Join the Journey, 3.1.20

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Every Sunday, Pastor Brian poses a question that relates to what we’ve discussed during the worship service. This is the question and answers from last Sunday. If you’d like, add your answer in the Comments.

Question: For Lent: What are you giving up or adding in?

Answers:

  1. Adding in more morning meditation and prayer; using less single-use plastic every day.

  2. Giving up politics; adding in HomePlate 6-month volunteer position.

  3. Adding in prayer bead prayers.

  4. Giving up condemnation; adding in connection.

  5. Adding more prayer time.

  6. Giving up milk; adding more walking.

  7. Instead of eating chocolate, use my new prayer beads.

  8. Adding patience; giving up control.

Brian's Blog: "Leper Messiah"

During Lent we will be pausing and sitting down in Isaiah 53 -- one of the most famous messianic passages in the Bible.  It was written by Isaiah, a prophet who served during the reigns of five of Judah’s kings about 800 years before the birth of Jesus.  Imagine the shock to him as he received these messages from God about a future “Faithful Servant” called the “Leper Messiah” by Jewish scholars and commentators because this Messiah would suffer and die and He alone would cure the leper.  What a picture this chapter paints of one who would die, like a lamb, and carry the sins of all people for all time. It is a graphic image. 

So, I am inviting you, during the season of Lent to read and reread this chapter. Read it in different translations. Read it slowly. Listen to what Isaiah penned and see what parallels you find with Jesus himself. It was this passage, remember, that Phillip the Evangelist used to convert the Ethiopian Eunuch along the desert road. It was from this passage both Matthew and John, Peter and Paul quoted underlining the fulfillment seen in the life of Jesus.  

Are there sins in your life?  Is there sickness? Is there hurt?  Is there any brokenness? Read this passage and think of what it declares has been done FOR YOU.  

Indeed, have you believed? 

Then the opening question is answered by your faith as the prophet asked: “Who has believed our report?”  

Have you seen the power and saving Grace of the Lord on display in your life?  Then, you can answer the prophet’s second question, “And to whom has the arm of the Lord been revealed?”  For clearly the Lord has revealed His power and his faith to you.  

This week I was speaking with someone who has discovered hope and Jesus by coming to worship at Westside.  He has discovered hope in the community and has felt the presence of the Holy Spirit among us. This man is one who would say recently he has said “yes” to that first question, “He has believed what the prophet has spoken.”  And he would answer that “to him has the arm of the Lord been revealed.” He has seen the Lord’s salvation put on display in his life. Powerful stuff was declared by Isaiah -- the person of the Messiah, the work of God put on display to deliver us from sin, from sickness, from pain.  

Such a powerful passage is remarkable in all that it declares that can be seen put on display in the life of Jesus.  

Ponder this great salvation during Lent this year.  Draw close to Jesus. Let Him into your life.  

Grace to you all. 

Only One Day Left!

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Family Promise needs just a bit more to be able to afford this Day House. But they must receive the money by tomorrow! Please visit https://charity.gofundme.com/o/en/campaign/be-the-promise to donate now!

Here are all the details:

We have an incredible opportunity to purchase a house to be our new Day House. This property will provide a safe, welcoming, homelike environment for families experiencing homelessness in Beaverton. We are extremely thankful to our first home at Sunset Presbyterian Church. Their community has been very supportive and helped us grow large enough to need a new space.
 
Why this house?

Our current location is in a large church room. The purchase of this house will create a homelike environment.

We are now located along only one public transit line. Moving to a central location along several bus routes will widen our access to the community.

Currently, outside our front door is a parking lot off Hwy 26, the new Day House will be located in a residential neighborhood and next to a THPRD park. The Day House includes a yard for playing, relaxing, and raised garden beds for learning to grow food.

At the moment, families cannot keep their pets with them and animals need to be boarded.  We will be able to provide an animal shelter for family pets to stay while their human families are in our program.

Right now, our families can use laundry facilities at designated times during the day. The house will allow for laundry use all day every day.

For now, families use stalled bathrooms. The new house will have two private bathrooms with bathtub/showers for families.

At this time, families use a small kitchenette to prepare snacks and light meals. Our new Day House will have a full size kitchen to offer cooking classes and let families cook their own comfort foods.

