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, December 8, 2025

Sermon (Dec. 7/Advent) “Advent Transformation” by Rev. Robert McDowell


December 7, 2025 (Advent)
Beulah UMC & Oak Grove UMC

     Let’s face it and I’ll just go ahead and get this out on the table.  Four weeks from now, only a few of us will actually still have that holiday feeling.  And the rest of us will either be exhausted from all the holiday rush, or annoyed that we have to climb back up that rickety attic ladder to get all those empty Christmas decoration boxes down.


     Or at the very least, many of us will feel some of those post-holiday blues.


     For Christmas one year when I was a child, Santa brought me an electric football game.  Maybe some of you remember this large metal football field with the vibrating football players that rarely would go the direction you wanted them to go. 


     The commercial claimed that it would be just like a real NFL football game, only the players were plastic, and the field was a sheet of metal.  But everything else was just like a Sunday NFL game.  They even had cardboard crowds that you could insert as a backdrop to make you feel like you were in a real stadium, complete with scoreboard.


     Do you remember how most of the scoring was done with this game?  It certainly wasn’t by touchdowns.  And my brother and I never quite figured out how to kick field goals with that little yellow hinged leg man and the microscopic size football. 


     Most of the scoring was through safeties because your player would start to go down the field but then turn around and head back into your own end zone.  One dust particle on that sheet of metal could make the difference between a 1st down or a 15-yard loss.


     I’ll never forget this.  It was the day after Christmas, and a neighbor buddy of mine thought it was really cool that I got this game for Christmas.  It was a really close game and with time running out in a scoreless game, my little plastic NFL man was breaking loose for a game winning touchdown. 


     He’s at the 20, the 15, the 10, the 5, TOUCHDOWN!!!!


     In my exuberance, I tried to do a handstand, but I flipped over, and I landed right in the middle of that field of metal, putting a huge dent around the 40-yard line.  I tried to fix it, but I could never flatten that dent out.  And from that point on, those little players would just vibrate down into that dent in the middle of the field.


     It was only one day after Christmas, and I had lost that holiday feeling.


     The Season of Advent, these four weeks leading up to the Christmas season, is not meant to get us all excited about the holiday, only to leave us down and discouraged after all the decorations have been put away.


     The Season of Advent is meant to have such an impact on our lives, that we will never be the same again. 


     Take for example our Gospel reading on this 2nd Sunday of Advent.  Notice that the focus isn’t on the manger scene at all - the focus is on a prophet like man getting people like us ready for the beginning ministry of Jesus.


     John the Baptist is drawing great crowds to hear him preach and get this – he is nowhere near a Walmart or Target.  He’s in the middle of nowhere.  In this busy month of December, a wide-open space of dirt and rocks is probably the last place that we would choose to go.  But this is where the action is on this 2nd Sunday of Advent.


     John is baptizing people left and right and let’s just put it this way - he’s not spreading a lot of holiday cheer.  Instead, he’s saying to repent and prepare for one who is more powerful than he.


     But isn’t it interesting that Matthew tells us that people were responding to John’s message?  And even the religious leaders were coming to be baptized and to be part of this interesting religious experience.


    But that’s when the music stops.  Just when the religious leaders had jumped in line waiting to be baptized, John turns to them and refers to them as snakes and he challenges their motives for joining the crowd.


     This text has always bothered me a bit, because at first glance, I’m thrilled that these religious leaders even showed up.  And notice that they didn’t ask if John had been properly credentialed and ordained and the degrees needed to be a pastor.


     I’m impressed that they were at least willing to jump on the bandwagon and get an extra dose of religion.


     But that wasn’t what John was about – to have people enjoy a nice religious experience or add a little more God to their lives.  No.  John was up to something a lot bigger.  So big that the kind of baptism he was offering would change their lives forever and maybe even make their lives more difficult.  John was preparing the way not for a warm religious experience, he was preparing the way of the Lord.


    And without holding back, John looks at those religious leaders and tells them, that the only folks who should wait in line by the river are those who really want to change.  “Bear fruit worthy of repentance,” John tells them.  “Think twice before getting dunked because your life will never be the same again.”


     Well, that puts Christmas in a different light, doesn’t it, because Christmas is about top to bottom, outside/in, inside/out, long lasting, transformational change.  The kind of change that goes well beyond Christmas Eve.  It goes with us the rest of our lives.  Is that the kind of Christmas we’re hoping for this year?


