize the different influences and how we allow ourselves to be motivated. History has proven that people, as a general society, must be informed and led in order to reach the highest levels of achievement.
These same two things have also motivated societies to go in the wrong direction and perform acts of violence and destruction with great consequence.
For America, our strength throughout history has come from people motivated by higher motivations than human desire. Human desire needs to be motivated in the proper way in order to achieve the best of life.
This requires a higher source outside the human condition. This can only come through a belief and faith in the Almighty God.
The Church in America has always been influential, because we have not been afraid to incorporate popular culture into our plan of action.
There have been three great awakenings, or religious revivals, that have profoundly impacted our history. These awakenings are even noted in secular studies of our history. These revivals often used popular music and speaking styles to reach the masses of people.
Unfortunately, oftentimes, these moves eventually succumbed to the influence of culture and lost their effectiveness. I am seeing the same thing happening in The Church today. This is why I believe that The Church needs to recognize where our source of authority comes from. Our voice must come from the authority of God, and we need to recognize the need our nation and people have to be influenced by God.
The Scripture declares, ‘There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death.? God alone gives us the path of life! As Christians, and as The Church, we can all use whatever we desire for our purpose’we just need to remember that these things are not our purpose. Will you walk at a higher level fulfilling your eternal purpose?
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church
I once knew a man that, while he was ill and bed ridden, called out to God to heal him. ‘I have served you well all these years, given freely to the needy, tithed to the church, helped whenever and wherever I was called. Dear God show yourself to me, heal me; please answer my prayer.?
His wife cared for him. Brought him food and medicine, anticipated his every need. His neighbors helped out, did his chores and sat with him while his wife shopped and ran errands. His children called, visited and helped out when they could. His church prayed with him for his healing.
Yet he grew ever more ill and despondent when God would not answer his prayer. He looked into the eyes of his wife, his neighbors, his children, his prayer chaplain and saw that they cared for him. And he thought to himself, ‘Well, at least I am loved.?
When I visited with him he shared how disappointed he was that God had not answered his prayers. He felt like God had abandoned him. I ask him to think about what he really believed about God and his relationship with God. ‘How would God answer your prayers??
Most of us would like to have a God with skin on him. We want a God that would speak directly to us out of the sky, with clear directions, as we are told he did with Noah,; or a God that speaks through a burning bush that was not consumed by the fire as we are told he did with Moses; or a God who would speak directly to us and heal our afflictions as we are told he did through Jesus.
When I returned to visit with the man he shared with me his revelation. He had really thought about what he believed about God and how he had been calling out to the God of his child hood, a God he no longer believed in, a God who had skin on him. He no longer believed in a person called God but knew that God was personal to him.
He had realized that the only things he knew for sure about God was that ‘God is spirit? (John 4:24) and that ‘God is love? (1John4:8)
He also realized that this God who is spirit and love had been showing himself to him through the love he saw in the eyes of his wife, the eyes of his family and friends; and that this God who is spirit and love had been caring for him and healing him through the only hands that he had, the hands of his wife, his family and friends; and that this God who is spirit and love had answered his prayers by opening his eyes and ears, his heart and mind, to an awareness of the love that is all around him.
On Thanksgiving Day, we as a nation pause and give thanks for all the blessings in our lives. Gratitude is a powerful prayer. When we are grateful, we draw to us more to be grateful for. God is great and when we are grateful, we are filled by the greatness of God.
Gratitude is an attitude. Gratitude is positive thinking; it is an affirmation of the good that is already present in our lives. Being grateful is allowing the greatness of God to work through us.
Gratitude is also an altitude; it is a raising of our minds and hearts above the appearances of lack and limitation, above the appearances of pain and disease, above the appearances of war and conflict. It is an altitude of God consciousness; it is an awareness of the ultimate good interpenetrating all of our earthly experience; it is a realization of the presence and the power of the Divine. It is allowing God to be a radiating center of light and love working in and through and as us.
May God, who is spirit and love, find free expression in and through and as you this holiday season and all ways.
Wishing you the blessing of a Happy Thanksgiving, Merry Christmas and a Joyous New Year.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is pastor of Peace Unity Community
We are in the midst of this season of frenetic activity and nonstop celebrating (or at least preparation for celebrating) someone has all too accurately dubbed ‘Hallowthankmas.?
While I am not sure of the origin of the term, I am certain that I know the experience of this busy, too often stressful, and yet hopefully joyful and fun time of year. It all begins in October (or is it even earlier now?) when Christmas decor shows up right next to Halloween costumes and ends early in the New Year.
Of course one of the hazards of this headlong holiday blur is that we may mostly end up exhausted and fail to appreciate or enjoy any it. I guess that’s why Thanksgiving is one of my favorite days of the year.
It really helps me press the pause button and take the time to ‘count my blessings.? On Thanksgiving I try to focus on appreciating the simple blessings of life that mean so much but that I all too often take for granted: precious time with family, the food on our table, the friends we have, our church, and the many other blessings we have received from God.
Of course taking time to really reflect on our lives and God’s goodness is a good habit to develop for everyday. For me it’s a matter of being intentional to pause long enough to remember that today, just like any other day, has 86,400 seconds in it ? and to decide to use at least a few of those to say ‘thank you!?
I once read a little story about a grandfather who was asked by his young granddaughter if he liked the turkey this year ? a question often asked nervously at holiday tables.
The grandfather responded he liked the turkey very much and in fact he tries ‘to have a little turkey every day.? Confused the little girl asked what he meant. He explained that he has a tradition in his life where each day he says thanks to God.
So even though Thanksgiving Day will come and go, there is no reason we too can’t ‘have a little turkey? every day. And of course if you don’t really like turkey you can substitute ham or fish or green beans or corn or tofu ? what matters is the reminder that all is gift and that there is a giver to thank.
One of the most important ways I try to say thanks to God every day is in my giving to God’s work and to others. Such ‘thanks ? giving? may be something material or it may just be sharing a smile or a word of encouragement or an extra dose of patience and love to someone else.
My prayer is that our generosity will flow as we give thanks through our giving to those around us, both just down the street and on the other side of the globe.
Psalm 100 puts it this way:
Make a joyful noise to the Lord, all the earth.
Worship the Lord with gladness; come into his presence with singing.
Know that the Lord is God. It is he that made us, and we are his; we are his people, and the sheep of his pasture.
Enter his gates with thanksgiving, and his courts with praise. Give thanks to him, bless his name.
For the Lord is good; his steadfast love endures forever, and his faithfulness to all generations.
You might consider putting these words on your refrigerator or taping them to the bathroom mirror or typing them into your smart phone, so that they can help you begin each morning with a ‘little turkey.? Have a blessed Thanksgiving!
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
Can we say it is official? Is highway repair season behind us? Are the orange barrels and signs put away?
Now we can look forward to the other Michigan season, winter! For the greater part, harvests have been gathered, garden plants removed, leaves fallen and raked, our homes and our yards prepared for the coming cold.
We have the wonderful privilege of heat for our homes when the blistering winds blow.
The walls of our homes protect us from the elements, but what other walls have we put up in our lives to protect us?
Maybe we have been hurt, physically or emotionally or in some other fashion, by someone in the past so we put up a wall to protect us from another attack. Maybe we pull away from contact with other people. Maybe, instead, we put up a good front and go on as if nothing has happened.
There are many ways we can build walls to protect us, to help us, but they will all fail.
Think of some of the strongest walls built and what has happened to them. If they are not repaired continually, if the smallest crack begins and is not repaired, it will spread and undermine the strength of the wall.
There is, however, a wall that will never fail. It never cracks, never needs repair or mending, is always solid and protects us from far more than the world or Satan could ever hope to throw at us in attack.
In Psalm 46, a Psalm of worship, we are reminded that ‘God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear though the earth give way, though the mountains be moved into the heart of the sea, though its waters roar and foam, though the mountains tremble at its swelling.?
God’s wall, God’s protection, God’s presence will never fail us! He is there for us at all times. Does it matter what we face?
God is there. God is watching over us. God is our refuge, our impenetrable fortress against the attacks of evil. Even if the entire world, all of creation is destroyed (which it will be at the time of judgment) God will be there and protect His people.
But the Psalm gives us one more strong guidance. It says ‘Be still, and know that I am God. I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted on the earth!?
How important it is to take time daily to be with our Lord. Time in His Word and time in prayer helps focus us, guide us, in what God holds before us and how He is with us through the day.
Yes, we are all busy and the busier we are the more important it becomes to take time with Him. He is the One Who strengthens, guides and protects as He leads us to serve Him.
Rejoice in all His blessings. Rejoice in His protection. To God be the glory.
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
Have you had somebody hurt you? I mean really harm you?
Have you were abandoned, discarded by someone you thought loved you? Maybe a friend who betrayed you? Maybe a spouse who cheated on you? Maybe a spouse who out of the blue said, ‘I want a divorce??
Have you had dreams that you’ve been working towards and suddenly, they’re shattered? And you wonder, ‘WHY God? Where are you God? I thought you were with me??
A few weeks ago I talked about Joseph. Not Joseph and Mary ‘not that Joseph ‘but Joseph in the OT ‘the great-grandson of Abraham.
Maybe you’ve never read the story of Joseph in the Bible, but maybe you’ve seen the musical Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat written by Andrew Lloyd Webber?
Joseph had big dreams when he was a boy ‘dreams given to him by God. But when he was 17, he was abandoned by his family. His own brothers hated him and threw him into a pit. Then they sold him as a slave. Later he unfairly spent time in jail. His life seemed to be one long string of bad luck.
Here’s the key: Joseph kept obeying God and applying God’s truth to his life, and eventually it all made sense. He didn’t give up. He didn’t quit on God. He didn’t take the easy way out. Eventually Joseph rises to the top of the Egyptian government and is able to help many people.
An inspiring story isn’t it? A key principle that Joseph teaches us is this: To understand why, obey and apply.
Joseph didn’t understand why he was in that pit or in that prison until years later! He didn’t understand why. But he obeyed and applied.
He trusted that God had the big picture in mind even when he couldn’t see it. He applied himself. He worked hard. He kept a good attitude. People liked him. He didn’t seek revenge. He didn’t get an attitude.
When he didn’t understand why, he obeyed and applied. How about you? When you’re in a pit and you don’t know why ‘obey and apply!
When you’ve done the right thing and still end up in trouble and you don’t know why ‘obey and apply!
When someone you’ve trusted hurts you and you’re tempted to get revenge ‘obey and apply!
When a beautiful, gorgeous opportunity entices you do something you know you should not do ‘obey and apply!
You may know why now, but somewhere down the road, in a later chapter of your story, God will show you why. And you will look back and go, ‘Wow! Look at how God was guiding me all the way, even when I didn’t know why.?
To understand why, obey and apply.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
The Bible says, in Hebrews 12:14, that we should ‘pursue peace with all men.? This is an interesting scripture and one we could find very difficult to keep. Surely there are people who God does not want us to pursue peace with! We are living in a time when opinions of people are rampant.
This is not just true through the public media, but now through social media’we all have a constant opportunity to like or dislike something.
Being encouraged to make comments can be good, until acute differences become evident.
I have often heard that we should not talk about politics or religion if we want to get along. These are definitely more charged than most discussions, but environmental issues and economic issues could certainly be added to the list.
Some people are just as emotional about the entertainment industry as well. With all of the opportunities to express ourselves, the chance to be filled with animosity against one another are constantly presented to us.
Many sites are purposely geared toward creating this environment. It serves many people well to get people on their side and see the need to defend themselves from adverse movements. This can sell books, increase viewers for programs, and create a niche market for someone to benefit from the animosity they create in others.
As a Christian, I must always remind myself that Jesus Christ is the prince of peace. If I want to be under His influence, I must also be a person who pursues peace.
This scripture not only advises us to pursue peace with all people, but also warns us to be careful ‘lest any root of bitterness springing up cause trouble?; because through this, ‘many people become defiled.?
In this day, I am observing many people with bitter roots. Anger always seems to be under the surface, and often interferes with the ability to deal with the pressure human relationships often create.
The scriptures tell a story of a man named Simon who came to a personal encounter with God. Initially, he had a great testimony that impacted many people; however, it wasn’t long before he was at odds with the leaders and proposing to use his newfound faith for personal gain.
The Apostles recognized immediately that ‘he was poisoned by bitterness.? Although it is not recorded in the scripture, church tradition says that he went on to become a great adversary of the church. How sad to have such a great experience, yet find oneself in a place contaminated by bitterness.
The poison of bitterness has not only hindered the Christian experience for many, it has also manifested in people’s relationships, particularly as the poison of many marital relationships.
Bitterness can be a root cause of problems, yet one we do not recognize until it is to late. This is why we must be so careful to pursue peace with all people, because we never know when the offenses we are picking up become rooted in our experience.
As a Christian leader, on many occasions, I could have allowed the countless voices of opposition to Christianity, and the moral code we hold, to put me on the defense and make me feel as though I must declare war on the opposition. However, as we go forth, we must all remind ourselves that the scriptures say we need to have ‘our feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace.?
Moreover, in Romans 10:15 it says, ‘How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the gospel of peace, who bring glad tidings of good things!? I want my feet to carry me through life, knowing that the way of Christ is the way of Life!
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church
The parable of two sons (Luke 15:11-32), also known as The Prodigal Son, begins ‘There was a man who had two sons.?.Rocco Errico, an Aramaic scholar and Unity Minister, pointed this out to me once at a workshop we were hosting and I really began to think about this parable in a whole new way. I started to see beyond the prodigal to the obedient son, the lesson that he presents, and beyond that to receive the father’s message.
Rocco shared that when Jesus said, ‘There was a man who had two sons,? his audience, remembering the Old Testament stories of Cain and Able, Jacob and Esau, would have responded, ‘Oh no, God forbid!? I have two sons. They are the joy of my life, and they can be challenging. Each child has his own personality, their unique approach to life that is different from each other and from the parents.
To shorten a lengthy story, the younger son strays and returns, ‘was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found.? The elder son stayed at home and worked in the fields for his father. Not only are there two sons, there are two different stories being told for each son. There is the son’s story, his experience, his expression of life, his belief system, his view of God. And, there is the father’s.
The younger son is the bad boy. He wastes his energy, his money, on ‘loose living.? Having lost everything he sinks to the lowest possible estate for a Jew, feeding the swine. Once he awakens to the wreckage he has made of his life he returns home fearfully wracked with a guilt trip, ‘I am not worthy to be called your son;? His view of God is of a punishing God; he believes he will be punished for his mistakes.
When the younger son is welcomed back, the older son gets angry and refuses to partake in the festivities. He’s a whiner with a martyr complex, ‘Lo, these many years I have served you? you never gave me a kid that I might make merry with my friends.? His view of God is of a demanding God; he must work hard and do the right things in order to receive his reward.
Both of the sons? stories are valid within their frame of reference. But, from the father’s frame of reference, neither of the sons? stories are True. In the mind of the father, there is no room for guilt and fear, no reason for selfish whining or martyrdom, God is not a punishing God nor is God a demanding God.
‘God is Love? 1John 4:7, and what is absolute (God/Love) can have no opposite. Guilt, fear, selfishness, martyrdom, privilege, worry, doubt, resentment, have no real existence; they are not of God and therefore have no place in living the spiritual life. ‘God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.? John 4:24.
Love tells us that all is forgiven; whichever way we stray, we can never be separate from God and the blessings of God, ‘Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours.? Luke 15:31. This is the message of the father. This is message of God to you: God’s wholly, perfect child, ‘it is the Spirit himself bearing witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then heirs, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ.? Romans 8:17.
‘Everything is beautiful in its own way.? Ray Stevens had a number one hit with this song in 1970. This is a true spiritual insight, for it is God vision; it is the spirit’s vision of our being; beauty is all that truly exists, for God is beauty and what is absolute can have no opposite. You are beautiful!
Today we choose to be the beautiful child of God that we truly are. We see beauty all around us, even in the ugliness. For beyond the appearances lies the Reality of God. And so it is!
Blessings of peace, joy & love
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is pastor of Peace Unity Community.
When you think of the word ‘church? what comes to mind?
For some church brings to mind an image of a quaint country building with a pretty white steeple. For others perhaps a grand cathedral in Europe or a place you went as a child on a bus to learn about Jesus. Sometimes churches are in homes or schools or warehouses or theatres and even in pubs or restaurants. Many of us have fond memories of the church we grew up in.
However many people today see the Church as antiquated and having little or no role their lives. Others have had negative experiences and the very word church brings to mind judgmental and hurtful memories. Most of us cringe at some of the things in history that have been done by the church. I am pretty sure God does to.
In the Bible the New Testament word for church is a translation of the Greek word ekklesia, meaning a people who are ‘called out? by God for God’s purpose. The word church is never used to refer to a building or meeting place, but always to a people who are called into God’s mission.
It has always seemed ironic to me that when someone (including me) is asked what church they attend, we almost always identify the building we go to. It would truly be more accurate to say something like, ‘I am a follower of Jesus on a mission from God who happens to gather occasionally at such and such place to learn and grow so that I can be the church in the world right where I am in every moment of every day.? I know it’s a bit long, but I hope you catch the drift that the church is a people serving God wherever they are, and certainly not a building or a place or a denomination.
Simply put, we don’t go to church, we are the church – or we’ve missed the point!
I really appreciate the way Anglican clergyman Ernest Southcott put it: ‘The holiest moment of the church service is the moment when God’s people’strengthened by preaching and sacrament’go out of the church door into the world to be the church.?
With this background, I hope you can see why I am so looking forward to this Sunday, October 13, when ‘the Church will leave the building? on Bluegrass Drive to be the church and serve in the community. That day we will gather for one worship ‘service? at 9 AM, and leave inspired to continue the ‘service? in serving others. And, even better, we will be serving alongside Clarkston Community Schools and the Chamber of Commerce, as well as various other community organizations and congregations to help those in need and to improve our community. We hope this is something that will happen each fall and spring, and will grow to include all who feel called.
The Church Has Left the Building + Clarkston Community School’s Green Apple Day of Service = a big Community Impact Day everyone is invited to be part of. Check it out and sign up to serve at www.calvaryinfo.org.
‘Now to him who by the power at work within us is able to accomplish abundantly far more than all we can ask or imagine, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus to all generations, forever and ever. Amen.? (Ephesians 3:20-21)
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
Recently a colleague of mine asked me to step into his office.
‘Do you remember last May, when you stopped me on the sidewalk at conference and told me what a great job I was doing??
I paused for a moment to remember and he continued.
‘When you did that, you didn’t realize that my wife was standing there and heard what you said. It meant a lot to share that moment with her as she hears mostly complaints from people. We both felt so blessed to hear your words. Thank you.?
It was a moment I had forgotten but it made a difference for them. All I did was offer a word of encouragement but it was something much more.
The power of an encouraging word cannot be overstated. It can change the way a person sees the world, the day and themselves.
Encouragement is not just saying nice things to someone. It is more than being polite or kind.
Encouragement comes from strength and conviction of faith.
When we offer encouragement, we are saying three truths. One, we believe that God is at work in life and is stronger than any burdens we carry. Secondly, to encourage someone affirms that God is using their efforts in ways that go beyond what they may be able to see.
Finally, when we offer encouragement to the discouraged, we are inviting them to look beyond the challenges in front of them and see the bigger picture of God at work in the world.
Perhaps, we are assisting others to discover grace where they could not see it. In turn, they can become those who offer hope and grace to the world.
The Apostle Paul wrote, ‘We have different gifts, according to the grace given us. If a man’s gift is prophesying, let him use it in proportion to his faith. If it is serving, let him serve; if it is teaching, let him teach; if it is encouraging, let him encourage… (Romans 12:6-8 NIV)
Some have the gift of encouragement. God has given them the unique gift of standing strong in faith as they walk with words that inspire and encourage.
Yet the Gospel invites all of us to stand strong in faith as we stop the negative and attacking language we so often hear and regrettably use.
We can choose to grow in faith and our awareness of the power of God’s grace in the world.
Then, even in the face of the most difficult moments of life, we will be more than nice. We will be able to stand strong in faith as we encourage others to do the same.
The Rev. Richard L. Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
The Law is not something we like to think about but it is always with us.
When I think back to the beginning of time, when God had just created man and placed him in the Garden of Eden to care for and tend it, there was only one law, to not eat of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil (OK, maybe a second law, to be fruitful and multiply).
But you know how it is, when we are told we cannot have something that is what we desire even more.
So the serpent, changing God’s words, asks Eve if it is true that God said they ‘shall not eat of any tree of the garden?? (Genesis 3:1)
The jar of the cookie lid was open. Eve responded: ‘We may eat of the fruit of the trees in the garden, but God said, ‘You shall not eat of the fruit of the tree that is in the midst of the garden, neither shall you touch it, lest you die. (Emphasis mine.)
Eve changed the words God spoke and her hand not only reached into the cookie jar, she ate the cookie.
Later God gives His children 10 commandments, rules for them to follow, that showed how they were to relate to Him and to one another.
They could not keep them and neither can we. So the burden increased as man made over 615 rules to be followed, but it could not be done.
Think about the laws today. We have libraries full of books that state laws, reflect laws, interpret laws and explain laws.
Yet, even when we know the laws we are prone to breaking them are we not? We might only be driving 46 in a 45 but we are breaking the law. We may make a right hand turn on a red light but cause someone to slow down because of it and we break the law. We may take a ‘sample? at a place that sells by the pound and we break the law.
I know we could go on and on. We may feel guilty or be so calloused by past behavior and that of society and, yes, our sinful nature, that it does not bother us in the least. Even though we were told to wait until after supper for a cookie, we silently lift the lid, reach in and eat the cookie.
Do we deserve to be punished? Of course we do.
We have failed to obey’the laws of the land, fellow-workers, friends, parents, a spouse and especially God.
Isn’t it wonderful, however, that we have a God Who loves us so much He sent His Son, Jesus, to take our punishment for us? We could not keep the law but Jesus kept it perfectly and gave us the full benefit of His perfection. This is the Gospel-grace that God so freely gives.
If you are feeling burdened by guilt join us to learn about grace!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
Maybe the question should be, ‘How well do you know the Bible??
Here are some statements actually made by students regarding the Bible:
Noah’s wife was called Joan of Ark.
Lot’s wife was a pillar of salt by day, but a ball of fire by night.
The Jews were a proud people and throughout history they had trouble with the unsympathetic Genitals.
Samson slayed the Philistines with the axe of the Apostles.
Moses went up on Mount Cyanide to get the ten amendments.
The first commandment was when Eve told Adam to eat the apple.
The fifth commandment is to humor thy father and mother.
The seventh commandment is thou shalt not admit adultery.
Moses died before he ever reached Canada.
The greatest miracle in the Bible is when Joshua told his son to stand still and he obeyed him.
Solomon, one of David’s sons, had 300 wives and 700 porcupines.
When Mary heard that she was the mother of Jesus, she sang the Magna Carta.
Jesus was born because Mary had an immaculate contraption.
Jesus enunciated the Golden Rule, which says to do one to others before they do one to you.
The people who followed the Lord were called the 12 decibels.
The epistles were the wives of the apostles.
A Christian should have only one spouse. This is called monotony.
If you know your Bible, these are hilarious.
If you didn’t laugh’well? . This month our church is starting a church-wide campaign where we are all reading through the Bible together.
Children, teens, adults ‘everyone ? has the opportunity to read the Bible on their own, talk about it in their small groups, and hear me speak on it, week by week.
We can trust the Bible to guide our lives. The problem is, we need to know the Bible and apply the Bible for it to do any good. You are welcome to join us as we journey through the Bible together this fall.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
When I was in the fourth grade I was taught that I could not sing. My voice was beginning to change and I would usually be somewhere between a soprano and bass often with in the same beat. One day my teacher told me, ‘Just mouth the words, you can’t sing.?
How many people have been discouraged from expressing their joy by thoughtless words such as these? I can sing, just not the way she wanted me to at the time. A choir director friend of mines says, ‘Singing in harmony is just singing a different note than everyone else is singing.? Everyone can sing, just as ‘everybody’s beautiful, in their own way!? (Ray Stevens) And, ‘Every child is born a genius.? (Thomas Edison) Many of us have locked our genius away where no one can see it.
Thankfully, in Junior High, Debby asked me to come sing in the 8th grade choir. I told her I couldn’t sing, but luckily she wouldn’t take no for an answer, ‘We need a bass.? Being a hormonal 14 year old there wasn’t much I could do but say yes. A long story shortened, I joined the choir; I stood in the back and mouthed the words because ‘I couldn’t sing.? It took a while for Mr. Henry to catch on and the phrase; ‘Matthew, I can’t hear you!? became a regular occurrence.
Eventually, I found my voice. In my 20’s, through a series of transformational experiences I gained a healthy self-esteem, I joined a choir in our church along with my wife. I picked up my guitar that I had first learned to play in my teens, signed up for lessons at the community college and have enjoyed many years of playing in the band, in the church and at coffee house ‘open mics?. My life is significantly richer with the gift of music. I may never be a rock star but I’m having fun.
The Apostle Paul tells us, ‘Now there are varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit; and there are varieties of services, but the same Lord; and there are varieties of activities, but it is the same God who activates all of them in everyone. To each is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good.? (1Corinthians 12:4-7) The fact that we value some gifts as greater than others, such as being able to put a big round ball through a small hoop, is a part of the human condition. We think we know better than God.
Instead of encouraging young people to find their God given talents and gifts we tend to channel them into what we want for them. Most people are not going to become world class athletes or doctors or lawyers or whatever path our parents put us on. We may become one for their sake or because we think we should or some other reason but, if it is not an expression our natural talent or gift, it will not bring us joy.
Or, we may fail in the attempt; we may feel or think that we are stupid and worthless because we didn’t measure up to some arbitrary measure of success; we may believe that we can’t sing, or can’t dance, or can’t fill in the blank, because of some careless words of an authority figure in our past. For whatever reason, many if not most people are not experiencing the joy of life for they are not expressing their innate God given talents and gifts which bring us joyful bliss.
Theologian Jonathan Edwards said, ‘The ideas or images in men’s minds are the invisible powers that constantly govern them. It’s the beliefs locked into the sub-conscious mind that either advances or blocks creative flow and imaginative ideas.? ‘Whether you think you can or you think you can’t, you’re right? (Henry Ford) ‘Follow your bliss.? (Joseph Campbell)
Let go and let God’s good come forth. Let go of preconceived ideas of what we can or cannot do; let go of preconceived notions of who and what we should be; let God be God in you and follow your bliss. For God is love and love is bliss.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior minister at Peace Unity Community.
We live in a time when many of the cultural values are up for discussion and debate.
Many people want to redefine the values of our society to fit the times, and often the values of the past only seem like a hindrance to modern thoughts of fairness and values.
Ingrained in every motivation for Americans is a motivation to seek after happiness; it’s even included in the bill of rights, but do we all have a right to ‘the pursuit of happiness??
What if our pursuit has an impact on the greater society? Should the desires of the individual dictate the rules of society as a whole if it is the only means one has to pursue after happiness?
These questions are before the nation, and the modern thought is: whatever the individual wants to pursue should be ok for them. The one stipulation that most agree on is, ‘unless that pursuit causes an intrusion to the pursuit of another person’s fulfillment.
Often, what is lost in this discussion is the well-being of the greater society, and how an individual’s actions can have a major impact without us really accounting for it. This has led to the great debate and conflict for the soul of our nation. Is it possible, or even desirable, for a society to try and be a collection of many parts, with each part seeking their own identity and values that must be accepted or imposed on the whole?
This has become the major point of discussion, as modernists argue that the greater society has a responsibility to allow freedom of expression to each component of the society.
This debate has only intensified the breakdown of our society into many opposing groups, because every person’s individual pursuit will eventually come into conflict with someone else’s.
I believe that the Christian church must be an example in these times by fully following the principles the Word of God established for the church. The Bible says that the church must be seen as the Body of Christ.
As a body, the Word declares that we need to see how every body needs many diverse parts. Each part of the body is unique and has a contribution to make. If we were all eyes, how would we be able to hear? If we were all ears, how could we see? We are encouraged to be different and appreciate our individual contribution, but we are also encouraged to see our need for the other parts of the body.
Although each part of the body needs the freedom for expression and function, this can never be independent of the needs of others!
We are each made to be a part of something bigger than ourselves, and we must recognize the need for the health of the whole in order for each part to function and be in health. An eye was not created for its own ability to see, but for the body to see’and this is true of every part of the body.
When God created man, He stopped and made a correction to the creation. I am sure that the all-knowing God did not stop to correct Himself, but did so in order to make a point for all of us throughout history.
It is not good that man should be alone; He declared that he needs a helper. He created someone the same, but also opposite.
Man was made to be interdependent, not independent. We need to be connected with each other, and with our Creator. As a nation, we need to seek for our expression, but not at the cost of society as a whole.
As Modernists push an agenda of expansive personal expression, we need to be ready to confront self-centered motivations that hinder contributions to something bigger than ourselves.
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
My friend, Sister Anne, used to work in a children’s home where she helped to teach and guide the children. She’s retired now. She lived in an upstairs apartment that was in the town near where she worked.
One day, after she came home from her work and had prepared her evening meal, she spotted a man outside her window on the sidewalk leaning against a sign post. He was somewhat bedraggled, looking depressed and hungry.
Sister Anne took pity on the poor man and decided she wanted to help him. So, she took out a ten dollar bill, put it in an envelope, wrote ‘Don’t despair? on the envelope and tossed it out the window where it landed at his feet.
The man saw the envelope, picked it up and looked around. Seeing Sister Anne standing in the window he had a quizzical look on his face. He read the envelope, opening it up he found the ten dollar bill. Smiling, he looked up at Sister Anne, waved and then headed off down the street. Having accomplished her good deed for the day, she thought no more of it.
The next day, after Sister Anne had come home, she heard a knock at her door. She opened it to find the man standing there. He handed her back the envelope which now had $50 in it. Confused, she asked ‘What’s this?? The man smiled and said, ‘Don’t Despair paid 5 to 1!?
It’s funny how often we think we know what we are saying and doing, but when it comes back to us it has taken on a whole new meaning.
I’ve heard it said that Americans and the British are two peoples who are separated by a common language. You say bonnet, I say hood. You say boot, I say trunk. You say lift, I say elevator. We use the same words but they have different meanings.
The same can be said of men and women. Deborah Tannen, in her book You Just Don’t Understand, relates the example of a husband and wife traveling on the freeway. Seeing an exit coming that had a truck stop, the wife asks if he would like to stop and get something to eat. He says ‘no? and drives past the exit. At the next exit she asks the same question with the same result. After the third time this happens, she got angry and accuses the husband of not caring about her or her needs
She was hungry and ready to stop for a break from the traveling. He wasn’t. She asked a question, he answered it. She wasn’t looking for an answer but to start a conversation. He was focused on results; she was interested in building relationship. We use the same words but they have different meanings.
Everyone has had different life experiences; we’ve grown up in different communities, different households, different faith traditions, different cultures. No one has had the same life experiences as another person. So we cannot truly understand where another is coming from when they say and do the things they say and do.
I believe that most of the world’s troubles and our own would be lessened if we just learned to really listen. Not just hear, but attempt to understand. If we don’t know where others are coming from we can’t understand their words or actions.
We have a choice. We can choose to live in ignorance, anger and resentment, prejudging others based upon our own limited life experiences and understandings.
Or, we can choose to understand that all people are doing the best that they can with what they have where they are; we can choose to practice charity, patience and tolerance of others; this is the way of love. ‘God is love, and those who abide in love abide in God and God abides in them.? 1John 4:16. ‘Choose this day whom who shall serve? as for me and my household we shall serve the Lord.? Joshua 24:15.
Blessings of peace, joy & love
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Community.
In our morning devotional reading my wife and I have been working through the book Love and Respect by Emerson Eggerichs.
Why, you might ask, when you have a good marriage? Resources like this can strengthen what is already there.
This book reminds me that I look at things from a male perspective and she looks at them from a female perspective. While that might seem obvious it is something we often ignore.
Maybe, if we did not ignore this, there would be more solid marriages and fewer divorces in our world.
Between July first and July fifth I will be attending our church body’s National Youth Gathering.
One of the first questions I am often asked when I tell people this, and where it is, is why anyone would want to go to San Antonio in July. (But it is a dry heat!)
The second question is why I would want to spend a week with 25,000 youth.
My answer to the first question is that I am going there because that is where the Gathering is.
There are many people hurting in San Antonio and we will have an opportunity to reach out to them and share the love of God that we have received in Christ Jesus.
I am reminded of God’s Word recorded in 1 John 4, 9’In this the love of God was made manifest among us, that’God sent His only Son into the world, so that we might live through Him.?10’In this is love,’not that we have loved God’but that He loved us and sent His Son to be’the propitiation for our sins.?11’Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another. (ESV)
Here is our opportunity to share God’s love with San Antonio!
Imagine the impact of 25,000 youth on a city. Imagine the impact of them sharing the love of God in Christ Jesus!
They gather under the theme LiveLove(d) from verse nine of the above passage. There were Christian growth opportunities and many servant events as those youth impacted the lives of individuals, reaching out, sharing the love of God.
Is that not what we, as Christians, are to do? We are to live loved and share the love we have received. St. Paul reminds us in Romans 5:8 that God shows His love for us in that’while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. (ESV)
How many feel unloved? How many feel lost? How many are hurting?
Take the time in the coming days to share God’s love and compassion with them. Ask how you might help. Maybe all they need is someone to listen.
Remind them they are important, that Jesus died so they might live’loved’forever.
Is it easy? Sometimes, but not always, but, we might remember, Jesus did not take the easy way out, He took the cross for us.
Take a little time to share His love!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
When Jacob was told of Joseph’s death, being shown the precious coat that he had given to him torn and covered with blood, he went into mourning.
All his sons and daughters tried to comfort him; ‘but he refused to be comforted, and said, ‘No, I shall go down to Sheol (Hell) to my son, mourning.?? Gen. 37:35.
Mourning is a hellish, ‘weeping and gnashing of teeth? (Mt 8:12), torturing experience that none of us want to go through and yet most of us encounter to some degree in our lives.
The loss of a job, a spouse, a dream, any loss can be devastating, crushing and life changing. Grief and mourning are a natural human response to loss.
Yet, in Jacob’s case, the hell of mourning was not brought on by truth but by a lie; Joseph was not dead. Jacob’s grief was truly useless, unnecessary, suffering. He could have easily been angry and punishing when he found out the truth.
Joseph had every right to be bitter and resentful. He was robbed of his precious coat and sold into slavery by his brothers, made a servant in Potiphar’s house, wrongly imprisoned, forgotten and alone.
Still, when the truth was revealed and Jacob, Joseph and their family were reunited there was no blaming or shaming, no resentment or punishment, only rejoicing.
They knew, as Joseph said, ‘As for you, you meant evil against me; but God meant it for good? Gen. 50:20.
These are some of the most powerful words in the Bible. What if we were able to meet all of life’s challenges this way? What if we could allow ourselves to feel the full range of human emotions deeply? What if we managed to come through the other side still confident and assured of Divine Wisdom and Love as our guiding light?
Instead most of us live in some measure of guilt, shame or blame for the past and fear, doubt or worry for the future.
With one foot in yesterday and one foot in tomorrow we are wasting on today. Yesterday is history, tomorrow is mystery, the gift is in today that is why it is called the present.
We learn from the past, plan for the future and live for today. Freed from the guilt, shame and blame of the past, freed from the fear, doubt and worry of the future, we are free to be all that we are created to be in the now.
‘First be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift.? Mt. 5:24. Forgiveness is a gift we give, so that our hearts and minds can live.
Resentment is a poison that we drink, to hurt the other so we think. The divine in you is what I see, from the divine within me. I forgive you and you forgive me, we forgive ourselves and we are free.
A friend reminded me recently that no matter what has occurred for me in this day, I can always choose to start over. I can ‘repent? (Mt. 3:2) or think again with a new level of understanding.
I can ‘become like children? (Mt. 18:3) unburdened by preconceived notions about life and living. I can be ‘born anew? (Jn. 3:3) into an awareness of God, Spirit’s, presence in all that I experience.
Today I choose to be ‘the light of the world.? Mt. 5:14. I choose not to walk in darkness but in the light of spiritual awareness. I choose to know that whatever is occurring for me in the outer world it is for my good and the good of all.
Truly, ‘If God is for us, who is against us?? Romans 8:31. I choose to feel the full range of human emotions deeply, knowing that it is a gift to be all that I am created to be. And, I choose to move forward into the joy of peace, wholeness and abundance that is mine to realize in this now moment.
Blessings of peace, joy & love
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior minister at Peace Unity Community.
Recently, I was reading the newspaper and came across an article discussing a statement made by a religious leader from the Catholic Church. The article was filled with comments from people who appeared to be upset that this person had made the statement.
I find it perplexing that people would think religious leaders should not express opinions about moral issues. Journalists will often write an article about an event from a supposedly unbiased and objective point of view, but will use people’s comments in order to make the article an editorial view.
As a religious leader, I have a responsibility to make a public stand on moral issues.
The stand I make is not supposed to be my own, but should be based on a higher source.
Religious leaders should be called upon to provide God’s truth on a subject. This opinion should not be subjective, but objective (based on the source of truth followed).
As the Pastor of an evangelical or Bible-believing church, I must find my source of truth in the scripture’keeping in mind that the general point of view is gleaned from church history.
The Bible says that God has placed leaders in the church as a source of training and equipping for the church. This is necessary because not all people have the time, or the calling, to be fully informed and prepared to interpret church doctrine on every issue.
We are living in a time where opinionated news is common, and allowing people to express their opinion has become the standard format. Everyone is encouraged to believe how important their opinion is. In a democracy, an informed and opinioned person is good. However, when it comes to our religious beliefs, we must be very careful. The scripture says to be cautious if you want to be a teacher, as you will fall under a more severe judgment.
Why? A teacher is responsible for the souls of the people and must give an account before God on the Day of Judgment. It is a very grave responsibility to hold someone’s life in your hands and it should not be taken lightly.
When we get into the realm of God, we must be very careful that we are not just expressing opinions because it can be an issue of life and death. The scripture says, ‘There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death.? Jesus came to give us life because on our own, the way of death often seems right.
When Jesus came to the earth for His mission, He did not claim to be right. His claim was that He was the truth incarnate and the words that He spoke were truth. He did not come as a different type of teacher, He came as God: to show us the way.
His statement to His followers was, ‘I am the Way, the Truth and the Life.? Getting back to the article I read, the response of many people interviewed was, ‘He doesn’t share the view of Jesus Christ.? The opinions they declared to be a reflection of Christ were not truths given from the Bible, only opinions on what they thought Jesus would think. I don’t know about you, but I don’t like people to say I’ve said something that I did not say.
Likewise, I do not want them to express what they feel is my opinion, when it is not my opinion at all. I am sure that Jesus also strongly shares this viewpoint. I can tell you one thing for sure’Jesus wants the world to know who He really is, not what modern society has made Him to be!
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church
2012 was the warmest year on record. Ice caps and glaciers are shrinking. Sea levels are rising. Carbon Dioxide levels are at record highs and growing rapidly. Global climate change is being demonstrated through record droughts, floods, hurricanes, tornadoes, weather pattern changes of all sorts. ‘Something’s happening here, what it is ain’t exactly clear? Stephen Stills.
We all have choices in how we respond to this information. We can deny it or believe it’s a liberal conspiracy. We can pretend it doesn’t exist, burying our heads in the sand. We can react in fear losing sleep or crying to our neighbors, or in anger protesting to those who will listen. We can run, but we can’t hide forever.
Another option is to respond with the strength of faith. We can place our faith in the Divine Spirit, by whatever name we choose to call it, that will lead us through any adversity. ‘He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High, who abides in the shadow of the Almighty, will say to the Lord, ‘My refuge and my fortress; my God, in whom I trust.?? Psalms 91:1-2. All things do work together in divine order and divine timing, not my order nor my timing.
This does not mean that we do nothing. No, rather, it means that we check in with our Source through prayer and meditation, find the light of inspiration, the firmament of faith, the seeds of ideas and follow through by putting feet to our prayers. Ask, seek and knock (see Matthew 7:7-8), we must act on our guidance.
I spent this past weekend in a workshop with Jean Houston discovering the ‘Wizard of Us.? We explored the Wizard of Oz as an archetypal story of human transformation. Whether it’s Gilgamesh, Jason, Noah, Arjuna, or other Mythological tale; these archetypal stories speak to the hero or heroine in all of us. In one part of the workshop, we endeavored to make contact with our transcendent brain, heart and courage. Like Dorothy, the Scarecrow, Tin Man and Cowardly Lion, we all must awaken to these divine aspects of self in order to return home.
We all have our parts to play in this great drama/comedy of life. We each have our destiny to fulfill, the potential for greatness that is within each one of us. ‘You are gods, sons of the Most High, all of you.? Psalms 82:6. Our home is in God, in Love. ‘He who abides in love, abides in God.? 1John 4:16. And from this abiding in God, in Love, we can more effectively play our part in a divinely ordered, fulfilling and sustaining way.
Fear, anger and denial, although serving a purpose in the proper circumstances, are unhealthy as a long term strategy. ‘Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives.? John 14:27. We overcome or transcend the world through the peace of mind that comes through our connection with Divine Mind. In Divine Mind are all the divine ideas for expression; we can appropriate God’s guidance, inspiration and directions for living in an awareness and expression of divine order and divine timing. We make and sustain this connection through prayer and meditation.
Whatever is happening here, I have faith that Divine Order and Divine Timing are active in the Universe and in our lives. You may be the person with the ideas that will solve the problems or lead to the solutions. You may be the person who funds the ideas, or supports their development, or raises the awareness of others, or holds the spiritual space for the blessings to pour forth.
We each have our spiritual gifts to express. ‘For as in one body we have many members, and all the members do not have the same function, so we, though many, are one body in Christ, and individually members of one another.? Romans 12:4-5. It is in our expression of these gifts that we bless each other and our selves.
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
The Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Community
It has certainly been a week of disturbing news and events with the Boston Marathon bombing, the fertilizer plant explosion in Texas, a devastating earthquake in China, and more all in the headlines, as well as in our hearts and prayers.
In such times I reflect on how we, as people of faith, are called to respond. I ask myself that familiar, but always challenging question, ‘what would Jesus do?? Here are a few reflections on the topic that have come to me these past few days. I hope they might be helpful to you as well.
First and foremost, in the wake of any tragedy I believe it is important to be reminded that God is with us. While we may wish that God would not allow such things to happen, God’s promise in our broken and fallen world is to be with us in the midst of the storms. Psalm 91 reminds us that, ‘You who live in the shelter of the Most High, who abide in the shadow of the Almighty, will say to the Lord, ‘My refuge and my fortress; my God, in whom I trust.?? Our faith does not protect us from crises, but reminds us that in the midst of them we can trust that we are truly safe.
Because I believe this is true, I can go about living positively and not give in to anxiety or ambivalence, hatred or despair, or fear. Martin Luther once said, ‘If I believed that tomorrow the world were to end, I would plant an apple tree today.? Now I don’t believe the world is about to end, but I do know that I want to live my life today and everyday according to my values and faith no matter what is happening in and around me.
Challenging times reveal our true character, as individuals and as a nation. This past week I have been inspired by many moving stories of heroic acts and bravery among first responders and bystanders alike. This is especially helpful to point out as we process such events with our children. Fred Rogers writes: ‘When I was a boy and I would see scary things in the news, my mother would say to me, ‘Look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping.? To this day, especially in times of disaster, I remember my mother’s words, and I am always comforted by realizing that there are still so many helpers-so many caring people in this world.? (Mister Rogers? Parenting Book)
So in the wake of this tidal wave of ‘bad news,? I am praying for the victims, giving thanks for the heroes, and I have renewed my commitment to live my faith and values as best I can, no matter what. This includes Jesus? call to love, forgive, and to be peacemakers as we combat evil with good and work together to build a more just and secure world. Cardinal O’Malley at an interfaith healing service in Boston put it this way: ‘In the face of the present tragedy, we must ask ourselves what kind of a community do we want to be, what are the ideals that we want to pass on to the next generation. ‘It cannot be violence, hatred and fear.?’And I would add that it also cannot be prejudice and unfair stereotyping of ethnic or religious groups.
Jesus said, ‘Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.? So I leave you with this challenging idea of putting these words into action from a colleague, Pastor Rich Melheim. He posted on the internet a children’s message he planned to share encouraging kids to write ‘Jesus kind? of letters to victims as well as ‘to the boy who did this terrible thing.? Melheim writes: ? If you dare, explain that you are a Christian, and since you follow a Jesus who teaches you to love and forgive, you love and forgive him. Close your letter saying Jesus loves him, and that you are praying one day he will know love and forgiveness. Tell him you hope and pray that one day love will crowd out the hate in his heart, and that he will be known as the kindest, most loving person in prison.?
I hope and pray, no matter where we are, that we are the kindest, most loving people we can be!
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Lutheran Church.
During Lenten and Holy Week our Congregation focused on hymns we like to sing and how they relate to our Lord’s suffering, death, and resurrection. On Easter we focused on the hymn I Know that My Redeemer Lives, hymn written by Samuel Medley in 1775, the tune, Duke Street, composed by John Hatton.
These words reflect the words of Job when, facing great struggle in his life (including loss of children, livestock, property and health), was encouraged to curse God and be done with it.
He speaks this confession of faith: ‘Oh that my words were written! Oh that they were inscribed in a book! Oh that with an iron pen and lead they were engraved in the rock forever! For I know that my Redeemer lives, and at the last He will stand upon the earth. ‘And after my skin has been thus destroyed, yet in my flesh I shall see God, Whom I shall see for myself, and my eyes shall behold, and not another. (Job 19:24-27, ESV)
Even in Job’s day people did not want to think about suffering and dying. They wanted to feel good. Job reminds us that without the suffering, without the death, there is no resurrection. It is coming through the trial that makes the resurrection such a great victory!
Every major religion talks about a tomb. Many will take you to where their founder is buried. Only the Christian faith cannot take you to the body because the tomb is empty. God defeated the powers of sin, death and hell, rising never to die again.
Who else could proclaim that? Lazarus? Yes, but he died again. Everyone Jesus raised from death during His ministry died again. Since then people have been resuscitated, not raised, and will die again unless Jesus returns before that day.
If you are standing at the tomb of a loved one how do you feel? Empty? Hurt? Lost? Maybe you question why this happened, wondering ‘what now??
Listen to the words of the hymn: He lives to grant me rich supply. He lives to comfort me when faint. He lives to silence all my fears. He lives to wipe away my tears. He lives and I shall conquer death. He lives, my Jesus, still the same!
As you hear those words how do you feel? Is the edge of death softened? Is the sting a little less? Do you hear the words of hope? Is the hurt covered with God’s healing balm? Do you hear the answers to your questions?
What is the Christian faith without the death and resurrection of Jesus, without the cross and the shed blood that assures us of our forgiveness? It is nothing. St. Paul reminds us that If in Christ we have hope only in this life we are of all people most to be pitied. (1 Corinthians 15:19)
Easter is not a day, it is a season, it is a life-style and a life-time. Easter is knowing that YOUR Redeemer lives.
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
I like to see the expression on their faces. They ask me, ‘How many ministers do you have at Clarkston Community Church??
I say, ‘About 700.? Their jaw drops. Then I clarify, ‘We consider every believer a minister. We have five pastors, but everyone is a minister.? Then they want to punch me for being a smart-aleck.
But it’s true. According to Jesus, every believer is a minister. I try to drive home this truth to my church.
So on Sunday, April 28, they will all have the chance to be ministers. We are having a special ‘The Church Has Left the Building? Sunday.
Instead of a normal Sunday worship service, the whole congregation will participate in service projects in and around our community.
The service projects will primarily be outside our church building but there will be activities for all ages and all skill levels.
After a brief preparation time at 9:15, we will depart to minister in all sorts of ways: All 11 schools in Clarkston will receive volunteers to do spring clean-up.
We will partner with the school’s PTA and maintenance personnel to clean the flower beds and clean up court yards or other tasks as assigned.
We will fill disaster relief buckets with supplies at the D.R.A.W. warehouse in Waterford. We will cooperate with Independence Parks and Recreation to stain the large wooden play structures at Bay Court Park.
We will fill grocery bags for needy families. We will tie blankets for cancer patients, fill baby bottles with coins for Birth Choice, write letters to soldiers, and do Elderly Care Home Karaoke. We’ll also work in our Community Garden to start growing vegetables for needy families.
Want to serve too? Anyone is welcome! Let us know at www.clarkstoncommunity.com.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
They came back with the ass, the colt that he had asked for. They placed their coats on the animal’s back for him to sit on.
Not only did this make his ride more comfortable, they were tokens of honor toward a man who was a great teacher, a rabbi, their leader, a prophet, the Messiah or Christos: the anointed one who would lead them into the new kingdom, the King of the Jews.
The crowds who were walking up the hill into the city for the Passover recognized the prophesied sign of the coming Messiah: a holy man riding on an ass, the colt of an ass.
Maybe some of them had followed him into the wilderness and remembered his promised blessings to the poor in spirit, to those who mourn and to the meek or maybe they had been witness to the miracles.
Believing that now was the time that the promises would be realized some began to lay their coats on the ground to honor him. Others cut branches off the palm trees and laid them on the road saying, ‘Save us, Son of David.?
Few truly understood the holy mission of this Christed one. Most were expecting a warrior king who would call upon the angels to smite those who persecuted them, the Romans.
Among these was Judas Iscariot, who was a Zealot, who was prepared to fight for his freedom and the freedom of Israel. These literal minded fundamentalists were greatly disappointed when their Messiah was arrested, imprisoned and crucified as a common criminal.
Judas was so distraught that he took his own life. He had been so excited and nervous when his Master had called upon him to bring the soldiers to him.
He knew in his heart that this was the moment when the Master would reveal himself as the Messianic Warrior King and the angelic host would arise in his defense; the final battle with the forces of evil would be fought and won now.
Most of the soldiers were nervous and afraid when they approached that hill and the garden where he had come to pray with his disciples. They were expecting a fight, falling to the ground when he revealed himself to them; they were ducking for cover for the ensuing battle. And there was no battle, at least not in the outer.
Palm Sunday, Holy Week, Lent and Easter, are all reminders for me to put myself in God’s hands. Symbolically and literally; I let go of my preconceived notions of how things should be; I give up my limited experience and understanding of what is really going on; I surrender my selfish, self-centered, egotistical wants and wishes, and let God be God in me.
I can literally place myself in the hands of Good Orderly Direction and pray, ‘Thy will, not my will, Thy will be done!?
Many learned, righteous and holy men and women, good people, may choose to take offense at my defense of Judas and at my dismissal of the traditional message about Jesus, the ‘Jesus died for our sins? philosophy.
However true this may be, in my mind it pales in significance to the fact that Jesus lived so that we may live life abundantly. His death and resurrection, the miracles, were all acts that were necessary so that we may hear his words, his message of Heaven in our midst, the Kingdom that is within you, that God is our Father and we are God’s children in whom God is well pleased.
This is the message of Jesus, the message that he wanted us to hear.
Whenever and wherever you are reading this; today is a holy day, the place where you are standing is holy ground, and right now you have the opportunity to be in Heaven.
A wise man once asked me if I would rather be right or happy. I responded that I would rather be right and happy. That shows you how much I know.
Sometimes we have to give up the good for the gooder: not proper English, but proper thinking. Sometimes we have to give up knowing the relative truth in order to know the Absolute Truth of God’s presence and power active in our life and affairs. Sometimes we have to lose everything in order to gain everything that is worthwhile. Or, it may have been just a man riding a donkey.
Blessings of peace, joy & love,
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior minister at Peace Unity Community.
This past weekend with warm temperatures and sunshine, the birds singing in the trees and the snow melting, I sensed springtime in the air.
It is always such a relief when it seems that we have once again made it through another winter. I begin to plan the garden and even can’t wait to get outside to do yard work.
I love to watch everything come back to life. Even though I know winter will try to return again in the next few weeks, I also know that spring and life will win the day.
In our lives of faith a similar struggle takes place during this season of preparation for Easter that we call Lent.
In fact the word Lent comes from an old Anglo-Saxon word for ‘springtime.? That seems to fit well, as Lent can be a spring-like renewal of faith. However just as winter never seems to give up without a fight, so too our lives of faith can be a struggle.
Our desire and good intentions to grow, soon collide with the realities of a too-busy world or our deep anxiety about the future or our regrets about the past.
Lent, which began on Ash Wednesday (Feb. 13 this year) and culminates at Easter, covers a period of 40 days. It originated centuries ago as a time of intense preparation for Baptism at Easter.
For all of us today Lent can be a time of repentance (turning to God), and renewed spiritual devotion. Some people fast, or ‘give something up? for Lent, such as a favorite food or TV, as a way of focusing attention on God.
The idea is that every time we crave the item given up, we are reminded of our dependence upon God’s grace and love. Other spiritual disciplines practiced during Lent include renewed devotion to Bible study and prayer, generous giving to those in need, and my personal favorite, deciding to commit at least one random act of kindness each day.
All of these things can draw us closer to God, but they don’t make God love us any more than he already does. ‘For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.? (John 3:16 TNIV)
This Lent at Calvary Lutheran we have been reading a small devotional booklet called ‘Holy Habits for the Season of Lent? by Rich Bimler.
I particularly like this book because it lifts up many common everyday things as spiritual practices to help us grow. Such ‘holy habits? include smiling more, laughter, getting enough rest, really listening, playing, or amazement at common everyday things. Sure he also includes things you might expect like confession and serving.
But his point is clear, sometimes we think the only spiritual disciplines that count are the really big ones like reading the whole Bible or fasting. Good as these things are, we can also grow by making a simple commitment each day to practice being more childlike, or saying thank you, or sharing some enthusiasm for life and faith.
So even if you have not made any commitments this Lent or have forsaken those you did make, there is nothing to stop you today, right now, from taking up some ‘holy habits? in your everyday life.
Each and every day we have a fresh start ? a new opportunity to receive and live in God’s grace and to develop some ‘holy habits.?
God never gives up on us. And the really cool thing is that when we do spend some real time with God, we do grow to become more the way God intends us to be.
My favorite description of God’s desire for the character of our lives is from Galatians 5 where Paul writes, ?’the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.? That’s the way God made us and wills for our lives to look no matter what is happening around us.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
We are well into the season of Lent in the church calendar. During this time it is not unusual for people to give something up as a reminder of what our Savior, Jesus, gave up for us.
St. Paul reminds us in 2 Corinthians 8: For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though He was rich, yet for your sake He became poor, so that you by His poverty might become rich.
Imagine what He gave up for us!
He had all the riches and glory of heaven, but He gave it up to come into our world. He had all the power of God, yet He submitted to the sinful power of man so He could die on the cross for our sins.
He gave it all up. He entered poverty for us, so we could live in a palace, heaven!
I often wonder how blessed we feel. When people ask me how I am my response is that I am blessed.
Sometimes, however, I don’t feel very blessed.
I am tired from a long day or lack of sleep the night before. But I had, at the least, the day and a bed in which I was able to rest.
I had a roof to keep the snow and rain off me, and a furnace that kept my house warm all night long.
I woke up to a hot shower. I checked the news on the television and internet. I had food waiting for me in the kitchen so I would not begin the day hungry.
Then, I begin to think about the people who do not have those opportunities.
They might have to wander down to a mucky river they bathe in and do their laundry and get their drinking water. Food is not plentiful, so they have little to eat.
They might have some shelter against the elements, but electricity is rare and expensive.
They have more important uses for their limited resources. It is a different life than the one we live.
But what do we do? We complain about so many of the things we have (or feel that we need) because they don t work like we want them to or because we don t have them.
Do we really understand how blessed we are? Just look around you. Even those who live in poverty are better off than many in the impoverished nations of the world.
What are we to do? In Matthew 25, Jesus tells a parable, a story with a teaching point. At the end He tells us that as we do for others, we do for Him, if we fail to do for others, we do not do for Him.
The parable leads us to understand that this was the way of life for the people He addressed.
Look around you. See who is in need. Reach out to them and become rich in the ways of God.
Be blessed and refreshed in the Resurrection.
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
This Feb. 22 we mark a date of embarrassment in American government. On this date in 1902 two esteemed members of the United States senate got into a fistfight in the floor of the senate over bias expressed on the Philippine tariff bill.
The Philippine Tariff Bill? Really? A schoolyard fistfight about? the Philippines? How stupid can government get?
In many ways we are asking the same question today. What are they doing with our money? Can they simply legislate away individual rights? What should be the relationship of government and God-given institutions like the family?
Thomas Jefferson said, ‘Those are governed best who are governed least.? The contemporary formula for government seems to ignore this wisdom.
So what are Christians to do about today’s government? Ignore it? Defy it? Circumvent it? Kick ‘the bums out?? Has today’s government abandoned principals of the founding fathers and therefore disqualified it from the obedience of the good Christian citizen?
No. If you are a Christian you simply cannot take that position.
The apostle Paul speaks very clearly of this in his letter to the people of Rome.
He says, ‘Everyone needs to be subject to the governing authorities because there is no authority except from God. Governments that exist have been instituted by God? resist the government and you resist what God has appointed?? (ch. 13)
Why does he say that? Why would he say obey a government that seems to be making decisions that so many Christians disagree with?
Because government serves an important purpose for God: government preserves order and God is a God of order. Governments carry our justice, punish evil, reward the righteous and keep anarchy from blowing up the community.
Governments are not always right, they do make terrible decisions that attack community and disregard justice (and Christians must clearly and strongly challenge overt government evil). But governments create community and community is a blessing from God that He wants for His people.
So taking the position that government is inherently evil ? it is just not found in the bible.
This day in 1902 our government looked pretty ridiculous. But this day in 1732 George Washington was born ? a man God powerfully used to establish an American government that blesses billions today. So let’s rejoice in this gift of government from God. Like getting sox at Christmas we may not like really the gift. But it serves an important purpose; it is a gift that gives us the ability to be in community with each other ? and with Our Creator. And that is a gift that is worth letting a couple of foolish senators bloody their noses for.
Bill Northend is a Lutheran Pastor at TheGatheringPlace in Davisburg.
A husband and wife drove for miles in silence after a terrible argument in which neither would budge.
The husband pointed to a mule in a pasture.
‘Relative of yours?? he asked. ‘Yes,? she replied, ‘by marriage.?
How happy is your marriage? Is your spouse really your Valentine?
The Apostle Paul gave us a key to a happy marriage.
He said, ‘Each one of you also must love his wife as he loves himself, and the wife must respect her husband.? (Ephesians 5:33)
Modern studies show that men’s number-one need is respect. They want to be respected.
The number-one need for women is love. They need to know that their husband cares for them more than anything else.
A woman came to a lawyer and said, ‘I want to get a divorce. I really hate my husband, and I want to hurt him. Give me some advice. I want to get his gold. I want to give him the shaft. I want to hurt him everyway I can.?
The attorney said, ‘All right. For the next three months while we’re going through the divorce proceedings, don’t criticize your husband. Only speak kind words to him. Build him up. Every time he does something, commend him for it. Tell him what a great guy he is, and do that for three months. After he thinks that he has your respect, tell him you were just yanking his chain and it will hurt him good.?
The woman thought, ‘I can play that game!?
So she complimented her husband for everything he did. For three months she told him what a great man he was.
Guess what? After three months, they forgot about the divorce and went on a second honeymoon!
Want a Happy Valentine’s Day? Show respect. Give love.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is senior pastor of Clarkston Community Church
Some days are more eventful than others. The other morning, after a significant snowfall, as I was driving into town I came upon the scene of an auto accident. I didn’t understand what had happened at first and I still don’t know the whole story. An SUV was stopped along the road and another vehicle was in the ditch. The second vehicle had left the road, smashed through a road sign and was hugging a tree. The front end of the SUV looked totaled. The car driving in front of me pulled over to the side of the road, and I instinctively stopped in front of her.
As I exited my car and approached the scene I saw that a man was standing next to the car that was off the road, his arm was draped over his head and blood was covering one side of his face. His young daughter was standing next to him with that deer caught in the headlights kind of lost expression in her eyes. The other driver was behind her car talking on her cell phone. I later confirmed with her that she was calling for help.
I searched my glove box and came up with a clean cloth to use as a compress for the minor cut on the man’s head. Wanting to comfort her, I spoke to the daughter assuring her that her dad would be okay and that help was on its way. Not knowing what else to do, I stayed with them until the fire truck and ambulance came and paramedics took charge. Then I proceeded on with my day, driving a little slower than I had been earlier.
The mention of the word compassion generally evokes positive feelings in most people. We want to be considered as compassionate and caring people. We think of ourselves as basically good and loving. We generally believe that compassion is the natural response to human suffering. How can you not feel compassion when you see people in pain, a starving child or homeless family? Being compassionate is part of being human. To feel another’s pain is a normal part of life. We are greatly offended when accused of not showing compassion.
Yet the evidence for the lack of compassion is readily available in every newspaper and broadcast. The results of this lack are tragic acts of war and aggression, conflict and struggle, poverty and hunger. How could these exist in a world filled with compassionate people? Perhaps we need to take another look at how we are relating with each other, evaluate our priorities, make new choices and help create a world that works for all.
