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, February 9, 2026

Sermon (February 8) “Who Is Your Isaiah?” by Rev. Robert McDowell

February 8, 2026

Beulah UMC & Oak Grove UMC

     Valentine’s Day is just around the corner. And as you know, there are all kinds of cards that you can buy for that special person in your life.

     But sometimes, these cards can be a little too honest.  I would strongly advise you to not buy any of these cards even if the messages reflect your true feelings toward your loved one.

     So for example, even if this card expresses your true sentiments do not under any circumstances give your loved one this Valentine’s Day card: 

     And definitely do not give your sweetie this card: 

     I don’t even want to think about what was going through this guy’s mind when he bought this card: 

     I don’t care how much this card reflects your true feelings, do not even think about buying this card: 

     Stay away from this card because it’s not going to go over very well:

     And last, but not least, if this card expresses your true feelings about your relationship with your loved one, I’m here to tell you that you need to rethink what you’re doing.

     Total honesty might not always be the way to go when buying a Valentine’s Day card, but it’s something that we need to always think about if we want to be the people that God has called us to be. There are times in our lives that we need someone who can lovingly point out areas of our lives that need reexamining.

     All of us have blind spots that prevent us from seeing who we really are and who God wants us to become. Just like cars have blind spots that keep us from seeing another car passing by us in the other lane, we too, can be blocked from seeing our true selves.

     Many of us have cars that have the blind spot monitoring system on our side mirrors to help us see cars in the other lane that we wouldn’t be able to see without it. It flashes an orange or red light indicating that a car is approaching from behind us in the passing lane. 

     It’s designed to keep us from having to turn our heads so that we can keep our eyes on the road. It took some time for me to learn to trust these little blind spot mirrors, but they are super helpful.

     The Old Testament prophets, like the prophet Isaiah, served as blind spot mirrors for the people of Israel. Their role was to help God’s people see what they weren’t able to see with their own eyes, or more likely, what they refused to see with their own eyes.

     Being a prophet was a very lonely life. They weren’t the type of people to invite to social events because people knew that they would be the Debbie Downers of the party. Nobody wants to be confronted about their unethical practices and behavior when they’re trying to mingle by the punch bowl. Pretty soon, prophets are shown the door and asked to never come back again.

     Prophets specialize in truth-telling and they’re not the kind of people who back down easily. After all, they are the mouthpieces of God. They have been given a fresh word from God that will most likely not go over so well when they open their mouths. They know to not take rejection personally since they are just the messengers making a delivery.

     Isaiah was one of those lonely prophets. In our Old Testament scripture reading, he tells the people of God something they probably already knew but didn’t want to hear. He tells them that they are rebellious and do not have the right attitude in how they are practicing their faith.

     Serving as one of those blind spot mirrors, Isaiah calls it like it is. He says that they are just going through the motions in their worship of God and that is unacceptable.   They show up for worship every week, but their actions don’t match their words the rest of the week. They are what we would call Sunday Christians.

     One of my favorite teachings of Jesus is when he talked about how we often notice a speck in someone else’s eye but somehow we are unable to notice when a log is in our own eye.

     Jesus often used crazy comparisons to get his point across and in this case he was reminding us that we all have blind spots that can prevent us from seeing the areas of our lives that are in need of transformation.

     Like Isaiah, Jesus also saw himself as a prophet, a spokesperson of God. His challenging words and teachings even contributed to him getting crucified on a cross. We don’t always like it when someone puts a mirror in front of us. It can be a painful experience.

     I met with another pastor over lunch. He told me about someone in his congregation who was racist in some of the things he said. He said how he had tried to point out to him how his comments and actions regarding people of color were un-very un-Christlike and inappropriate, but he just wasn’t getting through to this man.

     I said to my friend, “Maybe try a different approach. Have him read Flannery O’Connor.”