A new Day House will provide a safe, stable refuge from the harsh reality of homelessness. Creating a peaceful environment that preserves nurturing family life during a time of great distress will be the biggest asset.

The Day House will function much like our current Day Center, however it will be larger and located in central Beaverton. It will provide a haven during the day while we will continue working with our organizations who shelter the families at night. There are countless ways that the normalcy of walking into a house at the end of a school day, workday, or day of job hunting can help keep our families’ spirits strong as they continue their journey home.

Donate to our New Day House here

Why Now?
We have a narrow window of opportunity. The owners of the property need to sell it by February 29th, but would like to see the sale benefit the community. The purchase price is below market at $300,000.
 
How You Can Help:
We are asking for you to support us financially, but this effort will require community-wide support.

Donate financially to help us reach our purchase goal by visiting our GoFundMe Page http://bit.ly/GFM_BTP

Fill out the donation sheet and mail your donation

Share the GoFundMe Page with family, friends, and coworkers

Donate stock to the project, Click here for more information

Want to name a room or a garden bench? Naming Opportunities starting at $1,000

Volunteer to assist with planning and outreach for the campaign

Introductions to other community members who might be able to help financially and/or with the campaign

Want to schedule an outside tour of the property? Have questions? Please feel free to contact me at 971.217.8949 or BeThePromise@familypromiseofbeaverton.org.

Not Worth a Second Glance

What did Jesus look like?  Isaiah in the 53rd chapter describes him as unimpressive physically.  He was not a Grecian God, no contender for the arena, no cover story as the “sexiest man alive,” no billboard picture -- he would not have been played by our best known, most applauded actors. Not Bruce Marchiano or Jim Caviezel.  Eugene Peterson captured Isaiah’s language in a way we lean away from: “nothing attractive about him, nothing to cause us to take a second look.” What a description for this man of miracle and word! 

What might it have been like for Isaiah to pen these words?  How did the word come to him? What had he felt as he saw, heard, received this picture of the Messiah not as super powerful but as super ordinary, super defeated, super beaten, as killed even?  

He had just written of the degradation of this servant, called the “leper messiah,” since he would heal lepers. This one would be beaten so badly, Isaiah wrote, “He didn’t even look human-- a ruined face, disfigured beyond recognition” (52:12).  And now at the start of the 53rd chapter, the most famous description of the anticipated Messiah in Scripture Isaiah wrote of this one’s beginning: he was ordinary, a “tender plant,” a “root out of dry ground.” He would have an ordinary childhood, “He grew up like a tender plant before God.”  

No sales pitch.  No shouts. No accolades.  Just God saying through Isaiah, “Who would have thought God’s saving power would look like this?” (Isaiah 53:1). 

How much do we like the ordinary?  All around us people vie for the ability to be extraordinary.  The movie industry tells us story after story of various super powers -- not just in the Mr Incredibles of the world and other actual superheroes, but stories of people like Mr Rogers, Harriett Tubman, and the soldiers who saved the day in 1917.  These were ordinary yet extraordinary people at the same time. We make heroes of actors, sports figures and politicians. We want to achieve something, to be remembered, to have success, and win, if winning is possible. Perhaps that is what keeps us cheering on our favorite teams, hoping we might “win” through them! 

And then we find this description of Jesus, well, “The Messiah,” this “Faithful Servant” captured in print by Isaiah, as not extraordinary, but as beginning as very ordinary.  He grew up just like the rest of us, an ordinary child, an unremarkable looking boy, the “tender shoot growing up out of dry ground.” 

Perhaps beginning here we can learn just how extraordinary, how super, the ordinary in life is.  Jesus is described as so unremarkable looking that we would not even glance twice. Yet, in this chapter Isaiah tells just how incredible this man was and would be.  

Come to worship this amazing Savior on Sunday. Come check into how Jesus alone makes the ordinary extraordinary.

Parking Lot Repairs

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In the next few weeks, we will have some work done on the parking lot. We don’t have an exact start date yet, but will let you know as soon as we do.

During the work, and possibly afterwards, the entire lot will be closed. It shouldn’t affect Sunday worship but may be an inconvenience to groups that meet during the week. Please watch for an email with more details.

Thank you for your understanding!

Stand Up with HomePlate

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The second annual Stand Up with HomePlate, a fun evening of youth storytelling and improv, will be on Friday, April 3, from 5:30 - 7:30 pm.

