Monday, February 27, 2006

This Week's Sermon

This Sunday's sermon has been posted. You can read it here:

Sermon #17 - Come and See

If you read my sermons online, you will probably find a number of typos and mistakes. You may also find some minor or major differences between what was said on Sunday and what you read. I really like to get the sermons posted as soon as possible and if I wait until I get it perfected, it will probably never get done.

I have turned off comments on the sermon page itself. If you have any thoughts or questions, just come back to this post to comment.

peace,

will

Saturday, February 25, 2006

Remembering to Rest

I am constantly talking about our need for sabbath, our need to take time to rest our bodies and be in God's presence. (Read my post - Sabbath? Is that Really a Commandment?)

My dogs take me pretty seriously, but sometimes I don't even get it right.

Jesus tells us in Mark that:

"The sabbath was made for humankind, and not humankind for the sabbath."

Jesus showed us that we shouldn't be too legalistic about sabbath rest. He healed on the sabbath and he let his disciples gather food when they were hungry. This was technically breaking the religious laws of the time, but he knew some things were more important.

We can be too legalistic and we can also go too far the other way. If we try, we can always find something to do and never find time to rest with God. This week I am a little out of balance. I gave up my regular sabbath on Friday to preside at a funeral of a woman who had no church of her own. I think that was a valid reason to give up my day of rest. But then, I spent today at a meeting in San Antonio. Tomorrow is Sunday, so there will be little rest. Then, the week starts over.

Sabbath, for me, is like any other discipline. Once I get out of the pattern, it is really easy to stay out of the pattern. My challenge for the week will be to find some real time to rest in God's presence. I hope you find some time as well.

peace,

will




Friday, February 24, 2006

Worship this Week

For those of you who don't get the e-mail, here is the worship preview for this Sunday:

Scripture: John 1:43-51

Sermon Title: "Come and See!"

Have you ever invited someone to church? Most people never have because it seems like such a complicated issue. In John's gospel, a man named Philip makes the simplest invitation on record. He says to Nathanael, "Come and see." Simple, yet effective, because Nathanael follows Philip to see Jesus. This Sunday we will talk about that "come and see" invitation and also what we, as a church, need to do in the event that people actually take us up on it.

Remember that the United Methodist Men will be ready to serve you and your family a tall stack of pancakes this last Sunday of the month, with plenty of butter and syrup to go around.

See you Sunday!

will

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

More from Mexico

Here is a shot of the library nearly done. This is from day 2. You can tell by the extra layers of clothes. It was quite chilly. The roof is on and the windows and doors are in. The guys are just finishing up some trim while everyone else cleans up the site.



Picture number two is our group in front of the completed library. Our local help, our mistros are also in the photo. They were a huge help is showing us what to do and also doing the really difficult parts of construction. Right there next to Kathy is also our wonderful cook!

This building will be finished off by the folks at DIF. It will be painted and stuccoed before the books are moved in.

Monday, February 20, 2006

Mexico - First Look

Thank you to Robert for getting me some photos so quick! Here are some pictures of the first day of one of the building projects. This team was building a library at Sistema Nacional para el Desarrollo Integral de la Familia (or DIF for short). DIF is the equivalent of a child welfare services. This library is to be part of the facilities that offer food, health services and education for children and families in need.




What you can see in the first picture is a stack of cinder blocks being loaded onto the slab. We took the blocks and assembled walls on day one. You can see the walls going up in the second shot.

I will post some more photos and details soon!

peace,

will

Back from Mexico

The whole crew is safely back from Mexico. We had a really great trip. I think it might be interesting (and actually possible) to take the laptop and the camera next trip and blog each day from Mexico. (Yes they do have internet in Mexico, it is just a little trickier to get online.)

If you are a faithful weblog reader, were on the trip and took digital photos, please e-mail them to me so I can post them here.

I will post some more details of the trip once I get some photos to go with them. Basically though, we had a very successful trip. Our teams built two small houses for families and one decent size library for a community center in Rio Bravo. We had decent weather (though everyone was a bit chilly on Saturday). We even have great food, especially the folks on the library project who ate better than they did at home.

