Monday Post

Friday Reflection: Stories Matter

Jesus was a storyteller.  

When he walked this earth, he told stories and he delighted in and lifted up the stories of his people.

  • When he wanted people to know about God’s activity in the world, he told a story (Luke 8).

  • When he sensed that people were showing favoritism that did not reflect how God created them to be, he told a story. (Luke 14)

  • When he wanted to share about God’s extravagant love, he told a story (Luke 15).

  • When he wanted to help people learn about prayer, he told a story. (Luke 18)

  • When he wanted to encourage people to share of their God-given gifts, he told a story.  (Luke 19).

Jesus told stories within the Jewish culture that revolved around storytelling. These storytelling traditions are captured throughout the Bible from Genesis to Revelation.  It is important to reflect on ways our modern culture, influenced by enlightenment thinking of reason and deduction, has lost the art of storytelling that is actually foundational to our faith in God:

Parker Palmer, educator and activist, writes:

“Instead of telling our valuable stories, we seek safety in abstractions, speaking to each other about our opinions, ideas, and beliefs rather than about our lives. Academic culture blesses this practice by insisting that the more abstract our speech, the more likely we are to touch the universal truths that unite us. But what happens is exactly the reverse: as our discourse becomes more abstract, the less connected we feel. There is less sense of community among intellectuals than in the most 'primitive' society of storytellers."

The late Sir Jonathan Sacks, Emeritus Chief Rabbi, has quoted the late Ellie Wiesel who said,

"God created Man because God loves stories." Sacks goes on to say "We are the stories we tell about ourselves.... We come to know who we are by discovering of which story or stories we are a part."

Learning To Tell Our Stories

On 4th Sundays, some of us have been learning how the tool of storytelling can help us as we learn more about ourselves and each other.  We invite you to learn with us on Fourth Sundays between now and July. Here is information.  

During this season of Lent, we take time to receive the life altering story of the cross – a story of love poured out to heal us individually and communally.  The love story of the cross is our story of hope:

Christ brought us together through his death on the cross. The Cross got us to embrace, and that was the end of the hostility. Christ came and preached peace to you outsiders and peace to us insiders. He treated us as equals, and so made us equals. Through him we both share the same Spirit and have equal access to the Father.  Ephesians 2: 16-18

During this time of Lent – as we walk together toward the Cross, we invite you to take time to explore your own story and pause to hear others.

  • What is the story you cannot help but tell?

  • As you listen to others, what are the stories (sometimes underneath what is being said), that they are longing to tell?

May we grow as a community that listens and tells our stories.  We are all walking stories. Jesus Christ, the author and finisher of our faith (Heb. 12:2) is with us as we learn to tell our stories and learn to hold another’s story.

Invitation

Spend time with your story; spend time with Jesus’ stories, listen to the stories around you. During this season of Lent, receive your part in God’s big story of gracious love.

A prayer by Caroline Lu

Guide me Jesus, the Christ
Who knows so much
Remembers from where I’ve come
The stories that I hold

Guard my thoughts, actions, and ways
That easily run astray
Give me your peace
That knows none other

 Be my wise voice
Attune my ears to you
As I sit in quiet
Amidst the whispering breath 
--
Caroline

Friday Reflection: Journey toward the Cross

First Friday of Lent Refection from  Renée                                   2.19.21

Let’s journey through Lent together. For Jesus is our peace.

We journey together toward the cross. For the cross is for you, for me, for your neighbors, for our city, for our nation, for our world. The cross is for those you know by name; and for those who are strangers to you. The cross is for those in whom you delight and for those with whom you struggle.

Ephesians 2 says boldly:

The cross of Christ Jesus breaks down our barriers of hostility and enmity; the cross of Christ Jesus builds bridges for healing and new relationships where was none or only divide. The cross of Christ Jesus.

We are people that are quite aware of the reality of divide in ourselves, in our families, in our society. We know our tendency toward “othering” another human being. This season of Lent let us journey together toward that which brings us together. The cross of Christ Jesus. At the foot of the cross where we humbly bow to our Prince of Peace, there is no “othering.” There is only a new humanity in need of grace.

We are people who are overwhelmed by the sorrow and suffering of our world. We journey toward the One who “bears in his heart all wounds” (Edith Sitwell). The writer of Hebrews affirms in 2:18: “Because he himself was tested by what he suffered, he is able to help those who are being tested.”