Last year’s event sold out, so purchase your tickets today! Tickets include appetizers and beer or wine, along with emcee Poison Waters, music by Melao de Cuba, and lots of energy.

It all happens at the PCC Event Center at the Rock Creek Campus. Learn more and purchase tickets at www.homeplateyouth.org/standup.

Join the Journey, 2.23.20

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Every Sunday, Pastor Brian poses a question that relates to what we’ve discussed during the worship service. This is the question and answers from last Sunday. If you’d like, add your answer in the Comments.

Question: What one thing have you brought this morning that you can leave behind?

Answers:

  1. That no one will ever understand my loneliness. He does.

  2. Control.

  3. That I don’t have to worry; that God is my security.

  4. Hopefully leave some loneliness.

  5. Frustration.

  6. Any doubt about the way, truth and life of Jesus.

  7. My depression.

Brian's Blog: Think Fast

Lent.  It is a time to fast. Several years ago I told one of our daughters, Grace, that I was giving up texting while driving in the car for Lent. She laughed and said, “Dad, it is illegal anyway. That is like giving up shoplifting.” Telling this story to another friend of mine, he laughed saying, “You are just that kind of overachiever. Most people give up ice cream but you give up sin.”  

At Lent we usually think about giving something up. But equally important, perhaps more important, is what we “add in.”  The question is how will we allow whatever it is we release to increase our ability to follow Jesus.   

Here are some ideas.  With some there are “add in” ideas, but in any of them, involving time or money, you might think of giving away that time or money to God in some manner.  The bottom line: How might we “let God in” in a new and good way.  

Fast from Media-- Facebook, Twitter, TV shows, blogs, sport sites, whatever your media addiction is, give it up until Easter (Apr 12) and you may find that you’ve given it up for good.

Fast from going to Movies -- That seems a bit drastic, but so is following Jesus!  

Fast from people -- Catholic teacher Richard Rohr used to take a 6-week hermitage during Lent, nothing but silence, prayer, study.  Most of us cannot do that, but we could fast from social interaction for a time each day or a day each week. Some of you introverts might do this regularly, so your “fast” might be to actually speak to a stranger each day!  Whichever it is find ways to open up to God. 

Fast from Sex -- Hello -- this is for married couples.  If you are single, may you already be fasting from sex!  Common to Christian tradition is to fast from sex for a season (Paul wrote to married couples, to “deprive each other for a set time so that you can devote yourselves to prayer and to God” (1 Cor. 7:5). Remember Sundays are not fast days during Lent but feast days, so, well, you get the idea. 

Fast from Dating -- for single folk, perhaps Lent is a time to stop dating as a means to look at your primary relationship with God. 

Fast from Money -- How little can you spend in 6 weeks?  Other than regular bills, fast from every frivolous expense, however you define that.

Fast from Food or Drink -- Coffee, soda, sweets, certain meals, certain foods (meats, grains, dairy, etc). The traditional fast of the church has been from all dairy and meat products during Lent, a vegan diet. The idea is not to think of ways to get around what you have taken out, but use the craving for that food, that drink as a call to prayer, a call to God.

Fast from a workday Lunch -- Give up food one day and your daily routine of eating, and break up the day, take a walk, pray, read the scriptures, get in touch with God. 

Fast from Workouts -- Take 6 weeks, walk everyplace you can, eat veggies, but stop being a “gym rat,” a “weekend runner,” “a yoga addict, “a regular at the basketball court” and instead step out of the “race” to pause, be, pray, reflect, love. 

Fast from Driving -- for most of us, driving is something we do “reflexively” as if there is no other option. What would it mean to drive only to your job but no place else? What would it mean to limit trips to the store to only one store, once a week?   

Fast from Reading --  When did you last take time to reflect on what you already have inside you, rather than reading for now input.  This is not unlike a media fast, but also stop reading the devotional, the newspaper, and anything but essential reading.  Let your mind rest and experience silence. Prayerfulness. peace. When the fast is done you will learn to read in a whole new way.  

Fast from Plastics – What might it look like to not use or purchase anything wrapped in plastic for Lent?  Folk I know who have done this other Lenten seasons found it immensely challenging. They wrapped veggies in the paper towels in most markets. They took reusable bags. They shunned buying anything in hard, plastic containers.   

