Wednesday, December 30, 2009

You Welcomed Me!

Good morning, Loved Ones,

Here's hoping that you all found meaning and hope in your Christmas celebrations and that the onslaught of serious winter has brought you peace and beauty, not vexation and despair.

The gospel passage assigned to New Year's day by the lectionary is an interesting and challenging one. It is Jesus' parable of the sheep and the goats from Matthew 25.

I was hungry and you fed me,
I was thirsty and you gave me a drink,
I was a stranger and you welcomed me . . . (Mt. 25:35)

What a message for the New Year! If we are going to make resolutions, perhaps they should be informed by that verse.

Today I give thanks for . . .

. . . a third Wednesday of Cafe en la Calle and the generous response of one man who has been waiting for work every day now for three weeks. In the middle of his third conversation with Pastor Alfonso he reached in his pocket and pulled out a $5 bill. Pastor Alfonso told him, "No. These elements are a small offering on our part." The man responded, "Yes, I know. It is a beautiful work and I would like to be part of it." Thanks be to God.

. . . 17 young people at youth group last night and particularly for my friend and our brother, Ivan. I give thanks for him and pray that he would find the strength of spirit to move away from all the things that are interfering with his abundant life with Christ. Thanks be to God.

. . . the courageous 70+ people who braved the treacherous roads and showed up for Christmas Eve Communion and Candlelight and the 35-40 who did the same on Sunday morning. What a great meal we had --- Jean's Steak soup, Veronica's Tamales and Maria's Chicken Mole -- Mmmmmmm. Thanks be to God.

. . . Sam and Randy who are helping to fashion an idea for a "Back to Summer" youth conference that has been a dream for over a year. Thanks be to God.

. . . and finally for Kent Parrett's beautiful labor of love that decorated the front of the sanctuary and inspired us throughout advent and Christmas and now into Epiphany --- stained glass images of the Nativity, lit up, artfully hovering over the front of the sanctuary. What an addition to our worship! What great beauty during the candlight on Christmas Eve. Thanks be to God.

Let's be resolved to be thankful whatever 2010 may bring and to remember to look for Jesus and serve him in the most unlikely places.

Pastor Rick

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Forget the Stress

Merry Christmas to all this morning!

Hope that your advent celebrations are leading you to the light. I am posting again this year an alternative Christmas song for you to sing. It is sung to the tune of "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas." It comes from the folks at Sojourners.

Have Yourself a Peace and Justice Christmas
Have yourself a peace and justice Christmas,
Set your heart a-right.
Flee the malls and focus on Christ’s guiding light.
Have yourself a peace and justice Christmas,
Give your time a way.
Share God’s love, And serve “the least of these” today.
Here we are, as we pray for peace,
We’ll live simply and give more.
We care for those far and near to us,
Which brings cheer to us, once more.
God brings down
The haughty from high places,
And lifts up the low.
God cares for the hungry and the humble, so –
Forget the stress and let the peace and justice flow!


Thanks be to God for . . .

. . . a great group of youth who chased each other around the ice skating rink last night.

. . . a second Wednesday morning of "Cafe en la Calle." Thanks to Gely, Javier and Maria who came along today and brought sandwiches, sweet bread and arroz con leche to share with the folks who were waiting and hoping for work. Please pray for Vince who is sleeping in a park in this cold weather because the shelter is full.

. . . Courtney and Yvonne who are completing community service at the church and doing so with positive spirits and not as life draining obligation.

. . . Harvesters Food Netwrok which enables us to share God's bounty with those of us who are struggling to make it.

. . . Glenda Jo Self and her daughter Theresa who, for the second year in a row, helped five familes to have some food and presents.


What are you thankful for today?

Gimme cinco!

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Good morning, Loved Ones,

As the season brings its stress and challenges, let the your gratitude rule the day.

Philippians 4:4-7 (The Message)

4-5Celebrate God all day, every day. I mean, revel in him! Make it as clear as you can to all you meet that you're on their side, working with them and not against them. Help them see that the Master is about to arrive. He could show up any minute!

6-7Don't fret or worry. Instead of worrying, pray. Let petitions and praises shape your worries into prayers, letting God know your concerns. Before you know it, a sense of God's wholeness, everything coming together for good, will come and settle you down. It's wonderful what happens when Christ displaces worry at the center of your life.


Thank God for . . .

. . . music teachers who help children like me and the bright eyed middle schooler at last night's Eisenhower M.S. find artistic expression through our voices and instruments.

. . . Erandeni Ontiveros who is gathering our church kids to do special music during worship next Sunday.

. . . Pastor Tom who consistently calls us to corporate confession Sunday after Sunday. Pastor Tom is the best 'bad guy' in the world!

. . . those who work in the healthy cooking program on Fridays. The teachers, the interpreters, the helpers, the organizers, the child care provider. This ministry is proving to meet a great need.

. . . a new ministry begun this morning. Yesterday Pastor Alfonso said, "Why don't we take coffee to the day labor site on Central Ave. tomorrow?" This morning we served coffee, hot chocolate, pancitos, granola bars and bananas to about 40 men and women who were waiting and hoping for work. They questioned why anyone would give away free coffee. "Es un mundo loco!" they said. We were blessed.

Let gratitude displace your worries today. Gimme conco!

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Monday, December 7, 2009

Buckets of Salvation

Good Monday, Loved Ones,

Your gratitude offering comes early this week. I'll be out of town until Thursday night and am disconnecting from cyberspace. So, please respond this week when you can.
Our inspiration this week comes from Isaiah.


Isaiah 12:2-6 (The Message)

2"Yes, indeed—God is my salvation.
I trust, I won't be afraid.
God—yes God!—is my strength and song,
best of all, my salvation!"

3-4Joyfully you'll pull up buckets of water
from the wells of salvation.
And as you do it, you'll say,
"Give thanks to God.
Call out his name.
Ask him anything!
Shout to the nations, tell them what he's done,
spread the news of his great reputation!

5-6"Sing praise-songs to God. He's done it all!
Let the whole earth know what he's done!
Raise the roof! Sing your hearts out, O Zion!
The Greatest lives among you: The Holy of Israel."

Today I raise the roof because . . .

. . . Kent Parrett took time and used his skills to produce a stained glass nativity scene for the front of the church. Can't wait to see it during the candlelight service.

. . . Javier Ruiz has agreed to fill in and coach Los Tiburones Tuesday evening weather permitting. Baby it's cold outside!

. . . Jim and Carolyn Mallinson, with dogs in tow, escaped a deadly, devastating fire at their home outside Sedalia Friday night. They lost everything but the clothes on their backs. Please keep them in your prayers.

. . . Bump Haynes continues to receive good reports in his health struggles. Keep praying.

. . . Alexander Jeffrey Dean's surgery was successful and he has begun the long and challenging process of healing and rehabilitation. Keep him and his mom, Amy, and dad, Greg, in your prayers.

. . . good folks at United Access handicapped equipment rented us a van at 1/2 price to get Alex home from the hospital on Friday. This would have been a very difficult task without the van's special equipment. Their generosity and compassion made the move a breeze.

OK, I pulled up one extra bucket of salvation water. What do you have the strength to pull up from your wells of salvation this week. Let's raise the roof with our heartfelt gratitude.

