December 30, 2012

Sunday Afternoon Prayer: For Life's Journey


This is my sermon text for our Old Year's service this evening.  We will think about how God, the maker of all things--not the gods of the hills--kept us through all the situations we have faced in the past year, and how we can trust that he will do the same in the year to come.  Tomorrow, it will be my traveling prayer as I set out on a pilgrimage of my own.

Psalm 121
A song of ascents. 

Mt. Tai in Tai an, China, where I lived for a year.  This is a holy mountain in China, where people go to pray, like the culture surrounding the psalmist.

I lift up my eyes to the mountains—
where does my help come from?
My help comes from the Lord,

the Maker of heaven and earth.
He will not let your foot slip—
he who watches over you will not slumber;
indeed, he who watches over Israel
will neither slumber nor sleep.
The Lord watches over you—
the Lord is your shade at your right hand;
the sun will not harm you by day,
nor the moon by night.
The Lord will keep you from all harm—
he will watch over your life;
the Lord will watch over your coming and going
both now and forevermore.

December 25, 2012

Merry Christmas!



"While they were there, the time came for the baby to be born, and she gave birth to her firstborn, a son. She wrapped him in cloths and placed him in a manger, because there was no guest room available for them.
And there were shepherds living out in the fields nearby, keeping watch over their flocks at night.  An angel of the Lord appeared to them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were terrified.  But the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid. I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people. Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is the Messiah, the Lord.  This will be a sign to you: You will find a baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger" (Luke 2:6-12).


Photo is of a nativity scene made in Nepal.  I purchased it at Global Gifts last year.

December 23, 2012

Sunday Afternoon Prayer: We Are Waiting


This afternoon’s prayer is inspired by a song that we are using as our prayer of illumination during Advent, “We Are Waiting” (Contemporary Songs for Worship 18, text and tune Greg Scheer).

We are waiting, waiting, waiting to hear God’s word.
We are waiting, waiting, speak we are listening Lord.


It’s Advent, and we’re waiting, God.

I am waiting, God.  Waiting to see what will happen in my life.  Waiting to see where you will lead me.  Waiting.

My parishioners are waiting, God.  Waiting for their families to be able to join them in the U.S.  Waiting to see what you have for their lives.  Waiting.

My friends are waiting, God.  Waiting for graduations, babies, and proposals.  Waiting to see how you will guide them.  Waiting.

We are waiting, God.  Waiting for you to return and make all things new.  Waiting to hear the trumpets of your arrival.  Waiting.

Maranatha.  Come quickly, Lord Jesus.


Photo by Li'l Wolf, http://www.flickr.com/photos/schneelocke/2201266557/, 22 December 2012.  Used under a Creative Commons License.

December 22, 2012

A Preview of Coming Attractions


During January, I have a wonderful opportunity to travel to Great Britain and visit churches and Christian communities there.  Part of the pastoral residency (funded by the Lilly Endowment) is to take a trip overseas to experience the church in a different cultural context. 

I will take my trip to England and Scotland.  I have experienced the church in a number of non-western, developing countries—China/Taiwan/Hong Kong, Mexico, and Nicaragua.  But I have never been to Europe.  So I am going to explore what it looks like to be the church in a global and post-Christian culture.  As I explore, I am sure I will also learn much about the history of the church in Great Britain and how that has affected the United States. 

I am excited to talk to pastors and church leaders about where they see God at work in their communities, and to hear what the challenges they face.  I am excited to hear their stories.  I am excited to worship with brothers and sisters in Christ in many different churches.  I am excited to have a time to “get away” from my daily life and hopefully be able to see things more clearly with a bit of distance.  I am excited to see what I will learn as I explore, and what I can bring back to enrich my ministry.

I will be visiting a number of places, and I am looking forward to each of them.

I will start in Poole, England (on the southern coast).  I am looking forward to seeing a friend who was a teammate of mine in China who has been living in Poole for several years.  I will be there for her wedding to a British man, so I am looking forward to being there for this special event, but also getting to experience this piece of English church life and the opportunities I will have to meet British Christians.

Then I will head north to Scotland where I will first spend a night at a guesthouse owned by a church in Glasgow.  The next day I will continue on to the island of Iona, which has been called a “a thin
place – only a tissue paper separating the material from the spiritual” (George Macleod).  Then I will spend a few days exploring Edinburgh and a bit of Reformation history, such as John Knox’s church.

