![]() Beloved of God, This Sunday, we will not be having our regular Sunday School classes. What we will be having is breakfast food! If you are going to be with us as we worship this week, plan on sticking around for a potluck brunch at 10:30 a.m. Bring a pile of bacon. Bring a casserole. Bring hasbrowns that have been covered, peppered, and chunked. If you forget to make something, pick up apple fritters on the way. Or just show up knowing that a 9” x 13” pan is more than enough monkey bread for almost anybody and you won’t go hungry. Our Scripture reading this week follows hot on the heels of our sermon text from last week. It picks in Romans 12:9 and goes on through the chapter. Sometimes I wonder if we miss how demanding this passage is because it sounds so gentle. Folk, I’m not always loving or lovable. My spiritual zeal sometimes fizzles. I often fail to inhabit joys with the joyful, and sorrow with the mourning. Forgoing the repayment of evil? Doing what is right in the eyes of everyone? Living at peace with all people? What about me? Where does living this way get me? What about my rights, my proper respect, my convictions? Beloved, if we would follow Jesus it might mean placing even our moral outrage on the altar. It might mean taking up a cross made not of wood but of unanswered wrongs and even enemies who have been fed at our table. It may be a matter of soul searching for us whether we really believe that by doing such things we overcome evil with good. But if Jesus Christ conquered sin and death through a cross and a grave, isn’t it likely that our own victory may have a similar shape? If we are people of wonderful gifts and renewed minds, it’s so that we can live a different kind of life altogether. There are purported Christians with large platforms who simply will not seek to live this kind of life and who are leading others away from it. They are in love with power and revenge. And I don’t know if I completely blame them, because living the way we’re instructed here in Romans 12 is hard. It is too hard for them to live out. But it is the way of Jesus. It’s the path of our master and Lord. And because he is alive, even this path of forgiveness, gentleness, and quiet righteousness is a path to true victory in and by Him. Please join me this week in praying for:
You are the salt of the earth; you are the light of the world, Marshall
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8/23/2023 0 Comments Maybe a psalm of escape?Beloved of God,
On Sunday I mentioned that we have not had anyone commit to teaching our first and second grade class this fall. I continue to hope that someone will feel a strong and clear leading to spend that hour with them on Sunday mornings. As I teach our Middle Schoolers, what I find so very often is that I’m beckoned back into Scripture with fresh eyes and ears. They’re not quite calculated enough to do anything other than to bring honest questions and concerns to their Bible reading. And if I were wiser, and if I’d taken Jesus’ teaching seriously, I might do the same thing. Teaching these classes is so often not just a duty, but a valuable redirection of our discipleship. If you want to talk about this further, please contact Megan. This week’s Scripture reading is from Psalm 124. It’s one of our “psalms of ascent,” but to me, it really feels like a psalm of escape. I know some of you have powerful stories of rescue and escape; moments where you are deeply aware that if God had not been present and moving in power you would not have survived. Those stories are powerful testimonies, and it’s a huge grace that you share them with us. But I do wonder how often it is the case that we are rescued from something and never notice. I wonder if we’re not all that different sometimes from that old cartoon, Mr. Magoo, moving through life with danger and trouble missing us by inches. A psalm like this might be especially valuable because it reminds us how constantly God has moved to protect us in moments we don’t even notice. Perhaps it would be worthwhile to read this psalm slowly, and then to thank God for all the moments that we know we’ve been rescued or preserved. Maybe that’s especially important if haven't really noticed them in the first place. What a joy to know how constant God’s care and defense are for us. Somebody ought to write a song about that. Please join me this week in praying for:
You are the salt of the earth; you are the light of the world, Marshall 8/10/2023 0 Comments Intentions and Outcomes![]() Beloved of God, This Sunday, during the Sunday School hour, everyone is invited to an exposition of our various church ministries. No church functions well unless they can have “all hands on deck”. Each of us must be willing to find ways to serve and ways to grow within a gathered body of disciples. I sure hope you’ll stay after the service, and explore some ways you might do both. Please make sure that you who are members have planned to attend our upcoming congregational meeting on August 20th. I believe that we make wiser decisions as a congregation when we have the benefit of each other’s council. There will be several important matters to consider, and I hope you’ll be there to help us consider them. Our Scripture reading this week is from Genesis 37:12-28. It’s early on in the story of Joseph, where his older brothers hatch a plan first to kill him, and then to sell him. Of course, this almost never happened at all. Joseph arrives in Shechem looking for his brothers but does not find them. He only knows where they are because of the intervention of a stranger. It’s the first in a series of events that play out on a very thin margin. Had the brothers killed Joseph as they initially intended, he’d never have wound up in Egypt. Had Reuben rescued him from the cistern, Joseph would not have made his way to Egypt either. One of the lessons of the Joseph story is about the gap between our intentions and the result of our actions, especially when God is involved. It reminds us that we’re not quite as powerful as we’d like, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Recognizing the gap between what we intend and what we’re able to do can help us to focus on what is more important for disciples than results: being faithful. Effectiveness is a bad measure of discipleship. It can de-center God from a story in which we play a meaningful but contingent part. Joseph lives a whole life where intentions and outcomes don’t always match up. And yet, God is faithful to him. If we want to be like Jesus, maybe learning to be faithful is more important than our own intentions and outcomes as well. Surely God can take care of the rest. Please join me this week in praying for:
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Sunday
Worship service: 9:00 am
Sunday School Bible Study : 10:30 am Youth Group (7th grade & up): 6:00 pm Wednesday
McBaptist: 8:00 am
Wednesday Night Dinner: 6:00 pm Directory Available online.
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