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Inadequate Thanksgiving

Good morning, Loved Ones,

Here's praying that this season of Advent finds you with your heads up, standing tall and paying attention. Live into hope!
Today's scripture for your reflection:

1 Thessalonians 3:9-13 (The Message)

9-10What would be an adequate thanksgiving to offer God for all the joy we experience before him because of you? We do what we can, praying away, night and day, asking for the bonus of seeing your faces again and doing what we can to help when your faith falters.
11-13May God our Father himself and our Master Jesus clear the road to you! And may the Master pour on the love so it fills your lives and splashes over on everyone around you, just as it does from us to you. May you be infused with strength and purity, filled with confidence in the presence of God our Father when our Master Jesus arrives with all his followers.

Today I give thanks for . . .

. . . Alexander Jeffery Dean, our nephew, who today is undergoing an extensive surgery on his legs. He's a brave trooper. Please pray for him today and for his mom, Amy, and dad, Greg.

. . . Pastor Alfonso Tot, my partner in ministry, for his steadfast commitment to building a community of faith, justice, peace and hope. His head is up, he stands tall and he pays attention while struggling with the incredible challenge of Parkinson's. Keep him in your prayers every day. I know you are in his.

. . . Sam, my son, who has chosen to spend his next semester in a border studies program rather than an exotic semester in Argentine. He'll be studying immigration issues and working with justice ministries and programs along the border. Keep him in your prayers.

. . . Lucas, my son, who has chosen the difficult IB studies program and continues to be committed to the life of his church and his music, soccer and swimming. He is growing into a fine young man. Please pray for Lucas.

. . . the ministries of Grandview Park Presbyterian Church, the justice work of IJAM (Immigrant Justice Advocacy Movement) and the neighborhood development work of AQUI (Affiliated Quality Urban Initiatives). All of this work is about the love of God filling our lives and splashing over on everyone around us. Pray for these efforts.

We are full of hope and the thanksgiving we share is insufficient for all the blessings we experience daily.

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Today we welcome Ingrid and Maria to our sharing of gratitude.

Sunday, November 29, 2009

“Pointed Toward the Sun”

Luke 21:25-36
November 29, 2009

Heads up.
Stand tall.
Pay attention.
These are the three points of my sermon today.
Shall we call it a message and head toward lunch?

This is the first Sunday of the Advent season.
The Advent season is a time of waiting and hoping.
It’s the first Sunday of the church year.
And what does the scripture describe this beginning Sunday?
The End.
The End, which in reality is a new beginning.

Have I got you totally confused yet?
Well, don’t be.
It’s very simple.
Heads up!
Stand tall!
Pay attention!

In this scripture today, Jesus wants us to be ready.
The world is a tumultuous place.
Tomorrow is always a question mark.
But when faced with the question of tomorrow Jesus says . . .
Heads up.
Stand tall.
Pay attention.

Apocalyptic movies are big these days.
2012, The Road, The Mist, The Happening, I Am Legend, Zombie Movies abound.
This passage from Luke’s gospel would be a great start for a screenplay.
“It will seem like all hell has broken loose sun, moon, stars, earth, sea, in an uproar and everyone all over the world in a panic, the wind knocked out of them by the threat of doom, the powers-that-be quaking.” (Luke 21:2-5-26, The Message)

For 2000 years people have believed this was their story.
Wars, rumors of wars, plagues, hurricanes, financial meltdowns . . .
All lead us to believe that this must be it . . .
. . . the beginning of the end.

When Luke wrote this gospel the temple in Jerusalem had been destroyed.
It seemed the beginning of the end.
When Rome was sacked it seemed like the beginning of the end.
When the Black Death hit Europe it seemed like the beginning of the end.
When the planes hit the twin towers it seemed like the beginning of the end.

When these things happens, Jesus says . . .
Heads up!
Stand tall!
Pay attention!

Keep your heads up!
Don’t stop looking up just because bad things are happening.
Don’t start walking around with your head down, fearful that the next axe will fall on you (even though it might).
Be optimistic because you have reason to be optimistic.
Why?
You can be optimistic in all circumstances because you know the end of the story is the beginning of the story.
Keep your head up.

Stand tall.
Stand tall in the face of trouble and persecution.
Don’t let the intimidation and fear that comes with bad events stop you from doing what is right.
Stand up for justice, for peace, for reconciliation and hope when others are acting out of fear and retribution.
Stand tall.

Pay attention.
Don’t get caught napping.
Don’t let your faith get dulled by parties and drinking and shopping. (The Message)
Keep your eyes open to what needs to be done while others are at Macys.
Pay attention.

Little apocalypses can happen in our lives day to day.
The wind can get knocked out of our lives so quickly.
We can't say what will happen tomorrow.
At any moment our world could come crashing down around us.
Yes, the world get s turned upside down for someone every single day—
. . . the death of a child or parent or spouse,
. . . a divorce
. . . a pink slip,
. . . a few little words from a doctor,
. . . a visit from Immigration Customs Enforcement.
The time will come when things like this will happen to you and to me.
How will we respond?

Nelson Mandela spent 27 years of his life in prison.
He spent that time in prison because he was committed to justice, hope & reconciliation.
During the worst years of South Africa’s reign of apartheid evil, Mandela was in prison.
He endured and came out of prison to lead the country toward reconciliation.
These are his words:
“I have found that one can bear the unbearable if one can keep spirits strong even when the body is being tested. Strong convictions are the secret of surviving deprivation. Your spirit can be full even when your stomach is empty. I always knew that some day I would once again feel the grass under my feet and walk in the sunshine as a free man. I am fundamentally an optimist. Part of being an optimist is keeping one's head pointed toward the sun, one's feet moving forward.”

Jesus tells us that in the end is the beginning.
In fact, Jesus’ death was the beginning.
As we point ourselves toward celebrating his birth, let’s not forget the real beginning.
The birth of a tiny Baby is the beginning of the end.
And the End is the beginning of God’s Kingdom without end.

So, no matter what happens tomorrow ‘keep your head pointed toward the sun.’

Heads up!
Stand tall!
Pay attention!

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

The Joy of Human Love

Good morning, Loved Ones,

Today is the one year anniversary of our Gimme Cinco discipline. Over 3700 expressions of gratitude have been shared among us in 52 weeks. We started out with 25 friends on our list and now have 74. Today we welcome eight new thankful people. Bienvenidos a Christy, Chrysanne, Jeanine, Jeanette, Deanna, K.R., Vicki and Ron. All are friends from communities across Kansas.

As you prepare to celebrate with family and friends this week consider this 'familiar' verse:


For the joy of human love,
Brother, sister, parent, child,
Friends on earth, and friends above,
For all gentle thoughts and mild,
Lord of all, to thee we raise
This our grateful hymn of praise.


Today I give thanks for . . .

. . . this community of gratitude and hope, for the shared thankfulness that has lifted me up week after week for the last year, for the stories we have shared of grace and challenge.

. . . my old buddy, Bob, who has reached out and created an opportunity for us have some fun together and reconnect.

. . . the Public Square community of friends who together are bringing new life to small towns and communities.

. . . the youth of Grandview Park Church and their leader, Randy, who continue to amaze and inspire, for their special thanksgiving dinner and gathering last night that brought together a wide variety of friends.

. . . Sam who returns today at 1:45 pm, for Luke who is out of school and has more time to battle me on FIFA 2010.

. . . Los Tiburones U17 soccer team -- a group of young men who help keep me young.

. . . an unexpected call this morning from a friend testifying to the power of prayer, community and the joy of human love.

