Signs of God & Faith

God asked the enslaved Jews in Egypt to mark their doors with a sign of their faith.
God promised freedom from slavery.

We adorn our sanctuaries with the cross upon which Jesus hung as a sign of our willingness to sacrifice for our faith.
God gives hope in the midst of hardships and sacrifices.

We baptize babies or adults as a sacrament, a sign of new life when we commit to following the teachings and practices of Jesus.
Jesus shows us the way to becoming the people God dreams we can be.

Today, we will gather around the Table with Christians from around the world on this World Communion Sunday as a sign of the wholeness of all peoples that you dream we will become.
Move us today to open our hearts and arms to all peoples. Amen. 

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Posted in Call to Worship, Days of the Church, Exodus, Exodus 12, Exodus 12:1-13, Exodus 13, Exodus 13:1-8, Old Testament, World Communion Sunday

Awakening Breath

Listen to sermon delivered at Condon United Church of Christ here.

Outline of Sermon
Sept. 11, 2016
Condon United Church of Christ
Rev. Tim Graves

Eve and Adam had a choice.

We have a choice.

Our choices have consequences,
sometimes far-reaching consequences.

***

Dispose of some myths.

Myth 1: Eve leads Adam to sin.

  • Eve is ‘ezer or helper – equal or higher status
  • ‘ezer used for God
  • the snake uses plural language > Adam was standing beside Eve

Myth 2: The snake was the devil

  • no indication whatsoever
  • snake was divine or semi-divine in ancient thought
  • “The snake was the most intelligent of all the wild animals that the LORD God had made.” (Gen. 3:1a CEB)
  • internal myth buster

In other parts of Bible:

  • biblically H’satan was more of a teacher
  • to empower devil is to de-power God
  • much of what we think we know is extra-biblical

Myth 3: Eden is a spa vacation.

Adam & Eve have a job

Myth 4: Original sin

  • this story is not about our sinful nature per se
  • it is about the human condition
  • it is about free will: individual & collective
  • our choices make it tough on us

The Nahum M. Sarna says in the JPS Torah Commentary,

“there is no inherent, primordial evil at work in the world. The source of evil is not metaphysical but moral.

Evil is…humanly wrought. Human beings possess free will, but free will is beneficial only insofar as its exercise is in accordance with divine will.

Free will and the need for restraint on the liberties of action inevitably generate temptation and the agony of choosing,

which only man’s self-mastery can resolve satisfactorily. (JPS Torah Commentary)

***

In every moment we have a choice. 

In this moment you

  • can leave
  • scream
  • sing
  • call me names

But God calls us to the most loving response.

How do we figure out God’s will?

  • prayer life
  • Bible study
  • community
  • generous giving
  • reflection on choice gone bad
  • other thoughts?

***

[PAUSE]

This is the 15th Anniversary of 9-11.

  • Where were you?
  • What were your thoughts?
  • What were our choices?

***

Adam & Eve made some choices

  • consequences

We made choices following 9-11

  • consequences

God warns Adam & Eve

  • choices have consequences
  • childbirth will be hard
  • the land outside Eden is harder to cultivate

What if God was giving them a choice?

  • not “the fall” but consequences
  • stay in garden
  • go into world

Remember, our life comes from the very breath of God

  • two parts: dust & breath
  • dust has no free will
  • so, free will is “of God”
  • to make a decision is to use God’s breath

When Adam & Eve make their choice to see the good & evil in the world, 

they are living into their God-parts.

They are following God’s lure to become co-creators of the incomplete creation. 

Like Adam & Eve, we are called to assist God, to co-create with God, God’s dream for the world.

 Suggests Disciples of Christ Pastor Loren Straight,

We are not called to stay in the garden but to go into all the world, in the image of God, 

where it is not all roses but toil and labor, resentment and competition, and always, always, the easy [choice] belief that someone has to die for this. 

Could it be that this is not about our fall but about our awakening? (Pastor Loren Straight, Central Christian, Iowa, Facebook, Narrative Lectionary Group, 9/9/16)

You are not fallen. You are called. 

Awaken the breath of God that gives you life. 

Listen. Follow. God will lead.

Amen.

