A Checklist

June 15, 2023

“32 They know God’s decree, that those who practice such things deserve to die—yet they not only do them but even applaud others who practice them.”

Today we finish chapter one of Paul’s letter to the Romans.  Chapter one is kind of like the famous line from Tale of Two Cities –“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.” On those mountaintop days we are not ashamed of the Gospel and we have a glimpse of the power we receive from that unseen God we worship and we know he has helped. We feel right with God through our faith.  But truly there are those days when we hold on with our fingernails and have to admit we blew it…yet again.  Thank goodness that God is not off in the clouds keeping track of our good and bad deeds but incarnated and went to the cross for us.  But many days are a mixture of good and bad and often like Richard Frost we stand and stare at “two roads diverging in a yellow woods” and we must choose which one to follow.

         Paul ends with a checklist of characteristics of the evil that draws us down that rabbit hole of separation from God that we talked about yesterday. Paul gives us a checklist of signs that we can look for that indicate the evil one is trying to distract us,
         “29 They were filled with every kind of wickedness, evil, covetousness, malice. Full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, craftiness, they are   gossips, 30 slanderers, God-haters, insolent, haughty, boastful inventors of evil, rebellious towards parents, 31 foolish, faithless, heartless, ruthless.”

Most of these qualities are extremes but some we recognize, like jealousy, envy and coveting.  Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount was clear that murder begins with hate and adultery begins with lust.  Gossip is a temptation for all of us and it is fun to share about our successes.   Perhaps the question that helps me most is to ask if what I am doing draws me closer to God and good or does it put a wedge between God and me?

         May our prayer be as we now enter chapter two that we too like Paul may not be ashamed of the Gospel.  May we listen to our conscience as the Holy Spirit seeks to guide us.  May we be reminded each time we enjoy the beauty of nature around us that there is a God who blesses us and seeks relationship with us.  Thank you, Lord.


The Downward Spiral

June 14, 2023

         I think the modern idiom is “I don’t want to go down that rabbit hole.”  When we encounter a temptation or a topic of conversation or anything that draws us into “the dark side,” draws us into depression and discouragement, we know we are on a slippery slope.  My husband would say, “Are you chewing on that bone again!” and I would know I am revisiting a topic that my mind cannot seem to resolve and therefore my emotions become darkened.  Paul in Romans 1 argues that all people know there must be a god as he reveals himself clearly in nature – the beauty of creation and created life.  When we choose to deny that and give credit God deserves to something other than God, we call it idolatry.  The children of Israel making the golden calf while Moses was on Mt. Sinai receiving the Ten Commandments would be a Biblical example.  We can make idols out of human talent, science, government, and almost anything.  We draw our sense of value, our sense of identity from that thing that is not God.  When we become confused like that, the result is that other areas in our life become out of balance also.  He says in verse 22, “22 Claiming to be wise, they became fools; 23 and they exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images.”  We become sheep following the wrong shepherd. 

         We tend to think of God zapping us when we are bad, not unlike getting a spanking from our parent.  I wonder if that fender bender is God punishing me for something I did wrong.  Often, though, my problem is the result of my own error.  I should not have been texting and driving.  I should not have stayed out late partying.  Of course I then was tired and caught a cold. 

         Paul talks of another way though that God deals with sin. “God gave them up to their lusts…”  Modern day English might say, “I wash my hands of this,” or “Learn the hard way then.”  God does not force us to obey and does not force us to love him.  We have agency.  God did not make robots but people made in his image and we have the choice to live in partnership with him.

         Sometimes we say that our conscience is bothering us.  The Holy Spirit nudges us.  We have to admit we really were snarky and snapped at a friend.  We stubbornly ate that dessert.  We knowingly sped knowing we were late.  As Paul has said, this is a moral dilemma not an intellectual challenge.  At that moment, our will is having the light of the Spirit of Truth shown on it.  Let us pray today that when we have those moments of truth, we will submit our will to the wisdom of God.  Lord help us not to go down the rabbit hole of stubbornness and rebellion. Open our eyes and ears to hear your voice today.


