Wednesday, August 29, 2012

YOU ARE “THE MAN,” AND SO AM I, AND SO ARE YOU - Psalm 51 and 2 Samuel 12


This week I still was pondering this David story a bit more and thinking: this is one wild story.  How in the world could you tell this story to children?    Someone told me last Sunday that there is a old song that many of us remember: O, be careful little eyes what you see.  O, be careful little eyes what you see.  For your Father up above is looking down in love…so be careful little eyes what you see.  David forgot the song.

And I thought, what are third graders going to do with this story.  We will soon give them their Bibles.  They can read it.

Veggie Tales to the rescue!!!   Many of you who are parents and grandparents have seen your share of Veggie Tales.  I will confess that I am not a great fan, yet I was tempted to play this today.  (I am certain some of you are very grateful I did not.)  Here it is: the story of David and Bathsheba on Veggie Tales.  Larry the Cucumber plays King George who is nuts over collecting rubber duckies.  King George looks out of the palace window and sees Junior Asparagus taking a bath with an irresistible rubber duck that George does not have in his collection.  George wants it so he sends Junior off to battle and he is “done in” by a barrage of blueberries.   So that means that King George gets the prized ducky.  But, as the story unfolds, Pa Grape comes in and tells King George…YOU ARE THE MAN.  Even when Veggie Tales tells it, this story makes us think. 

I am glad this story is in the Bible for it is a story of hope.  In the positive sense…David is “THE MAN”….the great and mighty King.  For a time, David saw himself as the supreme authority in everything, even to have the power to decide someone should die for his pleasure. 

The world needs this story.  This week I read about the new leaders of South Sudan just beginning at new government.  The people fought for independence and all over the world people were hoping for a new kind pattern.  But sadly, there is corruption, again.  I seems to be a legacy of colonialism.  Already, their leaders, who talked about how their leadership would be different, seem to be lining their own pockets, buying mansions and expensive cars, and setting up secret accounts in foreign banks.  People need electricity, roads, schools, water, sewers, and hospitals.  Powerful people are always tempted to define everything around them to benefit themselves only.  God values highly the powerless and if the powerful take undue advantage of the powerless…that is evil.  If the rich get even richer at the expense of the poor, God is angry.

The goodness of this story is in the turn that he made.  He discovers he is not God.  He cannot get everything he wants when he wants it.  I believe, along with the Biblical writers that God is above all institutions and that all are responsible to God to be fair and just to all.  There is a divine power at work in history that judges human uses and abuses of power.

I think it is the church’s responsibility to speak out.  For Nathan it helped because David was a person who loved God deeply.  Instead of killing Nathan too, David listened to God.   Kings are not always ready to hear criticism.  Jesus confronted the Empire and King Herod with a new kind of kingdom and that is part of the reason he was crucified.

It is so easy for Christians and for the Church to point fingers and name the sins of others.  It is important to remember that both David and Nathan were part of a covenant community that took God seriously.  David and Nathan both knew, when in their right minds, that God wants justice and fullness of life for all people, rich and poor.  We are required to be accountable to God.

Psalm 51 is the text that describes David change.  Judgment is often the way to renewal.  David was forgiven. 

He knew he was THE MAN…IN EVERY POSITIVE WAY.  HE WAS the Michael Phelps of the Kings.  He was THE MAN.  And now he know he is THE MAN who committed the crimes against God.    He would pay…others would pay…but life goes on.  God’s forgiveness is simple, but it is not easy.

How would you define sin?  Is it a silly notion from the past?  It is a thing that others do but not me? 

Sin is anything that keeps us from becoming all God wants.  The young American athlete Kayla Harrison who won the gold in the Olympic Judo competition told of her abuse by her former coach.  She said she would not wish that experience on her worst enemy.  But she did not let this awful thing defeat her.   She wanted to become what God wanted her to become.  David did the same.  David was on the mat for a while…but he got up.

I am grateful for the church.  The church reminds me that God is ultimately in charge of it all.  If I keep worship and education in my life it helps me stay away from what God does not like. 

And the church can be that Nathan I need, caring enough to tell me about a new direction.

Taking responsibility

One pastor I know of does a lot of pastoral counseling for couples having marriage troubles.  After listening to each person tell what is wrong, he asks them “How did it get this way?”  Then he asks them the important question: “What are you willing to change about yourself to help your marriage?

