Thursday, April 19, 2012

What the Mocking Bird Sang

Thank you, youth of New Hope. You led us in worship very well last Sunday. God bless you. We love you and look forward to having you lead us in worship again. Thank you Rachael Potter, Sarah Potter, Caleb Hinkle, Jaren Ford-Jones, and Toren Ford-Jones. Our thanks to your leaders: Leesa Holloway and Fred Griffith.

I am grateful to all of you who gave your time and shared your talents so readily at New Hope’s first Art Walk and Bake Sale last Sunday afternoon. Elaine Hardy conceived the idea, then, she and Kathy Stryker did a fine job of recruiting participants and organizing the event. The bake sale contributed $350 toward the Building Fund. We enjoyed being able to share our talents. We learned about each other. Some of you gave us a taste of your art or provided for us by means of your baking skills. My major contribution was buying and eating the baked goods. Thanks to all of you for your hard work.

Last Sunday morning there was a mocking bird up on at the peak of the roof of the A-Frame. That bird was singing loudly at 8:15, and I still heard him two and a half hours later as we entered worship.

According to what I have read on the Internet, male mocking birds are the most vocal. The singer last Sunday may have been a lonely bachelor looking for a mate. Maybe. But I heard that bird singing his heart out for us about what God is doing in New Hope. He was singing about our willingness to lay down our lives for one another, our desire to learn and grow together. He was singing about people coming forward at New Hope and saying, “I would like to see this ministry in our church and here is what I am willing to do to make it happen.” The mocking bird was not singing about how lonely he was. He was singing about how much God is blessing us. We are growing in every way you can measure growth: new believers in Christ, new members, new spiritual insights, dreams of the future, babies and toddlers, lives being changed toward Christ-likeness. That’s what I heard anyway.

It’s considered a sin to kill a mockingbird. Why? As Harper Lee says in To Kill a Mockingbird, “Mockingbirds don’t do one thing but make music for us to enjoy. They don’t eat up people’s gardens, don’t nest in corncribs, they don’t do one thing but sing their hearts out for us. That’s why it’s a sin to kill a mockingbird.”

Resurrection Celebration

Henri Nouwen wrote a meditation called “Smiles Breaking Through Tears.” Many people mourning the death of a loved one have found this to be a healing image.

“Dying is a gradual diminishing and final vanishing over the horizon of life. When we watch a sailboat leaving port and moving toward the horizon, it becomes smaller and smaller until we can no longer see it. But we must trust that someone is standing on a faraway shore seeing that same sailboat become larger and larger until it reaches its new harbor. Death is a painful loss. When we return to our homes after a burial, our hearts are in grief. But when we think about the One standing at the other shore eagerly waiting to welcome our beloved friend into a new home, a smile can break through our tears.”

On this Easter Sunday, we celebrate the resurrection of our Master and Leader, Jesus, “the One standing at the other shore.” The news that he came back from the dead and lives forever gave the first disciples both a scare and the motivation to preach the Good News of a living Savior. The life of Jesus is our hope for new life, our courage to change, and the Spirit within us that makes us want to be a healthy church for his sake. And the resurrection gives us the strength to face the painful loss of our loved ones. He has defeated death. That is why on this resurrection Sunday we smile, sometimes through our tears and we proclaim, “Christ is risen. He is risen indeed!”

Monday, April 2, 2012

New Hope Is Growing

We have come a long way. Our church is growing. I don’t want us to forget how far we have come. We have seen God’s work among us in powerful ways. To paraphrase a prayer that I’ve heard called an “old slave prayer,” We are not what we ought to be. We are not what we’re going to be. But, praise God, we are not what we used to be.
Let’s remember that we have several young families with children who have joined us and become active in recent times.
Let’s thank God for lives being changed.
Let’s give God credit for bringing us out of debt and into an ability to put money in savings.
As we have been talking about, we need to add classroom space for our children, youth, and adult Bible Study classes. Now is the time for us to begin our Building Fund Campaign. We need to raise $60,000 in order to buy the classroom building we have voted to purchase. Look for informational brochures and Building Fund Offering envelopes coming soon.
Together we can and will further the growth we see taking place. We will make room for the numbers of people responding to Christ, learning to love God and people, and growing in serving God together.

An Image of Life Beyond Death by Henri Nouwen

Here is a compelling image of hope that many people have loved and held onto as they mourn a much loved person who has died.

"Dying is a gradual diminishing and final vanishing over the horizon of life. When we watch a sailboat leaving port and moving toward the horizon, it becomes smaller and smaller until we can no longer see it. But we must trust that someone is standing on a faraway shore seeing that same sailboat become larger and larger until it reaches its new harbor. Death is a painful loss. When we return to our homes after a burial, our hearts are in grief. But when we think about the One standing at the other shore eagerly waiting to welcome our beloved friend into a new home, a smile can break through our tears."