“Natural Revelation”

June 13, 2023

“19 For what can be known about God is plain…”

Romans 1:19

            We are pondering how Paul, in his opening in the letter to the Romans puts “the wrath of God” as the opposite of his experience of the power of God for salvation and his experience of the righteousness of God through faith.  He’s “not ashamed of the gospel.” God’s wrath, on the other hand, he presents as God’s anger for the sins we willfully do to destroy God’s creation and God’s creatures.  God is not upset with ignorance but moral rebellion.  Our problem is not intellectual but moral.

              “Natural revelation” is Paul’s argument that God has revealed himself clearly to all people through nature.  No one can say after watching a sunrise or sunset or seeing the birth of a baby something that life is accidental.  Nature itself cannot be explained without considering the possibility of a god.  Paul is not saying Christianity is obvious to all but he is saying nature reveals the existence of God and to deny that takes willful rebellion and denies God the glory he is due.

            So let’s sit with that idea for a minute this morning.  Choose a natural event that you enjoy like a sunrise or a favorite piece of music or a special person who has blessed your life.  Enjoy that memory for a moment.  What does that memory reveal to you about God?  Try to list perhaps three characteristics and then thank God for revealing those aspects of his character to you.  Let us not harden our hearts to God’s presence in our lives today.  Blessings.


“Wrath”

June 12, 2023

“18 For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and wickedness of those who by their wickedness suppress the truth.”

Romans 1:18

         Paul starts his letter to the church in Romewith a positive thesis.  He is not ashamed of the Gospel for it is power and righteousness.  Paul, who considers himself a “slave,” finds in relationship to Christ power not from his own natural ability but from relationship with the God of creation.  Now he turns to the other side of the coin, wrath. 

         We think of wrath as anger about something.  Paul sets God’s anger against sin.  We say, “God loves the sinner but hates the sin.”  Paul is talking about “wickedness”, evil, that “suppresses truth.”  He is not talking about ignorance of truth.  Ignorance is different than choosing to do evil and ignore truth you know.  Paul is dealing with evil as a moral problem growing out of a person’s will, not an intellectual problem coming from the brain.

         When my kids were learning to drive, they kept an eagle eye over my shoulder watching my speed when I drove.  “Mom, you’re speeding.”  Not seeing a speed limit sign was a very weak excuse for we had both studied the same rulebook.  Suppressing the truth is convincing myself I can still drive when I know I have done too much partying.  I deceive myself and endanger my passengers.  Going into a big credit card debt for that special thing I just have to have but which I am not sure how I will pay for is a problem.  My wants always convince me I can diet tomorrow.  God does not like to see us hurting others or ourselves and deceiving ourselves that it’s ok. 

         Ignorance and deceit are two different things.  Perhaps today we need to shine the flashlight of God’s word on our hearts and ask if there is an area where we are deceiving ourselves.  Maybe there is someone with whom you have a grudge but actually it is partially your fault and you need to let that person off the hook and practice forgiveness.  Sometimes we get angry with God when we have just plain been willful and selfish.  During Pentecost, the flashlight of God’s word turns on our hearts.  Pentecost means the Holy Spirit is present and helping us be our better selves.  Let’s do it!


2nd Sunday after Pentecost: Three Little Pigs

June 11, 2023

First Reading: Hosea 5:15–6:6

15I will return again to my place
  until they acknowledge their guilt and seek my face.
  In their distress they will beg my favor:

6:1“Come, let us return to the Lord;
  for it is he who has torn, and he will heal us;
  he has struck down, and he will bind us up.
2After two days he will revive us;
  on the third day he will raise us up,
  that we may live before him.
3Let us know, let us press on to know the Lord;
  his appearing is as sure as the dawn;
 he will come to us like the showers,
  like the spring rains that water the earth.”

4What shall I do with you, O Ephraim?
  What shall I do with you, O Judah?
 Your love is like a morning cloud,
  like the dew that goes away early.
5Therefore I have hewn them by the prophets,
  I have killed them by the words of my mouth,
  and my judgment goes forth as the light.
6For I desire steadfast love and not sacrifice,
  the knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings.

