When the Israelites saw it, they said to one another, “What is it?” For they did not know what it was. Moses said to them, “It is the bread that the LORD has given you to eat.” The house of Israel called it manna…
Toward Sunday
We’ll conclude our current worship series, Ekklesia, this Sunday with a focus on ordination. Our worship will be rooted in 2 Timothy 1.1-14. Here is a link to the text. Who are the family or friends who’ve inspired you in your faith journey? What are some of the factors or events in your life that led you to “sincere faith” as Paul describes? Think back to when you first decided to follow Jesus, what have you learned about the cost…
Responding to the Word
The podcast from yesterday’s Pentecost sermon and spoken word is on our website. Listen here. Thomas Long writes, Augustine said, in the very first homiletical [preaching] textbook in the history of the church…that the purpose of a sermon is “to teach, to delight, and to persuade.” When Augustine preached, what he wanted to hear at the door of the church was not, “Thank you for your little talk,” but “I learned something this morning, I was moved by what you…
The Power of the Holy Spirit
Thomas Troeger writes, I recall hearing in a chapel one day a slightly nasal, reedy organ stop, the kind of sound that intrigues the ear. The tonal quality was so rich and distinctive that I felt if I reached out, I would touch the sound with my hands, as if it were a substance suffusing the air. I saw others around me perk up their ears. This was a far different experience from each of us listening to our tunes…
One More
The Low Road (an excerpt) Two people can keep each other sane, can give support, conviction, love, massage, hope… Three people are a delegation, a committee, a wedge With four you can play bridge and start an organization. With six you can rent a whole house, eat pie for dinner with no seconds, and hold a fund raising party. A dozen make a demonstration. A hundred fill a hall. A thousand have solidarity and your own newsletter; then thousands, power…
Confirmation
What is Confirmation? Let’s recall how John Wesley uses God’s House to describe the ways that grace works in our lives. The porch, the doorway and the house… God’s grace that goes before us is like the front porch of a house, we call this prevenient Grace which “wakes us up” to God. Once we have “woken up to God” , God’s grace works to get us in the front door. Through this justifying grace, we are enabled to have…
Grits and Church
John Ortberg tells the story of a friend who made his first trip south of the Mason-Dixon Line from Chicago to Georgia. On his first morning in the South he went into a restaurant to order breakfast, and it seemed that every dish included something called grits… Not being familiar with this southern delicacy, he asked the waitress, “Could you tell me, exactly what is a grit?” Looking down on him with a mixture of compassion and condescension, she said,…
The Landscape of the Heart
Thomas H. Troeger writes, Who would ever have picked Peter, that wavering and unreliable disciple, to deliver the first major sermon after the ascension of Christ? Yet there he stands before a crowd enlightening and expanding the landscape of the heart: “In the last days it will be, God declares, that I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions and your old men shall…
Toward Sunday
We will celebrate Pentecost and confirmation in worship this Sunday. Our worship service will be rooted in the story of Pentecost in Acts 2. Read the full text here. Reflect on a time when you have traveled where you did not speak the language of those you encountered. What was it like? In the Acts story, those gathered were able to hear the others speaking in their own language. Have you ever experienced anything like this? In comparison to how…
Prayers of the People
We will move in our worship series from baptism to confirmation and Pentecost this Sunday. As we transition, we pause to offer time in prayer: For wedding celebrations near and far, for the persistence of folks celebrating Gay Pride in the rain, for graduating seniors and their families, for new employment opportunities, for the celebration of the lives of our loved ones who have passed away, for the dreams of new ministries…Gracious God, we give thanks. For families who grieve…
The Form of Baptism
In his Treatise on Baptism, John Wesley writes: Baptism is performed by “washing,” “dipping,” or “sprinkling” the person….[It] is not determined in Scripture in which of these ways it shall be done, neither by any express precept nor by any such example as clearly proves it; nor by the force of meaning of the word “baptize.” Following Wesley, Methodists have generally been quite open in terms of the form, or mode, of how baptism is administered. What, if any, difference…
Baptism as Process
Gayle Carlton Felton writes, Baptism, then is not so much event as it is process. Like the Christian life for which it is both empowerment and metaphor, baptism is dynamic, not static; a journey, not a destination; a quest, not an acquisition. Baptism is promise, the fulfilling of which requires a lifetime and beyond. It is prolepsis-representing in the now that which will be accomplished in the future, but representing that anticipated fruition so powerfully as to make it real…
The Baptismal Covenant
Paragraph 23 of By Water and the Spirit: A United Methodist Understanding of Baptism states: In both the Old and New Testament, God enters into covenant relationship with God’s people. A covenant involves promises and responsibilities of both parties; it is instituted through a special ceremony and expressed by a distinguishing sign. By covenant God constituted a servant community of the people of Israel, promising to be their God and giving them the Law to make clear how they were to live. The circumcision of…