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Posted in Genesis, Genesis 2, Genesis 2:4-3:8, Old Testament, Sermon, Uncategorized

Unbelievable Promises

Praise the god of promises.
God always keeps God’s promises!

The noise of a world intent on collecting things distracts us from the miracle of what you promise.
God always keeps God’s promises!

We are tempted by the lure of earthly power even though we know peace can only be found in your promises.
God always keeps God’s promises!

Remind us in this hour that your promises to us are as unbelievable as God’s promise to Abraham & Sarah that they will have a child in their old age. Remind us that your love for humanity is boundless and we will one day live as you dream.
God always keeps God’s promises! Amen.          

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Posted in Call to Worship, Genesis, Genesis 15, Genesis 15:1-6, Uncategorized

Promises

Invitation to Offering
God promises much to humanity and we often turn the other way. As the plate comes around commit to give of your whole selves. Give of your talents and material possessions to the Church with the expectation that they be used to further God’s dream for our world.  Please commit yourself and give as you’re able.

Dedication of Offering
Divine One: We promise to use these gifts for good. We promise to use these gifts in furthering God’s realm. We commit to using these gifts in love and mercy for others.
Amen.

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Posted in Invitation to Offering, Offering, Prayer of Dedication, Uncategorized

So the story goes

In the beginning, so the story goes, God began creating.
In a garden, the divine one breathed life into the adamah, the very earth.

And we became.
Praise to the creator!

We gather to remember whose breath   gives us life.
Praise to the essence!

We gather to reconnect with the essence within me, within you, and permeating all that is. Praise to the god of relationship!

Holy one, we pray, “Animate us. Touch us. Heal us. Move us to breathe deeply of your love”
“Move us to share your breath of hope and promise in a world in desperate need of you. Amen.”

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Posted in Call to Worship, Genesis, Genesis 2, Genesis 2:4-25, Genesis 2:4-3:8, Genesis 2:7-9, Genesis 3, Old Testament, Uncategorized

Offering Invitation & Dedication

Invitation

We sing our praises to the Lord, for God is good and worthy! We give our whole selves — our talents and material possessions — to the Church with the expectation that they be used to further God’s dream for our world.  Please commit yourself and give as you’re able.

Dedication of Gifts

As a church we promise to use these gifts for good. We promise to use them in love and mercy for others. Amen.

 

Posted in Invitation to Offering, Offering, Old Testament, Prayer of Dedication, Psalms, Uncategorized

From the Belly of a Fish & Ninevah

 *Confession & Forgiveness of Sins

Get up and go to Ninevah, that great city, and cry out against it, for their evil has come to my attention.” (Jonah 1:1-2 CEB)

God calls to us!

3 So Jonah got up—to flee to Tarshish from the LORD ! (Jonah 1:3a CEB)

We confess we often run from God’s claim on our lives. We fail to love our neighbors as ourselves.

But me, I will offer a sacrifice to you with a voice of thanks. That which I have promised, I will pay. Deliverance belongs to the LORD!”  Jonah 2:9 CEB

Forgive us, we call to God. Help us be the people you created us to be.

10 God saw what they were doing—that they had ceased their evil behavior. So God stopped planning to destroy them, and he didn’t do it. (Jonah 3:10 CEB)

Praise be to the God of mercy and grace!                                         

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Posted in Confession of Sin & Assurance, Jonah, Old Testament, Uncategorized

Baby Moses Rides the Waves

Listen to this sermon here.

Now a man from Levi’s household married a Levite woman.  2  The woman became pregnant and gave birth to a son. She saw that the baby was healthy and beautiful, so she hid him for three months.  Exodus 2:1-2 CEB

Mothers and fathers — and grandparents — don’t normally keep babies hidden away. Speaking as the grandfather of a 2-month old, I’m talking about him and sharing pictures at every opportunity. I’ve noticed that many of you are the same.

The Pharaoh of Egypt felt threatened by the number of immigrants in his midst. He was afraid that should there be a war that the Hebrew people would rise up against him. He ordered all the baby boys killed at birth to prevent the immigrant population from increasing.

Of course, the baby’s mother hid him.

***

When she couldn’t hide him any longer, she took a reed basket and sealed it up with black tar. She put the child in the basket and set the basket among the reeds at the riverbank. Exodus 2:3 CEB

Can you imagine the desperation the baby’s mother must have felt?

