A United Methodist Pastor's Theological Reflections

"But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory (nikos) through our Lord Jesus Christ." - I Corinthians 15:57


Monday, April 15, 2024

Sunday (April 14) Pastoral Prayer

April 14, 2024
Beulah UMC & Oak Grove UMC

O God, we are only two weeks into the Easter Season, and you continue to reveal yourself to us in ways that remind us that Jesus really did rise from the dead. The Risen Christ truly is present in surprising and mysterious ways. And so, we continue to sing our Easter alleluias and celebrate your victory over sin and death through the cross and the empty tomb. And like our prayer hymn says so beautifully, “O may our love to thee, pure, warm, and changeless be, a living fire.” Thank you, O God that not even a solar eclipse can keep us from seeing your light and having a living fire faith.

 

We pray today for those who are going through a time of darkness. We think of friends and loved ones who are facing medical challenges. May your resurrection light surround them with your healing love.

 

We think of those who are grieving the loss of a loved one and have heavy hearts. May your resurrection light surround them with your comforting love.

 

We lift up to you those who are experiencing financial problems and are finding it difficult to care for their basic needs. May your resurrection light surround them with your sustaining love.

 

This weekend, we especially lift up to you the heightened tensions in the Middle East between Israel and Iran. May your resurrection light surround all of our world leaders that they would make wise decisions that will eventually lead to a more peaceful resolution of the current crisis.  

 

And whenever we face times of darkness in our personal lives, may our faith always look up to Jesus Christ, God, Son, Savior. The one who fed 5,000 people with just five loaves and two fish with food to spare. The one who helped the disciples catch so many fish that it tore their nets. The one who called us to lay down those same nets and become fishers of people. And the one who taught us to say this pray together…

 

Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen.


Sermon (April 14) “Something’s Fishy” by Rev. Robert McDowell


“Something’s Fishy”
Rev. Robert McDowell
Beulah UMC & Oak Grove UMC
April 14, 2024

     Every once in a while, as you are driving, you pull up to a stop light, and notice that the car in front of you has a bumper sticker which has a fish symbol.  It’s a way of letting you know that this person is a Christian.

     I’ve always felt that this is a bold move on the part of the driver, because what happens if you are pulled over for speeding or running a red light?  That would not be a very good witness.  

     And the worst thing would be if the driver of that car would offer some sort of negative hand gesture if somebody would cut him or her off.  What kind of witness would that be?

     But nevertheless, this fish symbol has been quite common among Christian motorists for some time now.

     Unfortunately, this phenomenon has led to a fish symbol war pitting Darwinist minded atheists against Bible believing Christians.  Never mind that Darwinism and Christianity are not mutually exclusive, but these fish wars make for some very entertaining comic relief on our highways and byways.

     Once the fish symbol began to be placed on bumper stickers, it wasn’t too long before we started to see the word “Darwin” in the middle of the fish symbol. These religious bumper sticker debates can be so much fun!

     But recently, I saw a bumper sticker which seems to be indicating that a truce is about to be made between this false dichotomy pitting the Christian community with evolutionist thinkers. 

     This new bumper sticker, at least new to me, has these two opposing fish symbols next to each other, apparently kissing one another as if to say, “Enough’s enough.”  Or maybe, I’m reading way too much into this new peace-loving bumper sticker, and all it is, is another marketing scam.

     This morning, I would like us to think about the role that fish play in the Bible.  Have you ever thought about just how many fish references there are in the Bible?

     I find it very interesting that our Gospel reading this morning contains one of these important fish references.  We find the disciples on the first Easter evening huddled together, scared, worried, and uncertain about what had happened to Jesus when they heard that the tomb was empty.  They are a fearful bunch.

     In this midst of this doubt and uncertainty, Jesus appears among them.  And Luke is careful to tell us that they thought he was a ghost.  And so, Jesus proceeds to invite the disciples to actually touch him and he shows them his hands and his feet which still contain the marks of the nails from Good Friday when he died on the cross.

     But these attempts prove futile, because the disciples are still confused.  Maybe they are thinking that he was still a ghost. And that’s when Jesus does something that finally helps the disciples to move from disbelief to a resurrection faith.  He eats a piece of broiled fish in their presence.

     What better way of dispelling the whole ghost thing.  This little fish-eating exercise was all that these disciples needed to recall those special moments with Jesus.

