Sunday, May 31, 2020

Sabbath. Study. Serve.

Sabbath, Study, Serve 
Taking the Sermon Into Our Week 

Scripture of the Week: Acts 2: 1-4 and 1 Cor 12: 1-13


From the Sermon:
We have two big questions. The first, what is the ______? and the second, why does the ______ even matter?

On the day of ___________, the day that church was created, all of the people were together in one place.

Our _____  needs to be connected to other human beings in a meaningful way, and when we are in such authentic relationship, even when we are not talking directly to each other, but worshiping together, we are changed.

The ________ grants different people different gifts.

We are the ____________________.

Reflection Questions:

What do we mean when we say that “we are the Church”?

How would you define the Church?

How do you use your gifts from God?


Prayer:

God, we confess that sometimes we have misunderstood the gifts we have received from your Spirit. We have thought that they were about us - about what we have earned or a talent we have. When really the gifts are from you for use in your mission and ministry. Let us boldly use our gifts for your purposes, we pray. Amen. 

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Death Swallowed in Life - 1 Cor 15: 1-26, 51-57

  The resurrection of Jesus Christ is not something that we talk about enough. We focus more on the forgiveness of sins that comes through the cross, but because of the empty tomb, we have hope in new life. Hope in resurrection.

   Maybe we don't talk about resurrection as much because it's hard to explain. We don't know all of the details, we don't know exactly how it works, so we focus on the cross as the central part of the story of Jesus. But the cross is connected to the empty tomb. You cannot have one without the other.

   The cross and the empty tomb offer us new life, both to come and right here, right now. If we believe in Jesus Christ as our Lord and Savior, they are part of our story. But it's not a story that we can keep to ourselves. We need to go forth and proclaim it.
 
    What can distract us from going forth and telling the story of resurrection?

Monday, May 25, 2020

Death Swallowed in Life Devo - 1 Cor 15: 1-26, 51-57

Spiritual Practices - Witness

Week of May 24th, 2020

 During the month of May, we are going to talk about the marks of the church. We will hear stories of churches, as seen through the book of Acts and Paul’s letter to local churches. The question we will explore is what does this mean for us today, as the body of Christ, here in this place.

     To facilitate this exploration, we are going to have opportunities to engage in spiritual practices that help us connect with God and show care to other people as the body of Christ. It is my hope and prayer, that as we look as some practices that may be familiar to you and others that may be new, that you will be open to the movement of the Spirit that can lead to spiritual growth. 



Scripture for the week: 1 Cor 15: 1-26, 51-57

Read these scriptures slowly. What sticks out to you. Why is Paul so adamant in his teaching on the resurrection? How is this teaching connected to all of the upheaval that the Corinthian church had experienced?


Spiritual Practice: Testimony

Often when we think about offering a testimony, the first thing that comes to mind are evangelist who are called to go far and wide to preach the Good News. Testimony, however, is a call that each of us has in Christ to witness to how Christ has changed our lives. Think about your testimony. Write it down. Who can you share this story with during the week?


Spiritual Practice: Praying Around Distractions


One thing that stops us from sharing our testimony is fear. Fear of how it will be received. Fear of what people will think of us. Fear that we will be rejected. Have we taken time to pray about these fears so they will not become excuses or distractions from our witness. Take time to pray about any fears you have about witnessing and hand it over to the Lord.

Sunday, May 24, 2020

Sabbath. Study. Serve.

Sabbath, Study, Serve 
Taking the Sermon Into Our Week 

Scripture of the Week: 1 Cor 15: 1-26, 51-57

From the Sermon:
If love is the ______  of what we believe, resurrection the _________ or God talk behind it.

Our faith is tied together in the _____________.

The problem that Paul was facing in Corinth wasn’t just in how people were treating each other in the body of Christ, it was also in what they were being _______.

Paul proclaims though that even that which we think is fallible will be _________.

Our ______ bear witness to the resurrection.


Reflection:
Why is the resurrection so important to Paul?

What is the power of the resurrection? 

Prayer:

Lord, thank you for the gift you offered us on the cross which brings us new life through the power of the resurrection. Thank you for not giving up on us. For changing us. And then sending us forth to proclaim the message of your grace.

