For preachers, this time is not at all ordinary. Here, January is filled with meetings, budgeting, and administrative work. It (this year) will be a time we use for planning for our Sacred Arts Initiative, which includes Moonlighters (February 13th), Lenten Music Events (March), our Choir and Arts Camp (July), and many other events, especially our Children's and Youth Calendar. We will be working on hiring a Student Ministry/Discipleship person (pray for your pastor and the SPRC Team). We will also be planning for, and inviting you to, the GMC Alabama Emerald Coast Annual Conference in Dothan (1st week of May, 2026), where you will be able to receive hands-on training in becoming disciples who make disciples! There will also be a trip (September) for our Sacred Arts Team to visit Asbury Seminary and get some needed recharging. NOT ordinary at all!
Here's the point. Christmas and New Year's are only beginnings. Both are times when we choose to follow better/closer, or drift along being unchanged and untransformed. Last week, we were reminded that the Magi "went back by a different way." So, consider these questions:
1. Will 2026 be an epiphany or a continuance?
2. Will 2026 be a transformation or a season of lethargy and sameness?
3. Will 2026 be ordinary or extraordinary?
There is a story in Luke 2. It tells of the prophetess, Anna. At least 2 things from Anna's story are worth noting. The first is that we find Anna doing the things that we should be doing as we are expectant for God's activity. She was in God's house (the Temple), worshipping, fasting, and praying. And, when Jesus walks past, she reflects and speaks about the redemption story, and the child who will make a way for that redemption. Second, we find that Jesus goes back to Galilee with Joseph and Mary, and enters His "ordinary time." Luke 2 says, "the child grew and became strong; he was filled with wisdom, and the grace of God was on him." During "ordinary time" some extraordinary things happened.
1. The child grew. The Son of God grew, so maybe we should grow!
2. The child was filled with wisdom. I wonder how that happened? I will bet Jesus read, sat with wise and learned leaders, and watched how Mary and Joseph did life. He learned, so maybe we should learn.
3. The grace of God was on Him. John Wesley tells us there are ways we can (if we are true followers) receive God's grace. Maybe Jesus did some of these things. Prayer, service, attention to the sacraments, fellowship with other believers, fasting, worship ... these are just some of the ways God's grace comes to us. Jesus was filled with the grace of God, so maybe we should be filled with grace too!
Jesus lived this out, so maybe we should too! Jesus' quest for growth, newness, fullness, and abundance was evident. Epiphany, transformation, and abundance! I am down with those things, and I hope you will invest time, energy, resources, and prayer into a year that will see all of these things happen, as God uses you to build His kingdom on earth as it is in heaven! AMEN and AMEN!
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