Sunday, March 30, 2025

Open Arms

 

Text: Luke 15:11-32

Focus: Mercy

Function: to celebrate mercy

11Then Jesus said, “There was a man who had two sons. 12The younger of them said to his father, ‘Father, give me the share of the wealth that will belong to me.’ So he divided his assets between them. 13A few days later the younger son gathered all he had and traveled to a distant region, and there he squandered his wealth in dissolute living. 14When he had spent everything, a severe famine took place throughout that region, and he began to be in need. 15So he went and hired himself out to one of the citizens of that region, who sent him to his fields to feed the pigs. 16He would gladly have filled his stomach with the pods that the pigs were eating, and no one gave him anything. 17But when he came to his senses he said, ‘How many of my father’s hired hands have bread enough and to spare, but here I am dying of hunger! 18I will get up and go to my father, and I will say to him, “Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you; 19I am no longer worthy to be called your son; treat me like one of your hired hands.” ’ 20So he set off and went to his father. But while he was still far off, his father saw him and was filled with compassion; he ran and put his arms around him and kissed him. 21Then the son said to him, ‘Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you; I am no longer worthy to be called your son.’ 22But the father said to his slaves, ‘Quickly, bring out a robe—the best one—and put it on him; put a ring on his finger and sandals on his feet. 23And get the fatted calf and kill it, and let us eat and celebrate, 24for this son of mine was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found!’ And they began to celebrate.

25“Now his elder son was in the field, and as he came and approached the house, he heard music and dancing. 26He called one of the slaves and asked what was going on. 27He replied, ‘Your brother has come, and your father has killed the fatted calf because he has got him back safe and sound.’ 28Then he became angry and refused to go in. His father came out and began to plead with him. 29But he answered his father, ‘Listen! For all these years I have been working like a slave for you, and I have never disobeyed your command, yet you have never given me even a young goat so that I might celebrate with my friends. 30But when this son of yours came back, who has devoured your assets with prostitutes, you killed the fatted calf for him!’ 31Then the father said to him, ‘Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours. 32But we had to celebrate and rejoice, because this brother of yours was dead and has come to life; he was lost and has been found.’ ”

Good morning to the beloved of God.

I love this story.

And it is important that while we see a tremendous picture of mercy given by the father to the wayward son, and we focus on forgiveness, we can’t forget that the main point of the story has to do with the elder brother’s poor attitude. And we’ll focus on that during this sermon, but let us first look at the amazing story of grace and mercy presented here by Christ.

I did a tour of England back in 2006 where we tried to learn how churches were adapting to a post-Christian society since Europe went through it long before us.

And while we were there, we attended this Mega-Church and I was really impressed with the architecture and symbols. It was Holy Trinity Anglican Church in Brompton and it was this huge, ornate, alabaster cathedral with all the Medieval stone carvings and statues.

But what impressed me the most was this robust wooden statue carved out of the base of a large tree. It was a statue of the father embracing the prodigal son.

I thought to myself, of the myriad of images they could have portrayed up there from the scriptures, they chose this iconic symbol of mercy to depict the the central theme to their purpose. Their purpose is to promote God’s mercy.

In my experience, God’s mercy is universal.

But there is a dynamic to this story that is important and that is the way the prodigal son changed his mind.

He refused to be stubborn. He let his mind be changed. He gave up his error and returned to his community and to his people.

We use this story the first night of Kairos to ask the men to examine where they have gone and if they are willing to come back.

In theological circles, we call this choice to come back repentance. It means to allow our minds to be changed. And that is part of the function of the Holy Spirit in our lives. Not only does she empower us to succeed, but the Spirit’s baptism is also with a cleansing fire that draws us away from destructive behaviors and attitudes toward those that bring God’s peace.

There is a key aspect to allowing our minds to be changed. It can be a stumbling block that many are not willing to get over: Humility.

It takes humility to walk with God. It takes a willingness to be open to the Spirit’s leading and direction which has a completely different set of values than the values of the world around us.

