9/30/2021 0 Comments Desiring God's fellowshipBeloved of God,
I sure hope you are planning on spending some time with us this weekend as we have some special opportunities for prayer, fellowship, education, and invitation to serve. First, we will be hosting an evening of prayer in the church building from 5pm to 9pm on Saturday. This come and go event is especially aimed at making space to pray for yourself, for each other, and over our various ministries here at WRBC. Second, we will be celebrating the Lord’s Supper together on Sunday. In the spirit of fellowship, we will also be having a brunch immediately after the service as a time to (re)connect with one another over a meal. If you would like to bring a breakfast dish to share, please let us know what you’re planning to bring here. Third, our Mission and Outreach team is going to be sharing about what they have been up to, our partnerships with other ministries, and opportunities to follow the Church’s call to mission. I hope you’ll stick around after brunch to hear from them, and learn more about Mission at WRBC. Our Scripture reading for Sunday is Psalm 26, which needs a bit of attention. I think there is always a temptation to read Scripture as if we are the “good guys”. I’m a little suspicious of that sort of confidence, because it’s usually the folks who are most confident of their righteousness who tend to cause the most harm. Psalm 26 has elements of this in it. “I have always been mindful of your unfailing love and have lived in reliance on your faithfulness,” says the Psalmist in Ps 26:3. But at the heart of this psalm is a desire to be declared innocent, in order to draw near to a holy God. 6 I wash my hands in innocence, and go about your altar, LORD, 7 proclaiming aloud your praise and telling of all your wonderful deeds. 8 LORD, I love the house where you live, the place where your glory dwells. It’s not “innocence” or “righteousness” alone that the Psalmist is after. It’s fellowship with God. We seek to live a life of righteousness or of innocence, not because it makes it easier to judge our neighbors. We do it because it allows us to approach our God more fully and faithfully; to know God more deeply. It is God’s own holiness that compels us toward a righteous life. We follow God into holiness for God’s sake, not our own. Most amazing of all, in Jesus we find a holiness that we can live into which we never would have found by ourselves. 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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9/23/2021 0 Comments Grace for the journeyBeloved of God,
The Missions and Outreach team is still working toward building teams to support displaced Afghans who will be in Santa Fe and Albuquerque. If you would like to join in this good work, please email the Missions and Outreach team and let them know. On Saturday Evening, October 2nd, we will be having a time of prayer and reflection in the church building from 5pm to 9pm. Different areas within the church will be designated for prayers of intercession for our ministries, confession, forgiveness, and reflection. You may come and go as you need throughout the evening. Please plan on spending part of that Saturday night with us in prayer. Our reading for Sunday from the gospel of Mark contains several episodes in a row that look like a collection of teaching organized around common images if they are organized at all. But the way we have Scripture is for our good, and I think that God was invested and operative even in a passage like this to place things together that we need to hear. The first part of the passage tells of a concern the disciples bring to Jesus over a man who is casting out demons in his name, but is “not one of us”. They are worried they should stop him, but Jesus disagrees. If he’s casting out demons in Jesus’ name, then whoever he is, he’s not the opposition. Jesus advises them to let him continue, because even if he were merely caring for the thirsty in Jesus’ name, it would be a sign not of opposition, but accord with the Kingdom of God. In the next section Jesus speaks of the judgement that awaits those who cause the small among us (In faith? In stature? Both?) to stumble. In fact, he admonishes his followers to be so concerned with holiness that even body parts that don’t cooperate are up for removal! The idea seems to be that where we go, what we do, and even what we see ought to be done in accord with a holy life, and failure to do so should be addressed at any cost. I like that these passages are side by side, because it reminds us of things that seem contradictory to us at first blush. We’re reminded that faith in Jesus practiced by others, even if we don't understand it, isn’t opposition. We’re told to be gracious about how others are following Jesus, and not to thwart them just because they’re not “one of us”. It’s a call to be gracious. On the other hand, the following passage speaks of a relentless pursuit of our own holiness, and the high cost of causing harm to those who are small or weak in faith. Jesus is clear, the choice is either a deep personal purity or the threat of hell. Nothing about us should be above our own careful interrogation, even our own bodies are to be carefully brought into a life of holiness. It’s a call to be rigorous. We need both words. We need to be reminded to be gracious to others following Jesus, perhaps especially because they will not be “one of us” as far as we can tell. We will disagree with folks as they follow Christ, even as they do so faithfully. But on the other hand, our self-examination and personal practice of holiness should be relentless. We should be constantly concerned with how we ourselves might live a life marked by the purity the Kingdom of God demands. But either of these words without the counterbalance of the other will fall into laxity, or abuse, and miss the point. God is gracious with us even as He is just, and just to us even as He gives grace. Part of discipleship is living in that tension without compromising it’s strains. May God give us the strength to do just that. Please join me this week in praying for:
