Sunday, October 31, 2021

Sabbath. Study. Serve.

 Sabbath, Study, Serve 

Taking the Sermon Into Our Week 


Scripture of the Week: 1 Kings 5:1-5; 8:1-13



From the Sermon:


David was a King of Israel who was known of seeking the heart of God. But that does not mean that David or those around them were ____________________.


God does promise David in that moment that his _______________________________.


The __________________ filled that place, just as the glory of God had led the Israelites before. 


It’s those special celebrations where we remember God’s _____________ that we renew our trust in God to move forward to whatever new thing God is __________ us to do.


Calls like Solomon’s, usually:

1.

2. 


Reflection Questions:

What is the point of special celebrations in scripture and in our lives?


What is the point of remembering in the Biblical sense?


What is God stirring amongst us for such a time as this?



Prayer:

Lord, for all the times we have looked back when you called us to look forward, forgive us. For the times we have dreamed to small, because we desired to be safe, forgive us. Renew in us a spirit of obedience to you, we pray. Amen. 

Monday, October 25, 2021

Devotional “God Calls David” - 1 Samuel 16:1-13 and Psalm 51:10-14

 October 24th, 2021

Devotional

God Calls David” - 1 Samuel 16:1-13 and Psalm 51:10-14

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: “How?” - 1 Samuel 16: 1-3

  There are many names for God throughout scripture. Unfortunately in many of our Bibles they are all translated the same, as God or Lord. For example, God in this particular passage of scripture is described as “El-roi” - God who sees. This is certainly neither the first nor the last time that God has been described this way, but it is important reminders as we enter into this week’s scripture that God does not see as we see. 

But before we enter into the story of Samuel, Jesse, and David, we need to step back and consider the story of Saul, the king who is in the process of being replaced. God originally chose Saul, without the reader or Samuel being given a rationale for his choosing. We are simply told that he was the tallest and most handsome man in Israel. Samuel declares that there is no one like him in all of Israel. 

However, the truth is that in some ways he is just like the rest of the people. For he disobeyed God and God had him removed from his position of power. Now God is inviting Samuel to set aside how he saw things in the past and how the people see Saul in order to boldly follow God. 

Tell of a time in your life when you were reminded that God does not see the way we do as human beings. 

Prayer: God, we thank you that you are the God who sees. You see our pain. You see our joy. You see our hearts. Help us to set aside the way the world sees in order to pick up your sight in our hearts and lives. Amen. 


Tuesday: “Samuel Did” - 1 Samuel 16: 4-5

When Samuel realized that he didn’t have any excuses from following the Lord, he took his heifer and his horn of oil and set out for the house of Jesse. 

But when he arrived, the elders weren’t sure what they were seeing. Was Samuel coming to them in peace or bring them a word of destruction?

Sometimes we do not understand what we are seeing. For God, time and distance do not hinder his sight, but that is not equally true in our lives. So we begin to quake in fear, until we ask the Lord to lead us with his eyes of perfect sight. 

What is something that looks scary in the distance but up close is harmless?

Prayer: Lord, our eyes are weak. We often think we see one thing, when it is not what is true. Help us to set aside that which blocks our heats and clouds our visions we pray. Amen. 


Wednesday: “Surely”-  1 Samuel 16: 6-9

  The problem is, even when Samuel stopped asking how, he still wasn’t aligned with God’s vision. As Jesse’s sons walked in front of him one by one, he saw people who looked great from the outside, but God responded one by one “not this one.” God and Samuel are truly seeing things differently. 

Perhaps even more detrimental is that Samuel is trusting his own eyes above everything else. Maybe he is thinking “well, our last King was handsome and tall, surely that is what God will do again.” But that isn’t the case at all. 

God is about to do a new things, just like God did a new thing long ago with the house of Eli. But Samuel had to be aligned with the way of God in order to step into the new thing before him and before Israel. 

How do you listen for the voice of God when your eyes deceive you?

