[Christ the King Sunday suddenly shifted into "Hanging of the Greens" Sunday as volunteers helped to decorate our Chapel and Sanctuary after each worship service. Pictured above are some of our church members decorating our beautiful Chapel. The church is now ready for the Advent season which begins Sunday, December 3 and lasts through the morning of December 24. Our Advent worship theme will be "Open the Gift." Click here for the Nov. 26 Christ the King Sunday sermon.]
O God we do rejoice that you
are the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords. Thank you for offering us a
glorious inheritance that includes your hope and your power made possible by
the resurrection of Jesus Christ who lives and reigns with you and the Holy
Spirit.
Remind us on this Christ the
King Sunday, that our true citizenship is in your glorious kingdom, and not
simply with a certain country or political party. We confess that we often
focus more on our personal and political agendas rather than on you as our
ultimate Lord and King. Forgive us for those times when we have chosen what is
politically expedient over that which would promote your kingdom of love,
justice, and peace.
As citizens of your kingdom,
empower us to seek your justice and mercy in all that we do and say. Grant us
courage to speak out against hatred, prejudice, sexual harassment, and the
abuse of power. May your kingdom here on earth be one where all people are
welcomed, where all are treated with respect and dignity, where all have access
to the basic necessities of life, and where those who have no voice are
respected and valued. Our God and King, we long for the world that you intended
from the very beginning, a world that reflects your glorious kingdom in heaven.
Even as we pray for your
kingdom to come as it is in heaven, we also pray for those who are in special
need of you today. We lift up to you those who are ill and who are facing
medical challenges. We pray for those who are looking for work and who are
struggling to get by each week. We pray for those who are experiencing
physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual pain. Grant to these a renewed
awareness of your resurrection hope and power. Remind them that they are
citizens of your kingdom and recipients of your glorious inheritance. In these beginning weeks of
the holiday season when it can be so easy to get caught up in the busyness of
this time of year and forget to take time for ourselves, remind us of the words
of good news from one of the verses of our prayer hymn that we just sang, “Jesus the Savior reigns, the God of truth
and love; when he had purged our stains, he took his seat above.” It is in
his name that we pray the prayer he taught his disciples and teaches us to say
together, “Our Father, who art in heaven”
Many of us probably remember the 1960s hit
TV series, “The Beverly Hillbillies.”
This show was all about the Clampetts who were simple folk living off
the land. When Jed Clampett, played by
Buddy Ebson, accidentally discovered oil on his property, he and his family
became instant millionaires.
Deciding to move to Beverly Hills to take
advantage of their new found wealth, the Clampetts find that their down to earth
lifestyle often times clashes with the new suburb and its shielded upper class
neighbors.
This show was a classic “rags to riches”
story line.Poor family becomes rich.
This reminds me of something the famous oil
tycoon, John D. Rockefeller, once said about the three simple rules for anyone
who wants to become rich.
Rule
#1 – Go to work early.Rule #2 – Stay at
work late.And Rule #3 – Find oil.
But do you really need to find oil in
order to be rich?
Regardless of how you or I might define
the word “rich,” the Apostle Paul gives us an easy to understand the definition
of this word from Ephesians chapter 1.
In verse 18, Paul writes about the riches
of Christ’s glorious inheritance among the saints.The riches of Christ’s glorious inheritance
among the saints.
Paul is saying that your net worth is not
tied to your financial assets.Your net
worth is tied to your relationship to Jesus Christ.For it is through Christ, that we are
recipients of the riches of his glorious inheritance.
That’s an amazing thought.My net worth has little to do with what I own,
and has everything to do with my relationship with Jesus Christ.
It seems like we get this turned around in
our society.We often fall into the trap
in believing that our net worth is tied to our financial assets, but it’s really
tied into our relationship with Christ.
I was reminded of this during a big
snowstorm one year.When the roads
finally got cleared enough, the whole county made their way to the grocery
store to get some groceries.
