live from Abbeville Methodist
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Not in OZ Anymore!
Monday, April 20, 2026
Worship ... Do, Get, or Give?
The book of Micah (I have a friend who has his life verse here) is truly about worship. Most of us think we know, or have a good idea of, what worship is all about. While we may know what we like, I want us to explore a question. Is worship about what WE like or about God? I hope you think this is a valid question, because if you do, we have a good starting point. And, I will add another question. Do we DO worship, GET worship, or GIVE worship?
Micah's 5 parts of worship teach us something we might have missed in how worship has evolved in the Church (or might I suggest, devolved?). Here goes:
1. Heart - In Micah's world, the church DID worship. Sacrifices, rituals, and extravagance (Micah 6:6-7) were the earmarks of worship. This carried through to Jesus' time as Jesus desired heart vs extravagance. Our song, Heart of Worship, is all about focusing on entering the presence of God with an open heart, to be filled by God.
2. Living Sacrifice - Micah railed against external worship exemplified in burnt offerings, thousands of rams, and rivers of oil. The church and its leaders had become focused on worship as a revenue stream. I wonder if the modern practice of "giving the people what they want" is any different? I was advised (in a worship seminar) to ditch practices like prayer requests, reciting of creeds, and ritual, to allow more time for manipulative methods to "bring people into the feeling of worship." True worship, just like love, is not a feeling. It is giving up time, heart, and control to God ... not human manipulation.
3. Life Outside The Church - Worship doesn't just happen in Sunday morning services. It is followed and preceded by God's requirements ... do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with God (Micah 6:8). These things happen while living life.
4. Humility - Humility toward God and other people is an outward acts of worship that proceed from an inward attitude. Micah 7:7 defines this as the prophet says, "But as for me, I will look to the Lord; I will wait for the God of my salvation." Micah is led by God ... not leading God where he desires to go.
5. Response - In March, our congregation sponsored a music program called "A Lenten Response." I loved this title, because it places worship in the proper place ... as a response to a holy, living, and loving God. "Who is a God like You, pardoning iniquity ... He delights in steadfast love (Micah 7:18-19)!" God is faithful ... God is all suffiucient ... God is the only one worthy of our worship.
In the song, Light of the World (We The Kingdom), one line describes worship this way ... "Fall down before Him, come and adore Him, sing hallelujah, to the light of the world." Do we do this, or do we select what we like and do what is comfortable? Or, do we enter His gates with praise and thanksgiving, giving worship to the only one worthy of our praise?
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Needing (and worth) Saving
Monday, April 6, 2026
Artemis and Bad Cats
Monday, March 30, 2026
Loosed!
The story of Easter is a story of being loosed! Jesus is released! Jesus moves out of the tomb! Jesus leaves the grave clothes behind! He is unbound to do what God is calling Him to do!
This isn't a first. Remember Jesus telling Lazarus to "come out" and his friends to "remove the grave clothes?" Remember the disciples releasing (untying) the little donkey for service to Jesus. And, there is the empty tomb on Easter morning, where disciples and women find the tomb unoccupied, because Jesus is already releasing His Church to teach, baptize, and release the Gospel message into the world.
This brings to mind the things we hold inside, even though we, as Christians, have been born from the dead, had our grave clothes removed, we have been untied for service to our Lord, and we have been called to leave the tomb that held our death. I wonder why I encounter so many angry people every week? Is it uncertainty over events? Is it personal or family issues? Is it the fact that we choose to judge our own lives based on our perception of how others see us? Is too much social media leading us into a frenzy? Or are all of these things summed up in the fact that we are trying to live in a tomb we have been released from?
People ... the stone has been rolled away! The grave clothes have been removed and left behind! The doorway is right there, ready for us to walk out! All we need to do is leave! ... and maybe that is our post-Easter task! Leave the tomb. Maybe we need to leave our tombs one at a time. So, a few preparatory questions ... what are MY tombs that Jesus has rolled the stone from?
1) pride? Pride will cause us to fall (Proverbs 16:18)
2) fear? Perfect love (Jesus) can drive away fear (1 John 4:18)
3) worry? Jesus said, don't spend any life in a spirit of worry (He's got this),
4) negative influences? I know I am meddling now, but you need to (especially those of us with addictive personalities) be willing to let Jesus roll away those stones and then you (we have a part in this) need to walk out of that dark place of death. If your social media makes you angry, walk away!
Do you know what all of those things above will do? They will kill relationships, they will stifle joy, they will impede the work of the Holy Spirit in your life, and they will cause the whole world to miss the beauty you bring into the world and into the Church! The beauty of Easter is that disciples and women who came to the place where Jesus was buried didn't find any body! The tomb was empty! The grave clothes were left behind! The glory of the Lord and the beauty of Christ walked out into a world that needs Him! Share the song! "Up from the grave He arose, with a mighty triumph o'er His foes!"
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Remembering and Rejoicing
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Calm Before the Storm
Last week I was out on the deck at the parsonage, talking to Lee on my cell phone. When we ended the conversation, I looked to the west, and dark clouds were looming. It was calm, but it was clear a storm was coming. That is the context and attitude of Palm Sunday.
Jesus has just made His final circuit around the Holy Land. He had been to Samaria, across the Jordan to the East, up through Jericho, and to Bethany (home of Lazarus). Now, He enters Jerusalem for a week that begins with "Hosanna ... blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord." A seeming triumph will be turned on its head, and betrayal, torture, mocking, denial, and death will follow. Palm Sunday is the calm before the storm.
There are so many lessons of Holy Week. Lessons about the person of Jesus. Lessons about us and our nature. Lessons about the amazing forgiveness of God. Lessons about seeing the storm and seeing through the storm to God's good and holy plan. Here are a few takes from a country preacher:
1. Shallow sense of false security - Some Jews thought they were about to be delivered from Roman occupation by Jesus. Judas was one of these, and he was quick to sell Jesus out after Jesus didn't fit his political agenda. As I look at our current political structure and parties, I don't see a lot of Jesus there. I wonder how many are willing to sell Jesus out, following their ideology, and ditching the Jesus who is the source of their salvation?
2. Sitting in the seat of mockers - "Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor stands in the path of sinners, nor sits in the seat of the scoffers (Psalm 1:1)." Jesus was mocked by some (including the Pharisees) for entering the city on the back of a donkey. Because people were looking for a mighty warrior on a charger, they missed the Savior who came to fight and win a battle they didn't even perceive. They missed their blessing.
3. Raising a hallelujah - Some looked past the donkey, past the meek itinerant preacher, and saw what the rocks, the earth, and all creation saw. "Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made. In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it (John 1:3-5)." They saw the one who made them, and the God who was light itself.
These are 3 of the responses on Palm Sunday. Which will you choose?