OK, so I overshot the goal by two. Gimme Cinco or Gimme Siete or Gimme Doce. Just give me some "gentle thoughts and mild." Let's share our gratitude.

Gimme Cinco and hit reply to all!

Happy Thanksgiving!

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Intimate, Open and Bold

Hebrews 10:19-25
November 15, 2009

Shots fired on Tuesday night . . .
In front of the church . . .
By a member of the church . . .
By one of our own . . .
By someone whom we love . . .
By someone in whom we have invested much time and hope . . .
Makes you want to scream . . .
Makes you want to get on your knees and punch the ground . . .

Shootings at 18th & Central . . .
Healthcare bills that don’t even consider 12 million people . . .
Fears being spread through people of faith that the economy will collapse . . .
Darkness and clouds and winter sets in and the light of the sun slants away from us . . .

Sometimes it seems that evil is having its way with us.
And we are tempted to lose hope . . .
We are tempted to throw in the towel . . .
Sometimes we are tempted to forget . . .
To forget all that we have shared together . . .
To forget all that God has taught us . . .

But the author of Hebrews wants us to remember.
We are called to remember . . .
To remember that we are part of a new way of living . . .
We are invited to live in an intimate relationship with the God of all creation.
Remember that Jesus has made it possible for us to draw near to God.
We can walk right up to God, right up to the Holy Place . . .

Because of Jesus.

Not because we are good . . .
Not because we do all the right things . . .
Not because we are anywhere close to perfect . . .
Only because Jesus has opened the door for us . . .

Jesus makes it possible for us to come to God and cry out and know that we have been heard.
Know that this Holy Parent will see us through the worst of times.

Because of Jesus we can be intimate with the God of all creation.
Because of Jesus we can be open with the God of all creation.
Because of Jesus we can even be bold with the God of all creation.

Intimacy – Its something sadly lacking in our world today.
Oftentimes our culture equates intimacy with sexuality.
But intimacy is the relationship a mother has with a child.
Intimacy is a husband and wife freely talking with each other about their fears, hopes and dreams.
Intimacy is brothers and sisters in Christ working elbow to elbow in the kitchen in service.
Intimacy is friendship, true friendship that hopes all things, believes all things and endures all
things.
This is the kind of relationship we have been invited to with God.
Intimacy with the God of the Universe . . .
Amazing!

Openness is a part of that intimate relationship.
When you have intimacy with a friend you are free to be open.
When you are angry, you can complain.
When you are sad, you can weep.
When you are joyful, you can sing.
And God sings, weeps and complains right along with you.
Just like your best friend.
Just like a loving spouse.
Just like good mother.

Intimate.
Open.
And bold.

We can be bold with God.
Because we are intimate and open we don’t have to be afraid to ask.
We can be bold with new ideas, with new activities, with living new life in the face of despair and
death.

And so, the writer of Hebrews says, because we have this intimate, open and bold relationship
with God through Jesus . . .
Because we know God like a best friend, like a loving spouse, like a good mother . . .
We can always move forward no matter what the circumstances.
We “keep a firm grip on the promises that keep us going.” (The Message)

But Hebrews reminds us that it’s not just about you and your relationship with God.
The writer goes on to say that the confidence we get from our relationship with God, makes us
cheerleaders for one another.
We are to be inventive, provocative, bold in our love for each other.
And we are to cheer each other on to do good works.

The love we have for one another and the good works we do come from our intimate, open and
bold relationship with God, not the other way around.
We are not invited to the Holy Place because of our love and good works.
Our love and good works become real because Jesus has opened the door for us.

So, while the shots are fired . . .
While the economy crashes . . .
While our politicians ignore those in need . . .
While the darkness of winter sets in . . .
We dance.
We celebrate Karina, a young woman who has an intimate, open and bold relationship with God.
We share what we have and eat wonderful feasts together.
We do not neglect to come together.
For quinceneras . . .
For birthday parties . . .
For dinners . . .
For coffee . . .
For Bible study . . .
For prayer . . .
For worship . . .
For worship . . .
For worship . . .

Why?

Because of Jesus.

He is our best friend.
He is our loving spouse.
He is our good parent.

Be intimate.
Be open.
Be bold.

No matter what happens.

God is with you.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Each Hour

Good morning, Loved Ones,

As the Thanksgiving holiday rapidly approaches, perhaps our Gimme Cinco discipline will gather strength. Today a hymn verse:

For the beauty of each hour
Of the day and of the night,
Hill and vale, and tree and flower,
Sun and moon and stars of light,
Lord of all, to thee we raise
This our grateful hymn of praise.


I give thanks for Karina's beautiful 'hour' on Saturday. For a celebration in which all could share. A quincenera full of solid worship, great food and joyful dance.

I give thanks for Richard who enacted our "Intimate, Open and Bold" message Sunday by raising his hand in the middle of the sermon and asking a question that was on his mind. What an incredible blessing to have young people engaged in worship!

I give thanks for Jennifer who remembers a great 'hour' she had at the Presbyterian Youth Triennium 12 years ago and has encouraged many of our youth to be a part of next Summer's gathering of 7000 youth.

I give thanks for Public Square Communities, Pastor Terry's ministry to small towns and communities. Thousands of people's lives are being changed and the 'hour' for their yearly gathering is this Thursday and Friday in Hutchison, KS.

I give thanks that Lou Dobbs 'hour' on CNN has come to close. No matter where he goes or what he does in the future, at least he won't have the CNN banner to give him credence. Thank God that one bully's voice has been silenced, if only for a few 'minutes.'

The big Day is approaching. Has the Gimme Cinco discipline given you any new insights into gratitude? What 'hours' are you thankful for?

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Not a Mouse

Good morning, Loved Ones,

Today I am awake to the many challenges we face as a church, as a community, as the people of God in this world. Let's not gloss over the challenges as we thank God even for the challenges.

Psalm 36:5-12 (The Message)

5-6 God's love is meteoric,
his loyalty astronomic,
His purpose titanic,
his verdicts oceanic.
Yet in his largeness
nothing gets lost;
Not a man, not a mouse,
slips through the cracks.
7-9 How exquisite your love, O God!
How eager we are to run under your wings,
To eat our fill at the banquet you spread
as you fill our tankards with Eden spring water.
You're a fountain of cascading light,
and you open our eyes to light.
10-12 Keep on loving your friends;
do your work in welcoming hearts.
Don't let the bullies kick me around,
the moral midgets slap me down.
Send the upstarts sprawling
flat on their faces in the mud.

I am thankful today that we have not slipped through the cracks and that bullies ultimately lose. A gun was fired in front of the church last night and no one was physically hurt. The emotional trauma and scars are there, but, thank God, no blood was spilled. Let us pray for the shooter who is one of our own.

I am thankful today that Pastor Alfonso and Randy and Greg were there last night when the trauma occurred and that they comforted the young man who was terribly shaken. Let us pray for this young man.

I am thankful today that the church's response to threats and bullies is, first of all, to care for the shaken, troubled and injured, and, secondly, to work for reconciliation and peace.

I am thankful for IJAM, the 40 congregations who are working for positive, humane and merciful immigration reform and working against the "bullies and moral midgets" who attack us and slander our brothers and sisters. O for a mud pit large enough to hold them all.

I am thankful today for a warm bowl of oatmeal loaded with brown sugar and an early morning bike ride around the lake with a friend. (I give thanks especially for the brown sugar.)