That grocery store was packed! Everybody and their brother were at that
grocery store.You could hardly make it
down the aisles, it was so crowded.People were fighting over basic commodities like milk and bread.It was incredible!And it was all because the delivery trucks were
late because of the snow storm so they were in short supply.
That little incident reminded me that even
though I had money in the bank for groceries, it didn’t mean a whole lot
because they were out of a lot of the grocery items that we needed.It didn’t matter who we were that day – low
income, middle income, high income (we were all dependent on those delivery
trucks.)
And I can’t even do justice to comparing
this personal incident with what people have to go through in places all around
the world where there is a scarcity of food.Wealth isn’t always about money. It’s about having access to the basic
necessities of life.
Wealth is about people helping
people.It’s about having hope that you
will be able to find a place to live and have a new future.
Speaking of hope, the Apostle Paul uses
this word in our scripture reading when he writes, “so that you may know what is the hope to which he has called you.”
When asked about your net worth, Paul
says, “don’t forget to include how much hope you have.”
Riches and wealth are not just about
tangible things.They are about
intangible things - things you can’t necessarily touch or feel.
We live in a society that values physical
touch in order for it to be worth something.Our society tends to devalue the things you can’t touch.And yet, which is more important?
Well.Let’s not get too carried away with this.After all, we do need to have some money to
live in this world.We need to give the
cashier something after we put our groceries on that conveyor belt.
And the scriptures certainly do not
overlook this simple but important truth that all of us need money to pay for
things.Jesus himself, talked a lot
about giving money to the poor.How do
you give money to the poor, if you have no money to give in the first place?
The early church during the New Testament
time was comprised primarily of people who were economically very poor compared
to the rest of society.That’s why the
scriptures often speak of helping the widows and orphans.These were often fellow church members who
barely had two cents to rub together.The scriptures consistently remind us, “Don’t forget to take care of
those around you.”
Just because being rich is primarily about
our relationship with Jesus Christ, does not mean that we can just go ahead and
avoid our responsibility to feed the hungry, clothe the hungry, and house the
homeless.It’s wonderful that we can
have our eye toward our heavenly home, but let’s also keep an eye on brothers
and sisters in need.Jesus commands us
to do no less.
But here in our scripture reading from
Ephesians, the Apostle Paul makes it very clear to us that our wealth and our
value are not measured by our financial portfolio.Our wealth can be found in Jesus Christ.
And in Jesus Christ, Paul tells us, “There is immeasurable greatness of his
power for those who believe.”
How can you measure this greatness of
Christ’s power?How can one possibly
measure a power that enabled God to raise Christ from death to life on that
first Easter Sunday?How can one ever
measure a power in which Jesus Christ is far above all rule and authority and
power and dominion, and who is above every name that is named, not only in this
age but also in the age to come?
How can someone even attempt to measure
the power of God who has put all things under his feet and has made the living
Christ the head over all things for the church which is his body, the fullness
of him who fills all in all?
Who
can measure such a one as this?This
King of King and Lord of Lords.
The Apostle Paul says, that those who have
placed their hope in Jesus Christ, are recipients of this immeasurable
greatness made possible only by a gracious and loving God.
And I love how Paul begins our passage of
scripture by affirming the church for how they love each other.Paul writes, “I have heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love toward all
the saints, and for this reason, I do not cease to give thanks for you as I
remember you in my prayers.”
Paul is saying that if you want to know
how rich you are, just look around you at all of your brothers and sisters in
Christ. The relationships that we have with each other are our most important
asset.
Approximately 200 years after the Apostle
Paul wrote this letter to the Ephesians, a man named Lawrence, was serving as
the treasurer of the Church of Rome which included appropriating money for the
care of the poor.
During this time, the Emperor of Rome,
Valerian, began to persecute the churches by confiscating their property.As the story goes, Lawrence who was a church
treasurer was ordered by a Roman prefect to hand over the wealth of the church
or be killed.
