Wednesday, February 18, 2015

I'm Available

When the prophet Isaiah had his vision of the glory of the Lord in the temple (Isaiah 6:1-8), he heard God asking who would take on the mission that he had.  Isaiah boldly proclaimed “Here am I. Send me!”  He is wonderful role model of how we can respond to the challenges that the Lord sends to us.

Often, however, it’s hard for us to know exactly what God wants us to do.  Very, very few of us have an experience like Isaiah’s, where the Lord speaks to us in a voice that’s impossible to ignore.  The life of discipleship for us more frequently involves trying to sense what God’s will is for us, or what mission he has in mind for us.  Over the years, I’ve had a number of people who have been so excited about the faith that they were eager to do anything for God.  But they didn’t know what God wanted them to do.  My advice was simple: tell God that you’re available, and he’ll give you a mission.  If you express your desire to serve, God will honor it.  Things will fall into place, usually in surprising ways, and you’ll find yourself making a difference in the name of Jesus Christ.  You may even find it so enjoyable and fulfilling that you wonder if it’s too easy.  That’s because you’re doing exactly what God has called you to do.

Since our special worship service on January 18, Old Union has been considering the theme verse that God has given to us:
“Encourage one another, and build each other up.” (1 Thessalonians 5:11)
This commission from the Lord is something that comes quite naturally to Old Union Church.  Many of us have had our lives and faith strengthened through the ministry of this church, and many of us have experienced the satisfaction of encouraging others.

Now that we understand the identity of our church, the next step is to figure out how to live it.  What can we do to encourage and build people up?  We do a decent job within our church family, but what about everyone else?  How can Old Union become a beacon of encouragement and up-building in our community?

To answer these questions, all we need to do is tell God, “I’m available.”  Old Union Church is available.  We’re ready and eager to serve God.  And then we watch.  We’ll discover people in our community who are discouraged, whose lives have been shattered.  Opportunities will fall in our lap to make difference in the lives of the hurting people of our community.  It won’t start with something heroic or splashy, but with simple, easy activity that will eventually develop into something that takes our breath away.


Please join me in telling God, “We’re available.  Old Union Church is ready to do what you want us to do.  Here we are.  Send us.”  Then watch to see what God will show us.

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

A Special Worship Service

Old Union had an unusual worship service on January 18.  Usually, as the pastor I select a Bible passage and tell the congregation how I think it applies to our lives.  Instead, you selected 14 Bible passages in advance, and told each other how you think they apply to our congregation.  During worship, we divided into five groups, each led by two elders, for lively and uplifting discussion.  By the end of the service I sensed a renewed excitement about our church, and how God is at work in it.

I was also very aware of how God was at work through the entire process: through the session as we planned the event, and through the congregation as He brought to people’s minds powerful and insightful Bible passages.  During the week before this worship service, I thought to myself, “Could I even dare to imagine that God would have all the groups select the same passage as the one that best describes our church?”  With 14 excellent passages to choose from, and five groups doing the choosing, it didn’t seem possible.  But it was.  After all, all things are possible with God!  All five groups selected the same passage, which was also the passage the session had selected during their discussion the week before.  Apparently God wants to use this Scripture to guide us in our ministry and mission:

“Therefore encourage one another and build each other up, 
just as in fact you are doing” (1 Thessalonians 5:11).

As exciting as the January 18 worship was, it is only the beginning.  Now that we have a guiding vision for our church, it’s time to do something with it.  On January 25 I began a series of sermons on this passage, and the verses that come before and after it, to help us learn as much from it as possible.  The session is developing plans for how all of us can use this verse focus our attention on what God wants us to do.  As we grow in our understanding what God is telling us, we will be able to focus the life of our church around it, giving purpose and meaning to all that we do.

Spend some time reflecting on these questions that arise from the passage.

