Conversations and Prayers

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· Have you found yourself holding your breath lately?

· Would you like to explore different aspects of prayer? 

· Are you longing for connection with other lay people?

· Do you seek a quiet place?

If you answered “yes” to any of these, the Lay Development Team would like to invite you to be a part of the Columbia District Lay Retreat. We will spend our day exploring personal and community prayers, sharing stories, having times for personal reflection, and experiencing the joy and fun of fellowship.

Saturday, May 4th

9:00 am to 4:00 pm

Collins Retreat Center
32867 SE Hwy 211
Eagle Creek, OR 97022

This retreat is open to all lay persons in the Columbia District who want to connect with others, share stories, spend time in prayer, and build community. Snacks and lunch will be provided.

Register at https://umoi-reg.brtapp.com/ConversationsPrayersRetreat

Sneak Peek for this Sunday

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“I’m going to hike the Alpinista way.  Want to join me?” Markus, an analyst from Switzerland asked as I approached him standing outside a small village in Spain, next to a small, white, wooden sign upon which was painted a hiker in blue with the term “Alpinista” in red letters painted upon it. We were on the Camino.  “Yes” was my reply, before I even asked what that meant!

The Alpinista way, hear therein the word “alpine,” like the ALPS, was off the main road, onto a narrow, unadorned, sometimes hard-to-find path that led through the woods and right out to the cliffs along the ocean. The views were spectacular once we reached the cliff tops. And the way was treacherous.  We hiked up, up, up to the peak of a mountain and then back down, down, down to the sea time and time again, on a winding, dirt path. It was narrow, through pastures, gateways, and on rocky shale pathways. After this day, I looked for the small signs with their symbol of the Alpinista way in order to take this path.

That was my fourth day on the Camino. My left calf muscle had turned rock hard on the first day out and wouldn’t stretch out or relax.  It pulled and hurt with every step. I didn’t know what to do with it, except, to keep going. On the way we took that day, at one point as I stepped up an especially steep incline, the muscle in my left calf felt as if it popped or ripped, the pain eased at first and then became excruciating.  It was with burning steps I limped up hills and down, after this. After a few hours we made our way down, down, down again into the town of Deba.

Our day was not through. Markus cared for me that day.  I sat and rested, drank the best-tasting beer ever, and then he said, “Now, we will eat lunch, then get you an ace bandage for your leg, and then we go up the hill. I walk slowly with you.” Indeed, we hiked again four kilometers up another 2000 feet in the hot sun to the place we stayed that evening. It was a killer day.  I was wiped out. But felt like I had passed some test!

In the closing remarks of Jesus’ message on how we live in relationship with Him, Jesus is all about contrasts.  He contrasts how people choose to follow – which way, what kind of fruit proves and tests relationship, and what kind of foundation. Build on the rock. These are connected to practice. How people practice following Him.

How might you respond if asked:  

What kind of fruit ought I see in the life of someone who claims to be a disciple of Jesus?

Or:  What might it look like to “do” the Words Jesus said?  

Or:  How do I know if I am really on that “narrow way”?

The answers might surprise you.  How might you respond? How do you choose?   

Maundy Thursday Seder Meal

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On Thursday, April 18, we will be treated to a wonderful meal in the Lighthouse. The menu is:

Matzo Ball Soup (GF option available)

Red Wine Braised Beef Brisket
Rosemary Potatoes
Roasted Root Vegetables
Lentil Salad

Chocolate Mousse  with Chantilly Cream

Dinner begins at 6:00 pm. There is no charge; however, an offering will be taken to support overseas missionaries. Please RSVP by Sunday the 14th at signups.wumc.me.

Join the Journey, 3.31.19

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Question: When has anxiety or judgment caused you to stumble?

Answers:

  1. I dealt with a major anxiety attack at a friend’s memorial service last week.

  2. When I take the plank out of my own eye, I throw it on a stack of lumber.

  3. Today I was anxious and spoke and it caused me to stumble.

  4. When worry overtakes me and I don’t leave my worries at the Lord’s feet.

  5. Being prideful; lashing out at others. Keeping “score.”

Sneak Peek for this Sunday

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It was one of those blurr days.  I was charged with going to buy the range we had selected.  Once I got through the paperwork, the salesman said that they needed a four-pronged outlet to plug into. The only way to check what was behind the old range was to come home and move it.  I tipped it precariously forward onto a mattress I had dragged into the kitchen, and could see it was hooked up through a junction box. Knowing this would need to be rewired into an outlet, I called an electrician  friend who said, “Hey that’s easy.” After he ran through what I would need to do, losing me after the first step, I said, “I’ll call back and tell you how it is going.” He ended up coming to help. This meant taking the old range out. So, I did this, he came and helped, and we put in the new outlet.  All finished a few hours later! I felt like I had really accomplished something, and the new range would be coming on the next Thursday, five days later.