     Flannery O’Connor wrote several thought provoking short stories out of the Deep South during the early part of the twentieth century. Her story entitled, “Revelation” is about what one woman is given to see, a revelation of her true self through a teenage girl in a doctor’s office waiting room.

     Ruby Turbin, the main character in the story, is portrayed as a very judgmental white woman who grew up with very racist attitudes.

     Ruby and her husband Claud own a small farm with cotton, hogs, and soybeans, and a number of black workers. Ruby has taken Claud to the doctor’s office after a farm accident. Sitting there, she surveys the attributes of everyone in the waiting room.

     As she silently watches the people in the waiting room, she secretly judges them and categorizes them in her mind.

     As she scans the people in that doctor’s waiting room, Ruby silently thanks God that she is a good, hard-working, church-going woman, and not like what she refers to as the white trash, the lunatics, and people of color.

     Somehow, one teenage white girl who is waiting with her mother and brother is able to see through Ruby’s false pretenses.  She is able to detect Ruby’s patronizing ways and can hear what she is thinking about each person in the waiting room.

     The girl finally has enough of Ruby’s rude thoughts. She throws a book at her, physically attacks her and then calls her a “warthog from hell.”  The girl is subdued by the doctor and Ruby and Claude go home.

     Like the prophet Isaiah did for the people of Israel, this girl had put a mirror in front of Ruby who was blinded by her own racist and judgmental attitudes. Sometimes the reflection in that mirror surprises us because we aren’t aware that this is who we really are.

     But the story continues.That night, Ruby is restless and can’t sleep. All she can think about is what that girl said and did to her at the doctor’s waiting room.

     She begins to cry, but what at first seemed like remorse turns into anger as she wonders why this girl chose to attack her instead of someone else in that waiting room, who in her mind deserved it way more than she did.

     This internal questioning and restlessness was just the beginning of a transformation that was beginning to take place in Ruby’s attitudes thanks to a divine revelation that she was about to experience.

     The next day there on her farm, Ruby sees a purple streak in the sky. She notices a swinging bridge coming down out of heaven. And on that bridge were people going to heaven and they were all so happy.

     The first people in line were the ones who Ruby had looked down upon all her life, people like the ones she had been judging in that doctor’s waiting room the previous day. And they were all heading to heaven together.

     And at the end of the procession were good and respectable people like she and Claude, people she thought to be morally superior to anyone else. But she noticed that as they were heading up to heaven that even their virtues were being burned away.

     And as she watched this revelation of God’s grace being extended to all people, she could hear the crickets on her farm singing, “Hallelujah!” And that’s how the story ends.

     And so I said to my friend. Have him read that story by Flannery O’Connor and if that doesn’t work, I don’t know what else to tell you.

     Who is your Isaiah? Who are the people in your life who help you to see your blind spots? Who are the people who help you to experience a revelation that can bring transformation in your life?

     I ran into a pastor one day. He’s been a friend of mine over the years. He knew that I would be retiring soon and he asked me what I would miss about serving as a full-time pastor.

     And I responded by saying, “Well, I definitely won’t miss having to fix the church toilet right before a worship service is to begin, or finding out on a 5 degree winter day that the church boiler all of the sudden stopped working. And I wouldn’t miss dealing with HR issues in the church. And…”

    And before I could continue, my friend interjected and said, “Now, don’t get too cynical, my friend.” I knew he said it in a funny way, but his comment hit me like a ton of bricks, revealing a cynical and negative side of me that I didn’t realize was there.

     I’m sure he didn’t realize it, but in that moment, he was my Isaiah, helping me to see something inside of me that was in need of God’s grace and transformation. I remember thinking to myself, “I don’t want to become a cynical person. I want to be a person of hope and encouragement.”

     When Isaiah spoke to the people of Israel, he wanted them to be the people that God had created them to be. He wanted them to not only worship the Lord with their lips, but to also live out their faith in the ways they relate to others.

     We too, don’t always live out our faith and we fall short of who God has called us to be. Our blind spots prevent us from practicing what we preach.

