Monday, December 8, 2014

Give Thanks to the LORD!


Give thanks to the LORD, for he is good; his love endures forever.  Psalm 107:1
 
Lately, the Facebook “thing” has been to offer 10 days of thankfulness. Each day you are challenged to post something that you are truly thankful for. It should be an easy list and I think most everyone who tries this exercise ends up with some of the same “thanks”. I am thankful for my family. I am thankful for my friends.
 
Here is a list of very different things to be thankful for:
 
I am thankful for a world that celebrates diversity and confronts racism.
I am thankful for seasons that remind me of the cycle of life.
I am thankful for scientists and doctors that find cures.
I am thankful for people who stand up to bullies.
I am thankful for bartering with homemade/homegrown things rather than paper and coin.
I am thankful for fevers that send us to doctors.
I am thankful for the wind that pollenates the world.
I am thankful for peacekeepers.
I am thankful for questions.
I am thankful for prayer.
 
In this season of giving thanks, may you know thankfulness for the obvious, the difficult and the challenging.  Amen.

 

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Go Camp!


I want to tell you a story…last year at Confirmation Camp I met a young woman that was at camp with the youth from her congregation. Ariel was their youth director. As happens at camp, we sat up late talking, solving world problems and dreaming. Ariel confessed a desire toward Word and Sacrament ministry, but worried that as a mother of two young children with a husband that had a good job, that  it would be difficult to physically go to seminary. I encouraged her to look into alternative ways to study and invited her to come to Austin to meet with me at the Lutheran Seminary of the Southwest with Director Rev. Dr. Jay Alanis. 
 
Ariel took me up on my invitation. It became clear that this dynamic, informed and intelligent young woman was destined to the ordained ministry. Jay encouraged her to find ways to include her husband and her children in her dream and told her a bit about some scholarship opportunities.
 
Last week, I saw that Ariel Williams purchased her books to start seminary at the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Gettysburg! The whole family picked up and moved. Next, I get an email from the director of the Fund for Leaders of the ELCA. This is the scholarship fund that paid for my seminary tuition. It turns out that Ariel thanked me in her application “for encouraging and supporting” her discernment and they wanted me to know that Ariel Williams is the 2014-15 scholarship winner! 
 
Full tuition paid.  Family together.  Church affirmed.
 
Go Camp!

 

Monday, July 7, 2014

“Here I am, Lord”

“Here I am, Lord”
When God called Samuel, it took him a while to recognize the voice, but when he did – he replied with “Here I am, Lord!”.  

When someone comes up to you and asks you to think and pray about a leadership position at Abiding Love, think about Samuel. Please don’t be reactionary and immediately say “Oh, No not me.” Instead seek out God’s will and direction for your response. 

We are about to get the Nominating Committee working for the November 2014 Annual Meeting. We will be electing a vice president, secretary, Worship Life Director, Children’s Ministry Director, Children’s Outreach Ministry Director, Parish Fellowship Director, Properties Board Director and Stewardship and Finance Board Director. 

The Nominating Committee first and consistently prays about God’s intentions for this congregation and its leadership. They take seriously their duty to find people that they feel God is pointing them to. They look for people that demonstrate a joy for serving and present themselves as leaders. 

Please, pray about your involvement in both mission, vision and ministry at Abiding Love, and let a member of the Nominating Committee know if you are interested in being a part of our church leadership team! 

2014 Nominating Committee: 
Elizabeth Collins
Linda Corhan
Lindsey Drake
Steve Kikta
Joel Lehman
Terry Wyatt

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

"Living Resurrected Lives"

 
Jesus heals the leper and says “show yourself to the priest.”

Jesus heals the Centurion’s son and the “servant was healed in that hour.”

Jesus heals Peter’s mother and “she got up and began to serve him.”

Jesus heals the Gadarene Demoniac of his many demons and the town “begs Jesus to leave them.”

On and on Jesus goes about doing resurrection things; healing, saving, transforming.

γερω (Gtr. egeiro) meaning 'to raise' – One of the meanings of ‘Resurrection’ is merely to raise. It’s not only bringing life back after death. Jesus “raised up” people from alienation, from disease, from shame to a new and better life.

Yet we know very little of what happened to those that he encountered in the days that followed. Their very lives had been altered for good – don’t you wonder what happened next? How did they then live fully knowing that they had been touched by the master? 

And what about us? How do we live as people for whom Jesus has come near?

What difference does the resurrection make? What difference does an encounter with Jesus make?

How can we live authentic, intentional and Spirit-filled lives?

In the Sundays that follow Easter, we will recall biblical stories of encounters with Jesus and examine the rest of the story….

April 27:  Simon Peter
May 4:     Thomas
May 11:    Mary and Martha
May 18:   James, the Brother of Jesus
May 25:   Paul
June 1:     Mary Magdalene
June 8:    Pentecost – Running on Empty

 

Friday, February 28, 2014

Take Up Your Cross Daily


This Lent we will explore the many human conditions that led Jesus to the cross. As Jesus journeyed the land,  he  encountered the poor and imprisoned, the diseased and the possessed. It was for these that Jesus spoke out against the imperial powers, and it was for these that Jesus offered a better and more Godly way. Truly, it was for these that he went to the cross. 
 
“Then Jesus said to them all, ‘If any want to become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.’” (Luke 9:23)
 
In the Gospel of Luke the word “daily” becomes a challenge to the friends and followers of Jesus and it is “daily” that we are called to confront and minister to the very same worldly ills and societal tribulations that continue to plague us all. To offer Gods love, grace and mercy we must be willing to look upon those most vulnerable and needy and work, pray and create change. Poverty, disease, violence, oppression, illiteracy, hunger…these calamities and more are tied to the cross that we lift up as our statement of Jesus passion. 
 
Lent is a time to be introspective and to examine the challenges to discipleship. Join us as we learn from Jesus how we - can take up the cross daily. 

 

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

"Living Words"


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
When Netflix presents their home page there is always the “suggested” genera based on what you have watched in the past. You know it says: “Because you watched - - - you might like - - -“. If one where to take your Bible readings and make suggestions based on your past “views” the suggestions might be….

History Channel with more of Genesis for all those times that we decided that we were going to read through the Bible from start to finish but never made it past chapter 21.

Romance and Family since we seem to stick to all the fairly good parts such as; births, blessings and  benedictions, or

“60 Minutes” full of hard hitting and challenging messages – but not too much as you can really only handle about one hour

However, we aren’t Netflix and so we try, with great intentionality, to offer a proclamation that leads us all to want to know God more and to be better disciples of Jesus. It turns out that we are one of the few congregations, Lutheran Congregations, that is, that does – sermon series. Most congregations follow what is called the “Lectionary”, a three year series of lessons designed to give an overview of the life of Jesus.  But there is no way that a lectionary can really cover the entire story of the Bible and too often I feel as though some of the more difficult texts are left out. Also, there are times in the life of a community where specific proclamation is needed. We at Abiding Love have discovered that Sermon Series help us grow!
 
“We want to know – not because to know is to believe, but because to believe is to want to know.”  -- (Friderick J. Gaiser – Word & World)
 
This Epiphany season we will encounter the Word using a sermon series called: “Living Words”. May the Word of God dwell in you richly. See you in church!