I know that I have plenty of weaknesses that I need to confess.  Staff Parish Committee is part of my Nathan here at the church and the District Superintendent: I do not always take a day off.  I do not know how to say, “no” very well.  I do not do conflict very well.  I listen to persons and I do respond to concerns, but I do not always communicate back very well as to what I have done. 

The medical profession works on illness.  The law community works on crime.  Schools work on our lack of knowledge.  But who works on sin.  That is our job.  The church: we work on sin.  It is a concept to help us look at what is wrong and how God can help us make it right.  Confronting sin is a hopeful way for restoration. 

Who teaches our children life skills…the church does.  Our nation and often churches are hijacked by polarized views and we cannot seem to get to common ground.  At the same time I do think that conflicts are ways that we get to spiritual growth. 

There is a television show called Restaurant Impossible.  Robert Irvine comes in and tells owners what is wrong with failing restaurants.  He looks at the décor and tastes the food.   He watches the cooks.  He interviews people eating there.  And then he lets them have the truth.  He puts people on an emotional roller coaster.  But he puts them again on the right path.  He tells the owners that that restaurant is nothing without the passion they have to make it work and make it right.  When someone like Nathan or Pa Grape or Robert Irvine dares to tell us the truth we ought to be thankful; he or she is doing us a great service.  We must welcome that voice for ourselves.  We must cultivate it without our church.  Truth tellers offer hope and new beginnings.  If they can change the hearts of kings, they ought to work well on us.

Jesus began this meal and still welcomes all.  This meal invites our participation without our perfection.  It is a meal of blessing and forgiveness.  It is for people hungry for goodness and compassion.  It is one way the church renews each of us and in turn renews the world.  When you come for communion…where you have been and what you have done are focused on who you are…a Child of God and where you are going for God.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Wednesday Evening Bible Study


We come to the Bible longing to seek God and a stronger relationship.  These words we find in scripture contain the Word of God for us.  We find that God has a desire to be with us, to teach us and guide us, and give us power.

Through engaging the Bible we discover many things; most importantly: the incredible mercy of God which creates new life.  We come to the Bible to see ourselves as we truly are and to discover the “more” God made us to be.  We find that our infinite worth derives not from what we manage to accomplish (as much as God does love that).  Our worth is established by what God bestows.

One great part of a Bible study is the interaction among those who gather.  The more we know of the Bible, seeing what God did in the past, the more we are able to see and to participate in what God is doing now. 

We will meet at the back of the Sanctuary from 6:30 to 8:00 p.m.  Here the topics for the five weekly sessions beginning August 29th.  Come to each session having read the texts and with questions and responses.

Session One: The Bible – What is it?  How was it formed?  Why study it?  How do you get to its meaning for today?  What does it matter?  What do I do with the contradictions? 
            Read: Psalm 84, Hosea 11, I Kings 19, I Chronicles 22, Acts 9, Exodus 20,
            Deuteronomy 5-6, Micah 4 and 6, Philemon, Luke 15, II Timothy 3:16-17

Session Two: Creation - Is it really “good?”  What is our role?  Do science and the Bible really disagree?  Why are there two stories of creation?  Why are we going to explore Mars?
            Read: Genesis 1 and 2, Psalms 8, 19, 33, 104, 127 and 128,  John 1, Job 38-40

Session Three: Brokenness - What is wrong with life in creation?  Why can’t people get along?  Why have profits become more important that prophets?  What are God’s warnings?  What are the consequences of human sin?
            Read: Amos 1-4, Job 11-37, Isaiah 1-7, Romans

Session Four:  Poverty – What do we do with the least, the last, and the lost?  How do we help without becoming suckers and enablers?   Do we make victims into criminals?
            Read:  The Book of Luke, Acts 10

Session Five:  Acts of the Holy Spirit – Where is new life for us and for the church?
Read: Acts 15-28, Ephesians 1-4,  1 Corinthians 12-13 and Romans 12, James 3-5

Respect for God is the Beginning of Wisdom - Psalm 111 & 112


What a world we now live in.  At age 90 my parents have and are using their iPad.  It helps that my sister has some remote access.  With their granddaughter, our niece headed to a far away county this offers a way to stay in touch.  Information shared around the world is phenomenal.  You can learn just about anything on the internet.  Never in the history of the world, have we known so much.  Yet, wisdom, in many cases, may be at its lowest point. 