You are the salt of the earth; you are the light of the world, Marshall 9/16/2021 0 Comments Speak the WordBeloved of God,
There are a few big things coming up in the life of the church next week. On Tuesday, 9/21 at 6:45 pm the Deacons will be hosting an open forum to present their recommendation on Article I (Statement of Faith) of the church bylaws. They are asking that folks who would like to give feedback or hear that recommendation be present at WRBC that evening. On Friday, 9/24 at 12:00 pm we will be hosting a luncheon for our senior adults. Lisa Larson will be leading a conversation about the scope of a prospective senior ministry, and input from our seniors will be especially important. You can RSVP for lunch by either emailing Lisa or by calling the church office at 505.672.9764. Our Scripture reading for Sunday is Psalm 1, which has helped me rethink the way I read the Bible. This is one of those times where the English translation cleans up the text with good intention only to soften the image we are meant to have. The NIV tells us that blessing comes to the one who “meditates” on the law day and night, but that’s not quite the picture here. You likely will have seen pictures or videos of faithful Jewish folks attending to their prayers at the Western Wall in Jerusalem. In fact that wall even has a nickname, the “Wailing Wall”, because of the way the folks gathered there will speak fervently and earnestly their prayers and readings from Scripture. This image is closer to the word we have here for meditate. It’s not a word for a detached and thoughtful repose, but for a moaning, a growling, a muttering through God’s law. The expectation is that we would read God’s word aloud, hearing ourselves as we do. I’m reminded of my first semester in college where I took a class on philosophical ethics. We were reading works by Kant, Hume, and Nietzsche. Much of it was difficult for me to comprehend. I found myself studying in the student union building because in order to understand what I was reading, I had to hear myself read it. I needed that extra point of contact with the text to fully grasp what was written. I had to read with as many parts of my mind and attention open to the text as possible. What if we read Scripture like that regularly? What if we were to adopt a discipline where we don’t hurry through a passage so we can get to the “valuable” work of mining it for meaning, and instead looked and listened to it patiently and deliberately? What might we hear that we hadn’t seen before? If you want to try this out, Psalm 1 is a perfect passage with which to give it a whirl. Please join me this week in praying for:
You are the salt of the earth; you are the light of the world, Marshall Beloved of God,
I want to remind you that this weekend our service at church will be a little different because I will be out of town at the Labor Day retreat in Glorieta. I have prepared something for you that I hope will be a meaningful chance to read and pray through Scripture together. I do want you to know that if you usually read Scripture on your phone or a tablet, a hard copy of the Bible may be useful for you to have with you. For some of you it won’t make much difference, but for others it will be a great help. Sunday School for all ages will be resuming on Sunday, September 12th. If you would like a list of adult classes you might attend, we will be sending out a list in the coming week. The list may update over the next week as leaders get a better sense of their scope and focus. I am especially excited to be teaching our Middle School class. I’m struck this week by the way the first verses of Psalm 125 speak of God’s care and protection with such confidence: Psa. 125:1 Those who trust in the LORD are like Mount Zion, which cannot be shaken but endures forever. 2 As the mountains surround Jerusalem, so the LORD surrounds his people both now and forevermore. There are any number of difficult situations that folks near and far are having to deal with at the moment. The world in it’s fallen goodness is always ripe for chaos to emerge, and there are times when that chaos can catch our attention in a special way: devastating weather events, pandemics, economic crises, political upheaval. Some of these things don’t feel far away at all, in fact some may be right on top of you. ...And yet the Lord surrounds His people. I don’t know if there were many who supposed that God might save and protect his people through the use of a cross, but that’s what happened. There may be surprising things that emerge from troubling moments. God has never been one to abandon His people, but God also has a way of bringing help and protection from unexpected places. I think Israel could sing songs like this because they knew that. I hope we remember that for ourselves. 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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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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