Beloved of God,
I cannot remember a time when a month went by as quickly as January of 2021. In just a few weeks’ time we will be beginning our Lenten study of N.T. Wright’s Lent for Everyone. There will be daily readings mainly from the gospel of Mark. We’ll check in together once a week to see what new things we have learned and where we are hearing God’s voice. If you’d like to sign up for that study a link is available here. I also want you to be thinking about ways that you might use your gifts to lead our congregation in worship. One thing we have learned as this pandemic has dragged on is that coordinating a worship service with fewer people able to serve conforming to the prescribed restrictions can prove very difficult. We began to wonder if there might be space for folks to offer testimony, to tell a story, to write a responsive reading, or to record worship music played and sung at home. If you are reading this and feel like you’re hearing your name called, I hope you’ll email me so we can talk further about it. One of our alternate readings for this week is from 1 Corinthians 9 where Paul talks about being “all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some.” I have to admit that I spend a good bit of time thinking about this as it pertains to our community. Many of you will have a deeper sense of the secularity in our little community than I have, but it is significant. I often wonder what obstacles exist in coming to faith for these folks. Is it their own past experience? Is it a Christian co-worker who they just can’t manage to get along with? Is it politics? Is it a deep sense of shame, or unbelonging, real or imagined? I have to tell you that I have always found talking about faith with non-religious folks to be something deeply challenging, and interesting. There is so much you can learn by listening. Someday this pandemic will be over, and we will have an opportunity to hash it out as a broader community. I wonder if some of those folks will have questions where we have answers. I wonder if they will have learned things about themselves that lead them to you, their Christian friends. I hope that when that moment arrives we’ll be ready to speak kindly, and truthfully, but above all that we’ll be ready to listen. I’m certain that if we can, it will be worth it, and we might just save some. 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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