Back-to-School

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Families - Save the date! We are going to celebrate Back-To-School safely this year with a little SVUMC Parking Lot Family Picnic and Blessing of the Backpacks! We miss you!

Please join us on August 16th!

At 6:00pm we will have a Prayer/Blessing service in the front parking lot for our students going back-to-school. Families will remain in their cars, receive a blessing and drive by the front steps to pick up a special backpack tag.

At 6:15pm, Club 26 and Youth will enjoy games (social distanced) and we will have food trucks in the back parking lot.

Everyone is welcome to stay and enjoy a bite to eat from the Food Trucks - please plan to social distance appropriately and bring your own chairs to enjoy eating with your family unit.

We look forward to seeing you and hope you will join us!

In the beginning, God...

Good morning!  Welcome to Wednesday in the Pastor’s Workshop.  It’s great to be with you today!

Our message for this week is: “Begin with Basics: Starting Right”.  Our Scripture texts are Genesis 1:1-2 and I John 4:7-9.  Our key thought is: “When you start right, things go better and when things go better, you finish well”.  The key is starting right.  And the Scriptural guidance to “starting right” is from Genesis 1:1, “In the Beginning, God…”

On Wednesday we look at the context of the text.  We want to find out about the world into which the Word was spoken. 

Scientifically we can’t go back to “Creation”.  We’ll leave that up to the physicists.

But existentially we can go back.  The Bible takes us there.  I love the paraphrase of Genesis 1:1-2 provided by “The Message”.  Eugene Peterson, author of “The Message”, in his opening describes the creation setting like this:  “Earth was a soup of nothingness, a bottomless emptiness, an inky blackness… a watery abyss.”  How graphic a picture of a time “Before the Beginning”, a time before God went to work!

For the Bible what separates us from the “nothingness, emptiness, blackness and the abyss” is God.  “In the Beginning, God…” What a blessing to know the presence of God stands between us and that “nothingness”.

Genesis 1:2 provides a Creation contrast for “In the Beginning, God…”  But there are contemporary contrasts as well.  There are those who say there is no God.  These are the atheists. They don’t believe in the presence of the Transcendent.  In doing so they cut themselves off from the power of the truly Transformative.  And then there are those who don’t know if there is a God or not.  They struggle with the notion of “knowing” and of faith.  They are the agnostics.  As I think of them I remember Pascal’s Wager.  Pascal was a famous French mathematician, philosopher and theologian from the seventeenth century.  His wager (stated in layman’s terms) went something like this:  If you don’t know whether there is a God or not, what do you have to lose in believing?  And what do you have to gain in believing?  In believing in God, even if there is not a God, you have nothing to lose and everything to gain. You end up living a life of love.  In not believing in God, if there is a God, you have everything to lose and nothing to gain. You miss out living in the saving grace of Jesus.  There’s a lot to think about in “the Wager”.

Fortunately, or maybe more accurately, “gracefully” for us, we do believe in God and affirm God is a God of love (I John 4:8).  That truth of Genesis 1:1 and I John 4:8 is a truth not only for the Beginning of Creation, but for all the beginnings of our lives. When we begin with that basic, we are starting right!

As you think on the contrasts of the Scriptures today I’d invite you to reflect on the question: “What would it be like if I was not able to affirm, “In the Beginning, God…” and “In all my beginnings, God…”?  What would that nothingness, emptiness, abyss be like?  And then give thanks this is not our faith and not God’s truth.

I am grateful to be with you in the beginning of this new series, the beginning of this day and the beginning of how God will work the love of Christ into our lives through “Begin with Basics: Starting Right”. 

In that blessing, I’ll let you get to work.  I look forward to seeing you tomorrow in the Pastor’s Workshop.

 Prayer:  Gracious God, thank you for the blessing of starting right and beginning each day with You.  Thank you for the way this faith connects us with Your Transcendent Presence and Transformative Power.  Help us to affirm that gift of grace in our lives every week, as we begin with worship.  Help us to claim that blessing every day, as we begin with prayer.  Lead us forward In Your ways of truth, so that we might live more fully and faithfully with You.  In Jesus’ name we pray.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Beginnings.

It’s good to be together on this Tuesday.  I’m grateful I can spend time with you in the Pastor’s Workshop.

As you know we’re beginning a brand new series, “Begin with Basics”.  It’s a timely series.  As we head into August, we’re gearing up for all before us.  There’s fall, a new school year, hopefully a further “reopening” of our church, community, and country.  Even in the midst of the pandemic, life moves ahead.

The series is based on the premise that “If you start right, things go better and if things go better, you can finish well”.  “Starting Right” is critical.

As we “Begin with Basics” we’ve decided to begin at the very beginning – of the Bible and all things. Genesis 1:1 states, “In the beginning, God…”  We’ve also chosen to clarify this opening affirmation with a truth from I John 4:8.  It’s not simply “God is…”.  More completely, “God is … love”.

On a typical Tuesday in the workshop we spend time analyzing the structure of a text.  We usually look for a logic of how a truth is presented.  We seek underlying themes that unite verses of a Scripture. But with our chosen texts being so brief this week, on the surface there doesn’t appear to be much to work with.

But if you “dive a little deeper” you see there are three “huge realities” we’re exploring.  We’re looking into “Beginnings”, “God” and “Love”.  We’re reflecting on the question, “How do these three realities relate to one other?”  When you put them together, what’s the “big picture”?  What does this “picture” mean to us today?

If you think about it, today and everyday are full of “beginnings”.  You got out of bed – that’s a beginning.  Maybe from there you have a prayer – that’s a beginning of today’s time with God.  Maybe you turn on the news – that’s a beginning of today’s time with the world. Maybe you get the kids up – that’s a beginning of serving your family.  Maybe you head out to a job– that’s a beginning of serving others.  You get the idea. Each day is full of beginnings.

And Genesis 1:1 makes this affirmation of faith, “In the beginning, God”.  In each beginning, God is there.   Taking that “Bible word” and making it “your word” (your affirmation about each of your beginnings) will change how you engage in those moments.  Not only that, but when you affirm that the God present in your beginnings  is a God of love this faith will shape how you “share life” in your interactions.

I John 4:7-9 builds on this whole theme.  As we read this Scripture we see the Apostle John calling us to “love one another” (vs. 7) because “love is from God”.  When we “love one another” we are living into the affirmation that in the beginning of every conversation and interaction, our God of love is in that “beginning”.

As you see, when you begin with these three basic ideas there are significant consequences.  When you begin with these basics you will “start right”.  And when you “start right” things will go better and you will finish well.

It’s a big and beautiful thought … “In the beginning, God” … “in all our beginnings, our God of love”.   Today I invite you to reflect on that truth.  Meditate on what that reality means for you.

As you do, make sure you take notes.  You’ll want to preserve your thoughts as leadings of God’s Spirit for you through this Scripture.

In that blessing, I’ll let you think, pray and write.  And I’ll look forward to seeing you tomorrow in the Pastor’s Workshop.

Prayer:  Gracious God, thank You for each new day and every new beginning .  Thank You for how You are God present in the very “Beginning” and in each beginning.  Thank You that You are present in love.  Thank you for the difference Your loving presence makes as I live into this truth of my faith today.  In the name of the One whom in his coming is the witness of God’s love for our world, Jesus Christ our Lord.

 

 

Begin with Basics

Good morning on this fine Monday! I’m glad to begin the week with you in the Scriptures and in the Pastor’s Workshop.

This week we’re beginning a new series.  It’s entitled “Begin with Basics”.  As we begin a new school year (whatever that may look like), as we head from summer and into fall (whatever it may hold), as we plan to reopen our church, community and country (whenever and however that will happen), this series believes there’s no better way to begin than with basics.  The premise is: “If we start right, things go better and when things go better, we can finish well”. It all begins with “starting right”.