I will head back to England, with a first stop in the northern city of York.  I will finish the trip in London.  I am looking forward to visiting a number of churches, including All Souls Langham and Wesley Chapel.  Of course, I am also looking forward to some historic and cultural sites.    

I will be blogging along the way, hopefully even a bit more than usual.  I am looking forward to sharing my journey, pictures, and stories with you.


Westminster Abbey photo by jpundt79, http://www.flickr.com/photos/jpundt79/3392606563/, 22 December 2012.  Used under a Creative Commons License. 
Iona photo by Duncan McNeil, http://www.flickr.com/photos/duncan_mcneil/1636030785/, 22 December, 2012.  Used under a Creative Commons License.

December 18, 2012

Christmas Ornament Stories: My Aunt and Uncle


Every ornament tells a story.  That’s the basic philosophy of my Christmas tree.  During this Christmas season, I am introducing you to some of my favorites and sharing the story behind them.  So far, I have shared ornaments from my parents and grandparents.

Today’s ornament is from my uncle and aunt, who also gave a Christmas ornament every year.  It’s really no wonder I love my ornaments--they were a huge part of extended family Christmas traditions.  My uncle was a pastor at a local church for over 30 years.  Every year, their family would host an open house in their home for anyone in the church the first weekend in December.  For several hours Saturday afternoon and Sunday afternoon, their house was filled with a steady stream of people from their congregation, celebrating Christmas together.  And every year, my aunt and uncle gave a Christmas ornament to each family who came to the open house.  Sometimes, especially in the early years, they were handmade.  I remember many a Thanksgiving where the after dinner entertainment was helping to finish up the ornaments for the open house.  Sometimes they bought small items they made into ornaments at some significant place for the year.  This is one of my favorites because it smells like cinnamon.    

The open house and ornaments are just one way that my aunt and uncle showed hospitality.  Family holidays at their house often included more than just biological family, but others who needed a place to celebrate too.  Throughout the year, they often had people knock at the door, whether church members dropping something off or friends of their kids.  They graciously welcomed them in and offered something to eat and drink.  My sister, brother-in-law, and at least one of my cousins lived in their basement for a while when they needed a place to live.  And they welcomed children with Downs Syndrome to their family through adoption.  They, probably more than anyone else I know, have lived out scripture’s command to “show hospitality to strangers” (Hebrews 13:2). 

December 16, 2012

Sunday Afternoon Prayer: I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day


I have written about this song in the past, but it seems right to me again this weekend, when I don't really have words to say.

I heard the bells on Christmas day
Their old familiar carols play,
And wild and sweet the words repeat
Of peace on earth, good will to men.


And thought how, as the day had come,
The belfries of all Christendom
Had rolled along the unbroken song
Of peace on earth, good will to men.


Till ringing, singing on its way
The world revolved from night to day,
A voice, a chime, a chant sublime
Of peace on earth, good will to men.


And in despair I bowed my head
“There is no peace on earth,” I said,
“For hate is strong and mocks the song
Of peace on earth, good will to men.”


Then pealed the bells more loud and deep:
“God is not dead, nor doth He sleep;
The wrong shall fail, the right prevail
With peace on earth, good will to men."

December 11, 2012

Christmas Ornament Stories: My Grandparents’ Faith


Every ornament tells a story.  That’s the basic philosophy of my Christmas tree.  During this Christmas season, I am introducing you to some of my favorites and sharing the story behind them.  First were some creative ornaments from my parents.

Today’s ornament is from my Grandpa and Grandma.  Pretty much every year, they gave all the grandkids an ornament.  I have some they bought while volunteering in Salt Lake City, some they bought in Mexico while they wintered in Tucson, and several that they made (the creative part runs in the family).

This one is my favorite.  It is also the last one, because it is from my grandma’s last Christmas with us.  They worked together on this one.  They developed the idea and found the pattern together.  My grandpa did the cutting and sanding.  This angel reminds me of their deep faith that they passed on to us. 