The Old English word for Lent (lencten) literally means “lengthen” and is translated to mean “spring” because spring is the lengthening of days as the sun’s light lingers in the sky.

During this season of Lent, we invite you to lengthen your vision toward the cross of Christ Jesus and to take time to meditate upon and give thanks for the centrality of the cross.  We are centering our Sunday messages upon Ephesians 2 while also reading other passages that bring our attention to the saving grace of Jesus.

You may want to read Ephesians 1-3 and spend time in various translations.

Walking Partners

As we journey together we also encourage you to reach out to a “walking” partner. Jesus never sent people out alone.  Who is someone you can connect with for a few minutes each week to share thoughts from your walk? You may want to physically meet up for a walk  or simply talk on the phone. Can’t think of a partner? Email jamesb@unionchurchseattle.org and he will make a connection.

Connections

We also will provide multiple times to connect throughout the week that you will find on our webpage:

Monday Midday Prayer | 12:15 pm
Wednesday Morning Prayer | 8 am
Wednesday Guided Reflections | 7 pm | March 3,10, 17, 24
Friday Movie Nights
Neighborhood Meals in Parks

If you have an idea for how to connect, let James B know.

Let us journey together in Lent, for Jesus is our peace.

When I survey the wondrous cross
On which the Prince of glory died
My richest gain I count but loss
And pour contempt on all my pride. 

--Isaac Watts

Ephesians 2:14-18
For Christ Jesus is our peace; in his flesh he has made both groups into one and has broken down the dividing wall, that is, the hostility between us. He has abolished the law with its commandments and ordinances, that he might create in himself one new humanity in place of the two, thus making peace, and might reconcile both groups to God in one body[c] through the cross, thus putting to death that hostility through it. So he came and proclaimed peace to you who were far off and peace to those who were near; for through him both of us have access in one Spirit to the Father.

Monday Post for February 15

For Jesus is Our Peace: Walking in Lent Together

The season of Lent, the forty days of preparation for the celebration of Easter, is a gift of time in a world that pulls upon our attention in myriad ways. Lent begins this Wednesday, (the day the faith community calls Ash Wednesday).

 Here is a question to help shape this season: Where have I gotten away from God, and what are the disciplines that will enable me to find my way back to the One who is already turned toward me?

 

Lent 2021 Focus

For Jesus is Our Peace: Walking in Lent Together

During Lent the focus of our communal worship on Sundays will be:
For Jesus is Our Peace
and we will explore the intimacy and expanse of the cross. We invite you to spend time meditating on, marinating in, and even possibly memorizing Ephesians 2.
We are highlighting the devotional The Way of Shalom prepared by Presbyterians Today. and will provide daily readings for you beginning Wednesday.

  For Jesus is our peace; in his flesh he has made both groups into one and has broken down the dividing wall, that is, the hostility between us. Ephesians 2:14

The season of Lent, the forty days of preparation for the celebration of Easter, is a gift of TIME in a world that pulls upon our attention in myriad ways. Lent begins this Wednesday, (the day the faith community calls Ash Wednesday). Throughout history followers of Christ have discovered all kinds of way to enter further into the new reality created by Jesus’ death and resurrection such as solitude, prayer, fasting, pilgrimages, singing and many more.

However you spend these next 40 days of Lent (46 counting Sundays), we pray you will take time to walk with open eyes and at a pace of life that gives you space to be with GOD.

Here is a question to help shape this season:

Where have I turned away from God, and what are the disciplines (the letting go and taking on; the changing of focus and priorities) that will enable me to turn to the One who is already turned toward me?

Friday Reflection: Sound of Justice

The Sound of Justice:  Amos 5 (from last Sunday)

Seek the Lord and live…
I hate, I despise your festivals,
and I take no delight in your solemn assemblies.
Even though you offer me your burnt offerings and grain offerings,
I will not accept them;
and the offerings of well-being of your fatted animals
I will not look upon.
Take away from me the noise of your songs;
I will not listen to the melody of your harps.
But let justice roll down like waters,
and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream. Amos 5:6, 21-24

What do we learn for our time and situation as we spend time with Amos 5 and 8th century BC Israel?