Fast from Trash -- Greatly reduce the waste you and your family produce. Let nothing be wasted.  Recycle as a discipline during Lent. Buy whole foods, use fewer bags, pray about what you learn along the way.

Fast from Talking and Texting -- Take a break from unnecessary communication.  Don’t talk or text just because you have nothing else to do. Put your phone away for a day.  Replace that time with mindfulness to God, your surroundings, real people, and yourself. Fasting from unnecessary chatter will open up the communication lines with God.  

Fast from Multitasking -- During Lent fast from multitasking by only allowing yourself to do one thing at a time. The point is not to say multitasking is bad, but to give your use of time and the tools that you have more to God.  Put time in God’s hands by doing only one thing at a time and reminding yourself that you are simplifying for Him. 

Fast from _________________ -- There is something in your life that is good, nourishing and just fine, but for Lent, that is the very thing you need to sacrifice to God.  You may know what it is already, but if not, pause, think, reflect and look for what that may be. Release it for Lent. Easter is coming soon, it always does.  

(adapted from Belifnet.com)

Pilgrimage to Israel

Imagine the surprise: You sign up to take a trip with another couple, good friends, and know you have signed up on what is termed “a pilgrimage.” But then you receive a printed book with daily reflection questions, passages of scripture to read, and daily readings. You realize the leader indeed views this journey as a life-changing pilgrimage, just as advertised, not just a visit to Israel.

Every day begins the same - early morning quiet reflection times over the passages, readings and opportunities to journal about life, experiences and insights. Every day you hear detailed lectures as you visit the places you had read about that morning in the Bible. Life Changing is too small a term.

Dave and Sally Sullivan went on such a pilgrimage to Israel last October and came home deeply impacted. The Sunday they returned, October 27th, they said how much they would consider it a privilege to share some of their insights. Since then, I’ve been on them to select a day. So, this Sunday, 2/23, is the time they will share. They have each selected a few of the most impactful moments. We will see slides and videos of some of those as they share. It will be an opportunity to dip into their own experience with Jesus.

The couple, their friends, who went with them were also deeply impacted. The man felt he had gone nearly as an agnostic but returned a man who had encountered and placed faith in Jesus.

At the end of the trip their leader asked three questions/requests.

  • What’s one thing you brought with you to Israel, that you are leaving behind? (Many named spiritual, psychological or physical burdens which had been loosened/healed and allowed to roll away from them.)

  • Name something God has done in you as you leave, something God has blessed you with.

  • Did God get from you what He brought you here for?

If you have never been to Israel, or might never make it, this is a Sunday to visit there by proxy. Come hear their story, come experience the grace of God in story and Scripture and be reminded that all we read of in Scripture is history, the real story of God given to us.

It is remarkable what God wants to do in our lives and hearts, and amazing to give him the chance to do it. This is a week to say: “Come -- have at me God.”

On this last Sunday prior to Lent, come let God have at you. Come hear and experience and enter the story told and experienced by Dave and Sally, and how Jesus walked, and swam, and journeyed with them just as He journeys with you day by day.

Shared Hearts

On Sunday, you were asked to share your thoughts, concerns, questions, or comments regarding the transition from Pastor Brian to a new pastor on July 1. Here are your responses:

  • If you go, I go too.

  • Don’t go.

  • We are very sad to see you go. Don’t go!

  • Please don’t leave :( :( :( Very sad

  • He is a good friend and I will miss him.

  • I am sad to see you leave, but I am happy for you to start your new journey. I LOVE YOU!!

  • Process is going great. Fantastic transition team.

  • Please be in support of the Emmaus community.

  • This will be a good opportunity to be open-minded and to welcome change. You are doing great.

  • Everything will be good and new growth will happen.

  • We are on an exciting journey!

Thank you for sharing. Continue to be in prayer for Pastor Brian, the incoming pastor, and all Westsiders as we travel this road together.

Join the Journey, 2.16.20

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Question: How are you feeling about how we are walking in transition?

Answers:

  1. I think we are doing a great job in preparing. We need to keep praying and trusting God.

  2. Uncertainty. Praying for the new pastor and for Brian.

  3. My apprehension is not how I am going to accept the new pastor but the effects on the rest of the congregation. I heard difficult stories regarding the state of the congregation.when the change took place to Pastor Brian.

  4. it feels like we are getting ready to start a new exciting journey.