We are set apart as believers to a different way of living. It takes humility to for go our pride.

The text says the prodigal son “came to his senses” and realized that a slave in his father’s house was better off than him, so he decided to return and take his rightful place as just a servant since he squandered his inheritance.

He owned up to his mistake and admitted it.

That takes humility. Remember, there are three things required of us, Do justice, Love Mercy and walk Humbly with God. Micah 6:8

Humility helps us to listen to and hear from God. On the other hand, pride makes us stubborn. Pride is what took Satan down.

I find beauty of the story in the father watching the road and longing for the return of his child. At this point, his child was dead to him, or at least the child had cut off the parent.

The father embraces the child. The child admits his error and accepts his punishment.

But the father will have none of that. None of the punishment, I mean. The father has his child back and this is all that matters. Reconciliation is the primary purpose of this story.

And that moves us to the elder brother who refused to participate. He refused to call him his own brother and he condemns his actions.

Notice something: the father places the child back in his position as child, but all that the father has still goes to the elder brother. The father is fair to the elder brother but doesn't get the credit. The elder brother’s pride destroys another relationship.

The parable, as I mentioned, is about reconciliation. We are first reconciled to God and then to others.

Pride caused the elder brother to resent mercy. Jesus, I believe, want us to stop being resentful of mercy. God wants us to celebrate mercy when it’s given.

So, let us finish by looking again at the father. At first, he validates the elder brother’s frustration, but then he reminds him of what is important:

He was lost and is found, we was dead to me and is now alive again.

The father sees restoration as the primary goal.

May we be restored as well.

Sunday, March 23, 2025

God's Grooming

 

Text: Luke 13:1-9

Focus: repentance

Function: to help people see how God enables us to be faithful.

13:1At that very time there were some present who told Jesus about the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices. 2He asked them, “Do you think that because these Galileans suffered in this way they were worse sinners than all other Galileans?3No, I tell you, but unless you repent you will all perish as they did. 4Or those eighteen who were killed when the tower of Siloam fell on them—do you think that they were worse offenders than all the other people living in Jerusalem? 5No, I tell you, but unless you repent you will all perish just as they did.”

6Then he told this parable: “A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard, and he came looking for fruit on it and found none. 7So he said to the man working the vineyard, ‘See here! For three years I have come looking for fruit on this fig tree, and still I find none. Cut it down! Why should it be wasting the soil?’ 8He replied, ‘Sir, let it alone for one more year, until I dig around it and put manure on it. 9If it bears fruit next year, well and good, but if not, you can cut it down.’ ”

Good morning the beloved of God.

We are in Lent still and again, our passage speaks to us about God’s judgment.

It is heavy. However, I believe it is important to understand the purpose of what we call God’s judgment. God is Love and God loves us because we are God’s offspring. And just as parents are entrusted with the raising of their own children and teaching them values, respect, faith, honor and encouragement so that they can succeed in life, God is a loving parent who wants the same for us.

When we hear the word judgment, we cringe a little because we have falsely equated judgment with revenge. God does not take revenge on us and God, if God ever was, is no longer concerned with revenge since the judgment for sin was carried out on God’s own self through the death and resurrection of Christ Jesus on the cross.

God is concerned with our well being and development. God has given us the Spirit so that we can thrive in God’s love. We thrive by faith, trusting and resting in God’s love for us.

By faith, we thrive in God’s love.

That is another reason why it is important for me to preach God’s love and our responsibility to respond with love toward others.

God believes in us and wants us to thrive.

So, the passage has Jesus talking about tragedies that have happened and the fact that God permitted them to happen. One was an accident, a tower collapsed, the other was oppression, Pilate, the Roman Governor over them, polluted their worship with an act of terror designed to suppress the crowd. Only, it isn’t called terror when it is State sponsored.

I surmise the question to Jesus was why this was permitted to happen.

