Episodes

Sunday Aug 19, 2018
Backpack Blessing - Philippians 4:4-8
Sunday Aug 19, 2018
Sunday Aug 19, 2018
Carry God's blessing with you by praying always, asking for what you need, and being thankful.
Philippians 4:4-8
::No Transcript Available::

Sunday Aug 26, 2018
Love Letter From God: David Misses the Mark John 3:16, II Samuel 12:1-14
Sunday Aug 26, 2018
Sunday Aug 26, 2018
David's response to being called out for his sin makes a Kingdom of difference. See how David's response compares to Saul's response.
No transcript available.

Sunday Sep 02, 2018
Love Letter From God: Elijah and Ahab John 3:16, I Kings 16:29-33, 17:1-5
Sunday Sep 02, 2018
Sunday Sep 02, 2018
God's faithfulness is evident in how Elijah is cared for even while it appears that Ahab is prospering in a drought.
No transcript available for the message.
As we have been doing every week in this series, I will remind you of what it looks like to say that the love of God is found in every page of Scripture:
What does it mean to say God loves?
God loved us enough to create us, to form us from the dust.
God loved us enough to let us fail, to let us choose our own way over God’s – to let us chain ourselves to sin and defeat and heartbreak and sorrow and death.
God loved us enough to provide a rescue, a way back: through wanderers, murderers, adulterers, defaulters, promise-breakers, foreigners, strangers, and lovers.
God loved us enough to show us mothers, judges, kings, and prophets who loved and spoke for God and kept reminding us of the promise of redemption
God loved us enough to show us how evil and wrong continually mess things up and how obedience to God fosters holiness and bestows blessing
God loved us enough to send us Jesus, the only begotten Son of God, to preach and live peace, grace, hope, joy, and love.
God loved us enough to see Jesus rejected, to see him die, to see him buried.
God loved us enough to raise Jesus from the dead and send the Holy Spirit to remind us of all we have in him and empower us to live like him.
God loved us enough to want us to live like Jesus – an abundant life infused with all the fruit of the Spirit, redeemed, free, loved.
God loved us enough to still let us choose our destiny.
God loved us enough to promise the hope of forever, of resurrection from the dead, and judgement.
God loved us enough, God loves us enough, God will always love us enough.
For God so loved the world…
God loves you.
God wants you to know it. God wants you to live in it.
God wants you to be able to love others because you know you are loved.
God’s love is expressed to us every week, most tangibly, as we gather at this table: The Son who died and yet lives, gave everything so we could know the depth of God’s love.
So, Come. Drink the wine. Eat the bread. Know you ARE loved.
God loves you. Go, love the world with him.

Sunday Sep 09, 2018
Sunday Sep 09, 2018
Elisha points us to Jesus and Jesus reminds us that God's provision is always enough.

Sunday Sep 16, 2018
Love Letter From God: Who Am I? John 3:16,I Chronicles 17:16, Psalm 8
Sunday Sep 16, 2018
Sunday Sep 16, 2018
When God says no to David's big dream, but promises him something else, David responds with humility, obedience, and worship with just 3 little words: Who Am I?
**No Transcript available**

Sunday Sep 23, 2018
Love Letter From God: Solomon Builds a Temple John 3:16, II Chronicles 7:14
Sunday Sep 23, 2018
Sunday Sep 23, 2018
How the temple Solomon built became the central representation of God's relationship with his people.
*No transcript available*

