Encountering God

2021-04-11 - revival.jpg

Encountering God
Revival - Part 4
Sunday, May 2, 2021
Ephesians 2:1-10, 2 Corinthians 5:13-21

For by grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God— not the result of works, so that no one may boast. For we are what he has made us, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand to be our way of life.

Ephesians 2:8-10

When John Wesley observed George Whitfield preaching the gospel to 30,000 miners on a hillside, he wrote in his journal,

I could scarce reconcile myself to this strange way of preaching in the fields... having been all my life so tenacious of every point to decency and order that I should have thought the saving of souls almost a sin if it had not been done in a church... At four in the afternoon I submitted to "be more vile", and proclaimed in the highways the glad tidings of salvation, speaking from a little eminence in a ground adjoining to the city, to about three thousand people.

If there was ever a word for a post-pandemic church, this is it. Before COVID-19 forced churches to close their doors, many felt like Wesley in thinking that “the saving of souls was almost a sin if it had not been done in church.” Maybe not a sin, but there was and often still is a prevailing mindset that expects people to come into the church to hear the message of God’s grace and salvation.

But Wesley’s understanding of grace extended far beyond the walls of the church. Through prevenient grace, Wesley believed that God’s grace was at work in a person’s life long before they were even aware of it. If God is present with a person before that person is present to God, it must imply that God’s grace is it work in homes and workplaces and markets and taverns and even in the fields as it is in the church. If this is true, the question is how we might help those outside the church become more aware of this grace at work in their midst.

It is ironic, perhaps, that Wesley commits to “becoming more vile” by preaching to the common workers in the fields. Some have responded in similar ways to extending the church’s ministry through online platforms. “That’s not church,” some will say. I even had one person tell me that we should shut down our live-stream worship because it made people too lazy and they needed to get back to worship in the building. Yet if it is true that God’s grace extends to everyone where they are at, why would we assume that God’s grace cannot be present in the digital world. There are certainly benefits to in person connection, and face to face, embodied relationship with others is crucial to our Christian faith, but does that require someone to be singing in a crowded sanctuary hoping not to be infected by an invisible disease? Or might it be that the face to face happens on the front porch with a few neighbors or with a few friends over lunch or coffee talking together about the scriptures from the sermon they just watched online from last Sunday?

Church happens wherever God is present with God’s people and God’s people are present with God. Let us then become more present to the God who is present with us in every ordinary moment of our lives, and let us point others to a deeper awareness of God’s presence in the ordinary moments of their lives. God doesn’t wait for people to come to church to meet him. Why should we?

Listen to this week’s sermon here:


For more on the Wesleyan Revival, check out Adam Hamilton’s book, “Revival: Faith as Wesley Lived It”



Successful Failures

Successful Failures

John Wesley records what has become his famous “Aldersgate experience” in his journal on May 24th, 1738.

In the evening I went very unwillingly to a society in Aldersgate Street, where one was reading [Martin] Luther's preface to the Epistle to the Romans. About a quarter before nine, while he was describing the change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone, for salvation; and an assurance was given me that He had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death.

What stands out to me the most in this passage is the first line… “I went very unwillingly.”…

… Where is God inviting you to put yourself in the path of grace this week, even if you have to go very unwillingly?

Pursuing Holiness

Pursuing Holiness

Nobody’s perfect.

While this may be a comforting sentiment when we make mistakes, it can also easily become an excuse to live our lives however we choose because we know that God loves us for who we are. “You do you” has become almost a motto of our society. It is a well intentioned expression of tolerance, acceptance, and individual expression, all of which are valuable. We should be comfortable being ourselves without fear of judgement and criticism. We all have unique personalities and gifts that we should freely express and share. But being comfortable with who we are doesn’t mean settling for less than who God intended us to be. God loves us as we are, but the same God loves us far to much to leave us the way we are…

Rekindle the Flame

Rekindle the Flame

… There are many periods in history in which we might identify our own struggles and learn from our ancestors in the faith. For this season, as the United Methodist Church faces it’s own decline and divisions, I believe we may have the most to learn from our own heritage in the Wesleyan Revival which ultimately gave birth to the people called Methodists.