     I wonder if Peter’s mind flashed back to the time when Jesus got into his boat and told him, “Take this boat away from the shore and let down your nets so you can catch some fish.”

     What a strange request, especially since Peter and the others had been fishing all night long without catching anything.  What do you mean, “Let down your nets?  This is the way fishing works Jesus.  Sometimes you just don’t catch anything and some days you do.  This is a ‘don’t catch fish’ kind of day.”  So, Peter humors Jesus by taking the boat out to deeper waters to let down the net, probably looking forward to showing Jesus that he knows more about fishing than he does.

     This is probably the only time a fisherman has ever hoped to not catch a single fish, just to prove a point to Jesus.  “Jesus.  Leave the fishing business to us.  It’s pointless to let our nets down one more time.”

     The funny thing about this story is that Peter didn’t just end up catching three to five fish.  That alone would have proven Jesus’ point.  Picture in your minds these two large nets filled from top to bottom with fish.  And now picture these two nets being pulled into the boat and tearing from the huge weight of the catch.

     Game, set and match.  Jesus wins.  I think Jesus knows something about fishing, don’t you?

     And the story ends with Peter, this tough and proud fisherman falling to his knees, swallowing his pride, and acknowledging that Jesus is someone very special.

     But Jesus doesn’t leave Peter on his knees along the shore.  He tells him, “You hang around with me.  And you’ll learn how to become fishers of men.”  It was that fish story that led Peter, James and John, to leave everything and follow Jesus.  How’s that for a fish story?

     And as Jesus was eating that piece of broiled fish in our Gospel reading for today, I’m sure all of the disciples thought of the fish stories of all fish stories.  

     You remember.  Jesus had been teaching and healing people one day and it was getting late in the afternoon when the twelve disciples came to Jesus with a solution for a problem.

     Now, on one hand, don’t you just love it when people don’t just tell you about a problem, but when they also give you a possible solution for that problem?  When people just give you a problem without a solution, it kind of leaves you flat-footed.

     So, hand it to the disciples.  They come to Jesus not just with a problem, but with a possible solution.  

     “Jesus, this whole day has been great.  People can’t get enough of your teachings.  They are responding to your message about the in-breaking of God’s kingdom and how God loves them, and cares about them.  You have brought healing to the blind, the infirmed, and the diseased.  But Jesus.  You need to give the benediction and get these folks home.  They’re getting hungry.”

     Well, hand it to the disciples.  They brought a solution.  Just send them home.  But Jesus doesn’t accept the solution.  Instead, he gives them a challenge.  He says, “Uh.  No.  You give them something to eat, right here.”  

     And the disciples, like good Methodists, do what comes naturally.  They ask for the treasurer’s report and sure enough, there isn’t enough in the budget to feed 5,000 people.  

     But half-jokingly, and maybe to call Jesus’ bluff, they tell Jesus what seems like an absurd and meaningless statement.  “Actually, we do have five loaves and two fish leftover from yesterday.”  Can you hear the nervous laughter of the disciples after they say this?  “C’mon Jesus.  Enough’s enough.  Let’s get practical and get these people home.”

     “No.  I want you to have them sit down in groups of fifty and I’ll take it from there.”

     And from there, Jesus offers a prayer of thanksgiving to God and Luke tells us that they all ate and were satisfied.

     The exclamation point in that story is that, not only were 5,000 people fed with five loaves and two fish, but the disciples ended up collecting twelve baskets full of leftovers.

     “Jesus – you proved yourself again.  We really didn’t think you could pull it off.  You really are someone special, aren’t you?”

     We know that sometime around the middle of the 2nd century, a little over a hundred years after the time of Christ, the early church began using the symbol of the fish to express their belief in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, hence the fish bumper stickers that we see on the back of cars.

     The early Christians realized that not only are there several fish stories in the Gospel accounts, but the word, “fish” actually makes a very nice acrostic in summarizing the Christian faith.

     The Greek word for fish is “Ichthys” and those Greek letters also served as an acrostic which provided those early Christians with a reminder of the the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

     Those letters spell out the words, “Jesus Christ, God, Son, Savior.”  “Jesus Christ, God, Son, Savior.”  Say that with me.  “Jesus Christ, God, Son, Savior.”

     So, whenever the Christians of the early church used that fish symbol, they were in effect saying, “We believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and the Savior of the world.”

     When people become followers of Jesus, this is the basic statement of faith they are making. Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and the Savior of the world.