Sunday Sep 30, 2018
Sunday Sep 30, 2018
John 3:16
For God so loved the world that he gave his only son, that who ever believes in him should not perish but have everlasting life
Ezra 9:4-9, 15-10:1
--
Let us pray:
Hide me behind your cross, Lord Jesus. Articulate the Father’s heart through my voice and let the Holy Spirit breathe new life to us, opening our ears to hear the message of God. Amen
Here’s what’s happened:
The best people, royalty and wealthy and strong families were captured by Babylon.
Persia conquered Babylon.
Things mostly stayed the same, but God was working. And the king of Persia made it so Some of The children of Israel who were in captivity in Babylon have returned to Jerusalem. Ezra and Nehemiah capstone the history of Israel as written in Scripture. After this, we read of events that happened during that history- the historical record is necessary to understand all that happens in the rest of scripture: from the prophets to Jesus, knowing who the children of Israel have been and who God has been to them sets the stage for all of what we read in the rest of scripture.
The remnant who have returned from Babylon to Jerusalem after the exile realize it was and is their sin that have caused them to lose sight of God. The temple has been and is a representation of their relationship with God and as they are rebuilding that – more on that next week in Nehemiah – they also begin to seek God’s favor by repenting of their sin.
Ezra has returned as a priest who will stand between the people and God, convincing them of their sin and pleading on their behalf to God. This is how it would be until Jesus cried It is finished and the curtain that separated us from God was permanently ripped apart. God invited us to see our sin for ourselves and to be reconciled to God, redeemed no longer through animal sacrifice but by the very blood of Christ. In the view we have of God working through Ezra to call the people to repentance is a view that points us to Christ today.
Repentance looks to regain the standing the sinner needs with God. It is a renewal and refreshing of the covenant that God made with them, as children of Israel and it is initiated by a recognition of their own part in breaking the covenant in the first place. These people are asking for God’s grace to move them forward as a people dedicated to God.
They recognize their need for repentance, but also they recognize all the ways God has been gracious to them along the way – even in captivity/exile, they have seen God’s hand. In fact, the whole reason they are in this place at all is because of the way God’s grace moved on their behalf while in exile.
This, too, we can find in our own hearts: what are the ways you have separated from God? What do you need to do to seek repentance?
---
As we have been doing every week in this series, I will remind you of what it looks like to say that the love of God is found in every page of Scripture:
What does it mean to say God loves?
God loved us enough to create us, to form us from the dust.
God loved us enough to let us fail, to let us choose our own way over God’s – to let us chain ourselves to sin and defeat and heartbreak and sorrow and death.
God loved us enough to provide a rescue, a way back: through wanderers, murderers, adulterers, defaulters, promise-breakers, foreigners, strangers, and lovers.
God loved us enough to show us mothers, judges, kings, and prophets who loved and spoke for God and kept reminding us of the promise of redemption
God loved us enough to show us how evil and wrong continually mess things up and how obedience to God fosters holiness and bestows blessing
God loved us enough to send us Jesus, the only begotten Son of God, to preach and live peace, grace, hope, joy, and love.
God loved us enough to see Jesus rejected, to see him die, to see him buried.
God loved us enough to raise Jesus from the dead and send the Holy Spirit to remind us of all we have in him and empower us to live like him.
God loved us enough to want us to live like Jesus – an abundant life infused with all the fruit of the Spirit, redeemed, free, loved.
God loved us enough to still let us choose our destiny.
God loved us enough to promise the hope of forever, of resurrection from the dead, and judgement.
God loved us enough, God loves us enough, God will always love us enough.
For God so loved the world…
God loves you.
God wants you to know it. God wants you to live in it.
God wants you to be able to love others because you know you are loved.
God’s love is expressed to us every week, most tangibly, as we gather at this table: The Son who died and yet lives, gave everything so we could know the depth of God’s love.
So, Come. Drink the wine. Eat the bread. Know you ARE loved.
God loves you. Go, love the world with him.