  • What can we do to encourage one another?
  • What can we do to encourage our community?
  • What can we do to build each other up?
  • What can we do build up our community?
  • How can we do these things together, as a church?
  • How can we do these things as individual members?

The session and I would love to hear your suggestions and ideas!

This is not something new.  The discussion groups on the 18th talked about the many ways that Old Union and its people already encourage and build people up.  By focusing on these gifts and considering how we can use them to touch a discouraged and broken-down world, we can be part of God’s work to increase his kingdom.

 Peter

Monday, January 26, 2015

Encourage and Build Up

Old Union had an unusual worship service on January 18.  Usually, as the pastor I select a Bible passage and tell the congregation how I think it applies to our lives.  Instead, you selected 14 Bible passages in advance, and told each other how you think they apply to our congregation.  During worship, we divided into five groups, each led by two elders, for lively and uplifting discussion.  By the end of the service I sensed a renewed excitement about our church, and how God is at work in it.

I was also very aware of how God was at work through the entire process: through the session as we planned the event, and through the congregation as He brought to people’s minds powerful and insightful Bible passages.  During the week before this worship service, I thought to myself, “Could I even dare to imagine that God would have all the groups select the same passage as the one that best describes our church?”  With 14 excellent passages to choose from, and five groups doing the choosing, it didn’t seem possible.  But it was.  After all, all things are possible with God!  All five groups selected the same passage, which was also the passage the session had selected during their discussion the week before.  Apparently God wants to use this Scripture to guide us in our ministry and mission:

“Therefore encourage one another and build each other up,
just as in fact you are doing” (1 Thessalonians 5:11).

As exciting as the January 18 worship was, it is only the beginning.  Now that we have a guiding vision for our church, it’s time to do something with it.  On January 25 I began a series of sermons on this passage, and the verses that come before and after it, to help us learn as much from it as possible.  The session is developing plans for how all of us can use this verse focus our attention on what God wants us to do.  As we grow in our understanding what God is telling us, we will be able to focus the life of our church around it, giving purpose and meaning to all that we do.

Spend some time reflecting on these questions that arise from the passage.
What can we do to encourage one another?
What can we do to encourage our community?
What can we do to build each other up?
What can we do build up our community?
How can we do these things together, as a church?
How can we do these things as individual members?
The session and I would love to hear your suggestions and ideas!

This is not something new.  The discussion groups on the 18th talked about the many ways that Old Union and its people already encourage and build people up.  By focusing on these gifts and considering how we can use them to touch a discouraged and broken-down world, we can be part of God’s work to increase his kingdom.


Peter

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

The Church Follows the Eyes

When I took my motorcycle safety course, I learned that “your wheels follow your eyes.”  If you look at the pothole you want to avoid, you’ll end up hitting it.  I learned instead to look at the patch of good pavement, and that’s where my bike would go.

Over the past several months, our eyes have been on the potholes of our church.  We’re very aware of the problems and difficulties that Old Union is facing, and many of us are worried about the future of our congregation.  But, to paraphrase my motorcycle instructors, the church follows the eyes.  As long as we focus on our church’s weaknesses and problems, we’ll never get onto the clean pavement.  Our ride will keep getting rockier and rockier.  It’s wise to be aware of the “potholes” around us, but our future lies on the good pavement.

The session and I encourage you to pay attention to what God is doing in our church.  What gifts and opportunities has he given us?  To word it another way, what are we good at as a congregation?  God’s desire for us is to respond to what he is doing in our church and in the community around us.  He wants us to use the gifts with which he’s blessed us.  He longs for us to build upon the strengths that we have.

Since September, the session has been working actively to plan for Old Union’s future.  There’s a good chance it will look very different from what we’re doing now.  Some of us may be uncomfortable with the plans that God has for the church.  But the session is convinced that the health of our congregation depends upon following God’s guidance as he leads us into the unknown.

To move forward, we first need to know where we are now.  You can’t reach a destination without knowing your starting point.  We cannot use the gifts God has given us if we don’t know what they are.  We can’t respond to what God is doing if we don’t know what he is doing.