     Back to our Gospel reading. After Jesus eats that piece of broiled fish, which no doubt reminded those disciples of the many fish stories they had shared together, he then gives the disciples a new name.  He calls them witnesses.  “You are witnesses of these things,”Jesus tells them.

     We’re not just church members. We are primarily known as witnesses.  Witnesses that Jesus has been raised from the dead and is alive today.

     Some will find this hard to believe and they will say… “This all sounds a little “fishy.”

     But this fish story is actually true.  “Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and the Savior of the world.”

Monday, April 8, 2024

Sermon (April 7) “Peace Be with You!” by Rev. Robert McDowell


April 7, 2024 Sermon
By Rev. Robert McDowell

     Poor Thomas.  All this guy wants is a little physical proof and he ends up getting stuck with the label, "doubting Thomas."  

    Who gave him this name?  All it takes is for one person to give someone a label and the rest is history.  God or bad. Is it fair to remember somebody by one incident?

     And yet we remember Thomas by this story in John chapter 20.  And ironically, it’s because of his statement of faith in verse 28 of this chapter that would later help the early church to formulate the doctrine of the deity of Jesus Christ.

     Outside of what the scriptures tells us about Thomas, tradition tells us that he risked his life by using money that was supposed to be used for building a palace for an Indian King and instead he gave that money to the poor.  Never mind that tradition also tells us that Thomas was eventually speared to death for his faith in Jesus Christ, joining several of the other disciples in becoming martyrs.

     And so, it’s unfortunate that we remember him as Doubting Thomas.  History can be so unforgiving and selective when it comes to remembering someone's life.

     Our Gospel reading this morning invites us to ask the question, “Is there any room for doubt in the Christian faith?”   

     A woman asked Bertrand Russell, the world’s best-known atheist at the time, what he would say if it turned out he had been wrong and found himself standing outside of the Pearly Gates.  His eyes lighting up, Russell replied, “I would simply say, ‘God, you gave us insufficient evidence!”

     Maybe that answer is fitting for an atheist, but what about for those of us who do profess faith – is there a place for doubt in our lives?

     Christian author, Philip Yancey shares this story from his book, “Reaching for the Invisible God.”  He writes that Peter De Vries, the product of a strict Calvinist home and undergraduate studies at Calvin College went on to write novels about the loss of faith. One of his characters could not forgive God for not existing – words that explain much of De Vries’s own God obsessed work.  

     His novel, “The Blood of the Lamb,” tells of Don Wanderhope, father of an eleven-year-old girl who contracts Leukemia.  Just as the bone marrow begins to respond to treatment and she approaches remission, an infection sweeps through the ward and kills her.

     Wanderhope, who has brought in a cake with his daughter’s name on it, leaves the hospital, returns to the church where he prayed for her healing, and hurls the cake at the crucifix hanging in front of the church.  The cake hits just below the crown of thorns, and brightly colored icing drips down Jesus’ face of stone.

     In referencing this story, author Philip Yancey goes on to say that one of the reasons he remains a Christian is not so much that he can explain away tragic stories such as this one, but because of a lack of good alternatives.  He goes on to write, “The only thing more difficult than having a relationship with an invisible God is having no such relationship.”

     When our daughter was in High School, she would often accompany me on pastoral visits. One of those visits was with a young girl in the hospital who was about to begin chemo treatments.  We shared in a prayer together in her hospital room and we told her that the church was lifting her in prayer.

     As we left that room, I couldn’t help but to wonder why God would allow this beautiful little girl to suffer through chemo treatments, when she should be at home enjoying life.  I know that none of us can ever fully know the whys, but it’s good to know that we are allowed to shake our fists at God sometimes.  That was one of those times.

     I remember a time when I sat in the living room of a couple who had recently attended the funeral of their 57-year-old daughter.  As you can imagine, the death of their daughter had left them feeling very empty and sad.  And I’m glad that they didn’t pull any punches when I met with them that day.  

     They said, “We just can’t understand why God would have allowed this.”  I told them that even though I didn’t have any answers for them, that it was good that they were expressing their true feelings with God.

     I’m actually glad that the disciple Thomas was honest enough to tell the other disciples who had the advantage of seeing the risen Lord, “Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands and put my finger in the mark of the nails and my hand in his side, I will not believe.”

