Resisting Temptation

Blessed is anyone who endures temptation.
(James 1:12 NRSV)


Tonight we unfortunately happened to tune into a program entitled: “World’s Dumbest Thrill-seekers.” I must admit that the title was true. One man did a back flip off the roof of his house (looked to be about 30 feet up). Another attempted to fly off a mountain (in one those flying suits) seeking to catch a balloon tied to a rock. He crashed into the rock and broke his leg. There were many other things that these people were tempted to do which absolutely boggles the mind.

There are times when all of us are tempted to do things that aren’t real smart. Shirley, Camile (who was my girlfriend and Shirley’s best friend at the time) and I were in the front seat of Camile’s Corvair. We had the really bright thought that one would steer, another would change gears, while the third would work the peddles. I think we were seventeen. You would have thought our brains should have been more developed by that age… guess not.

We proved that none of us ever escape some form of temptation. Of course, some of us are tempted more dramatically than others.

William Willimon tells an amusing and yet sad story about something that occurred in a Women’s Thursday Morning Bible Study he was leading in his church. The group was studying Jesus’ temptations. Dr. Willimon asked the group, “Have any of you ever been faced with temptation and, with Jesus’ help resisted?”

A young woman who was attending her first Bible Study raised her hand. Verleen was different from the rest of the women present; she grew up differently and had a different set of values. She began: “A couple of years ago I was into cocaine really big. You know what that’s like! (I am sure the ladies in the Bible study shook their heads in agreement – yeah, we know what that is like). You know how that stuff makes you crazy.” She told the women that a few years before she and her boyfriend robbed a gas station. “It was as simple as taking candy from a baby,” she said. That night her boyfriend also wanted to rob a convenience store, but something inside of Verleen told her it was wrong. Her boyfriend beat her up for refusing to go along with him but she felt good saying no, “cause that was the only time in my life I ever said no to anything,” she told the group.

Through the stunned silence Dr. Willimon muttered, “Well, er, uh, that’s resisting temptation. That’s sort of what this text is about.” He then led the group in the closing prayer.

Temptation is relative. All of us are tempted. Some to do what could have been a tragic stunt with a car. Some might even go so far as being extreme thrill-seekers. But there are others who are tempted to do things we would not even imagine. We need to be aware that there are people who are tempted daily with situations that you and I cannot even imagine… and we need to pray with them and for them that they may see the error of their thinking before they go so far that they hurt someone else or themselves. 

Dear Jesus, help us, your people, to win the battle with temptation. And when we read about people who do some awfully foolish things… we need to remember the old saying… “there but for the grace of God go I.” In and through Jesus. Amen.

Grace and Peace
Steve

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Just Showing Up

“So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are citizens with the saints and also members of the household of God, built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the cornerstone. In him the whole structure is joined together and grows into a holy temple in the Lord, in whom you also are built together spiritually into a dwelling place for God.”    Ephesians 2:19-21 


I can’t tell you how often people are absent from church for a while, then come back, and when they pass through the receiving line at church say sheepishly, “Sorry I haven’t been here – I’ve been bad.” They seem to expect disapproval or punishment. 

In 40 years of ministry, I still haven’t quite figured out what to say. I usually opt for the non-judgmental, compassionate cadence, “We are glad you’re back! We’re not about guilt here! We’ll be here whenever you need us!” But while this is true, there are a couple of problems with the lack of fullness of my response.

Maybe they need to be needed, and missed. Maybe they need to know there’s something at stake in them not coming. That, if they are former members, the promises they made to the church and to God mattered. And even if they are not former members, they matter – that we notice when they are gone, and we are diminished by their absence.

Maybe they need to hear that if they do come more often, their life might just get better. I say might – churches are flawed institutions, and mine among them, and there is no promise that life will be better simply because we live close to the Lord. Our faith will get better but life may become much more challenging. But, here is the thing, if you want to get wet, you have to get into the water. If you want grace, peace, hope, comfort, growth, you have to get into, or near, the people and places that have them.

What I want to say to people when they come before me and hang their heads is, “listen – you get out of it what you put into it.” I can’t say it, because it doesn’t sound very pastoral, but really it’s just a logic statement. You can’t win if you don’t play.

