live from Abbeville Methodist
Monday, January 13, 2025
Down To Business
There are 3 instructions in what Jesus tells his disciples in this prologue from the story of the Samaritan woman. They are simple, but necessary if we are to proceed with any urgency toward what God is calling us to do.
1. Wake Up - In his Wake Up Call devotional, JD Walt begins each devotion with a prayer. It says, "Wake up sleeper ... rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you!" The prayer comes from Ephesians 5:14, and harkens from passages in Isaiah and Malichi. The Bible is in a constant state of calling God's people to wake up. I did a sermon once called, "I Believe In Zombies." Zombies are, of course, walking, dead people. I see them every day. We walk past the stricken traveler on the side of the road. We walk past the signs, warning us that something is right. We know differently. Last week we sang "Is He Worthy." The first line of the song is a statement and reply ... "Do you think the world is broken? We do!" We see fires, floods, broken people, pettiness, anger, deceit, destruction, and all manners of struggle. Yet, we are content to be a cog in the wheel of time. JD Walt says, wake up! Rise from the dead. We are called and equipped for such a time as this!
2. Look around - Isaiah 43 says, "Behold, I am doing a new thing! Do you not perceive it? I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert (Isaiah 43:19)!" We know we are living in this time of wilderness. I think we, if we look around, can see and feel the parched desert. God's word has said this would happen. Amos 8:11-12 says, "A time is coming, says the Lord, when I will send a famine upon the land. Not a famine of food or a thirst for water, but a famine of hearing the words of the Lord!" We HAVE the word of the Lord in the Scriptures we have been given. We HAVE God's Holy Spirit to open, teach, and unpack the word of the Lord. What we are missing is eyes to see and ears to hear. Notice the passage from Amos says ... 'a famine of HEARING the word of the Lord.' I wonder if this is why Jesus (and John in Revelation) frequently say, "Let he who has eyes see and let him who has ears hear." We are called and equipped for such a time as this!
3. See the ripeness of the fields - Here is what we often miss. In our sheltered settings ... in our pristine buildings ... in our preferred styles of worship ... we forget about the mission and purpose. In 2025 I will pound the mission and purpose into our consciousness. Forgive my repetition, but the Mission is to be God's blessing to the world (not just America, which, by the way, isn't hearing/seeing/perceiving our message) ... Genesis 22:18. Our Purpose is to be part of God's plan to "bring people to Himself (Exodus 19:4)."
Wake up! Look around! The fields are ripe! The Church has a mission. The Church has a purpose. Time keeps "rolling on down the deep canyons and through the green meadows into the broad ocean." We worship and follow the Lord of the harvest. Let's get down to business!
Monday, January 6, 2025
Wise Advice
I have an acquaintance who is in charge of a large school system. He is a good leader, and, best of all, a wise witness to students who share his challenging upbringing. He didn't rise to his position easily ... it took lots of effort, education, struggle, and hard work.
One day, a person working with students with discipline and learning challenges asked him to speak to these struggling students. They might listen to someone who had similar challenges in education and life. Here is what he said was the #1 thing that would lead these struggling students forward. "Do not be, or allow anyone to make you a victim. Being a victim is a crutch, a cultural sham, and a lie. It will cause you to focus on how others are the cause of your situation. Remember ... you are who you choose to be. If you become a victim, you will never be accountable for anything. It will always be some other person's fault, and you will live in anger, mistrust, and falseness. Live and grow past this attitude. Make choices that will grow you and challenge you. Work hard. Be the person you were created to be, and don't let victim mentality take that away from you!"
John 21:21-22 addresses this head-on. Peter gets in victim mode as he sees John following while he is conversing with Jesus. Peter asks Jesus, "What about him?" Jesus (in what seems to me a snarky tone) says, "If I want him to stay alive till I return, what is it to you? YOU must follow me!" What is Jesus saying here?
1. Stop coveting - The 10th Commandment (Exodus 20:17) tells us "Do not covet!" To Peter, Jesus is saying, "Stop diluting your witness, your walk, and your actions based on what other people are doing ... follow me!"
