First Steps – October 15, 2018

Jean-Pierre de Caussade said this (I find it very helpful):

“We will be perfect when we are in complete cooperation with God. The way toward this perfection is slow and hidden from our observation. There are many books written about these things. There are many theories and theological explanations. If we want, we can go to school and learn about all of this. We might even become competent to teach and write about it ourselves. Maybe we will even begin to give others some spiritual direction. To have only an intellectual understanding of our faith is to be like a sick medical doctor living among healthy people.

You don’t need to understand how medicine works in order to be cured. All you have to do is take it. You can be warmed and cheered by a fire without knowledge of combustion and chemistry. If we are thirsty, we want to drink of water rather than a book that explains thirst.  Holiness is not the result of study. If we have a thirst for holiness, reading about it will only make us thirstier!”

One of the things I like about this quote is the focus on a slow and sometimes hidden process of holiness. Sure, once a person is justified, they are holy according to God. It is a gift God gives to us via Jesus Christ. Romans says the righteousness of Christ is applied to us. Yet, there is the part of the salvation experience that is process-orientated, meaning it takes time—often a long time—a lifetime. It is good to be reminded of this.  Holiness is a lifetime pursuit. Therefore, settle in, give yourselves a little grace and trust God’s work in your life. You might not see the day-to-day change but over long periods of time, you definitely will.

 

This week’s reading:

  • Monday – Colossians 1
  • Tuesday – Colossians 2
  • Wednesday – Colossians 3
  • Thursday – Colossians 4
  • ​Friday – 1 Timothy 1

 

Please Pray for:

  • The people in need of help from the devastating damage from Hurricane Michael.
  • Our nation and our leaders.
  • Our families, homes, workplace, church, and community.
  • Those that are suffering and grieving.
  • Ongoing Building Renovations, Modifications, and Phase 3: Construction of New Youth Building and rear parking.
  • The United Methodist Church.

First Steps – October 8, 2018

“But sooner or later we must distinguish between what we are not and what we are.  We must accept the fact that we are not what we would like to be.  We must cast off our false, exterior self like the cheap and showy garment that it is.  We must find our real self…created to be a child of God, and capable of loving with something of God’s own sincerity and His unselfishness.” (Thomas Merton-No Man Is An Island).

Often we present one view of ourselves to others, and we withhold who we really are as if behind closed doors.  Perhaps it is fear.  Maybe we are scared of what people will think of us if they really see who we are.  The net effect is an inauthentic life.

What is interesting to me is that the message of the New Testament is one that recognizes the inconsistencies of what we are and what we are becoming.  To some degree it is a paradox.  We are both sinners and saints—at the same time.  God is aware of this and is not fooled by our inabilities to be authentic.  Therefore, at some point we must become more comfortable with the paradox of sinner and saint.  Perhaps the more we get comfortable with what we are and what we are becoming with the help of God’s Spirit, the less likely we are to live inauthentically.

 

This week’s reading:

  • Monday – Ephesians 6
  • Tuesday – Philippians 1
  • Wednesday – Philippians 2
  • Thursday – Philippians 3
  • ​Friday – Philippians 4

Please Pray for:

  • Our nation and our leaders.
  • Our families, homes, workplace, church, and community.
  • Our new year in Christian studies and activities.
  • Those that are suffering and grieving.
  • Ongoing Building Renovations, Modifications, and Phase 3: Construction of New Youth Building and rear parking.
  • The United Methodist Church.

First Steps – October 1, 2018

Anger and anxiety characterizes our lives more than patience and peace. We act in compulsive, competitive, and controlling ways.  We have our addictions and issues, though some of us hide them better than others.  We lose our temper, and our tongues rattle off with meaningless chatter or hurtful diatribes.  Often they are verbal arrows that pierce others.  Then all of this produces grief and guilt because we don’t want to live in this way.  A conflict rages inside us that our shame and guilt only fuels.  We know we ought to love, and at times we desire it deeply; but still, more often than not, we do not choose to love.

Yet, our experience with the risen Christ reorients and renews us towards compassion and kindness.  As we continually—daily—give ourselves to Christ, it creates a whole new capacity to love God, our neighbor, and even ourselves. We are all not what we want to be BUT we definitely aren’t what we used to be.  Thankfully, personal transformation is not left to us alone.  We are not abandoned to our own will and ability.  We participate with the Divine One.  It is the Holy One who breaks into our time, our space, our minds, our psyche, and our personality to give comfort and companionship in a very real way.  It is the Spirit’s work in us, which produces the inward transformation that is desperately needed.

Unfortunately, I forget the assurance that comes with the Spirit’s work, especially when I focus on the destructive areas of my life.  Therefore, trust that God is working on their areas.  We are all works-in-progress.  Remember the Spirit’s work in you.

