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Bo’s Blog
Being a life-long fan of the Minnesota Twins baseball team has taught me a lot
about life. There have been some great years—1965, 1987, and 1991—and there
have been many good years—most of the 2000’s, for example. But there have also
been many years that would qualify as “stinkers.” Those were the times when it
was difficult to listen to, or watch, the games. Those were the times my Auntie
Bert would shake her head and say, “Those poor boys.” But as a life-long fan,
you stay with your team when they stink, as well as when they’re great and good.
There are some great and wonderful moments in life. There are many good ones
too. But there are also days, months, or even years that are real stinkers.
Times when we feel like we’re going through things we would never wish on our
worst enemy. It sometimes feels like it would be better just to give up, and
some do. But it’s important to remember that as life-long fans we need to work,
or strive, or fight, or endure, or grow through those bad times in life. Doing
so makes the good and great times yet to come even better.
Sometimes Christians think that they can avoid the bad times in life, if only
they are good enough Christians. We’ve been working through Paul’s letter to
the church in Rome this summer, and chapter 8, verse 28 is often quoted for just
this purpose—“All things work for good for those who love God.” But what Paul
meant by good in that phrase is what your mother meant when she said, “Eat your
lima beans. They’re good for you.” God knows that what’s good for us is not
necessarily what we enjoy, but what helps us to grow in our faith and as human
beings. And that growth, like adolescence, can sometimes be painful.
So really, as we go through the ups and downs of our faith and of life, it’s
much more helpful for the Christian to look at verses 38 and 39 of chapter
8—“For I am certain that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor
things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor
anything else in all creation can separate us from the love of God in Christ
Jesus our Lord.” Now there’s a life-long fan.
Shalom,
Bo

July 2011
This month I begin
my fourth year here at Prosser UMC. Those who study such things say that it
takes about four years for a pastor and congregation to get to know each other
well, and to really feel comfortable with each other. Once the pastor gets the
“lay of the land,” and the congregation gets the measure of the pastor, they
begin to know what ministry they can do together.
I have to say that
Alison and I have felt welcomed here from the beginning. It has been nothing
but a delight to get to know the members of this congregation, and the
communities of Prosser and Grandview. You all have been very gracious with us,
especially in allowing me to commute during the first two years so that our kids
could remain in the area in which they grew up. Since moving here full-time
last September, we have both noticed that traffic in the Tri-Cities is much
worse than it used to be.
So, now that we are
feeling comfortable with each other, I want to share with you a question that I
asked the Ad Council members in June—“Why are you here?” This question has two
meanings. The first is “How did you come to be here, in this place where you
are now?” What were the events, and who were the people, that led you to this
point in your life? How did you come to be connected to Prosser UMC? I have
heard some of your stories over the years, and look forward to hearing more of
them. It’s important for each of us to know our story, because that story has
made us who we are. It’s important for us as a church to know each other’s
story, because that shapes our identity as a church. Think about your story,
and think of someone with whom to share it.
The other meaning
of the question “Why are you here?” is “What are you here to do?” What is it
that you are being called by God to do in this place? We are all called by God
to do something. What is your calling? (If you want some hints, read Micah
6:8, or Matthew 28:18-20, or listen to God’s nudging.) Sometimes how we got
here can be a clue or help to what it is we need to do. Again, think about what
you are feeling called to, and share that with someone. Explore the
possibilities. It doesn’t take much looking around to see that there’s plenty
to do, but we don’t have to do it all. Just our part.
I look forward to
our year ahead together.
Shalom,
Bo
June 2011
Bo’s Blog
There was a letter
to the editor of the Prosser Record-Bulletin in April that raised the
question,”Is it appropriate for a pastor to be involved in a school bond
campaign?” I think that question raises an interesting topic for reflection.
As I noted in last
month’s blog, all Christians are called to the duty of Christian behavior, or
moral action. We must live out our faith. Based on Jesus’ teachings to “do to
others what we would have them do to us,” and to “love your neighbor as
yourself,” sometimes that duty calls us, as Christians, to become involved in
the political process, because the political process is one of the tools we can
use to make the changes we need to be a better community. As Americans, we are
encouraged to participate in the political process. As Christians, we are asked
to let that participation-whether it be making speeches, writing letters, giving
money or time, and even voting-be informed, as all our other actions should be
too, by our faith.
Pastors are
generally seen as leaders within their congregations, and sometimes within their
communities as well. They also tend to be seen as moral leaders, although these
days we are well aware that they are subject to the same human frailties and
misjudgments as others. And it is perhaps because pastors are seen as moral
leaders that they need to be careful and clear about how they participate in the
political process. I cannot, and should not, say from the pulpit, “You must
vote this way.” That would be an abuse of my position as pastor, not to mention
an endangerment of our non-profit status with the IRS.