Psalm: Psalm 50:7-15

7“Listen, my people, and I will speak: Israel, I will bear witness against      you; for I am God, your God.
8I do not accuse you because of your sacrifices;
  your burnt offerings are always before me.
9I will not accept a calf from your stalls, nor goats from your pens;
10for all the wild animals of the forest are mine,
  the cattle on a thousand hills. 
11I know every bird of the mountains,
  and the creatures of the fields are mine.
12If I were hungry, I would not tell you,
  for the whole world is mine and all that is in it.
13Do you think I eat the flesh of bulls,
  or drink the blood of goats?
14Offer to God a sacrifice of thanksgiving
  and make good your vows to the Most High.
15Call upon me in the day of trouble;
  I will deliver you, and you shall honor me.

Second Reading: Romans 4:13-25

13The promise that he would inherit the world did not come to Abraham or to his descendants through the law but through the righteousness of faith. 14If it is the adherents of the law who are to be the heirs, faith is null and the promise is void. 15For the law brings wrath; but where there is no law, neither is there violation.
16For this reason it depends on faith, in order that the promise may rest on grace and be guaranteed to all his descendants, not only to the adherents of the law but also to those who share the faith of Abraham (for he is the father of all of us, 17as it is written, “I have made you the father of many nations”)—in the presence of the God in whom he believed, who gives life to the dead and calls into existence the things that do not exist. 18Hoping against hope, he believed that he would become “the father of many nations,” according to what was said, “So numerous shall your descendants be.” 19He did not weaken in faith when he considered his own body, which was already as good as dead (for he was about a hundred years old), or when he considered the barrenness of Sarah’s womb. 20No distrust made him waver concerning the promise of God, but he grew strong in his faith as he gave glory to God, 21being fully convinced that God was able to do what he had promised. 22Therefore his faith “was reckoned to him as righteousness.” 23Now the words, “it was reckoned to him,” were written not for his sake alone, 24but for ours also. It will be reckoned to us who believe in him who raised Jesus our Lord from the dead, 25who was handed over to death for our trespasses and was raised for our justification.

Gospel: Matthew 9:9-13, 18-26

9As Jesus was walking along, he saw a man called Matthew sitting at the tax booth; and he said to him, “Follow me.” And he got up and followed him.
10And as he sat at dinner in the house, many tax collectors and sinners came and were sitting with him and his disciples. 11When the Pharisees saw this, they said to his disciples, “Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?” 12But when he heard this, he said, “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. 13Go and learn what this means, ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice.’ For I have come to call not the righteous but sinners.”

18While he was saying these things to them, suddenly a leader of the synagogue came in and knelt before him, saying, “My daughter has just died; but come and lay your hand on her, and she will live.” 19And Jesus got up and followed him, with his disciples. 20Then suddenly a woman who had been suffering from hemorrhages for twelve years came up behind him and touched the fringe of his cloak, 21for she said to herself, “If I only touch his cloak, I will be made well.” 22Jesus turned, and seeing her he said, “Take heart, daughter; your faith has made you well.” And instantly the woman was made well. 23When Jesus came to the leader’s house and saw the flute players and the crowd making a commotion, 24he said, “Go away; for the girl is not dead but sleeping.” And they laughed at him. 25But when the crowd had been put outside, he went in and took her by the hand, and the girl got up. 26And the report of this spread throughout that district.

CHILDREN’S SERMON:  Three Little Pigs 

We all know the story of the three little pigs who went out to build their homes.  The first little pig built his house of straw and the wolf blew it down.  The second little pig built his house of wood and the wolf blew it down.  The third little pig built his house of bricks.  It withstood the test of the wolf.  Share with your neighbor what one of the “wolves” are today that might be blowing on your house.

Let us pray.  Lord may the words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart be acceptable in your sight, my Rock and my Redeemer.