Lawrence agreed, but said that it would
take him three days to gather it.During
those three days, Lawrence placed all the money of the church into the hands of
trustworthy stewards.And then he
assembled the sick, the aged, and the poor, the widows and orphans of the
congregation, presented them to the Roman prefect, and said, “These are the treasures of the church.”
If you every wonder where we keep the
treasures of this church – all you need to do is to look into the eyes of your brothers
and sisters in Christ, and there you will see God’s treasure.
I shared this with you before, but my mom and dad didn’t have a lot of money,
but they had enough to raise a family of four and provide for our basic needs.
They knew the importance of saving for the future and being content with what
they had.
My dad would often say and I still can
hear him saying this, “We were the
happiest when we were poor.” And then with a grin he would say, “That’s why we’re still happy.”
Money can’t buy happiness.
I have a good friend who recently shared
with me his faith story. He got married
to his high school sweetheart and they began living the good life as they say.
Back in the 70s, the two of them were
making a six figure income, and spending their money basically on themselves.They were getting promotion after promotion
and moving very quickly up the corporate ladder.
But even with all of this, his wife was
feeling pretty empty inside.She felt
rich on the outside but bankrupt on the inside.
Then in 1979, his wife was watching a
Billy Graham Crusade on TV and she made a decision right there on the spot to
receive Jesus Christ into her life.Her
life totally changed from that moment on.And as she became more and more excited about the riches of God’s
kingdom, he continued to become more and more empty inside.
But then John told me, things changed
about three months later.He said, “I was sitting in a little church, not
hearing a word of what the preacher was saying and I finally realized that all
the riches of the world would never be able to make me happy or give me peace.”
He said, “In that moment, I was thinking about our expensive house, our swimming
pool, and our forty cars.”And then
he said, “that’s right Robert.You heard right.I didn’t say 14 cars.I said 40 cars.I was thinking about all of our wealth and
yet I was feeling so empty from the poverty of my soul.It was then, as I was sitting in that pew,
that God’s love captured me and I became filled with the riches of hope, joy,
peace, wisdom, and God’s Spirit.”
“Here’s
the ironic thing in all of this,” he went on to say.“Since I gave my life to Jesus
Christ, I really do feel like I can now honestly say, ‘I’m the richest man in
the world.’”
And so, yes, you can be rich without
striking oil. The King of Kings and the Lord of Lord’s has left you with a
glorious inheritance.
Thanks be to God!
From Rags to Riches
Small Group Questions
Ephesians 1:15-23
November 26, 2017
The world tends to define being rich as how much money you make or how big your house is.
Why do you think the world defines how rich we are in terms of money and possessions?
The Apostle Paul defines being rich very differently in our Ephesians 1 scripture. Being rich means that we have a life-changing and growing relationship with Jesus Christ who is the true king over all creation. Specifically, Paul tells us in verse 18, "so that, with the eye of your heart enlightened, you may know what is the hope to which he has called you, what are the riches of his glorious inheritance among the saints."
What spiritual riches have you experienced in your life and how have they been a blessing to you?
Pastor Robert shared the story of Lawrence, a Christian who lived just a couple hundred years after Paul's letter to the Ephesians was written. When Valerian, the Roman Emperor demanded that Lawrence hand over the riches of the church to the empire, Lawrence who was serving as the church treasurer assembled the poor, the widows, and the orphans who the church had been helping and told the emperor, "These are the treasurers of the church."
Share how you see the church claiming the poor and the needy as the true treasures of the church.
In the sermon, the story was shared about a man who was very wealthy. He owned an expensive house, had a lot of money, and owned 40 cars! He was considered "rich" by the world's standards, but he was empty inside until he accepted Christ into his life. He said that it wasn't until he became a follower of Christ, that he truly felt like he was the richest man in the world.