In the last few years, I have become increasingly thankful that the faith they passed on is a well-rounded faith.  They were (and are) people of great piety.  They kept a drawer of Bible story books to use when the grandkids came to visit.  They wanted to help us learn the stories of faith and the practice of family devotions.  For their 50th wedding anniversary, the family gave them a Bible that each of the kids and grandkids had marked some of their favorite verses in.  In the years since, both Grandma and Grandpa have added notes of passages that are significant to them.  It is a wonderful physical heirloom of faith.

But their faith is more than knowing the Bible well and having right theology.  Their faith has legs.  It showed itself us in the care they show—the gifts, showing up on all sorts of occasions, being good friends and faithful church members.  And it showed itself in the way they spent their time.  Instead of going to Florida for the winter to go golfing and shopping, they went to Tucson to volunteer at a fledgling Christian high school.  My grandpa is a Christian school teacher by trade, and so every winter he helped this school as it grew.  He did everything for them from substitute teaching to digging ditches and building things.  Grandma helped to work in the library.  Their selfless care for others was a living model for us and shaped our family.  I would not be the same person without them.  I thank God for them, and for this ornament that reminds me of my heritage.

December 07, 2012

Purple Fabric and Metallic Thread--My Advent Stole


“The people walking in darkness have seen a great light;
on those living in the land of deep darkness a light has dawned” (Isaiah 9:2).

This verse, plus a number of pictures of other stoles, inspired the design for my new Advent stole.  Stoles help me and my congregation to mark the passage of time through the Christian calendar.  Like people wear snowman earrings during December or red, white, and blue on 4th of July, pastors in robe-wearing-churches wear stoles to remind us of the season.
 

My mom and I created this stole.  It is purple, the traditional color of fasting and penitence and the color of the royalty of the coming king.  It also has some blue, a newer Advent color of hope and anticipation.

It features a road for the people walking in darkness.  And it is the journey that we are all on, the journey of waiting and expectation, living in the already-but-not-yet.  


And at the end of the road is the star.  I chose this star, a natal star cross, because it is a 4 pointed star Bethlehem star plus a cross.  It reminds us that the light came as a baby in Bethlehem, but he brought light to the whole world through his death and resurrection.

As we walk the journey of Advent this year, I pray that we would be reminded that God is faithful to his promises.  The people walking in darkness have seen a great light.  And God will remain faithful and come again to make everything new.

December 04, 2012

Christmas Ornament Stories: My Parents’ Creativity

Every ornament tells a story.  That’s the concept of my Christmas tree.  Over the next few weeks, I am going to introduce you to some of my favorites and tell you the story behind them.

When I was growing up, my parents bought my sisters and me an ornament every year.  They were always special.  Sometimes they had our name on it. Sometimes they found it in a gift shop on a family vacation.  Sometimes they represented one of our hobbies.  Mom and Dad gave them to us the evening we decorated the Christmas tree.  It was always one of my favorite nights of the year.



My mom made this ornament for Christmas 1986 (that’s helpfully stitched into the back).  I love the simplicity and the slight sheen of the floss she used.  And I love that she made it, because she made a lot of things in the first years of my life.  In most of the pictures of me as a young child I am wearing a very cute dress my mom made me.  Once we were school-aged, she turned her sewing attention to costumes.  Betsy Ross, a Seminole Native American, and a medieval royal were some of the costumes she created for me.  She passed on her resourcefulness and some of her crafting and sewing abilities to me.



This is the ornament they gave me when I was in first grade.  That year, we were studying the middle ages at Christmas time, so this is the closest my mom could come to a medieval ornament.  A week or so before Christmas we had a reenactment of a medieval feast with a few other families.  We all had costumes.  The dining room was arranged to look like the great hall of a European castle.  Each family created a banner to represent the tapestries found in castles (I think my parents still have the one we made).  We were the entertainment between courses.  One of my friends juggled.  Another told jokes.  I recited the poem “Four and twenty blackbirds baked into a pie.”

The best part was the dessert.  It was a castle cake!  The moms planned how to bake cake in coffee cans and loaf pans and get it to stay together like a castle (in the days long before Pinterest).  I think she stayed up late and got up early to put it together, because I was totally surprised.  Standing guard at the drawbridge was this ornament (and my sister’s similar one).  I had noticed that morning that it was missing from the tree.  I was delighted and surprised that it was part of this magnificent cake.  So every year when I put this ornament on the tree, I am reminded of that cake and the many, many hours my mom invested in giving me an excellent education.        

