from 2 Corinthians 5:16-21
The foundation for our call to relationship with others is found in the relationship made possible by God’s willingness to look at our broken relationship with Him and move to make things right. Not because God had somehow wronged us, but because God is gracious to we who have wronged Him.
We are called to take up the cause of bringing the world around us to reconciliation with God…but in order to do that we have to be willing to step outside of our small worldview and live lives in response to the grace offered by God to us through Jesus.
When we view that sacrifice for what it is and what it accomplished, then our view of the world around us begins to change.
w/ Vern Collins
from Romans 12
Loving well is not like sleep well. IF things go smoothly during the night, if there are no worries, if kids don’t wake you up, if there are no nightmares then maybe you will sleep well.
But loving well should not be left up to such chance. God is not a God of luck, God is a God of intentionality…in the way He loves us and in the way He calls us to love others.
Paul gives us a model for how we are to achieve the kind of love that is a reflection of the relationship from which we were created…the relationship of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
It begins with grace.
w/ Vern Collins
from Hosea 11:1-9, 14:4-7
w/ Vern Collins
from Genesis 1:26-27
Our lives tend to be a web of relationships. Marriage, family, dating, friendship, classmate, co-worker, employee and employer, proponent and opponent of an issue or idea…
Relationships can often be a source of great joy or they can be a source of great pain in our lives. There are times when we find ourselves seeking isolation because we have been so wounded by relationships…and there are times when without realizing it, we find ourselves living in a “functional isolation” born our of the illusion of connection we create through social media.
To say that relationship is complicated is an understatement…but what if we saw relationship not just as a challenge we have to navigate, rather something for which we were actually created?
Imagine how you might begin to look at God, and humanity around you differently if you lived like you were created for connection with both.
w/ Vern Collins
from Matthew 6:13
It’s not just that we feel overwhelmed from time to time…many of us are living lives in a constant state of being in over our head…and yet we tend to spend our time and energy looking to people and powers and systems in this world to change things…to give us hope. What happens when those are the very things that seem to be stealing hope from us?
In our final week on the Lord’s Prayer, we look to Jesus’ petition for our protection and deliverance…a protection and deliverance He would make possible because He Himself was not protected from suffering.
w/ Vern Collins
from Matthew 6:12
We live in a world that is full of hurt, and many of us carry that hurt around inside us. Whether we hurt over the things we have done that we feel guilt over, or whether we have been hurt by others…our lives are marked with pain of some sort. The question is, what do we do with that hurt? Do we simply learn to deal with it, or are we willing to release it? To seek forgiveness, to be forgiven? What about forgiving others?
Are we willing to name our pain, and trust that God can release us from it?
Are we willing to release others from the pain they have caused us?
Too often not…but it is not impossible. Perhaps all it takes is a new understanding of forgiveness, what happens when we are forgiven, and what can happen when we forgive.
w/ Vern Collins
from Matthew 6:10
At the heart of the prayer Jesus offers as the example for His disciples to follow is surrender. It is naming the work He has been called to do and committing Himself to that work…the work of seeing God’s purpose accomplished on this earth.
In inviting His disciples and all who would follow to pray in this way, Jesus is also inviting us to name and commit ourselves to being a part of God’s rescuing and restorative work on this earth.
And yet, our tendency is to build our little kingdoms and then ask God to bless them.
What if instead, our lives were spent building the Kingdom that Jesus came to inaugurate? What if we began to bend ourselves to the work of God rather than trying to bend God to our work on this earth?
Imagine how different our lives might look.
w/ Vern Collins
from Matthew 6:7-9
If you’ve ever found yourself frustrated by prayer, if the mystery that surrounds prayer, the fact that it seems like prayers too often go unanswered or aren’t answered the way you’d like…if you’re not even sure what or how to pray most of the time, then you’re in good company. Even the Apostle Paul wrote that when we don’t know how to pray or what to pray, the Holy Spirit would be faithful to lead us.
That’s good news, but many of still feel unsure as to where or how we begin.
Jesus’ disciples longed for more in their prayer life too, and so they asked Jesus to teach them how to pray (Luke 11). While Jesus didn’t answer every question they asked, or respond to everything they desired to see happen, He felt this request important enough to respond to…and so He gave them what we have come to call, “The Lord’s Prayer.”
As we work through this series, beginning with “Our Father,” may your heart for prayer be rekindled, may you encounter the power that are in these words, and may you be transformed.
w/ Vern Collins
from Matthew 1:18-25
Advent was never just about the single event of the birth of Christ…yes, it represents the waiting, the hope, the expectation…yes it connects us with those who hoped for so long to see God’s promised Messiah…and yes, it now offers us a framework as we wait for Christ to return.