     But then an Isaiah comes along. A book hits us on the head. The blind spots are removed, and we come face to face with the painful truth of who we really are.

     Yes, we are all sinners. But we also discover a God of grace, a God who offers us love and forgiveness, the same love that is offered to everyone else, even those we think deserve it the least.

     And when our blind spot is finally removed, and if we listen carefully enough, if we really, really listen, somewhere off in the distance, we too, can hear the crickets singing, “Hallelujah!”


Sunday (February 8) Pastoral Prayer

February 8, 2026

Beulah UMC & Oak Grove UMC


Merciful God, we do pray that you would open our eyes and our hearts to what you want to reveal to us today. As painful as it may be, thank you for those Isaiahs that you send our way to help us see those areas of our lives that are in need of your transforming grace. Remove any blind spots that have been blocking our vision of who you are, who we are, and who you want us to become.

 

On this Super Bowl Sunday, remind us that we are also on a team, a team that according to the Prophet Isaiah, focuses on sharing our bread with the hungry, blessing the homeless, and providing clothing for those in need. We want to be a team that not only worships on Sunday mornings but who also care about the injustice and oppression that we see and read about during the week.


Lead us to be your salty Christians who help others to see you in us. Lead us to be your lampstands who provide light for those who are discouraged and in need of hope. And we especially pray for the people on our prayer list as well as the many other joys and concerns that are on our hearts and minds this day. Send your healing, guiding, and comforting presence to all who are in need of you this day.

 

Silently now, we wait for thee, ready our God, thy will to see, open our eyes, ears, and hearts, illumine us, Spirit divine. And now as your team of salty and light shining Christians, we join in praying this pray 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.


Sunday, February 1, 2026

Sermon (February 1) “Count Your Blessings” by Rev. Robert McDowell


 February 1, 2026

Beulah UMC & Oak Grove UMC


    There will be a football game next Sunday...The winning team will receive the Vince Lombardi trophy which is created by Tiffany's of New York. The Super Bowl was watched by an estimated 128 million people last year.

 

     It is a contest of superlatives: the fastest, the strongest, the most powerful, the most determined. Besides the game there will be enticing  commercials which are usually unique and fun to watch.  The commercials are quite a display of all the things in the world that are said to bring us happiness:  cars, beverages, Doritos...

 

     It’s ironic that the designated Gospel reading for today is from Matthew 5 and is commonly called the Beatitudes, which mean blessing or happiness. What does bring us happiness?

 

     The disciples and others had gathered around Jesus to hear his message.  In Jesus' day as in ours, the marks of success were usually one's position in society, one's wealth, one's family, one's achievements.

 

     Happy are those who have, and especially those who have the most! These are the folks who are considered blessed, who are in the spotlight.

 

     Jesus however looks at his listeners and speaks of them being favored by God and he doesn't mention any of the usual terms of success. His list goes in a different direction because it deals with the heart and one's relationship with God and with others. 

    

     Words jump out at us: poor, meek, thirsty, grieving, persecuted, merciful, peace seeking, pure.

 

     Jesus is describing those who are part of his kingdom, those who are trying to follow him. This is their reality. This is our reality. He shares that God is with us whether our lives are empty or full. Even in brokenness, there can be blessing!

          

     Let's look at each of these 8 sayings: what is it like to participate in God's kingdom? What is in store for those who look to God for everything?

 

     A friend of mine shared an article about manor houses in England. (Think of Downton Abby) One house stood out among those featured. On the corridor walls were hung portraits of those who had been part of the estate.

 

     In this house, the portraits were of their servants. Through the years, generation to generation, the ones chosen to be honored were the ones who had served: the butlers, the maids, the gardeners.  The Beatitudes are the hall of fame for God's kingdom, portraits of those who serve God.

 

     As we look at the Beatitudes, are there ones that reflect your life?

 

-Honored  are the poor in spirit: There is good news for those who see the emptiness of their lives, and their need for grace. The people who know how frail they are and so they put their whole trust in God. They will not be disappointed.

