Last Sunday, we handed out a plastic spoon
to each person who was here in church. Those plastic spoons were to remind us
to serve in three different ways this past week.
Many of you shared how God prompted you to
serve. These stories have been really inspiring.
One of you mentioned that immediately
after worship last Sunday after you received your spoon, God prompted you and
your husband to serve. While your husband changed your neighbor’s smoke
detector battery, you took coffee and breakfast to a friend at a nursing home.
All week long, I kept thinking, “How am I going to fulfill the spoon
challenge?” As I went through the
week, I discovered that opportunities will present themselves if only we will
be open to them.
For example, this past week, I was in the
drive-thru lane at a fast food restaurant. A mini-van got in line behind me.
As I sat there just waiting to place my
order, it was like God was saying, “Pay
for the person behind you.” I remember thinking, “Lord, I don’t get paid for another two days. And what if that van is
filled with a bunch of kids? This could be expensive.”
As these thoughts were going through my
head, it was becoming more and more apparent that this was something God wanted
me to do. So when I finally pull up to the window to pay for my order, I say, “Here’s the money for my order and I also
want to pay for the van behind me.”
This worker had a surprise
look on his face and he tells me, “OK,
that will be another $3.10.” I went, “Yes!!”
And this guy just laughed. I told him, “Just
tell the person behind me, “God bless you from First United Methodist Church.”
You should have seen the smile on this
guy’s face. It made him feel good that people are willing to do nice things. So
here’s the deal. That was the best $3.10 I have ever spent in my life!
God is good! Amen? Amen!
This morning, we continue our “Living
Generously” church-wide focus by focusing on trust issues. Do you have trust
issues? I think we all have trust issues to varying degrees.
Proverbs is considered one of the Wisdom
books in the Old Testament. In our Proverbs reading for this morning, it tells
us that “The name of the Lord is a strong
tower; the righteous run into it and are safe.”
In the ancient world, a strong tower was a
central place located in a particular territory or city where people could go
if they felt threatened. It was a defensible place of protection and security.
This past spring, the tornado warning
siren went off during one of our Wednesday Fellowship Dinners out at our
Crossroads facility. When the sirens started, we invited everyone to go to one
of the tornado shelter areas in the building. Fortunately, there were no
tornados that night, but it was comforting to know that we had these designated
places for safety.
Where do you go when you feel threatened
by the storms of life? That’s a really good question because all of us
experience challenging times from time to time.
Over the past few weeks, we have been
watching a video series revolving around Frank Donovan and his family. In the
episode that we are about to watch, Frank’s sense of security is challenged.
Even
though Frank is extremely wealthy and has more resources than many of us
combined, in today’s episode, he comes face to face with a challenge that is
beyond what he can control. He is in need of a strong tower of protection in
his life. Let’s watch and see how Frank responds.______________________________________________________________
[Watch this video which is the fourth of five videos telling the story of the Frank Donovan family. Use the password, rhemedia to access the video.]
______________________________________________________________
Can you relate to Frank? Have you ever found yourself in a situation where you felt helpless and without any hope? While it was good that Frank wanted to take care of his family financially, he had forgotten the most important source of his protection. That source is God.
A couple of years ago, I shared the story
of Bob Buford. Bob had made a fortune in the TV cable business. One January evening in 1987, his brother
called him to let him know that Bob’s son, Ross, along with two of Ross’s
friends had attempted to swim the Rio Grande River.
“I
think we have serious trouble,” his brother told him. “Ross is missing in the Rio Grande.” He told him that the Texas
Rangers were coordinating the search for Ross.
And so Bob flew down to the Rio Grande
Valley to join in the search, arriving by daybreak the next morning. Because of
his substantial wealth, Bob was able to hire and pay for extra airplanes,
helicopters, boats, trackers with dogs, anything money could buy.
By three o’clock in the afternoon, Bob
looked into the eyes of one of the trackers and knew that he would never see
his son, Ross again. He remembers walking along a limestone bluff perhaps two
hundred feet above the muddy and treacherous river, as frightened as he had
ever felt.