Jim Koelliker sent me a photo and caption this week.  It shows a two year old with his hair all messed up and his eyes closed and talking on the phone.  The little child is saying….”No, grandma, double click on the Chrome icon.”  Jim titled the photo as Tech Support.  Brandy Webb and my son give me weekly guidance on how to use my computer.   Thank God!

One of the things that the church offers the world is a godly wisdom and goodness.  That is our hope.  If we can do that—and I think we do—it is because God is here and blesses us.  Wisdom based in faith, is a knowing guided by biblical values.  It draws on the best from the past to guide us into God’s future.  It is driven by the belief that we can know what God wants from us, from our church, from the world.  For example, God wants kindness and justice.

In this world of information, we need wisdom and the world really needs wisdom.  The Church offers wisdom and love to a world need them greatly.   God has shaped this church into an inter-generational family where God dwells in goodness.  God blesses us over and over and over with goodness and wisdom.  We then we offer this to the world.  I invite us today to celebrate this gift.

 I can remember a few years ago when Clint Easterday was one who loved skateboarding.  And I remember how skateboard parks were created to give a place for riders to be instead of on the sidewalks.  Now there is a conflict arising between skateboarders and younger boys riding kick scooters.  As in California, police are being called in to remove the scooter people because the law says it is for skaters.   Do unto others…has been thrown out.  What about sharing and taking turns.  See how the world needs wisdom.

Here are four things that God has created here and today’s scripture reflects all of these.
            EVERYONE NEEDS GUIDANCE
            EVERYONE NEEDS THOUGHTFUL SELF-CRITICISM
            PRAYER IS A GREAT RESOURCE
            GOD OFFERS TRUTH BEYOND WHAT WE COULD ARRIVE AT ALONE
                        We all have a danger of trying to fit God into our understanding.
                        God is asking us to fit our thinking into God’s will.

A GREAT PSALM TO PRAISE GOD AND A MEMORY HELP BUILT IN

When the youth planned its year programs it laid out the alphabet….what program begins with the letter “A,” then “B.”  And that is how they did the whole year.  This psalm does the same thing….it uses the letters of the Hebrew alphabet and has been created for public worship, not so much private prayer.  It tells about the nature of God and what God has done.  If you turn one more Psalm you will find that Psalm 112 is the pattern but is about a faithful person who responds to the glories of God like in Psalm 111.

I also wrote the opening prayer with the help of the Tuesday a.m. Bible Study, they did the same with A,B,C…all the way through the English alphabet.

INVITE PEOPLE TO USE IT AS A PUZZLE…CIRCLING THE LETTERS.

There are so many reasons for praise, many ways of praise, countless places of praise. 

IN GOD’S CREATION

I hope you had a chance this summer to see some new place in God’s creation.  I will never forget my first look into the Grand Canyon…there were no words possible to express my thoughts and feelings and experience.  One person wrote about the Grand Canyon: ”I felt God had set it there to prompt our awe and wonder.  Just to see what God has created makes my heart rejoice.”
At the rim of the canyon there is now a giant glass bottom walkway that thrills visitors.  Penny is certain that she could not praise God out on that Skywalk, 4,000 feet above the river.   

Penny and continually drawn to the ocean…just to be there walking along the shore brings us a closeness.  And the Oregon Coast is one of the most beautiful places we have visited.

And if you cannot travel visit the Sunset Zoo and the Flint Hills Discovery Center.

TRAVELING TO NEW PLACES AND MEETING NEW PEOPLE

On the second Thursday of October, you are invited to come hear Mary Ann and Forrest Buhler tell about the recent trip they made with the Manhattan Masterworks Chorale.  They visited Italy and The Czech Republic.  The group got to sing in St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome.

PRAISING GOD IN THE MIDST OF WORSHIP

Praising God alone is good but it is even better when it is shared in worship.  Our Open Door Sunday School class is studying the Psalms.   It is so good to offer praise to God with others.  Praising God in the middle of a congregation of people who share the same beliefs is a long-tested way of getting closer to God.  And some days I need help praising God. 

I PRAISE GOD MOST FOR WHAT I SEE HAPPENING IN PEOPLE’S LIVES

Even more than all the most beautiful places on the planet, it is even more the work of God in the lives of people that makes me rejoice.  We praise God because divine goodness lasts forever.  “Righteous” in this psalm is a feminine form meaning the power of love to re-create lives.  This happens here at College Avenue. 