     And how could we ever put Thomas down for a statement like this when we already know that the rest of the disciples had locked themselves in a room because they were afraid that the Jewish authorities would be coming after them.  That doesn’t sound like an Easter faith to me.  That sounds more like the kind of faith I have many times.  Fear.  Worry.  And doubt.

     The good news in our scripture is that the risen Christ returned to this same place, and this time Thomas was with them.  Jesus enters the room and says, “Peace be with you.”  By the way, isn’t this a wonderful way to begin a meeting?  To remind people that even in the midst of our doubts, questions, and uncertainties, that God’s peace is with us.

     And then we have this dramatic scene where Jesus turns to Thomas and invites Thomas to actually touch the wounds of his body to help him move from doubt to belief.  I always find it interesting that John never specifically says that Thomas actually touched those wounds.  But he does tell us that Thomas responded with a powerful statement of faith, “My Lord and my God!”

     And then we have the ending of the Gospel.  John writes, “Have you believed because you have seen me?  Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.”

     “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.”

     John wrote his Gospel for those of us who did not have the opportunity to physically see and touch the resurrected Lord.  But notice how our scripture reading concludes. 

     I have this image in my mind where Jesus turns his head away from the disciples, looks into a video camera, and turns his attention to us. He looks at you and me in that camera and says, “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.” And if you think about it, Jesus does bless us if our hearts are open to see his presence in our day-to-day living.

      Like the day when I was visiting a mission site where volunteers from a several of United Methodist churches serve at a soup kitchen and a free clothing store. Someone in our group that day asked the volunteers and staff members who work there, “How do you keep your faith strong when you’re working in this kind of impoverished and dangerous environment?”  

     And one of the workers responded by saying that they keep their faith strong by realizing that they are helping one person at a time. This worker pointed at another volunteer sitting next to her and said, 

     “This woman sitting here next to me is the reason that my faith stays strong.  Thanks to God’s grace and this mission site, this person has been able to find a better life for herself and for her children and she has been able to break free of poverty.  She now has her own home, and while it may be a very modest home, it is still a big step forward for her.”

     I left that mission site thinking feeling so blessed. “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.” 

     I received this personal letter one year. It was right after we had celebrated Easter Sunday.

     “Pastor Robert, You may remember me.  I visited your church several times now, but have not been able to since January, due to some very difficult days in my life.  The chemo given to me beginning in January has caused some difficult side effects.  Also, we experienced the sudden death of one of our sons in February.  I’ve enclosed the memorial folder from his service which was most uplifting.  So…as I said, we’ve had difficult times of late.  Time heals, they say – we’re relying on that.  Our son’s death has not diminished my faith at all for he was a child of God, and it is clear (the word “clear” is underlined) it is clear to me where he is now.  This brings me much comfort.  Easter blessings!”  And then she signed her name.

     How has this woman been able to stay strong in her faith?   She has believed without seeing.

     Our reading from the Book of Acts, tells us about how Peter boldly proclaimed the good news of Jesus Christ to the people of Jerusalem.  The disciples were able to move from their betrayals, and their denials and become the bold witnesses that Jesus had called them to be.

     They were still people who had doubts – but now they had the power of the Holy Spirit at work in their lives.  They were given an assurance that Jesus would always be with them.  

     Maybe we can identify with Thomas who needed some assurance that Jesus had truly risen from the dead. We long to know that there is life in the midst of so much pain and brokenness in our world. And today, we have this Gospel reading about Thomas and his doubts and how he came to a deeper faith in the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

     T.S. Eliot once said, “These are only hints and guesses, Hints followed by guesses; and the rest is prayer, observance, discipline, thought, and action.”

     Prayer, observance, discipline, thought, and action.  And yet through these things, Jesus offers us his peace and blessings.

     I was listening to the news one day which was even more depressing than usual and was feeling really down because of it. You could say that I was in need of a blessing in that moment, some sign that the Risen Christ was present in the midst of so much sadness in the world.

     And that’s when I received a phone call from some dear friends who just had their baby. They said it was a girl.  And they were naming her, “Grace.” 

     Mom and baby Grace were all healthy and doing well.  What a beautiful name. “Grace.” That phone call made me smile because it dawned on me that God had literally just sent me some grace.    

     These hints and guesses remind us that the Risen Christ continues to say to each one of us, “Peace be with you.”

