Monday, June 15, 2026

Two Words

Some of you know I have been involved in a year-long training "huddle" of six preachers from Global Methodist Churches in the southeast.  It has been a great time of sharing ministry, concerns, gifts, stories, work, and life.  I am the oldest, and my friend, Sam, from Freeport, is the youngest.  There has been a lot of work associated with this collaborative training, and all of us have learned from one another.  In one of the sessions, we had the chance to come up with two words that we felt described our calling as Christians and as ministers.  This was hard, though we were aided by 4 (yes, 4!) personality tests.  Later in the process, we were again asked to share two words (again, after several focusing exercises) that would describe how we would call our friends, colleagues, ministry partners, and connections to become disciples of Jesus that worship passionately, love extravagantly, and witness boldly.  This was hard ... very hard!

Words are important.  And they tell a story.  In the early 1900's, someone was asked to shorten a news story (several paragraphs) into six words that summarized the story.  They said, "FOR SALE, BABY SHOES, NEVER WORN").  This story, often attributed to Hemingway, amplifies that much can be said in a few words.

Sunday is Father's Day.  A Biblical father, Jacob (Genesis 46:28-34), travels to Egypt with all he has, so that his family can weather a famine.  His son, Joseph, tells him specific words to say when Pharaoh greets Jacob and Joseph's family.  "We, your servants, have raised livestock all our lives, as our ancestors have always done.’ When you tell him this, he will let you live here in the region of Goshen, for the Egyptians despise shepherds."  Joseph, always clever and calculating, knew the right words to say so that his (and also God's) purpose would be realized.  Words are important.

This Sunday, let's merge the themes "words are important," "Father's Day," and "Two Words."  What do you think your Two Words would be, if you were asked, "what are the Two Words that flow out of your life that would describe how God calls you to make disciples?"  Or, maybe, "What Two Words would God (our heavenly Father) us to describe how you are making disciples (I like that 2nd one)."

For Joseph, the words might be Providential Preservationist.  Joseph protects His family (the family that will ultimately become the great nation that saves/blesses the world), preserves God's promise, and perpetuates God's plan.  God's promise is preserved because Joseph is available, obedient, and accessible to God's perfect plan.

Ok ... now for some self-disclosure.  My Two Words (they seem to evolve a bit over time) might be, Discover and Become (I didn't count the 'and').  I want each of you to Discover who God is, His beauty, His promises, and His purpose.  I want each of you to Become the person God created you to be ... people who live out Jesus in your circles and create a place where blessing, beauty, and discipleship happen organically.

What are your Two Words?  And, for our fathers, do your Two Words fit with God's purpose to bring everyone to Himself?  Words are important, aren't they?

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Fog and Opportunity

There is something beautiful about pushing a boat out into the fog on the Choctawhatchee Bay. The shoreline disappears, familiar landmarks vanish, and all you can see is a gray curtain hanging over the water. Yet there is peace in knowing the bay well enough to trust where you are headed, even when you cannot see the destination.

Life with God often feels the same way.

In Genesis 37, Joseph made what was probably a youthful mistake. God gave him dreams, but Joseph shared those self-exalting visions with his brothers, whose hearts were already growing jealous. Perhaps those dreams should have remained hidden in the fog a little longer. Instead, his brothers filled in the blanks, assuming Joseph desired to rule over them, and their jealousy set in motion years of hardship.

Dreams are funny things. Sometimes they appear through a foggy haze, much like looking through cataracts (something I understand better after recently having cataract surgery). When our vision is clouded, we often supply our own explanations, assumptions, and fears. We imagine what God must mean instead of patiently waiting for Him to reveal His purpose.

Yet some dreams are more than imagination. Some dreams are God-given visions—glimpses of a future reality that He is preparing. They are less about our own greatness and more about His unfolding plan. They become destinations toward which God gently steers us.
Several months ago, our church had such a dream: to invite children into an encounter with God through art and music. That vision formed around the beautiful prayer of Psalm 90:17:

"Let the beauty of the Lord our God be upon us, and establish the work of our hands for us; yes, establish the work of our hands."