The music God loves to hear is the sound of justice.  It is the sound of a society where people of all sectors of life can come together and know they are welcome, encouraged, supported, championed, embraced. It is the sound of voices praying together, lifting our voices in song that brings healing and restoration where there is pain and division. It is the sound of shared stories that unite us to our Creator and the Maker of heaven and earth. This is  Worship. This is the Kingdom of Heaven on earth.

God loves to hear the music of justice that, with the Spirit of the Lord seeks out injustice – ensuring medical bills can be paid, food can be shared, children can have access to wifi for education, relationships can be healed, the environment can be enjoyed by anyone.  …  What would you add is the music God longs to hear?

Amos 5 and the image of an ever-flowing torrential river, traveling to the lowest crevices to bring the healing waters of life, bring to mind another river in scripture.

Revelation 22 says:  “Then the angel showed me the river of the water of life, bright as crystal, flowing from the throne of God and the Lamb  through the middle of the street of the city. On either side of the river is the tree of life … the leaves of the tree are for the healing of the nations. No curse will be found there any more. But the throne of God and of the Lamb will be in it, and his servants will worship him; 

You would think that God’s plan for humanity would be to restore us to God-self and then bring us back to the GARDEN again…

Instead, God does what is beyond our imagination and brings together all of the people of all nations into… a city. Not a city like Babel or Jerusalem or Rome or New York, or Dubai or Seattle. But a city splashed with color, spacious and populated joyfully with people of all nations, from all the earth. Together.

There is no temple in this City, we are told because the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb, Jesus, the ONE sacrificed for our sake, are the temple – the gathering place.

It is a city of wholeness and healing, full of beauty and joy, and in the middle of the city —right down the center — is the ever-flowing RIVER of LIFE. It is a river in which all have access to it with the tree of life on both sides bringing healing. IT is the river of justice of Amos. It is the water of LIFE that Jesus offers.

INVITATION

We, who live on this earth, held in the in-between --in the middle— are invited to live as bearers of hope and as people who remember that God hates that which destroys creation, hears the cries of injustice and invites us to seek the Spirit daily that we might participate in the flowing work of justice NOW in our CITY. In our neighborhood.  In our world.

And, Jesus Christ, our Lord,  is at the center.

What the people of Israel missed, what Amos came to proclaim and the good news we share is that REAL WORSHIP combines our gratitude and praise to God that Jesus is Lord WITH our acts of justice and righteousness in our every day lives,  in our families, our neighborhoods, our city. In our world.  

Lets participate in  Jesus’ everflowing stream of water that brings healing – a healing for you, for us and for the nations

A prayer for you today

Dear God on High, thank you that you say there is space in your story for me. Forgive me for not trusting your Word that says I matter and for seeking my identity in false images to puff myself up in the world.  Help me to trust that your Spirit of Life flows through me to bring your healing to this world. Open my eyes to see the places where my gifts, personality, and story can be a blessing to others on this journey of life.

Thank you that in seeking you, I find whole, real life.

In the name of Jesus. Amen

Friday Reflection: Seek

Seek

Today is 1/29/21.  The last day of 10 days of palindromes.  
Perhaps like me, you are seeking order in any possible place and moment in a time that can feel primarily chaotic and uncertain.

Amid this ongoing pandemic as we face the reality that we’ve been doing this for almost a year, I’ve been struck recently by the feeling of being stuck with myself. I look in the mirror each morning, and think, “Well, here I am again!”  I want to lift my eyes upward and experience God’s presence in each day, but I am overwhelmed by both the mundane and the monotony as well as the chaos and the confusion.  

Do you feel this way?  Wandering around the room, pausing to remember what day it is, trying to decide where to focus --what are your priorities when demands are real and pressing, but the dimension of your world is drastically reduced?  
Do I send the email before or after I do laundry? Do I do laundry or wear the same outfit again? Set up another zoom call?  (Not another!) Help my child with math or reading or both?  Figure out what I can make with the food in the refrigerator? Review a spreadsheet? Watch the news stream again? The days seem long and also surprisingly short as we reflect back and ask, What did I do today?