Prayer: Lord, today we ask that you break open any hardness in our heart that would lead us to disobedience and not following you. We know that we cannot do this on our own, precious Lord. It is only by your grace. Amen. 


Thursday: “Youngest” - 1 Samuel 16: 10-11

  Yet even as God said time and again “not this one” - one remained. Only he wasn’t with the rest. He was excluded and out in the fields tending the sheep. But where the family may have seen the youngest, God saw a leader. Where they may have seen one who wasn’t as tall or strong as the others, God saw a King. 

Now does that mean that David will always be the perfect King? By no means. We know that David will have his own struggles with seeing and not seeing, especially in the case of Bathsheba and Urriah. But he is the one who God has chosen to lead Israel. 

Time and again in this narrative we are reminded that God does not see as mortals see. But God’s timing is also not mortal’s timing. Think of what would have happened if Samuel’s impatience had led him to not listen to God. Think of times when our own impatience leads us to not listen to God. We need not only to see, but to wait for God to reveal. 

  What does waiting for God to reveal look like in your life?

Prayer: Lord, help us to see the importance of waiting upon you. May we not rush ahead of you or fall so far behind that we lose sight of your glory. Lead us, by the hand, we pray. Amen. 


Friday: “Anoint Him” - 1 Samuel 16: 12-13

One of the things that we know about David is that he was a man after God’s own heart. But sometimes we get a little confused about that word “heart” in English. For in our day and time we think of heart as emotion. But in Biblical times, the heart was the center of one’s entire being. 

So David didn’t just seek after the emotion of God, we sought after being centered totally in God. And it was that centering that allowed him to live in obedience to the Lord. 

Being centered in God means we don’t need to have all of the details. We don’t need to see everything in our way. We simply respond, because we are so close to the Lord. 

  How are you centered in the Lord?

Prayer: Lord, next time we want to have all of the details, free us to trust you. Next time we want to go our own way, bring us back in line with you. May we seek to follow your way and will, we pray. Amen. 10


Saturday: Preparing for the Word

You are invited to read and pray this weeks text and topic: Solomon’s Temple” -1 Kings 5:1-5; 8:1-13

Sunday, October 24, 2021

Sabbath. Study. Serve.

 Sabbath, Study, Serve 

Taking the Sermon Into Our Week 


Scripture of the Week: 1 Samuel 16:1-13 and Psalm 51:10-14



From the Sermon:


God is about to do a ______________ again.


But this time instead of respond, “speak Lord, for your servant is listening” Samuel answers out of _______ - “_______________________?”


We can’t say, Lord, I’m willing to follow, but _________________________________.


Once Samuel realized that God was in control, he _____________ any remaining excuses.


Even when Samuel thought he had laid down his bricks, shed his excuses, he still had ____________________________ that stood in the way from responding to God.


David could not have lived into his call if Samuel would not have been willing to set aside both his ______________________________________ about who is meant to be a King. 





Reflection Questions:

Are we people who more often say, speak Lord, for I am willing to listen and go wherever you send me? Or are we people who seem to think it is our job to tell God all the ways that God’s call could go badly for us?


What excuses do you need to lay aside in order to follow God?


How have the ways of the world distracted you from your calling?




Prayer:

Lord, we cannot live into our calling from you by our own strength. If we try to go about it on our own, we start to slide towards the way of the world. Forgive us, O Lord, and help us to seek to live out of our calling in your strength and power alone. Amen. 

Monday, October 18, 2021

“God Calls Samuel” - 1 Sam 3: 1-21 Devo

 October 17th, 2021

Devotional

God Calls Samuel” - 1 Sam 3: 1-21

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: “Samuel” - 1 Samuel 3: 1

When was the last time that someone asked you to do something for them? Perhaps it was to run an errand for them, or watch their children. Maybe it an invitation to simply spend time with them, or something else entirely. What was your response - did you do what that person asked you to do? What was your process behind deciding how to respond? And how quickly did you respond?

