Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Second Sunday of Pentecost: The Holy Spirit - We Are Not Left Alone

On this Second Sunday after Pentecost we continue our series on the Holy Spirit.  

As Mennonites, as well as other Christian communions, we do not have a very developed theology of the Holy Spirit.  The Spirit of God is the presence of Jesus Christ with us.  Over the first few weeks following Pentecost Sunday we are exploring how are living as disciples of Jesus is integrally connected to living in and by the Spirit of God.

Connect to Promise of the Holy Spirit: One Who Comes Alongside.  Jesus promised upon his leaving (ascension) that he will not leave us as orphans - but that he will send another Comforter - another Paraclete.  Paraclete is a Greek word meaning, "One who comes alongside."  Jesus sends the Spirit to be with us always - and no matter what we encounter the Spirit comes alongside of us.  In fact, the Spirit, in taking up residence in the Body of Christ comes alongside of us through one another.



Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Seventh Sunday of Easter: The Lord's Prayer - Lead Us Not into Temptation

On this Seventh Sunday of Easter, we finished our series on the Lord's Prayer.

Connect to Lead Us Not into Temptation: Depending On God to Be with Us.  The Lord's Prayer ends just as relationally as it begins.  In the beginning of the prayer we prayed expressing our relationship with God - "Our Father who is in heaven" and now in praying, "Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil" we are praying for God to be with us who are on earth.


In praying the Lord's Prayer, we are praying in opposition to the principalities and powers - and so now we pray for us not to be alone but for God to be with us as we confront and are confronted by these powers, which were created to serve humanity, but now act to dominate and oppress.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Third Sunday of Easter: Co-laboring with God - Illinois Mennonite Conference Annual Assembly

On this Third Sunday of Easter, I preached at East Bend Mennonite Church which hosted the Illinois Mennonite Conference Annual Assembly from April 20 - 22, 2012.  Our theme for the Assembly was from 1 Corinthians 3: 1-9: We are Co-laborers with God.

Connect to A Vision for God: Seeing Whom God Sees.  Paul addressed the Corinthian Christians that they were fighting about which ministry and which leader was more important.  In so doing, they missed seeing God and they missed seeing whom God sees.  Ministry fails when we quarrel about what we believe to be important in ministry because we miss God and what God is doing and whom God is embracing.  May we not lose our vision of God in participating with what God is doing and whom God is embracing.


Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Second Sunday of Easter: The Cry for the Kingdom - The Lord's Prayer

On this Second Sunday of Easter Sunday, we move to a focus on praying the Lord's Prayer.  In being reoriented by Resurrection, we live praying a prayer that leads us into reorientation.  

The Lord's Prayer is a prayer that prays for the making visible of a new reality, a new reality that reorients creation through the Resurrection of Jesus Christ.  As a people who are now in this Resurrection community, we are a people of the new creation and so we pray for God's will and presence to be manifest on earth as it is in heaven.  The Lord's Prayer is a cry for the kingdom of God to reorient all creation - our economics, our security, our politics - in relationship with the Living and Loving God.  

The message for this Second Sunday of Easter focused on Matthew 6: 5-15 and Luke 11:1-4.


Connect to The Cry for the Kingdom: The Lord's Prayer.  In this message we discover that what the disciples of Jesus wanted to learn from Jesus is how to pray to God as personally and intimately as he did.  For Jesus praying to God was more than reciting the right words to God - it was entering into a personal, relational, family conversation with God.  This is what the disciples desired - may we desire to communicate with God in the same way - as family.  


Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Easter Sunday: Resurrection - The Ultimate Reorientation

On this Easter Sunday, we move from our Lenten focus on Psalms of Disorientation and Reorientation in which we were preparing ourselves for the new life that comes through the Resurrection of Jesus Christ at Easter, to celebrating the Resurrection of Jesus as the ultimate act of reorientation.  Our lives on our own are so often disoriented from the ways of God, but in being joined with Christ in his resurrection from the grave, we enter into a radically new orientation as human beings in human community.


The message for Easter Sunday focused on Acts 10.


Connect to Resurrection: The Ultimate Reorientation .  In this message we focused on the Spirit being the main character in Acts 10 who brings about transformation not according to our political or theological agendas, but according to what the Spirit desires to do in bringing a diverse human together as a community in Christ.  In the example of Peter and Cornelius - a Jew and Roman soldier, we as a community of Jesus are to be open to whomever the Spirit of God brings into our midst so that we might all be transformed in ways the Spirit desires. The Resurrection and transforming work of the Spirit are the ultimate acts of reorientation in our lives.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Fourth Sunday of Lent: Psalms of Disorientation and Reorientation - How Can We Give Thanks to God in Difficult Times?

On this fourth Sunday of Lent we continue our focus on Psalms of Disorientation and Reorientation in which we are preparing e ourselves for the new life that comes through the Resurrection of Jesus Christ at Easter.  We are reminding ourselves in what ways our lives are so often disoriented from the ways of God and as we engage these Psalms in Lent we seek to be open to being reoriented to the ways of God.

The message for this fourth Sunday of Lent focused on Psalm 107

Connect to
How Can We Give Thanks to God? Being Reoriented in Difficult Times. In this message, we experience reorientation as we learn to give thanks to God in difficult times.  This does not mean we thank God for everything - because trauma and pain is not the will of God - everything does not have a purpose for God.  But in giving thanks to God IN every circumstance, rather than for every circumstance, we are connected to God in our difficult times - and in being connected to God, in giving thanks, God walks with us through our dark times.  God is with us IN our difficult times


Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Third Sunday of Lent: Psalms of Disorientation and Reorientation - Hearing God Speaking

On this third Sunday of Lent we continue our focus on Psalms of Disorientation and Reorientation in which we are preparing e ourselves for the new life that comes through the Resurrection of Jesus Christ at Easter.  We are reminding ourselves in what ways our lives are so often disoriented from the ways of God and as we engage these Psalms in Lent we seek to be open to being reoriented to the ways of God.

The message for this third Sunday of Lent focused on Psalm 19

Connect to Hearing God Speaking - Being Reoriented. In this message, we experience reorientation as we learn to hear God speak to us.  There are three movement in this Psalm which lead us into deeper relationship with God - and as a result - we become more open to hear God speaking into our lives.  We move from witnessing God and God's creative work to being encountered by God and ultimately to being personal to God - in which we worship God.  It is in worshiping God, that we hear God the clearest.