THE FEAR OF THE LORD IS THE BEGINNING OF WISDOM

Over and over the word fear takes away from the meaning the Biblical writers intended.  One man I know, explained it this way.  “I feared my dad because of the things he did to us kids.  It has been my greatest hopes that my son never has that feeling around me.”

The fear referred to in this Psalm is not that definition of fear.  Fear here means respect, awe, reverence.  I think the only fear we might have is the fear we would disappoint God. 

I hope you have given up the idea of being a “sinner in the hands of an angry, vengeful God…imagining a vengeful God eager to send people to hell. 

This Psalm presents a loving God providing food, creating community, giving guidance and laws to hold our lives on track.  All of this comes from God’s goodness.

God’s goodness means a whole new way of life for people.  God keeps promises to be just and forgiving.  They reveal God’s plan for a whole new way of life for his people.  We can see lives changed from self-centeredness to lives of self-sacrifice  and compassion.  This Psalm is about what God is doing to show us the heart of God.   

THE GIFT OF THE HOLY SPIRIT BRINGS WISDOM

Wisdom is more than intelligence.  Wisdom is the careful and prayerful use of knowledge to live the purposes of God.   It is to accept the guidance given us by God with grace and gratitude, and then to practice it, not just talk about it.   Biblical wisdom is a practical thing. 

It means understanding how to live, that is, find out what God wants from us and doing just that.  It means making this work here and now the real world in which God’s love and compassion are at work.  It means learning how to be a artisan of faithful living as guided by the Holy Spirit.

One of the most precious resource we have is water.  The terrible drought we are in reminds us how dependent everything is on water.  In the scriptures water is a symbol used for the Holy Spirit…living water.

God provides the Holy Spirit, the source of spiritual blessing.  The church is at best a container for the Holy Spirit.  The water represents the spirit.  It is possible for a person to receive the Holy Spirit without a glass, or without the church.  But in my experience it has been the Church that helps me keep in touch with the Spirit.  Without a glass it is much harder to drink the water.  

Worst of all the institution can believe that it is alone has access to the water.  That is when things go sour.  Those institutions either have lost the water they think they have or the water in them has turned bad. 

Every religion has great teachings.  Every religion has strayed from those great teachings.  9/11 shattered our feeling of safety and revealed big gaps in our interfaith awareness.  USA realized that it knew little of Islam and the media demonized Muslims and made them into terrorists.

The teachings of Jesus that emphasize unconditional love point to a Oneness that is the exact opposite of exclusivity.  As a Jewish Rabbi, Jesus’s sense of oneness was central to his teachings.  Without conditions, love has no boundaries, no reason to fence itself off, no need to feel superior, and not need to draw community barriers. 

I think it is a false sense of superiority that both individuals and groups have is created by the conditions of love.  When we say, “We are better than they are,”  we are saying that we love ourselves more than we love others, because we believe we are more worthy of love.  From our spiritual point of view, we are all God’s children.  We share an equal sense of worth, a worth with enormous positive value.  Unconditional love erases those boundaries by affirming that there is no need to define our values as superior.  Thank God for this place of wisdom.

Prayer

Thank you, God for the privilege of praising you here.  May your Holy Spirit renew us with worship and learning.   Keep us in awe and reverence toward you.  That will carry us a long ways toward wisdom.  May we praise you with singing and prayers and play together.  Amen.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Where People Get Fed - John 6:35, 41-51


My wife, Penny and I laughed.  CBS news helped us make a decision.  We were wondering what we might do to celebrate our next anniversary.  We are not fans of gambling but we learned of a new restaurant chain opening in Las Vegas.  Just listen: the new Denny’s is 6,400 square feet with a wedding chapel in the middle.  You get dressed up with Las Vegas outfits…circus people, night club show people, western apparel.  I am trying to imagine what Penny might choose.  Photographers take your pictures, print them and put them on Facebook.  And the wedding cake is made out of pancakes and there is also a bar.  You can go to the bar, to the wedding, to the bar, to the photos, and back to the bar.  It is a Denny’s.  All I can say is, “NO THANKS.”

THE WORLD NEEDS PLACES TO GET FED

If you will remember the people who got fed with the other 5,000 first sat down with each other.  That meant meeting people you did not know.  It meant talking and getting acquainted and connected. 

There were some people who just wanted the food…that’s it.   Jesus knew there would be people who just were interested in food and nothing else.  But the feeding of the 5,000 was less important than what he hoped they would learn: that he was and is the bread of heaven.  He wanted people to know that he was one way that people could feed on God in the hearts by faith.  There is always enough spiritual food.