  A lot of us feel that Christianity is expressed by doing things for others, both when they ask and when the do not. And to a certain extent this is true, when it is coupled with a discerning spirit. But today’s scripture passage reminds us that the true mark of our faith is how we respond to what God asks us to do.

One of my favorite events that the annual conference holds is called God’s Call. There are two events held every year, one for teens and another for adults, but both with the purpose to help people discern what God is calling them to. While the original aim may have been to help people who are called into ordained ministry, as the event has evolved over the years, so has the understanding that God calls us in a variety of ways to different ministries in and beyond the walls of the church. Through this event, and others like it, I have been blessed to hear hundreds of people’s call stories - their personal narratives about God calling them and pursuing them relentlessly. While each story is unique, almost all have one thing in common, resistance. As relentlessly as God pursued a person for a specific task, with that same passion did people resist God, creating excuses or trying to ignore the call on their life. One gentleman told me that he knew that he was being called for over twenty years, but was too sacred to respond, so he just ignored God.

How do you spend time with God?

Prayer: God, we are thankful that you love to spend time with us. May we love to spend time with you and learn to respond to your call in our lives. Amen.  


Tuesday: “Listening” - 1 Samuel 3: 2-9

  If the story of the call on Samuel’s life teaches us anything, it is God will not be ignored. Samuel was a young boy whom his mother had hoped and prayed for during her years of infertility. While crying out to God, she promised that if he would only give her a child that she would commit the boy back to the service of the Lord. And that is what she did. When Samuel was old enough she took him to live at the temple with the priest Eli. But even with all of those years of living at the temple, Samuel did not recognize the voice of the Lord.

 Samuel heard a voice call out to him after he had went to his mat to sleep for the night. “Samuel, Samuel!” And like an eager servant, he ran to the one he thought was calling him, the priest he served, Eli. I imagine that Eli was not as eager as Samuel to have his sleep interrupted. I can picture him rolling on to his other side, waving his hand, as he said, “I did not call you; lie down again.” Then it happened a second time. Samuel, might have thought that the old man was testing him, or had forgotten that he had called him, so he rushed in a second time, declaring that he had heard Eli calling his name. Again Eli dismissed him. Finally, the third time, even through his sleepy haze, Eli was able to discern who was truly calling out the boy’s name, God. He told Samuel to stay where he was next time the voice called, knowing that there certainly would be a next time, and tell the Lord to speak, for his servant was listening.

  Time and time again I’ve had people tell me that they wish God would speak to them in an audible voice. Call out their name and give them instructions. But when God speaks to you, do you know that it is God, or do you mistake it for someone else? Do you respond to the voice of God by saying that you, God’s servant, are listening, or do you ignore the voice of God? How do you respond to God’s leading in your life?

Prayer: God, we thank you for Eli who was able to speak into Samuel’s young life and help him respond to you. May we, too, be often to people leading and guiding us to be more open to you. Amen.  


Wednesday: “Speak Lord” - 1 Samuel 3: 10-14

Part of the Covenant Renewal Service, often celebrated near the beginning of each year, is the following affirmation, “Christ has many services to be done. Some are more easy and honorable, others are more difficult and disgraceful. Some are suitable to our inclinations and interests, others are contrary to both. In some we may please Christ and please ourselves. But then there are other works where we cannot please Christ except by denying ourselves. It is necessary, therefore, that we consider what it means to be a servant of Christ.”The truth is, often God calls us to do thing that we would rather not do, because we our task to be easy and covenant, and God does not settle for the simple plans or the easy way out. No, God’s dreams for the Kingdom of God and our role in it, are much larger then what is easy. But they are the best.

