Easter is a great day! It's the second most popular day in the church year, judging by attendance, and what a celebration it is! Women and girls wear their finest Easter dresses and bonnets, men might even wear a tie--or for those really trying to impress--a whole suit! Children arrive all fired up--not because of the resurrection of Jesus, but because of the sugar high they are riding after devouring generous gobs of chocolate they found in their Easter baskets!
Indeed it is a great day, but I feel sorry for those who miss the whole story. It's great to celebrate the risen Savior, but what does it truly mean if we don't remember his last meal, his last words, his brutal crucifixion. We couldn't have Easter Sunday without Maundy Thursday or Good Friday. And yet despite this, churches across the United States continue to see a decline in attendance during Holy Week. And that's a real shame.
Without coming face to face with our sin that put Jesus on the cross, it's hard to imagine why we need a Savior. Now I know in this politically correct age that we aren't supposed to ever feel bad about ourselves, let alone come together to face it with our brothers and sisters. But this is exactly what we need to realize this week: We need a Savior.
Somewhere along the line we started to believe that being happy was really the goal of life. And while our happiness is important, how do we ever strengthen our faith if everything is "fine"? What if we actually let ourselves feel all our emotions, the good and the bad. Only in that kind of honesty can we find deeper relationship with God and with each other.
So I know that Maundy Thursday and Good Friday aren't the most exciting and thrilling of all days in the church year. But these days are of absolute importance in knowing who we are in Christ Jesus. You see, the Easter promise actually begins unfolding when Jesus dies. Only in this most selfless act can we see just how much God loves us. Only when we approach the cross ourselves on Good Friday can we see the nails on the cross that remind us of the pain Jesus willingly endured so that we wouldn't have to.
I know the excuses: life is busy; it's impossible to attend worship more than once per week. But what about this week, when we remember everything Christ endured for us so that we might be saved from the wrath that we should receive? How better to prepare for Jesus'-and therefore our-victory over the grave?
Even if you don't worship during this Holy Week, it's important that you at least take time to thank God for sending God's Son to take your place on the cross. Because if we forget that then we miss the entire blessing that is Easter. Spend some time with God this week; God is more than ready to spend time with you!
God be with you. Always!
Monday, April 14, 2014
Thursday, February 20, 2014
A Cause for Change
Hey there! Pastor Doug reporting from San Antonio, Texas, where the ELCA church developer conference is being held. Despite the lure of warm weather, we are engaged in learning how the church can truly grow!
One of the most important aspects of authentic church growth is ability to change. This doesn't promise that change will be easy or that there is some magic bullet that solves all problems. What is does lead us to is viewing what is important to God instead of what is important to us? Shouldn't these both be the same? Well, ideally, yes! But in reality we all have our comfort with things that don't necessarily build faith or hold relevance in God's mission to the world today. This may mean trading in our comfortable yet stagnant ways for something more challenging and yet far more valuable to the care and growth of God's kingdom.
Indeed I too have to let go of those things sacred to me (but not God) that hinder our journey of faith. There are exciting times ahead for all of us in the church as we lift up leaders and map the assets of the people in the parish. In this we hope to less try to force square pegs into round holes, but rather find opportunities in our ministry that fit the people we engage.
If you're up for it, this could be an incredibly rewarding journey!
In God's service,
pd
One of the most important aspects of authentic church growth is ability to change. This doesn't promise that change will be easy or that there is some magic bullet that solves all problems. What is does lead us to is viewing what is important to God instead of what is important to us? Shouldn't these both be the same? Well, ideally, yes! But in reality we all have our comfort with things that don't necessarily build faith or hold relevance in God's mission to the world today. This may mean trading in our comfortable yet stagnant ways for something more challenging and yet far more valuable to the care and growth of God's kingdom.