But I can, and
should, say, “This is what I believe our faith says about this issue.” Many
pastors did just that during the Vietnam War. Not telling people what to think,
but raising the issue and the questions up for people to think about for
themselves-“How does my faith relate to this issue?” I can march on Washington,
as did Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., and many other pastors, did. I can run for
office, as other pastors, like the Rev. Al Sharpton, have already done. And it
is appropriate for a pastor like me to work on a school bond committee, as Rev.
Paul Fredricks and Rev. Gary Wolfer have already done. Because pastors, like
all Christians, have been called to both faith and action.
Shalom,
Bo
May 2011
The Lord is risen!
He is risen indeed!
We are in the
Easter season now, which began the last Sunday of April and goes until Pentecost
Sunday, June 12. It is a season of joy, after the seriousness of Lent. It is
for us a reminder that the risen Christ is with us. It goes beyond Easter Egg
hunts, chocolate, ham or lamb dinner, maybe some new clothes, and a good ending
to what could have been a tragic story. It is the celebration of nothing less
than the changing of God’s relationship with humanity. That sounds important,
and it is. There is no more “chosen people.” There is now “God’s people.” And
each of God’s people is now given the responsibility to maintain and live out
that faith.
Maintaining our
faith is as simple as saying “He is risen indeed!” It is our statement of “This
I believe.” We maintain our faith through personal spiritual practices, like
prayer, reading scripture, going on retreats, journaling, attending worship, and
more. Living out our faith is more difficult, though, because that involves
doing things which might not be easy or comfortable for us in our families,
workplaces, or communities. It is what C. S. Lewis calls “Christian Behavior,”
the title of the third book in “Mere Christianity.” He bases Christian behavior
on Jesus’ teaching, “Do to others what you would have them do to you.” It
sounds simple, and a lot of people agree it’s a good idea. But often times our
self-interest interferes with carrying it out. When it may incur a cost of
time, or money, or inconvenience to us, we may, just this once, avoid the
morally right action.
Fortunately, the
good news of Easter is that, when we have taken a wrong turn in our behavior,
God is there to help us turn back. Christian behavior is our goal, and should
always be what we are striving toward, but when we fail, as we will, God’s
grace, and often the grace of others around us, welcomes us back to try again.
The joy of Easter is not just about the eternal life we may have with God
through Christ, but also about the grace we receive to “do to others, what we
would have them do to us” in this life. Alleluia!
Shalom,
Bo

Formatted PDF Here: March 2011

February 2011
February is the month we
celebrate love. St. Valentine’s Day is the 14th, but well before that we see the
heart shaped
pink and red balloons in the
stores, and we start thinking about who we’re going to give cards and/or candy.
That thinking reminds us, yet
again, of who the important people in our life are, and why we feel they are
important to
us. It is a good thing to
take that time out of our “regular” schedule, to pause and think about the
people who mean
so much to us--the people who
form us and shape our life.
Love is an important part of
our faith too. If you looked up how many times the word “love” appears in the
Bible, it
would be in the hundreds.
Think of the phrases you know from the Bible with “love” in it: “For God so
loved the
world. . . “; “No greater
love. . .”; “Love your neighbor. . .”; and “God is love. . .” are some that come
to my mind.
Throughout the Bible there is
the constant theme of God’s love for Israel, and for all humanity. And it was
because of
God’s love that Jesus came to
live among us, to be a sacrifice for us, and to establish a new relationship
between us
and God.
Jesus spoke a lot about
loving one another. In fact, as the quote at the bottom of the page suggests,
loving one
another is the identifying
mark of being a Christian—a follower of Jesus. “They’ll know we are Christians
by our love”
is more than just a song. It
is to be the thing about Christians that identifies for the world who they are,
just as a
Scout shirt identifies the
youth who wears it as being a member of Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts.
It is not always easy to love
each other. Some people can give love, but feel uncomfortable receiving love.
Some
people have been so shaped by
their life experiences that they have a hard time giving or receiving love. And,
being
human, it’s often easy to get
so focused on getting our needs met that we forget about the needs of others.
Love can
sometimes languish on the
sidelines.
But God’s love is always
there, to fill us, to support us, and to be a source for us. It is there to
remind us that this is
the badge we wear for the
world, to let them know whose we are. It is there to form us and to shape us. It
is good to
remember love and to
celebrate it.
Shalom,
Bo
January 2011
January in the church is always an interesting time—a combination of the secular
and the sacred. As participants in our culture, January is a time to start anew,
to make fresh resolutions about how we can become healthier in our activities,
our diet, our relationships, and/or our spirituality. We are well versed and
rehearsed in our traditions of the new year. As participants in our Christian
faith, January is when we focus on the season of Epiphany.
On what?
Epiphany is not so well known as Easter or Christmas, or even Lent or Advent.