Samuel was only a young boy, but God gave him a difficult task - Samuel was to deliver the news to his mentor, Eli, that God was doing something new and he and his house were not part of the plan. In fact, Samuel had to tell the one whom we loved like a father that his family would be perished forever for their sins against the Divine. Samuel couldn’t fall back asleep after God spoke to him, because he was so troubled by the words. So he lay there until morning, fearing what he had to tell Eli. But even through Samuel would rather have not heard the message and rather not have relayed it Eli, he did so. Samuel responded to his hard task with the grace of a servant. Are we willing to do the same? Or do we hide from the message of God, fearing what it will cost us more then we fear God?

What gives you the courage to respond to God?

Prayer: Precious Lord, somewhere we have picked up the idea that everything you call us to will be comfortable or easy. Let us set aside this lie so we can pick up the truth of your call upon our lives. Amen. 



Thursday:It is the Lord” - 1 Samuel 3: 15-18

We have much to learn from this story. Calls are not simple. They often ask us to set ourselves aside as we seek to serve God in the way we are called. While the story of Samuel was about one call in particular, the book of 1 Samuel reminds us that he was called upon by the Lord time and time again. We, too, rarely have only one call from God. Instead, we have a series of calls, or calls within calls, that emerge. I wish I could say that it gets easier to respond to calls as time goes on, but I’m not sure that it does. Even when we trust God, we often resist the call of the Lord when we are asked to do something that we would rather not do. But perhaps that is the true mark of a servant of Christ, the ability to do what we may not want to, trusting that it is for the glory of the Kingdom of God.

God is the God of calls. We have seen time and time again that God has called his people to step outside of their comfort zone - Samuel, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Jesus, the Disciples, Paul, the list goes on and on. Sometimes we have an experience like Paul on the road to Damasuc where it is impossible to ignore the voice of God. Other times we have calls like Samuels, which can cause delayed recognition that God is calling us and speaking to us by name. But no matter what the call, there will be two components. First, a nudge by God. This may come in the form of a direct task, “Go and do this in-particular” other times it will simply be a leading, where we cannot see the next step until we take the first one. But no matter what the nudge feels like or it says, it will be able to be tested by scripture and other faithful Christians. Secondly, God’s call for us will involve our name. What our call is, is not for anyone else to do. Our call is specific to us, because God cares for us as individuals and knows us intimately enough to give us a personalized task or mission.

How do you sense that God is calling you for such a time as this?

Prayer: Almighty God, we are humble that you call us to be part of your work in this world again, again and again. Give us the courage to respond to your call upon us with a resounding “yes”. Amen.


Friday: “With Him” - 1 Samuel 3: 19-21

  There are going to be times when we do not know how to respond to God’s call in our life. Just as Samuel needed Eli to tell hi that the voice calling him was in fact the Lord’s, as well as instructions on how he should respond, so do we need Christian companions at times to help us discern the voice and call of God. We are called to hold each other accountable, which at times means we need to ask each other the hard questions about how we are responding to the call of God in our own lives and rebuking each other when we turn away from our call by taking the easy way out.

  God is the God of continual new beginnings and unrelenting calls in our lives. But God will not be ignored, brothers and sisters, and we should not sit by the side if those in our midst are ignoring God’s call or struggling to live into it. We are community because we support each other, especially in times that are challenging, which most times of calling are. We gather together to help each other test our calls and live them out. We hold each other accountable as a sign of love. And we remind each other that while God’s calls are not always easy, they are indeed our calls, not to be lived out by anyone else, for the glory of the Kingdom.

 What has God been calling you to do? How have you been responding to God? Has your answer been yes, but you haven’t taken any action to fulfill your call? Have you been seeking to live into your call but need support? Or have you simply been ignoring God, hoping that the call would go away, or thinking that God mis-spoke and what God has called you to do is really a task for someone else? And how have you been supporting each other in your calls as the body of Christ? Have you been holding others accountable, or do you shy away, knowing that if you hold someone else accountable that they will hold you accountable in return?