And Jesus responds with the implication that God could have stopped it and he reminds them that death and tragedy reminds us to focus on God and our own well being.

Tragedies like this serve as reminders to be drawn close to God. We shudder when we think of what happened to Juanita Maloon, and again in the shuddering our focus is brought back to God.

That is what is happening here in this story, and the Jesus’ response is not the promise that bad stuff will not happen, but that through it all, we are restored by God.

Then he uses another word that has sometimes been given a negative connotation. He tells them that they need to repent.

But don’t worry, it literally means to change direction, or more specifically, to allow your mind to be changed by the leading of the Holy Spirit.

Believers are open minded to the leading of the Spirit. They give up this system of retribution and revenge and embrace love and forgiveness.

Jesus is telling them to make the decision to follow in his way of living and loving others. He is telling us to follow after his teachings when they contradict the values given to us by the evil influences in the world around us.

So let me put this in the context of how I would have interpreted it had I heard it right then back in the first century of this common era. I would have interpreted it like this: Follow this new way of life, it flows from God’s Spirit and it will heal and restore you to the path of a life lived to the fullest of what God intended for you.

Now I appreciate how the designers of the Lectionary text included the metaphor about the fig tree in context with this passage that mentions judgment and restoration.

He speaks of a tree that is not doing well and the commitment of the gardener to make it thrive.

God’s commitment to us is to help us thrive through the leading of the Spirit in our lives.

And because it is Lent, we are going to let it stand that at the end, there is the possibility that after the extra care is done and the tree fails that it will be discarded as the parable implies.

But I can’t see God discarding any of God’s children. Jesus lets the tension stand here in this passage so that we can sort out the necessity of this concept that we make the decision to let the Spirit lead in our lives.

We choose whether or not to let the Spirit lead us.

And just as we pray and recommit our trust to God every week when we repeat the Lord’s prayer for God to give us what we need each day, Our Daily Bread, this choosing to follow is a daily exercise.

I suggest that we wake up in the morning and sometime during those wee hours of waking we recommit ourselves to walking in the grace and love and mercy of God that day.

It is a day by day process. Just as Alcoholics Anonymous does, we are refreshed and reminded by this text to choose for ourselves to let God lead us throughout the day.

God wants us to thrive and sends the Spirit to encourage and empower us.

Although the possibility of failure exists, we can succeed because God is faithful and committed to our success.

Trusting in God to help us, to nurture our own fig trees of life, is living by faith in the power of God. God leads us to that place where our minds decide to love like Christ did in our reaction to the evil that is around us.

So, this is about trials and it reminds us to keep our eyes focused on the love of God during these trials. God is committed to aiding us through the Spirit inside of us.



Sunday, March 16, 2025

Love, Working Through Faith

 

Text: Philippians 3:17-4:1

Focus: Endurance

Function: to help people see the power of the Spirit to keep them focused

17Brethren, be followers together of me, and mark them which walk so as ye have us for an ensample. 18(For many walk, of whom I have told you often, and now tell you even weeping, that they are the enemies of the cross of Christ: 19whose end is destruction, whose God is their belly, and whose glory is in their shame, who mind earthly things.) 20For our conversation is in heaven; from whence also we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ: 21who shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body, according to the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himself.

4:1Therefore, my brethren dearly beloved and longed for, my joy and crown, so stand fast in the Lord, my dearly beloved.

Good morning beloved of God. I love the way Paul calls them the beloved of God and then his own beloved. He has what is called a Pastor’s heart. In other words, he is in touch with that side of him that is empathetic and intuitive to people’s suffering. I believe he was in touch with his nurturing, feminine side.

Generally, when I am picking my passage from the possible lectionary texts, I try to avoid the passages that appear to be judgmental or negative.

But, this is Lent and it’s a season for us to re-focus our hearts toward how we live this Christian life in a world that tries to distract us by telling us it is okay to be selfish, greedy and refuse to share our blessings from God because its the American way.

