Daily Devotional 4/13/20

 

 

David and the Psalms-  

Our new sermon series will be focusing on the 23rd Psalm. A psalm of David. I have to admit the Psalms traditionally have been something I struggle with in my bible study… I’ve always viewed them as poems and flowery words that sometimes contradict each other and confuse me…. This is probably because I’m not a poetic or prose person, I like the literal meaning of things that I don’t have to ponder too much on to get it…  

Then one day it clicked for me that the psalms are the songs of old, the hymns of the people of God that were sung, and would’ve been just as well known to the Israelites as we know the words and tune of “Jesus Loves Me.” They sung certain psalms at certain times of the year just like we sing our favorite hymns and carols at Christmas and Easter.  

King David had a long history with music and singing. Before he was anointed to be the next king of Israel, he was singing with the sheep. Once anointed, God used David’s gift of music and worship to move him closer to the throne. Saul, who was the king before David called for someone to come and calm him with music. (Read 1Samuel 16:14-23) 

Saul needed some relief from his own anxieties and stress. David was able to give him relief through worship and music.  

David continued to express the things going on in his world through the psalms. Centering on a cry for certain needs of forgiveness and safety and even joyful praises of God’s goodness!   

With David, we see the path of our own emotions, when we too are in despair and lose patience in waiting for God. However, God in his perfect timing makes an answer that leads us back to his love and protection. With God, we find joy. 

I know I have certain songs I turn to in certain times of my life… I bet you do too. You know the ones that lift you up out of a sad space, or the one that captures your love for your spouse or family… Or even the one that as soon as you hear it you can help yourself from dancing! We often know the words by heart and sing a long easily to the music we love…  

So after a long aversion to the book of Psalms, I finally get it… I finally see how they are woven into the fabric of our Christianity, how they too are the songs that help us express our emotions and desires to God, how they can lift us up out of the depths of despair and reorient our focus back on to the goodness of God.  

So here’s my challenge to you today:  

What are those songs you know by heart? The ones you turn to for the different chapters of your life?? Why do you think they speak to you? 

What do the psalms mean to you? Are they confusing or are you able to dive in and let the words surround you?  

Do you have a favorite Psalm? If not, I challenge you over the course of this sermon series to discover one…. Mine is Psalm 91 by the way….  

One more tip for you, Shane and Shane who performed for us last year has an album of Psalms and it’s definitely worth a listen.  


Holy Week Daily Devotional 4/11/20

 
Below, you will find a few resources to assist you in cultivating your life with God as we prayerfully reflect on the events of Holy Week. Included are a reading for reflection and the traditional Scripture readings for today. There is also a link (under the prayer below)  to some meditative music you may want to play during your time with God today.

 

[Suggestion: Find a quiet, comfortable place. Take a few deep breaths to begin your time of prayer, and perhaps as a way of dedicating yourself again to God, you may want to say to yourself on each respective inhale: “In the name of the Father…and of the Son…and of the Holy Spirit…” Then, prayerfully say the Lord’s Prayer and begin reading when you are ready.]

 

 

Saturday of Holy Week

Most of us have had moments of intense grief at some point in life, or–if we have not–we will eventually. My dad was my hero, and when we learned that he had terminal cancer, I felt completely unable to function. Much of what my life had always been was being lost. In the days following his diagnosis, I lived with a constant sense of having been kicked in the stomach, and I remember for several days waking from sleep, each time hoping that it had all been a bad dream. It always only took a moment for the dark reality to set in.

     Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John each tell the story of Jesus’ burial, but none of them say anything about what the disciples were doing on Saturday. There are some obvious possible explanations: it was a Sabbath, so they couldn’t do anything actively. Also, since Jesus had essentially been executed for treason (“If you let this man live, you are no friend of Caesar.”…Above his head they placed the written charge against him: This is Jesus, the King of the Jews”), the disciples must have been fearfully aware of the possibility that they would become the next targets. So, though we aren’t told what they did, we can be reasonably sure that they hid, full of shock, fear, and grief.

     Though my grief over my dad was intense, I’m sure it wasn’t in the same category as what Jesus’ friends experienced on the day after his crucifixion. In addition to the loss of their beloved leader, they also had to deal with the injustice involved, the devastation of their dreams and hopes about who they thought Jesus was (in their framework, a crucified Messiah was a contradiction in terms), the fear that they would be next, and perhaps most painful of all–the shame for having deserted him at his arrest.

     If they slept at all, they surely awoke on Saturday hoping for an instant that it had all been a nightmare and that Jesus was still there next to them. After a moment, when the dark reality set in again, it is certain to have felt overpowering. Jesus’ body lay dead and lifeless in a tomb.

            The only detail the gospels give us about Saturday is one that reiterates the point:
            The next day, the one after Preparation Day, the chief priests and the Pharisees went to Pilate. “Sir,” they said, “we remember that while he was still alive that deceiver said, ‘After three days I will rise again.’ So give the order for the tomb to be made secure until the third day. Otherwise, his disciples may come and steal the body and tell the people that he has been raised from the dead. This last deception will be worse than the first.”

             “Take a guard,” Pilate answered. “Go, make the tomb as secure as you know how.” So they went and made the tomb secure by putting a seal on the stone and posting the guard.
(Matthew 27:62-66, NIV)

Traditional Scriptures for Saturday of Holy Week

Lamentations 3:1-9, 19-24
Psalm 31:1-4, 15-16
1 Peter 4:1-8
Matthew 27:57-66

 

A Prayer for the Day

O God, Creator of heaven and earth:  Grant that, as the crucified body of your dear Son was laid in the tomb and rested on this holy Sabbath, so we may await with him the coming of the third day, and rise with him to newness of life; who now lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

[Suggestion: If it is not necessary, try not to move quickly into the next part of your day. You may want to set a timer for five minutes to sit quietly with God, or to go on a walk. If you would like some meditative instrumental music, click here, or for a musical meditation on Isaiah 52:13-53:12, click here.]