SERMON

         Today we are really starting the Pentecost season.  Pentecost is the time after Easter and after the Holy spirit is sent to be with each of us as our counselor, our advocat, the Spirit of Truth leading and guiding us in our daily lives.  We reflected last week on how the Trinity draws us into community, draws us into communication, and teaches us lessons we are challenged to obey.  Today’s text introduces us to three people, three real examples of this.  Matthew is a social outcaste, a tax collector, who is called to follow Jesus.  Jairus, the synagogue leader is not a follower but struggling with the immenent death of his daughter.  The third is a desparate unnamed women, “unclean” from a flow of blood.  She has no name, has no status as a female, and is sick.  All three people are outside Christian community.  All three are not in comfortable communication with Jesus nor ordinary church going people.  All three need Jesus and they must make choices.

Matthew:  “9As Jesus was walking along,”

         “As” introduces disciple number 5.  Jesus has called James and John, Peter and Andrew.  “As” Jesus is walking along he notices Matthew.  We don’t know why.  He does not go out of his way but is alert to who is in his way.  We sometimes think evangelism is sharing the Gospel with some “identified sinner” who obviously needs to hear about Jesus because we see the questionable lifestyle.  Jesus is not looking for someone to enlist to his cause but is going about life as normal and notices a man he engages in conversation. 

         We would not classify Matthew as a modern day “seeker.”  As I listen to the news reports I wonder if the workers for the IRS or police or FBI would find a warm welcome in our churches.  On the other hand perhaps we would not think to talk to a bartender or nightclub owner or a political leader from the opposite side of the rails.  We all have our social excuses for not interacting with people that make us uncomfortable.  We are too old, not rich enough, too conservative and so we excuse ourselves from crossing the line between “in” and “out.”  Matthew as a tax collector was an “outsider.”

         Matthew is part of an existing community, not necessarily looking for new friends.  Matthew’s friends come with him to listen to Jesus and those ever watching Pharisees object.  Jesus is clear that building community, caring for the sick and outcaste is a priority for God.  If we were to draw a clock to represent the time we spend talking with God, talking with friends about our faith, and talking with “others” about our faith, we might have to hang our head.  The point I want to make is not numbers of people witnessed to or our assesment of the spiritual condition of people we interact with. Only God knows the heart. But I want to note that Jesus was willing to talk about faith to those who happened to cross his path.

         Pentecost is not focusing on how our God communicates with even the social outcaste but the reality that because Jesus is alive in our lives, we may at anytime feel the tap of the Holy Spirit on our shoulder to share about our faith with someone we would not normally interact with.  That social outcaste is outcaste in the eyes of the world but is someone God wants to be in his community.  Can we say, “Welcome”?  Let’s turn to our neighbor and say, Welcome to Bethany!

         Matthew had to make a choice.   Jesus invited him to “follow.”  Matthew had to choose to obey.  He did and that changed his life from “outsider” to “insider.”  Matthew came with the skills he had honed in the secular world and perhaps with some of the bad habits also that had to be repurposed but when he chose to follow Jesus, he not only became an “insider” but he also became “valuable” and “forgiven.”  Matthew became someone who was part of God’s community, part of God’s story, someone in relationship with God, and under God’s authority – not Rome’s. We might say that Matthew was building his house of straw, on finances, and the wind of finances can blow it down.  He ran to a house built with bricks.

Jairus

         Matthew was a social outcaste, a tax collector.  Jairus on the other hand was a leader in the Synagogue.  Not all problems are “out there with those sinners.”  Jairus knew enough about Jesus to seek him out in his hour of need but he was not a committed follower.  We might call these people CEO Christians.  We might see them at Christmas, Easter and Other times like death.  Or again we might call them 9-1-1 Christians.  They tune in during emergencies hoping for help for their crisis or some crisis they perceive in the world.  Jairus is not without faith even though he goes to that “other” church or denomination.  He knew enough to turn to Jesus.  Turning to Jesus in our hour of need is always a good choice.

         Jesus goes with Jairus but so do the crowds.  I doubt this was some sort of triumphal procession through the streets of Jerusalem.  Community is messy.  The evil one loves to whisper in our ear that probably God will not answer my prayer request as I waited too long – til my daughter died and the mourners are gathered.  Probably the others clamouring for God’s attention will be dealt with before me as I am not a committed devotee of Jesus.  The evil ones loves to throw up all the possible barriers to community that might highjack God’s attention from our place in community.  Like wise all the voices of the crowd and our friends communicate, “Don’t bother the master.”