The word compassion comes from two Latin words meaning to ‘suffer with.? This is more personal than mere sympathy, more intense than mere empathy or understanding and more active than mere mercy or pity. It is the sharing of the experience, lifting the burden of another onto your shoulders, a hand up to the one who is down so that you may both move forward. It is feeling another’s pain, crying with those who mourn and hurting with those who are suffering. ‘Compassion requires us to be weak with the weak, vulnerable with the vulnerable, and powerless with the powerless.? Henri Nouwen.
Jesus said, ‘I have compassion on the crowd,? before giving instructions for the feeding of the four thousand (Mark 8:2). ‘The Lord is gracious and full of compassion;? (Psalm 111:4). The Buddha said, ‘Compassion is that which makes the heart of the good move at the pain of others,? and advised us to ‘fill your mind with compassion.? The Dalai Lama said, ‘If you want others to be happy, practice compassion. I you want to be happy, practice compassion.? All but one chapter of the Quran begins with, ‘In the name of God the Compassionate, the Merciful?. ‘Compassion is the keen awareness of the interdependence of all things.? Thomas Merton
‘And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to me.? (John 12:32) This is the fruits of compassion, to be lifted above the pain and sorrow and suffering of this earthly experience. And, the only way out is through. Serenity, peace of mind, fulfillment comes with giving and receiving love: compassion.
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior minister at Peace Unity Community.
Trust. Such a simple word but also one of great importance in relationships.
It is difficult to have a good relationship with someone you do not trust. It is also an important part of faith.
We trust God and He provides for us out of His goodness and the bounty of His blessings.
Proverbs 3:5-7 urges us to Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding 6In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will make straight your paths. 7Be not wise in your own eyes; fear the Lord, and turn away from evil.
What if we were to put all our trust in the Lord? What difference might that make in our lives? How might we be guided in reaching out and sharing the blessings we have received with one another?
Yes, there may be days when we do not feel very blessed but, if you really think about it and view it from the lives of those in impoverished regions, we are blessed.
Think of the difference our reaching out, using the blessings God has given us, might make in the lives of others.
Think of how our taking time to care and show concern for them might build trust in us and, ultimately, in God!
When I think of trust I think of the relationship between Jesus and Peter. Peter was one of that inner-circle with Jesus, one of His closest friends.
He proclaimed Jesus the Christ, the Son of the Living God. In the next breath he was trying to prevent Jesus from going to Jerusalem and the death that awaited Him. Jesus rebuked Peter and how Satan was using him. Jesus also predicted Peter would deny Him three times before the cock crowed which Peter vehemently denied.
It was Peter who drew the sword to defend Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane. It was Peter who entered the courtyard of the high priest. Trust was broken.
Think of how it feels when a trusted friend betrays your trust.
A promise is broken, a secret spilled, and you are deeply hurt.
You want to pull away and not have anything to do with this friend.
When that happens, when you decide to get revenge for their action, when you bear the grudge, who is it that is hurt the deepest?
You are. It tears down our body, our health suffers, the friendship is destroyed and our faith is sorely challenged.
What did Jesus do for Peter?
After Jesus rose from the grave He meets Peter and the disciples on the lake shore where they had been fishing.
Jesus says to Peter, three times, Do you love Me? Peter keeps responding that Jesus knows he does.
Three times Peter denied Jesus, three times Jesus restored him.
If your brother sins against you, go and seek to be reconciled (Matthew 18).
Our God has revealed Himself in His Son, may He reveal Himself to others through us.
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
One thing that has always fascinated me has been the power of symbols.
They are concrete things, images, or even sounds that have more value than what simply meets the eye or ear. Gestures, too, can be used as signs.
Symbols add color and spice to life and often allow us to transmit a message more elegantly than by using words.
Symbols point towards the fact that a human person is not just a bunch of random cells, but that we’re made up of body and soul.
Our body sees the sign or symbol, but it’s the soul that understands the symbol’s deeper meaning.
Take the simple fact of a traffic light. Imagine the chaos at a busy intersection if all the drivers failed to grasp the deeper meaning we assign to the colors green, red, and yellow.
We all know that green means ‘go?, red means ‘stop?, and yellow means, ‘go faster?. These symbols allow us to convey meaning in a colorful and lively way. Even the black lines that you’re looking at now, the things we call letters, are symbols.
Or imagine if we failed to go deeper than hearing mere sounds when we hear a crying, hungry baby.
We have no problem understanding that a child needs food or warmth or attention just by their cries.
Sounds, then, can also be symbols pointing us to a deeper reality.
Gestures, such as bowing down, also transmit a specific message. It is a gesture of humility and respect when someone is in the presence of greatness.
For example, at two of the most important sites for Christians, the birthplace of Jesus in Bethlehem and the tomb where Jesus rose from the dead in Jerusalem, one can only enter by bowing down.
When it comes to spiritual matters and religion, symbols are even more important. God knows that and that’s why he uses them to transmit certain spiritual messages.
The symbols themselves not only point to something deeper, but they actually make that deeper reality present.
That’s what is meant by the word ‘sacrament?: it is a sign or symbol that carries with it a spiritual result.
Take water, for example. It can be a particularly powerful symbol because it is universally understood. It is a symbol of purity, life, and refreshment.
Water is used in Christian Baptism not only because it symbolizes purity, life, and refreshment, but more importantly because we believe that the waters of Baptism actually purifies the soul, gives it a share in God’s life by refreshing it with grace.
At the very moment the water is cleansing the skin, God is purifying, giving life to, and refreshing the soul.
Symbols are an important part of life and I hope these few words have given you just a little better appreciation of how precious they are.
They help us to understand better that we’re more than just flesh and blood. We’re body and soul.
So, whether it’s slowing down when you see yellow, or a simple smile, make the most of the symbols in your life.
Fr. Daniel Pajerski, LC, is Formation Director for Everest Academy.
‘Someone has said that an expert is anyone who is more than 100 miles away and you have to pay to talk to them. Our culture is full of experts. There are experts out there who will tell you that the economy is lousy ‘you’ll never get that career you’ve always wanted. You’re marriage is too far gone ‘you might as well call it quits. You don’t have the skills necessary ‘you might as well settle for less.
Oh yea? Listen to what the experts used to say:
Everything that can be invented has been invented.
Charles H. Duell, U.S. Patent Office director, 1899
Who the h? wants to hear actors talk?
H. M. Warner, Warner Bros. Pictures, c. 1927
Sensible and responsible women do not want to vote.
Grover Cleveland, 1905
There is no likelihood man can ever tap the power of the atom.
Robert Millikan, Nobel prize winner in physics, 1923
Heavier than air flying machines are impossible.
Lord Kelvin, president, Royal Society, c. 1895
Ruth [Babe Ruth] made a big mistake when he gave up pitching.
Tris Speaker, 1927
The horse is here to stay, but the automobile is only a novelty.
The Michigan banker who advised Henry Ford’s lawyer not to invest in the new motor car company
Gone with the Wind is going to be the biggest flop in Hollywood history. I’m just glad it’ll be Clark Gable who’s falling flat on his face and not me.
Gary Cooper
Why not dream some big dreams this New Year? Scripture says that God can help you ‘sing a new song? (Psalm 96). God can make you into ‘a new creation? (2 Corinthians 5:17). He can give you ‘a new heart and a new spirit? (Ezekiel 36:26). You can ‘be made new in the attitude of your mind? (Ephesians 4:23). Through faith in God you can ‘put on a new self? (Colossians 3:10)!
Don’t listen to the experts this New Year! Listen to God! And go for it!
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
For those of you who may not have noticed, the world ended last month. Not the physical world, as many had predicted, but the world as we know it.
This may not be news worthy as it happens all the time, ‘I die every day? (1Cor 15:31) says the Apostle Paul. The person I was yesterday no longer exists. Today, I am a ‘new creation? (2Cor 5:17). It is up to me to choose what the ‘new creation? will be for me. If I continue to look back at what was, hoping for what used to be, or focus on the future of what may or may not occur then I miss the gift of new life that is available to me in this now moment. The gift is to be found in the now, that’s why it is called the present.
The Mayan Calendar ended Friday, Dec. 21. For linear minded people, who do not comprehend the eternality of existence, this meant the end of time. This and similar events plus the prophecies of doom and destruction that accompany them can create a fear response. This response has been capitalized upon by doomsayers throughout history.
Practically every year we hear of a prophesied Second Coming or other dooms day event. The Second Coming has been anticipated since the first century, in the days following Jesus Ascension (Acts 1:11.) And many are still waiting.
I believe that the Second Coming is not an outer event, but an inner experience of our awakening to our divinity; the kingdom of Heaven, the kingdom of God, the Christ, that is located ‘at hand? (Mt. 4:17), ‘within? (Jer. 31:33), ‘in you? (Col. 1:29). When we approach scripture, whether it be the Bible or the Bhagavad Gita or the Tao te Ching or any of the world’s sacred texts, as just a myth or history, we miss the spiritual or metaphysical importance of the writings.
The Bible is ‘our? story; these sacred writings point to the evolution of our consciousness of God active in our lives. This is because we are made in the image and after the likeness of God (Gen. 1:26) and ‘God is Spirit? (Jn. 4:24). We are inherently spiritual; we are spiritual beings having a human experience, and we are human beings learning to express our spiritual divine nature.
The Mayan calendar is in the shape of a circle. A circle has no beginning and no ending. The calendar ended Friday and started anew on Saturday. Many of us celebrated that day by having a Planetary Birthday Party. Happy Birthday to you!!!
Life is a circle, with no beginning and no ending, only we define it sequentially in the limitations of our three dimensional world as having a beginning and an ending. Spirit transcends the limitations of time and space, the three dimensional world. Our Second Coming, our awakening, comes as we consciously transcend the limitations of time and space to realize our divinity, the kingdom, as our here and now reality.
December 26th was St. Stephens Day or Boxing Day in Great Britain. A day dedicated to sharing our bounty with those who are less fortunate.
To some it is the first day of Christmas, ‘On the first day of Christmas my true love gave to me, a partridge in a pear tree,? the twelve festive days that end on January 6th; Epiphany, the ‘showing forth,? which celebrates the visit of the Kings honoring Jesus Birth with gifts of Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh.
To all of us it is the beginning of a new life. We can choose to continue to drag the old along with us. Or, we can choose to show forth the new.
We can choose to be ‘new creations,? looking for the gifts that exist in the moment and sharing these gifts of peace, joy and love with all. So it is and so be it.
Blessings of peace, joy and love.
Rev. Matthew E. Long, Peace Unity Community
A parent’s worst nightmare. They were just children. An utterly senseless evil act of violence.
If it could happen there, it could happen anywhere… So many feelings and emotions. From shock and disbelief, to horror, despair, and sadness, to outrage, fear and more.
And all of that from a ‘safe? distance here in Clarkston. Is there any hope for us? As people of faith what can we do and how do we respond, especially this Christmas?
There are certainly no easy answers and we dare not offer trite cliches to those suffering – or to any of us for that matter.
However if the Christmas story is going to mean anything, it has to mean something at a time like this.
And if we are going to be part of what God is doing to save this world that he loves so much (John 3:16), then it is precisely now that we are called to be God’s people – to be the light to the world (Matthew 5:14).
Last Friday as I watched the news unfold I shared these words on Facebook: ‘We pray for all those impacted by the tragic mass shooting at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, and especially for those families who lost children or other loved ones in this nightmare. With them we mourn, we pray, and with the Psalmist we plead: ‘Out of the depths, I cry to you, O Lord, hear my voice!? (Psalm 130:1)…As family and friends and all in our nation grieve these senseless deaths and injuries, we claim the promise of the Prince of Peace and commit ourselves to never tire in bringing his message of hope, peace, joy and love to a world that seems sometimes so filled with darkness, sin and pain.?
Sin and evil are certainly very real. But so is God’s love and the resiliency of people.
A sign in Newtown says: ‘Our hearts are broken – our spirits are strong.?
Stories of heroism and courage from children, teachers and staff, and first responders are already being told.
People today, people 2000 years ago at that first Christmas, and people long before that cried out to God: ‘Out of the depths, we cry to you, O Lord, hear our voice!?
God what will you do to help this broken world and when will you come to make things right?
I believe God’s answer arrives as a newborn baby in a cave to a humble couple in a small town. Not a grand entrance, but one we can relate to.
He is Immanuel which means God with us (no matter what!), and his name is Jesus which means God saves (from sin and death and evil!).
Jesus is God’s promise that ‘The light shines in the darkness, and darkness did not overcome it.? (John 1:5)
And all of this happens in the real world we live in today. In a part of the Christmas story we seldom focus much on, King Herod was trying to find Jesus not long after his birth so he could kill him (Matthew 2).
He was jealous and didn’t want another king on his turf. So he ordered the mass killing of all the young boys in Bethlehem.
Mary and Joseph barely escaped to Egypt with Jesus. The sounds of those tears and the cries of outrage mingle with tears and cries of those in Newtown today – and ours too.
The real context for the Christmas story does not look like the perfect Christmas card, but rather it is precisely in the midst of violence, sin and evil that the Prince of Peace is born.
Last Friday night I had tickets for the new Hobbit movie but I almost didn’t go. It just didn’t feel right to go and enjoy myself, while others were hurting so.
But knowing that Tolkien’s writings deal with the struggle of good against evil, light against darkness, and the significant role in that struggle of simple folk and little people, like hobbits (and like me), I went.
In one of my favorite scenes the good wizard Gandalf was asked why he chose a ‘halfling,? the hobbit Bilbo, to come along on their quest against the forces of darkness. What could he do and what did he have to offer?
Gandalf’s response is a word for each us and the difference we can make right where we are – no matter who we are.
He says that ‘it is the small things, every act of normal folk that keeps the darkness at bay ? simple acts of kindness and love.?
He continues: ‘Why Bilbo Baggins? Perhaps it is because I am afraid, and he gives me courage.?
As people of faith we hold the ‘darkness at bay? and give one another courage when we shine the light of God’s hope, peace, joy and love right where we are.
That’s our calling and I believe that is the gift of Christmas.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
Christmas is coming! Christmas is coming! Can’t you hear it in the voices of children and feel the excitement in the air?
Wait a minute. It’s not Christmas yet.
We have so commercialized and secularized Christmas that, by the time it arrives, we are ready to pack away the gifts, take down the tree, put away the decorations and get back to life as normal instead of celebrating the 12 days.
Is that how it should be? It takes time and preparation to be ready to celebrate properly.
Would we marry someone the day we met them? We need to get to know them and spend time getting ready for the big day. Would we build a house for our child to grow up in the day they were born? So, also, we need to prepare, get ready, to celebrate Christmas.
That is what Advent is all about.
Like someone getting ready to welcome a baby into their home, so we prepare to welcome Jesus into our home and into our world at the second advent, the second coming. St. Paul tells us about how the timing for the first coming of Jesus was perfect.
In Galatians 4 he writes, ‘But when the fullness of time had come, God sent forth His Son, born of woman, born under the law.?
What fullness of time? God’s time in His plan. Why did He send His Son? To redeem us, to buy us back from the debt of sin that we could never have paid.
But it took planning and preparation. In Genesis 3:15, ‘God promises to Adam and Eve that He would send a Savior Who would crush the head of the serpent, Satan.? The people waited and planned for this fulfillment for hundreds and hundreds of years. The Old Testament prophets spoke of Him.
Then, in Luke 1 the priest Zechariah is told that he and his wife, Elizabeth, would have a son. They had no children because Elizabeth was barren, unable to have any children and both of them were advanced in age. But it happens just as the angel says. ‘This child is to be the forerunner, the one to announce the way and prepare the world for the coming King.?
We read later in Luke 1 that Mary, a young virgin woman was told by an angel that she, too, would bear a child. This Child would be the Son of God, conceived by the Holy Spirit. Joseph, her betrothed (like our engagement but more seriously understood), thought she was unfaithful until he was assured by an angel that this was not the case.
Wow! That is a lot of angels and a lot of preparing! God did not mind at all. He was preparing for more than His Son’s birth. He was preparing for your forgiveness. He was sharing His love with you. He wants you to be in heaven with Him!
So, Christmas may have to wait, just a little, while we prepare. Happy Advent!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
God’s ultimate goal for your life on Earth is not comfort but character.
He wants you to grow up spiritually and become like Christ.
Think about the Christmas Story. Jesus was born when Rome ruled the world.
It is estimated that over half the population of the Roman Empire were slaves.
The Jewish people were oppressed by the Romans.
There ‘was no room in the Inn? for Joseph, Mary, and baby Jesus, so he was born (most likely) in a cave used to keep animals. When he grew up, Jesus was criticized and eventually crucified!
We tend to idealize the Christmas story as if it was sweet, nice, and cute. The fact is, life was hard then and life is hard now.
Oftentimes people ask me, ‘Greg, if there is a God, and God is good, why is there so much suffering in the world??
That’s a huge question with lots of angles. But one answer is this: God’s ultimate goal for your life is character, not comfort.
God wants you to develop the kind of character described in the Beatitudes of Jesus, the fruit of the Spirit, Paul’s great chapter on love, and Peter’s list of the characteristics of an effective and productive life (Matthew 5:1-12; Galatians 5:22-23; 1 Corinthians 13; 2 Peter 1:5-8).
Every time you forget that character is one of God’s purposes for your life, you will become frustrated by your circumstances.
You’ll wonder, ‘Why is this happening to me? Why am I having such a difficult time??
One answer is that life is supposed to be difficult! It’s what enables us to grow.
Remember: Earth is not Heaven!
You will have all of eternity with no hardship. So don’t waste your hardship. Grow from it.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
A few days ago I bundled my family up and drove to the Haehnle Sanctuary, west of Ann Arbor, to observe the Sandhill Cranes who are gathering in large numbers in preparation for their migration south for the winter.
As the sun was setting and the air was getting colder, thousands of wondrous cranes with their long necks gracefully leading the way and their thin legs trailing behind came flying in.
It was a divinely choreographed symphony as at first a group of three appeared, then 12, then 20 and then hundreds at a time came into view. They just kept coming and coming until night blurred our vision.
How grateful I am to my friend who told me of this place, to my wife and son who agreed to come along and share the experience, to the people who have carved out this special place to preserve it for you and me and future generations.
Most of all I am grateful for the infinite, eternal, unlimited loving presence and power that I call God and for this thing called life.
It can be difficult to feel gratitude when we are experiencing difficulties, health challenges, financial shortfalls or conflicts in our relationships.
I know that these can be all encompassing coloring every interaction, clouding our thinking and moods, interfering with our joy for living.
I also know that I can always find something to be grateful for and the more I am grateful the more I have to be grateful for. Where I saw a divine symphony, I know others just saw a bunch of stupid birds.
A practice I began many years ago is to write down 10 things that I am grateful for first thing in the morning before my mind has much of a chance to begin obsessing about all the things I have to do today.
Try this for 21 days and your life will be transformed.
I begin and end my days with prayers of gratitude for this day and all the many blessings in it, my friends and family and loved ones, this wonderful life we live.
Then I individually name the people and the events that have blessed me whether I recognized it at the time or not. Often what we complain about the most conceals the greatest blessing, as this anonymous prayer demonstrates.
‘Lord, thank you for this sink of dirty dishes; we have plenty of food to eat. Thank you for this pile of dirty, stinky laundry; we have plenty of good clothes to wear. And I would like to thank you, Lord, for those unmade beds; they were so warm and comfortable last night. I know that many have no bed.
‘My thanks to you, Lord, for this bathroom, complete with all the splattered mirrors, soggy, grimy towels, and dirty lavatory; they are so convenient. Thank you for this finger-smudged refrigerator that needs cleaning inside and out. It has served us faithfully for many years and has enough food in it for several meals. Thank you, Lord for this oven that absolutely must be cleaned today. It has baked so many things over the years.
‘The whole family is grateful for that tall grass that needs mowing and the lawn that needs raking; we all enjoy the yard. Thank you, Lord, even for that slamming door; my kids are healthy and able to run and play. Lord, the presence of all these chores awaiting me says that you have richly blessed my family. I shall do them cheerfully and I shall do them gratefully.?
In the words of Rabbi Harold Kushner: ‘If you concentrate on finding the good in every situation, you will discover that your life will suddenly be filled with gratitude, a feeling that nurtures your soul.?
How do we create a joy filled life, through the power of gratitude.
‘If the only prayer you ever say in your entire life is ‘thank you? it will be enough.? Meister Eckhardt
Happy Thanksgiving!
Rev. Matthew E. Long, Peace Unity Community.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior minister at Peace Unity Community.
Last week’s election was very interesting. Prior to the election, the animosity between the opposing groups had become very strong and neither side seemed to comprehend that the other might win.
What we will find, however, is that no matter the outcome, the world will not fall apart. In your mind, it may be a step in the wrong direction, but it can be reversed just as it has so often throughout history.
The bigger problem is our lack of understanding the broad perspective of our need for one another. In the beginning, when God created man, He did it in such a way that we would see our need for someone opposite than ourselves.
The Bible tells us that God created man and then observed, ‘This is not good.? I am sure that the woman could have a hay day with this statement, because the result was the creation of woman who was taken out of man. She would stand opposite of Adam representing the opposing person to him.
It seems that God has created all things with a polarity of opposing forces. The smallest particles of creation are held together by a nucleus keeping negative and positive charges in sync. The creation of mankind follows the same route with opposing forces, male and female, creating a balanced environment for the family.
It is this environment that Christians extol as the perfect blend for the raising of children and forming the basis of a strong society. Although the contemporary world finds fault with our stand, it is a logical one’not just an old-fashioned, moral restraint that we want to impose on the greater society.
This pattern is a good one, but will only work well when people understand the importance of our differences and the need to draw from the strength of others who are different.
Just like the family, our nation has two political parties. If you could look at it from the biblical family perspective, one could easily see that they represent the two poles of family life. The Democrats seek to be aware of the needs of people and meet those needs; the Republicans focus more on personal responsibility. This represents the views traditionally given to mothers and fathers.
Mothers are typically the nurturers and fathers are the enablers. It is no coincidence to me that the polls always show men tending towards the Republican candidate and women to the Democratic candidate. The issues certainly have nurturing and enabling aspects. In an election race, each candidate will typically have two separate plans on how to reach women and men, because this is an obvious need when considering the way each gender looks at the world.
As a country, we are like the movie The War of the Roses, where the man and woman become so enraged with each other that they try to kill each other at the end of the movie. We have become a nation divided into many groups’each one living in their own world, with a worldview distinct and without the influence of the others. Therein lies our demise; we do not want any influence that would seem contradictory, even though like the smallest particles of creation, it would provide the balance needed to keep things moving. It is time to learn our lesson’we all have something to give, but we all have a need to receive something as well.
Someone recently gave me a card with a message inside that said, ‘Knowledge is knowing a tomato is a fruit, wisdom is knowing not to put it in a fruit salad.? I am sure that some may disagree with this, but I liked the statement because it showed, in a practical way, how knowing something could actually be detrimental to our full understanding. Wisdom comes through dialogue and is only possible with maturity. The challenge for each of us today is to move past the animosity and see the benefit one another can bring to the collective part.
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church
For I am not ashamed of the Gospel Paul says as he writes to the Christians of Rome.
As we hear those words and think about them I wonder how many people would say that today.
We have so many teachings that take away from the truth of God. We hear songs that proclaim to be Christian but never mention God.
We read articles that are supposed to be of spiritual nature and find a few words thrown in at the end that attempt to give some impression of being Christian. But to stand on the Gospel and the power it brings?
Are we undercover Christians? Do we hide our faith except for times when it is convenient for it to be shown? Do our words and actions deny the faith we have, the relationship with Jesus we have been called to live?
Is it only on Sunday morning or when we are at church that it is O.K. to live our faith and let it show?
Jesus says: So everyone who acknowledges Me before men, I also will acknowledge before My Father Who is in heaven, but whoever denies Me before men, I also will deny before My Father Who is in heaven. (Matthew 10:32-33 ESV)
How do we live our lives when we are around other people, especially those we know are not Christians?
Do we let our faith show? Do we acknowledge Jesus, our Savior?
Sometimes it seems an unfair advantage when I am talking to people who have just let out a stream of profanity and then they ask me what I do for a living.
When they find out I am a pastor they are so apologetic. It is then that I remind them that it should not matter who I am or what I do but that their faith should show at all times to all people.
How do we witness that faith? Our church has just finished the celebration of the Reformation, where we remember the focus on the Word of God and the salvation we have been given in Jesus, God’s Son.
Many in the world focus on Halloween but we remember it as All Hallowed’s Eve. The following day the church celebrates All Saint’s Day, remembering those who have cast aside the mantle of sin and taken the fullness of the glory won for them by Jesus as they entered into heaven.
Can we be a solid witness in this world?
Yes, if we are not ashamed of the Gospel. Yes, if we live in the power of salvation, knowing our sins have been washed away in the blood of Jesus, shed from the cross for us.
Imagine Paul ashamed of the Gospel. Imagine the disciples and the early Church ashamed of the Gospel. Imagine them burying the power they had been given by the Holy Spirit.
If you can imagine that then you can see a Church that does not exist.
May we never be ashamed, but proclaim Him always!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
October: what a glorious month! The stunning, vibrant array of color displayed by Mother Nature for a brief moment inspires many a conversation. Some will speak of their favorite viewing location or remembrances of seasons past. Many declare fall to be their favorite season, others deride it as the prelude to winter complaining of the wet and cold.
When the leaves finally fall, whether slowly, naturally over many weeks, or suddenly, all at once with the wind and rain, the trees are bared and the stunning, vibrant, annual life expression comes to an end. There is the death of the old in the fall so that the new may be reborn in the spring. The cycle of life naturally includes death and new birth.
Chapter 11 of the Gospel according to John contains the curious story of the death and resurrection of Lazarus and the social and political fallout that led to the crucifixion of Jesus. This story has incredible layers of symbology and meaning for all of us, too much to cover in this single column. Today I will focus on Jesus? words concerning death.
The message comes to Jesus and his followers that Lazarus is ill. Jesus says, ‘This illness is not unto death; it is for the glory of God,? and so he did not travel immediately to Judea but waited for 2 more days. Then he says, ‘Our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep, but I go to awaken him out of sleep.? His disciples don’t understand why He has to awaken a sleeping Lazarus so Jesus has to tell them plainly, ‘Lazarus is dead.?
Now, either we have to conclude that Jesus was mistaken when he declared that Lazarus? illness was ‘not unto death?, or that he lied to his disciples, or that he has some other understanding of the nature of life and death. I prefer the latter, understanding that death is a relative expression of life that has no absolute reality.
Death and birth are inseparable. Each is a beginning and an ending. The sperm and egg die to create the fetus; the fetus comes to an end to become the infant; the infant ends to become the child; the child ends to become the youth; the youth ends to become the adult. We have to die to what we were to become what we will be. We have to release the old way of thinking and believing in order to enter into the ‘glory of God.?
Jesus understood death, not as an ending but, as a new beginning. Therefore, ‘It is not death but dawn? as the poet has written. It is a new relationship with life without the old physical expression. Each ending and new beginning is a process that we go through sometimes joyfully and often painfully. The Ego or personality or local self sees this death to the old as a finality, an ending not a new beginning and therefore we experience grief over the apparent loss of the old.
Sometimes we need help to see beyond the relative appearances of death and loss. Grief is a natural human expression when we experience the death of a loved one or other significant loss such as of a job, a divorce or of a belief system. It takes time to work through the stages of grief, there is no rushing it; it can only be prolonged or delayed by denial of the process. And, we can receive support as we walk through the process and support others in the process with prayer, a listening ear and a loving heart.
The anger and pain we see expressed in society today: in the political process, in the media, in many churches and organizations, is at the same time a result of the denial of the natural process of change that is occurring and a stage of the process. Our part, as emerging Universal Humans with Jesus, is to ‘hold the high watch?: not to get caught up in the relative appearances but to hold the vision of ‘the glory of God? being made manifest. And so it is!
Blessings of peace, joy & love
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is pastor of Peace Unity Community
During the dedication of the cemetery at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, President Abraham Lincoln delivered one of the most memorable speeches in American History.
His speech, known as the Gettysburg Address, was to recognize the awesome sacrifices made during the Civil War in order to preserve the Union and to liberate the slaves in the confederacy.
He declared that our democracy must be ‘for the people, by the people and of the people.? This declaration affirmed the source of power and strength of a democracy.
Although this declaration was meant to affirm the efforts for equality and the power of the people, we must also see the opposite side of the declaration. If a democracy is for, by, and of the people, we must recognize the awesome responsibility the average citizen holds.
As we approach the coming election, the candidates are going to try to convince us that if we vote for them, they will implement a plan of action to save and secure our future.
The choices we make in the coming election will be very important, but we must also understand that if the source of authority comes from the people, the strength must also come from the people. In the end, politicians cater to the people’not the other way around.
If we are to face the uncertainty of times with confidence, we must also seek for a change in the attitudes and actions of the everyday citizens.
It isn’t just Washington that is in a sea of debt. Our consumer-oriented society has much of the responsibility for the planning of the future.
Can we complain about Washington when we do the same things in our personal lives? I often hear of the moral decay we are served by popular culture in the way of songs, movies, and other media. Would the media moguls sell these products if no one was buying them?
Many complaints have surfaced over the risky ventures of Wall Street, but is our craving for risky, high-yielding investments part of the drive? I am sure it is.
We need change in the high levels of our government; but as the citizens, we must understand that real change will start at the bottom, not the top. It is time for revival in America!
The scripture tells us to ‘Repent and be converted in order that times of refreshing may come from the throne of God.?
To ‘repent? means to ‘have a change of mind,? to ‘convert? means to ‘have a change of direction.?
We do not have to be people who are just carried with the tide of the times, nor should we see ourselves as powerless because we are not sitting in a seat of power or authority.
The power to change is within the individual and their willingness to accept the responsibility of making change. America has been a country that extols the power of the individual.
Individuals who have made the right choices have been the catalysts for great change. Millions have come to this country over the years because they believed that this country offered the opportunity for greatness for those who would pursue it.
The power is in the individuals. Now is the time to not just use that power for personal gain, but to preserve our future by returning to the principles that made us the great nation we are.
As a pastor and Christian, my goal is to remind people that we must be ‘One nation, under God.? God was the source of inspiration for many of our founders’and must be for us today, as we seek to secure our future!
The Rev. Loren Covarubbias is pastor of Mt. Zion Temple.
Most of us have probably heard the old Chinese saying, ‘a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.?
Though it comes from a Chinese philosopher named Lao Tzu who lived over 2,500 years ago, it still rings true today that actually taking a first step is essential to any journey or dream, no matter how large or difficult the venture may be. The emphasis here clearly seems to be on the action of doing something and getting started, not just talking or thinking or worrying about it. This is sound advice for sure.
However, as I was doing some research, I came across a number of reliable sources that suggest a more correct translation of this quote from the original language would be something like, ‘the journey of a thousand miles begins beneath one’s feet? or ‘even the longest journey must begin where you stand.?
Here the emphasis shifts somewhat from action to reflection on where you are when you begin. The journey begins in stillness and right where we are, not where we wish we were or think we should be. This too is wise counsel.
Recently, we have completed the development of a spiritual growth pathway for Calvary congregation to help guide and encourage our steps of spiritual and personal growth as God’s people. As we have done so, it has become evident that both understandings of the quote above are important to remember in the life God calls us to.
Our goal is to help each person in our faith community do something to take a growth step, that is to ‘Walk the Talk? as our fall 40 Days spiritual growth journey theme suggests.
However, at the same time, it is important to recall that we each begin the journey at a different place and will follow a somewhat different path of spiritual growth due to our uniqueness. God calls us to start right where we are, not where we think we should be or want to be. And God calls us to get started now, not wait.
I believe this is really good news of God’s grace and unconditional love for us. Today we are invited to come as we really are to walk with the Lord and grow to become all that God has made us to be. The Bible puts it this way: ‘May the Master take you by the hand and lead you along the path of God’s love and Christ’s endurance? (2 Thessalonians 3:5). I am so glad that as people of faith we don’t make this journey alone.
This fall in Clarkston we have a chance put this into practice as we are embark on a new venture together as My Habitat Clarkston launches.
This is a real opportunity for us to come together to not only build a house for a family, vital as that is, but to also build a better habitat for humanity, for all of us.
This is a big undertaking, and as I write this, we still do not know exactly where the house to build or renovate will be. We do know that we have taken some first steps together.
We have gotten started right where we are and now we each have an opportunity to get involved in building this house and this habitat by doing whatever we can to make our community an even better place to live.
I like the way the Message Bible puts Paul’s words: In light of all this, here’s what I want you to do…I want you to get out there and walk’better yet, run!’on the road God called you to travel. I don’t want any of you sitting around on your hands. I don’t want anyone strolling off, down some path that goes nowhere? (Ephesians 4:1).
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is Senior Pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church.
This has been a time to soak in a balmy season, to indulge in a slow pace of ‘smelling the roses? and to find rejuvenation, rest, replenishment and refilling.
What a great season to just relax and just let the good stuff of life wash over us!
But ? we can see the end; the list of tasks lies ahead. A tsunami of things inked on our calendar gathers before us and threatens to barrel down in an avalanche of demands.
Soon we will be consumed by soccer, homework, budgets, deadlines, catch-up clean-up, follow-up and a myriad of things that must be done to keep our head above water.
Summer hasn’t even ended and we are already anxious because we must get things done. We are a people that must get things done.
But we are also a people created for another purpose.
When God gave Moses the Ten Commandments the third thing He said to do was: ‘Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy.?
What’s this mean? Another thing to get done? – Another thing to add to our list?
No ? not at all.
Sabbath is an original Hebrew word of the bible and it means to rest, to cease exertion.
Like summer that arrives on our calendar and refreshes us, Sabbath, or rest – specifically rest with God – is something that also comes to us and refreshes us.
This rest and refreshment is something that God does FOR us.
What does that mean? God wants us to experience Sabbath and to rest in Him. He wants us to step back from our hectic lives and listen to what he has to say to us; He has a lot to say about how much He cares about us.
He does not want us to drown in our need to get things done and find ourselves in despair. He wants us to hear that he has a better plan for us than just getting things done.
So as summer comes to a close and the events of the new season threaten to consume our joy, we can stop, listen and take in the rest of this ‘ongoing Sabbath? season that He has for us.
Our value does not come from the accomplishment of the things we do. When we rest in His Words to us we see that we are refreshed not because we did stuff but because He does stuff ? we are the people He loves.
What a great season to just relax and just let the good stuff of life wash over us!
Bill Northend is a Lutheran Pastor at TheGatheringPlace in Davisburg.
There is a new energy and excitement in the air. It’s not politics or religion, it’s not in church or in state; but in consciousness. A New Birth is preparing to emerge, not only individually or locally but universally, in all of humanity.
The pregnancy is obvious to those of us with eyes to see. Change is occurring at every level of experience. It can be uncomfortable, sometimes painful.
The human mind, the ego or local self, is full of fear, doubt and worry. Outer appearances don’t necessarily look the way we want them to look. If we are unaware of the divine process that is occurring within us we may think something is wrong, bad or sinful.
We may try to hide, run or fix it.
If we are aware of the divine process that is occurring within us we can move forward with confident assurance that God is in charge and that things are coming together in divine order and divine timing. Truly, ‘all things work together for good? (Romans 8:28.)
I recently attended a conference where futurist Barbara Marx Hubbard was the keynote speaker.
She spoke on ‘A New Vision for Humanity?, the vision of humanity’s conscious evolution into a universal human, from ego to essence, a co-creator of new worlds.
We are combining efforts for a Planetary Birth Day Party on December 22, 2012. Much of the world is warily anticipating the end of the world as we know it on December 21st, the end of the Mayan Calendar.
Knowing the truth that this is not an ending but a new beginning we are planning for a celebration to welcome the new birth.
The vision for a planetary new birth is the coming shift: an evolutionary quantum leap in consciousness from Ego or Local Self based living to Essence or Universal Self expression, from creature to co-creator.
We can transcend the limitations of Egoic sense consciousness, rising into the Essence of universal consciousness.
We normally observe the world through our physical senses of sight, sound, taste, touch and smell. Here we experience the appearance of separation.
The plants, the animals, people, places and things all appear to be separate from us. There is the appearance of lack and limitation such as when Jesus was challenged by his disciples about how they were to feed the multitudes of people who were gathered on the hillside to be in his presence and to hear him speak.
There were only five loaves of barley bread and two fish offered up by the young man. ‘But what are they among so many people?? (John 6:9,) asked his disciples. Five is symbolic of the darkness of sense consciousness; the appearance of lack and limitation where there is never enough.
The addition of two raises us to seven, symbolic of physical completion, the addition of the psychic senses of clairvoyance and intuition. Now we begin to sense the connecting link between all of creation and of the creator.
Clairvoyance is the inner sense connection between all conscious beings and intuition is our inner sense connection with the infinite, unlimited, eternal, God-Mind: the creative power, the spiritual presence, the ultimate reality that is the essence and the source of all that is, has been and can be.
Jesus was operating from an awareness of the infinite, unlimited, eternal, God-Mind when he had the people sit down to receive what he already knew had been prepared for them.
He gave thanks for what had been made apparent and for the bounty he knew was readily available.
The combined act of the young man’s generosity and Jesus? blessing inspired those who had plenty to share with those who were without and all were satisfied.
Twelve baskets were utilized to gather the remnants of the feast.
Twelve is symbolic of spiritual completion or our twelve spiritual faculties of faith, understanding, will, imagination, zeal, power, strength, love, wisdom, order, elimination and life.
When these are filled with the substance of spirit: God-Mind, a consciousness of oneness with all needed good is achieved and all things are possible. ‘For mortals it is impossible, but for God all things are possible? (Matthew 19:26.)
These are exciting times and we choose to be at peace living in harmony with all that is, knowing and living in unity; conscious of our oneness with God and with each other. Thank you God, for so it is. Amen!
Blessings of peace, joy & love
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior minister of Peace Unity Community
What is more American than baseball, apple pie, and mom? As hard as it is for many in society today, I would answer that question with an expression of my Christian faith.
People today argue from the point of view of freedom FROM religion rather than freedom OF religion and the opportunity to express our faith.
Are we, as a nation, founded on Judeo-Christian principles? Decidedly, yes. If we look at the historical data and the history of our nation with open eyes it becomes very evident.
The Preamble of the Declaration of Independence says: We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal with certain inalienable rights, that among them are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
As you read the Constitutions of all 50 states that make up our great nation you will find reference to God, in many of them directly referencing the Creator.
While there is controversy in the wording, we proclaim we are one nation under God. Our coinage proclaims that it is in God we trust.
The early settlers of our nation gave thanks to God for successful voyage across the stormy seas and for providing them with food needed’in spite of the tragedies and hardships they faced.
We are a people who have been blessed by God. Stop and take a look around you.
Look at the beauty of His creation.
Look at all the material supplies He has poured upon our nation.
Look at how He has guided us as His faithful people for over 200 years. And then turn the other way and see how we have failed God.
We have turned from Him, rejected His guidance and His ways. We have turned from His teachings and when we look at the problems we face as a nation what do we do? We blame God.
God has called us to gather to worship Him and to celebrate the blessings He pours upon us as a society.
We just recently celebrated the freedom we are given to gather in worship as we decorated His skies with colorful of fireworks (thank you donors!) and the plumes of smoke that followed.
Remember God’s people of old who, during the exodus, were led by God by a pillar of cloud by day that covered them and a pillar of fire by night that led the way before them? We, too, are led by God!
Do we see? Do we find the joys and blessings He has in store for us?
Too often we look for the smoke that covers our ways and seek to hide from the light.
Come out of the dark. Come into His Light.
Come and gather around His Word.
Seek Him while He may be found.
Let Him lead.
Do we see it? We are blessed. As we look to Him, Who gives all things, pass those blessings on to others.
When asked how you are, tell the person I am blessed’to be American!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
Did you know that a coalition of businesses, government officials, houses of worship, nonprofits, and schools is forming to build a Habitat for Humanity home here in Clarkston this fall?
Just a few weeks ago several area community leaders met in my office to continue the momentum. Habitat for Humanity’s Oakland County affiliate has agreed to provide project management and support to the movement, starting with the acquisition and renovation of a foreclosed or vacant house in the Clarkston area for a local family.
Clarkston Community Church will provide seed funding and leadership for the project, culminating in a community volunteer effort in September and October.
Upon the renovation of the home in October, the family will move in before Thanksgiving.
A big question is, ‘How will a family be selected??
I think it’s important to clear up several misunderstandings.
First, Habitat homes are NOT just given to people. The family must pay for them, put in sweat equity, and go through extensive training that will help them keep the home.
Secondly, you do NOT have to be absolutely broke, with no income.
There are three basic qualifications to be a Habitat home owner:
DO YOU HAVE NEED? For example, is your current home unsafe? Are you living in someone else’s home? Are you unable to obtain a conventional mortgage?
CAN YOU PAY FOR YOUR NEW HOME? You must have an on-going source of income. The cost of the Habitat will be greatly reduced, but it is not free.
In fact, a family of four generally needs to make between $19,600 and $52,250 a year to qualify.
ARE YOU WILLING TO PARTNER WITH HABITAT? You must be willing to put in sweat equity and take classes that will help you be a successful home owner.
We are in the search mode now! So don’t hesitate!
If you think you may qualify ‘or know someone who might ? go to www.habitatoakland.org and download a free copy of the pre-application form.
Also, if you want to be involved in this Habitat build this fall, contact Habitat for Humanity at 248-338-1843.
‘I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.? – Jesus
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
‘School’s Out? (for summer), by Alice Cooper, was the sound track for my first summer after graduating from high school.
Released the summer before, it was still very popular and played constantly on the AM radio.
‘No more pencils, no more books, no more teacher’s dirty looks.? ‘School’s been blown to pieces.?
Now my son is graduating from high school and the song still strikes a responsive chord with his generation.
Although formal education may end for most of us, school is never truly out. Most of the lessons I’ve learned over the years, most of the practical application stuff that I use came after I graduated from high school, after I graduated from college and after I graduated from seminary. Life is the great teacher and we are lifetime learners.
People sometimes ask if there is a purpose to living, or if they still have lessons to be learned.
And my answer is, if you are still sucking air, walking on the earth and not 3 feet above it or 6 feet below it, you still have a purpose and lessons to learn to prepare you for your next adventure in life on this side or the other.
Our job is to awaken to the possibilities. God is infinite, unlimited, eternal existence and we are made in the image and after the likeness of this infinite, unlimited, eternal existence.
We stagnate when we are full of ourselves and are not open to new and creative ideas for life and living. And, stagnation is death. As I gain more experience with this adventure called life and living, the more I know I don’t know.
When I graduated from high school I knew it all. Full of myself I had to go through periods of darkness, times of pain and suffering in order to be opened to a greater level of awareness.
Times of soul searching, experimenting with alternative spiritual paths, counter culture and mind dynamics, etc., have led me to a place where I know it’s not about having the right answers but being able to ask the right questions.
The more I know, the more I know I don’t know. Eventually I imagine that I will know nothing and since nothing is greater than God that must surely be the epitome of understanding: Nirvana, Samadhi, Heaven, Bliss.
Today the sun is shining. Tomorrow it may rain and storm.
And, the sun is always shining above the clouds; the light of God is always constantly, continually, consistently shining in and through and as you, as me.
Above the darkness of sense consciousness, beyond the feelings of loss and fear, transcending the error beliefs in lack and limitation; spiritual awareness awaits our conscious recognition.
I trust that you will remember to plug into your spiritual community this summer. Here we remember to celebrate life and connect with the infinite, unlimited possibilities for expression as children of God. ‘Where two or three are gathered? (Mt. 18:20) there is a greater energy, a transcendent reality, a higher power present. Here you can receive support to realize your potential for peace, wholeness and abundance in unity with your spiritual community.
Blessings of peace, joy & love
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior pastor of Peace Unity Church and Holistic Center
Europe’s financial crisis is still making news and shaking the world markets. Financial uncertainty reigns because of the inability to deal with financial problems in an immediate way.
The prevailing logic is that they must do something now to give the markets and people a sense of security in the future. However, security in the future can only come if they are willing to deal with some very difficult choices now. The problem is that no one wants to suffer now or in the future.
The people do not want to be held responsible for past choices that have put their financial security in jeopardy. In the midst of this global crisis, governments are falling and the ones left standing are scrambling to hold on to power by giving the people what they want.
Many people say that we should learn from the mistakes of the great depression and spend money to spur economic development. They tell us that the way out of our debt problems is to spend more money.
The problem with the Great Depression was that the governments were afraid to spend us back to prosperity.
The truth is’government programs didn’t pull us out as much as World War 2. There are many different debates as to what pulled us out, but I do know something that sustained 60 years of economic growth.
The generation of the great depression came out of that time with a lesson of financial freedom.
They came out with the understanding of the need to save money and plan for the future, without ‘assuming? life would always be without a crisis.
That mentality produced a generation of people with the character of sacrifice and responsibility, which my generation benefited from.
I may not know how government economics work enough to have an intelligent argument on world finance, but I do know the impact of character and proper principles. Macroeconomics may be debatable; but for me, the micro is about personal character and integrity. When we deal with the core issue, we will find that some of the bigger issues will take care of themselves.
This brings me back to the impact of World War 2. For the United States, it certainly is true that the war immediately cured our lack of jobs. Sending millions of people to war, and enlisting the women to replace them, had a great impact on the economy.
The fact that the industrial might of Europe and Asia were destroyed in the war put America in a very good position to become the economic leader of the world. Another amazing contribution was the development of the character of ‘sacrifice of the individual for the greater cause of democracy and freedom.?
The generation that faced the Great Depression was now facing the evils of totalitarianism. The first crisis that they faced concerned economic well-being; now, their very freedom to live as they saw fit was being challenged. They rallied to the cause.
Again, the challenges they faced formed the character to face the crisis. How did this come about? They were willing to make the sacrifice of the moment in order to secure not only their freedom, but also the generations that would follow.
During this Memorial Day season, we should remind ourselves of the great sacrifices that others have made for us. Their sacrifice laid the foundation for the time of great blessing that we have experience for many years. The greatest honor we can bestow on someone is when we set ourselves to emulate his or her example. We need to rally ourselves in this time of great crisis, to willingly sacrifice for the future generations.
In the 1930’s, most of Europe chose to listen to despots. They followed men who promised them easy solutions by blaming their plight on others. The result was people trying to take from others. Is history repeating itself?
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
I am excited about some networking currently going on here in Clarkston. Our church has participated in several Habitat builds in Pontiac.
Recently, however, we’ve been discussing the possibility of a build in Clarkston.
With our tough economic times, many people even in Clarkston have lost homes. Wouldn’t it be great if we could help some of these families get back on their feet?
We are seeking to form a coalition of businesses, government officials, houses of worship, nonprofits, and schools to connect with people in Clarkston who are in need of a hand up–especially people who need safe, decent, affordable housing.
Habitat for Humanity’s Oakland County affiliate has agreed to provide project management and support to the movement, starting with the acquisition and renovation of a foreclosed or vacant house in the Clarkston area for a local family.
Clarkston Community Church will provide seed funding and leadership for the project, culminating in a community volunteer effort in September and October.
Upon the renovation of the home in October, the family will move in before Thanksgiving.
Habitat for Humanity will help coordinate various community education, training, and work projects to go along with the effort.
The total budget for the home renovation project will be $100,000 and will require 100 – 150 volunteers.
There are all sorts of ways to contribute. Obviously, money is a big factor. If many organizations from around town cooperate, we can easily raise the money to build a house.
For those physically able, it will be fun to swing a hammer or paint or put up dry wall. We will need people to prepare lunches and park cars.
No matter what your skill level, there will be something to do. What a great way to build a sense of community!
Maybe you would like to get involved? Maybe you have someone in mind that is in need of a house? I encourage you to give me a call (248-625-1323).
‘I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.? – Jesus
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
April 22, 1970, the date of the first modern Earth Day observance, found me and my junior high school classmates stumbling through the mountains of Oregon’s Coast Range planting fir trees and picking up garbage in what was then known as the Tillamook Burn.
The Tillamook Burn was the site of a series of horrendous forest fires in the 1930’s and 40’s. Over 700,000 acres of 400-year-old fir trees were lost due to the fires that were caused by careless logging operations and smokers whipped up by coastal winds. The first fire burned for nearly 3 weeks before seasonal rains doused the flames.
There in 1970, over 36 years after the initial burn, the skeletons of the burned trees still dwarfed the young men and women who were hopefully planting year-old seedlings into the fertile mountain soil. The little yearlings only hinting at the potential they contained.
In 1973, the Tillamook Burn was officially renamed the Tillamook State Forest. This was a testament to 24 years of reforestation efforts where millions of seedlings had been planted by volunteers and lumber company reforestation teams. Yet, even today, the forest is but a shadow of what it had been and will again be long after all of us who participated in the replanting are gone.
I remember getting off of the school bus at the end of the day and walking behind my buddy Billy. Billy pulled out a stick of gum, popped it in his mouth and threw the wrapper on the ground. I yelled, ‘Billy, what the (heck) are you doing? We just spent the day picking up garbage and here you are trashing our street.? He just laughed. I picked up the wrapper and put it in my pocket.
My oldest boy is a member of the Clarkston High School Robotics team, Team RUSH. Part of their public service activities is to clean up after home football games. I have participated on a number of occasions and have made the observation that people can be such pigs. I sometimes wonder if they know what a garbage can is. Piles of cups, wrappers, junk of all kinds are casually left behind by the fans as if the world is their toilet. This experience has certainly awakened the kids who are volunteering to be more conscious of their actions.
People often ask, ‘What would Jesus do?? I can’t imagine Jesus throwing his trash to the side of the road or leaving it for others to pick up after him. ‘The kingdom of Heaven is at hand.? Matthew 4:17. ‘The kingdom of God is in the midst of you.? Luke 17:21. In Genesis we are told that we have dominion over all the earth, vs. 1:26,28. Dominion includes caretaking and stewardship and doesn’t promote trashing the planet. I believe the Good Shepherd would also be the Good Steward of God’s kingdom on earth.
‘It (the Kingdom) will not come by watching for it. It will not be said, ‘Look, here!? or ‘Look, there!? Rather, the Father’s kingdom is spread out upon the earth, and people don’t see it.? The Gospel of Thomas 113.
Earth Day 2012, with all its projects and activities, will have come and gone by the time you read this. Truly every day is Earth Day when we accept our responsibility to be good stewards. We have the ability to respond with peace, joy and love as we engage in this sacred service. May we all be awakened to the spiritual path of sacred service in God’s kingdom on earth.
Blessings of peace, joy & love
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
How difficult life can be! Think of all the things put on our plate on a regular basis. First, there is the full schedule, then having to work overtime to complicate matters even more.
There are the sports schedules or the recreation times, making sure we get to the Club and spend time with our friends. There are all the family commitments and’life gets pretty hectic, doesn’t it?
During His ministry, Jesus would often invite the disciples to get away for just a while.
It might mean a trip up a hillside or journey to the Mount of Olives. Often they would spend time together relaxing in the garden called Gethsemane.
Yet that garden would carry a foreboding eeriness as Jesus took His disciples there on the night of His arrest and trial. From the moment of His arrest it all moved so quickly. The trial. The flogging. The crucifixion. The death and burial.
Maybe you can identify with the heavy hearts of Jesus? followers when, on the third day, the women headed to the tomb to finish preparing the body for death and the disciples hid behind locked doors out of fear.
The sorrow can be overwhelming and crippling, making life itself a heavy burden.
But then the ray of light begins to shine through. That first ray across the tomb that brings a little joy to our life.
We enter where there should be death and we find life. We hear the words spoken, proclaimed: Why do you seek the living among the dead? He is not here but has risen. (Luke 24:5-6) What a change in mood, what a change in attitude!
There are many who come to hear only those messages of joy. Maybe we feel obligated to come at Christmas and Easter because that is the thing to do. What about our faith the rest of the year? Do you believe in God?
Many say they do but realize that even the devil believes in God’and knows Him and fears Him! Can we say the same? The day of judgment will come. Where will we stand on the day of the resurrection of all the dead?
God is not seeking only a few hours of our life.
He wants all of our life and all of our devotion. God wants a relationship, a solid relationship with each of us. He wants us to experience the birth and the death of Jesus but He offers us so much more.
Now that we have experienced the Resurrection again, take time to resurrect the relationship God would have with you.
Take time to be with Him each day as you open His Word and pray.
Take time to grow, joining with other Christians, in weekly worship. Take time to experience both the highs and the lows of the Christian year as you spend time with Him.
And then, as Paul Harvey used to remind us, then you will know the rest of the story. A blessed Resurrection to you!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
Over the years I have prayed a lot of prayers for others, for myself and for situations in the world.
Sometimes these prayers clearly seem to have been heard and answered. Sometimes the situation I was praying about was resolved or the person got better. And there have been times I’ve experienced answers to prayers that can only be explained by a miracle.
I believe in the power of prayer and I have many experiences that lead me to believe even more deeply that God has heard and answered my prayers.
However, I have also had occasions when I have prayed and prayed, and yet nothing seemed to happen. I have prayed for situations that didn’t change and for people who didn’t get better.
I know some of these unanswered prayers were probably self-serving or short-sighted on my part.
But others at least seemed to be about good things that God teaches us to care about.
I think that most people at some point along the journey of faith will wonder if God has heard them. Most of us will wrestle with the question that if God can do anything, then why doesn’t he?
Perhaps you’ve asked questions like these or are even asking them now.
Maybe you have been praying for a job, for your marriage, for your kids, for the health of a loved one, or for peace in our world.
Maybe you’ve wondered if you are praying the right way or with the right motivation.
Maybe you’ve wondered if you have enough faith or perhaps even that because of something in your past that God is somehow withholding an answer.
So how do we deal with all of this?
If we believe that God always hears our prayers (and I certainly do), then the real issue is that God doesn’t always answer our prayers the way we think he should or on our timetable.
In Mark 9 Jesus is speaking with the father of very sick boy who comes to him and says “‘? if you are able to do anything, have pity on us and help us.’ And ? Jesus said to him, ‘If you are able!’All things can be done for the one who believes.’? Immediately the father of the child cried out, ‘I believe; help my unbelief!'”
This really seems to suggest to me that we all struggle with believing sometimes and that Jesus is able and willing to help us even when we have just a little faith. Yet the kind of help we receive, and that is promised, is not always what we expect.
In my life unanswered prayer reminds me that God is God and I’m not, and that we have different perspectives.
In fact, while I may not always like it, some unanswered prayers have really shaped me into the person I am today. It seems to me that the question is really, what is prayer all about?
As I once read, it is “not a vending machine in the sky where we put in a prayer and get out of God what we want or think we need.”
I have come to realize that prayer is first of all not so much something to be answered but rather a conversation with God about what matters.
Prayer is about deepening our relationship with God in all the seasons of life. Prayer is really spending time with God. Prayer is less about informing God or instructing him about how run the universe as it is building a relationship.
Prayer changes me and grows me as a child of God. Prayer opens me to being the “answer” to someone else’s prayer.
And ultimately my experience has been that when I am open to God in prayer, while I may not get what I want, I do get what I really need.
And what I need is to know that “come what may,” I am safe with God and that he will walk with me even “through the valley of the shadow of death.” (Psalm 23)
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Lutheran Church.
Spring: the warm sunny days, the snow is melted, daffodils, crocus, and hyacinths are popping out of the ground; the earth is coming back to life after its long winters nap.
The Equinox is near where the days will once again be longer than the nights; animals come out of hibernation, migratory birds return to the north, and the golf courses reopen.
Renewal, rebirth, resurrection and recreation are common themes along the mystical path.
Osiris, Ra & Benu in Egypt, Mithra and Zarathustra in Persia, Adonis of Syria, the Grecian Phoenix, the Chinese Businiao, the Russian Firebird and a variety of other ancient scriptures, myths and legends from most every culture recount this mystery of death and rebirth, of loss and rediscovery.
The religious aspirant who is seeking a mystical union with the divine routinely participates in rituals reenacting the experience of death and rebirth.
Ritual purification, baptism, fasting, meditation, aligning ourselves with the divine assist us in finding meaning in life through death and rebirth.
Jesus? crucifixion, resurrection and ascension epitomize this mystical process of renewal in mind, body and spirit.
Lent, beginning with Ash Wednesday and culminating on Easter are the Christian aspirants traditional time of ritual opportunity to participate in this mystical process.
The reward is the kingdom. The cross is the mystical path. ?’take up the cross and follow me?? (Mt. 10:38) taken in context means to let go of the beliefs, behaviors and ties to the past that are blocking your awareness of the kingdom and enter into the reality of its presence here and now.
We cross out the negativity represented by the earth and regain the possibilities representative of heaven.
The ever present reality of the kingdom is a dominate message of Jesus in the Gospels. He places it within our reach ‘at hand? (Mt. 4:17) here and now.
He compares it to practices that we can participate in here and now such as sowing good seed, leavening bread, finding buried treasure, and casting our nets.
The key to entering the kingdom is to ‘change and become as children? (Mt. 18:3.) Children are naturally open, receptive and responsive to the leadings of spirit.
They have no defined rules of behavior, regulations of proper conduct, earthly laws to govern their expression except those that are imposed upon them by us adults.
When we are guided by spirit we naturally do the right things, love and honor each other as expressions of the divine, and desire to do only good.
Some native cultures have a practice of seasonally setting aside time to observe their children and emulate their play and activities. This way they reconnect with life anew and experience a rebirth in mind and body.
This is a conscious process. We all feel the urgings of spirit to be more truly authentic, truly who we are as expressions of the divine, children of God.
It is by consciously participating in the process that we realize the kingdom: expressing peace, wholeness and abundance anew in this now moment.
Where ever you are on your spiritual journey, I invite you to make the choice to be renewed, reborn, resurrected and recreated, you can rediscover your divine purpose and path, and enter into an awareness of the kingdom here and now.
Blessings of peace, joy & love
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
Today is Ash Wednesday and Christians from all over the world begin a forty day spiritual journey known as Lent.
The destination is Easter and I’d like to offer a few words that might help you walk the path more successfully. Basically, Lent is about ‘walking alongside? Jesus Christ by imitating him and following his call to conversion.
The forty days of Lent are first of all an imitation of the forty days that Jesus spent in the desert before he began his public work.
He fasted during this time and when the days were over, the devil tempted him just as he had tempted Adam in the Garden of Eden.
Adam disobeyed God’s command and God told him: ‘You are dust and to dust you shall return.?
In this way, God was revealing that death is one of the consequences of sin. The ashes that many receive on their forehead today are a reminder of that reality.
Whenever we purposely do something we know to be wrong, we turn our back on God and start to walk away from the loving Father who created us. We walk away from the source of our life and this route will always be a dead end.
Well, the good news is that Jesus is the new Adam. Instead of turning his back on God as Adam did, Jesus responded in the desert by being faithful to God.
Jesus thwarted temptation. By imitating Jesus? obedience to God, we do an about-face from Adam’s path and turn towards the path of life.
That ‘turning towards? God is exactly what the call to conversion is all about.
There are many ways to reverse course, but there are three things that are especially effective: fasting, prayer, and almsgiving.
These are three signposts of the spiritual life that will always point us in the right direction.
Fasting helps us along the path of conversion when dealing with ourselves; almsgiving directs our goodness towards others, and prayer turns us toward God.
It’s no secret that a child will tend to think about only what he wants when he wants it. Adults have the responsibility to teach children to look beyond themselves.
In a similar way, fasting helps us to be spiritually mature. By giving up something, we are able to see beyond our own immediate needs; our vision is purified.
Fasting directs our vision outside of ourselves. So, in certain sense, fasting prepares us for almsgiving, the path of giving to others. By giving to others we follow the path of Christ who said:
‘It is better to give than to receive.? That, of course, leads us to prayer, which is turning towards God by looking at Jesus Christ. Prayer is the final step in conversion because we direct our minds and hearts towards our final goal: God himself. No matter where you are on the journey may this Lent bring you closer to the final destination. Happy trails!
Fr. Daniel Pajerski, LC, is Formation Director for Everest Academy.
As I was preparing for the morning worship service at Lakeview Church one Sunday, a man from the congregation walked up and offered me something he held in his hand.
I held out my own hand, and in my palm he carefully placed a small yellow blossom with a short green stem attached. A dandelion. A weed.
Normally, I wouldn’t give a little yellow dandelion a second thought. But this time was different. It wasn’t because the dandelion itself was so remarkable, either. In fact, it was much smaller than any one of the million or so that I’ve seen in my own yard, and nearly every other yard in Michigan.
Even the stem seemed too frail and thin to offer much of a future for the little yellow flower. Still I looked at this little blossom with a sense of wonder.
It wasn’t the size or perfection of the flower that amazed me. It was the date of the discovery that made me stop and notice.
See, what makes this event so remarkable is that the Sunday I’m talking about was February 5th, 2012. The man who brought it to me said he found it growing next to the mail box on his way in that morning.
I was so impressed by this little dandelion blossom that I held it up in front of the entire congregation so they could see it too.
I think they all recognized the significance of a dandelion in bloom in February in Michigan. After all, we all know that doesn’t happen.
I’ve lived here all my life, and I’ve never seen a dandelion in February. But does that mean it’s impossible? Is my ability to see something the ultimate test of whether or not it is possible? I sure hope not!
As I looked at that little flower, I wondered how it was that a single blossom appeared on that frail stem.
I thought of all the dandelions I had noticed on the front lawn of the church last year. How many must certainly be waiting in all of our yards, content to sit the winter out, with all of its gray, blustery days and its frigid nights.
