Sunday Morning

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Detour

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

            Life doesn’t let up just because it’s Lent.  There are still appointments to keep, work to be done, and distractions all around.  Finding time to focus in on The Gospel message is hard.

            It’s always been hard.  It will continue to be, here on earth. 

            I remember one year when this was especially true for my family.  In 2006, at 5 and 7 years of age, my daughters were becoming more conscious of the world outside of our home and church.  The “Easter” bunnies were out in full-force that year at the mall, on school worksheets and in friends’ toy boxes.  It’s only a problem, I think, when it begins to overshadow the real meaning of Easter in kids’ minds and hearts, which is just what began to happen with my daughters.  Their lives were getting busier, and God wasn’t always fitting in.

            To make matters worse, we were traveling that year.  Leaving on Maundy Thursday for Virginia, and returning the Monday after Easter, we would miss church at a time when we really needed to be there.

            I remember praying for my family often that Lent, asking God to help me keep our lives focused on Him.  I also remember overwhelming my daughters with Easter message ‘reminders’, to the point where they began to resent it.  Somehow I had got it in my head that I was the one responsible for making sure they didn’t miss the point.

            My life had become busier too, you see, and somehow, in the midst of it all, I had forgotten how amazing and wonderful our Lord is.

            While in Virginia, we were driving back from a day trip in Richmond when my husband lost his way.  I remember thinking it odd, because he never loses his way.  We ended up taking a very long detour, and passed a Lutheran church.  Noting the service times, we decided to return the next day, Easter Sunday, for worship.

            Something ‘magical’ happened at that service.  Maybe it was the recognition of familiar liturgies and prayers in a different setting that heightened our awareness of them.  The service, the sanctuary and the people were all different and yet somehow familiar too.    But there was something more.  My family and I sat in the pew attentively, as the Pastor spoke about (of all things) the busyness of life and holding on to our faith.

            My older daughter, Sarah, mustered up the courage to come forward for the children’s chat, where the pastor handed each of them a plastic egg to open.  Much to the kids’ surprise, all of the eggs were empty.  This was just like at the tomb on Easter morning, Pastor explained.

            Back at home the next day, after unloading our luggage, Sarah sifted through the clothes, toys, and memorabilia from our trip to find that plastic egg, and with a permanent marker wrote on it, “The Tomb was Empty!”  Praise God, she got it!!  The message I’d tried so hard to get across to her, she got it!

            At that moment I ‘got’ it too.  Jesus Christ is alive, and at work in our lives.   He will continue to be, here on earth.  He will always get His message across.   He will always sift through the busyness of our lives, pull out what is important and bring it to our attention, if we will only come to Him.

            Sometimes, all it takes is a detour.

Strength

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

            Last week was rough.  Day after day I battled discouragement, and by the weekend it had the upper hand.  When Sunday came, I resisted an urge to miss church.  You see, I was feeling really transparent and didn’t want anyone to witness me in a state of spiritual weakness.  More than anything, I wanted to just hide away somewhere until it all passed.

            Do you ever feel this way?

            There’s so much pressure in our culture, and in this community, to always be strong, isn’t there?  I put so much pressure on myself to be spiritually strong.  I paste a smile on my face and try to hide the fact that I am wounded inside.   But that’s not what God wants for our Christian community.

            There is so much strength to draw from at church!  I’m just now coming to a new understanding of this.

            Again and again on Sunday, The Good Lord pointed out individuals to me who were exhibiting His strength.  It was as if He were drawing them into a tight circle around me.  At first this only made me feel worse.  I mean, being surrounded by people who are strong only highlights my own weakness, adding insult to injury, right?

            Not so in the Body of Christ!

            In the Body of Christ, we are all members of The One who is our source of strength.  We are One in Christ.  Our connectedness means that stronger members lend strength to weaker members.  When I am weak, you are strong for the both of us.  And when you are weak, I lend you my strength.

            We are connected in Christ, you and I, and so even now, as I think of you, I am gaining strength from your strength!

            I shared my struggle with one person at church.  I hadn’t planned to; my feelings just spilled out.  Her reaction surprised me!  I guess, unconsciously, I had expected her to be disappointed with me for being so weak.  But she wasn’t, she was compassionate.  The one thing I so needed right then was compassion.

            It takes a strong person to have compassion for someone who is weak.  Only someone connected to the steady flow of God’s strength can care like that.

            Praise God!

Hearing His Voice

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

I’m finding that I’ve got to listen very closely in order to hear my Savior Jesus in the din of everyday life.  How about you?

Hearing Him isn’t as hard for needy, anxious types like me – we sheep in the flock that stick close to the One with the rod (maybe even to the point of getting underfoot sometimes).

“Baaaa, I don’t know Lord, that hill is pretty steep and my legs are a bit wobbly today, baaaa.  Besides, there might be wolves on the other side, baaaa!  Do you really think we should Lord??  Well, o.k., I guess, so long as you go first, baaaaa.”

What about the rest of you?  What about those of you that mill around confidently in the middle of the flock?  It can get rather noisy in there.  What about you adventurous sheep exploring out along the fringe?  It can be dangerous out there.

How do you hear His voice?

Hopefully, along with the grass, you are feeding on The Good Shepherd’s Word every day.  Maybe you are even boldly carrying that Word to sheep outside of the flock!

I hope you come back into the fold every Sunday morning along with all of the other sheep who know His voice, to be fed by Him in that same Word and in sacrament, and to hear Him calling you out again.

I hope that, even with all of the other voices calling out all around you, you will always know The Lord’s call distinctly, and follow Him.

This week I am praying that you will know the Savior’s voice!  I’ll be reading in John 10 and Psalm 23 about The Good Shepherd.  Will you read along with me?  Leave a comment, tell a friend.