 

Blessing

Through Jesus Christ our Lord; who was tempted in every way as we are, yet did not sin. By his grace we are able to triumph over every evil, and to live no longer for ourselves alone, but for him who died for us and rose again:

The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit, be with us all evermore. Amen. (2 Corinthians 13:14)

Sources:

Daily readings: Follow: 40 Days of Preparing the Soul for Easter by Daniel Ethan Harris.
Traditional Scriptures: The Revised Common Lectionary
Prayer for the Day: The Book of Common Prayer
Instrumental Music: Quietime: Lent, by Eric Nordhoff
Musical Meditation: With His Wounds We are Healed (Isaiah 53), by The Corner Room

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Holy Week Daily Devotional 4/10/20

 
Below, you will find a few resources to assist you in cultivating your life with God as we prayerfully reflect on the events of Holy Week. Included are a reading for reflection and the traditional Scripture readings for today. There is also a link (under the prayer below)  to some meditative music you may want to play during your time with God today.

 

[Suggestion: Find a quiet, comfortable place. Take a few deep breaths to begin your time of prayer, and perhaps as a way of dedicating yourself again to God, you may want to say to yourself on each respective inhale: “In the name of the Father…and of the Son…and of the Holy Spirit…” Then, prayerfully say the Lord’s Prayer and begin reading when you are ready.]

 

 

Good Friday

I always underestimate how quickly this part of the story happened. If we read yesterday’s and today’s stories in the Bible, they take up a lot of space. For example, of the twenty-one chapters in John, one-third of them (chapters thirteen through nineteen) are filled with the content of these twenty-four hours.

     This makes the pace seem slower when reading the story, as we read about Jesus getting passed back and forth between people, Pilate trying to figure out what to do with him, and the religious leaders working the political system to get their desired result (“You are no friend of Caesar….We have no king but Caesar.”). Yet despite the change in pace of the narrative, the reality is that Thursday evening Jesus was having dinner with his friends–including Judas. By mid-afternoon on Friday both Judas and Jesus were dead.

     As I’ve tried to let these stories sink in and picture the scenes of the Last Supper, Jesus’ trial with the Sanhedrin, Peter’s denial, the crowd’s choice of Barabbas and insistence on Jesus’ death, I’ve realized something: If I had been there and been a character in the story, or even just a face in the crowd, it’s silly to think that I would have done anything differently from what everyone else did. I too would have been on the wrong side of the story and left Jesus alone.

     I might have been one of those who loved Jesus but for various reasons couldn’t do anything about what was happening, and therefore had to let it happen. Those such as Mary his mother, Mary Magdalene, John, Joseph of Arimathea, or Nicodemus surely hated what they saw happening but felt some inevitable sense of resignation to the way things were playing out so quickly.

     Or I might have been someone who more actively turned my back and ran from Jesus, like most of his friends. I may have even reacted as Peter did and tried to cover up any tracks that I’d had with him. Based on my own history in circumstances much less intense than what Peter faced that night, I don’t have much reason to think I would do any better than he did.

     Or I might have been Judas. It’s easy to believe that I could have been more interested in my own plan than Jesus’ way. Like Judas, I too have been disappointed with God at times, feeling that he didn’t come through as he should have, so who’s to say that I wouldn’t have been the one to seek personal gain as a result of Jesus not turning out to be and do what I had hoped?

     Regardless of what role I would have played, I would have been among those included in Jesus’ statement, “you all will leave me alone. Yet I am not alone, for my Father is with me.”

     I would have been somewhere on the wrong side of this horrible drama. And Jesus would have known that, and even in his most agonizing hours which I helped to bring about, he would have loved me anyway.

 
Traditional Scriptures for Good Friday

Isaiah 52:13-53:12
Psalm 22
Hebrews 10:16-25
John 18:1-19:42

 
A Prayer for the Day

Almighty God, we pray you graciously to behold this your family, for whom our Lord Jesus Christ was willing to be betrayed, and given into the hands of sinners, and to suffer death upon the cross; who now lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

[Suggestion: If it is not necessary, try not to move quickly into the next part of your day. You may want to set a timer for five minutes to sit quietly with God, or to go on a walk. If you would like some meditative instrumental music, click here, or for a musical meditation on Isaiah 52:13-53:12, click here.]

Blessing

Through Jesus Christ our Lord; who was tempted in every way as we are, yet did not sin. By his grace we are able to triumph over every evil, and to live no longer for ourselves alone, but for him who died for us and rose again:

Glory to God whose power, working in us, can do infinitely more than we can ask or imagine: Glory to him from generation to generation in the Church, and in Christ Jesus for ever and ever. Amen. (Ephesians 3:20-21)

Sources:

Daily readings: Follow: 40 Days of Preparing the Soul for Easter by Daniel Ethan Harris.
Traditional Scriptures: The Revised Common Lectionary
Prayer for the Day: The Book of Common Prayer
Instrumental Music: Quietime: Lent, by Eric Nordhoff
Musical Meditation: With His Wounds We are Healed (Isaiah 53), by The Corner Room

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Holy Week Daily Devotional 4/9/20

 

Below, you will find a few resources to assist you in cultivating your life with God as we prayerfully reflect on the events of Holy Week. Included are a reading for reflection and the traditional Scripture readings for today. There is also a link (under the prayer below)  to some meditative music you may want to play during your time with God today.

