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Going on a Journey

Dear Friends,

What if I told you that in roughly six weeks you are going to get to take a much-needed vacation to another country (bear with me, we are just going to pretend we are not in the midst of a global pandemic)? Where are you going? Let’s pick someplace warm and sunny. How about Iceland? Okay, I know that doesn’t sound warm, but the people there have warm dispositions. You have six weeks to get ready to go. What are you going to do between now and then to get ready? Oh, I forgot to mention one little detail, you are going to be there for seven months.

After we look up on Google Maps where Iceland is, the next thing we might do is make sure our passport has not expired. Next comes the planning, buying clothes, deciding who will feed the cat while you are gone, figuring out what suitcases to take, and the list goes on and on. I am sure you would spend time looking up key phrases in whatever language it is they speak there. You might even study some Icelandic culture and history. As you ponder the next seven months your thoughts might turn toward the people you are leaving behind. Who do you need to take out to coffee before you go? After all, it is going to be a long time before you are back. Maybe there is even someone you need to mend the bridge with in case you get trampled by a caribou while you are there. You certainly want to have your house in order before you go.

Seeing as I am a preacher you have probably figured out this message is not really about traveling to Iceland and avoiding getting eaten by polar bears. On Easter Sunday we are going on a journey. Easter is a day set aside in the church to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus. It is also a day for the sending out of the church into the world in the power of the resurrection of Jesus filled with the Holy Spirit which we remember at Pentecost fifty days after Easter.

Before the church is sent at Easter and Pentecost we get ready for the journey. The season of getting ready is the time of Lent. Lent is the forty days, starting with Ash Wednesday (February 17th), before Easter. This is a time to prepare to go. It is a season set apart for confession, repentance, preparation, and listening. It is like being one of the disciples following Jesus around for the three years as he ministered on this earth. For three years the most important thing you would do is listen to and watch Jesus. As one of the disciples, you may not fully understand what Jesus is doing and why but you would still listen, learn, and wonder.

In this season of Lent we, at Hope, are going to listen and watch Jesus. We will do so first by daily reading together from the four gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John) and the book of Acts. Attached to this message you will find a daily Bible reading plan. I invite you, as you read to listen and watch Jesus and his disciples. To ask questions and wonder. How might you have reacted if you had been in the crowd? Why do you think Jesus did what he did? What do you think God could be up to? How did Jesus express God’s love for humanity? We will also take this time to listen to our community. We know that God is already at work in the life of every person drawing them to himself and inviting them to experience his love. Take this time to listen and look with anticipation for where God is at work.

We will also listen to God, each other, and scripture by gathering together online each Wednesday morning and evening at 7:00 AM and PM for guided prayer. This will start tomorrow morning with a special Ash Wednesday service on Facebook Live that will be repeated in the evening. This service will end with communion.

Plan to join together with your Hope family in this season of getting ready to go on a journey of a lifetime following Jesus together as his people in the next season of ministry at Hope.

Blessings,
Pastor Stephen

What are we inviting people to?

What are we inviting people to? What really is the “good news” we want people to accept? When I was a kid, my favorite book of the bible was Joshua. It was a grand adventure and story to be entered into. In time the childish things were put away and the adventure was lost. Replaced by a more mature reading of scripture. Many days my heart still aches for those days of simple adventure.

Then I get to the gospel stories and wonder if Jesus’ isn’t trying to reawaken an adventure long lost in centuries of rules and system. Jesus didn’t invite people to become objects to be used by the church for its purposes. He invited them into the adventure of God’s story.  Alan Roxburgh, in his book, Missional, convictingly and powerfully reminds me of the power of Jesus’ story:

There was this freedom in Jesus’s stories. I can’t believe those who heard them felt that Jesus had some other agenda going on underneath, that he was only interested in how they could fit into his plan. In Jesus’s hands, stories opened worlds for people whose imaginations had collapsed down narrow tunnels with little light. Often Jesus’s stories became landmines. At first, they seemed innocent enough, but once a person got inside the story or parable, it would explode unexpectedly, crack open little worlds, disorient a taken-for-granted life, disrupt practiced scenarios, and overturn assumptions so that the brightness of God’s future could be seen.

Be honest, are we inviting people to an adventure or to another job?

Stephen

 

 

 

Source:
Roxburgh, Alan J. Missional : joining God in the neighborhood. Grand Rapids, Mich: Baker Books, 2011. pg 82.

A Fight Was Breaking Out

Dear Friends,

I stood at our back window looking out. I was waiting for the coffee to finish brewing. Despite my years of attempts, I have yet to develop a perfectly brewed cup of coffee without having to wait. With nothing better to do I gazed across the yards between the houses the next street over.

To my shock I saw a concerning site. The middle school had just let out for the day. I watched a group of boys surge forward against another then disappear out of sight, hidden by a house. A few moments later the group returned, this time chasing a single boy. Thoughts raced through my head as to what might be happening. Was this bullying at its worst? Were two groups breaking into a fight? Then another surge as one group pushed back. In the few moments I watched the battle I wondered if I should quickly drive over to the next street to see what was going on or just call the police. It was then that I saw it. The thing that would change everything. A boy ran through the gap, chased by a dozen others, holding a football.

What I had thought was a fight was only a pick-up game of America’s favorite sport. What had prevented me from seeing the truth were the houses on either side of my field of vision. If I had been able to magically blast them away I would have known the true context of the battle between these boys on this day. I would have known this was not a neighborhood falling into pre-gang violence but a community united. What I lacked was the full context.

When we read our bibles we can too often be guilty of the same thing. We can read a few verses without seeing what is around. The results can be devastating. There can be many houses which block our vision: chapter and verse markings, headings, and pages to be turned. Left unmoved we can fall victim to the same errors I made watching football.

During a class I took in seminary I endured a near daily drill from Dr. Ben Witherington, “A text without a context is a pretext for anything you want it to be.” And a football game without a Good Year blimp overhead becomes gang warfare. Whenever we read our bibles it is a good exercise for us to step back and read the surrounding verses, chapter and book. This is also why it is a good practice to occasionally commit to read your bible through (yes, from Genesis to Revelation). The practice will help implant into your mind a general context of scripture as a whole.

Blessings,
Pastor Stephen

P.S. Did you know you can read through your whole bible in a year by reading 3 chapters on week days and 5 chapters on weekends?

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