It is easy to get lost. And lostness often causes us to freeze. This may sound counter-intuitive but when we are lost the invitation is to SEEK.  It begins by asking what am I seeking? (Besides the pair of shoes you misplaced six months ago). Am I seeking the comfort of the past?  Am I seeking an elusive future? Or am I seeking the presence of God Who is maker of heaven and earth; Who cannot be contained in one building or program or agenda?  Am I seeking the One who calls us Beloved;  who travels a far distance to find us?

This weekend we invite you to a practice of seeking God right where you are. The invitation is to lift your head above the mundane and the monotony, the chaos and the confusion to seek the Lord.   Our triune God seeks hard after us to communicate our worth and God-given identity and longs for us to be seekers who stop, turn and embrace our relational identity that is not a transaction.  

Learning from Amos

The invitation to seek is woven throughout scripture and we see this word is central to Amos.  Meditate on these words from Amos 5. We’ve included in the 5:4-9; 14-15 in the Message because the freshness of the language catches our attention.

God’s Message to the family of Israel:

“Seek me and live.
    Don’t fool around at those shrines of Bethel,
Don’t waste time taking trips to Gilgal,
    and don’t bother going down to Beer-sheba.
Gilgal is here today and gone tomorrow
    and Bethel is all show, no substance.”

 So seek God and live! You don’t want to end up
    with nothing to show for your life
But a pile of ashes, a house burned to the ground.
    For God will send just such a fire,
    and the firefighters will show up too late.

 Woe to you who turn justice to vinegar
and stomp righteousness into the mud.
Do you realize where you are? You’re in a cosmos
    star-flung with constellations by God,
A world God wakes up each morning
    and puts to bed each night.
God dips water from the ocean
    and gives the land a drink.
    God, God-revealed, does all this.
And he can destroy it as easily as make it.
    He can turn this vast wonder into total waste.

 Seek good and not evil—
    and live!
You talk about God, the God-of-the-Angel-Armies,
    being your best friend.
Well, live like it, 

 Hate evil and love good,
    then work it out in the public square.

How does this invitation to seek God, resonate with Jesus’ teaching in Matthew 6:33?

Seek first the Kingdom of God and all its’ righteousness and all these things will be added unto to you? 

 Through Amos we learn that the people of Israel lost their identity, thinking they were so special, and they forgot to seek the God who already had sought them.  Their worship became a ritual empty of their dynamic God. They forgot their connection to the larger community. To live as God’s Beloved is to trust that what God gives to us flows through us to to bless others. The God of Justice brings healing and restoration to the world and all of creation through us.  To seek the Lord and live means to discover that your living is interwoven with the lives of others. To seek the Lord and live is to name that which oppresses and diminishes and destroys others and to pursue the way of peace.

When you seek God and all that God desires to reveal, you help others flourish. Do you trust that? This is the heart of the message of scripture. When you say yes to Jesus as Lord you say yes to the world God loves and yes to being a bearer of love.

We invite you to take time to pause some time in your day and seek God’s healing presence, intimate counsel, and merciful love. God is with you, for you, and longs to work through you.

Prayer

Lord of Creation, thank you for the way you have created me – wonderfully and beautifully made. Thank you for looking upon me and calling me your beloved.

Jesus, Emmanuel, open my eyes this day to the ways I can offer the gifts, resources, personality, PRESENCE, and insight I possess to be used for good. As a blessing.

Spirit of grace and mercy, show me how I can participate in your flowing river of justice to bring healing, hope, and restoration — even here and now in a pandemic.

God of intimacy and love, help me trust that there is space in Your Story for me.

—reflection by Renée Notkin

Monday Post / Hear the Roar

But this I call to mind,
and therefore I have hope:
The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases,
his mercies never come to an end;
 they are new every morning;
“The Lord is my portion,” says my soul,
“therefore I will hope in him.”
Lamentations 3:23-24

We are now providing a Monday post that we pray will be a resource for you in your daily life of faith.

For the next few weeks, we are reading and learning from the prophet Amos. We invite you to join with us by taking time to read the book of Amos, perhaps in various translations.

Here is James B’s  introductory sermon from Jan 10 to help guide your time. You can also listen/watch the video here.

Hear the Roar. Amos 1-2

What are you feeling after what happened at the Capitol this week?
How did your spirit respond to what politicians said before, and then what they said after?
How did it make you feel earlier in the day to see a huge crowd pressing against the Capitol building with a token police presence when those same steps, the Mall, and the Lincoln monument were covered by an overwhelming armed presence during the BLM protests this summer?
How do you respond to “Jesus saves” signs alongside a noose and Confederate flags?

