Broken Saints and Healing Sinners
  • Home
  • Broken Saints Blog
  • Contact Page

Render Unto God...

6/28/2014

1 Comment

 
Lord, you called us to give to Caesar what is Caesar's and to God what is God's.  Help us to see that all of creation and every breath we take is from your hand and teach us to use every good gift according to your will.  Amen

    I am in the process of wading through two very interesting books at the moment. One is Tomas Piketty's "Capital in the 21st Century" and the second is Elizabeth Warren's new book, "A Fighting Chance."  Piketty's is a real challenge because of the depth of the material involving economics, statistics and history and Warren's is compelling in its personal tale of the American journey and hard won success. Both have a great deal to say to the future of the US and global economies.

    Pope Francis has noted the need for just economics and systems that acknowledge the responsibility to address the basic needs of the poor and disenfranchised. Francis has called for a "legitimate redistribution of wealth" and cooperation between "the private sector and civil society." 

    For their efforts on behalf of a more equitable and functionable economy Piketty, Warren, and Francis have all been accused of being socialists. This seems to be the standard attack when anyone dares to raise a voice that challenges the "accepted norms" of contemporary economics and servicing capital.  None of them, however, are arguing in anyway for anything approaching  broad socialism but instead are calling for adjustments to a capitalist system that continues to teeter on the brink of collapse and which favors capital over labor as if a dollar or Euro, sheckel or ruble produces anything by itself. Capital alone cannot even sell and distribute a product without labor if it ever managed to figure a way to gather resources, engineer, and make product.

    Speaking of legitimate redistribution wealth is not socialistic except by assumption of its opponents because capitalist economies depend on labor for both production and consumption. Fair pay  and stopping corrupt  labor practices redistributes wealth as well. Insuring fair trade and fair competition brings vitality to the market balancing the needs of producer and consumer.

    Jesus dealt with people who felt oppressed under excessive politicial power, too. Roman taxes were high and placed a strain on local economics. The pharissees decided that they might draw Jesus into an unwinnable argument by asking if it was right to pay taxes. Say no and he would be labled a threat to the state and say yes and he would potentially lose the support of the crowd. 

    What the Pharisees  did not expect and what Jesus did was redefine the question. Give Caesar what is Caesar's and God what is God's. Caesar made the coin of the realm. All trade occurred under that coin. Taxes were paid with that coin. In other words if you used the coin of the Empire you owed the Empire something for what they made possible; roads, water, safety, etc.  Give Caesar his coins because he is the one who mints it and makes it possible. But more importantly give God credit for everything in your life and rejoice in his gifts. 

    Every morning when you rise up thank God for the rest of the evening. Every night give thanks for the opportunities and the labor of your day. Be thankful when neighbors draw close and support you in your hour of need and rejoice in the opportunity to give aid to your neighbor in their need. Tend to and give thanks for the economy of the community of faith where the coin of the realm is "agape" Christlike love poured out from the river of life which eternally quenches our thirst. In the end we are all accountable for how we use God's gifts including Caesar.




1 Comment

Creator and Creature, Gifted and Giving

6/23/2014

1 Comment

 
Gracious Holy Spirit, you are the creator and sustainer of life and all good thing, those present and those yet to come. Teach us to rejoice in thanksgiving for all our blessings and to listen to the Spirit nurturing and growing them for new ways of living in your Kingdom. Amen.

     What does it really mean to acknowledge God as the creator of all that is seen and unseen? And what responsibility does acknowledging those gifts place on our lives?
 
      To say that God is the creator, the source, of all that is seen and unseen means that we in all that we have and are in ourselves and with all our talents and abilities are created by God. Any physical skills, any musical talent, any intellect, any athletic prowess, and on and on is first and foremost a creation and gift from God. This is not a debate between nature or nurture because even both of those are elements created by God. Your time, your health, your age, and even your personality are from God in the broadest sense. Even if you can’t see it or touch it still is part and parcel part of God’s creation. From Newton’s discovery of gravity to the unimaginable force of a Black Hole, from potential
energy of a rock balancing delicately on the crest of a hill to Black Energy present throughout the universe or universes it is all from God’s creative power.
 