         Jairus had a crisis though.  His daughter had died.  I was not there and am not medical but whether she died or was in a coma, the girl too was not in community.  We can be outside God’s community because of our doubts and diseases.  That is a different dynamic than Matthew.  The dynamics of Jairus or his daughter does not stop Jesus from engaging with them.   We do not need to be people of faith for Jesus to reach out.  Like Jairus’ daughter we may need someone else interceding for us.  That someone might be you!

         When Jesus arrives at their home, he first silences the crowds and the mockers.  She is not dead.  She is not beyond the ability of God to help.  Jairus’ crisis-faith does not limit God’s power to heal nor his love for the lost.  God is about restoring life and building faith.  He is not about measuring how worthy we are to be part of his community.  God does not love us just because of our faith in Jesus.  God loves us because we are his creation.

         Jesus tells Jairus to clear out the crowd and Jesus tells Jairus’ daughter, arise.  Jairus, a public religious leader must choose if he is going to obey infront of his congregation, infront of his peeps.  That is where the rubber meets the road.  Jesus is communicating and inviting him into community and he must put faith into action.  His obedience affects the atmosphere for his daughter and allows Jesus to “do his thing” for her.  Our obedience impacts the lives of others who may be entrapped in situations beyond their control.  Matthew went from being “an outsider” to “an insider” with his crew of people watching.  Jairus went from “sick with anxiety” to “reporter” of the miracle in his house.  His daughter went from “dead” to “alive.”  Pentecost season is a time when we realize how our status in community is changed, our communication channels are more open with God, and we realize how strategic our obedience is in the lives of others.  Perhaps people who are emergency prayers are like people building their houses of sticks.  It’s better than straw but in an emergency, they are in trouble.

An Unnamed Woman

         Our third character we meet this morning is an unnamed woman in the crowd who is outside community because of her illness and her identity as a woman.  She sees herself as unseen, unworthy and untouchable.  Her desparate hope is that by just touching the edge of Jesus’ robe she can be made well.  I suspect many in our world today are like this woman.  The obvious are those differently challenged who find it physically challenging to come to church because of their physical conditions that make the mechanics of going to church challenging but also embarrassing.  They turn on the TV and are discipled at a distance about the “health, wealth, and prosperity” the gospel offers but which has not come to them.  Then there are those with colorful pasts of being used, abused and rejected.  Most of us carry stories we do not want to share but for many their weight of failure drives them to desparately seek the edge of Jesus’ robe.  Real relationship is beyond their imagination.  Often we don’t see them because they don’t even value themselves.  Sometimes we too are so ashamed about our failures, we, like them, grasp desparately for Jesus.

         The beauty of this woman is that even when she considers herself unacceptable, Jesus knows the power has flowed from him and he knows she is there in the shadows.  She goes from “unseen” and “untouchable” to “seen” and “daughter.”  Jesus calls her “daughter.”  The world rejects her but faith has made her a daughter of the risen Lord.  Jesus communicates with her that she is valuable and whole through him.  Her choice to turn to him changed her life.  I would suggest this is a decision to build a house of bricks.  Straw and wood would not do for this woman.

Matthew, Jairus, a dead daughter, a sick woman

         Our text today takes people who are outside community and we see Jesus pull them into relationship.  We see people who are out of communication with God, enter into communication and who then become part of stories spreading throughout the world and through time.  We see people making choices to obey and follow and realize the huge difference it made in their lives.  Perhaps we are just like one of those people or perhaps we know someone else who is.  The message of Pentecost is that no matter what kind of house we build, of straw, wood or brick, God desires to be our guest and have us as part of his community.  He wants to communicate with us about whatever is on our minds.  He does not want us to call on him just when the big bad wolves are at our door.  And he wants us to let him help build stronger homes that stand firm when the winds of life blow.  Pentecost is a time when we ask ourselves if we are building with straw, wood or brick. Ephesians 2:19-21 challenges us:

“19 So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are citizens with the saints and also members of the household of God, 20 built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the cornerstone. 21 In him the whole structure is joined together and grows into a holy temple in the Lord;”

Let the people of God say, “AMEN!”