God's love is exquisite. Tell me about it! Gimme cinco.

Pastor Rick

http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Friday, November 6, 2009

I'll Sing It!

Good Morning, Loved Ones,

November has arrived! This is the designated month for gratitude here in the US. Fortunately, you are among the faithful who practice it year-round. We have completed the first 11 months of Gimme Cinco. Over 3500 expressions of gratitude have been shared among us. The psalmist tells us that this is no time to quit sharing our gratitude.

Psalm 89 (The Message)

1-4 Your love, God, is my song, and I'll sing it! I'm forever telling everyone how faithful you are.
I'll never quit telling the story of your love—
how you built the cosmos
and guaranteed everything in it.
Your love has always been our lives' foundation,
your fidelity has been the roof over our world.



I sing to the birthdays of so many up and coming saints celebrated in the last couple of weeks. Pastor Tom, Pastor Alfonso, Pastor Terry, Lisa Take, Greg Take, DeDe Behrens . . . and many others who never quit telling the story of God's love. "Ba-ba-da-ba-ba-ba - Happy Birthday to you! Cha-Cha-Cha!"

I sing to the youth, their leader, Randy, and to all those who contributed to make the Lock-in a "great success!" "It's the song of the redeemed rising from the Grandview Park basement! It's all God's children singing, Glory! Glory! Hallelujah! He reigns!"

I sing to the adult Sunday school class that faithfully meets every Sunday at 9:45 under Pastor Tom's leadership. It's clear that God's love is the foundation of their world. "
What more can He say than to you He hath said—To you who for refuge to Jesus have fled?
"

I sing to the children who celebrated a 'harvest party' Saturday night because Gely and Erandeni made it happen. "Little ones to Him belong. We are weak, but He is strong."

I sing to the glorious beauty of these fall days and the waning warmth of the sun as it goes to spread it's glory on the southern hemisphere.
"For the beauty of the earth, For the glory of the skies, For the love which from our birth Over and around us lies, Lord of all, to thee we raise This our hymn of grateful praise."

What will make you sing out today? Don't keep it to yourself. Let's hear it.

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Divine Hospitality

Isaiah 25:6-9
November 1, 2009

If I say “Thank you” you say, “You’re welcome.”
In Spanish it’s different, isn’t it?
If I say “Muchas gracias” you say, “de nada.”
Which literally means what in English? . . . “It’s nothing.”
But in English we say, “You’re welcome.”
Which in Spanish literally means “Tu eres bienvenido.”
Those are two quite different responses to thank you.
Oh, it’s nothing! In Spanish
You are welcome! In English
I think that us English speakers don’t really think about what we are saying when we say “You are welcome.”
Welcome is the hospitality word.
When we say, “welcome” we are saying, “come on in. What’s mine is yours. Make yourself at home!”

Maybe subconsciously that’s why fewer people say “you’re welcome” these days.
When I say “thank you” to people these days I hear “no problem” or “sure” in response more often than I hear “you’re welcome.”
It’s amazing that our response to ”Thank you” is supposed to be, “Take it. Take what ever you need. You are welcome to it.”

You know who says, “You are welcome” and really means it, though?
When we say, “Thank you for this day, Lord!” He says . . .
“You’re welcome! And there’s more where that came from!”
When we say, “Thank you for this food, Lord.” He says . . .
“You’re welcome! And there’s more where that came from!”
When we say, “Thank you for life, Lord!” He says . . .
“You’re welcome! And there’s more where that came from!”

God is the one who really knows what “You are welcome!” means.

The book of Isaiah tells us about this divine hospitality.
The church father Ambrose told Augustine that Isaiah wasn’t merely a prophet. He said that Isaiah is the first apostle and evangelist.
The passage we read today is the 1st apostle and evangelist at his best.
What an incredible vision!

Isaiah tells us that God is going to set a lavish banquet for . . . whom?
For the Jews only?
For the Christians only?
For the Muslims only?
For English speakers only?
No. No. No and no.

Isaiah tells us that God is getting ready to welcome all people to the Table.
God is setting the Table with filet mignon and KC strips.
There’ll even be soy burgers so that everyone feels welcome.
And it doesn’t matter if you prefer a bold cabernet or sparkling grape juice.
Whatever it is, God will have the Table full enough to meet everyone’s needs.
Everyone. All. Todos son bienvenidos.
That’s what God is up to, the divine “You are welcome.”

But Isaiah tells us that as God is welcoming us to the Table, God is also eating.
What is God eating?
God is swallowing up death.
God is making a meal of all those things in life that limit us.
God is swallowing up all those things that diminish our well-being.
God is swallowing up all those things that try to take away our community.

Death here is more than just when the breath leaves our bodies.
The death that God is chewing up and spitting out is the death that produces individualism . . .
Death that produces greed . . .
Death that produces poverty . . .
Death that produces warfare . . .
Death that produces racism . . .

God is like a great sea monster gobbling up all these sharks and jellyfish we produce and he doesn’t even say thank you.
He doesn’t have to because God says what?
“You’re welcome.”
God welcomes us to the Table at the same time he is gobbling up all the things that threaten us.
Oh, yes, God can indeed multi-task!

God in Jesus does the hard work for us.
The positive and the negative.
He sets the table and welcomes us.
While at the same time eliminating threats to his generosity.
When we come to this Table, all we can really say is . . .
“Thank you!”
Thank you for welcoming us, God, all of us!
Thank you for defeating all of those things that prevent us from welcoming others.
At this Table, God is teaching us to say, “You are welcome!” and mean it.

Now because we live in an individualistic society and culture, I’m supposed to say what this means for you and your individual salvation.
Well you get to live forever, right?
You get your mansion on the hill and an Escalade with a Quik Trip in your garage.
You see, we have traded the real sweetness of the good news for getting mine in the sweet by and by.

Isaiah’s vision of what God is about, Isaiah’s vision of God’s salvation has very little to do with my wants and desires.
What God is about, according to Isaiah and Jesus and Paul and Peter and John and Mary and Martha and Miriam and Ruth and Naomi is a community, a community called God’s Kingdom.

It is a place where the tears will be wiped away.
It is a place where a table is set for all people.
It’s a place that Jesus said we can experience now.
It’s a place so close that at times we can actually experience it.

Like yesterday morning.

Yesterday morning the kitchen downstairs was buzzing with people who got up early and came to set the Table for our youth after their lock-in.
I was burning the bacon.
Greg and Javier were screwing up the pancakes.
Telma and Carmen were fixing perfect eggs and trying to fix the bacon and the pancakes.
Lisa, who had spent all night on her birthday with the youth, was entertaining us with her ebullient personality.
And all the while the youth were stumbling into the kitchen, wiping sleep from their eyes and saying, “What are you burning, Pastor Rick?”

Yesterday morning I saw Isaiah’s vision.
I smelled it.
I tasted it.
And all I can say is, “Thank you, Lord. Thank you, thank you, thank you, Lord!”
And all God ever says back to me is . . .
“You’re welcome.”
“You are welcome . . .
What’s mine is yours . . .
There’s more where that came from . . .
Make yourself at home . . .
Mi casa es su casa . . .
You’re welcome!”

Saturday, October 31, 2009

“Thank You Very Gracias!

Thanks to Pastor Alfonso the title of this blog has become a common phrase at Grandview Park Presbyterian Church. When he’s feeling really grateful he throws in a “maltiosh” (Maya Quiche for “Thank you!”). Along with Pastor Alfonso we have begun to live these words daily.