But it is important to us as Christians because it contains our job description.
An epiphany is a moment of understanding or revelation—the “aha!” moment.
Epiphany in the church is when Jesus, the light of the nations as the Old
Testament prophets put it, was “revealed” to the world, in the persons of the
wise men, who followed the light of the star to the place where Jesus was born.
And this same Jesus told his followers, “you are the light of the world,” making
us, his followers that same light for others. It’s our job to be that light, to
reveal Jesus to the world through the things that we say and do.
There are plenty of people who feel they are living in darkness, and could use a
little light. People in Sri Lanka recovering from the mudslides of the past
year. People in Haiti still struggling from last year’s earthquake. People in
the lower Yakima valley who are without a job or without a home. People anywhere
in the world who are feeling spiritually lost or abandoned. They are looking for
the light.
Perhaps our New Year’s resolution could be to be more “light-like.” We have a
good history of sharing the light and being the light. Just this past year we
gave over $1,600 to help people in Haiti, our youth raised over $750 to buy
presents for our Christmas family, and our Christmas Eve offering brought in
almost $400 for ministry in Nepal, and for Jubilee Ministries. We are a light
simply by opening up our building to the outside groups who use it. But there is
still more Epiphany that is needed in our world, and we can resolve to seek more
ways to shed that light. It is our job.
Happy New Light-Year!
Shalom,
Bo
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December
2010
Bo’s Blog
Last month I wrote about how Thanksgiving helps us
to recognize our blessings and to give thanks for them. December, and
the seasons of Advent and Christmas, move us on to the next step by
reminding us to share the blessings we have with others.
In Advent we prepare and wait. Prepare for what?
Wait for what? For God’s gift on Christmas Day. For the gift of
Emmanuel (meaning “God with us”). For the gift of Jesus (meaning “he
will save his people”). We received, so many years ago,and still have
today, God’s presence among us. God was, and still is, with us, around
us. We received God’s salvation in that gift of Jesus’ life, death,
and resurrection, a gift we continue to share with the world. We
received these wonderful gifts, and are called to follow Jesus’ example
and give to others.
And we do give. We give gifts to family and
friends. Its fun (and harrowing at times) to go shopping for gifts in
the weeks before Christmas. The best gifts, that I’ve received or
given, are often those that reflect something of the relationship
between me and the other person, something of our past history, or
present interest. I think many people do try to give gifts that have
meaning, rather than those that are just expensive or fancy. We want
to give something that expresses the love or friendship we feel for
them.
We are also called to give to those we don’t know.
God’s gift of grace is for the whole world. Jesus’ sacrifice was for
all people. Many of us give donations to charities throughout the
year. We also give through our church, through the apportionments we
pay to our conference and through the support we give to groups like
Jubilee Ministries. Jubilee, for example, through its food bank,
provides families in need with food, and with a limited amount of rent
or utilities assistance. Through the Red Door thrift store, they
provide families with clothing and things for the home at low prices.
And through the vouchers they provide, with the help of our police
department, they give assistance to people travelling through our area
for gas, food, or an overnight stay. By our contributions, we give
gifts to many people we will never know. But they will know that we
care, as God does, for all people. This month we celebrate being
blessed by God’s gift of love. The way we celebrate this gift is by
giving gifts of love to others. And isn’t there a song about that—a
song that started with the angels singing “Gloria in excelsis Deo?” And
it is echoed today with the words “Love is something, if you give it
away, you end up having more.”
Shalom,
Bo
November 2010
I guess I’m just a real tradition-oriented person
(“Really?” says Alison).
November, for me, is the month of Thanksgiving
dinner—and all the
things that go with that. Going to my mom’s in
Sacramento, seeing my
sister, uncle, aunt, and family down there, having
turkey, mashed potatoes,
gravy, sweet potatoes, vegetables, and fruit salad
with whipped cream and
marshmallows in it. These are the things I think
of when I think of
Thanksgiving.
But these things don’t always happen each
November. There have been times
when I haven’t been able to go down to Sacramento.
I haven’t always had
turkey for Thanksgiving. And now I have health
concerns that make me realize
that my idealized Thanksgiving dinner is not
especially good for my cholesterol
and triglyceride levels. And although this has not
traumatized me greatly,
experiencing these things has made me realize yet
again that change is always
a part of our lives.
Others have experienced even greater changes in
their lives than I have. I
think of all those who got “underwater” on their
home mortgages, those who
lost their homes to foreclosure, those who had to
simply walk away because
they could not pay their mortgages, and those who
are now homeless because
of events and decisions beyond their control, and I
realize that I am lucky that
my family and I still have a home in which to
live. I think of the people I know,
and many more I do not know, who must spend this
holiday season without
someone they love because they have passed away, or
are serving in
Afghanistan, or are in prison, or have run away,
and I realize that I am lucky
that I can spend my holidays with my family. I
think of the people who have
lost their jobs, or those who must make their
Thanksgiving dinner out of a
limited number of food stamps, or those thousands
of children who die each
day in our world from hunger, and I realize how
lucky I am that I will have a
special dinner this month.