Indeed I too have to let go of those things sacred to me (but not God) that hinder our journey of faith. There are exciting times ahead for all of us in the church as we lift up leaders and map the assets of the people in the parish. In this we hope to less try to force square pegs into round holes, but rather find opportunities in our ministry that fit the people we engage.
If you're up for it, this could be an incredibly rewarding journey!
In God's service,
pd
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
Looking Beyond the Obvious
Looking Beyond the Obvious
1 Samuel 16:1-13; Psalm 51:10-14
Pastor Doug Holtz
The people had been led by prophets.
But
now they have put down roots
They
wanted to be like the cool kids
Just
like their neighbors
They
wanted a king
God
told Samuel to give them what they wanted
And
so he did—Saul
It went just fine for a while
Wars
were won; riches were collected
But
then Saul and his men became greedy
Won
the war, but kept the spoils for themselves
Kept
the best cattle, sheep
Kept
a few slaves as well
What is happening here?
God doesn’t make this easy
Samuel:
Last week told Eli he was through
Then
had to tell Saul he was through
A
long journey to Bethlehem
Under the auspices of sharing
sacrifice
There’s no big name flash here
One
of the smallest villages in Israel
Surely there was some assistant to
succeed Saul
God had other plans
Jesse’s boys came one by one
God rejects them all
Imagine
the disappointment
Notice:
rejected for this vocation
Not
rejected as people
Not
deemed worthless
Just
not king material
Imagine Jesse standing there
Imagine Samuel: getting nervous
What
is God doing?
David is an
afterthought
Jesse
remembers him
The
meek shepherd
The
musician out in the field playing harp
What do ya know!
God
is turning the world upside down again
Using
the world’s least to be the kingdom’s greatest
If we could only judge with these
lenses
Instead of basing our decisions on
first impressions and outward appearances
The
first televised Presidential election
Nixon
vs. Kennedy
Pale,
underweight from hospital stay
Nixon
had no chance
Milli Vanilli
Stand-ins
for the real singers.
Very
popular
Backlash
was extreme
David not what everyone imagined as
king
But that’s what God does
He
goes to the out of the way places
Finds
the ones who don’t fit the mold
Uses
people who we see as weak, or crude, or worthless
People
like us.
I kind of look like a pastor
Tall,
handsome (well, reasonably)
Even
have a rather large noggin for the brains
Yep,
size 8 1/8 – find that in a regular store
But don’t let looks deceive you
I’m
the one who gets filled with doubt
Whenever
the smallest thing goes wrong
I know I’m not perfect
But
the way I’m wired
It
crushes me when I’m not
I
fight that every day
So it’s relief to me to realize David
wasn’t perfect either
He made big mistakes, it’s the reason
he wrote Psalm 51 as prayer
He wrote this prayer after having relations
with Bathsheba
A
military leader’s wife
She
became pregnant
David
had her husband killed
Hey,
maybe we’re not so bad after all.
And despite all that
God
forgave David
Repented
of his evil ways,
Turned
back to God.
God
used David for more greatness
God forgives us, even before we
confess
God
will use us faults and all
To
bring God’s message to neighbors and friends
Through
the gifts God gave us to share
The
gift of time
The
gifts of talents and skills, unique in each of us
So
David’s prayer is ours too.
A
prayer we can lift every time and everywhere we go.
Please
pray the words of Psalm 51, our second lesson, together.
Create in me a clean heart, O God,
and put a new and right spirit
within me.
Do not cast me away from your presence,
And do not take your Holy
Spirit from me.
Restore to me the joy of your salvation,
And sustain in me a willing
spirit.
Then I will teach transgressors your ways,
And sinners will return to you.
Deliver me from bloodshed, O God, O God of my salvation,
And my tongue will sing aloud
of your deliverance.
God has already delivered us
We
are washed by the cleansing of God’s word every day
Through
the body and blood of Christ.
We
too are renewed in the promises of baptism about to be shared
So in response to God’s great love and mercy,
We’re
about to sing a song that reminds us of our hearts
Created
new every day.
