Extra-Ordinary Living

Stepping Out with Peter

Now when they saw the boldness of Peter and John and realized that they were uneducated and ordinary men, they were amazed and recognized them as companions* of Jesus.  Acts 4:13  

*they had been with Jesus

 What transformation happens when we are companions with Jesus? What do people recognize in us that reflects our journey with Jesus?

2022 Summer Focus

This summer we are journeying with an ordinary guy in scripture, the disciple Peter, who is relatable in so many ways!

From Peter’s  first encounters with Jesus as he is encouraged  to “fish into the deep water” and invited by Philip  to “come and see” who this Jesus is, we are are learning with Peter that no matter how ordinary, unordinary or extra-ordinary we feel,  we worship an  extraordinary God – who is actively engaged and passionately committed to creation.

Simon receives a new name Peter  from Jesus – before he has done anything to prove his worth.  Peter not only receives an invitation to live as God sees him  -- as one who is not like shifting sand but solid as a rock --  we also receive an invitation.  We, too are invited, to see ourselves through the eyes of Jesus. 

Through Peter – an ordinary, every day person like us – we are invited to join with him  on a journey of discovery with Jesus to learn (for disciple – means learner)  how the God of the universe longs to transform our image of ourselves and ignite within us a passion for wholeness and restoration in this world God created and loves.


Previous Messages

We invite you to join us through reading these scripture passages at your own pace. If you have missed a sermon, here is the link to our past messages:   http://www.unionchurchseattle.org/sermons


Weekly Focus

June 17:  Luke 5:1-11 Into the Deep

June 24:  I Peter 1:3-9 Living Hope

July 3:  John 1:35-50 New Name and True Identity

July 10: Matthew 14:22-35  Into the Troubled Water

July 17:  John 6:52-69  To Whom Shall We Go?

July 31: Matt 16:13-23  Learning from God’s Dream

August 7: Luke 9:28-36 and Mark 9:1-13  Party on the Mountaintop

August  14: Matthew 18 How Many Times?

August 21: John 13:1-17. Our Feet?

Sept 4:  Luke 22:24-36; 54-62 Bold promise, big denial, and real grace

Sept 11 John 21 Out of the Deep (New Beginning)

Sept 18: Acts 3  In the Name of Jesus

Oct 2: Acts 4 Companions with Jesus in the Face of Power

Our God Who Invites

June 12.2022
Before we even knew that this place we call 415 Westlake would be our Union home and a 3rd place for the neighborhood –the Union community was  meeting on Capitol Hill and praying about the neighborhood of South Lake Union.

This was before Amazon, Google, or Facebook had wandered into this neighborhood. There were still gas stations, Firestone Tires, and even a Denny’s… This was a place of slow transition and conflicted history in our city. A place where the Duwamish dwelled and fished… a place impacted by broken treaties and native people forced out. A place of sawmills and light industry.  A place of biomedical research. And, a place that continued to be home to a wide cross section of people at the heart of our city.

 In 2007, we were feeling nudged by the Spirit to “come and see” what it would mean to be God’s people of faith in SLU; to  sink down roots here as we asked with the Spirit how we could live our faith outwardly, seeking the welfare of the city.

 About this time, while worshiping on Capitol Hill and walking the streets of SLU, James B and I met with a group of pastors of our city to connect and pray. We introduced ourselves and said, we are a part of new faith community and we are praying about locating in South Lake Union.

Immediately a woman across the table from us, leaned forward, reached out her hand and said, “welcome!  I am Susan Burchfield, pastor of Immanuel Lutheran in the Cascade/South Lake Union neighborhood.  Let me know how I can support  you to feel a part of the community.’  And she invited us to visit her.

Susan embodied God’s Spirit of welcome.

An invitation makes all the difference.

Suddenly, we were looking at SLU with relational eyes and open hearts as she shared all that she had learned and discovered; as she shared stories of hope and heartache. And of God’s faithfulness.
Out of her invitation we began a partnership with Immanuel and their non-profit, Immanuel Community Services, that support the surrounding community through a Food Bank, a Recovery Program and a Hygiene Center.

Yesterday some folks from Union made burritos for the people who will come to the ICS food bank and Hygiene center and last Thursday another group of people from Union sat down over a meal with guys in the ICS recovery program.