“A life in thankfulness releases the glory of God.” ~ Bengt Sundberg

For 48 consecutive weeks we have practiced shared gratitude with our e-mail list called Gimme Five/Dame Cinco. Every Wednesday for 11 months we have shared 5 things for which we are grateful. In the beginning there were about 25 people on our list. Now we have 65. In 48 weeks we have shared over 3200 expressions of gratitude. This shared gratitude has lifted my spirit on many occasions. Each Wednesday I try and stay close to my computer so that I can see what others are thankful for. I’m reminded of Paul’s words, "Every time you cross my mind, I break out in exclamations of thanks to God." (Philippians 1:3)

Dr. Robert Emmons has found through research that when people write down things they are thankful for their happiness increases by 25%. People who participated in this study felt fully 25% happier - they were more optimistic about the future, they felt better about their lives and they even did almost 1.5 hours more exercise a week. Pastor Terry grabbed hold of this the third week of Gimme Cinco. He noted, "By end of day, were it not for this discipline, I would literally ignore, not notice, bypass and forget key people who absolutely paved the way for the path(s) I took in that one day. And by morning, another list emerges: either STILL forgotten from the day prior or ALREADY standing on the road ahead of me, already creating the agenda, the opportunities, the food, the potential for me to move forward with expectancy in the coming hours."

Our practice, I believe is even more beneficial than simply journaling. We share our gratitude. We don’t just write it down and keep it to ourselves. We share it with one another, both the good stuff and the bad. And by sharing we build up one another and we build up our sense of community.

Paul in Ephesians says, “Thanksgiving is our dialect.” (Eph. 5:4). It doesn’t matter whether we say it in Quiche or English or Spanish. When we say “thank you” to God and each other, lives are blessed. So as we approach the Thanksgiving holiday think about how you can share your gratitude. Maybe you didn’t know about the Hump Day Gimme/Dame 5.0 and would like to join the group. All are welcome. The important thing is to practice gratitude daily. The Christian faith begins and ends in gratitude. Faith is a gift. Your life is a gift. Don’t forget to say thanks to the Giver! In the words of Pastor Alfonso, “Thank You Maltiosh Very Gracias!”

Gimme Cinco!
Pastor Rick
(If you would like to join in the Gimme Cinco dialogue just send an email to me at rudyflash@aol.com with Gimme Cinco in the subject line.)

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Reassuring Presence


Good Morning Loved Ones,

What has God done for you today?

Psalm 139 (The Message)

1-6 God, investigate my life; get all the facts firsthand.
I'm an open book to you;
even from a distance, you know what I'm thinking.
You know when I leave and when I get back;
I'm never out of your sight.
You know everything I'm going to say
before I start the first sentence.
I look behind me and you're there,
then up ahead and you're there, too—
your reassuring presence, coming and going.
This is too much, too wonderful—
I can't take it all in!

I give thanks for a safe and inspiring trip to the Christian Community Development Association conference in Cincinnati. For great messages, music and workshops . . .

I give thanks for my companions on the road -- Pastor Alfonso, Maria, Greg and Ingrid --- for great work yet to be accomplished in our neighborhood and community.

I give thanks for David who stepped forward to contribute even more to the anniversary lunch bill at the church. David's smile, warmth and generosity of spirit are inspiring.

I give thanks for Sam's fall break. I missed half of it, but I give thanks for every moment I have with him.

I give thanks for Luke's inspiring performance in goal last night. It was the last game of the HS season for him, and he and his team never gave up through very trying circumstances.

Go on ahead --- It's your turn. Gimme cinco, for God's sake!

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Don't Let It Get Away

Good morning, Loved Ones (evening to those up late on Tuesday),

Sharing my 5 on Tuesday night because of a trip early on Wednesday.

Psalm 34:11-14 (The Message)
11
Come, children, listen closely;
I'll give you a lesson in God worship.
12 Who out there has a lust for life?
Can't wait each day to come upon beauty?
13 Guard your tongue from profanity,
and no more lying through your teeth.
14 Turn your back on sin; do something good.
Embrace peace—don't let it get away!

I give thanks for the lesson in worship I received Sunday when we experienced two baptisms and a wedding on the 120 anniversary of the church. Actions do speak louder!

I give thanks for the warm smile and personality of Karina Rivera, one of the newest members of Christ's body.

I give thanks for Karina's brother, Max, the heartbeat of our worship experience and the other newest member of Christ's body.

I give thanks for Everardo and Teresa who made their promises to each other in the presence of the great congregation and before God.

I give thanks that after 120 years new promises are being made on the corner of 17th and Wilson.


I'm waiting . . . Dame cinco, por favor!

Pastor Rick

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Permission to Be

Good morning, Loved Ones,

Today a few words from Thomas Merton.

The most wonderful moment of the day is that when creation in its innocence asks permission to "be" once again, as it did on the first morning that ever was.
Here is an unspeakable secret: paradise is all around us and we do not understand.
It is wide open. The sword is taken away, but we do not know it:
we are off "one to his farm and another to his merchandise."
Lights on. Clocks ticking. Thermostats working. Stoves cooking. Electric shavers filling radios with static.
"Wisdom" cries the dawn deacon, but we do not attend.
(Thomas Merton, "A Book of Hours")

Let's attend to the wisdom of gratitude this brand new day.

For sidewalks and quiet streets and a four-legged companion to walk me into this day . . .
For God's permission to "be" once again and to shake off the doubts and dread of night . . .
For the paradise around us that we seldom see or understand . . .
For the radiant face of God in Jesus Christ which obliterates the shadows of our childish, vengeful, angry, sword toting god of punishment . . .
For the Wisdom found in little things . . .

Today I give thanks.

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

In Good Hands


Good morning, Loved Ones,

Welcome to Wednesday. Praying that all is well with you and yours today.

Psalm 146:5-10 (The Message)

3-9 Don't put your life in the hands of experts
who know nothing of life, of salvation life.
Mere humans don't have what it takes;
when they die, their projects die with them.
Instead, get help from the God of Jacob,
put your hope in God and know real blessing!
God made sky and soil,
sea and all the fish in it.
He always does what he says—
he defends the wronged,
he feeds the hungry.
God frees prisoners—
he gives sight to the blind,
he lifts up the fallen.
God loves good people, protects strangers,
takes the side of orphans and widows,
but makes short work of the wicked.
10 God's in charge—always.
Zion's God is God for good!
Hallelujah!

Today I give thanks . . .

. . . for the pit crews at our two NASCAR booths last weekend. It's hard on the the feet, the knees, the back, the ears and sometimes even the spirit and the soul. But it's a good bonding time and definitely helps fund the ministry of Grandview Park. Thank God for people willing to give their time and energy.

. . . for those two disciples with the repetitive syllable names, DeDe and Gigi, who fueled and organized the pit crews for our NASCAR fund raiser. It takes months to prepare and weeks to recover. Thank God for leaders.

. . . for young people who don't give up even in the face of odds and worldly systems that are stacked against them. For poorly funded and coached urban futbol teams who get sent into the lion's den of suburban soccer mom's and dad's and team's with four coaches and top dollar facilities. I give thanks that God is faithful even in unjust situations and that young people can trust in God even when injustice surrounds them.

