Monday, December 17, 2018

Another Way: Monday Message

The book of Matthew says the Magi went to Jesus on "their way" (Matthew 2:9) but went home by "another way." (Matthew 2:12) According to the story, the Magi alter their return trip having been warned in a dream about king Herod's evil plan. But Matthew's word choice also reflects the promise of the Gospel. We come to Jesus with our "own way" and Jesus gives us "another way." We bring Jesus the hurts, hang ups, and hassles of our "own way" and Jesus shows us "another way" of living and loving. If you missed this weekend's message, you can listen to it here.

Monday, March 26, 2018

Formed by what we follow


These days, there are lots of things the world goes after. We chase titillating news stories. We go after job promotions, nicer cars, and bigger homes. We follow our favorite sports teams and rock stars. We pursue our children and grandchildren’s success. Innocent or decadent. Healthy or unhealthy. What we go after shapes and forms who we are.

In John’s version of Jesus’ Triumphal Entry, the Pharisees (exasperated trying to squash Jesus’ popularity) exclaim, “Look, the world has gone after him” (John 12:19). In yesterday’s message we explored what it means to “go after” Jesus. Following Jesus doesn’t mean dismissing intellectual doubts or questions. It simply means (simple, not easy) choosing to abandon our way of doing things for his. As we daily choose Jesus’ way, we are shaped and formed for the truly good life. If you missed yesterday’s message you can listen to it here.

Join us on April 1, for Easter worship. This weekend’s message is, “No Fool’n!” There will be no Saturday night worship. All three worship services will be on Sunday morning at 8:30, 10:00, and 11:30 (contemporary). It’s going to be a wonderful Sunday celebration that you won’t want to miss!

Monday, March 5, 2018

Building community, not just houses


While many of the psalms are individual prayers, Psalm 80 is communal. It reminds us that God’s salvation is not private and individualistic. God saves us into a family – the covenant family of God. God’s plan for blessing and restoring the world involves community.

As hurricane Harvey rebuilding kicks into high gear, where will we seize opportunity to become mini-restoration communities? With organizational prowess, technological know-how, and fierce determination, we have the potential to do a lot of things. But will we be restoration communities along the way? Will we just build houses or will we build transformational relationships? With every task there’s an opportunity to go it alone or to go it together. Let’s choose the latter and build community.

If you missed yesterday’s message you can listen to it here.

Monday, February 26, 2018

Restoring Joy

Worry, fear, resentment, and regret are some of my biggest joy-stealers. When I fret about the future, begrudge something in the moment, or feel shame about the past, joy drains from my soul like a sieve.

Can you relate?

Thankfully, God is in the restoration business. Psalm 51 says, "Create in me a clean heart, O God... Restore to me the joy of your salvation." Joy is restored to our souls when we daily invite God to remake our hearts. Rather than catastrophizing about the future, beating yourself up about the past, or resenting a present experience, make David's prayer your own. If you missed yesterday's message, you can listen to it here.

PS. Try this, from Tim Timmons:
http://www.10000minutes.com/blog/
Breathe In: JESUS
Breathe Out: YOU HAVE MY ATTENTION
Practice this with me all day long...from the time you wake up till you go to bed!

Monday, February 5, 2018

Power for the Faint

Harvey recovery is gritty and difficult work. It takes a long time to put a house back together after a flood. Truth is, restoration of any kind takes a long time. In an Amazon-Prime world where everything happens so quickly, it’s difficult to wait for results.

Seasons of waiting can make us doubt God. Does God care? Is God listening? But Isaiah invites us to turn the equation. Rather than seeing God’s character through the lens of our circumstances, Isaiah invites us to see our circumstances through the lens of God’s character. That kind of waiting renews our strength (“Those who wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength.” Isaiah 40:31).


If you missed yesterday’s message (“Power for the Faint”) you can listen to it here