Which of Paul's riches/treasures from our Ephesians reading do you want to receive in a new way today? 1) Other fellow Christians who encourage you! (Eph. 1:15-16) 2) A spirit of wisdom & hope! (Eph. 1:17-18) 3) Christ's great power! (Eph. 1:19)
During this week that we celebrate Christ the King Sunday, pray this prayer together:
Almighty God, who rules over all that is, by
your presence among us, may your reign of righteousness and peace, joy and
love, justice and mercy be evident in our lives. We lift our hearts, bow our
knees, and open our mouths to sing your praises this day. We rejoice in your
goodness and we seek the transforming power of your love and grace. Fill us, we
pray, in the name of Christ the true king, who has conquered the forces of sin
and death. Amen.
[Like the old saying goes, "whenever Methodists meet, they eat." Pictured above is a packed Fellowship Hall for our "Thanks for Giving" covered dish meal which followed our 10:30 worship service. The church provided the turkey, stuffing, gravy, and drinks and people brought covered dish food and desserts to share. It was a little taste of the future heavenly banquet! The meal was a way of thanking our congregation for their faithful giving to both our general budget ministries as well as to our Capital Campaign. It was also a special day as we received six new members and celebrated a baptism. Click here for the sermon.]
Gracious, Giving, and
Abundant God, we your thankful people have come to worship and praise you this
morning. We are here in this place because you have summoned us to be here. You have called each of us by name and have
gathered us to be your family. Thank you for our church family and for the many
blessings we have enjoyed over this past year.
Thank you for new members and
baptisms. Thank you for Sunday School classes and small groups. Thank you for
choirs and soloists. Thank you for worship leaders and greeters. Thank you for blanket
makers and flower arrangers.
Thank you for telecare
callers and radio sponsors. Thank you for anthems and Worship U gatherings.
Thank you for building renovations and air conditioning. Thank you for dish
washers and table setters. Thank you for prayer cards and prayer chains.
Thank you for the Korean
congregation and for Kappa Phi. Thank you for Wonderful Wednesdays and Music
Sunday. Thank you for OU concerts and scout meetings. Thank you for officering
envelopes and online giving. Thank you for clothing donations and Monday
lunches. Thank you for water bottle give aways and Trimble backpacks.
Thank you for acolytes and
church workdays. Thank you for preschool children and preschool teachers. Thank
you for choral risers and moveable pulpits. Thank you for ushers and Leadership
Board members. Thank you for refurbished pews and our lighted cross at night.
Thank you for Sunday youth group and United Methodist Women.
Thank you for staff members
and first time worship guests. Thank you for sermons especially the good ones.
Thank you for a parking garage and meetings less than 2 hours. Thank you for
casseroles and hazelnut coffee.
But most of all, even beyond
all of these many blessings, we are most thankful for the life, death, and
resurrection of Jesus Christ in whose name we now offer this grateful prayer
together saying…
I’m going to go
out on a limb and assume that you are familiar with this short video clip.
Let’s watch it because it just never gets old.
Those opening
words were spoken by Admiral James T. Kirk of the starship, Enterprise. I love
how dramatic he sounds. “To seek out new
life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no man has gone before.”
Even if you’re
not that much into space exploration and the whole Star Trek craze, how can you
not want to be on that spaceship with James T. Kirk?
Penny loves Star
Trek so she was really excited when they came out with a new Star Trek movie a
few years ago. For the months leading up to that movie, she couldn't stop talking about it. She just
couldn’t wait to see that movie.
Now, the truth
is, it’s not that Penny is the biggest Trekkie fan in the world. I just think
she likes these more recent Star Trek movies because of actor, Chris Pine who
plays James T. Kirk.
Here’s a picture
of Chris Pine in the movie, "Star Trek Into Darkness." He’s the handsome
looking guy in the middle. He’s the new James T. Kirk.
Penny doesn’t
realize it, but the producer of this new Star Trek movie first asked me to play
the part of Kirk. So here I am.
As you can see, I
was extremely excited to be asked to try out for the movie. It was hard to
contain my enthusiasm. They took several pictures and this ended up being the
best one.
Here’s the actor
Chris Pine again.
Here he is using
his communicator as Admiral Kirk. He looks OK in this scene, I guess. So they
asked me to do this same scene. And well… I’ll let you be the judge.