Susan’s invitation began a journey of paying attention together.  For Together we are two churches invited by God to “come and see” what God has for us in how we “seek the welfare of our city” as followers of Jesus who are paying attention to the Spirit’s nudging.

 What does it mean in your life to see God as one who invites?

Psalm 8 affirms that God is a God who invites us into relationship with God’s self and one another for goodness and purpose.

 Psalm 8 asks a daunting question of identity:

God of majesty,

When I consider your heavens,
    the work of your fingers,
the moon and the stars,
    which you have set in place,
what is humankind that you are mindful of them,
    human beings that you care for them?

 

The Message translation is blunter:

    Then I look at my micro-self and wonder,
Why do you bother with us?
    Why take a second look our way?

This brief Psalm centers us upon all that we’ve been discovering in our Known and Knowing series as we’ve explored what it means to trust that since the beginning of creation and time the God of the universe has communicated with us and desires us to know who we are by knowing who God is.

This Psalm centers our identity within the context of who GOD is!

Our God who is the giver of abundant life, who is before all time and yet intimately engaged with us in our time; our God searches our hearts and knows us. our God is there with us in the void and cares for our whole person.

This God of glory and majesty, seems to have created humanity with intention and with deep regard.

Stunning!  But, this is not a moment to become egotistical.  The structure of the Psalm brilliantly prevents us from moving into any  self-glorification.

Our glory and honor as humans (yes, that is the language) is dependent upon our connectedness to God within the context of the creation in which God has placed us.

God created humans with dignity and worth so that we would treat one another and all of creation the same.

 In light of recent events, we can easily say – ah, but we know who humanity is!

We are flawed. We are selfish. We consume too much and we do not treat one another equitably. We are finicky and self-centered. 

And, yet, what we’ve continue to discover as we’ve delved into the Word of God and each week learned afresh of God’s commitment to us, God chooses to see us differently.

Verse 2 affirms that perhaps infants and children are our teachers – we are created to praise! It is our praise that silences our enemy who is opposed to our God who created Humans for good and not for exploitation and destruction.

The Psalmist audaciously tells us that the God whose own identity is known through creation and whose name is majestic -awesome – in all the earth,

 God considers us – you and me. 

But not just you and me.  All of humanity.

The God who is known, does not give up on us.

This God is ‘mindful’ of us

To be mindful – is to remember; to not forget nor forsake.

 God who knows our worst and becomes human flesh to meet us in our worst so that we might be delivered from our fears of death, our isolation, our bad decisions, our evil tendencies, delivers us to a new life, renewed to our true identity and invited to a meaningful purpose

 This God who takes on death for our sake is true to God’s word, echoed in Exodus 2, “I have heard the cries of my people and not forgotten.  I remember my covenant with Abraham, Jacob, and Isaac….

The God who invites is a God who remembers God’s promises. 

 As Romans 8 says – nothing can separate us from the love of God found in Jesus Christ our Lord. And the Spirit reminds us of this commitment.

YET… We can feel overwhelmed by what has gone array –

Because of the bad choices we humans have made over centuries of seeking to be in control and out of sync with our true identity as God’s beloved stewards,

 The word “dominion” that we find in Psalm 8:6 may leave a sour taste in our mouth.

As one writer says:  “to put human dominion at the center of things without the context of God’s sovereignty is positively dangerous.”  Unbounded dominion is disaster.

 Humble stewardship is the dignified invitation for which God has created us.

Our God on high gave us the agency to make a difference for good in our world.

It begins by invitation.

1.   You are invited to be connected to our God who knows you fully and loves you unconditionally

Yes, the God who knows you and desires to be known,  invites you into an ongoing, daily relationship with the trinity – Father, Son, and Spirit – Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer.  You are invited to participate with God’s relational being.

To take time to know God, to read God’s word to you, to listen to God’s Spirit,

From this relational reality

You are invited to participate.  Your gifts, personalities, perspective are central to God’s kin-dom work…. Of restoring relationships.

When you show up – it matters. Psalm 8 tells you that in God’s economy… you matter.

It is when we do not believe it that we seek control … or become too isolated.

 2.   You are invited to participate!

Co-create, c-reconcile, co-imagine. To be humble stewards together – guided by the Spirit

Sadly our current culture has reduced God to a transactional God – who seems demanding, distant, and irrelevant. –

Look again. Come and see.