If you were angered and appalled and saddened by what you saw then there is someone that I would like you to meet.
The Prophet Amos.
And if you don't feel that way then there is someone I would also like you to meet.
The Prophet Amos.

Last Fall, we decided to focus on the book of Amos for our Winter 2021 sermon series and it now amazes me how the Spirit times things. For we will see as we get to know Amos over the next few weeks that he has much to say to us today.

Amos was a farmer who tended sheep and fig trees. That was his profession. He had not gone to prophet school or planned to be a prophet, but the Lord gave him a vision that he was compelled to share with Israel. Kind of a gutsy thing to do considering he didn't live in Israel--he lived in Judah.
This is during the 8th century before Christ’s birth and Israel had become a divided Kingdom: there is Israel in the North that had broken away from Judah in the South because they didn't like some of the taxation and demands being placed upon them by Jerusalem.
So, not so famous Amos was family but the kind that you don’t care if you see. Especially, if he shows up in those fig stained, sheep smelling farmer clothes. Because, mind you, Israel was doing extremely well. The attention of the stronger military powers in the greater region were distracted by other distant wars which meant it was a time of freedom and boundary expansion for Israel.

These prosperous times played well into their perceived identity.

They were, after all, the people that God had brought miraculously out of Egypt into the promised land and declared to them that he was their God. And they knew a day was coming, a judgment day, when God would flex his muscle, set the world right and place them In the catbird seat.                                                                  
They were God’s special people.
And things were going very well for them --businesses were making good profit, people were building houses for themselves, often many houses --decorating them with artisan furniture made of leather an ivory.
And talk about worship! It was the talk of the town: celebrations and feasts were packed events.
People bragged about the offerings and sacrifices they made and the music -- the music was the subject of much excitement and attention.

Of course, there is another side to all this.
Such wealth was not accumulated without exploiting others. The poor were really poor, Exploited and when broken and no longer of economic benefit, discarded.
There were property schemes that prevented the poor from getting property.
Legal schemes that kept them from advancing.
And business schemes that allowed those with wealth and property to limit any competition. The leaders, themselves being affluent and vested with power, did not take their responsibility to govern very seriously but instead focused on skin care and parties.

That very active religious life had become unmoored from the living God.
As a result, the show was the thing. It did not matter whether you were at a feast for the Lord or going with your son to a prostitute in the temple of Baal.

The people of God had fallen asleep in the comfort of salvation and prosperity.
How do you wake up a sleeping people?
How about unleashing a lion?
That is the vision that God gave Amos.
The first line of his vision that he records is, “The Lord roars from Zion and thunders from Jerusalem; the pastures of the shepherds dry up, and the top of Carmel withers.”

God has some roar --traveling from Jerusalem a hundred miles  from where they were and going another 50 beyond them to Mount Carmel—and still hot enough to wither vegetation.
That is an image that can kind of blow you away.

But the unsuspecting shepherd, called to be prophet from outside the country, is strategic in the way that he imparts the vision that God has given him.
He doesn't come directly after his northern family with the Lion’s roar of impending danger.
He begins by talking about the neighbors: Damascus, Gaza, Tyre, Edom, Ammon and Moab—all places they felt superior to and were glad to hear had been put on God’s short list for judgement.

Let the Lion roar!

For the neighbors really had done horrific things:

Obliterated foes with excessive force. Enslaved and sold whole communities. Relentlessly held onto and fed hatred for their neighbors. Broke their word and treaties with people they are close to.
Destroyed the helpless, including the slaughter of pregnant women for ambitious gain

The Israelites are likely saying, “We like this guy-- this new Prophet from down South! Tell us more You make us feel special!”

And, Amos does tell them more but now he begins to speak a little closer to home about their family members next door in Judah and he even begins to blur the lines between Judah and them.
In the passage that Natasha read, Amos begins as he did with all the other countries -- with a little saying: For three sins even for four I will not relent.” This is not an arithmetic statement but a Hebraic idiom of saying, “not only a great quantity but even more!” Certain numbers like 3, 7, 12 and 40 our numbers of completion, numbers used to say they contain everything.
So when you say 3 even 4 there is a sense it is a staggering number that goes even beyond what you think of as being complete --it's overflowing. So, in addition to tons of other sin, what is the overflowing evil of the people of God? The Lion roars:

“they have rejected the law of the Lord
and have not kept his decrees,
led astray by false gods, the gods their ancestors followed”

Now you can say, “What’s the big deal? So I'm not listening really close to Bible stories?
I'm not super legalistic? For this God is angry?”