“God
provides a brand new heart.”
Monday, October 14, 2013
A Calling for Us All
A Calling for Us All
1 Samuel 3:1-20
Pastor Doug Holtz
Hannah could not have children.
Hannah made vow to the Lord.
O
Lord of hosts, if only you will look on the misery of your servant, and
remember me, and not forget your servant, but will give to your servant a male
child, then I will set him before you as one set apart until the day of his
death. He shall drink neither wine nor intoxicants, and no razor shall touch
his head.
When he was able to eat and drink on his own, she brought
him to the temple, and gave him to the Lord. This is where Eli comes into the
story.
Eli was the priest of the temple.
Usually the next in line for the priesthood would be his
sons.
But they were “scoundrels.”
Sacrifice made.
Servant stuck
fork into the pot
All
the meat that came with it was for the sons
Read
1 Samuel 3:1-10 (page 122, Spark Story Bible)
Only 10 years old!
God could
call any of you!
Maybe
God already has
Felt
you needed to help someone?
Had
the feeling you needed to check on neighbor/relative?
Now for the part we don’t know well. We will have our reader
come up and read the rest of our lesson.
Read
1 Samuel 3:11-20 NRSV
Imagine hearing those words as a young boy.
Samuel just lay there until morning
Eyes wide
open
Not
the message one likes delivering
But it was Samuel’s to tell
He lay awake
all night thinking about it
God’s
sometimes gives us that task
God’s
call is to work in changing human systems
That
are broken
Taking
the unpopular approach
So maybe we are all Samuel
We think of
ourselves as the last one God would ever call
Our weaknesses,
our limitations, our deficiencies
That’s
OK, Samuel too
Didn’t
recognize the voice of God
Moses
had many hesitations
Remember
Jonah?
We as community can assist one another
Samuel needed
Eli
Help
him realize God’s call
We sometimes need help hearing the call too.
Maybe it’s
that little bird whispering in your ear.
The
nagging thought that refuses to go away.
That
still, small voice that echoes in your mind.
Maybe it’s
something or someone
You
see every day
That
suddenly seems different
Grabbing
your attention
And we are all called
Not just
pastors and other leaders
Vocation:
Parent,
child, neighbor, sibling, spouse, citizen
Imagine the ways we might say: “Speak Lord, for your servant
is listening”
Imagine the gifts
God has given you to use
Spiritual
gifts inventory
Use
gifts to be God’s people in God’s world
Administration
– Artistry; Exhortation – Mercy
Faith
– Service
60
questions
Might
be a surprise
Might
stir imagination
A still small voice
A
nagging inclination
As community. We should encourage, nudge, push, pray
For each
other. Together. Gifted.
Maybe
we report. Respond to what we see
Even
give each other a hard time.
It’s what community is all about
Even God exists/functions
in community
Father,
Son, Holy Spirit
What
makes us any different?
The church needs to be like Eli
Encouraging
all to hear the voice
Calling
them into all they are created to be.
Help
each other be truthful; Even when truth is hard to hear
What church do we want to be?
One that
shows Sunday morning
puts
in its time; leaves for another week
Or one that
truly loves the neighbor
Praying
for and speaking to the community
Letting
people know of God’s love
For
the youngest, oldest, richest, poorest
For
people just like us
And
completely different from us
God is calling each of us, and all of us together
Will we
answer the call? As brothers and sisters we can together.
Monday, October 7, 2013
Satisfying Hunger
Satisfying Hunger
Exodus 16:1-18
Pastor Doug Holtz
So Moses heard the call of God to be
leader for the people of Israel.
Moses cries for help.
God tries to get the attention of the
Egyptians, of Ramses the new Pharaoh
Raised
as Moses’ brother.
God
sends the plagues.