      As part of creation, we as human beings have great responsibility for how we use the gifts of God in our lives. We are responsible for how we use our talents and abilities, for good and for evil. Using God’s gifts in harmony with his will or in pursuit of our own will and sinfulness is an expression of how we understand our relationship to God. Do we understand that God is creator and we are creature with everything else in creation? Or do we elevate ourselves like demigods out of creation believing human wisdom for the use of creation is good enough and we do not need to listen to the voice of God’s living Word over and against our own desire. 
  
      Do you work with and nurture the gifts that God has placed in your life? Did you practice your trumpet, piano or guitar lessons; do you exercise or practice your jump shot and drop step in the post for basketball? Have you learned to save your money and do you maximize your investments so that you grow the resources from which you can give generously to the work of the kingdom of God? Have you studied and added new skills so that you are growing in the ways you can serve God? Can you teach Sunday School? Can you teach us or are you willing to learn how to speak Spanish so that you canlive with grace and hospitality among new members to our community? Can you sing in the choir? 

    The implications of understanding what it means to be gifted by God as creator and our responsibility to nurture and use God’s creative gifts wisely is boundless in its possibilities. Being fallen means we often neglect what is possible and settle for what is comfortable. It means we frequently accept diminishing what God has created and placed in our care and stewardship rather than nurturing, growing and increasing the possible.
 
     Scripture tells of both gifts of the Spirit (1 Corinthians 12:8-11) and the fruits of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22-26). What gifts has the Lord of Creation granted you and how are you using them to bear fruit for the kingdom of God. How does our awareness of being both saint and sinner impact on our confessing our shortfalls in using God's gracious gifts? How does God's continuing love and healing move us forward and into new ways of using those gifts and bearing new fruits?

What is seen in your life and what is still unseen because God isn’t done with you yet.



If you enjoy these devotions and reflections and believe in the spiritual reality of our struggles as Saints and Sinners please help us fund this ministry for the next three years so that we can keep it advertizing free. Thank you and God bless you for your help.

http://www.gofundme.com/a1ab9s
1 Comment

Be Christ!

6/16/2014

2 Comments

 

Gracious Savior you do not promise us your eternal life only when we depart this world. Instead you call us into the celebration of your unending grace each morning as we rise in the promise of baptism. Keep us ever mindful of this gift helping us to live your abundant life each day. Amen.

Be Christ! Be Big Tree! Be the change you want to see!

    Yesterday I helped with an all day Big Tree Arts and Music Festival of mostly local talent. The purpose of this event was to raise funds for our local Juniata County Food Pantry. 

    Summertime presents a particular challenge to the numerous small food pantries all over the country as demand for services rises. For many people that sounds counter intuitive because they think that summer time means people can potentially grow more of their own food. The problem is more complex than that. 

    When schools close for the summer many of our poorest children no longer receive a meal or two at school through food programs. This means demand increases on the already strapped budgets of low income families at home. Ask any parent about it. Children never seem to stop eating, constantly needing food for growth. Plus most low income families usually live in apartments and rarely have access to space to grow food. And many families may have no experience at growing anything. 

    In a conversation from last year that I had long forgotten I spoke of these realities to a couple of members of the local community in passing. They were as surprised as most by the realities of summer at the local food pantry. But that is not the end of the story. These two people took the story to heart and they decided to do something about it. 

    Yesterday was the fullfilment of that conversation as a local music festival was restarted, refitted and rescheduled from Labor Day weekend to Father's Day. A variety of logistics issues and stumbling blocks occurred and each was overcome as people worked together. Over a dozen bands and musicians donated time. Music went from 11am to 11pm and it was a great success. Why? 

    Why was it a success? The answer is best summarized in the t-shirts that the support staff were wearing. Those shirts simply said, "Be Big Tree." Indeed we were. 