I’m amazed that in the middle of all the gray, lifeless vegetation, one little plant persisted through the freezing temperatures, and gave the world a real, yellow, living flower.
Now, I don’t want to give the plant too much credit in affecting the outcome of this situation.
However, I do think that it’s worth noting that the flicker of life in that plant is what brought that blossom into being. It’s part of that God-given desire to not just survive and preserve life, but to celebrate life, and live life.
That little plant could have simply kept one green leaf and it would still be living. But instead, God chose to bless it with a yellow blossom, the part of the plant that develops into seeds and preserves its DNA in another generation of dandelions. That’s the wonder of the February dandelion!
Jesus taught that we are not to worry about everything. He asked, ‘Who, by worrying, can add a single day to his life??
He then suggested that his followers consider the lilies of the field, who neither work or plant or harvest, yet God blesses them with attire that is more beautiful than the robes of kings.
God blessed that little dandelion plant with a yellow blossom, and He has blessings in store for your life if you’ll give Him the opportunity.
See, He won’t force his way into your life. He’s been aware of you since before you were, and He knows everything there is to know about you. He knows the situations in your life, and just what it is that you’re worried about.
If you’re reading this, and you find yourself in the chilly days and nights of a winter season in your own life ? maybe a time when it seems that all the greenness of life has turned to the gray of disappointment and despair, take hope in God’s own promises.
The Old Testament prophet Jeremiah wrote that God has plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.
When you start to feel like all hope is gone, and there’s nothing left to even hope for, remember the wonder of the February dandelion.
If you have questions or comments, or if you would like to receive special prayer consideration, please contact Pastor Jon Grimshaw at blueboss302@charter.net .
This is going to be an interesting year. Watching the political debate and hearing the talk of starting a new war, reading the news of another tragic death of a young person, seeing a fight break out over a minor traffic accident; I wonder when we will learn to live the principles of peace and nonviolence that are at the core of all our religious and spiritual paths?
Monday, Jan. 30 was the 64th anniversary of the death of Mahatma Ghandi and the 1st day of the 15th annual Season for Nonviolence, a national 64-day campaign dedicated to demonstrating that nonviolence is a powerful way to heal, transform, and empower our lives and our communities. We are educating ourselves about the possibilities for peace and nonviolence, and honoring those who are using nonviolence to build a community that honors the dignity and worth of every human being.
Ghandi encouraged us to ‘be the change you wish to see in the world.? Those of us with eyes to see know that violence is not the answer to the violence we see in the world. Violence begets violence and if we keep doing what we always done we’ll keep getting what we’ve always gotten: more violence. The Season for Nonviolence offers the opportunity for people to learn to live the principles of nonviolence for themselves, in their daily lives and in the world.
Martin Luther King Jr, said ‘If we assume that mankind has a right to survive, then we must find an alternative to war and so let us explore the conditions for peace.? These conditions include practicing nonviolence. Our awareness must transcend the limitations of belief, fear and hatred with an awareness of peace and unity. ‘We must either learn to live together as brothers, or we are all going to perish together as fools.?
Buddha said, ‘One’s mind finds no peace, neither enjoys pleasure or delight, nor goes to sleep, nor feels secure while the dart of hatred is stuck in the heart.?
Compassion, love, caring, forgiveness; these are the paths to peace taught by all the world’s religions.
Lao Tse said ‘If there is to be peace in the world, there must be peace in the nations. If there is to be peace in the nations, there must be peace in the cities. If there is to be peace in the cities, there must be peace between neighbors. If there is to be peace between neighbors, there must be peace in the home. If there is to be peace in the home, there must be peace in the heart.?
Muhammad said, ‘Hurt no one, so that no one may hurt you.?
‘Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives.? John 14:27. The world thinks of peace as the absence of conflict. Spirit knows that peace is a transcendent consciousness that is mindful of the ultimate unity of all creation. A transcendent consciousness, such as that demonstrated by Jesus, Ghandi, Martin Luther King Jr. and others, can be in the midst of the conflict that is inherent within the world and be at peace: calm, centered, compassionate.
The Mayan Calendar in 2012begins a new cycle. Astrologers indicate that the solar system has completed a cycle, crossing the Galactic Equator and is entering into a new phase. This can be a time of the growth of our awareness of ‘the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding? Phil. 4:7.
During the Season for Nonviolence we have daily practices designed to foster the growth of our awareness of peace and nonviolence.
For more information see www.agnt.org. Together we can be a force for positive change in our world.
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
When Jesus Christ came to the earth, He came to bring great change. The prophets of the Old Testament foretold of His coming and the dramatic changes it would bring. When He came to His people, the majority of the establishment rejected Him and His message.
They had heard of His coming, and it was actually the catalyst for most of what they did; but when He came, they were not willing to allow the changes to facilitate the new era Jesus Christ had announced. In times of change, it is very difficult for the established system and leadership to adjust to change.
One day, as Jesus was coming into the capitol city of Jerusalem, He literally wept over the city.
He said, ‘O Jerusalem, Jerusalem’How often I wanted to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, but you were not willing!? Jesus Christ knew that their rejection would ultimately lead to their destruction. At the time of His crucifixion, their fear and dread of Jesus came to a head. The ultimate rejection was Jesus Christ being crucified on the cross. He had not done anything wrong; it was just the threat of upsetting the applecart, so to speak, that aroused their anger and brought them to the point of the crucifixion. When Jesus Christ died on the cross, the scriptures tell us that the veil of the temple was torn in half.
The veil represented the old order and how it operated. This tear meant things would never be the same. Unfortunately, the scripture does not give the details; someone must have simply sewn up the tear, because the turmoil subsided and everything went back to the way it was.
Everything stayed the way it was until the total destruction of the city. As Jesus had prophesied, the generation would not pass until everything was impacted by the rejection of Jesus Christ.
To me, this is similar to the times that we are now living in. Everyone knows that the times have changed the world we live in. The Old World Order that prevailed for many years is no longer viable with the advancing of China, India, and much of the former undeveloped world.
The economic order of the last 70 years has been shaken and will never be the same. In 2008, the fissure in our economy took many by surprise.
The impact of the shaking of our system is still obvious, with the turmoil in Europe and the uncertainty of the future of our nation. It seems like the ‘veil has been torn,? but we are simply trying to sew it back up. The debt of the nations, and individuals, has had a terrible effect on our nation and provides an uncertain future for all; yet we are using the old methods to hold it together. Individual debts began to fall when people saw that precarious times had come upon us. Practical thinking started to prevail as people saw the dangers of spending money we didn’t have.
Yet, with the encouragement of the established order, we were admonished to spend ourselves back into prosperity. This past Christmas, they tell us that individual debt has returned to pre-2008 levels’and naturally, government spending hasn’t changed course either. The prophet Jeremiah spoke of a time like this’the people had become hard-hearted because they would not deal with the issues at hand. This is what the scripture tells us will bring change, a change that will transform and secure our future. A change that says, ‘Woe is me for my hurt! My wound is severe. But I say, ‘Truly this is an infirmity, And I must bear it.? (Jeremiah 10:19 NKJV)
This year, I hope that we have someone who is willing to tell us the truth and a people who will respond to the need of the time!
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church
2012 is here and we usher in a new year, but did you know that when it comes to spiritual matters, for many, the year began weeks ago?
As we change calendars and begin a New Year I thought it might be helpful to explain a little bit about a different type of calendar and year, one for the soul.
Many people all over the world follow a calendar called the liturgical year. The whole point of the year is to celebrate the life of Jesus Christ.
It all starts four weeks prior to Christmas, with the season known as Advent.
This first period of the year is named from a Latin word that we can basically translate as ‘coming?.
As you might expect, during the season of Advent, Christians prepare for the birth of Jesus on Christmas day. His birth is a time of such joy that it would be impossible to celebrate it for only a single day.
The celebration of God coming to earth is so momentous that Christmas has its own season within the liturgical year. The Christmas season continues into the first week of January, usually ending on Jan. 6, the feast of the Epiphany.
On this day, Christians recall the day when the wise men brought gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh to the child Jesus, recognizing him as the Savior of the world. With this celebration the Christmas season draws to a close.
The next part of the liturgical year begins with the celebration of the Baptism of Jesus. This inaugurates the part of the year known as ‘ordinary time.?
Ordinary here doesn’t mean that during that time we have to be ordinary and nonchalant about spiritual growth.
The word ordinary is used because during the weeks of ordinary time, no one particular event in the life of Jesus is highlighted. Ordinary time is the longest period of the liturgical year, lasting for 33 or 34 weeks.
This series of weeks is not continuous, however, because it is broken up by the period called the season of Lent.
Lent is a period of forty days beginning on Ash Wednesday. During Lent, the followers of Christ devote themselves in a special way to prayer, sacrifice, and good works.
This time reminds Christians of the forty days Jesus spent in the desert praying and fasting.
Lent is a preparation for the most important events of the whole liturgical year: Jesus? crucifixion on Good Friday and his Resurrection from the dead on Easter Sunday.
Although the time of preparation is long, the period of celebration is even longer. The Easter celebration lasts for fifty days and ends on Pentecost Sunday when Christians celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit and the beginnings of the Church.
You might have noticed that there’s no vacation time on this liturgical calendar. That’s because when it comes to spiritual matters we save our vacation days for heaven.
Fr. Daniel Pajerski, LC, is Formation Director for Everest Academy.
The New Year is already upon us. It always amazes me how fast the time goes. Wasn’t it just a short time ago that we were being warned of an impending disaster in our technology’when we went from 1999 to 2000?
Now we are coming into 2012. Have you heard all the disaster scenarios? The Mayan calendar predicts the end of the world in 2012 and many other sources are confirming disaster is just around the corner.
It is amazing to me how people love to warn of the end, but so few take a realistic long-term view. I am never motivated by any information that encourages short-term thinking. Panic is definitely a motivator for immediate action.
As a person who loves history, I am always motivated to view events from a historical perspective, and as a Christian, I take the long-term view of the future. I do see trends that are leading our nation down a road of disaster.
The contributors to this scenario have been long-term and varied in their influence. The good thing about a long-term view of a disaster is, it gives us the opportunity to do something about the future, and either change it altogether, or at least prevent a ‘worse case? scenario.
By nature, I am an optimist rather then a pessimist, but in the end I am a rationalist.
In other words, we must have a rational explanation of our problems and realistic efforts to change them.
A big part of the problem our country is facing is generational and it will take a generational turn to change it.
I am part of what many have called the ‘baby boomer? generation. As a generation, we have always questioned authority and institutions.
The upheavals of the late 1960’s were the result of a desire to fight against these things because they were often seen as purveyors of injustice.
The end result is a crisis of leadership in our nation and a crisis of function in our government as well as other institutions. To change this situation, we need to have a change in the basic premise of our thoughts and motivations.
We are confronting a moral dilemma. To reverse this crisis, we need to make immediate choices, but we also need a long-range plan of reformation. It would not be the first time that we have done this as a nation.
In the early 1800’s, America was facing many problems that seemed like they would overwhelm our country. Alcohol abuse, family breakdowns, crime, and a general sense of pessimism invaded the land. The problems seemed so great that most people saw them as irreversible and did not hold much hope.
Along came a preacher named ‘Lyman Beecher.? Motivated by his love for the country and his fervent faith, he began a call for reformation.
He said that it had to start in the church and it would be a force to turn the nation around.
His call was generational and his children carried on the burden through various reform efforts. He believed that if we were willing, God was able.
Beecher wasn’t the only voice, but a major voice in those days. There is credible evidence that this spiritual renewal changed our country and had a profound impact on society. A country is not an impersonal thing, but a gathering of people under a single banner. I say, we must once again build our faith and say’God, you can turn our nation around. We must recognize in our prayers that we need to be the vehicles God will use to bring this change.
‘The LORD shall send the rod of Your strength out of Zion. Rule in the midst of Your enemies! Your people shall be volunteers In the day of Your power; In the beauties of holiness, from the womb of the morning, You have the dew of Your youth.? (Psalm 110:2-3 NKJV)
The Rev. Loren Covarubbias is pastor of Mt. Zion Temple.
‘And in that region there were shepherds out in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night. And an angel of the Lord appeared to them and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were filled with fear. And the angel said to them, ‘Be not afraid; for behold, I bring you good news of a great joy which will come to all the people?? Luke 2:8-10
The message of Spirit is clear and consistent; in the stories of the angel’s appearance to the shepherds, to Zechariah (Lk 1:13), to Mary (Lk 1:30) and Joseph (Mt 1:20), it is, ‘Be not afraid.?
We can be tempted to be in fear when life brings us what life brings us.
And fear is not a bad thing, especially when we understand it in the original sense of meaning awe and respect. We fear burning ourselves on a hot stove or falling off a tall building. We respect the power of electricity and of gravity, and have learned to work with them to improve our enjoyment of the physical world.
Similarly, we can work with the power of God to improve our enjoyment of life and living.
Life is filled with joyous possibilities. Some we appreciate and others we don’t. ‘Count it all joy, my brethren, when you meet various trials? (James 1:2)
Each moment is an opportunity to live in love, to be love, showing compassion for ourselves and all others. This is the path of joy. ‘These things I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full.? John 15:11
The shepherds represent the aspects of consciousness that watch over our mental activity, our thoughts and feelings. They were watching ‘over their flock by night.? Night symbolizes darkness of sense consciousness, awareness without inspiration. Yet they were out in the field, open and receptive to the good news of Divine illumination.
The good news being the birth of a special child, ‘Christ the Lord.? ‘And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying ‘Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace among men with whom he is pleased!?? (Lk 2:12-14)
When we are inspired, we offer praise and give glory to a greater reality than we normally participate in, we recognize and give thanks to our higher power; we consciously invoke an awareness of the infinite, unlimited, eternal existence that we call God. We know the peace that is God’s pleasure for us and in us.
The new birth is called ‘Emmanuel? or ‘God with us? (Mt 1:23.) It is a conscious awareness of our intimate connection with the Divine. This is not an egocentric glorification of self. It is a selfless experience of union with the ultimate, infinite, unlimited, eternal existence of the absolute good that is God. From here we can ‘be the change we wish to see in the world.? (Ghandi)
The outer world is a reflection of our inner state of awareness. When we are negative we tend to draw to us experiences to reinforce the negativity.
Likewise, when we are happy, loving and joyous we tend to draw to us experiences to support our joy. And, even those inevitable brushes with unwelcome events and people are easier met with compassion. ‘If you want others to be happy, practice compassion. If you want to be happy, practice compassion.? (The Dalai Lama)
May all that you think, say and do, here, now and always, be in joy with compassion for yourself and all of God’s creation.
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior minister at Peace Unity Church and Holistic Center.
Some things should be clean. I think restaurants and hospitals should be clean. The tools used by my dentist should be clean.
There are lots of things that should be clean in this world. Employees should wash their hands before returning to work. I am less concerned about construction workers or bus drivers than I am about doctors, nurses, and anyone that would touch my food. Clean is good.
There are other things that I am not so sure that need to be clean. An office, for instance, should look used and lived in.
My office could have been cleaner, at least that is what the folks from A&E’s ‘Hoarders? said when they stopped by to help me get organized.
Besides, is a cluttered desk is the sign of a cluttered mind? Or, is a clean desk a sign of a cluttered drawer? Oh well, there are things that should be clean and there are things that should be less clean and a lot more lived in.
For instance, let’s look at the Christmas Story. Not the one with Ralphie and the Red Ryder carbine-action, 200-shot, range model air rifle with a compass in the stock and a thing that tells time.
I’m talking about the first and original Christmas Story where Jesus is born in a manger to Mary and Joseph.
Maybe modern movies make it a little more realistic and gritty. Most of the things I’ve seen, like paintings, show a very quiet Jesus and two tremendously serene parents who are bathed in light emanating from Jesus? crib. It’s all too pretty and clean. I don’t think it was that attractive or calm or clean.
Mary is a young girl, 13 maybe a little older, engaged to Joseph.
She is a virgin. The angel Gabriel visits her and tells her that she is highly favored. This makes her a little nervous.
Maybe she was thinking of Job (Job – long ‘O?). He was a righteous man that God pointed out to Satan. This was not a great thing for Job. He lost his wealth, family, and health in that book.
Yes, he was made whole again with a new family and everything, but it wasn’t an easy road to travel.
Mary is favored by God and she gets to have a baby out of wedlock. This isn’t going to be any easier for her, it appears. This news will disgrace her fianc? and her parents. As a bonus, Mary could have been stoned.
Can you imagine the scene of her telling her parents?
‘Mom. Dad. I thought you should know that I’m pregnant.? Mary’s father starts looking for some kind of weapon and mutters, ‘I’ll kill him!?
‘Dad, it wasn’t Joseph. I’m still a virgin,? she says as she tries to calm her dad down. Her mother weeps softly. ‘This is God’s baby. I promise.?
I don’t think her parents said, ‘Oh, as long as God is the father, we’ll go get the nursery ready.?
I think it was a really difficult time, but it was a time that God saw them through. Christmas is really more like that than what we celebrate today. Today it is happy songs and lights and presents and stuff, but it started out on a different note.
Maybe Christmas needs a little cluttering up.
Someday Jesus will return and in that day Jesus will replace our weeping with joy, our death with life, our chaos with peace, our sorrow with gladness, and our hatred with love.
Until that time, we still have friends dying from cancer and other diseases, friends whose marriages will end, and we will continue to send our children and loved ones to war.
If I am going to have any chance of a Happy and Merry Christmas I need room for my doubts and sorrows.
I need a Holiday where I can pray for Jesus to come and come quickly. I need a Holiday where my faith will become sight and my hope a reality.
I need to celebrate His arrival, but more importantly I need to wait for his return. And for that to happen, I need a Christmas that is lot less clean and a lot more complicated and cluttered.
I need this so I can know that I am not alone in what I am going through. Maybe that’s what we all need. What do you think?
Dave can be reached at dave@skinministries.com.
How was your Thanksgiving dinner? Did you spend it with family, friends and other relatives?
Regardless, I venture to say that you ate quite a bit of food. My wife and I went to both of our family’s homes for the holiday and ate a meal and desert at each place and by the time we finished the day, we didn’t think we would ever look at food again the same way as before.
But just as is the case every other year, we awoke the next morning to growling stomachs, reminding us that we needed to eat once again.
Somehow all of the sweet potatoes with melted marshmallows on top, the stuffing and mashed potatoes, and all of the turkey (not to mention the desserts!) did not fill us up to the point of never needing to eat again. Why? Because we need food ? we need nourishment.
The same was the case as Jesus sat down with a Samaritan woman during the daytime as she had come to a well to draw water for her family.
Knowing her situation as only Jesus could, he asked if she could give him a drink from the well; an odd question for a Jewish man to ask a Samaritan woman for many reasons.
First of all, Jews and Samaritans did not associate with one another; the Jews believed the Samaritans to be a lesser important group of people and therefore did their best to stay away from them at all cost.
Secondly, it was against the custom of the day for a Jewish man to associate alone with a woman; after all, what would people think if they were to see this encounter play out from afar?
But Jesus had a bigger purpose. When the Samaritan woman questioned her qualifications to even associate with Jesus, he simply tells her that if she knew who he was, she would ask him for a drink and ‘he would have given [her] living water? (John 4:10b)
In other words, if she had any idea who Jesus was, she would seek out what he had to offer her ? life giving water that quenches thirst to the point of never needing anything else. Jesus would have offered her a life that was more fulfilling and enriching than anything she could have ever dreamed of.
You see unlike Thanksgiving meals and family get-togethers that hold the possibility of leaving you depressed and uncomfortably full, only to be hungry again in a few hours, Jesus offers something that fills eternally the need in our life for relationship with God.
In verse 13 Jesus responds saying, ‘Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks the water I give him will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.?
Are you left ‘hungry? this week after Thanksgiving? Are you left with a pit in your stomach after a day of dining and sharing life with family?
Jesus has the solution ? him! Whether it is a relationship in your life that is leaving you wanting more, a failed attempt at success after a life of climbing the corporate ladder, or the bottle at the bar that ultimately leaves you wanting more, Jesus offers life-giving ‘water? that will never leave you thirsty’never leave you wanting anything else.
My question is, are you hungry/thirsty today? If you don’t have a church home, I would like to personally invite you to worship with us at Lake Louise Church of the Nazarene, 2300 S. Ortonville Road just south of Bullfrogs.
During this Advent season, we are preparing our hearts to celebrate the birth of Christ and I would love the opportunity to share that time with you and your family. May God richly bless you and your family this Christmas and New Year!
The Rev. Matt Bailey is pastor of Lake Louise Church of the Nazarene.
It’s not uncommon to see a football player celebrating a touchdown by looking up and pointing to the sky.
Did you ever wonder what he might be looking at? Was he pointing to the replay of his spectacular catch? Did he spot a very exotic bird right after he crossed the goal line and want everyone else to see it too?
I bet if you were to put on some cleats and go down on the field at that very moment you’d probably only see what he sees: a clear blue sky.
Then again, those of us who try our best to think about spiritual things prefer to give those celebrations a spiritual interpretation.
In those moments I like to think he’s pointing beyond the sky and thanking God. A football player, or anybody for that matter, who can see beyond what his eyes tell him is a person who has faith.
Another example might help. Back when a phone call was only a dime, two mischievous young men were in Grand Central Station.
They saw a boy they knew who was notorious for trying to make easy money. One of his favorite things to do was to fish for coins in the pay phones that lined one of the walls of the station.
As the young men were watching, the boy came to one phone, found it empty and tried the next one. Whenever he found a dime, he would keep it.
Then something odd happened. He reached into one of the coin slots, pulled something out, looked at it with disgust and threw it on the ground.
The two observers were baffled about what had caused him such aggravation. A few minutes later they walked over, and picked up the object of scorn: a penny.
The next day, the two young pranksters decided to do an experiment. Hoping to see the boy again, they planted a penny in ten consecutive pay phones.
Sure enough, the boy came around. He poked his fingers into the first slot, grabbed a penny, decided it wasn’t what he was looking for and jettisoned it to the ground.
He came to the second phone and did the same thing?10 times in a row.
The pranksters couldn’t believe it. The boy had failed to discover the very thing he was looking for. He couldn’t see beyond the single penny to see the larger gift he was being offered.
The truth is that God is continually offering us his blessings. They may seem small but over time we should learn to appreciate them.
Faith helps us to do that. It is a virtue that gives our life an added dimension. By faith we’re able to appreciate the simplest things in life more deeply.
His blessings might not come in the packages we expect, but they are present for anyone who has the eyes of faith to recognize them.
Fr. Daniel Pajerski, LC, is Formation Director for Everest Collegiate High School and Academy
‘In the temple he found those who were selling oxen and sheep and pigeons, and the money-changers at their business. And making a whip of cords, he drove them all, with the sheep and oxen, out of the temple; and he poured out the coins of the money-changers and overturned their tables.? John 2:14,15
Jesus was a trouble maker. He questioned authority and challenged the status quo.
He worked on the Sabbath: picking grain (Mt.12:1) and healing the man born blind (Jn.9:14), offenses that were punished by death under Old Testament Law (Ex.30:15).
He challenged the authorities. He called them vipers (Mt.3:7), hypocrites (Mt.23:13) and accused them of being liars and offspring of the Devil (Jn.8:44.)
He challenged their scriptural teachings (Mt.16:12) and evidenced their failure to follow the great commandment (Mt.22:37-39) in the story of the Good Samaritan (Lk.10:29-37.) Etc., etc., etc.
The current Occupy Movement is questioning authority and challenging the status quo.
You may support their cause or be merely sympathetic to their issues or be repulsed by their actions and think they should be thrown in jail; we have to acknowledge that there is an incredible level of discontent with business as usual.
The Tea Party is based upon the same energy with a different agenda.
As I listened to two of the current Occupy Movement organizers being interviewed on NPR the other day, three words stuck out for me: conscience, conversation and culture.
They are asking that corporations, business owners, politicians, everyone have a conscience and do what is for the highest good of all. This seems reasonable to me, a ‘do unto others as you would have them do unto you? (Mt.7:12) mentality.
The current economic system can be likened to a game of musical chairs; there seem to be fewer and fewer chairs while more and more people want to play.
Wall Street, the President, Congress; none of that can or will solve our problems. We the people have to engage the conversation; we have to initiate the discussion of the solutions that really work. Jesus didn’t blame the man who was robbed; he praised the Samaritan who helped him get back on his feet.
Capitalism has proven to be the most successful economic system for innovation and development.
And, the rich are getting richer while the poor are getting poorer. Our culture doesn’t seem to be able to distinguish the benefits of giving people a hand-up from a hand-out. Education, training, assistance are necessary to lift the lower class of income earners up. Lack of jobs causes people to resort to theft to feed their families and the downward cycle accelerates. People need meaningful work.
Family Systems Theory teaches that individuals cannot be understood in isolation. The problem child is a symptom of a dysfunctional family system. It is only when we address the dysfunctional system that true healing can occur. Whether we are talking about a family, a body, or society, true healing requires a shift in how we view the system and how we relate within the system.
What is emerging is a new paradigm; this is the shift. Jesus ushered in a new awareness of our relationship with the infinite, unlimited, eternal existence that is God. Today, we are being called upon to increase our awareness, to awaken to the dysfunction, acknowledge that the system doesn’t work for all, accept our part in perpetuating a dysfunctional system, be alert to the opportunities to foster positive change, ask for Divine guidance and act upon that guidance in ways that truly benefit all.
You are God’s beloved in whom he is well pleased (Mt.3:17, Lk.2:14.)
Blessings of peace, joy & love.
Matthew E. Long is senior minister at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
It’s the time of year again when the trees explode in color before our very eyes, like a display of fireworks.
Nature seems to leave the best for last before the solemn days of winter come.
The change in seasons is something so dramatic that throughout the centuries man has felt the need to mark these changes with various traditions.
The change from autumn to winter is no different. In a few days the night air will be filled with the words ‘trick or treat? and the sidewalks invaded by goblins and witches and a variety of creative costumes.
It’s time for Halloween.
There are many explanations about the origin of Halloween, but there’s no mistaking that our current celebration focuses our attention on spirits and ghosts and on things we believe in but don’t normally see.
I’ve often been asked how a Christian should celebrate Halloween or even if they should celebrate it at all. I wouldn’t presume to offer a perfect answer, but maybe a few thoughts will help.
There is more than one side to the celebration of Halloween so much of what you get out of it depends on your perspective.
How about en example? Anyone who has ever done any type of sketch or drawing will know that you only get a full appreciation of an object when you look at it from different angles.
A door knob, for instance, looks different whether you look at it from the front or from the side.
Well, I would say that the best way to get the full perspective on Halloween is to observe also the day that follows it.
Halloween gets its name because it’s All Hallows Eve, that is, the evening before All Saints Day.
There is something mysterious about the world of ghosts and skeletons and all of us are drawn into the mystery.
Skeletons attract our attention not because of the bones, but because we imagine that once before those bones belonged to a person.
Where that person went is what causes us amazement and even fear. Ghosts and spirits attract our attention because we imagine that they used to inhabit a body.
Why they are not united with their body is what enchants us. All Saints day gives us the answers.
On All Saints Day we look forward to the day when those bones will be united happily with their rightful owner for all eternity in heaven.
On All Saints Day we look forward to the day when that wandering spirit finds true peace and receives his body back forever in paradise.
All Saints Day is the fitting complement to Halloween. Halloween is a reminder of our limits; All Saints Day is a reminder that, for those who love God, life has no limits.
So, by all means have a Happy Halloween? but only if you also have a Happy Day of All Saints.
Fr. Daniel Pajerski, LC, is Formation Director for Everest Academy.
In my last article I talked about the dash. You know ‘that dash between your birth date and death date. You see it in obituaries and on headstones in cemeteries. That dash represents your life.
You cannot control your birthday. You cannot control your death date. At least you’re not supposed to.
However, you can do something with your dash. You can live your dash intentionally. You can live passionately. Love completely. Learn humbly.
The fact is, we are all aging. Our days are numbered.
Speaking of aging, I came across a comedian’s take on aging that I really like.
It says, ‘Do you realize that the only time in our lives when we like to get old is when we’re kids.
‘If you are less than 10 years old you are so excited about aging that you think in fractions. How old are you? I’m four and a half. You are never 36? . You are four and a half going on five. That’s the key.
‘You get into your teens and now they can’t hold you back. You jump to the next number, even a few ahead.
‘How old are you? I’m going to be 16 and you could be 13, but hey you are going to be 16.
‘Then the greatest day of your life ‘you become 21. Even the words sound like a ceremony. You become 21.
‘Yes, but then you turn 30. Ooh, what happened there. Makes you sound like bad milk. He turned, we had to throw him out. There is no fun now, you just soured. What’s wrong? What’s changed?
‘You become 21. You turn 30 and then you are pushing 40.
‘Whoa, put on the brakes. It’s all slipping away. Before you know it you reach 50 and your dreams are gone. But wait, you make it to 60. You didn’t think you would, but you make it. So you become 21, turn 30, push 40, reach 50 and make it to 60. You built up so much speed now that you hit 70.
‘After that it’s a day-to-day thing. You hit Wednesday. You get into your 80’s and every day is a complete cycle. You hit lunch. You turn 4:30. You reach bedtime.
‘It doesn’t end there. Into the 90’s you start going backwards. I was just 92. Then a strange thing happens if you make it over 100 ‘you become a little kid again. I’m 100?.?
Whether you are 8 ? or 90 ?. Live your dash! ‘I have come that they may have life and have it to the full.? (John 10:10)
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
Every time I watch the news, I am always amazed to hear the business news.
The stock market, for example, will make wild moves up or down based on information from the statistics the government sends out or by news from around the world.
When people talk about the economy, they speak about solutions that are so tied to the momentary needs and so few have a long-term solution.
It is obvious from all the reports that this world economic shaking compares to the trauma of the Great Depression. The statistics may not be as bad, but the impact (both in depth and width) certainly is.
By depth, I mean how deep the problem is and by width, how widespread the damage could be in the world.
When I was growing up, the Great Depression represented a watershed moment that required a great overhaul of how we did business.
Like today, there were obviously many opinions about the problem, but it was easily recognized as a structural one.
Just like today, it certainly could be seen as a moral problem, because many of the problems were brought about by improper actions and often motivated by the wrong things.
It could be argued that the solution for the Great Depression was World War II. The Second World War did two things: it opened a market for manufactured goods (in this case weapons) and it also provided a rallying point to pull the people together in a common interest.
Our common interest was simple’survival!
Hopefully, war will not be the catalyst for our recovery at this point in history.
Wouldn’t it be something if we could rally together for our common good so that our country could turn another corner and begin the road to recovery?
The inspiration for this turn will certainly not come from our politicians. It seems that our politicians are symptoms of what ails us as a people.
The change of direction that we now need must come from a higher motive than someone just being elected to office.
I do not discount the value of the political system, but in order for it to succeed, it must be motivated by people who are demanding something besides personal interest.
Whether we are talking about special interest groups, or individual interests, self-centered motivation has become the norm in our society.
We need what the Bible calls a revival. A revival is the stirring of people outside themselves, a turning to something bigger than themselves. The stir can be a higher aspiration, but when we think that this high aspiration is our political agenda, it will often come back to being about us.
When God becomes our higher aspiration, it also opens us up to solutions that are not about us, but indeed something higher than us.
America has gone through many spiritual revivals in our history; time has proven that these revivals, though directed to God, have always brought about positive change in our country.
Even secular history books tell of the three great spiritual awakenings that have shaken our nation throughout our history.
I believe that it is time for another one of those awakenings, or revivals, as I am calling it.
This process not only corrects our actions to produce change, it motivates God to do something for us that we cannot do for ourselves.
The scripture says, ?’if My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.?
I am excited about that prospect and believe it is indeed on the horizon.
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
‘In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.? (Genesis 1:1)
Sometimes it’s good to start at the beginning and remember God.
In the beginning, here, now, always; there is only God. Nothing else exists, just God creating the heavens and the earth. What are the heavens and the earth created out of? God, its all God.
Seven hundred people were arrested in New York on Saturday. It doesn’t matter whether you are disgusted by their actions or support their cause. You may call them freedom fighters or terrorists. You may think of them as out of work bums or leaders of a new wave of reform. The fact remains that the issues they are espousing are real.
Needs serve to turn us to God, God does not create the need nor fulfill the need; our consciousness of God is the fulfillment. The more we focus on the problem or deny its appearance, the more energy we are giving to the problem, the bigger it gets. The more we focus on an awareness of God, growing our consciousness of God as our infinite source and supply, the more we realize the fulfillment of our needs.
Biblical miracles began with a need. The Widow who had nothing but a jar of oil (2kings 4:2) turned to God and her need was fulfilled. The feeding of the 5,000 (Mark 6:41) began with the awareness of a need then Jesus looked to heaven and the need was fulfilled.
We acknowledge the need, we do not deny it, we accept its appearance in our lives. We deny that the appearance of need has the power to control our lives then we turn our awareness toward God as our infinite source and supply. Our awareness of God active in our lives is the fulfillment of every need.
‘In the day that the Lord God made the earth and the heavens?? Genesis 2:4.
Crisis precedes transformation. The 13.7 billion year history of the universe is a series of evolutionary jumps sparked by crisis points.
First there was nothing and then there was something, the universe came into existence. First there was nothing physical then the planets and suns were formed of the dust and gases.
First there was no life then there was plant life.
First there were no multi-cellular life to consume the oxygen build up and then there were animals.
First there was no conscious intelligent life then humans came into existence. Each step is marked by a need for greater emergence of God consciousness.
In biblical symbology: First there was no man then there was Adam. First there was not the awareness of the One God then there was Abraham. First there was no national identity of the children of God and then there was Moses. First there was no awareness of God within and then there was Jesus.
We are at a new crisis point. The Chinese character for crisis includes two symbols that can be interpreted as danger and opportunity. The emphasis is on the danger. This is a crucial point in time that could present a great opportunity for positive change.
What is emerging? What is the next quantum leap going to bring? What is your role to play in this emergence? How are you plugging in to your spiritual community to be a part of the change you wish to see?
Remember it all begins and ends with our awareness of God at work in our lives and affairs. God is our source and our awareness of God is our supply.
Blessings of peace, joy & love
Matthew E. Long is senior minister at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
Here in Michigan, we are beginning to see the first signs of autumn.
As I look out my window, I notice that yellow, brown and red are replacing the green color that predominated throughout the summer season.
I love green. It seems refreshing to me when I see green everywhere.
As the fall season begins, my first thought is ‘Oh no, I’m losing my green world!? My next thought is to think about the white snow cover that will become the dominant color during Michigan’s winter.
For this reason, I am not fond of the fall’even though I hear people talk about the beauty of the fall colors.
My thought is, ‘Do you realize that means winter is coming??
I am not a fan of winter. In the past, people have said, ‘You need to find a winter activity that you like.? In time, I did’I began taking winter vacations to Florida and Mexico. These trips certainly made winter more tolerable for me.
One day, Jesus Christ was speaking with His disciples. They were inquiring about the signs of the last days and His return to restore His Kingdom.
He said to them, ‘Remember the parable of the fig tree. When its branch becomes tender and puts forth leaves, you know that summer is near.?
In other words, each season is unique within itself, but it also speaks of what is going to come after it. If we are watching for seasonal signs, seasons should not take us by surprise.
The scripture also declares, ‘For everything there is a season and a time for every purpose under the heavens.?
We need to know the season that we are in. Although we live our lives according to the season, we must also recognize that it is time to prepare for the next season.
Our country is in a severe economic distress. It took most people by surprise, even though there were many signs of the impending crisis.
Unfortunately, we do not like to live thinking about tomorrow, so we simply choose to live only for today. The scripture tells us that God has made everything beautiful in its time, but it also qualifies that with the statement, ‘Also He has put eternity in our hearts.?
We should not just be a people of the moment; God wants us mindful of eternity. This means that we should always think about and prepare for what is to come.
A good friend of mine, who traveled the whole world, once asked me a probing question. Why do you think the countries with weather similar to Michigan are the most prosperous?
This question is based on a true observation. The industrial and economic wealth of Europe is based in the north, and the same has typically been true in the United States. Throughout the world, tropical countries tend to be poorer than ones in temperate weather zones. My friend’s observation was that changing seasons trained people to think long-term.
One must prepare for each season, knowing that they will only last for a while and you must be ready for the next. Technology is changing the observation of weather and human behavior, but the principle is very real and to the point.
We cannot just live for ‘today.? We must be a people with a long-term plan. From a farmer’s perspective, this means: never use all your seed for food, because you must be prepared for what is to come.
Western society, the United States included, has forsaken long-term planning for short-term comfort.
The idea of suffering, or enduring loss, today for tomorrow’s gain has lost favor with people who demand satisfaction now.
We are already suffering the consequences of that behavior. Will someone arise on the scene who will rally us to live properly, or will we respond to a demagogue who will tell us what we want to hear?
Someone who will point the finger of blame and offer easy answers, or will we return to those principles that made us great and gave us immense blessing in the past.
We cannot solve our modern world with yesterday’s understanding, but we can solve today’s problems with the enduring principles that have a proven track record.
For me, that proven track record is the Word of God that endures from generation to generation and still produces good fruit.
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
Life is good! I actually took a full week off for vacation this summer. Yeah God! With all the activities, teams, committees, work, etc. that I am involved with it wasn’t an easy job to schedule the time. And, we went to my favorite beach. The beach is one that I have been going to since high school, many moons ago.
We have a family cabin there. We hadn’t been there for a couple of years and my eyes tended to focus on the things that were different.
New or remodeled buildings, trees that had grown and needed trimming, the grass that was increasingly encroaching upon the gravel parking area all captured my attention.
Before long I was able to shift my attention away from the changes, some I considered negative while some I viewed as positive, and focus on the essence of what I long for at the beach: sun, sand and the sound of waves rolling onto the shore. These were there in abundance. Life is good!
Life is good when we focus on what is real, eternal, unlimited. And, the world can be a scary place, when we believe in it.
Unemployment is still high, housing prices are low. The stock markets, commodities, etc., are unstable and unsure investments at best. Wars and revolutions are raging. Severe weather seems to be the new normal.
Cancer, AIDS, H1N1 or whatever the newest designer disease is; nuclear fallout from Japan, etc., etc., etc.; no wonder the use of mood altering prescriptions, sleeping pills, stimulants and anti-depressants are on the rise.
‘But take courage; I have conquered the world!? John 16:33.
The Master Teacher gave us the tools for living the good life; to be in the world but not of it (John 8:23, 14:27, 17:16, etc.)
The world is an expression of our belief in the reality of things external; a belief that we could be separate from our good, separate from God.
Conquering the world, we shall know the Truth of our unity as we have a conscious awareness of the Holy Spirit: the whole Spirit of God active within us.
‘In that day you will know that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you? John 14:20, we are one!
The Apostle Paul was genuinely inspired when he wrote, ‘Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind? Romans 12:2.
Jesus said it this way, ‘Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand.? Matthew 4:17. Repent, from the Latin, literally means to think again.
From the ancient Greek its ‘Metanoia? were we experience the transcendent creative power of the word (John 1:1.)
Restated, this quote could be, ‘Think again with a new level of understanding for the ultimate reality of God’s great good is within your reach here and now.?
Mind renewal or regeneration (Matthew 19:28) is the key. The regeneration begins when we stop looking to the outer world as our source.
When I realize God as the Source and my consciousness of God as my supply, all I need and desire is readily provided. The job, the investments, the economy is not the source of my good, God is!
The doctors, the medicines, the environment is the not the source of my good, God is! My spouse, family and friends are not the source of my good, God is!
Through conscious contact with God in prayer and meditation I link my mind with God Mind and draw forth Divine Ideas for expressing health and wholeness, peace and harmony, prosperity and abundance. Life is good!
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
We read from Matthew 13:15 Now when it was evening, the disciples came to him and said, ‘This is a desolate place, and the day is now over; send the crowds away to go into the villages and buy food for themselves.?
In Matthew 13 we read about Jesus feeding the 5,000. Some would tell us that based on this passage that Jesus will give us all that we need in this life.
In fact, we often hear that Jesus promises to take care of all of our needs. That thought is based on this passage among others.
So if God promises to take care of all of our needs, why do you get sick? Why do you or a family member have cancer or die from cancer?
Christ did not come to this earth as an earthly king, but rather as a spiritual king.
So what does that mean? It means that Christ will take care of us. He will provide for us according to His will.
But we must realize that it is not always His will that we don’t get sick, or that we are cured of our illness. And because of sin, He also promises that we will all one day die. But He also promises that all whom the Father gives Him, He will also never abandon.
That means that for all who believe on Jesus Christ, as their Lord and Savior, that He will keep them in His care forever and ever.
For those who believe on Jesus Christ, He will keep them eternally in the one true faith. Christ did not come to this earth to take care of your physical needs, but rather to take care of your spiritual needs.
This miracle had nothing to do with Jesus taking care of all of our physical needs, but that we are to have faith in Him.
Having faith in Jesus Christ, He will spiritually care for us all our days, because He has promised that He will protect all those whom His Father has given Him to take care of.
Believing on Jesus Christ as our only Savior, Jesus promises to keep us in the one true faith.
We will always be the children of God, never to be lost from His fold, never to be taken from Him. We will be His eternally!
This is all because Jesus Christ died on the cross for our sins, and rose from the dead on the third day, and His Holy Spirit opens our hearts and minds to believe this.
By Christ’s death and resurrection through faith in Him, we are assured of our eternal life. No guessing, no worrying, instead, we are His eternally.
This is His promise to us. And what a promise it is, that by believing on Jesus Christ, we will be His forever and ever, living eternally in Heaven with Him! Amen.
The Rev. Kelly Todd is pastor of Christ Lutheran Church.
We are living in a very interesting time. For the United States, this is probably one of the more serious times in our history.
Although we are not in a ‘great depression,? as we were in the 1930’s, we are certainly in the same pressure cooker of distress. From the economic crisis, to the world order being threatened by the lack of certainty in the future’we certainly should see the danger of the time.
Looking back, we must remember how people respond to crisis when the fear of uncertainty begins to motivate behavior. Political upheaval is a very real possibility.
One of the most important things that we must be careful of is a victim mentality. This is what led to the rise of hate that motivated the Holocaust and World War II. In order to manipulate the Germans, Hitler convinced them that they were victims of Jewish ‘conspiracies? and that their economic problems were the result of the mistreatment at the end of World War I.
Hatred and the sense of getting even made them become blinded to the evil of Nazism and Hitler. The Germans were not the exceptions. Violent responses due to anger turned the world upside down. There were many dictators sitting on the sidelines waiting for their opportunity to seize power. Many nations had entered into economic wars through trade protections and other forms of barriers, as people saw their problems from a victim mentality rather than from a perspective of personal responsibility.
Animosity and anger are on the rise in our country and we must be very careful not to allow these emotions to gain a foothold in our minds.
If we allow this, we will respond from our feelings rather the rational thought, which will only create more problems in the end. If we see ourselves as victims, we will go on the defense, or even still, we may go off the offense.
The struggles resulting could implode our world, much like what happened at the onset of World War II. The conflicts over retirement age and benefits could pit the young against the old. Unemployment could pit the hard up against immigrants, legal or undocumented, as so often has been the case in history.
The have-nots could turn on those who have resources, or are not suffering, because we are drawn into comparisons with other people. These are just a few of the causes of both the rise of Nazism and the ensuing conflict with communism that lasted for 60 years. Have we learned any lessons from the past?
We need to be mindful of the past and set our eyes on the goals for our future, with proper planning and personal accountability. In fact, the greatest contributor to our present dilemma is the lack of long-term planning.
Whether government, industry, or individuals; people have forsaken long-term planning for immediate satisfaction or results. Now, we are reaping the harvest of short-term planning and the worst thing we can do is try to come up with a short-term solution. Emotional thinking promotes immediate reactions, motivated by a need for immediate satisfaction.
The Bible says it like this in Hebrews 12:15, ‘looking carefully lest anyone fall short of the grace of God; lest any root of bitterness springing up cause trouble, and by this many become defiled; 16 lest there be any fornicator or profane person like Esau, who for one morsel of food sold his birthright. 17 For you know that afterward, when he wanted to inherit the blessing, he was rejected, for he found no place for repentance, though he sought it diligently with tears.?
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
Remember what it was like?
Two captains were appointed to divide the group into teams. They chose one person after another. You waited in anticipation for your name to be called.
Finally, they chose you! Remember how good that felt? You belonged. You were wanted. You were a part of the group!
Remember, also, what it felt to be left out, what it was like before your name was called.
Do you remember those who remained on the side waiting to be chosen? Remember the hurt and the pain you felt as you saw others chosen before you and, maybe, the glances and the laughter as they seemingly looked at you.
For many those are not fond memories.
We would probably just as soon forget, especially if we were not the most athletic or one of the ‘chosen? from the class group.
When you were chosen did you ever encourage the team to select one of those less likely to be chosen? Did you see the delight on their face when they, too, were chosen?
God did not choose His people because they were the greatest or the most numerous.
He did not pick them because they were the most athletic or the best looking. God chose them out of His great love for them; they were chosen by grace.
Jesus, in the New Testament, tells us: You did not choose Me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and that your fruit should abide so that whatever you ask the Father in My name, He may give it to you. (John 15:16, ESV).
He chose you. Out of all the people there have ever been He chose you. You are special in His sight.
He empowered you through the Holy Spirit, given with the waters of baptism, to be one of God’s own, special, children.
Jesus also tells us: But many who are first will be last, and the last first (Matthew 19:30).
Those who excel in this world and who push to get ahead, relying on their riches and power, exploiting others and seeming to be great in this world will find heaven difficult to grasp.
Whenever we rely on our own efforts we fall short.
Those who are often despised by others, who are rejected and seen as the dregs of this world but rely on God’s grace and Jesus? forgiveness earned on the cross are those who gather at His feet in heaven.
The chosen do not necessarily find life easy. They face many trials in this world. They may suffer and even give their life.
There is great evil around us as we see in the news on a daily basis. Knowing we are chosen, and a better life awaits us in heaven, allows us to endure to His glory’because we ARE chosen.
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
It is already past mid-July, and summer is rushing by’again.
It always seems that there is so little time and so much to do during this brief period of warm, even hot this year, weather in Michigan. I know I so look forward to being able to relax, play and just be together with family and friends.
I also know that these times will not just happen. I have to “make” the time ? literally carve it out of my busy life. I have to intentionally build such time into my schedule and priorities.
Our need to rest and be restored is not something optional. It is necessary. In fact I have discovered that it is built into the very fabric of our lives and it is the way God made us.
You may recall that in Genesis chapter one God spends six days busily creating everything. Then on the seventh day God rests. GOD RESTS!
Why do I sometimes act like I don’t need to stop and rest? Do I really think that I can do without something that even God does do without?
The 3rd Commandment in Exodus 20 says, ‘Remember the sabbath day, and keep it holy. Six days you shall labor and do all your work. But the seventh day is a sabbath to the Lord your God; you shall not do any work??
I try my very best to observe the 10 Commandments, not so that God will love me any more than he already does, but so that I can lead a more healthy and joyful life.
However since Sunday is usually a pretty big work day for me, sabbath-keeping has always been a particular challenge.
Often my attempts to take another day of the week off fail. Perhaps you find it hard too ? packing so many things in to those precious days off that you fail to really rest in God’s love or take time to refocus.
The word holy means set aside for a special purpose or to dedicate to God.
God’s call to rest by setting aside some holy sabbath time breaks our weekly patterns of busyness and achieving, expectations and productivity, competition and pressure.
We can lay aside our to-do lists and do something different.
One author suggests that: ‘If your week is filled with e-mails and telephone calls, turn both machines off for the day.
If your frantic schedule has you traveling all week, a sabbath at home will provide much-needed rest.
If you spend your week cooped up in an office, a sabbath walk in the woods or an afternoon at the park playing with the kids may be just the space you need.?
Sabbath time brings renewal too. Renewal means making things that have become old and familiar new again.
It is a time for us especially to renew our relationships with others and with God.
In the New Testament Jesus sums up all the commandments in this way: ?? you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength’and you shall love your neighbor as yourself? (Mark 12).
Taking sabbath time is really a way of following up on that oft spoken refrain, ‘We really should get together more often.? Getting together with God and with others is not an optional, ‘if I can fit it in kind of thing.?
Rather it is essential to our lives. Focusing attention on God (worship) and on others (sharing God’s love) is what we were made to do, and it makes the rest of our days more meaningful and purposeful.
I hope you have a great summer’and I hope you will take some sabbath time to let God restore your heart and soul.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church.
A song was released a few years ago by a popular recording artist that simply proclaimed that there was ‘no such thing as the real world,? but that it was simply a lie you had to get over.
While I understand the spirit of the song and the artist’s attempts to capture the minds of those frustrated with the realities of this ‘real world,? I do believe that there is in fact a real world out there.
This real world is a world of hurt, fear, letdowns and frustrations.
In this real world, people die, get divorced, lose the family pet to old age, and get into car accidents.
In this real world, there are people who will tell you they care about you, only to turn around and prove the complete opposite to be true.
This is a reality that I tend not to like and would rather that none of us would ever have to deal with.
Many fail to understand how the church can exist in such a world tainted with messiness and junk.
How can an organization that exists to do good, do so in such a reality that we find ourselves in? The answer is clear; it’s not only possible, but it is what we are called to do.
The Bible is not a tool to be used to simply add blessings to the lives of those who seem to have it all together.
It is, in fact, a book that contains the best message ever given, that there is a God who loves us, cares for us, and wants a relationship with us.
It is a book that contains a wonderful message from the God of this universe, creator of all.
The reality is that there is in fact a terrible reality for our world. There are wars, rumors of wars, death, disease and famine.
People hurt other people in action, word and thought, and we tend to care very little about those whom God came to give life to.
So, how do we have a realistic faith?
My response is a question ? how can we not? When confronted with the messiness of the reality we find ourselves in, I am reminded by God’s Word that He has come into our world as Christ, has lived in our neighborhood, so to speak, and has conquered death and hell so that we can have life and have it abundantly.
That does not mean I will be rich. It does not mean I will never get sick. It does not mean that I am immune to the effects of divorce and sin.
What it does mean, is that I have a hope.
A faith message that focuses on an idea that everyone will be okay and that bad things never happens is inaccurate and hurtful to the Kingdom of God.
But so is a message that the reality that we find ourselves in cannot be a place where God can move and affect life-altering change in our hearts and lives.
The reality is that oftentimes our present circumstances are only part of our reality. The parent dying of cancer is reality, but it is not all of reality.
The reality also is that God has a plan for your life, loves you more than anyone else does or could ever love you, and wants to do great things in and through you.
So how can you have faith in this reality we live in? I believe the better question is, how can we have faith without bringing it into the real situations of our daily lives?
The Rev. Matt Bailey is pastor of Lake Louise Church of the Nazarene.
On the fourth of July we finally made it into the Clarkston Parade.
We have talked about it for a couple of years and this year we actually rallied the energy to do it. Our presence was a simple expression that peace begins with all of us, peace is patriotic.
The Pledge of Allegiance includes the declaration that we are ‘one nation under God.?
Jesus told us ‘Blessed are the Peacemakers, for they shall be called children of God? (Matthew 5:9) which tells me that if I am to truly be the child of God that I am, and be ‘under God,? I must be a peacemaker. Peace is Patriotic.
I want to know ‘the peace of God which passes all understanding? (Philippians 4:7) in the midst of all the noise in my life.
I want to know peace when a loved one is angry. I want to know peace when the doctor says what the doctor says.
I want to know peace when the bank account says what the bank account says.
I want to know peace when I am in traffic and the idiot does what the idiot does.
To the extent that I can connect with the wholeness which is God, which is an awareness of the infinite, unlimited eternal presence and power that is God, I can be peace in this now moment.
I was thinking about the 4th of July Parade again and our little part in it.
If we had been walking down the street by ourselves with no other floats, no farm equipment, no bands, no classic cars, I doubt thousands of people would have stood on the side of the road and cheered us on. We would have been largely ignored.
But, in the context of the whole parade, we were an integral part of the whole.
Every part is necessary for the whole, and ‘the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.? (Aristotle)
The parade would not have been the same if any of the parts had been missing and yet if any of the parts were missing the parade would still be whole.
So it is with each one of us, although there is often a consciousness piece that is missing.
We don’t feel whole; we may be sick or tired or in pain. We don’t think we are whole; someone else has more or better stuff than we do.
We don’t realize that we are whole; our attention is on what appears missing not on the reality of God’s all sufficiency in all things.
To realize and actualize our wholeness simply requires an out picturing of the power of faith as directed by our belief system.
‘Your faith has made you whole.? (Mark 5:34)
‘Believe you have received it and it will be yours.? (Mark 11:24)
We can accomplish all things through the power of faith when guided rightly by our beliefs.
If we believe we are whole, we tend to attract and express wholeness.
If we believe we are peaceful we tend to attract and express peace.
If we believe we are prosperous, we tend to attract and express prosperity.
If we believe we are divinely guided and inspired, we tend to attract and express new and creative ways of being.
Examine your beliefs about yourself and the world by asking two questions.
1) Is it true? By which I mean, is it absolutely true, constant, unchanging, and eternally true?
2) Is it helpful? By which I mean, does it contribute to your participation or experience in the greater whole?
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
I am writing this article before the July 4th Fireworks, but I trust it didn’t rain, and the fireworks were awesome in their new location from Everest Academy!
Over the last few months many people have asked us, ‘Why did Clarkston Community Church offer the $10,000 matching challenge?? I want to explain why.
There are three main reasons our church is getting more involved in reaching out to the community.
In case you’re not aware, the matching challenge is just one of the many activities CCC is doing around Clarkston. For example, we are involved with Habitat for Humanity where we build homes for needy families.
We’re involved in blood drives and tutoring and elder care homes. We support Light House and Grace Centers of Hope. The list goes on.
Why do we do these things? One reason is to simply meet needs. There are hurting people ‘the hungry, the poor, the widow, the orphan, and the disadvantaged.
As Christ-followers we believe it is a basic human right to have your needs met. We believe that every person is made in the image of God. The image of God is the basis for human rights.
It’s easy for us to forget how radical and unique that idea is. Philosophers today are having trouble coming up with a morality code, because if all we are is evolved animals, and there is no Creator, no purpose in life ‘if you are not made in the image of God, why should I care about you? Why should I take my time and money to help you?
It’s the Judeo-Christian teaching that gives us a reason and a motive to care about others.
But there’s a second reason we do these things: to follow Jesus.
Much of Jesus? teaching has to do with justice and compassion for the poor and disadvantaged. For too long Christians have gone to church to sing their songs and pray their prayers, and not get out into the streets to really love people.
According to Scripture, faith works. The more we appreciate God’s grace and love in our own lives, we will desire to pass that grace along.
A third reason our church is focusing on doing good deeds in the community is pragmatic: to correct misperceptions.
Christopher Hitchens, a famous atheist who writes books against religion, says, ‘Religion poisons everything.?
A growing number of people in our society believe that religion is what is wrong with this world.
People divide and hate and kill because of their religion. Maybe what we need to do is get rid of religion.
It’s easy to point to churches that fight and crazy pastors that want to protest and burn books.
It’s easy to look back in history at the crusades where Christians killed nonbelievers in the name of Jesus. Many people see Christians as arrogant, hypocritical, and narrow-minded.
What this world desperately needs to see is Christians and churches really living out the teachings of Christ.
People need to know that God is not a cruel, hateful God. In fact, justice reflects the character of God. This is a major theme of the Bible.
Psalm 146:7-9 says, ‘He upholds the cause of the oppressed and gives food to the hungry. The Lord sets prisoners free, the Lord gives sight to the blind, the Lord lifts up those who are bowed down, the Lord loves the righteous. The Lord watches over the alien and sustains the fatherless and the widow, but he frustrates the ways of the wicked.?
Over and over again the Bible says that God is a just God, a compassionate God ‘a God who cares about the poor, the widow, the fatherless, and the hungry.
And people who claim to follow Christ are supposed to reflect the character of God to the world.
So why are we doing these things? To meet needs. To follow Jesus. And to correct misperceptions
Simply put: God wants us to DO SOMETHING for his glory. How about you? What are YOU doing?
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
Have you ever felt like nobody appreciates the work you do? If you have, then you’re in the same boat as the servant in a parable found in the Bible.
The servant had been hard at work all day long plowing in the fields. When he came into the house, instead of receiving accolades, he received orders to start serving dinner. As if that weren’t enough he was supposed to do so humbly, in a spirit of self-forgetfulness.
If this seems to be a hard teaching, we should remember that Jesus provides such parables so that we may learn the way to spiritual maturity. So what lesson can we learn from this?
When we follow the path of service to our neighbor, we should strive to be motivated by a pure love that is concerned about others? welfare. That sounds very idealistic because it is. However, idealistic doesn’t always mean unrealistic.
The truth is that living selflessly is the key that opens us up to exceptional achievements. We bear within ourselves a call to greatness and this greatness is uncovered the more we strive to serve others. An example will help.
A little over a month ago the Navy SEALs made the headlines again. Their training is recognized as the hardest in the world. What type of individual makes it through SEAL training? The one with the biggest biceps? The best athlete? The ones with the most natural talent?
Not so, says Lt. Cmdr. Eric Greitens, a Navy SEAL himself.
He says: ‘Almost all the men who survived possessed one common quality. Even in great pain, faced with the test of their lives, they had the ability to step outside of their own pain, put aside their own fear and ask: How can I help the guy next to me? They had a heart large enough to think about others, to dedicate themselves to a higher purpose.?
When we serve, we build up all those around us and in the process discover that we are capable of much more than we can imagine.
When we are humble servants we come to realize that it is better to give than to receive. We get a taste of what true greatness is all about.
There is one person who shows us this self-giving in a unique way: Jesus himself. He knows what it means to go above and beyond the call of duty. There was no obligation for him to become a defenseless child, yet he did so because he wanted us to be able to approach him.
There was no need for him to experience our limitations of hunger and tiredness, yet he did so because he wanted to bear our burdens. There was no law that said he must die on the cross, yet he did so because his love knows no limits.
When we compare our life to the Divine Master’s we are compelled to say: ‘We are unprofitable servants; we have done what we were obliged to do.?
Fr. Daniel Pajerski, LC, is Formation Director for Everest Collegiate High School and Academy.
We have just celebrated an important milestone in the church, Holy Trinity Sunday, where we boldly and firmly declare that our God is one God manifested to us in three Persons, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
In light of the false teachings that have taken place in the world this is an important declaration of faith.
We are told to honor our fathers and our mothers. In May we celebrated the blessing God gives us in our mothers and this month we remember the blessing of our fathers. It is difficult, if not impossible, to raise children without the presence of both a mother and a father there to give a balanced outlook on life.
At the same time we are reminded of the importance of the example of the father in raising a child in the faith. The absence of a father’s guidance often leads to ambiguity of faith.
At the same time we remember the many young adults who are preparing to step out on their own, maybe for the first time.
I remember the joy (along with the fear and trepidation) of beginning college and then transferring to a school that led me to leave the shelter of the nest.
Even more frightening can be the step out of college and into the work force. It seems the safety net has been withdrawn under that circumstance! What if we fail?
No matter who we are or what we do there are a couple things to remember. First, we all have responsibilities. God gives each of us gifts and He calls us to use those gifts in serving Him.
Even those who might not believe in God have that responsibility because He has given them their gifts.
The second thing to remember is that God is with us at all times. He has promised never to leave us or forsake us. We are reminded in the words of the Psalmist (139) that God knows everything about us and is with us always. He knows us better than we know ourselves because He knit us together.
As we continue on the journey together, bound by the faith we have in Jesus as our Savior, whether we be a dad or a grad, I offer to you the words I have used to guide my life and my ministry.
Solomon, the wisest man to ever live, wrote Commit your work to the LORD, and your plans will be established.
(Proverbs 16:3) What wonderful advice that is! Put it in the Lord’s hands.
Take it to Him in prayer, ask for His guidance on where you should go, let Him guide you to what He would have you do, then listen for His answer and follow where He leads. When He is in control you will not and cannot fail.
God’s blessings as you serve Him as His child.
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
It is with a heavy heart that I am bidding this loving Ortonville community farewell. I have been appointed by my bishop to Ypsilanti First United Methodist Church as of July 1 and am already in full packing mode for our move. I would like to share some closing thoughts and prayers with you who are to continue on your journeys of faith here in this place. I begin with these words from the Apostle Paul to the church at Thessalonica.
1 Thessalonians 5:12-5:22: Now we ask you, brothers, to respect those who work hard among you, who are over you in the Lord and who admonish you. Hold them in the highest regard in love because of their work. Live in peace with each other. And we urge you, brothers, warn those who are idle, encourage the timid, help the weak, be patient with everyone. Make sure that nobody pays back wrong for wrong, but always try to be kind to each other and to everyone else.
Be joyful always; pray continually; give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.
Do not put out the Spirit’s fire; do not treat prophecies with contempt. Test everything. Hold on to the good. Avoid every kind of evil. (NIV)
Serving in this community has been a labor of love and it is important to understand that one cannot separate the two by laboring without loving or loving yet not found laboring ? they simply must exist hand in hand.