Not really the American way, but the way of the world.

In contrast, John implies that if we have the means and we see someone in need and do nothing to help, we are not walking in the love of Christ.

The way of Christ revolutionized and upset the social order of the first 3 centuries. It was a radical shift from class oppression by wealthy to the collective empowering of the poor when they learned to share and to help each other survive.

It was so radical that the Roman authorities tried to stop them by executing them in the arenas as public spectacles.

In order to bring about a system whereby everyone was included, some of our early fore-fathers and fore-mothers gave their lives.

So, our Lenten sacrifice, or our Lenten focus on the suffering of Christ, which leads us to the celebration of his resurrection on Easter Sunday, is a reminder of the suffering of generations of believers who have born witness to our faith with their lives.

Our sacrifice remembers the sacrifices of others.

Christ himself, in faith and the hope of the resurrection, suffered the agony of his murder for us in order to deliver us from the fear of death and restore us to God through our own living by faith.

We cannot adequately do that except for the resurrection which for us means that when we die, we die in faith that the Lord himself will redeem our lives from the grave into our reward.

Lent looks forward to the resurrection and there can be no resurrection without a death. In Lent, we symbolically die to ourselves.

I’m not sure what to do with the phrase from our passage in verse 21 when he says he will change our vile body.

When I read Genesis 1, I read that God created both male and female and God called both male and female: “good.” When I read Romans 1, I read that God created different genders as well.

God calls Creation Good.

And yet, in this passage, Paul calls what God created as vile.

The scriptures do say that when God created us, we were good and then we became corrupt.

And it is true that there are people who have cut off their conscience, or have had their consciences severed by abuse or neglect as is the case with many of the residents I get to know during a Kairos weekend.

And in order to keep society safe and to protect the weak from the strong, we are forced to incarcerate those who violate the rights of others.

And although I believe that non violent offenders need a better solution for rehabilitation than our prison system, I agree that societies need to ensure justice. Some people aren’t safe to be around others.

I get the fact that there are evildoers in this world and God desires that we protect the weak from those who would exploit them.

But I don’t see prison resident, or the Uber passenger, or the Wal-Mart clerk and especially any of you as vile. I see humans whom God loves. I see us as created in the image of God and I know from scripture that God is seeking to redeem us by faith working through through love.

It takes faith, or trust, in God to be able to make a sacrifice because we believe in God’s reward for obedience.

But again, it is Lent and we take this time to acknowledge that corruption has crept into humanity and we direct our focus on what God wants from us as we live the rest of our earthly lives for God’s glory and purpose.

So let us focus on the rest of verse 21.

Or, let us focus on the fact that God knows that there is brokenness in this world.

We take comfort in the fact that not only does God’s all-knowing isn’t just from God’s throne in heaven, but also by the fact that God became human and experienced human suffering.

God can relate to our pain.

So, the Love of God works through faith to help comfort and restore us in our pain.

And again, Easter Sunday proves the power of God over the evil that is present in this world.

In verse 23, Paul focuses on the fact that God is all powerful and will indeed transform and redeem us from this corruption through the power of the Spirit.

Through God’s Spirit we find a better way of living and responding to evil. By faith in the resurrection, we feel the power of God’s love.

We feel the power of the Spirit giving our spirits understanding and mercy towards others because we are experiencing God’s love and mercy ourselves.

I love the way those who choose the lectionary text included verse 1 of Chapter 4.

It is the conclusion to Paul’s point about us living by faith for the Love of God toward others.

He recognizes the distractions, as we have seen in the text, and he reminds us to be steadfast.

I suppose the Lenten sacrifice symbolically reminds us of our devotion to God.

And I see the faith giving us the power to continue to love. So be it.



Sunday, March 9, 2025

Everyone

Text: Romans 10:8-13

Focus: Sodzo

Function: to help people see that salvation is holistic


8But what does it say?