And what better way to “start right” than with basics from the Bible!   And when we’re thinking about basics from the Bible what better place to begin than Genesis.  And what better chapter to start with than Genesis 1.  Genesis 1 will be the source of our inspiration over the next month. We’ll see what the Spirit “generates out of Genesis” as we explore these verses together!

This week we’ll begin with the very beginning.  Genesis 1:1 will be our focus scripture for Sunday.  Our emphasis will be on the first phrase, “In the Beginning, God …”   We’ll be clarifying that phrase with few words from I John 4:8, “God is love”.      Our full Scripture texts for Sunday will be Genesis 1:1-2 and         I John 4:7-9.

As always on Monday I invite you to immerse yourself in the Scripture. Read and re-read the texts.  Write and re-write the verses.  Use several translations.  Do your own paraphrase.  Even though these texts are short, they are powerful.  As you spend time with them they will stimulate some great spiritual mediation for you.

I’m excited about our August series.  As we work through “”Begin with Basics” from Genesis 1 we’ll explore: “Starting Right”, “Get Creative”, “Shine a Light”, “Connect with Care” and “Claim Goodness”.  I believe God’s Word will lead us forward into a life with the Lord that is so worth living!  As the premise goes, “When we start right, things go better and when things go better we can finish well”.    It all “Begins with Basics” --- “In the Beginning, God…”

So let’s set off together.  I’ll let you get to work.  There’s not much to read and write.  But there is a lot to think about!

In that blessing I look forward to joining with you tomorrow in the Pastor’s Workshop.

Prayer:  Gracious God, thank You for the gift of a new week.  Thank You for the blessing of a new series.  Thank You for inspirations from Your Word.  Thank You that when we begin with the basics of Your love for us in Jesus Christ, everything goes better and we can live life well.  In that gift of Your grace we give You our praise in the name of the Word who was in the beginning and through whom everything was made, even Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen

Preparing for Sunday

Grace and Peace!  We’ve made it through another week and worship is only a day away.  I’m glad to be with you in the Pastor’s Workshop.

As you know, Saturday is a Sabbath day in the workshop.  Sabbath is about rest.  Sabbath is about being in a different “rhythm” than our normal productive routine.  And Sabbath is about centering in God.  Sabbath is about prayer.  On Saturday we do both in the workshop, we pray over our work from the week and we rest to get ready for worship tomorrow.

So as you pray today, what will you be lifting up?  What will you be asking for?  What will you be thanking for?  What will you be “talking with God” about?  Particularly, in relation to our Scripture this week, Philippians 4:6-7 (“Don’t worry about anything.  But in everything, by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving …), how will you be praying?

Here are a few of my prayers for our work this week and for our worship tomorrow:

-        I pray that even though we worry, it would not be a constant condition in our lives.

-        I pray we would take the Scripture’s path out of our stress and “walk” into God’s peace.

-        I pray we would practice “centering in Christ” as outlined by the Scripture (pray about your stress, get specific in supplication, give thanks for how God is present and ready to minister to you).

-        I pray we would know the blessings of “centering in Christ” – calmer nerves, collected thoughts,  and a more peaceful, powerful, positive and productive “place” from which to engage daily living.

Prayer provides us an opportunity to picture a “preferred future” as God would provide it in grace in Christ.  As you pray this Scripture what “preferred future” do you picture for yourself?

I don’t want to go on too long today.  It is a day of rest for you and for me!

At the same time I do want to thank you for spending the week together, for exploring the Scripture together, for thinking and writing together, and for praying for worship tomorrow together. 

I believe prayer is powerful – very powerful.  I believe in prayer we center ourselves in the midst of God’s grace in Christ.  I believe as we pray for tomorrow and for worship, God will be at work.  God will work in and through our work, not only answering our prayers, but working God’s will in ways that bless others and glorify God.

In that faith I’ll let you get to praying and I look forward to being with you tomorrow in the Master’s workshop!

Prayer:  Gracious God, thank You for the gift of Sabbath.  Thank You for rest.  Thank You for prayer.  Thank You for how you invite us to be with You in Christ and to live with You as we follow the truth of Your Word.  Thank You for how Your Word calls us from worry into a place of peace in You.  Strengthen us by Your Spirit to make that “journey of faith” each day as we come to You with our supplications and thanksgivings.  For this blessing and for all the gifts of your grace, we give You our thanks and praise through Jesus Christ our Lord.

 

Worry.

Greetings!  It’s good to be with you on this Thursday. I’m glad we can continue our work together in the Pastor’s Workshop.

Thursdays are a “highlight” in our week.  Today we review our notes, listen for God’s leadings, and draft a message to bring in worship.

This week in our series, “Prepare with Prayer”, we are exploring a very practical aspect of prayer.  How do we use prayer when we are “stressed out” to “center in” to God’s peace?   What does that mean?  What does that look like?

Our guiding text has been Philippians 4:6-7.  The Apostle says, “Don’t worry about anything.  In everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God…”

So what might our message be for Sunday?  Here are my “talking points”.

Stress is a certainty in our lives.  It comes with the challenges and changes of life.

At one level, stress can be good.  It helps us to stay energized and engaged in whatever we’re doing.  Where we get into trouble is when we have too much stress for too long.  When we get “stressed out” that is detrimental for us and others.

So how do we know when we’re at a point of “too much stress for too long”?  We have an early warning indicator light on our personal dashboard of life.  Our warning light is “worry”.

“Worry” lets us know fear is creeping in as part of our reaction to stress. Worry alerts us to pay attention and to act upon our source of stress. 

When we don’t address our stress, fear doesn’t go away.  Instead fear grows and builds.  There is a path we walk if we don’t act.  The path progresses like this: worry, being anxious, living in anxiety, panic.

At times we all find ourselves on different points in this path.  We all have “walked it” to differing degrees.

As we walk this path we know it is “not good”.  It’s not good for our physical, mental, emotional or relation health.   It’s not good for others.

When we find ourselves “out there” (stressed out), how do we de-stress? 

Exercise, deep breathing, talking with others (friends or therapists) are all good ways.  But a particularly powerful way to lessen stress we have as a people of faith is Prayer!

In prayer we face into our fear with faith. We give our worry “wings”.  We turn our cares into prayers.

Prayer brings God into the picture (of our stress) as a partner. 

In prayer we experience God as a loving parent with whom we can share the specifics of our stress.  Sharing those specifics is called “supplication”.

Even as we share those specifics (engage in supplication) we do so, not as a recitation of all that is wrong, but with thanksgiving.  We couple each specific stressor with a corresponding “thank you” to God.

This process of praying with supplication and thanksgiving brings us into the “Peace of God”.  Even though this Peace “surpasses understanding” (verse 7), we experience it in lower blood pressure, calmed nerves, and collected thoughts. The very Lord who said “Be Still” to the sea is pronouncing that same blessing upon our soul.

Approaching daily life from that calm, collected center is powerful and positive.  As the Apostle says in verse 7 Christ keeps our “hearts” and “minds” in that peace.   In that center of God’s peace our emotions are steady and our decisions are healthier.

As we walk this path of prayer we will know the truth of this text:

“Don’t worry about anything.  But in everything, by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.  And the peace of God which passes all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.”

This is how the message is “shaping up” for me.  Of course on Sunday it will be expanded and enriched, but this is the basic plan.

What message is coming forward for you?  How is the Spirit speaking to your mind and heart out of this Scripture?  Make sure you take time to jot down a few of your own “talking points”.  They are ways God is guiding you through the Biblical word.

