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dreamprayact

~ Reflections of a preacher, poet, and contemplative activist

dreamprayact

Tag Archives: spiritual renewal

Renewed in the Waters of Grace

14 Thursday Jan 2016

Posted by mark lloyd richardson in Justice, LGBTQ, Reflections

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

baptism, baptismal reaffirmation, biblical obedience, courage, grace, Isaiah, Pastoral ministry, reconciling ministries, social justice, spiritual renewal

splash

A scripture text from Baptism of the Lord Sunday still rings in my ears. To a people living in exile, the prophet Isaiah speaks of courage to believe that God is still up to something. “Do not fear,” comes the word of the Lord, “for I have redeemed you; I have called you by name, you are mine.”

We hear these words as we remember and renew our baptisms. We come to the baptismal font knowing that God is actively involved in redeeming our lives and this world. Fear loses its threatening grip in the shadow of such immense promises. If the Lord of Creation claims us and calls us to live in the freedom of such promises, who are we to let fear get in the way?

The Israelite exiles were on the edge of extinction when they heard the words, “Do not fear.” They were scattered and despairing of their future when the prophet reminded them of God’s covenant with them. They were “a tiny, miserable, and insignificant band of uprooted men and women,” according to Old Testament scholar Claus Westermann, when the prophet declared their new and different identity as a people supremely valued by God. “You are precious in my sight, and honored, and I love you,” God says to Israel in spite of their shortcomings.

The waters of baptism lead us to new life – a life surrendered to the God who knits us together in our mothers’ wombs, a life of belonging to the community of the redeemed, a life of learning at the feet of the Rabbi from Nazareth what it means to be fully human and how it feels to be whole. “When you pass through the waters,” the Lord says, “I will be with you.”

The Rev. Dr. Israel (Izzy) Alvaran, Western Jurisdiction Organizer for Reconciling Ministries Network, was our guest preacher this past November. His message was in essence his testimony. Here is a young man who felt called of God at an early age to become a pastor. However, he was also aware of the church’s ban on openly gay people being ordained. He had a dilemma – how to respond to the call of God knowing that the church would not welcome someone like him in leadership if his sexual orientation were made known.

Years later as he stepped into his first pulpit to preach, it was in the very church where he had been brought by his father to be baptized as an infant. It occurred to him in that moment that baptism is a means of grace in which God blesses us with the name “son” or “daughter,” in which God calls us “beloved.” The church and its clergy may administer the sacrament of baptism, but God is the One who calls us by name and claims us as God’s own! No one can take that holy identity from us. No one can remove the sign of God’s grace that rests upon us.

When Izzy came out to his parents recently he felt their unconditional acceptance. He reported, “I am overcome with grace to know they love me.” What the church will do with LGBT people who simply wish to serve God freely with their gifts remains an open question. However, the walls of fear are crumbling. Baptism does that. Embracing our identity as sons and daughters of God does that. Trusting in the God who sides with the oppressed and the marginalized does that.

We are to live as a people named and loved by God. The delight that God takes in you and me is akin to the delight I’ve seen in the eyes of grandparents as they interact with their grandchildren. For that reason, God’s voice through the prophet still rings in my ears, as God gathers together the whole human family at the water’s edge and says, “Everyone who is called by my name, whom I created for my glory, whom I formed and made,” come my beloved, receive grace, trust grace, be renewed in the waters of grace, preach grace, practice grace, live grace, breathe grace!

Words (c) 2016 Mark Lloyd Richardson

Like a River Flowing

15 Monday Sep 2014

Posted by mark lloyd richardson in Worship Liturgy

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

baptism, blessing, Christ's peace, grace, hope, humanity, praise, reconciliation, spiritual renewal, worship

WyomingWe sang this song at the close of worship this past Sunday using the familiar tune FINLANDIA. If you wish to use these lyrics in worship sometime, please let me know.

The peace of Christ is like a river flowing
from God’s own heart in healing streams of grace.
In all our comings and in all our goings,
God’s mercies lead us to a holy place.
Peace like a river flowing through our lives
reminds us what it means to be baptized.

This earthly home we share with one another
cannot withstand our hatreds and our fears.
So when we look and see a sister, brother,
we know Christ’s peace is also coming near.
May we now live into this hopeful dream,
a day made new in shared humanity.

This dream for peace seeks out the meek and lowly,
children of God by blessing and design,
created in the image of the holy,
to reconcile this life with life divine.
Peace like a river flowing through our days
renews our hearts in gladness and in praise.

Copyright (c)2010 Mark Lloyd Richardson

O Blessed Spring

12 Sunday May 2013

Posted by mark lloyd richardson in Reflections, Worship Liturgy

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Christ, forgiveness, grace, healing, Holy Spirit, joy, Maranatha, peace, prayer, Revelation, silence, spiritual renewal, water of life

Rushing waters

This morning in worship at our church I included a time of prayer and silent reflection on the scripture text for the day, Revelation 22:12-14, 16-17, 20-21. We had a water display in front of the altar and I preached my sixth and final sermon in a series on the book of Revelation from the very close of the book, which is also the culmination of the biblical message. Following the service, some of the worshippers asked me to share this text on my blog. So here it is:

A Time of Prayer & Reflection

“Let everyone who is thirsty come. Let anyone who wishes take the water of life as a gift.” (Rev. 22:17) God in Christ wants to quench your spiritual thirst. Christ offers living water to those who seek it. This time of prayer and silent reflection is an opportunity for you to reflect upon the words of scripture, and to ask Christ to come and renew your spirit. We begin by singing verse 1 of song #2076, “O Blessed Spring,” and between verses will pause for silent reflection and prayer.