God is radical, engaged, powerful and inclusive, present, meets us in the void, attentive to our suffering.

 God remembers you (is mindful you)

And desires to work through your uniqueness for good in our world – not just in heaven.

This may involve speaking up for truth in your academic world, it may be advocating for legislation that makes this world safer for children, this may mean saying yes to a new job – or staying in a job, it may mean taking time to talk to a neighbor or reach out to a friend.

It may mean re-thinking our spending patterns, our eating habits, and our engagement with people we do not know by name.

  • What does it mean in your life to see God as one who invites?

  • Where is the Spirit nudging you?

  • What does it mean for you to trust today that God is actually mindful of you and needs your gifts to bring restoration?

Pentecost

 Pentecost Sunday 2022

On this  day where God empowers the church to minister we welcome our new Pastor of Youth and Community to Union to further strengthen and equip us! Come and meet our new member of the Union family and give thanks for the work of the Spirit! 

Celebrate the gift of the Holy Spirit into our lives to connect and equip us to be God’s agents of reconciliation in an estranged world. We celebrate God’s dream for humanity to live as new creation that cares for creation as we seek the dignity and welfare of all people.

On the day of Pentecost 2000+ years ago people from all the known nations were gathered in the bustling, overcrowded city of Jerusalem.  Many were there to celebrate Shavuot – the Feast of Weeks, 50 days after Passover, people had come together  to acknowledge God as creator  and giver of the law.  Some in the crowd were just there – as happens in any big city.   (If you saw the crowded streets of Windsor this week – you have a vision of a crowd).

A few were there because they had followed Jesus, now risen from the dead, and Jesus had told them to wait in Jerusalem.

Into this expectant, faithful, discouraged, overwhelmed crowd – God acts. God moves. God’s Spirit descends upon this gathering of people who spoke the diverse languages of “every nation under heaven” we are told.   And the disciples, now empowered by the Holy Spirit, share the Good News of God’s love and salvation in the native tongues of those who where there.

 [Acts 2:1-4]

When the day of Pentecost had come, they were all together in one place. And suddenly from heaven there came a sound like the rush of a violent wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting. 3 Divided tongues, as of fire, appeared among them, and a tongue rested on each of them.4 All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages, as the Spirit gave them ability.  

The Holy Spirit is a very real energizing Presence.  – God on the Move.  And because of the Spirit, Jesus is not gone and God is not distant.   Because of the Spirit, our lives are united with God, our Creator, and Jesus, our Lord and Advocate.

God created us, Jesus leads us & the Spirit shows the way. In dealing with the Spirit we are dealing with none other than the personal presence of God.   

Where and how do you experience the Holy Spirit (Breath of God and One who Comes Alongside) comforting, guiding, teaching, inspiring, connecting you to others, and breathing into you new life?

Jesus weeps with us

Jesus weeps with us

 As Jesus came near and saw the city, he wept over it,  saying, ‘If you, even you, had only recognized on this day the things that make for peace!”  Luke 19:41-42

This is another week of weeping as we angrily and even numbly say, “when will this killing end?” We want change. We want a new day of justice that honors our children and teachers’ basic right to safely attend a school; that protects people of all demographics to safely shop at their local grocery store. 


As we gather in communal times of worship, story telling, listening, and action, we want you to know that you matter. If you need someone to talk with, to weep with, to collaborate with on ways to respond to the hate we see around us to show another way, reach out to those you have gotten to know in Union. Unskilled as we may be, it is what it is to be the body and it is how we do become better at being “Internally Alive.” We may think we do not want to be a burden but honoring another by trusting them is a gift we give helping us each to be more fully human. 

On Sunday we gather for worship to be reminded afresh of who God is, Creator and Maker of abundance. God is not made in our image, as is so often portrayed. We are created in God’s image. We gather in worship to re-orient and refresh our hearts, minds, bodies,, and souls on how God desires us to live for “the welfare of the city.” (Jeremiah 29:7)

Uvalde

Dear Union Family,

We do not know what to say. 

So many words swirl around us.

It is not that there are no theological thoughts or scriptural passages to quote but, in this time, the most healing act may be to stay in our anger and pain. Attempting to move away quickly runs the risk of  failing to let pain do the work of moving us to restorative action.