Yesterday, was the funeral of Andy McIntosh and following the graveside service family and friends came back to the church for the funeral meal.  Betty Beach, Nova Brooks, and Erma Johnson were in the kitchen doing their part.  I cannot tell you how much the family appreciated it.  With the church’s assistance and donated food, the family can look at photos, tell stories, laugh and cry, and heal.  Otherwise some family member would have to work on that rather than be a part of the healing.

One man was there who told me that would never think of being in a church.  He is not a church person.  But he told me that the worship was very good…he like the bagpipes, the funny Norwegian song was a hoot, and the singer did a great job.  He enjoyed the organ music and he did think he would and he even liked the sermon and the meal was the awesome.  He described the experience as very good, nothing he would ever associate with a church.

I thank God every day that our church has a cohesive, congregational identity with a strong sense of belonging.  In many places in our country the church is declining in a big way.  Yet, three faith families are increasing more than all the rest: the Mormons and Muslims and Non-denominational Christians.  7 out of 10 Americans believe in a personal God, but only ½ of all Americans affiliate with any faith community.  It is my belief that we need lots of different faith families each having some different and unique niche in the millions who do not come.  Each church or mosque or temple or congregation can be a holy place for the kingdom of God.  I doubt if God is too concerned about labels, but God is very concerned about people having faith families. 

People need places for bread…Panera is good…but Jesus is better.  Starbucks is popular and Radina’s.  Bars are good for getting together.  But churches can be so much better.   The world is starving for spiritual nourishment, nurture, and support.  People are dying for spiritual bread…they are so hungry…now they are killing for lack of bread.

SPIRITUAL BREAD IS GIVEN TO THOSE WHO PRAY AND STUDY THE BIBLE

The film, “The Bridge on the River Kwai,” was a fictional movie yet it told the story of a river in Thailand, where a railroad was built in 1942-3.  Along its banks, 13,000 POW’s died of disease, starvation, and brutality.  Their captors forced them to build a railroad.  The heat got up to 120 degrees and husky men became walking skeletons in weeks.  Morale was terrible; something had to be done.  Two prisoners organized Bible Study and prayer groups.  Ernest Gordon, a prisoner at that time, wrote of his experiences in building the railroad. 

I quote:  “We changed.  We stopped thinking about ourselves as angry victims of the some cruel joke and began to grasp a truth that suffering comes from human hunger and stupidity, not from God.” 

“Nowhere was the change in us more manifest than in our prayers.  We learned to pray for others more than for ourselves.  When we did pray for ourselves it grew less about getting something and more to release the power within us. 

Gradually we learned to pray the hardest of all prayers: for our enemies.  During the final months of our imprisonment, something happened that convinced us that God was at work.  A trainload of enemy soldiers pulled in from the battles.  They were casualties from the fighting in Burma.  They were in pitiful condition, starving, and wounded.

My men’s action was as instinctive as it was compassionate.  With no order from me, they moved over to clean the wounds, give them our rations of rice, share them our meager resources.  To our men these were no longer enemies, but fellow sufferers.” 


SPIRITUAL BREAD IS GIVEN TO THOSE WHO RECEIVE COMMUNION

Years after the Last Supper, Paul wrote:
THE LORD JESUS ON THE NIGHT IN WHICH HE WAS BETRAYED
TOOK BREAD
AND AFTER HE HAD GIVEN THANKS
BROKE IT AND SAID,
“THIS IS MY BODY, WHICH IS FOR YOU.
DO THIS IN REMEMBRANCE OF ME.”

IN THE SAME WAY AFTER SUPPER, HE TOOK THE CUP SAYING,
“THIS CUP IS THE NEW COVENANT IN MY BLOOD.   DO THIS WHEN, WHENEVER YOU DRINK IT, IN REMEMBRANCE OF ME.”

“EVERY TIME, THEN YOU EAT THIS BREAD AND DRINK THIS CUP, YOU PROCLAIM THE DEATH OF THE LORD UNTIL HE COMES.”

SPIRITUAL BREAD IS GIVEN TO THOSE WHO REFUSE TO SAY IN THE PAST, THOSE WHO CLAIM GOD’S NOT YET

I come here to worship because I am hungry for Jesus.  I have had too much of killing in Colorado, and now in Wisconsin.  I am saddened that a Muslim Mosque was just burned to the ground in Joplin, Missouri. 

