Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Steve-o's Devos: In the beginning...

You always have to start somewhere. A couple of years ago, I thought, wouldn't it be great to discover a new way to reach out to people in Nashua who had not discovered, or perhaps had forgotten, God's very present being in their lives. It was quite a thought....almost mind-boggling to some. Weren't there already plenty of churches in New Hampshire? People could always come to those services. At least, that was the conventional wisdom.

When you give birth to a new thing, especially when it might involve change, things are a little weird at first. When you give birth to a new idea, lots of people want to know how it might end up. It is sort of like announcing the birth of a new child to your extended family who then begins to ask questions like: What will it be when it grows up? Where will it go to college? How will it be able to live on its own? Where is it going to live later?

Questions like that seem silly to ask the parents announcing the birth of their child. A new thing requires a simple response: joy. There should be excitement about something new coming into the world. There should be a sense of great possibilities.

John's Gospel gets rid of those cosy family pictures and pushes us back to recall the very beginnings of the world (click above to read the passage). John wants us to hear the Good News as a rebirth, a new creation, something that God is doing that has a precedent only when the very world was first new. John wants us to recapture that amazing sense of the generousity of God that first came to us in creation. And John wants us to realize that there is a new grace even more overwhelming than this early birth pang: the coming of Jesus, God in the world.

I love the way Eugene Peterson puts this in his adaptation of this Gospel passage: God has moved into the neighborhood. What an amazing return! What a fascinating thought! God is here with us in our own city. God wants to be where we are, where we live. Wow!

Perhaps that is why By The Way was birthed...to remind people that God is here, even in Nashua! God is in our neighborhood and we go out into the businesses and public places to remind everyone of God's intense love for them. We go on the way because of God's intense grace for each and everyone of you.

In some ways, we are also at a new beginning stage at By the Way. Kari will be taking on the duties of this ministry fully in the coming year as God calls me to new ventures. She will need your grace and support as she walks into the neighborhood with God, discovering this amazing new thing that God is doing here. It is a wonderful way to use her gifts.

I will continue to lift you all up in prayer as you enter into this new beginning together and will enjoy the news of your discoveries and the blessings God has in store for you! May you hold the grain of grace given to you in Christ Jesus so that it may blossom into a wondrous new thing! Amen.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Steve-o's Devos: The Presence/ts of Christmas

Are you stressed out yet? Got your Christmas baking done? How about your shopping? Been Caroling? Visited a few relatives? Trying to travel home or to visit friends? It has been a crazy week and weekend for many of us. Not having the power to get to Christmas has practically taken on a new meaning for so many of us here in New England. It is certainly a time to come together as community to care for one another, help one another, and even give thanks for the many blessings we do have even in the midst of all the ice and snow of the new winter.

You know we spend a lot of time wondering about Christmas presents. Some folks start their present shopping the day after December 25th trying to get a quick head start for the next year. Hopefully they will remember where they put these presents 11 months later when the time comes. Hiding something for a year cannot be easy.

The season of Christmas might feel like it is all about the presents we get. Some will tell you that the whole idea of buying and giving presents is what the season of Christmas means. In the midst of a difficult year for many, the idea of spending for presents is a rough one. And if we listen to the way of our own commercial culture we could get quite depressed about all this.

But Christmas is not about presents. It is about presence. Christmas is about being. It might be being with friends, with family, or discovering something deeper. It is this deeper mystery of God coming to us that is the essence of Christmas presence. Luke's story of Jesus (click the title to read the passage) is an amazing reminder about how God enters into our kingdom.

Now even if you don't know the Christmas story from the Bible, you can pick up the bare bones of it from most Holiday fare. Mary and Joe head off to Bethlehem. When they arrive, having forgotten to reserve a room through priceline.com, they discover no rooms are available throughout the town. They are invited to use a barn. Depending on how you look at it, this stable could be a good or a bad thing. The animals and their smells might be bad, but their warmth might be a welcome thing on a cold night. Hay can be pretty warm too (hopefully neither Mary or Joe had allergies!). The couple heads off to this barn for the night and it is here where the miracle of God occurs. Mary gives birth to Jesus.