Brian's Blog: Love Letter

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I love you. 

Sometimes we don’t say this enough in our lives.  Like daily to the people closest to us.  

And sometimes we neglect to say this enough with those around us occasionally. 

For years, Karen and I have had the pattern of a good goodbye and a good hello daily.  We believe that this life is tenuous. It is short. We don’t really have guarantees on longevity and we need to relish the moments, embrace the opportunities, and make certain our departures especially are on good terms.  It is better to end with a kiss and a goodbye than a “Good Riddance!” 

So in this blog, I wanted to tell you clearly, and certainly, and assuredly: I love you

You are the best congregation of people, the best group of friends, the best collection of beauty imaginable. I love you.  

I love your humor, your joy, your messy grace, your inventive love, your creativity, your willingness to dream big, wildly, and unusually. 

I love how you have freely tried things: 

  • like painting the walls with handprints and footprints as a picture of us being the hands and feet of Jesus. What an amazing experience that was for so many people! 

  • like block parties with raucous music; 

  • like abandoning the many fundraising events in favor of stewardship; 

  • like welcoming kids to be with us in worship; 

  • like celebrating kids and a shoeless pastor dancing around the sanctuary; 

  • like wild fun parties at the auctions; 

  • like answering questions about scripture some weeks rather than a message FROM scripture

  • like baptisms at the lake!

  • like dreaming up a building that was 1000x better than the old one when God launched us into a rebuilding project with a fire!      

I love your willingness to take walks, explore neighborhoods, deliver flowers to neighbors and cookies to strip clubs.

I love your heart for the homeless and the hurting, the downcast and the outcast, the drug addict and the lost orphan.  You have hearts that weep for the least of these our brothers and sisters. I love this. 

I continually learn so much from you because of this heart you have. 

I love your laughter and smiles, your hugs and energy, your tears and your joy, your willingness to be weird for the sake of the gospel.  

I love how you don’t “fit into” the normal UMC grid at all, because you are outlanders and outlandish together, in the best way.  I love this. 

I love you and am loving being your pastor these last months together.  What a walk this is. Kind of strange and wild, that we only have just over four months left together, right? How does that hit you?  It hits me all kinds of wild ways, as I wrote about that a couple of weeks back.    

On Sunday, one 10-year-old girl in the congregation clung to me, weeping, saying, over and over again:  “Why do you need to leave?” It was a poignant moment for the two of us. I just said, “Honey, just hold on and we will just be together for a moment.  Just feel those feelings. It’s ok to have them.” Then, after some of the ‘eye fountains’ stopped, she tried and tried to get those tears to stop sooner, but they wouldn’t. But then, she could breathe more steadily.  And we were able to talk more about the reality of change, departure, and sadness and that it is ok to feel it and how we hope to work with this together. It was a precious moment.  

That spoke volumes to my own heart too: how loved I am. 

Thank you for the love you have shown to me over these years.  You love well. And I love you. What a good opportunity this has been.  

Around St Valentine’s day, I just wanted to let you know again-- I love you.  Thank you for being the best and boldest and most brilliant of people.  

Hugs on this day! 

Brian 

Share Your Heart

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This Sunday is a day to share our hearts...

  • What’s good about transition? 

  • What are you looking forward to after July 1? 

  • What is your heart saying about this season? 

  • Is there anything you’d like to work on during this time? 

  • What’s going to be the hardest for you after Brian leaves?      

  • What feelings are you processing now? How are you processing them? 

  • Questions you are asking:

Come at 8:15 or 10:00 am and let’s share.

UMC Response to Eastern Oregon Flooding

Larry Johnson, Conference ERT Coordinator

Larry Johnson, Conference ERT Coordinator

The Emergency Response Teams of the Oregon-Idaho Conference have reacted to the recent devastating flooding in eastern Oregon.  Read more here.

To support relief efforts, you can make donations through the church, noting either the Conference advance no. 260 for the disaster response fund or the Conference advance no. 261 for the Emergency Response Teams support fund. 

Learn more about disaster preparedness at http://www.umoi.org/disasterpreparedness

An Incredible Opportunity - but Act Fast!

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We received this email from Family Promise of Beaverton. Please take a few minutes to read and react. Thank you!