I’m glad to work with you today in crafting the message.  I look forward to Saturday when we “pray” over it and Sunday as we proclaim it. 

In anticipation of those future blessings, I’ll let you and God get to work today in your personal workshop!

Prayer:  Gracious God, thank you for the gift of today.  Thank you for your Biblical word which guides us into how we can live this day more fully and faithfully.  Thank you for the way you provide for us to “de-stress” and “center” in you through prayer.  Let this blessing not only be a message for Sunday but a practice for everyday.  This we pray in the the name of the One who is our Peace, Jesus Christ our Lord.

Centered In

Welcome to Wednesday.  We’re half-way through the week in the Pastor’s Workshop!

As you know this week we’re looking into a very practical “blessing” of prayer.  How can we go from being “Stressed Out” to being “Centered In”?  Our Scripture, Philippians 4:6-7, holds the key. “Don’t worry about anything.  But In everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which passes all understanding, will guard your heart and mind in Christ Jesus.”

On Wednesday we look at the context of the text.  Often we explore the historical or textual setting of the Scripture.  Today I’ve chosen to stay “experiential”.  Let’s think briefly about the opposite of being in prayer. Let’s talk about being in panic.

Actually, that’s a bit over dramatic.  But I do want to think about the path that leads to panic.  Since the Apostle begins saying, “Don’t Worry…”, I want to look into worry.

Worry often starts with stress.  Stress is a normal, natural part of life.  Stress comes with the challenges and changes of daily living.  Particularly in these days of the pandemic, we know about stress!

Some stress in life is good.  It keeps us engaged and energized in whatever we’re doing.  The problem comes when we have too much stress for too long.  When that happens we go from being “Stressed” to becoming “Stressed Out”.

There is a pathway, a progression we “walk” when we go from being “Stressed” to becoming “Stressed Out”. The first step in the path is worry.  Worry is an indicator.  Worry lets me know, “Fear is becoming part of my reaction to my stress.”  If I don’t pay attention to this “worry indicator” and address my stress then fear grows.  As fear builds the progression goes from Worry to Being Anxious, Being Anxious to Anxiety, Anxiety to Panic.  Of course this progression happens over time, often a long time.  But I think we all, at one point or another, have walked this path. 

We know being on this path is not good for our health.  It’s not good for our physical health – sleepless nights and heart palpitations aren’t good!  It’s not good for our mental health. We make rash decisions.  It’s not good for our emotional health.  We lash out at others.  It’s not good for our relational health.  When we’re not at a “good place” we’re hard to live with.  Others often bear the consequences.  Being “Stressed Out” is not good in any way, shape, fashion or form!

So when the Apostle says, “Don’t worry…”, his counsel is don’t start down this path.  Recognize the early warning signs of worry and do something about them.  Pray!  Instead of reacting in fear, respond in faith. Instead of becoming “Stressed Out” follow a path of “Centering In”. 

What great and timely advice!  What this Scripture lets us know is that “Worry” has been a problem for a long time --- at least 2,000 years.  But God has been around longer!  What worked then, will work today! Pray!

What are your thoughts about stress and worry, anxiety and fear?  As we think about these “contrasts” to the Scripture today, how have these realities been part of your life?  How did they start and where did they lead?  How do they highlight your need for God’s “answer”, your need for Prayer?

Jot down your thoughts.  Record your reflections.  Your experience will lead you into your need for prayer, and through its practice, into the peace God gives.

In that blessing, I’ll let you get to work and see you tomorrow in the Pastor’s Workshop!

Prayer:  Gracious God, we know stress is part of life.  In the midst of our stress be at work by Your Spirit.  Help us pay attention to the warning of “worry”.  Let us give our worry “wings” and turn our cares into prayers.  Strengthen our faith in the midst of our fear that we may follow You in the path of peace You provide.  This we pray in the name of One who is our Peace, Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen

Centering in God in our Stress

Good morning!  It’s great to be together on Tuesday in the Pastor’s Workshop.

This week we’re looking at one of the most practical aspects of practicing prayer.  In a world that’s full of stress how can the Holy Spirit be of help?  Our Scripture for Sunday is Philippians 4:6-7. 

Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.

The title of our message is, “Prepare with Prayer: Spiritual Stress”.

On Tuesday we look at the structure of the text.  Is there a logic that leads us as we read this Scripture?  How is a main idea “emerging” through the Biblical word?

Like so much of the Apostle Paul’s writing, this text is very compact.  He puts so much into so few words.  “Unpacking” this Scripture can be done “word by word”.

The first word is “worry”.  As we face into the challenges and changes of life, it is always stressful.  The question is how will we handle the stress?  A normal reaction is “fear”, fear that expresses itself in worry.

Worry is an indicator that we are on a path we don’t want to follow.  We go from having stress (which is a normal part of life) to being “stressed out” (which is when stress becomes worry becomes anxiety). 

In our reaction of fear we can choose a response of faith.  Faith is when give our worry “wings”.  Faith is when we turn our cares into prayers.

Paul says “Pray”.  Prayer brings God into the picture.  It is no longer us handling our stress by ourselves.  The Spirit is now with us. 

Supplication is when we make Prayer specific.  It is when we detail the changes, the challenges, our fears, our frustrations --- when we lay it all out in ways that our worries are turned into a way of coming closer to God.

As we get specific with supplication, we don’t do it as a recitation of worry and care, of complaining and fear.  We lift our prayer and supplication with thanksgiving.  We are thankful for who God is as a caring God.  We are thankful for how God has helped us in the past.  We are thankful for how God is with us in this present moment leading us forward.  We are thankful.

This thankfulness bring us more fully into God’s presence.  How do we know we are in God’s presence?  By the peace we begin to experience.  It is a peace that has be with us all along, just as God has been with us all along. We just weren’t focused into the peace through our faith.  Now, with prayer, we are!

It is in that place of peace that Christ Jesus “guards” our hearts and minds.  As we respond to the challenges and changes of life from a “place of peace” we respond more positively, productively, more under control – self-control and God’s control.

Through following the counsel of this Scripture we have gone from Stressing Out about Stress to Centering in God in our Stress. We have “Spiritualized Stress”.

 That’s the logic I see in this Scripture.  What do you see?  What is the main idea that you find “unfolding”?  How do you follow it through?

I invite you to make your notes as you do your work today and get ready for tomorrow in the Pastor’s Workshop.

Prayer:  Gracious God, thank You for Your presence with us always.  Thank You especially for how You are with us in our times of stress.  Thank You for Your invitation to pray, which invites us to claim Your presence and practice Your peace.  We praise You for these blessings today through Jesus Christ, our Lord.  Amen

Spiritual Stress

Good morning on this Monday.  Glad we can start out the week together in the Pastor’s Workshop.

We’re coming in the last week of our current series, “Prepare with Prayer”.  We began with “Save the Day” based on “This is the day the Lord has made” (Psalm 118:24).  We talked about being ready to take on whatever the day holds.  We are “Battle Ready”, “strong in the Lord, in the strength of his might”, by “putting on the full armor of God” (Ephesians 6:10, 11, 18).  Our third week focused on the prayer our Lord taught us to pray, the Lord’s Prayer.  As we pray, “Thy Kingdom come, Thy Will be done on earth as it is in heaven” we know God is ready to answer that prayer through us and our witness. (Luke 11:2). Last Sunday we were comforted with the great prayer of David, “The Shepherd’s Prayer”, Psalm 23.  We learned three important prayers: “There is a greater glory that restores my soul”; “In the shadow, I have a Shepherd”; “I have a home in the heart of God forever!” 