“Day by Day”

June 10, 2023

         This week we looked at Paul’s introduction to his letter to the Romans.  He had not met them but they were on his “do meet” list.  They were people he had prayed for and now was longing to meet in person.  He is convinced that as they shared their stories of faith he would hear how they too were not ashamed of the Gospel in a culture unfriendly to Christians and he would hear that the Gospel was the power of God for salvation in their lives and produced the power of righteousness through faith.

         As I pondered what hymn carried that deep desire to walk closer to God and God’s people daily, growing in grace and faith, I came up with two of a similar title.  Day by Day (and with each passing sorrow) and Day by Day (dear Lord I pray).  Enjoy.

https://www.google.com/search?q=Day+by+day+(three+things+I+pray)&oq=Day+by+day+(three+things+I+pray)&aqs=chrome..69i57j0i22i30l5j0i390i650l4.38421j0j9&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8#fpstate=ive&vld=cid:f19e649b,vid:lXSx9NUfmsI

Power

June 9, 2023

         Paul presents his thesis to the church in Rome in his opening chapter, Romans 1:16-17;

 “16 For I am not ashamed of the gospel;

 it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who has faith, to the Jew first and also to the Greek. 

17 For in it the righteousness of God is revealed through faith for faith; as it is written, ‘The one who is righteous will live by faith.’

Paul, who identifies himself as a “slave,” proposes the idea that faith in Christ aligns him with the “power of God.”  A powerless slave finds power in a master who enables him to live by wisdom in this world.  The world does not understand.  He no longer answers to the whims of people but has found the God of the universe who has all power and is willing to come to his slave’s aid.  God is not a taskmaster sitting off in the clouds evaluating his work but a being that incarnates and empowers him to be his better self for his own fulfillment and for the betterment of the world.  Gospel, which we often call the “good news”, tells us that God has come to us and we have power as we believe.  Perhaps power is not your thing but being valuable enough to help is a desire in all our hearts.

         Paul also talks about the righteousness of God that is found through the Gospel.  Righteousness is being “right” with God.  We use the word forgiven.  We could also say whole, having our record wiped clean, having no barriers between the eternal and myself.  God is not out in the clouds offended by my humanness but partnering with me, as I will allow him, to make life better.  The slave has been given voice and vote in the relationship with the Almighty.  The Gospel is the good news of available relationship, as we believe, faith.

         “Faith” like love or peace or joy is one of those words we can only see in action.  It is relational, not theoretical, and not contractual.  Faith opens the door to relationship with a God who shares power and righteousness with his creation.  Today we might think of the places where we feel powerless or unrighteous.  We can invite the God of the universe to help us cope and clean up those areas.  That is good news for sure.  We are not in this alone.  Blessings.


“I am not ashamed…”

June 8, 2023

         Today we read in Romans 1:16-17 one of the favorite verses people memorize from Romans and the theses of the letter Paul is writing to the people in the church in Rome.  He’s introduced himself, thanked them for their ministry that is talked about around the empire, and now he makes a foundational statement that resonates within us, reminding us of our core identity.  We are people who profess a gospel, good news that we believe. 

“16 For I am not ashamed of the gospel; it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who has faith, to the Jew first and also to the Greek. 17 For in it the righteousness of God is revealed through faith for faith; as it is written, ‘The one who is righteous will live by faith.’

         Paul is not ashamed of his faith.  Mass media today has identified Christian faith with so many causes and beliefs that a profession of being a Christian can be embarrassing.  Or at least we think twice before saying it as we evaluate how the other might interpret our statement.  Many identify it with ultra conservative political beliefs that might even advocate violence.  Others can dismiss Christians as just do-gooders, trying to save the ecology.  And there is a whole host of other baggage that people connect to a profession of Christian faith.