 

[Suggestion: Find a quiet, comfortable place. Take a few deep breaths to begin your time of prayer, and perhaps as a way of dedicating yourself again to God, you may want to say to yourself on each respective inhale: “In the name of the Father…and of the Son…and of the Holy Spirit…” Then, prayerfully say the Lord’s Prayer and begin reading when you are ready.]

 

 

Maundy Thursday
  “When Jesus wanted to give his followers–then and now–a way of understanding what was about to happen to him, he didn’t teach them a theory…He gave them an act to perform. Specifically, he gave them a meal to share.”
–N.T. Wright

  The Passover meal that Jesus shared with his disciples on their last night together was full–as it always had been–of powerful, intentional reminders about their past. It took them back to when their ancestors had been slaves for centuries in Egypt, and then God had miraculously delivered them from their oppression as they began a long journey toward the Promised Land. Really, it was more than a way of bringing the old stories to mind. It was a way of participating in the story, a way of realizing, “We are the people who were brought out of slavery into freedom.”

  As well as looking to the past, their Passover meal also always helped them to look to the future in hope. Just as their ancestors had been, they had also been under oppression for centuries, and they needed God’s deliverance anew. Their scriptures pointed toward someone through whom God would accomplish this, an anointed one (Messiah/Christ), through whom their oppressors would once more be defeated and the promised freedom would again come–this time, forever.

  By the time that they came to the night of that Passover meal together in an upper room, Jesus’ followers had come to believe that he, their Rabbi, who was leading them through the rituals of the meal was the one through whom these things would happen, though they hadn’t understood many of the things he had tried to teach them. Much that had happened in the preceding days was strange to them, but they understood what the Passover meal meant. They all knew the meal’s rituals well, as they had participated in them in the same way every year of their lives.

  At least, they understood the meal until-at some point in the evening–Jesus changed the ritual. “Take, eat. This is my body….Drink from this cup, all of you. It is my blood….” Jesus took this meal about their past and their future and pointed it–in their present moment–to himself, to his own body and blood. “Do this in remembrance of me…”

  John’s account of that meal is very different, though no less memorable. In John’s story, nothing is said about Jesus identifying the bread as his body, nor of the wine as his blood. Instead, John is the only one of the gospel writers to focus on something else that happened during the meal:

  Jesus knew that the Father had put all things under his power, and that he had come from God and was returning to God; so he got up from the meal, took off his outer clothing, and wrapped a towel around his waist. After that, he poured water into a basin and began to wash his disciples’ feet, drying them with the towel that was wrapped around him.

   …When he had finished washing their feet, he put on his clothes and returned to his place. “Do you understand what I have done for you?” he asked them. “You call me ‘Teacher’ and ‘Lord,’ and rightly so, for that is what I am. Now that I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also should wash one another’s feet. I have set you an example that you should do as I have done for you. Very truly I tell you, no servant is greater than his master, nor is a messenger greater than the one who sent him. Now that you know these things, you will be blessed if you do them. (John 13:3-5, 12-17, NIV)

  This provided the setting for the rest of the evening, in which Jesus gave his “farewell address” to his friends (though it was really more of a conversation), important enough that John devoted about 1/5 of his entire story to the dialogue (see John chapters 13 through 17). On that night which he wanted his friends to remember for the remainder of their lives, Jesus reiterated something to them no fewer than three times:

   A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another…
My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you…
This is my command: Love each other.

  One meal, with two different accounts which each have an associated command: “Do this in remembrance of me” and “Love each other.” These are the reasons this day in Holy Week uses the term “Maundy.” The meaning would be clearer to us today if we called it “Mandate Thursday,” as the root of these words, maundy and mandate, means “command.” So this is “New Commandment Thursday” when we commemorate, “Do this in remembrance of me” and “Love each other.”

  Just as the original night looked to the past and the future with a whole new meaning given in the present for the first disciples, it does the same for us. I hope that when we are next able to celebrate Holy Communion with other followers of the Messiah, this context can come to mind:

  • We are taken backward in time–back to that upper room with the astonished disciples when Jesus took the meaning of the ancient Passover onto himself. Each time we share the Jesus-meal, we again put ourselves into the old story of the people who are in bondage and desperately need God’s deliverance. As the liturgy says, “On the night in which he gave himself up for us, he took bread…he took the cup…”
  • We are taken forward in time–the only thing Jesus describes as something that will be done in the age to come–after all things are made new–is to share in this meal again: “I tell you, I will not drink from this fruit of the vine from now on until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father’s kingdom.” Each time we share the Jesus-meal, we are getting a foretaste of that final/first banquet with Jesus himself. As the liturgy says, “By your Spirit make us one with Christ, one with each other, and one in ministry to all the world, until Christ comes in final victory and we feast at his heavenly banquet.”
  • We experience the wonder of what happens in those moments when we take the bread and cup together as Jesus instructed. He, the crucified and risen King, is with us, and his grace enables us to live more fully in him–and he in us. As the liturgy says, “Pour out your Holy Spirit on us gathered here, and on these gifts of bread and wine. Make them be for us the body and blood of Christ, that we may be for the world the body of Christ, redeemed by his blood.”

  As Jesus undoubtedly knew was true of his first disciples on that night, we too need to be strengthened by this meal if we are to be able to continue following him through the rest of tonight and into tomorrow.

   Then Jesus went with his disciples to a place called Gethsemane…

   While he was still speaking, Judas, one of the Twelve, arrived. With him was a large crowd armed with swords and clubs, sent from the chief priests and the elders of the people. Now the betrayer had arranged a signal with them: “The one I kiss is the man; arrest him.” Going at once to Jesus, Judas said, “Greetings, Rabbi!” and kissed him.

   Jesus replied, “Do what you came for, friend.”