I like my traditions. But it’s good for me to be
reminded that my traditions are
just things, like cars and money and clothes. And
when we try to cling too
tightly to our things, we can forget that they are
blessings, and must be held
loosely. How good it is that we have this time of
year to remind us of our
blessings, and to remind us that it is important
for us to give thanks for them.
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October 2010
Bo’s Blog
Being archivist for the east side of our annual conference, I get to look at all
kinds of old committee minutes, and conference journals. Sounds exciting,
doesn't it? Actually, it is, because one thing I've noticed in reading
through those minutes and journals from 100 years ago is how much energy and
excitement there was in the church then. They had more teachers than they had
Sunday school classes. They didn't have enough rooms for the classes they
had. They had more clergy than they had churches to which they could send
them. They were always adding more classrooms, starting new classes, founding
new churches. You can sense in those pages this strong desire to share the
good news they had with others. The opportunity is still there for this
kind of energy. Those who do research on such things tell us that well over half
the people around us don't have a church. But somewhere along the way our
attitude about our faith has changed. Somewhere in the 1940's, 50's, or
60's, mainline churches shifted from being evangelistic (which is this urgent
desire to share their good news), to being conservationists (maintaining
their buildings and programs). That's quite a shift, when you think about
it. It's not just being less pushy about "sharing your witness." It's about a
shift from being proactive and active, to being reactive. Jesus spoke
about it as hiding a light under a bushel. Or we might think about it as
putting our light away for a rainy day, or putting it in a protective case so
nobody can disturb it. The purpose of the light is to guide us and others
through life. It does no good if it is hidden, or protected, or saved for
later. There are people around us – neighbors, co-workers, friends, and family –
who need it now to help them through a dark time. We worry a lot about
imposing our beliefs on others, but we don't have to. Just by letting them
know you go to church, or that you are a Methodist (or Presbyterian, or
Catholic, or simply a Christian) opens up a new realm of discussion
between you. I've found that many who are “un-churched” or who have left the
church in which they grew up have questions about faith, religion,
theology, and God. I've learned a lot from their questions. And if you
feel out of your depth, you have permission to say to them, "I don't know the
answer to that question, but my pastor loves to explore these questions and
ideas. Let's ask him!" It's not about making ourselves uncomfortable, or
making others uncomfortable with us. It's about deepening our relationships with
others, being available for each other in time of need, and deepening our
relationship with God at the same time. It's about recapturing the idea
that the "Good News" is supposed to feel like it is something good for us, which
will make it something we will think of as good for others too. So this is an
invitation to get excited. Invite someone new into this part of your life. We
have a lot of things going on here in the coming months – John Nilsen on
the 17th, Paul Jeffrey next month, worship services, the Country Fair, Advent
events. Let God's light shine.
Shalom,
Bo
September 2010
Bo’s Blog
When I was in college, I was still living at the house in which I had grown up.
It was next to the
elementary school I had attended, and one day I went for a walk through that
school. No students or
teachers were there that day, and as I looked into the window of my 5th Grade
classroom I saw something that
looked both familiar and different. The classroom looked pretty much the same as
when I had been there years
before, and yet it looked strange, because everything—the student desks, the
counter tops, the teacher’s desk, even
the blackboard—looked smaller than I remembered. It surprised me that being
older, and taller, made such a
difference.
As we get older, that difference in perspective becomes less surprising to us,
but usually only with things that stand
out like that. We tend to forget that such a difference also applies to less
tangible things. Our understandings about
life and the world and the way things work grow and mature, and things we
thought we already knew instead become
new again, or gain a richness and depth we had not recognized before.
I particularly notice this when I teach a class, or prepare a sermon, or simply
read the scriptures. Stories in the Bible
that I thought I knew turn out to have another character in them I hadn’t paid
much attention to before, but who
seems to stand out this time. The meaning of a sentence, or a word, may seem
more complex or multi-faceted, or
just simply different this time I read it. Or I might be reading it in the
context of a new commentary or book which
provides a different view of a familiar verse.
In a way, this is exciting, because it’s like having something new to learn even
when I work with something I’ve read
before. As we celebrate Christian Education Sunday this month, think about the
ways you are still learning,
particularly from scripture. In the sermons you hear, or your reading at home,
or your participation in classes, do you
sense that feeling of familiarity and newness? Each time we come back to a
familiar passage, we have the
opportunity to learn something new because we come to it from a different
perspective. Our Christian education is a
lifelong journey, full of surprises, and new insights, and God’s Spirit working
within us.