Tuesday, May 19, 2020

Faith, Hope, and Love - 1 Cor 13: 1-13

    As I worked on this particular sermon I texted my best friend and told her that I was working on a sermon about love when it seemed like there was no love in the world. The Church is fighting. There is fighting in politics. The world stands desperately in need of love.

   And perhaps that is why we need 1 Cor. 13 today just as much as when Paul penned it. We seem to not know what love is so we don't know how to go about showing it or sharing it with the world. We have made love into an option instead of an imperative. Or to put it another way, we put ourselves above the idea that we should love others.

    The church in Corinth was a mess. Folks were not acting as the body of Christ, just as sometimes we are messy and fail to be the body of Christ today. To that church, Paul wrote this letter calling them to live into love, but not just any love - the love of Christ. Agape love.

    We need to re-learn what it means to be a people of love. And not just any love, but a people of love that was shown on the cross for us and for the world. What would it look like for the body of Christ to be known as the people who share the love of God, first and foremost? How could the world be changed?

Monday, May 18, 2020

Faith, Hope, and Love Devo - 1 Cor 13: 1-13

Spiritual Practices - Acts of Compassion

Week of May 17th, 2020

 During the month of May, we are going to talk about the marks of the church. We will hear stories of churches, as seen through the book of Acts and Paul’s letter to local churches. The question we will explore is what does this mean for us today, as the body of Christ, here in this place.

     To facilitate this exploration, we are going to have opportunities to engage in spiritual practices that help us connect with God and show care to other people as the body of Christ. It is my hope and prayer, that as we look as some practices that may be familiar to you and others that may be new, that you will be open to the movement of the Spirit that can lead to spiritual growth. 



Scripture for the week: 1 Corinthians 13: 1-13

Read these scriptures slowly. What sticks out to you. What do you think was preventing the church in Corinth from showing love?


Spiritual Practice: Acts of Compassion

The act of compassion, or showing concern for other people, can shape our spirits to have room to love as Jesus did. Over the next week, pick two ways that you can show compassion to someone in your life. How does acting with compassion show your love for God and neighbor?
  • Do all you can to help people in need.
  • Seek out people in need and do all you can to help them.
  • Increase your service to others and graciously acknowledge other’s service to you.
  • Go two miles for a sister or brother who asks you to go one.
  • Spend one hour each week visiting a lonely person whom you would not normally visit.
  • Spend at least one hour each day helping someone in need.
  • Spend four hours each month helping the disadvantaged in our community.
  • Spend four hours each week helping the disadvantaged in our community.
  • Practice listening to others as a ministry of grace.
  • Express feelings of genuine appreciation to at least one person each day.
  • Engage in regular visits to local prisons.
  • Establish a meaningful relationship with someone in prison and, when possible, with their families.
  • Encourage our congregations in missional giving through personal example.
  • Seek to help a family in need somewhere else in the world.
  • Eat one less meal each day and give the money to feed the hungry in our community.

Spiritual Practice: Write Down What is Important

Think about what is most important in your faith life. Write them down as a list. As you look over your list, how does it compare to what Paul was talking to the Corinthians about? How can you live into what is important to you?


Spiritual Practice: Show Greater Love


Sometimes we do not show love. Our sinful self gets in the way. Think of someone you have failed to love this past week. How can you show greater love to them in the coming days?

Sunday, May 17, 2020

Sabbath. Study. Serve.

Sabbath, Study, Serve 
Taking the Sermon Into Our Week 

Scripture of the Week: 1 Corinthians 13: 1-13

From the Sermon:
If we just relegate 1 Corinthians 13 to ______________, we miss what the Apostle Paul is trying to communicate.

Paul wasn’t primarily writing to make people feel good - he was giving a word of _________ to a church in _________.

Love is not _________.

Paul is talking about _______ love - the absolute highest form of love - the love that God has for us and we have for God.

The ____________ we show as the Church should be done in a spirit of love.



Reflection:
What is most important to us, as the body of Christ?

How are we sharing the love of Christ with the world?

How can we show greater love?



Prayer:

Lord, teach us to prioritize your love in our lives. As we seek to show your love to the world, in word and deed, may we grow in faith and hope as your people. Amen. 

Tuesday, May 12, 2020

The Church in Corinth - Acts 18:1-4; 1 Corinthians 1:10-18

  If I asked you to write down a list of the things that divide us, I bet you could do so pretty quickly. Things that divide us as a nation. As a Church. As families. Things that divide even us as individuals.