Sunday (April 7) Pastoral Prayer

April 7, 2024
Beulah UMC & Oak Grove UMC

O Risen Christ, during this time of prayer in which we lift up to you all of those who are on our church’s prayer list as well as other prayer needs that we have shared this morning, may they each hear your reassuring words, “Peace be with you.”

 

For the people we encounter in our everyday lives, may they each hear your reassuring words, “Peace be with you.”

 

For when we are facing a difficult decision and in need of your guidance and direction, may we hear your reassuring words, “Peace be with you.”

 

When our hearts are heavy with remorse because our words and actions have been hurtful toward others, may we hear your reassuring words, “Peace be with you.”

 

When we are experiencing grief and loss and in need of comfort and hope, may we hear your reassuring your words, “Peace be with you.”

 

When our doubts and fears overwhelm us, and we wonder if our faith is even real, may we hear your reassuring words, “Peace be with you.”

 

When the sun is eclipsed by the darkness of this world, may we hear your reassuring words, “Peace be with you.”

 

When the joy and happiness of Easter becomes overtaken by worry, anxiety, and unease, may we hear your reassuring words, “Peace be with you.”

 

When we don’t know what to pray for or how to even begin to pray, may we hear your reassuring words, “Peace be with you,” and then join in saying the prayer that you taught us to pray together…

 

Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen.


Monday, April 1, 2024

Sermon (March 31/Easter) “Fear and Joy” by Rev. Robert McDowell


March 31 (Easter), 2024 Sermon

Rev. Robert McDowell

     Whenever I hear the gospel account of that first Easter, so many emotions surface to the top.  These emotions are so powerful, you can almost touch, smell, and taste the events of that first Easter morning.

     Easter.  The biggest day in world history.  Far bigger than even Christmas.  Easter.  The day death died.  I want to take you back to that distant Sunday morning, the first day of the week, when the dew lay heavy, the sun was warming up, the birds were shaking sleep away with the thrill of dawn, and all of creation breathed in the smell of anticipation.

     Two people rose early, their sandaled feet covered with dust.  They went to the tomb, and met an angel, who broke open their whole world, saying, “He is not here: he is risen.”  Feel the intensity of their emotion: smell it.  

     Matthew, the gospel writer, tells us what they did and what they felt.  They ran, with fear and great joy.  With fear and great joy.  And we can see them running, with fear, with the hasty, gulping breath of fear, and with gurgling joy, with the outstretched hands and billowing cloak and squealing yelps of joy.

     Fear and great joy: at the heart of the resurrection.   

     I’ve been thinking about how much the bible addresses the emotion of fear.  Fear is interwoven throughout the pages of scripture.  And no one seems to be immune from its hold upon us as we go through life’s peaks and valleys.

     There’s the fear of judgment.  Adam and Eve, banished from the garden.   Cain, discovered to be a murderer.  David, exposed as a scheming adulterer.  Israel herself, thrown into exile as a result of her own sin.  

     The fear of holiness.  Moses meeting God in the burning bush and on Mount Sinai in a dark cloud amid thunder, lightning, fire, and smoldering cloud.  Shepherds keeping watch over their flock by night, and an angel needing to tell them, “Do not be afraid.”

     Fear of taking a risk, like the third servant in the talent parable who buried his talent in the ground out of fear.  Terrible fear.

     Then, there’s fear of the unknown.  A stone rolled away, a mysterious presence of an angel, the shaking of the earth, soldiers confused. 

     And yet, great joy.  After forty days of rain and 150 days of flood, Noah sends out the dove and it returns with an olive branch.  After the shame of the tower of Babel, God calls Abraham to be the father of a nation.  

     As the Ark of the Covenant is brought into Jerusalem, David dances before the Lord.  As Ezra reads aloud the books of the Law to the returning exiles, they weep with joy.  As Elizabeth greets Jesus’ mother-to-be she feels the babe within her leap for joy.

     Zacchaeus, the despised tax collector, ends up picking up his robe and runs home with glee to prepare a kingdom banquet for Jesus.  The father of the prodigal son is bursting with joy when he sees his son, the one who has just squandered his inheritance, off in the distance.  Great, great joy!

     Fear and great joy are at the heart of the resurrection story of Jesus, at the heart of the entire biblical narrative, and at the heart of what it means to be a people of faith.

     Fear that the person who lives down the street and is sure that God doesn’t exist might be right. Fear that we’re just not good enough to be a Christian.  Fear that Jesus calls us to peace when we know all too well how extremely difficult it is to love our enemies.  Fear that Jesus will call us to a new way of living, a new kind of ministry, or carry his cross farther than we think is possible.  So much fear. 