The camera guy
kept telling me to not use the communicator to send text messages, but that’s
my preferred mode of communication. I’m looking pretty intense there.
Here’s a picture
from a scene in the movie with actor Chris Pine and the actor who plays Spock.
Yeah, I admit Chris
Pine looks good in this scene, but it seemed kind of boring to me so I decided
to put some action into the scene.
I kept asking for
a phaser gun and they finally gave me one so I used it in this scene even
though there weren’t any bad people in this scene.
So the next scene
that they asked Pine and me to do was a scene with the beautiful actress, Alice
Eve. So here’s Chris trying to pull off the macho look.
They tell me that he’s kind of a heart throb.
Now here’s me in the same exact scene.
I went with a more natural look that would
look much better on the big screen.
And believe it or
not, we did this scene in one take. I kid you not. I’m not bragging, but I am
comfortable in front of a camera.
And then of course, we all know that Spock
and Kirk are the main characters in Star Trek. So, here’s Chris Pine in one of
the scenes with Spock.
You know, I
looked at that scene and to me, they just look way too serious. I mean, these
guys were buddies, right? So here’s me in this same scene with Spock having a little fun with him when he wasn't looking.
I thought it was
funny too, but the actor who plays Spock didn’t think it was as funny as I did.
It was a tough choice, but in the end, they finally made the decision to go with
Chris Pine. But at least, I had my fifteen minutes of fame.
By the way, I’m
curious how many Star Trek fans are here today. Raise your hand high if you’re
a big Star Trek fan?
The way we
resonate with that dramatic opening Star Trek theme song about “seeking out new life and new civilizations
and going boldly where no man has gone before” is similar to how God’s
people must have resonated when the Prophet Isaiah spoke his dramatic words to
the people of Israel.
Sounding a little
like James T. Kirk, Isaiah says, “For I
am about to create new heavens and a new earth.”Isaiah was speaking to a whole nation of
people who after returning home from the Babylonian exile after several years,
still find their homes and gardens in ruins, the city in rubble, and the
rebuilding of their Temple nowhere near the beauty and splendor of the former
one.
The people of
Israel were still without hope and they were stuck in a mindset that their best
days were behind them. They had given up believing that God would be able to
give them a new future. They were left only with their memories of the good old
days.
I remember speaking
with someone whose mother had passed away. It had been several months since her
death and I asked how he was doing. He said that he still feels the pain of
grief because he still misses her.
Since he lived in
the house next to her, he was always able to see a light in the living room of
the house where she would read at night before going to bed. And he said, “It was so strange to look at mom’s house
from my window at night and now only see darkness.”
He went on to
say, “Ever since she’s been gone, I think
about all of the good times I had growing up in that house and how it was
filled with so much laughter and so many good memories. It’s been really
difficult to adjust over these past several months,” he said.
My heart went on
to him as he shared his grief and heavy heart with me.
The people of
Israel were living during a time when the present looked bleak and the good
memories from the past were becoming more and more distant as the years went
by. Nostalgia over the good ole days will only take you so far.
It’s in this
context of hopelessness and a longing for the good ole days, that Isaiah speaks
a word about something the people of Israel hadn’t thought about for quite some
time. Isaiah speaks about a future that is filled with hope.
And this is no
empty hope. This hope is rooted in the words of the Lord who spoke them through
the prophet Isaiah.
The Lord is
inviting the people of Israel to experience a new faith trek. They have been
dwelling in the past long enough. It’s now time for them to boldly go into a
new future, a future that is filled with hope.
My sense is that
there are many of us here today who are looking for a new challenge and who are
ready to follow God into a new future. Do you want to be a faith Trekkie? Are
you ready to let go of the past and begin a new journey with God?
James T. Kirk
describes the Star Trek exploration as seeking out new life and new
civilizations and going boldly where no man has gone before. Isaiah describes
it a little differently. He says that it’s about God creating new heavens and a
new earth.
Sound exciting?