[pause]

In some ways three-months may be the perfect age for babies.

As we know by the time a child is 3-months old they are very social.

They are in a period that child developmentalist Haim Ginott called equilibrium. (Those other less charming stages he called disequilibrium.)

In short, 3-month olds are typically charming.

They are not quiet, however.

And so a mother took what seemed a heartless and cruel step to protect her baby from certain death at the hands of Pharoah’s men.

The action she took was intrinsically beyond neglect. To place a baby in a basket and send him floating down a river — even in the swampy area of the river where the bulrushes and reeds grew, was by any standard abusive.

And so Baby Moses rides the waves of the river.

[pause]

Frankly, this is a terrifying story! A mother sends her infant to a  likely drowning death out of desperation that the Egyptians will kill him at the Pharoah’s orders.

And we tell this story to children!

The only way we didn’t have nightmares about this story as children was because it was sanitized, taking on the character of a Disneyworld ride.

The baby’s older sister stood watch nearby to see what would happen to him. Exodus 2:4 CEB

I love how the cartoon I showed you portrays the older sister as calm and cool as her baby brother floats unaccompanied and unprotected on the water.

One movement by the baby — very likely with a three-month-old — and down will come  baby cradle and all into the water.

I don’t care how much sibling resentment exists, few sisters would take this without extreme distress.

But Baby Moses miraculously rides the waves of the river to an earthly salvation.

Pharaoh’s daughter came down to bathe in the river, while her women servants walked along beside the river. She saw the basket among the reeds, and she sent one of her servants to bring it to her.  When she opened it, she saw the child. The boy was crying, and she felt sorry for him. She said, “This must be one of the Hebrews’ children.”  Exodus 2: 5-6 CEB

This moment — when “she felt sorry for him” — is the miracle.

This is the moment when God’s extravagant, luring spirit of love moved her to see the humanity of an outsider in the cries and eyes of a baby boy riding the gentle waves on the edge of the river.

The Pharoah’s daughter would certainly have known what her father had commanded. She could justifiably have called for Pharoah’s men to come and take the child away.

Instead, her humanity connected to his humanity. Instead the image of God — the divinity within her commingled with that divine in the unprotected, unaccompanied infant.

And Baby Moses rides the waves of God’s love as it flows between two human beings.

Then the baby’s sister said to Pharaoh’s daughter, “Would you like me to go and find one of the Hebrew women to nurse the child for you?” 

Pharaoh’s daughter agreed, “Yes, do that.” 

So the girl went and called the child’s mother. 9Pharaoh’s daughter said to her, “Take this child and nurse it for me, and I’ll pay you for your work.” 

So the woman took the child and nursed it.  

After the child had grown up, she brought him back to Pharaoh’s daughter, who adopted him as her son. She named him Moses, “because,” she said, “I pulled him out of the water.” Exodus 2:7-10 CEB

Another miraculous part of this story of love which binds us together as one human family is that a little girl was moved to speak to one to whom she should not speak.

She was presumptuous and brazen and downright bold to speak to royalty. The Pharoah’s daughter had every right to send the child away with far more than a scolding.

But she didn’t.

The divinity within a young child — that extravagant love of God that refuses to give up on humanity — moved her to risk her own safety for that of her baby brother.

Yes. Baby Moses rides the waves into the arms of the very woman who gave birth to him.

This. This is a story of love. It is a story of miracles. It is a parable to explain how it is that Moses, a Hebrew child, would become a part of the royal household and eventually lead the Hebrew people to the promised land.

[pause]

***

But that is not what happened this month in our community. One too young to die did not survive riding the waves. In a brutal, violent tragedy a 17-year-old child died from an auto collision.

The Snyder’s home burned. 33,000 acres were consumed over just a few days.

Where was the extravagant love that saved a three-month-old?

Did God love Moses more than God loves the people of Condon?

[pause]

The short answer is, of course, no. God loves Condon with all the boundlessness as God loved the Hebrew people in Egypt.

First, it’s important to remember that this is ancient historiography. Unlike what we try to do with history, it was never expected to be an objective retelling of facts.

Rather, this is a story based on facts that is told to reveal important truths. In the case of the larger narrative that truth is that God loves the Hebrew people.

