Thursday, January 21, 2010

Today

Today – Today used to bring us a great deal of excitement. The promise of a long planned trip, treat, or event was out there somewhere. Maybe it was a birthday when we were very young.



“How long until my birthday party, Mama?” we would ask.




“Oh, not yet,” she would answer. “It’s not until next month.”



“How long until my birthday party NOW,” we would ask in a few days.



“Oh, it will be here soon. It’s less than a month,” would be the answer.



After many more requests and a combination of patient an maybe impatient answers, “How long until my birthday party, Mama?”



“Tomorrow!” we would finally hear. But, tomorrow is not yet today, is it? We were anxious for the day to arrive. We wanted it to come. We were anxious to see our friends, to find out what kinds of presents might have come our way, and to be allowed one of the few days out of the year when we were allowed to do everything first and eat almost as much unhealthy food as we could ever want!



Today we live in the world of now. We have microwaves to speed up our meal preparation. We have instant coffee, instant rice, instant just about anything you could imagine. We have cameras that allow us to view the picture seconds after we have taken it. We want our internet speedy. We want what we want, when we want it. We carry our phones with us because we can’t wait to get home and get our messages. We have call waiting so we don’t have to call back when the line is busy.



All of this seems to have made us less patient instead of more. Imagine the Israelites gathered in the synagogue when Jesus opened the scroll to the passage from Isaiah. 


Isa 61:1-2
"The Spirit of the Lord GOD is upon Me,
Because the LORD has anointed Me 
To preach good tidings to the poor;
He has sent Me to heal the brokenhearted,
To proclaim liberty to the captives,
And the opening of the prison to those who are bound; 
To proclaim the acceptable year of the LORD,


He selected a passage written by the prophet Isaiah some 700 years prior to that day. Imagine the longing of the people present on that day, people who were poor, who were in bondage, who were blind in so many ways, and who waited, and waited, and waited for the Year of the Lord for generation upon generation.



What sort of interpretation did the congregation expect that day? The probably expected to be encourage to “keep the faith,” maybe to “suffer patiently,” perhaps a condemnation issued upon the oppressors of the people of Israel. I think it is safe to say that no one expected to hear “This day this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing!” Today has arrived. Praise God!



Pastor Craig

Friday, January 15, 2010

Trusting the Shadows




Trusting the Shadows – Shadows are generally the places of which we are afraid. When we were young, we turned on the lights before we walked down the hall to our room. We weren’t afraid of stubbing our toe on a toy left behind from the day’s play. We did want to get a clear view of just who, or what, may be there in the shadows of the hallway or stairs. We may have slept with a nightlight on or a closet light peeking through a partially opened door.


My Grandmother always had a nightlight going into the kitchen. Living 6-7 miles outside of town in rural Wisconsin, there was some wisdom in doing it that way. She actually did get up and need it every single morning of the year, even during the summer months. There is never a day to sleep in for Wisconsin dairy farmers. She would get up and help my grandfather get started milking the cows long before I ever thought of getting up. Then she would manage to have breakfast cooked and on the table before the majority of the house was awake.
Yes, most times we want to banish the shadows so we can clearly see the situation around us. However, today we welcome one shadow. The shadow we welcome is the shadow that is cast over us from the protective cover of the wings of God. The Psalmist tells us “How precious!” this protection truly is. Jesus commented on it as well in the Gospel of Luke. “How often I wanted to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her brood under her wings!”


Under those wings we find protection. Under those wings we find nurture. Under those wings we find sustenance. Under those wings we find all the things for which we stray so far from those wings to seek. All the time they are in the very place God calls us to.   


Living in the shadow of God’s presence is such a blessing. I am astounded that we spend so much time running from it. We seek satisfaction and protection in so many other things, but the truth is there is no safety when we seek fulfillment away from our Heavenly Father.


All which I took from thee I did but take,
Not for they harms,
But just that thou might’st seek it in My Arms.
All which they child’s mistake
Fancies as lost, I have stored up for thee at home.[1]


Pastor Craig


[1] The Hound of Heaven Francis Thompson

Monday, January 11, 2010

How to Remember Your Baptism

How to Remember Your Baptism
This Sunday, the lectionary passages recount for us the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptizer. It is common on this Sunday that we ask the members of the congregation to remember their baptism, for many Presbyterians a difficult task since it is traditional practice to baptize infants.



Maybe it is more accurate to ask us to live up to our baptism. The Scriptures and the confessions teach us that baptism for us involves the in-grafting of the baptized into the body of Christ. As parents baptizing children, we do this in the same way God commanded the Israelites to circumcise male children on the eighth day of their birth. These children are now a part of the covenant family and members of the Kingdom of God.


This entrance into the covenant is also why we refer to the period of instruction leading up to membership in the visible church as confirmation. The individual is not merely being given instruction regarding the church sacraments and his/her ability to understand what happens through participation in them, nor are they learning about the governmental structures of the church or denomination the person is seeking to join. These persons are confirming the faithfulness of God through his covenant, that they have indeed grown up into their faith, into the promises made on their behalf by their parents years before.


The promises were originally made for you, if you were baptized as an infant, when you were unable to voice your own choices. Your parents made a commitment to pray with you and for you. They promised to live the Christian faith before you in such a way that finding Christ would be as simple as watching them and how they acted, reacted, and treated those around them. So, remembering your baptism means remembering and living out that moment in your life when your parents’ faith became your own faith. This is the time when the covenant became real, when the faithfulness of God came through, when your parents’ prayers for you became reality and you allowed the Holy Spirit to draw you to your Savior, Jesus Christ.


Pastor Craig

Monday, January 4, 2010

The Gathering

The Gathering – Gatherings are nice. We have just come through “gathering” holidays, those holidays when most of us make considerable effort to connect, or reconnect, with family and friends. We visit those we can and write to those we cannot. We send out letters highlighting life changes and achievements that have been a part of our lives, or our children’s and grand-children’s lives for the past year. Some of us actually read these letters that other people send to us talking about people we have never met, and probably will never meet!


Jeremiah 31:7ff talks about a gathering, one that brings great joy, a gathering from the remote places of the earth. I will bring them from the land of the north and gather them from the ends of the earth. Among them will be the blind and the lame, expectant mothers and women in labor; a great throng will return. Yes, Almighty God will find those that are His wherever they have wondered over the course of their lives, whatever their circumstances. He will bring them to Himself. He will not abandon the black sheep of the family because of the things they have done. He will not shut the door and lock them out. All he asks is that we, yes I said we, return joyfully, that we recognize that it is God who leads us back home, that we put away our self-righteousness and stop thinking that this is something we have achieved on our own efforts and by our own might.


As the Prodigal Son returned to the grace of the Father, so shall we. He will strip off the things that label us as slaves and dress us as royalty, as children of the King, as ones who dress who belong to the Kingdom of God. 
Maybe you feel like the Prodigal Son. You might feel that you have not used 2009 to follow the Savior in the way you had planned a year ago. It is time to come home and change clothes. Your Heavenly Father accepts no slaves, only sons and daughters. The feast is prepared. Your clothes are laid out on your own bed. Your Heavenly Father is in the tower watching for your form on the horizon. He knows the way you walk. He knows your little mannerisms. He knows everything there is to know about you. He even knows the very number of the hairs on your head. Be gathered in, in 2010!

Pastor Craig