But that is not rejecting the law.
The law in this sense is God's revelation of God's self. The law is not so much legislation and rules but God conveying God's character. Look at the Ten Commandments and you see that the Giver of them must value relationships and justice. You find a God who loves us before we love God. Who is committed to us. Who is the only one knows us and loves us so well that we won’t be twisted and hollowed out as we would if we chose to follow lesser things we make into god’s hoping for a better life.

How does this rejection of God manifest itself?
The Lord says:

“They sell the innocent for silver,
and the needy for a pair of sandals.
They trample on the heads of the poor
as on the dust of the ground
and deny justice to the oppressed.”

In short, we see it in social and economic injustice that keeps the poor poor, in debt and even enslaved as they try to pay for simple necessities.

And He continues weaving this injustice with hypocritical religion:

“Father and son use the same girl
and so profane my holy name.
They lie down beside every altar
on garments taken in pledge.
In the house of their god
they drink wine taken as fines.”

Rejecting God revealed in the Law, they then find it easy to blend in idols and destructive practices into their belief system. Father and son embrace the idol of sensuality and make themselves comfortable using the garment/gain from someone who is indebted to them (which the law prohibits them from having after sunset), and then mocking God’s grace by worshiping with wine that was likely extorted from others through trumped up fines that are paid to them (not the government).

Rejection of God, abuse of others, social injustice, cheapening grace—all made all the more repulsive because of their special relationship with God.
They twisted what God meant by special.
They thought they were entitled, better than others.
But Israel and Judah are not special in that God loves them more. They are special in that God is choosing to work out salvation for all nations through them and has equipped them to do so. Like in a family: Parents love all their kids but choose one to handle the estate. It doesn’t mean that one is loved more but they do have a special position for a special assignment.

The very thing that they took pride in—their relationship with God brings responsibility—and liability. By bringing them out of bondage in Egypt, walking with them in the wilderness and giving them the law—they are equipped with God’s love and wisdom, faithfulness to live not like those who do not have their advantage/blessing. They are to live differently. They are to live valuing what God values: relationships and social justice.

When that is ignored the Lion’s roars his grief and anger.

That is why the Christian Nationalism we saw on screen on Wednesday is so grievous.

What we saw was something like:
Jesus saved me.
Jesus is the truth.
I accepted Jesus into my heart.
I have the truth.
My country is a divine tool of the Messiah and gives me freedom to have this truth.
Sin is invading and taking over the country to ruin my faith and the country.
So we fight at all cost to maintain purity and preserve my way of life, blind as I may be to the embedded unbiblical colonial values that oppress others.
We are special.
The US is special and basically the closest thing to the Kingdom of God on earth”

But the reality is we do not have the truth.
The Truth has us.
We are Disciples of the Truth /Jesus.
Christian nationalism is counter to the truth.
It is counter to the way of the cross, to giving of ourselves; counter to living generously, counter to not fearing losing a privileged position because we have a greater hope than the US; counter to placing purity over love and justice. The xenophobic prosperity gospel of Christian nationalism is countered to the incarnational Christ born in a manger, raised in a carpenter's family, visited by mind-valuing foreign travelers; counter to the One anointed to proclaim good news to the poor, to proclaim freedom for the prisoners, recovery of sight for the blind, and to set the oppressed free.

It is always tempting to put ourselves first.
That's why Prophetic voices, scripture and the cross are important. They remind us of the Jesus of the truth we follow--Reminds us of the one who loves us like no other and empowers us to love like we never could.
There is a roar to be heard throughout our land today. Are we going to wake up and love those different from us as He loves us?

Questions to reflect upon this week as you spend time reading Amos

  • What are you feeling after what happened at the Capitol last week? Take time to journal and talk to God.

  • What do you hear in Amos’ message that speaks to today?

  • What do you think or feel when you hear that God equates social justice with embracing the Law ( of God)?

  • What is an invitation you are hearing from God?