. . . for a church and elders and deacons who are ready to receive a new vision after 120 years of service and ministry. Thank God that Grandview Park did not get stuck in any one of those 120 years and is ready to follow Jesus into the next 120 years.

. . . for Bump Haynes and others like him who are facing health challenges and have put their hope in God.

We are in Good Hands (and I'm not talking about Allstate!). Let's share our gratitude that God is in charge.

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

God In Full View!


Good morning, Loved Ones,

Welcome to a brand new day. New opportunities, new chances to redeem yesterday and claim tomorrow, new hope, new faith, new grace.

Psalm 84 (The Message)

A Korah Psalm
1-2 What a beautiful home, God-of-the-Angel-Armies! I've always longed to live in a place like this,
Always dreamed of a room in your house,
where I could sing for joy to God-alive!
3-4 Birds find nooks and crannies in your house,
sparrows and swallows make nests there.
They lay their eggs and raise their young,
singing their songs in the place where we worship.
God-of-the-Angel-Armies! King! God!
How blessed they are to live and sing there!
5-7 And how blessed all those in whom you live,
whose lives become roads you travel;
They wind through lonesome valleys, come upon brooks,
discover cool springs and pools brimming with rain!
God-traveled, these roads curve up the mountain, and
at the last turn—Zion! God in full view!


Today I give thanks . . .

. . . for Dr. John Perkins, a humble preacher with a third grade education who has worked for 50 years for racial reconciliation in Mississippi and around the country. Dr. Perkins is a friend to all, even the klansman who nearly beat him to death. He will not allow others to box him in and sees new perspectives even at 80 years of age.

. . . for Pastor Alfonso, Maria, Greg and Ingrid, traveling companions on the road to Mississippi and partners in the AQUI work of building healthy community here in KCK.

. . . for Carmen Flores who can even interpret for Randy Lopez! Carmen communicates God's grace and love regardless of who is in the pulpit.

. . . for Randy Lopez who does it all --- preaches, leads the youth, emcees fiestas, coaches youth basketball, mentors, loves his community and his family . . .

. . . for honest friends who value relationships enough to confront and speak the truth.

. . . for all those who allow God to travel life's roads with them and who are blessed by the Life that comes into full view in them.

Have a wonderful day and know that we are all waiting for you to "gimme cinco"!

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

One Precious Day

Good morning, Loved Ones,

One more piece to share from the New Sanctuary trip.

Every day, Creation is renewed.
Wake up and see unfolding
In the spreading light of dawn,
The world and all it contains
Coming into being, new, fresh,
Filled with divine goodness
And love.
Every day, Creation is renewed.
Reflected in the great lights
We see a new day,
One precious day,
Eternity.

This precious day I give thanks . . .

. . . for David Cliburn, Interim Associate Executive Presbyter, who suggested that Heartland Presbytery might want to come and meet at a small, urban congregation that can't even figure out what language to speak. I thank God that he saw something in us that others, perhaps even we, missed.
. . . for presbyters -- elders and pastors -- who ventured off their beaten path to enter a neighborhood and community they might have once feared only to be welcomed, included, fed and nourished at the Lord's table.
. . . for Lucas, Natalie, Bump, Javier, Ruben, Max, Pastor Tom, Carmen, Karina, Pastor Alfonso, Pastor Rick, Pastor Terry and Randy who allowed the Holy Spirit to speak through them in worship.
. . . for friends like Arnold and Esther Rogers who come out of nowhere to lend a hand for friends and even for people they don't know.
. . . for One Precious Day to be remembered, celebrated and cherished as a sign of what the Lord can do through us and as an inkling of what we have to share that can build up the church and point us toward the Kingdom of God.

What do you "see unfolding" in this "spreading light of dawn?" It's a new day. Renew your heart, mind and soul with thanksgiving. Gimme cinco!

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Subtle Graces of Life

Good morning, Loved Ones,

Here is another piece of the Jewish liturgy. Again, it was shared at our NSM gathering in New York. It is called Aleynu.
The Aleynu praises God for allowing the Jewish people to serve him, and expresses their hope that the whole world will recognize God and abandon idolatry. As we are spending many hours this week in service, preparing for the Presbytery meeting on Saturday, I thought this piece was appropriate.

It is up to us to hallow Creation,
to respond to Life with the fullness of our lives.
It is up to us to meet the World,
to embrace the Whole even as we wrestle with its parts.
It is up to us to repair the World and to bind our lives to the Truth.
Therefore we bend the knee
and shake off the stiffness that keeps us
from the subtle graces of Life
and the supple gestures of Love.
With reverence and thanksgiving we accept our destiny
and set for ourselves the task of redemption. (Rami M. Shapiro)

Today I give thanks for . . .
1) . . . the supple gestures of love being performed by the many who are painting steps, replacing ceiling tiles, pouring concrete, cleaning stairwells, installing toilets, plastering walls and on and on and on . . .
2) . . . team leaders - Amy, Javier, Telma, Gigi, DeDe, Carmen, Dedric and Pastor Alfonso who are "wrestling with the parts" to make this meeting the best it can be.
3) . . . fiesta performers - Sudanese, Korean, Kenyan, Indonesian, Mexican, Guatemalan and Grandviewparkian.
4) . . . the opportunity for service the Presbytery meeting has provided us, the strength it will give us to do the next "task of redemption", and for the elevation of our self-image and for increased faith and trust in God.
5) . . . Sunday. It will truly be a day of rest for us, a Sabbath day of worship and celebration for service to God and our neighbors.

Let's bend the knee today and shake off the stiffness. Gimme cinco!

Pastor Rick

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

We Are Loved


Good Morning, Loved Ones,

Today I'd like to share a liturgical piece from the Jewish tradition. It is an interpretive version of the Ahavat Olam (Unending Love).

We are loved by an unending love.
We are embraced by arms that find us even when we are hidden from ourselves.
We are touched by fingers that soothe us even when we are too proud for soothing.
We are counseled by voices that guide us even when we are too embittered to hear.
We are loved by an unending love.
We are supported by hands that uplift us even in the midst of a fall.
We are urged on by eyes that meet us even when we are too weak for meeting.
We are loved by an unending love.
Embraced, touched, soothed, and counseled . . .
ours are the arms, the fingers, the voices;
ours are the hands, the eyes, the smiles;
We are loved by an unending love.
Blessed are you, Beloved One.

Today I give thanks for . . .

. . . Cole Herder who is tirelessly committed to his little town of Humboldt, Kansas and stands ready to step in and help even when he is unsure what is needed.
We are loved by an unending love . . .
. . . Bump Haynes who is courageously facing his radiation treatments while at the same time planning to welcome his fellow Presbyterians to his church, Grandview Park.
We are loved by an unending love . . .
. . . Mike Spears, Kent Parrett, Linda Haynes and many others who have come on days other than official work days to complete a project at the church.
We are loved by an unending love . . .
. . . Bill McCune, Russell Hays, Al Swartz, Dedric Moore, Bob Bowlin and many others who over many years have devoted themselves to repairing, maintaining and improving our lovely old building.
We are loved by an unending love . . .
. . . Pastor Tom who works to bring an artistic sensibiity to whatever he does in his life, be it chalk drawings or pastoral care.
We are loved by an unending love.

Whose arms, fingers, voices, hands, eyes and smiles you are thankful for today? Gimme cinco!

Don't forget -- this Sunday is our last Work 'n Worship Sunday before our Heartland Presbytery Family comes home to visit. Get to the church between 9 and 2 and help us get ready!