     As I was walking down the hospital hallway after visiting a church member who was a patient there, a stranger abruptly greeted me, “Are you a pastor?”  He had noticed I was wearing a clergy badge.

     As he struggled to keep the elevator door from closing and with a tone of desperation in his voice he said, “Pray for me pastor.  I am going through a divorce, and I’m really scared.  Say a pray for me, pastor.”  

     As he was losing his grip on the elevator door, I quickly said, “The peace of Christ be with you.”  As I continued down the hallway, I kept thinking about the expression on this man’s face.  

     Fear.  Horrifying fear!  Yes, we all know fear.

     And yet, also great joy.  Joy, when you discover that love isn’t just a fleeting feeling but that it became flesh in the person of Jesus Christ.  Joy, when after years of living under the burden of guilt and self-hatred for something you’ve done, you finally hear the words, “You are forgiven” and you now know it to be true.

     Joy, when in the midst of your anger and frustration at how the world isn’t the way it’s supposed to be, God calls your name and says, “This is what I want you to do,” and you realize that you are being invited to play a part in God’s story after all.

     Joy, when a family stricken by death, can somehow gather with the pastor at the church and through the telling of shared stories, can begin to laugh again, and celebrate the life of one who has touched each of them in so many special ways.

     Joy, when you’re going through a very dark time in your life and someone leaves a card or brings some food, or gives you a look which says, “I don’t know you very well, but we’re both part of the body of Christ, so I’m here for you.”

     Joy, when a person says to you, “I don’t know if it’s something you said, or in something you showed me through your actions, but I’ve come to believe in Jesus because of you and my life has been transformed.”  Joy.  Fabulous joy!

     Fear and great joy: at the heart of the story of Easter, and at the extremes of our hearts today.  So much to fear, so many reasons to be afraid.  

     Fear for ourselves, that the hole in our hearts will turn our faith into dust and our hope into cynicism. Fear for those around us.  Fear that we feel so powerless.  So vulnerable.  So helpless.  Fear that we won’t know what to say to a friend whose loved one recently passed away. Fear that our hidden fears will be exposed.

     And also, great joy.  Great joy!  Joy of a lamb finding its rickety feet in a meadow.  The joy of a baby discovering how to swallow.  The joy of the song, when we have the words and God has the tune.  The joy of friendship, of those we have known and have loved through thick and thin. 

     The joy of forgiveness, when bitterness and failure do not get the last word.  The joy of creation, when we hear birds chirping on a spring morning. The joy of giving someone a hug when they were expecting a simple handshake. The joy of suddenly realizing that God really did answer a prayer that you have been lifting to God for a long time. 

     Great joy.  Great, great joy.

     So here we are friends.  We are at the moment when the angel’s words break open in our lives, and we start to run with fear and great joy.  

     Fear and joy, the two poles, the two extremes of our human response to the awesome intimacy of God.  Fear and joy run with us throughout our lives together, as constant reminders of the cost and promise of following Jesus.  Fear and joy, at the center of our deepest longings and at the very heart of our desires.

     But there is a secret.  

     It’s a secret that we only glimpse at in this life.  It’s a secret that was first revealed to those two early risers on the first day of the week, while all creation breathed in the aroma of anticipation.  It is the secret of Easter.  It is a secret that I pray we will realize and embrace in the midst of our heavy hearts today.  It’s a secret that is the climax of our gospel.  A secret of the mystery of fear and joy.  

     And the secret is this… Joy wins.  

______________________________________________

Note: Portions of this sermon have been incorporated from the April 8, 2007 sermon, “Fear and Joy” delivered by Rev. Sam Wells, Dean of Duke Chapel, Duke Divinity School, Durham, NC.

Sunday (March 31/Easter) Pastoral Prayer


March 31, 2024
Beulah UMC & Oak Grove UMC

O God, just as our worship service began by proclaiming, “Alleluia,” we continue to sing our “Alleluias” to you because Christ the Lord is risen today! Our lives will never be the same because of the good news of Easter. Sin and death have been defeated. And we are your Easter people!

 

May every Easter Lilly, every Easter basket, every Easter egg, every chocolate bunny, every jellybean remind us of the good news of Jesus’ resurrection.