The word is near you,

    in your mouth and in your heart”

(that is, the word of faith that we proclaim), 9because if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. 10For one believes with the heart, leading to righteousness, and one confesses with the mouth, leading to salvation. 11The scripture says, “No one who believes in him will be put to shame.” 12For there is no distinction between Jew and Greek; the same Lord is Lord of all and is generous to all who call on him. 13For “everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.”


Good morning beloved of God!

Oftentimes, when I am choosing my text for a sermon , like we saw last week with Lectio Davina, I look for a word or a phrase that sticks out to me and focus on that. Hence , the word I chose to focus on is “Everyone” from the phrase “everyone who calls upon the name of the Lord will be saved.” When Paul writes those words he is quoting the Old Testament, The same quote that Peter used when the Holy Spirit fell in the book of Acts, it's from Joel 2:32.

I find it an interesting turn of phrase. Let me break it down to simple terms. Everyone who prays to God will be saved.

I think in order for us to understand this, we need to go back to our understanding of what it means for us to be saved.

There is what I call a salvation formula in this passage that speaks to the condition of the heart of a person and they way they respond with from their heart with an outward sign of their commitment to Christ Jesus.

I’m not into formulas as if they were magic enchantments that will automatically secure a persons salvation.

Throughout the scriptures, God looks at the heart and looks for a heart that responds willingly to the leading of the Holy Spirit to thrive in their love for God by loving others.

But the formula that is written here is believe and confess. Specifically, it is believe with the heart -resulting in Right living, and confess with the mouth -resulting in restoration..

It is one of the main reasons why we do baptism here. Baptism is our confession of our trust in Christ.

To me, salvation comes from resting in Christ and letting the Spirit of God lead me in my life. It touches every aspect of our lives.

That, I believe is why he says we believe resulting in righteousness. The phrase means the result is right living, by applying the standard to love others as much as ourselves,

And prayer leads us to God and to listen to the Holy Spirit. That is why I did the Lectio Divina exercise last week, to help us get in touch with the Holy Spirit.

So, theologically, we need to get past the concept of salvation where we simply make it to heaven when we die.

That is not at all what Jesus talked about when Jesus talked of salvation. You know, because I have taught you that eternal life literally means a life without boundaries, unlimited by the possibilities of the Spirit’s power inside of us.

Salvation -being saved- is restoration, or being restored by God.

Praying people get restored to God.

Everyone who prays to God gets help from God. And he means everyone because he mentions that there is no distinction between races.

And that help is transformational as the Spirit of Christ dwells in us in a more and more intimate and personal way.

That is why in the passage containing John 3:16, he introduces it with the mystical concept of being born from above.

We may have heard it as born again.

And baptism symbolizes it as we are put under the water, we symbolize a death to the old way of being selfish and as the water washes that life away we become alive to the new way of letting the Spirit lead us more and more to love one another as we prosper in God’s grace. It symbolizes a form of death to selfishness and becoming alive to this new way of living. We are alive to loving others like Christ did.

God dwells inside of us and restores us to the place of oneness with God and others. And the goal goes beyond personal transformation into a society that truly cares for the least of these.

Christ prayed “Our Father,” not “My Father,” signifying that his redemption was inclusive of everyone.

People say that Jesus wasn’t political since he said that his kingdom is not of this earth.

But he came to establish the Kingdom of God here on earth instead of just in heaven.

Salvation is restoration to God and to others and it is our mission according to 2 Corinthians 5:17-20, Listen:

17-20...Now we look inside, and what we see is that anyone united with the Messiah gets a fresh start, is created new. The old life is gone; a new life emerges! Look at it! All this comes from the God who settled the relationship between us and him, and then called us to settle our relationships with each other. God put the world square with himself through the Messiah, giving the world a fresh start by offering forgiveness of sins. God has given us the task of telling everyone what he is doing. We’re Christ’s representatives. God uses us to persuade men and women to drop their differences and enter into God’s work of making things right between them. We’re speaking for Christ himself now: Become friends with God; he’s already a friend with you.