December 02, 2012

Sunday Afternoon Prayer: Let Your Kingdom Come


This is a prayer we have been using in our evening worship services.  Each time I have prayed it, it has seemed so right, so what the church ought to be.


Reshape us, good Lord,
Until in generosity,
Faith and full expectation,
We are truly Christ-like.

Make us passionate followers of Jesus
Rather than passive supporters.

Make our churches places of
Radical discipleship
And signposts to heaven,
Then, in us, through us,
And, if need be, despite us,
Let your kingdom come.
Amen.



The prayer is from “Evening Liturgy E” in A Wee Worship Book by Wild Goose Worship Group, 1999.
Image by edgeplot, http://www.flickr.com/photos/edgeplot/208618609/, December 1, 2012.  Used under a Creative Commons License.

November 30, 2012

In the Least Expected Places


One thing I’ve discovered about being a pastor is that I start thinking about the next church calendar season well before it actually arrives.  Advent doesn’t start until Sunday, but I’ve been thinking about it for a couple of months now--planning a sermon series, doing initial research about Luke 1, working on our liturgy, making sure that someone got candles for Sunday. 

We will be preaching through Luke chapter 1 over the next four weeks.  This Sunday I'm preaching on the story of Zechariah and Elizabeth from Luke 1:5-25.  Along with the text, this poetic and musical retelling of the story has been in my heart over the last couple of weeks.  This song is by a band called So Elated on their Christmas album, The Bewildering Light (follow the link to get the album legally for free at noisetrade!). 

Jerusalem and the holy temple filled with smoke
Zechariah shuns the news from the angel of hope
Stuck behind an incense cloud of religion and disappointment

God keeps slipping out of underneath rocks 
in alleys off the beaten path
Open both your eyes.

Prophets and kings and poets can contribute their work
just like eggs in a nest are alive with the promise of birds
But the Lord of Creation will not be subjected to expectation

God keeps slipping out of underneath rocks 
in alleys off the beaten path
Open both your eyes.

Elizabeth, barren, her knees black and dirty like coal
her consistent prayers float to the sky and revive her soul
God we will wait though we don't understand your redemptive story

God keeps slipping out of underneath rocks
in alleys off the beaten path 
Open both our eyes.

I love the reminder that “the Lord of Creation will not be subjected to expectation.”  I have expectations, and hopes, and dreams, but God who created heavens and earth doesn’t fit neatly into those boxes.  But that doesn’t mean God is absent, because often we see glimpses of God where we least expect it, “in alleys off the beaten path.”  God came to Zechariah and Elizabeth in the middle of their dashed expectations, and he did something unexpected in and through them. 

And my prayer for myself and for you this Advent, especially while we are in those places where God isn’t doing what we expect, is that our response will be like Elizabeth: 

Elizabeth, barren, her knees black and dirty like coal
her consistent prayers float to the sky and revive her soul
God we will wait though we don't understand your redemptive story.



Image by Nick Thompson, http://www.flickr.com/photos/pelegrino/1356007875/, November 30, 2012.  Used under a Creative Commons License.

November 27, 2012

On the Church Calendar


When I lived in China, I went shopping with a teammate and some students for Christmas decorations.  As we went from booth to booth, sorting through the over-glittered window decorations and artificial Christmas trees, I saw an artificial wreath.  I was struck with an idea, “I can make an advent wreath!”  We always had an advent wreath at home when I was growing up, and my mom found various devotionals for us to use during the season.  Once I tracked down some purple candles, the advent wreath helped me to focus on the season.  In the morning darkness, I would like the candles and be reminded that “the people walking in darkness have seen a great light” (Isaiah 9:2).  That was a particularly dark season of the year for a variety of reasons, and the simple candles gave me hope and peace in the midst of it.

Advent is just one season in the church calendar, the way that the church tells time.  Growing up, although we did observe Advent, we really only paid attention to some parts of the church calendar.  But as I have lived with the church calendar longer, it has become an important way for me to order my life.  A Lutheran source says, “People order time in various ways, often based on the rhythms of nature. The church organizes time by the church year. It tells the story of God, who is beyond time, acting in history – above all through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.”  

