Monday, February 23, 2026

Another Word on Time

Lent is upon us.  It is a 40-day period before Holy Week (not counting Sundays) in which we, as Wesleyan Christians, reflect, remember, repent, re-center, and rethink how we live out our faith.  Many view Lent as a time for giving up or sacrificing something to grow stronger in our faith.  In my reflection on Lent, I am focusing this year on a better understanding of time.

Last week, I used the Greek words Chronos and Kairos in my sermon.  Generally, Chronos is the measurable time we use to structure seconds into minutes, minutes into hours, hours into days, days into weeks/months/years.  It is where we get the terms 'chronological' and 'chronology.'  It is the order/structure of time.

But this Lent, I am going to consider the more important word for time, Kairos.  Kairos is appointed, meaningful, or prophetic time.  In Mark 1;15 Jesus is beginning His ministry, and He uses the words, “The time has come,” he said. “The kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news!”  Jesus uses the word Kairos (in the Greek) here.  It is not a day, or week, or year.  It is a time fulfilled by God's perfect plan.  It is the coming of an event appointed and anointed by God.  So, here is the question for us.

First, has the Kingdom of God arrived in your life?  Whether you know it or not, you are either living in Chronos (in the South, we call this "the same old same old") or Kairos.  I spoke to a young man today.  He was stuck in the systems of law enforcement.  Jail, probation, times and dates he must be at a certain place, are his current reality.  He lives in the Chronos of the culture into which he has fallen.  He has learned that Chronos can, and will, enslave you in a cycle that, when viewed in reverse, seems like a repetitive pattern.  In fact, it is an unhealthy pattern that C.S. Lewis said makes people into "cattle for the slaughter."

Second, do you want to live in the freedom of Kairos?  Kairos is the time that is appointed by the one who made us, created us as His masterpiece, and gifted us for a beautiful purpose.  This time is freedom because it fulfills us, completes us, and brings us to life "on earth as it is in heaven."  Kairos allows us to live, love, and become what God has planned, and God's plans are ultimately beautiful.

This week we celebrated 2 big events in the life of the Church.  We saw our sister in Christ, Maegan Pinyan, become married, and we prayed for that marriage to be lived out in Kairos ... appointed, anointed, and prophetic time.  We want those 2 lives to bloom and grow in the light and purpose of the Living God.  We also celebrated the life of Myra Nell Brannon.  Myra Nell entered the glory of God on Sunday and we celebrated her life on Friday. What we know for sure is that Myra Nell was living in Kairos.  How do I know this?  Myra Nell was filled with God's grace, purpose, perseverance, kindness, joy, and love.  Even in her last days, she held the dignity and beauty of God's anointing and purpose.

Maegan is heading East to a life in ministry.  Myra Nell is off to a new beginning in God's house, which has plenty of room for her ... and for you, if you choose to live in Kairos, a place for God's appointed, anointed, and blessed.  How can you get there?  We said it on Ash Wednesday ... repent, and believe the Gospel!

Monday, February 16, 2026

Missionaries of Beauty

We have the saying that "beauty is in the eye of the beholder."  While this is largely true, I prefer a more encompassing idea that is from Ecclesiastes 3:11, "God has made everything beautiful in its time."  I don't hold to the more Calvinist view that this implies that non-beautiful things are actually created/brought to us by God.  God didn't intend for Hitler, Stalin, and other dictators to kill millions of innocent people.  I do hold to the Wesleyan idea that God can make/turn negative and devastating things into something He can and will use for His good purposes.  But enough theological interpretation.  Here is the point of this blog.

First, God is into beauty.  God created beauty, and even creates our ability to see beyond the seen realm into the beauty of the unseen realm.  Isaiah 53 says, "There was nothing beautiful or majestic about His appearance ...(Isaiah 53:2)."  If we are unwilling to look past appearances, we will fail to see the beauty of even the Son of God, our true and living Lord!  But, if we look closer, we see the beauty, the grace, and the true love of what Jesus said and did.  Jesus was a "missionary of beauty."

Second, from the above passage and many other passages, we can begin to understand that the source and author of beauty is God.

1. "And let the beauty of our Lord, our God, be upon us, and establish the work of our hands for us.  Yes, establish the work of our hands (Psalm 90:17)."  God can make the work of our hands beautiful if He blesses that work.

2. "How beautiful are the feet of those who bring Good News (Romans 10:15, Isaiah 52:7)."  God can make our feet beautiful when they bring the saving power, goodness, grace, and forgiveness of God.

