A World at War

A World at War

Last week we acknowledged the cloud that seems to loom over us even when we try to live out our normal ordinary lives in peace. It is a cloud of fear, of despair, of anger, of blame, of hatred and of outrage. Even in our best attempts to go on with life-as-usual, this cloud reminds us that we are not OK.

It’s like having a great time on vacation and coming back to realize the sky in all your photos looks gloomy because it never stopped raining. The rain may not have stopped you from enjoying the trip, but it likely had a significant impact on your plans and your mood while you were there, even if you tried not to notice.

In the past, such clouds moved in during seasons of great tragedy or turmoil, and then life would go back to normal. Wars and conflicts came and went. The stock market rose and fell and rose again. So-called leaders would fight out their opinions in campaign rallies and debates, the people would vote, and then we would all go home for a nice family dinner and that would be the end of it.

Not anymore…

The Barrier of Relationships

The Barrier of Relationships

It’s all about people. It’s always been about people. When it comes to people, there’s only one thing that really matters.

  • Every person is created in the image of a God who deeply loves him or her.

    • I am created in the image of a God who deeply loves me.

    • You are created in the image of a God who deeply loves you.

    • Your neighbor is created in the image of a God who deeply loves him or her.

    • Your enemy is created in the image of a God who deeply loves him or her.

Get the point yet? …

… Relationships matter.

Love of one another bridges the barrier between us and a loving God.

The Cloud of “Not Okay-ness”

The Cloud of “Not Okay-ness”

First, my apologies to any English teachers out there. I know the word “okay-ness” is not OK. Nevertheless, this “not OK” word reflects the “not OK” reality we live in.

Describing the holiday season of 2019, Dan Rather shared the following on Facebook…

It seems familiar, but the backdrop is not. Friends and family travel and gather. There are cold wars between warring factions who share the same last name…

Walking amidst the jostle of busy shopping streets, with overcoat wrapped tight against the cold, I can feel the nervousness beneath the mirth…

- Dan Rather, December 21, 2019…

Peace in the Moment

Peace in the Moment

Here we sit on the 8th day of Christmas and most of the world has moved on. Our calendar tells us that a more immediate holiday has arrived… New Years Day, 2020.

Yes, it’s a new year. Yes, it’s even a new decade.

We have resolutions to make and break. We have houses to clean. We have bank accounts to reconcile and credit cards to pay after Christmas. We have decorations to put away, assuming they have not already found their way into our basements and attics. And by now, school can’t start soon enough for most parents…

Grace at the Center

Grace at the Center

… How do we respond when our desires for security, approval and control are triggered?

Are we even aware when these desires become the driving force behind our actions?

As this year comes to a close, let us examine our hearts and prepare to respond as Jesus did. Rather than allowing our desire for security, approval and control to define us and drive our behaviors, let us simply learn to quiet our restless hearts and find grace at the center.

The Quiet Game

The Quiet Game

We often think of Zechariah’s silence as a punishment or consequence of his doubt. In Luke 1:20, we read: “because you didn’t believe, you will remain silent, unable to speak until the day when these things happen.”

Yes, the silence is a result of Zechariah’s unbelief, but nowhere does it say he is being punished. What if in fact the silence was a gift, a difficult gift to be sure, but a gift nonetheless. For it is in this silence that Zechariah’s faith grows beyond measure. When he is again able to speak, he can only speak the prophetic words of the Lord which the Holy Spirit had written on his heart all those months. Silence clears out the rambling chaos of our minds and fills the emptiness with the Word which speaks all of Creation into being.

As Dietrich Bonhoeffer writes, “It is silence in which God in known and through the silence of His mysteries that God declares Himself to us…”

Just a Small Thing

Just a Small Thing

Late one evening the week after Christmas in 2010, I was sitting with my guitar in the dark sanctuary of Springfield United Methodist Church (Springfield, KY) as the soft glow of street-lights reflected through the beautiful stained glass windows.

I was thinking about the amazing Christmas Eve Candlelight Service we had there only a few nights before, and the church-wide Christmas party afterward at one of the member’s homes. It was such a small gathering, though not too small given the size of the congregation, but to this day it was one of the most special Christmas Eve nights I can remember.

Sometimes… maybe most of the time… it’s the small things that mean the most. That’s what this week’s song is all about…

Are We There Yet?

Are We There Yet?

The temple has been rebuilt. The city walls are under construction. Jerusalem is being restored. God’s people have come home.

And yet as they gather to dedicate the temple we read that the older priests and heads of the families who had seen the first temple wept aloud. No matter how much they tried to make it look like home, it would never be quite the same again. Their weeping reminds us that we are not home yet…

So Hard to Believe

So Hard to Believe

Advent and Christmas can serve as a type of “thin place” in our church calendar. It is a season when the veil between heaven and earth seems more thin than usual. It may be a place where the holy and the ordinary meet.

That’s what this week’s song is about as we move into the Advent season. May the weeks ahead be filled with “thin places” where you encounter the miracle of God with us in beautiful and amazing ways.