And God, though God rarely tells us this to our faces, needs us in church too. Some of us can only get the grace God wants to give us when we pass through that portal, into a sweet, slightly dusty, hardworking, authentic faith community. It’s not that grace is unavailable elsewhere; it’s just that – we’re tuned to the right frequency when we’re there together and we get it right. Church is the structure in which Jesus is joined together and grows into a holy temple in the Lord, where we ourselves can become God’s crib.

They say that 80% of life is just showing up, right? I add… showing up expecting to encounter God.

Dear Lord, help us to overcome anxiety, sleepiness, inertia, guilt, irritation, out-sized expectations, the lure of brunch and all kinds of other things that don’t necessarily deliver as promised, to be a regular part of a healthy faith community. Help us all to know we belong to you and to each other. Help us to know that you call us to be present with you in worship and service. Help us to show up ready for a life-changing encounter with you. In and through Jesus. Amen.

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You Can Run But You Can’t Hide

Jesus said) “For the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost.” 
Luke 19:10


So, can you tell me what you were doing in July of 1980?

That question would be a hard one for me. Just trying to come up with an answer could be quite a challenge. However, I know exactly what I was doing in July 1980. I was going to school at Duke and attending the funeral of my two nephews (my brother’s two sons, David [9] & Brian [8]), who drowned in a farm pond next door to their home in Monroe. There is no way I can ever forget that time. It hurt me so deeply to see my brother and his wife at such a loss, that all I wanted to do was sleep. I guess that was my coping device? In all probability, unless you had some sort of major event in your life — a wedding or a birthday or funeral, you probably are having a tough time remembering.

Although Joseph Welch might have problems recollecting other years and months, July of 1980 he is in prison, but in July 1981 he has no problem remembering what he was doing. That’s because that’s when Joseph escaped the Wyoming State Penitentiary. Did a good job of it. Nobody had any idea what happened to Welch. He was missing through most of the 80s, all of the 90s, and the first decade of the new millennium.

A recent news story coming out of Anchorage, Alaska, says that Joseph Welch is missing no longer.

It’s true. Welch’s freedom was brought to an end when Police Chief Shad Haller arrested him while Welch was having his supper at the Tide Pool Restaurant. Information with the story says that Welch had been in Alaska for at least 12 years. During that time he had kept busy doing construction jobs.

Stories like that amaze me.

Just think, all the time Joseph Welch was going about his daily activities the police were looking for him. The passing of seasons and years made no difference, the police were after him. When the trail turned ice-cold and no leads were forthcoming, the law hadn’t forgotten. Joseph Welch was a wanted man.

At the beginning of this devotion, I asked what you were doing in July of 1980. Now, let me ask a question which is easier: when were you born?

See, I told you it would be an easier question.

Now here’s something to think about. From the moment you were born — and even before — the Lord has been looking for you. At first He looked for a sinner so He might call him/her to repentance and adopt that person into the family of faith.

Then, after the Holy Spirit had given you faith, after you had become a Christian, God kept looking for you. He was looking for you to use the gifts He had given, looking for you to show your appreciation for Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross for you — in large ways and small — to live as a good representative of the family name.

No doubt there have been times God has been disappointed by what He’s seen; other times may have made him smile. Still, one thing is certain; tomorrow is a new day, and you can be sure God will still be looking for you because you are His child.

Dear Lord, let me draw comfort from your ongoing presence in my life. Forgive me for trying to escape, disregard or disobey. Let me be gladdened by the fact the living Jesus continues to live in my heart. May my life reflect the difference He has made. In and through Jesus. Amen.

Grace and Peace
Steve

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“Best Friends Forever”

“[David and Jonathan] made a sacred promise of friendship to each other.”
(Good News Bible) Excerpt from 1 Samuel 23:14-18


When we look at the above picture we can’t help but think of simpler times and more pleasant days. I look at these guys and I am reminded they were friends through thick and thin. It was a friendship that passed the test of time.

It’s hard to have close friends. Some blame this on the pace and pressure of life today, with financial and career demands more time-consuming than ever. Others argue that social networking lets simpler virtual friendship make up for the real thing.

But as psychologists point out, the absence of close friendship leaves a void that the best marriages and closest partnerships can’t fill. Primary loyalties reach a breaking point when made to carry the full emotion of both parties. Relationships fall apart, and rates of loneliness, depression, and even suicide grow.