     I was talking to someone who had just got done participating in a forty-day church-wide spiritual focus. The worship services, the sermons, and the small groups were all designed to lead the people of his church into a deeper and growing relationship with Jesus Christ.


     And this member shared something with me that day which has stuck with me to this day.  He said, “You know, don’t you, that the 40 day study isn’t really over.  It’s just the beginning.  Now’s the hard part.   We need to live out what we promised to do.”


     John the Baptist would have said, “amen,” to that.


     “Bear fruit worthy of repentance” John tells us in this season leading up to Christmas, because if you don’t, Christmas won’t really mean a thing.  It will just be another religious experience that gets boxed up and put back in the attic.


     There was a time when my bookshelves were filled with notebooks from seminars I had attended over the years.  I’ve stopped saving these notebooks because they took up so much space on my shelves so now, I take notes on my laptop so I’m more likely to refer to them from time to time.  For some reason, when those hard-bound notebooks get stored on my shelves, I tend to forget about them.


     I don’t want to store Jesus on a shelf and forget about him.  Elf on a shelf is fine, but not Jesus on the shelf.


     I don’t want to put Jesus on the shelf. I want Jesus to live in me and to shape and mold me to be the person he is calling me to be.   And that’s a life long process.  And that’s why the message of John the Baptist is so important for us today.  Don’t put Jesus on a shelf.  Repent and bear fruit worthy of repentance.


     Charles Simeon was a student at Cambridge University in England in the 18th century.  During this time, students at English Universities were required to attend church regularly and to receive Holy Communion once a year.


     As you might imagine, this requirement to attend chapel and receive the Sacrament had some negative effects because of the many students who attended for the wrong reasons – just to fulfill a requirement to stay enrolled in the university.


     When told that he would be required to receive the Lord’s Supper during the middle of the term, Charles was faced with a dilemma.  He wasn’t a Christian and he certainly didn’t want to be a hypocrite and receive the Sacrament for the wrong reasons, so it was at that moment that he decided that if he must go he would repent, turn his entire life over to Christ, and become a totally committed follower of Jesus Christ.


     That decision on February 2, 1779 literally transformed his life.  From that moment on, he dedicated himself to be a growing disciple of Jesus Christ everyday.  It’s a commitment he kept for the rest of his life.  In his journal, he wrote, “and so earnest was I in these exercises that within the three weeks, I made myself quite ill with reading, fasting, and prayer.”


     Charles Simeon went on to become a chaplain of Holy Trinity Church in Cambridge where he faithfully served for 55 years until shortly before his death in 1836.  He was often criticized for the enthusiasm and zeal that he brought to his faith.

 

     For Charles Simeon, it was all or nothing when it came to faith in Christ.


     And this is the message for us from John the Baptist this morning. Are we all in? Will we allow this season of preparation to last longer than the Christmas break?  Don’t let Christmas be a holiday that simply comes and goes.  Don’t put Jesus on the shelf. Allow the Christ of Christmas to change your life from the inside out.


     Inevitably, in the middle of January, we will no doubt see a house here and and there that will still have their Christmas lights up. 


     Even in the beginning of February, you might even see a Christmas tree with lights flickering through a bay window.


     But the more important question for you and me in this Season of Advent is – once the decorations are put away, the broken toys are pushed toward the back of the playroom, the clothes that don’t fit are returned, and the reindeer antlers are removed from our car windows, will the light of Christ still be shining brightly through you and me for all to see?


     And the answer to that question depends on how deep into the Jordan River we’re willing to go.

Sunday (December 7/Advent) Pastoral Prayer

December 7, 2025 (Advent)

Beulah UMC & Oak Grove UMC


Lord, thank you for John the Baptist who was willing to stir things up in preparing the people for the coming of Jesus into the world. Thank you for his challenge to us to not allow Christmas this year to be something we can simply box up and put back into the attic.

 

Remind us in these weeks leading up to Christmas that you want to transform us from the inside out. You want to shake loose our preconceived notions of what we think Christmas should be this year. You want to surprise us anew with the gift of your presence in a way that we could never have dreamed possible. As our prayer hymn will soon remind us, you want us to give you our hearts.

 

Take our hearts and fill them with the light of your hope, peace, joy, and love. Take our hands and our feet and empower us to bear fruit that is worthy of repentance.

