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Children, Couli, and Christ

January 25, 2024

I’m watching a children’s baking show. A bunch of 9- to 12- year old kids are making amazing food in a 3-hour time limit in a TV studio with lights and directors and cameras and people they have just met. I don’t even know what a “couli” is and they are designing, and creating deliciousness without recipes!

Are we too careful with Christ, with the good news of Jesus? How can churches better empower youth and children to lead? Is it possible we’ve created the bread of heaven for adults who fit our prescribed criteria in such a way that by the time you’ve gotten to fourth grade you realize the church has less confidence in your potential than anyone else in your whole world?

Jesus said we should let the kids come to him. The Bible says a child shall lead us. Indeed, he was only 12 when he stupefied the Temple preachers of the law with his wisdom and understanding.

What might we learn about, “Jesus loves me,” if we hear from the kids instead of talking down to them? I don’t know if I have the answers—because I probably haven’t listened to them well enough. Shall we?

Thanks be to God for the kids in our lives who remind us to “taste and see the Lord is good!”

 

Peace,
Beverly

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Venite adoremus Dominum

 Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. 

Venite adoremus Dominum!
Come let us worship the Lord! The snow lay on the ground;
the stars shone bright, when Christ our Lord was born on Christmas night.”

This became my favorite song this Christmas. Mostly the refrain. I found myself humming it over and over. Of course it helped that we did actually sing the tune throughout the Advent and Christmas seasons. However, when I looked out the window this week, with the snow on the ground, and the moon shining bright, I felt a certain peace as I hummed the song. Even now, as I write, and listen to the video, I have a smile on my face and calm heart.

Congregational singing, and congregational memorization of songs and prayers and scriptures, have power to help us through tough times, to refresh us during tiredness, and to enhance the joy of a special moment.

When we recite particular phrases, or sing refrains, doxologies, glorias, over and over, we are teaching one another to hold onto pieces of faith that have been passed down from generation to generation.

Between now and Ash Wednesday, I encourage you to practice during the week the refrains of sharing God’s peace with one another.

Hymn 609: Praise God, from Whom All Blessings Flow

Hymn 448: Peace of God Be with You

 You might even try memorizing a Scripture:

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places,
just as he chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world
to be holy and blameless before him in love.
Ephesians 1: 2-4
Peace, Shalom, Salaam,
RevBev

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Don’t Give Up Hope

If your resolution has hit some bumps in the road, don’t give up hope!

“But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.” Romans 8: 25
I originally wrote a very frustrated, okay- angry, post about our global lack of compassion regarding the state of a child’s life

(and yes, I have mirror). From hunger to war, grown-ups need to be better adults! Thousands die from war and random gun violence, millions die of malnutrition, and millions more remain in poverty, unable to escape or rise above the conditions of their birth.

It gets better.

Yet, in his book, “Factfulness,” Hans Rosling, posits that for all the not good, terrible things that are our reality, the world is actually becoming a better place to live in than it was 10 years ago, a generation ago, a century ago and longer.

If Paul tells us that we hope in what we cannot see, Rosling is saying, “Look, look back and look at the reality then and now so that we can find hope for the next millennium, the next century, the next generation, the next decade, the next day, in the bits of progress that are becoming reality.” Rosling is criticized for an overly optimistic view. However, read carefully, “Factfulness,” is an invitation to let small change give us the hope of what we dream but cannot see and spur us forward in hope.

The condition of the world for our children is terrible, in places, horrifically apocalyptically catastrophic. In those places, we must intervene with immediate resolutions of food, water, peace. Peace. Peace.