Frogs,
gnats, flies
Killed
the Egyptian livestock (Israel’s herds survived)
Boils,
hailstorm, locusts
darkness
for three days
Killed
firstborn Egyptian sons, even livestock
Finally Pharaoh gave in, quickly
changed his mind
Chased
after them
To
the Red Sea
God gave Moses power to split the
water
Israel
crossed without incident
Egypt
tried, water came on them, drowned
Three days after, hadn’t found water
People
complained
God
provided
Our story today begins after that
The
joy found at the Red Sea
Now
long forgotten
They wanted it all
Not
just escape from the Egyptians
But
the promised land
They were in the desert, hungry
They
complained
So
would we!
God sent food. It was great
Quail every night
Manna (“What is it?”) every morning
Sort
of a Bible Times Chewandswallow.
Movie:
Cloudy with a chance of manna
They had enough
Nothing
extravagant
But
enough
Which soon wasn’t enough
Greed
took over
Tired
of enough
Wanted
more
Just like Mayor Shelbourne wasn’t
satisfied with simple food
Taxed
the machine with requests
(Taxed
God with whining)
God knew they weren’t ready for the
land of milk and honey
Israelites
didn’t see the Promised Land for another 40 years
Sounds like the world today
Someone
asked why the church is dwindling
We’re
not shiny and attractive
People
don’t want truth
They
want stuff
And we’re told we need more every
time the media gets us
Industry tells us we can be happier
by buying their stuff
“A
little piece of happy” – really?
“Open happiness!” – for your dentist
“Think
different” – means you can be more awesome
Sea
Monkeys? Remember? “Own a bowlful of happiness”
Bring
smiles, laughter, and fun into your home.
THEY’RE
BRINE SHRIMP – YAWN
Seven-up
makes happy babies? No, sad parents
Some
even make money
teaching how to make money
making people believe their product
can make them happy
A whole industry telling us we don’t
have enough
We
will only be happy with their thing
And
we all fall for it.
We might well heed the words
Of
a recent modern-day prophet, George Carlin
“Trying
to be happy by accumulating possessions
Is
like trying to satisfy hunger by taping sandwiches all over your body.”
We can only be satisfied when the
food in within us.
We
can only be happy when the happiness in within us
No
Mercedes car, no Barbie doll, no amount of riches
Will
ever bring happiness
It
doesn’t hurt…
But what is enough?
Give
us this day our daily bread.
Just
enough
Even
the manna God sent spoiled when it was horded
Stewardship month
How
can we be proper stewards of God’s abundance?
Don’t
horde it.
Just
like manna, it goes rotten.
Share
your gifts
Your
time, your skills and abilities
Great
with your hands? Use them to help others.
Great
listener? Listen to others
Great
storyteller? Tell stories.
Great
singer? Sing to God’s glory
Great
with kids? Share time with them.
It’s not difficult. We all have gifts
to share.
What
if we all shared them.
Your pledge card
Asks
for a pledge of time.
It’s
between you and God.
Keep
track someplace
Asks
for the talents and skills you can share.
When
you share, the blessing is yours.
Yesterday,
I painted ceilings all morning at Larson’s home
Inspired
by the people helping
Giving
of themselves
Some
of you were there
Or
donated food (greatly appreciated)
A
lot of volunteer labor for tiling project
Teaching
Sunday School
Leading
confirmation small groups
Decorating
the narthex—kids can find their names
ALL
EFFORTS ARE BLESSED
Seeing
the house come together
Watching
the water head to the pond instead of inside the building
Seeing
kids discover God
Watching
relationships grow
Maybe it’s not about you.
After 40 years wandering in the
wilderness.
Moses
climbed the mountain
Saw
a glimpse of the Promised Land
Knowing
he would die before he got there
Gave
thanks
Because
others would know the promise fulfilled.
Through Jesus’ death and resurrection
We
know those promises are yet to come
Who
will learn of the promise fulfilled
Because
of our leadership?
PRAY the God will lead others to the
promises through us.
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