The murders in Uvalde Elementary School are horrific as is the loss of life in the 213 similar acts of violence in these first 146 days of the year and the hundreds of shootings before—each tearing apart additional lives of parents, siblings, grandparents, spouses, cousins, and friends.  The loss of laughter, hopes, dreams, and moments together is incalculable. We need to express that—to acknowledge the violation of the sanctity of life—to voice that this is utterly wrong and rips us to the core.

How do we talk to our kids about this—our kids who in many instances are already more aware of this harsh reality that we are from years of shooter drills and lock downs in their classrooms?

How do we pray when it feels it is to no avail and prayer itself has entered the political battleground?

We do not know what to say. So many words swirl around us. 

But we do not abandon being present to our kids, holding, feeding, listening, asking what they are feeling, what they are thinking, choosing to live from love not fear. We do not abandon prayer---but we pray for more than comfort and peace.  And we do not pray as a way of diverting attention from institutional evil that perpetuates these deadly acts. Instead, we pray for wisdom and courage to partner with the Spirit to transform our community by tangibly loving our neighbor and working against the fear-based constructs that root identity in guns more than Jesus.

Cole Arthur Riley, author and creator of Black Liturgies, reminds us of Frederick Douglass’ invocation to all of us: “I prayed for 20 years but received no answer until I prayed with my legs.”

We also need to remember we are not alone. To that end, here are a couple of things we can do right now together though a part: 
1) Set a reminder on your phone for 3 pm for the next twenty-one days and, wherever you are, as a community we will pray for government action, for our neighbors and how we are to participate in ending these senseless killings.   

2) Walk or drive around your local schools.  Be mindful of what comes to your attention and how we can respond in countering acts of violence in our communities. 

In this time where the brokenness of an estranged world maybe more present than you remember…

Anger is appropriate—it is a sign of being created in the image of God Who creates life.

Prayer is appropriate—we follow a God who calls us to pray without ceasing.

Action is appropriate—we are called to bear witness to Christ came and lived physically in this world.

Hope is appropriate—the power that raised Jesus from the dead is still transforming lives.

With you in Christ, 

James B and Renée

 

PS Parents, you have likely received many resources from your kids’ schools but here are a few more that have been referred to us:

Worship in Action

A note from Sharon Mead on celebrating Worship in Action on this Fourth Sunday:

Throughout this week following Easter, I think we often still bask in the joy of the resurrection and Jesus' gift of life and connection to love forever. It's a joyous time. But what’s next after the Easter celebrations are all cleaned up and life moves on? 

Cathy Thwing recently shared a blog post with me from the Transforming Center and I loved this excerpt about Jesus’ post-resurrection priority. His to-do list following the most transforming event in history was pretty simple. Spoiler alert: it's about putting people first. 

"After all Jesus had endured to accomplish victory over death, there were so many things he could have chosen to do in the time between his resurrection and his ascension. He could have hosted a joyous celebration, showed himself (and maybe even gloated a little) to the ones who had humiliated and killed him, or staged a strategic gathering with influencers focused on how he was going to bring in his kingdom. But instead, he initiated a series of private and very personal interactions with his close ones, gently creating space for what they most needed. His people were more important to him than partying, politicking, or planning." 

People first. It was and is as simple as that. No politicking or even big bashes were even considered. It was just time to be with those he was close to and those who needed his encouragement. This is the same motivation we have for Fourth Sundays - serving and spending time with our community and beyond - providing love and encouragement.  

Fourth Sundays are rarely strategic or full of influencers, but it's always a time of personal interactions that just might be what you need. 

Looking forward to Fourth Sunday together!

Lent Signpost. Week 6

Set your face on Jesus’ face

3 pm Daily Prayer:

As we journey this week toward the cross with Jesus,  we invite you to pause in whatever you are doing at 3 pm each day this week and to take a moment to pause and pray.  May this be a week of finding a different, other pace to life that invites space to be with Jesus. 

Luke 9:51

When the days drew near for him to be taken up, he set his face to go to Jerusalem.

Read Luke 20 - 24

Spend some time in conversation with God.


Question to ponder:

What action can you take this week to help you walk with Jesus during Holy Week and set your face on his face?