Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Thoughts for November 19, 2006

Scripture Readings Leading to
Sunday November 19, 2006
2 Kings 4 & 5                    Elisha’s Miracles
Luke 4:31-5:26                    Jesus’ Miracles             

This week we will have another story about an oil jar which does not run dry.  This particular miracle by the prophet Elisha is similar to the miracle by Elijah we studied a couple weeks ago and both are similar to the miracles Jesus performed as recorded in Luke’s gospel.  Miracles are miracles and we seem to live in their midst most of the time.  We may or may not see our daily life events as miracles, but someone else probably does.

As we are preparing for Nov. 19th, our Stewardship Celebration Sunday, we would do well to consider these miracles.  Even on some of my worst days, I am still very blessed.  I need to grow in ways to express my thankfulness.  Not because it is required for entry into eternal life, but rather, precisely because I have been offered eternal life I need to offer gifts as an expression of God’s grace.  It (what ever “it” is) all is a gift from God in the first place anyway.  I am only a caretaker of all that is placed before me.  

If I consider myself as God and offer myself the position of one who creates and decides, then I will also do with the resources around me as I see fit.  If I consider myself as unworthy to even participate in that wondrous thing God is doing and then neglect the need to invest the treasure in self and others, then I again fail and fall short of God’s plans for those to whom much is given.  

I think we need to do our part.  Be faithful, in season and out.  I think we need to listen, reflect and then act outwardly toward the stranger and widow who have no hope.  As we are faithful and see our lives full of love and peace as the jar of oil not running dry,  I believe we will move just a little closer to home.    
Blessings, Dave Weesner
  
Sunday Worship
Scripture: 2 Kings 4:1-7
Sermon Title: “The Price of Oil”

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Thoughts for November 05, 2006

Scripture Readings Leading to
Sunday November 05, 2006
1 Kings17, 18, 19               Elijah’s Witness
Luke 7:18-35                    What Jesus Saw in John             

Sin likes to hide.  It finds a way to lay dormant for days and weeks and then strikes like a viper when we are weak or unaware.  Sin is cunning and willing to wait without being nurtured for long periods.  Sin can appear from a clean slate we assumed had been fully cleansed, like the weed patch which quickly grows after a slab of concrete has been overturned after many years. Sin likes to hide.

Perhaps closer to the truth is that we like to hide our sin.  At least in respectable circles and in places of societal advantage we like to appear sin-less.  And so we stuff our sin into a pair of baggy pants, attempting to hide that which is a constant and painful reminder that we are only human.  

However, I have noticed that as of late it is becoming the fashion statement to display sin, boldly.  The current culture offers sin on display at every corner.  We seem proud to watch Madonna strut, or the pro athlete attempt to remember the number of children they have propagated.  Our culture feasts on visual depravity, physical abuse, and verbal profanity in a mind-numbing quantity in a variety of unfortunate contexts.  No one feels safe.  No place is sacred.

In some strange way, God is now more powerful than before.  When we kept everything hidden, sin still lurked, but was more difficult to discern.  Today we can easily tell who has Christ and who stands in need.  Actions and language easily and functionally separate those who are humble before God and those who are calling out for attention.  You see that is just the issue.  These sinful actions out in the open are “not so subtle” cries for help.  

It would seem to me that our task is not to condemn and pass some sort of hokey “I got Jesus and you don’t” religious judgment, but rather we are called to bring Christ in love to those most in need.  Jesus said, “It is the sick who need the doctor.”   And that radical love which brings all things into the light also brings us all together and just a little closer to home.    
Blessings, Dave Weesner
  
Sunday Worship
Scripture: 1 Kings 17:8-24
Sermon Title: “Stronger Than Sin”

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Thoughts for October 29, 2006

Scripture Readings Leading to
Sunday October 29, 2006
Galatians 5:1-6:10               Fruits of the Spirit
Luke 6:27-49                    Love Your Enemies             