This way that the church organizes time shapes us.  It doesn’t happen overnight, but through the years we are oriented to get the full view of God’s work in the world.  Instead of organizing our life by when we get to take vacation from our work or have to buy lots of gifts, we organize our life by Jesus life, death, and resurrection.  Instead of being forced to be happy all of the time, we have a variety of seasons with different timbres.  The church calendar is countercultural.  It continually points us towards Christ and helps us to meditate on his work.

And the church calendar is a good teaching tool.  It is simple enough for kids to learn.  The colors associated with each season give us a visual way to engage the story.  It tells God’s story.  This past Sunday was Christ the King (or Reign of Christ) Sunday.  We were reminded that Jesus reigns and that all parts of our life are under God’s authority.  What better message on a weekend of obsessive consumerism? 

This Sunday, the first Sunday of Advent, I will remember the start of the church year.  The way God sent his son to earth.  And I will remember again that the “people walking in darkness have seen a great light.”  I am thankful for the church calendar that helps me to pay attention, to remember, to focus on Christ.   

 

Calendar image copyright © 2011 Michele Quigley, http://www.family-centered.com/living/2011/11/printable-liturgical-calendar/, accessed 27 November 2012.  
Used under a Creative Commons License.

November 25, 2012

Sunday Afternoon Prayer: A Grace

I found this simple yet profound prayer this week:
O God,
To those who have hunger give bread,
To those who have bread
Give hunger for justice.

From South America, found in Around a Thin Place: An Iona Pilgrimage Guide by Jane Bentley and Neil Paynter, pg. 77

November 24, 2012

My Thanksgiving Adventure


“Enter his gates with thanksgiving and his courts with praise;
give thanks to him and praise his name.  For the Lord is good and his love endures forever;
his faithfulness continues through all generations.” (Psalm 100:4-5)

For Thanksgiving this year, my parents and I decided to celebrate at my apartment and invite some of the refugees I work with.  I invited a family of 5 that recently arrived from Nepal, and we cooked and set the table accordingly.  As I was driving over to pick them up, I was wishing my apartment was bigger so I could have invited a Sri Lankan family that lives nearby, too.  When I got to the Nepalese family’s home, I found out the mother wasn’t feeling well and the daughters were going to stay home to care for her.  That meant only 2 of 5 were going to come. 

We got in the car and started driving home, but as we were about to pass the Sri Lankan family’s apartment I decided to stop and see if they wanted to come over.  I didn’t have their phone number in my phone to call them, so I just knocked unannounced (which I don’t usually do).  I asked if they had plans and invited them over.  They said yes and I waited while they got ready to leave. 

I arrived home with 6 people instead of 5, so we slipped another chair around the table and put the food on the table.  My mom and I cooked a pretty traditional Thanksgiving meal—turkey, stuffing, sweet potatoes, roasted vegetables, cranberry sauce, a spinach salad.  At times, conversation seemed strained, since I was the only person that really knew everyone.  But as the meal went on, it got easier.  Everyone helped clean up (except maybe my dad because one of my Nepalese guys told him in their culture the young people serve the older people) and participate in the day.  My parents told them stories about life in Michigan farmland.  My mom played with the 3 year old.  He had discovered my baskets of toys and games, and one of the young men asked my mom how to play Phase 10.  She explained it and then I heard him enthusiastically say “let’s play.”  He has been through an incredible amount of pain in his short life, and it made my heart glad to hear him excited about a game.  So we played a few phases of Phase 10 before it was time to go home.

As we were saying goodbye and leaving the house, several of them said they felt like they were a part of a family today. 

That is about the best thanks I could receive.  The day wasn’t quite what I was planning, but it worked out well.  I am thankful for this opportunity to share home, food, parents, games, a holiday, and love with others.  I am thankful to be able to share “hospitality with strangers” (Hebrews 13:2).  

November 20, 2012

Thanksgiving Standing Stones


“In the future, when your children ask you, ‘What do these stones mean? tell them that the flow of the Jordan was cut off before the ark of the covenant of the Lord. When it crossed the Jordan, the waters of the Jordan were cut off. These stones are to be a memorial to the people of Israel forever.”(Joshua 4:6-7)


When God’s people entered the promised land, Joshua instructed the leaders to set up standing stones to remind them of what God has done.  They were reminders of God’s presence in human history.  For the past few years, I have created a “Thanksgiving Standing Stones List.”  I usually draw stones in my journal and write what each one symbolizes.  This year, I am sharing the list here—my reminders of what God has done.
 