   Then the men stepped forward, seized Jesus and arrested him. (Matthew 26:36,47-50, NIV)

 

Traditional Scriptures for Maundy Thursday

Exodus 12:1-4,(5-10),11-14
Psalm 116:1-2,12-19
1 Corinthians 11:23-26
John 13:1-17,31b-35

A Prayer for the Day

Almighty Father, whose dear Son, on the night before he suffered, instituted the Sacrament of his Body and Blood: Mercifully grant that we may receive it thankfully in remembrance of Jesus Christ our Lord, who in these holy mysteries gives us a pledge of eternal life; and who now lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

[Suggestion: If it is not necessary, try not to move quickly into the next part of your day. You may want to set a timer for five minutes to sit quietly with God, or to go on a walk. If you would like some meditative instrumental music, click here, or for a musical meditation on Isaiah 52:13-53:12, click here.]

Blessing

Through Jesus Christ our Lord; who was tempted in every way as we are, yet did not sin. By his grace we are able to triumph over every evil, and to live no longer for ourselves alone, but for him who died for us and rose again:

May the God of hope fill us with all joy and peace in believing through the power of the Holy Spirit Amen. (Romans 15:13)

Sources:

Daily readings: Follow: 40 Days of Preparing the Soul for Easter by Daniel Ethan Harris.
Traditional Scriptures: The Revised Common Lectionary
Prayer for the Day: The Book of Common Prayer
Instrumental Music: Quietime: Lent, by Eric Nordhoff
Musical Meditation: With His Wounds We are Healed (Isaiah 53), by The Corner Room



Holy Week Daily Devotional 4/8/20

Below, you will find a few resources to assist you in cultivating your life with God as we prayerfully reflect on the events of Holy Week. Included are a reading for reflection and the traditional Scripture readings for today. There is also a link (under the prayer below)  to some meditative music you may want to play during your time with God today.

 

[Suggestion: Find a quiet, comfortable place. Take a few deep breaths to begin your time of prayer, and perhaps as a way of dedicating yourself again to God, you may want to say to yourself on each respective inhale: “In the name of the Father…and of the Son…and of the Holy Spirit…” Then, prayerfully say the Lord’s Prayer and begin reading when you are ready.]

 

 

Wednesday of Holy Week

   I have occasionally met people who have very strange names (like the time in college when I was introduced to two sisters named Rainbow and Sunshine), but one name comes to mind which I’ve never heard of a parent giving to their child: Judas.

  I’m sure there is an exception out there somewhere, and I hope that his parents either weren’t English-speaking or just didn’t know this story very well, but–thankfully–not many parents choose to give their sons the name of the most well-known traitor in the history of the world.

  Despite its history after Jesus, the name, Judas, has strong roots. It was a common name for Jewish boys in Jesus’ day. Two of the twelve disciples had the name, plus one of Jesus’ brothers. Judas, Jude, Judah–even Jew and Jewish–all come from the same name/word and all point back in Israel’s history to one of Jacob’s sons. In Jesus’ day, it was a heroic name with royal implications. Judas Maccabaeus successfully led a revolt against Israel’s oppressors a couple of centuries before Jesus was born. Judas the Galilean led a revolt against the Romans during Jesus’ boyhood, which was crushed brutally.

  But ever since the day we’re considering in this reflection, somewhere around Wednesday of the last week of Jesus’ life, the name Judas brings to mind evil, darkness, and the worst aspects of the human heart.

  Judas was part of the inner circle from the beginning of Jesus’ public career. Despite how artwork through the centuries has portrayed him, there was nothing about Judas that made him stand out as the obvious choice for “Most Likely to Betray God’s Anointed.” He was one of the group, hoping that Jesus was the one for whom they had been waiting. He was there passing baskets around to the crowd when five loaves of bread and two fish had fed thousands of people. He saw the sick healed, demons cast out, and the dead raised to life–perhaps, at Jesus’ instruction, even doing some of these things himself just as the other disciples did. He was there when Jesus taught, and could undoubtedly sense that it was like no other teaching he had ever heard.

  Though speculation abounds and all kinds of possibilities exist as to why Judas went to the chief priests and asked, “What are you willing to give me if I deliver him over to you?” and then accepted the deal for the price of thirty pieces of silver, we can never know what went on inside of him.

  Still, I’ll add my own speculation to the mix: perhaps something about the previous few days had convinced Judas that what he had hoped Jesus would accomplish was ultimately not going to happen. Yesterday, we mentioned how–even though the tension in Jesus’ interactions in the temple was so high–apparently, most of Jesus’ followers still didn’t foresee what was coming nor understand the warnings he had given them about it. That is, except for one woman, who showed her understanding by anointing Jesus for his burial while he was sitting at a supper with the twelve.

  Maybe, after all, that woman wasn’t the only one who understood. Maybe Judas did by that point as well. Or possibly her actions at that dinner and Jesus’ response to her were what allowed Judas to see what, by then, was inevitable: this man, whom they had thought was the Messiah–their deliverer–was going to die, and apparently that was even what Jesus had expected for some time. Jesus had spent the last couple of days in the temple picking a fight that he intended to lose.

  In the minds of almost everyone who had followed Jesus to that point, realizing the fate that awaited him would have meant that he could not have been the one they had hoped him to be. The Messiah (the real one) would deliver, conquer enemies, restore Israel, and rule as king; anyone who would head knowingly into his own defeat and death therefore could not be God’s anointed one. It would be impossible to think of anyone executed before coming to power as being the long-awaited king.

  We are arrogant to think we would have caught on any more quickly than the rest of the disciples. They simply had no framework for understanding Messiah-ship that looked like what Jesus was about to do. Perhaps that clicked a bit sooner for Judas than it did for the others, and as soon as he realized it, he therefore had to get out. (Surely he realized that if Jesus was going to die, his followers would become targeted as well, and there was no reason to go to the grave with a failed Messiah.)