Earlier cultures traditionally considered friendship so important that newborns were assigned a best friend right at birth! Mary Wollstonecraft, one of the earliest advocates of women’s rights, spoke of both men and women in noting that while Eros is transient, “the most holy bond of society is friendship.” She echoes Aristotle’s argument that friendship is essential to the public good-by enlarging understanding beyond private and domestic life.

The Bible itself speaks not only of the love, mercy, and judgment of God, but of the friendship of God. Abraham and Moses are called “friends of God.” God needs others. That’s why we were created. In the divine image, we in turn are made to need others – not only as with Adam and Eve but also Naomi and Ruth, Jonathan and David, and the friendship commended elsewhere in Scripture. Jesus calls us friends (John 15:12).  He says we reciprocate by being a good friend of others.

Dear Lord, in this time of Facebook friending and unfriending, may I be a true and real good friend of yours by being a true and real better friend of others. Help me to turn my virtual friendships into the real, everyday actions of a true friend. In and through Jesus.  Amen.

Grace and Peace
Steve

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Seeing God at Home

“Jesus said to them, “Only in his hometown, among his relatives and in his own house is a prophet without honor.”  He could not do any miracles there, except lay his hands on a few sick people and heal them.  And he was amazed at their lack of faith.”    Mark 6:4-6


Have you ever wondered if the Amazing Grace could ever be amazed? What could possibly cause Emanuel, God with us, to ever be astounded, taken aback, startled or amazed?

What amazed Christ was something that is all too familiar to most of us. It is the contempt that we often harbor for that which is familiar.  According to Mark’s gospel, the Good News message, the mighty works of deliverance and the healing miracles of Jesus did not reach a formidable roadblock until he came to his hometown of Nazareth. There, the people who knew intimate details about his parents, his siblings, his upbringing and his occupation, questioned the validity of his work and the wisdom of his words. Jesus’ “homies” doubted and disrespected him because they could not reconcile what they knew about him with what God was doing through him. They were oblivious to any notion that the everlasting goodness of Almighty God could be brought to them in the life of someone they lived with closely.

This is more than contempt for the familiar. This is a sign of self-loathing. It is the understated but undeniable conviction that the best of life cannot possibly be found among one’s own people and community.

The best spouse for us couldn’t possibly be the one we actually married . . . could it? The social, educational and economic resources we desperately need for growth and development could not possibly exist in our own neighborhood…could they? The exciting, life-changing movement of God couldn’t possibly take place through the people who attend our church week after week…could it? God couldn’t possibly be working to transform the world through our motley crew of family and friends…could God? Surely the face of God can only be seen through that which is mysterious, exotic and other-worldly…right?

Dorothy left her home on a magical journey to the land of Oz, only to discover that her true heart’s desire was with her at her home all the time. And God is amazed that we and Dorothy continue to miss so many hometown miracles because we keep looking past God in us, trying to find God; we keep missing God in the reflections of who we are and where we are.  Amazing.

Dear God, you have deposited so much heavenly treasure in so many earthen vessels.  We pray that the details of the vessels will not make us miss your deposit, especially when it is at or near home. In and through Jesus.  Amen.

Grace and Peace
Steve

 

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The Double-Minded?

“I hate the double-minded.”  Excerpts from Psalm 119


“I am of two minds on that,” some of the older folks use to often say in a situation that is difficult to assess or when the correct course of action is not yet clear. So we respond to the words of the poet Robert Frost in his famous poem, “The Road not Taken”:

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood

And sorry I could not travel both

We admire people who pause at a fork in the road. Often they are the ones who are able to see both sides of an issue, and they know how to weigh options.

So why does the writer of this psalm envision God saying, “I hate the double-minded?” What’s so wrong with being of two minds?

Nothing is wrong with being double-minded in the time before making a decision. But, sooner or later, commitment is called for. You cannot plow a field by turning it over in your mind. Eventually you must put your hand to the plow… it comes time to act. As novelist Albert Camus observed, sometimes we must make a 100 percent commitment to something about which we are only 51 percent certain.  