 

In this Advent Season in which we wait expectantly for the birth of the Christ Child, we offer our prayers for people who are on our hearts and minds, those who are facing medical challenges, those in need of healing, those in need of comfort and reassurance, those who are feel scared and alone, those who are feeling down during this time of year because of grief and sadness. Thank you for being a God who knows all of our needs and our challenges, and our longings. Thank you for a church like this where we can find rest for our souls and pray this prayer that Jesus taught his disciples as we await his coming…

 

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, December 1, 2025

Sunday (November 30/Advent) Pastoral Prayer

November 30, 2025 (Advent)

Beulah UMC & Oak Grove UMC


Lord, thank you for this new season of Advent to help us wait patiently for the coming of Jesus into the world. When we are feeling anxious or even fearful about what the future holds, remind us of today’s first Advent candle that offers us the light of hope.

 

Your light of hope shines brightly through the Christmas lights that are already up in our neighborhoods. Your light of hope shines brightly through an encouraging word that someone shares with us at just the right time. Your light of hope shines brightly through a bible verse that sounded like it was meant just for us. Your light of hope shines brightly through this morning’s worship and the singing of hymns. And the good news of our faith is that your light of hope will only grow brighter as we draw closer to the birth of Christ.

 

We pray for those who are on our hearts and minds this morning who are in need of your light of hope as well as the people on our church’s prayer list. May this Advent Season be a time for all of us to experience your healing, guiding, protecting, comforting, and saving presence.

 

As the Apostle Paul reminded us in our first scripture reading this morning, lead us in this holy season to put on the armor of light, an armor that is able to overcome any darkness, an armor that helps us to wait patiently for our prayers to be answered, an armor that helps us to be the best versions of ourselves that we can possibly be, an armor that helps us to become more like you; holy, faithful, patient, hope-filled, and loving.

 

Come, thou long expected Jesus even as we pray that prayer that you 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.


Monday, November 24, 2025

Sermon (November 23) “The Thanksgiving Challenge” by Rev. Robert McDowell


November 23, 2025
Beulah UMC & Oak Grove UMC

     The thanksgiving holiday is pretty simple and straightforward. It’s a time for us to be thankful. I’ve always approached thanksgiving as a time to make a personal list of the many blessings in my life which are many.


     When families gather around the thanksgiving table, there’s a tradition to go around the table and share something for which they are thankful. If we would each share all of our blessings, the food would get too cold. I think the listing of our blessings is the easy part of Thanksgiving because there are just so many for us to name.


     So, it’s no wonder that our Thanksgiving reading from the Book of Deuteronomy begins with a long list of reasons for the people of Israel to be thankful. At the top of that thanksgiving list was that God was leading them to their new home in the Promised Land.


     Just listen to this long thanksgiving list that involves the land they are about to enter. A wonderful land, streams of water, springs, wells that gush up in the valleys and the hills, a land of wheat and barley, vines, fig trees, pomegranates, olive oil, honey, no shortage of food, stones, copper and plenty of stones for building.  What a list!


     If this was scripture was written today rather than thousands of years ago, maybe this is how it would read. “Because the Lord your God is bringing you to a wonderful land, a land with well-maintained parks, hospitals, gyms, an awesome zoo, 4 lane highways, and plenty of restaurant choices, you will eat and be satisfied, and you will bless the Lord in the wonderful land that he’s given you.”


     Whether it’s the 21st century or during ancient times, coming up with a thanksgiving list is the easy part. Just take a few minutes to think about your blessings, and I’m sure you’ll come up with a really long list.


     Every morning during my prayer time, I end my prayer by listing and thanking God for the many blessings in my life. A lot of times, I list the same things, but sometimes there will be other blessings that will come to mind, and I will name those instead.


     I have a friend who would often remind me, “our health is our wealth.” I’ve heard him say that enough times, that I now will often include this in my list of thanksgivings. “Thank you, God for my health, for being able to have a doctor, and for health insurance.”


     Thanks to my friend, this particular blessing of health will often now be near the top of my list when I name God’s blessings in my life.


     A friend who likes golf told me that even when he is having an awful round of golf where he’s hitting every other shot in the woods or into the water, he’ll simply say to himself, “But it’s still a nice day.” “But it’s still a nice day.”


     I like that! Even if things do not go our way, what a difference it can make when we remind ourselves, “But it’s still a nice day.”