The apostle Paul reminded the communities in Corinth and Ephesus that all are called to do something in the body of Christ - some teachers, some apostles, others pastors. Some prophets, some who work miracles, and others who have the gift of healing. Some who work on administration others who are evangelists. We are all called, but we must be discerning enough to hear God’s voice and bold enough in our love for the Lord to respond to God’s call on our lives, in the hope that God is doing a new and powerful thing through us. How will you respond? How is your call story similar and different from that of Samuel? 

Prayer: O loving God, remind us that we do not seek to live into the call you have placed in our lives alone. Enable us to feel you presence leading us and find support in our brothers and sisters beside us. Amen. 


Saturday: Preparing for the Word

You are invited to read and pray this week’s text and topic: “God Calls David” - 1 Samuel 16:1-13 and Psalm 51:10-14

Sunday, October 17, 2021

Sabbath. Study. Serve.

 Sabbath, Study, Serve 

Taking the Sermon Into Our Week 


Scripture of the Week: 1 Samuel 3: 1-21


From the Sermon:

You are __________. By virtue of your baptism, you are _________.


Hannah has fulfilled her promise to God and ___________ is living in the temple with _____, in order to serve the Lord.


In this moment, Eli is able to realize that Samuel is_________________________, something that does not happen every day, and instruct him in how to respond. 


Maybe its a friend who can speak truth into your life. This friend does not need to be perfect, but they do need to be ___________________________.


A _________________________ is a person who holds space to listen to you and listen for the movement of God at the same time.


We need to _____________ when to speak and when to be silent.



Reflection Questions:

Who would you describe as an ‘Eli’ in your life?


How do you seek out wise people?


How do you soften your heart to receive a difficult word?



Prayer:

Lord, place people in my life like Eli who help me recognize the call you have for me and give me the humility of Eli to allow other people to speak into my life as well. Amen. 

Monday, October 11, 2021

God Provides Manna Devo - Exodus 16:1-18

 October 10th, 2021

Devotional

God Provides Manna - Exodus 16 1 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: “If Only” - Exodus 16: 1-3

Who is God? We describes God in so many ways: as our strength, our source of joy, our deliver, the one who fills us, the one who is jealous for us, and the one who satisfies us. Big promises and concepts to wrap our minds around. 

But these are not the words that jump to mind for the Israelites. They think not of God as a provider or deliver, but One who has wholly abandoned them. They do not think of God as the giver of life, but the One leading to death. And because their perception of God is off, it colors how they are perceiving their current circumstances. 

We will never be fully able to describe who God is to us. For we only know about God what God has chosen to reveal to us. And even in the midst of those revelations, our human understanding of God is limited at best. So we craft stories and poems to try to get language around these revelations. Language to express to others who God is and what God is doing in our lives. And that is hard. There is so much to say about God, yet we don’t know even how to begin.

How could have claiming who God truly is have changed the experience of the Israelites?

Prayer: God, we confess that sometimes we let our own experiences guide who we believe you to be. Our heart can whisper lies to us that replace the truth of who we know you to be. Forgive us, O Lord, and help us step into your truth anew today. Amen. 


Tuesday: “Raining Bread” - Exodus 16: 4-5

  The way that we perceive our experiences with God will ultimately influence how much we trust God and can grow in our relationship. One of the questions that blocks relationships with God the most often is ‘why would God allow humans to suffer?’ Inherent in this questions are the beliefs that God is in control and is all powerful and all knowing. Yet, we seem to forget that God created humans with the capacity for free will, which means that our decisions have consequences. And sadly, other’s decisions can have unintended consequences for us. We seem to embrace the freewill that God has gifted us with, until something goes wrong - then we want God to be a puppet master, controlling each of our experiences. 

But that would not allow us to develop a relationship with God. On the other side of the coin - God didn’t just create the universe then step back, just to see what would happen. God walks with us through our suffering, just like God was constantly with the Israelites in the wilderness day and night,  if only we can perceive that Holy presence in the midst of chaos. God does not and will not leave us alone in our suffering. 

