Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Looking Ahead to January 1, 2023

This is our annual "choose what we sing" service. The assembled congregation will get to choose the Carols we sing during the service.

The Scripture Reading's for New Year's are:Ecclesiastes 3:1-13 Revelation 21:1-6

During the service folk will be invited to share Highlights/Lowlights from 2022 and also Hopes/Fears/Resolutions for 2023.

The Reflection title is A New Beginning

Early Thoughts: What is 2023 the time for? Where is God leading us this year? What is beginning to happen in your life? In our communal life?

As we take one calendar down and put the new calendar up it is a time for new beginnings. Something new is on the horizon. What do we hope it will be?

Scripture reminds us that God is at work in the world. The Revelation passage reminds us that God is creating a new heaven and a new earth, that God is living among us, and that all time (the ending and the beginning) is in God. 

As a congregation we launch into a new year, how will we be the church differently in 2023? How will we be the same? God is calling us to be a beacon of loving community here in Grande Prairie, we have to determine how we will continue to shine brightly.

As 2023 begins we are still, as a society, somewhat in recovery mode. Almost 3 years in the era of pandemic continues to leave a mark. Add in the soaring inflation we met in 2022 and ongoing uncertainty both at home and abroad we have to wonder what 2023 will bring. Will it be  a year of recovery or of limping along? 

But God is in the midst of all of it. If 2023 is a year of great recovery or if 2023 brings new hiccups God is in the midst of it. Maybe this year will be a time of dancing. Maybe it will be a time of weeping. (Likely it will bring both.) At any rate, a new year is beginning, with new hopes, new possibilities. May we walk with God into whatever might come out of it.

Monday, December 19, 2022

Everyday Miracles – A Christmas Eve Reflection

What miracles have you seen at Christmas?

Christmas is a time for miracles. Sometimes the miracles are big, like the complete personality change we see in the Grinch or Ebenezer Scrooge. But most often they are small everyday things that we could easily miss. In her poem The Christmas Miracle Angela Morgan writes:

Do you know the marvel of Christmas time,
The miracle meaning of song and chime,
Of hearty love and huge good will,
Of feasts that gladden and gifts that spill?
Do you know what happens to homes and men
When Christmas love is abroad again?
Could you look beneath, you would see the rush
Of a flood as real as a river's gush;
A torrent wonderful, deep and wide,
That sweeps the world in its magic tide.

Oh, it isn't the gift, and it isn't the feast;
Of all the miracles, these are least.
It's the good that flows from the hearts of men
When Christmas love is abroad again.
For wishes are real, and love is a force,
And the tide, which ages ago had source
In the heart of a babe, has grown and gained
Till all humanity, single-veined,
Answers the call of the mighty surge,
Swings to the great resistless urge.

What miracles have you seen at Christmas? What small everyday miracles have been part of your Christmas celebrations?

Christmas is not only a time for miracles, Christmas draws out miracles. As we tell again the story of God breaking into the world, of God becoming one of us, the Word-Made-Flesh we are drawn to look for the miraculous around us. At the same time, the story and the spirit of the season draws the miraculous out of us.

I think of the phenomenal amount of giving that happens this time of year. Salvation Army campaigns, toys for kids, Christmas Hampers, “Adopt-a-family” programs. What is the success of those things if not a miracle? Even when times are tight and everyone expects givings to be down I am often surprised at the amazing generosity of people in the Christmas season. A specific example. As Advent began the St. Paul’s Explorers group asked for help so they could fill “blessing bags” for the Friendship Centre. Three weeks after they asked they had enough donations (and money to buy more supplies) that they were able to fill 52 bags. Which happened to match almost exactly the number of clients the Friendship Centre had who they would give those bags to. Is that a Christmas miracle?

The ghost of Jacob Marley tells his former partner that it is required of every spirit to walk among their neighbours. Too often we fail to let our spirits do that, maybe because we are too busy, or too wrapped up in our own ‘stuff’, or just too tired. But there is something about Christmas that pushes our spirits out and about. That may be an everyday miracle in and of itself, certainly it allows more miracles to happen. When we reach out beyond ourselves and share gifts of love miracles happen.