    Mahatma Gandhi once said what has been paraphrased as, "Be the change you want to see." In other words, "Be Big Tree," "Be Christ. "

    The hoi poloi of the crowd yesterday was a broad mixture of people who all were willing to Be Big Tree and to be the change they desired to see in the lives of those touched through the work of our local food pantry. The crowd and performers included agnostics,  various Christian communities, members of the local Krishna community, and more. It included a broad variety of musical styles, it included young and old, financially gifted and financially challenged, and persons of all different stripes and dots, people with a lot of ink and people without any. All came together for a great day and a great celebration. All were willing to Be Big Tree.

    How often I have desired for Christians to live like Big Tree, powerfully present, as the body of Christ taking real risks and trusting in God's grace. How important it is for us to "Be Christ" in the marketplace of the world. Being Christ means simply loving each person we meet and celebrating every opportunity to be the change we want to see. It is pouring out our Christ filled lives for others. Sometimes I wonder where is the church, the body of Christ, in the midst of the world.
 
    Then I remember someone was there and it was me and it was all the people who came to Big Tree. I was able to "Be Christ" among all the people whose stories I listened to and they were Christ to me even if they did not know it.  I remember offering a ride home to a couple in need. "Be Christ when you reach out to the least of these." I called 911 to get Emergency Medical Services for a woman who needed professional assistance. "Be Christ" when you offer comfort and care to the ill and the struggling. I served pizza to people needing some dinner. "Be Christ" when you feed the hungry. 

    I thank God for people remembering a conversation from a year ago. I thank God as I learned yet again there are no small moments when we live as Christ among others. "Be Christ" in all things.

Be the change you want to see. Be Big Tree. Be Christ. For us as Christians it is always, "Be Christ."








2 Comments

Who is Welcome?

6/9/2014

0 Comments

 
Lord grant us faith and trust in you and time for amendment of life in sure confidence of your grace and the power of your Spirit. Amen.

WHO IS WELCOME HERE?

WE at MESSIAH LUTHERAN CHURCH want the following to be known.

WE want it to be of public record that those of different skin and heritage are welcome here.

WE want it to be known that those who suffer from addiction to drugs and alcohol (whether they are recovering or not) and their families are welcome here.


WE want it to be known that women and children are welcome here and that they will not be harassed or abused.


WE want it to be public record that in this congregation you can bring children to worship and even if they cry during the entire service, they are welcome.


WE want it to be known that those who are single by choice, by divorce, or through the death of a spouse are welcome here.


WE want it to be known that if you are promiscuous, have had an abortion, or have fathered children and taken no responsibility for them, you are welcome here.


WE want it known that gossips, cheats, liars, and their families are welcome here.


WE want it to be known that those who are disobedient to their parents and who have family problems are welcome here.


WE want it to be of public record that gays, lesbians and members of their families are welcome here.


Let it be of public knowledge that we at Messiah Lutheran Church take seriously that "all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God." (Romans 3:23) The young and the old, the rich and the poor, all of the broken are welcome here.


WE want it to be of public knowledge that "we are justified by the grace of God, which is a gift through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus our Lord." (Romans 3:20)


WE offer welcome here because we believe that "while we were yet sinners, Christ died for the ungodly." (Romans 5:8); that is us. Christ did not die for us after we showed signs of "getting it all together," Christ loved us and still loves us while we are yet sinners.
Sinners are welcome here; sinners like you and me like our neighbors. Let us not condemn the world, but let us proclaim to a broken and hurting world, God’s forgiveness and grace. WE want it to be of public record that since we are a sinful people that we will not always be as quick to welcome as we should. Let us be quick to admit our sin and seek forgiveness.


May God give us the grace to welcome and forgive one another as Christ has welcomed and forgiven us. "For God so loved the world that He gave His only Son to die for it." (John 3:16)



0 Comments

    Pastor Bill Esborn

    Pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America for 30 years and, finally, coming of age after six decades of living by the power of water and the Word.

    Archives

    September 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    February 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    July 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Web Hosting by iPage