This week we finish with a very timely and practical blessing of prayer.  In these troubled, stress filled days, how can prayer help?  Our title this week is “Spiritual Stress”.  Our Scripture is Philippians 4:6-7. 

“Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”

On Mondays we “saturate” ourselves in the Scripture.  We read and re-read, write and rewrite the text from several translations.  We want the words of the Scripture sink in deep.

It is helpful in this process to read several translations or modern paraphrases of the same Scripture.  The way different scholars translate the original Greek language helps stir our thinking.  Just look at how this text is translated/paraphrased below.

 Don’t worry over anything whatever; tell God every detail of your needs in earnest and thankful prayer, and the peace of God which transcends human understanding, will keep constant guard over your hearts and minds as they rest in Christ Jesus. – JB Philips translation

Don’t fret or worry. Instead of worrying, pray. Let petitions and praises shape your worries into prayers, letting God know your concerns. Before you know it, a sense of God’s wholeness, everything coming together for good, will come and settle you down. It’s wonderful what happens when Christ displaces worry at the center of your life. – The Message paraphrase

Don’t worry about anything; instead, pray about everything. Tell God what you need, and thank him for all he has done.Then you will experience God’s peace, which exceeds anything we can understand. His peace will guard your hearts and minds as you live in Christ Jesus. The New Living Translation

After reading the Scripture several times in several translations, try your own paraphrase.  This exercise will focus your faith on the message the Spirit is speaking to you.

I’m glad we can be in this Scripture this week.  Its practical advice about turning worry into prayer is something we all need to hear.

In that blessing I look forward to exploring this blessing with you more fully this week in the Pastor’s Workshop.

Prayer:  Gracious God, thank you for your invitation to pray.  In Your love You invite us to lift up whatever is on our heart to your holy, loving heart.  You call us to turn our cares into prayers. Strengthen us in this faith as we go through this week.  In the name of Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen

Preparing for Sunday

Grace and Peace on this Saturday!  Hope you’re having a good weekend.  I also hope you’re getting ready for a good worship tomorrow.  In the Pastor’s Workshop, good worship makes for good weekends.

Today in the Workshop is a day of prayer.  We’ve finished writing the message, but the work is not done.  The message needs time to “marinate” in grace.  Having a day to pray allows that to happen. Saturday is when we “prepare with prayer” for Sunday.

This week we have been blessed by being together in Psalm 23.  As we read and worked with its six verses we were led through “green pastures and still waters”.  We traveled trails in mountain meadows, valley shadows, and to a king’s table.  Taking time with this psalm, praying this poem-prayer, “restored our souls”.

So what are your prayers as we head into tomorrow?  What are you praying for yourself, for others, and for our world because you’ve spent time with the “Good Shepherd” this week?

Here are a few of my prayers:

I pray we memorize Psalm 23.  It is a Scripture you want to “store up in your heart”

I pray we know deep in our hearts we have a Good Shepherd who is with us every day.  The Lord is our Shepherd!

I pray in the “valley of the shadow” we are not overcome with fear, for the Lord is with us.

I pray we remember and use the 3 prayers the Psalm teaches:

·       There is a beauty bigger than me and a glory greater than my own that restores my soul!

·       In the Shadow, I have a Shepherd.

·       I have a home in the heart of God forever!

Psalm 23 is an inspirational Scripture.  What has it stirred in you?  What are your prayers?

I believe God’s Spirit inspires prayers in us, so we will reach out to God.  And I believe the God who inspires prayers is already at work answering them. 

In that faith I give thanks we can prepare with prayer today and we can worship in joy tomorrow.  In that blessing I’ll see you tomorrow in the Master’s Workshop!

Prayer:  Gracious God, You are our Good Shepherd!  Thank You for leading and guiding, providing and protecting, comforting and consoling us. Your strength and care, Your goodness and mercy are with us all the days of our lives.  Even as You shepherd us, let us become better shepherds with those You entrust to our care. Lord, we give You thanks for the blessing of this week and for the ways You restore our souls always.  In Jesus’ holy name we pray.  Amen 

Wrapping Up the Week

Greetings on this Thursday.  It’s good to be with you as we head towards the end of another week in the Workshop!

What a blessing it has been to be together in Psalm 23.  This poem-prayer has such spiritual depth and power. To open ourselves to its witness “restores our soul”.

As you know, Thursday is a “moment of truth” in the creation of a message.  It’s a day when we review all our notes and mediations, pray, and “put it all together” on paper (or in our case on screen.)

So, as you have listened and learned, mused and meditated, what message has the Spirit given you from Psalm 23?

Here are my “talking points” as I get ready for Sunday:

Psalm 23 is a most beloved Scripture. It has been the inspiration for many hymns, books, poems, paintings and other expressions of faith through the ages.

It finds its power in the pictures it paints of ‘green pastures’ and ‘still waters’ and in the trails it travels from mountain meadows to valley shadows to a king’s table.  Above all it endears itself to all believers in the faith it proclaims: “The Lord is my Shepherd”.

The Psalm is a poem and a prayer.  As a prayer it teaches us three prayers – three prayers we can pray as we travel the trails of our lives.

As the psalm begins it reminds me of one of the most beautiful moments of my life.  I was on a hike with my family in the Rockies.  We ascended to the top of a ridge where the view was “breath taking”.  In that moment, as I beheld that beauty, there came an awareness that we were being held by a “bigger beauty”.  This experience of majesty renewed and restored my soul.  Maybe you have had one of those “majesty moments”.  The psalm awakens us to how the Lord leads us into these times and invites us into this prayer of wonder and worship: “Lord, thank you for beauty bigger than myself and glory greater than my own that restores my soul.”

It’s important to treasure those majestic moments.  The trails of life can quickly change.  In this psalm the shift happens in three words.  We go from “green pastures and still waters” to the “valley of shadows”. 

Our Sunday message shares of one experience of my walking through that valley. You have had those experiences as well.  Those are the times in life when the bottom seemed to “drop out” of your life and you know, “I am in the valley of the shadow”. 

What’s important to know in that valley, what our faith reminds us of, “in the shadow we have a shepherd”.   That faith makes all the difference! 

There is an episode from King David’s life, the namesake of this Psalm, which highlights this difference of deliverance.  Knowing “the Good Shepherd is with us” offers strength to stand and sustaining support to keep going.  The prayer the Psalm teaches for this valley is succinct: “Lord, In the Shadow you are my Shepherd.”

Psalm 23 is one of 39 psalms that are called “Psalms of David”.  Some think that’s because David wrote them.  In his youth, as a shepherd, he was an accomplished minstrel.  Others think these psalms received this designation because they were commissioned by David when he was king.

Whatever view you hold, Psalm 23 reflects both the faith of a shepherd and a king.  In verses 1-4 we find a shepherd who knows he has a Good Shepherd.  In verses 5 and 6 we find a king who knows what it means to be hosted at a royal banquet.

I don’t have the experience of feasting at a “kings table”.  But I do know what it means to be hosted royally with utmost hospitality.  The finery of a holiday gathering with my family is a “meal fit for a king” for sure.

The truth is, you don’t need “finery” to feast lavishly.  Anytime, anywhere anyone opens up their home and heart and invites you to “pull up a chair” and make yourself to home, there a goodness and mercy that witnesses to the “goodness and mercy of God”. This “goodness and mercy” follows us in the days of our lives.  More than that, acts of gracious hospitality remind us of God’s great graciousness. The Lord opens his heart to be our home forever.  This leads to the third prayer of Psalm 23 – “Lord, your heart is my forever home!”

As we travel the trails of life we are invited to pray the Psalm and to pray the prayers the Psalm teaches us.  As we do that we will be blessed with this great gift of faith: “The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall the want.  The Lord is my Host, my soul shall be satisfied.”