  I don’t know how much Jesus knew about Judas when he chose him to be one of the twelve. The gospels seem to be clear that Jesus knew during his time with the disciples that one of them would turn away, and John even says that Jesus knew from the beginning who would betray him.

  Regardless of the timing–whether Jesus knew what Judas would do from the first time they laid eyes on one another, or if it was some time after that–considering the relationship between the two of them makes me tremble for a couple of reasons.

  First, I realize that I am not so far from Judas as I would like to think. Jesus has utterly disappointed me at times, when I counted on him to do things I thought he said he would do, and then they did not happen. I have never wanted out as Judas did, but I’ve also had a remarkably easier time of following Jesus than in his case. Of course I like to think that if I was at the Last Supper, I would have been the one reclining close enough to Jesus to whisper a question in his ear, but it’s just as likely that I would have been the one who dipped the bread in the bowl with him.

  The other part of it that makes me shudder–and want to spend some time on my face before God–is to realize that regardless of when Jesus knew what he knew about Judas, Jesus loved him. Jesus kept him around, shared his life with Judas. He washed Judas’ feet. He passed bread to Judas, saying, “Take it. This is my body.” Then he passed wine and said, “This is my blood…” Only after all of these things did Jesus tell him, “What you are about to do, do quickly.”

  Judas had his feet washed. He ate the bread. He drank from the cup. Then he left to go make his deal with the chief priests.

  And Jesus loved him.

 

Traditional Scriptures for Wednesday of Holy Week

Isaiah 50:4-9a
Psalm 70
Hebrews 12:1-3
John 13:21-32

A Prayer for the Day

Lord God, whose blessed Son our Savior gave his body to be whipped and his face to be spit upon: Give us grace to accept joyfully the sufferings of the present time, confident of the glory that shall be revealed; through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

[Suggestion: If it is not necessary, try not to move quickly into the next part of your day. You may want to set a timer for five minutes to sit quietly with God, or to go on a walk. If you would like some meditative instrumental music, click here, or for a musical meditation on Isaiah 52:13-53:12, click here.]

Blessing

Through Jesus Christ our Lord; who was tempted in every way as we are, yet did not sin. By his grace we are able to triumph over every evil, and to live no longer for ourselves alone, but for him who died for us and rose again:

The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit, be with us all evermore. Amen. (2 Corinthians 13:14)

Sources:

Daily readings: Follow: 40 Days of Preparing the Soul for Easter by Daniel Ethan Harris.
Traditional Scriptures: The Revised Common Lectionary
Prayer for the Day: The Book of Common Prayer
Instrumental Music: Quietime: Lent, by Eric Nordhoff
Musical Meditation: With His Wounds We are Healed (Isaiah 53), by The Corner Room



Holy Week Daily Devotional 4/7/20

 

Below, you will find a few resources to assist you in cultivating your life with God as we prayerfully reflect on the events of Holy Week. Included are a reading for reflection and the traditional Scripture readings for today. There is also a link (under the prayer below)  to some meditative music you may want to play during your time with God today.

 

[Suggestion: Find a quiet, comfortable place. Take a few deep breaths to begin your time of prayer, and perhaps as a way of dedicating yourself again to God, you may want to say to yourself on each respective inhale: “In the name of the Father…and of the Son…and of the Holy Spirit…” Then, prayerfully say the Lord’s Prayer and begin reading when you are ready.]

 

 

Tuesday of Holy Week

  So far in Holy Week, Jesus has ridden into Jerusalem the way a king would and allowed the crowds to welcome him as one, and then he went straight to the heart of the nation (the temple) and in the strongest words and actions possible, made clear that judgment was coming upon it. With those things having happened, it is not difficult to foresee confrontation coming.

  The morning after Jesus briefly–yet powerfully and symbolically–stopped all of the activity in the temple, he returned there. As expected, the confrontation came:

    One day as Jesus was teaching the people in the temple courts and proclaiming the good news, the chief priests and the teachers of the law, together with the elders, came up to him. “Tell us by what authority you are doing these things,” they said. “Who gave you this authority?”

    He replied, “I will also ask you a question. Tell me: John’s baptism—was it from heaven, or of human origin?”

    They discussed it among themselves and said, “If we say, ‘From heaven,’ he will ask, ‘Why didn’t you believe him?’ But if we say, ‘Of human origin,’ all the people will stone us, because they are persuaded that John was a prophet.”

    So they answered, “We don’t know where it was from.”

    Jesus said, “Neither will I tell you by what authority I am doing these things.”
(Luke 20:1-8, NIV)

  The authorities’ question to Jesus was a natural one. He had been acting like the person in charge–of the temple, of Jerusalem, and therefore of all Israel–but according to the system, he was a nobody. His questioners were the ones who had the positions of power, not him. “By what authority are you doing these things?” is both a question and an accusation, similar to asking, “Just who in the world do you think you are?”

  At first glance, Jesus’ response about John the Baptist looks like a clever trick question, allowing both sides to avoid answering the other’s question, but Jesus was actually providing a clear answer to them. When asked, “Who in the world do you think you are?” Jesus points them back to John the Baptist, whose claim to be the forerunner of the Messiah said plenty about who Jesus was–if John really was God’s prophet. At another level, by referencing John, Jesus is pointing back to his own baptism at John’s hand, when a voice came from heaven and said, “You are my son, whom I love. With you I am well pleased.” Jesus was saying, “That is who I am, and where I get my authority.”[1]

  If John the Baptist was a fake, so was Jesus, and the establishment would have had the right to treat him as such. But if John was the real thing, then Jesus clearly had more authority over the temple, Jerusalem, Israel–and the world–than any of the men questioning him.