Finally, we understand that the world around us is not often in the mode of creating ... it is more into tearing down.  We feed our minds on reality shows that insult and tear down for the amusement of our negative attitudes.  We feed our emotions on videos, rhetoric, and "news shows" (please DO note the quotations) that are selling us the poison pill of hate, violence, negativity, self-righteousness, and victimhood, all so that we will drift further and further under the impression that our opinion, our perspective, our party, our ideology, and our 'group' is somehow better that those "lesser" people.  While we do this, I think God looks down on us and says what He said outside of Jerusalem ... "if you, even you (Jerusalem) had only known on this day what would bring you peace, but now it is hidden from your eyes (Luke 19:42)."  

God DOES make everything beautiful in its time by revealing the things we need to see, hear, know, and perceive.  It is beautiful when we see past the hopelessness to the beautiful hope of the Gospel.  It is beautiful when we see past the beaten, bloody man on the cross to the beautiful Savior who brings us life from death.  It is beautiful when we see a spark of Christ in another person and choose to lift them up from the pit, because of the Christ in us.  And here is some REALLY Good News that is the Gospel truth ... we can, by following Jesus instead of our culture, see and hear the beauty God sends every day!  Don Moen writes it this way ... "Lord, Your mercy is so great, that you look beyond our weakness, and find purest gold from miry clay, turning sinners into saints." AMEN

Monday, February 9, 2026

Where Does Yours Shine?

The Bible talks a lot about light.  Jesus and His disciples are both called light in the world.  And prophecy about Christmas says that "to those walking in darkness, a light has come."  As I write this blog, I have a flashlight beside me, ready for use in an emergency.  But, as we approach Youth Sunday (this Sunday, the 15th), I want you to reflect on a question.  Where does your light shine?

We worship the Son of God, who was the manifestation of all the things in the first paragraph.  But Jesus has given those responsibilities to us, His Church.  You and I have been given a light.  Where does this light shine?

Might I make a few suggestions?

1. How about your workplace, where some of us spend most of every day?
2. What about social media, where people are sometimes excused from the collateral damage of "shooting from the hip"?
3. Maybe your home, where familiarity doesn't have to breed contempt?

Let's remember Jesus, the author and perfector of our faith, took His calling of lighting a dark world seriously.  Maybe we, who proclaim His name and announce His kingdom, should follow our Master, Teacher, and Lord.

Sunday, we will sing "This Little Light of Mine."  It is not just a children's song.  It is for and about all who want to change their world ... one little light at a time.  


Monday, February 2, 2026

What Are You Taking?

Have you ever been on a journey, and realized the things you have with you become burdens, rather than assets?  Lee and I have moved over 20 times.  I hate to admit this, but we have carried some things with us that we haven't used in many (many) years.  Planks from an old train station, acquired in 1986.  A multifunctional sawhorse I haven't used once.  The list is long and sad.

As I was reflecting on Luke 10, I stopped on a passage that, at first, seemed out of place.  Here's what it says ... "Do not take a purse or bag or sandals, and do not greet anyone on the road (Luke 10:4)."  This didn't "tweak" me because of what it says ... it interests me because it speaks about the things not to take and the things not to do.  Distractions?

What distracts us from the work we are gifted and sent to do?  On February 18th we begin Lent with an Ash Wednesday service.  We will "remember we are dust," by the imposition of ashes.  We will sing and hear music that will prepare us for the journey of Lent.  We will try to leave behind distractions so that we can go from the ashes of Lent to the sacrifice (and beauty) of the Cross.  We will think, remember, reflect, and (hopefully) grow.  We will decide the things that cause us to focus, and we will decide the things we must leave behind to make the journey.

Maybe this is why Jesus' first instructions are not about the many things the disciples need to take, but the things that will distract and divert them from the work ahead.  Let's deconstruct Jesus' command:

1. Purse - Our money causes us to get focused on the cost, rather than the mission.  Remember ... we count the cost, but if God calls us to act, we act, in accordance with His will.

2. Bag - We have a tendency to fill bags with things that make us comfortable.  Maybe Jesus wants us to focus on the mission, and not our comfort.  Maybe comfort itself is a distraction.

3. Sandals - Most commentators take this to mean extra sandals.  If you remember the Hebrews of Exodus, Deuteronomy 8:4 reminds us that those sandals didn't wear out during the 40 years of wandering.  A few days of travel seem like a piece of cake for the God who provides.

4. Greetings Along The Road - I have a friend who strikes up conversations with everyone he meets along each day's travel.  He is an interesting person, but not such a good employee.  He spends most of each day in conversations, and little of each day working on his job.  Gramma said we have 2 ears and only one mouth.  Maybe Jesus wants His followers to get to the destination He has given them.

I hope you are ready and excited for our Lenten journey together.  Remember ... we have a mission and a destination.  Stay focused.  Keep on track.  And, stay in love with Jesus!