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Frankly Speaking - October 23, 2019

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October 23, 2019

All they asked was that we should continue to remember the poor, the very thing I was eager to do.
 Galatians 2:10 (NIV84)
 
Remembrance equals participation. (Bruce Waltke)

These words from the Apostle Paul are part of a defense he mounts against people questioning the legitimacy of his ministry. It seems like he was always at the center of some controversy. He makes clear that other apostles in Jerusalem recognized his call from God to go to the Gentiles and made it clear that Gentiles did not need to become “Jews” (circumcised) to be part of the church. They just had one concern: that they not forget the poor.
 
That seems to me to be a remarkable little note. It is so easy for forget the poor … the needy, disadvantaged, oppressed, under-resourced, or displaced. The fact is, the Bible views all of us as “poor” from a spiritual standpoint, and the same compassion that moved God to reach out to us spiritually also moves us to have compassion for physical kinds of needs. God views us in our entirety as physical souls.
 
We talked a few weeks ago about how powerful the word “remember” is. It occurs more than 200 times in the Old Testament alone, and it never means simple mental recall. It always means to do something. And to not remember is to forsake or reject. For example, to “remember the Sabbath” means to observe it. When God “remembered” the plight of the Israelite slaves in Egypt, he did something about it. “Remembering” is why we have memorials and preserve historical sites and create museums. We “remember” by doing.
 
The greatest population of needy people and one of the most significant people movements in history is taking place today, right under our nose. An extraordinary 71 million people around the world are displaced right now. One third of them are in the Middle East and they are some of the most UNreached people in history. We are conditioned by media and news reports to view this from a purely secular standpoint, but we must learn to see things through a biblical lens, from God’s standpoint. In Ralph Winter’s words, “Every major decision you make will be faulty until you see the whole world as God sees it."
 
As a church we have been very proactive and strategic in having a hand in what God is doing through the global refugee crisis. Out of tragedy God is bringing great opportunity, and we are in a position to take great advantage of it.
 
For several Sundays we have presented updates on what our partnership with World Relief is producing in Jordan. This Sunday we are inviting people to contribute to a special offering to support that ministry. Our goal is $30,000 and it is above and beyond our regular budget. Would you make a special offering – in any amount – this Sunday? If every family gave $60, we would easily reach our goal, just one way of “remembering the poor.”
 
Frank

 

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Frankly Speaking - September 25, 2019

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September 25, 2019
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BY POPULAR REQUEST … the prayer I mentioned in the message on Sunday morning.

PRAYER OF ST. PHILARET OF MOSCOW (1782-1867)
(from FRANCOIS DE FENELON, 1651-1715)
 
O Lord, GRANT me to greet the coming day in peace ...
HELP me in all things to rely upon Your holy will ...
IN EVERY HOUR of the day, reveal Your will to me ...
BLESS my dealings with all who surround me ...
TEACH me to treat all that comes to me throughout the day with
peace of soul
and the firm conviction that Your will governs all ...
In all my DEEDS and WORDS, guide my thoughts & feelings ...
In UNFORESEEN EVENTS, let me not forget that all are sent by You ...
TEACH me to ACT
firmly and wisely,
without embittering and embarrassing others ...
Give me STRENGTH to bear the fatigue of the coming day with all that it shall bring ...
DIRECT my will ...
TEACH me to pray ...
PRAY You Yourself in me ...
Amen.

 
I cannot even tell you how I came across this prayer; only that it struck me in some way and that I felt led at one point to memorize it on my walks. It was probably the language that appealed to me, and the practicality of it. In some ways, it is almost an extension, with some variations, on the Lord’s Prayer. In fact, I usually combine it with the Lord’s Prayer, using it to riff on the “daily bread” petition. At any rate, using this is part of my daily “warm-up” routine has been very helpful for me. It is just one of several prayers that I usually go through every morning. Paradoxically, it is only then that I feel like I am ready to pray. Isn’t it odd that you have to pray in order to be able to pray?! Often I slow down in the various petitions and begin pondering and praying more about them as well. Since it is memorized and I do not have to think about what to pray, it has been anything but a burden. It has been freeing. It is a prayer I want to pray. And if, for some reason, I find myself unable to spend a lengthier time in prayer, going through this along with the Lord’s Prayer and a few others at least orients me properly for the day.
 
That is my experience. I would love to know about yours if you decide to “try it out and take it for a spin.” Let me hear from you!
 
Prayerfully,
Frank


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