The perpetually double-minded never get very far from home because they get stuck at the first fork in the road. For them – for all of us, at one time or another – it is best to heed the advice of Yogi Berra: “When you get to a fork in the road, take it.”

Dear Lord, meet me at the crossroads. Show me the way I am to go. Then give me the courage to act. In and through Jesus. Amen.

Grace and Peace
Steve

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The Questions of Life

Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding.  In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will make straight your paths.   Proverbs 3:5-6


The questions of life.

Tonight I would like to begin with a true-false test. Don’t worry; your scores won’t be shared. Here goes.

#1 – True or False: The original color of Coca-Cola … was green.

#2 – True or False: The state with the highest percentage of people who walk to work is Alaska.

#3 – True or False: The first novel written on a typewriter was Tom Sawyer.

#4 – True or False: Only two people signed the Declaration of Independence on July Fourth.

#5 – True or False: Hershey’s Kisses are called that because the machine that makes them looks like it’s kissing the conveyor belt.

#6 – True or False: Half of all Americans live within 50 miles of their birthplace.

#7 – There are more collect calls made on Father’s Day than any other day of the year.

#8 – True or False: Honey is the only food which doesn’t spoil.

#9 – Taken as a group, men can read smaller print than women; as a group, women hear better than men. (What did you say?)

#10 – The term “the whole nine yards” comes from World War II fighter pilots whose ammo belts were 27 feet long. If they fired all their bullets at a target, the target got the whole nine yards.

So, you’ve finished the test. Do you want to score yourself? Look to the end of the devotion, immediately after the prayer.

The questions of life … you already know those questions are not the important questions of life. There are two really important questions. The first is whom do you believe? And the second is whom will you trust? I’ve watched enough of those court shows on TV to know I’m a pretty bad judge of who can be believed and trusted.

I make my judgments based on things like I don’t like the way she smiles or he’s got two earrings in each ear. I think he’s lying. Then, having made my non-scientific decision, I turn the channel.

Whom do you trust? Whom will you believe?

Thankfully, there is one area — the area of our salvation — where Christians don’t have to debate or have any doubts. God’s holy and inspired Word tells us that Jesus Christ is the Savior of the world.

Jesus proved to all the world that He could be trusted with our lives because He willingly gave His that we may have life.

Dear Lord, in a world of uncertainty and doubt, we give thanks for a Savior who not only told the truth, He was and is the truth. Send the Holy Spirit so our doubts may be dispelled and our questions reduced. In and through Jesus. Amen.

Grace and Peace
Steve


The test score — all the questions are true.

Snopes.com


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The Really Good Samaritan

(Jesus said) “Which of these three, do you think, proved to be a neighbor to the man who fell among the robbers?” He said, “The one who showed him mercy.” And Jesus said to him, “You go, and do likewise.”       Luke 10:36-37


We Christians all know that parable Jesus told about the Good Samaritan. We also know we should join with that unnamed good-deed-doer and be good Samaritans too. Some of us even like to think we are good Samaritans and would never pass by on the other side.

I hope so, but there are times I wonder. I wonder how far I would go to help a stranger. I wonder if I would be as good a Samaritan as is Michelle LaPlante.

Here’s the story: Jill Fink, a mother of two-year-old twins, took off her engagement ring so she could put sunscreen on her daughter. She put the toddler in a swing and dropped her ring into the child’s stroller. She forgot to put her ring back on. She forgot for two days. When she finally remembered she did a lot of crying. Yes, she retraced her steps, but she knew the ring was gone.

Meanwhile, the ring was found by attorney Michelle LaPlante. LaPlante said, “If that had been my ring, I would have gone out of my head.” So LaPlante put up a note at the park where the ring had been lost; then she put up fliers in the neighborhood; then she took out on-line ads; then she listed the ring on an Internet list; then she took the ring to the police department.

To make a long story short, a receptionist at Fink’s office spotted the Internet list ad and, in a short time, the ring, the ring’s loser, and the ring’s finder were united.

So, let me ask, “How good a Good Samaritan are you?”

We all know a person would be a lousy Good Samaritan if he were to keep the lost ring. But how far would you have gone to return that diamond to its rightful owner?

Would you have taken it to the police?   Probably.

Would you have written up and posted fliers?    Maybe.

 Would you have taken out ads? How far would you go to be a Good Samaritan?