God does not cause suffering, but God redeems it for us. Ultimately that is what God is doing - working through and with us to create this new Kingdom, both here on earth and beyond. We believe that God is not a far off deity, simply living in Heaven and not present in our lives. Instead we believe that God is active and moving and present with each of us. 

How has God provided for you, even during difficult times?

Prayer: God, we thank you that even when the Israelites complained against you, that your grace shined through. You continued to provide and lead them, even when they could not see. Let the eyes of our hearts be open so we can see this truth in our lives as well. Amen. 


Wednesday: “The Glory of the Lord” - Exodus 16: 6-8

Think about the person you are closest to in life. Or perhaps the person you have known the longest. How would you begin to describe them to someone who has never met them? Some of us are good at describing folks that don’t know each other to one another. I have friends who have never met, but will ask me about each other when we chat, because they feel like they know them through my descriptions. But its hard to describe our whole experience with a person - it takes many conversations, many descriptions, many stories. 

We place an emphasis on having a personal relationship and experiences with God. We lift up the fact that its not enough to know about God, we need to know God personally. Think back to my friends - they know about each other, but they don’t know one another with the deep sense of intimacy I do. That can only emerge over time with shared experiences. So it is with God. We may be able to start out our relationship with God finding out facts and descriptions, but that relationship will remain shallow at best if we do not progress to knowing God personally, in a way that can only develop over time shared together.

How did you come to be in relationship with God?

Prayer: Almighty God, you are the God of glory and power, and yet you choose to be in relationship with each of us. Thank you for providing not just what we need, but drawing close to us even when we are far off. Thank you for giving of your very self to be with us every single day. Amen. 


Thursday: “Draw Near” - Exodus 16: 9-12

A stumbling block for some people in how to describe who God is comes with naming God. We are limited in our human language in how we can talk about God, so we try to use human descriptions and names to capture what our relationship is with God. But God doesn’t make this easy, for the only name or title God gives us is “I am who I am.” The Bible has many ways to describe and name God as well: God of Abraham, Shepherd, Father, Creator, Maker, Lord, Jehovah, King, Almighty. Ultimately God cannot be captured by any one of these descriptors, but at their very best they can help draw us into a deeper relationship and lead others into relationship with a Holy God as well. 

We cling to and describe most frequently the language around the parts of God we treasure most - but we need to realize and accept that this may not be true for every other Christian - and that does not make either of us wrong. For example, the last church I served was African American, some of whom survived Hurricane Katrina. They stressed the God of deliverance who accompanies us even through the darkest valleys of life. But that may not be how you view God. I once was told that trying to describe God was like looking through a kaleidoscope - we all are going to see different shapes and images, but they represent different parts of God, because God is so vast. 

How do you address God and how does that help you draw near to God’s presence?

Prayer: God of Grace and God of Glory, we humbly thank you for hearing us when we call. Thank you for hearing not just our words but our hearts. Amen and amen!


Friday: “Needed” - Exodus 16: 13-18

  Part of the first Article of Religion for United Methodists sums up the scriptural teachings about God by stating, “There is but one living and true God, everlasting, without body or parts, of infinite power, wisdom, and goodness; the maker and preserver of all things, both visible and invisible.” A description wide enough for us to find God in the midst of. A description narrow enough that we can be in relationship with this God. 

Who do you believe God to be and how is God alive and moving in your life in a way you can point out and describe to others? How is your life proclaiming the presence and power of God? How are you leading others to know who God is? And how are your prayers flowing from your relationship with God?

Prayer: O loving God, may we continue to grow in love for you and others. Shape us, mold us, and send us, we pray. Let us be the body of Christ for the world. Amen. 


Saturday: Preparing for the Word

You are invited to read and pray this week’s text and topic: “God Calls Samuel” - 1 Samuel 3:1-21

Sunday, October 10, 2021

Sabbath. Study. Serve.