Last week, our planning team gathered to discuss the overwhelming logistics for our July 13–17 Sacred Arts Camp. There were schedules, volunteers, supplies, classrooms, music, and countless details that could easily make the dream seem impossible.

But something wonderful happened. The fog began to lift. The cataracts are being removed.

What once seemed confusing is beginning to come into focus as a "thin place"—a place where the distractions of this world fade, and God's reality becomes beautifully clear.

Joseph's dreams led him through opposition, obstacles, and oppression before they led him to God's purpose. Our own dreams often travel the same road. Yet if they are truly born of God, they will eventually lead us exactly where He intends.

I love that the word opportunity may be traced to the Latin expression ob portu, referring to favorable conditions for bringing a ship safely into harbor. The tide comes in, the winds align, and the captain knows it is time to make port. There is work to be done!

Perhaps that is where we are today. By following God's leading and allowing His beauty to establish the work of our hands, He is guiding us into the harbor He has prepared—a place filled with art, music, drama, goodness, grace, and children discovering the beauty of Christ.

The fog is clearing. The cataracts are being removed. And the beauty of God's dream is finally coming into focus.

Monday, June 1, 2026

Wrestling With God

I believe we have all done it!  Wrestling with God.  And it IS Biblical.  Read Genesis 32.  

This part of the Bible is not just read ... it is navigated.  There are strange stories that would make a soap opera blush.  There are Hebrew customs, traditions, and symbols that are woven through the thread of the stories.  In this combination of poetic narrative and Hebrew narrative, we find the character Jacob.  Jacob (the name) means supplanter or heel-grabber.  Jacob struggles with life from birth, grabbing Esau's heel as he is born.  His life is filled with conflict, scheming, and a constant pursuit of something I don't think Jacob even knows ... until Peniel.  There, Jacob encounters God, and there is a wrestling match.  Jacob emerges from the encounter injured, changed, and renamed. What can we learn from all this?  I'll try to unpack this a bit.

First, Jacob sends his family and everything he owns ahead, across the Jabbok River.  I am guessing Jacob had some idea that fate had caught up with him, and he might be facing his brother Esau, whom Jacob had cheated out of his birthright.  God had other plans.  The old song, "You Gotta Walk That Lonesome Valley," comes to mind as Jacob awaits what is coming.  "We gotta walk that lonesome valley ... we gotta walk it by ourselves, nobody here gonna walk it for you, we gotta walk it by ourselves."  

Second, Jacob (I think) does what he normally does.  He doesn't let go.  I say this as I experience a modern-day world of people who rationalize their way into quitting things.  We are part of a team, but quit participating because someone hurts our feelings or doesn't value us as much as we would like.  This happens on sports teams, in workplaces, and in churches.  I want to tell people, "Put on your big boy/girl pants," and reflect on what would happen if God treated us this way!  I come from a generation that looked at quitting as unacceptable social behavior.  They learned to work with and through difficult people.  Jacob hangs on to God for dear life, and if he dies, his cold, dead corpse will still be hanging on!

Third, Jacob's encounter with God causes seismic changes in his life.  He is physically injured and changed (now with an out-of-joint hip).  He names the place where this happened Peniel, which means "face of God," I believe, to remember this encounter forever.  His name is changed to Israel, now a nation known for tenacity and unwavering commitment to a mission. But more than his name, things start happening that change Jacob's life.  In the next few verses, Jacob reconciles with his brother Esau.  He is no longer running away.  He honors God with an altar to El-Elohe (The Mighty God). He follows God's instructions to live in Bethel (meaning the house of God).  

How has your encounter with God changed you?  Are you a city on a hill, doing good so that your Father in heaven is glorified?  Or are you building a tower for yourself that will reach the stars?  Jacob finally started listening to God.  How goes it with you?