Sunday Oct 07, 2018
Love Letter From God: Nehemiah's Prayer John 3:16, Nehemiah 1:1-11
Sunday Oct 07, 2018
Sunday Oct 07, 2018
John 3:16
For God so loved the world that he gave his only son, that who ever believes in him should not perish but have everlasting life
Nehemiah 1:1-11
--
Let us pray:
Hide me behind your cross, Lord Jesus. Articulate the Father’s heart through my voice and let the Holy Spirit breathe new life to us, opening our ears to hear the message of God. Amen
When I was eight years old, I attempted to write in a diary every day. I got the diary for Christmas, in my stocking. I LOVED it. And for the first two weeks, every day I wrote something – Dear Diary, today was great! Love, Jennifer. And then one day, I got busy and I stopped writing. To this day, every time I have tried to journal, I can only do it for a season and then I stop.
The reason I have always wanted to journal faithfully is because when I read the Diary of Anne Frank in 3rd grade, I wanted to do what she did – leave what I was thinking and feeling for those who might want to understand my experience later.
The book of Nehemiah is an example of that kind of writing in scripture. The book is essentially his journal of being in exile, finding out that his home country was in shambles and needed help, and then going, by God’s help to take care of those things.
In Nehemiah’s journal we see over and over the same thing that we read here in the first chapter – everything that occurs happens in this same sequence: a situation, Nehemiah prays, Nehemiah acts.
Here he fasts and prays, next the king notices him and before he speaks to the king, he prays. Then he travels to Jerusalem and prays before he talks to the people there. He faces opposition – he prays. He gets offers of support – he prays. People are in need – Nehemiah prays. Throughout Nehemiah’s journal, what we call the book of Nehemiah, the same order – something happens, Nehemiah prays about it, and then Nehemiah acts.
The reactions that Nehemiah has throughout the book are set up through this very first moment – when Nehemiah hears of Jerusalem’s issues, he weeps, then he mourns, fasts, and prays. He is seeking God’s face before he does anything else. He is waiting to hear from heaven before he moves forward. He starts by fasting – taking attention from his very needs to turn everything he has to God. Then he prays, and if we take the prayer he has written in his journal as a template, his order of praying is pretty helpful, even to us:
He starts with praise. I was at a conference this past week for several days and the host lead every morning with a devotional. His premise was gratitude. He talked about finding ways, every single day, to be grateful to God for something. Even when things look bad. Even when things are hard. Even when it seems as though nothing can or will work out the way it needs to or should. Nehemiah is heartbroken and sees no way to fix the situation – but he praises God for who God is and for God’s faithfulness:
Lord, the God of heaven, the great and awesome God, who keeps his covenant of love with those who love him and keep his commandments
What if we expressed gratitude even in the hardest moments? What if we remembered God’s faithfulness even when it seemed as though God wasn’t being faithful? When we express our gratitude even in our misery, it changes us. We begin to see even a little bit of hope, because we can find all of God in grateful expression.
Next, Nehemiah moves to confession. Nehemiah recognizes that the gulf between what is happening and what he would like to see happen has opened because of the faithlessness of the follower. The sins of the people have made it impossible for them to hear God’s voice, to follow God’s way, and to be faithful to the covenant that God set up to protect them. Nehemiah confesses that to God and admits that whatever sins they have done, have all been sins against God first and foremost. Nehemiah seems like a pretty good guy. He’s committed to God. He’s faithful in prayer. But he recognizes his own limitations and weaknesses and calls them out to God as a confession of his own human vulnerability.
God asks us to recognize our sinfulness in the same way. We are asked to confess and repent when we miss the mark that God has set up for us. We are blessed, as Christians, to have the gift of the Holy Spirit to help us recognize our sinfulness and to desire more than to live in our sins. But every week as part of our prayer for communion, we confess our inability to do what God has called us to and our lapses in that place. We confess that we do not love God enough or our neighbors enough. It is when we confess that we become vulnerable. That we recognize our limits and God’s limitlessness and the ways in which we cannot measure up – short of the grace of God that pours out on us through confession and repentance. God’s grace is made perfect in our weaknesses, the scripture tells us. And it is through our confession that we recognize God’s perfect grace as the power we need.