  Paul is writing to a divided. One of the beautiful gifts of the Church in Corinth is that it was diverse. Yet, because Jews and Greeks, male and females, poor and rich were gathering together - people started trying to one-up each other. They wanted to make the Church like the world - defining who was the most elite. Who had the most power. Instead of seeing the Church as a way to transform the world.

   Today, we have very similar struggles in the Church and we are equally in need of hearing these scriptures as those in Corinth long ago. We have tried to cut off disunity by calling uniformity - but that isn't how God created us to be. Or we dismiss those who disagree with us. Or we simply leave the body of Christ because of our own hurt feelings.

   Paul reminds us that there is another way - one that is bound together by the love of Jesus Christ.

   How could the unity of the body of Christ be a witness to a divided world?

Monday, May 11, 2020

The Church in Corinth Devotional

May 10th, 2020
Devotional
“The Church in Corinth” - Acts 18: 1-4, 1 Corinthians 1: 10-18
Keep the sermon topic and Biblical text preaching all week by following Pastor Michelle on twitter @tinypastor and reading her sermon blog www.revmichelle.blogspot.com

Monday: “Be in Agreement” - 1 Cor. 1:10
Of all of the bickering I’ve seen over the years, perhaps the worst is church fights. You know the kind of argument I’m talking about – where we pray that more people join our side then the other, where the name of Jesus often gets pulled in, as if Jesus would ever have a part of any of this, and the chill of our attitudes towards each other fills the pew. The type of fight where we leave the church, our Christian family, because we don’t want to be part of another argument, or worse, because we didn’t get our way. Even with all of the teachings contained in the Bible, we do not fight well in the church.
We also seem to argue about the silliest things – what color the carpet should be, who should play what part in the upcoming pageant, or whether hymns or praise and worship songs nurture our soul. Whether to serve decaf coffee after church. The list goes on and on. But underneath our pettiness I think there are some deep theological questions being worked out.
Why do disagreements in the Church hurt so much?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, we come before you today and confess that we have had many disagreements in your church. Some over silly things. Some over deeply important things. But we realize that when we disagree, we fail to boldly live as your people. Forgive us, we pray. Amen. 

Tuesday: “I Belong To” - 1 Cor 1: 11-12
In today’s passage of scripture Paul is pleading with the people of Corinth – people he has spent well over a year with. Paul dwelt among them as a tent-maker, while telling people about the love of Christ. Eventually those people would come together and form a worshipping community. But after Paul left the people began to quarrel. The entire letter of 1 Corinthians is addressing the issues of the community as reported by someone on the inside. We don’t know if this person had the most truthful account, but we do know that they felt compelled to tell Paul, and that they were from the house of Chloe.
And what were they arguing over. Baptism. It seems to be the discussion topic that never gets old. When to baptize a person. Should it be believer’s baptism? If so, at what age? If it’s an infant baptism, will we allow for a second baptism later? Should you be sprinkled or dunked? Should it be done inside of the church walls or out in nature? And that’s before we even get to the questions around what baptism means. While the topic is full of heated-debate topics, I don’t think I’ve ever heard one about who baptized someone.
But alas, this is where the Corinthians issue lies. It has to be important to Paul because it is the fist he addresses, after a loving introduction, before going into a lengthy discussion on other topics. He wants them to remember it. What are the roles or rhetoric? People remember what they heard first and last, and tend to fade out somewhere in between. So Paul jumps right in to discussing what he was appalled to hear – that people are claiming allegiance with the people who baptized them. Some are saying that they belong to Apollos and others Paul, or Cephas. I wonder if in this community, even those claiming to belong to Christ really understood what they meant or if they were simply trying to one up the last person.
What are some of the arguments that we have had that are similar in tenor or tone to those in Corinth?
Prayer: Lord, we confess that we can sometimes take your good gifts, such as the gift of baptism, and trample all over them. We can twist them around to be about us instead of about you and your Kingdom. Forgive us, we pray. Amen. 