The session wants your help to recognize how God is at work in our church.  As always, the best way to learn from God is through Scripture.  Prayerfully consider which story, or passage, or character from the Bible can help us understand what God is doing at Old Union.  Is there a passage that captures the spirit of our congregation?  Is there someone in the Bible who has been in a similar position to ours?  Is there a teaching from God that we can take to heart?  Is there a story in Scripture that relates to Old Union?  Please make time to discover where God leads you in Scripture.  Remember: we are not looking for the problems our church has, but for signs of what God is doing and how he has equipped us.

No later than January 11, please tell me what Scripture passages you find.  Your responses will help the session to recognize God’s presence and work as it leads us into the future the Lord has prepared for us.


Peter

Monday, November 24, 2014

Being a Healthy Church

We’ve been talking a lot lately about  how our church is doing.  Many of us feel anxiety, and perhaps even despair, when we look at some of the troubling trends in our congregation.  But there is only one way to have a healthy church.

Quit worrying about it.

None of us can create or sustain a healthy church.  Only the Holy Spirit can do that.  He is the one who calls a church into existence, gathers people into it, and shapes them into a community that builds the kingdom of God.  Let God do his work.  If Old Union truly is his church, he’ll be at work in it.  He will build it and fill it with life.  But if the Spirit doesn’t do it, there’s nothing any of us could ever do to make up for it.  All we could do on our own is make a cheap human imitation of what church is supposed to be.  I don’t know about you, but I have no desire to be part of a pretend church.  Either God fills it and empowers it, or it’s not worth having.

So what should we do?  After all, we can’t just sit on our hands and wait for God to act, can we?  To be honest, sometimes that’s the best thing we can do.  There have been too many times in my life when I was convinced I knew what the best path was.  All I ended up doing was getting in the way of God’s plans.  However, there are a few things that each of us can do to be part of the Lord’s work in our church.

1. Quit worrying about how well or poorly the church is doing.  Trust God to take care of it.  He’s been at work in Old Union for more than 200 years, at times that were much more dire than this.  To paraphrase Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount, who of us by worrying can add a single spark to our church?

2. Pray.  First, pray for yourself.  A healthy church is a community of disciples.  The spirit of a church is only as strong as the spirit of its members.  Are you a disciple: a student and follower of Jesus Christ?  If so, what are you doing to develop your relationship with him?  How are you deepening your commitment, growing in your knowledge, taking the risks that God has put in front of you.?  Second, pray for our church.  I don’t mean “Pray that God will be at work in the church.”  He already is.  And I don’t mean “Pray for our church to grow.”  That’s up to God.  I mean “Pray that Old Union will pay attention to God and will get with his program.”


3. Find and follow our purpose.  God created Old Union for a reason.  It  is not to gather for an hour of worship once a week and make sure we can pay the bills to have our Sunday morning gathering.  Sunday worship is essential and critical.  But our church’s purpose grows out from that worship.  What does God want us to do?  Why did he create our church?  The reason for being a church isn’t about the building, the pastor, the budget, the next church program or function.  These are things to help the church pursue its purpose, but they are not the goal God has placed before us.  Then, once you figure out what God wants from us as a church, do it.   Get on board with what the Lord is already doing.  When we do that, there’s no stopping us.

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Your Church's Personality and Purpose

Each congregation has its own personality.  Sometimes the differences are obvious: small family congregation or megachurch, traditional or contemporary worship style, Presbyterian or Roman Catholic or nondenominational.  But even among churches of the same size, worship style and denomination, the differences can be staggering.  You may have experienced this when worshiping at a relative’s church or while traveling.  Even if it’s another family-style Presbyterian church with traditional worship, the church may have seemed nothing like Old Union.