To love is to risk.  Allowing the Holy Spirit of God to have control of our lives is risky.  Love is required by the Holy Spirit.  Relationships are always risky.  Mostly we shrink away from the Spirit because of the unknown risk involved.  We would rather retreat into unhealthy attempts to follow laws and regulations rather than fly with the freedom of love.  
It is curious; that we believe that there is less risk, less pain with the path that avoids a full movement within the Spirit.  And yet the truth of Gospel message is that the opposite is true.  When our lives are filled with Spirit and we move to God’s call of love our lives will be less painful, less uncertain.  

The Church is no different.  A dead church attempts to control everything and everyone.  Demands are made to put everyone and everything in their proper place to align with the law of the local church law-giver.  This may be the pastor or it may be a controlling family or dysfunctional group usurping Spiritual presence and power for building up personal identity and ego.  We have all seen it.  Too many times.  

The Spirit –filled church will feel chaotic at times, maybe even out of control.  However the church alive in Spirit will also be offering the fruits of the Spirit as testimony.  Love will abound.  Grace and peace will follow.  Justice will be demanded by the Spirit.  The voice of the one bent low by the forces of this world will be heard singing praise to the King of Heaven.  Outward expressions of gratitude and fellowship will prevail.  It may be messy at times.  Tears of joy may flow.  Unrehearsed shouts of joy and hands raised as a banner toward heaven may be experienced in the presence of the gathered body.  Even quiet reverence, not a stuffy shushed down quiet, will be offered.  

This Spirit-filled church is the one I want to serve.  I believe it is also the church to which you seek to build as we all move just a little closer to home.     Blessings,  Dave Weesner
  
Sunday Worship
Scripture: Galatians 5:13-14
Sermon Title: “Love-Able”

Thursday, September 28, 2006

Barbeque and Minsitry

A Little Closer to Home

I have been thinking about writing a book about how ministry is like cooking good barbeque.  Before you laugh me out of the county, read a little further and see if you might just agree.  As a disciple of Jesus Christ we have this thing we call ministry which is the orientation of our lives to make more disciples of Jesus.  When I refer to our ministry I mean we may be professionals in ministry on a church staff, unpaid volunteers, or simply committed folks who believe and then act on those beliefs.  I think each of us are called and uniquely equipped for the ministry of making disciples.  

Having said this I have identified five barbeque ideas which seem to hold true regardless of our ministry position or place.  They are in no particular order of importance: preparation is essential, learn to take advice, someone has to do the dishes, if your looking then your not cooking, and the final product will speak for itself.

Preparation is essential in good ministry and barbeque.  Start with fresh ingredients, not something left over from last year.  One of the worst things we do in ministry is to use outdated ideas and programs with no “spice” left in them.  The meat of the ministry may be one of any number of possibilities, but it must be fresh, handled carefully, trimmed of the fat, and always focused towards the purpose.  I have found it is easy to get sidetracked during the preparation time, to the place where something unrelated can throw off my whole days schedule.

Learn to take advice.  How many times must we hear this before it begins to sink in?  If we just start to barbeque and never read a recipe or inquire of a friend how this best works, we will have set our selves up for failure and disappointment.  Yes, if we are stranded on a desert island with nothing to eat and find a rack of ribs, bag of charcoal, and a nice grill we could probably make something tasty happen.  However, with all the information or history freely offered, it just makes sense to ask and receive assistance.  We must respect ourselves, those around us, and the ministry itself enough to read, ask, and then listen.  Good barbeque is always kind of personal thing as is ministry.  Feel free to take what you learn and tweak it to match your situation and personality.

