Pastor’s Note
9/7/22
Reading and praying the psalms invite us to do the same. If you’ve noticed, I begin most of the prayers I pray with those very words from Exodus 34 - that’s the God we serve! I’d encourage you to memorize them and use them in your prayers as well. When life is going well, use them to celebrate God’s faithfulness. When life isn’t going so well, use them to remind God (and remind yourself) Who God said God would be, and let this be an anchor to your soul in the bad times. And look for other times the psalms quote these words – you might be surprised just how often you see them.
8/24/22
God is always with us. No matter what we face, God is by our side. God doesn’t send us through the valley of the shadow of death with a cheery promise to meet us on the other side! No, God promises to walk with us all the way - “for thou art with me.” The central message of the psalm is the same as the central phrase and the central words, giving us the assurance that no matter what we face in life, we do not face it alone.
8/17/22
If life is going well, and your psalm is a psalm that says “life is good,” then use it to praise God! If life isn’t going so well, and your psalm says “life is awful,” then use your psalm to tell God your troubles. If God has brought you safely through a tough time, and your psalm is one of those that says “life was awful, but look what God has done,” then use it to thank God.
7/27/22
However tarnished we may be, God never gives up on us. Paul writes in Ephesians 4:22-24, “You were taught to put away your former way of life, your old self, corrupt and deluded by its lusts, and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and to clothe yourselves with the new self, created according to the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness.”
7/20/22
As you go through your week at home or work or church, talking or texting or calling one another, baking, painting, sewing, overseeing others in your job, or being a parent, remember you do these things because you’re created in the image of God. These activities we so easily take for granted are ways God has stamped his image on us. When we think of life this way, it deepens our understanding of what it means to “give to God what belongs to God.” It is to recognize that our whole lives–every bit of them–belong to God.
7/13/22
Jesus proclaims that God’s kingdom is breaking into this world and transforming it, and that transformation entails turning this upside down world rightside up. The inbreaking kingdom casts the Light of God into every corner of our lives, causing us to reassess and reevaluate everything we thought we knew. Everything has changed because in Jesus, God has torn open the heavens and come down.