Over the course of the last six years of my tenure here in Ortonville, I have witnessed such a wonderful outpouring of the Holy Spirit as witnessed through the prayers, presence and deeds of so many in our community. The support for local missions through your local churches and community groups are a lasting tribute to a true spirit of stewardship and discipleship in love of neighbor.
But history guides us to be ever vigilant in keeping our community safe and healthy. We always need to be on guard for the rise of personal agendas over God’s will for us to live serving and loving our neighbors. Much has been accomplished and yet much more needs to be done. It is critical that we as faithful Christians and good citizens remain committed, involved, and inspiring one another to an ever deepening love and service. New ideas, programs, visions, and goals need to be dreamt, discussed, tried, tested, and implemented where fruitful. May we always remember that it is more important to share the blessings of life than to simply have such blessings. In the reading I provided, Paul is pleased with their work, so he just wanted them to understand that they still need to be on guard so that they don’t rest on their laurels or become routine and mechanical in what they do for Christ and for each other.
More wisdom can be gleaned from this passage in the form of details of how we can continue being productive, spirit-filled, active Christians working for God’s Kingdom. I believe that we must maintain a level of respect for those in authority in our community. We may disagree with their ideas and policies at times, but we should continue to show a modicum of respect for the public office in which they serve. I believe that we should strive to live in peace with our neighbors. One of the best ways for this type of ‘peace? to occur is for all of us to serve with their God-given gifts, letting others use their gifts and then respect and love one another for what God is doing through them.
Remember….the Holy Spirit is alive and at work everywhere and in everyone….the challenge is for us to discern the presence of that power so that we might encourage each spark and fan each flame! Peace is a two-way street! This type of peace comes when all work together to build the Kingdom of God and to serve one another. I agree with the Apostle Paul that we all need to encourage the timid or fainthearted in life and help the weak. This instruction is a command that has nothing to do with age, social status, gender, race, or competence, but with those who are lacking confidence in themselves or their faith. We are all called by our common humanity to walk alongside one another in our lives. We need to lift up everyone and give them the support they need to build their confidence in order to carry on through life. We are to truly love one another!
My time here in Ortonville is drawing to a close but my heart is gladdened by the real and present presence of the Holy Spirit working in and through so many of you here in the greater Ortonville area. I call each of you to recommit your lives to living and giving this community a reason to believe that Jesus Christ is Lord and that God is a loving God. May your growing relationship with God give others cause to seek such a relationship for themselves, through Christ, that is loving, personal, and intimate.I close with these words from the Apostle Paul as my prayer for each of you….. ‘Be joyful always; pray continually; give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.
You all shall remain in my prayers as I hope my family and I remain in yours. God bless!
The Rev Tim Dibble is pastor of Ortonville United Methodist Church
My youngest son recently played the role of the Cowardly Lion in his school’s production of the Wizard of Oz. For those out there who have somehow missed out on experiencing this book, movie, stage production, the Lion is a scaredy cat and travels with his new found friends Dorothy, Scarecrow and Tin Man to ask the Wizard for courage. Dorothy wants to return home to Kansas, the Scarecrow wants brains and the Tin Man wants a heart.
As the story develops there are many adventures where the characters face challenges and express the qualities that they desire. The Lion demonstrates bravery, the Scarecrow intelligence and the Tin Man compassion. In the end, with the Good Witches help, Dorothy realizes there is no place like home and she had the power to go home within her all the time.
They had to go through the adventures and face the challenges they faced in order to realize their potential and to understand what is truly important in life. Things happen in our life for a reason.
‘For everything there is a season and a time for every purpose under heaven.? Ecc. 3:1.
I’m writing this as we head into the Memorial Day weekend, the official start of summer. With any luck and the creek didn’t rise, any more than it already has, I will be putting my vegetable garden in as is my tradition. Later in the summer you will find me watching the corn grow and the flowers bloom.
Having lived on a farm and been a partner in an organic cooperative, I have a definite appreciation for the changes of the seasons. Each is necessary for the successful crop.
Spring brings the new growth, seeds sprouting, flowers blooming. With summer comes the fruitage and fall the harvest. Winter brings the necessary time of rest and renewal required to prepare for the next spring. It can’t be summer all the time; even in the tropics the seasons bring changes of weather, changes in the flowers and vegetation.
My life goes through cycles and seasons. There are times when there is new growth; creative ideas are sprouting, followed by the fruitage of those ideas and the inevitable harvest of the results. And then comes winter, which I often try to resist, with its barren appearances sometimes dark and gloomy.
Eventually I accept where I am at in the cycle and realize that my attempts to make it different are just vanity. As the preacher says, ‘All is vanity and a striving after wind.? Ecc. 1:14. What is, is.
It’s my choice to continue resisting, ignoring, rejecting, complaining, etc., etc., etc., or to acknowledge, accept and embrace the natural flow of life.
‘The kingdom of God is not coming with signs to be observed; nor will they say, ‘Lo here it is!?
or ‘There!? for behold the kingdom of God is in the midst of you.? Luke 17:20-21.
Here and now is what is. Here and now is my time to enjoy. Here and now God is my source. And with God as my Source all I need and desire is readily provided. I open my mind and heart, my thoughts and feelings to be clear channels for Divine Spirit. I am blessed as I am a blessing to others.
And a new season begins.
Blessings of peace, joy & love
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
Several years ago my wife and I were driving down Square Lake road. We were going to visit somebody in the hospital.
The two lanes were being squeezed into one, and the traffic was backed up almost a mile. Everybody was cooperating and going single file when I looked in my review mirror and saw a guy flying alongside of us expecting to cut in at the last second.
All of a sudden he boldly started to cut in on me, and I had to pull over and stop or he would have hit me!
Immediately I flushed with anger. I was hot! So I didn’t slow down. I played chicken with him! I had a big van. He had a little sports car. I’m in the right; he’s in the wrong. I’ll show him!
All of a sudden he violently pulled in broadside, rolled down his window, screamed at me and gave me the finger! (And it wasn’t his little finger either!)
I admit that I had the impulse to jump out of my car and pound that guy’s head in! But then I had visions of me sitting in jail and all of my parishioners writing letters to me.
I realized, “This is silly and stupid. Just let it pass!” And within three minutes we were past the traffic jam and on our way.
Anger. We all experience it. Anger can make an otherwise rational person do crazy things.
That experience made me go home and search the Bible regarding anger. Here’s what I learned:
1) Anger is dangerous. “A hot-tempered man starts fights and gets into all kinds of trouble.” (Proverbs 29:22)
2) Anger is a symptom of a deeper problem. “A man’s wisdom gives him patience; it is to his glory to overlook an offense.” (Proverbs 19:11)
If you’re always getting ticked off; if you’re always blaming people for “making you mad,” you then you’re not wise. You just don’t get it. The more you understand your kids, the less you get angry at them. The more you understand your husband/wife, the less you get angry at them.
Anger is never really the root problem in your life. It’s a symptom, a warning light. It tells you something is wrong. Anger usually signals that you’re hurt, you’re fearful, or you’re frustrated.
3)It’s ok to be angry’just express it in healthy ways. It’s ok to be angry. But it’s critical we express our anger in the right ways. We tend to clam up or blow up.
God says, “Grow up.”
“If you are angry, don’t sin by nursing your grudge. Don’t let the sun go down with you still angry’get over it quickly; for when you are angry, you give a mighty foothold to the devil.” Ephesians 4:26-27
God promises us his grace to change. We don’t have to live with grudges and ulcers that eat our lives away. Freedom, forgiveness, and wholeness are ours in Christ.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
I’m finishing a two month series of teachings on the subject of faith. The more I understand faith, the more I also understand lack of faith.
The Bible says, ‘When the Son of Man comes will He find faith on the earth?? If anyone understood faith it was Jesus!
There are a lot of scriptures on the subject of faith. Hebrews 11:6 says, ‘Without Faith it impossible to please God, you must believe that He is and that He is a rewarder of those that diligently seek Him. Faith is the victory that overcomes the world.? Heb. 6:12 declares, ‘Be followers of those, who through faith and patience, inherit the promises.? I Tim. 6:12 encourages us to ‘Fight the good fight of Faith.? Ephesians 6:16 recommends that we ‘Take up the shield of faith that quenches all the fiery darts of the wicked one.?
Matt. 9:29 warns us that ‘According to your faith, be it unto you.? Jesus spoke to many that were healed and He said it was their faith that made them whole. It was not always Jesus? faith that created results.
When the disciples failed to see people delivered, Jesus said, ‘Oh ye of little Faith!? The word ‘Ye? means ‘You? of little faith. He obviously expects us to exercise our own faith. God’s word plainly teaches that God is no respecter of persons, but we can see through scripture that He is a respecter of faith!
How can you tell if someone has Faith or not? I believe we can tell when someone has faith based on the same criteria that Jesus used. Jesus could tell by their words, their actions or, in one case, by the results.
Prayers are offered by many Christians. From my experience, most prayers are not prayers of faith, but rather prayers of hope! But, nowhere in the Bible does it say that the prayer of hope will save the sick.
The word does not say according to your hope be it unto you. Faith is what gets the job done! Every Christian has faith. However, that doesn’t mean every Christian is walking in faith all the time. You can’t be saved without faith! We’re saved by grace through faith, and that not of yourselves, lest any man should boast, but it is the gift of God. Faith allowed salvation to come to you because you heard the gospel message about salvation.
But have you heard the message about your healing? Have you heard the word about your finances? Have you heard the word about the infilling of the Holy Spirit? Have you heard the word about your children? Have you heard the word about your peace, your strength, your love, your joy or your victory?
Even though I’m a Christian I can still get into unbelief! I can get into fear, worry and anxiety. I can even quit or give up in the midst of a battle. I can also fall victim to negative talk. All of these mindsets take me out of faith and into doubt and unbelief.
I didn’t say that when I fall into unbelief, I don’t believe in God or that I’m no longer saved. I’m simply not operating in the Faith that I have inside of me or I don’t know what God’s word says on the matter. We can’t have Faith beyond what we know!
The scriptures are clear that faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God (Rom. 10:17). You can’t truly be in faith until you know God’s word concerning a matter. Faith begins where the will of God is known! When I was younger in the Lord, I remember hearing many people end their prayers with the words ‘If it be thy will.?
It sounded spiritual and humble. I found out that those words can be faith destroying words versus faith building words. We can use those words in some forms of prayer, but I never use those words when I’m praying the prayer of faith.
The way to get faith is to hear the word of God concerning your need. The Bible is the written word, which reveals His will. His Rhema, is the spoken word that we hear with our spiritual ears.
When God speaks to our hearts, it will produce the same faith that the written word does! Get into the Word and take advantage of what belongs to you! Remember, if you’re truly hearing the word, faith will come!
The Rev. Jeff Stonerock is pastor of Victory World Outreach Center.
In 1513 Ponce de Leon set sail in search of waters that would make old people young again.
As we all know it was a futile quest. There is no magical potion or waters or anything else that will make us young again, we are all part of this sinful world and the wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23).
St. Peter wrote to those who were struggling with the life they were living. Some who had believed in Jesus had returned to the old way of life and were wondering why things had not really changed.
Others were struggling with some of the changes they were going through, the trials they faced because they believed in God.
He called them to remain faithful to God’s calling to them. God reminds us through Peter’s writing that we are born again, not of perishable seed but of imperishable (1 Peter 1:22).
Our first birth is, obviously, to earthly parents. They, however, are the same as we are. They were born in sin and they have passed that sin on to us.
As Jesus told Nicodemus, if we want to see the Kingdom of Heaven we need to be born again, born of water and the Spirit (John 3:5).
We need new parents, imperishable and sinless parents. This comes to us in the Spirit of God and the Word of God.
This leads us to live in love for one another, but not just a brotherly love, we are led to the deeper love that God has for us, a love so great it caused Him to send His Son to die for our sins.
Paul must have also wrestled with those who would change what God taught through him.
He tells the Galatians: But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach to you a gospel contrary to the one we preached to you, let him be accursed. (Galatians 1:8)
John, too, struggled with changes to God’s Word. In Revelation 22 he warns against adding to or taking away from the words of prophecy written in the book.
Recently we have heard about changes coming to the Bible. Is this good?
Unfortunately, meanings of words change within a culture and context.
Sometimes words might be changed that will reflect the same thing, for instance we might translate a word ‘joy-filled? replacing the word ‘gay? because society sees it differently today than it did 50 years ago. The same meaning is conveyed.
There are other instances where this is not so. One of the changes proposed is to translate ‘virgin? to ‘young maiden.?
These, in our culture today, are not necessarily parallels as they were in the past.
Not to be thought of as out-of-date or unwilling to change, I do think it is important to hold to the Word of God as it has been given us.
If that makes me old-fashioned, so be it. Better than that, may it make me true to the Word of God.
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
My mother taught me so much. Things like, be yourself, do your best, love forgives, always wear clean underwear, and share with others.
A story that could be true of any of us’One rainy spring day a woman was shopping with her young daughter. She was very busy and had many errands to run. The crowds and traffic were terrible, so they had to skip lunch to get everything done.
Towards the end of the long day the woman was tired and hungry, her feet were aching, and she was more than a little irritable. As they left the last store to finally head for home, the woman turned and said offhandedly to her daughter, ‘Could you believe the nasty look that salesman gave me??
Without skipping a beat her young daughter innocently answered, ‘Mommy, he didn’t give that nasty look to you. You already had it when you went in.? Knowing the young girl was right, the woman paused, said a silent prayer, gave her daughter a hug, and said, ‘Thanks, I really needed that!?
Like it or not, intentionally or unintentionally, carefully or carelessly, we share what we have with others. Whether we are aware of it or not, what we do has an impact on our world and on those around us ‘for better or for worse.? Every time we encounter another human, no matter who they are or what their position is, we have an opportunity to build up or tear down. Wherever we go we can share joy, peace, hope and love, or we can sow irritation, anxiety, frustration, and despair.
I know all of this because my parents taught me. But sometimes I act like I don’t really get it or seem to care. Life can be very difficult and yet in the midst of all things I really want to build others up and share goodness.
Often it is in the little things and in the common everyday experiences that we have our greatest impact ? and our kids, and others, do watch what we do more carefully than we are usually aware.
In Bible times I can imagine Jesus? disciples and others watching him very carefully to see how he handled things ? how he treated people along the journey of life. Was he consistent? How did he deal with interruptions? How did he handle those different from him? How did he react to those who made mistakes? What did he really care about most? How did he share his love and amazing grace with those he met? What did he do when we was tired?
After Easter Jesus appears to his disciples a number of times and shares with them the miracle of his resurrection. Because it was so amazing they were always startled by his presence (Luke 24:37) or they didn’t recognize him (Luke 24:14). And almost always Jesus? first words to his friends were, ‘Peace be with you.?
What wonderful opening words they are and they helped. I long for that peace in my life too. They are words I need to hear today in the midst of the ups and downs of my life. I believe Jesus shares that same peace with me, and because of that I can approach each day with a fresh start and a kind heart.
Following Jesus? example I wonder how our days would be different if we greeted each new morning and each encounter with another person with the words and actions that communicate, ‘Peace be with you.? That is what I really want to share with others, and with God’s help I really can.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
What is our world coming to? Our newspapers, television screens and magazines are riddled with stories of scandal, crime, racial and/or cultural bigotry, and economic despair.
Stories abound about how ‘we? are losing the ‘war on poverty,? the ‘war on drugs,? the ‘war on terrorism,? the ‘war against teenage pregnancy,? as well as the many other such ‘wars? that I am sure spring to your mind.
Even here in what many consider the simple rural life of our area we suffer from the same malaise of negativity, distrust, disrespect, and social meltdown.
We all shake our collective heads and say, ‘Someone really ought to do something about that,? or perhaps, ‘It’s hopeless? or perhaps even, ‘I don’t understand why God allows this or doesn’t do something.?
The fact of the matter is that God has done something. God has done many ‘somethings.? God throughout human history has sent prophets to try and get people to follow life paths that will bring them the peace, dignity, self-fulfillment, and security that we all crave for our lives and the lives of our loved ones.
God sent many prophets to try and relay this message of hope and time and again humankind failed to listen.
Finally God came to us to speak to us directly . . . face to face . . . human being to human being in Jesus Christ, to show us the way to live with one another and for our own well being.
And while we failed again to rally to the truth and sent Jesus to the Cross, God still did not give up on us and rose from the grave that wondrous Easter morning and continues to be with us in the most personal way through the Holy Spirit . . . God’s Spirit that we might finally understand what God had been trying to share with us since we first pulled away from God’s loving authority so very long ago.
It was this message that the Apostle Paul was inspired by God to share with the church at Ephesus and through the Bible to share with us today.
‘Then we will no longer be infants, tossed back and forth by the waves, and blown here and there by every wind of teaching and by the cunning and craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming.
Instead, speaking the truth in love, we will in all things grow up into him who is the Head, that is, Christ.
From him the whole body, joined and held together by every supporting ligament, grows and builds itself up in love, as each part does its work.?
The truth, the answer to the world’s problems, the answers to the issues in our country, our community, and in our own lives has always been the same . . . God has given us everything we need to have and live the lives we seek and long for ourselves and those we love.
We have the resources and talents we need to bring our world into harmony with God’s will and the loving hope that is ours to claim.
The answer we have gotten from God, learned from Jesus, and continually encouraged toward through the Holy Spirit is that the answer is you and I.
It is up to us individually and collectively to take responsibility for our world, our lives, and the care of our neighbors. We are called to live together as Jesus lived with us. We are called to love each other.
We are called to love together, work together, and face our personal and shared issues and challenges together with Christ’s life as our guide.
The answers you seek begin with you and your relationship with God and continue to blossom and reach fulfillment in our relationships with one another.
Jesus lived a life involved with people, in their lives, in their problems, and even in their joys and victories. Jesus can still be the ‘way, the truth, and the life? for you.
The answers you seek always begin and end with your relationships with God and your neighbor.
It takes each of us getting involved. Joining together in common purpose and with a collective will and vision for the world in which we live and raise our families.
Each of us has been created unique, gifted, and priceless. Without each of us, the efforts to bring into being the sort of world we dream of are diminished, but together, as one body, in a personal relationship with God with the support of God’s Spirit, nothing is impossible.
So the next time you see an issue that needs solving, a challenge that needs facing, a problem that needs addressing, consider the possibility that you are part of the answer; you who have been created just for this time in this place and in this situation.
Without you and your gifts and talents joined together in common cause with others, the church suffers, the community suffers, and the world suffers. If not you . . . then who?
The Rev. Tim Dibble is pastor of Ortonville United Methodist Church
Airports in Tampa and West Palm Beach have had to change their designations because of the fact that the North Pole is moving East at a rate of 40 miles per year.
At this rate, in 50 years it will have left Northern Canada, passed through Alaska and reside in Siberia. Scientists predict significant shifts in weather and seismic activity as the Earth’s Magnetic Field adjusts to the movement.
Two of the largest earthquakes in history have occurred in the last seven years with resulting Tsunami’s that have killed hundreds of thousands of people. The latest in Japan has created a nuclear catastrophe second only to Chernobyl and it is still raging.
The struggle for democracy, civil war and terrorism in Africa and the Middle East have led the United States into a third war. And, the National Debt as a result of fighting these wars threatens to bankrupt our children.
A slow recovery, producing few jobs, continues to erode the housing market eliminating equity on Main Street while the Wall Street Bankers are again receiving million dollar bonuses.
Doomsayers on both ends of the political and religious spectrums are having a field day. They are capitalizing on the fear and anger to win their elections, sell their books and convert the disenfranchised.
Be wary of easy answers that lay blame on specific groups of people or end time predictions. We’ve been doing this for a long time and it has never proven correct.
What is easy is finding and living in Heaven.
Jesus located it plainly as being ‘at hand? (Mt. 4:17). It is within our reach, here and now. Heaven is an activity we can participate in today, such as sowing good seed (Mt 13:24), or using yeast to leaven bread (Mt 13:33), or a treasure hidden in a field (Mt 13:44) and it belongs to the poor in spirit: the humble (Mt 5:3).
What is necessary is a shift in consciousness, a shift from looking outside ourselves for evidence of Heaven and to look within for a realization of Heaven on Earth (Mt 6:10).
We will never truly know peace in the outer until we realize peace within. We will never truly know health in the outer until we have an inner realization of Divine Life.
We will never know true prosperity until we have an inner realization of our Divine Source and Supply. ‘Seek first His Kingdom and His righteousness and all these things shall be yours as well.? (Mt 6:33).
Holy week: Palm Sunday, Good Friday, Easter and beyond to Pentecost and the Ascension are symbolic of this necessary shift. The Triumphal Entry, declaring the coming of Christ as King; turning the tables on the money changers, cleansing God’s Temple; The Last Supper and foot washing, the arrest, the trial, the crucifixion, resurrection and ascension demonstrate the process.
Simply stated: Let go and let God’s good come forth.
Jesus showed us the way, it’s up to us to follow his guidance and ‘The works that I do ye shall do and greater works shall ye do.? (John 14:12).
Hoppy Easter!
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior minister at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center
I want to talk about hell for a few minutes, but I’m not really going to talk about hell. And since this isn’t about hell, it isn’t about writing an intellectual dissertation or providing a Scriptural defense of it.
Hell is actually a prop to make my point. What this is really all about is a simple observation about how we talk about things and how people see us.
Recently, there has been a lot of discussion about hell because Rob Bell, a preacher in the Grand Rapids area, wrote a book that asked a lot of questions about it.
What is hell like? Is there a literal hell? Is it eternal torment? Who will be there? How does one keep from going there?
Even before the book was released and read, it was the hottest topic on the internet for a while. It created quite a stir and provoked a wide range of varied, but pointed, responses.
This was mostly in Christian circles. I don’t know a lot of people outside of the Christian community that give a rip about entire sanctification, predestination, eternal security, irresistible grace, prevenient grace, or any of the atonement theories out there.
I don’t know that most folks even really care about hell, but it is the thing we are talking about and our conversations are getting noticed.
Please don’t misunderstand me; I think theology is really important. The point I’m trying to make is that people are watching us.
In the movie ‘Ocean’s Eleven? (2001), Bellagio casino owner Terry Benedict (Andy Garcia) and his girlfriend Tess (Julia Roberts) are in the casino’s art gallery.
As Tess leans in for a kiss, Terry moves away while pointing to a CCTV camera and says, ‘In my hotel, there’s always somebody watching.?
To the world at large, we are all Christians. Even though we have more Christian denominations than Cold Stone has ice cream flavor combinations, most people just see us under one label, ‘Christian.?
What I see when we discuss topics, like hell, is a group of people that sound anything but friendly and kind. I think other people see it, too.
It’s okay to have differing opinions when it comes to theology. It isn’t wrong. Besides, I don’t think we’ll ever agree on everything. Not even the apostles did that.
But we can demonstrate a grace-filled, kind, and understanding attitude even in the midst of our differences.
Jesus said that the world will know we are Christians by the love we have for each other. And yes, that applies even when we are talking about theology.
Discussions about theology are valuable and we should have them. In the process, we need to remember that in this world someone is always watching.
Are our disagreements marked by grace? Is it more important to be right than to love each other? Does it even matter?
The Rev. Dave Gerber is pastor of Skin Ministries.
Our Lenten worships are following Old Testament situations and New Testament applications. This past week we looked at conflict and promise.
Conflict is not something we necessarily like, but it is necessary for growth.
Too much conflict is not a good thing, it can destroy relationships. Sin causes conflict, leads to the destruction of God’s plan for man and man’s ability to follow where God leads.
Disagreements, however, can bring new ideas that allow for discussion and can work productively.
Promise brings us hope and anticipation, often with an element of excitement that shows future possibilities to those involved.
Abraham was given a promise by God: he would be given a son, the legacy of a nation and the forerunner of the Messiah.
Impatient with God’s time, Sarah, his barren wife, took matters into her own hands, telling Abraham to have a child with her maidservant, Hagar. Ishmael’s birth creates conflict between Sarah and Hagar. Isaac, Sarah’s son born later, became the child of promise fulfilled by God.
Jesus? birth is also filled with conflict and promise. It was difficult for Joseph who felts Mary was unfaithful to him and God. He loved her and determined to divorce her quietly, to not bring public disgrace upon her.
Mary was faithful to God and Joseph but was also in conflict. An angel told her she would bear son.
How could this happen? The Holy Spirit would come upon this faithful maidservant of the Lord.
Do you hear the great message of hope given by the angel? Joseph was told that Mary had not been unfaithful to him or God, but was faithful as she followed God’s will and guidance. She was carrying a far-above extraordinary Son’God’s own Son. The promise to Abraham fulfilled in a child, the Messiah to be born.
Jesus faced conflict. Early in His ministry He had conflicts with the religious leaders because He did not fit their traditions. Conflict cost Jesus His life on the cross, where He died for all sins. The only Son of God was not spared, the final sacrifice.
Isaac would reign over a clan that included David and Jesus. That Kingdom would end. Jesus rules over all creation, a clan that includes all true believers in Him.
Romans 10 reminds us: 8But what does it say? ‘The word is near you, in your mouth and in your heart? (that is, the word of faith that we proclaim); 9because, if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. 10For with the heart one believes and is justified, and with the mouth one confesses and is saved. 13For ‘everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.?
Isaac, a child of Law, shows the conflict between God and man; Jesus the Child of Promise, shows the peace He brings between God and man.
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
The Lord has convicted me of something lately. I mutter a lot. You say, ‘What? Not you, Greg! You’re a pastor! And you seem so upbeat and positive!?
Sure I can be upbeat when I’m up front and in public view. But I have to admit that in my own thoughts, I can be quite the mutterer! I can whine and gripe and whisper under my breath with the best of them.
A few Sundays ago I gave a talk from Luke 20, where Jesus warns us not to be grumblers or mutterers.
I admitted to my congregation that the message was for me as well as for them. Do you mutter? On a typical day, what kind of self-talk is going on in your head?
Someone pulls out in front of you. Someone makes some kind of remark at work. You get that phone call. A hundred things can happen that just throw us off balance for that day. We spend the day muttering.
A few weeks ago I was getting gas in my van at a local gas station. I paid inside and walked out.
A man asked me, ‘Is that your van?? I said, ‘Yes.? He said, ‘I’m sorry but I pulled too close and knocked your mirror off.? My nice van! How dare he! We exchanged information and I drove away ‘muttering.
Then I realized, ‘Greg, you have so much to be thankful for. Your family is healthy. You’ve got lots of great friends and a great church. Don’t let a stupid mirror ruin your day.?
And I didn’t. God gave me the grace to be grateful that day.
Gratitude or muttering. It’s a choice. It’s a perspective.
And for those of us who claim faith in Jesus, we have even more reason to be grateful. Philippians 2:14 says, ‘Do everything without complaining or arguing, so that you may become blameless and pure, children of God without fault in a crooked and depraved generation, in which you shine like stars in the universe as you hold out the word of life.?
How much complaining goes on in your family? In your relationships? In your own heart and mind?
1 Peter 4:8 says, ‘Above all, love each other deeply, because love covers over a multitude of sins. Offer hospitality to one another without grumbling. ? (1 Peter 4:8?9)
Do you love people from the heart, deeply? Or do you view most people as problems and you’d just as soon keep your distance? Are you a hospitable person who looks to help people, or do you grumble when some need presents itself and you think, ‘Well, I guess I have to do something??
One of my favorite verses is Philippians 4:4, ‘Rejoice in the Lord always. I will say it again: Rejoice! Let your gentleness be evident to all. The Lord is near.?
Joy! Gentleness! That’s God’s will for our lives! Not grumpiness! Not gruffness! Not muttering! Try it this week. See how it changes your life.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
Over the years I have prayed a lot of prayers for others, for myself and for situations in the world.
Sometimes these prayers clearly seem to have been heard and answered. Sometimes the situation I was praying about was resolved or the person got better. And there have been times I’ve experienced answers to prayers that can only be explained by a miracle.
I believe in the power of prayer and I have many experiences that lead me to believe even more deeply that God has heard and answered my prayers.
However, I have also had occasions when I have prayed and prayed, and yet nothing seemed to happen. I have prayed for situations that didn’t change and for people who didn’t get better.
I know some of these unanswered prayers were probably self-serving or short-sighted on my part.
But others at least seemed to be about good things that God teaches us to care about.
I think that most people at some point along the journey of faith will wonder if God has heard them. Most of us will wrestle with the question that if God can do anything, then why doesn’t he?
Perhaps you’ve asked questions like these or are even asking them now.
Maybe you have been praying for a job, for your marriage, for your kids, for the health of a loved one, or for peace in our world.
Maybe you’ve wondered if you are praying the right way or with the right motivation.
Maybe you’ve wondered if you have enough faith or perhaps even that because of something in your past that God is somehow withholding an answer.
So how do we deal with all of this?
If we believe that God always hears our prayers (and I certainly do), then the real issue is that God doesn’t always answer our prayers the way we think he should or on our timetable.
In Mark 9 Jesus is speaking with the father of very sick boy who comes to him and says ??? if you are able to do anything, have pity on us and help us.? And ? Jesus said to him, ‘If you are able!’All things can be done for the one who believes.?? Immediately the father of the child cried out, ‘I believe; help my unbelief!??
This really seems to suggest to me that we all struggle with believing sometimes and that Jesus is able and willing to help us even when we have just a little faith. Yet the kind of help we receive, and that is promised, is not always what we expect.
In my life unanswered prayer reminds me that God is God and I’m not, and that we have different perspectives.
In fact, while I may not always like it, some unanswered prayers have really shaped me into the person I am today. It seems to me that the question is really, what is prayer all about?
As I once read, it is ‘not a vending machine in the sky where we put in a prayer and get out of God what we want or think we need.?
I have come to realize that prayer is first of all not so much something to be answered but rather a conversation with God about what matters.
Prayer is about deepening our relationship with God in all the seasons of life. Prayer is really spending time with God. Prayer is less about informing God or instructing him about how run the universe as it is building a relationship.
Prayer changes me and grows me as a child of God. Prayer opens me to being the ‘answer? to someone else’s prayer.
And ultimately my experience has been that when I am open to God in prayer, while I may not get what I want, I do get what I really need. And what I need is to know that ‘come what may,? I am safe with God and that he will walk with me even ‘through the valley of the shadow of death.? (Psalm 23)
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Lutheran Church.
Over one hundred years ago, a church raised funds to have stain glass windows installed in the sanctuary.
Families could dedicate the windows they paid for in honor or memory of a loved one. The campaign was successful and the windows are still there today.
However, those windows tell a painful story. The largest of the windows are in a prominent place in the sanctuary and the names of a family are listed in memory.
In the back of the sanctuary, around the corner and hidden on the side of a rarely used stairway is a small stained glass window. The names of that family are rarely seen.
The back story is two of the families of the church at that time were in conflict with each other. One of the families had a member who was chair of the stain glass window campaign committee. It was this person who decided where windows would be placed.
The chair made sure their family window was prominent in the sanctuary and the window of the family they were in conflict with was placed in the obscure stair well.
Our inability to get along and forgive has lasting consequences. Our pride often leads us to believe we are justified in our unforgiving behavior to those who have wronged us.
What we miss is our unwillingness to forgive comes from the same arrogance others have when they think they have or had the right to hurt us.
We have all made mistakes. We have all hurt others and been hurt.
Sometimes those actions are unintended and we are unaware of those we have hurt.
Sometimes we have acted out of a desire to cause others pain.
Jesus taught his disciples must humble themselves. It is what Jesus did when we was willing to take the hurts and sins of the world.
Humility comes from the power of love. It is that same love that builds the foundation for forgiveness and reconciliation.
Who in your life still needs your forgiveness? Whose forgiveness do you still seek?
In a world of hate filled rhetoric causing isolation and distrust, you can always find those who will encourage condemnation over forgiveness.
Look where such attitude is taking us?
The Lord’s Prayer calls us to say, ‘forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.?
Seeking forgiveness is directly tied to forgiving others. Every time I pray that prayer, I am find myself on either end of the equation. Usually I need to be forgiven and forgive at the same time.
It is time for us all to hear two very clear truths. We are forgiven. If no one else will tell you this, God does.
The other truth that must come from our hearts is the forgiveness we give others. When we share this, freedom and real joy is made possible for all.
The Rev. Richard L. Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church
Last weekend my son was in a regional robotics competition with his high school robotics club.
This is his second year and knowing how much fun the competitions are, I bravely offered myself as a volunteer at the event.
All that incredible teenage energy helped carry me through two very long days.
The high level of cooperation between schools and the absence of the malice shown at so many sporting events is very inspirational.
Although they may not have taken home a trophy, every student in the competition was truly a winner.
Just by participating they garner valuable skills in team work, planning, preparation and implementation of their designs, public speaking and so much more.
Having played sports in high school and college, my standing joke for the weekend was that these kids were having way much more fun and without the concussion or broken bones.
Ash Wednesday, March 9, begins the 40 days and 6 Sundays of the Lenten Season, a Season of preparation for the Resurrection Experience on Easter Sunday.
Our theme for Lent this year is Let Go & Let God. God will do for you what you cannot do for yourself.
Conversely, God will not do for you what you can do for yourself. As the saying goes, ‘Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition.?
Praise God for perfect health and live a healthy lifestyle: eat right and get exercise.
Praise God for perfect relationships and be a good partner: get off the couch and relate.
Praise God for the perfect employment and be the perfect employee: love the job you have and you will have the job you love.
Praise God for abundant finances and do what work is yours to do.
Praise God for peace of mind and meditate on the Divine Presence.
Praise God for Divine Guidance and take the next right step, and the next and the next.
We know that God will take care of us. And we have our part to play on God’s team. Just as my son has his role to play on his robotics team. Just as the athlete has their role to play in their sports team.
Each is dependent upon the other team members playing their parts. We let go of the outcome and let God do its mighty work in and through us. We have our part to play.
Our Master Teacher told us to ask, seek and knock.
‘For everyone who asks receives, and everyone who searches finds, and for everyone who knocks the door will be opened.? (Matthew 7:8)
We must do our part. It does no good to simply have faith, to wish and hope and wonder. We must do what is ours to do.
‘Faith without works is barren.? (James 2:20)
When we let go and let God, we release our need to control the outcome knowing that the Divine Will for us is greater that our own selfish wills.
We release our need to know and trust that at the right time we will be shown. We live in an attitude of gratitude for all the great gifts that are now present in our lives.
The gifts of life, of love, peace and harmony, health and wholeness, prosperity and abundance are ours by divine inheritance.
We let this Divine Energy carry us through each day one day at a time.
Have an awesome Lent. I’m pullin? for ya.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is pastor of Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
It seems that the world is in turmoil.
People throughout Northern Africa and the Middle East are rising up over the totalitarian regimes that have controlled them for many years.
Additionally, we have concerns in our country regarding Egypt because the former regime was pro-American in policy. The same is true in Bahrain.
Libya’s leader was at one time on the forefront of terrorism, and if there were a regime change in Iran, it certainly would not be a negative for us or anyone else for that matter.
With everyone wondering where this is all going, I believe it is very important for all of us to remind ourselves that the world is never just out of control.
The scriptures tell us that God rules in the armies of heaven and in the armies of men. Of course, this does not mean that every war is instigated or controlled by God, but it does tell us that God watches over the affairs of men to keep His purposes moving forward.
Many prophets of old have foretold of turmoil in the areas surrounding Israel. In the end, God has ordained that this will be where God will fully manifest His glory in the affairs of men.
Many people claim to have a full understanding of God concerning these events, but my experience has been that they prove to be wrong more often than right.
Throughout history, we have always claimed to know what God wants done and we are always quite helpful (in our minds) getting God’s plans implemented.
This was true even at the time of Christ. Even the people who crucified Jesus Christ thought that they were doing God a favor.
Before His meeting with Jesus Christ and the call to be one of His disciples, the Apostle Paul persecuted the Christian church to the point of consenting to the murder of Christians, all the while thinking He was doing God a favor.
If we really want to do God a favor, we would get out of His way’not help Him clean up the world.
What we can do, however, is to proclaim the gospel of the Kingdom of God. According to the scriptures, this Gospel is the declaration that our God reigns. While man seems to always be messing things up, God is the redeemer of man.
In the Bible, the word redeemer is one who pays for the mistakes of others. God pays for our mistakes, but wouldn’t it be better if we would allow Him to do His work and actually help Him in His endeavor?
While God’s job is to rule the world, our job is to announce His reign to the world. If we would take our rightful place, we would also come to a place of rest where we would cease from our own labors and simply watch God do the real work.
In truth, this is the goal of the Christian walk. In the Old Testament, the people of God were in bondage as slaves in the land of Egypt.
God sent Moses to bring them out of Egypt and take them to the Promised Land, which was foretold to be a land of great blessing.
When the children of Israel came to the Promised Land, it was inhabited by giants; fear of the giants convinced them that God had set them up for disappointment.
The children of Israel refused to go into the land and rebelled against their leader, Moses.
In the Bible, God said, ‘So I declared on oath in my anger, ‘They shall never enter my rest.??
The people of God could not see God offering them rest. Why? The children of Israel were looking at the giants, not the promise of God.
When God makes us a promise, we do not have to make it happen’that job belongs to God. All that we are called to do is believe God and make the announcement of His reign.
Simple plan isn’t it? Unfortunately, we spend our time trying to take control of our world and other people; in the end, we miss both the promise and the rest that God has for us.
The Word declares in Hebrews 4:9-10, ‘There remains therefore a rest for the people of God. For he who has entered His rest has himself also ceased from his works as God did from His.?
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
‘There remained therefore a rest to the people of God. For he that has entered into his rest, he also has ceased from his own works as God did from His. Let us labor therefore to enter into that rest, lest any man fall after the same example of unbelief.? (Heb. 4:9-12) What was this place of rest that Paul was writing about? These scriptures state that rest has to do with ceasing from our own works.
This tells me that people can get caught in the trap of doing things their own way. Rom.14:17 teaches us about this resting place that God has provided for all of us.
The Bible calls this resting place ‘Kingdom Living.? ‘For the Kingdom of God is not meat and drink, but righteousness (right standing with God), peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost.?
Just becoming a Christian does not cause you to be at rest in every area of life. Paul said in the above scripture that we must labor to enter into this rest. That’s right! We must labor to enter into rest! The problem we have is discerning where and when we’re to labor. Laboring in the wrong area is like chasing the wind; you’ll just get tired of chasing.
Finding rest always has to do with walking in God’s wisdom instead of man’s wisdom. We must have the ability to discern the difference. Choosing Gods wisdom will bring us the rest that we desperately want and need. Man’s wisdom brings exhaustion, discouragement, and frustration.
There are many areas in which we need to discern God’s wisdom from man’s wisdom. For example, you will live a continuous battle if you can not discern the difference between lust and love.
Love desires to get at the expense of others and Love desires to get at the expense of self. Love is of God, lust is not! People who constantly experience failing relationships may think their walking in Love, but most of the time they’re not. Love never fails!
We must also be able to discern the difference between condemnation and conviction. Condemnation brings guilt and shame. These emotions will drag you into a fight that you will never win. Conviction, on the other hand, will bring Godly sorrow that leads to repentance.
Conviction leads to freedom; condemnation leads to bondage. Many people are unable to discern the difference between ownership and stewardship. Ownership brings with it a sense of pride and arrogance. We see this in little children when they learn one of their first favorite words, ‘Mine.? Stewardship remains grateful for everything it receives. Stewardship maintains a sense of responsibility for what it’s been given. Unfortunately, I’ve witnessed too often the fight people enter into when they’re going through a divorce or receiving an inheritance. They get worn out fighting for what they think is ‘theirs.?
We also need to discern the difference between trying versus trusting. I hear people say it all the time, ‘I’m trying.? I’m trying, always carries with it the idea of working hard, but never arriving. I know in my own life, I’ve been caught in the cycle of trying and failing. It’s exhausting!
When we move into the place of trusting, we find rest. Trusting is allowing God to do the work, not you. . A former Pastor of mine once had to take a two year sabbatical because he had what he described as ‘Ministry Burnout.? He shared his experience with a fellow minister who politely responded, ‘You mean you were trying to do it yourself?? This minister pinpointed the problem perfectly!
How can we properly discern what kind of wisdom that we’re walking in? First, check your level of peace and rest. God’s wisdom will lead you to peace and rest. If you don’t have peace and rest, you’re probably not walking in God’s wisdom somewhere in your life. It’s easy to begin to take on battles, fights and responsibilities that God never intended for us to have.
Faith is the victory that overcomes the world. Doubt and unbelief kept the Israelites out of the rest God had called them to. Doubt and unbelief are still the biggest enemies to faith and peace. Doubt and unbelief lead us down the road of using man’s wisdom to conquer our battles. The labor were supposed to be involved in is, laboring in word and in doctrine. We’re to seek after God’s wisdom as one would seek after a hidden treasure. God’s word is able to discern the thoughts and intents of the heart. Renew your mind with the word of God! God is not hiding things FROM His children, but rather hiding things FOR His children. When you find His wisdom, you will find?.. Ahhhhh’rest.
The Rev. Jeff Stonerock is pastor of of Victory World Outreach.
My journey of faith has had its ups and downs over the years.
Following Jesus I have been on mountaintops when God seemed so close that I could almost reach out and touch him and everything seemed clear. However at other times along the journey I have walked through deep and difficult valleys where God seemed very far away and I have struggled with doubt and despair.
For each of us the journey of faith includes days in which we feel close to God. At such times God’s will for us seems clear and our faith is strong and sure. Yet at other times we struggle with doubts and questions. During these times God can seem far away, almost as if the connection has been lost. We might even wonder if God is listening to us anymore.
Of course I believe that God never leaves us (see Psalm 23), and I trust that God is with us in all the seasons of life. Yet as people of faith how do we deal with doubts? Or, to put it another way, ‘Do I have enough faith if I still have doubts sometimes??
Doubting and questioning among God’s people is nothing new. The Bible is filled with stories, not only of great faith, but also of those genuinely seeking and struggling to believe.
Of course the most well known example of doubting is Jesus? disciple Thomas, whose very name has become synonymous with doubt. I’ve always thought this unfair, as in many other situations Thomas showed great faith and courage as he tried to follow Jesus (see John 11:16 & 14:5).
Like us, Thomas was a ‘mixed bag? of faith and doubt. And Thomas, like us, is just the kind of person Jesus meets where they are, loves and sends forth to share his Good News of love and grace with others.
Sometimes people of faith view doubt as simply bad or weak or sinful. Sometimes we may even try to suppress or deny it.
Pastor and theologian Helmut Thielicke suggests a different approach calling doubt ‘an envelope with a message inside it.? To find the message we need first to open the envelope and explore it. In the end Thielicke says: ‘A Christian is not someone who doesn’t doubt, but someone who doubts his doubts more than he doubts his faith.? I think this means that faith is trusting God even in the midst of not having all the answers.
As part of the Nazi resistance in WWII he was speaking in the kind of very difficult life situation that causes one to ask questions and to wonder ‘where is God?? and ‘what are God’s people to do?? But he chose to trust God anyway.
I have found in my own experience that when I open the ‘envelope? and wrestle with my questions and doubts, my faith is not diminished, but instead it grows. Certainly doubt left unaddressed can lead to despair and unbelief. However in the context of prayer, a community of faith, and God’s Word we can grow and mature in faith even as we wrestle with our doubts. In fact what often emerges from these efforts is a deep, authentic, gutsy faith that can stand up to the tough circumstances of life, trusting God in the midst of them, even if we don’t have all the answers.
Frederick Buechner in his book Wishful Thinking put it so well when he said, ‘Doubts are the ants in the pants of faith. They keep it awake and moving.?
I still don’t have all the answers to all my questions and doubts. I still have my list of questions I want to ask Jesus when I get to heaven. But in the midst of all of that, I also have a growing faith and a deepening relationship with Jesus. And above all I know that God loves me!
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church.
When major events happen we tend to look for someone to blame. Once we’ve found someone to blame, we think our work is done and then we can get back to normal.
We see this at work around the recent shootings in Tucson. There are a lot of fingers pointing in a lot of different directions. And for every finger pointed away from us there are three pointed back at ourselves.
One thing I do know, we cannot write this off as God’s will, ‘It is not the will of my father who is in heaven that one of these little ones should perish.? (Matthew 18:14) ‘It is the father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.? (Luke 12:32)
It is a call to awaken to a new level of possibility.
Yes, this was a senseless, tragic occurrence and the guilty party(s) should be held accountable for their actions. And, with an understanding of group dynamics and systems theory, I know that we have an opportunity for real change. ‘Repent, (think again with a new level of understanding) for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.? (Matthew 3:2)
This is a Teachable Moment: a traumatic moment filled with emotion that catches our attention and begs us to question our understandings and preconceived notions of reality. Why did this happen? How do we stop this from happening again? Why can’t we all get along? What do we need to change and what can we change to foster harmony? These are some of the questions that we need to answer for ourselves.
The answers are not as simple as some would have us believe. Gun control? Sure it would be great to keep the guns out of the hands of the violent and insane, but it would not be a good idea to take guns away from law abiding citizens. No one politician, individual or group’s rhetoric can be blamed. We all share responsibility for creating the negative mental soil within which the seed for this event germinated. Every thought of anger, blame, shame, selfishness, greed, etc., adds to this negative mental soil.
A child that acts out can only truly be understood and treated within the family system that supports him or her. Dysfunctional families such as a workaholic father and an over protective mother, or a myriad of other destructive, obsessive or compulsive behaviors, are directly related to a child’s acting out. The answer is simple but not easy. The system must be healed in order for the individual to be healed.
In this Teachable Moment we have an opportunity for real change, a call to unity. Will we arise to the occasion, or will we simply go back to sleep and let ‘them? handle it?
You can ‘be the change you wish to see in the world? (Mahatma Ghandi). Right now you can search your heart and mind to purge the negative, destructive thoughts and emotions, and replace them with positive, nurturing, empowering, divine ideas and feelings. And, you can join with others in supporting the growth in awareness of the interdependent whole.
Sunday, Jan. 30 is the beginning of The Season of Nonviolence. This is a 64-day period dedicated to demonstrating that nonviolence is a powerful way to heal, transform, and empower our lives and our communities. See www.agnt.org for more information.
In the words of the song ‘Let there be peace on earth, and let it begin with me.?
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
There is perhaps no better way to begin the new year than to listen to the words of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
We can listen to her words in the prayer called the ‘Magnificat.?
In this prayer we get a glimpse into the heart and mind of Mary as she prepared for the birth of her son Jesus. Let’s take a look at some of the phrases of Mary’s prayer so that we might gain some spiritual insights.
Mary’s prayer begins: ‘My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord; my spirit rejoices in God my savior.?
At Christmas we celebrate a God who is so great that he didn’t flaunt his greatness. Often in life we think that our personal greatness lies in putting ourselves and our own achievements at the forefront.
We might be tempted to believe that others will admire us, respect us, and want to approach us if we show them how great we are.
In highlighting our greatness, however, we can actually distance ourselves from others. The higher we put ourselves on a throne, the farther away from other people we become.
Christians believe that God came down from heaven, not on an inaccessible throne, but in the silence and simplicity of a manger so that we could come close to him without fear.
He allows us to approach him through the greatness of his humility.
Mary must have sensed this wonderful paradox because she also says: ‘He has looked upon his lowly servant.?
She understood that God comes close to the humble of heart. Mary did not deem herself worthy of becoming the mother of the Savior.
She calls herself a ‘lowly servant? and recognizes that, because of her humility, ‘all generations will call me blessed.?
Her prayer continues: ‘The Almighty has done great things for me.?
Mary recognized God as the source of all the good things in her life.
What were these good things? Remember that Mary and Joseph were poor as far as earthly possessions go.
For all those who are poor, Mary is a consolation. She shows us that the true spirit of Christmas can be experienced in the absence of material things.
So, despite the many hardships that people face, there truly is a message of hope every Christmas.
Mary grasped that these good things were spiritual ‘things?: love, friendships, happiness.
She teaches us that among all the beautifully wrapped boxes we find under our Christmas trees, the most precious present is the presence of the Christ child who brings us peace and joy.
Fr. Daniel Pajerski, LC, is Formation Director for Everest Academy.
Heading into the New Year, there are many positive signs that we are starting to come out of the great recession of 2008.
We have faced the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression; however, all the positive signs are encouraging as we move forward. In Michigan, we have faced the brunt of this economic despair as our manufacturing base, always so important in Michigan, has suffered tremendously from the changing economic times.
The election of a new governor and legislature gives us a little more encouragement of possible change to better our situation. In times like this, it is interesting how predictable people can be in their response to the situation. As a pastor for 32 years, I have observed this in the problems that people face individually. Some people always seem to have a positive outlook, where others tend to see things from a more negative point of view. Some see the glass half full, while others see it half empty. How do you see life? The more important question then becomes, ‘Who do you look to in order to help you navigate your response to the situation??
I have found that most people tend to gravitate to people like themselves.
We naturally feel most comfortable being around people like ourselves. Negative people tend to rally around negative information, while the positive people do likewise, looking for those who will reinforce their feelings. The problem with this scenario is that we easily become influenced; being carried with our situations, rather then making the sound decisions that will give us the ability to manage our situations and bring the most positive outcome.
As I read both political and economic writers these days, I see people who can only see one side of life, advocating for solutions without a real solution. In Bible times, they had watchmen upon the walls of the city to keep people aware of impending danger.
The prophet Isaiah said, ‘Watchmen, Watchmen what of the night? The day comes and also the night.? The word of the Lord is that we should always keep a balanced view, observing both the positive and the negative. We should also keep an open mind, without being motivated by fear or other underlying natural instincts. Our underlying natural instincts will usually hinder us from making wise choices based upon all the information of the time. These responses will also have the tendency to cause us to make shortsighted decisions, rather than the long-term decisions that will enrich our lives.
This is what I like about being a Christian. When I became born-again, I became aware of a whole new side of life: my spiritual side. My spiritual side comes from God, so it certainly is outside of my normal response. Whenever I face a situation, my natural inclination is my immediate response.
However, when I allow my spiritual side to kick in, I become balanced; with this poise, I can make the best decisions for my life. Through the Spirit of God, I can find the peace necessary to respond with logic rather then emotion; with God’s guidance and His Word, I can receive the council necessary to walk in wisdom. For many people, this may sound simplistic, but after 56 years of living I can say, ‘the proof is in the pudding.? It has worked for me and I can see how it has worked for many others. Could you use some help navigating the difficult waters of this time? Get to church this Sunday Morning and allow yourself to hear an alternate voice!
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Temple
In my Christmas Eve sermon last month, I referenced a conversation with a friend on Facebook.
While I am not a Facebook fanatic, I recognize the value of connecting with people with the immediacy social networks like Facebook provides.
The ability to connect across miles and time allows people who would not know about each other to remain connected.
My daughter recently told me there is no reason for her high school class to have a reunion.
Everyone she wants to remain in contact with from those days are currently among her ‘friends.?
She says conversation at a reunion would usually consist of questions like, ‘where are you living, what do you do, tell me about your family,? etc.
All of this information she receives with casual glances at their postings. As she says, ‘Except hanging out with my closest friends, what would we talk about??
Last week, there was an article in the news about a little girl who received a kidney from a stranger who heard about her need on Facebook.
The mother spent hours networking and hoping. Because of that connection, the little girl is now free from dialysis and home.
Social networking is so successful because it connects to one of the deepest human needs ? the need to be in community.
We are created in the image of God and in need of others in our lives. We all have differences in our need to be with others. Some need many friends, others only a few. Some like to spend most of their time with friends, others need less time. But we all have a need to connect.
The creators of social networking knew this. So did the creator of creation.
God was quite intentional in creating us to be in relationship. Jesus grew up and gave us an invitation to be part of a social network. It is called the Kingdom of God. All are welcome.
The primary relationship is found in being connected to Christ. Our connection to Him is the foundation of a network of people who enter into blessed connection with each other.
In these relationships we experience real love, acceptance, mercy, forgiveness, hope, and justice.
I hope in the coming days you will have many friends. May you have friends whose hands you can shake, eyes you can see and share the joy of breaking bread together. In this New Year, I pray we all grow closer in our connection to God and our relationship with Christ.
May we discover the joy of laughter and love with the friends God has given us and those God will lead us to in His name. Happy, Holy and Blessed New Year to All!
The Rev. Richard L. Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
Did you know that Americans spend over $400 billion a year on Christmas?
The average shopper will spend $658 for gifts this year. One in four Christians say that Christmas cripples their budget. One in three Americans lives with extreme stress that worsens during the holidays.
I just finished a Christmas Series at my church called GIVE THIS CHRISTMAS AWAY.
The main idea was to change how we do Christmas. Instead of rushing around, stressing out, spending money we don’t have ‘let’s simplify!
Let’s make Christmas a time when we slow down, focus on relationships, and give to those who really need it.
Do we really have to buy 37 gifts for each one of us? Do we really have to go into debt every Christmas, and then get depressed every January, wondering how we’re going to pay the bills? What is the real point of Christmas, anyway? After all, it’s Jesus? birthday! How does Jesus want us to celebrate Christmas?
In one of my messages I encouraged our congregation to GIVE LOVE TO OUR COMMUNITY. I gave them ten ideas.
Here are just a few of them:
Decorate a Christmas tree to give to a needy family. Our church got fifty Christmas trees, and then families in our church bought decorations, and we gave the trees away.
Buy a Christmas gift for a needy family through Angel Tree. We hung up little paper angel decorations on a tree at our church, with instructions on how to buy some gifts for needy families. People would take an angel off the tree and buy the gifts written on it. We helped 250 needy families this way.
These are just two examples of how we ‘gave some love to our community.?
Some families spontaneously paid for someone’s dinner at a restaurant. Many gave blood at our Blood Drive.
It might be as simple as holding the door and smiling at someone.
The point is this: Christmas is about God so loving the world that he gave his Son to die for us.
Love gives. And God calls us to love ‘which means that we need to be givers.
I encourage you this Christmas season, go ahead and enjoy your family and swap a few gifts.
But think about maybe cutting back a bit. Maybe you could spend a little less on yourself and a little more on those who really need it.
After all, isn’t that what Christmas is really about?
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
I will never forget how our oldest son experienced his first Christmas.
We were living near Honolulu then and we took our almost one year old downtown to see the Christmas lights which we thought were quite spectacular.
They even had palm trees decorated in fun ways, something we had not seen before.
But what amazed us was that we took our son to see the bright lights and decorations, and much to our surprise he was much more interested in the other people around than in the lights. We took him to see the lights but he saw the people instead.
That same Christmas as our son opened his presents he would invariably tear at the wrapping paper for a few moments, but not really with the purpose of opening the gifts. Instead when he had a piece of brightly colored paper torn off he was satisfied and would drop the rest of the package, which we thought was the real present. He liked empty boxes a lot that Christmas too.
Reflecting on those experiences about 20 years ago I wrote: ‘I wonder when he will learn, like most of us have, to care more about the bright lights instead of the people right in front of us? I wonder when he will learn to care more about what’s inside a present than experiencing the sheer joy of something new given to him ? no matter what it is’When is it that we lose our innocence and wonder about such things??
Well, as you probably already know, it begins to happen for most of us sometime between the ages of one and four, and then we spend the rest of our lives trying to get that wonder back and trying to keep things in proper perspective.
Now each Christmas I hope to experience again the childlike wonder I used to have and to be reminded of what really matters.
Christmas is a time when even adults can experience the wonder of miracles and angels and an amazing story of how God came to earth as a baby born in a barn to love us and save us.
Christmas is a time we can experience again the wonder of such things, but it probably won’t happen unless we take some time and make some space in our busy lives for it to happen.
There is so much to do getting ready for our Christmas celebrations that we sometimes forget to do what Mary did that first Christmas when she ‘treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart.? (Luke 2:19)
So how do we know when we are really ready for Christmas? I don’t mean that we have all the presents wrapped or cards sent or food prepared. I mean when are we really ready for Jesus? birthday?
A few years ago another pastor wrote about his young son coming into the bedroom at 4:30 a.m. on Christmas morning, saying, ‘Daddy, mommy, come quick! I saw it!?
As the parents wiped the sleep from their eyes they knew what had happened. Their son had broken the family rule and had already gone downstairs.
So the surprise of a new bike he had wanted for 2 years was missed by them. Disappointed they got the rest of the family up and made their way through the dark house. Surprisingly their young son led them downstairs past the Christmas tree, totally oblivious of the bicycle, to the window.
There he pointed his little finger to the eastern sky and said. ‘Look! The Star of Bethlehem! I’ve seen the star!? And that family was again filled with the wonder of Christmas.
I know that I am really ready for Christmas when I take enough time to ponder the Christmas story so that it comes alive again. I know I am really ready for Christmas when my favorite gift is the one that comes wrapped in swaddling clothes and is laid in a manger ? for me.
I hope you will take time to receive this ultimate gift of love from God into your lives with childlike wonder and excitement this year. For me it puts everything else into perspective.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church.
Christmas has a special meaning unique to each one of us. For some it is a focus on family: finding the right present, planning the perfect meal, traveling great distances to be with those we love.
For others it’s a time of extra work, cleaning, decorating, gifts to buy and wrap, food to prepare, being forced to spend time with people we try to avoid the rest of the year.
For some, Christmas is all about the birth of a special child a little over 2,000 years ago. It can be about living the Christ message of awakening, practicing love and forgiveness by giving of ourselves, our time, our talents, our treasury to share with those who are less fortunate.
I love the Christmas holiday season. Once I can recover my serenity and get past the blast of commercialism, I revel in the experience. The lights, the Christmas cards, the carols, our advent celebration, snow: these all help to bring a sense of awe and wonder and mystery to the season.
This can be a time of awakening to the Christ Spirit within, returning to the light of spiritual awareness that Jesus spoke about, ‘You are the light of the world? (Matthew 5:14 ), ‘God is Spirit? (John 4:24 ) and we are made in the image and after the likeness of God (Genesis 1:26). We are inherently spiritual.
The Christmas story is our story. Joseph and Mary are our thoughts and feelings who have had a spiritual awakening, visited by angels. They are bringing forth a new level of awareness within us, the Christ child. But there was no room for them at the inn, our intellect which is full of preconceived ideas and beliefs of what is real.
So the birth, the coming forth in consciousness, happens in a manger: our heart center which is open to give and receive.
We are the spirit that God has given us. Spiritual awareness is awakening to the kingdom of God, or the kingdom of Heaven that Jesus clearly located as ‘within,? ‘in our midst? and ‘at hand.?
His parables describe Heaven as a here and now experience that we can choose to participate in. The pearl of great price, the treasure buried in the field, the good seed, etc., are stories that describe activities that assist us in awakening to the Christ Spirit within.
A story is told of a man who dreamed he had died and, standing before his creator, was given a choice between heaven or hell. First he was shown a room labeled Hell, where miserable people sat around a bountiful banquet table with all the delicacies a person could desire.
Tied to their hands were spoons and forks that were three feet long, so despite the abundance they could not feed themselves.
Next he was shown a room labeled Heaven. Here was the same scene, same bountiful table, same three foot long spoons and forks. The only difference was that the people were joyously feeding each other. It’s our choice.
Blessings of peace, joy & love,
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
There’s a paradox about being thankful. On the one hand we know we should be grateful, but on the other hand ingratitude seems to be where we so naturally find ourselves.
The Bible expresses this paradox throughout its pages.
‘O give thanks to the Lord, for He is good? the Bible tells us (Ps.107:1). ‘In everything give thanks,? it says (1 Thess.5:18).
Yet, despite these exhortations we find plenty of grumbling (Ex.16:7), forgetfulness of God’s mercy (Dt.8:12), and refusals to honor Him or give thanks (Rom.1:21).
God calls us to thankfulness, but gratitude is rare.
This is something we can identify with all too well when our own busyness, self-sufficiency, and preoccupation with our own plans keeps us from giving thanks when it’s due.
So, how does one get and keep a grateful heart? The answer is to look beyond ourselves and our circumstances to the supremacy of Jesus Christ.
If our state of gratitude is only linked to our immediate circumstances, we’ll constantly be vulnerable to ingratitude because we’ll always be tempted to focus on what’s wrong with our present situation. This is true whether you find yourself in good times or bad.
Yet, when our focus is on Jesus as the supreme ruler over all, a thankful heart can be the norm for us as we recognize that what we might experience at any given time is all incidental to knowing and walking with Him.
The Apostle Paul has more to say about being thankful than anyone in the Bible. This is remarkable because he spent so much of His life facing persecution and hardship.
So, how was it that thankfulness became such a big theme in his life and ministry? Because the supremacy of Christ was preeminent in his thinking.
Paul knew that Jesus is the head over all things, and that in Him all things hold together.
And he knew that He has transferred all believers from the domain of darkness to Christ’s everlasting kingdom. He knew further that in Him was forgiveness and an eternal inheritance (Col.1)
The response for Paul in light of such glorious truths was obvious. Not only did it mean we should walk in a manner worthy of the Lord, bearing fruit in every good work.
It meant that we are to be a people who joyously give thanks ? because of Christ ? because in Him all the incidentals of life pale in significance.
For Paul, to live was Christ (Phil.1:21). Today, it should be for us as well. And when it is, thanksgiving comes naturally.
The hard circumstances that many face today should never be diminished. But no matter what those circumstances may be, there is reason to give thanks.
And it’s because of Jesus.
Because through His death, burial, and resurrection, He is bringing about a new creation, in your life and in the whole world.
Feeling ungrateful? Turn to Jesus, and give thanks for the life that is in Him.