Well, here is what is involved in this new faith trek according to Captain
Isaiah.
First of all,
this faith trek involves a letting go of the past. Isaiah says that the former
things shall not be remembered or come to mind.That may sound too difficult to do because it seems like the past is all
we have.
The problem with
the past is that it’s in the past! The other problem is that dwelling on the
past and the things we can’t change can prevent us from moving forward in life.
Isaiah spoke his
word to the people at just the right time. They were so focused on the good
ole’ days before their exile and the despair of their present situation, that
they were now stuck and going nowhere. And that’s not a good place to be.
I thought it was
interesting how much media coverage there was in the weeks leading up to the
birth of William and Kate’s first baby in England a few years ago. Even though
England has so much incredible history, all of the focus that year was on the
future of the country and the birth of that royal baby.
What part of the
past is God calling you to let go so that you can move into the future God has
in mind for you? It might be a negative personal experience, a broken
relationship, a long held grudge, or a maybe it’s a disappointment that has
been difficult to overcome. God invites us to let go of our past.
A second thing
that this faith trek involves is accepting our new identity in God. Isaiah
shares these words of the Lord to the people of Israel. The Lord says, “Be glad and rejoice forever for I am about
to create Jerusalem as a joy, and its people as a delight.”
What a great
identity the Lord gives to us. God sees us as a people of joy and as a people
of delight. If only we would be able to see ourselves the same way that God sees
us. We were created in the image of God.
What a wonderful
description to embrace for our church. We are a church of joy and we are a
people of delight! When people ask me where our church is located, I usually
say that we’re the church with the white pillars across from the parking
garage. Maybe I should just tell them, “We’re
the church that is filled with joy and the people are a delight.”
And wouldn’t it
be great if that person would say, “Oh, I
know which church you mean. Yeah.” And wouldn’t that be wonderful for every
church to embrace. “We are a people of
joy and we are God’s people of delight.”
And here’s a
third important part of our faith trek journey. And this is just as important
as the first two things. We are called to live into God’s preferred future.
Back to
Captain Isaiah, or rather, Prophet Isaiah. In addition to telling the
Israelites to let go of their past and claim their new identity, he also paints
a picture of the preferred future that the Lord has in mind for them.
And this
picture includes things that the Israelites have been missing for a long time
like the building of houses, plentiful vineyards, safety and security, and
blessings. Isaiah even goes so far as to say that the Lord’s preferred future
includes harmony in the animal kingdom where the lion and the lamb shall feed
together in peace.
Now, on one
level, the Israelites began to experience some of these things as they
continued to get settled after their many years in Babylonian exile. But on
another level, we also know that God’s ultimate preferred future will be even
more glorious when God creates new heavens and a new earth. This is the
ultimate hope of our faith, that this world will receive a total makeover and
God will make it all new again.
The Lord wants
the people of Israel to begin living with this beautiful and hope-filled future
in mind. Just think what a difference it would make if we would all live in
such a way that anticipates this future reality for our world.
Instead of
cynicism or negativity, the Lord wants us to approach each day with the end
result in mind and the end result is a world that is filled with peace,
justice, harmony, compassion, friendship, safety, and an abundance of resources
for everyone.
And if all of
this seems just too good to be true and unrealistic, let’s remember that this
faith trek we are called to take is like no other. This faith trek isn’t about
us trying to remake the world on our own strength. We can try, but we will be
very disappointed.No, this trek is
about what God can do in and through us. Nothing is impossible with God.
So how about
it? Are you up for the journey? Are you ready to be a faith trekkie? Are you
ready to let go of the past? Have you claimed the new identity that God has for
you that you are a joy and a delight? And are you ready to live into God’s
preferred future that will be beyond our wildest imagination? Are you ready to
embark on a faith trek? Are you ready to boldly go where no one has gone
before?
There’s one more thing that I wanted to share
with you about my conversation with the person I mentioned to you earlier in
the sermon, the man who was still grieving the loss of his mother.
