Friday, December 28, 2012

Amber Alert - Jesus Goes Missing

Isn't it every parent's worst nightmare?  A child has gone missing and minutes feel like hours in the frantic search for the beloved child.  And what do we do when our child rounds the corner of the backyard fence or peeks out between the clothes in the store, just as we're getting ready to call the police?  Don't we hug first and then scold and discipline?  We react out of love and fear, all commingled together.

When 12 year old Jesus stays behind in the Temple with the learned scholars after the Passover Festival in Jerusalem, it takes Mary and Joseph 3 days to miss him and begin their fearful search.  And what do they do they find Jesus?  Mary scolds him as if he were a child, missing the fact that her 12 year old Jewish son, ready for his bar mitzvah, has been about his Father's (capital "F" here) business.  Luke 2: 41-52 is a heart wrenching, singular story of Jesus the boy maturing into a man.

And the literal search is not the most important part of the story.  Mary and Joseph as parents are not the most important part either, even as our hearts ache with either memories or fears of such a nightmare.  This is not a how-to-parent story, but a coming-of-age story as the hero Jesus begins his first step to his maturing into ministry.

If Jesus is maturing and growing into his intended ministry, how are we keeping up?  How will 2013 be a time of deepening our faith?  Will we grow closer to Jesus as we commit ourselves ever more deeply in relationship to other members of our family of faith?  Will we follow Jesus' teaching and preaching ministries as we serve others beyond our immediate community of faith?  Both challenges are intertwined as we set our faces toward 2013.  As we go forth from worship on Sundays, how do we engage with each other during the week?  Significant Relational Groups (SRGs) are excellent opportunities to practice our spiritual humanness together as we share passions, loves, interests.  Serving in mission to those who have been left behind provide excellent opportunities to see Jesus in the "other."  Topeka JUMP is a new opportunity to give voice to our concerns for social justice just as Jesus commands us to love and serve.

I wonder about God's worst nightmare as he sent his only Son, vulnerable to the ways of the world, to us to show us what God is like?  Is God hunting for us, searching the highways and byways for our commitments to the kingdom?  Does God grieve and groan as we go missing?

Grace and Peace,
Pastor Shelley

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Prepare Your Spirit

When you hear ‘spirit’ during the Advent season, what do you immediately think of? The spirits of Christmas past, present, and future? The Christmas spirit? Making spirits bright? What kind of spirits you put in your eggnog? Or maybe even the Holy Spirit and how it is moving, breathing, pushing, pulling in your life and the life of Trinity right now? 

Many Christians think of Advent as a time to slow down – to catch our breath - that as the world gets busier and busier, we intentionally take time to still our hearts and prepare the way for the Lord once more. But as we prepare our spirits for the coming of the Christ child, it’s less of a “find your centering place” and more of a “Buckle your seatbelts – it’s going to be a bumpy ride.” 

Mary’s encounter with her cousin Elizabeth takes center stage in our Scripture this week. Read Micah 5:2-5a and Luke 1:39-55.

The Holy Spirit came upon Elizabeth, and the preacher’s wife became the prophet. The marginalized young unwed mother-to-be sang a revolutionary song, about God turning the world upside down, about a God of grace and mercy, about a good God who keeps promises. As Mary and Elizabeth’s spirits went on a rollercoaster ride between joy and worry and exultation and anxiety and fear that no one would believe them, they found solace and assurance in their relationship. They found that the Spirit came when they were together, those two women who carried the messenger and the Message. They found that it was easier to prepare their spirits for the coming uncertain days if they had community and connection. 

So too is my wish for all of us at Trinity – that we can truly prepare the way of the Lord through community and connection, that our spirits are complete only when we are together, that we find joy and assurance in how the Holy Spirit moves in our own spirits. The Christ child comes again at Christmas to fully be in relationship with all of humanity – so prepare your Spirit as we start to live His story again. Amen. 

Grace and peace, 
Pastor Kate

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Prepare Your Home for Your Homecoming

How is your decorating coming?  Do you have enough room for your Christmas tree, your wreaths and garlands and Christmas knickknacks?  Or do you have to make room by moving chairs, tables, and your everyday "stuff" out of the way?  Are the presents wrapped and ready to go in the mail or under the tree?  How many parties involve bringing goodies?  Are the stockings hung over the chimney with care?
Am I touching a nerve in your busy, perhaps frantic schedule?
These are not the most important questions of course.  The bigger, more significant questions are:  "Have you made room for Jesus in your days - in your space - in your schedule?  Where do you squeeze him in?  Will you fling wide your front door if you open it and there he stands?"

Old Testament prophets speak to us when they promise:  The Lord is already in our midst (Zephaniah 3: 14-20) and the Lord will bring us back home for a great family gathering (Isaiah 12: 1-6).  How do we respond to these promises?  If the corners of our rooms and hearts and minds are too full, will we have to look for Jesus out back in our sheds or between the cobwebbed baskets/tools/recycle in the garage? Do we even recognize our Lord in our midst?

Our home is more than our space and the things that fill up our space, no matter the size of our spaces.  Our home is where God is - wherever and whenever we continue to nurture our relationship with Jesus.  So, both prophets Zephaniah and Isaiah encourage us to make room, recognize, and welcome our Lord.  Because they lived before the birth of Jesus, they're projecting their hopes, which we find realized and incarnated in Jesus the Christ.

Let us join them when we sing, shout, rejoice, exult, celebrate, raise the rafters with our joy, and proclaim the Lord's name with all that we do and share and serve through this season of thanksgiving for the birth of the Babe, who enters into the very real humanity of our lives - God with us - Emmanuel.

Grace and Peace,
Pastor Shelleyhttp://bible.oremus.org/?ql=222333236

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Lessons and Carols - We Tell the Birth Story

The combination of singing and reading scripture through worship emphasizes the importance of God's Word to us when we gather as a community of faith.  It's been said that singing is like praying twice.  Music has effects on us that are experienced in ways different than listening to the spoken Word.  Singing in participation or listening to music awakens us to God's presence and is a critical way that we learn the theology of our faith.  Scripture and music combine to evoke, edify, enhance and expand our consciousness of God's reality and God's grace and mercy.

Join us as we read, sing, listen, and remember the story of the the birth of our Lord, Jesus Christ, in worship this Sunday (Dec 9) at 10:30a.m. at Trinity

Grace and Peace,
Pastor Shelley