The Rev. David Bostrom is pastor of Seeds for the Harvest ministry.
This week we celebrate Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving is a holiday started by early pioneers who came to the United States, then known as the New World, in search of a better life.
This ‘better life? would come with a great price. Many of the people who began the voyage from Europe did not make it to the New World. Many lost their lives through sickness or the danger of traveling by ship in those days.
Once the people landed in the New World, they had to deal with a whole new set of problems. I have traveled quite a bit in recent times and am amazed by the adjustments you have to make when traveling to another country.
Most of those adjustments have to do with tastes and routines, not life-threatening situations. I cannot even imagine traveling to a new land without knowing what I would find when I get there’especially knowing that I would be responsible for making provision for myself through farming and hunter gathering.
However, many people were willing to make that choice because of the offer of a better life for them and their children. The only real hope for comfort and strength was from their belief in God.
Even with all the loss and suffering, they wanted to take time to show their thankfulness to God for their very existence and meager provision. When we celebrate Thanksgiving, we will do so with much abundance.
Many will have prepared traditional meals along with their favorite desserts. It would have been so different on that first Thanksgiving and what an example for us to follow. What are you going to be thankful for this holiday season?
Many people are suffering from the protracted economic crisis that we have been facing. They have suffered loss of income, net worth, and many will even face uncertainty in the days ahead.
We must look back to our forefathers for an example of how to handle this present situation. First, we must not just look at our lack; we must look at what we do have. Then, we must learn to rejoice with our portion and give thanks to God.
Appreciating what you have will get you in the right frame of thinking to press towards a better day. It could certainly be argued that a big part of our problem today has been the lack of appreciation for what we have. Many people, businesses, and even the government overleveraged themselves to get things that they could not afford.
Many people bought houses that they could not afford and borrowed on their equity in order to satisfy an ever-increasing appetite for more.
When the correction came, it was much worse because people had no restraint in the reach for more. Now, we must get ourselves positioned for a better day by being thankful for what we have, so that our pursuit for more can be managed with sound principles and long-range planning.
If we had been a thankful people, we would not be in the position that we are in today. The question now becomes: where are we going to be?
I like the position of the holidays, with Thanksgiving opening the door for the Christmas season. With Christmas being the time of abundance, we should see Thanksgiving time as the pause to prepare for the blessings to come. This principle can guide our outlook in life and prepare us for the better days, which are sure to come. It is time to lift our vision high and worship God who is the source of all good things!
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
It has certainly been a beautiful fall in Clarkston and I am very thankful to God for it! It has also been a very busy time for most people I know. It seems like we try to pack more and more into the time we have. Of course even with all of the advances in technology, and with all of those ‘time-saving? devices, time still moves along according to God’s original design. There is still 60 minutes in each hour, 24 hours in a day, and 365 days a year. And of course each of us has only so many of those minutes, hours and days this side of heaven. We have not figured out a way to make more time, so we are left with the ongoing challenge of making good use of the time God has given us.
I heard somewhere about a presenter at a seminar who placed a glass jar on a table and carefully filled it with some large rocks. The presenter then asked, ‘Is the jar full?? The students responded, ‘Yes!? Next he took some gravel and added it to the jar, filling the spaces between the rocks, and again asked, ‘Is the jar full?? Being quick learners, the students replied ‘Probably not.? Then the presenter dumped some sand into the jar filling in the spaces between the rocks and the gravel. Once again he asked ‘Is the jar full?? ‘No!? the students all said. Finally, he filled the jar completely with water and asked the students what they had learned from the illustration. Someone answered, ‘If you try really hard you can always fit more things into your life.? The presenter replied, ‘No, the point is this, if you don’t put the big rocks in first there will never be room for you to fit them into your life.?
I believe this principle can be applied to all aspects of life. The fundamental question for each of us is: ‘What are the big rocks? What are the most important things in life and have I made room for them first? Or do these ‘big rocks? get edged out by all the busyness in life?? This is very worth thinking and praying about.
However it is also interesting to think about the jar itself ? our lives. The Old Testament prophet Isaiah (Is. 64:8) proclaims, ‘O Lord, you are our Father; we are the clay, and you are our potter; we are all the work of your hand.? This passage affirms that God in love has made us and gifted us with life. And Paul, reflecting on the gift of life with Jesus in the New Testament (2 Cor. 4:7) reminds us that, ‘We have this treasure in clay jars, so that it may be made clear that this extraordinary power belongs to God and does not come from us.? For me all of this is an important reminder that the biggest rock I place in the jar is my relationship with God, and that even the ‘jar? (my life) itself is a gift from God. I know I need to always be aware of this as I fill my busy life with many things.
The good news is that we are not left on our own to just figure this out by ourselves. For God desires a relationship with us each and every day, no matter where we are, to guide us in keeping our priorities the way he intends ? which is in a healthy life-giving balance. When life gets hard, and it does for all of us, I often turn to the words from the prophet Isaiah (Is. 40:30-31) for encouragement, ‘Even youths grow tired and weary, and young men stumble and fall; but those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.? This is good news as we approach the busy holiday season and try to live out God’s purpose and priorities.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church.
If you were arrested for being a Christian, would there be enough evidence to convict you?
There are many recent studies that show that there is not a whole lot of difference between people who claim to follow Jesus and those who don’t.
Their lifestyles, their checkbooks, their personal behavior, and their attitudes are a lot alike.
It got me thinking (that’s a good thing!).
What does a real Christian look like?
Should there be some obvious differences between believers and non-believers?
As I wrestle with these questions I’m reminded of an old story.
The light turned yellow, just in front of him.
He did the right thing, stopping at the crosswalk, even though he could have beaten the red light by accelerating through the intersection.
The tailgating woman was furious and honked her horn, screaming in frustration, as she missed her chance to get through the intersection, dropping her cell phone and makeup.
As she was still in mid-rant, she heard a tap on her window and looked up into the face of a very serious police officer. The officer ordered her to exit her car with her hands up.
He took her to the police station where she was searched, fingerprinted, photographed, and placed in a holding cell.
After a couple of hours, a policeman approached the cell and opened the door. She was escorted back to the booking desk where the arresting officer was waiting with her personal belongings.
He said, ?’I’m very sorry for this mistake. You see, I pulled up behind your car while you were blowing your horn, flipping off the guy in front of you and cussing a blue streak at him.
‘I noticed the ‘What Would Jesus Do? bumper sticker, the ‘Choose Life? license plate holder, and the chrome-plated Christian fish emblem on the trunk, so naturally’I assumed you had stolen the car!??
The Bible says in Ephesians 5:1 ‘Be imitators of God, therefore, as dearly loved children and live a life of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us.?
Hmm? ‘Live a life of love’imitate God.?
Does that include how we drive? Does that include how we speak to our spouse and to our kids? Does that include our checkbook? I think it does.
If you were accused of being a Christian, is there enough evidence to convict you?
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
November: when the vibrant yellows and reds of fall give way to the dirty browns of winter, before the snow covers the ground in a glimmering blanket of pure white.
It really can be a bleak and lifeless stretch of days.
Yet it is in this month that we choose to, as a nation, celebrate our gratitude for the bountiful life we have been given.
It’s easier to be grateful when you have your job, your house and your family at your side. It’s harder when, as so many around us have, you have lost your job and your house or your family is in turmoil. Life can seem bleak and lifeless.
Yet, there is always something to be grateful for. It may be the aid of a social service agency, the smile of loved one or even a stranger’s kind word; there is always something to be grateful for.
What do you do when something good happens in your life? Do you remember to give thanks to the source, God?
What about when you pray? Do you remember to give thanks knowing that you have received?
Giving thanks in advance of the demonstration is the example given us by our Master Teacher.
In the sixth chapter of John we have my favorite version of what is known as the feeding of the 5,000. It is one of the few stories appearing in all four of the gospels.
‘Jesus then took the loaves, and when he had given thanks, he distributed them.? (John 6:11) Before they were multiplied, he gave thanks for what he had.
What happens next is sometimes portrayed as a sort of a magic trick, as if the five loaves were somehow magically multiplied to feed the 5,000 men plus who knows how many women and children leaving ‘twelve baskets with fragments? being gathered up after the feast.
Scholars familiar with the customs of the people of the time will tell you that they were not likely to travel into the wilderness without provisions.
There were no Kroger, Meijer or party stores on every corner. Travelers packed more than their anticipated needs and hid their stores with their baggage to discourage beggars and thieves.
The generosity of the lad with the five loaves and two fish was the catalyst which prompted an avalanche of sharing.
This is the true miracle. People who would not have normally shared freely did. Where do you think the twelve baskets came from?
Our opportunity is to participate in thanks living. Living in an attitude of gratitude we are grateful for the abundance even before we have received.
We demonstrate this by sharing what we do have – time, talents or treasury. We always have something to give, always something to be grateful for.
Thank you God for this day, our family, our friends, the joy we share, this wonderful life we live!
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
What do the Beatles and Pope Benedict XVI have in common?
Well, they have more in common than you might think.
Although separated by more than 40 years, both appeared in Great Britain before crowds of cheering young people.
You won’t hear the Pope singing ‘All you need is love,? but the message he delivered gave very similar advice.
He spoke to young people in a universal language, the language of love.
Last month Pope Benedict XVI did a four-day tour of the United Kingdom.
Although he is 80 years old and doesn’t fit the image of someone who would typically attract a group of young people, the reception he received was more positive than any of his critics could have imagined.
So, why was his message received with such enthusiasm and warmth? He struck a chord with the young people because he challenged them to achieve greatness in a way that they’re rarely encouraged to aspire to it.
He challenged them to become saints. Saints? Aren’t saints something of the past? Do saints have any place in modern society?
Well, Pope Benedict says, yes, they do.
This seems odd only because many people have an odd view of what a saint actually is. Let’s listen to some words of the Pope himself:
‘God loves you much more than you could ever begin to imagine, and he wants the very best for you?
‘I hope that among those of you listening to me today there are some of the future saints of the twenty-first century?
‘Perhaps some of you have never thought about this before.
‘Perhaps some of you think being a saint is not for you. Let me explain what I mean? We live in a celebrity culture, and young people are often encouraged to model themselves on figures from the world of sport or entertainment?
‘When I invite you to become saints, I am asking you not to be content with second best. I am asking you not to pursue one limited goal and ignore all the others?
‘Happiness is something we all want, but one of the great tragedies in this world is that so many people never find it, because they look for it in the wrong places.
‘The key to it is very simple ? true happiness is to be found in God. We need to have the courage to place our deepest hopes in God alone, not in money, in a career, in worldly success, or in our relationships with others, but in God.
‘Only he can satisfy the deepest needs of our hearts?
‘Not only does God love us with a depth and an intensity that we can scarcely begin to comprehend, but he invites us to respond to that love.?
As you can see, being a saint means that you first recognize that God loves you infinitely and wants you to love him back.
Being a saint doesn’t mean being soft or indifferent or settling for second best. It means loving God and others in an exceptional way.
I can’t think of better path to follow.
Fr. Daniel Pajerski, LC, is Formation Director for Everest Academy.
Whenever difficult times come, there arises a mass of people who wonder whether or not we are ‘living in the last days.?
Today, in our climate of political and economic upheaval, people again are pondering whether the last days are upon us.
Recently, I’ve been told more times than I can count, ‘the end must be near.?
But is it? Let’s consider a few facts.
First, in the Bible the phrase ‘last days? does not refer to the end of the planet as we know it, but the end of the Jewish temple system with the coming of Jesus Christ (Acts 2:17; Heb.1:2). Consequently, we have been living in the last days since the first century.
Second, there are hundreds of instances in history when it was believed that the ‘signs of the times? proved that the end of all things was near.
During the fall of the Roman Empire, for example, it was widely believed that the end of the world must be at hand. It wasn’t. It was simply the beginning of a new world.
Third, the Bible tells us that Jesus is the heir of the nations (Ps.2:8), and that the end will come after He has brought all things under subjection (1 Cor.15:22ff.).
It’s because of this Christians have been commissioned to disciple the nations (Mt.28:18-20) and to pray ‘Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven? (Mt.6:10).
Thinking through these facts presents an alternative scenario to the common end times vision that preoccupies many.
Just because difficult times come does not mean it’s the end of the world.
Those difficult times may arrive for other reasons. For instance, the Bible repeatedly teaches that societies who disobey the Lord, He will judge ? those who sow the wind will reap the whirlwind (Hos.8:7).
When we consider the godless trends of American culture, it is much more logical to assume that God is allowing us to reap what we’ve sown than to assume the end of the world is at hand.
Once we realize this, our focus changes. Instead of speculating about the time of Christ’s return and waiting for the end to come, we are able to focus on aligning our lives with God and His purpose in world.
We live in a world marred by sin, but Christ has been raised to bring redemption and a new creation.
The day will come when there will be new heavens and a new earth. In anticipation of that day we are to trust in the Lord and do good, and dwell in the land and cultivate faithfulness (Ps.37:3).
The assumption that hard times is a sure sign that the end is near is unfortunate. It is a distraction that keeps the people of God from doing the work that God would have them do.
As our society faces decline due its apostasy from the Lord, it would be far more profitable to pursue repentance, faith and the building of God’s kingdom, than the latest end times diversion.
The Rev. David Bostrom is pastor of Seeds for the Harvest Ministries.
Mark 10:13-16 And they were bringing children to him that he might touch them, and the disciples rebuked them. But when Jesus saw it, he was indignant and said to them, ‘Let the children come to me; do not hinder them, for to such belongs the kingdom of God. Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.? And he took them in his arms and blessed them, laying his hands on them.
As children we always wanted to delay our bedtime, or at least our falling asleep, so at any and every opportunity, we would ask for a glass of water, a bedtime story, or some other time waster. As a child, we did this every time that we had a baby sitter.
They would always begin, Once upon a time in a land far, far away, a little boy and a little girl who were a lot like you? and the yarn would unfold, detail upon detail would be presented, and then at the end we would hear, and they lived happily ever after. You knew from the very second that you heard Once upon a time, that this was going to be a whopper as we used to call them, where the only truth in the entire presentation were the words. It was pure fiction? but we loved it.
Today, when children hear of something like this, they too know it is fiction, their first clue is the word ‘story.? When they hear the word ‘story? they are ready for something made up, an untruth. Children in our schools today are taught that stories are fictional, accounts are true. Now as parents who believe in the bible, we go to the ‘bible book store? and buy a ‘bible story book.? Since stories are not true as children are taught them today, they immediately think of the bible as fiction? just a story with a happy ending.
When our children grow up, even when many of our young parents today grew up, we see that they have been indoctrinated to stories in this same way. In Sunday School, the teacher say’s, lets read our ‘Bible Story,? and our children are happy because they get another story which in their mind is a great yarn, told to amuse them, where the facts are far and few between? great stories, you bet, but true? That depends on your definition of ‘story,? but in their minds, they were not true. Instead, they see something that is total fiction.
When we look in our churches, often we don’t see many young people, and we wonder why. Well, if you were told that what you were hearing was just a story, with little or not truth to it by your definition, what would make you want to come to hear more? We are so busy in this day and age that we don’t have time for stories?
It is time that we stop telling bible stories and begin to tell bible accounts. The words that we speak don’t change, what we heard as a story, can be retold word for word, as an account and the children are thrilled. They want to hear about Adam and Eve, David and Goliath, or even Jesus birth. But instead of telling them what they understand to be a fictional story, tell them the account of Adam and Eve, or David and Goliath, or Jesus Birth? tell them the true account!
Semantics, maybe, but today, we use the word ‘Story? in a different way than we did even 40 or 50 years ago! Therefore, the next time that you read to your children or grandchildren from the bible, tell them the bible account. They will quickly come to see it as the truth, and not biblical fiction. In another 20 years, I suspect that you will see more children believing in Christ because they know it is true, and not biblical fiction.
The Rev. Kelly Todd is pastor of Christ Lutheran Church.
In about five weeks, we will be holding our mid-term elections for federal office; we will also be electing our main term choices for statewide offices.
It is expected to be a time when the incumbents will fare badly because the electorate is so frustrated with the affairs of our country.
Although the incumbents are going to be the targets of most of the frustration, the polls actually indicate that most people are not too excited about their replacements.
Congressional approval ratings are at historic levels of disapproval, however, those alternatives are not popular either.
I believe this indicates the fact that the general population knows full well that we are on the wrong track, but unfortunately we have been on the wrong track for so long that looking back does not provide much encouragement for the future.
Many of the difficulties that we face today are the result of choices we made a long time ago’those choices will not be easily reversed.
The Bible tells us that if we want to understand the invisible God, we should look at the visible things because they demonstrate the attributes of the Creator.
One very good example of this is the concept of seedtime and harvest. In the book of Genesis, it says that the seedtime and harvest cycle will last as long as the earth remains.
This principle is obviously true; when you sow a seed and give it the proper care, in time, it will grow and produce fruit.
Oftentimes, the choices in life are seed planting choices because they set the stage for future results.
In our country, we planted and nourished many seeds, or choices, without consideration of the long-term impact of those choices.
As a society, we were encouraged by our contemporary influences to think about our temporary satisfaction; hence society became the fertile soil for our national choices.
Many government programs were started without thinking about the long-term costs, as were many business and labor agreements. We have experienced the failing of many of our businesses and without dramatic changes our government will follow closely behind.
The greater issue is not what specific agenda we will follow, but what character motivations will we follow.
In order to reverse the seeds of the past, a spiritual renewal must take place to form the basis for the changes that we need.
If we do not have spiritual change, our choices will not have the fertile soil that will allow them to grow to the point of producing the long-term changes that we need.
As the election draws closer, I certainly have specific policies that I would like to see instituted, so I have chosen candidates who I will vote for.
However, as a pastor and Christian, I also realize that I have an even more important role.
That role is to bring about a change in people, and in the greater society, that can only take place with God’s help.
It is great that so many Christians are becoming actively involved in politics.
As Christian Americans, our stewardship from God means that we should vote and be in the public square, but we must also be very committed to an even more important role in the transforming of our society’spiritual renewal.
Finally, we must understand that the building blocks of a society are the families and individuals who comprise its individual parts.
We must make our own individual choices that will enhance our future, and also lay the proper spiritual foundation that will give the seed fertile soil to grow in. If your choices are seeds, are you considering how powerful those choices are? Are you taking your future seriously?
Answering these questions has truly become the most important issue for today.
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
I used to think that peace meant the absence of conflict. I used to think that when the war was over we would have peace. But when the war was over others began.
There always seems to be some person or group that wants to fight, to kill and die to prove that they are right and the others are wrong. How can there ever be peace?
I now know that peace is not the absence of conflict but a conscious awareness of the divine harmony and order that transcends the inherent conflicts that we experience in this physical world. ‘My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you.? John 14:20. I can envision a world where we naturally engage peacemaking skills in resolving conflicts.
When enough of us have discovered the place of peace within ourselves, the tipping point so to speak, the rest of the world will awaken to the potential for peace in us all. It is akin to the shift that came about because of those who dared to suggest that the Earth was not the center of the universe. Eventually enough people accepted this new awareness and the balance was tipped.
The greatest obstacle to peace is intolerance. A belief or policy, a thought or feeling of intolerance toward other’s beliefs or practices obstructs the peace. It makes cooperation and peace difficult to achieve. Yet tolerance is rarely tolerated because it is misunderstood.
Tolerance is not approval. It is not condoning or promoting. It is recognizing and respecting the beliefs or practices of another. It is acceptance of the fact that my opinions and those of someone else are not always in agreement and that the other person has a right to their opinion just as I have a right to mine.
One place where there is a need for greater tolerance is in the area of religious beliefs and practices. To condemn another because they use a different name for the Divine or that their beliefs and practices are different is an act of war.
We should celebrate our diversity and honor our humanity while striving to express our divinity. In the Judeo-Christian Bible there are at least a dozen names and derivations of names for the Divine: including Elohim, Yahweh, Adonai, Allah, and Theos.
If I were to somehow travel back 2,000 years and meet with the historical Jesus, I would love to talk with him of God. Firstly, I know that he wouldn’t be able to understand me because he didn’t speak English. That aside, if I called him Jesus he wouldn’t know that I was speaking to him. There is a dispute among scholars but, his name would have been most likely pronounced either Eeshoo or Yeshua.
Secondly, he would probably ask me who this ‘God? was that I had asked him about. Jesus spoke Aramaic. The name for the Divine that he used was Allah. He said, ‘Allah ruha oo? literally, ‘God is spirit? John 4:24. There is but one Spirit, though it be known by many names: Great Spirit, Infinite Spirit, Holy Spirit, God, Tao, Cosmic Consciousness, Universal Energy, etc.
I invite you assist in tipping the balance of conscious awareness toward that of peace and justice for all of God’s creation. Practice loving tolerance while celebrating our diversity, honoring our humanity and expressing our divinity.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long is senior minister at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
Do you think about heaven much? You might say, ‘You’ve got to be kidding! My life is crammed right now. I just lost my job. The kids are sick. I don’t have time to think about heaven.? It’s easy to imagine, ‘What good is it to think about heaven?? After all, we’ve heard that ditty, ‘He’s so heavenly minded that he’s no earthly good.?
This summer I’ve been giving a six-week sermon series on Heaven. I have learned so much! Many people have been telling me, ‘I did not know that about Heaven! This is so exciting!?
In this short article, let me just give you two reasons why we need to think about heaven. First, we need to think more clearly about our lives. Imagine going on a trip and not knowing anything about your destination. ‘Hey, where are you going? Yellowstone Park?
Cool! Where’s that at?? ‘Mmm, I’m not sure.? ‘Well how do you get there?? ‘I don’t know.? ‘Well what’s it like?? ‘I don’t know. I hear it’s really nice.?
You’d never do that, would you? You would Google it and MapQuest it. You’d want to know how to get there and what it’s going to be like when you get there. Is it going to be hot or cold?
What kind of clothes do you take? You want to prepare for it!
Did you know that every day, worldwide, 3 people die every second, 180 every minute, and almost 11,000 every hour. So if the Bible is right about what happens to us after death, it means that more than 250,000 people every day go either to Heaven or Hell.
We need to think clearly about where we’re going. Which leads to the second reason why we need to think about heaven: It empowers us to live this life better. There’s a cemetery in Indiana that has a tombstone that’s over 100 years old, and it has an epitaph written on it that says:
Pause, stranger, when you pass me by.
As you are now, so once was I.
As I am now, so you will be.
So prepare for death and follow me.
An unknown passerby scratched additional words on it.
To follow you I’m not content,
Until I know which way you went.
When we really think about the fact that we’re going to Heaven or Hell, it will change how we live today! When we realize how incredibly beautiful and satisfying the New Heavens and the New Earth will be, and how we’re going to see our believing loved ones, and how we’re going to have new resurrection bodies and live on a new resurrected earth ‘it will give us fresh hope and faith and power to live this life well!
So maybe you’re really discouraged today. Life is hard. You’ve got all kinds of problems. If you’re a Christ-follower, do you realize that you have a rich inheritance? One day, money will be no problem. Sickness will not happen. Sadness and frustration will be no more. You will have a new resurrected body and live on a new earth. Your deepest desires and needs will be met.
I’m finding that the more I learn about Heaven, the better I want to live this life today.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
I heard that on one particular Monday Night Football game, Walter Payton reached the equivalent of nine miles of running yards for his career.
When he passed the mark, the announcer made mention of the milestone and the other announcer responded: ‘Yeah, and that’s after getting knocked down every 4.6 yards.? There is a lot of wisdom in that somewhat comical reply.
Imagine how drastically shortened the career of any football player would be if he became discouraged every time he was knocked down. In order to succeed, we first have to realize that there will always be obstacles to our progress.
How we deal with failure or setbacks is often the key to our personal success. The same principle can be applied to spiritual matters. To be strong in spirit we need fortitude, or what is also referred to as perseverance.
The virtue of fortitude ensures firmness in difficulties and allows us to continue performing good actions despite adversity. What are some things we can do to cultivate this virtue? There are many, but I would like to suggest at least three. First of all, start out with clearly defined goals. Whenever we start on the path to achieve anything, we first have to be very clear about what the concrete goal is.
This might sound obvious, but how many of us start a project without defining precisely when we will have reached the end?
For example, if we desire to climb the highest mountain, then our concrete goal will be to reach the top of Mt. Everest.
Setting a concrete goal allows us a way to measure progress and motivates us to forge ahead until we’ve reached the top.
Secondly, a positive attitude is necessary if we want to persevere. Some might see the words ‘positive attitude? and immediately dismiss this as childish or unrealistic.
Two people can view the same event and draw two different conclusions about what happened or about how to continue. We color circumstances in life with the attitude we use to face them.
We’re all familiar with the story of David and Goliath. Some like to say that, while all the Israelites were scared to confront Goliath because he was so massive, David turned Goliath’s size to the Israelites? advantage by thinking: ‘He’s so big, I can’t miss him.?
One of the keys to persevering in good works is to always bring the proper attitude to the obstacles that face us.
Teamwork is the third element. Too often we think that asking others for help is a sign of weakness. Yet, how many things can we take sole credit for in life?
The most basic gift we have, that of life itself, is something that has been given to us. When we realize that our lives are not complete without the presence and support of others-especially of God himself- there are no obstacles impossible to overcome.
So, the next time someone knocks you down, remember that with the virtue of fortitude you will not only get up off the ground, you’ll keep running.
Fr. Daniel Pajerski, LC, is Formation Director for Everest Collegiate High School and Academy
Well, I purposely held off writing this column so that we could see the results of the elections held earlier this month.
For some there were a lot of surprises, for others they saw just what they expected to see. Yet, no matter how you look at it, it was not business as usual.
What do I mean by this?
Well, let us look to Matthew 22:36-39 where we read: ‘Teacher, which is the great commandment in the Law??
And He [Jesus] said to him, ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.
This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.?
Over the past several weeks, we have heard countless campaign ads that have told us nothing of what the candidate will do for our state or local government, but we have sure heard all about how the ‘other guy? has done us wrong or will do us wrong.
Best construction or a smear campaign?
My mother always told me that if I could not say something good about someone else, then I should not say anything about them. So in an election, how would we campaign? Well, of course, we would tell everyone what we would do!
Such a novel idea don’t you think?
I have heard that negativity sells and in a campaign, the candidate wants the biggest bang for his buck.
In fact, just about everyone wants the biggest bang for their buck. And that brings us to my very point: that in our society, we really don’t care how we do it, just give us what we want.
The ends always justify the means. Well at least that is what we want to believe. We believe that it justifies us and makes us feel good about what we have done and about ourselves.
Sounds pretty selfish doesn’t it?
It follows right with the corporate idea of making the bottom line all important. I can remember a day when a young person would take their first job while in high school, and unless it were delivering newspapers, they might well retire from that job, and with a pension.
Over the years this has changed dramatically. Some of the latest government information states that the average person will have 12 jobs in their life time.
And today, that does not even mean that they will have a retirement to go with it. This points to corporate greed. The corporations only care about themselves.
Actually, greed is one of the biggest issues that we have in our world today. It is not about what is right or wrong, as I said earlier, it is all about the bottom line.
Can you imagine a world that followed God’s plan ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. And you shall love your neighbor as yourself.?
Yet, this is what God desires: for us to treat everyone with love and respect, not just our children, or our spouses, but also those we work with, buy from and sell to, and anyone with whom we interact.
We are all sinners and we all have fallen short of God’s will, but by His grace and mercy, He gives us a second chance and even a third and fourth chance.
His will for us is to trust and believe on Him, forsaking all others, and to share His word with others so that they too may know Him as their Lord and Savior.
There is still hope for our country, and for us and that hope comes from none other than Jesus Christ.
For He alone suffered on the cross for our sins, died, descended into hell, rose from the dead on the third day, and ascended into heaven to live eternally!
And His desire is to share this heaven and eternal life, with all who believe Him as their Lord and Savior.
The Rev. Kelly Todd is pastor of Christ Lutheran Church.
The other day my family and I went to see the new movie, ‘Despicable Me.?
This is an enjoyable tale about a villain named Gru who attempts to pull off the biggest heist in history using three orphan girls but finds his heart changed by their innocence. And, it was in 3D.
My favorite part was the antics of Gru’s minions during the credits which were greatly enhanced by the 3D effects.
What this movie brings to mind for me is the many people who in some way believe that they are despicable.
At some level they feel shame and guilt for who they are.
They may have never done anything as bad as getting a parking ticket, but still they have that sense of unworthiness, shame and guilt.
Most people have some remnants of low self esteem. Many cover it up by overachieving.
Whether we got it from our parents or teachers or friends or the church or whomever; we bought into the message that we are bad, not worthy of the good that happen for us and the negative is earned punishment.
Some point to biblical quotes such as Psalm 51:5 ‘I was brought forth in iniquity? as evidence of our inherent sin.
When read in the context within which it was written, David’s remorse over his part in the death of Uriah and stealing his wife Bathsheba, we can relate to the nature of the feelings being shared.
They were not meant to be taken as a definitive statement.
Earlier David wrote of our true nature, ‘What is man that thou art mindful of him? thou hast made him little less than God? Psalm 8:4-5. We are not the totality of God, but all that God is ‘I am? Exodus 3:14.
We are created ‘In the image and after the likeness? of God and all that is created is ‘very good? Genesis 1:26 & 31.
God don’t make no junk! This may not be good English, but it is right thinking.
Everyone is born with the capacity to be loved and loving, for ‘God is love? 1 John 4:16. The thought atmosphere that we grow up in helps to shape and form who we become.
A Course In Miracles tells us that there are only two messages, ‘one of love, and the other the call for love.? Text 273.
Child psychologists tell us that children desire attention and will act out negatively if they cannot get it otherwise.
Clues to how Gru became a villain were present throughout the movie and were stated by his mother near the end, ‘You are a much better parent than I ever was.?
Inner Child Advocate John Bradshaw, in his series on Homecoming, states that ‘It’s not about who is to blame. It is about taking responsibility for the person that we are.?
Low self esteem robs the world of the wondrous child of God that you are. The ego tells you that you are unworthy.
David was told that he could not defeat Goliath, 1Samuel17:33. Spirit says that ‘we are children of God, and if children, then heirs.? Romans 8:16-17.
The power and presence of God within you can defeat the giants of doubt, fear, self-criticism, guilt and shame.
It is through your innocence, becoming ‘as a child? Matthew 18:3, that we allow the greatness of God to shine through Matthew 5:16.
This is the divine corrective.
Blessings of peace, joy & love
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
This week’s primaries have opened up the fall election campaigns. As the country now approaches the midterm elections, we will receive a barrage of information about the candidates.
As is typical these days, we can be sure that there will be plenty of negative campaigning. For me, it is not negative to point out another person’s record, but I am leery of all the personal lambasting and character assaults.
I am always skeptical when I hear people question another person’s motivations. The Bible tells us that we cannot even judge our own hearts, so we certainly should not think that we can judge someone else’s.
I consider it a bad sign that so much animosity has been created today within the political realm and our society as a whole. Unfortunately, even Christians are guilty of this.
As Christians, we should be very careful to understand that our Christian principles should motivate every action and persuasion that we have in life. Jesus taught a different way then most.
He said, ‘You have heard that it was said, ‘Love your neighbor and hate your enemy.? But I say unto you, love your enemies’and pray for them which despitefully use you.?
Jesus taught us that our actions should be motivated by a desire to emulate our heavenly Father. Therefore, we surely should not emulate the contemporary society that has become so hostile to one another.
The book of Hebrews says, ‘There remains therefore a rest for the people of God.? We fail to enter into that rest because of our lack of faith.
Faith says that God is in control of our destiny. We are not the victims of time or people, but as the children of God, we are under the care of our heavenly Father. He not only cares for us, but He works diligently in our lives.
This is why the Bible says, ‘The steps of the righteous are ordered of the Lord.?
When you have that confidence, you do not have to constantly be on guard trying to protect yourself or the world. You know’looking over your shoulder wondering if an enemy is lurking behind you.
Why? Because the Bible says, ‘If God is for us, who can be against us?? When God is on your side, you do not have to worry’you just have to believe. This faith will give us the rest that we need. This rest not only alleviates our souls, but also gives us the ability to act rationally and properly think through our choices.
For this reason, the secular media has promoted emotional responses to life situations. The marketers have used this method to persuade us to be irrational consumers.
Today, they are using these same tactics to promote political figures. If they can entice you to be emotionally charged, you will buy into something that you may regret later. This has proven true with the financial crash that we have undoubtedly witnessed.
People have come to realize that we bought into a lifestyle we cannot sustain. If we are not careful, we may buy into a political persuasion that we cannot sustain over the long run either. We are living in a world that seems to be veering out of control.
It will take a people of faith and rest to get it back on track. If you have been caught up in the frenzy of the times, I would admonish you with the Word of God. If we are going to strive for anything, let us strive to enter into the rest of God’and let the peace of God rule our hearts and our minds!
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
Someone asked Jesus what the greatest commandment was and Jesus said that it was to love God with everything you have and to love your neighbor as yourself.
Thank goodness it wasn’t something hard, right? But it is hard, isn’t it?
While we cannot love our neighbor as our selves without loving God, I want to talk about loving our neighbor here today. What does it mean to love our neighbor?
Some people have told me that in order to love our neighbor we must first learn how to love ourselves.
Maybe they are right. I think do alright with loving ourselves. Admittedly there are people that do not treat themselves well for a variety of reasons.
A majority of us, however, manage to take care of our wants, needs, and desires with few problems. I guess what I am trying to say is that I often feel like one of those seagulls in ‘Finding Nemo.?
They fly around saying, ‘Mine! Mine! Mine! Mine!? I don’t think I’m alone. Loving ourselves isn’t the problem.
Back to the question: What does it mean to love our neighbor as yourself? I like to say that it means to love your neighbor as if it were you.
I know there are some folks that are easier to love than others. I get it, I do. Loving our neighbor is about loving the people around us like we want to be loved.
‘Do unto others as you would have them do unto you? is even another way to say it.
So we are to love our neighbor as if it were us. Now who is our neighbor? Your neighbor is anyone around you. It is that person that is loveable or unlovable.
It is the person that is kind of weird and uncomfortable to be around. It is that person that dresses differently, believes differently, and acts differently than you do.
Our neighbor is a person who’s political and religious beliefs are different than our own beliefs. In short, there are 6.7 billion neighbors in the world.
Okay, imagine that you are with your friends. You are all having a good time talking about all the things you have in common. In walks a person that dresses kind of funky. Their T-shirt spouts a slogan that is different from the slogan on your T-shirt.. They look like they just don’t fit in for any number of reasons.
If that were you, would you want to be ignored or looked down upon? That would stink. What would you do? You know you are a pretty fun guy or gal, right? You know you have something to say and to add. You would love to get to know you, right? Hopefully, you would go over and start a friendship.
I know this isn’t easy, especially if we start people that make us really uncomfortable. I know there are people that are really different than us.
I also know that this might not seem right according to what we’ve learned in church. But I am reminded that Jesus was a friend to sinners. He ate with them and hung out with them.
It worked for him and for us. I think it will work for our neighbors, too. I promise.
Dave is the pastor of Lake Louise.
Several months ago I did a series called Survivor. We looked at a handful of things that make life tough. One of those things was depression.
I think we all deal with some form of depression ? even if it’s just discouragement. But haven’t we all had those ‘down? times?
I know that technically speaking, there is a difference between ‘depression? and ‘discouragement,? but it’s sort of like arguing over whether we’re in an economic ‘recession? or a ‘depression.? If you lost your job, it’s a recession. If I lose my job, it’s a depression.
Let’s think about discouragement-depression. First, what is depression? I think Psalm 40 gives us a pretty good definition. Psalm 40:1-3 says, ‘I waited patiently for the Lord; he turned to me and heard my cry. He lifted me out of the slimy pit, out of the mud and mire; he set my feet on a rock and gave me a firm place to stand. He put a new song in my mouth, a hymn of praise to our God. Many will see and fear and put their trust in the Lord.?
Depression is when you feel like you’re in a slimy pit and you can’t get out. Everyone is discouraged at times. But if your discouragement becomes too deep and lasts too long, it’s probably depression.
Second, what causes depression? It may be a physical condition. Your body may lack proper amounts of chemicals such as serotonin.
I have a pastor friend who leads a large church. He was speaking to a group of us pastors a few years ago and he told us how hard it was for him to admit that he had a physical condition of depression.
The first time he went to the drugstore to pick up his medicine he was afraid. He just knew the receptionist at the counter was going to announce over the speaker, ‘Will Pastor Marty of Crossings Church come to the counter to pick up your depression medicine!?
He was ashamed that he ‘a pastor ? had a depression problem. But you know what? He’s on the proper medicine, and God is using him and using his struggle with depression to create a sense of brokenness and humility that is reaching out and touching many people for Christ.
Lack of replenishing relationships may also cause depression. Mary Southerland is a Christian woman who has written about her own depression and how she deals with it.
She discovered in her own life that she was running around and serving everybody. She discovered that a major cause of her depression was that all of her relationships were superficial and even draining. She was always giving and serving and never receiving.
So ask yourself: Do I have healthy relationships in my life where I personally am replenished and gain strength from those relationships?
Depressed people usually feel alone and isolated, like no one understands them.
Others causes include poor self-image, failure to deal with past issues, such as unresolved anger and disappointment over a loss.
The big question is, how can we get out of our pit?
First, get a medical evaluation. Only a doctor can tell you what’s really going on in your body.
Secondly, exercise and rest. There are all kinds of studies that show how exercise and rest fight off sickness and depression.
Third, develop healthy relationships. Don’t be a loner. Don’t slide through life with superficial relationships. Have a few close friends where you laugh together and play together and cry together. (This is what church is supposed to be about!)
And most importantly, receive God’s grace.
Base your self-esteem on God’s love for you. You are valuable. You matter to God. He loves you so much that he gave his Son for you.
When we’re willing to look beneath the surface and unmask our depression, God is more than able to lift us out of the slimy pit, set our feet on a rock and put a new song in our mouth.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
This past week, we celebrated the anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Many people think that this is the day our country became independent from the colonial powers. It was not the day of Independence, but the day that the people in colonial America declared their intent for Independence and for what they believed their rights should be as a people. In order to make change possible, there must be a declared intent. Many people will complain about their circumstances without ever making an attempt to change them.
We are living in a time of great conflict, and once again we must declare our intent to do something about our circumstances. Of course, this requires a resolution of where we want to go as a nation. We are living in a time where many people have proposals of how we need to proceed for the future, but we still do not have a declared intent of where we are going. In the last presidential election, our president won office on the promise of change. He won a resounding victory, receiving not only election, but also big majorities in Congress to help him facilitate his programs. The problem is that when he began to move forward, people have been uncomfortable with the changes he has proposed. Election slogans are very important in elections, but often times lead people to vote for something without a full understanding of what it means. We all know we need to change some things; the important question is: ‘What do we need to change??
The Bible says that without a vision, the people perish. In other words, you cannot get where you want to go until you make a choice of where you want to go. This is what vision is’a defined purpose and direction that gives you the ability to chart a course of action. In our media culture, we are easily given to clever slogans and grand programs, but we are not too easily given to real ideals and goals. The modern call for multiculturalism has brought us to a place where people are afraid or unwilling to have a declared intent with the purpose of uniting people for a single purpose. There is certainly a need to offer the opportunity for personal goals and desires, but we have often placed such emphasis on the individual that we have forgotten about the need for a corporate vision. We have become a nation of separate groups vying for power and privilege. Everyone is at the table seeking their share, but we fail to understand that the share becomes smaller when no one is building for the whole.
In all my observances, I have seen the answer to our situation is not for a grand scheme; we must return to some simple and practical moral qualities that will bring strength to our foundation. The Bible says, ‘If the foundations be destroyed, what will the righteous do?? We need to repair our bottom line, and then from this moral foundation, seek leaders who will seek to get us where we need to go as a people. We need what the Bible calls repentance. It is the recognition of what has brought us to this place of crisis, then asking forgiveness as we acknowledge our shortcomings. Next, we need a declared intent that we will strive to follow through with our commitment until we see the desired results. This is what our founding fathers did’and the rest is history!
The Rev. Loren Covarubbias is pastor of Mt. Zion Temple.
Let’s pretend that you have never heard of the Bible. Someone hands you a copy and lends it to you promising that it’s ‘a really good read.?
It’s summer, and you have the time, so you settle down with a tall glass of lemonade and open the book?
‘In the beginning?? What a lovely start, you think. Almost as good as ‘once upon a time.?
Clearly this has all the indications of a good novel. By the time you get to the Book of Leviticus, though, you’re ready to put an end to this investment of your time since your eyes have grown bleary with all the prescriptions, legal language and unfamiliar obligations that seem to be being imposed upon the people in the story.
It’s starting to read more like a textbook, so you put it down. The end.
Now let’s pretend that you do know something about the Bible.
You know that it isn’t a novel, something meant to be picked up and read from beginning to end, necessarily.
It’s a collection of books, with many literary forms from which to choose. Its authors were gifted with the spiritual insight necessary to reveal truth by writing in a style that appealed to the people of the time.
Want a funny short story? Try the Book of Jonah.
Want to read a really good debate? Look to the Book of Job.
How about some religious history? Move toward the center of the collection and read through the Book of Kings.
Letters? No one did it better than Paul.
Poetry? Try Psalms.
Even myth, understood correctly, as an imaginative and symbolic story about a reality that is beyond our comprehension, is present in the book of Genesis.
Knowing something about the Bible opens us up to understanding something about mystery.
The Bible reveals a two-thousand-year process of people reflecting on their experience and on the significance of their experience in the context of their relationship with God. And to make it even more interesting, these insights increased as the years went by.
This makes a lot of sense to me and helps me put in perspective some of the stories, especially in the Old Testament, that don’t necessarily put God in the greatest light.
Reading the Bible with an understanding of the beliefs of the people of the time, an understanding of the type of literature I am reading, and knowing that the Bible developed as a process of revelation is a big help. Back to that lemonade.
When read as a collection, the Bible becomes your own personal banquet of inspiration!
And so, I return to the beginning and the truth revealed in the book of Genesis, that everything that exists is here because a loving God created it.
Lately I’ve been pondering this truth and have come to the rather blatant reality that this includes everyone, including me! Rather obvious, you might say, but I would counter that at times we sell ourselves short and forget how special we really are in God’s eyes.
I’ve also centered on the word ‘beginning? and allowed it to work upon my heart. Have you ever considered that beginnings and endings seem to blend to the point where it’s hard to know which is which?
This is the last article I’ll write for the Clarkston News since I’m ending my position at St. Daniel.
Thanks to all of you who have not only inspired me, but have affirmed me in this work. But sometimes endings are stirred into being by beginnings, and this is the case for me.
I’ll continue to write because I have faith that this a Godly purpose for my life. Where it will lead I can only imagine, but I find comfort in the words of Jesus at the end of Matthew’s gospel, ‘I am with you always, until the end of the age.?
Have a great summer, and happy reading!
Cheryl Smith is director of Adult Faith Formation at St. Daniel Catholic Church.
A father was trying to take a nap on a Sunday afternoon in his living room.
His little boy kept bugging him. ‘Daddy, I’m bored.? So his father, trying to make up a game to keep his son busy, found a picture of a world map in the newspaper.
He ripped it up in about fifty pieces and said, ‘Son, this is a puzzle. I want you to put it all back together.?
Dad lay down to finish his nap, thinking he would get at least another hour of sleep. In about 15 minutes the little boy woke him up. ‘Daddy, I’ve got it finished. It’s all put together.?
His dad said, ‘You’re kidding.? He knew his son didn’t know all the positions of the nations and countries.
He said, ‘How did you do that?? The boy said, ‘Dad, there was a picture of a person on the back page of that newspaper. When I got my person put together the world looked just fine.?
It’s amazing how much better the world looks when your person is put together in the right way. A few months ago I spoke to my congregation on HOW TO BE HAPPY. In that series we took an honest look at ourselves ‘our hurts, hang-ups, and habits. We learned two key things.
First, we learned that God wants us to be happy. Somewhere people have gotten the idea that God is an ogre! He’s mean and he doesn’t want you to have any fun.
And if you really sell out to God and live a life of obedience to him then you’ll be miserable. Nothing could be further from the truth!
Jesus said, ‘Until now you have not asked for anything in my name. Ask and you will receive, and your joy will be complete.? (John 16:24) Jesus wants us to have joy!
Question. If Jesus wants us to be happy, then why are there so many unhappy people, even Christian people?
Lots of people look like they’ve been baptized in prune juice. I think the answer has to do with the second thing we learned in our series: Happiness is a by-product of living well.
Many of us have divorced our spirituality from the rest of our life.
‘I go to church and say my prayers and so I’m spiritual! Oh, by the way, I’m mean to my neighbor. I’m lazy at work, and I have lust issues.?
Somehow we’ve lost the truth that Jesus cares about all of life. It’s not like you can have your ‘religion? over here and your ‘life? over there.
If we’re going to be happy the way Jesus wants us to be happy, then we’ve got to live the way Jesus wants us to live.
Are you happy? Maybe you have some real-life issues that are blocking your happiness. Maybe you’re a people-pleaser and lack proper boundaries. Maybe you’re a control-freak who’s into power plays. Maybe you have an addiction to food, pornography, or alcohol.
You won’t find happiness by singing to Jesus on Sunday morning and ignoring these issues the rest of the week.
Get real. Get honest. Let Jesus in. That’s the way to be happy.
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church
We will soon be celebrating Memorial Day. I love to celebrate holidays like this. As a person who loves history, I understand the impact the past has on the present.
I especially like the aspect of this holiday, where we are commemorating the impact of the lives sacrificed for us on the field of battle.
When I was a kid, I remember my mom telling me about her brother who was killed in World War II.
He was actually killed by friendly fire, or Allied bombs, dropped in the confusion of the intensity of the battle.
The older I get, the more important to me the concept of the youth who sacrificed for us, but never had the opportunity to share in the great prosperity of our nation in the years following the war.
My mom told a story of her own mother who was warned in a dream of the loss of her son the night before they got the message. Grandma of course broke in the pain of the loss of her son, but found comfort in the dream as it made her sense the sovereignty and concern of God from the warning she received from Him!
Oh the suffering of those years and what great prosperity and blessing it purchased for us.
We are living in a day when suffering and pain are seen as the enemy. It is certainly true that we should all want to avoid needless suffering and pain, but we also need to recognize the great benefit that pain has to offer. The greatest blessings in life will most certainly also involve pain.
Marriage is a great example of this concept. The Bible declares that marriage is a gift given to us by God. In the beginning, when God created man He said, ‘it is not good for man to be alone I will create a helper suitable for him.?
We surely need help in life, but what we need to help us oftentimes is just the opposite of what makes life pleasant. The woman that God made for Adam was one who would stand opposite of him. The word in the original translation literally means ‘one who stands in opposition to someone.?
To reach one’s highest potential in life, we often need someone to stand against us and convince us to do perhaps even what we do not want to do.
This concept alone will provide it’s irritants, but then add the human perspective of all the other differences between a man and a woman and one can certainly agree with the author who wrote the book, ‘Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus.?
It is obvious that the only way an arrangement like this can work is for pain and suffering to be a part of the equation.
Unfortunately, one of the greatest contributors to the high rates of marriage failure is our unwillingness to sacrifice ourselves and accept the pain necessary for long-term happiness.
The Bible tells us that God wanted a bride. This bride is the church’the collective of His people.
He wanted us so much that He was willing to pay the ultimate price. He gave His only begotten son for us by sacrifice on the cross, but it doesn’t just stop there.
The Bible also says that if God was willing to offer such a sacrifice for us when we were just sinners, how much more is He willing to pay the price for us to become everything He wants us to be. What sacrifice to remember!
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Temple.
When I flip a switch in my home a mysterious thing occurs. The light goes on.
Ok, Ok, I know that there are wires in the wall which carry a thing called electricity to the bulb. That electricity came from a power plant somewhere, where generators with turbines inside create a magnetic field that causes the electrons to vibrate and transfer electric energy through the copper wire inside my walls to a small wire in the light bulb causing the small wire to heat up and glow. Voila, let there be light!
But no one really knows what electricity is. Is it the electrons which are vibrating in the wires or the wave of energy that moves through the wires? There does not seem to be a single definition that satisfies everyone. Yet we use electricity every day.
And what is light? Some scientists will point to a particle called a photon that has mass. Others will describe it as a wave of energy that has no mass. Albert Einstein said it was both, a wave-particle duality. This is both a mystery to the understanding and an experience to be enjoyed.
This leads me to the Great Mystery: God! Some will tell you that God is a being in the sky watching over you, kind of like Santa Claus (he’s making a list, checking it twice, gonna find out who’s naughty or nice.) Others will tell you that there is no God, but they do acknowledge the presence of universal laws and principles such as gravity and mathematics.
To Jesus ‘God is Spirit? (John 4:24) and is not to be worshiped in a physical location ‘on this mountain or in Jerusalem,? but in every thought, word and action ‘in spirit and truth.?
The Apostle John tells us that ‘God is Love? (1John 4:16), reflecting this absolute nature of the Divine.
God is also ‘Our Father? (Matthew 6:9) which describes a personal relationship. In the original Aramaic the word is Abwoon, which comes from the same root as the word for Father (Abba.) According to Neil Douglas-Klotz, in ‘Prayers Of The Cosmos,? it points to a cosmic birthing process that is not gender specific and could be translated as Divine Parent.
This echoes the book of Genesis which tells us that we are made in the image and after the likeness of God, ‘male and female he created them? (Genesis 1:27.) So God is both personal and absolute, imminent and transcendent: a mystery to the understanding and an experience to be enjoyed.
With the joy and freedom that comes through the experience of God’s imminent power and presence we transcend the relative appearances of lack and imitation, disease and conflict, to be the light of the world. ‘You are the light of the world!? (Matthew 5:14.)
When in the midst of life’s trials and tribulations: the doctor’s diagnosis, the dwindling bank account, the obnoxious neighbor, we continue to be a loving, caring, nurturing presence; we have transcended the world and truly are the light of the world.
Today I invite you to embrace the mystery and affirm with our brother Jesus, ‘I am the light of the world.? (John 8:12.)
Matthew E. Long is senior minister
at Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center.
The Easter season is a time of great joy and a celebration of a victory-a victory of life over death, a victory of good over evil. This was accomplished by Christ rising from the dead.
The Resurrection teaches us that spiritual goodness prevails even over physical death. And a promising fact is that we can share in this spiritual goodness by striving to have a healthy spiritual life.
Often, however, we really don’t think about having a spiritual life. What, after all, is a spiritual life?
A scene from the Bible might help illustrate this. After Adam had sinned, God asks him the question ‘Where are you?? God knew where Adam was physically, but I believe he was also asking Adam a question about where Adam’s heart and thoughts were.
Physically I can only be in one place at a time. Spiritually, though, I can be in many different places. Every one of us has had the experience of daydreaming when we should be working or paying attention in school.
Or have you ever asked yourself: ‘What’s the first thing on my mind when I wake up in the morning?? Well, believe it or not, these things are a great way to figure out more about your spiritual life. What you are constantly thinking about is an indication of where you are spiritually.
In finding out more about our spiritual life, we can come across a couple of common roadblocks: materialism and judging others.
We’re immersed in a society where material things take center stage.
At the heart of it materialism doubts the existence, or at least the importance of things we can’t see, hear, taste, touch, or smell. Those who have ever traveled to places of extreme poverty have often experienced this phenomenon: people in the midst of poverty (especially children) can still be happy.
This is in no way meant as an excuse not to help. It’s simply a testimony that our soul is capable of greater things than what the material world offers.
When we do start delving into spiritual things, we often make judgments about others.
How often do I spend my ‘spiritual time? time judging others based on their looks, what they wear, etc.? We are so easily led astray by outward appearances.
The point is: we can easily deceive ourselves about the spiritual state of another person. We can create a false image of someone in our mind, end up creating a monster and then treat that person as the monster we’ve created rather than the good person they really are.
So what’s one solution to overcoming these two obstacles? The virtue of hope.
Hope allows us to spend our ‘spiritual time? focused not on material things, not on the false judgments we often make about others, but on the fact that death does not have the final word, that, in the end, good will prevail.
The most promising thing that awaits us is new life in heaven. Easter is a celebration of what awaits us and hope helps us to get there.
Fr. Daniel Pajerski, LC, is Formation Director for Everest Academy.
This week we focus on someone important to us: our mothers. Where would we be without them, our birth-mother or one who loved and adopted us into her family’as her own?
Many examples of mothers in the Bible that us how God leads and supplies us.
The first mother, Eve, gave into temptation and sin entered the world through Adam, her husband. Neither are our mothers perfect. They face struggles similar to our own. When they give in to temptation, reach out to them with the same love, care, and forgiveness they have shown us through the years.
Next is the aged mother, Sarah. Imagine having been promised a child and waiting until age 80 before receiving that blessing! I am sure there were many times she was discouraged, even doubting the promise. What an example of patience to us as we await God’s blessings.
Moses and his mother remained faithful to God rather than the command of Pharaoh, to kill all Hebrew male babies. God provided this faithful woman so Moses could free the Children of God from their enslavement.
Ruth showed great faithfulness to her mother-in-law, Naomi. Both widowed, Ruth was told to stay with her family when Naomi returned to her homeland. Ruth chose to remain with Naomi, speaking these wonderful words to Naomi: ‘Do not urge me to leave you or to return from following you. For where you go I will go, and where you lodge I will lodge. Your people shall be my people, and your God my God.? Ruth 1:16 (ESV). We see such faithfulness when we lose spouses yet continue to care for our in-laws as part of our family.
In the New Testament Paul, writing Timothy, speaks of his faithful mother, Eunice, and his grandmother, Lois, who were instruments in God’s hands, developing Timothy’s faith in Jesus as his Lord and Savior. Timothy was important to Paul and to God in the early Christian Church.
What better example do we have than Mary Jesus? mother? What an unusual birth’He was conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary!
Painful, Mary watched her Son, nailed to the cross, hang His head in death and proclaim God’s forgiveness for all mankind’s sin’even His mother’s. Before He died Jesus turned to His disciple and commended him to care for His mother and His mother to receive care from His disciple. What better care could anyone receive than God’s gift of forgiveness?
As you celebrate with your mother, whether in person, by telephone, or just remembering, take time to thank her for the blessing she is to you. She is God’s own, unique gift for you. Forgive the times she failed you and seek her forgiveness for the times you failed them. Then, celebrate together the love you share in Him!
The Rev. Kendall Schaeffer is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
There has been a documentary airing recently on the Discovery Channel called ‘Life.?
It’s an 11-part series narrated by Oprah Winfrey that has made good on its promise to show nature in a way never seen before.
Our family has been captivated on Sunday evenings by the descriptions and displays of how the inhabitants on our planet live.
Last Sunday, the show was about plants. My young adult daughter, an animal lover extraordinaire, let out a small breath of frustration as she declared that this episode couldn’t possibly be as good as the others.
After all, what’s cuter than dolphins, primates, or cuddly bears? And isn’t ‘cute? the way everything needs to be evaluated?
At one point, the camera got up close and personal with a Venus Fly Trap, well known to most of us from our grade school years when our teachers allowed us to place bugs in the plant and watch with childish voyeurism as the bug met his demise.
I remarked to my husband (with my now fully mature sense of sensationalism) that it was amazing that God had thought all of this through when he created our world.
The show continued with absolutely marvelous stories of plants that have adapted to growth without nutrients or water in some parts of the world, and how they have a sense of intelligence about them that allows them to reproduce.
Their relationship with birds and animals is so orderly that you’d have to be blind not to see the hand of God.
This led me to thoughts of beauty. Plants, after all, are beautiful. Even dandelions in the right place are wondrous to behold.
From beauty, my thoughts turned to God’s wisdom. The book of Wisdom proclaims, ‘You have arranged all things by measure and number and weight.?
Truly, this world is created beautiful, and I believe God is trying to tell us something by this very fact.
Because creation comes forth from God’s goodness, it shares in that goodness ? ‘And God saw that it was good’very good.? God willed his creation to us, and we are entrusted with maintaining this goodness.
I’m writing this article on Earth Day, a day set aside for us to give thought to how we are treating our planet.
What are we doing, or not doing, to contribute to the goodness and beauty of our planet?
It’s not too late to celebrate Earth Day! Take a walk outside today just as a start. Look, listen, and touch the earth. Spend ten minutes watching a bird make a nest. Smile as you watch squirrels scamper up a forbidden birdfeeder.
Then make a resolution to do your part in contributing to this wondrous and beautiful gift from God. The earth will be glad you did.
Cheryl Smith is director of Adult Faith Formation at St. Daniel Catholic Church.
You know what a wake is.
A wake is a wave of water that a boat leaves behind it. And that wake has two sides to it, and a good water skier knows how to use both sides of the wake.
Dr. Henry Cloud, in his book, ‘Integrity,? says that as we go through life we all leave a wake behind us.
And our wake, just like that boat, has two sides to it: task and relationship.
Now here’s the deal. When it comes to our task, lots of us have a real solid wake behind us.
We’re smart. We’re hard workers. We know how to get things done.
So as we look back at the task side of our wake, we’ve reached our goals and accomplished a lot. But when we look at the relationship side of our wake, what do we see?
Do we see strong relationships where people are happy because they’ve know us?
When we look back at our wake do we see people skiing around, smiling, because we’ve been in their lives?
Or do we see people bobbing for air, bleeding, and left wounded because we’ve skied through their lives and brought them some kind of pain?
So ask yourself:
What kind of wake am I leaving behind? Not only in terms of my tasks but in terms of my relationships?
Are people more trusting?
Have they grown?
Do they feel better?
Did they learn and feel inspired because I’ve moved through their lives and left a good wake?
Or are they less trusting? Are they hurting?
In my current series of talks on Sundays, we’re looking at our character. We’re looking at our personal issues.
The fact is, Jesus wants to do more than ‘save us? for heaven some day when we die.
He wants to save us from our sin ‘our junk, our baggage ‘all the ways that we hurt others and ourselves, today.
Jesus can help us transform our character so that we impact people’s lives positively.
How’s your wake?
The Rev. Greg Henneman is pastor of Clarkston Community Church.
I cannot believe the number of times a little three letter word has caused so much anger to well up within me. Come on, a three-letter word? I know several four-letter words (think ‘pardon my French?) that have not gotten me as angry as this little word. In fact, people have said things about my family and me that have not gotten me as angry as this word.
What is this word that can send a reasonable person, such as me, into such a tizzy? It is the word ‘why?. Yes, why is a three-letter word that has been the reason for much of my frustration in life.
Here’s the thing: It doesn’t have to do with the way that a child asks ‘why? a thousand times to every answer you give. ‘Daddy, why do…?? and then whatever answer you give is followed by the question, ‘why?? Nope, that doesn’t really bother me.
It drives me nuts when I give someone an answer to their religious or theological inquiry and they have the audacity, the temerity, and the outright nerve to ask ‘why??!
Why? What do you mean ‘why?? Are you telling me that my answer, an answer that has served me well for the past 20+ years is not good enough for you? Why? Why? Well’because! That’s why.
Yep, I get pretty logical when that happens. It isn’t pretty and will one day be recorded on someone’s phone and posted on YouTube.
You know what I discovered? I discovered that if the person to whom I was talking, didn’t accept my answer, I didn’t know what to say after that.
I realized I didn’t know what I was talking about. I realized that much of my beliefs in God and Jesus and the Christian life were based on little more than talking points.
At a recent funeral, the wife of the deceased asked me why God would allow her husband of 37 years to die. The old Dave might have had an answer like, ‘God has a plan for each of our lives. We cannot know it, but we can be assured that God intends good to come from it.?
And that would be a fine answer unless she utters that dreaded three- letter word ‘why?.
Do you want to know what I told her? I said that I didn’t know why God let it happen, but I know why God gave us to each other: so we can help each other through this life.
If she asks me ‘why? about that answer I can go on for a long time and not exhaust the love of God and our need to carry each other’s burdens. I can talk about being a physical representation of the love of God to each other in a sometimes horribly unfair and painful world. But a talking point answer isn’t going to do her much good.
Take some time this week and ask yourself why you believe what you believe. When you get to a sticking point, go to your pastor and ask him/her about why your church believes what it believes.
He or she will be happy to explain it and get you past the talking points into a deeper, more fruitful conversation. I promise.
The Rev. Dave Gerber is pastor of Lake Louise in Ortonville.
By the time you read this column, Easter will be in your rear view mirror, spring is sprung and summer is looming large.
While I’m writing this we are in the midst of Lent, snow is on the ground and I am contemplating the coming of spring and the mysteries of Easter anew.
At this time of year, I often notice big signs stating ‘He is Risen? alluding to the premier event of the Christian calendar celebrating the resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth nearly two thousand years ago.
A significant event must have occurred to turn a bunch of weak kneed disciples into confident Apostles preaching the good news. I believe in Jesus, and I believe Jesus when he tells me, ‘The works that I do, you will do and greater works than these will you do.? (John 14:12)
Easter derives its name from the Great Mother Goddess of the Saxon Peoples of Northern Europe, Eastre, the Goddess of Fertility who was honored in the spring. Both rabbits and eggs were associated with her as fertility symbols.
Much of our Easter stories and traditions have parallels that come from ancient traditions such as that of Eastre, the stories of Isis and Osiris, and the flight of the phoenix for examples.
Spring is a time of new birth for plants and animals, the natural cycles of the earth’s flora and fauna are in evidence abundant.