Someone has to do the dishes.  Oh, crud.  I never knew barbeque was so messy until I actually got to cooking myself.  When I make the rib rub, I have to clean everything again; the counter tops and then the measuring spoons, and containers.  I find it is the same for the mop sauce and finishing sauce; let alone actually applying the rubs and sauces to the meat.  I wash a lot of dishes while I am in the process of cooking.  Many times I wash the same dishes several times in the same day.  Someone has to do the not-so-fun work part of ministry also.  I have found that if I am in charge of a ministry, I should also be prepared to do the most unpleasant work.  My experience is that as I engage positively in, “dish washing,” others come along side and we end up having fun.  But make no mistake, the dishes will need to be washed.

If you are looking; your not cooking.  In good barbeque temperature is critical.  I try to cook along at 215 degrees for several hours without high peaks or low valleys.  Once you have developed a little history and have a basic idea of what you are doing, you will be able to keep the fire burning with discipline and planning.  The biggest problem with all of us is that we want to see what is cooking.  We open the lid and in doing so we release the temperature and then have to start over again.  It is hard to trust the process and not keep checking and looking, looking and checking.  Barbeque takes time, but requires us to trust the process.  Ministry also needs to be able to do its thing without a herd of folks picking and poking at the meat of the ministry all along.  Perhaps it is a God thing to learn to simply sit back, enjoy a nice diet Pepsi, and just let the meat cook.  

The final product always speaks for itself.  We might want to make excuses or put our product on a silver platter, but the truth is that the final product will speak for itself.  Barbeque, like ministry is unique to the time and place, but the people who come into contact with our work will make the decision whether to engage further or back away slowly.  I am always wary of those who claim to know all the best barbeque recipes but have never actually personally attempted to cook a brisket for 10 hours.  It is always nice to get feedback and then use that information to tweak the process a little one way or another with the goal of becoming more effective.

As you can tell I am having some fun with using barbeque as a metaphor for ministry.  There are several more chapters I am considering and I hope to link a Biblical example along  with a recipe to each thought.  So, lets get cooking and I hope I gave you some “food for thought.”

See You Sunday,   Pastor Dave Weesenr

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Thoughts for October 01, 2006

Scripture Readings Leading to
Sunday October 01, 2006
Luke 9:10-17                       God’s Hospitality
Luke 14:15-24                     Jesus, Banquet             

Have you ever been really, really hungry and somebody offered you some food?  Have you ever been really, really lonely and someone offered you conversation or a place to belong, even if just for a little while?  Have you ever been frustrated and confused by the events of the day and needed a new vision of grace to move you back onto the correct path?  I have been there.  My guess is that as you are honest and take a moment to consider your experience, you have encountered each of these situations as well.  This is life being lived out.  Life is not always sanitary or pretty or happy, but life does offer possibilities at every bend and eternal opportunities to rethink and be renewed.  Life is a gift from God and contains the gunk, but also the glory.  And daily we get to choose our path.

This wonderful story of Jesus feeding the five thousand is a little vision of heaven on earth.  We might see the hospitality of God in the small groups gathered on the grass.  We can be sure there are groups that have invited the widow or lonely individual to join their fellowship.  We can be sure of the laughter and conversation taking place.  There is sharing and caring moving among the circles.  The invitation is clear, powerful, and instructional.  It is also addictive.  As we gather in the circles we find we yearn for more of this friendship.

We may also see the hospitality of God offered though the simple meal of loaves and fish.  We may see a hungry world feeding upon God’s grace, much like a baby feeds upon the mother’s breast.  That which is needed is offered and received with humility and thanksgiving.  The action of the giver is greater than the gift received but is not offered so as to be placed above the other.  The gift is offered simply because the gift exists and the action of hospitality is possible.  

There is no motive or hidden agenda other than to offer grace.  There is only hospitality and a needy world.  I do not think it can become more simple.  The kingdom of God is a place where what is available is offered without reservation.  And when I begin to act in this way, with this hospitality leading my decisions, I know I am just a little closer to home.     Blessings,  Dave Weesner
  
Sunday Worship
Scripture: Luke 9:10-17
Sermon Title: “A Dinner Party”