The last thing Nehemiah does in his prayer is petition. He asks God to give him favor in the presence of the king he serves. He recognizes God’s power in the situation and even though he is not sure what God will do – he asks God to give him success and favor. Nehemiah is the cupbearer to the king, so he is in the king’s presence on a regular basis, but he is not at liberty to simply speak his mind or ask for things from the king of Persia. (quick aside: we too would not be able to simply ask for things from God if God hadn’t made a way for us to approach the throne through Jesus. We still approach the throne of God with awe and humility, but we also go with boldness because Jesus made that possible for us) God acts on Nehemiah’s behalf and the king notices Nehemiah’s disposition. Nehemiah breathes a quick prayer when the king notices him and then tells the king what he wants.
And in the rest of Nehemiah’s journal we read how God answered Nehemiah’s prayers over and over. He gave Nehemiah wisdom, he gave him strength, he gave him helpers – God worked in the hearts and minds of those around Nehemiah over and over. God didn’t just set it up so Nehemiah’s petition to the king was granted, God worked through that request and Nehemiah’s faithfulness to finalize the work Nehemiah had wanted to do.
Much of what Nehemiah experienced and wrote about seems so far from what we need today: temples are no longer a central part of our worship; we don’t build walls around our towns. But we DO face opposition from those around us sometimes. We DO face challenges in doing the work of the Kingdom. We DO face challenges in our families and homes and hearts. And we, like, Nehemiah can put those things before God and trust God’s faithfulness to be at work. God expects us to ask for these things, even though God knows them and sees them. God wants us to seek him as Nehemiah did: with gratitude and confession BEFORE our petition – our hearts and minds and attitudes need to be in the right place so that what we are asking is no longer about what we WANT but what we NEED. So often we confuse wants and needs, but when we put ourselves in the posture of gratitude and confession, things begin to be clearer and we see what God can do to address our need, but not necessarily in our want.
God may move you when you want to stay somewhere, because you need to move. God may keep you somewhere when you want to move, because you need to stay. God may expect you to act where you want to be still or God may expect you to be still where you want to act.
In all of those things, if we are obedient to God’s work on us and in us, God will move. God will be faithful. God will build the Kingdom, God will walk with us through challenge and heart ache and hardships.
---
As we have been doing every week in this series, I will remind you of what it looks like to say that the love of God is found in every page of Scripture:
What does it mean to say God loves?
God loved us enough to create us, to form us from the dust.
God loved us enough to let us fail, to let us choose our own way over God’s – to let us chain ourselves to sin and defeat and heartbreak and sorrow and death.
God loved us enough to provide a rescue, a way back: through wanderers, murderers, adulterers, defaulters, promise-breakers, foreigners, strangers, and lovers.
God loved us enough to show us mothers, judges, kings, and prophets who loved and spoke for God and kept reminding us of the promise of redemption
God loved us enough to show us how evil and wrong continually mess things up and how obedience to God fosters holiness and bestows blessing
God loved us enough to send us Jesus, the only begotten Son of God, to preach and live peace, grace, hope, joy, and love.
God loved us enough to see Jesus rejected, to see him die, to see him buried.
God loved us enough to raise Jesus from the dead and send the Holy Spirit to remind us of all we have in him and empower us to live like him.
God loved us enough to want us to live like Jesus – an abundant life infused with all the fruit of the Spirit, redeemed, free, loved.
God loved us enough to still let us choose our destiny.
God loved us enough to promise the hope of forever, of resurrection from the dead, and judgement.
God loved us enough, God loves us enough, God will always love us enough.
For God so loved the world…
God loves you.
God wants you to know it. God wants you to live in it.
God wants you to be able to love others because you know you are loved.
God’s love is expressed to us every week, most tangibly, as we gather at this table: The Son who died and yet lives, gave everything so we could know the depth of God’s love.
So, Come. Drink the wine. Eat the bread. Know you ARE loved.
God loves you. Go, love the world with him.