As I
mentioned, he said that it’s been difficult to look out his window at night and
see nothing but darkness in the house where his mother once lived. I could see
the sadness and the heaviness in his eyes as he was sharing all of this with
me.
But then he
said to me, “But not too long ago, a new
family moved into mom’s house. I got a chance to meet them. They are a very
nice family with two teenagers. I took them a chocolate pie that mom used to
make and gave it to them as a house warming gift. I explained to them that I
used to live there and had many, many happy memories in this house.”
He said they thanked him for the warm welcome. And the
wife said, “When we were looking for
homes in the area, this one really stood out for us because we could sense that
there had been a lot of love here.”
And after sharing all of this with me, he said, “And now, when I look down from my window at
the house where mom lived, I’m glad to see that there’s a light in the house
again and that this new family can call it home like I once did.”
In the midst of our brokenness, disappointments, and
despair, Isaiah speaks a word of hope to us. He reminds us that our faith
journey is never over.
God promises
to be with us throughout all of our experiences in life. And we are invited
once again to boldly go where no man has gone before. We are called to let go
of our past, accept our new identity in Christ, and live into God’s preferred
future.
If you would like to be part of this faith
trek, I invite you to simply hold out your hands right there in front of you,
bow your heads and close your eyes, and join me in prayer.
Let us pray. God of new beginnings, just as you offered a
word of hope to the people of Israel so long ago, you offer a word of hope to
us this morning. In the midst of our pain and brokenness, you invite us to
boldly follow you into your preferred future that is beyond our wildest
imagination. This is the day to respond to your summons in a new way.
As we hold out our hands, we
know that your hand is reaching out to us. You want to bring healing to those
places in our lives where we have felt empty. You want to give us hope where we
have only known despair and disappointment. And you want to use these same
hands to be your healing presence in our community and world. Thank you for
coming close to us today. And thank you for new beginnings and new adventures.
In the name of the One who has promised to create new heavens and a new earth,
we want you to know that we’re ready to make this faith trek, to be your people,
and to place our trust in you. Amen.
Faith Trek
Small Group Questions
Isaiah 65:17-25
November 19, 2017
The prophet Isaiah sounds like a "trekkie" (Star Trek) fan because of his call for Israel to leave behind the troubled past and boldly go forward into God's future where he is creating "new heavens and a new earth." (Isaiah 65:17a) The people of Israel were primed to go on this "faith trek" because they had just returned from exile where Jerusalem was in ruins and their homes had been destroyed. They probably welcomed Isaiah's call to boldly enter into a new faith trek with God.
Share a time where your faith took on even greater importance because of a challenging time in your life. How did you grow from that new "faith trek?"
The prophet Isaiah offers us three very important ways to be involved in a new "faith trek" in our lives. Share how you are doing in each of these areas:
Isaiah's "Faith Trek" involves:
1. Letting Go of the Past (Isaiah 65:17b)
What is the "past" that God is calling you to "let go?"
2. Accepting Our New Identity from God (Isaiah 65:18b)
What is the new identity that God wants us to embrace and always remember?
3. Live Into God's Preferred Future (Isaiah 65:17a)
What is the preferred future that God has in mind for the world? What does this
preferred future means for you in your "faith trek?"
Close Your Time Together By Opening Your Hands & Praying this "Faith Trek" Prayer Together:
God of new beginnings, just as you offered a word of hope to the people of Israel so long ago, you offer a word of hope to us this morning. In the midst of our pain and brokenness, you invite us to boldly follow you into your preferred future that is beyond our wildest imagination. This is the day to respond to your summons in a new way.
As we hold out our hands, we know that your hand is reaching out to us. You want to bring healing to those places in our lives where we have felt empty. You want to give us hope where we have only known despair and disappointment. And you want to use these same hands to be your healing presence in our community and world. Thank you for coming close to us today. And thank you for new beginnings and new adventures.
In the name of the One who has promised to create new heavens and a new earth, we want you to know that we’re ready to make this faith trek, to be your people, and to place our trust in you. Amen.