These are talking points for this Sunday.  As always the points will be expanded upon providing fuller clarity.

That’s the message I received. What did you hear?  What will you write?  I was greatly blessed by Shea’s Children’s Message this week.  She rephrased the Psalm in her own words and then drew pictures that “preached” this great prayer.  You’ll want to see that! 

Again, it has been a blessing to be with you in this wonderful witness of God’s word this week.  I look forward to Saturday, when we can “pray together” and then Sunday, when we can join in worship.

In that anticipation, I’ll be with you again soon in the Pastor’s Workshop.

Prayer:  Gracious God, thank you for Psalm 23.  Thank you for its inspiring witness that awakens us to Your truth, You are our Good Shepherd. Thank You for how this Psalm leads us on the trails of our lives in ways we know “You are with us”.  Help us to pray this Psalm and to pray the prayers the Psalm teaches in ways our souls will be restored each and every day.  In the name of our Good Shepherd, Jesus Christ our Lord, we pray.  Amen

 

 

 

The Blessing of Psalm 23

Welcome to Wednesday!  It’s a blessing to be with you in the Pastor’s Workshop.

As you know, we’re focused on Psalm 23.  This beautiful poetic prayer has been an inspiration for hymns, books, and paintings throughout the centuries.  This week it will be the inspiration for our message.

On Wednesday we look into the context of the text.  As we find out a bit more of the background of Biblical scripture we broaden our understanding of its meaning.

The Book of Psalms is commonly called the “Hymn Book” of the Bible.  Many of the psalms are songs sung by the faithful in ancient Judaism.  They reflect a highly developed corporate worship.  These hymns reflect a full range of human emotion, from highest joy to deepest sorrow. 

They also witness to a profound faith In God.  It was in that faith the worshippers could open themselves and offer to God whatever was happening in their lives.  It was in the faithfulness of God, the worshippers could then be strengthened in their faith as they were reminded of God’s deliverance and were assured of God’s salvation.

Psalm 23 is from a group of psalms called “A Psalm of David”. These start at Psalm 3 and go through Psalm 41.  Some hold to a traditional belief that David was the writer of these psalms. Scripturally David as a shepherd boy was pictured In I Samuel as quite a musician.  Others believe that David commissioned these hymns when he was king.  Still others hypothesize these psalms were dedicated to David as their source of inspiration.

Whatever view you hold, this Psalm reflects the faith of David both as shepherd boy and as conquering king.  The opening verse starts out, “The Lord is my Shepherd”. The next three verses (verses 2-4) use imagery developing the relationship of a shepherd to the sheep and of the Good Shepherd to us as his sheep.  In verse five the image shifts to a royal table.  We are seated at a kingly banquet with the Lord as our host.  In God’s hospitality there is an anointing with favor, an overflowing of “goodness and mercy”, and a graciousness that reminds us we have a home in the heart of God forever.

Some have speculated that the shift in the psalm may reflect a “second verse” in the song. Just as with our hymns, the guiding metaphors can change between verses.  Others theorize that for the psalmist to portray the fullness of faith they wanted to proclaim, they needed to picture God as Good Shepherd, who provided and protected, and as Royal Host, who welcomed and blessed.

Whatever your interpretation, this Psalm witnesses to the deep faithfulness of God to us which we need to sustain, strengthen and enrich our faith in God.  Praying this psalm on a regular basis, whether you’re in “green pastures”, in “the valley of the shadow” or at the “king’s table”, will minister a blessing we all need.

In that gift of grace, I invite you to read and recite the Psalm today.  Let it become a song of your heart now and always!

Prayer:  Gracious God, thank You for the blessing of Psalm 23.  Thank You for how it ministers Your faithfulness to us.  Thank You for how it reminds us that in the shadows we have a shepherd and in the bounty we are blessed by Your grace. Let Your faithfulness to us inspire our faith in You. This we ask in the name of our Good Shepherd, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen

Walking with the Good Shepherd

Great to be together on a Tuesday!  I hope you’re ready for a blessed day. It’s good to start with you in the Pastor’s Workshop. 

This week we’re working with one of the most well-loved prayers and psalms of all time.  We’re “walking with the Good Shepherd” in Psalm 23. The title of our message is “Valley Trails”.

Yesterday we “immersed” ourselves in the psalm.  We read and re-read.  We listened closely not only to what the Psalm said, but also to what our hearts and minds had to say.  We jotted down our impressions and our meditations.

Today we take a more “objective” look at the text.  What is the structure?  How does it advance the main thought?

The first guiding metaphor is a shepherd with his sheep.  The original listeners would have had a deeper sense of that relationship than most of us do today.  Most of us don’t have first-hand experience of shepherds and sheep. What we can imagine is how the shepherd protects and provides for the sheep and how the sheep depend totally upon the shepherd. 

In the care and guidance of the shepherd, the psalmist invites us to travel the trails of life.   

There are beautiful and lovely paths, beside “green pastures” and “still waters”.  This “path” guides us into right things of God.  The images evoke a deep sense of God’s beauty. To follow this trail is to “restore our souls”.

The shepherd and sheep travel not only lovely trails. They also know what it means to walk through dark times, when “shadows” fall and when death seems near.  These are times when if the sheep were alone, they would be afraid.  And yet, as the psalm highlights, they are not afraid.  Panic doesn’t overcome them, because they know the shepherd is with them.  They are under the shepherd’s protection.  The shepherd’s “rod” and “staff”, “strength” and “sovereignty in the situation”, are their courage.

In verse 5 the guiding metaphor shifts from sheep with a shepherd to guests at a king’s banquet. There is a wide range of speculation about why this change was made. One theory posits that to capture the fullness of the relationship God shares with the faithful this transition was necessary. 

In this new metaphor the guests are seated at a royal banquet table.  Even the presence of enemies cannot dampen the outpouring of favor and the overflow of goodness. The joy of the king’s feast is supreme.

And the Psalmist concludes with this thought: this favor, goodness, and joy in the presence of the Lord are not temporary or passing.   The richness of the relationship the faithful share with God is eternal.  The abundance of grace we know today witnesses to an abiding fullness of grace forever. 

The Psalm is so rich in its imagery that to meditate on its message is lengthy.  Yet, you don’t want to rush through this poem-prayer.  This psalm is like a work of “fine art”.  The more time you spend with it, the more it will speak to your heart. 

I invite you to “walk” through this Psalm again.  Travel it as a sheep with a shepherd.  Pull up a chair at the banquet of a king who serves up “goodness and mercy”.  Take time to be blessed by Psalm 23.

Enjoy the blessing.  I’ll join you again tomorrow in the Pastor’s Workshop. 

Prayer:  Gracious God, thank you for the richness of the relationship we share with You.  Thank you for Psalm 23 and how it invites us into that blessing of traveling the trails of life with You.  Thank you for how You host us at the banquet of grace as Your guest.  Through our faith open our hearts more fully to the gift of life with You as expressed through this beautiful poem –prayer.  This we would pray in the name of our Shepherd King, Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen

Psalm 23

Good Monday morning!  Glad to start out the week with you in the Pastor’s Workshop. 

As you know, our current series is “Prepare with Prayer”.  Our hope for this series is that prayer would be a powerful tool you can use more effectively to integrate your faith more fully into your daily living. 

Last week we looked at one of the most famous prayers in all the Scripture, the Lord’s Prayer.  We focused on the phrase, “Thy Kingdom come and Thy Will be done on earth as it is in heaven”.  

This week we’re going to explore another of the Scripture’s most famous prayers, Psalm 23. We’ll focus on the phrase, “Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil for You are with me.”  The title of our message this week is “Valley Trails”.