 Sabbath, Study, Serve 

Taking the Sermon Into Our Week 


Scripture of the Week: Exodus 16:1-18


From the Sermon:

Would you say that more of what you say to God is “_________________” or “____________”?


The primary things coming out of the mouths of the Israelites are _____________.


Lies can ____________________________.


When we lose our ability to perceive what God has done and is doing, we no longer ________ what God will do.


Even in this place of a fractured relationship with God, God is still _____________ to the people who are complaining against him.


Where we need to keep our heart in check is to see if  _____________________________ with God is one of complaining, because we have written a different narrative in our head and heart about who God is.



Reflection Questions:

How would you describe your prayer life?


How does your perception sometimes lead you farther from God?


Do we still trust God in our complaining or do our complaints reveal that we are drifting farther and farther from trusting God?



Prayer:

Lord, release my stiff neck and make me aware of what you are doing. As my attention to you grows, may it free me to praise you for what you have done and who you are. Free me to trust you more. Amen.

Monday, October 4, 2021

“God’s Name is Revealed” Devo - Exodus 2:23-25; 3:1-15; 4:10-17

 October 3rd, 2021

Devotional

God’s Name is Revealed” 

Exodus 2:23-25; 3:1-15; 4:10-17

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: “Blazing Bush” - Exodus 3: 1-3

My call story, in a book aptly titled Beyond the Burning Bush. Most of the stories in the book are ones about encounters with God, but not a one of them was exactly the same as the next and none were the same as Moses’s, yet they all were transformative.

  The thing about calls from God is that the come when we least expect them. For Moses, he was simply doing what he did every day, tending his father in law’s flock. Over forty years earlier Moses had fled from Egypt, where he had been adopted by the Pharoh’s daughter even though the law said that he should have been killed. He found himself with a complete change in life circumstances - from being a child and young man in the palace to tending sheep. 

On this particular day, Moses took the flock to Horeb, where the mountain of God was located. There, the angel of the Lord appeared to Moses in a bush that was on fire, but did not burn up. Moses thought the only thing he could do was turn and not look directly at the bush itself, but out of the bush came the very voice of God, calling his name.

What are the ways that God has captured your attention in your life?

Prayer: God, thank you for continually reaching out to us - even when we do not respond. Even when we do not hear. Even when we do not go. Keep reaching out to us, O Lord. Do not give up on us, we pray. Amen.  


Tuesday: “Here I Am” - Exodus 3: 4-5

  For me, my call came in a time in my life when I thought I had everything figured out. I planned on going on to pursue my doctorate in psychology. However, I was planning on being out of the country most of my senior year of college, so I started visiting schools my junior year. While I was standing in the room that held all of the dissertations, hard bound and aligned in alphabetical order, in the school that was my top choice, it was as if the Holy Spirit finally broke through my heart and said ‘this is not what you are called to be doing.’

Honestly, I probably knew that well before that particular moment. I switched colleges and majors after my freshman year, and in the process of doing so was invited to go to an event held in State College. My pastor described the event as one of discerning what to do with your life, so imagine my surprise when I found out it was people exploring different aspects of ministry - something that had never been on my radar before other than to say, ‘nope, not for me.’ I left that event sort of playing around with the idea of becoming a lay speaker or certified lay minister, something where I could still have a “real” job and be involved in the church.

After transferring colleges, I was a double major, psychology and religion. But my religion professors, who knew that this wasn’t what I was planning on doing full time, kept giving me opportunities. One professor in particular arranged for me to preach my first sermon at a small church in New York. It was very bad. Less than eight minutes and worship was over super quick that day, but he kept encouraging me. 

After that moment in the dissertation room it was like a switch was flipped, but the same time line still existed. I was still planning on being out of the country for a good chunk of my senior year, which meant I needed to start the certification process for ministry and looking at seminaries within eight months. But after being obedient to the leading of the Holy Spirit, doors started to open and circumstances aligned that I was able to be certified as a candidate for ministry and be accepted to the seminary I felt called to go to, all before boarding a plane in August to leave for a semester in Australia prior to graduating in December. 