In the case of narrower story,  the truth revealed is that Moses will grow to be an important leader.

Scholars see parallels between this story and an earlier Egyptian tale that emphasizes the humble beginnings of a great leader. But literary license or not, does God love Moses more than Condon?

The issue here is called theodicy or why does God let bad things happen?

I’m sure you’ve heard the typical platitudes: God works in mysterious ways or God’s ways are not our ways or God has a plan or everything happens for a reason or the one which bothers me the most, God is testing us.

Though those ways of understanding God may at a superficial level answer why God would allow a 17-year-old to die in a crash, they also turn God into a cruel deity.

At least for me, that is not what love is about. That is not the God I perceive and experience. Love is not allowing evil to happen. It’s not about allowing a home or crops to burn.

I think the problem is how we define God.

When we define God as all-powerful, as Christians we place ourselves in a position of being apologists for all the evil and bad that happens in the world.

As United Methodist Pastor Cori Cypret says:

“At best, it makes God the author of suffering and the perpetrator of evil. At worst, it makes God out to be a sadist, enjoying the pain and suffering of others, taking pleasure in causing pain.” (http://coopersvilleumc.org/1/post/2014/02/biblical-mythbusters-myth-1-everything-happens-for-a-reason.html)

No. I think God does not stop the bad things because God cannot stop the bad things.

In Romans, the Apostle Paul says,

We know that God works all things together for good for the ones who love God, for those who are called according to his purpose.  Romans 8:28 CEB

Those who begin from the standpoint that everything happens for a reason — not in the Bible by the way — misinterpret Paul and twist it to mean that God is all powerful and God has a plan, and that our free will means little if anything.

But what if, like you and I, God doesn’t know the future. God doesn’t know what we will use our free will to do and to say.

Consider, God knows all the possibilities, all the choices we might make, but until we make that choice…Until we use our God-given free will, God doesn’t know what we will do.

God encourages us to pick the most loving of those choices. But. If we are created in the image of God, we have to have free will.

As theologian Robert Mesle says,

God knows everything there is to know. But the future does not exist yet, except as a range of possibilities that have not yet been chosen. (Robert Mesle in Process Theology: An Introduction)

Allowing us our free will, having created it within us, God seeks to encourage us, to lure us, to point us toward the most loving response in every millisecond of our lives.

God wants us to be more loving. God wants us to care for our neighbor as ourselves. God desires the best for us, the good for us.

Our job is to respond to the divine beckoning and make that choice in every millisecond of our lives.

The nature of the world is such that bad things happen. The actions of all of creation intermingles and interacts.

Because God is a persuasive God rather than a coercive God, the most God can do is encourage us and each part of the world (to the extent parts of the world have sentience) to interact lovingly.

The fires of the last month happened through a sequence of natural phenomena and choices made.

In the accident, a sequence of choices — even as tiny as when the driver of the truck began his journey or when a 17-year-old chose to leave town — came together in a seemingly random way to bring the two vehicles together at the moment that the teen’s car swerved over the line.

This is not God testing anyone. This is not even necessarily bad choices on anyone’s part.

In other words, as the bumper sticker says, “stuff happens.”

[pause]

The world in which we live is in need of healing. It was in need of healing in the time of Moses and remains in need of healing now. But God never gives up on God’s dream for the world and for us.

Our persuasive God keeps encouraging, luring, & moving us toward a better existence, even when it doesn’t seem like it.

Look at the way this town has rallied around the Reser family and our young people in their time of horrible grief. God did not cause the death of a 17-year-old or a family home to burn.

No.

Given the tragedy of the loss, a loss that God suffers with us, we are encouraged to love yet again and even more.

Writes UCC scholar and pastor Bruce Epperly,

Our love of God and others, prayerfully expressed, opens the door for God to bring forth new possibilities of healing and for us to claim our role as God’s partners in healing the earth.  (Bruce Epperly in Process Theology: A Guide for the Perplexed)

***

Though Condon has dealt with challenging and tragic things this month, the extravagant love of the One, is working through all that happens.

Less than satisfying to our culturally-ingrained sensibilities, bad things do happen to good people. Bad things do happen to good towns and even to good friends.

But the people of this town have by and large risen to the opportunity to love and heal one another.