Ordination!  I was ordained as a Minister of the Word on January 1, 2012.  Even most of a year later, sometimes I still can’t believe it.  The fact that I am ordained is a testament to God’s faithfulness and sometimes mysterious ways.





      Liz and Allison, friends who have been to the heights and depths with me this year.  They celebrated my ordination with me, let me cry on their couch, brought me Jimmy John’s in the hospital while my mom was having surgery, and ate lots of meals with me.



My mom’s healing; she had a serious infection in her knee last winter which resulted in a hospital stay, 2 surgeries, and a long recovery period.  She has recovered really well and been able to maintain an active life this summer and fall.





      Starting the second year of my residency.  It is fun to be going through things the second time around, when I have at least an idea of how they go.  It is also exciting to see the Holy Spirit moving in our midst.






      Rediscovering camping and hiking this summer and fall.  I loved getting away and spending time outside in God’s creation.





Thanks Be To God!



Standing stone photo by Ian W Scott, http://www.flickr.com/photos/ian-w-scott/5752055707/, November 12, 2012.  Used under Creative Commons License.
All other photos are my own.

November 18, 2012

Sunday Afternoon Prayer: To the Light of the World


This morning, I offered the intercessory prayer on behalf of our congregation.  The sermon text was Matthew 5:14-16 so I made heavy use of light imagery from the Bible.  I have changed proper names to protect their privacy.

Jesus, light of the world:

When we look around our world, the darkness often seems overwhelming.  But we know that the light shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it. 

Jesus, shine your light into the darkness of the Middle East.  May your light shine instead of rockets in Israel and Palestine.  May your light shine in the midst of conflict in Syria.  Protect Christians living in those places, and give them courage to be your light in the darkness.

Lord, shine your light into the dark places in our lives.  We think of those in the dark place of grief.  We remember L&H and H&F as they grieve recent losses.  We remember the many members of our community that face a new phase of grieving this week as the holiday season starts.  Surround them with your love.  Remind them that the darkness has not overcome your light.

And we ask that you will comfort the members of our community who are facing health problems, especially B.  Give wisdom to the doctors and peace to their family members.

Jesus, who is the light of the world, you have also said that we are the light of the world.  We pray for T. as he lets his light shine in the prison.  And we pray for his family, that they would see your light in him and in others you have put in their lives.

The Christian Reformed Church has designated today as Chaplain’s Sunday.  Today we bring our chaplains to you as they let their lights shine in the shadows of hospitals, nursing homes, military units, and workplaces.

We praise you for the ways that you have helped us to let our light shine through our English as a Second Language programs.  Continue to help our tutors to let their lights shine to their students, that they would give glory to you.

Help all of us to let our light shine in our homes, neighborhoods, and workplaces.  May many see our good deeds and join us in giving glory to you.

We pray all of this in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  Amen. 



Photo by Kalyan Kanuri, http://www.flickr.com/photos/kalyan/163744627/, November 17, 2012.
Used under a Creative Commons License.

November 16, 2012

Be Not Afraid


I was talking with a friend today.  She is in a time of some uncertainty.  As I think about it, almost all of my friends are in some time of transition or uncertainty—looking for a new job, starting a new job, beginning a new relationship, moving to a new home, or having a new baby.    

This reminded me one of my favorite songs I’ve learned at Church of the Servant, “Come, Holy Ghost.”  I first heard it sung by the choir as they prepared for a service.  It was during the first month or two I was at COS, just trying to get my bearings.  The chorus really struck me: “Be not afraid, where you go there I am with.”  At that time, the words floating through the church building set me at peace.  Even though I was in a new place doing a new thing, God was with me there, too.  I didn’t need to be afraid, because God was with me.

I did some research on the song today and found that the words are attributed to the early church.  The chorus was added and it was set to music by Ray Mills and Bruce Benedict a few years ago.  You can listen to this setting on their website.

So for all of us in some time of transition, this is my prayer:

Come, Holy Ghost, Creator blest, And in our hearts take up Thy rest; 
Come with thy grace and heav'nly aid to fill our hearts which thou hast made, 
To fill our hearts which Thou has made. 
 
