The big shopping day has passed, and it appears that we’ve begun the season when our days are named according to the level of our retail shopping. We hope for a “Black Friday” – so that financial books come out “in the black” and not “in the red.” Tomorrow is “Cyber Monday” because of all of the online shopping predicted to take place. Soon we can look forward to “Green Monday” as shoppers make one last surge to grab up Christmas gifts and Christmas bargains. Today it seems our days are numbered and named according to our spending.
The church has another way: Every moment of every day is noticed and numbered by the One who has given it to us – God the Father almighty, creator of heaven and earth. WE are named by the One who reigned from a cross on that “Good Friday” – Jesus Christ, – and who marks us with that cross in Baptism. And we are called by the Holy Spirit who gives us true joy, not in seeing how much we can pile up for ourselves, but in discovering the joy that is known in serving the neighbor.
At Bethlehem this past week, there have been telling signs of Christ’s rule over the lives of disciples here: a meal served on Thanksgiving Day to 175 new Americans; and still on the pews in our worship space – some of the 510 quilts made by the Mission Work Day Quilters to share locally and around the globe.
On the Sunday of Christ the King, we look to the promised day when “the kingdom of this world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Messiah, and he will reign forever and ever.” Rev. 11:15 NRSV
And we pray:
O God, our true life, to serve you is freedom, and to know you is unending joy. We worship you, we glorify you, we give thanks to you for your great glory. Abide with us, reign in us, and make this world into a fit habitation for your divine majesty, through Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen.
Monday, November 26, 2007
Naming the Days
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Monday, November 19, 2007
Generously Living as Disciple with Whatever I Have
I’ve always appreciated Ken Medema’s profound lyrics and powerful music. The songs from the new CD “Stories to Tell & Gifts to Share” (part of the new ELCA stewardship resources) have connected with and challenged me especially during the past few weeks. Here’s another – most fitting for this week when our congregation is thinking about what it means to be “Generously Living as Disciples” and as our nation approaches Thanksgiving Day.
“Whatever I Have”
Grateful Living
Just suppose I find myself on a crowded, city street,
begging for subsistence amid the sound of rushing feet.
Or suppose I find myself in a lonely prison cell.
Could I say from deep inside I am glad for all is well? Refrain
Refrain:
Whatever I have or have not; whatever I am or am not,
I can make it through anything now in the One who makes me who I am.
Just suppose I find myself in the lap of luxury,
In a mansion on a hill or a yacht upon the sea;
In the halls of greed and power, where temptation grows each day.
Would my every step announce I could give this all away? Refrain
Just suppose I find myself far away from home and friends,
In a desert with no path on a night that never ends.
Or suppose I find I’m caught by a greed that won’t let go.
Could I raise my voice and say for all the world to know: Refrain
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Monday, November 12, 2007
We are Changed for Good
We’re in the midst of a three-week series, Generously Living as Disciples. Yes, that would be the fall stewardship emphasis; but I have to say that this is anything but a typical “stewardship emphasis.” This week, the sermon took the form of a chancel drama, written by my colleague, Pastor Steve Cook. “The Day Love Came Home” is a delightful, powerful, and humorous telling of the story of Zacchaeus. Ed & Solveig Krafnik portrayed Zac Zacchaeus and his wife, Betty, and gave us a glimpse into what the conversation might have been like the night Zacchaeus repented, gave away half of their possessions, settled fourfold with anyone with whom he had a issue, and welcomed to their house Jesus and the disciples! Following the drama, Roger Fink, Dave Kvaas, and Brenda Handel-Johnson offered the following song by Ken Medema:
Changed for Good
1. No more watching from the top of a tree; no more watching from a distance to see;
love is here and love is calling to me; I’m being changed for good.
2. Light the lamps and let the party begin; open doors and let the people come in.
I am miles away from where I have been. I’m being changed for good.
Refrain:
Here’s my promise, here’s my vow: things are changing, starting now;
I was lost, now I’m found, go and tell everybody in town.
3. Time to break the chains that bound me so long.
There’s no way that I can right all my wrongs.
Here I start and if it takes my life long, I’m being changed for good.
The song’s been going through my mind all week., also reminding me of what Luther says about the significance of Baptism for daily life: “It signifies that the old person in us with all its sins and evil desires is to be drowned and die through daily sorrow for sin and through repentance, and on the other hand that daily a new person is to come forth and rise up to live before God in righteousness and purity forever.” ELW, p. 1165.
Welcome to a new day, friends!
Changed for Good, Words & Music by Ken Medema. Copyright ã2007, Ken Medema Music/ASCAP/Brier Patch Music. All rights reserved. International copyright secured. Member CCLI. This song is included in a CD called “Stories to Tell & Gifts to Share.”
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Monday, November 5, 2007
All Saints Day Connects Saints Across Time & Place
All Saints Day is one of my favorite days of the church year, and this year was no exception. Bethlehem All Ages Orchestra played at 9:00, and the Choir sang Brahm’s How Lovely Is Thy Dwelling Place from the “Requiem.” At 11:00 the Ensemble and Band had me so caught up in praise that I lost where we were at the end of worship! At all of the worship services on this weekend, we celebrate the baptized people of God, past and present, who make up the body of Christ. On the bulletin cover, in the shape of a cross, are listed the names of all who have been welcomed into the body of Christ in the Sacrament of Holy Baptism this year. And surrounding them are printed the names of all who have joined what we call “the Church Triumphant” this past year. How moving and emotional it is to name each of these dear brothers and sisters in the Prayer of the Church as we all, with their families, give thanks for their lives! It is a powerful reminder of how we are connected to the saints of all times!
At the same time, this is a day to remember that we are connected to the saints of all places. Saturday night brought home that experience as 40 people gathered with our friends from Bethlehem in the Holy Land, who had prepared a fabulous Middle East dinner. Following the meal, they told about the hardships they endure as Palestinian Christians, how because of where they were born, their family now has to live separately (in Jerusalem and in Bethlehem). They told about how the economy of Bethlehem is being devastated by the wall, and they expressed their concerns for the way that this impossible living situation is driving so many Palestinian Christians to leave the city of Bethlehem, the place of Christ’s birth. But above all, what we heard from these courageous Christians was their hope in Jesus Christ and their determination to work for the good of the people and the city that is central to the faith of Christians around the world. They said that it’s not the stones of the city that are important – the place of Christ’s birth will not change; but it is the “living stones,” the people there, about whom they are concerned.
I am proud of the work that the ELCA is doing in partnership with Christians in the Holy Land; there is a wealth of information on the ELCA web site - ELCA.org
“Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside very weight and sin that clings so closely, and let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfector of our faith, who for the sake of the joy that was set before him endured the cross, disregarding its shame, and has taken his sear at the right hand of the throne of God..” Hebrews 12:1-2a
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