Easter is the one Christian holy day that is not determined by a date on the calendar or governmental edict creating a three day weekend. It is determined by the date of the full moon following the vernal equinox. It is determined by the sun and the moon, by the cycles of nature.
It is the natural cycle of life that this mythic Hero’s Journey of Good Friday, Easter and the Day of Ascension (40th day after Easter) symbolize: crucifixion, resurrection and ascension, or death, rebirth and transcendence.
This is a journey we all participate in, dying to the old so that we may be reborn to the new and elevated to a new transcendent level of awareness.
This new level transcends our old consciousness and allows us to know our relationship with God’s Universe in a new and infinitely more creative way.
People who have had near death experiences, such as myself, tend to come back with a new awareness of their connections with Universal Energy, with God.
And you do not have to have passed through the gate of death and returned to experience this connection. This infinite, eternal, unlimited energy, presence and power that is God permeates all of existence, it transcends existence and makes existence possible.
Through consciously affirming the presence of God in prayer, making conscious communion, and submersing our will into God’s in meditation on the infinite reality of the Divine; we can know God.
In knowing God we realize the healing, harmonizing, prospering energy of God that is manifesting as each one of us. We make it real by expressing health and wholeness, peace and harmony, prosperity and abundance in all that we are: in all that we think, say and do.
My vision for you is that you experience this spring as a time of ascendance in your life as you know with our brother Jesus, ‘I AM Risen!?
Thank you.
The Rev. Matthew E. Long
is pastor of Peace Unity Church & Holistic Center
This week marks an exciting week for the Christian community. We are commemorating what is often called ‘Holy Week.?
This is the commemoration of the most important components of our faith. Friday marks Good Friday. For an outsider to our faith, one would hardly call this Good Friday when you think of what we are remembering. It is the day of the crucifixion and death of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Why do we call it good? The Bible teaches us that all have sinned and fallen short of the Glory of God. Because of sin and the penalty of sin (death), Jesus Christ had to die to pay the penalty of our sin. The Bible declares, ‘For God so loved the world He gave His only begotten Son that whoever would believe in Him would not perish but would obtain eternal life.? Good Friday only tells part of the story.
The Bible says that God not only sent His Son as the savior of the world, but He also sent His Son to fully experience the human condition. Jesus came and not only died for our sins, but rose from the dead and ever lives to make intercession for us! We have someone plugging for us who is fully aware of the human condition. Jesus not only died for us, He also lived for us.
In the Old Testament, the prophet Isaiah gives us insight into the early life of Jesus Christ.
He says in Isaiah 53, ‘He grew up before him like a tender shoot, and like a root out of dry ground. He had no beauty or majesty to attract us to him, nothing in his appearance that we should desire him. He was despised and rejected by men, a man of sorrows, and familiar with suffering. Like one from whom men hide their faces he was despised, and we esteemed him not.?
When Jesus Christ came to the earth, He came in the humblest of human experience. Most of us have heard of the virgin birth, and as Christians we are called to fully embrace this concept. It is not a concept easily received by the non-believer. Most people would have assumed Mary had sinned and Jesus was conceived out of wedlock. I always said that if I was God coming to earth, I would certainly have picked the genetic composition to produce a buff, athletic body and certainly good-looking.
However, Jesus came to experience life as we do, so He did not come like a Hollywood star, but as a simple and ordinary person. Why? Because His eternal purpose was to share our burdens and it was intended that He would share them in a personal way.
Our church, Mt. Zion, will present a play called ‘The Passion of Mary? this weekend. The story represents the crucifixion through a mother’s eyes. My endeavor in this original script was to make people fully aware of the human conditions surrounding the life of Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ was God and became a person in order to fully experience our condition. How amazing!
We must also remember that not only did Jesus Christ fully experience the human condition, but He also triumphed over the human condition. He showed us that in the midst of pain and suffering, we could overcome in every situation. If we will give our best to God’in the end, He will give His best to us. What is His best? Resurrection represents God doing for us what we cannot do for ourselves. Jesus Christ not only died for our sins, He offers us the empowerment to live triumphantly in this life and also access to another life’eternal life with Him. Will you accept the offer?
The Rev. Loren Covarubbias is pastor of Mt. Zion Temple.
Ash Wednesday begins the 40 days and six Sundays of the Lenten Season, a Season of preparation for the Resurrection Experience on Easter Sunday.
Traditionally it is a time of prayer and fasting, symbolized by the question often asked ‘What are you giving up for Lent??
People tend to treat it like a second chance to make good on our New Year’s resolutions to eat healthier and get more exercise.
A couple of years ago, my young son got a hold of this idea from a friend who attends a Catholic church and decided to give up sugar for Lent.
He was determined to do it and even though it turned out to be a much bigger commitment than he had originally anticipated, through it all, he stuck to his commitment. It helped that I normally make cookies with honey instead of sugar. His mother and I couldn’t have been prouder.
It is good to let go of negative habits of eating, acting and thinking at any time of the year. And, I often encourage people to Take It Up For Lent: take up a new habit of eating, acting and thinking.
For one day or 40 days, take up a healthy eating routine, take up a new exercise routine, take up a positive way of thinking.
The infinite, unlimited, eternal existence that is God is desiring greater expression through you.
As the author, Eric Butterworth says, ‘Your life is God’s gift to you. What you do with it is your gift to God.?
Several years ago a Colleague of mine started a movement called A Complaint Free World, see www.complaintfreeworld.biz for more information.
He challenges people to go 21 consecutive days without complaining, criticizing or gossiping. He will even give you a bracelet to help you remember. If you find yourself complaining, switch the bracelet to the other wrist and start over.
I have to admit it took a lot more than three weeks for me to make it 21 days consecutively, and today I find myself much happier and more satisfied with my life.
Over 2200 years ago the philosopher Zhuangzi said ‘Happiness is the absence of striving for happiness.?
We are happy when we decide to be happy. Sadness, depression, anxiety are physical addictions as well as mental states; our minds and bodies become dependent upon the chemical reactions in our bodies.
In 21 days we can begin to reprogram our minds and bodies to be positive, affirming and happy.
So this year I invite you to Take It Up For Lent; take up a positive, affirming, happy and joyous new you.
Matthew E. Long is Senior Minister at Peace Unity Church and Holistic Center.
There are many things in life we don’t have easy answers for and the meaning of suffering has to be at the top of the list. In these few lines I won’t even try to give a complete solution to this problem, but I thought it would be profitable to take a look back a few weeks to a recent event and perhaps shed some light on the situation.
The recent earthquake in Haiti is a typical example of a catastrophe that makes us ask serious questions about life.
Ask yourself: ‘What was my initial reaction when I heard about the disaster?? Your response might be an indication of what you believe in your heart about God and what you think in your heart about your neighbor.
Some could conclude that God was punishing the people of Haiti for the country’s past sins.
That is a terrifying vision of God, but let’s suppose he punishes in this way. If that were the case, we would only be looking at one side of God’s character. If a natural calamity can lead us to conclude that God punishes, then, to be fair, we should also give God credit for the good things that happen in nature. Why not acknowledge the thousands of days that he gave the same people the warmth of the sun? If he is vengeful and punishes, then he is also a loving God who daily distributes generous rewards. So, even the most cynical analysis allows leeway for God’s goodness.
What would a vengeful outlook lead us to conclude about the people who were the victims? If physical suffering were necessarily a consequence of moral failure, then how many of us would be healthy enough to get out of bed every morning? None of us can boast of being perfect, so we should think twice before assuming that others are receiving retribution for their offenses.
Rather than blame God and judge the people who were victims we should trust in God’s mercy and laud the efforts of those who sacrificed to save others. In those who were found alive we can admire a spirit that is stronger than death. The tragedy was also an occasion for people to grow in goodness through countless acts of generosity; acts that might not have been accomplished otherwise.
I think a more serene approach is to see everything in terms of a divine, if mysterious, plan. There was and is suffering and pain for the victims and their loved ones and these thoughts are in no way intended to suffice, but we can also believe that the suffering and pain will one day come to an end. If we want to begin to make any sense out of suffering, we must strive to perceive that some good can result from it.
Fr. Daniel Pajerski, LC, is Formation Director for Everest Academy.
You might be tired of hearing about Haiti. It isn’t because you are cold-hearted or uncaring; it just means you are human. We can only see so much suffering and death and destruction before we have to step away to maintain our sanity. Caring hurts. Caring takes its toll. Caring in the midst of such overwhelming need can make you feel insignificant and hopeless. In order to deal with it, we tune out. We go to the movies, watch comedies, go for a walk, or go shopping. We do anything that takes our minds off of how horrible things are in the world around us.
We just can’t look at one more sad face, one more orphaned child, one more man that lost his wife and kids. We cannot watch one more mother hold her children as they wait for food and water. It hurts something in our hearts. Somehow our soul gets damaged. The problem is that tuning it out doesn’t really help. We are still overwhelmed, and worse, we ignore the suffering.
Sometimes we think finding the answer to the question of why it happened will help. Smarter people than me have tried to answer those questions, so I’m not even going to try. For me, it really doesn’t matter why. I don’t care why the earthquake happened. I don’t care if it was a deal with the devil. I don’t care if it was because of what didn’t happen in Copenhagen. It happened. It was devastating. Lives were torn apart. People that God loves were devastated. God weeps.
In times like these, life is not a theological question to answer. In John’s gospel, the disciples asked why a man was born blind. They asked if it was the man that sinned or his parents. The disciples knew that someone had to have sinned. Jesus said it wasn’t the man or his parents. Jesus says, ‘Neither this man nor his parents sinned, but this happened so that the work of God might be displayed in his life? (John 9:3 NIV). But it could be translated, ‘Neither this man or his parents sinned. Let the works of God be displayed in him!? In other words, Jesus said that there is work to be done and we better be about doing it. You and I have the ability to do something about the suffering in Haiti and it will demonstrate the power of God.
That power is not only demonstrated to the people in Haiti, but for us as well. When we are overwhelmed by suffering as in Haiti, we can question God and the way the world works. We can get depressed, angry, or frustrated. We can sit around and try to figure out how all of this happened and what it means for us and them. That won’t help.
If we want to start feeling hopeful again, there is one thing we can do: We can start by giving and serving. When we give to people that need our help, we are participating in the work of God and somehow through that participation, we are filled with the Spirit of God. We become hopeful because God is hopeful. When we give we receive. That is powerful, for both the people in Haiti and ourselves.
When the man born blind was given his sight, he saw the Light for the first time in his life. Our sacrifices can bring light into the Haitians? darkness and our own.
What do you say? Would you give to the people of Haiti so they could see the Light? You may not think you can do much, but it will make a huge difference for both you and the Haitians. I promise.
The Rev. Dave Gerber is pastor of Lake Louise Church.
One of the common problems of our time is the number of people that endure each day without peace in their lives. Whether the cause be anxiety, doubt, fear, guilt, or trouble, the problem is serious.
Not only do people who lack peace become immobilized and unable to lead the kind of productive lives that God intends for them, they also have adverse affects on the people around them. At a minimum, those who lack peace are irritable, preoccupied, and hard to live with. More seriously, those without peace can become angry, destructive, and even violent.
The good news is that God gives His peace freely to those who turn to Him. And he gives it in three different ways.
First, He gives the objective peace that we need to have with Him.
The Bible’s description of us is not flattering. It tells us that we have all sinned and fall short of His glory (Rom.3:23), that we suppress the truth in unrighteousness (Rom.1:18), and are by nature children of wrath (Eph.2:3). Because of this, we are naturally out of accord with Him, and by going our own way we are not at peace with Him.
But God, being rich in mercy, has taken the initiative to do what is necessary to bring peace. He has sent His Son to be the satisfaction for our sins (1 Jn.2:2) so that His wrath would be turned away from us. To experience the resulting peace with Him, all we need to do is believe Him. The promise of the Bible is that ‘having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ? (Rom.5:1).
Second, God gives us the subjective peace we need to have in our own hearts.
In this world of sin and strife, maintaining your own personal peace is a constant challenge. How easily our peace is upset by even the slightest concern or provocation!
But here again, God provides. To those who commit their cares to Him in prayer, He gives a peace that surpasses all comprehension, and guards the heart and mind (Phil.4:6,7). And because He freely gives His Spirit, this peace can be experienced in any place and any situation. ‘Peace I leave with you; My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Do not let your heart be trouble, nor let it be fearful? (Jn.14:27).
Third, God gives peace with regard to our relationships with others. If we are at war with God, and do not have peace within ourselves, it is certain that this will spill over into our relationships. But God, by His grace, can reverse this.
His Word tells us, ‘When a man’s ways are pleasing to the Lord, He makes even his enemies to be at peace with Him? (Pr.16:7). So, if it seems you’re at constant odds with the people in your life, it could be that your ways are not pleasing to the Lord.
Of course, it’s possible to be walking with the Lord and still be out of accord with another. Yet even if you can’t resolve things with that person, you can still have peace with God and yourself if you are doing all that you can to pursue peace with all men (Rom.12:18). In any case, peace of all kinds begins with turning our hearts to the Lord.
‘Now may the Lord of peace Himself continually grant you peace in every circumstance? (2 Thess.3:16).
The Rev. David Bostrom is pastor of Seeds for the Harvest ministry.
It has been two weeks since the devastating earthquake in Haiti. The devastation and human loss is measured in numbers and beyond description.
As of this writing there are well over 100,000 killed and so many more injured. The number of those homeless and without basic necessities of food, water, shelter and medical care remains at catastrophic levels.
All this is in the poorest country in this hemisphere. There is no infrastructure able to meet the needs this disaster without help from the outside.
The outside is responding. The list of organizations providing help is long and important.
Our financial support for those in need is critical. I encourage you to find a relief agency and offer what you can to offer hope for those in need.
Haiti has a special connection with United Methodists in Michigan. We have a covenant relationship with Haiti. United Methodists from Michigan have been going to Haiti for years to assist in mission and ministry.
A mission team of Michigan United Methodists were there when the earthquake hit. They have now all finally safely returned home. More trips are being planned.
Our church is a collection site for inexpensive health kits you can make at home. Those simple supplies will be delivered to be given to those affected by the earthquake. Information on how to make those kits can be found on our church web site at www.clarkstonumc.org.
Reports out of Haiti have told of human suffering but it has also given testimony of great faith. This past Sunday as congregations continued to bury the dead and care for the living, they sang songs of praise. Some from the outside might wonder how that could be possible.
When all is taken from you and life is precarious at best, why would you give God thanks? It is because you still have life. You still have hope.
It is because you know after everything else is gone; the only thing that remains is God.
This God is not standing off far away. This God is not rejoicing in the power of the earthquake.
God is instead in the midst of the lives of those so afflicted. God is receiving the ones who have died and weeping with those who grieve.
God is stirring the hearts of those who will be the hands and feet and hearts of mercy.
How do we know? We know because we knew God before the earthquake. Join with those in Haiti who are praying and praising God today. They know something that is true. Perhaps as we assist them, they can teach us.
The Rev. Richard Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
We are now well into January. How are those resolutions coming along? I admit that I’m feeling more than a little impatient with myself.
My goals just can’t seem to be reached quickly enough, and I find it difficult to maintain the motivation I had in those first few days of the new year. It doesn’t help that winter days lend themselves to that endless feeling of ‘just grin and bear it.? Sometimes I feel like I treat January and February as a disease to be endured rather than a time to live well. I am being hard on myself.
St. Francis of Assisi, a saint who lived during the late 12th and early 13th century would object to this disposition. One of his famous quotes, ‘the journey is essential to the dream,? reminds me that all our moments in life are a gift, including those that seem inconsequential, boring, disappointing, challenging, or downright depressing.
He would more than likely counsel me that these winter days can be times of real growth in the spirit, a time to learn and reflect on how each of us can work toward being the best version of ourselves? that unique individual God has called us to be.
While the journey may seem uphill sometimes, it is days like these that strengthen us for our life’s mission. As Christians, we can find consolation in the words of St. Paul, ‘We know that all things work for good for those who love God, who are called according to his purpose.? So, back to those resolutions!
I suppose you could divide the world into learners and non-learners. We all make mistakes, and fall off the proverbial wagon from time to time. But we also know people who refuse to give up, even when they seem to fail. Being a learner allows us to be open to what is happening around us, hearing the lessons that life has to teach, and becoming successful at recognizing mistakes as simply that, a mistake.
Perhaps the question to ask yourself is not whether you are successful or failing in your work toward your resolutions, but rather are you a learner or a non-learner? Remember that the journey is essential!
Maybe this seems like nonsense. Perhaps you never bothered to make any resolutions this year. Perhaps the journey toward being your best self seems too difficult. If that is the case, I urge you to reconsider. It’s never too late.
God has created you to be capable of greatness, and you have an essential purpose. Ask yourself these two questions: What is one thing that you could do that would radically change your life? And secondly, what great thing would you attempt if you knew you couldn’t fail? Begin the journey and don’t be afraid of the bumps in the road.
Cheryl Smith is director of Adult Faith Formation at St. Daniel Catholic Church.
Are there people close to you who seem distant? Having a hard time connecting with others? Feeling alone and cut off from those who are around you?
Before you go seal yourself up in a box and isolate yourself, how about taking some steps to renew your relationships?
When people find they are having a hard time getting along with others, they often neglect to think that maybe they are part of the problem. But it’s always good to look first at how you may be contributing to any difficulty, instead of assuming that the cause lies elsewhere (Mt.7:3-5).
This approach is most hopeful, too, because it means that there are things that you can do to improve your situation.
So, consider your relationships.
Having a rough time with your spouse? Maybe you haven’t been much of a companion lately. Things not going well with your kids? Perhaps you’ve been off in your own world, only contributing a stern look or a harsh word here and there. Having a tough time at work? Could it be you haven’t been fulfilling your role very well as of late?
If any of these things are true, it can go a long way toward explaining why there’s a coolness between you and others.
The good news is that the situation can change for the better. But it will take some action on your part in applying the second greatest commandment.
The second greatest commandment is, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself? (Mt.22:38). Following this command is one of the most powerful things you can do to renew your relationships.
And realize this. Your neighbor is not just the guy next door ? it’s all those the Lord brings into your life, especially in your own household (Lk.10:29ff.; 1 Tim.5:8). And love? It’s more than just a warm feeling. It’s taking the initiative to lay down your life for others (Jn.15:13).
So, do you really want to warm up those cooled relationships that are frustrating you? Then, take a look around and consider ways you can take a caring step toward those who are close to you. Be a better friend to your spouse, a more involved parent, and a more engaged worker, etc. . ..
The key is to take the initiative. Don’t wait around for certain feelings to come. Just start doing what you know to be right today.
As you do this faithfully, surely good will come. After all, it should, because taking such initiative is God’s way.
God is the one who took the initiative to renew our relationships with Him by sending His Son, Jesus Christ (Rom.5:8). As we live our lives after Him, it’s right for us to take the steps necessary to renew our relationships with others.
We are to love, because He first loved us (1 Jn.4:19).
The Rev. David Bostrom is pastor of Seeds for the Harvest ministry.
The first couple days of each New Year are usually filled with trying to get things back to ‘normal? after the busy holiday season. I also find myself making some resolutions about how I want things to be different in my life in the year ahead.
My resolutions usually relate to losing weight and getting more exercise as I discover again that all of my clothes have ‘mysteriously? shrunk over the past month. I know that these resolutions are good things as I try to do better and help me refocus my priorities. However I also know that the most important thing for me is to open my life again to God’s love and grace so I can become more what God wants me to be in this new year.
So as I begin 2010 I am taking some time to pause and pray and reflect about my life, my priorities, my purpose, my relationships, and my faith in God. I am also trying to not move on too quickly from Christmas, and all that it means, even though our decorations will soon be put away.
One thing I dislike doing after Christmas is putting the manger scene away ? especially packing the baby Jesus into a cold, dark box. Somehow it just doesn’t seem right.
So a number of years ago we began a family tradition of leaving the baby Jesus out all year instead of packing him away. Then we move him around the house throughout the year.
It’s fun because we never know where he will turn up, but even more important it is a reminder to us that Jesus is with us each and every day of each and every year no matter where we are, what we’re doing or what is happening in our lives. In this way the Good News of Christmas is present in our home all year.
Something else I am always struck by after Christmas is the thought that we spend so much time getting ready to celebrate the birth of the baby that we tend to forget that the real work begins when you bring the baby home.
Anyone who has ever had children knows what I mean ? and I believe the same is true for the celebration of Jesus? birthday if we really take it seriously. So even though Christmas Day is past I am choosing to reflect on this question: ‘Is Christmas over, or has the real work just begun??
I am reminded of one my favorite poems by theologian and spiritual writer Howard Thurman called ‘The Work of Christmas? (from The Mood of Christmas by Howard Thurman). It seems particularly relevant this year as we face together these challenging times:
‘When the song of the angels is stilled, when the star in the sky is gone, when the kings and princes are home, when the shepherds are back with the flocks, then the work of Christmas begins:
‘to find the lost, to heal those broken in spirit, to feed the hungry, to release the oppressed, to rebuild the nations, to bring peace among all peoples, to make a little music with the heart?
‘And to radiate the Light of Christ, every day, in every way, in all that we do and in all that we say.?
My hope and prayer for you and me is that we live each day in this new year with Christmas in our hearts and lives. And one more thing, I saw a little joke recently that said, ‘Beat the Christmas rush, come to church today.? A good word for a new year and another way to live like its still Christmas ? all are welcome in God’s house every day.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church
Where we are born establishes the course of the rest of our life.
Three babies born in Clarkston, Baghdad, and Nairobi will have somewhat different paths to follow. None are automatically better than the others. Other factors such as the health of the family, social environment and economic standing will affect their life path.
What they believe about themselves, the world and who they worship shape them as a person. Our first defining moments however, begin with where we were born.
Why was Jesus born in Bethlehem? Bethlehem was the place where King David was born.
He was the greatest of all the kings of Israel. Like all of us, he was less than perfect. His sins were public for all the world to see. Yet as low as his sins brought him, his faith placed him in places where God’s providence and grace were made known.
How much better than, for one who was sinless and would bring in the Kingdom of God, to be born in the place of David’s birth?
Christian Biblical scholars point to a passage in the book of Micah. They interpret Micah 5:2 (‘But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah, though you are small among the clans of Judah, out of you will come for me one who will be ruler over Israel, whose origins are from of old, from ancient times?) as referring to the place where the Messiah was born. So it makes sense to them Jesus was born in Bethlehem.
These are some of the reasons why Jesus was born in Bethlehem.
Perhaps more important is where Bethlehem is and what it became. Bethlehem is five miles outside of Jerusalem. It was ‘in the country.? God intentionally chose to have his Son be born not in a place of power. Instead the common and ordinary was chosen. Stable smells and manger hay was chosen over cologne and silk. If Christmas first came to a place such as that, then it can come anywhere now.
For that night, Bethlehem became the center of the world where shepherds, sojourners, and eventually wise men would gather. Bethlehem became where all were welcomed and important.
Why Bethlehem? Perhaps it was so wherever we are this Christmas, we know Christmas can come there. Christmas can come to our home, community, family, hurts and hopes. Christmas can come even to us where there is no peace or hope and make both possible.
Christmas began in a place where we would know the only thing that made it possible was God’s grace. That is still true today. Merry Christmas and may the peace of this new born King come to you wherever you are!
The Rev. Richard Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church
Thanksgiving is increasingly one of my favorite times of the year.
I like it because Thanksgiving really helps me focus on appreciating the simple things of life that mean so much but that we all too often take for granted. Things like time with family, the food on our table, the friends we have, and the many blessings we have received from God even in these very challenging times.
Thanksgiving is a wonderful pause after the hectic pace of a busy fall and the even more hectic pace of the approaching Christmas season. However taking time to really reflect on our lives and God’s goodness need not last just a day.
It seems to me that there should be bit of Thanksgiving every day. For me it’s a matter of being intentional and taking the time. Pausing long enough to remember that today, just like any other day, has 86,400 seconds in it ? and to decide to use at least a few of those seconds each day to say ‘thank you!?
I once read a little story about a grandfather who was asked by his young granddaughter if he had liked the turkey this year ? a question often asked at our holiday tables. The grandfather responded that he liked the turkey very much and in fact he tries ‘to have a little turkey every day.?
Confused the little girl asked what he meant. He responded that he has a tradition in his life where each day he sets aside some intentional time to say thanks to God. So even though Thanksgiving may be over as you read this I would invite you to join me in ‘having a little turkey? today and every day ? or if you don’t really like turkey you can substitute ham or fish or green beans or corn or tofu ? what matters is the reminder that all I have is gift and that there is a giver to thank.
One of the most important ways I try to say thanks to God every day is in my giving ? to others.
Such ‘thanks ? giving? is especially important this year when so many are struggling. It may be something material or it may just be giving a smile or a word of encouragement or an extra dose of patience and love to someone else. May these tough times be marked by the generosity of God’s people as we give thanks through our giving to those around us both nearby and around the globe.
Psalm 100 is one of my favorite reminders to give thanks. I hope you will consider putting it on your refrigerator or in your daily planner or taping it to the bathroom mirror that you look into each morning so that these words can be a ‘little turkey for you every day.?
‘Make a joyful noise to the Lord, all the earth.
‘Worship the Lord with gladness; come into his presence with singing.
‘Know that the Lord is God. It is he that made us, and we are his; we are his people, and the sheep of his pasture.
‘Enter his gates with thanksgiving, and his courts with praise. Give thanks to him, bless his name.
‘For the Lord is good; his steadfast love endures forever, and his faithfulness to all generations.? (Psalm 100 NRSV)
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church.
Now is the time to gather and give thanks.
I hope your Thanksgiving is one involving family and friends. Whatever foods you consider essential for a Thanksgiving meal, I hope there was plenty. I also hope you found plenty of reasons to give thanks and knew who to thank.
Some years there are many reasons to give thanks. Our family is celebrating a wedding, a new grandchild, another on the way and the first time our whole extended family will spend Thanksgiving together in almost 30 years.
There are so many reasons to give thanks!
Other years may seem more difficult. For so many reasons, some may find it easier to list what has gone wrong in the past year more than right.
When that happens, are thanksgivings still worth having? How do you give thanks when your hearts are not filled with gratitude? Why bother to say thanks when all you see is more loss than blessing?
I believe the answer depends on what you think God is supposed to do for you. If God is primarily there to tend to our needs and give us blessing, then give thanks based on the good you have received.
This also suggests some years it would be appropriate to cancel Thanksgiving.
If you have had a difficult year, wait before you either cancel Thanksgiving or begrudgingly go through the motions.
Instead let me suggest a real reason to give thanks. This is a reason to give thanks, whether you are feeling blessed or overwhelmed with struggle.
The reason simply stated is this, God is.
God seeks to be more than your divine Santa. God wants to be in relationship with you.
From the moment of our birth, God has intentionally wanted to be part of your life. This relationship is no guarantee every day will be filled with joy and blessing. Certainly, the life of Christ demonstrates this truth.
Yet in all moments, God is. God is with us. God is faithful to walk with us. On happy days, God dances with us. On days of grief and despair, God carries us even as we may question if God is even there.
This Thanksgiving, I hope you have a reason to give thanks. For after all is said and done, there is only one real reason?..God is.
God is for you, for your family, our country and all who will only accept the gift of this relationship. Blessed Thanksgiving to you!
The Rev. Richard L. Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
I have begun to profoundly appreciate the places in our created world’places that naturally evoke a sense of wonder and awe at the power of the divine and the energy of the human spirit.
Michigan is a magnificent place, especially in the season of autumn. Anyone who has recently witnessed a rising harvest moon, a maple blushing with its last burst of energy before leaves fall, or a young buck moving hesitantly through the backyard has been privy to the scenic wonders available as gifts for our eyes.
If you’ve ever given pause to these moments to thank God for the gift, you have experienced grace’a meeting place with the divine. Nature is boundless in the opportunities it provides to spend these transcendent moments with our Creator. And yet, the natural world is merely a backdrop for some of the most wondrous places on this earth.
Because we are made in the image of God, human beings share in this ability to create places of grace. Last spring I had the opportunity to travel with my daughter to Turkey, the so called ‘cradle of civilization,? a place legendary for its connection to the Bible’s stories of creation and a place where one can walk in the footsteps of St. Paul, the greatest Christian missionary that ever lived.
In the six months since that journey, I have reflected on the places where I met God. Some may seem more likely meeting places than others. For example, we visited the home where tradition tells us Mary, Jesus? mother, lived out her remaining days in Ephesus under the care of the disciple, John.
The experience of grace here was one of deep respect, reverence and gratitude for the life of Mary, the model of discipleship for me.
There was an obvious connection between God and human beings in this place, and everything there heralded a sense of divine presence.
Candles, prayer intentions tacked onto stone walls, men in long brown robes, and hundreds of pilgrim people helped to prepare my disposition to meet God here. Other places where I experienced grace surprised me! Our journey also took us to a small Turkish village outside of Ephesus where women wove the tapestry style rugs for which Turkey is famous.
Here there were no candles, no prayer intentions, and the men sat at picnic tables smoking filterless cigarettes and drinking small glasses of Raki, a traditional Turkish liquor.
And yet, this meeting place with God was in some ways more profound. The people were simple, humble, and friendly; gifted with talent and patience beyond my comprehension. One rug can take half a lifetime to weave! I was struck by God’s presence in their lives and in their small village.
While I couldn’t gather the nerve to swallow the Raki, I felt a great sense of joy in joining in the mealtime toast honoring the providence of Allah.
I knew then in my heart that God’s presence was among us, that I was meeting God in a small Muslim village, and the words in John’s first letter sang out in my heart: ‘Beloved, let us love one another, because love is of God; everyone who loves is begotten by God and knows God.?
This week, seek out your own places of grace and spend some time reflecting on what God is teaching you in that space. Our world is a wondrous place, and you might be surprised where God will meet you next!
Cheryl Smith is director of Adult Faith Formation at St. Daniel Catholic Church.
When I was a child there were popular commercials featuring Smokey the Bear. His message was ‘Only you can prevent forest fires.?
The movie Bambi was also very popular. This movie told the story of a deer whose family had been destroyed in a forest fire. There was a concerted movement that the prevention of forest fires would preserve our woodlands. The national mindset was certainly impacted by these themes.
Time, however, has proven that many of our noble efforts may actually work in contrast to the natural order. Wild fires began to ravage our national forests at an unprecedented rate. Through these events we became painfully aware of the necessary balance to nature.
Fires which are not instigated by man are very much a part of the natural order and very important to the long term health of the forest. Occasional forest fires will burn the build up of brush under the forest canopy so that when larger scale forest fires do occur they are not as intense.
In California I have observed the majestic redwoods and sequoia trees, many of which are thousands of years old. These trees have not only survived forest fires but they actually require forest fires in order to open their cones for reproduction and new growth. The natural order is amazing and resilient. Nature often proves that something which seems bad in the moment can actually be good for the long term.
The Bible says if we want to understand the ways of God we simply have to look at the natural order He created. When we observe the biblical principles we can certainly benefit as we apply them to our every day life. Often times suffering for the moment brings greater blessing in our future while seeking temporary satisfaction can lead to long term problems.
This is what has happened to us as a country in our economy. Many bad practices are now bearing fruit. If we are wise we will let the fire consume the bad undergrowth so in the long term we can be more productive and bring a longer lasting blessing.
Unfortunately, the prevalent idea of the age is pain avoidance at all cost. Therefore, we have a government spending trillions of dollars to alleviate our momentary distress with no real thought about our future. The Bible says that though the fires of judgment can be severe what they produce in the end is refined gold, something durable and precious.
Will we see the wisdom of God or simply create a scenario for greater fires in our future? When the banks were teetering the government came to the rescue. Now we are stunned when the people we rescued paid themselves bonuses and went on with life as usual.
How could we expect anything different if no judgment was experienced? The argument from the banking industry is we need bonuses in order to hire the best people. If they are the best people then how did we get into this situation?
Michigan is one of the worst states economically in our nation. Will we cure our problems or just go on with business as usual? The Bible says there is a way that seems right to men but the end is the way of death. I am so glad I have founded my life on the principles of the word of God. The Bible also says when we follow His principles when the storms come and the winds blow we will be like a house built on the rock. If we don’t follow His ways we will be like the person who builds their house on the sand. Where will you build?
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
I love the book of Proverbs. How come? Because I need wisdom, and Proverbs offers it in abundance.
The Book of Proverbs was originally intended for young men who would grow to assume leadership positions. But it is beneficial for all, and it invites all to come and partake of it.
‘Turn to my reproof,? wisdom cries, ‘And I will pour out my spirit on you. I will make my words known to you? (Pr.1:23).
Because you surely need wisdom, I commend Proverbs to you. Take one chapter a day, and you will get through the book in a thirty-one day month. If you do so with an attentive and faithful heart, you will be blessed with peace and joy ? in addition to wisdom.
There are a number of themes in Proverbs that relate to everyday life. God and man, wisdom, the fool, the sluggard, friendship, words, the family, and life and death, are all themes that you’ll find through this book.
Dominant among these themes, of course, is wisdom itself.
But what is wisdom? One good definition is, ‘the right use of knowledge.? But if you take a closer look, you’ll find that wisdom has different shades that make it full and rich.
Wisdom, for example, involves instruction and training. It doesn’t just come with the passing of time. It’s hard won, because it involves character as much as the mind.
Wisdom also involves understanding or insight. When Solomon became king he prayed that God would give him the ability to discern between good and evil (1 Kings 3:9). What is it that gives such discernment? Wisdom.
Wisdom also contains an element of what we would call shrewdness, prudence, or wise dealing. Each of these abilities can be used to scheme and bring harm. But with the right heart they can bring good out of tight circumstances because such wisdom gives the ability to handle tough situations.
Finally, wisdom also has to do with knowledge and learning. Not merely head knowledge, but the knowledge of God. And this helps us to see how wisdom is actually attained.
Where does wisdom come from? It comes from the Lord.
‘The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom? (Pr.9:10). This means that if you want wisdom, you must turn to the Lord and devote yourself to Him.
As one commentator on Proverbs put it, wisdom is not for the man who is wise in his own eyes, but the one who watches daily at the gates.
The Rev. David Bostrom is pastor of Seeds for the Harvest ministy.
Hospitality may sound to some as a passive act of polite manners. It is more than that.
When hospitality is offered, others are honored, empowered and included. Hospitality demands respect be given unconditionally to those who receive it. Hospitality creates a holy space between the giver and receiver. Hospitality is radical.
‘It is also becoming causality of our culture.
The language in our world today is divisive and alienating. Differing viewpoints are treated with scorn. Rudeness and hostility is becoming a fact of public and private speech. Several public events come to mind.
? The disrespect of a Rep. Joe Wilson towards the office of the President of the United States when he shouted out, ‘You lie!? from the floor of the U.S. Senate is inexcusable regardless of political preferences.
? When Kanye West interrupted Taylor Swifts acceptance speech at the MTV awards by taking the microphone out of her hands and protesting that Beyonce Knowles should have won instead, he was booed. But the damage and disrespect was already done.
? When a cross was burned on the lawn of a family in our area and a mural in town vandalized with obscene painting, the lack of respect was brought home. Questions as to whether we should embrace a Salvation Army store in our area demonstrate a lack of awareness as to the need for one that already exists. It also suggests a lack of hospitality for others.
These acts and attitudes perhaps are not the norm. But they are symptomatic of a greater social illness. The ability to discern differences and offer respect at the same time is an act of radical hospitality in defiance of the social malaise.
Jesus Christ taught radical hospitality. He came to redeem and save all. This includes those who are in and out, up and down, near and far, the familiar and stranger.
When we as a church or individual disciples offer hospitality, we do so in the knowledge we all stand equal in the presence of Christ.
The most radical act of Christ was his unconditional acceptance of all. It is what gave hope and blessing to sinners of all kinds. It is what gives hope to each one of us. It is also what got him killed.
When we talk about radical hospitality in the church, we are talking about more than politeness. We are demonstrating personal humility, mutual respect and surrender to Christ. When we see the world not as them and us, but all as children of the living Lord called to come together for worship, mission, and service, we will be able to practice radical hospitality.
The Rev. Rick Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
A few days ago, during one of my visits to the school chapel, I heard one of the girls pray: ‘Lord, may people all over the world enjoy the same freedoms that we enjoy in our country.?
Knowing the girl and what recently happened in her native country, I understood immediately what she was talking about: the freedom to discuss God and religion in schools, both public and private. A law passed last month in Venezuela ‘requires education to have a ‘lay character’in all circumstances? and leaves religious education to families.?? (Catholic News Service, Tuesday, August 25th, 2009)
If that doesn’t sound too alarming to you, take a minute to ponder what is happening. In an age of open-mindedness, globalization, and diversity, it almost appears that in some parts of the world God must only be discussed in the privacy of one’s own home. Many are being forbidden to learn about God in the very places where they should be encouraged to open their horizons.
Independence is among the first principles our nation was founded to protect and nurture, but it can be taken too far.
As Fulton Sheen once remarked, ‘anyone who thinks he is totally independent from everyone else should take a look to see if he has a belly button.? We are unique, but we shouldn’t pretend that we don’t rely on others to help make us better. For many, believing in and relying on a loving God helps them to become better people. Is that a topic that is harmful to discuss? Is it healthy to pretend that we have to be totally independent from God?
In a free society, people should not feel intimidated about or afraid of discussing God in public. We live in a society where free speech is guaranteed. However, among some, it seems that there is a certain fear to speak about God. What is there to fear? Religion has been blamed for causing division and war and it is true that people have fought for religious purposes. However, isn’t it unfair and close-minded to highlight the mistakes people have made in the name of religion while overlooking the countless ways that religion has brought peace, security, and unity?
If we are free to discuss the excesses of those who are devoted to religion, can we not also be free to discuss the hospitals, orphanages, homeless shelters, soup kitchens, and, yes, educational institutions established in the name of religion? Can’t we also admire the fact that there are those who believe that some things are more precious than their own life?
It is no coincidence that societies which want to leave God aside also end up leaving human rights aside. Governments may decide that God will be banned from discussion in schools, but they cannot banish the desire to know and love God from the human heart. The truth is that when we decide not to make God part of our discussions or part of our lives, he is not the one who suffers; we do.
Fr. Daniel Pajerski, LC, is Formation Director for Everest Academy.
I had breakfast recently with my good friend Chris who has been battling a rare form of cancer for two years. With no intention to underestimate the ferocity of a disease like cancer, I have to admit that the phrase ‘battling cancer? is so overused that it dilutes how difficult this disease is to manage.
Indeed, watching Chris endure multiple surgeries, two full rounds of chemotherapy and the devastation of learning the cancer is back for another go is like witnessing full blown warfare.
And yet, I am sure if you were to ask her about her experience, she would likely tell you it was difficult and then quickly move on to how on this day she is living quite successfully, thank you very much.
She is an inspiration to me and to all those who know her because she is a living example of how wonderfully made we are. God creates us in his image? body, soul, and spirit. Our job throughout this life is to respond to this gift with gratitude and respect, always trying to balance our physical, intellectual, emotional and spiritual selves against the weight of the world’s pressure upon us. How can this be done?
Chris has always been extremely active in a variety of ways ? she runs, racewalks, practices yoga and strength training, continually challenging her body to be the best it was meant to be. Many would say that it is this attitude of fitness that has contributed to her amazing ability to fight cancer, since even the chemotherapy has not kept her out of the aerobics room at a local gym.
This would be true, at least to some extent. But Chris would be the first to remind you that while the exercise is extremely important, without the constant prayer devoted to her wellness by the people who are accustomed to working out with her, she might not be alive today.
You see, it’s all about balance. Chris intuitively understands and practices something many of us spend a lifetime trying to achieve. We must nurture all parts of our being? mind, body, and spirit. To live without food for one is to defeat your efforts to be healthy and wholesome.
And so, Chris is grateful for prayer offered on her behalf and responds with a vital and dynamic prayer life of her own. She even participates on a team that leads retreats for the women of her church!
Unfortunately, when the going gets rough, we as ‘productive? members of society tend to let go of that which is less outwardly productive, our spirituality and our prayer life.
Believe me, I’m not judging, since I am as guilty as the rest! Luckily, I have people like Chris in my life to remind me of the sacredness of life, of the gift of each day, and the essential nature of prayer and relationship with God through Christ. I encourage you to commit today to live a more balanced life.
A change of season is a good time to make positive changes in our personal lives and the harvest is a wonderful reminder of God’s provision in our lives. Live well!
Cheryl Smith is director of Adult Faith Formation at St. Daniel Catholic Church.
There is an air of excitement and hope as the adventure of a new school year begins. There is also anxiety and fear about what the future holds.
Above all it is hard for me to believe that summer is already moving into fall. Football games, fall weddings, apples and fresh produce of all kinds, crisp nights and hoped for ‘Indian summer? days ? these are some of my favorite things.
This time of year for me will always be, above all, a reminder of how much I love to learn and grow.
In fact I think that’s the way God made us. So each day I try to learn something new and grow deeper in some way ? maybe in a relationship or in knowledge about something or maybe getting to know myself better or God.
It seems to me that as people we are either learning and growing, or we are closing ourselves off and slowly dying. I know that I will always try to be open to new things and new learning ? I want to keep on growing each day of my life, even in anxious times.
When asked what is the most important thing to learn and do, Jesus summed up the Christian way of life in the Great Commandment ? love God with all your heart and soul and mind and strength; and love your neighbor as yourself (Mark 12:29-31).
Of all the great things there are to learn, I believe that learning about God’s love for us and learning to return that love and extend it to others, is far and away the most important. It applies in all of the seasons of life and in the midst of every challenging circumstance we may face. I also know that I’ve still got a lot to learn about love and that I need help along the way ? from God and from you.
Often our greatest learning about love and about ourselves comes in the most difficult and challenging situations and relationships. Do you recall the teacher or coach that taught you the most?
Most likely they loved and cared about you deeply, but probably they also challenged you to a point you didn’t like sometimes ? but you learned and grew. Life is like that as we learn to love.
Our greatest teachers often come in the form of things we would rather avoid, like challenges, painful circumstances, fearful times and difficult relationships. Someone once said that ‘God never wastes a hurt? if we are open to letting him use it to grow us.
I’ve also heard that when we are struggling to love in a difficult relationship or in these challenging times it can mean for us that ‘school’s in session? and it’s time to really learn and apply, not just talk about, loving God and others. Love is an action more than a feeling
This October at Calvary we will embark on a 40 day spiritual growth journey called ‘Fearless: Living Without Fear? based on a wonderful book by pastor and author Max Lucado. During these 40 days we will intentionally engage in some encouraging activities to help us learn and grow in faith as God’s people.
We will do this by spending time in the Bible, in prayer, in serving others, in discovering together how we can find peace and respond to anxiety with faith rather than fear. The only way I can really live and love as God intends is to be a life-long learner.
So each day this fall I hope to learn how to be more faithful and fearless in my living and in my loving.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Lutheran Church.
God’s design for every human being is that they would use their gifts and abilities to develop this world for His glory.
Unfortunately, people often find themselves so weighed down by burdens that they themselves are incapable of doing the good they know they should.
Of all the burdens that people carry ? ranging from health to finances to relationships and more ? I’m convinced that the most oppressive burden of all is guilt.
Guilt has a way of infiltrating every aspect of your being and hindering you from doing what the Lord would have you do.
This, of course, is why Satan delights in accusing people of their wrong, because it keeps them from fully contributing to God’s world.
A good example of the crippling effects of guilt can be seen in the story of Joseph and his brothers.
After Joseph was sold into slavery by his brothers, he eventually became the prime minister of Egypt. While in this position, a great famine came on the land, and his brothers were compelled to come before Joseph in Egypt for food (Gen.42).
As the story unfolds, it’s apparent that the brothers of Joseph were burdened by guilt years after they mistreated him.
Not only did guilt immobilize them from going down to Egypt in the first place, but it made them very fearful once they got there.
Also, because of their bad conscience, they were incapable of receiving the good that Joseph extended to them, and they were inclined to behave in foolish and illogical ways.
Guilt still has the same effects today.
How many people are well aware of something they need to be doing today but just can’t bring themselves to do it because they are burdened by some misdeed of yesterday?
How many people spend their days nagged with the thought that their lives are doomed because they fear the wrong they have done will catch up with them?
Or, how many are there who are suspect of every kindness shown them because they know themselves to be unworthy?
I’m afraid the answer to all of these questions is that there are many.
But there is good news for the guilty.
God sent His Son Jesus Christ to pay the penalty for those who know their guilt and free them from living in a state of condemnation (Rom.8:1).
This is all part of God’s plan to restore humanity to its original design, and equip individuals to serve Him in this world.
Does guilt have you incapable of moving forward without fear? Then turn away from yourself and turn to Jesus Christ in faith.
Lay your sins upon Him and shake off your guilty fears. Realize that you are His workmanship, and go do the good He has prepared for you to do (Eph.2:8-10).
The Rev. David Bostrom is pastor of Seed of the Harvest ministries.
As you read and listen to the news these days, there seems to be a lot of positive news on the economic front.
Personally I am not very impressed with the commentaries of the so-called experts myself, as I am reminded that these experts contributed to our recent flirt with disaster on the economic front.
Of course we cannot just blame the experts; there is more than just a little blame to go around in every segment of society.
This plague has not just been local; it has been widespread to most of the developed world. We have witnessed excessive living without the constraint of principles.
Now, with much help from the government, we are seeing a turnaround in many places. Unfortunately, much of this turnaround stems from artificial stimulation rather than the natural flow of the markets and proper response of people.
It is simply money from the government enticing people into spending and money being pumped into the financial institutions to get people borrowing. The long-term benefits are still somewhat dubious.
The Bible says in Acts 3:19, ‘repent therefore and be converted in order that times of refreshing might come from the throne of God.?
The biblical concept of repentance is sorely needed in our world today. Repentance begins with a recognition that something is wrong and we need to do something about it. Oftentimes repentance is thrust upon us by circumstances that have blown up in our faces.
The second step of repentance is to acknowledge what we have done wrong in order to bring about change in our circumstance and to make the corrections necessary to both repair the problem and keep it from happening again.
I have seen many people who just repeat the same actions over and over again, only to reap the same consequences. They never see change in their life and are always mad at the world, or God when times of trouble come.
Albert Einstein once said, ‘Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.? As an observer and student of history I have also witnessed this same pattern in societies.
Around the time of the September 11, 2001 disaster we were experiencing the first rumblings of our later financial distress. The Federal Reserve pumped money into the system to keep us from suffering and only rekindled the housing bubble for it to burst later on.
Who would have ever thought that we would see houses for under $50,000 in Clarkston again? This is an example of what the government can do for us when we refuse to swallow the hard pill of our mistakes and put off our ‘day of reckoning? into the future. It seems that we are doing the same thing all over again.
It is interesting that at the same time we are seeing recklessness in high places. There seems to be a revolt in our country against the foolishness of governmental intervention.
The savings rate of the average American is skyrocketing at a time that the government has gone hog-wild at the trough of excessive spending. This could in fact be the sign of a revival of our society that will result in the end with better government.
What does this have to do with our spiritual life? Jesus said in Luke 16:11, ‘therefore if you have not been faithful in unrighteous money who will commit to you the true riches?? Our choices are often more far-reaching than we know. It is time for all of us to repent and experience His refreshing in our lives so that we may be prepared for even greater opportunities.
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Temple.
Perhaps you have walked in my shoes. ‘Mom! We’re on vacation! Why do we have to go to church when we’re on VACA-A-A-ATION???
This normally leads to that oft-used expression that goes something like, ‘None of my FRIENDS? MOMS make their kids go to Church on VACA-A-A-ATION!?
Ah, a challenge and a choice of responses to be made.
Should I use the guilt trip (Is one hour a week really too much to ask?) The discipline line? (It’s good for you, that’s why!) Or, how about the bribery line? (Oh, come on, honey! It’ll be fun! We’ll go out to breakfast after!) If all else fails, just lay down the law (you know the one?.As long as you live in my house?..)
This family episode got me to thinking about two things a bit more seriously.
The first involves a call I believe we all have to adopt a missionary spirit. After all, if you think about it, kitchen table evangelization with our own families and friends is likely some of the greatest missionary work being done in this country today.
The second is related to the first. Once we’ve done the very fine work of bringing the good news of the Gospel to our family and others, how do we convince them to actually attend our churches?
We don’t usually think of ourselves as missionaries unless we’ve had the experience of traveling to a different country for the purpose of witnessing to the Gospel. Yet, isn’t that what we are?
If you’re reading this article, there’s a good chance that you also go to church or, at the very least, you associate with a church even if your attendance is a bit irregular. In my mind, that makes you a disciple and a missionary.
Jesus? last words to his disciples in Matthew’s gospel were, ‘Go, then, to all peoples everywhere and make them my disciples?? Frankly, where do we start?
My suggestion is to start at the kitchen table. Experience has taught that it helps to witness to children (and adults for that matter) in a way whereby they don’t even know we’re doing it. A sense of calm, joy, life, and a healthy dose of humor go a long way toward making the gospel seem less constrictive than they might guess.
After all, to love the world the way God loves it means meeting people where they are without judgment or fear. It might help to recall Jesus? parable about yeast in which he says, ‘the kingdom of heaven is like yeast that a woman took and mixed with three measures of wheat flour until the whole batch was leavened.? Yeast is useless on a pantry shelf; it must enter the dough! God doesn’t protect himself from the world, so why should we?
Try it!
The next step, attendance at worship, might present a bit more of a challenge, but I contend that we should not lose hope!
Many of our churches are doing a magnificent job at providing opportunities for people to bring God into their lives where they are at. It’s our job, as disciples and missionaries, to invite them to come and see. At St. Daniel this weekend, for example, we are hosting a ‘Welcome Home? weekend for those who have been away for the summer as well as for those who might be looking for a church to call home.
We were amazed during our planning process to discover that we have over 40 opportunities for men, women, and children to refresh their spirit and celebrate their faith!
So, dear child, why should you be going to church, even on vacation? It’s a great question and it deserves a well thought out answer.
Our churches are sacred; they are set apart as a meeting place with the Body of Christ, the community.
To stay connected to the Body of Christ, wherever you are at, enlivens your spirit and prepares you for the work to be done at home. Praise God! How’s that for an answer?
Cheryl Smith is director of Adult Faith Formation at St. Daniel Catholic Church.
We have an international event occurring that teaches us a very important lesson for life and one I hope our country learns from.
In the country of Honduras, we have been drawn into a major political conflict. The president of Honduras, Jose Manuel Zelaya, is a left-leaning person in close relationship with Hugo Chavez, president of Venezuela.
Chavez fancies himself to be a leader who will take up the cause of the poor, like his hero Fidel Castro of Cuba. One can only wonder if his intentions are altruistic or self-serving, but we can only guess.
Either way, he has convinced many people in his country to trust his intentions by making him their president first, then allowing him unprecedented political powers.
The constitution of his country limited the terms of the president to stop the trend of many Latin countries to be dominated by dictators. He was able to get the constitution changed through many political maneuvers.
Now many expect that he will exercise his increasing powers to sustain a lifetime in office, as Fidel Castro did in Cuba. Fidel maintained his complete control of Cuba for 50 years.
President Zelaya tried to follow Chavez’s path recently by forcing a referendum on Honduras to change their constitution.
This referendum change would allow presidents to serve more than one term in office. He claimed that this was not for his benefit, but you can imagine what the leaders of Honduras believed.
Like the United States, Honduras has a three-branch system of government in order to bring checks and balances on the power of one group. Both the Honduran Congress and the Supreme Court ruled his actions as unconstitutional and a breaking of the law. Both branches in agreement sought his ouster and used the military to remove him from office.
Although it looks like a military takeover, it was in fact the actions of two branches of government seeking to limit the excessive authority of the other. Recent events certainly confirm their suspicions as Hugo Chavez has come out strongly endorsing Zelaya, using his formidable influence through oil wealth to do so.
The American government has come out of this situation on the side of Zelaya and Chavez!
Why has this happened? Because in our past, we were indeed guilty of using these kinds of maneuvers to help dictators on our side to maintain power, often times against the popular will of the people.
Now we are trying to prove that we are not what we used to be. The problem with these actions is that we are now doing what we always said we would not do, and that is, intervene into the affairs of the people of Latin America. We are threatening to cut off aid and use our influence to direct the affairs of Honduras. The only difference is the side we are on.
The point of this discourse is to point out how important it is to live by principles and not by external influence.
Any time you are trying to prove something, you respond to a situation not by principle, but by the expectations or the opinions of others.
However, proper behavior, both in the international realm of life and personal realm of life, requires that we live life by a standard of laws and principles. These principles can be fluid as we grow in experience and understanding, but they must be guided by the underlying premise that we established.
We have become a world and a country constantly responding to the events of the times; we are becoming like a ship at sea without a rudder.
This is why I love the Bible. Even in the history recorded we see the changing response of God to man, but the underlying story is still the same.
God is the same and His character is the same. He says so in His word: ‘I am the Lord who changes not.?
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
Do you yodel very often? Me neither. In fact, as I check my music files, I have not one yodeling song included. I have heard yodeling before but mostly characterized it as impossible to take seriously or actually enjoy.
But now my attitude has changed somewhat. As I write this I am in Kloten, Switzerland, just outside of Zurich. My wife and I have been here for two weeks. It is our first trip to Europe and as you might imagine, have found it fascinating and wonderful.
We recently returned from a trip to the mountain region around Lake Luzern and stayed with the Vogel family. Marlise and Andy are our age, have raised five children (one who is now our son-in-law) and are active in the Catholic church in their village of Beckenried.
As we talked, Marlise told me about a funeral she recently attended. During the service, there was a selection of music offered by a yodeling choir. The comment caught me a little by surprise. Marlise was gracious in explaining to this naive parochial American that yodeling has a heritage that comes from a sacred desire to praise God.
In Switzerland there are places your heart is naturally inclined to want to praise God. The beauty of mountains, lakes, flowers, architecture, churches and more have taken me to moments of just wanting to praise God.
Yodeling is the music in this area of the world that comes from the soul, goes beyond words and lifts a series of notes intended to give thanks to God for the many blessings we have received.
Since I understand funerals as a time for grief and for praise for the life lived and being lived with the eternal Lord, I can see room made for a yodeling choir.
I have yet to download on my MP3 a yodeling song, but I think I might.
Perhaps the question is not so much whether we like yodeling as a type of music, but whether we have a grasp of the presence of God in our lives and desire to return thanks for our many blessings.
Do I have a spiritual focus allowing me to see God’s generosity? Am I humbled enough to be grateful and willing to praise God for what I didn’t earn, don’t deserve and yet receive? I will think more about that later.
But now, I get to go and hold our almost 3-week-old first grandchild Leah and give her a feeding. Yo-da-la-he-he!!!
The Rev. Richard L. Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
On Pentecost, we celebrate God’s sending of His Holy Spirit to be with us for all of eternity.
If we look to John 7:37-39 we read, ‘On the last day, that great day of the feast, Jesus stood and cried out, saying, ‘If anyone thirsts, let him come to Me and drink. He who believes in Me, as the Scripture has said, out of his heart will flow rivers of living water.??
But this He spoke concerning the Spirit, whom those believing in Him would receive; for the Holy Spirit was not yet given, because Jesus was not yet glorified.
Christ tells us that if we thirst, that coming to Him, He will take care of our thirst. In fact, He even tells us that for all who believe on Him, they will have the living waters flowing out of their hearts, as well. This brings to mind that Jesus is a cheerful giver.
Some years ago, many people collected Enesco’s Precious Moments figurines. Sam Butcher was one of the designers of those figurines, and one such piece was titled ‘God loveth a cheerful giver.?
When I think about our Lord and Savior being a cheerful giver, and all that we receive from Him, I think about how or what we give back to Him. In our hearts and minds we think, ‘Well, how much do I have to give to the church to make them happy?? or, ‘How much do I owe this week??
We find giving a chore. We don’t give from the first fruits, instead we give out of necessity or out of obligation. Whatever happened to giving from our heart?
If giving was a chore, then just what does God owe us? God created us perfect, without sin. Yet, we became sinful and unclean.
Since we broke the relationship with God by Adam’s fall into sin, He owes us nothing, yet, He still freely gives us the living water, His Word, so that we may receive eternal life. If we are giving back to God as a chore, then we truly have a wrong attitude in all of this.
Instead, we should be asking ‘Dear God, what can I give to You, because of my love for You?? Another way to say it would be, ‘Dear Lord, for all that You have freely given to me, this is what I have, but please help me to give You even more in the future.?
My Dear Christian friends, God is truly a cheerful giver, and we never want for what we really need. God takes care of every single true need that we have and we are certainly cheerful takers, but we seldom are cheerful givers.
My grandfather became a Christian some six months before he was called home to live with Christ eternally. One day, he asked me how much he should be putting in the offering plate.
I told him that he should give from his heart and that it is not all about money.
I told him that so often we think that God only wants our money but, instead, God really wants us to give freely of our time, our abilities and then our money.
That we would do well to think about what Christ has done for us and to give accordingly.
You see, once the Holy Spirit, brings us to faith in Christ, we find that we are justified or made right with God the Father by Christ’s death and resurrection.
With this faith in our hearts, He sanctifies us, or causes us to do holy things; that is, we begin to do good works for Him. Not because we are trying to pay Him back for what Christ has done for us, but because of our love for Christ, we want to freely give back to Him in love!
It is here that we begin to desire to freely and cheerfully give to Christ so that others might truly know this Jesus and His real love for them, and that it can be theirs as well. Christ died on the cross for all sin, and rose from the dead on the third day just for them.
Nothing more and nothing less. We don’t give of our time, talents or our monies because we have an obligation. Rather, we freely give because of our love for Christ. If we give to Christ for any other reason, then we are giving for the wrong reason!
The Rev. Kelly Todd is pastor of Christ Lutheran Church.
When King Solomon began his reign, the Lord approached him and told him to ask for whatever he wished and promised that He would give it to him. What did Solomon ask for? He asked for wisdom (1 Kings 3).
Good choice.
There are a lot of things you may want to ask for in life ? money, a job, good health, a spouse ? but wisdom tops them all.
If you have wisdom, you are in a position to manage whatever comes your way. But if you lack wisdom, whatever desirable thing you do have will easily be misused and bring you harm.
You don’t have to be a king for this to come into play. Though you do not rule over an earthly kingdom as Solomon did, you do need to govern your own life with all its choices.
And you will give an account for your contribution to God’s kingdom. All this requires wisdom.
The good news is that wisdom is freely available for all who need it and want it. In fact, the scriptures make it plain that God wants us to have wisdom.
The book of Proverbs presents wisdom as out in the streets, shouting to the na’ve who pass by, urging them to come and receive what she has to offer.
She cries out, ‘Turn to my reproof, behold, I will pour out my spirit on you; I will make my words known to you? (Pr.1:23).
Further, the book of Proverbs urges us to ‘acquire wisdom, acquire understanding? (Pr.4:5).
And where does this wisdom come from?? It comes from the Lord. ‘For the Lord gives wisdom. . .? (Pr.2:6).
Wisdom is calling out to you. It’s within your reach. She is there ready to guide you and bless you. She wants you to have what you need to live your life right.
What does it take to receive it?
Two things.
First, you need to renounce folly and follow wisdom as she calls you. The book of Proverbs presents wisdom and folly as two dinner invitations (Pr.9).
Both cry out to come and partake. Both make their appeal. But there’s a difference. Only the invitation of wisdom leads to life.
Second, you must believe. James tells us that if anyone lacks wisdom he is to ask of God who gives to all men generously.
But to receive that wisdom, you must ask in faith, for the one who doubts is like the surf of the sea driven and tossed by the wind. Let not that man expect to receive anything from the Lord (Jas.1:5-7).
There’s not a soul around that doesn’t need wisdom.
Though we are undeserving, it’s available through the One in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge (Col.2:3).
Listen to wisdom’s call, and follow the way she leads you faithfully.
The Rev. David Bostrom is pastor of Seed for the Harvest mnistries.
Graduation open-houses are in full swing and for graduates everywhere this is an exciting season of celebration. It’s a time to experience the satisfaction of accomplishment and to anticipate the future.
Yet this year in the midst of stressful economic times there is also much worry and concern about how things will be ? and we know they will probably be different from what we have become used to. Above all this is a time of transition and there is an abundance of advice from many sources about life and how to live it.
Of all the wise and helpful words that can be shared at graduation time, I believe there is none more basic nor more easily forgotten in the busyness of life, than something I learned even before I ‘graduated? from preschool.
You probably even know the song. It goes like this, ‘Jesus loves me this I know…? I am loved and accepted by God no matter what career path I take; no matter how much I achieve or how much money I make; no matter if I go to college or go to work; no matter who I marry or if I marry, and no matter how things go during this recession.
These simple words, ‘Jesus loves me this I know?? assure me that God will love and forgive me no matter what mistakes I make along the journey of life or what difficulties I encounter. And above all, they let me know that God desires to have a loving relationship with me forever. When all else fails, God is faithful and will always be there for me.
When I base my life on this fundamental trust in God’s goodness and grace I am free from having to always prove my basic worth and value as a person.
I am free to mold my life around God’s will and purpose regardless of the economic climate, and to follow Jesus? example.
I am free to love God and others (see the Great Commandment in Mark 12:28-31). I am free to try new things and to fail and learn and be all that I can be.
And the best news of all is that I am free to do this not to get God to love and accept me, but because he already does.