 

When grief and heartache weigh heavy upon us, remind us of the good news of Easter.

 

When depression and worry overtake us, remind us of the good news of Easter.

 

When life’s challenges hit us hard, remind us of the good news of Easter.

 

When prayers feel like they are going unanswered, remind us of the good news of Easter.

 

When hopes and dreams have been shattered, remind us of the good news of Easter.

 

When our sins and guilt get the best of us, remind us of the good news of Easter.

 

When fear does everything it can possibly do to rob us of joy, remind us of the good news of Easter.

 

O God, open our hearts and minds so that will will notice and celebrate the reminders that you send our way of the good news of Easter.

 

Like this prayer that Jesus taught us to say together…

 

Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen.

Friday, March 29, 2024

Sermon (March 28/Maundy Thursday) “A Very Unique Meal” by Rev. Robert McDowell



Maundy Thursday
“A Very Unique Meal”
Rev. Robert McDowell
March 28, 2024

    Maundy Thursday is an important day during Holy Week.  It’s a time for us to remember when Jesus shared in a last supper with his disciples. Soon, he would be arrested by the Roman authorities and crucified on a cross.  This last meal has become a meal we continue to receive to this day to help us reflect on what Jesus’ suffering and death mean for us.

   This is why the Apostle Paul spends time writing about the Lord’s Supper in his letter to the Christians in the city of Corinth.  They had forgotten why the Lord’s Supper is a very unique meal.

     In Paul’s day, the Corinthian Christians would have met in homes to worship, eat a meal together, and receive the Lord’s Supper.  The bread and the cup were part of that much larger meal they would have had together. 

     Somewhere along the way, they forgot the reason why they were gathering for a meal in the first place.  They forgot why the loaf of bread and the cup were part of that great spread of food.  This holy meal that was meant to remind them of their oneness in Jesus Christ had become just another meal. 

     And so, Paul reminds them of the meaning of this meal by saying how it was Jesus who offered his body and his blood for us so that we will always remember what he did for us when he died on the cross for the world. 

     Paul is saying that whenever you see the bread and the cup on that table of food, to remember that this is why we have gathered in the first place.  We have gathered because of what Jesus has done for us.

     In my first church where I served as pastor, I was celebrating the Sacrament of Holy Communion one Sunday morning. We were serving by intinction where people come forward to a communion station, take a piece of bread, dip it into the chalice of juice, partake, and then return to their seat. I was serving at one of those communion stations.        

     One of the beautiful things about the intinction method is that it is a very personal experience as people come forward one by one to receive the Sacrament.  It is also a very meaningful time for me as pastor because when I offer the bread and the cup, I can make eye contact with each person as they receive the Sacrament.

     So anyway, I was serving Holy Communion at one of the stations and one of my older members who was in her 90’s was in my communion line. As a life-long member of the church, she was seen as the matriarch of our small congregation.

     When it was her turn to receive, I lovingly looked into her eyes and said, “Florence, this is the body of Christ broken for you.”  She received the large piece of bread but then accidentally dropped it on the floor.  So, I offered her another piece of bread which she received.  

     Then I offered her the cup and said, “Florence, this is the blood of Christ shed for you.”  She then dipped the bread into the chalice and ate. And then she did something that I will never forget.  

     She looked down at that large piece of bread that she had accidentally dropped on the floor.  I assumed that she was going to gently bend over and pick it up since it would be in the way of the person behind her.  

     To my great surprise, she quickly swung back her foot, and with all of her might, she kicked that piece of communion bread as far away as possible. As she started to go back to her pew, she gave me a little smile as if to say, “Problem solved.”

     I know she thought she was doing a helpful thing but all I could think about was, “I can’t believe dear Florence just kicked the consecrated loaf of Christ.”

     The Apostle Paul wants us to know that Holy Communion is a very unique meal. He sums up the meaning of this meal in the last verse of our scripture reading when he writes, “For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes.”

     The Sacrament of Holy Communion has a past, a present, and a future dimension.  When we receive the bread and the cup, we remember the past and how Jesus died on a cross for the sins of the world.  

     When Jesus died on the cross, he allowed all of the pain, brokenness, and sin of the world to rest on his shoulders, so that he would be able to defeat its power once and for all.

     The cross reminds us of how deep our vulnerability to sin is.  It also reminds us of how costly love is.  Jesus was willing to do for us what we were not able to do for ourselves.  He broke the power of sin and death.