     Sometimes, I’ll remember to simply say to God something like, “You know, God, it’s been a while since I have remembered to simply thank you for sending Jesus to die for my sins and for being such an awesome source of hope and comfort in my life. Thank you so much for not only saving me, but for also being present in my life to strengthen and guide me. Like, I can’t imagine what it would be like if you weren’t in my life. Thank you! I should tell you that more often!”


     So, in any given moment, we can always be thankful because our blessings are more than we can even count. The challenge isn’t in coming up with a list of blessings in our lives. The real challenge is in not taking these bessings for granted. That’s the challenge.


    Our scripture reading even offers us this warning: “But watch yourself! Don’t forget the Lord your God. Don’t become arrogant, forgetting the Lord your God.”


     We forget the Lord our God whenever we forget that we live in a world were many people go without the basic necessities of life. We forget the Lord whenever we forget that the blessings we have are in some measure due to other people who have helped us to get to where we are in life.


     I think of a successful farmer who started with little more than a mule and a small piece of land. He plows the fields, endures droughts and floods, and enjoys abundant harvests and prosperity. At the end of a long workday, he drinks a cold beverage on his beautiful front porch that he had built with his own hands. He thinks about his wealth and how far he has come in life.


     In Bolivia, a similar aged farmer who has worked just as hard as the first farmer is still poor because he hasn’t had adequate roads to transport his produce to the market. He also lives in an area where there are inadequate schools, a lack of opportunities for success, and poor health care. And yet, the first farmer believes that the only reason people are poor is because they just don’t work hard enough.  


     I remember my first impression of Guatemala when I went there on a mission trip several years ago. Our Guatemalan mission team leader had picked us up at the airport and drove us to the place where we would be working for the week.


     As I looked out the window of the van during our hour-long trip to our mission site, I took notice of the many Guatemalans who were working out in the coffee bean fields under the extremely hot sun. In addition to the men, I saw many women and children working in the fields.


     I tried to think how different my life would be if I was forced to work in the hot sun like that every single day. Even before I arrived at the place we would be staying for the week, God had already opened my eyes to how so many people live throughout our world.


     Our job was to dig a long water trench from a lake to a tiny village so that the people of that community wouldn’t have to walk everyday to get their water. I tried to imagine what it would be like to live in a tiny shack where there was no water.


     The Guatemalans of that village worked side by side with us and together we dug a long trench in the hot sun that week. They taught us to pace ourselves and drink plenty of water as we swung pix axes and shoveled the dirt.


     Thanks to that mission trip, I have a renewed appreciation for the cup of coffee I buy at the coffee shop. Somebody worked long hours in a hot field for very little pay so that I could go through a drive-thru and have that grande size speciality coffee.


     The challenge of Thanksgiving isn’t so much to come up with a list of our many blessings as important as that may be. The real challenge is to not forget those who struggle every single day just to make ends meet. This is the real Thanksgiving challenge.


     It’s not surprising then, that just a few chapters later following our Deuteronomy scripture reading we hear that we are to open our hands to the poor and to the needy. The sheer abundance of the land means that their wealth is to be shared, not hoarded.


     What helps you to not forget those who struggle to make a living?


     I think of waiters and waitresses who are on their feet all day and who get very little pay. The Thanksgiving challenge is to be thankful for their service and if they don’t remember to give me a refill, to offer them some grace. That’s not the easiest job especially when they’re waiting on several tables at the same time.


     When I focus only on my blessings and forget about the many people who are struggling and lonely, then I miss out on the true meaning of the Thanksgiving holiday.


     I remember a time when I conducted a graveside funeral service for a church member. After the service, I was to ride back with the Funeral Director.


     Before we left the cemetery, this funeral director made it a point to call the cemetery office that was in charge of the cemetery to let them know what a wonderful job their workers did to prepare the grave for the service. After he got off his cell phone, I told him that this was a really nice thing for him to do for those workers.


     He said that even though he thanked the cemetery workers in person, he knew that if he would also call their manager, that they would probably say something nice to those workers as well. This funeral director was living out the Thanksgiving challenge. He was thinking of the people who often receive little or no appreciation.


     As we celebrate the Thanksgiving holiday this week, let’s remember this Deuteronomy scripture reading and prepare two thanksgiving lists, one that lists our many blessings, and one that will remind us of those who are in need and ways that we can be a blessing to others.


     May all of us accept this Thanksgiving challenge because it will help us to be God’s thankful people.