I had sent pictures of my journey but I forget to mention that one detail, that we would be without the range for five days. Karen had been impressed, only seeing pictures and reading texts that they would be able to deliver it on the same day as purchased, a Saturday.  She got home and there was this hole where the range had been. As we talked over what we might do for dinner, suddenly the stress of this situation came forward, and she said, in one of those sudden revelations: “But how am I going to cook my egg in the morning?”

At that I understood.  In life often it is the little things that are the toughest, the smallest of details that “break the camel’s back.”  

“Oh, Karen.  Didn’t I tell you that they were not delivering the new range today?”  I asked, apologetic.

Anxiety can hit in the smallest details of life and often as Jesus wrote it will be centered around the basics of our bodies (shape, size, etc), then, food, drink and clothing.

This week Jesus deals with three core problems that we face as people in our lives and these interrelate. Jesus speaks of these as anxiety, judgment and not realizing how deeply we are loved. These can interrelate, for when we are anxious, that very anxiety can cause us to be hyper aware of the faults of others, bringing us into judgment, and both are related to a basic belief that we are not loved. To all this the heart remedy is to turn outward, to seek God, to find refuge in that relationship, to pay attention to our own needs and brokenness rather than being hyper attentive to others.  

That may be clear, but we need reminders to come back to God’s for us.  For all of us can find ourselves mired into feelings of anxiety or judgment or being forlorn.  And for all this, God invites us back to Himself. Let’s come there this week.


Join the Journey, 3.24.19

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Question: How has your practice of prayer become a daily practice that roots you in Christ’s presence?

Answers:

  1. I am daily challenged by people at work. I always turn to God for patience and understanding and tolerance.

  2. I find myself turning to God instead of myself or others when I’m in need.

  3. My daily reading in The Upper Room. Journaling with Jesus makes a huge difference. I miss it when I don’t do it.

  4. Prayer is a daily practice that brings me closer to Jesus. As a member of the Prayer Team I practice intercessory prayers for many others in our congregation, community, nation, and world.

Sneak Peek for this Sunday

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Standing behind this man at Costco, he turned and said “We all get to wait.”  I laughed and said, “I consider it good practice. I need to learn to breathe into waiting in life.”  “What do you do?” he asked. Surprised, I said, “I’m a pastor of a local church.” “You are! I thought you must be connected somehow to Jesus. You just shine.”  “Well, thank you sir. I didn’t feel especially shiny today, so that is great to hear.” That launched a conversation that lasted about 15 minutes about his life and mine, about Jesus, and the impact he has had on our lives.  

That day I left Costco deeply thankful that Jesus shows through my eyes.  Jesus wants us to live our lives so that they carry a kind of light that is visible, a kind of hope, a kind of salt that adds flavor.  Some days I can feel like the light is dim or the salt is lacking flavor, but then encounters like this one demonstrate that God is at work through me no matter what I might be feeling beneath the surface.  

Lent is a great time of year to pay attention.  How is your spiritual life?

We take our cars in for regular oil changes or check the oil for our older vehicles, so how about using Lent to check your spiritual pulse, to “check the oil” -- how is your connection with the Holy Spirit?

If you took your temperature spiritually -- how hot are you running spiritually?  Spiritually we want to be hot not cold or lukewarm. So are you running hot spiritually?  If not, why not? What steps in Lent might you take to raise your temperature?

Jesus makes some statements in Matthew 6, talking against the practices of the Pharisees telling the people to fast and pray and give but not like the Pharisees or like those who were pagan among them did.  He uses interesting language in this section. He says, “When” not “If” you pray, give, fast. He is speaking from the assumption that they WILL fast and give and pray. He is telling them when they do this not to follow the example of their religious experts and leaders. Don’t fast, give and pray in order to be seen by people, in order to be applauded by people, in order to be rewarded by people.  Instead, he invited them and invites US to be a people who give and pray and fast in order to serve and honor God.

This is not a statement that we ought not pray or fast or tell people what we give,  in public. For example this is not a statement saying that when we are in a restaurant eating, that to pray there is somehow showing off-- nope.  Jesus is speaking against the Pharisaical practice of prayer done LITERALLY on a street corner, loudly, demonstratively IN ORDER to be applauded by people.  That’s a different world from praying for the waiter and the food at a restaurant, or praying for a friend who has told you of a need right there in the store.  Jesus says, of those Pharisees, they will get rewarded by the observers. But then says, “But you, when you pray, pray in secret and the Father who sees in secret will reward you…”  He invites his followers to pray to one who Knows them, to the “Father.” Pray not to some unknown, disconnected, unconcerned deity, but this intimately connected, loving, present, Abba Father, Papa God who sees, loves, knows and answers.  

This Lent be taking that spiritual temperature and take some steps to raise it -- to pray, to fast from something that pulls your attention from God, to give extravagantly to meet some need.  This Lent do something in secret to bring a positive blessing.


EPIK Training

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EPIK (Everyman Protecting Innocent Kids) is holding a Cyber Patrol training session - bringing men to the fight to end the demand for prostituted people.