Peace,
Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Grant's Tomb

On my first morning in NYC at the New Sanctuary gathering I stumbled across Grant's Memorial Tomb which lies just NW of the Riverside Church. I thought of the old Grant's tomb joke and the quiet time for reflection that morning inspired a poem.

Grants’ Tomb
9/2/2009

Light advances on water, earth and flesh
Troops of day attack shadows of dream and dread
“Let us have peace,” said the Man ‘o War
A grand old party slogan long forgotten
Who lies in this tomb?
No one
The general has relocated
His portrait eyes the questioning heart
Has he gone to Hiroshima?
Maybe Kinshasha?
Could be Iona
Tomb cannot hold dream
The drunken soldier’s eyes shift toward the New Morning
Every dawn empties another grave
Commander-in-Chief trades night for day
In a house divided

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Robust Community


Good Morning, Loved Ones,

Welcome to September! I give you Cinco today from the National New Sanctuary Movement Gathering at Riverside Church in NYC.

James 3:17-18 (The Message)

17-18Real wisdom, God's wisdom, begins with a holy life and is characterized by getting along with others. It is gentle and reasonable, overflowing with mercy and blessings, not hot one day and cold the next, not two-faced. You can develop a healthy, robust community that lives right with God and enjoy its results only if you do the hard work of getting along with each other, treating each other with dignity and honor.


Thank you, Lord for . . .

. . . Pastor John Fife who started the Sanctuary Movement 30 years ago and had to leave us
yesterday after his keynote to attend a court date in Arizona to defend himself against a charge of littering the desert. His group, "No More Deaths," puts water in the desert so that those who are crossing can survive the brutal passage. It is for this he is being prosecuted.
. . . The musical group Nueva Cosecha (New Harvest) who brought us the messages in song, "Don't Call Me Stranger" and "No Human Being Is Illegal."
. . . My friends, John, Ginny, Daniel and Laurie from IJAM (Immigrant Justice Advocacy Movement) who are here with me and listening, sharing and learning to help make a difference.
. . . Rabbi Michael, who yesterday reminded us that the Old Testament calls for us to "love our neighbor" once, but calls for us to "love the stranger" 36 times.
. . . The Personnel Committee of GPPC and the challenging work they have been doing over the last few months. I'm thankful that they listen well and embody the message from our brother, James, above.
. . . The people of Grandview Park Church are building a robust community by "getting along with each other, treating each other with dignity and honor."
. . . This litle corner of NYC full of institutions of learning and faith, for Union Theological Seminary, Columbia University, Riverside Church . . . for a rich history of thoughtful discourse and positive conversations that have changed the course of history.

Woops! I did it again. 7.0 instead of 5.0. Oh well, you know how it is. Once you get started, it's hard to stop. We're all waiting to hear from you. Gimme Cinco!

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Town and Country

Good Morning, Loved Ones,

What are you thankful for today?

Psalm 108:1-6 (The Message)

1-2 I'm ready, God, so ready,
ready from head to toe.
Ready to sing,
ready to raise a God-song:
"Wake, soul! Wake, lute!
Wake up, you sleepyhead sun!"
3-6 I'm thanking you, God, out in the streets,
singing your praises in town and country.
The deeper your love, the higher it goes;
every cloud's a flag to your faithfulness.
Soar high in the skies, O God!
Cover the whole earth with your glory!

Today I give thanks for . . .

. . . the time we've had to spend with our oldest son, Sam, this summer. He heads back to school on Friday and we will miss the energy and humor he brings to our life.
. . . the time we get to spend everyday with Lucas, our youngest. For his sense of humor and his ability to relate to just about anyone.
. . . a cool summer, full of wonderful memories of biking with friends and family, a fantastic neighborhood summer program for kids, a chance to see New York City and a beautiful week in the Wet Mountain Valley. Summer of '09 is one to remember!
. . . public servants like Senator Kennedy, and all other public servants, democrat or republican, liberal or conservative, who take their service seriously and make sacrifices for the greater good.
. . . the hands and hearts that have come together for worship 'n work and the work 'n worship still to be done this Sunday and September 13.
. . . those who offer mercy and compassion to those who are suffering, even reaching out to those who are guilty and perhaps deserving of punishment. I give thanks for all those who have forgiven me and given me second, third, fourth . . . chances!

Come on! It'll lift your day and the day of others, too. Gimme cinco!

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/

Sunday, August 23, 2009

We Can Do It, Jesus Will Help (Part 2)

Isaiah 58:9-14

I had lunch with Pastor Terry this week at the new Bistro on 7th St.
Terry, being Terry, engaged the lady who owns the place in a conversation about the Sabbath.
She shared that part of her family was Jewish and part 7th Day Adventist.
So for her the Sabbath was Saturday, not Sunday.
And when Terry told her how we had combined work and worship last week on our Sabbath she was shocked.
“You do not work on the Sabbath. The Sabbath is for rest!” she said. And she frowned and looked at me with great disapproval.
To which I replied, “Well, I really don’t take things as literally as all that.”
She didn't stick around to hear the rest of my answer because she had plenty of work to do.

If we really believed that about the Sabbath --- No work! Only rest! Then how is it that we are comfortable with making us, pastors, work on the Sabbath?

No. The question of the Sabbath is at once far more complicated and far simpler than the “get some rest” mantra.
The Sabbath is the call to stop chasing your dream long enough to catch onto God's dream for you and for the world.

Isaiah in verse 13 says, you trample the Sabbath when you pursue your own interests.
You trample the Sabbath by doing what you want, whether its work or play or even rest.
The Sabbath is to be a delight, a day of celebration, a day when we put aside ourselves to learn how to love God and neighbor.

Walter Bruggeman says that, “Sabbath is a curb on self-indulgence for the sake of the community.”
What I have seen on our work ‘n worship Sundays is just that, people who have put aside themselves for the sake of the community.
So, sorry, Bistro lady, I love your food and your restaurant, but I’m not buying your theology of the Sabbath, nor your condemning look.
And we’re not moving our worship to Saturday, either!

We’ve got two more work ‘n worship days coming up --- next Sunday, August 30 and the Sunday before the presbytery meeting, Sept. 13.
I’m sure there will be more to do for this old building after the presbytery meets, so I hope that we don’t abandon work ‘n worship Sundays altogether.
Our work ‘n worship days are great opportunities to learn the deeper meaning of Sabbath.

On those days we learn to become “handy men.”
We work together for a common good that is bigger than my life, my home, my family, my future.
And we pause to worship and share a common meal and it’s all free.
All of it, the work, the worship, the meal, it’s all free to those who come.

Remember what Isaiah says in chapter 55:1-2,
1 "Come, all you who are thirsty, come to the waters;
and you who have no money, come, buy and eat!
Come, buy wine and milk without money and without cost.
2 Why spend money on what is not bread, and your labor on what does not satisfy?
Listen, listen to me, and eat what is good, and your soul will delight in the richest of fare.

The Sabbath is a delight – a chance to break away from the desire to exploit or ignore your neighbor.

Last week we talked about becoming “handy men” for Jesus as opposed to DIYers (Do-It Yourselfers).
A handy man stands ready to help his neighbor, even help a DIYer who has gotten in too deep.
Ours is a do-it-yourself culture.
I, far to easily, give in to it.