O Comforter, to thee we cry, Thou heav'nly gift of God most high; 
Thou fount of life, and fire of love, And sweet anointing from above, 
And sweet anointing from above. 


Chorus: 
Be not afraid, where you go there I am with you. (2x) 
 
O Holy Ghost, through thee alone, Know we the Father and the Son; 
Be this our firm unchanging creed, That thou dost from them both proceed, 
That thou dost from them both proceed. 

Praise we the Lord, Father and Son, And Holy Spirit with them one; 
And may the Son on us bestow all gifts that from the Spirit flow, 
All gifts that from the Spirit flow.



Photo by Messiah Lutheran (Mechanicsville, VA), http://www.flickr.com/photos/mlcas/6970671144/, November 16, 2012.
Used under Creative Commons License.

November 13, 2012

How Long, Lord? A Post-Prison Lament


How long, Lord? Will you forget me forever?
How long will you hide your face from me? (Psalm 13:1)


Psalm 13 gives us words to talk to God in life’s hard times.  It is a lament, a way to express frustration and anger within our relationship with God.  If there is a population that has cause for lament, it is returning citizens—men and women who have felonies on their record but have completed their prison sentence.  My church is involved with a number of ministries both inside and outside of prisons.  One of them is a group called CONTACT for returning citizens to worship and fellowship together.   

Members of this group have been working on creating a staged reading based on Psalm 13 and their experiences as returning citizens.  Sunday night, they debuted it as part of our evening worship service.  They told their stories of regret and guilt.  They told their stories of meeting Jesus and the new life they have found in him.  They told their stories of the struggles to find good housing, get good jobs, reconnect with family, make friends, find a church, and look towards the unknowns in the rest of their life. 

One man told his story to us.  He, like the others in his neighborhood, started to use drugs and alcohol as a young teen.  When he was 25, he was partying one night—he described himself as totally wasted--and stabbed 2 people, one of whom was his best friend.  He spent over 20 years in prison.  While he was there, he heard about Jesus from another inmate.  He became a follower of Jesus, and God delivered him from drugs and alcohol.  God changed his life.  Now that he is back on the outside, he is working a steady job and found a church home.  But he is about 50 years old.  Most people his age are set with family and friendships, so it is hard to make friends.  Since he was incarcerated for most of his working years, he wonders what retirement will be like.

They concluded with the story of the Lost Son from Luke 15, the story of the Father’s unconditional love and how they have received this love from God.  Like a Biblical lament, they started with the struggles and questions and ended with trust in God’s grace. 

“But I trust in your unfailing love; my heart rejoices in your salvation.
I will sing the Lord’s praise, for he has been good to me.” (Psalm 13:5-6)


Photo by Giara, http://www.flickr.com/photos/giara/6351299142/, November 13, 2012.
Used by Creative Commons License.

November 11, 2012

Sunday Afternoon Prayer: A Post-Election Prayer

Many prayers were offered before the elections in the United States this past week.  I know that some people are thrilled their prayers were answered their way and some are devastated that their prayers were not.  Here is my prayer for this country (and American Christians) as we go forward.


Healing God,
You see our broken and fractured country. You see broken relationships, even within the church, because of politics.  You see fractures among people of different ages, races, genders, classes, and religions.  Bring healing to these fractures.  Heal broken relationships.  May we find our unity in you.  Help us to see beyond ourselves, our interests, our party affiliation, and see the good in others’ points of view.  Heal the broken hearts of candidates who lost elections after pouring their heart and soul into the race.

Wisdom-giving God,
Give your wisdom and discernment to our leaders.  Help them to discern what is best for our country: for our citizens of all kinds, for those hoping to be citizens, for our allies around the world, and for our relationships with countries we might consider our enemies.  And help them to work together for good.  May we all find the power of compromise with one another.  May our laws and policies bring a touch of your peace and justice in this broken world.    

Sovereign God,
Our help comes from you, maker of heaven and earth (Psalm121:2).  Help your people to remember that you are sovereign, that this world belongs to you.  No matter what happens to our country, you are still in control.  Remind us again and again that our primary identity is not in our citizenship, but in the waters of baptism.  We are new creations in Christ, and our only comfort in life and in death is that we belong to you (Heidelberg Catechism Q&A 1).   

In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  Amen.