God never promises we will have an easy life if we stay close to him and follow his way, but he does promise that our life will have purpose and depth, and that we will not be alone. That is enough for me.
For the past few years I have shared with the graduates at Calvary Lutheran a word of blessing and challenge. I have adapted it from something I found called simply ‘A Franciscan Blessing.?
For me it captures what is different about a life lived with and for Jesus. It is about so much more than just being ‘religious.? It is a different way of going about life that goes deeper. It is not the easy way, but I believe it is God’s way and I hope you will be open to it no matter what season of life you are in.
‘May God bless you with discomfort at easy answers, half truths, and superficial relationships, so that you may live deep within your heart. Amen.
‘May God bless you with anger at injustice, oppression, and exploitation of people, so that you may work for justice, freedom and peace. Amen.
‘May God bless you with tears to shed for those who suffer from pain, rejection, starvation and war, so that you may reach out your hand to comfort them and to turn their pain into joy. Amen.
‘May God bless you with enough foolishness to believe that you can make a difference in this world, so that you can do what others claim cannot be done. Amen.
‘May God bless you with the assurance of his amazing grace, that you may always know that nothing can ever separate you from the love of God in Christ Jesus. Amen.?
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church.
The political debate in our country is intensifying.
The people on what is referred to as ‘the left? are in a great debate with those on what is known as ‘the right.? Sometimes the animosity among the television and radio personalities is palpable. It seems like the intensity of the opinions is creating a deep animosity and in some occasions hatred between the people.
What I have noticed is we not only have people disagreeing with each other but it seems we have developed the idea that if someone disagrees with us they not only have a bad idea but they are a bad person. It is interesting to me that in a time of advanced education and great knowledge we have become more simplistic in our reactions to each other.
This problem has not just impacted the political debate but it seems to permeate our society as a whole.
Relationships between differing ethnic groups and even between the genders has intensified. Every time a government position is filled everyone wants to categorize each person to be sure every group is represented.
It appears we think everyone is self-centered and the only way we can be protected is to get someone just like us at the table. Is it now true that only people who can relate to me can be responsible for affairs concerning my life?
We have become a people without trust. The issue is not one of the head but one of the heart.
When Jesus Christ came to the earth He encountered a world much like we have today. Everyone was fighting over who was right and who was wrong and the lines between the differing classes of people were very striking.
Jesus came with a new message. He said before we can properly use our heads we must make sure our heart is in the right place. He made a statement, which I believe is very important in our time.
He said, ‘To the pure all things are pure and blessed are the pure for they will see God.?
When our heart is not right it will cause us to see wrong. This is why I believe we need a change of heart in our country more than we need to change each other’s minds. When our hearts are changed how we see each other will change also.
I am very disconcerted by the fact that even many of us in the religious community have joined the contemporary debate without guarding our hearts.
The Bible says, ‘For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whoever would believe in Him would not perish but would have eternal life.? The Bible goes on to say, ‘God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world but that the world through Him might be saved.?
We need to heed the words of the prophet Isaiah who said, ‘Put away from the midst of you the pointing of the finger and your light will go forth as a lamp that burns, and healing shall arise and finally the Lord will protect you from behind.?
Jesus Christ is the Prince of Peace.
He shows us how to bring long lasting peace. It is not by making war but making peace. It comes from giving people the benefit of the doubt about their motivations and trusting as we all listen to each other we can really begin to appreciate the differences we have.
Those differences can enrich us when we learn to draw from each other. I have traveled the world and observed many nations with various forms of governance. I have found that none work well if they are operated by people with the wrong attitude but possessing right attitudes go a long way in correcting the errors in a system.
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Temple.
What kind of cell phone do you have? Are you in love with it? Do you have one constantly by your side? If so, you probably understand the love/hate relationship that I have with mine.
I love the way it connects me to my work, family and friends. I like using it to get the news, sports, weather, etc. But I get frustrated when calls don’t go through. Dead zones make me feel anxious.
I would like to say I am not addicted to it, but I am getting calls from cell phone twelve step programs.
My wife has a far more distant relationship with hers. If she could get one with rotary dial she would be happy. All she wants her phone to be is a phone. Go figure.
The irony of this is for the majority of my life there were no phones to carry around.
The first phone in my life had different rings like my cell phone. But on that phone two rings meant it was for our family. The other rings were for the rest of the five families sharing the same line.
I remember having to pick us the receiver to see if another household was already using the phone. It was a big day when we had our own designated phone. Then I only had to share it with my parents and brother.
Now I carry a phone with me wherever I go and it is always on. It is amazing we can become dependent upon something we never use to know could even exist.
That is the way a conversation with God may seem too. Perhaps it has been a long time since you have talked with God or that you felt the presence of God with you.
Maybe you are unaware that it is even possible to have a conversation with God. Perhaps you have never been taught how to pray or go deeper in your prayer life. But the prayers you do not pray today can become the life line of your life in days to come.
Once you experience the power and joy of prayer, you want to return to it as quickly as possible. Life has a way of leading us to prayer.
Abraham Lincoln said, ‘I have been driven many times to my knees by the overwhelming conviction that I had absolutely no other place to go.?
I pray the blessings of your life or the trials will lead you to discover the power of prayer. You will also discover a conversation and relationship worthy keeping in your life all the time. It is the call I am always ready to make or take.
The Rev. Richard L. Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church
‘It’s a miracle!?
On this most recent Memorial Day weekend, my family made our annual and obligatory trek to participate in that blessed ritual of summer which is known as ‘going up north.?
This, of course, will be the first of many occasions to do so this season, but there is something especially sweet about the first time. Luckily, we have a place to go that is on a lake, near the woods, quiet, and?.free!
My husband’s mother, Ann, who happens to be widowed, owns a lovely little home on Mullett Lake near Cheboygan, and she graciously provides for us often and abundantly whenever we can get away. You may be thinking this is where I’m going with the miracle thing, but wait, there’s more.
Sitting down to dinner on the first full day of the weekend, Ann took it upon herself to say the table grace. ‘Thank you Lord, for this day and this beautiful weather. It’s a miracle, Lord! It’s just so beautiful, a miracle!?
The word ‘miracle? was probably interjected into her prayer a half dozen more times. We all kind of smiled, almost to the verge of breaking out in laughter. It was a nice day. About 60 degrees and sunny. And yes, we have had worse days on Memorial Day weekend. But, a miracle? Really? A miracle? It got me to thinking about miracles.
A Harris poll in November 2007 found that nearly 8 in 10 American adults believe in miracles. In 2000 a Newsweek poll showed that 84 percent of Americans believe that God performs miracles, nearly 8 in 10 think the miracles in the Bible really took place, and more than 6 in 10 say they know someone who claims to have experienced one.
And lest you think that miracles are exclusive to the Christian faith, they are not. Miracle stories are found in many of the major religious traditions’from the stories of the miracles of Lord Krishna in the Hindu tradition, to those attributed to the Prophet Muhammad, to the miracles of the Buddhist saints.
Often, miracles are associated with human being’s darkest hours. Especially in times of tragedy and sickness, our prayers for a miracle take on an urgency that invites a supernatural response from God.
Our rational selves limit us to what can be so; our spiritual selves transform these limitations and see beyond to what God most desires?.a time when ‘He will wipe every tear from their eyes, and there shall be no more death or mourning, wailing or pain?? (Rev 21:4).
Interestingly, accounts of miracles have occurred. Just talk to anyone who has experienced a medical miracle and you will become convinced that miracles can and do happen. But this very fact begs another and even more difficult reality. Why does God grant some miracles and not others’It is my belief that a real miracle points to something much bigger. A real miracle is not a media spectacle, it is not flashy, and it is never a miracle just for the sake of a miracle. A miracle is meant to transform reality. A true miracle signals change.
Finally, miracles point to God, not to a person, and are a sign of the kingdom which has yet to be fully realized in our world. I believe God wants us to pray for miracles, and I also trust that God’s will shall be done in this world.
Even when our prayers are not answered as we would like, transformation can and does take place. Think of the situations in our nation or in your own family that have caused a true conversion because you have prayed for a miracle.
So, can a really nice day be a miracle? I guess it depends on your perspective. Miracle or not, something about being ‘up north? with your family on a sunny day in May is very special. Even transformative. Have a great summer, and don’t forget to keep praying for miracles!
Cheryl Smith is director of Adult Faith Formation at St. Daniel Catholic Church.
?’Store up for yourselves treasure in heaven, where neither moth nor decay destroy?.? Matthew 6:19
You might ask treasure in heaven?
My current concern is treasure on earth!
Paying my car payment. Keeping my home. Buying groceries.
Surely the scripture writers endured massive hardships; so why do they tell us this?
An interesting thing occurs when we look at material goods and spiritual goods. There is an inverse relationship between the amount of effort needed to produce something and the duration that it benefits me. Let’s compare a material good with a spiritual or intangible good (i.e., a kind word, a sense of peace, a friendship).
The truth is that materialism and spirituality are both necessary. We need material things to survive and we can enjoy them as part of the life God has given us. Material goods can help man achieve his perfection when he uses them for his own good and the common good. It takes a great amount of effort on many people’s part to produce material goods. We can enjoy them, but only for a limited time. They may even vanish depending on circumstances. The present financial crisis is a case in point. On top of all that, material goods cost money, sometimes money we do not have.
Consider that it is our beliefs and religion, however, that provide the anchor when we are blown off course by storms of change in our lives. In the long run, if you think about it, spiritual matters are longer lasting. Spiritual goods are freely acquired and can be shared extensively without being lost or depleted in the one who shares them.
A spiritual good takes less effort to produce, but the good stays for the remainder of a lifetime and is independent of material goods. A kindness extended can lift the heart and often come back when most needed. A friendship is something that endures despite my material fortunes. The strength and peace that come from the faith that God loves me provides lasting consolation in difficult times. Perseverance helps me keep going when I want to quit. Trust helps me to stay positive when the world is dark. A positive outlook on life helps me pick up others who have fallen down. A sound piece of advice can help others steer through troubled waters. And, a word of encouragement can help people see the good in themselves and others despite our human tendency to focus on what has gone wrong.
In a world focused on the material, we can often get lost in the pursuit of the ‘next?, ‘better? and ‘best?. In times like these, when the pursuit of material goods is a struggle, we can rely on our treasure in heaven, our spiritual store, to sustain us. Yes, we live in a material world, but how much more perfect it is because of the spiritual world which gives it life.
What free spiritual gift can you give someone today?
Father Daniel Pajerski, LC, is formation director at Everest Academy.
I recently read an article in Time magazine about the thinking behind the Obama administration.
The article talked about behavioral economics and referenced three books on the subject, ‘Predictably Irrational, Nudge,? and ‘Influence.?
In order to help me better understand some of the thinking behind the policies of our present executive branch I bought and read all three books. They each spoke about how predictable human behavior can be and how business can take advantage of these persuasions as well as how the government can use the same information to motivate our society to do the things they think are right.
Although I do not endorse the goals outlined in the books and especially some of the thinking behind our present society I certainly saw the wisdom of the authors in understanding human behavior.
My favorite subjects have always been history and social sciences. The first of the books I read was ‘Predictably Irrational.? The title clearly indicates what the author is trying to say about human behavior.
The author feels that one can pretty well predict that humans will act irrationally more frequently than we will respond rationally. This is an interesting observation and in many ways flies in the face of contemporary thinking. Since the days of the Enlightenment Era western society has been highly motivated to think that when given the proper opportunities and knowledge we will typically react in a rational and mostly altruistic fashion.
The Bible does not speak so optimistically about human nature. The prophet Isaiah lamented, ‘All flesh is grass and all the godliness thereof as the flower of the field. The grass withers and the flower fades, only the Word of God abides forever.?
Although the authors of these book were saying the same thing their answer was to have people motivate them to do the right things. The problem with this solution is what person or people will do this?
History has shown that many people have thought that given the control of the world or their people that people could make the world a better place. Unfortunately, time has proven the best intentions of man are usually in the end corrupted by man.
If it is not the leader it seems to be the opportunists who work for the leader. The best thing we can do is as we have in the United States government is have a balance of powers that will bring checks and balances to human behavior. Secondly, we need limited government in order to maintain our individual right to choose, even if that means making mistakes.
Finally, we need to have a moral compass that is higher than us. We need God! Like the psalmist said in the Bible, mankind needs to declare lead me to the Rock that is higher than I.
In the United States today many people are claiming we need a fully secular society and this will guarantee our freedom.
Actually, just the opposite is the case.
The greatness of our nation is directly related to the fact that we have a moral persuasion leading our nation and our leaders. This moral basis has been based upon the Bible. Morality can not originate with man. Many evils of history are based upon the so called morals of man.
Morality must come from God and we must know who that God is. Perhaps America is becoming a multi-cultural nation but the truth is the God of the Bible has been our God. We need to be careful not to heed the calls of those who say there is no God or even worse there is not a specific God!
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Temple.
A prevailing theme given to us in the Bible is that God intends to bring blessing to people. This is a revolutionary thought for those who conceive of God as nothing more than a cosmic killjoy. But it’s true. God created a world of abundance to bring blessing to all mankind.
When God made the first man and woman, it was in His mind to bless them and all their offspring. And to Abraham was given the promise that through him all the families of the earth would be blessed (Gen.12:3).
This promise applies to us even today. After the resurrection of Jesus Christ, it was proclaimed that God had raised up this Servant and sent Him in order to bless (Acts 3:26). And those who belong to Christ are Abraham’s descendants and heirs according to promise (Gal.3:29).
Throughout the Bible ? and history ? we find that God has been faithful to His promise. He indeed has blessed. And He still intends to bless.
But it must be remembered that there is a conditional aspect to God’s blessing. The conditional aspect is that there must be faithfulness on the part of those who receive His promises.
Adam, for example, needed to trust God for the fullness of blessing, and because he didn’t, he was kicked out of the garden. Abraham had to believe God ? and keep believing Him for a long time ? for the blessing to be realized in his life. And Israel of old needed to obey. When the people did obey, they were blessed ? in a huge way. But when the people hardened their hearts and refused to obey, they were brought to ruin.
The example of Israel is especially pertinent and worth taking a closer look at.
In the book of Deuteronomy, God told Israel that He was going to bring them great blessing. But with that pronouncement He also gave a warning. He told them to beware lest they forget Him. He knew that it was likely that with their prosperity their hearts would grow proud, and that they would believe that it was by their own power they had acquired wealth.
Consequently, He gave them notice that if they became stubborn and refused to obey Him, they would perish.
It is not hard to see the parallel between ancient Israel and our own nation. And this should not be surprising because God’s principles endure.
God has blessed our nation immensely throughout its history. But where are we now? We have become proud, thinking that we are sufficient to create and manage wealth apart from His Word. The result? We’re perishing, just as God said.
America’s problems are not all that complicated. We have forgotten the One who blesses. We have become arrogant, thinking it is by our own power we have acquired wealth. This is folly and it leads to ruin. The good news is that God still intends to bless, and He will if we return to Him, He will.
‘The ball is,? as they say, ‘in our court.” The question is, what will we do with it?
Will we return to Him?
The Rev. David Bostrom is pastor of Seed for the Harvest ministries.
What are you doing this summer?
It is a question I have asked several of our college age adults who are finishing with another year of school. Some are working, some traveling and some just planning on relaxing for the summer.
As I listened to their answers, I was intrigued not only by what they were going to do but in their belief they had options.
When was the last time you had the luxury of thinking about what you were going to do with three months of ‘free time??
For me, summers of my college years always meant I had to work to earn money for the semesters to come. Yet there was a freedom in knowing the routine was going to be different.
For three months the things that had stressed me in the past were going to be left behind. I could catch my breath, gain perspective and get a break to become refreshed for what was to come next. I loved those summers.
For the majority of us, summer is a welcomed season after a long winter. But with the exception of a few weeks vacation and weekends that are now spent out of doors, we still have to go to work, raise families, and tend to the same things that are an ongoing part of our lives.
The stresses of the past three months will remain with us. We just take them with us on vacation when we garden, golf, etc. It is the price of being a grown up, living in the adult world. Or so we think.
But what if we could look to summer as a time to change our routine, become renewed and transformed in the way we see the demands and pressures of our lives?
Summer is the season that God gives us so we can feel warmth, see growth and treasure sunsets. Summer is the season when God reminds us life has a rhythm and the cold and drear of the past can be driven away.
Summer is not just a welcome break. It is the invitation to all of creation to rejoice and renew our relationship with God who has given us life.
It is the season when we allow God to enter our life so powerfully that we become renewed parts of the gift of creation.
It is the season where our souls can enter into intentional worship at any given moment. It is the season where the old can be laid down and hope restored.
The Psalmist tells us, ‘Shout praises to the Lord!’Sun and moon all of you bright stars, come and offer praise?..every man and every woman, young people and old, come praise the Lord!? (Psalm 148)
Summer is here and so is the opportunity for each of us to be renewed, transformed and blessed. So, I ask, what are you going to do this summer?
The Rev. Richard Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
We are living in extremely challenging times for many people. Many are losing equity in their retirement accounts, the value of their homes are plummeting and for many in Michigan even the loss of their job.
From a corporate perspective the ‘Big Three? have become a mere shell of their former glory. Many small businesses are going under and the banking failures have sent a panic not seen since The Great Depression.
Of course everyone is looking for help and where are they looking? To Uncle Sam.
We have come a long way since we were excited by the challenge of President Kennedy when he declared, ‘Ask not what your country can do for you but ask what you can do for your country.?
Everyone now seems to look to the government as the comforting mom who says, ‘Don’t worry honey, I’ll fix it.? It seems no one in Washington is willing to admit they can offer assistance but the truth is they can not cure the problem without allowing the time and pain commitment from the people in need.
The government is literally printing money, to the tune of 1.2 trillion dollars at one point, in an effort to try and cure the problems. It reminds me of the time when my son was young we stopped at an ATM machine so I could get some cash for something. When he watched my actions his eyes got real large and he said, ‘Pappa! I want one of those cards!?
Do not get me wrong, I understand our need to get involved in solving problems and alleviating suffering when possible. However, it is very important to solve the problem by dealing with the root causes so we not only take care of the symptoms of the disease but deal with the cause as well.
We need to build at fence at the top of the cliff to stop people from falling rather than simply supplying a rescue team at the bottom to deal with the suffering of those who have fallen over the cliff.
Father God also permits us to suffer the pain of our actions in order to train us for the future as a part of the healing process. Hebrews 12:6 says,?’For whom the’Lord loves He chastens, ?? The word chasten means corrective learning.
When we go through a situation and make a mistake our loving Father is always quick to forgive but at the same time He will not just rescue us from our problem. He will make us a part of the solution in order that we can become strong and wise in the issues of life.
The Bible tells us the story of the children of Israel. They had fallen into slavery in the country of Egypt and were crying out to God because of their pain. God raised up a many named Moses to deliver them.
God did many miraculous things to bring them out of Egypt which is the more exciting part of the story but He also led them through a process that would give them the tools of life so they not only would come out of Egypt but also take possession of a land of their own.
The children of Israel became very angry in this process. In their anger they turned on Moses?, God’s chosen leader, and cried out for someone to take them back to Egypt, their bondage. It is funny how even a bad past can sound good when we are facing the challenges of the present and the future.
Moses was a good leader as he accepted the challenge to confront the people with the higher way of life that God had for them. The future God planned had pain but it also had promise. God’s way is a way of comfort but it is also the way of challenge. Will you choose God’s way?
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
My husband and I have lived in Clarkston for nearly 25 years. Often I reflect on the divine providence involved in circumstances that have allowed us to raise our family in a warm and caring community where neighbors show concern for one another, education is a primary value that adults seek to pass on to children, and natural beauty surrounds us at every turn.
My faith community, St. Daniel, has been the rich soil that has nurtured my family’s Christian faith and graced us with many lifelong friendships. I am fortunate to have a job where I feel freedom of expression as well as the ability to reach out to others and affirm the divine uniqueness given to every individual.
Clarkston is a community that is blessed with spiritual vitality, as witnessed by its many churches. While faith expressions may vary, we share belief in the eternal truth of God’s being and an overabundance of God’s love that fills the world and overflows’even throughout the universe!
The Holy Spirit, working through each individual church and member, is present and effective, and Christians experience this most profoundly in Word, Worship, and Sacrament. We are, indeed, a fortunate community.
Gratitude is an oft-encouraged disposition for coming to the Lord in prayer. Even during difficult economic times, we have much to be thankful for, only one of which is the community in which we live. And yet, we most likely find ourselves turning to prayers of petition as well, especially in times of great need or when we require consolation.
I’d like to suggest that praying with others in community is not only unifying in nature, but it is also an appropriate method of gathering up all that we are and acknowledging in humility who God is. And the numbers don’t hurt! I have a friend that, while keeping a sense of community in mind throughout her personal prayer, likes to imagine the Verizon commercial with all the folks standing behind the guy with the cell phone. I have my people! Community support in prayer is essential.
This year, I would like to encourage you to attend a special gathering of members of our community to join in prayer regardless of your church affiliation. The National Day of Prayer will be held on Thursday, May 7, from 7-9 a.m.
The National Day of Prayer, now in its 58th year nationally, encourages Americans to pray for our nation, its leadership and its centers of power: church, education, family, government, business, and civic groups. The observance pre-dates the founding of our nation in 1775, when the Continental Congress called on colonists to pray for guidance as they founded the nation.
A joint resolution of Congress in 1952 established a national day of prayer; and, in 1988, an amendment designated the first Thursday of May for the observance.
This year, St. Daniel will be hosting the event which will include a full breakfast, music by members of the community, and Dr. John Canine as the keynote speaker.
Dr. Canine’s topic is, ‘Prayer: Hope of the World?. A prolific speaker and author, Dr. Canine will be joined by representatives from government, education, civic groups and other key community agencies.
Tickets are $7 and available at many area churches. If your worshipping community does not have tickets, please contact Dianne Bretz (248-625-3288) at Calvary Lutheran Church to obtain your ticket. I hope you’ll seriously consider joining us. There’s power in numbers!
Cheryl Smith is director of Adult Faith Formation at St. Daniel Catholic Church.
As a child I remember the smell of vinegar as we dyed eggs; Easter baskets filled with chocolate bunnies and peeps; new clothes and uncomfortable shoes; women wearing Easter hats; beautiful flowers; and going to church with all my cousins. These are very fond memories!
However after high school I grew bored with church, wandered from my faith, and checked out other spiritual paths. I had lots of questions about Jesus and Christianity ? including, is it true and does it matter?
It seems that most of us believe Jesus rose from the dead. In fact I read recently that a Gallup poll reported that most people in the U.S. who do not even go to church believe in Jesus? resurrection.
I guess I never really doubted that either, even when I was away from the church. For me the question was, and is, does it really matter?
I believe that there is a deep longing in all of us; a hunger for something beyond ourselves that will last and give our lives meaning and purpose and hope ? especially this year as we face such difficult and challenging times. We long to be secure and loved and accepted. We want our lives to really matter and we want to be sure to invest in things that really last.
It always seems that around Easter this hunger surfaces and there is a surge of interest in spiritual things. Jesus makes the cover of news magazines and church attendance swells. I am so glad many will come seeking again this year ? hoping to hear an old, old story about Jesus and his love that will help somehow. If there has ever been a time when we need Easter to really matter, it is now.
Easter matters to me because, no matter what else is happening around me, it shows me how very much God loves me. The truth of Easter gives my life purpose and meaning and perspective. However it’s really such a strange way to save the world ? a gruesome death on a cross and an empty tomb ? so I understand that it can be hard to accept sometimes.
Even one of Jesus closest followers, forever known as ‘doubting? Thomas, took some convincing from the risen Lord himself. So in the midst of my searching and even sometimes doubting, year after year I am captivated by the Good News about Jesus and drawn again to his love and amazing grace. He meets me where I am, rather than asking me to have it all figured out or to have it all together in order to qualify for his love.
Now, more than anything else in all the world, I desire for that relationship to deepen and grow; I want to get to know him better. I want to love God and love others just as he did. Because of Good Friday and Easter I know that I get a fresh start every day, no matter how I’ve messed things up or how hard my life gets. Thank God that ‘Jesus loves me this I know?? And so, that’s why Easter matters to me ? every day!
That’s my story and my Easter faith, and I hope you discover its truth too. Along the journey, exploring and asking questions is not only ok, but I believe it is part of how we grow closer to God. So beginning April 22 at our Wednesday evening FEAST program at Calvary I will be leading a class exploring the book ‘The Shack? to discuss and explore the interesting and challenging faith issues raised. You are always welcome to join us along the journey of faith.
Easter matters every day. Christ is risen. He is risen indeed!
The Rev. Pastor Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church.
During the weeks leading up to Good Friday and Easter Sunday, there are many who seek to make changes in keeping with the new life that is promised to all who believe in the crucified and resurrected Christ.
But too often any experience of change is short-lived, and this leads to frustration and a loss of hope.
Is it possible for lasting change to take place for those who desire to grow in character? It certainly is.
But for lasting change to occur, we must experience an inward transformation. Temporary, external change may result from a focused exertion of will power, but change that endures must come from a renewal of the inner life.
The foundation of this renewal is union with Christ Himself.
The Bible tells us that those who have faith in Christ are partakers of His death and resurrection. This means that they have been crucified with Him, and also raised up with Him (Rom.6:4,5). As a consequence, believers are to live as dead to themselves, but alive to Christ.
Do you understand what this is saying? If you are a believer in Christ, you must regard your old self as dead, with your new self being that of Christ living in you. This reality is the basis from which all Christian spiritual formation proceeds.
Once a believer has established that he is to live as dead to himself and alive to Christ, he is in a position to pursue change and growth with hope of success. For positive change to be realized over time, a number of components need to be in place.
First, there needs to be a vision and desire for change. It’s one thing to agree to certain theological truths, but it’s another thing to really want to live in a way that is in keeping with Christ and His kingdom.
For desirable change to come about, we need to hunger for something more than our flesh and this world can provide us, and develop a vision for it.
Also, it’s necessary to actually intend for change to occur. Wishing and wanting are not enough. We must be serious about doing things differently.
This is true of anything we undertake to achieve, and it is true of spiritual growth as well. There must come a point where you say, ‘I am tired of my old self, I am going to do what it takes to change and obey Christ.?
Finally, there needs to be a means to bring change about. We do not have the power to effectively alter the thought patterns and feelings that lead us to self-destructive behavior.
But God has given us the means that transform us inwardly. These means include prayer, Bible reading, fasting, meditation, worship and service, among others. As we faithfully use these means in our own lives, God works within us in such a way that change works itself out.In a day when so many seem to be at the end of their resources, we may have hope knowing that God has provided what is necessary for lasting positive change. This change is found in trusting His Son, and following His way of life.
The Rev. David Bostrom is pastor of Seeds for the Harvest ministries.
A couple years ago, I was at football practice here at the school. It was a late August afternoon with unusually high temperatures. I was wearing my black suit and someone approached me with a concerned look and asked: ‘Do you have to wear that??
I have to admit it was getting a little stuffy, but I smiled and said: ‘No, I’m just making a small sacrifice.?
Sacrifice can be a pretty scary word. We try to avoid it, and our culture has a button or pill to minimize most discomforts. However, sacrifice and suffering are realities and opportunities for personal growth.
How many people actually enjoy getting out of bed early to go to work? The knowledge that someone is depending on them can be a powerful motivator to get up. The result: the paycheck and personal satisfaction of a job well done. The price: personal sacrifice.
Every parent goes through many hours of lost sleep feeding and comforting a baby. The result: a healthy child. The price: personal sacrifice.
Sacrifice comes in many forms: the call we do not want to make, the time we do not have, or the luxury item we do not want to give up. True sacrifice can be described as doing something good for someone else even when it is difficult for me. Personal sacrifice done willingly is called love.
The current economic downturn that is impacting so many may be an opportunity to make sacrifices at a new level. As I watch the suffering of others, how do I react? With a distant eye? Concerned, but not involved?
Taking an active role in relieving the suffering of others, even strangers, can be a significant sacrifice. It may not be something we feel like doing. In pushing ourselves to help others, with meals, prayers, financial support, or simply by listening, we are pushing ourselves to achieve true ‘love of neighbor?.
Jesus Christ never asks more of us than he asks of himself.
When we skip a meal, we are hungry. How might we feel after skipping 120 meals? Jesus? 40 days and nights in the desert were full of hunger and temptations. The funny thing is that the Gospel says simply that Jesus was ‘hungry.? Jesus must have been more than hungry, he must have been starving!
So, why do the Gospel writers said he was only hungry? Maybe they wanted to show us that Jesus had much more on his mind than just getting something to eat. The devil tempted him at that moment to change stones to bread and he responded: ‘Man does not live on bread alone.?
Jesus lived to accomplish the mission his Father gave him: ‘My food is to do the will of the One who sent me and to finish his work.? Where did he get this supernatural strength? What motivated him to endure this unpleasant test? His nourishment was spiritual food and his motivator was his love for us.
Consider this:
What can you sacrifice today?
Father Daniel Pajerski, LC, is director of formation at Everest Academy.
We are living in a time of unprecedented change. For many years we have been told of our need to adjust to the technological age and all the changes it brings.
For the most part we were reminded of the great benefits this new era would bring. Technology and the world economy were heralded as the promise of great things.
With the impending crisis in our financial system and the economic slow down we see how change is not only working to good but it is also speeding up the negatives as well as the positives.
It seems as soon as we became aware of the financial crisis it came out of nowhere and our response has been more about how to panic than how to cure the problem. As soon as we caught our breath about the billions necessary to fix the problem the billions became trillions and we are still not sure where all of this is taking us.
Although technology and world connections have speeded up the process of this crisis it is by no means the cause.
Behind every machine eventually is a person and behind this problem we see the real culprit. The real culprit is simply the failure of human behavior rather than the failure of the systems and machines we have created.
There are a number of solutions being offered to cure our ‘systems? but we must remind ourselves the real issue is a moral factor.
Old fashioned greed and covetousness motivated the downfall of our years of prosperity. I am reminded of this simple principle by an incident with my son at a young age.
My son was with me one day as I drove to an ATM machine. His young eyes saw me put my debit card in the machine and out flew money. With great big eyes he said, ‘Pops! Can I have one of those money cards?? I laughed and told him I could indeed give him a card but the truth of the matter is unless you put money in you can not pull money out of the machine.
I should have been preaching to the Wall Street fat cats because even the bankers seem to have forgotten this basic principle.
This principle of life applies to more than just money. Success in life will directly correlate to what you are willing to invest in. The increasing popularity of gaming in our country is a direction reflection of our attitude that one can find success through simple chance or luck.
For many the stock market, housing and other scurrilous investments became a search for the quick success and gigantic return one expects from hitting the jackpot at the casino.
Now we must return to a time when you have to save for a down payment if you want to own a house. The good news is the lack of speculative buying or people buying without their own money will keep the prices in line with what an average person can afford.
Hopefully people will also realize the need to save for a rainy day so that periodic downturns will not result in the wholesale surrender of homes. A more difficult adjustment will also be our need to adjust incomes to more sustainable levels for businesses to succeed long term.
Many of the businesses that are in desperate shape right now will learn the lesson that a good business is one structured to survive and even thrive in good times and bad.
When you look at the landscape today one thing I see is that trying to circumvent basic principles in order to achieve fast results has proven to be an illusion.
My hope is that our society demands we bring morality and principled centered living back so that we can have a future and also provide one for children and grandchildren.
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion.
In 1904, Mary Bethune sought to acquire ground for the building of a new school. She had started a school for African American girls which had grown from only a few to over 250 students in two years.
When she went seeking land, the Daytona, Florida city fathers were not excited to help this energetic black woman. She was offered acreage that served as the city dump. This land, called Hell Hole, was hers if she wanted it for $250.
Undeterred, she sold pies to raise the down payment, and bought the land. She cleared it and offered it to God for the purpose to educating the youth and children God sent her.
The school of the former garbage dump became Bethune-Cookman College. Thousands of the brightest and best young people of our nation have graduated from there and become distinguished leaders.
Mary Bethune-McLeod became a woman of great influence. She served as advisor to President and Mrs. Roosevelt on issues pertaining to the African American community. She remains one of the great heroines of American history. She stared down poverty, racism, and limited opportunities and blazed a path of glory for us all.
I love she could allow God to help her turn a Hell Hole into a sacred place of learning. This past week I shared a rich time remembering her contribution with a graduate from Bethune-Cookman.
His and others continue to make contributions to the church and society over a hundred years after the days when Mary Bethune was clearing off the garbage from the land of Hell Hole.
God is in the business of transformation and new life. In every generation and in each individual life, God wants to make of our life a holy gift.
Currently the church is moving through a time called Lent. We are facing our own sins and surrendering ourselves more into the grace of God.
In Easter, we see again God in Christ turning what was once a hell hole into a holy place. We are living in a time when many of us are facing what seem to be hellish days with little hope.
The temptation is to hide and give up.
Mary Bethune is one example of another choice. In the midst of hell we can see hope, in the darkness of today we can see the light of the future, and in God we can live in victory even when others can’t see it.
In the name of Christ, I invite you into a relationship with Jesus Christ. Enjoy the victory that is there for all.
The Rev. Richard Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
There is an old joke about Lent that goes something like this:
A pastor is walking to his car late one evening on his way home from church when someone sneaks up behind him, presses a knife against his back and says, ‘Give me all your money, NOW!?
As the pastor opens his jacket and reaches into his inner pocket for his wallet, his pastor’s clergy collar is exposed. Upon seeing it, the would-be robber gulps and says, ‘Oh, I’m sorry pastor; I don’t want YOUR money.?
Shaken but relieved, the pastor takes a candy bar from his jacket pocket and offers it to the man who replies, ‘Oh no pastor, I can’t take that ? you see, I gave up chocolate for Lent.?
This thief obviously missed the real point of the season. Lent can mean so much more than just ‘giving something up,? helpful as that may be.
By God’s grace I believe Lent can be a time of real growth and transformation in our lives no matter our circumstance this year. Opening ourselves up to God, seeking hope by helping others in midst of struggles, and giving our relationship with God some renewed attention are some of the spiritual disciplines of Lent. These are investments of great and lasting value that we can make even now in the midst of these very challenging and difficult economic times.
Lent, which begins on Ash Wednesday (Feb. 25 this year) and culminates at Easter, covers a period of 40 days. It originated centuries ago as a time of intense preparation for Baptism at Easter.
For all of us today Lent can be a time of repentance (turning to God), and renewed spiritual devotion. Some people fast, or ‘give something up? for Lent, such as a favorite food or TV, as a way of focusing attention on God. The idea is that every time we crave the item given up, we are reminded of our dependence upon God’s grace and love. Other spiritual disciplines practiced during Lent include renewed devotion to Bible study and prayer, generous giving to those in need (something very important right now), and my personal favorite, deciding to commit at least one random act of kindness each day.
All of these things can draw us closer to God, but they don’t make God love us any more than he already does. ‘For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.? (John 3:16 TNIV)
It has been a long winter and I am so ready for the return of life at spring. In fact the word Lent comes from an old Anglo-Saxon word for ‘springtime.? That seems to fit well, as Lent can be a time of springtime-like renewal of faith.
However just as winter never seems to give up to spring without a fight, so too our lives of faith can be a struggle.
Our desire and good intentions to grow soon collide with the realities of a too-busy world and our deep anxiety about the future. The brokenness of our lives and world comes out even when we don’t want it to. There are no doubt many reading this today who have had to ‘give up things? not by choice, but because of job loss or wage cuts.
By necessity, Lent this year for many will be a time of reprioritizing and simplifying. Just as we can count on the return of spring, God promises to be with us today, and at all times, to draw us close and show us the way.
Lent culminates in Easter ? new life ? and that Good News is always in season. Each and every day we have a fresh start ? a new opportunity to receive and live in God’s grace. God never gives up on us.
And the really neat thing is that when we do spend some real time with God, we do grow to become more the way God intends us to be. My favorite description of God’s desire for the character of our lives is from Galatians 5 where Paul writes, ?’the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.?
That’s the way God made us and wills for our lives to look no matter what is happening around us. Lent is for me a special time to partner with God so that I allow him to grow my character in these ways ? and I must admit I do have some growing to do for my life to look that way every day.
No matter what happens it is my desire to grow in faith so that when people look at me they increasingly see ‘love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.?
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evanangelical Lutheran Church.
We are about to enter one of the most holy times of the year. It is a time of passion, surprise, unbearable sadness and overwhelming joy.
It has several names but the one most of us recognize is simply, March Madness. I love tournament time in College Basketball.
Of course, this year, locally we are getting excited about another basketball tournament. Our own Clarkston Wolves are an amazing team to watch. (Go Wolves!!)
In recent games, you can see your favorite teams getting ready for tournament time. Each player is becoming more confident in their role. Teams are claiming their identity and perfecting their performance so when the passion of tournament time takes over, they will be ready to deal with pressure.
The different parts of the team begin to take on a common personality and rhythm. When tournament time comes, actions are immediate and in coordination with the other teammates on the court. The teams that perfect this have the greatest chance to win it all.
In our lives, we are blessed with a wide variety of people who become part of our ‘team?. Some are with us for a short time; others for most of our years.
I believe each person we encounter can become a blessing as we learn the lessons we discover together. Even those who have been difficult for me to get along with or who I do not like teach me a great deal about myself.
Recently, I have been preaching a series on critical relationships we all need in our lives. These relationships serve specific roles in our health and growth an individuals and as a community. In the series we have talked about the importance of our Mentors, Prot’g’s, True Friends, Reality Checks and several more. You can see and read these at www.clarkstonumc.org.
Each of these relationships are precious because they help us grow and experience a fuller understanding of our selves, each other and God.
Like a team, our lives thrive when we eagerly engage with each other and accept the unique contributions each person has to offer. While we are inclined to spend our time with people like us, we are strengthened by those who challenge us and teach us what we cannot know on our own.
Jesus was the walking Gospel, the full revelation of God on earth. It was to him that Jews, Gentiles, Samaritans, men, women, children, rich, poor, Roman soldiers, holy and sinners alike came.
Those who are counted as followers of Jesus in the New Testament make up the most diverse community ever established on the earth. It was intended to be the way the church would always be.
I pray the same would be true for the church today and the community I am proud to call home.
The Rev. Richard Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
Mark 12:41-44 And he sat down opposite the treasury and watched the people putting money into the offering box. Many rich people put in large sums. And a poor widow came and put in two small copper coins, which make a penny.
And he called his disciples to him and said to them, ‘Truly, I say to you, this poor widow has put in more than all those who are contributing to the offering box. For they all contributed out of their abundance, but she out of her poverty has put in everything she had, all she had to live on.?
Often in hard times or when bad things happen in our country, like 9-11 we see people flocking to church to find comfort and peace in Christ, comfort form their fears, and a friend to share with.
Today, in this financial mess that our world is in, people are staying at home. They are not coming to church. They are not coming because they are ashamed, ashamed that they do not have an offering. In our world today, we in the church have made it sound to those who are hurting most, that unless they can give an offering to our Lord and Savior, that they are not welcome in our midst. I am finding that many are saying in their heart, I can’t afford to come to church.
Weekly, people in our congregation pass the offering plate without putting something in, or they give to God only a few coins? they give what they have, they give all that they can. Sometimes we forget that an offering is not just money, but rather that it is a gift to God in Christ Jesus to do the work of and in his kingdom.
A gift of time or effort given from the heart is so much more worthy in God’s eyes no mater its size, than a gift given begrudgingly or out of necessity.
And a poor widow came and put in two small copper coins, which make a penny. And he called his disciples to him and said to them, ‘Truly, I say to you, this poor widow has put in more than all those who are contributing to the offering box. For they all contributed out of their abundance, but she out of her poverty has put in everything she had, all she had to live on.?
As a pastor, I am thankful to have members give from their hearts because it is here that their faith shines through! With a faith that causes them to give from the heart, their faith remains much stronger over time, but more importantly they see and understand that they are not coming to church to see how big of an offering they can make, but rather they are coming to church to be ever closer to Christ and to grow in their faith daily.
Believing in Jesus Christ is not about money, it is about your faith in Christ.
So what happens if you don’t have an offering to give? Should you stay home? Should you slide down in your seat so that no one will see you? The answer is a resounding NO, instead, come to church and hear the word of God, read it, learn it, mark it, and inwardly digest it.
If you do not already, then through the Holy Spirit, trust on Christ as your Lord and Savior, believe beyond any reason or doubt that His death on the cross and His resurrection from the dead has forgiven you of all your sins!
Become a child of God, and if you are already His child, then come to have your faith continually strengthened and renewed. God’s will is that you would be ever stronger in His word? trusting and believing on Him as your Lord and Savior.
Yes, give from your heart, but most importantly, come to church to hear God’s good and perfect Word for your life, so that you too may believe on Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior! For your souls sake, you can’t afford not to come to church.
The Rev. Kelly Todd is pastor of Christ Lutheran Church.
My husband and I are blessed to have a terrific family. We have four children, three of whom are ‘out of the house,? and becoming increasingly adept at caring for their individual needs.
They are, for all intents and purposes, single and on their own. There are times when we want to shout, ‘thank God!? and times when we ache to return to the days when our influence was powerful’albeit occasionally controlling.
Yet, we have tremendous faith that these marvelous people that happen to be our children will contribute in a meaningful and powerful way to our society, and we look forward to sharing these significant times with them.
I hope they will come to understand fully that it is the working of the Holy Spirit in their lives that has brought them to this point and that they will continue to use the gifts of the Holy Spirit to respond faithfully to God’s call.
Which brings me to ask, how do you use the gifts of the Spirit?
Wisdom. Long associated as a gift restricted to the elderly, wisdom is more about experience than age. Yes, sometimes they go together, but wisdom is often gained at a very young age.
Recall Jesus? words to the disciples in his reminder that they should accept the kingdom of God like a child. Hearing the Spirit’s call in our life experience requires openness and a spirit of non-judgment.
My daughter recently experienced the inauguration while living abroad in Cyprus. Some of her fellow students were from Nairobi, and she remarked that their reaction of joy and excitement gave her greater perspective and understanding of what it really means for our country to have elected an African American president.
Understanding. Steven Covey wrote in his famous book, ‘The Seven Habits of Highly Successful People,? that to be truly successful one must seek first to understand before being understood.
That’s a powerful lesson. How often do we fail to place ourselves in another’s shoes? In our experience as parents of young adults, we have often tried to return to our experience of youth in an attempt to understand our own children.
We’ve concluded that there is no justification for expecting them to live their lives without making plenty of mistakes. We certainly did!
Right Judgment. Sometimes doing the right thing is as simple as that. Do it just because it’s the right thing to do. When my children challenge me about why they need to belong to a church, I tell them that if it weren’t for communities of faith that supported, comforted, and challenged our ideas about right and wrong, then there would be as many churches as there are people.
The ongoing argument often heard among young people is that they are ‘spiritual, but not religious?. I contend they cannot be separated. We need boundaries; otherwise, we’re forming our own religion. Someone once remarked, ‘Are you sure you’re wise enough for that??
Courage. Being a young adult today takes courage, there is no doubt. Social, economic, and moral issues put us all at odds with others during the course of each day that dawns. Anxiety often precedes actual courage, and I think that’s one way to know that our courage is a gift of the Spirit. No one can stand up alone.
Knowledge. Knowing that we are called by the Spirit is both a comfort and a challenge. We can count on the Spirit to inspire us and give us the words we need to speak to those who hunger for truth. On our part, however, we need to be well prepared.
This may be the greatest challenge to young adults, who have grown up being spoon fed by the wonders and pitfalls of the Internet.
Reverence. Ah, a lost art it would seem in our culture. When was the last time you felt ‘reverent?? That feeling of deep respect, humility, obedience, or piousness?
Again, my daughter’s experience in Cyprus was profound in this respect. As she visited some of the Greek Orthodox cathedrals, she said she felt overwhelmed with a deep sense of reverence in the presence of God.
Wonder and awe. Related to reverence, this gift seems more accessible. Allow yourself a walk outside today or listen to some beautiful music. Perhaps it will invoke in you a sense of wonder and awe at the greatness and creativity of God. Take it as a gift.
We are all invited to answer the Spirit’s call. The Spirit challenges us, constantly inviting us to grow in faith and love. The Spirit is the wind that dishevels our complacency, the fire that impels us to overcome our fears, and the voice that whispers the invitation to change our hearts and grow. How will you answer the invitation this week?
Cheryl Smith is director of Adult Faith Formation at St. Daniel Catholic Church.
Our country and perhaps our world is facing the greatest economic crisis in 80 years.
Some suggest we may be facing a time similar to The Great Depression. As a child I remember reading stories about that era and being in awe of the great sorrow.
When I was young we went to the movie theatre and saw the movie ‘Tobacco Road,? which told the story of a depression-era family forced to go to the poor house. My sister Jeanne always cried at movies and it was a real tearjerker for her. I have to admit that it also choked me up more than just a little.
We often heard stories about how our grandparents had seemingly weird money issues that carried over from the Great Depression era. Though we felt sorrow for those people and their experiences we were convinced by educators that society had learned from the past mistakes and such an event would certainly never happen again.
I now realize those assurances were more based on our need for a sense of security than a real understanding of history. The truth is history does repeat itself and if we do not learn from the lessons of the past we will certainly re-live those event.
To me the greatest lesson we need to learn is that the basis of our problem now, as it was back then, is not simply economic but rather it is moral.
The same moral lapses that occurred in what we called The Roaring 20s are the same moral lapses happening in America. In those days, secular society was fully embracing the scientific era and felt there was no need for God and certainly not for the ‘old fashioned? moral restraints of the past of a need to live by a higher moral standard than we felt to be good for our own personal happiness or sense of fulfillment.
This sense of self-fulfillment led to moral failure in the economic and political realms. These moral lapses led to the great economic failure and the accompanying political extremes of Nazism and Communism.
Is the holocaust and totalitarian governments possible in our so-called enlightened times? If the economic failures can be repeated who would say it is not possible for the political failures to be repeated?
I think this is an important time in history when we need to see the end result of mankind thinking they can live without the moral influence of God.
I am fully convinced the economic crisis we now face is not the result of economic theory but the direct result of moral lapse of these self-centered times. Greed has moti-vated the great financial institutions into making extremely foolish investment decisions which has also meant leading our society by encouraging other to follow their lead.
Over-leveraged people who work for over-leveraged corporations, which are being led by government leaders who are trying to solve our problems by over-leveraging the government. I do not know about you but I see the same solutions being offered that got us into this problem in the first place.
Maybe somebody will finally be able to say, ‘Stop! Let’s look at where we are going and make a change.? Like the psalmist said in the Bible we need to also say, ‘Lead me to the rock that is higher than I.?
If we want to go forward with success, we need to look upward. The Bible says, ‘There is a way that seems right to man but the end thereof is the way of death.?
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
Have you ever noticed how our identities can change depending on our titles and/or responsibilities? One moment you’re a spouse and the next moment you’re in the role of a parent.
Barack Obama was a Senator one day and, then, the next day he became the President Elect. Not only did he change titles, but he will now take on a whole new level of authority, importance, and responsibilities. Sometimes we wear different identities at different times.
You may be a husband at home, but a boss at work. Hopefully, parents have learned to leave their ‘boss identities? at work versus bringing them home. There are even times we take on new identities, never returning to our old identities.
In a witness protection program, a person is given a new identity for their own protection. This new identity results in a radical life change.
Often the identity change is a life or death decision. The individual may need to change his appearance, name, conversations, and location in order to start a new life. Danger lurks around the corner for those that are tempted to revert back to their ‘old? lives. The level of possible danger determines the level of commitment one would have to their new identity.
Spiritually speaking, the same principles apply when a person receives Christ into their20life. The word of God says that you’re a new creature in Christ Jesus, old things have passed away and behold all things have become new (II Cor. 5:17).
The Bible says that a decision for Christ means that you’ve also been given a new name in heaven. God often changed peoples birth names to represent changes in their lives. For example, Abram’s name was changed to Abraham. When you choose Christ, you are NOT the same person you used to be.
The word of God says, not only does your name change, but your very heart changes. A complete package deal comes with salvation. Unfortunately, many Christians don’t realize that they have a new identity. Many don’t train themselves on how to maintain this new identity.
Let’s look at the Witness Protection Program as an example. To maintain your new identity, your conversations must change, the past must be put away, old habits will have to die, and some relationships may need to be terminated.
The Bible advises the Christian to ‘Put off the old man and put on the new man.? The phrases, ‘Die to the old man,? and ‘Lose the old life,? take on new meaning.
Why is this ‘dying? important? It’s important because the key to living an abundant life in Christ, is to see yourself in light of your new identity in Christ.
Do you see yourself as righteous in the sight of God? The Bible says you are! Do you see yourself as a child of God and a part of His family? The Bible says you are, it even adds that you are joint heirs with Jesus Christ himself. Do you see yourself as bold, courageous, and victorious? The Bible says that you are more than a conquerer through Christ who strengthens you.
Very few Christians actually know WHO they are in Christ or WHAT they have in Christ.
It’s a new year, a new time to start with a new identity. Much like the Witness Protection Plan, it’s up to you to put on your new identity and put off the old identity! It may be a matter of life or death.
The Rev. Jeff Stonerock is pastor of Victory World Outreach ministry.
A New Year begins, and along with it comes a new slate of resolutions. We have all experienced the unhappy moment when we realize we haven’t lived up to the promises we made to ourselves at the beginning of the previous year.
So what do we do? We make new resolutions.
Why? Because it is in our God-given nature to want to be better, to improve and to progress. We are destined for greater things and we strive to this end. God gives us the tools of perseverance and patience to help us fight the good fight and improve ourselves over time.
The start of a new year is a perfect time to take a step back and decide, Where do I want to go with the life I have been given? What are my new resolutions?
A friend once told me that if you are looking for personal resolutions, start with your eulogy and work backwards. In other words, at the end of your life, what would you like to hear about yourself?
Is it?
She always knew the news about everyone. He always bought the best. She was an unbelievable shopper. He was devoted to his car. She was always busy. He was the highest scoring video game player.
Or is it?
She was compassionate. He had the right priorities. She served her neighbor. He used his material resources for the good of others. She was humble. He was a good father. She cared more about people than things.
Jesus Christ tells us that where your treasure is, there is where your heart lies. The resolutions we make should help us achieve things that will help us get to heaven rather than simply help us achieve things here on earth.
There is nothing wrong with the traditional resolutions of weight loss, physical fitness, better organization and better budgeting. These resolutions can take us to new levels in our physical selves. But, maybe there is more.
This year, step back. Look beyond the repeat resolutions and old stand-bys. Determine what is keeping you from becoming the person that God wants you to be and build a resolution to get there. When failures occur, we can resolve to continue moving forward, rather than become discouraged and step back to the habits that take us away from our goals.
We are probably familiar with the story of creation in the Bible. After the fall of Adam and Eve, God asks them: ‘Where are you?? When we embark upon the task of setting new resolutions for ourselves we can take some time to ask the same question:
Where am I?
Father Daniel Pajerski, LC, is the director of formation at Everest in Independence Township.
One of my favorite childhood memories of Christmas is our family’s manger scene, complete with all the figures from the biblical Christmas story.
As my sister and I set up the scene, each figure had to be in just the right place ? the perfect scene. And then, last of all, after everything else was ready, we carefully placed baby Jesus in the manger ? the feed box filled with straw. It was a beautiful scene ? just right, or so we thought.
As much as I still love to set up our family’s manger scene, it now seems to me that there is something missing from these serene and quaint, quietly beautiful and perfect manger scenes. Missing is life and especially all the messy things that go with it in the real world.
Missing are the sounds of worried parents wondering where they can stay while they deliver their first baby. There would have been gasps of wonder at the gift of new life, sighs of exhaustion, maybe even some snoring.
The labor pains of Mary would certainly have been heard, for nothing tells us that this unique birth was easier than any other. The sounds of Jesus nursing at his mother’s breast, coos and bubbles ? so many delightful baby sounds are missing too.
Also missing are the sounds of cattle chewing their cud, and of sheep and donkeys shuffling around, eating and snorting. And, oh, the smells of the manger ? damp, musty, dark smells.
And there would have been some earthy people around too ? shepherds working hard, walking far with their sheep. Mary and Joseph had likely not had the time or place to bathe. Sweat and road dirt, tangled hair and dust, the smells of birthing all mingling.
I wonder how manger scenes would sell if they came complete with all the sounds and smells, the sights and textures of the real thing? I have also often wondered where Mary and Joseph might have ended up if they were looking for a place to stay in 2008 in the violence torn Middle East? Or what might happen if they were looking for a place in the United States, even right here in economically challenged Southeast Michigan? And what if they knocked on my door?
My guess is that if all the hotels were full and if they did not look like ‘respectable well-to-do folk,? Mary and Joseph might have ended up at a homeless shelter or on the doorstep of some church asking if there was any room.
They might have found themselves with a group of homeless under a bridge, and if they couldn’t find their way to a hospital somewhere, who knows, maybe the baby Jesus might have been placed in a cardboard box and wrapped in swaddling newspapers or some old clothing donated by a local church.
That is the kind of real and desperate situation Mary and Joseph faced. And the kind of messy situation in which Jesus, our Lord and Savior, our newborn King, came into as he entered our world.
This is what God chose ? it was part of the plan. For you see, when God decided to ‘put skin on? and to be born in a manger, it was so he could get close to us ? real close in our real and often very difficult lives. It is an experience through which we can see and touch, smell and taste and hear God’s Word of hope for us ? no matter who we are, where we’ve been, what we’ve done, or how things are going for us today.
For once we have found God in a barn, we can never again be quite sure where God will appear next. God’s holiness is found in the lowliest and least likely places, like in a stable’and on a cross.
The real Christmas story assures us that God is with us in the messiness and real stuff of our lives today. In our joys and in our challenges there is God with us and for us.
‘All this took place to fulfill what the Lord had said through the prophet: ‘The virgin will conceive and give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel? (which means ‘God with us?). Matthew 1:22-23
May you receive this real gift of Christmas in a special way this year.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church.
One day this past week, my 14-year-old daughter returned from school to find me working at our computer. Bounding in the room, she flung her arms around me, hugged me tightly and said those words we parents live to hear, ‘I love you!?
Lest you be tempted to believe I live in some sort of idyllic world where teenagers routinely act lovingly, obediently, and subserviently toward their parents, let me reassure you this is not always the case!
In fact, on this particular day, she and her classmates had attended an assembly entitled, ‘Rachel’s Challenge?, the story of Rachel Scott, a victim of the Columbine High School shootings several years ago.
The Rachel Scott message, according to the website, is that ‘students have the power to make permanent, positive, and cultural change in their schools and communities by accepting the challenge to start a chain reaction of kindness and compassion.?
My daughter, who was very moved by the presentation, felt compelled to do something. She questioned me, ‘Mom, what can I do??
Ah, and there’s the question for us all, isn’t it? We are one week from Christmas, with one week left of the season of Advent. Our economy is a mess. At the time of this writing, we don’t know the outcome of the auto company proposals to Congress, and everyone is on edge about what the future will bring. What can we do?
Many of us feel tempted to give in to fear, to go inward, to resign ourselves to feelings of helplessness and hopelessness until things somehow miraculously get better.
Yet this season of Advent reminds us to do just the opposite. The season of Advent leads up to and prepares believers for Christmas, when we will celebrate the birth of the Lord, his incarnation among us.
But as the Church prepares to celebrate his birth, it also looks forward to his second coming at the end of time. Between the first coming and the second coming of Christ, there is our current history, an in-between time, difficult as it might seem for now.
So, do we live suspended between first and second coming, without access to a current experience of the presence of Jesus? No!
Rather, we live our lives in the here and now a certain way, proclaiming the Good News of salvation, precisely because Jesus Christ is coming again. This looking forward to the second coming of Christ if full of possibility and promise. Therefore, hope ? not fear- dominates this
As we are approaching the Christmas season we are facing very uncertain times.
The economy of our nation is desperate while our state, Michigan, seems to be the direst of all states. Although there are many different solutions being tossed about on how to best cure our current economic distress it is painfully obvious that many of these solutions are only best guesses as to what will cure our problems.
It is amazing to me that in many cases the very people who have been leading the companies and organizations that got us into this economic crises are the very ones we are looking to in order to get us out of the current situation.
For me, it is not much consolation when I see such little understanding of our economic system. Many of the leading figures were not only vitally involved in the shaping of our economy but they were also educated at our ‘best? educational institutions.
When we hear scientists debate theories about the natural world it makes sense that we are still learning more about the unknown world we inherited from God. We need to realize that the economic system is a man made system, so logically it would make sense that we should be able to comprehend how and why it works in the manner that it does. The truth is many things about the economy are certainly open to debate and the theories of how it works best are evolving with time.
This is one of the reasons the message of Christmas is so important and necessary for our world. The Christmas story is the story of God entering the affairs of man in a very personal way in order that He could offer us hope for our lives.
God does not just speak from heaven but He is willing to get personally involved in our lives. Jesus was God becoming flesh in order that He could dwell among us and relate to our human experience. God does not just join us but He offers us the opportunity through His son Jesus Christ to live beyond the human experience in the power of the living God.
In our contemporary world society has become too sophisticated to think we need the simple wisdom that the Bible offers. Our prosperity has given us something to rely on to the extent that now we often think we do not need God or the fellowship of the church.
We often consider these things as just memories from the past that we enjoy reminiscing about but do not have any firm commitments to. During these days of distress we need to remind ourselves about our need for something beyond the human experience. We need God and we need the wisdom He imparts to us. We need to return to the very principles that our society was founded on. Although we have come a long way in history the truth is we still need something that is above ourselves.
Giving honor to God is not just about finding answers for our problems but it finding the inner peace and strength to face our problems. When Jesus Christ came into the world the scriptures tell us that He was coming as the Prince of Peace.
We know that since He came to earth wars have not ceased but we do know that when God does something on the inside sooner or later it will manifest itself on the outside.
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Temple.
What do you do when you need comfort? Perhaps you visit an old friend, get together with family, friends or favorite pet. Snuggling in underneath a warm blanket with some hot chocolate comes to mind. Some eat, others drink, some go out and others stay in.
Even if our ways of seeking comfort are different, we share in common a need to find it.
In Isaiah 40, the prophet tells us God called out that it is divine intent those in need find comfort. ‘Comfort, Comfort my people? says the Lord. Those words were spoken in a time of great despair.
The world as they had known it had been taken from Israel and they found themselves in exile. Their homes were gone, their place to worship destroyed and their future unknown. Certainly they needed to be comforted.
The comfort God offers here however is more than hot chocolate and sugar cookies. This comfort is characterized by two things, action and strength. The people are to find ways to prepare a place for the Lord. This was true for them as a people and as individuals.
God was going to come to them, but they had to get ready. At least part of this preparation was to turn their thoughts away from their calamity and towards God. This comfort also was characterized by strength. Those who needed comfort were given the strength of God’s presence to allow them to stand where they lay down, to sing where they had lamented and to hope where they had given up.
We live in a time where comfort is a precious and rare commodity. The offering of God remains the same, the gift of comfort. As we move closer to Christmas, we are invited to make decisions that our actions and thoughts would turn to God and less to the stress of acting as if we have to make Christmas happen.
God makes Christmas happen. We are simply called to prepare a place in our homes, lives and communities where it can arrive. In doing so, we discover much of what we hoped would give us comfort in the past never offered any lasting value. The Comfort of God is endurable, renewable and eternal.
I am proud to be part of a congregation who is invested in offering comfort that gives strength and hope. We are engaged in many activities offering tangible gifs of comfort and hope to those who need it.
From Career Transition workshops to Christmas Angel ministry (www.clarkstonumc.org) and so much more we are seeking to not only help people feel better but to do better. Being here brings me hope, strength and comfort.
My wish for each of you is that you find a place this season where you can offer and receive the comfort God intends for you.
Seek out a way to offer comfort and to prepare for the arrival of the Lord. It is there you will find your peace, hope and divine comfort that lasts.
The Rev. Richard Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
Call me crazy, but I love November. Every year at this time I begin to feel a bit different from those around me. I find peace in silver-gray days, feel wonder at the sight of a harvest moon, revel in the warmth and comfort of heavier blankets, look forward to family traditions of thanks and joy, and enjoy pondering the reality and depth of end times.
I admit November isn’t perfect. One of those who think I’m a bit ‘off? is my mother. The shorter days! The cold weather! The brown grass and the bare trees! Pondering end times? How depressing! She’s got a point, but I still find much to fill my soul during this month that most people seemingly endure as the ugly stepsister of the more festive December.
Actually, it starts spiritually for me on the first day of the month. Beginning very early in Christian tradition, this day was known as All Saint’s Day, a day that celebrated and honored the valiant martyrs, mystics, and founders of our faith
. These saints live in infamy in our Christian tradition to this day, and many people find comfort and strength from knowing, learning, and reflecting upon their lives. It is still celebrated as a holy day in the Catholic faith. Some might be surprised to know that Halloween has a very Christian connection to this feast day.
Halloween was originally known as ‘All Hallow’s Eve? (hallow actually means ‘holy?), and it began as a night when people would dress up like pagan spirits’goblins, witches and ghosts’in order to ‘taunt? those who dressed up like the saints. The people dressed as pagan spirits were symbolically trying to turn the saints away from their Christian ways.