Shalom,
Bo
August 2010
A few months ago, at one of our meetings, it struck me that this church has had
a significant impact in the city of Prosser. We helped start a food bank many
years ago, and even housed it in the basement of the church for a while. Now it
is Jubilee Ministries, with the Red Door thrift store and Jubilee Food Bank on
Stacey St., serving thousands of people each year. Someone thought seniors
needed a place to gather. Again, something that started in this church is now
the Senior Center at 7th and Dudley. We currently have a computer lab in two
classrooms that offers time and technology for students to do schoolwork in the
lab, and also refurbishes older,
donated computers to give away to families that don't have a computer for their
students at home.
In Grandview, United Methodists frequently reached out to their community. They
hosted a number of groups and events for the people and organizations of
Grandview, including an annual SMILE event so that low-income children
could be seen by a dentist, the annual Chamber of Commerce volunteer recognition
dinner, the PEO yardsale, a neighborhood after-school program, and even a
preschool. They had Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Sundays in the summer, took
pies to people in the neighborhood, and had a food booth at the Fair. Their
quilters group offered to help community members finish or fix their old
quilts and quilt projects. They had a significant, positive, impact on the
city of Grandview.
So. . . . . .
What do we do next?
All of the things we have done in the past are good. We should be proud of the
impact we have had on our communities. It's not enough, though, to bask in
the light of past glories. Our communities still have needs, and still
need us. What issue do we see as needing to be addressed? When we look around
our neighborhood, what is it that we can provide for the enrichment of
those around us?
Talk to people. Share ideas. We know our communities. Bring your ideas to church
and share them during coffee hour, and at meetings. Help us to be the
church, the servants of Christ, in the places in which we live.
Shalom,
Bo
Bo’s Blog for July 2010
I am enjoying preaching from Paul’s letter to the Galatians. Now, I know some
people have problems
with Paul, especially when he writes about things that reflect the customs of
his times (although some of
those writings were pretty progressive for his time). But the early church
thought that what he had written
about the meaning of Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection was so important, that
they included those writings in the New Testament so that generations of
followers could read them.
In this letter, Paul
is dealing with a very basic question—How do we define who is a Christian and
who isn’t? Some Jewish followers of the time believed that anyone who
wanted to be a part of the church had to be Jewish, which meant that
Gentiles had to convert to Judaism, follow the Law and dietary restrictions, and
be circumcised. Paul’s insight, even though he was a Pharisee (a religious
lawyer), was that being a part of God’s covenant community no longer
depended on what we did, but rather on what we believed. If we believe that God
has acted, in Jesus’ death and resurrection, to create a new covenant
relationship with us, then we are a Christian. To be sure, Paul had no
problem with Jewish Christians who wanted to continue to obey the Law and
dietary restrictions which were a part of the old covenant, and to have
their children circumcised, as long as they realized those traditions were
no longer necessary for their relationship with God, and as long as they didn’t
require others to do them. But we human beings seem to have this natural
tendency to want to be in control of things, including our relationship
with God. Time and again, over the last 2000 years, people have turned to
Galatians as a corrective to this behavior, and still do so today.
What this ends up meaning for us is that all of our traditions, doctrines,
rituals, and theology aren’t what make us Christians. It is simply our
faith that does that. And so we can say with Paul that we are no longer Jew nor
Gentile, male nor female, slave nor free—or to put it modern terms we are
not liberal or conservative, Catholic or Protestant (or Orthodox), praise
service or traditional—but are one in Christ Jesus. We may experience God
working in us in different ways. We may bear different fruits as a result
of God’s Spirit at work in us. We may find that different rituals, ways of
praying, or styles of worship are better at helping us to open ourselves up to
God’s Spirit. But we are still one in that Spirit; one in that Lord.
Shalom,
Bo
What is
worship?
This is the question that occurred to me
at the District Academy in April. Bishop Grant Hagiya was speaking to us about
various aspects of church life, particularly on Sunday mornings, and how they
fit (or don't fit) the needs/culture of the community, and world, around us.
One of the items he mentioned was an analysis of the worship experience put
forth over 100 years ago by the Danish philosopher Sören Kierkegaard.
Kierkegaard said that the Sunday morning church experience is a lot like a play,
with the congregation as the audience, the pastor as the actor/actress up on
stage, and God as the off-stage prompter. Kierkegaard went on to say that the
roles should be changed, so that the congregation becomes the actors and
actresses, the pastor becomes the off-stage prompter, and God becomes the
audience.
This led me to thinking about the
question, "What is worship?” What is the purpose of our gathering together on
Sunday mornings in the church sanctuary?
If it's to be entertained, then we don't
have to do anything. We sit in the audience and watch the show. We remain
passive. We let others sing our songs and say our lines. But is that worship?