I will share more as I have time and photos. I hope the trip was a blessing to the residents of Rio Bravo, it certainly was a blessing to those who went.

peace,

will

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Off to Mexico

I have been slacking a bit this week in my blogging. I am trying to get ready to leave tonight for Mexico for Grace's annual Mexico Mission Trip. I wish I had more time to write about the trip and what we will be doing, but I have been putting together my part, the worship for the weekend. Most of our trip will be building small houses and a library in the small town where we will be staying. But, we will also have lots of time for worship and prayer and reflection.

I look forward to writing more about the trip and experience on my return.

peace,

will

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

This little piggy went to market, this little piggy stayed home, this little piggy glowed in the dark

If you have ever lost your pig in a dark parking lot at night, you will certainly be relieved to hear this. Scientist in Taiwan have bred fluorescent pigs. They have added genetic material from jellyfish to pig embryos to breed a pig that glows in the dark.

The point of this was not that we are in need of glowing pigs. It is an attempt to better understand genetics in hopes of helping to cure and prevent disease in humans. Anything we do genetically does, of course, cause us to pause momentarily to think about the moral, ethical and theological implications of such a thing and consider how far we should take such endeavors. But, in the meantime, enjoy the wonder of pigs that glow.

The full article is available here.

Taiwan breeds green-glowing pigs


peace,

will

Monday, February 13, 2006

This Week's Sermon

This Sunday's sermon is posted and ready to read.

Sermon #16 - "Servants of Christ: First Steps, Next Steps"

Your thoughts and comments are always welcome.

peace,

will

Thursday, February 09, 2006

Newsletter Column

The following is my column from this week's newsletter. I am posting it here for those of you who don't get the newsletter or think paper is "so 1900s."

This Sunday marks the final week of our emphasis on stewardship of service. As I said in my sermon on Sunday, the point of this time is not to find volunteers to fill all the jobs around the church. Just as we see financial stewardship as a spiritual response to the freely given grace of God, this is about considering the way in which we use our hands and feet to serve in the same way. We give to God in response to what God gives to us and then we trust in God to transform what we give into things greater than we could ever imagine.

Not only does our service hold the promise of transforming the world in God’s name, it can transform us as well. It is my experience that people who find ministries of service that connect their God-given gifts and talents with the needs of the world are forever transformed and drawn closer to God.

The very day I was baptized, I was asked to by a member of my church to help out with the Sunday School program by becoming the Sunday School Superintendent. All I had to do was collect attendance sheets and offerings and make sure all the children’s classes had graham crackers and icewater. I was terrified! I thought for sure I would some how mess it up. That first service opportunity turned out to be one of the most important things I have ever done. Not only was it important because it follows Jesus’ instruction to care for the little ones (see Matthew 18) it was also important because it drew me closer to God and helped me to better understand my role as a servant.

I really want to challenge you this week to think about what God is calling you to. I believe that every member of Grace can turn in a commitment card this week, whether you are stepping forward for the first time to try a new ministry or simply committing to continue in a ministry you are already involved in. If you are already involved in ministry at Grace, maybe you will consider taking on something else. Might I suggest that if you are serving in a ministry within the church (reaching in), you consider trying one outside of the church (reaching out)? If you are serving outside of the church, perhaps you will consider something inside the church.

I am really excited about this Sunday. I am looking forward to the number of people who will step up in ministry. I am looking forward to how God will transform our commitments and truly help us to bring God’s love to the people who surround us. I am looking forward to how we will be transformed as well!


peace,

will

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Sunday Music

Our praise band did a great song during the offering in 9:45 worship this week. It is a song they were working on and I asked if they might do it during our stewardship of service emphasis. It is not typical worship song since it is somewhat confessional nature. It asks the question, if we are truly the body of Christ, why aren't we doing more?

For those of you who attend 8:30 or 11:00 service, or those at 9:45 who didn't quite catch the lyrics, I am posting them here.