In the end, however, the saints would win out as ‘All Saints Day? began at midnight and the gone were the devils and ghosts. This tradition celebrated the victory of good over evil, of faith over dark forces, and of Christianity over paganism.
Today Halloween has developed into a time when we can laugh at our dark side, trusting in the promise that good will overcome evil when the light of a new day dawns. It is only when one loses sight of faith that All Hallow’s Eve becomes ‘hollow? rather than ‘hallow?.
All Saint’s Day is followed by All Soul’s Day on Nov. 2, a day where we celebrate a ‘communion of saints?, all those who have gone before us, perhaps much less famous, but nonetheless models of Christian virtue and love.
This is where I begin to really feel reflective. Perhaps the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday affects my mood, but I find myself often thinking of family members and friends who have helped create me as the person I am today.
I am thankful for these people. Some of them are now with God, and yet their presence across time and space at this time of the year envelops me in warmth that defies the chilly November days.
Have you ever visited a cemetery in November? If not, I encourage you to do so. My husband’s uncle passed away this past week, and we were fortunate enough to be able to attend the graveside service. It was cold and windy, so we all huddled close, arms entwined as we listened to the minister’s words of comfort and hope.
I left that service wondering how people with no faith get through these kinds of days. For our part, our sadness was frosted with the sweet promise of hope and eternal life, and we were able to depart with a sense of peace and joy and thankfulness for the life of this very special man. The cemetery housed all these emotions and helped me to sense God’s presence and grace in a way that might not have been possible outside of that place.
So, really, is November all that bad? I think not. Call me crazy, but having faith in eternal life is definitely a gift to be thankful for!
Cheryl Smith is director of Adult Faith Formation at St. Daniel Catholic Church.
According to statistics compiled by internet researchers Karl Fisch, Scott McLeod, and Jeff Brenman, there are 31 billion searches on Google every month. If nothing else, this fact tells us that the human race has an incredible appetite for knowledge.
These researchers estimate that a week’s worth of the New York Times contains more information than a person was likely to come across in a lifetime in the 18th century. And, they project that this year alone more information will be generated than in the previous 5,000 years. These interesting facts lead me to ask a few of questions.
Were the men who lived in the 1700’s and helped to set the moral compass and path to success for our country ignorant or uneducated?
After reading the Declaration of Independence, we know the answer is ‘no?.
Our founding fathers wrote about ‘self-evident? truths: that all men are created equal and endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; chief among those are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. These founders felt comfortable speaking about God, our ‘Creator.?
Those who provided sound reasoning for American independence did not rely on a Google search to learn about the most fundamental truths of life. There was another source of knowledge. They saw God’s hand in the world around them and had the humility to recognize a power greater than themselves.
They had reverence and respect for their Creator that was passed on in how they treated their fellow man. If our founding fathers had no knowledge of God, why did they appeal to him as the source of human rights and truth? True wisdom is not a series of unrelated facts, but the knowledge and acceptance of truth.
Does an abundance of technical facts truly make a person ‘wise?
Anyone who has witnessed a glowing sunset, the power of the seas, or the colorful beauty of a fall morning has gained knowledge of creation and the Creator far richer than isolated facts can explain. We learn in many ways that stretch beyond statistical data.
In our modern society, mentioning God can be frowned upon as something that religious fanatics do. Yet, if we consider the Declaration of Independence to be a meaningful document, we must acknowledge that knowledge of God is at the very foundation of our nation.
At 31 billion searches per month, what are we searching for?
It is possible that the overabundance of information has blurred what is most important. We have heard the scriptural phrase ‘Do unto others as you would have done unto yourself.?
I would propose that the facts to know are those that promote doing what is best for my neighbor and that help discover the goodness of God. When we know how to do good to our neighbor and how to defend the vulnerable ? we have gained true wisdom. When we stop searching for spiritual truths, our spirit still needs an outlet. I can’t help but think that our desire for more and more information reflects a deeper yearning for truth and goodness that can’t be satisfied by facts.
Father Daniel Pajerski, LC, is the Director of Formation at Everest in Independence Township.
n the wake of this hard fought election season, I hope and pray we can now come together to continue the dialog, build trust and work for the good of all.
I hope and pray we can work for justice and peace in all the earth, bring hope and inspire faith in these difficult times. I hope and pray we will be willing to see the shades of gray in so many issues, rather than only the sharp contrasts of black and white.
Most of all I am increasingly aware that my hope ultimately rests in God, not a political candidate or party or position.
God certainly works through these things and calls us to exercise our rights in trying to influence them, but ultimately I say with the psalmist, ‘I lift up my eyes to the hills, from where will my help come? My help comes from the Lord, who made heaven and earth.? (Psalm 121:1-2)
At Calvary Lutheran we are in the midst of an exciting spiritual growth journey called the 40 Days of Love. It seems very appropriate that during these challenging economic times we are focusing on Jesus? great commandment ‘to love the Lord with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength? and ‘to love your neighbor as yourself.? (Mark 12:30-31)
Perhaps now more than ever I need to be refocused on what really matters and where my hope lies. I need to be reminded that my relationship with God and my relationships with others can grow during these difficult times ? and that these loving relationships are what life is really all about. Of course I am not talking about the feeling of being in love, as wonderful as that is, but about the choice and action of loving God and others in all the seasons of life because ‘God has first loved us.? (1 John 4:19)
This past weekend during worship Pat Gottschalk put it this way as she encouraged our congregation to continue to be generous in giving and loving, especially during this time of great need for so many: ‘The 40 Days of Love has also helped me grow in my relationship with others ? with you. It’s important I think that we remember that we are all going through this together and because we are all going through these challenging times together as Christians ? each of us as a part of the body of Christ – that we gather strength from each other because of our faith and trust in Jesus Christ. In Matthew 6:27 Jesus says ‘Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to your life???
Sometimes we worry anyway ? when the economy is not good or if the candidates of our choice are not elected or the struggles of life seem overwhelming.
Nevertheless the Good News is that we are not in it alone. We can turn to God and to one another in love. ‘God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble.? (Psalm 46:1) and God’s grace and love are always there for us ? no matter what.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Lutheran Church.
You don’t hear much about the soul anymore. You hear plenty about taking care of the body. And you’ll hear an occasional warning not to waste your mind. But few are the exhortations about tending to your soul. And that’s too bad.
The soul lies at the foundation of human life. It is what integrates your mind, body, and spirit. And it more than any other aspect of your being shapes who you are as a person.
Neglect of the soul, therefore, is a great peril. A well-tended soul brings good to the totality of life. Whereas the soul that’s neglected works deterioration through every aspect of one’s experience.
The overall neglect of the soul in our day is apparent. The isolation, coldness, addictions, anger, and abuse that characterizes so many are all indications of a society that is impoverished when it comes to the nourishment of the soul.
The critical nature of this soul-neglect cannot be understated. Those afflicted with it are engaged in a self-destructive struggle as they are ruled by their desires and habits and held captive by deceptions and falsehoods.
The human suffering caused by this struggle is incalculable. And the ongoing neglect of the soul only makes matters worse. But there is hope for those who seek to have their souls renewed and restored.
The first step is to acknowledge that you have a soul that needs to be cared for. Turn from any neglect and begin to recognize your soul and pay attention to its needs.
Next, entrust your soul to God. There are those who believe they can manage just fine without any help from God, but the damage done to the soul in the process cannot be escaped. Rest from the weariness of our souls can only be found in Him.
Also instrumental in restoring the soul is God’s law. The Bible tells us, “The law of the Lord is perfect, restoring the soul” (Ps.19:7).
God’s law is the perfect standard of righteousness. As we look to this standard we see how we fall short of it, and this serves to lead us to the only one who is perfect, Jesus Christ. As we come to Him in faith, we begin the process of having our souls restored.
But the law of God also serves to restore our souls in another way. God’s law is His ongoing standard for how we are to live, and as we follow this standard with the aid of His Spirit our souls take on new life and develop.
Unfortunately, any mention of God’s law has largely been abandoned in our day ? even among Christians. Indeed, we are only accepted before God on the basis of faith. But His law remains instrumental in the keeping and development of our souls.
When Jesus looked on the masses, He saw them as “sheep without a shepherd” (Mk.6:34). That is to say, He saw them in need of restored souls. I do believe Jesus’ view of the masses would be just the same today.
The Rev. David Bostrom is pastor of Seed for the Harvest ministries.
We are living in very difficult times. Many people are experiencing losses of great magnitude. Even the foundation of our economic system is being shaken to its very core.
The recent government bail out of some financial institutions has brought to the forefront years of improper management of our fiscal responsibilities. This lack of proper management is not just on Wall Street but it is in the halls of our governments, both local, state and federal, as unfortunately also includes the management of our personal finances as well.
Everybody seems to be pointing their finger at someone else because we all want someone to blame in times like this.
I believe that one of the places we have also failed with our leadership is in the family. I am part of the Baby Boomer Generation.
Looking back I can see the roots of this problem that are now having a generational impact. Many people of my generation had a negative attitude towards their fathers. The way we have sought to rectify this perceived problem was to please our children at all costs with no sense of personal responsibility.
The end result is that we have parents who are afraid of their own children’s disapproval and disappointment and have been unwilling to lead them from a position of authority. Everybody seems to want approval but are unwilling to earn our respect.
One of the greatest presidents of our time, Harry Truman, had a sign on his desk. It simply said, ‘The Buck Stops Here!? I think it is time we all take that sign out and put it on our desk.
Jesus Christ was a true leader. Even when it meant facing an angry mob Jesus was willing to speak the truth and stand for the right behavior. As we know, this was the same persistence that took Him to the cross.
Jesus Christ also had a heavenly Father who was willing to allow Him to face adversity knowing that when He proved Himself He would be given approval that was well deserved. His childhood was not one of wealth and privilege yet He was able to overcome adversities and earn His Father’s approval.
The Bible teaches us that what we need is wholesale repentance. The repentance means to turn your life around. We need a complete turnaround in our country from top to bottom. In order for this change to happen we need true leadership in our nation.
A true leader does not just put their finger in the air to see where the winds of opinion and polls are blowing. Rather, a true leader comes up with solutions and then rallies the people to the challenge of the problem. In order to do this a leader must be willing to let people know when they are a part of the problem and also convince them to accept both the responsibility of the situation and encourage a willingness to change the behavior.
In this day we need to be true leaders that are not afraid to stand for truth, not afraid to admit mistakes, be willing to work ourselves out of them in order that the next generation can learn from us.
Will you be one of these that stops pointing the finger, accepts personal blame if necessary and stands tall in order to make a difference?
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Temple.
As I write this I am watching the news to see which way the Dow Jones index and other markers are headed. Over the past weeks, have you felt like your emotions and future is hanging on numbers?
I am hardly showing great discernment by saying we are in the middle of some very hard times. Michigan and our area of the state are at the center of economic downturn and its impact is touching our very souls.
If one image of the church is that it is a hospital for souls, then it seems each week there is a growing need for triage. Statistics say that 80 percent of us are stressed and anxious about finances.
That feels even a little a low compared to the conversations I have been engaged in. So why am I so hopeful and excited about the days ahead?
I am confident in this troubled time because I am looking at centuries of past indicators. Throughout history, faith in the midst of the worst of times has been the foundation that guided the afflicted to deliverance.
The prophet Jeremiah bought land in the middle of Jerusalem, while it was being conquered, as an investment in the promise that God would be faithful. He was right.
When his enemies celebrated his death, Christ was preparing to defeat death and give the promise of abundant/eternal life. Since then, people of faith have been the singular transformational power in the world.
The joy of this is I am not writing about pie in the sky faith. Faith that makes a difference not only calms the soul but provides bread for the table.
The church is called now to act not only in worship and prayer but in strategy and support to those who are in need.
In our congregation, we recently held a forum for GM salaried retirees who are having massive change in their benefits package. Those who attended were not only upheld in prayer but also shared great resources and information to help each other know how to proceed in the days ahead.
We have held a forum for all who are facing job loss and change with more being planned. People have come together to offer valuable insight on how to manage being unemployed and more importantly resources to network and be made ready to have success finding new employment.
Faith is made evident when the anxiety of our souls can find solace in prayerful support and our physical needs are meet in practical solutions.
In the midst of this troubled times, consider where your security and hope really resides. I suggest that long before there was a Dow Jones, there was a dynamic real God making tangible difference in the lives of those who put God at the center of their lives. That is where my security lives, and where the miracles of hope are living today.
Are you ready to get into that market?
The Rev. Richard Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
One thing I’ve learned is that, despite the fact that we are each created in the divine image, holiness isn’t something you’re necessarily born with.
Oh sure, we’re all born with the promise of holiness, even the potential for sainthood, but how and by what means is the attribute of holiness attained? If you were asked to call to mind a holy person, who would it be? Is this person alive or passed on? What is it that you believe makes this person ‘holy??
I believe that holiness exposes itself in natural and ordinary ways. In my experience with holy people, I have observed three important characteristics that seem to prepare each of them for a unique call to holiness.
The first of these is the ability to equate suffering with hope and challenge. No life is untouched by suffering, and least of all a holy person. The difference seems to be the way holy people choose to balance suffering with faith.
Faith changes one’s vision, and seeing with the eyes of faith involves a commitment to believe that good will come out of evil and a profound understanding that people and relationships, not circumstances, dictate the measure of goodness in one’s life.
Peter the apostle seemed to understand this. Despite the extraordinary suffering he was exposed to in his master and friend’s humiliating death, and notwithstanding his own failure to acknowledge that he knew him, Peter did not despair.
Scripture recounts that at the Resurrection, Peter ran to the empty tomb eager to receive the Good News. Not only was Peter filled with amazement and hope at this extraordinary turn of events, but in his love for the Lord, he answered Jesus? challenge to shepherd God’s people.
Interestingly, the second characteristic is related to the first ? generosity. Holiness is not something one reserves for Sunday services. Holy people are generous people? all the time!
They see their life as a gift to be shared with their family, their profession, their faith community, and their society. They take seriously the evangelist John’s words, ‘From his fullness we have all received, grace upon grace?? and interpret that understanding to include their own life. Grace upon grace, blessing upon blessing ? all of it to be shared with a generous spirit!
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, holy people are attracted to and maintain a spirit of simplicity. They live the biblical teachings about the essential goodness of creation and human being’s responsibility for the stewardship of God’s gifts.
As such, the lives of holy people tend to be appealing to all people. After all, who wouldn’t like a simpler life? Having said that, I must admit this only goes so far for me! When things get a little hairy in my household, my very holy husband often reminds me we could move up to his hunting camp up north’and he’s serious.
Now understand, I get the simplicity thing’but only to a point. Indoor plumbing remains extremely important to me, but he’d be fine. But I digress.
These three things ? hope amidst suffering, generous service, and simplification of one’s life are all important aspects of each individual’s call to holiness. Being created in the divine image gives each of us the natural abilities to answer this call in our own unique way.
I invite you to ask yourself, ‘Where am I on my journey toward holiness??
Cheryl Smith is director of Adult Faith Formation at St. Daniel Catholic Church.
Life is best when I am learning and growing. I think that’s the way God made us. So each day I try to learn something new and grow deeper in some way ? maybe in a relationship or in knowledge about something or maybe in getting to know myself better or God.
It seems to me that as people we are either learning and growing, or we are closing ourselves off and slowly dying. I know that I will always try to be open to new things and new learning and new people ? I want to keep on growing until the day I die.
Here is a question to ponder: What is most important in your life? What is your #1 goal?
I believe that how we answer these questions reveals much about our deepest values, and about who or what is really guiding our life. We all have dominant core values that we consciously, as well as unconsciously, base our decisions on.
In the Bible God tells us that what is most important in this life is LOVE ? that love is to be our most central core value and our primary aim. Love defines what life is to be about and what success is.
In fact Jesus, in the Great Commandment (Mark 12:28-31), said that of all the teachings in the Bible the most important thing to learn about and do is love ? loving God with all of our heart and soul and mind and strength, and loving our neighbors as ourselves.
So of all the great things there are to learn, I believe that learning about God’s love for us and learning to return that love and extend it to others, is far and away the most important. I also know that I’ve still got a lot to learn about love and that I need help along the way from God and from you.
Often our greatest learning about love and about ourselves comes in the most difficult and challenging situations and relationships. Do you recall the teacher or coach that taught you the most? Most likely they loved and cared about you deeply, but probably they also challenged you to a point you didn’t like sometimes ? but you learned and grew.
Life is like that as we learn to love. Our greatest teachers often come in the form of things we would rather avoid, like challenges, painful circumstances, and difficult relationships.
Someone once said that ‘God never wastes a hurt? if we are open to letting him use it to grow us. I’ve also heard that when we are struggling to love in a difficult relationship it can mean for us that ‘school’s in session? and it’s time to learn, not just talk about, loving God and others.
This October at Calvary we will embark on a six week spiritual growth journey called ‘The 40 Days of Love.? During this time we will focus on the Great Commandment to love and how we can have more life-giving relationships with God and others.
We will intentionally do some things to help us learn and grow in love as God’s people. We will do this by spending time in the Bible, in prayer, in serving others, and in small groups. With conflict, divorce, violence, prejudice, and polarization around us daily, it’s obvious we all need some lessons in building healthy relationships, and that’s what the 40 Days of Love is all about.
I believe that the only way I can live and love as God intends is to be a life-long learner about love. You are invited and welcome to learn together with us how to love and live as Jesus did!
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Lutheran.
What an amazing election we have in front of us! A win from either candidate will mark a historical event, as we will have our first African-American president or our first female Vice President.
A few years ago, I began preaching a message about ‘The New Day.? I believe it is a new day for the church and also a new day for our nation.
Amazingly enough, as I began preaching and declaring this theme, other companies (such as Chrysler and Target) started using the same theme in their slogans.
As a Christian, I believe that God works in history to fulfill His purpose and that society often reflects God’s intent without really knowing it. God indeed has more influence than you know!
Earlier this year, I declared that these are times when we need to break with the status quo. I have also affirmed that we need transformational leadership to help us adjust and prevail during these fast-changing times.
Everyone seems to be talking about the need for change to come. I have news for you: change is not coming, it is already here and it did not take a politician to bring it.
The question now is, how will we deal with change? Many of us are experiencing the impact of these changing times. Some are experiencing difficulty because of the economic changes, while others are experiencing the benefits of the positive effect of change.
If we want to prosper in these times, we certainly cannot resist change. We must embrace it and focus on the positives, while learning to deal with the negatives.
I know God holds the future, so I am able to look forward to the future with great hope and expectation. I have confidence that because God loves us, He will work towards our good’if only we will let Him.
With this outlook, we can ‘endure? the difficult times while sowing seeds for the future. Without hope we will not sow for the future, but rather only guard what we have until it dwindles away.
The United States has become a great nation through our ability to embrace change with a positive attitude.
We have been fortunate enough to have leaders like Franklin D. Roosevelt, who encouraged sacrifice and endurance during World War II.
Although short-lived, many were inspired by John F. Kennedy’s admonition to embrace a new frontier.
When the 1970s economic malaise was weighing us down, Ronald Reagan came on the scene to remind us of the greatness of our heritage.
Now it is time for someone to make us bold enough to move into an uncertain future, as well as get us to persevere through these turbulent times in order to get there. At this point, we need more than programs; we need inspiration and hope.
As an evangelical Christian, I am very excited about the grit and determination that Sarah Palin, the Republican vice presidential nominee, possesses. Our constituency seems to be fired up by her Christian and family values as the backdrop for her strong political convictions.
As a Christian, I am also thrilled about the positive impact Barack Obama has on the aspirations of young African-Americans to see that there is no glass ceiling in the political world to hold them back.
I am excited about being a person of faith most of all because, although I do not know exactly what the future will bring, I know the One who holds the future in His hands.
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion.
This summer our youngest daughter became the Director of Youth Ministry at the Oxford United Methodist Church.
Elizabeth had expressed an interest in youth ministry as she came out of high school. I, however, encouraged her to pursue another one of her interests, elementary education.
My thinking was focused around her long term security. I wanted her to have a career with solid income and benefits. I told her to explore elementary education and if it worked out, then she could still volunteer in youth ministry in her church.
She took my advice and went to college, studied and eventually came away with a clear understanding.
God wanted her in youth ministry. So she worked in youth ministry as a volunteer and gained experience.
It was evident early on that her connection with the youth and the impact she had on the youth she worked with was significant. This summer, she had the chance to lead her own youth ministry and went on staff at Oxford UMC.
Shortly after hiring on, she met with the pastor, Rev. Doug McMunn and began to prepare for the fall. In those early meetings, Doug shared with her he would be gone on vacation in August and she could fill in and preach for him.
This was quite a surprise to Elizabeth! She had never preached before, had not thought about it and was not sure she could do it.
The week before, she called me to talk about preaching, the scripture she was using and some of the details about the sermon.
It was fun to watch her struggle and get excited about the scripture as I have done weekly for almost 30 years.
On the Sunday she preached, I was preaching in my church. However, her mother and other friends from Clarkston were in the congregation to listen to her with confidence preach without looking at her manuscript. She did well, very well.
Besides giving me a chance to brag about my daughter, there is another reason I share this with you.
When you begin to get a sense of the plan God has for your life, don’t listen to those who think they have a better idea.
My best intentions for Elizabeth could not surpass what God has in store for her.
The other lesson is this, be careful what you say around your children. One day they will stand in their own shoes and may sound a lot like you.
On Aug. 24, I was grateful and humbled to God that the word of the Lord was on our daughter’s lips. May you and your family hear and follow the path God has in store for you.
The Rev. Richard Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
It is hard to believe that school has begun and that fall is just around the corner.
Perhaps, like me, you have found yourself saying things like, ‘I don’t know where the summer has gone,? or ‘I can’t believe it’s September already.?
Time certainly seems to fly by ? and sometimes we find ourselves just hanging on for dear life, and wondering how we can possibly fit it all in or hold it all together.
When my life seems too busy and out of control, I stop and ask, ‘Do I really have to live this way? Or is there another, and better, way??
Of course I know the answer ? it’s just hard to put into practice sometimes. I know that this time of year is an opportunity to reassess our priorities and decide again what we will fill our calendars, and thus our lives, with first.
Of course some things are pretty much givens; like family responsibilities, school and work. But lots of other things are choices I make. I believe that how I go about doing the things I’ve ‘got to do? as well as those which I choose really can be different.
I have discovered that if I take the time to put God first in all things (something which takes time as well as discipline and openness and surrendering my priorities), that I am really able to focus on that which is really most important. And putting God first changes me, so that I can live with more purpose and focus and joy, even in the midst of busyness and stress.
All of us, I think, seek joy and purpose, meaning, love, contentment, acceptance, and real security in our lives. Frankly sometimes I act like all of this depends on me and my doing.
I forget that God wants these things for me too ? and that God will see me through (and even grow me through) the times when life is rough.
In Jesus? famous Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7) he addresses many of the fundamental areas of faith and the concerns of our lives. It is a model of great preaching that remains relevant, inspiring and real, even today.
Shortly after pointing out that regardless of what we say, ‘Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also? (Matt. 6:21), Jesus addresses the issues of worry, frantic busyness and priorities.
He reminds us that we are of more value to God than the birds of the air and the lilies of the field, and that we cannot add time to our lives through worry (Matt. 6:25-34). Then Jesus says, ??.strive first for the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.?
What ‘things? is Jesus talking about? In the text he mentions specifically food and clothing, the basics of life.
I think this message also clearly addresses how we gain joy, purpose, meaning, love, contentment, acceptance, and real security too.
We don’t get these by just trying really hard, being busy or worrying, but rather by turning our lives over to God.
The truth is that as Fall again comes upon us we will fill our calendars with lots of things. I want to encourage you to put the best thing, that is God, first and then see how the rest of the pieces of life fit together, rather than just trying to fit God into what is left of an already busy life. It’s a matter of priority, but my experience is that the right priority first makes all the difference.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church.
When people speak of “government,” they typically have in mind politics or entities like Congress. But a right understanding of “government” is much broader than civil officials.
God has ordained three governments: family, church, and civil (or state). Each of these has its own particular role under God.
The family is the original and most basic of all orders. Husbands and fathers are to be the “heads” of the family, with their wives as helpmates and children walking in obedience (Eph.5:22ff;6:1-3).
Within the family itself, God’s most basic commandments are taught and learned (Dt.6:6-9).
The government of the church is to be led by elders. The function of these elders is not to lord it over others, but to shepherd those entrusted to their care (1 Pet.5:1-4).
By grace, they are to maintain God’s righteous standards and equip believers for the building of His kingdom (Eph.4:11ff).
The civil government is to be of limited authority and function. According to the Bible, the civil government’s role is that of a minister of justice (Rom.13:1-4). In this capacity, the civil government is charged by God to protect life, liberty, and property, so the citizens of the land can best fulfill their God-given callings.
All three of these forms of government are subject to God. Jesus is the ultimate ruler as the King of kings and Lord of lords. Consequently, all who head various earthly governments are accountable to Him.
This gives those who are under these governments recourse when the rulers over them misuse their authority. A wife, for example, is under no obligation to listen to a husband who demands she does something wrong.
The same holds true of church members and citizens when they are directed to do something that is unrighteous or unjust. In the end, “we must obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29).
For the different earthly governments to work effectively and promote a stable society, there must be another form of government being practiced: self-government.
Without self-government, families become restless and dysfunctional, churches become compromised, and the state assumes more and more power as it seeks to maintain order in a society undergoing collapse.
Understanding this is essential if we are ever going to address what ails our own society with any effectiveness. While most attention is given to what might be done by the civil government to restore the fortunes of our culture, the real answer lies in restoring self-government among our families, churches, and citizens at large.
When the individuals of any society are enslaved by their impulses and desires, there is disorder of every kind and in every place.
Accordingly, the biggest contributor to any society is he who is able to rule his own spirit. He is better than he who can conquer a city (Pr.16:32).
We need to quit looking to the civil government to solve problems that can only be solved by self-government. And we need to look more to the One who can give us a spirit of self-control (2 Tim.1:7).
The Rev. David Bostrom is pastor of Seeds for the Harvest Ministries.
Like many of you, I have thoroughly enjoyed watching the Olympic Games these past several days.
The reported 10,500 athletes from 204 different countries represent the ‘BEST of the best? ? those who have spent the majority of their lives training for countless hours ? day after day ? year after year ? with no guarantee that they’ll ever qualify or win at the Olympic games.
But they do have hope and passion and a goal. They are ‘going for the gold? and they are most certainly focused on the prize.
A competitive swimmer or runner will tell you that the very worst thing you can do in a close competition is to look back ? to take your focus off of the goal.
In swimming it can cost you precious tenths or hundredths of a second that makes all the difference at the end of the race.
In running competitions looking back can cause you to stumble over the feet of the person in front of you or cause you to step out of your lane and be disqualified.
God’s Word has a unique way of teaching us about ‘focus? in the race of our Christian life. In Hebrews 12:1-2 we read, ?? and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us. Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith.?
As Christians we must stay focused on the goal – the goal of eternal life with our Savior Jesus in heaven.
There are going to be plenty of distractions and temptations around us each day to take our focus off the ‘goal.? But St. Paul encourages us to ‘run with perseverance,? that is, with resolve and determination.
Gold, silver, or bronze ? it doesn’t matter in what ‘place? you finish the race. What matters is that you finish the race ? that you keep your focus and faith in Jesus ? and you will receive the prize ? eternal life.
St. Paul, in his writings, also employed the language of the ‘games.? He, too, understood how important it was to remain focused in a race.
In Philippians 3:13-14 he wrote, ‘Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.?
The past can be a huge distraction. Hurts, pains, disappointments, death, missed opportunities, the loss of a job ? these can all keep us looking back withregret.
But God’s Word teaches us to forget what is behind and strain toward what is ahead. It’s not easy. It can be painful to take that step forward again. It’s hard to rid ourselves of the burdens and hurts of the past.
But when we ‘fix our eyes on Jesus? and put our focus and future in the hands of God, we will reach the ‘finish line? and receive the prize ? the crown of eternal life in heaven.
Ready ? set ? fix your eyes on Jesus ? GO!
The Rev. James Krueger is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
We are living in times of great change. I am 54 years old and would never have expected that I would live to see the extreme changes in technology and culture that have happened in my lifetime.
As a child, I remember my mother talking about her childhood. Her stories included details about growing up on the heels of the Great Depression and the impact of World War II.
When she told of life without some of the things I took for granted, I just attributed it to her having lived in the old days and that now we were living in modern times.
I remember well when man first walked on the moon and his declaration that he took a small step for man, but a giant step for mankind.
The thought crossed my mind, ‘How could we ever surpass landing on the moon, eight track cassettes and certainly who would ever top the 1969 Z28 Camaro??
The late sixties were turbulent times. We lived through the deaths of Bobby Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr., saw the turmoil of the civil rights movement, riots in major cities and the war in Vietnam.
The peace movement and the notion of free love espoused by the hippies caused quite a stir. Yet it seemed like every revolt had an accompanying counter move, so the general impression was that not much would actually change in the end.
Indeed how times did change!
Some changes were definitely for the good, such as with the civil rights movement and prejudice in our society. I am greatly surprised by the level of change in the moral attitudes that was brought on by the so-called love revolution.
The love revolution aspired to make it possible for all people to have the freedom to express themselves and find personal satisfaction without the consent of the greater society.
This self-expression was considered the right of every individual, regardless of how it would impact others.
Parents were told that they were not responsible for their children’s happiness. Children were not bound to their parents and individuals should have the right to personal happiness without considering what the results of their actions would do to others.
These people could even point to the Bill of Rights and declare it was their God-given right as an American to pursue happiness.
In the Bible, the people were questioning Jesus about His teachings and He made an important statement that still rings true today.
He said, ‘Wisdom is justified by her children.? In other words, time will tell whether our idea was actually good or not.
We Americans have witnessed the changes of our time and need to espouse a counter-culture revolution. It should no longer be based on the concept of free love, but rather real love.
Real love, the Bible says, does not think only of itself but is kind and considerate of others; it seeks the well-being of others versus our own well-being.
This is the love that our country needs. It is certainly the need of the family unit and needs to begin in our marriages.
Our country is at a crossroads. We need a revival of some of the old fashioned principles that made us the greatest power and country of modern times. If we want to keep the great blessings that we have received, we need to go back to living by the same principles that got us to this place.
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
Several months ago, I wrote an article in this column about the faithfulness of our chocolate Labrador retriever, Sabra. She was an image of compassion and faithfulness in the article.
That article drew the most response I ever received from a column. Dog lovers shared their love of their pet with me and spoke of the lessons about life and faith they learned from their four legged companions.
One person wrote me saying they wish they could show half for love and compassion his dog gave him every day.
I was touched by the response and understood it. I think of it today with special blessing since last week we had to put Sabra down due to illness.
I believe the God of all creation and creatures is giving us lessons every day through the world around us. To take care of creation is a Christian act of obedience. God clearly placed the responsibility of caring for the land, water, air and animals on humanity.
In addition, when we pay attention to the earth and its creatures, we can learn basic lessons of life.
Over my years in ministry, I have been told by countless people their place to worship is the lake, a river, the mountains or some other place in nature. Some have even told me the golf course, though my game never allows for enough peace to sustain holiness.
I can understand the intent of what is being said. As a fly fisherman, I can testify to countless moments of peace and holiness on the rivers of the PM, AuSable, Snake River and other holy sites.
However, as precious as those places are to me, they are not all I need. Those places allow me to learn how to find peace when I am alone or with friends.
They are like filling stations for my soul but when I reenter the world those moments of renewal can get drained dry and I am left longing to go back and be refilled.
They do not sustain me in moments of trial, daily life and crisis situations. Even the lessons my dog Sabra has taught me are not enough; for I can never see the world as simply as she can.
I need the support of other humans who know what it is to struggle, sometimes fail and then succeed. I need spiritual mentors who have traveled the path I am on and know its highs and lows.
I rejoice in the strength of sharing with other less than perfect people who also witness to a God of never ending peace, grace, love and hope. The mentors, prayer friends, members of our church family and others are so precious to our life.
Give God thanks for those people in your life. If you do not have any, come join in the sharing. Give thanks for those who share their faith life with you, for they are a blessing to rich to describe.
The Rev. Richard L. Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
July 4th has already come and gone, and summer is rushing by’again.
It always seems that there is so little time and so much to do during this brief period of warm weather in Michigan. I know that I so look forward to being able to relax and play and be together with family and friends.
I also know that these times will not just happen. I have to take the time ? literally carve it out of my busy life. I have to intentionally build such time into my schedule and priorities. If I don’t, I know that most likely it will not just happen.
Our need to rest and be restored is not something optional. It is necessary. In fact I have discovered that it is built into the very fabric of our lives.
Setting time apart and having a change of pace are part of the very way God made us. You may recall that in Genesis chapter one God spends six days busily creating everything. Then on the seventh day God rests.
GOD RESTS!
Why do I sometimes act like I don’t need to stop and rest? Do I really think that I can do without something that even God does?
The 3rd Commandment in Exodus 20 says, ‘Remember the sabbath day, and keep it holy. Six days you shall labor and do all your work. But the seventh day is a sabbath to the Lord your God; you shall not do any work??
Being a pastor I try hard to do my very best to observe the 10 Commandments, not so that God will love me any more than he already does, but so that I can lead a more healthy and joyful life.
However since Sunday is usually a pretty big work day for me, sabbath-keeping has always been a particular challenge. Often my attempts to take another day of the week off fail. Perhaps you find it hard too ? packing so many things in to those precious days off that you fail to really rest in God’s love or take time to refocus.
The word holy means to set aside for a special purpose or to dedicate to God. God’s call to rest by setting aside some sabbath time breaks our weekly patterns of busyness and achieving, expectations and productivity, competition and pressure.
We can lay aside our to-do lists and so something different. One author suggests that: ‘If your week is filled with e-mails and telephone calls, turn both machines off for the day. If your frantic schedule has you traveling all week, a sabbath at home will provide much-needed rest. If you spend your week cooped up in an office, a sabbath walk in the woods or an afternoon at the park playing with the kids may be just the space you need.?
Sabbath time brings renewal too.
Renewal means making things that have become old and familiar new again. It is a time for us especially to renew our relationships with others and with God.
In the New Testament Jesus sums up all the commandments in this way: ?? you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength’and you shall love your neighbor as yourself? (Mark 12).
Taking sabbath time is really way of following up on that oft spoken refrain, ‘We really should get together more often.? Getting together with God and with others is not an optional, ‘if I can fit it in kind of thing.?
Rather it is essential to our lives today and into all of eternity. Focusing attention on God in awe and reverence (worship) and on others (sharing God’s love) is what we were made to do, and it makes the rest of our days more meaningful and purposeful.
I hope you have a great summer’and I hope and pray you will take some sabbath time to let God restore your heart and soul.
The Rev. Jonathan Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church.
When God made the first man, He put him in a garden. In so doing, He provided humanity with a pattern for life, showing us all what our lives are to be about.
To grow a thriving garden, you need several elements.
First, you need a willingness to cultivate it. Gardens can’t be left to themselves, they need to be worked at.
Second, you need to guard or protect your garden. That is, you have to do what you can to keep various critters from disturbing what you are growing.
And third, you need to trust, knowing that though you may do the planting and watering, God causes the growth.
These three elements are precisely the ones that God gave the first man when he put him in the garden of Eden.
After putting the man in the garden, the Lord commanded him to cultivate the garden and keep it. And He also commanded him to trust Him (specifically, regarding His direction not to eat from a certain tree).
Cultivating, keeping, and trusting, are needed for more than just growing gardens. They are necessary for every endeavor in life.
If some opportunity comes your way, or if you are given something good, you can’t just let it sit there. You need to work at it and develop it.
At the same time, you need to protect against any intruder that would diminish the value of what you have. And all while you are cultivating and guarding, you need to trust that God will bless your faithful efforts.
Let’s consider a couple of examples.
If you have a family, you can’t just leave it to itself and expect it to remain alive. You need to cultivate your marriage and children. You need to pay attention to those cultural forces that are harming your family and guard against them.
And you need to trust God, believing that as you follow Him in your family He will surely bless it.
The same thing is true for a business or some other enterprise under your care. Whatever operation you have an interest in, it needs tending to.
It can’t run on auto-pilot. You need to work at it, and anticipate changes and threats that may harm what you have. All while trusting God to bless your efforts.
The need to trust can be the hardest part for anyone of us to fulfill.
When God told the first man not to eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, He essentially told him that he was not to share in God’s glory and rule until the appointed time.
But in the very next chapter (Gen.3), we learn that the man could not wait, and seized what God had forbidden (at least for a time).
We face the same temptation. We want glory and authority and power ? but we want it without the necessary cultivating, keeping, and trusting.
This seems to be especially so with many young people today, who want and expect to have now what it took their parents a lifetime to attain. Unfortunately, with such a heart, gardens do not grow.
Consider the garden that God has put you in. Cultivate it and keep it. And trust Him for His blessing as you do.
The Rev. David Bostrom is pastor of Seeds for the Harvest ministry.
Currently, I am preaching on stories from the book of Genesis.
These stories were told around campfires and in worship for generations before they were written. They became part of the deep truth and life experience of those who first heard them.
They answered fundamental questions that people had about life.
Noah and the Flood tells the story of God flooding the world and after hating the horror it produced made a promise the world would not be destroyed by flood ever again.
Abraham and Sarah is the story of a God who makes promises to a flawed person and then makes those promises come true. Theirs is a story of people who are willing to trust in divine promise when there is no evidence it is remotely possible to expect fulfillment.
Family strife is described between Sarah and Hagar, Isaac and Esau, Joseph and his brothers. The humanity portrayed in their lives describes the struggles we live with daily.
When these stories were first heard, people began to understand several truths. God really was committed to us and all creation. Even in the worst times, God did not abandon us. God willingly used less than perfect people to accomplish his will.
For those of us who know we are not up to the task or all we should be, we have a God who blesses, cares for and guides us into fulfillment and victory. Family battles do not have to end in broken families. Forgiveness and reconciliation are possible when we allow the power, love, and mercy of God to come into the home.
These lessons are not outdated. In fact, they sound even more relevant to me than when I first heard the stories as a child.
These stories are no longer intimately known by the world or our community. At best, most have casual knowledge of the stories or have reduced them down to bed time children stories.
There truths remain however, and offer lessons of value to us still today.
A fundamental truth of these stories is that God makes promises to us and keeps them. This is a hard lesson to understand in a world that no longer trusts promises.
We have come to understand promises as our best intent, wish or desire. We promise but often allow other events to get in the way of allowing us to fulfill them. Listen to the campaign promises coming your way if you need an example of promises you can not entirely depend on.But the promises of God in these stories told the listeners that God cared enough to make a promise and then keep it. Even as people repeatedly kept failing to live up to their promises, God remained faithful.
In a world where there seemed to be more danger and chaos than hope, the message of a faithful, committed God sounded pretty good. It still does today. Because it was true then and is now. Blessings!
The Rev. Richard L. Dake is pastor of Clarkston United Methodist Church.
Lately I’ve been feeling my age. Oh, not necessarily in the physical sense, although I am beginning to realize that a particularly significant birthday ‘milestone? is not far off.
Rather, age is a concept that begets a certain sense of fascination for me, especially as this ‘middle-ager? reflects upon the young.
June brings a whirlwind of activity when you are young. Recitals and playoffs, tournaments and concerts, award ceremonies, send-offs, and especially graduations, add lots of excitement and pride to many families? lives.
As parents of a recent high school graduate (our third in the household!), my husband and I have participated in and supported our own children in most, if not all, of these activities.
We always come away with a sense of awe at what they are able to accomplish.
After all, they are so young. But really, should we be surprised?
Jesus surely recognized the inherent value and the immense potential of children, teaching his disciples that children are indeed the model for all his followers.
Yet Jesus wasn’t focusing on their ability to accomplish; rather, he affirmed their utter dependence upon their parents, challenging his disciples to have this same sense of dependence upon God.
He taught that ‘unless you turn and become like children, you will not enter the kingdom of heaven.? (Matt 18:3) Perhaps we could all benefit from prayerful contemplation regarding our own sense of trust and dependence upon God, praying with the psalmist, ‘God is our refuge and our strength, and ever-present help in distress. Thus we do not fear, though earth be shaken?.the Lord of hosts is with us?? (Ps 46:2-4)
Dependence isn’t something with which most adults are comfortable. We like to think we have control of every aspect of our lives.
We make our plans for life with an attitude not unlike the rich fool of Luke’s gospel. In that parable, the rich man is caught talking to himself (and answering as well!), fretting over the space required to store his harvest.
He is intent upon providing for himself in a big way so that he can ‘rest, eat, drink and be merry!?
God’s response turns that attitude upside down when he says, ‘You fool, this night your life will be demanded of you; and the things you have prepared, to whom will they belong? Thus will it be for the one who stores up treasure for himself but is not rich in what matters to God.? (Lk 12:20-21)
So what matters to God?
First and foremost I believe God desires that we recognize our need to trust in his ability to care for us.
Jesus teaches us to seek first God’s kingdom, and everything else will be given us besides. This trust and dependence upon God will naturally allow us to accomplish the things that add real meaning to our lives and the lives of others.
This, too, is what God desires ? our willingness to be his hands and feet in our world. Once again, youth provide a beautiful model of this attitude, especially in our own community.
At our schools, in our neighborhoods, and in our churches, Clarkston youth can be seen taking the lead and witnessing God’s love through service to others. Parents, teachers, youth ministers and pastors provide the support, and the youth come through with unbridled enthusiasm!
Let’s take a lesson from their vibrancy and join in the fun. Take some time this summer to serve your church, your community, your world.
Allow the Lord to speak these words to your heart, ‘Well done, my good and faithful servant’come share your Master’s joy!? (Mt 25:21)
Cheryl Smith is director of Adult Faith Formation at St. Daniel Catholic Church.
Our nation and our state are in a very difficult economic place.
The failing economy is impacting everyone. We are now facing a credit crunch brought on by very unhealthy financial institutions.
There is an old adage, ‘It takes money to make money.? Businesses and individuals who once found credit easy to obtain are finding that times have swiftly changed. As the economy sputters and many people are facing major problems and losses everyone seems to be in agreement that we want the government to get us out of this mess.
I hope that in the middle of this mess we are able to understand the root of our problems are not economic but are spiritual.
The prophet Jeremiah lamented the condition of the hearts of his people when they were straying from God.
He said the whole land had become brutish. The word brutish means a person has become a consumer rather than a producer. The people of Jeremiah’s time were seeking for satisfaction in life. They were finding their satisfaction in what they could consume rather than what they could accomplish.
Everyone had become dull-hearted and went about seeking for self-satisfaction without regard to the consequences they or anyone else would have to bear.
This condition affected not only the people but also the leadership. Everyone had become consumers and before you know it they were consuming each other.
The prophet then lamented the ‘noise of the bruit? has come. The sound of the consequences of the behavior was now upon the people and they would have to face the consequences of their choices.
This describes the time we are living in.
Everyone in seeking to enjoy life now not only has spent all of their money but they have borrowed from their future. Banks were the purveyors of this trend by sending endless credit card applications and then offering loans to consolidate the credit card debts.
When applying for credit one often has to mark the question in regards to their home if they own or rent. I think we need a new category, own, rent or pretending to own.
For many people their borrowing has eliminated any equity they may have had in their home. As is seen in a great many cases with the falling housing values that people have situations where they actually owe more on their home than it is worth.
At one time lenders could be depended on to tell people if they actually qualified for a loan but then started giving out loans without properly qualifying people. Keep in mind these were often times people well trained in finance, and especially true of the managers of these banks and lending institutions. In the Bible a ‘dull-hearted? person is someone who does not use their knowledge because personal desire has made them stupid.
Now these same ‘well qualified leaders? are asking the government for help to secure their companies for the benefit of the national economy.
If we are not careful we will once again sacrifice the future for present temporary comfort.
Our government is already over leveraged and the future of Social Security and other programs are in danger.
Will we add to the load?
Jeremiah told the children of Israel what their solution was. He said we must say, ‘Woe is my hurt! My wound is severe. But I say truly this is an infirmity and I must bear it.? He goes on to say, ‘O Lord correct me, but with justice; Not in anger lest you bring me to nothing.?
As a people we need to turn from ourselves to the one that is higher than us and make a choice for the life that is higher than us. It may seem difficult to ignore but our real problem will certainly be more deadly!
The Rev. Loren Covarrubias is pastor of Mt. Zion Church.
By Father Daniel Pajerski
Isn’t it ironic that one of the biggest threats to communication in our world today is sound, or too much of it?
The other day I was in the car waiting at a stoplight. In the car in front of me was a young woman listening to music. The music was so loud that I could see the rearview mirror shaking to the beat.
I enjoy music just as much as anybody, but no one can deny that in this life, we can enjoy too much of a good thing. Sound was created by God, and in itself, it is a wonderful thing.
But when sound becomes noise, it can become an unhealthy distraction.
Too much noise impairs our ability to communicate with those around us, and puts distance between us and those we love.
In our society, ‘noise? comes in many forms. Today’s average teen is spending more and more time in cyberspace. As the PBS Frontline stated in its January 22, 2008, report entitled Growing Up Online, ‘This is the first generation to come of age immersed in a virtual world, outside the reach of their parents.?
In other words, the Internet helps children to avoid communicating with parents, and it takes from the time that parents have to communicate with their children.
As humans, we are made to communicate with each other. Parents and kids need uninterrupted time together to get beyond surface conversation and understand each other. This is hard to do with email and instant messaging.
Humans have an uncanny ability to communicate. We do not even need sound! A glance can speak volumes. Often times, when we know another person well, we can tell exactly what that person is thinking without he or she having to say a single word.
The raising of an eyebrow, a smile, a wink ? these motions can speak without words ? that is, if we are truly ‘listening? to one another.
Communication is critical to healthy family life. To combat the distractions available, today’s family has to ‘fight? for time to listen to each other.
This takes effort and sacrifice. Sacrifice? Not a common household word. The fruit of this sacrifice is a family with more patience, tolerance, and charity.
Families with these virtues tend to grow stronger, resolve problems faster, and support each other. A strong family yields strong children.
So, ask yourself a couple of questions.
How many times this week did you sit down with your loved ones and eat a meal that lasted at least 30 minutes? (the average amount of time we spend glued to a TV show). Then, ask yourself how many combined minutes each of your family members spent on the Internet, watching television or listening to an iPod this week.
Based on the numbers, there may be room for change. More dinner time as a family. Less radio or television in the car. Family game night. One less night ‘out? and one more night ‘in?. There are many possibilities.
To strengthen our families, we need to turn off the noise, and listen. We just might be amazed at what we hear.
Father Daniel Pajerski, LC, is the Director of Formation at Everest Academy in Independence Township.
woman was shopping with her young daughter. She was very busy and had many errands to run.
The crowds and traffic were terrible that day, so they even had to skip lunch to get everything done.
Towards the end of the long day the woman was tired and hungry, her feet were aching, and she was more than a little irritable.
As they left the last store to finally head for home, the woman with turned and said offhandedly to her daughter, ‘Could you believe the nasty look that salesman gave me??
Without skipping a beat her young daughter innocently answered, ‘Mommy, he didn’t give that nasty look to you. You already had it when you went in.?
Knowing the young girl was right, the woman paused, said a silent prayer and gave her daughter a hug as she said, ‘Thanks, I really needed that!?
Like it or not, intentionally or unintentionally, carefully or carelessly, we share what we have with others.
It’s true, whether we are aware of it or not, that what we do has an impact on our world and on those around us ‘for better or for worse.?
We are not islands unto ourselves. Every time we encounter another human, no matter who they are or what their position is, we have an opportunity to build up or tear down.
Wherever we go we can share joy, peace and love, or we can sow anger, anxiety, frustration and despair.
I know all of this, and likely you do to. But sometimes I act like I don’t really get it or seem to care. When that happens others get hurt by my carelessness.
Life can be very difficult sometimes and yet in the midst of all things I really want to build others up and I want to share goodness.
Often it is in the common everyday opportunities and experiences that we have our greatest impact ? and our kids, and others, do watch what we do more carefully than we are usually aware.
In the Bible times I can imagine Jesus? disciples and others watching him very carefully to see how he handled things ? how he treated people along the journey of life.
Was he consistent? How did he deal with interruptions? How did he handle those different from him? How did he react to those who made mistakes? What did he really care about most? How did he share his love and amazing grace with those he met?
After Easter Jesus appears to his disciples a number of times and shares with them the miracle of his resurrection.
Because it was so amazing they were always startled by his presence (Luke 24:37) or they didn’t recognize him (Luke 24:14).
And almost always Jesus? first words to his friends were, ‘Peace be with you.? What wonderful opening words they are and they helped.
I long for that peace in my life too.
They are words I need to hear today in the midst of the ups and downs of my life. I believe Jesus says the same thing to me, and that because of that I can approach each day of my life differently and I can have a fresh start.
Following Jesus? example I wonder how our days would be different if we greeted each new morning and each encounter with another with the words, ‘Peace be with you.?
That is the kind of impact I want to have more and more each day, and with God’s help I really can.
The Rev. Jonathan A. Heierman is pastor of Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church.
Throughout history titles have been used to mark ‘victories? over enemies following a time of war.
On May 7- 8, 1945, the countries comprising the ‘Allies? celebrated ‘V-E Day? or ‘Victory in Europe Day.?
On those days, the armed forces of Nazi Germany officially surrendered to the representatives of the Allied Forces officially ending the war in Europe.
Though ‘V-J Day? or ‘Victory over Japan Day? was announced on August 14, 1945, it was officially recognized in a ceremony on the deck of the battleship USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay on Sept. 2, when representatives of Japan signed documents surrendering to the Allied Forces and bringing to an end the war with Japan.
For Christians, ‘Good Friday? represents ‘V-S Day? or ‘Victory over Sin Day. ‘Easter Sunday? represents ‘V-G Day? or ‘Victory over the Grave Day.?
On these two days, we observe and celebrate the end of hostilities between us and Satan, namely, the victories won for us over ‘sin? and the ‘grave? through our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
The hostilities officially began in the Garden of Eden when God spoke to ‘the serpent? these words from Genesis 3:15, ‘And I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers; He will crush your head and you will strike His heel.?
The word ‘enmity? means ‘a time of hostility? or ‘warfare.? The words of Genesis 3:15 represent the ‘protoevangel? or ‘first gospel? in Scripture. In these words, God announced that ‘one born of woman? would come to destroy Satan’s plans for the conquest and destruction of man.
God’s promise of our ‘defender? who would wage war for us came to pass in Matthew 1:20-21, ‘Joseph, son of David, do not be afraid to take Mary home as your wife, because what is conceived in her is of the Holy Spirit. She will give birth to a son, and you are to give Him the name Jesus, because He will save His people from their sins.?
As we celebrate ‘Victory over Sin Day? on ‘Good Friday? this week, we remember that on the cross Jesus sealed the victory over sin and Satan with His own blood and with His words of victory, ‘It is finished.? (John 19:30)
On Easter morning we’ll celebrate ‘Victory over the Grave Day? ? the day when God raised from the dead His victorious Son and offers the promise of eternal life in heaven to all who believe in Jesus as their Savior from sin.
No better words can sum up our celebration this week and the hope that is ours as children of God than these words from the ‘Great Resurrection Chapter? of Scripture, ‘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.? (1 Corinthians 15:54b-57)
God bless your victory celebration as we rejoice together in the Easter proclamation, ‘Christ is risen!
He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!? Amen.
The Rev. James Krueger is pastor of St. Trinity Lutheran Church.
This past Christmas, I bought the same gift for each of my adult siblings.
It’s called ‘Listening is an Act of Love,? and it is a compilation of stories meant to interpret the history of our country in a unique manner.
It’s particularly interesting because it’s of its intention to provide an ‘oral history,? giving the book a high level of human interest. The voices in these stories retell many profound experiences of the human condition’joy, sadness, courage, and love.
What I found particularly fascinating was how often these stories were tales of conversion, and not necessarily in the religious sense that we have become accustomed to hearing that word.
Fundamentally, conversion means ‘change,? as in ‘seeing the light,? and conversion can and does occur in many aspects of human experience.
In fact, conversion in one human being can and has altered the course of history. We’re familiar with the more infamous conversions, such as Martin Luther King, Ghandi. and Mother Theresa.
But in ‘Listening is an Act of Love,? I was struck with the importance of each individual human story when it contains the element of conversion and its fruit is passed on through generations for their benefit.
Change in our lives is constant; of this we can be certain. Does this also infer that we are called to continuing conversion? I think so, and not just for our benefit, but also for those whose lives we affect on a daily basis.
As Christians, we are blessed with the ancient season of Lent, because it affords us a time and place to consider the relevance of conversion for our lives.
Historically, Lent began in the apostolic era and was universally observed in the ancient Church. It was and still is considered a time of preparation for Easter, where the faithful rededicate themselves to the Christian life and converts are instructed in the faith.
The 40 days are counted from Ash Wednesday, which this year falls on Feb. 6, until the Saturday before Easter, March 22 (Sundays are skipped to commemorate the Lord’s Resurrection). These 40 days imitate the time Jesus spent fasting in the desert before he began his ministry.
History is always important to understand our roots, but realistically we need to consider what difference Lent will make in our lives this year.
What needs to change? Practically, how do we transform our outlook toward a new way of loving God and others? How can we become more fully converted to life as a disciple of Jesus?
These are questions I encourage you to ponder in the next two weeks before Lent begins.
I challenge myself as well as you to make this the year that you truly experience ‘conversion.? We all have a story to tell that can add meaning to another’s life.
In turn, we can all be open to benefiting from the story of another. This Lent, why not begin the story of conversion with your own life?
Then, pass your story on!
You never know who might be listening!
Cheryl Smith is director of Adult Faith Formation at St. Daniel Catholic Church.
One of the sad features of contemporary life is the number of people who have given up thinking that their lives could actually change for the better. This situation is a natural consequence of a culture that has largely lost its faith in God.
But for those whose faith in God remains, the hope of change and progress continues to prod them forward with optimism.
And with good reason.
God has equipped believers with all that’s necessary to bring constructive change about.
While every change for the better begins with God, realizing positive change depends on how you view yourself. If you view yourself as simply a product of your experiences or a victim of all that has happened to you, change will be impossible.
You’ll be passively resigned to the status quo.
But it doesn’t have to be that way. Followers of Christ have a new identity. They have been crucified and raised up with Him (Rom.6:3,4). They are new creatures (2 Cor.5:17), who are no longer slaves of sin, but servants of a new Master.
Consequently, by grace they are able to say no to stubborn habits, reverse destructive patterns, and walk in newness of life. All hope for change begins here, by living in union with Christ.
But besides living in union with Christ, there also needs to be a standard and process for change. You need to know what changes God would have you make and how you are going to get there.
The Bible provides what’s needed here.
God has given us His Word in order to teach, reprove, correct, and train us for righteousness. He wants us changed according to His standard so that we would be equipped for every good work (2 Tim.3:16,17).
This change comes about as a process as we read and hear the Bible, and respond to it faithfully. And it’s as we submit ourselves to Scripture’s teachings, reproofs, corrections, and training that we are prepared to fulfill God’s purpose for our lives.
Of course, for change to stick, it must be remembered that habits play a vital role. As it’s been said, “you make your habits, and then your habits make you.” And it’s in this regard that your habits can be either your best servant or worst master.
So, be sure your habits are good ones.
Creating good habits can be tough, especially if you have some bad ones to contend with — but it can be done.
Success comes when you don’t merely try and shake a bad habit, but replace it with a good one.
For example, impurity needs to be replaced with purity (2 Tim.2:22). Fear needs to be replaced with love (1 Jn.4:17).
It’s by way of this replacement principle that the habits we need to shape our lives for good are instilled. Combine this with regular prayer, worship, service and other spiritual disciplines, and you will be well on your way to the kind of change God intends for you.
Too many people have given up on changing their lives for the better. This year, be among those who look to God’s grace and power to bring about those changes you know you need to make.
David Bostrom is pastor of Seed for the Harvest ministries.
By Pastor Russ Reemtsma
There is a lot of talk today about ‘weapons of mass destruction.? There ought to be great concern over who has them and how willing they are to use them. Many folks remember the cold war days, with the ‘bomb shelters? and the ‘duck and cover? exercises practiced in the schools.
There is another kind of WMD threat. Unlike the nuclear arsenals, it is unleashed every day. It destroys untold lives and relationships. It polarizes countries, marriages, friendships and any kind of relationship known to mankind. It is selfishness.
There are some who preach the ‘virtues? of selfishness. They appeal to the cynicism in people today.
Many people have been burned in bad marriages, crooked business dealings, exploitative religion, etc. So these gurus of selfishness flourish in their seminars, book sales and media attention. Their ‘Look out for number one(self)? sermons abound. Yet the irony of selfishness is that we can never be truly happy by simply fulfilling selfish desires. More money will not do it. More education will not make us more sympathetic people.
Jesus reiterated the two greatest commands of the Bible when he said, ?’Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.? This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.? All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments? (Matthew 22:37-40).
To some, what Jesus said may sound ‘old fashioned? or highly simplistic. Yet, He emphasized that ‘all of God’s Law? centers around loving God first and your neighbor as you are already loving yourself.
Think of the difference it would make if this were practiced. Crime would go down, marriages would last for a lifetime, children would not rebel and perhaps poverty would be reduced.
Our problem is that we are inherently selfish. It is our nature. Just look at little children. Cute as they are, we must teach them to share their toys, not hit their siblings, and not destroy others? belongings. Sin is the essence of selfishness.
Sin makes us to be thoughtless of others, as well as ungrateful. I read of an elderly man who approached a stranger at a post office. He asked the man if he would help him by addressing a postcard. The man agreed and even wrote a short message for the senior. When the man asked if there was anything else he could write, the elderly fellow thought for a moment and said, ‘Yes. Write ‘P.S. Please excuse the sloppy handwriting.??
The cure for the inborn malady of selfishness is a change only God can bring. We need to both experience and show the love of God. One cannot show the love of God until he or she experiences it by accepting forgiveness that only Jesus Christ can bring. Christ died to receive the punishment we all deserve. It was He who showed the ultimate selflessness by dying on the cross for us. It is He Who extends pardon for those who trust Him alone to forgive and bring real change.
Once we have been forgiven and changed, we may overcome the self-life by making Christ the Boss in our lives. To put God first and put the ‘god of self? aside is to know true gain. Jesus noted the irony when he said, ?’whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me and for the gospel will save it. What good is it for a man to gain the whole world, yet forfeit his soul? Or what can a man give in exchange for his soul?? (Mark 8:35-37, NIV).
No greater joy can be known than knowing God through Jesus Christ. That is contrary to the fads of the ‘feel good? gurus, but it is the wisdom of the Eternal God. The way up is down. Selfishness and self-gods must go.
(Russ Reemtsma is pastor of the First Baptist Church of Clarkston.)
By Pastor Greg Henneman
About a year ago my wife and I were driving down Square Lake Road. We were going to visit somebody in the hospital. The two lanes were being squeezed into one, and the traffic was backed up almost a mile. Everybody was cooperating and going single file when I looked in my rear view mirror and saw a guy flying alongside of us expecting to cut in at the last second. All of a sudden he boldly started to cut in on me, and I had to pull over and stop or he would have hit me.
Immediately I flushed with anger. I was hot! So I didn’t slow down. I played chicken with him. I had a big van. He had a little sports car. I’m in the right; he’s in the wrong. I’ll show him! All of a sudden he violently pulled in broadside, rolled down his window, screamed at me and gave me the finger. (And it wasn’t his little finger, either.) I admit that I had the impulse to jump out of my car and pound that guy’s head in. But then I had visions of me sitting in jail and all of my parishioners writing letters to me. I thought, ‘No, this is silly and stupid. Just let it pass.? And within three minutes we were past the traffic jam and on our way.
Anger. We all experience it. Anger can make an otherwise rational person do crazy things. That experience made me go home and search the Bible regarding anger. Here’s what I learned:
1) Realize the danger of anger. ‘A hot-tempered man starts fights and gets into all kinds of trouble? (Proverbs 29:22).
2) Understand the causes of anger. ‘A man’s wisdom gives him patience; it is to his glory to overlook an offense? (Proverbs 19:11). If you’re always getting ticked off, if you’re always blaming people for ‘making you mad,? then you’re not wise. You just don’t get it. The more you understand your kids, the less you get angry at them. The more you understand your husband/wife, the less you get angry at them.
Anger is never really the root problem in your life. It’s a symptom, a warning light. It tells you something is wrong. Anger usually signals that you’re hurt, you’re fearful or you’re frustrated.
3) Express your anger in healthy ways. It’s okay to be angry. But it’s critical we express our anger in the right ways. ‘If you are angry, don’t sin by nursing your grudge. Don’t let the sun go down with you still angry’get over it quickly; for when you are angry, you give a mighty foothold to the devil? (Ephesians 4:26-27).
Ultimately, the responsibility for managing your anger is you. Not your spouse. Not your friend. Not your boss. But you. You need to recognize your triggers. You need to get a handle on what ticks you off, and you need to take responsibility for understanding and defusing it. As long as you keep passing the buck and blaming somebody else for your anger, you’re not going to get healthy.
God promises us his grace to change. We don’t have to clam up, blow up or flare up. We don’t have to live with grudges and ulcers that eat our lives away.
Freedom, forgiveness and wholeness are ours in Christ.
(Greg Henneman is senior pastor at Clarkston Community Church.)