I once heard of a Really Good Samaritan, a preacher, who gave up his home – moved out – so that a homeless couple and 13 kids could move in for a while. WOW!

I do know how far Jesus went to help the bruised and battered sinners of this world. He went all the way. Every moment of His life was dedicated to the single purpose of reuniting lost sinners with their Creator. Jesus didn’t rest; He didn’t take a vacation; He didn’t take a coffee break from the cause, which would lead to His death and our salvation.

He was the ultimate Good Samaritan. He is our Savior.

Dear Lord Jesus, you have set an example for all of us. Grant that we may leave behind greed, selfishness and inconvenience, so we may show ourselves as your disciples, true Good Samaritans for others. In and through Jesus. Amen.

Grace and Peace
Steve

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Thank You For Your Wishes

I want to say “Thank You” to all who took the time to remember my birthday yesterday. Yes, you did overwhelm me… the cards, emails, telephone calls, and Facebook messages all joined in a chorus of smiles from your heart to mine.

imagesTurning the big 70 brings its own set of smiles… My insurance agent tells me if I live to 79 I will lose all my insurance. In other words… die before the nine years are up. My body says, (with a Vincent Price voice) see how you can handle what I have in store for you… ha ha ha. My wife says “What did you say?” My grandchildren say “Aw Papaw, we thought you were 45?” My son says “Be careful… let me do that for you.” My friends ask “How are you doing?” and really want to know… cause they are going through the same aches and pains. One said “You are now officially a member of the “Old Geezer’s Club.”

I looked back and was amazed to see what was happening in 1947. It may help explain somethings about me???

old geezer 1

Maybe we will see James Howell at the store?

Let’s see, alien landing, CIA, Cold War, Dead Sea Scrolls, Jackie Robinson, First computer bug, all add up to a Miracle on 34th Street… Yep, that’s me… spaced out at times, a bit buggy, somewhat secretive – especially with those choosing to stand opposed, belief in equality for all people, but my miracles have been on all streets.

Thank you for sharing your wishes with me… it really made my day even brighter!!!

Grace and Peace
Steve

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Remembering The Smile

“The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures. He leadeth me beside still waters. He restoreth my soul…”   Psalm 23


I reminisced this morning about the last church I served before retiring… and I wanted to share this with you again.


This morning as I stepped into the pulpit a smile came into my heart because I knew I was back home. You know when I noticed that smile?

I noticed it when I started the opening prayers this morning and I felt God’s love inside and your love around me… I really do mean it when I thank God for this sacred space we gather in every week… it means a great deal to each one of us in our own way.

I noticed it when we sang the first hymn and the words spoke directly to my sermon.

I noticed it when Beverly played the prelude. She puts her heart and soul, her spirit into the personal interpretation of the music she selects and offers to lift our spirits to God. As usual, this morning she lifted my soul.

I noticed that smile in my heart when I gathered the children around me and they smiled and we shared something very special. For a few moments that old grandfather up front was given the privilege to speak with the children about Jesus, to see their smiles close up, and be blessed by them.

I noticed that smile in my heart when I read scripture. What a special time for all of us as we hear God’s Word read out loud for all to hear… for we learn by the hearing of that word. And I was honored to be able to read that Word.

I noticed that smile in my heart when, during the beginning of our prayer time, I mentioned that I had been at Conference all week and had not seen anyone, so how are you doing? That was such a special and sacred moment for me as we shared how we are doing together. It is indeed an honor to be able to speak to God about those in my care. I had to smile because God was smiling.

I noticed that smile in my heart as the choir sang the anthem. I know they do not see their singing as a performance but as an offering of praise to God. I smiled because they give it their all, do their best, and offer it with grace. Plus… it is always beautiful.

I noticed that smile in my heart as I began my sermon. It is hard to believe that people will gather to hear someone talk about a shepherd boy and a giant doing battle. What in the world could that have to do with the church family at Pine Grove? Today you listened for that word from God in which God said I am with you in every battle you face, and, by the way, I have already won the war. Thank you for listening and expecting me to speak a word for God that will have meaning for your life. Thank you for that trust.

Yes, there is a smile in my heart because I love being back home with you. Thank you for being my family.

Grace and Peace
Steve

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