The next stanza of The Christmas Miracle reads:

Oh, vain is the boast of the hardened one
Who scouts what the centuries have done.
Be he ever so mean, be he ever so cold,
Though his heart be flint and his claim be bold,
His veins will tingle, his pulses thrill,
To the sound of " Peace on earth, good will! "
Why, even the man who grips his purse
With a stingy mouth and a cruel curse
Must yield to the flood and be borne away
To join in the glory of Christmas Day.

So I ask again, what miracles have you seen at Christmas? Were they big and showy or were they everyday miracles? Something like one bored child choosing to entertain another young child and getting a hug in return. Or maybe strangers connecting so that one is not alone and lonely over the holidays. Or maybe the person with just enough still putting a couple of bucks in the Salvation Army Kettle. Or maybe some other gift of love shared with a neighbour, a friend, a family member, a stranger. What miracles might have floated right under our noses without our seeing them? What miracles have we done without thinking it was a big deal?

Christmas is a time for miracles. The miracles of Christmas are expressed in words like hope, peace, joy, love, and birth.

Hope: it is a miracle of Christmas that God breaking into the world gives us hope for what yet may be. Even with all that seems to go wrong in the world Christmas reminds us that God is still active in the world, God still moves us toward God’s vision for the world.

Peace: Christmas marks the birth of the Prince of Peace. A miracle of Christmas occurs when the story moves us closer to living together in peace and justice with all our neighbours. We may have a long way to go, but the miracle is that we keep heading in that direction.

Joy: Christmas Joy is that deep sense that somehow, some day all will be well. Christmas Joy is the miracle that allows us to search for joy even when our hearts are heavy.

Love: Love is always a miracle. Love that moves us to give of ourselves for the benefit of our neighbours is deeply embedded in the Christmas story. The baby in the manger is Love in human form. Love that is shown in grand gestures and gentle everyday kindnesses is the miracle that keeps the world functioning, keeps us hopeful, leads us to peace, and gives us great joy.

Birth: New life, new possibility, birth is a miracle. Birth happens in many ways, many things are born each new day. Each birth opens a door to a new way of being in the world. What is being born in your heart this Christmas time? What new miracles might that birth bring about?

In The Lord of the Rings we find gems of wisdom like “I have found that it is the small everyday deeds of ordinary folks that keep the darkness at bay. Small acts of kindness and love.” or “Even the smallest person can change the course of the future” or “Such is of the course of deeds that move the wheels of the world: small hands do them because they must, while the eyes of the great are elsewhere.”. It is wisdom like this that leads me to believe so strongly in the power of everyday miracles, everyday acts of love. Not because they are grand or showy, but because they are loving. We may feel we can not accomplish great things but each of us can do many small things. We are all capable of sharing the love, peace, hope, and joy that shines from the manger on Christmas night. And that might be the greatest miracle of all.

We close with the remainder of The Christmas Miracle:

Have you guessed the secret of Christmas night,
When the whole world loves with all its might,
When the whole world gives with a lavish hand
And joy is awake throughout the land?
Do you know the marvel that happens then
In the glow that goes from the hearts of men?
Have you looked beneath, have you seen the fire
That leaps from the soul of a great desire —
A warmth as real as the heat that springs
From the hearth where the great log laughs and sings?

Oh, it isn't the holly, it isn't the snow,
It isn't the tree or the firelight glow;
It's the flame that goes from the hearts of men
When Christmas love is abroad again.
'Tis the laughter of children, quivering high
In a shower of radiance to the sky
For wishes are real, and love is a force,
And the torch which ages ago had source
In the star that lighted the wise men's way
Burns with a magical fire to-day.

So great the shining, so pure the blaze,
It reaches beyond, through the stellar ways,
Till — listen! A wind voice told it me —
Our globe that swims in ethereal sea
Glows like a lamp whose flame is love
To the other worlds that swing above;
And this the signal that makes them know
We have hearths and homes and cheer below
Why, gods and angels walk by the light
That streams from the earth on Christmas night!

Let us all listen for the laughter of children and words of love. Let us all look for the glow that radiates from the manger and through the hearts of men, women, and non-binary folk alike. Let us all walk with gods and angels this Christmas night,

May we all see the miracles happening right in front of us. May we all take the chance to be miracle-workers in our own right – even if our miracles are of the humdrum, everyday type.
Amen.

