Tuesday, November 17, 2009

What's Church for you?

What is Church for you? Is this just a gathering of the so-called Christians who meet on Saturday or Sunday? Is this all about hearing the organ play, singing hymns, hearing the word, giving tithes/ offerings and then going home? Is Church just about missions and services to help our neighbors?

Here is what I would say about what church is for me:

· Church is a place of new beginnings

· Church is a place of transformation and change

· Church is a place of new possibilities

In other words, Church should be a place where after failing else where, when we come to worship, Jesus meets us at the point of our needs and failures. Every time we come to this place, we find a new beginning in every aspect of our lives. Every Saturday and Sunday, through worship, we discover new possibilities as we meet people and have fellowship with one another. Church then becomes a place where “through Christ all things are possible.” (Philippians 4: 13)

When you come to worship, do you look forward to experiencing real church?

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Reflecting on the Beatitudes

I guess most of us have heard or read about the beatitudes (Matthew 5: 1-12). However, have you ever looked at them with some depth? As I read them I found out that they actually encompass all the values we need to be Happy people in this life and in the one to come. Well, the world around us tells us how we can be happy, but let us discover what Jesus says about real happiness.

Every statement on the beatitudes begins with the word blessed. If you go to the Greek text, you get not just one meaning, but many, which include favor and happiness in addition to blessing. In other words, we could say "Happy are the poor in spirit" or "Blessed are the poor in spirit." Friends, we find happiness only when the following values are found in our hearts:
  • humility, obedience and dependence on God and God's word
  • mercy
  • hunger and thirst for God's presence in our lives
  • being people of peace, welfare and health
These values help us relate to God, ourselves and others in the way that God's kingdom grows on a daily basis. When they are put into practices, there are the results that happen in our lives, and these are are:
  • We are welcomed in God's kingdom and community in the present and the time after life
  • We are comforted even when we go through challenges, oppositions and persecutions
  • God fills us with God's Spirit and presence
  • We find favor and mercy before God and humans
  • We see God in our everyday life
  • We are called God's children
I would like to make sure that you pay attention to Jesus' ending words in this Scripture. He finishes asking his disciples to always rejoice and be glad because what they would go through even prophets had the same experience. Happiness therefore does not exclude tribulations, temptations and challenges. These are on the path we, Christians, are and we cannot avoid or prevent from having tough times.

Like what Jesus said when he prayed for his disciples in John 17 that we are in the world, but not do not belong to the world. This is we will go through situations that humans experience, but the difference is that for us, Jesus will walk with us. We will be comforted and always find favor before God.

Friends, you're a very special person and know that you have what you need to make a difference in your life and that of the people around you!


Be always blessed and encouraged!

Emmanuel

Monday, November 9, 2009

A reflection on Mark 12: 38-44

While Jesus was in the temple teaching, he spoke against the scribes and then praised a widow (Mark 12: 38-44). Scribes during Jesus' time were people who knew the law. They knew how to write and read. They were very highly educated compared to the rest of the population. They were around kings and princes. Today, we would say they are belong to the upper class. According to Jesus, these scribes are not good people. They are not who they really are. They would like people to see how they love God by what they do not by what they are. Also, they do not relate well to other people. They mistreat the widows and the under privileged.

Here we see someone struggling with honesty. I wonder where is the church on this issue. Do we not as a church allow everyone to pretend to be saint? Do we provide space for people to really be themselves when they come to church? Open hearts, open minds and open doors is what we claim to be as United Methodists. Perhaps, you are not Methodist, but as a Christian, are you really what you say to be? Scribes wore robes to let people think they were God's children, but that was not what Jesus thought of them. The truth about being God's people does not reside in doing church, but in being the church.

The other part of the story is that Jesus praised the widow. Why did he do that when the scribes gave more than this poor woman? Well, It is not about what you give, but about what are left with after giving to God as someone said. In other words, knowing that we give God the best of what we have was what Jesus wanted to see in people during service at the temple.

In the ancient world, being a widow was the lowest social status in society. This still happens even today in some places in the world, especially in patriarchal contexts. When my Father died, his family had the final word on what is going where. My Mom was like an observer. She could not decide on whether to keep her husband's properties or let them go where her children would have been sent to. Fortunately, none of this took place because two of my siblings and I were already adults (20 years and older).

Losing one's husband in such a society actually takes you to the class of the poor. You lose everything including your status as a sister or daughter in law. However, based on our scripture, Jesus in some way is advocating about social justice and blaming the people who devour the widows' homes. They use their power and influence to take things away from these women. Their society could also allow them to do so. The use of power and privilege to take away social status, property, resources, etc. is not from God's kingdom. It is Sin against God. It does not please God at all.

