6/30/2021 0 Comments Do you find it hard to be patient?Beloved of God,
I am so excited that we have been able to restart our McBaptist Breakfast for the young at heart this week. But such a great chance for fellowship with seniors in our community reminds me of a deep need we have. We are looking for someone to fill the fellowship chair and to represent that ministry with the CLT. I have had several people approach who are willing to serve on the team, but nobody who senses a call to lead it yet. If you have a gift of hospitality and might consider leading that team, I hope you’ll get in touch with me so we can talk about it further. It would be an immense blessing to this congregation. On a similar note, we are looking for folks to teach Sunday school at all levels this fall, and I hope that you will get in touch with me if you have any interest in doing so. I’d like to talk through what your plans are, and to get a sense of how we can help provide curriculum or supplies as you need them. Feel free to email me if you have decided to teach, or are discerning a call in that direction. On Sunday we will be reading from 2 Samuel 5:1-10, a passage which I think often gets passed over in the David narrative. Mentally, I often will go straight from “Saul is king” to “David is king”, but that’s not how it happened. Saul had a son who followed him on the throne, and David ruled only Judah, his own tribe, from Hebron for a full 7 years. It is this passage where all of Israel finally comes to him and anoints him as king over all the tribes. Sometimes we gloss over that story if we aren’t patient. We know where it is going and we just want to get there. So in our mind we crown David king even before all the people have, and just get on with it. It’s hard to be patient when you already know where you want to go. I wonder if David ever found it hard to be patient. I wonder if there were moments between that day where he knelt in front of his father, and brothers, and the prophet Samuel, and this day in 2 Samuel 5, when he was frustrated. I wonder if he ever wondered why God wasn’t moving along any faster, or why he had to run for his life from Saul instead of God intervening swiftly and decisively. Sometimes I sure wish God would get on my schedule. I’ve had days where waiting for God to move was difficult and disappointing. But I think that’s just a sign that I haven’t learned to get rid of hurry in my life yet. John Wesley, in a letter from 1777 explaining his rapid pace of life, says to a friend that he is “always in haste but never in a hurry”. I think it might be wise for us to understand God’s movements this way. God’s work for us and for the world is unceasing. “He who guards Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps.” But if God does not seem to move for us as quickly as we would like, it is not because God has ceased to move. We must, like David, learn to be patient. God knows what God is doing, and no matter how it looks, God is always doing. 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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