Wednesday: “Divided” - 1 Cor 1: 13-16
So Paul asks the big question: What – has Christ been divided into parts? Paul will go on later in this epistle to speak about the body of Christ being composed on many parts, but here is a picture of vicious deconstruction. The people were ripping into each other, and essentially claiming to be associated with the workers of Christ instead of with Christ himself. The whole point of the gospel had become moot in the midst of the quarreling. Salvation had been displaced.
Christ tells us to take his message of love and hope to the ends of the earth, but we can’t even take it to our neighbors because we cannot love well. We are so caught up in Christian propaganda and getting people saved, that we miss the message that people are sending us – that they are craving love and acceptance. And then the kicker, how can people ever believe in the love of Christ, if they cannot even see our love for them.
How does our disunity reflect a lack of love?
Prayer: Lord, you are very clear in calling us to love God and to love our neighbor, but we confess that sometimes we cannot even love our brothers and sisters well. Forgive us, O Lord. Create in us a new heart, full of your love and grace we pray. Amen. 

Thursday: “Cross of Christ” - 1 Cor 1: 17
Paul is essentially saying, How are ya’ll ever going to be able to share Christ’s message with those around you – those people going to the pagan temples, the people begging on the streets, those oppressed by the government, the people around who are having children they can’t take care of just in hopes of having someone love them unconditionally. How are we ever going to reach out to a world, if we are can’t even love those amongst us in our community?
A popular Christian song from a few years ago claims that “loves not a fight, but its something worth fighting for.” I don’t want you to leave here today thinking that people who care for each other don’t fight – talk to anyone who has been in a marriage or family unit and they will tell you that just isn’t true. But I think we need to re-evaluate what we are fighting about and how we communicate with grace.
We need to take the time to asks ourselves, what are we really fighting about and is it all that important? In other words, are we fighting about harm that another is causing us or bringing upon themselves? Okay. We need to discuss that. But are we hurt because things didn’t go the way we planned or over something as trivial as who baptized whom, or who we pledge our allegiance to over certain issues, maybe that could be handled a better way than a community wide quarrel.
How can we learn to disagree differently within the body of Christ?
Prayer: Lord, we confess that we have looked to the ways of the world when it comes to defining how we disagree rather than your Word or your way. Forgive us, O Lord. Teach us anew today. Amen. 

Friday: “The Message” - 1 Cor 1: 18
Often we loose perspective and small things become really big things. Other times, drama needs to be dealt with in order for wholeness to emerge. This wholeness is for any and all people involved, not just the person who feels that they have been hurt. And I think that’s what Jesus is trying to communicate when he teaches about going in private to the one who has wronged you. There is no need to make a big scene, because really that is just going to make everyone look foolish and hurt the other person without really bringing you peace, or the community rest. If one on one doesn’t work, take another person, unassociated, unbiased, and if at all possible unknowledgeable about the grievance. Talk to each other. Listen to the other side of the story, and don’t necessarily walk in to such a conversation with an agenda or a demand. If healing still doesn’t come, bring a few other sets of ears, and as a last resort, bring it before the community.
We tend to flip this around today, however. Bringing it to the community first, either by our actions, silence, or flippant words. We want people to be on our side, but a church family isn’t about sides. It isn’t about claiming Paul or Apollos or Cephas. It’s about being in union with Christ. Like an unbroken circle, where we are working with each other towards a common cause. For the power of the cross, the heart of the Gospel, can become so clouded to those watching us, and even to ourselves, when we do not have conflict in love. When we want people to think that our side is right or wise, there isn’t much room for God’s wisdom, rooted in love and compassion, to intervene into our hard hearts and heads.
The funny thing about this epistle, is that by the time it arrived to the Corinthians the problem may have been resolved, or at least glossed over. But maybe Paul needs to still address it to get down to the deeper issues – the deeper questions – am I really Christ’s even if I’ve never seen Jesus? What does it mean to belong to God through Christ? Am I sure of my own assurance in salvation?
So today, I would ask us each to think of a conflict we have had in the church. Has been resolved? Is it worth fighting and dying for? If not, let it go. Apologize if necessary. If it is, pull the person aside after the service and talk to them, listen to them, and seek wholeness together. For if we are a fractured and disconnected community, how will we ever be able to communicate love beyond these walls? 
What do we proclaim unites us as the body of Christ?
Prayer: Lord, help us to keep our hearts and minds focused on you - especially when we disagree. Call us to the way and power of the cross, we pray. Amen. 