And now, for something interesting.... For Luke, it was very important to help connect this story for his community in a deeper way. Luke's whole good news of Jesus is centered in the remembrance of the Last Supper....you know, the whole "end" of Jesus' public ministry when he sits at table with his disciples in the upper room. It is there where Jesus invites the disciples to share wine and bread and communicates that they share this common set of elements, this "communion," with one another often. It would be a sign and reminder of how they were all connected into the life and death of Jesus and what that grace meant for them all.

It is in Luke's telling of Jesus' nativity where we see this important story of the stable. Mary lays Jesus into a manger. Manger is just an old-fashioned word for feeding trough. The manger is central to Luke's story because it is here where all the animals would come for the grains and feed that made up their daily food. Jesus must be placed there in Luke's story, because it is a deeper symbol of who Jesus is: the bread of life. Jesus in the manger is a sign of Christmas presence. The manger is the feeding place, the "table," where all are welcome.

Jesus in the manger is a connection, subtle and intentional by Luke, to help us see Jesus as the one who will feed us. We come to him here in this simple and unusual way, and receive a life-giving connection to everyone. In Luke's good news, the signs of "communion" (or fancier word "eucharist") are present constantly from the beginning of Jesus life until the unbelievable end.

Sharing in this simple bread we remember Jesus and all he is for us as disciples. He is our Emmanuel, "God With Us." We take and eat a simple piece of this bread as a reminder of God's presence with us. Jesus is God's present....more importantly, Jesus is God's presence.

May you experience a moment of Jesus' presence in the coming week. Amen.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Sunday's Longest Night Service Postponed

Thursday's service at Riv was wonderful. But... due to the constantly falling snow, we'll reschedule the Sunday night service in Manchester for a date in the not-too-distant future. (I believe there are long nights in January as well...)

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

All Are Welcome

Service of the Longest Night
a time of prayer and reflection, candlelight and connection

to remember... to grieve... to find hope

There are times when we are hurting during these pre-Christmas days, and we need to know we are not alone. Some are grieving for loved ones who have died. Some are suffering from broken relationships, unemployment, and other kinds of loss. During this time of increasing darkness, we need each other. And we need the light God shines in the midst of our blues.

Whether you are feeling sad or you just want to support others going through tough times… you are welcome to join in this time of remembrance, companionship, and hope. We’ve got two dates and two locations for you to choose from.

Thursday, Dec. 18 at 7:30pm
Rivier College, Dion Center (Clement Street)
Nashua, New Hampshire

Sunday, Dec. 21 at 8:00pm
Gethsemane Lutheran Church, St. James Hall
Pennacook St. and Pine St.
Manchester, New Hampshire

Feel free to bring… pictures of those you are missing, a poem to read or a story to share, a friend or two, or just bring yourself. If you'd like to have pictures of those you are remembering put into a slide show, please send them to Crystal Mohrmann at crystal24@gmail.com.

This event is sponsored by… By the Way; Birch Tree Counseling, Londonderry, NH; and Rivier College Students of Ailing Mothers and Fathers. If you have any questions, call Kari at 603-889-7537.

Directions to Rivier's Dion Center:From the Everett Turnpike/Route 3, take Exit 4. If coming from the north, turn left at lights onto East Dunstable Rd. If coming from the south, turn right onto East Dunstable Rd.. Take right at third light (about 1 mile) onto Main Street. At the roundabout (rotary), take the second right onto the campus. Turn left on Clement Street and follow the signs to the Dion Center, on the left.

Directions to Gethsemane's St. James Hall:Take exit 6 off of 293/Everett Turnpike and turn right on Amoskeag St. which becomes Salmon St. after you cross the bridge. Turn right on Elm St. and left on Pennacook. The parking lot and entrance to St. James Hall will be on your left before you reach Pine St.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Steve-o's Devos: Do Not Be Afraid

As we get ready to gather for the service of the longest night, it is an important time to pause and reflect on this simple yet world-changing story that announces the coming of Jesus (click on the title to read the passage). I could probably spend a lot of time here trying to unravel all the bits and pieces of Luke's story. It is a story filled with mystery, unusual characters, and odd incidents. It is a story that tries to give a careful history of Jesus and wants to start out with an important announcement...really a proclamation for all time.

Two centuries separate Luke's careful account of Gabriel's announcement to Mary that she will be the mother of all mothers. Human history has had various ways to understand the story from more mystic and ancient magically descriptions, to a host of well-reasoned scientific explanations, to a lot of back pedaling and waffling over what "really" happened and how it impacts whether you should follow this Jesus.