Here is our text in the New King James Version:

The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.He makes me to lie down in green pastures; He leads me beside the still waters.He restores my soul;
He leads me in the paths of righteousness for His name’s sake.

Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil;
For You are with me;
Your rod and Your staff, they comfort me.

You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies;
You anoint my head with oil; My cup runs over.
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life;
And I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.

On Mondays we spend “quality time” with the Scripture.  We read and re-read, write and re-write from multiple translations.  I like to use the New Revised Standard Version (our pew bible), the New King James Version (a more traditional translation), the Message (a modern paraphrase), the Living Bible (another modern paraphrase), and the Common English Bible.  They are all available for free on biblegateway.com.   Towards the end of your study time rephrase the Scripture in your own words, the (your name) Version. 

One of the reasons this Scripture is a favorite are the beautiful and powerful images it invokes.  One of the ways to immerse yourself in Psalm 23 is to form a series of pictures in your mind: green pastures, still waters, valley of the shadow, a table set, a cup overflowing, a home to dwell in. As you work through your preparation today let this imaging stir your “holy imagination”. 

Even as we study Psalm 23, there are certain Scriptures really worth committing to memory.  This is one of them.  Investing your time and energy in “planting” this psalm in your mind and heart will reap rich rewards in your life of faith. 

I’m glad to begin this week with you in this great Psalm.  I trust that as we study it together God will “lead us in paths of righteousness for his name’s sake”.

In that blessing I’ll let you get to work.  I’ll see you tomorrow in the Pastor’s Workshop.

Prayer:  Gracious God, thank You for the blessing of a brand new week.  Thank You we can enter into it studying Your Word.  Help us to know that in our study You would lead us in Your “paths of righteousness”, opening up our minds and hearts to your life-giving truths.  As we take the time to be in Psalm 23 help us know more deeply that “You are our Shepherd” and we do “dwell” with You forever.  In that blessing we enter this week and lift up this prayer, in the name of our great Shepherd, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen

Prayers for Sunday

Grace and peace on this Saturday! I’m glad to finish out this week with you in the Pastor’s Workshop. 

Our Saturday summary looks like this:

This week in our “Prepare with Prayer” series we looked into one of the most famous prayers in all the Scripture, the Lord’s Prayer.  We worked with Luke’s version of the prayer, Luke 11:1-13 (Matthew also has a version in Matthew 6).  We focused on the “core phrase”, “Thy Kingdom come, Thy Will be done”. We discovered how one of our “privileges in prayer” is to give our voice to praying this prayer of Jesus’ heart for our lives and for our world. 

As you know, Saturday is a Sabbath in the workshop.  It’s a day in which we take our work of the week and lift it to God in prayer.  We ask God to bless all we’ve done. We pray God will take our work and use it in God’s Kingdom work.  We ask that “the words of our mouths and meditations of our hearts” would be acceptable in God’s sight.  And more than acceptable, that they would be used by God in ways that we can be “used by God” to be more effective witnesses for God’s Kingdom. 

So what are your prayers on this Saturday?  What are you asking for, with your “ask” being guided by this Scripture and God’s Spirit?

Here are a few of my requests:

  • I pray that I may see the Lord’s Prayer as the great gift of God’s grace that it is.  

  • I pray that I may be saved from “Saying” the Lord’s Prayer, and that I would be conscious of “Praying” the Lord’s Prayer.

  • I pray that I might always pause on the phrase, “Thy Kingdom Come and Thy Will be done on earth as it is in Heaven”.  I ask that I would think and pray about what that phrase means in my life: in my home and marriage, with my family and friends, in my job and leisure, in our community and country.

  • I pray that I always believe God loves to answer this prayer, the Lord’s Prayer.  I ask that I am ready to discover and live into God’s answer each day.  

  • I pray that when I say the final “Amen” on the Lord’s Prayer I know that the Prayer is not over, but the answer is just beginning in the day ahead.

These are some of my prayers.  What are yours?  Again and always, write them down in your notebook.  

As you record your prayers, you can look back on them later.  You can see how your prayers reflect your journey of faith.  You can see how God answered Your prayers.  You can see how you have grown in your “walk with Jesus”, your “life in Christ”. 

Since it’s Saturday, I hope you can have some Sabbath time today. I hope today will hold a “change of pace” from your regular week.  I hope there will be some rest and relaxation at some point.  

And I hope that this time of prayer will help prepare you for worship tomorrow.  I hope Saturday’s R and R (Rest and Relaxation) will lead into Sunday’s R and R (Renewal and Restoration).  If you have a weekend like that you’ll be ready for what’s ahead in the coming week!

In that blessing, I pray you have a “productive” prayer time today and I look forward to worshipping with you tomorrow!

Prayer:  Gracious God, thank You for the week past.  Thank You for Sunday and for worship tomorrow.  Thank You for how you would fill each day with Your love and grace in Jesus.  Thank You for how prayer awakens us to that possibility and strengthens us to live into that potential. Lord, let Your Kingdom come and Your Will be done in our living.  Let our praying Your prayer bring us into that blessing.  This we pray in the name of the One who taught us to pray the Prayer, Jesus our Lord.  Amen

God wants to answer prayers.

Greetings on this Thursday!  I’m glad to be with you as we come to a highlight of our week in the Pastor’s Workshop. 

Our current series is “Prepare with Prayer”.  This week we’ve been focused on one of the most famous prayers in all the Scripture.  It’s the prayer Jesus taught his disciples to pray.  It’s the Lord’s Prayer.

Not only have we looked at the prayer, but also the surrounding verses – the prelude and postscript.  They provide an important context, informing our practice (our praying) of the Lord’s Prayer. 

Thursday is a “creative climax” of our week.  Today we review our work.  We “put all the pieces” together.  We craft and draft a message that we pray “gives voice” to a “Word” we have heard from the Scripture by the Spirit.

As I gather my notes and collect my thoughts here are talking points for my message this week. 

I believe God loves to answer prayers.  More importantly, I believe Jesus believed God loves to answer prayers.

How else can you explain the two teachings at the end of our text today? “Ask and you shall receive. Seek and you shall find.  Knock and it shall be opened to you.” Then there is also Jesus’ second lesson: “Who among you, if their child asks for a fish will give them a snake or asks for an egg will give them a scorpion?  If you know how to give good things to your children, how much more will the Heavenly Father give good…”  These teachings are invitations to prayer and assurances of answers.

There are those who have taken these two teachings and stretched them beyond their bounds. The “Prosperity Gospel” has encouraged a preaching and praying of these verses where they have become a pandering to our wants rather than prayer for God’s will.  When people have come up empty in their prayer, they wonder, “What’s up?”

Here’s what I think is “up”.  God does love to answer prayers, and particularly prayers that are in harmony with Jesus’ prayer, “Our Father, Thy Kingdom come and Thy Will be done.”

Prayer is the expression of what’s on our soul.  Prayer gives voice to the hurts and hopes of our lives.  I believe that God, in God’s love, hears and answers these cries of our hearts. 

I believe that Jesus, as our Lord of love, has a heart for us and our world.  Jesus, as our Lord of love, has desires and hopes for us and our world.  One of the greatest privileges we have in prayer is to offer our human voice to lift up Jesus’ desires and hopes for us and our world.  One of the greatest gifts of prayer God gives is to pray our Lord’s Prayer.  I believe God loves to answer that prayer. 

We see how God loved to answer our Lord’s Prayer in the life and ministry of Jesus.  It is clear from the Scriptures that Jesus loved to pray.  In fact in the text today, Jesus was just finishing up his prayer time.  As he did this, his disciples began to make a connection: Jesus prays and then goes into the day and performs mighty works, teaches inspiring truth, exudes a love for people that draws them in droves.  The disciples saw the connection between prayer and practice.  So they made the request, “Lord, teach us how to pray”.  Teach us how to pray so we can have similar results and make that same powerful connection with God. 

