R&R: Relationship and Release

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Tuesday, January 25, 2011

I pray this in the name of Jesus


God,
Thank you for your presence
during the hard and mean days.
For then we have you to lean upon.
Thank you for your presence
during the bright and sunny days,
for then we can share that which we have
with those who have less.
And thank you for your presence
during the Holy Days, for then we are able
to celebrate you and our families
and our friends.
For those who have no voice,
we ask you to speak.
For those who feel unworthy,
we ask you to pour your love out
in waterfalls of tenderness.
For those who live in pain,
we ask you to bathe them
in the river of your healing.
For those who are lonely, we ask
you to keep them company.
For those who are depressed,
we ask you to shower upon them
the light of hope.
Dear Creator, You, the borderless
sea of substance, we ask you to give to all the
world that which we need most -- Peace.

~ Maya Angelou

Sunday, January 23, 2011

chimney rock villa

We have the privilege of hosting church for the residents of chimney rock villa the 4th Sunday of every month, 2pm. The BMA (Bayard Ministerial Alliance) share the opportunity to minister to these special souls...
Come help us out next time! So thankful for Sheila and Nolan who consistently show up to help with the music and care for the residents.
I am very impressed with the villa's respect, love, dignity, caring, compassion...: http://chimneyrockvilla.com/

Friday, January 7, 2011

start the new year right


Here's some flyers I made hoping to motivate our church to be inviters!
Also, a missions dinner and our annual family business mtg are right around the corner.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Let There Be LAUGHTER

Go Ahead and Laugh!

Kirk Byron Jones


Throughout our adult lives, we are given the strong, if unspoken message that laughter has no place in the things of life that are really important. Grown people are not supposed to approach life and vocation with humor. Some areas of life are deemed too serious. In the movie Patch Adams, a young, unorthodox physician-in-training is almost dismissed from medical school, in part for displaying "excessive happiness."

Laughter and gaiety are genuine adult needs. In The Color Purple, a broken Sophia laments, "I know what it feels like to want to sing, and have it beat out of ya." If laughter should be harnessed in everyday living, it certainly has to be restrained when it comes to religion. After all, is there anything more serious than God, anything more solemn than the holy, the sacred? Sometimes, we in the church go out of our way to ensure that people don't get too carried away.

Alan Jones wrote in his wonderful book Sacrifice and Delight: "In some ways the organization of the Church looks as if it has arranged things precisely to see to it that the Spirit is kept in check, to see that nothing happens, least of all the breaking out of delight." Then, he added: "Deadliness has a terrible mystery about it because it is not really dead. It is depressingly alive, the active enemy of delight."

Maybe Sarah denied laughing because she had too many enemies of delight in her life, people who made her believe that laughter did not mix well with maturity. But Sarah has the last laugh. Nine months later, she had the laugh of her life. And that second time, she did not take it back (Genesis 21:6-7)!

Part of the fun in the miracle of Isaac's birth is that it actually happened! 90-year-old Sarah had a baby! Century-old Abraham became a daddy! It really happened! Can you believe it? Every time Sarah thought about it, she laughed. And she laughed even harder as she pictured the expressions on people's faces. She imagined how shocked they would be when they saw her pushing a stroller down Main Street! They would be stunned when they looked in her grocery cart and found diapers and baby powder!

Sarah was so filled with free-flowing laughter about the birth of her child - not her grandchild or great-grandchild - that she did not name the baby Abraham Jr. or any of the names that might have seemed appropriate. She named her first and only child Isaac, which in Hebrew means "laughter."

The stranger is not mentioned in Genesis 21:6-7, but my sense is that, unlike in Genesis 18 where Sarah was the one behind the tent curtain laughing, this time it was God behind the curtain, off-stage in the distance, laughing away.

In Martin & Malcolm & America, James Cone notes the role of laughter in the work of the two great leaders [Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X], and the continuing power of laughter for activism today: "To fight for life is to experience the joy of life. To laugh, to have fun, is to bear witness to life against death. Freedom fighters are fun-loving people. Therefore, let us laugh, let us shout for joy, not as an indication that we are no longer angry but rather as a sign that we have just begun to fight."

Let there be laugher! Laughter is healing to the soul and the body, as the doctors have verified, concurring that it is one of the most potent natural stress relievers. Additionally, there are hundreds of reports verifying the value of laughter for curing illness. Some reports are nothing short of miraculous.

In Laugh After Laugh: The Healing Power of Humor, Dr. Raymond Moody relates the experience of a well-known clown who visited a hospital. While there, the clown noticed a little girl being fed by a nurse. Lying next to the little girl was a doll that looked like the clown. As the clown walked closer to the child, the child said his name. The nurse threw down the spoon and ran off to call the doctor. Why was the nurse so startled? That was the first time the child had spoken in six months. The child progressed daily after that breakthrough.

Dario Fo, one of Italy's great playwrights and clowns, won the 1997 Nobel Prize for literature. When he was first informed of this, he thought it was a big joke. Assured and reassured that it was not, Fo exclaimed, "God is a clown!"

God is a clown. We do not find these exact words in the Scriptures, but we do find these words:

"A happy heart makes the face cheerful." (Proverbs 15:13)

"The cheerful heart has a continual feast." (Proverbs 15:15)

"Everlasting joy will crown their heads. Gladness and joy will overtake them, and sorrow and sighing will flee." (Isaiah 35:10)

"For I will turn their mourning into gladness; I will give them comfort and joy instead of sorrow." (Jeremiah 31:13)

"I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people." (Luke 2:10)

"Blessed are you who weep now, for you will laugh." (Luke 6:21)

"Ask and you will receive, and your joy will be complete." (John 16:24)

"[God] will wipe every tear from their eyes." (Revelation 21:4)

Let there be laughter!

Monday, January 3, 2011

Christ Plus Nothing

For I resolved to know nothing while I was with you except
Jesus Christ and him crucified. 1 Corinthians 2:2 (NIV)

(This devotional is by Jon Walker, editor of the Daily Hope Devotionals

and author of Costly Grace: A Contemporary View of Bonhoeffer's

'The Cost of Discipleship.')

Today you may be thinking about New Year's resolutions? You know,

those lists we make with two scoops of optimistic enthusiasm,

sprinkled with unrealistic expectations, and topped with the cherry

of knowing the list isn't serious anyway.

But there is one guy who I suspect played for keeps when he made

New Year's resolutions -- that zealot who could never do anything halfway,

the let's-get-real-about-our-faith apostle Paul.

My thought is Paul only had one resolution on his New Year's list: "This

year I resolve to know nothing but Christ and him crucified"

(1 Corinthians 2:2).

Paul's message is radically simple: Salvation is in Christ alone.

What does this mean?

  • It's not Christ plus your good behavior.
  • It's not Christ plus the years you taught a Bible study.
  • It's not Christ plus your tithe.
  • It's not Christ plus the church you attend.
  • It's not Christ plus the number of verses you memorize.
  • It's not Christ plus your title in the church.
  • It's not Christ plus wisdom from the latest Christian seminar.
  • It's not Christ plus a desert fast (or even a dessert fast!).
  • It's not Christ plus a good driving record.
  • It's not Christ plus well-behaved children.
  • It's not Christ plus the right job.
  • It's not Christ plus the right spouse.
  • It's not Christ plus the latest technology.

It's simply Christ. Christ plus nothing.

That's Paul's message, a message that is as right throughout 2011

as it will be in 2999. May your resolution for this year be nothing

but Christ and Him crucified.

I can't get enough of Ravi's beautiful words!