I can’t emphasize it enough, this is the work of the Holy Spirit inside of us as she is striving to reconcile the whole world to God.

Let me speak a minute, then, about Christian Nationalism, well, I can’t call it Christian anymore, so I call it Nationalism. It is bound up in White Supremacy. I is afraid that white people are being replaced by brown people. It is powered by racism which is a sin.

Jesus in his teachings, and then Paul as he gives his version of them both agree that the transformation God desires is not by coercion, but by the power of Love softening and changing the hearts of hard hearted individuals. Nationalism wants to use laws to get people to conform to what they believe to be Christ’s teachings instead of the power of the Spirit.

My prayer for the Politicians in power who are placing some sort if misplaced patriotic fervor over compassion for immigrants who will most likely suffer death or slavery to gangs or political persecution is the same as Bishop Budde who called on those in power to have compassion and mercy instead of maligning refugees. She lovingly fulfilled the mandate given to her as a shepherd of to the whole flock of America that we see in the 2 Corinthians passage. And I love the way she did it. It was gentle and loving. I might have thrown in the rest of Matthew 25:41-46 where Jesus sends those who refuse to care for strangers to judgment. But intead, she focused on the reality that the Spirit of God could touch them and make them merciful as well.

Sadly, the response to her was not loving. And she didn’t change or get bitter as she was pressed about it in further engagements. It was obvious that she was working in the love of the Spirit.

The power of change inside of us and the culture is Love fueled by faith. Remember, faith, or belief changes us to follow the new commandment: Love everyone.

Sadly again, another Nationalist politician responded to Bishop Budde by trying to claim that it is a Christian virtue to care for our own to the exclusion of others. That, beloved, is a direct contradiction to the teachings of Jesus. Love everyone because everyone who prays to God belongs to God. That is a lot of people!

This insurgence of Nationalism that calls itself Christian is spiritual warfare for between the historic teachings of love and mercy that Jesus taught and the domination of the empire version of Christianity that started in the 3rd century.

Here is how we tell the difference: Nationalism is coercive, the Spirit is a gentle shepherd inside of us leading us to have mercy, love and compassion. That is the new way of living, the restoration, the salvation that Jesus brings to us and us to Jesus.

Let us live in the power of the Spirit. Amen.


Sunday, February 16, 2025

The Freedom of the Spirit

 

Text: 1 Corinthians 14:26-33

Focus: The Holy Spirit

Function: to help us feel free to let the Spirit lead in our midst

26 What should be done then, my brothers and sisters? When you come together, each one has a hymn, a lesson, a revelation, a tongue, or an interpretation. Let all things be done for building up. 27 If anyone speaks in a tongue, let there be only two or at most three and each in turn, and let one interpret. 28 But if there is no one to interpret, let them be silent in church and speak to themselves and to God. 29 Let two or three prophets speak, and let the others weigh what is said. 30 If someone sitting receives a revelation, let the first person be silent. 31 For you can all prophesy one by one, so that all may learn and all be encouraged 32 (and the spirits of prophets are subject to the prophets, 33 for God is a God not of disorder but of peace), as in all the churches of the saints.

Good morning to the beloved of God!

This is the last sermon on my mini series on the gifts and the power of the Holy Spirit to bring glory to Christ and build the community faith.

So far we have learned how the Holy Spirit dwells in everybody and gives them gifts of manifestations of God’s presence within them.

The gift of tongues was of either men or angels, according to Chapter 13:1. I believe the tongues of angels is a prayer language whereby we don’t know how to pray, but the Spirit intercedes with groans and mutterings too deep for words and we get to pray our hearts according to the will of God. (Romans 8:26)

Two of the gifts were signs for unbelievers. (verses 1-5) The tongues of men gift was used by God as a sign to unbelievers. They would hear a message delivered to them by someone who didn’t know the language and it would be a word of advice or as it states earlier in our chapter, some sort of revelation about them pointing them to their need for God’s mercy. And preaching, or prophecy, also draws people to Christ. Paul also alludes to that in Romans 10.