The Christian response

must be rooted in the gospel of peace in order to move toward the reign of Christ we hope to be creating. Rather than solidifying the perspective that hoarding goods needed for a sustainable life is the only way to stave off our hunger, we share. Rather than reifying the attitude that only by greater destructive power can we save the world from the violence wrought by enemies, we love and sacrifice.
The original enemy was this sibling rivalry. Hope comes from the prince of peace who was born to heal, to share, to forgive and love his enemy, even at the cost of his own life. Few of us will ever have to share a bit of bread, a few dollars of income, that is life-threatening. Yet all of us Jesus-followers are called to let go of our lives.
“For those who want to save their life will lose it,
and those who lose their life for my sake,
and for the sake of the gospel, will save it.”
Mark 8: 35

You probably made a resolution that involves letting go of something. Don’t give up. Letting go is a spiritual discipline. Add to your resolve the prayer of hope, “I can do all things through him who strengthens me.” Philippians 4: 13 This prayer glorifyies God in all things, and proclaims the gospel in all circumstances. Here’s Paul’s situation:

“I rejoice in the Lord greatly that now at last you have revived your concern for me; indeed, you were concerned for me but had no opportunity to show it. Not that I am referring to being in need, for I have learned to be content with whatever I have. I know what it is to have little, and I know what it is to have plenty. In any and all circumstances I have learned the secret of being well-fed and of going hungry, of having plenty and of being in need.” Phil 4: 10-12

Can we who follow the Savior learn to be content with less so that others can survive, thrive, with a more? Rejoice—with Christ all things are possible. Rejoice, never giving up, never giving in, never giving out,1 but striving forward with the gospel of peace.
Peace of Christ to you, with you, within you,
RevBev
 
1 paraphrasing The Honorable John Lewis 
Images: “Gaza-boys-fenced-in” by AlphaBetaUnlimited is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0. ; “Peace on Selby Avenue” by sarahkarnas is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.

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Joy to the World, and you!

Are you happy?
In any given moment, I suspect you would say, “Yeah, sure. I’m happy.” You might be thinking about something special that makes you smile. Perhaps you think of an upcoming not-happy event and caveat your answer silently, “right now.” Did you have to force yourself to sing, “Joy to the World?”
 
Happiness is discovered in moments and is a fleeting emotion. It is part of the big 4: glad, sad, mad, and afraid. There are many ways to define each of those emotions. If you have kids, it is likely that you have asked them to use words to describe how they feel. Maybe you have a visual chart on the refrigerator. I doubt you ask them to use a variety of words when they are happy. Try it.

Ecstatic, pleased, content, celebrating, enthused—these are a few of the ways we can describe “happiness.”  “Joy,” is not included in my list. For the six weeks of Advent and Christmas we have been asking, “How does a weary world rejoice?” I want to ask you a new question.

Are you full of joy?
Joy is a way of life. In a world where happiness is relegated to momentary flashes of relief that break up the monotony of mediocre maladies or monumental maelstroms, joy is about character and perspective. Joy permeates all our emotions. Joy builds up our resilience in the face of fleeting happiness and the continual barrage of wearying experiences, near and far. Joy is a sustaining stance that dares to dream and craves to create something better.
 
Our ministry colleagues at A Sanctified Art defined rejoicing as six postures or skills that help us develop the character of a joyful life:
Acknowledging weariness                 Being connected to one another
Allowing for amazement                   Remembering our stories of hope
Making room for…                             Rooting ourselves in rituals    

Plus, this week, the final piece, the seventh posture and skill, is trusting in our belovedness. In death, in life, in good times and difficulties, through successes and struggles, nor anything else in all creation, trust the truth that you are fearfully and wonderfully made, in the image of God, who loves you. This truth, seeping into the very core of your being, insists that you are made to rejoice in the Lord always simply because you are, and you are loved
 
Joy to the world–and to you!
RevBev
 
Images: from A Sanctified Art;
Beloved, by Lauren Wright Pittman, Inspired by Luke 3:21-22, @sanctifiedart (c) used by permission/license

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How do you love God?

12/28/23

The children’s catechism called, “Belonging to God,” asks, “How do you thank God for this gift of love?”