We have been riding the waves not in a basket like Moses but armed with love and caring and a sense of community.

When [Pharoah’s daughter]  opened it, she saw the child. The boy was crying, and she felt sorry for him. Exodus  2:6a CEB

Miracles happen in the midst of hurting. The miracle is the persuasive God who moved Pharoah’s daughter to empathy and that binds our community together.

The miracle, the Good News is God’s love resurrects hope and love in the darkest of hours.

Amen.

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Posted in After a Tragedy, Exodus, Exodus 2, Exodus 2:1-10, New Testament, Old Testament, Romans, Romans 8, Romans 8:28, Sermon, Special Times

A Community Candlelight Gathering for One Who Died Too Soon

Below are my remarks and prayer from this evening as our small, eastern Oregon community gathered to grieve, lament, and be with one another following the tragic death of a beloved 17-year-old last evening.

Opening Remarks

Let me tell you what I know to be true. Pain doesn’t last forever, though when we’re in the midst of it that can be hard to believe.

Our God, the divine essence that feeds the wheat, the breath that blows and is converted to electricity by windmills is love. That love is within you, too.

That love is the image of God in which each human being is created.

That love is what causes us to ache, and hurt. For without love loss is nothing. We cannot imagine a world without Kaela. How can she be one moment and than not the next?!?

***

Community Prayer

Please assume an attitude of prayer or meditation as your faith or no faith dictates. 

Sacred breath,

You blew across the nothingness before it was something. You loved an earth and a sun, stars and a universe into being. We feel your love at the birth of our children, grandchildren, neighbors and strangers. You are the very breath that gives us life.

In the wheat fields, on the mountain tops, on gravel roads beneath spacious skies, and in the canyons your breath moves. In our joys, the laughter, our learning and growing, even in our conflicts [pause], but mostly in our relationships of love your breath reminds us that we are one humanity, one community.

In our sister Kaela we felt your breath that connects all of the living together. She was friend, classmate, neighbor, daughter, and barely-known but she was and remains your beloved. Your breath of love left Kaela’s earthly body yesterday in a horrible, violent way. Her breath now intermingles with yours.

We weep because we do not see her face anymore. We cry because she will not be at the fair or graduation. We will not get to see her laughing eyes or her angry face. Nor will she grow to have children of her own. We think she is no more.

We think we will feel this deep chasm of grief and loss and pain, forever.

[Pause]

Breath of healing and hope, blow through the fairgrounds, blow through the halls of the high school, take up residence in her family home, blow along 206, and in every canyon of Gilliam county. Make your love known to distressed hearts. Be a salve for those who sob, who are numb, and angry.  As our grief continues in the months and year to come gently breathe your love upon skin wet from so very many tears.

[Pause]

Today is a day for sorrow.

Though we will have many more days of sadness, we know that your breath of love will bring hope and healing in its time

just as the wind blows out the frozen fog of winter and the smoke of wildfire in its time.

We are grateful for your love which binds our community together. We recognize your divine presence that resurrects hope in the darkest of hours.

Tonight we grieve.

Tomorrow is a day to grieve and take one more step forward.

Blow your loving breath at our back that our steps will be light and grow in hope each day. May we breathe in your love that now contains the essence of our dear friend, Kaela.

Shalom. Peace. Amen.

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Posted in After a Tragedy, Genesis, Genesis 1, Genesis 1-2, Genesis 1-2:1, Old Testament, Special Times

Waves of Love & Commitment

Invitation

God’s breath sustains the ever-creating universe. Divine love rode the waves with the baby Moses and is with you in every joy, heartbreak, and challenge. Let God’s love move you to commit to use your talents and financial resources for expanding love in our world.

 

Dedication

Divine One: May these gifts of money, time, & talent be like a river in the desert.                                   

Posted in Exodus, Exodus 2, Exodus 2:1-10, Genesis, Genesis 1-2, Genesis 1-2:1, Invitation to Offering, Isaiah, Isaiah 43, Isaiah 43:19-20, Offering, Old Testament, Prayer of Dedication, Uncategorized
Creative Commons License BY-NC-ND 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/

All materials by Tim Graves unless otherwise noted. Creative Commons License BY-NC-ND 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/

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