Saturday: Preparing for the Word

You are invited to read and pray this week’s text and topic: “Faith, Hope, and Love” - 1 Cor 13: 1-13

Sunday, May 10, 2020

Sabbath. Study. Serve.

Sabbath, Study, Serve 
Taking the Sermon Into Our Week 

Scripture of the Week: Acts 18: 1-4 and 1 Cor 1: 10-18


From the Sermon:
Christ is calling us to _________.

Paul is talking about people being _______.

In Greco-Roman society, there were all sorts of divisions in society, but they all existed with one purpose - to say who the ______ were.

In the Church we find our value in _________ alone. 

I think that Paul would appeal to us to have ______________.


Reflection Questions:
Have you ever been in a disagreement with someone? What was that experience like for you?

If you aren’t acting like those who belong to the Kingdom, how in the world is anyone else going to come to believe?

What would Paul say to us about this today about our disunity and quarrels? 

What are we unified around?

How could we deal with divisions and quarrels in a meaningful way?


Prayer:

God, we humbly come before you and plead that you be the one who unites us - in love for you and love for one another. Let us be people who reflect your Kingdom, we pray. Amen. 

Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Church at Thessalonica

     If anything should strike us reading the book of Acts it should be that it was not easy to be the early church. It was not easy to be Paul and his companions, bringing the Good News to people in cities that sometimes did not want to receive in.

    In fact, in chapter 17 of Acts we see that both the religious establishment and the government were hostile to what Paul is preaching about Jesus.

    But... people still believed!

    For Paul, it was worth it because people were coming to hear the Good News and believe about Jesus.

    I think too many Christians in America today think that evangelism is supposed to be easy. It's supposed to be easy to have people come to believe the Good News. Or that we can just open up the doors of the church and people will come in. The truth we see in Acts is that evangelism is hard, but that it is also worth it.

    What are we willing to risk for the sake of the Gospel message?

Monday, May 4, 2020

The Church at Tess. Devo

Spiritual Practices - Writing

Week of May 3rd, 2020

During the month of May, we are going to talk about the marks of the church. We will hear stories of churches, as seen through the book of Acts and Paul’s letter to local churches. The question we will explore is what does this mean for us today, as the body of Christ, here in this place.

    To facilitate this exploration, we are going to have opportunities to engage in spiritual practices that help us connect with God and show care to other people as the body of Christ. It is my hope and prayer, that as we look as some practices that may be familiar to you and others that may be new, that you will be open to the movement of the Spirit that can lead to spiritual growth. 



Scripture for the week: Acts 17: 1-9 and 1 Thess. 1: 1-10

Read these scriptures slowly. What sticks out to you. What do you think happened in between the events of Acts 17 and Paul writing 1 Thessalonians? 



Spiritual Practice: Writing Our Prayers

There is something that happens when we write things down. We are more prone to remember them, but they also stick with us as we reflect upon them, even when the writing is over. Take time this week to write a prayer to God. How was this similar or different from the way you normally pray? What did you discover?




Spiritual Practice: Writing to our Body


Think of one college student or one shut-in that you can send a card to this week. As you write your card, spend time praying for that individual. How can you show care for them in the coming days?

Sunday, May 3, 2020

Sabbath. Study. Serve.

Sabbath, Study, Serve 
Taking the Sermon Into Our Week 

Scripture of the Week: 1 Thess. 1: 1-10
Acts 17: 1-9

From the Sermon:
Paul’s letter were intended for _____________________.

The religious leaders thought Paul was teaching __________.

The government thought that Paul had come in to over throw their way of life as Jesus was proclaimed to be _____.

Out of those riots, out of that mess that Paul had to escape from, a _______________.

We are bound together by the belief that God is ____________.

We are bound together by the belief that God loves this _____________.

We are bound together by the _____ of God.



Reflection:
What binds us as believers here and now today, together with the believers in Thessalonica?

Do we believe that sharing the Good News is worth leaving what makes us comfortable so others can know the power of Jesus?


Prayer:

Lord, we confess that sometimes we think it should be easy being the church. But when we hear the stories of the early church in Acts and read Paul’s letters to individual churches, we see that there is a struggle to proclaim the Good News. Equip us and sustain us to bear the message of your Kingdom, we pray. Amen.