Last spring I was painting DeDe’s office and was on a deadline.
I needed to get it done by Monday morning and it was Sunday afternoon at lunch downstairs that I was complaining about having to go straight from church to DeDe’s office and probably pull an all-nighter to get the work done.
I remember complaining to Greg about it during lunch that day.
I also remember Greg offering to come and help me get it done.
I also remember rejecting Greg’s offer to help.
Why? Because I got myself into that mess and by God I was going to get myself out of it even if it killed me!
Greg was practicing Sabbath on the Sabbath, and by rejecting him, and the help that he offered, I rejected the Sabbath.
I said, “No thanks, Greg. I can do it myself. This isn’t your problem.”
But Greg, practicing Sabbath, was saying, “Your problem is my problem. We can do it, Jesus will help.”

These promises in Isaiah 58 aren’t promises about free grace.
The cost of living a Sabbath life is the cost of community.
God’s presence becomes available to us when we open up to each other and to our community.

If this passage from Isaiah is true, then neighborliness is the precondition of access to God.
If you want God in your life, then you darn well better be treating your neighbor well --- rich, poor, black, white, asian, latino, young, old . . .
If you are praying all the time and fasting all the time and you still feel far from God, then maybe you should check your relationship with your neighbor.

What does this mean for Grandview Park Presbyterian Church?
I believe that we have been in “handy human” training for about 120 years.
At various points we have been a good “handy humans.”
At different times over those 120 years we have “curbed our self-indulgence for the sake of community.”
At other times we haven’t practiced Sabbath living so well.
This is one of those times when we are tempted to focus on ourselves.
We have a bad economy; the bank account is drying up here at the church.
Maybe it’s time to focus on taking care of us.
Maybe its time to rein it in, to turn inward.
Maybe its time to stop all this costly outreach.

No. You know better. I know better.
God’s demand for Sabbath living is no less demanding for us together as the church than it is personally.
It is perhaps more demanding that we as the Body of Christ be “handy humans,” ready at a moments notice to put our self-indulgence, our self-interests aside.
We have done a lot of things for the children and youth in our community.
And whenever have reached out to the youth and children it has given us life.

But if you look at our neighbors, you can see there are a lot more things that we could be doing.
There are lots of jobs for handy humans here in our community.
There are lots of opportunities for good, neighborly Sabbath living in our community.
If you are wondering where God is in our church financial crisis . . .
I can guarantee we are not going to find God hiding in the boiler room trying to weather the storm.

God is already out there, trying to fix what is broken.
Lives, homes, schools, neighborhoods.
If we want God to be with us, if we want God to give us what we need, if we want to live Sabbath lives, then that’s where we need to be.

“A Dios orando y con el mazo dando.”
Pray to God and swing a big hammer.

Yes, the Sabbath is about worship and prayer and rest.
But that’s not all its about.
True Sabbath is about giving up our little self-interests for the sake of large delights.
True Sabbath is God’s Handy Humans at the ready.
Ready to give and ready to receive.
Ready to work and ready to worship.
Ready to be handy people and not do-it-yourselfers.

We can do it, Jesus will help.

Isaiah 58:12 You'll use the old rubble of past lives to build anew, rebuild the foundations from out of your past. You'll be known as those who can fix anything, restore old ruins, rebuild and renovate, make the community livable again.

Friday, August 21, 2009

We Can Do It, Jesus Will Help


We Can Do It, Jesus Will Help (Part 1)
Isaiah 58:9-14

My Grandpa Behrens was a “handy man.”
His life’s career was a streetcar driver.
But in his retirement he was a house painter, carpenter, electrician, plumber, remodeler . . .
And like most “handy men” he was also a fisherman.
He was a person like Kent or Juanito or Ricardo.
If there was a remodeling job to be done, he either knew how to do it or would soon figure it out.

It’s unfortunate that the “handy man” gene is not transferred across generations.
House painting I learned by the very patient teaching of my friend Al Killingsworth.
But a “one note Johnny” who only paints, like me, can’t be called a “handy man.”
A handy man can fix anything given the right resources.

Lowe’s and Home Depot exist because of all the aspiring “handy men” among us.
Home depot has that great phrase “You can do it, We can help.”
The sermon title for today and next week is “We can do it, Jesus will help.”

Why are we doing this today?
Why are we shortening our worship service to work on the Sabbath?
I thought the Sabbath was supposed to be a day of rest.
And yet here we are shortening worship. Why? To rest? No. To work.

Let’s see if there might be an answer in Chapter 58 of Isaiah, one my top ten Bible passages.
God’s people have been allowed to return to Jerusalem from exile in Babylon.
They are very good at praying and fasting and worshipping.
They do those things a lot and they do them all the time.
But God doesn’t seem to be responding.

The people say, “God, look how spiritual we are! But it’s like you don’t even hear us when we pray.”
And God, not very diplomatically says, “Your fasts are meaningless. You quarrel with each other. You ignore the needs of the poor and the hungry and the sick.”
“The kind of worship that I want,” God says, “is Handy Man worship.”
The kind that looks at the neighborhood and says, “There’s some hungry people out there.”
“We can fix that, Jesus will help.”
“Kids are growing up in some unhealthy homes with lead and asbestos and mold.”
“We can fix that, Jesus will help.”
“This old temple here is in ruins”
“We can fix that, Jesus will help.”

Pastor Alfonso told me about a phrase in Spanish.
“A Dios orando y con el mazo dando.”
My interpretation is “Pray to God and swing a big hammer.”
Trust in God and work.
Pray to God and work.
Worship God and work.

And the amazing promise for me comes in verse 12.
"You'll use the old rubble of past lives to build anew, rebuild the foundations from out of your past. You'll be known as those who can fix anything, restore old ruins, rebuild and renovate,
make the community livable again."

If we work ’n worship with each other --- then I can finally be like my Grandpa Behrens.
We can become “Handy People” for our neighborhood and community.
We can become known as “those people on the corner there who can fix anything” --- physical, social or spiritual.
And along the way, like my handy man grandpa, we’ll also become better fishers of men.

We can do it, Jesus will help.

The work we do on this building today is important work, but is merely our practice laboratory for what God is calling us to do out there beyond the doors, in the neighborhood, in the community.
God is here helping us with this building.
But the ultimate “Handy Man” is already at work out there.
That’s where we’ll find Jesus.
That’s where we’ll find our delight.
That’s where we’ll find our true worship.
That’s where we’ll find our future.

We can do it, Jesus will help.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

More-Than-Enough

Good Morning, Loved Ones,

Psalm 4:4-8 (The Message)

Complain if you must, but don't lash out.
Keep your mouth shut, and let your heart do the talking.
Build your case before God and wait for his verdict.
Why is everyone hungry for more? "More, more," they say.
"More, more."
I have God's more-than-enough,
More joy in one ordinary day
Than they get in all their shopping sprees.
At day's end I'm ready for sound sleep,
For you, God, have put my life back together.

Today I give thanks for . . .

. . . the two fine young men God has given named Sam and Luke, for the 20 and 16 years of joy they have brought to our lives.

. . . the 24 year partnership God has given me with a kind, compassionate and loving young lady named DeDe.

. . . the unusual amount of cool, wet August days.

. . . all the "handy persons" who came and worked hard last Sunday to rebuild and renovate.

. . . especially for Mike Spears who spent many days last week finishing the tile floor which has gone undone for 3-4 years.

There you have it. Gimme cinco!

Pastor Rick
http://gimmecinco.blogspot.com/