God loves variety.  Why else would he have created more than 350,000 species of beetles?  Each person you meet has a unique personality, background, interests, and abilities.  God loves the same variety when it comes to his churches.  He takes pleasure in the distinctiveness of each gathering of his people.  There is a quality about Old Union Church that no other congregation on the planet has.  It is the identity and personality that God has given to us.

When we realize this fact, we can draw two conclusions to guide us as we seek to address the challenges that our church is facing.  First, the solutions for our difficulties will not be approaches that work well at other churches.  Ben Roethlisberger throws the pigskin and Sidney Crosby handles the puck.  If Sidney took passing tips from Ben, it wouldn’t work out very well.  We may notice a concept that works wonderfully at another church, but it would make as much sense at Old Union as hitting a golf ball with a baseball bat.  Certainly, we can learn from other churches and get wonderful inspirations from them about how we can serve God and his people in powerful and exciting ways.  But not every idea survives the transplant.  And when it does, it needs to be adapted to thrive in our congregation’s environment.

Second, we serve God best when we are the kind of church he created us to be.  Michael Jordan did a decent job when he tried to be a baseball player, but he excelled at basketball.  His gifts suited the boards better than the diamond.  Old Union might be able to do a passable job of serving God in many different ways, but our gifts are best suited for the particular game that God created us to play.  To bring honor to God and to be a healthy church, we need to recognize our church’s own unique style, and use it to do the unique work that God has prepared for us.

This month, please spend some time in prayer reflecting on what makes Old Union the church that it is.  To guide you in this endeavor, here are some suggestions:
  • What memories or stories best capture for you what Old Union is all about?
  • Which hymns best describe the relationship with God that Old Union demonstrates?
  • What passage from the Bible exemplifies the life of our church?
  • Is there a picture, image, or symbol that portrays Old Union’s character?
Please tell me or a session member what God teaches you about our church.

Friday, September 26, 2014

What Do We Value?

In last month’s message I described some of the difficulties that Old Union Church is facing, to help us acknowledge and deal with issues that we’d rather not think about.  I ended my message by commenting that these difficulties are the symptoms of a problem that we haven’t identified…yet.  Instead of looking for quick fixes to address the symptoms without addressing the disease, or worrying that Old Union might have to close its doors, I encourage you to join the session and me as we seek to understand what our challenge is, and to find ways to address it.

The issue we’re facing, whatever it is, is not about what is happening or not happening it at Old Union; it is why these things are happening or not happening.  In other words, what are the values or purposes behind the things that we do as a church?  God created our church, he has brought each of us into it, and he is at work in our midst, for a reason.  Our job is to recognize what that reason is: why God wants us to be a church.  When we have a better sense of what our purpose is as a congregation, and when we focus our hearts and resources toward that purpose, we will be doing what God has created and called us to do.  And there is no doubt that when we follow where God is leading us, he will provide all the resources and opportunities we need to do so.

Our church has a statement of purpose: it’s posted above the steps to the church basement, and it’s on our church letterhead.  Our purpose, together, is to praise the Lord, grow in faith, spread God’s word through the community, and reach out to those in need.  Our session has identified the “core values” of Old Union Church, and you’ll find them on the first page of the picture directory: spiritual development and growth, providing a place for belonging, and caring for and supporting those in need. 

I invite you reflect on these statements, and spend time in thought and prayer with the following questions:
  1. Lord, is this what you want Old Union to be and to do?
  2. How well does the life of Old Union today reflect the values and the purpose we say that we have?
  3. If someone were to walk into our church for the first time, what would they think our purpose is as a church, based on what they see us doing and hear us talking about?

Statements on pieces of paper are a waste of time if they have nothing to do who we are as a church.  They are meaningless if they do not describe the calling God has given us.  Until we discover what God wants, and respond to it, the symptoms will only get worse.


Please share the results of your prayers and thoughts with a session member or with me.  Next month I’ll offer some ideas about how we can recognize the identity that God has given Old Union Church.