Like many people today, Wesley grew up in a religiously divided home and society. His parents were Anglican and his grandparents were Puritans, but rather than choosing sides, John listened carefully and learned the value of each. He came to realize a middle way, or “via media” in which loving alike was more important than thinking alike. His life was shaped by his mother’s emphasis on caring for the souls of her children and by his father’s perseverance in the face of tremendous suffering.

As we begin this journey through the early Wesleyan revival, we begin with these three themes, the care of souls, listening to one another through our disagreements, and perseverance in the face of suffering and struggle. No matter what conflicts and resistance Wesley and his family faced, these core values kept the flame of Christ’s love alive in their hearts and their home, and shone forth as a beacon of hope to a lost and weary world.

May God rekindle in us the fire of our first love, Jesus Christ, and send us forth with humility the humility to spread that love abroad to friend and enemy alike, that God’s kingdom may be fulfilled on earth as it is in heaven.

Revive us, O Lord! Revive us again!

What Story Does Your Life Tell?

What Story Does Your Life Tell?

…If we are truly in Christ, we do not have the option to crawl back into the womb of our pre-resurrections life, where everything was routine and comfortable and familiar. We must learn to live with an eternal perspective. Our very lives must proclaim the hope of resurrection and the power of Christ over death and the grave.

There are two versions of the resurrection story. One is the story of the disciples, who struggled for weeks and even months with fear and uncertainty as they embraced hope and waited upon the Holy Spirit while trying to figure out the implications of Jesus’ resurrection for their lives. The other is the story of fear and hiding, the story in which we go on with our lives as normal, as if the body was stolen and we just have to move on.

Which story does your life tell?

Blessings in the Wilderness - Week 7: Freedom

Blessings in the Wilderness - Week 7: Freedom

We talk a lot about fighting for our freedom but Jesus offers us the freedom not to fight. As we consider the way Jesus used his freedom, to surrender, to allow himself to be arrested in the garden, even to willingly lay down his life, it should give us pause to ask ourselves how we are using our freedom.

Are we really free, or are we bound by our fears and our need for control and survival?

Do we use our freedom to fight for our own rights, or to sacrifice for the sake of others?…

What Happened to Peace?

What Happened to Peace?

Hosanna to the Son of David. Hosanna to the humble king riding on a donkey. Hosanna to the Prince of Peace…

…”Then Jesus entered the temple and drove out all who were…”

Wait! What?

I thought this was a peaceful protest. I thought Jesus entering Jerusalem on a donkey stood in contrast to the military might of Roman authority. What happened to the peace?

In Matthew 5:9 we read, “Blessed are the peacemakers” and then in Matthew 10:34 Jesus says, “Do not think that I have come to bring peace…” What’s going on here?…

Blessings in the Wilderness - Week 6: Rest

Blessings in the Wilderness - Week 6: Rest

In a world where staying busy is a virtue, the idea of rest often goes against the grain of our work ethic and our need to prove our worth by our productivity. Work is indeed an important part of our lives, but the blessing of rest reminds us that we are not defined by our work. Our identity is not, or at least should not be wrapped up by what we do or what we produce.

To rest is to know that we are enough simply because we are God's beloved.

To rest is to remember that we are not in control, nor do we have to be.

Let us rest this week as we learn to let God be God…

What's the Worst That Could Happen?

What's the Worst That Could Happen?

For all of our bold claims about how God is in control, it is interesting how often we make excuses when we are the ones called by God to do the impossible. We encourage and sometimes even expect others to have more faith, to trust God with whatever circumstances they are facing. We remind them that God can do miracles and that God will work everything out for the good. But when it’s our turn to face the impossible it doesn’t matter how many miracles we have seen, we tend to hesitate and imagine all of the things that could go wrong….

Blessings in the Wilderness - Week 5: Perseverance

Blessings in the Wilderness - Week 5: Perseverance

We pray for discernment all the time. We pray to know God's will. We pray for guidance in our decisions and for how to navigate the challenges we face. The question is, how long do we pray?

The wilderness reminds us that God does not answer on our timetable. The wilderness teaches us to persevere. Faith isn't about a quick and miraculous answer to prayer, as wonderful as those may be. Faith is about the long game.

In what areas of your life is God asking you to persevere right now?…