The training will be held at 2808 NE Martin Luther King Jr Blvd, Suite N, on:
Friday, April 5, 6:30 - 9:00 pm: instruction; dinner included
Saturday, April 6, 9:00 am - 2:00 pm: mock cyber patrol and live cyber patrol; snacks and lunch included

This is a call to men to join the fight against sex trafficking. Click here to register for the training. 

CDCES Thanks You

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“When the Columbia District Church Extension Society met for its annual meeting last month, we celebrated those congregations that contributed 100% of the CDCES askings—including YOU! We are so very grateful, and we want you to know that your donations help us to administer the funds that allow us to support life-changing ministry across the district. Our projects have included a partnership with an alternative high school, strategizing creative solutions to Portland’s housing crisis, turning an unused parsonage into an intentional communal residence for young adults, and community organizing to support cutting edge ministries beyond the walls of the church building….all of this has been made possible with your help.  Thank you!” —CDCES Board of Directors

Benefit Wine Dinner

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On Saturday, April 6, journey through southern Europe with Taste of Excellence Catering and Cliff Creek Cellars. They will bring you a seven-course dinner, paired with wine, to benefit a retreat center in Portugal. The center is the vision and heart of our friends Josh and Risa Hobson.

Tickets for this culinary adventure are $89 per person and available here.

Learn more about the retreat center here.

Join the Journey, 3.17.19

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Question: Where do you think you are being called to move beyond where you are right now?

Answers:

  1. My life is in a state of change. I don’t know where I am going right now.

  2. To rest in God’s arms and feel secure through the business of purging and preparing for new roommates.

  3. More loving service.

  4. Learning to trust God in my work life, not just my personal life.

  5. Make sure that my attitude is pleasing to God - what is inside will surface.

  6. Write a book. YouTube channel with scripture. Deepened prayer.

Sneak Peek for this Sunday

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We were reading Matthew 5: 17-48 aloud during our worship design team awhile back and one of the team members said regarding the word about divorce “That sounds pretty harsh.” Indeed, everything Jesus says here can sound harsh. It was a limit setting, boundary establishing, Royal Law kind of message. He was not seeking to placate the ears of his hearers, but was establishing a new ethic around violence, sexuality, marriage, oaths, revenge and real love.

He is hard hitting especially against the culture of his time. The law-keeping leadership held to the letter but avoided the law’s intent at every level. They were freely willing to divorce their wives and remarry, for example, while considering themselves “law keeping.” Even while that very action decimated the woman’s life -- no protection, no covering, no hope, no future. They felt that oaths were fine, as long as connected to holy objects, but Jesus says otherwise.

They abusively treated others, especially the Roman oppressors, but Jesus calls them instead to “turn the other cheek” and “walk the second mile.” The meaning of this call was immense, it was a literal call to force the soldier to break the law through submission.

While this might sound harsh, it was revolutionary. And indeed, as we come to it in this era, is still revolutionary now. People love keeping the letter of the law. They love attaching themselves to one phrase or another, hold that, while ignoring what might be a greater, deeper, more meaningful point.

This is Jesus. He pushed the envelope. He was the liberal in that era. He was the progressive. He was the one accused of being a drunkard and glutton because he refused to follow the traditions of his time. What are we associated with? How are we following Him today? Do others look at us as being radicals? Are we helping to push the envelope with our culture?

In John Wesley’s time he was the radical. He was kicked out of the respectable Anglican pulpits because he was preaching in a style not appreciated -- calling for repentance and salvation, indeed! Even though it was considered vile to take the Word of God outside the walls of the church institution, that is where he took it. He preached to the poorest of the poor, those considered below the upright, wealthy church-going folk. And in doing this radical, visiting prisoners, feeding the hungry, nursing the sick to health, taking literally Jesus’ call to do so, England experienced a visitation of God, and a revival which saved it from revolution.

What might Jesus be calling us to be in this era that fulfills the spirit of what it means to be followers? How might this way look to those around us? Where is radical calling to us?

Hobsons Needing Help

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From Josh and Risa Hobson:

We are so excited we have a place to live!

This also means we have A LOT to get done before 
we have to be out of our current place on March 31st. 
 

We have several opportunities in the coming weeks for folks to come help with our moving and estate sale process. We will also be looking for childcare during many of these times. If you able to help with one or more of these, please email familiahobson@gmail.com or text Risa at 503-577-4355 so we can give you further details.

For dates and tasks, please visit https://mailchi.mp/4acb61520ee6/local-help-needed-for-move-and-estate-sale?e=19618d285a

Condolences

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Please pray for Joe Molesworth in the loss of his son, Keith, who died suddenly on Tuesday. Keith leaves behind two sons and a fiancee. No information is available yet on services.

Cards may be sent to:
Joe Molesworth
379 NE Hyde Circle
Hillsboro OR 97124

Our hearts go out to Joe and Keith’s family in this difficult time.