Does that experience fulfill our spiritual needs? Does it help us to grow in
our relationship with God? Probably not. It may entertain us, but it probably
won't lead us into the deeper waters of faith. That journey calls for
interaction.
We do a lot
of things in our worship service that keeps the congregation actively
participating. One of the first things I noticed about worship here at PUMC is
that there is a lot of music in it, which I like. Singing hymns brings us
together in community. It's not just me singing a song, but all of us together,
and that reinforces our feeling of being a church family. It is a time in the
service when we are the actors and actresses, and God is our audience. We sing
these songs in praise to God. And many of the hymns have some great theology in
their lines that can get us thinking about our faith.
Singing is
one way we move from Kierkegaard's first set of roles in a worship service to
his second.
This summer
I'm going to be experimenting with other ways of doing that. I will be out of
the pulpit and off the "stage," in an effort to move that stage more toward the
pews. I'll be a little less formally dressed than past summers (no shorts
though--that would not be good). And I'm planning on experimenting occasionally
with making even the homilies interactive. And I want to know what you think
about these changes, whether good or bad. Please tell me what you
think,
or talk to someone from the Staff-Parish Relations committee (Peggy Edom, Diane
Fortune, Carolyn Hart, Linda Key, Camille Klingele, Sierra Klingele, and Jim
Raney).
What is worship for you? What are the
things that we do on Sunday mornings that are helpful for you in worshipping
God? Whether old or new, whether you've done them in other churches or here.
Let us join together in being active in our worship of God.
Shalom,
Bo
The Good Samaritan died in New York the other day.
Perhaps you heard about it. A 31-year-old Guatemalan immigrant was walking down
the street early one Sunday morning. Ahead of him were a man and a woman. The
couple started arguing. When the argument turned physical, the Good Samaritan
rushed forward to intervene. He was stabbed for his trouble. The man and woman
ran off in separate directions. The Good Samaritan tried to follow the man, but
soon succumbed to his injury, and fell to the pavement.
Once, the Good Samaritan had been well-off enough to pay for the medical care,
lodging, and food of a beaten Israelite he didn’t know. Now, he was poor and
bleeding on the streets of New York. Who would help him?
The priests and the Levites came by. . .and went on by. During the course of the
next hour seven people walked past the injured man. Some just glanced at him and
hurried on. Some stopped and stared for a while before moving on. One actually
went over and tried to lift him up, exposing the pool of blood collecting
underneath him, before giving up and going on. (This was all recorded on a video
surveillance system.) After more than an hour, someone called 911. When the
paramedics arrived, the Good Samaritan was dead.
Why didn’t they stop and help the man? Or at least call 911? Demographic
statistics would say that the majority of those seven people would call
themselves Christians, and that six of them would say they believed in God. Yet
they didn’t help the Good Samaritan.
We can probably understand why. In a large city; a poor-looking man, lying on
the sidewalk. Probably a homeless drunk. Better to not disturb him — let him
sleep it off. Or maybe there’s the “I don’t want to get involved” factor. But I
think if we’re honest, at the root of it all is fear. Fear of getting hurt
ourselves. Fear of getting drawn into something long and involved that might
take up our day, ruin our plans, or cost us money. Fear that we might have to
change something about ourselves.
I originally wrote a blog for this month’s newsletter about how we are still in
the Easter season, celebrating God’s resurrection of Jesus. But I didn’t think
we should be so busy celebrating God’s redeeming love for us that we forget
about our neighbors. God’s redeeming love is for all. Jesus called his disciples
to “love one another.” Jesus said that the most important thing was to love God
and to love neighbor. And Jesus said we may have to lose our life (or our
agenda, or our security) to be his disciple. One man just did.
We recently sang a song in worship with these words: “Nothing can trouble,
nothing can frighten. God alone fills us.” Easter is not only about celebrating
God’s redeeming love for all. Resurrection also means an end to fear. If “God
alone fills us,” then we have nothing to fear.
There is an opening for the position of Good Samaritan.
Shalom,
Bo

Happy Easter! April 2010
One of the fun things about Easter is that
it matches what’s happening in the world around us this time of year. Trees are
blossoming and new green leaves are busting out of their buds. Daffodils and
tulips are in bloom. The air is warming up enough to have windows open some
days, and the smell of the fresh air wafting through the house breaks into that
months-of-closed-winter-house air. We start to get outside more, work in our
yards more, and bring the outside scents of blossoms and flowers in. Sprinklers
get cleaned out and tested. Lawn mowers come out of the garage, and the first
mowing of the year occurs. It stays light later, and you see more people, and
sometimes their dogs, out for walks. Life feels fresh and new.