CASTING CROWNS- If We Are The Body
Album : Casting Crowns (2003)

It's crowded in worship today
as she slips in
trying to fade into the faces
the girls teasing laughter is carrying farther than they know
farther than they know

But if we are the body
why aren't his arms reaching
why aren't his hands healing
why aren't his words teaching
and if we are the body
why aren't his feet going
why is his love not showing them there is a way
there is a way

A traveler is far away from home
he sheds his coat
and quietly sinks into the back row
the weight of their judgmental glances tell him that his chances
are better out on the road

But if we are the body
why aren't his arms reaching
why aren't his hands healing
why aren't his words teaching
and if we are the body
why aren't his feet going
why is his love not showing them there is a way

Jesus paid much too high a price
for us to pick and choose who should come
and we are the body of Christ

But if we are the body
why aren't his arms reaching
why aren't his hands healing
why aren't his words teaching
and if we are the body
why aren't his feet going
why is his love not showing them there is a way

Jesus is the way


peace,

will

Monday, February 06, 2006

This Week's Sermon

This week is week two of our emphasis on stewardship of service. At Grace we will be talking about stewardship all year and talking about it in every form. Sometimes stewardship is limited to speaking about financial giving. However, when we join the United Methodist Church, we promise to support it with our prayers our presence our gifts and our service. Throughout the year, we will focus on each on each aspect.

You can read the sermon here:

Sermon #15 - "Servants of Christ - Reaching Out to Serve"

peace,

will

Wednesday, February 01, 2006

The End of an Era STOP

I guess the era was pretty much over since I had never actually sent or received one, but I was sort of sad to read today about the official end of the telegram. After 145 years, Western Union has stopped sending telegrams.

If you want to read more, there is an article on LiveScience.com.

It is not surprising. With cell phones, pagers, faxes, e-mail, instant messaging, fedex, ups, and a billion other ways to communicate instantly, it is hard to see where there would be a market for the telegram. I just always thought it would be cool to get a telegram. Had I known they were going to stop, I might have sent one to myself. STOP

peace,

will

Private Prayer and Home Worship

I was working on a devotional yesterday and I ended up getting completely sidetracked and thinking about private prayer and home worship. I started thinking about the fact that the corporate worship that we gather for on Sundays was developed with the assumption that those who attend spend some amount of time in personal prayer. In the Didache, believed to be one of the earliest set of written instructions on Christianity, Christians were instructed to prayer the Lord’s prayer three times a day. There are still Christians who follow this practice. There are other Christians who, while not being that rigorous or specific, take time for daily prayer. There are also Christians who are even more rigorous in their prayer life than those original instructions specify. Some pray for extended periods several times a day.

However, I know from experience dealing with Christians of different ages and at different stages of the journey that there are a quite a few people for whom personal prayer is not a part of their life. I have heard on more than one occasion from people who are faithful church members, people who come to worship nearly every week and who even have leadership roles in the church, statements like, “I only really pray when I need something.”

Now I am not writing this in an attempt to tell people to pray more (though that is a good idea). I was thinking about this in the context of the assumptions under which our model of corporate worship was developed. The things that we do on Sunday morning, the prayers, the music, the sermon, and the order of the whole thing are based in the historical tradition of the church. The way we worship was developed based on the assumption that most people had a serious prayer life.

Let me add something else to the mix. I was looking at my copy of the 1965 version of The Methodist Book of Worship, the predecessor to The United Methodist Book of Worship on which we base our worship services. The thing that was most noticeable was that the full name of the ’65 book is actually The Book of Worship for Church and Home. What is a little less noticeable is that within the pages of this book are resources for families to worship together, including “A Form for Family Prayer or Worship in a Small Group” and “Table Graces”. This book assumed not only private prayer, but family prayer and worship. Think about standing in a congregation and asking three questions. First, a show of hands for those who pray privately outside of worship. I bet there would be a lot of hands for that one. Second, a show of hands for those who pray as a couple or as a family. I guarantee there would be fewer hands for that one (especially if the pastor promised to close her eyes.) Third, a show of hands for those who worship as a family (as in read scripture, sings hymns and pray together.) Of course there might be some, but not a lot of hands for that one.

There may be a problem with the fact that since we still do worship basically the same way we have for years, we still assume that most people are doing those things. I think that this puts and awful lot of pressure on worship. Think about it. If Sunday is the only time that many people are worshipping and praying alone and as families, Sunday worship carries the whole weight and responsibility for the development of people’s relationship with God. All of that in one hour. Perhaps that has something to do with the fact that worship issues are so emotionally charged. Large arguments and even church splits happen over the specifics of worship, which makes a lot of sense if people consider that time their only time with God. If Sunday morning were my only time with God, I would want it to be perfect too!

Well that is more than I have to say in my average blog post. But I hope it will get you thinking about your own personal and family prayer and worship life. Perhaps it will get me thinking about more ways to help people be more intentional about their relationship with God the other six days a week.

peace,


will