We have an incredible opportunity to purchase a house to be our new Day House. This property will provide a safe, welcoming, homelike environment for families experiencing homelessness in Beaverton. We are extremely thankful to our first home at Sunset Presbyterian Church. Their community has been very supportive and helped us grow large enough to need a new space.
 
Why this house?

Our current location is in a large church room. The purchase of this house will create a homelike environment.

We are now located along only one public transit line. Moving to a central location along several bus routes will widen our access to the community.

Currently, outside our front door is a parking lot off Hwy 26, the new Day House will be located in a residential neighborhood and next to a THPRD park. The Day House includes a yard for playing, relaxing, and raised garden beds for learning to grow food.

At the moment, families cannot keep their pets with them and animals need to be boarded.  We will be able to provide an animal shelter for family pets to stay while their human families are in our program.

Right now, our families can use laundry facilities at designated times during the day. The house will allow for laundry use all day every day.

For now, families use stalled bathrooms. The new house will have two private bathrooms with bathtub/showers for families.

At this time, families use a small kitchenette to prepare snacks and light meals. Our new Day House will have a full size kitchen to offer cooking classes and let families cook their own comfort foods.

A new Day House will provide a safe, stable refuge from the harsh reality of homelessness. Creating a peaceful environment that preserves nurturing family life during a time of great distress will be the biggest asset.

The Day House will function much like our current Day Center, however it will be larger and located in central Beaverton. It will provide a haven during the day while we will continue working with our organizations who shelter the families at night. There are countless ways that the normalcy of walking into a house at the end of a school day, workday, or day of job hunting can help keep our families’ spirits strong as they continue their journey home.

Donate to our New Day House here

Why Now?
We have a narrow window of opportunity. The owners of the property need to sell it by February 29th, but would like to see the sale benefit the community. The purchase price is below market at $300,000.
 
How You Can Help:
We are asking for you to support us financially, but this effort will require community-wide support.

Donate financially to help us reach our purchase goal by visiting our GoFundMe Page http://bit.ly/GFM_BTP

Fill out the donation sheet and mail your donation

Share the GoFundMe Page with family, friends, and coworkers

Donate stock to the project, Click here for more information

Want to name a room or a garden bench? Naming Opportunities starting at $1,000

Volunteer to assist with planning and outreach for the campaign

Introductions to other community members who might be able to help financially and/or with the campaign

Want to schedule an outside tour of the property? Have questions? Please feel free to contact me at 971.217.8949 or BeThePromise@familypromiseofbeaverton.org.

Join the Journey, 2.9.20

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Question: What hard thing most shook your faith? How did you stand?

Answers:

  1. When my husband left.

  2. Loss of a loved one from my life. Deep faith in God.

  3. Death of my parents. My feeling lonely and lost over the last six months.

  4. Dementia raises hard questions. Faith doesn’t always give answers but it gives hope that such answers exist.

  5. Finding out we couldn’t have more children. Struggle and trust that God has a plan. Enjoy the child we were blessed with.

  6. William’s time in the navy.

Brian's Blog: Each Word a Gift

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Hurtful language.  Snide remarks. Sarcasm.  Anger. Rage and malice. And the wreckage behind.  

It happens.  It is amazing how that children’s rebuff to bullies:  “Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never harm me” was once super popular, yet so far from true.  That phrase was said to have first appeared in a publication of the Christian Recorder in March 1862, a publication of the African Methodist Episcopal Church.  It was there presented as the “old adage.”

But we all know that words are powerful.  Indeed a bone can break with a blow, but words wound the heart, injure the mind, and sear the very soul.  It is incredible how powerful our words can be. Each of you can testify to this, for were I to ask, you would be able to come up with some painful thing that was told you as a child.  Even if the event happened decades ago, it still can carry weight. For some of us, depending upon the level of healing we have experienced, that “word” can carry with it all the feelings that accompanied the event.  Indeed, if it is still very fresh, we would be able to tell what we were wearing, where we were standing, and who else was with us.  

Scripture affirms the power of words, saying, “The tongue can bring death or life…” (Proverbs 18:21). James wrote that the tongue is “full of deadly poison” (James 3:8).  

Have you noticed in your life how a single putdown can have more power than 30 uplifting comments?  It is as if we lean in to the negative and push back from the positive.  