2. Stop worrying - You get the impression that Peter is still caught up in diva mentality ... he wants to be the top dog. Yesterday Tyrek Hill, Miami Dolphins wide receiver, said, "I want out ... I'm a competitor and I don't want to just go out there and be there." My comment to brother Hill would be ... "Are you saying that the other players on your team don't desire to win and compete? Are you saying you are better?" Peter is part of something bigger than him ... divas are not needed in ministry!
3. Stop sifting life through your perceptions and feelings - Maybe Peter feels threatened by John's relationship with Jesus. Maybe Peter feels like what happens to John diminishes what Jesus has to offer him. For a group of students struggling with school and authority, a wise administrator is telling them to drop the concept of sifting their life through what happens to other people. Work hard. Trust leaders who are investing in you. You are not better or worse than other people, but you are different. Your gifts, when used by the master, are just what the master needs. Be taught. Be led. Be you. Be God's. Be completed by the only one who can complete you. Let the other doubts, emotional impulses, and Satan-led (yes, I said it!) perceptions be negated by the God who says, "With God, all things are possible (Matthew 19:26)."
You say, "Ok pastor ... that is what we stop doing. What do we do?" We do to others as we would have them do to us (Matthew 7:12). We live in the thin place of serving God, washing feet, spending time with the brokenhearted, extending mercy, loving justice, and walking in humility (Micah 6:8, Psalm 34:18, John 13). We worship with all we got (Psalm 150). We share the Good News with everyone so that disciples of Jesus are made (Matthew 28). And, we pray a lot, using our 2 ears more than our 1 mouth (1 Thessalonians 5:16-17). This should keep us busily doing what Jesus told Peter ... "You must follow Me!" AMEN
Sunday, December 29, 2024
Plain and Beautiful
Sunday, December 22, 2024
What to Keep
Tuesday, December 17, 2024
Embrace
Sunday, December 8, 2024
Encounter
Monday, December 2, 2024
Bells
You might not believe it, but there is actually a "theology" of church bells. Church bells, because of their loud peals and purity of tone, are thought to 1) drive away evil spirits, 2) expel negative thoughts/attitudes, 3) call people to worship, and 4) announce the "sending" of the saints (this is one way they function at AMC as little girls and boys ring them after service on Sunday). By any standard, our bells are beautiful and compelling.
Wednesday, our handbell choir will serve at our Community Tree Lighting, and all of the above traditions will be at play. I expect the bells will ring with purity through the cold evening air. I hope everyone gathers at this annual "ringing in" the Christmas season!
There is another very American story about bells. The song, "I Heard The Bells On Christmas Day," was written by the great American poet, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Longfellow's life was marked by several events that shaped the song and offer hope, even to those of us who have lost much. His wife, the love of his life, was sealing envelopes, in 1861, when the flame ignited her clothing, and she was burned to death. In 1863, Charley, his son, unknown to Longfellow, joined the Union Army. Later that year, Charley was wounded in battle. So Longfellow, with his son barely recovering from the wound, was faced with a Christmas nursing his son back to health, and caring for the 5 other children. On Christmas Day, 1863, he sat down, overwhelmed by war, responsibility, and loss, and did what poets do. He wrote. Here are some of those words:
I heard the bells on Christmas Day, their old familiar carols play. And mild and sweet their songs repeat, of peace on earth, good will to men
And in despair I bowed my head. There is no peace on earth I said. For hate is strong and mocks the song, of peace on earth good will to men.
Then rang the bells more loud and deep. God is not dead, nor does he sleep. The wrong shall fail, the right prevail. With peace on earth good will to men.
Then ringing, singing on its way, the world revolved from night to day. A voice a chime, a chant sublime, of peace on earth good will to men.
These words are as true today as they were then. And, for Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, those bells did all of those things written above. They drove out evil, expelled negativity, called him into worship, and then sent him out to serve God. He served well, as we share his song, his hope, and his longing for "peace on earth, good will to men." AMEN