Now that you are done reading my thoughts around the scripture (Mark 12: 38-44), carry on thinking on the following questions:
where do we put God on our priority list?
  • Is God on top of our everyday life activities?
  • How do we relate to people who do not belong to our social status?
  • What according to us makes us be different from other people?
  • How do we use that fact of being different from each other? How do we use our diversity?

Be blessed and encouraged always!

By Emmanuel

Thursday, November 5, 2009

What's That in Your Hand?

It is so easy for humans to find excuses of not doing certain things. Of course, there are people who have talents in given areas and which others do not. I cannot go and play against Michael Jordan in basket ball hoping to beat him. I cannot even think of challenging a wrestler for a fight. You realize that all these people have talents, but they had to train everyday to keep it going. Most basket ball players or wrestlers were born with some physical energy that even if I were to train everyday, I might not even get.

However, there is a story of a guy in Exodus 3 who, after messing up in Egypt by killing an Egyptian while he was protecting a Hebrew, had an encounter with God at what is called Mount Horeb. His name is Moses. He was born from Hebrew parents and hid in a basket and then put on the river. Pharaoh's daughter was taking a bath along the river and then found the basket. She adopted this baby boy and named him Moses. Moses had to leave Egypt when two Hebrews told him not to get into their business because they did not want him to kill them as he did to the Egyptian. That scared him thinking that the news had already spread in the nation. Based on that, he would then leave and go to find refuge in Midian. There, he married Ziporah and began to work for his father in law, Jethro.

One day, he went to this mount Horeb where most people avoided to head to. This was the belief in much of the ancient world that there are deities or some god's activities on top of every mountain. Moses, however, thought he should go and check it out.
How many times, have we always run away from problems? Avoidance and flight are what come into our mind when we face challenges. When the situation becomes conflicted, we, humans, often leave and go. Moses was though a persistant guy. He wanted to get closer to the situation, which was a burning bush. A bush burning but not consumed. Can you ponder this? Would this not sound very impossible to us? It was real and that's why Moses wanted to know more about it. What would you do if you saw something like that? Moses gets closer and then heard a voice calling him by his name. What an amazing experience! Have you ever heard a real voice? Or would that be related to some mental and psychiatric illness?

In this story, it was not. It was God calling Moses for a mission. This was a liberating ministry that was set before him. Every human situation can be turned into a liberating experience. In the midst of all things that happen to us, there are some elements of redemption. It does not mean that the ending of every matter should always be that all things agree with our goals or desires. Getting closer to the burning bush is scary at first, but the closer you get the more knowledge you get. You only hear God's voice when you are in the midst of a situation, crisis, conflict, or challenge.

What do you do when you're facing moments of fears, anxieties in your life? Do you choose the flight or avoidance paths, or do you choose to get closer in an attitude of prayer? If you do like Moses, God will then watch and wait until you get so much close. Then you hear God's voice from the midst of the burning bush. God calls us by our names like He did with Moses. There is nothing of us that can be hidden to our Maker. When we hear God's voice, it is about this liberating ministry.

In the case of Moses, it was about liberating the Israelites from slavery. In your case, it could be liberation from sin, from a disease, from death, from losses, or you name it. Someone needs to get over something. Some justice needs to be done for someone who seeks liberation. For liberation to take place, there is need of a liberator. For the Hebrews, Moses was their liberator. Today, for some situation in the church, you may be one. God would like to use you and me to set someone free.

Are you ready to respond to that calling today? Moses looked at his limitations when he received the call. He used these as an excuse for not wanting to go back to Egypt. He did not have any knowledge of God because he grew up and was raised as an Egyptian. He had then to learn with time to trust in the Lord. His assurance and faith grew with time. Therefore Moses was not perfect. He was very inept to really qualify for such a mission.
God is not looking for a perfect person for a mission. He is looking for someone like you and me. He is looking for very ordinary people to use them to do extraordinary things. Everyone can qualify to be God's servant, but the starting point is to hear God's voice and say yes to it. There are many burning bushes around us, in our church, in the global church, in our communities and in the world around us. God is in search of more Moses's.

When Moses struggled with the idea that he would not really be able to help with this mission, God asked him: "what's that in your hand?" How many times, have been asked to do something in church or community, and your response has been: "I am not able to do this?" God will not use what you don't have, but just the staff in your hands. We all have potentials that God needs to use to liberate someone.

When you wake up in the morning, do you see yourself as a Moses? Do you trust God to use every word, every deed and everything of yourself to change someone else' s life? How do you respond to problems, crises, diseases, conflicts, losses and challenges? Do you run away or do you choose to be a Moses and face the situation to find God's redemptive presence in it?

Friends, when you are in front of a burning bush (a situation you feel it needs a remedy), that means you're there for a reason. God would like to use you in extraordinary ways to touch and save somebody. Make everyday a Mosaic opportunity, a redemptive and liberating experience for someone through you.
Be Blessed & Encouraged Always!