Anyway, I think it is a pretty cool gift, and that can be the problem. We can, as they did, get proud.

So, at the end of Chapter 12, Paul tells them to pursue the greater gifts and then he lists them.

He reminds them in chapter 13 to keep focused on love because that is the proof of their faith, not these showy demonstrations of power.

And then in the beginning of 14, he makes it clear that the division was caused by the one gift of tongues.

And I believe he is really careful not to quench the power and the moving of the Holy Spirit in their midst. He just wants them to focus on how the Spirit causes them to love others instead of puffing up their own ego.

So in Chapter 14 he gives organizing, or instructional, principles about how the gift of tongues and its corresponding gift prophesy are supposed to work.

Essentially he says that if you are just praying your angelic prayer language to God, keep it silent because others will only hear babbling and people who don’t understand will mock us.

And it happens, I saw a video last week mocking a preacher of Christian Nationalism praying in tongues. And Paul implies that mocking us for that without someone to explain does indeed appear foolish. So avoid foolish stuff.

But if the tongue is a prophetic message and someone can interpret it, then go ahead.

And he gives instructions, two or three at the most, in order and give watch and see where the Spirit is leading when this is happening.

He gives one caution about the leading of the Spirit and he tells them that they can’t use the excuse that the Spirit took control to break the flow of the meeting.

Specifically he says that we have control over the when and how we speak or move in the Spirit and we should be sensitive to the Spirit’ timing and moving.

I don’t know how to tell you to do that except for me it is a pretty strong gut feeling or intuition that I have at times.

But the main point, after he tells them to not be crazy with their expressions, is the be free to express what the Spirit is doing in their midst.

The point is to be free to let the Spirit flow in our midst.

Now this is where it gets really cool here at Painter Creek.

We have created an environment that enables people to use their Spirit driven gifts, talents and passions to express their love for Christ and others.

One of the best Spiritual expression of that is worship in music since music seems to resonate the emotional and spiritual significance of what we are singing about.

It draws us close to God and I love our music, I think it works well here. I connect with God during our singing.

Musical expression is a gift and a talent from God according to scripture.

But so is art. So is poetry. Look at the beauty of the and meaning behind the table decorations each week. Understand the creativity behind the liturgy each week.

The Bible is full of different kinds of worship expressions. Did you know that Psalms 119, the longest chapter in the Bible is actually an acrostic Poem from the Jewish alphabet? David takes each letter of the alphabet and every line of each stanza starts with that letter. It must have taken him months to write it. It is a beautiful expression of the art of poetry and it is recorded in our book of worship for eternity.

That is why I love to hear the Poetry when it is read because I know that it is God inspired. It speaks to me and draws me closer to God.

The idea in the passage is to get people to express their love for God, for nature and for others through the Spirit’s leading in their lives.

There is also the gift of helps and service when people sense a reward from God for cleaning, fixing things and keeping things going. Paul emphasizes the less visible gifts as the most important because they keep us functioning.

I can’t emphasize enough the importance of meals and hospitality as a Spiritual gift and expression.

When we were meeting at the Fourman’s house, the eating and making of the meals was more than just food. I felt it. It was a spiritual connection and bond.

Look at the story of Sodom and Gomorrah. The angels came to town to see for themselves if the wickedness was that bad.

And Lot was the only righteous person.

And he proves his righteousness by welcoming the stranger. Welcoming the stranger has been a Middle Eastern religious value throughout their history.

The gift of hospitality builds this church. We can keep on growing by capitalizing on that gift.

And now were doing a Garage/Bake sale fundraiser. It’s an inspired idea that will draw us and the community together.

What I am saying is that I see the Spirit moving in many ways here at Painter Creek and you all are participating with your gifts. Thank you.