  Does that mean that following this call wasn’t hard and down right terrifying at times? Absolutely not. Moses knew that there was something holy happening in the moment with the burning bush, but that doesn’t mean that he could describe it. That it made sense to him.

What do you sense that God is calling you to at this season in your life?

Prayer: God, we thank you that at all ages you call us to be part of the work of your Kingdom in unique ways. Give us the strength to respond “yes” each and every time you call us. Amen. 


Wednesday: “Holy Ground” - Exodus 3: 5-10

God told him that he was being called to go to the Pharaoh, on behalf of God, and bring the Israelites out of Egypt. That’s the thing about calls and being on holy ground - it’s not about me. It’s about something bigger than just me or just what I want. It’s a vision to do something for God, to be part of the work of the Kingdom that is beyond my wildest imagination. 

  By no means, however, does that mean that we all hear the same call as Moses. Or the call to be a pastor. Or the calls to _____________, fill in the blank with whatever you may be thinking. Your call is just that, your call. Not someone else’s. When we are in places where we can listen to God, we realize that God is speaking to us about our purpose, not anyone else’s.

How we hear God may also be different for each of us. Moses heard the audible voice of God. But for many of us, we hear God in the quiet, inner voice. The leading of the Holy Spirit. A lot of folks tell me that they wish that God would speak to them in an audible voice. Then they would know what to do. Then they would know how to respond. But look at Moses. Even though he heard the voice of God, Moses still asked “Who am I to do what you say?” We also know that Moses goes on later in the story to give a list of excuses as to why God should pick someone, anyone, else.  

When is a time that you wished that God would have picked someone else for your call? How did you respond?

Prayer: Almighty God, forgive us for the times we have denied our calling or tried to pass it on to someone else. Reminds us that you formed us with a purpose and let us boldly live into it for your glory. Amen. 


Thursday:I AM” - Exodus 3: 11-15

Jesus told a parable in the 14th chapter of the Gospel of Luke about people who made excuses as to why they couldn’t attend a great dinner party. It's one that we heard this morning through our call to worship. People had all sorts of reasons not to come, but the excuses just made the owner throwing the party angry. 

Honestly, just like Moses and just like the people in Jesus’s parable, we all have a list of excuses. Reasons that we say that we will follow the prompting of the Holy Spirit, but only if everything else lines up. Or I’ll do that eventually. Or we say that we pray to God to show us the way and will of God, but really we just mean that we are praying that God bless the decisions that we have already made. 

What are some of the excuses you give to God to not follow him?

Prayer: God of Grace and God of Glory, we thank you that you do not let our excuses deter you. Instead you invite us, again and again, to reach out in your name. Amen. 


Friday: “Send” - Exodus 4: 10-17

  Sometimes following God is simply taking the first step, trusting that God will be with us. Several times in this section of Exodus we find God reminding Moses who God is and that God will be with him. God said, “I am the God of your father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.” God said, “I will be with you; and this shall be the sign for you that it is I who sent you: when you have brought the people out of Egypt, you shall worship God on this mountain.” God said, “Thus you shall say to the Israelites, ‘The Lord,[b] the God of your ancestors, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has sent me to you.”

  When we follow the call of God, we do not go alone. But that doesn’t mean that we have all of the details worked out exactly. We simply respond. 

The truth is that we all have a purpose, a call from God on our lives. Have you been listening for the call of God in your life? What is most important to you? Is it following the way and will of God? Now is your time, dear friends, to dare to follow wherever God may be leading. No more excuses. Just chasing after the heart of our God.

Who is God partnering you with in ministry?

Prayer: O loving God, may we continue to grow in love for you and others. Shape us, mold us, and send us, we pray. Let us be the body of Christ for the world. Amen. 


Saturday: Preparing for the Word

You are invited to read and pray this week’s text and topic: “God Provides Manna” - Exodus 16:1-18