Category: Michael D
Prayer . . .
One of the best aspects of serving in Regional Ministry is the opportunity to visit many of our congregations during the year. Often, I am there for the morning to be present, sit in on a Sunday school class, and worship. But, sometimes I am there to offer words from the pulpit, communion table, teach a class, or like last Sunday, graced with the responsibility to offer the pastoral prayer. For the non-Disciples and possibly non-Christian who reads this blog, the pastoral prayer is a time when one voice offers a prayer of intercession during worship. Sometimes it is followed by the Lord’s Prayer, but it does not have to end this way. Here is the prayer I offered at First Christian Church in Edmond last Sunday. My thanks to the ministers, Rev. Chris Shorrow and Rev. Jerry Black for including me in worship leadership.
As the community of faith gathers for prayer I bare the gratitude of your Disciples siblings all across Oklahoma for your willful work to be a voice of Gospel here in Edmond. I encourage you focus on the image of the person for whom you are grateful this morning as we center hearts and minds for prayer.
Let us pray . . .
God who speaks and listens:
we’ve come to hear and experience good news:
Your steadfast love never ceases. Your mercies never come to an end;
they are new every morning;
they are reviving with each breath we take.
Great is your faithfulness that you incarnate in all humanity and blossomed
in Jesus of Nazareth, who like prophets before him, bore witness to your
Good News with his life. It is Jesus’ birth that we celebrate as we wait for
your Advent of life giving hope, compassionate peace, balanced joy, and
steadfast love.
God who listens:
there are many people we are missing,
many relationships broken,
many known and unknown to us that have left this life and
are now in your presence.
Absorb the questions and cries of the grieving.
Embrace those praying for medication to work,
for tests to be negative,
for the skill of doctors and nurses.
Strengthen the voices and hands that speak out against
injustice and speak up for equality.
Rekindle your Spirit in each of us to be refuge and strength for our neighbors
in times of change, when the mountains shake and the waves roar,
when fortune blinds us, and when violence takes your children.
Celebrate and dance with us in our joys and laughter.
God who speaks:
help us filter out the noise of our culture and the routine mental
conversations so we can hear your will for our living.
Call us to service. Call us to live reconciled. Call us to prepare a way in
our own living to be disciples of Christ and proclaim your Good News today
and everyday we draw breath.
Call us to pray. Amen.
Is that Something or Nothing?
David Letterman used to do a bit with Paul where they would raise the curtain on stage, see a thing, and then discuss if that is “something or nothing?” I also enjoyed the bit, “Will if Float?” Dave hasn’t done either of those bits in a long time. A tech friend of mine explained to me last year that Google has changed what people think is worth “paying for” and that their strategy of “some stuff for free and some you pay for,” even if it is “ad words,” has changed the behavior of what content or services that a person would pay for. When you think about it, Google just picked up the business model of Big Box Stores that sell a little of everything at such low prices that it has driven down the costs and the expectations of said product.
My companion and I create and self publish a little service called, Sacred Steps: Children’s Sermon Journal. It is a weekly document to assist those that are following the Lectionary readings each week in their worship experiences and are working to prepare a “children’s sermon” from one of those texts. We utilize another great site for study, Textweek.com, as a beginning place for some of our thinking and writing. My companion is a First Testament biblical scholar, so most of her words are her own about the First Testament texts. SSCSJ is unlike other options in this area, but it is something that few would “pay for.” We’ve tried subscriptions and will move to an ebook model when Advent begins this year. We have a few subscribers. No worries. It is not a primary income stream. I’m thinking about this today after reading an opinion piece from the New York Times this morning. I won’t completely rip off his words, but borrow a paragraphs for exposure and link to the article.
Slaves of the Internet, Unite!
by Tim Kreider | Opinion/The New York TimesPracticalities aside, money is also how our culture defines value, and being told that what you do is of no ($0.00) value to the society you live in is, frankly, demoralizing. Even sort of insulting. And of course when you live in a culture that treats your work as frivolous you can’t help but internalize some of that devaluation and think of yourself as something less than a bona fide grown-up.