  So we could turn Jesus’ response into a statement rather than a question:

    “Who in the world do you think you are? What kind of authority do you think you have to do things like this?”

    “I am the one who came after John, with all that that means.”

  Jesus then went on teaching in the temple, continuing to say extremely provocative things about the temple and its leaders. He told stories (in which the parallels were not difficult to draw) about people in power mistreating, even killing, their master’s servants. He pointed out their hypocrisy and injustice toward the innocent, and the price that others–like a poor widow giving all she had in an offering–paid for it.

  Yes, the temple was beautiful, but if Israel continued to reject God’s way, which was being perfectly embodied before them in Jesus, it was inevitable that the temple’s destruction was coming. “Not one stone will be left on another.”

  Of course this was shocking. It was like taking all of our meaningful national sites which we assume will be around forever, and saying, “Every one of these will be turned into ruins–and it will happen while our generation is still here to see it.”

  The only way to describe something so tumultuous would be to use language that could communicate the earth-shattering nature of the events, like the old prophets did: “the sun will go dark, the moon won’t give any light, the stars will fall out of the sky” (see Matthew 24).

  Israel was headed on a course for destruction, and if they continued to refuse Jesus’ message and change direction (repent), their doom was inevitable. (As we mentioned yesterday–it all happened about 40 years later, and it was indeed as horrible as Jesus described.)

  I said yesterday that Jesus’ fate was sealed after riding into the city as a king and saying/doing what he said/did in the temple. Now, after an extra day of saying such provocative things about the temple and its leadership, it was extra-sealed. The authorities would not allow this man to live.

  Though those in Jesus’ circle must have been aware of the tension and conflict, many of them still didn’t grasp what it meant. Still thinking of Jesus as the kind of Messiah they had always expected, they couldn’t foresee what was coming for him in a few more days.

  At least one woman understood, though. She saw what was happening with clarity. After the intense day in the temple, Jesus and his group returned for the evening to Bethany. While guests in a home, eating dinner with the twelve, this woman came in, approached Jesus, and unreservedly poured very expensive perfume on him, as one would do to a corpse before burying it. She knew what Jesus knew–he was about to die.

[1] See N.T. Wright, Mark for Everyone (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2004), 154-157.

  Again, as we mentioned yesterday, when we watch this story unfold, it is impossible to look at Jesus as a helpless victim. Rather, in the kind of way he described as “lose your life and you will find it,” he seems to be in control of what was happening.
 

Traditional Scriptures for Tuesday of Holy Week

 

A Prayer for the Day

O God, by the passion of your blessed Son you made an instrument of shameful death to be for us the means of life: Grant us so to glory in the cross of Christ, that we may gladly suffer shame and loss for the sake of your Son our Savior Jesus Christ; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

[Suggestion: If it is not necessary, try not to move quickly into the next part of your day. You may want to set a timer for five minutes to sit quietly with God, or to go on a walk. If you would like some meditative instrumental music, click here, or for a musical meditation on Isaiah 52:13-53:12, click here.]

 

Blessing

Through Jesus Christ our Lord; who was tempted in every way as we are, yet did not sin. By his grace we are able to triumph over every evil, and to live no longer for ourselves alone, but for him who died for us and rose again:

Glory to God, whose power, working in us, can do infinitely more than we can ask or imagine: Glory to him from generation to generation in the Church, and in Christ Jesus for ever and ever. Amen. (Ephesians 3:20-21)

 

Sources:

Daily readings: Follow: 40 Days of Preparing the Soul for Easter by Daniel Ethan Harris.
Traditional Scriptures: The Revised Common Lectionary
Prayer for the Day: The Book of Common Prayer
Instrumental Music: Quietime: Lent, by Eric Nordhoff
Musical Meditation: With His Wounds We are Healed (Isaiah 53), by The Corner Room

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Holy Week Daily Devotional 4/6/20

Below, you will find a few resources to assist you in cultivating your life with God as we prayerfully reflect on the events of Holy Week. Included are a reading for reflection and the traditional Scripture readings for today. There is also a link (under the prayer below) to some meditative music you may want to play during your time with God today.

 

[Suggestion: Find a quiet, comfortable place. Take a few deep breaths to begin your time of prayer, and perhaps as a way of dedicating yourself again to God, you may want to say to yourself on each respective inhale: “In the name of the Father…and of the Son…and of the Holy Spirit…” Then, prayerfully say the Lord’s Prayer and begin reading when you are ready.]

 

 

Monday of Holy Week

We have come to the most widely-known eight days in all of human history, called Holy Week by Christians. It began yesterday, Palm Sunday, as we remembered the story of Jesus riding into Jerusalem to the crowds cheering as if they were welcoming a king, and it will continue on through Jesus’ last night with his disciples, his arrest and mock trial, his crucifixion, death and burial. And then his resurrection will change everything, for everyone, forever.

We are familiar with Palm Sunday, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter Sunday (or if not, you soon will be), but what about the other days? What took place on the day after Jesus’ royal entry into Jerusalem? And on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Saturday?

This week, we will try to walk day by day through the events of the corresponding days of Jesus’ life. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John were not particularly concerned with telling their stories in a way that would allow us to put together a nice, exact historical reconstruction of exactly what happened at each point during the week. That’s fine because those aren’t the most important pieces. They were rightly more focused on getting their points about Jesus across than they were about trivia games we might like to play centuries later about what happened on which day. Nonetheless, we can still put together a plausible sequence of events for the week, and doing so is our goal as we continue in this journey of denying ourselves, taking up our crosses, and following our Lord.

So for today, Monday in Holy Week:

According to Mark’s telling, after Jesus entered Jerusalem to the shouts of the crowds, he went to the temple courts. Since it was already late in the day, he went to stay the night in Bethany with the twelve before returning to the temple the next morning (presumably, Monday).