He thought to himself, “Here’s something you can’t dream your way
out of. Here’s something you can’t think your way out of, buy your way out of,
or work your way out of. This is,” he thought “something you can only trust your way out of.”
And then he prayed, “Dear God, somehow, give me the ability to accept and absorb whatever
grace people might bring to me at this terrible time.”
As the search for Ross continued, God’s
grace surrounded Bob. The search team ended up finding his son four months
later about ten miles down the river.
As horrifying and sad as this experience
was, Bob also experienced the gift of God’s grace and in ways that he had never
experienced. Close and silent embraces from friends, letters and phone calls of
concern and empathy, and gifts of meals prepared and brought to his home were
much needed signs of God’s love.
In
that moment when Bob was at a loss for what do do, God became a strong tower
for him during the most difficult time of his life. Even with all of his wealth
and fortune, that was nothing in comparison to the sure foundation of God that
was provided Bob and his family in their darkest hour.
In our movie, Frank Donovan was faced with
a challenging time as he waited to hear the news about his wife who was in a
coma. Re helped Frank to see that even though Frank was feeling helpless in
that moment, that God was there for him. God was his strong tower in that time
of great need.
I think that Re provided Frank with three
important things in his time of great need.
The first thing that Re showed Frank is to
trust that the Lord is our strong tower. Today’s story began with Frank being
frustrated in his work on trying to develop a trust fund. Re points out that
Frank doesn’t just have issues with his trusts. He also has issues with trust.
Re shared about the time when his wife had
cancer and how that led him to allow the Lord to be his strong tower. That’s
what we can do for each other. We can share with each other how God has been a
tower of strength in our lives during times of adversity.
Our Proverbs reading tells us that the
Lord is our strong tower. That’s the first important point.
The second thing that Re helped Frank to
see is to trust in God’s perspective. When Re went to the top floor of the
hospital to look out over the city, it helped put Frank’s work and focus on
money in perspective. Sometimes, we need that bigger perspective to remember
that God is so much bigger than the things that we face in our everyday lives.
The tower that we read about in the Book
of Proverbs doesn’t just provide something to hide behind. It also provides a
perspective to help us see the bigger picture. What bigger picture is God helping
us to see during our five-week focus on what it means to live generously?
And here’s this third thing that Re helped
Frank to see from today’s episode. Re helped Frank to trust that God can help
something good come out of a bad situation.
God doesn’t cause bad things to happen,
but God does provide good to come out of the bad things that happen. We might
not see it right away, but this is part of our faith. In the Book of Romans, the
Apostle Paul writes, “We know that all
things work together for good for those who love God, who are called according
to his purpose.”
In our Gospel reading for
today, Jesus is preparing his disciples for when he would be leaving them. He
comforts them with these words. “Peace I
leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world
gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not let them be afraid.”
This scripture is often read at funerals
to help family members know that God is offering his peace as they go through
that difficult time. God’s peace is a gift that is always available to us.
This week, I invite us to think about the
walls that we create to provide us with protection and security. Instead of
focusing on creating more walls to protect what we have, let’s think more about
placing our trust in the Lord who is our strong tower.
Many of us will be receiving a mailing in
the next day or two that will include a financial estimate of giving card for us
to complete and bring with us to church next Sunday. This estimate of giving
card is one of those ways that we can put our focus on the Lord as our strong tower
rather than on the walls that we create to protect what we have.
As we consider our financial gift to God
and the church for our upcoming year, I leave us with something that Re said to
Frank in today’s video. Frank asked Re a really important question while they
were together overlooking the city. Frank asked how he will be able to tell the
difference between building imaginary walls and being smart with his money. Re
gave him this answer. “Maybe when you
stop thinking of it as your
money.”
I think that’s the whole point of our
five-week focus. If we truly want to live generously, then we need to remember
that everything we have belongs to God anyway.
If God is truly our strong tower, than we
can certainly trust him by being generous in our giving.
No comments:
Post a Comment