Sunday, January 10, 2016

Notes from the Sermon

The series beginning today is titled Wake Up and Live. Enlightenment anyone?

Sometimes we are in a groove. Sometimes we are in a rut. When we are in rut, we sleep through life and don't really live. 

St. Irenaeus wrote, "The glory of God is man fully alive."

Psalm 1:3 That person is like a tree planted by streams of water,which yields its fruit in seasonand whose leaf does not wither—whatever they do prospers. 

The fully awake Christian is like a redwood at Big Sur. Behold the glory that God has wrought. 

The psalm goes on to say the wicked are like chaff and this dried up image makes me think of the drought and how all too often we live in a spiritually drought-stricken land. 

We are as close to God as we choose to be. Like the verse in Deuteronomy where God implores us to choose life. 

We need to be awake and aware of the "company" we keep and steer clear of that which deadens our souls. 

Our delight - leading to life and enlightenment- should be in the Word of God. Can we really delight in the things that deaden and darken our souls? I don't think so. Empty pleasures aren't pleasures at all. Reminds me of The Screwtape Letters - where C. S. Lewis writes that pleasures come from God and Satan seeks to trick us to trade true pleasure for that which isn't really pleasure at all. 

How often, though, does church offer empty pleasures rather than true delights? 

Sunday, January 3, 2016

Notes from the Sermon

"You are welcome here wherever you are on your spiritual journey."

"Hello, my name is..."

Today I asked the question "What is at the heart of all American religion?" C. S. Lewis wrote Mere Christianity about those beliefs all Christians share. The sermon began with an example of different ways of doing church. The sermon is on identity. Here we go...

God changed people's name in the Bible - God gave them a new identity. We are a new creation, we have a new destiny, a destiny that is different from our past. 

We are all too often defined by our mistakes - known and named for our failures. God does not define us by our mistakes. God gives us a new start. 

It's never too late. Abram/Abraham got his new start - his new name - when he was 99! Sarai/Sarah was 90 and have birth after a lifetime of barrenness. Good news for a woman in her fifties. 

We are not our past mistakes. We are new. We are set free. Do not believe what the world says about you, do not be defined by world, do not be limited by the past. God has given you a new future.  We are the Children of God and God is LOVE. 

"Hello, my name is...Love."