Incredibly, Jesus honored their ask. In just six short phrases he summed up essentials of what was on his heart for his disciples to lift up. Jesus gave his disciples “his prayer” to pray.  

He gives his prayer to us as well… To Pray! Notice I said, “Pray” not “Say”.  Have you heard the expression, “Say the Lord’s Prayer”?  Saying the Lord’s Prayer can be a mindless repetition of phrases we know by heart. With thoughtless recitation this powerful prayer becomes a pile of empty words.   To “Pray” the Lord’s prayer asks us to: Pause and Focus on the Prayer as a gift of Jesus to us; Put our heart, soul, and mind into the Prayer; and to Personalize the Prayer by asking not simply God’s Kingdom come and Will be done on “earth”, but more specifically God’s Kingdom come and Will be done in our homes, with our families and friends, our schools and jobs, our community and nation.

As we pray the Lord’s Prayer God will bring God’s answers through our lives and our witness.  I’ve included a favorite story of how God honored and answered the Lord’s Prayer through the life of a good friend of mine.

Lastly, God does want to answer Jesus’ prayer, the “Lord’s Prayer”, “Thy Kingdom come and Thy Will be done”, in and through your life as well. The three postscripts to the Prayer: The Friend at Midnight, “Ask, Seek, and Knock”, and the “How Much More of Goodness” encourage us in that assurance. 

So pray the Lord’s Prayer.  And know that when you say,”Amen” the prayer is not over.  The answer is just beginning!

That’s a brief overview of what will be expanded on for Sunday.  These are my thoughts and reflections.  Make sure you also take time to review your notes and to summarize your meditations.  They are “the message” God has been giving you through the Scripture by the Spirit this week.  Your “sermon” is important to record.

I hope you’ll tune in to worship, not only to hear more about the “Lord’s Prayer”, but also to be blessed by some great music and encouraged through time of prayer. 

In that prayer I look forward to being with you on Saturday for some final preparation and then on Sunday for some uplifting worship.   I think that’s all part of God’s Will being done as we share in Christ’s life together at Spring Valley. 

Prayer:  Gracious God, thank you for the blessing of a beautiful day.  Thank you for how we can follow Jesus’s example and begin the day with prayer.  Thank you for providing a prayer we can use to start this and every day – Jesus’ prayer. Thank you for how you love to answer our Lord’s prayer.  Help us to be open and participating in Your answer by the working of your Holy Spirit in and through us.  We lift this prayer in the name of the One who shows the power of answered prayer, Jesus our Lord. Amen. 

The Lord's Prayer

Welcome to Wednesday!  Hope you’re ready for a good day in God’s grace.

As you remember our message for this week is entitled “Game On”.  It comes from Luke 11:1-13.

Yesterday we examined this text.  We saw how an understanding of this Scripture can be organized around the guiding thought, “Thy Kingdom Come, Thy Will be done on earth as it is in heaven”. This principle can be used to unify the entire passage in ways that each verse advances us in praying Jesus’ prayer.

Today we look at the context of the text.  We seek to find out more about the world in which the word was first spoken.  We expand our understanding of a Scripture by considering it’s historical and Biblical settings so we know more of its power in our present day. 

Dr. David Clark has commented that in first century Palestine, the historical setting for the Scripture, “many Jews were looking for a more personal encounter with their God.  They believed that the glory of the Lord was not confined to the Temple in Jerusalem, and that in the ‘temples’ of their homes and synagogues they would be like priests.  They would offer sacrifices, not of animals, but of prayer.”  With this understanding, Jesus’ teaching of the Lord’s Prayer became a source of great empowerment for people of faith.  

The Lord’s Prayer is found in both the Gospel of Matthew and the Gospel of Luke.  In Matthew Jesus teaches the crowds his Prayer early on in his ministry.  The setting for the Prayer is the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 6).  This teaching is surrounded by a great many other truths on a variety of topics.  In this setting the Lord’s Prayer is contrasted with the hypocrites’ prayer. The hypocrites pray to be glorified by others.  The Lord instructs that we should pray to glorify God.  The hypocrites pray in public to be noticed.  Jesus says we should pray in privacy, as an act of intimate fellowship with God.  The hypocrites pray by piling up holy phrases. The Lord prays in a way that gets to the point.  You can see the tension sighted by Dr. Clark in Matthew’s contrast of the hypocrites and the Lord.

In Luke Jesus teaches the prayer to his disciples in the midst of his ministry.  He has already done many miracles, taught many Kingdom truths, drawn many crowds, commissioned and sent his followers to proclaim the Kingdom. The disciples have seen how prayer is a cornerstone to his ministry.  They have witnessed prayer’s results in power and effective practice and so they request, “Teach us to pray even as John taught his disciples to pray.”

As we join these two settings of the Lord’s Prayer, they bring an important word of caution.  Too often we “say the Lord’s Prayer” rather than “pray the Lord’s Prayer”.  Since we know it so well and say it so regularly it becomes easy to repeat it by rote.  It can quickly become a matter of piling up phrases.  When we pray the Lord’s Prayer we take time to see it as an intimate moment with “Our Father”.  We pray that through this time of prayer we participate in how God’s Kingdom comes and the Lord’s will of love is done in our world as it is in Heaven. We pray for those things that make this possible for us (daily provision, daily forgiveness from God and for others, daily deliverance from temptation and evil).   As we “Prepare with Prayer” we discover, as those first disciples did, that “praying” the Lord’s Prayer brings power to our prayer life and vitality to the daily practice of our faith.  

In that blessing I give thanks for this teaching of our Lord.  And I look forward to being with you again tomorrow In the Pastor’s Workshop. 

Prayer:  Gracious God, thank you for the blessing of this day.  We praise you for the gift of your prayer, the Lord’s Prayer.  Help us to learn how to use it more fully and pray it more faithfully.  Save us from “rote repetition” of your Prayer or any prayer we lift to you.  Let our time of prayer be a joining of hearts, our heart with your eternal heart, in ways that You minister healing and hope to our lives.  Let our moments of prayer lead us into moments of serving others with joy.  This we ask and pray in the name of the One who taught us to pray “Our Father”, even Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen

 

Teach Us to Pray

Glad to be with you on this Tuesday.  It’s a blessing to be together in God’s word! 

This week we’re continuing our series, “Prepare with Prayer”.  The Scripture for this week is Luke 11:1-13.  Our message is entitled, “Game On”.  

On Tuesday we look closely at the text.  We seek to identify individual ideas within a passage.  We also try to discern, “Is there an underlying theme that guides this Scripture?  Is there a core thought the text is developing? How does this main idea condition other supporting verses?”

Luke 11 begins with Jesus wrapping up his morning prayer time. The disciples notice how important prayer is to him and to his ministry. The pattern is: Jesus prays in the morning and then goes into the day to teach inspired truth, perform miracles bringing healing or deliverance, or love on folks in ways he draws them into his good news in droves.  

As the disciples witness this pattern and power they ask Jesus, “Teach us to pray”.  Teach us to pray so we can have results like that.  Teach us to pray so we can rise from prayer and go into the world and participate in how God’s Kingdom is coming into the world with truth, power and love.  Teach us to pray. 

And so, Jesus does.  He teaches them (and us) the most famous of all prayers, the prayer we pray every time we worship, “The Lord’s Prayer”.  