Answer: “I promise to love and trust God with all my heart.”
Q: “How do you love God?”
A: “By worshipping God, by loving others, and by respecting what God has created.”

If you are now striving toward a new year’s resolution, perhaps this line of thinking is more than adequate. And a better choice than, “Lose 10 pounds by Valentine’s Day.”

It doesn’t exclude healthy lifestyle changes. Respecting the divine creation that is you is important. It does include a commitment to gathering in a community for praising the Creator. It does mean working to grow the ways in which you do love for others, toward others, in tangible expressions of your love for God. And respecting what God has created—so many options!

Water conservation, less plastic, more intentionally diverse friendships, nature walks, new ways of speaking to spouses or children, or co-workers, adopting a fur-baby, minimizing car-trips to the store….

What part of the created world, people, things or places, are dear to you? How might you in 2024 give praise to God for this, show your love of God by loving it more intentionally, and grow spiritually in your respect for this aspect of creation?

Let it be resolved—for one month. Yes, it’s okay to make a very short-term, time-limited, relevant, achievable, measurable, specific commitment. Yes, this is a SMART resolution. You got this!

Pick up your STAR WORDS in worship on Sunday! Find a guiding light for the coming year.

Happy New Year!
Rev Bev
Image: A Sanctified Art|@asanctifiedart| (c) 2023

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Already!? All ready? Alright!

12/20/23
Already? All ready? Alright!

I’m not. Not at home, not at work. Writing, cooking, wrapping, ordering… So much to do and so little time.
Would I be too busy to answer a call, only to find out someone needed a friendly voice during a sad moment of holiday memories? Would I be too busy to hear the knock at the door of a stranger needing help for his very pregnant wife, or too fearful to answer? Would I be too busy to see Jesus in the midst  of flour and bows and Amazon deliveries and sermons waiting to be birthed? To attend Christmas worship?!

Would I miss the joy of Christmas?

Or the good news of great joy, the promise of a coming peace? All.of.it? Because it’s already time and I’m not all ready?

From Thanksgiving through Christmas, our days and nights can be filled with “have-to’s:” efforts to get a few more hours of overtime to pay the light bill, let alone buy a gift–making sure no family traditions are forgotten even though they have become more chore than joy. ……………        These lists we are completing and checking twice become burdensome.

Until they are over and we pause to reflect. In that moment we recall someone’s smile, another one’s surprise, and a thank you we didn’t need because we knew, we knew, it was all worth our effort. We might warm inside as we recall something special done for us.

I have said my favorite day of the year is January 2 because there’s leftovers and nothing to do but remember and be grateful.

Sabbath

Beloved, that is the idea of Sabbath rest, the precursor to our promised eternal peace. Enough food and nothing to do except rest in the gifts around us with gratitude. Sabbath is a way of life that is currently practiced on a specific day of the week, 1 day after 6 days of work and schedules and busyness. However, Sabbath is meant to invade those other six, seeping into the rhythms of our lives such that we become accustomed to putting away lists and answering calls , less fearful of strangers, more enlightened in our vision of Emmanuel, God with us, knocking at the doors of our days in many a guise.
 
Sabbath in our lives becomes a dance to the choruses of angel songs that brings their prophesied peace into our reality.
 
Maybe we don’t have to wait for the seventh day, or January 2, to rest and rejoice. Maybe Christmas Day can begin our new Sabbath lifestyle. For to you a child is born and he is your wonderful counselor, mighty God, and the prince of peace.
 
Be still and hear the angels singing all around us of God’s presence with us.
Rejoice, Emmanuel shall come you!
 
All is ready. All is right. You got this. 
Have yourself a merry Christmas! 
Peace,
RevBev
 
 
Enjoy the music by clicking the highlighted links here or above.
Dolly Parton’s Angels in the Midst;
Images: https://teachingmyfriends.blogspot.com/2011/12/running-out-of-time-to-be-festive.html;
sharefaith media subscription used by permission.

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2022 Blog Posts are archived HERE.