The reality of all these various arguments, philosophies, and thoughts boils down to Luke's simple laying out of events. I wonder if he would have elaborated so much if he thought we would have stumbled with incredulity at parts of his tale? But truly we are called to focus on these pieces of bizarreness with jaws dropped. An angel appeared? Mary was a "virgin" and yet is going to have a baby? God's interested in us?

It is the foundation of the message here where that last question is intended to break through. God has taken a hard look at us and realized there is something missing. It means that whatever we thought was normal, whatever thought was a sure thing, is going to get turned upside down...sometimes for good. And do in the midst of this unusual love story, for that is what this is, God's love story for us all, that Gabriel's words, "be not afraid" feel odd and yet are such a welcome to our ears, and to Mary's.

Gabriel's pronouncement opens the door for what should surely have overwhelmed a woman of age let alone a teenager awaiting to be married. In the message Gabriel shares, it is perhaps no mistake that Mary is directed to go to another older woman who can give her perspective and help her through what will be a rough time in the coming weeks. It is this sense that God's hope for us and all that it might mean comes with a promise, but also with the blessings and resources to see us through.

As you come to worship with us in the coming week, take a moment to remember who those loved ones were that might have said "don't be afraid" and take a moment to pause and give thanks for all those who were with you when that voice might have been suddenly and unexpectedly silenced. Even Gabriel did not return to comfort Mary. That job was left to a great cloud of witnesses, her family, and a community that needed to discover what it meant together to be thrust onto the center stage of God's new hope for the world.

May this week be a reminder of hope for you filled with memories of those you loved and those who helped to love you through the loss of someone dear. Amen.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Steve-o's Devos: Who Are You?

Last week, I mentioned how John was out in the desert doing a little dunking in the Jordan River and calling people to wash themselves anew and to prepare for something really important. It turns out that as he did this, some people still wanted to know what he was really up to and who he was, really (see the passage by clicking the title of the devo today).

Isn't it good to know that skepticism has always been around. It must just be a bit of human nature to always want to suspect the reasons behind why something is happening. It can be a good thing too as we learn to ask questions and figure out how our world is put together and how we are connected to one another in some way. Inquiring minds always want to know, right?

Without figuring out what someone is up to on our own, we often need to ask questions. It is a bit odd that people might have come to find out what John was up to out there in the desert, even be baptized, and then to pause afterwards and say, "Wait a minute, now who did you say you were?"

John has a pretty simple answer, he is the "voice in the wilderness." John states simply that he is the one who calls people into the new day that is dawning. He does not expect more or less of how the message is received and he will take you to the river and guide you to be ready, but that is about as far as his ministry can take you.

It perhaps is no wonder then that sometimes we here at BTW find ourselves in a similar situation. "Who Are You?" is a common question of us when we first meet with someone new, or someone in the community asks about what we hope to do here in Nashua. In a lot of ways, we are truly preparing the "way" for something that God is calling us to do together, form a safe community where all are welcome, where we can ask questions openly and without fear, where we can heal from past hurts of all kinds, where we can hear some truly good news in the midst of our daily lives.

In many exchanges of conversation there are often two questions that will arise. The first often is "Who Are You." It is a get-to-know-you sort of question as we figure out how or why we came together to talk in the first place. But then a deeper question comes next, "What are you looking for?". This is the question that John knows the people are wanting an answer to as they wish to figure out who he is and what he is doing.

"Who are you?" the people ask. They want to live differently. They know things must change. they know that the old traditions spoke of a new way of living but they have not seen it. And now they are out in the middle of nowhere, wandering in search of a savior. If not John, then who?

Therein lies the very cornerstone of what the preparations for Christmas are all about. "Who are we really celebrating?" is a question worth reflecting on in these few weeks before December 25th. The television ads want us to think the question is an answer to what we want, but God calls us to reflect on a deeper question, what are we really desiring, hoping, and dreaming for in our lives. God's answer leaves all material things in the dust as a hope for a new dawning day bursts into the world in the form of a little child.