 

 

This week’s reading:

  • Monday – Ephesians 1
  • Tuesday – Ephesians 2
  • Wednesday – Ephesians 3
  • Thursday – Ephesians 4
  • ​Friday – Ephesians 5

Please Pray for:

  • Our nation and our leaders.
  • Our families, homes, workplace, church, and community.
  • Our new year in Christian studies and activities.
  • Those that are suffering and grieving.
  • Ongoing Building Renovations, Modifications, and Phase 3: Construction of New Youth Building and rear parking.
  • The United Methodist Church.

First Steps – September 24, 2018

As you beginning of each day this week, I offer you this prayer:

Almighty and everlasting God, you have safely brought us to the beginning of this day. Defend us with your mighty power, and grant that this day we fall into no sin, neither run into any kind of danger, but that all our doings, ordered by your hand, may reflect your righteousness. Remind us that we live with you, now and forever, Amen. (Adapted from The Book of Common Prayer).

At the end of each day this week, I offer you this prayer:

O Lord, my God, I thank thee that you have brought this day to a close. I thank you that you give rest to the body and the soul. Your hand has been over me, guarding me, and preserving me, all this day. Forgive my feeble faith and all the wrong I have done this day and help me to forgive all who have wronged me.

Grant that I may sleep in peace under the care of your hand. Help me to rest though darkness is around me. Into your hands, I commend my body and soul, my loved ones, and my household. Thank you for what you have given me.  (Adapted from Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s Letters and Papers from Prison).

 

This week’s reading:

  • Monday – Romans 12
  • Tuesday – Romans 13
  • Wednesday – Romans 14
  • Thursday – Romans 15
  • ​Friday – Romans 16

 

Please Pray for:

  • Our nation and our leaders.
  • Our families, homes, workplace, church, and community.
  • Our new year in Christian studies and activities.
  • Those that are suffering and grieving.
  • Ongoing Building Renovations, Modifications, and Phase 3: Construction of New Youth Building and rear parking.
  • The United Methodist Church.

First Steps – September 17, 2018

Martin Bucer was a German priest and friend to Martin Luther. Under God’s direction, Bucer was a proponent of The Reformation.  Because following Christ doesn’t always equate to an easy life, Bucer’s obedience resulted in exile and a life of poverty.  What I’ve always enjoyed about Bucer is his writings on love and care of others as a natural expression of one’s faith.

Bucer would often say that if you want to follow Christ and change your perspective and behavior, then take all your concern for yourself and redirect it towards others.  Genuine love, which fulfills every Biblical command, doesn’t seek its own profit at the expense of welfare of another.  He said, “the best, the most perfect and blessed condition is that in which we can most usefully and profitably serve others.  Keep in mind that spiritual service is superior to material service and that the community is more important than individuals…the responsibility of service to others rests upon both the spiritual and secular leaders.  There can be no greater plague than people seeking their own advantage” (Instruction in Christian Love).

For many people, they live on the work of others.  But followers of Christ do the opposite.  The Christian gives up what might be rightly due so that one can help another.

 

 

This week’s reading:

 

  • Monday – Romans 7
  • Tuesday – Romans 8
  • Wednesday – Romans 9
  • Thursday – Romans 10
  • ​Friday – Romans 11

Please Pray for:

  • Our nation and our leaders.
  • Our families, homes, workplace, church, and community.
  • Our new year in Christian studies and activities.
  • Those suffering due to catastrophic natural disasters.
  • Ongoing Building Renovations, Modifications, and Phase 3: Construction of New Youth Building and rear parking.
  • The United Methodist Church.

First Steps – September 10, 2018

Gratitude enlarges one’s capacity for delight.  When one expresses gratitude, one experiences more joy, more happiness, more peace, and is better attuned to what God wants to bestow independent of circumstances.  When one expresses gratitude, one finds delight in the goodness of God.

Therefore, our task this week is to find ways to express our gratitude.  For some, it might be written reflections in a journal.  For another, gratitude might be expressed vocally to a friend or family member. Yet for another, it might be the daily naming of one single thing that brings joy.  Perhaps for another, it is a list of things most thankful for that hangs on a refrigerator.  The key is to find a way to express your gratitude to God and others.  Don’t wait or put it off.  Begin today.

James 1:7 says, “Every generous act of giving, with every perfect gift, is from above, coming down from the Father of Lights, with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change.”

 

This week’s reading:

  • Monday – Romans 2
  • Tuesday – Romans 3
  • Wednesday – Romans 4
  • Thursday – Romans 5
  • ​Friday – Romans 6

 

Please Pray for:

  • The United Methodist Church
  • Our families, homes, workplace, church, and community.
  • ​Our nation and our leaders.
  • Those suffering due to catastrophic natural disasters.
  • ​Ongoing Building Renovations, Modifications, and Phase 3: Construction of New Youth Building and rear parking.