In the world of child development there is much evidence that using negative words has less authority/impact than positive.  Indeed, some research into children’s lives noted that discipline worded negatively is much harder for the child to understand.  “‘Stop’ on its own tells a child nothing. He is left to deduce what he shouldn’t be doing and what he should be doing. For preschoolers and toddlers, that’s asking too much.  And then if we “add” what a child should stop doing, I am asking that the child double-process, both what I have told him not to do and to decide what he should do instead.” 

This article continued, “In general, science finds that when a child (or anyone for that matter) is told no, their fight, flight, freeze or faint response is activated (1). In this state of mind, children are more likely to emotionally respond. The result is a child who likely feels angry, avoidant, rigid or helpless. In contrast, when a child hears positive phrasing, their prefrontal cortex, the area of the brain responsible for resilience, curiosity, open-mindedness, problem-solving and even morality is engaged (2).”  (Whole article here)

All from the choice of positive or negative language.  Language with kids, language with adults, language that is yelled or spoken softly, language that tears down or builds up.  There are so many choices for us in the words we use. And as we make those choices it might help to recall how language impacted our own lives.  It seems that the way we were spoken to often is how we speak to others.  

This is tough to see, but it helps to ask those we trust.  Get feedback from others around you -- how did I come across?  Did that sound harsh? Was I negative? Did that comment impact you negatively?  Get feedback for what you cannot know: how others experience you.  

Do the hard work of communication.  It is important to learn how your words are impacting others. It is important to communicate to others how their words have impacted you.  And it is important to learn to use language in a way to always seek to build others up, to equip them for the good, to embrace them with the words you use.  As Paul wrote to the Ephesian Christians he spoke in this manner: “Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen” (Eph. 4:29). Eugene Peterson caught the sentiment this way in his translation, “each word a gift.”  

What a picture.  Each word a gift to the hearer.  

There are so many situations torn apart by the use of language in our times and in the church. In the midst of these times, language is all the more important.  May you speak allowing each word to become the gift it needs to be for the hearer. May your goal become to build up those around you with the words you are using.  

I swim with one guy who seeks to always encourage everyone he meets day by day.  He seeks to find something to uplift the hearer. And this friend is not yet even a Christian, but that is his goal.  What a godly goal. Make each word a gift today.  

Isaiah's Answers for Today's Questions

The book of Isaiah can be divided into three “servants” -- a “faithless servant,” an “almost faithful servant,” and “The Faithful Servant.” This is not a division of the “whole” but of the main figures addressed within the prose/historical sections, King Ahaz, King Hezekiah, and then God’s Faithful Servant, whom we say points to Jesus. The book can also divide between judgment (chapters 1-39) and restoration (chapters 40-66), even though a subtheme in the judgment section also is “trust.” For within that section, the first 39 chapters, the people, and these two kings waver in who to trust, various superpowers and gods of their own making, or the Living God. Did you notice the book has the same number of chapters as the Bible has books? And did you notice the book divided as scripture can be divided between judgment (the Old Testament) and restoration (The New Testament)? This astounds me about the book of Isaiah. God spoke 66 sermons through this prophet which were then arranged theologically into the form that we find in the Bible.

We are spending some weeks within this book -- listening to the God who yet speaks and still calls us to trust, to ask for signs, to believe in His work, and to be a people of worship. God still speaks through the passages of this book telling them and us, “though your sins are as scarlet, they shall be white as snow.” We all need to hear that. And God still speaks, saying, “Comfort, comfort my People.” The passages of this book evoke powerful images of God’s saving grace, so much so, that much of Handel’s great choral piece “The Messiah” was from passages directly lifted from this book.

In this season of the life of the church -- the season fraught by questions, deep conversation, and the uncertainty of a future we cannot see, with a new pastor, and perhaps a different kind of greater church structure -- we need to come back to basics, to foundational truth, to the voice of the Good Shepherd which we can find in this book.

Don’t miss this sojourn for I have found that Isaiah captivates the heart and mind and calls us to trust and submit to God in new ways. Come, worship!

Ask Your Questions

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Do you have something weighing on your heart about the upcoming pastoral change? You can use this link, http://freesuggestionbox.com/pub/iwahzmd, to ask questions or leave comments completely anonymously.

On February 16, Share Your Heart Sunday, questions will be answered. Plan to attend at 8:15 or 10:00 am.

If you’re unable to attend, watch for more information on the bulletin board at the back of the sanctuary.