What an interesting place for new hope to start, in the birth of something new. As we consider what our hopes are in these weeks, I encourage you to reflect on who you are and in what new ways you are growing into the person God hoped and knows you can be. If you discover that peace which passes your own understanding and expectations, perhaps you will see that grace-filled break that opens the door into what your heart has longed for all along. Amen

Friday, December 5, 2008

Steve-o's Devos: Getting A Little Wet

If you are paying even a little attention to the news these days it seems like there is very little "good" about it. For many the spectre of homelessness, joblessness, and any other number of "-lessnesses" are poised to overwhelm them. How fascinating it is then that we find ourselves in the season of "Advent" in the time of the Church. Advent is that season that helps us refocus our lives. It is a time to prepare for something wonderful that is about to happen. It is a period of pregnant expectation and longing for change. You might say that we have many signs that are pointing to the way things need to be in our world, and yet we still need a nudge to remind ourselves about this very thing.

In Jesus' day, there was a guy called John who headed off into the desert and began preaching. You would think that this makes little or no sense. Why would someone with a message for everyone to hear go outside of the city to proclaim it? If John's message was so vital, why not head to the very centers of his faith to allow others like him to hear it?

As it is with John's proclamation, so it is with our ministry at By the Way. So often it seems odd that we would go away from a church group to be in the midst of people who would never set foot in the church door. We talk with people who find it hard to believe that anyone really cares about them and prays for them on a regular basis. It is a reality that we discover whenever we walk the streets of Nashua with a flyer or some other advertisement that can be posted in a work location or in a school. It is the thought that somewhere a calm, soothing voice reminds people that they are loved and cared for and that God is calling them into community for a new purpose.

This is the case with John's proclamation (which you can read by clicking the title of our blog today). John's message seems harsh but he takes a simple element, water, and turns it into a symbol that serves as a reminder of a person's need to change. John baptizes people in the Jordan River. His is a symbol of washing away the outer detritus of life, the dirt and dust of living, that cakes the outsides of the people's bodies. He calls them, and us, to "repent", to give up our old ways of thinking and to expand our worldview so that we can be ready for someone who has a message even more earth shattering than John's. That person is Jesus, and John says that his baptism is one only of water, but that "the one" to come will drench us in God's spirit.

What an image that is! Imagine being soaked to the bone in God's grace. Imagine being so completely overwhelmed by God's love that your own hope can never dry out or up.

This is what this preparatory season is all about. It's about cleaning out our lives so that we can be overwhelmingly grateful for the gift of a small baby born of a teen mother in a run down barn. Out of scarcity will come a gift of abundance.

Are you ready to get wet? Amen.

Monday, December 1, 2008

All Are Welcome

Service of the Longest Night
a time of prayer and reflection, candlelight and connection
to remember... to grieve... to find hope

There are times when we are hurting during these pre-Christmas days, and we need to know we are not alone. Some are grieving for loved ones who have died. Some are suffering from broken relationships, unemployment, and other kinds of loss. During this time of increasing darkness, we need each other. And we need the light God shines in the midst of our blues.

Whether you are feeling sad or you just want to support others going through tough times… you are welcome to join in this time of remembrance, companionship, and hope. We’ve got two dates and two locations for you to choose from.

Thursday, Dec. 18 at 7:30pm
Rivier College, Dion Center (Clement Street)
Nashua, New Hampshire

Sunday, Dec. 21 at 8:00pm
Gethsemane Lutheran Church, St. James Hall
Pennacook St. and Pine St.
Manchester, New Hampshire

Feel free to bring… pictures of those you are missing, a poem to read or a story to share, a friend or two, or just bring yourself. If you'd like to have pictures of those you are remembering put into a slide show, please send them to Crystal Mohrmann at crystal24@gmail.com.

This event is sponsored by… By the Way; Birch Tree Counseling, Londonderry, NH; and Rivier College Students of Ailing Mothers and Fathers. If you have any questions, call Kari at 603-889-7537.

Directions to Rivier's Dion Center:
From the Everett Turnpike/Route 3, take Exit 4. If coming from the north, turn left at lights onto East Dunstable Rd. If coming from the south, turn right onto East Dunstable Rd.. Take right at third light (about 1 mile) onto Main Street. At the roundabout (rotary), take the second right onto the campus. Turn left on Clement Street and follow the signs to the Dion Center, on the left.


Directions to Gethsemane's St. James Hall:
Take exit 6 off of 293/Everett Turnpike and turn right on Amoskeag St. which becomes Salmon St. after you cross the bridge. Turn right on Elm St. and left on Pennacook. The parking lot and entrance to St. James Hall will be on your left before you reach Pine St.

listening and exploring faith together