     Whenever I get discouraged or experience disappointments, all I have to do is think of the cross and I am reminded of God’s great gift of love through Jesus Christ.  

     Approximately two thousand years ago, Jesus, the one who was the visible expression and true embodiment of God gave his life for you and me. What Jesus did is rooted in human history.

     But Holy Communion also has a present dimension.  The Apostle Paul writes that we are to receive the bread and the cup.  By receiving Holy Communion, it’s a way for us to know and experience God’s saving love in the here and now.  

     We believe that the Sacrament of Holy Communion is one of the means of grace by which God offers his love and grace to us anew. Every time we receive the Sacrament, we can have an assurance that God will be present with us just as he was present with Jesus and the disciples in the Upper Room 2,000 years ago.

     And Holy Communion also has a future dimension.  In the last verse of our I Corinthians scripture reading, Paul writes, “For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes.”  Those last three words are so important in helping us to understanding the meaning of this Sacrament.  “Until he comes.”  

     Whenever we receive the bread and the cup, we are reminded that there will be a day when Christ will return and all of God’s people will feast at his heavenly banquet.  This is the ultimate hope of our faith that one day God will make all things new, and it will be a time when there will be no more suffering, sadness, mourning, sin, and death.

     Every time we receive this Sacrament, it’s a time for us to look forward to that time in the future when there will be new heavens and a new earth. And until that time, we are called as the church to live out our faith and share this hope with others.

     Somewhere along the way, the church at Corinth forgot that this was a very unique meal.  Maybe it was good that they forgot, or we wouldn’t have this scripture from Paul to help us understand the meaning of this meal.

     During church camp one year for elementary age children, a pastor noticed that that one of the children was always misbehaving, even during their worship time in the evening.  One of the counselors explained this boy’s story with the pastor.

     This boy whose name was Adam, along with his brother were staying with their grandparents because their parents had recently divorced.  The grandparents thought that it would be good for her grandchildren to attend church camp.  The boys had never attended church, so all of this was very new to them.

     To help the situation, the pastor and this counselor partnered Adam with a high school counselor whose name was also Adam.  Big Adam was to help explain to young Adam why they were doing the camp activities and why they had closing worship each night. This high school counselor helped changed little Adam’s behavior. 

     On the final evening of worship, they all celebrated Holy Communion.  Each camp family picked two persons from their group to serve Communion to the other members. 

     As young Adam’s group came forward, the pastor asked for the two persons to come and join him at the altar to receive the communion elements to serve to their family.

     Little Adam was one of those chosen. The pastor served him and the other student, and then he handed the elements to them to serve their camp family.  

     Tears filled this pastor’s eyes as he watched this young student serve the bread and the juice and share the words of communion to his group. 

     This young boy who was going through a very difficult time in his life was experiencing transformation and newness of life, all because somebody took time to come alongside of him.

     On a Maundy Thursday several years ago, I took my Holy Communion kit with me to a rehab center to visit a retired United Methodist pastor. I just thought that he would like Holy Communion since he wouldn’t be able to attend our Maundy Thursday service that night.

     When I arrived at the rehab facility, he was having his therapy session. Fortunately, he was taking a break, so we had time to talk. He was so glad to know that I brought my Holy Communion kit.

     As I got out my communion kit to set things up on one of the tables, his physical therapist came over to us and my pastor friend introduced me to her. Looking at my communion kit, she asked me if I always take the Sacrament with me during my visits.

     I told her that I brought it because it was Maundy Thursday and I thought Clarence would like to receive the Sacrament to remember Jesus’ Last Supper. She said, “Today is Maundy Thursday? I should have known that! Do you have enough for me?”

     I said, “Sure. Pull up a chair and join us.” I was about ready to offer a communion prayer when another patient came over and asked, “Mind if I join you?”

     No sooner had this man joined us that another staff member noticed what was going on and said, “I’ll come over, too if that’s OK!”

     So many joined us for Holy Communion in that physical therapy room, that we almost needed to have ushers and acolytes!

     There is something very unique about this meal, isn’t there?

     It’s a meal that is rooted in the past when Jesus died on the cross for our sins. It’s a meal that includes the present because Christ promises to be with us whenever we receive it. And it’s a meal that points us to that future hope when one day, we will all feast at Christ’s heavenly banquet together.

     Past, present, and future. It’s all part of this meal that we call, “Holy Communion.”