Jun 7, 2023 | Pastor Jim's Blog
Today’s Word from Pastor Jim…Join us June 11th for worship this Sunday at 8 & 10 a.m.
This Sunday will be marked by Joy!
Come out to worship, fellowship, and celebrate!
The service will feature beautiful, uplifting music by our fantastic TLC musicians.
There will be cinnamon rolls in the Coffee Hour.
There will be a 97th Birthday Celebration for Trudy Martin at coffee hour. When asked what she wanted for her 97th birthday, Trudy said she wanted to come home to TLC. Bring a card! Bring your well wishes.
And it will be my profound privilege to officiate at the Baptism of my youngest two grandchildren! Ava Grace McNany and Hudson James Knoblauch will be baptized at 10 am. Hudson will be baptized at the same font where his mother was baptized 32 years ago.
See you Sunday!
Pastor Jim
[email protected]
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Jun 2, 2023 | Pastor Jim's Blog
Today’s Word from Pastor Jim…
“Blessed are those who trust in the Lord, whose trust is in the Lord. They shall be like a tree planted by water, sending out its roots by the stream. It shall not fear when heat comes, and it leaves shall stay green; in the year of drought, it is not anxious, and it does not cease to bear fruit.” — Jeremiah 17:7-8
Put yourself in the path of the Gospel. Put yourself in the path of Jesus.
If you read the Jesus story, what you find is that those who were in his pathway were blessed. There were many in ancient Palestine who were disabled, diseased, blind, or dead for that matter. Those in the pathway of Jesus often had their sight restored, their health renewed, and Jesus never encountered a dead body that he did not raise to new life.
That was 2,000 years ago… and today there is no end to human suffering. The followers of Jesus are not promised an escape from the brokenness of body and mind.
Those who believe in God and those who don’t, share the human frailty of flesh and blood. None of us get out of here alive, consequently we should expect to be visited by disease, disaster or the gradual decay of our bodies.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow penned these words in 1841: “Into every life a little rain must fall.” We should expect nothing less.
In every human story there are a variety of seasons. There are seasons of want and seasons of plenty, there are seasons warmed by the sun and bitter cold winters, seasons of love are sometimes followed by betrayal, as toddlers our steps are unstable, and as our days near their end, we wobble without the assistance of cane or walker. Understanding this reality is a critical part of preparing for the journey ahead.
None of us can anticipate every challenge or disaster, but that should not render us helpless.
Those who encountered Jesus were blessed.
Put yourself in the path of the Gospel. Plant your roots deep by streams of living water.
Life is difficult and dangerous, too difficult, and dangerous to navigate alone. I want to encourage you to tend to your root system.
Trees with deep roots can withstand the storms of time, and seasons of drought. Tend to your root system, the life-giving foundations that will allow you to stand tall in times of trouble.
The time to invest in an emergency fund is long before a financial downturn. The time to invest in community is before you need the help of a community. Put yourself in the path of the Gospel. Show up for worship, bathe yourself in grace, hear words of forgiveness, rub shoulders with other sinners, learn from the stories of others, wash some feet, feed the hungry, shed tears and dry the tears of others, share your fears and brokenness with those who will not judge you or reject you.
Muse upon God’s word, be uplifted by the great hymns of the church, don’t go it alone. When I am alone, I am in bad company.
How are your roots? Good things happen to those who encounter Jesus.
I will see you in Church, we are after all, one day closer.
Love,
Pastor Jim
[email protected]
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Remember that we change to our summer schedule with worship services at 8:00 & 10:00 a.m. this Sunday!
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May 26, 2023 | Pastor Jim's Blog
Today’s Word from Pastor Jim…
It has been my privilege, a sacred honor, to be at the deathbed of so many, to experience final moments, and a final breath. Pastor Dan Erlander, my friend, mentor, and partner in ministry at TLC for a decade, shared a deathbed experience with me. He said that as he was keeping vigil at the deathbed of a hospitalized parishioner, he moved closer to touch the man’s forehead, making the sign of the cross. Suddenly the man’s breathing became labored; it seemed clear to Pastor Dan that the end was near. Dan inched even closer, reading the 23 Psalm. He said that it was then, in labored tones, the man uttered his final words on this earth. “Pastor you are standing on my oxygen cord.” It was of course a joke, but he had me going until the end.
My first deathbed experience was at Billings Hospital in Chicago where my grandmother was dying of AIDS. She had been my constant companion, babysitter, and friend for the first 22 years of my life. We gathered around her bed, and she just closed her eyes, no final words to remember or treasure.
On a dark and cold Whidbey winter evening a decade ago, I drove to Whidbey General Hospital to be with Trudy Paulin. Trudy was a woman of faith, she had fought the good fight, death was near, but not an enemy; she was not afraid. We held hands, I read scripture to her, and we prayed. She then stroked my hand and said, “It is nasty outside, you go home now, be safe driving, and hug your girls.” I kissed her on the forehead and she smiled; Trudy died shortly after I departed.
When one is at the very end of this earthly journey words are not wasted, words are precious and chosen with care. At the end of his life, just moments before his arrest, Jesus gave his disciples a new commandment, “Love one another, as I have loved you, so you must love one another.”
Moses gave us 10 Commandments. Those 10 Commandments became the foundation for the legal codes embraced by countries across the world. Jesus did not discount any of the 10 Commandments, but he did consolidate them into one: love, love one another, as I have loved you.
This one commandment cannot be understood without two tiny, sometimes overlooked, words: “As I.”
We are to love as Jesus did. Jesus loved by serving, healing, touching the untouchable, listening, washing feet, forgiving, and ultimately by giving his life. He did not let a series of civil and religious laws obscure the rule of love. Love one another as I have loved you. The Apostle Paul understood this love to include patience and kindness.
The 10 Commandments given by Moses had become 613 religious laws by the time that Jesus was born. The law had taken on a life of its own; it was a cruel, judgmental taskmaster that unnecessarily restricted the lives of God’s people. Would it be possible for you to remember, must less keep, 613 laws? On his deathbed Jesus condensed the 10 Commandments and 613 laws into a single command. Jesus did not mince words. The command was to love, to love as he loved.
The great Seattle born theologian and guitarist Jimi Hendrix famously said, “When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace.”
Our world is troubled, not more troubled than it was in the 1960’s, not more troubled than it was in Jesus’ day; the world has always been troubled. We are not in a position to cure all the ailments of this world. We are not able to stop the waring madness of power-hungry dictators and politicians. We cannot, on our own, solve the crisis at our Southern border, the political unrest in Africa, or the evil of white supremacy.
That reality does not negate the call of Jesus to love. Our lives should still be guided by God’s theological North Star; this commandment to love AS Jesus loved. We are not helpless, far from it, we have at our disposal the very power that conquered the Roman Empire. We have the power that comes from God, and that power is love. “Love,” not armies, conquered the Empire; love conquered the same Empire that put Jesus on a cross.
To love AS Jesus loved is the command; that has not changed in 2,000 years. The love that is commanded is a choice to be made each day. This deathbed insight can illuminate a pathway to a more abundant life. The choice is yours, each morning, with each encounter with spouse, friend, or stranger. Can we make the choice to love? Can we be known for our patience, kindness, acts of charity and forgiveness?
A new commandment I give you, “Love one another, as I have loved you, so you must love one another.”
“When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace.” – Jimi Hendrix.
One beggar telling another where to find bread, I am your,
Pastor Jim
[email protected]