New life is stirring in Grandview, as the
Rev. Lyda Pierce begins work at the lower valley ministry site for the Annual
Conference. It’s not yet clear what that life will look like, but there is
definite need for United Methodist ministry with life in it for the people of
the lower valley. Lyda will spend some time looking at the information that the
conference has already gathered, and discerning what ministry is needed. She’ll
sniff the air. Look for the green shoots. Listen for the sounds of the
community. Get a feel for what God is doing in Grandview.
Easter is about new life. New life is
exciting! And new life can be a little hard to figure out at times. The
disciples experienced that. They had trouble figuring out what happened to
Jesus’ body at the tomb, and what it meant that he was gone. One had trouble
believing the others that Jesus was raised from the dead. New life challenges
what we think is going on. It contrasts with our comfort in the status quo.
Yet we deal with it all the time—and not just in spring. It happens when we are
born into our family of origin. It happens when we move out on our own. It
happens when we have kids of our own. It happens when we care for an aging
parent. Easter hits us again and again throughout our lives. New life begins
again and again, right under our noses, and we deal with it, we enjoy it, we
thrive on it.
Because it is in new life that we grow.
It is through new life in Christ that God works in our lives. And it is with
the new life of the resurrection that new ministry will begin in Grandview.
Christ is Risen! He is Risen Indeed!
Alleluia!
Shalom,
Bo

March 2010
The Olympics are over. There were some exciting moments this
time, and some sad ones too. There were the courageous athletes who competed
while hurt. There were experienced athletes who redeemed expectations from long
ago. There were those who didn’t meet the expectations of today. And there was
the fascinating and baffling sport of curling. The Olympics provided a good
sports event to fill the empty space I feel between the end of football at the
beginning of February and the first pre baseball games in March (I’ve never been
a fan of basketball or hockey). March is the real beginning of baseball. Sure,
pitchers and catchers get together in mid-February to throw a ball around, but
real baseball starts with the pre-season games. I’m surprised at myself each
year at how much I look forward to the start of baseball. I guess part of it is
what I wrote about last year that it brings out thoughts of summer, and all the
memories and warm feelings that come with it. But I also remember that, about
September, I can get pretty bu on baseball. It takes a lot of perseverance for a
fan to maintain the same level of interest through to the end, even if your team
is doing well. Six months is a long time to watch games, read box scores, keep
up on injuries, and monitor slumps, and if you add pre-season and (if you’re
lucky) post season, that can go to 8 months. It’s a long-term commitment. But
then commitments are meant to be long-term, and are not always easy. We make
commitments to our friends to do something, and usually that’s no big deal
because we plan for the time or energy or whatever it takes to fulfill that
promise. But sometimes it takes more than we planned for, and we struggle to
make good on what we said we would do. Many of us have made vows to each other
to remain faithful and committed to each other for the rest of our lives. There
are many days when that is an easy promise to keep. But there are also times
when it is very difficult, because we all have insecurities and make mistakes
and fall short of our own or each other’s expectations. And there are times some
decide they must let go of that vow in order to survive.
Last month I urged each of us to make a commitment to adding
something to our lives that would help us keep God more in the forefront of our
lives. Often it’s easy to keep up with this kind of commitment when it’s new and
we seem to feel better because of it. Likewise, it’s often easy to set aside our
new habit when we stop feeling the freshness of it, or the benefits of it. It
takes perseverance to maintain a commitment—to a team, to a friend, to a spouse,
and to God.
And just as it is in those mundane, or boring, or joyful, or
really, really tough times that our connection to each other is deepened into
the fabric of our being, so it is w relationship with God. Our spiritual life
takes root, and grows, from our daily feeding.
Go Minnesota!
Shalom
February 2010
This is the time of year when I’ve learned that I have to make a
choice. The short daylight hours, the day after day of cold, often overcast, and
even rainy, can get a person down. There’s even a diagnosis for it Affective
Disorder, or SAD (I’m not making that up). So, if I begin to feel down at this
time of year, I’ve realized that I have to make a choice. Do I focus on all the
cold and dark o the past weeks and months, or do I look forward to the warm
sunny days that are getting closer. It’s kind of like the glass half empty,
glass half full choice, only in this case the glass is continually getting more
full (or more empty, whichever works better for you). Do I look forward to the
positive, or stay stuck in the negative?
Looking forward this month, we begin the season of Lent on Ash
Wednesday, February 17 th.