On their way to the temple, Jesus approached a fig tree but did not find any fruit on it. Then came one of the scenes which I am sure I will never see painted on the wall of a children’s Sunday School classroom.

In the ways that we typically think of Jesus, we would likely expect his reaction to finding no fruit on the fig tree to be something like one of the following:

• Maybe he would look at the tree, have a tear well up in his eye while a bluebird comes and lands on his shoulder to tweet a song in a minor key over Jesus’ sadness that this tree had not been able to properly produce its fruit. Jesus could have meekly mourned over the sad tree.

• Or, perhaps Jesus would just look intently at the tree, command it to produce some fruit, and it would instantly have jumbo, juicy figs for all of the disciples to share. Jesus could have powerfully, victoriously healed the unfruitful tree.

But Jesus did neither of those things. Instead of mourning over the tree or healing it, he cursed it: “May no one ever eat fruit from you again.”

If I had been one of the twelve, I surely would have stood there thinking, “Ouch, Teacher. Hunger pangs make you a little crabby this morning?”

But, being as capable of a storyteller as Mark was, he didn’t allow us to stay there, wondering about the stability of Jesus’ emotional state. (If that was the point, and he was that crabby after missing breakfast, what would he have been like after fasting for forty days in the desert?) Instead, he gave us one of his story-sandwiches, where he began one story, moved to another, then came back to the first in order to point out the links between the two.

In this story-sandwich, this incident with the poor little fig tree is the bread, while the meat is what Jesus did when he arrived in the temple.

On reaching Jerusalem, Jesus entered the temple courts and began driving out those who were buying and selling there. He overturned the tables of the money changers and the benches of those selling doves, and would not allow anyone to carry merchandise through the temple courts. And as he taught them, he said, Is it not written: My house will be called a house of prayer for all nations? But you have made it a den of robbers.’” (Mark 11:15-17, NIV)

So now we have two consecutive stories of Jesus that don’t get painted on the walls of children’s Sunday School rooms. In order to understand what’s happening here, we have to recognize that Jesus was not staging a protest of the commercialization of people’s worship in the temple. Perhaps, if Mark hadn’t connected the temple story to the fig tree, we might be able to come away with that as the full meaning. Instead, since Jesus’ encounter with the fig tree ended in a curse for the tree’s failure to be and do what it was created for, Jesus then proceeded to do the same thing in the temple.

The temple existed to symbolize God’s dwelling with Israel for the sake of the world, but its leaders had turned it into a place to promote violence toward outsiders and injustice toward Israel’s own people. So–just as Jesus’ words to the tree stopped its natural processes, his brief but symbolic words and actions in the temple stopped the course of events in the place that was the center of Jewish life.

Mark wraps up the story-sandwich as the disciples return to the city the next morning and pass by the same tree, now withered from the roots. He wants us to get the point: Jesus’ action in the temple was a warning that, if it continued failing to be and do what it was created for, the same fate awaited the temple that came to the tree. And to make sure we don’t miss the lesson, Mark puts an exclamation point on his story-sandwich through Jesus’ comments when Peter noticed that the fig tree Jesus cursed had withered:

Have faith in God,” Jesus answered. Truly I tell you, if anyone says to this mountain, Go, throw yourself into the sea,and does not doubt in their heart but believes that what they say will happen, it will be done for them. Therefore I tell you, whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours. And when you stand praying, if you hold anything against anyone, forgive them, so that your Father in heaven may forgive you your sins.”

Again, remember that this is part of the sandwich, rather than a stand-alone teaching. Jesus isn’t saying that Peter and the others could also learn to do cool things like wither fruit trees, make mountains move, or anything else that they decide on a prayer-whim. No, the point is still the meat of this story-sandwich: the temple. When Jesus says, “this mountain,” I imagine that he also pointed a finger toward the Temple Mount. He’s teaching the disciples to pray that God’s new order would replace the old and that, inconceivable as it may have seemed to them, the temple was nearing a time when it would be no more.

Jesus’ dire warnings about the temple came to pass in 70 AD when the Romans laid siege to Jerusalem, including the temple’s destruction.

Also, just as important for our journey through Holy Week is to realize that because of this and Jesus’ procession into Jerusalem as a king the previous day, his impending death was now inevitable. No one could ride into Jerusalem as a king and proceed to say and do the things toward the temple which Jesus said and did and be allowed to live. When we read the story in this light, we begin to get the sense that Jesus was not a victim of Roman and Jewish injustice when he died on the cross; rather, he seems to be orchestrating the story exactly as he saw fit.

 

Traditional Scriptures for Monday of Holy Week
Isaiah 42:1-9
Psalm 36:5-11
Hebrews 9:11-15
John 12:1-11

 

A Prayer for the Day
Almighty God, whose dear Son went not up to joy but first he suffered pain, and entered not into glory before he was crucified: Mercifully grant that we, walking in the way of the cross, may find it none other that the way of life and peace; through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

[Suggestion: If it is not necessary, try not to move quickly into the next part of your day. You may want to set a timer for five minutes to sit quietly with God, or to go on a walk. If you would like some meditative instrumental music, click here, or for a musical meditation on Isaiah 52:13-53:12, click here.]