Monday, December 12, 2022

Looking Forward to December 18, 2022 -- 4th Sunday of Advent


 The Scripture Readings this week are:

  • Matthew 1:18-25
  • Matthew 2:13-15, 19-23

The Sermon title is Dreams of Love

Early Thoughts: Disney's Cinderella would have us believe that "a dream is a wish your heart makes, when your fast asleep". The Everly Brothers suggested that all we had to do was dream and our beloved would be in our arms. The Mamas and the Papas told us that California Dreamin' was the way to escape a dreary winter's day. It seems often, but not always, when we sing about dreams we treat them either as wishful thinking or a way to escape reality.

Maybe dreams are like that sometimes. I know I have had my share of escapist or wishful or 'what if' day dreams over the years.

But sometimes dreams are something deeper. When we quote Dr. King's famous speech where he pronounced "I have a dream" nobody accuses us of being escapist. We recognize the words of a man who knew reality and saw a different possibility. Sometimes dreams push us to live differently.

Still, it often seems that to say someone is a dreamer is a slightly nicer way of saying they have unrealistic hopes or expectations.

Then there are dreams in Scripture. Dreams are a common way for God to communicate with God's people in our faith story. Consistently those dreams are times when God offers direction and/or comfort so that those people can go on following God's Way. And so I believe they are dreams based in God's love for the world and for those individuals. In love God encourages them to follow a hopeful path (even if there are times the path seems fraught with danger and disaster).

As Matthew tells the story, Joseph is a dreamer [which reminds me of another Joseph who rose to prominence  not just for having dreams but also for interpreting other people's dreams]. In a dream he is told not to give in to the rules and divorce Mary, despite her being pregnant, but to marry her and name the child (to have Joseph name the child would show that Joseph is accepting the child as his own). In a dream he is warned to get out of town before Herod's goons get there. In a dream he is told to go back to his homeland, and then a subsequent dream suggests he go to a different town instead.

Would the story of Jesus even get going without all these dreams? What role do dreams have in furthering the story of Love?

In these verses Matthew shows God acting through dreams to make the story possible, to make the renewal and restoration of the world possible. [There is another dream in these chapters of Matthew -- the Magi are warned not to tell Herod where the child is to be found.] In dreams, God is acting to protect the promise of Christmas.

How does God move in our dreams? How does God prod us to act, to participate in the story of renewal and restoration and redemption that we find in Jesus of Nazareth? How does God plant the dream of a renewed world in our hearts?

Are we ready to dream big dreams, and live out the dream despite the dangers there may be along the way? Can we share the dream and possibility and promise of love active in the world?

Can we risk being called dreamers?
--Gord


Monday, December 5, 2022

Looking Forward to December 11, 2022 -- Advent 3A


 The Scripture Readings this week are:

  • Psalm 146:5-10
  • Isaiah 35:1-10
  • Luke 1:46-55

The Sermon title is Rejoice! The World is Changing!

Early Thoughts: Joy to the World! The Lord is come! Mind you that seems also to carry the promise of a lot of turning the world upside down.

In the Gospel of John we are told that unless a seed falls into the ground and dies it will only remain a seed, but if it goes through death it becomes much more. When a seed is planted it is transformed. When a seed is planted what looked like barren ground can burst into life. Flowers can bloom. Joy  abounds!

Our cause for rejoicing as people of faith is inextricably linked to God's ongoing work of transforming the world, transforming us. And yeah, sometimes the process of being transformed is really kind of difficult and painful and less than joyful.

Mary sings words that echo the Psalm reading, words about a world being turned upside down. Isaiah promises renewal and return and new life (flowers in the desert wilderness). Isaiah also talks about strengthening weak hands and hearts, about encouraging those who are fearful as this time of renewal breaks into the world.

This week we will light the candle of Joy. Paul once exhorted us to "Rejoice in the Lord always: and again I say rejoice". Our faith story is not about a world that is staying the same. It is the story of a world that is being changed, of values that run counter to what is generally considered common sense, of an invitation to let ourselves be transformed in mind, heart, and soul. And still we are called to rejoice.

Change is hard. Change is often nerve-wracking or terrifying. Often we try to avoid change, or at least to control it. But God invites us to embrace change that we can not control. God steadies our nerves and strengthens our trembling knees so that we can be transformed. And for that we will rejoice.
--Gord