            Verse 1, #2076 “O Blessed Spring” (from The Faith We Sing songbook,
                                                                                               Abingdon Press, 2000)

The water of life is the water of spiritual refreshment and renewal.
Reflect on where Christ is renewing you in your life.

            30 seconds of silence

            Verse 2, #2076 “O Blessed Spring”

The water of life is the water of joy in the presence of God.
Reflect on where God is increasing your joy in your life.

            30 seconds of silence

            Verse 3, #2076 “O Blessed Spring”

The water of life is the water of grace to transform you and the world through you.
Reflect on where God is forgiving you and setting you free to live by faith.

            30 seconds of silence

            Verse 4, #2076 “O Blessed Spring”

The water of life is the water of cleansing and healing.
Reflect on where Christ is meeting you in your brokenness and making you whole.

            30 seconds of silence

            Verse 5, #2076 “O Blessed Spring”

The water of life is the water of peace for those with heavy burdens.
Reflect on where Christ, the holy Vine, the living Tree, blesses you with peace.

            30 seconds of silence

Come, Gracious God. Come, Lord Jesus. Come, Spirit of Gentleness. As we receive the water of life, may we be renewed in spirit, be made whole by your grace, and be blessed with your peace.

Words and photo (c) 2013 Mark Lloyd Richardson [Permission to use this liturgy in public worship with credit noted].

Looking Up When Life Has Got You Down

12 Tuesday Jun 2012

Posted by mark lloyd richardson in Reflections, Sermon portions

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

2 Corinthians, Anne Sullivan, God's reigning, Helen Keller, hope, inner nature, promise, spiritual renewal

Helen Keller once said, “By faith, I mean a vision of good one cherishes and enthusiasm that pushes one to seek its fulfillment, regardless of obstacles. … Faith reinvigorates the will, enriches the affections, and awakens a sense of creativeness. Active faith knows no fear, and it is a safeguard to me against cynicism and despair” [Helen Keller, “The Light of a Brighter Day,” in This I Believe: The Personal Philosophies of Remarkable Men and Women, eds. Jay Allison and Dan Gediman (New York: Henry Holt and Company, 2007), p. 138].

As an infant, a fever left Helen deaf and blind. But with the assistance of her teacher, Anne Sullivan, she learned to communicate through the eyes and ears of others. In time, she graduated from Radcliffe College, and became a renowned author and activist.

Faith is a verb! When we lose ourselves in service to others, it is an expression of faith and a form of participation in the Way of Jesus. As C. S. Lewis once said, “Relying on God has to begin all over again every day as if nothing had yet been done.”

Helen Keller admits how troubled her heart was when she learned of all those who “must labor all their days for food and shelter, bear the most crushing burdens, and die without having known the joy of living.” Likewise, you and I know people who struggle to get by in this economy, who battle addictions, who experience lingering illness, or who do not have a place to call home. We too are affected by the world’s pain because of our shared humanity.

However, it does little good to lose heart. The apostle Paul writes, “So we do not lose heart. Even though our outer nature is wasting away, our inner nature is being renewed day by day” (2 Cor. 4:16). The external material of life as we know it deteriorates and changes. But there is something more than this outer nature we see. There is an inner nature that is being renewed by Christ each and every day!

As disciples of the resurrected Christ, we already live in the dawning of God’s coming reign. We “look not at what can be seen but at what cannot be seen; for what can be seen is temporary, but what cannot be seen is eternal” (4:18).

We do not lose heart because we don’t think this physical, material world is all there is. There is an eternal weight of glory beyond all measure (4:17) waiting for us! We trust that in the age to come both our bodies and the body of Christ will be transformed.

So when life gets us down, we look up! We look at the promise of hope in the risen Christ! We look beyond the transiency of earthly life to the eternal presence of God! We look past the slight momentary afflictions we suffer to the eternal weight of glory seen from the perspective of faith!

Despite her handicaps, Helen Keller was not only grateful; she devoted her life to assisting others who were deaf and blind. She said, “For three things I thank God every day of my life. Thanks that He has given me knowledge of His works; deep thanks that He has set in my darkness the lamp of faith; deep deepest thanks that I have another life to look forward to – a life joyous with light and flowers and heavenly song.”

Rachel Hackenberg, a United Church of Christ pastor in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, has written a beautiful poem called “Hold On.” Here’s an excerpt, but the whole poem is found at faithandwater.blogspot.com.

When all else fails you, hold on to a song:
one that stirs your soul and pulls you with it
on a high soaring ride….

If it is love that fails you, as love does,
hold on to a flower: see how its true beauty
is revealed in blessing the work of bees.

If it is the mind that fails you,
hold on to a toddler’s hand
and discover the world again….

If it is time that fails you, hold on to your path:
you have only the Where and the When
of the Present; God meets you there.

But again, dear friends: when all else fails you,
hold on to a song that sings you to heaven
and do not be afraid.

Words (c) 2012 Mark Lloyd Richardson
Photo (c) 2012 Dallis Day Richardson

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