This kind of bread takes my physical hunger away, but I am soon hungry again for food.  What I partake of the Holy Spirit, I am always more spiritually hungry for what Jesus gives.  When I come here I am admitting that I need God.  Jesus has not returned yet, and I have not yet gone to heaven.  When I think of the NOT YET, I then know that Jesus is present.

One temptation of the church is to celebrate only the presence of God and not the absence.  I cannot always make people happy telling you that you are OK and I am OK.  This way everything fills up and there is no empty space left for affirming our lack of fulfillment. 

Therefore, every time I have communion, I experience the Lord’s presence and his absence in the world and in us.  We both feast and we mourn.  We celebrate the joy and the sadness…the fulfillment and the yet to be, satisfaction and the longing. 

The kingdom of God is a process of God feeding us and then we tell people where we have found food.  The kingdom of God is only in a process, it is not yet completed.  The vine is growing we are part of that vine.  Sometimes we get to see and enjoy the fruit and sometimes we do not.  It is yet to come.

Did you notice that the people around Jesus wanted to pen him into the past they knew…”We know his parents!  We know where he lives.”  Instead they could have seen the glory of God unfolding before their eyes.

Luke has Jesus telling us:  BLEST ARE YOU WHO ARE HUNGRY, YOU SHALL BE FILLED.

SPIRITUAL BREAD IS GIVEN TO THOSE WHO GIVE

The Jesus of Luke might well have said the words written on the Statute of Liberty in the New York Harbor:

“GIVE ME YOUR TIRED, YOUR POOR, YOUR HUDDLED MASSES YEARNING TO BREATHE FREE….SEND THESE, THE HOMELESS, THE TEMPEST-TOST TO ME.”
 
In my perception we are about to lose this part of America.

I can remember my grandmother telling me about the Great Depression.  People would walk by and ask if they had some extra food.  Yet grandma would feed them on the porch.  She and grandpa had mom and five boys…7 in the family.  No matter what, even feeding those travelers, there was always enough.  I hope America in this election does not forget this foundation of America.


SPIRITUAL BREAD IS GIVEN TO THOSE WHO LEARN TO MAKE THE BEST OUT OF THE WORST.

Our church has several children in 4-H and Riley County just finished the fair.  Andy  learned leadership, planning and executing projects, and how conducting meetings.  In 4-H there are countless opportunities to make your contribution to the good of the club.  And that he learned well.

The family shared a short of one of Andy’s 4-H projects.  He enjoyed 10 years of this leadership-building club.  For the fair he made a map of the United States with thousands of match sticks.  It was an awesome map, but trouble came when the matchsticks caught fire.  After the fire dept. visited the house, he was faced with the problem of what to do with a charred map.  He creativity kicked in and his did a project on preventing forest fires. 

Then to think he worked for Apple and had that last name.  What fun.  He once has the enjoyment of standing near Steve Jobs and having him laugh and laugh.  Then he was the one to put together a memorial service for Steve in the Boulder/Denver Area.

Steve Jobs:

Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work.  And the only way to do great work is to love what you do. 

Jesus added: DO NOT WORK FOR THE BREAD THE SPOILS; INSTEAD, WORK FOR THE FOOD THAT LASTS FOR ETERNAL LIFE.  THIS IS FOOD WHICH THE SON OF MAN WILL GIVE YOU BECAUSE GOD THE FATHER HAS PUT IS MARK OF APPROVAL ON HIM.

THIS IS WHAT MY FATHER WANTS: THAT ANYONE WHO SEES THE SON AND TRUSTS WHO HE IS AND WHAT HE DOES AND THEN ALIGNS HIMSELF WITH HIM WILL ENTER REAL LIFE, ETERNAL LIFE.

EAT THIS BREAD AND YOU WILL LIVE FOREVER AND LIVE HERE AND NOW. 

The Bread of Heaven came down to feed us and to give life to the world.  Jesus was willing to give us everything, all of life, in order for us to have life.

Monday, August 6, 2012

Welcome!

Welcome to Rev. Larry Fry's Bible Study Blog.  Using this medium we can keep the conversation going beyond the church walls.  Each week I will update this blog and encourage discussion between myself and followers.  

Starting August 29, 2012 Rev. Larry Fry will lead a Bible Study each Wednesday evening starting at 6:00pm at College Avenue United Methodist Church.  If you are unable to attend this Bible Study or just want to carry on the discussion please use this blog as a way to participate.  

Thank you!