 

Blessing
Through Jesus Christ our Lord; who was tempted in every way as we are, yet did not sin. By his grace we are able to triumph over every evil, and to live no longer for ourselves alone, but for him who died for us and rose again:

May the God of hope fill us with all joy and peace in believing through the power of the Holy Spirit. Amen. (Romans 15:13)

 

Sources:

Daily readings: Follow: 40 Days of Preparing the Soul for Easter by Daniel Ethan Harris.
Traditional Scriptures: The Revised Common Lectionary
Prayer for the Day: The Book of Common Prayer
Instrumental Music: Quietime: Lent, by Eric Nordhoff
Musical Meditation: With His Wounds We are Healed (Isaiah 53), by The Corner Room



Daily Devotional 4/3/20

Hi, First Methodist! I’m Beth Garza, the director of Worship Arts. Many of you know that I have twin boys that recently turned eight years old. We have been homeschooling with them (and our daughter, who is seven) for the past three weeks because of the virus, and it has been HARD. They miss school, their friends, their activities, sports, church… you name it, and they miss it. Andrew, one of my twins, looked at me yesterday and said, “Are we EVER getting out of the house again?” He was so sad and so serious!

It reminded me of when I first became a mom to my twin boys. It wasn’t easy — feedings every three hours around the clock, minimal sleep, twelve bottles a day, and lots of visitors. I had these two precious, sweet bundles of joy that depended upon me for everything. I was completely in love and completely overwhelmed. One day, when the boys were about six weeks old, my mom came into my room and found me weeping in my bed. When she asked what was wrong, all I could articulate was that I couldn’t figure out when and how I would leave the house EVER again! It was mind-boggling to me. It was our new normal and I hadn’t figured it out, yet.

Pastor Kurt has been talking to us about God meeting us where we are. As a new mom, God met me there. He reminded me that He gave us the children for which we prayed so desperately. He reminded me that He loved our boys more than we ever possibly could, which are comforting words that I cling to often.

Over time, we found our new normal. The boys got past the newborn stage, I got some rest, and we figured out life as a family of 4. Then, as a family of 5! Pretty soon, things got “as back to normal” as they could when you add new members to your family!

As we are entering our third week of social distancing and quarantining, how are you feeling? Does it seem like it will never end? Maybe you find yourself like my son, Andrew, thinking “Are we EVER going to get out of the house again?” In this crazy time, I find hope and comfort in these words from Romans: “Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer. Share with the Lord’s people who are in need. Practice hospitality.”

Romans 12:12-13

 

Questions of the day:

  1. How might God be inviting you to live out Romans 12:12-13 today?
  2. How can you practice patience and remain hopeful with your family, in your situation, today?

 

Prayer: 

Dear Lord,

Today I will not let fear or worry consume my life. Instead, I will wait patiently for Your peace — the peace that comes from You and transcends all understanding, and I will guard my heart and mind. I thank You in advance for allowing me to feel peace and remain patient. Amen



Daily Devotional 4/2/20

How we thank God for you! Because of you we have great joy as we enter God’s presence10 Night and day we pray earnestly for you, asking God to let us see you again to fill the gaps in your faith.

1 Thessalonians 3:9-10

 

Giving God Some Space

Hi, church family. My name is Mara Dolan, and I am the Director of Children’s Ministries.
I am currently sitting in a place that probably looks familiar to a lot of you. In case you’re not familiar, I am in the nursery area of our church, also known as the ARK. This place is not normally quiet on a Thursday. Children First, our Children’s Day Out & Preschool Program is on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 8:30 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. During the school year, there are usually over 110 children, ranging from age 6 months – Pre-K. In fact, on a “normal” week, we are blessed to hear the joyful sounds of children in the ARK on Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. As a person who absolutely loves working with children, not being able to hear or see kids in the ARK, Upstairs, and throughout the church, has been heartbreaking.
I really loved Kara’s quote during her devotional yesterday, “Vulnerability is a curious thing. We resist it, don’t like it, and yet there is actually a raw kind of beauty that is present in vulnerability.” So here I am being vulnerable. It’s hard to imagine that it’s been almost 3 weeks since the COVID-19 pandemic affected our community. I had many different reactions, but I vividly remember one. With tears in my eyes, I cried out, “God, how am I supposed to do ministry? Because right now, I just don’t know what to do.” I began praying for the strength and courage to give God the space, to do what only he can do. As I shared in the Staff Picks, Everything Belongs by Richard Rohr is one of my favorite books. It showed a new way of thinking about vulnerability. “I should always be ready to see things anew, and there is nothing wrong about saying “I don’t know” to God. I need to go to God with a heart and mind of a child.
I will begin closing with an excerpt from Everything Belongs. “It should be the work of Christians who believe in the paschal mystery to help people when they are being led into the darkness and the void. The believer has to tell those in pain that this is not forever; there is a light and you will see it. This isn’t all there is. Trust. Don’t try to rush through it; we can’t leap over our grief work. Nor can we skip over our despair work. We have to feel it. That means that in our life we will have some blue days or dark days. Historic cultures saw grief as a time of incubation, transformation, and necessary hibernation. Yet this sacred space is the very space we avoid. When we avoid darkness, we avoid tension, spiritual creativity, and finally transformation. We avoid God, who works in the darkness — where we are not in control! Maybe that is the secret: relinquishing control.”
As we look ahead to week 4 of this “new normal,” remember God is in control. During this time of continuous change, God has shown me “The Place.” The Place of peace instead of worry, trust instead of doubt, and hope instead of despair. Since then, there has been 4 different Children’s Ministry Zoom Bible Studies, 4 “Connect with Mrs. Mara,” Weekly Challenges, and upcoming Palm Sunday, Holy Week, and Easter surprises. God continues to show me ways to still do ministry because he is The Place!
 

Questions

  1. Have you had a conversation with God about what you are noticing?
  2. How are you becoming more authentic in the presence of God?

 
 

Prayer

Lord, I come to you for protection. (Psalm 71). Guard my heart and soul and protect me from evil. Lord, you go before me; I am not alone. Show me how to trust that you will never leave or forsake me. Thank you for letting me see things anew.
In Jesus Name, Amen!