         Paul says he is not ashamed because the gospel is the power of God and the righteousness of God.  I suspect today in our culture we might say we are not ashamed of the gospel because it is the love of God through faith or we might identify it as the forgiveness of God through faith – for all, Jews and Gentiles, Americans and nonAmericans, men and women…all people. 

         Let’s take a minute and honestly ask the Holy Spirit to search our hearts.  Are we ashamed of the Gospel?  When we think of the Gospel do we think of power, righteousness of God, love or forgiveness?  What is core to the Gospel that gives us courage to share with another?  Blessings as you reflect.


“I give thanks through Christ Jesus…”

June 7, 2023

         We are pondering Paul’s introduction to his letter to the Romans.  He does not know them so he first introduces himself as “a slave” of Christ Jesus and then as an apostle under assignment, “called.”  Paul wants to meet these young Christians whose reputation of faith is known all over the civilized world then.  They were his heroes or models.

         When I was a young adult I attended a street rally held by a politician running for governor who later became President of the United States.  I did not get to meet him but I had his signature on a card I kept pinned to my corkboard.  Once I stood with my brand new baby in arms as the President of Kenya walked by and he paused, pointed his ruler’s stick at my daughter and proclaimed, “She too will go to this school.”  And she did.  We all have heroes and people we admire that we would love to meet or at least be in a meeting with.

         Paul is not giving thanks for a good deed done to him, from which he benefited.  He writes, “I give thanks to my God through Jesus Christ for all of you. (Romans 1:8)” He is thanking God for how the Roman Christians have lived their faith in the middle of a pagan city.  He wants them to know that he is one of the prayer warriors, one of the unknown masses praying for them constantly and he is trying to figure out a way to meet with them so they can share their faith.

         Is there someone who has been a model and mentor to you that you might want to thank for how they have lived their life in a way that deeply impacted you?  “Thank you for being you, cause it has helped me to become me.  Perhaps we say nice things on birthday cards or anniversaries but today perhaps there is someone you could write a just-because card to with words of affirmation.  Some of our mentors and heroes have passed on but we can ask God through Jesus to relate our gratitude for their lives.  Gratitude is a powerful force for good in our lives and in our world.  Take time in prayer to remember those who have blessed you and whom you would love to meet with and have a good chat about life!


Obedience of Faith

June 6, 2023

“ through whom we have received grace and apostleship to bring about the obedience of faith among all the Gentiles for the sake of his name, 

including yourselves who are called to belong to Jesus Christ, (Romans 1:5)”

         Paul’s first sentence in his letter to the Romans is definitely a mental challenge.  We pondered his introduction as a “slave” of Christ Jesus and what title we would choose.  Then he says he was “called” to be an apostle to the Gentiles and Jews because of his direct encounter on the road to Damascus.  I suspect our Christian identity is not necessarily something we lead with as we introduce ourselves to others but we wait for “the right moment.”  In this same sentence that introduces not only Paul as the author but also his message he is about to introduce, Paul now says we too have grace and apostleship through “the obedience of faith.”  Hmmm. Paul does not set faith and works as opposites like many are prone to do when talking about salvation.  Paul sees faith working hand in hand with obedience, the living out of the faith we profess.

         Romans is going to confront us with the integrity of our faith.  Today the question is “Do we walk the talk?”  Paul does not want this to be a question just for those other guys whom we identify as “sinners” but he is going to build a message that challenges his readers to take their own spiritual temperature, honestly reflecting on how well they have integrated their faith with their lives.

         Let’s take that question out of the “hell fire and brimstone” context we often put it in and let’s put the question in to the context of how we want our friends and family to understand us.  Do we want to be known as a “player” or as “one inch deep and a mile wide” or “all blow and no show”?  The rubber meets the road if you ask me how I want to be seen in the eyes of my grandchildren and my friends.  I want my faith to bring about obedience to the wisdom of the God who made life and knows how it works best.

         May we join Paul today and pray that we grow in our ability to submit our will, obedience, in faith to the God who has revealed himself to us and desires to grow a relationship of grace with us.  Lord, help.