Sunday Oct 21, 2018
Love Letter From God: The Suffering of Job John 3:16 and Job 42:1-6
Sunday Oct 21, 2018
Sunday Oct 21, 2018
What do we really learn about suffering from Job?
*no transcript available*

Sunday Oct 28, 2018
Sunday Oct 28, 2018
John 3:16
For God so loved the world that he gave his only son, that who ever believes in him should not perish but have everlasting life
Psalm 1, 13, 150
--
Let us pray:
Hide me behind your cross, Lord Jesus. Articulate the Father’s heart through my voice and let the Holy Spirit breathe new life to us, opening our ears to hear the message of God. Amen
Music connects us to moments. Couples in love select a song that matters to them. They play it at their wedding. Daughters and daddies dance at that same wedding, playing music that remind them of their relationship. We sing lullabies to our babies, dance in our cars to the radio as it plays songs. We commemorate those who have gone on, big moments in our collective memory, and even decades of time are recalled quickly and swiftly in just a few notes. We write our emotions in remembered time with the sounds of song.
These books on the pulpit this morning are hymnals – most Nazarene, although 1 Methodist – and there are songs in here that connect me to my childhood. There’s a song that we’ve sung here that transports me back to a church of my youth – one with black and white pews and Sunday night pick-a-songs. It is ‘And the trees of the field will clap their hands, the trees of the field will clap their hands, the trees of the field will clap their hands as we go out with joy’. Music is a way for us to time travel, to remember how we felt, to remember what we did – it takes us to that moment when we connected to our surroundings through the template of the perfect song.
Since the God who created us sang over us at the dawn of time, it should come as no surprise that the largest book of the Bible, in terms of number of chapters, is the one that brings with it music – or at least lyrics.
Psalm lives as a testament to our connection to God – the book is scripture passages that connect us emotionally with God. And that is the spirit of worship – we are connected to God through every part of who we are – including our emotions.
There are many types of psalms preserved for us. We will only talk about 3 – wisdom, lament, and praise. Wisdom is typified in Psalm 1 – I’ll read it for you again. Psalm 1:
Blessed is the one
who does not walk in step with the wicked
or stand in the way that sinners take
or sit in the company of mockers,
but whose delight is in the law of the Lord,
and who meditates on his law day and night.
That person is like a tree planted by streams of water,
which yields its fruit in season
and whose leaf does not wither—
whatever they do prospers.
Not so the wicked!
They are like chaff
that the wind blows away.
Therefore the wicked will not stand in the judgment,
nor sinners in the assembly of the righteous.
For the Lord watches over the way of the righteous,
but the way of the wicked leads to destruction.
Wisdom psalms give us instruction in living a blessed life. These are poems that express for us in word pictures what it means to follow God, to live according to God’s purposes.
Lament is sometimes the hardest for us, because we lean toward joy – we do not want to rest in sorrow, we swerve away from drinking from lament – but the reality is we do lament – we do live in sadness. We do ask questions of God – we do not always understand God’s purpose, and just like Job last week, we wonder why we have to suffer. Lament psalms express that – listen to Psalm 13 again:
How long, Lord? Will you forget me forever?
How long will you hide your face from me?
How long must I wrestle with my thoughts
and day after day have sorrow in my heart?
How long will my enemy triumph over me?
Look on me and answer, Lord my God.
Give light to my eyes, or I will sleep in death,
and my enemy will say, “I have overcome him,”
and my foes will rejoice when I fall.
But I trust in your unfailing love;
my heart rejoices in your salvation.
I will sing the Lord’s praise,
for he has been good to me.
Notice how even in lament, the psalmist turns to praise and reminds us that even in the hardest place, where he feels forgotten by God, he trusts God’s love, God’s unfailing love – and sings praise for past goodness. Even as the psalmist feels abandoned and alone, and even anxious, he remembers the goodness of God and rejoices.
The last type of psalm is praise – and it is exemplified in many, many psalms. 150 is the one we are looking at today:
Praise the Lord.
Praise God in his sanctuary;
praise him in his mighty heavens.
Praise him for his acts of power;
praise him for his surpassing greatness.
Praise him with the sounding of the trumpet,
praise him with the harp and lyre,
praise him with timbrel and dancing,
praise him with the strings and pipe,
praise him with the clash of cymbals,
praise him with resounding cymbals.
Let everything that has breath praise the Lord.
Praise the Lord.
The beauty of the psalms is the way in which they both resonate with us today and help us see who God is and connect us to God.
The psalms are a beautiful gift of scripture that allow us to speak to God in the language of the ancients, and reminding us that music and prayer are intertwined. All of the words in the psalms can be prayers or songs or poems, but all of them give us a picture of God’s everlasting-ness. If a psalmist can write words that still draw me closer to God, or draws the church closer to God, then just as with any music, we find ourselves able to remember the moment of God’s presence that is found in that psalm.
Our worship is a weekly drawing us to that place, drawing us closer to God, building our worship memory to build our connection to God and each other.
---
As we have been doing every week in this series, I will remind you of what it looks like to say that the love of God is found in every page of Scripture:
What does it mean to say God loves?
God loved us enough to create us, to form us from the dust.
God loved us enough to let us fail, to let us choose our own way over God’s – to let us chain ourselves to sin and defeat and heartbreak and sorrow and death.
God loved us enough to provide a rescue, a way back: through wanderers, murderers, adulterers, defaulters, promise-breakers, foreigners, strangers, and lovers.
God loved us enough to show us mothers, judges, kings, and prophets who loved and spoke for God and kept reminding us of the promise of redemption
God loved us enough to show us how evil and wrong continually mess things up and how obedience to God fosters holiness and bestows blessing
God loved us enough to send us Jesus, the only begotten Son of God, to preach and live peace, grace, hope, joy, and love.
God loved us enough to see Jesus rejected, to see him die, to see him buried.
God loved us enough to raise Jesus from the dead and send the Holy Spirit to remind us of all we have in him and empower us to live like him.
God loved us enough to want us to live like Jesus – an abundant life infused with all the fruit of the Spirit, redeemed, free, loved.
God loved us enough to still let us choose our destiny.
God loved us enough to promise the hope of forever, of resurrection from the dead, and judgement.
God loved us enough, God loves us enough, God will always love us enough.
For God so loved the world…
God loves you.
God wants you to know it. God wants you to live in it.
God wants you to be able to love others because you know you are loved.
God’s love is expressed to us every week, most tangibly, as we gather at this table: The Son who died and yet lives, gave everything so we could know the depth of God’s love.
So, Come. Drink the wine. Eat the bread. Know you ARE loved.
God loves you. Go, love the world with him.