As you look at the Lord’s Prayer, you can see it as six separate thoughts.  God, You are our Father.  Let Your Kingdom come and Your Will be done.  Give us the provision we need for today.  Forgive us our sin and help us forgive others.  Deliver us from temptation and evil.  God, Yours is the forever Kingdom. Amen. 

Another way to look at the Lord’s Prayer, and the perspective of our message this week, is to organize the Lord’s Prayer around the main idea, “Thy Kingdom Come, Thy Will be done on earth as it is in Heaven.” Our sermon this week assumes this desire is at the “heart” of Jesus’ prayer.

If you organize the Lord’s Prayer around this core thought, the prayer unfolds like this: God, You are our great and mighty, loving and holy Father.  God, we want your Will and Way of Love, being done in Heaven, to be done right here on earth in our lives today.  Provide what we need to participate in Your Kingdom coming and Your Will being done.  Reconcile and restore us to Yourself and to others (forgive us our sins and strengthen us to forgive others), because we know the coming of your Kingdom doesn’t happen by ourselves.  Coming into harmony with one another is part of Your Kingdom coming. And deliver us from self-absorption, lesser loves, petty prayers, and anything else that draws us away from Your kingdom coming and Your will being done today.  And as You’re doing that God, save us from any deeper evil that lies beneath our temptations.   We desire Your Kingdom and Will today because Yours is the true and forever kingdom, the power and the glory, today and forever.  Let’s get on with it! Amen! Game On!

It’s a different take on the Lord’s Prayer for sure! 

And then the three following teachings: “The Friend at Midnight (a lesson on perseverance)”, “Ask, Seek and Knock (a lesson on assertiveness)”, and a “Parent’s Goodness  (a lesson on God’s generosity in answering this prayer)” are not three random teachings.  They are supportive teachings on the main theme, “Lord, let Your Kingdom come and your Will be done.”  

These three teachings connect like this:  When you aren’t sure what God’s Kingdom will is or how it is to be done today in your living, don’t let that stop you from praying the prayer – persevere!  Continue to “Ask” and “Seek” and “Knock”. You will come to know and find. The ways of God’s Kingdom working will be opened to you. God in goodness and generosity will answer and provide, just as a parent provides good things for their child.  God will be at work with the Holy Spirit to enable and empower the Kingdom to come and God’s Will to be done in and through you.  

As you see, when you connect the entire passage with the core thought, “Thy Kingdom come and Thy Will be done”, that desire conditions how you read each of the verses.  This normative thought shapes how the passage unfolds and the meaning it holds. 

This is just one approach to this Scripture.  There are many others.  And you have your own.  As you meditate on this Scripture make sure you write down your reflections.  They are how God is leading you into deeper faith through this text and the truth it holds.

This passage includes lots of thoughts. So I’ll let you get to work! And I look forward to being with you tomorrow in the Pastor’s Workshop. 

Prayer: Gracious God, thank You for this Scripture.  Thank You for Your love for Your world, as Your love is revealed in Jesus.  Thank you for how Jesus teaches us to pray Your Love for our lives and for our world – Your Kingdom come and Your Will be done. Lead us forward in this prayer today as we seek to live into this truth.  This we ask in the name of the One who taught and lived this prayer, Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen

Game On

Good Monday morning!  Hope you had a wonderful fourth. Glad we can start the week together in the Pastor's Workshop.


This week we'll continue with our series, "Prepare with Prayer".  Our hope is that prayer would become a more powerful tool you can use more effectively to integrate your faith more fully into your daily living.

The Scripture this week comes from the Gospel of Luke, Luke 11:1-13. Of all the Gospels, Luke is the book that emphasizes the power of prayer and the working of the Holy Spirit.

1 One day Jesus was praying in a certain place. When he finished, one of his disciples said to him, "Lord, teach us to pray, just as John taught his disciples."

2 He said to them, "When you pray, say: "'Father, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come.

3 Give us each day our daily bread.

4 Forgive us our sins, for we also forgive everyone who sins against us. And lead us not into temptation.'"

5 Then Jesus said to them, "Suppose you have a friend, and you go to him at midnight and say, 'Friend, lend me three loaves of bread; 6 a friend of mine on a journey has come to me, and I have no food to offer him.'  7 And suppose the one inside answers, 'Don't bother me. The door is already locked, and my children and I are in bed. I can't get up and give you anything.' 8 I tell you, even though he will not get up and give you the bread because of friendship, yet because of your shameless audacity he will surely get up and give you as much as you need.

9 "So I say to you: Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. 10 For everyone who asks receives; the one who seeks finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.

11 "Which of you fathers, if your son asks for a fish, will give him a snake instead? 12 Or if he asks for an egg, will give him a scorpion? 

13 If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!"

As you see, this Scripture covers "a lot of ground."  It begins with the disciples asking Jesus to teach them to pray, the Lord's Prayer, and then three of Jesus' teachings on prayer. What we'll be doing in this week's message is seeing how all these elements fit together in an overarching truth.  The title for our message is "Game On."

As always on Monday we immerse ourselves in the text of the week.  So read and re-read, copy and re-copy, listen carefully.  What are  the ideas and images that "speak" to you?  Make sure you jot these down in your notebook.

Tomorrow we'll look more closely at each of the sections of the Scripture.  We'll identify key elements. We'll see how they interact to advance our core message.

So, I'll let you get to work.  And I look forward to being with you tomorrow!


Prayer:  Gracious God, thank you for this day and this new week. Thank you for the gift of prayer. Thank you for the ways prayer gives expression to the hope of our hearts. Thank you for the hope You have for us and the ways Jesus leads us to pray into that hope. In that blessing, we lift our prayers in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen

In Christ,

Paul

Prayers for Sunday

Happy July 4th.  Here’s to having a great Independence Day!  

I’m grateful we can celebrate in a free nation.  I’m thankful we have a Lord whose love frees us to live fully.  As Jesus said, “If the Son makes you free, you are free indeed!”

As we come to Saturday, you know it’s a Sabbath time in the Pastor’s Workshop.  It’s a day when we take all we have prepared and hold it up to the Lord in prayer.  We ask God to bless and use our work, helping us grow in grace in Christ Jesus. 

So as we come to this time of prayer today, what are you lifting up?  Particularly as you think about Ephesians 6:10-18 and being “Battle Ready”, how would you pray?

Here are some of my prayers.

We do fight “spiritual” battles.  There is spiritual warfare that happens in our hearts.  I pray as we experience those struggles we know we can find our “strength in the Lord and the power of his might.”

I pray the Prayer Guide of “Putting on the full armor of God” would be useful and helpful for us.  To picture our prayer as seeking God’s truth, desiring God’s righteousness, walking in God’s peace, relying on God’s faithfulness, giving God the glory and following God’s word is a powerful way to pray and live. 

I pray we would be alert for those opportunities to grow in and give out God’s grace, present with us each day.

I pray we would always pray for one another.  I ask that as we stay in “supplication for all the saints” God would draw us closer together and build up our fellowship in Christ.

These are some of my prayers inspired by this Scripture.  What are you praying for?  Particularly as you pray this Scripture, how is God guiding you in your time of prayer?

Again, I’m glad we have this Sabbath time together today. I hope you have a very happy and healthy fourth.  I pray you know the freedom Christ gives to love, and the power the Spirit provides to live into that possibility. 

In that blessing, I look forward to being with you tomorrow – not in the Pastor’s workshop, but in the Master’s workshop as we join in worship!

 Prayer:  Gracious God, we praise you for the blessing of our nation and the gift of our freedom. We thank you for the grace that is ours in Jesus Christ.  We pray that we might use our freedom wisely and live in this grace fully.  Let our lives may be a witness to Your goodness and Your glory.  This we pray through Jesus Christ our Lord.