Lent has a reputation that’s kind of on the negative, or down, side. For one
thing, we often talk about giving something up for Lent, usually something we
like that’s bad for our health like chocolate or ice cream. But there’s also
another way of looking at Lent. Lent is based on the story of Jesus spending 40
days in the wilderness. That’s why Lent begins 40 days (not including Sundays)
before Easter. We often refer to this story as the temptation of Jesus. But what
Jesus talks about in his responses to the temptations, is the importance of God
in our lives. He takes the negatives of his situation—his hunger and the
temptations offered him—and instead responds with the positive of the importance
of God in his life. Perhaps this year, instead of giving something up for Lent,
we might consider the positive response of adding some to our life, something
that helps remind us more of God’s presence in our life. The Upper Room is one
way to do that. Reading the brief scripture passage, story, and prayer brings
our relationship to God to the forefront of our daily routine for a moment more
each day than we may usually experience it. Or if you’re already doing that, try
adding a brief prayer or scripture reading to your morning or evening routine
each day. The idea is to add something that brings God more to the forefront of
your life and your thoughts. Choosing the positive. Looking forward. The
daffodils will be coming up soon.
Shalom,
Bo
November 2009 Blog
I grew up in a family of story-tellers. I can remember family
gatherings and grandparents telling stories about me, my brothers, my parents, aunts and uncles and cousins. Dinner time
was also story time: stories about work or friends or our day or the old stories about "when we grew up." Still
today, family gatherings are a time of stories, telling and re-telling the stories of family and friends. Telling and
re-telling our stories. I remember as a kid being impatient when I'd hear the same story
again. I already know this story. I know all the facts. I know what gets said next. Why can't I go play? As an
adult, though, I've learned about the great gift I was given in these stories. I didn't just learn the facts about the
stories. The stories have helped me learn who I am. Not just the stories about me, but all the ones about cousins and
uncles and aunts and grandparents and family friends have told me, taught me, about the people with whom I am and
from whom I have come. I have told people that, although I grew up in California, I am culturally Minnesotan. I
discovered this by listening to Garrison Keillor and thinking "I know these stories. I know these people. They are my
people." I learned my heritage, my culture, by hearing the stories of my Minnesotan relatives again and again. We are approaching the time when families gather and celebrate.
We are approaching the holidays--the holy days-- when we will again hear familiar stories of the promised coming,
of the time when God draws near. It's easy to get caught up in the hustle and bustle of shopping and preparations.
It's easy to get distracted by the arrangements and logistics. It's easy to think that we already know the facts
about the stories we hear in church and don't need to pay attention.
But the repetition of the story is the gift the church gives us.
It forms us. It shapes us. It tells us our past, our present, and our future. It tells us who we are in this world,
and to whom we belong. It carries our identity. It molds us into family. It reminds us of our foibles and our gifts. It
reminds us that we are God's children. As we move through this month, take the time to listen to the
stories around you, and to tell, or re-tell, your stories. Listen to the stories of veterans. Listen to the stories of
family. Listen to the stories of the approaching God. Hear what they tell you about yourself, about humanity, about your
family, and about our faith. Explore who you are and who we are as a church family. Celebrate the heritage of which
you are a part. Give thanks for the gift of stories.
Shalom,
Bo

October 2009
I have written that fall feels to me like a time of beginning.
School has started. People are back from their summer travels and re-creation. Meetings and events at church become
more frequent. The activity level seems to grow each week.
But it is also a time for reflecting; for looking back at where
we have been and what we have done, as well as looking forward to what we will be doing and where. Fall is the time
when I am evaluated by the Staff-Parish Relations committee. Together the members of the committee and I look back
on what I have done well and what I could do better. We look at what has been my focus this past year, and
what I might focus on for the coming year. It is important work that they do with me--important for me obviously,
but also for the congregation because it affects where we, as a family, go from here. The members of the
committee have their own experiences of my work here, and have heard some of the experiences of others. If you would
like to contribute some of your own feedback/praise/criticism with them, please contact one of them.
The committee's members are Peggy Edom, Chairperson, Scott Cromar, Carolyn Hart, Sierra Klingele, Jim
Raney, Bob White, and Dean Smith. We also take time to evaluate the work of the church during this
season. We do that mostly through the annual charge conference. We look at what we have been doing this past
year--where has our focus been as a congregation? If I were to answer that now, I would say our
focus has been on transitions. We have still been working with the pastoral transition, getting used to each other
and getting through all the first times of things that happen throughout a year. Transition has continued in our music
department as well, going from one staff person to two paid and one volunteer staff. We've transitioned from a
water damaged kitchen to a remodeled one. We've gone through transitions with our sanctuary piano and organ. And
the biggest transition of the year--going from two congregations to one new congregation. All transitions bring stress and strain. Each of us, and all of
us together, must determine how well we have done handling the transitions we have gone through in the past year.
And all of us together must decide where we go from here. There are still the tremors and aftershocks of the great
upheavals to go through, still the adjustments to be made to our new family and surroundings. What has worked well
for us so far, in getting us through this year? What are the things we need to change in order to a better job of
being and making disciples of Jesus? You can share your feedback, praise, or criticism with me or with others in
our church family, but do engage in the process of helping us evaluate where we are, and where we need to be going
in the future. The effective ministry of this church depends on it.
Shalom,
Bo
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