 

-Honored are those who mourn: there is good news for those whose hearts are broken by their own loss and the tragedies of the world. In their vulnerability, they know their need for God and will in turn,  receive  strength, and deeper empathy for others.

 

-Favored are the meek: there is good news for those who realize who they are in God's eyes, who are unassuming and have humility that gives them power.

 

     Henri Nouwen, an author and professor taught at Yale and Harvard. He left teaching and went to be a part of the Daybreak Community near Toronto, Canada. The Community is made up of folks with mental and physical handicaps along with those folks who care for them. 

 

     Nouwen said that he experienced an identity crisis because people at Daybreak had not read his books, did not know his reputation or that he was famous. This forced him “to recognize his true identity.”  His accomplishments didn’t matter. What was important is that he could give and receive love as a child of God. 

 

-Honored are those who hunger for righteousness to prevail. There is good news for the one who yearns for suffering to end, and justice to come.

 

-Favored is the one who is merciful. There is good news for the one who sees what others see and feels what they feel and responds with mercy. You will find others will show mercy to you.

 

-Honored are those who are pure in heart. There is good news for those who are earnestly seeking to know God and to know themselves, who do the right things for the right reasons.

 

-Honored are those who are the peacemakers. There is good news for those who restore relationships between people. They are reuniting God's family.

 

-Favored are those who are persecuted: there is good news for those who are treated badly for doing good. Their dreams will come true.

 

     For the 1964 World's Fair in New York, an artist, Sister Mary Corita produced a banner which was 40 feet long and featured the Beatitudes. Amid all the advances of technology at the Fair including some of the first computers which were on display) her banner highlighted the joys of God's kingdom.

This is her translation which was written on the banner:

 

Happy are those who feel their spiritual need for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven. Happy are the gentle for the whole world belongs to them, Happy are those who hunger and thirst for what is right for they will be satisfied. Happy are those who show mercy for mercy will be shown to them. Happy are those who know what sorrow means for they will be given courage and comfort. Happy are the single-hearted for they will  see God. Happy are those who make peace for they will be known as the sons of God. Happy are those who have suffered persecution for the causes of goodness for the Kingdom of Heaven is theirs.

 

     All of us have been invited to a party, not necessarily a Super Bowl party, but a party with all who have responded to Jesus’ call to come and follow him. The Beatitudes show us who said yes to the invitation. I hope that we find ourselves in that company of famous and unknowns, of timid and brave hearts.

 

     Barbara Lemmel is a United Methodist pastor and she tells of driving her son Micah who was 3 years old to day-care on day. Micah was studying his reflection in the mirror on the sun visor.

 

     She decided to play a game with him and asked, “Who’s in the mirror? “Is it Daddy?  Uncle John ? An elephant? Is it Jesus? You know whenever you look in a mirror you see Jesus a little bit. Jesus is always in you a little bit.”   

 

     Micah was silent as he pondered that. And then he said,“I need Jesus to be in me a lot.”

 

     I would join Micah in his evaluation of our human condition. Micah also captured the essence of each of the Beatitudes: when we have compassion, when we are humble, when we are merciful, when we are peacemaking, when we are grieving, when we are ridiculed, when we are desperate to know God in every facet of our lives - then we are reflections of Christ! Living the Beatitudes helps us see our true identity.

 

       I would also join Micah from our Old Testament reading this morning where the prophet sounds a lot like Jesus when he says, “He has told you, O mortal, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.”

 

    Yes, there is a big football game next Sunday. If you do watch the Super Bowl, I hope you have some of your favorite snacks and that you enjoy the game. When the cheering is over, the pizza is gone, and the confetti falls on the winning team, remember that you can also count your blessings.

 

     These are the blessings that lead to the greatest honors and the deepest joys in this life, a life that is centered on being part of God’s kingdom here on earth.

 

     Blessed are you.