But Advent was about much more than a significant event…Advent IS about much more than a significant event. It is about the Kingdom Christ came to establish. It is about reminding us that His Kingdom is still here and we are called to live in to it…to live into our new citizenship.
Worshipping Fully, Spending Less, and Giving More are all characteristics of the life of a Christ follower…but when we Love All we begin to look a lot more like Jesus Himself.
w/ Vern Collins
from Luke 3:7-18
There is something about Advent that begs the question, “why?”
“Why would God send His Son to this earth?” More specifically, perhaps, “what is it in my life that I am incapable of taking care of on my own?”
In our Advent passage this morning we find John the Baptist in the wilderness, in light of the Christ Who has arrived and is about to begin His ministry, calling people to repent…to turn from what they thought gave them worth, and turn to a new understanding of who they are and what life is meant to look like.
And in this we catch a glimpse that the Gospel might just be about more than the individual…that maybe it is about those around us too.
w/ Vern Collins
from Matthew 6:19-21, 24
In all of the natural world, humans have the greatest proclivity toward collecting things. Sure, there are animals that store away food, but with the intention of consuming it when there is no food to gather. Humans, however, collect things that may never have an purpose beyond essentially taking up space. Whether you hold on to furniture, trinkets, finances, or the latest technology…chances are there are things you have that you simply do not need. And yet, too often, it is the “stuff” that holds our focus more than anything else. Having it. Acquiring it. Longing for it. Keeping it safe. We worry a great deal about things in our world that ultimately only have a fleeting value.
Jesus, on the other hand, suggests that the treasure we store up ought to have an eternal value to them…that instead of storing up treasure on this part, we store up treasure in heaven. When we hold that teaching up next to the simple manner in which Jesus was born into this world, then storing up Kingdom treasure looks a lot less like material investment and much more like becoming preoccupied with the hearts of others.
w/ Vern Collins
from Isaiah 9:2-7
The Advent of Jesus meant something to the small corner of the world in which He was born. In fact, it would go on to mean something to the ENTIRE world. From the birth of a baby to a criminal’s cross, the entrance of Jesus into humanity would forever alter the course of history…but has it altered yours?
Is your life different because of the Advent or arrival of Jesus? Do you think differently about your time? About your treasure? About your future? About those around you?
This and so much more is what we are invited into in Christ. This Advent season, you are invited to pursue something a bit different from what this world says the season leading up to Christmas should be. Come be a part of the conspiracy…it begins with worship!
w/ Luke Edwards
from Ephesians 5:21-6:9
How are we meant to respond when there is disagreement with those around us? How are we meant to prove our point? How should we go about winning the argument? How are we supposed to convince others to see things the way we see them?
What if, even in the face disagreement that is so difficult, our goal is not to win the day, rather to offer a new way forward…not a way born out of a rock solid argument, but out of choosing a different posture? A posture of submission…of service.
Perhaps the key to navigating relationship is not guarding what is right, but pointing to what is Good.
w/ Vern Collins
from Ephesians 4:1-16
It does not take long in this life before we begin working to be seen as being worthy…worthy of affection, worthy of attention, worthy of responsibility, worthy of advancement, worthy of acceptance. Too often, we will go to great lengths to prove our worth, and too often come away feeling more unworthy for what we sacrificed in the process.
What if you began to live out of the worth you are already given in Christ? What if you rather than living to prove your worth, you strived to live a life that reflects the fact that you have already been called, “worthy.”
And what would it look like to do that in the context of the Body that is the Church?
w/ Vern Collins
from Ephesians 3:14-21
As Boone UMC celebrates 150 years of ministry in the High Country, we are excited to welcome one of our former pastors, Rev. John Fitzgerald, whose long journey over different seasons in his life affords him insight into the truth of Paul’s words here at the end of Ephesians 3, and the power of the Holy Spirit in the life of the church to accomplish immeasurably more than we could ever dream possible!
w/ Rev. John Fitzgerald
from Ephesians 3:1-13
To have an understanding of Gods’ grace in your life is to know the power of forgiveness, the power of hope, the deep value in knowing that you are loved and desired, and ultimately that the God of the universe is FIR YOU. This is displayed in the lengths God was willing to go to in order to present His Son, Jesus as a sacrifice for your sin, thus opening the way for you to be invited into life with Him.
What if that grace wasn’t meant to stop with you? What if it wasn’t so much about how it makes you feel loved and accepted and believed in? What if you stewarded that grace in such a way that it wasn’t trivialized…rather it was leveraged for the transformation of lives around you?
w/ Vern Collins
from Ephesians 2:11-22
We could agree that walls are important in providing stability, creating a structure that is safe…and yet so often we erect walls that are harmful and divisive.
What if instead of building walls between you and the rest of the world, or adding bricks to those that already exist, you instead began to work to break them down, just as Christ has broken down the walls that separate us from God?
w/ David Hockett