Tuesday, October 17, 2017

The United Methodist Church of the Resurrection in Leawood, Kansas, United States Weekly Devotions: Grow Pray Study Guide - "An ordinary rock became a sacred pillar" for Wednesday, 18 October 2017

The United Methodist Church of the Resurrection in Leawood, Kansas, United States Weekly Devotions: Grow Pray Study Guide - "An ordinary rock became a sacred pillar" for Wednesday, 18 October 2017
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Questions in this GPS marked with Ø are particularly recommended for group discussion. Group leaders may add other discussion questions, or substitute other questions for the marked ones, at their discretion.
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"An ordinary rock became a sacred pillar"
Wednesday, 18 October 2017
Genesis 28:10 Ya‘akov went out from Be’er-Sheva and traveled toward Haran. 11 He came to a certain place and stayed the night there, because the sun had set. He took a stone from the place, put it under his head and lay down there to sleep. 12 He dreamt that there before him was a ladder resting on the ground with its top reaching to heaven, and the angels of Adonai were going up and down on it. 13 Then suddenly Adonai was standing there next to him; and he said, “I am Adonai, the God of Avraham your [grand]father and the God of Yitz’chak. The land on which you are lying I will give to you and to your descendants. 14 Your descendants will be as numerous as the grains of dust on the earth. You will expand to the west and to the east, to the north and to the south. By you and your descendants all the families of the earth will be blessed. 15 Look, I am with you. I will guard you wherever you go, and I will bring you back into this land, because I won’t leave you until I have done what I have promised you.”
16 Ya‘akov awoke from his sleep and said, “Truly, Adonai is in this place — and I didn’t know it!” 17 Then he became afraid and said, “This place is fearsome! This has to be the house of God! This is the gate of heaven!” 18 Ya‘akov got up early in the morning, took the stone he had put under his head, set it up as a standing-stone, poured olive oil on its top
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Fleeing his angry twin Esau (cf. Genesis 27:41), Jacob had showed no vision much greater than his own survival. He stopped at what the text simply called “a certain place” to sleep. Alone in the wild, with only a stone for a pillow, he had a dream in which God promised him heirs who would bless the whole earth. That dream gave him a life-changing, awed sense of God’s presence. When he awoke, he worshipped, and named the place Beth El (Hebrew “God’s house”).
Ø Can you recall a time when you especially felt the need for reassurance of God’s presence? What was going on in your life? In what way(s), big or small, did you find a renewed sense of God’s presence? How might the practices on the daily reflection prayer card given out in worship make God’s presence real to you? Which of them do you already follow to help you remember to seek God, and respond to God’s presence?
• Jacob’s world didn’t have structures like our church sanctuaries, which we often refer to as “God’s house.” What are some ways you might deepen your experience of God when you come to God’s house? What about the other days of the week? Identify one step you will take to draw closer to God through the act of worship, corporately with others and by yourself on days that do not have corporate worship.
Prayer: Lord God, that “Jacob’s ladder” we still sing about is always there, connecting earth and heaven. Open my eyes to remember that even on my most “wilderness” days, you are with me, waiting to hear from me. Amen.
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Kari Burgess
Kari is a part of Resurrection's ShareChurch team. She is involved with the marketing, guest registration, and volunteer coordination for the conferences we host, and she considers it a joy to serve, using her gifts to help renew God's church. She enjoys running and hiking and loves being a cheerleader for her girls at all of their sporting, music and school events.

Can I be honest? I struggle with feeling God’s presence. Everywhere I turn the last couple of weeks is pointing me toward stopping and noticing God’s presence with me, and for some reason I am resisting. Between Pastor Scott’s sermons about finding God in the “ordinary” of our every day, a Staff Chapel message focused on the importance of taking sabbath time with God, a Bible study led by Pastor Wendy where we are learning a model of prayer based on interactive gratitude, journaling and listening for God’s response, it is very clear to me that God is telling me something. Then I read today’s scripture from Genesis when Jacob wakes up from his dream and says, “The Lord is definitely in this place, but I didn’t know it.” God is telling me he misses me and wants me to SLOW DOWN and talk with Him and interact with him.
So why do I struggle with this? I feel like a broken record. In my last Insights, I mentioned how busy our life is right now, even explaining how our Google calendar is full of our kids’ activities, color coded by person, with carpool notes. And I find myself frequently answering the “How are you?” question from co-workers, friends and acquaintances with “Good! But busy.” And telling people about how we drive our kids around everywhere. Who wants to hear about that? Aren’t we all busy? We’ve CHOSEN this life willingly, and I am incredibly grateful for it. Our daughters are involved in great activities and while they feel exhausted at times too, they love everything they are doing.
I use the excuse of being too busy to allow time to connect with God. Bad excuse, I know. I understand how important it is to take time every day to simply BE with God. I’ve been shown some simple ways to help connect: the 5 C’s of daily reflection from this weekend’s message, imagining myself in my happy place (the mountains) and taking time to reflect, interactive gratitude journaling. These are all great suggestions. But if I’m honest, REALLY honest, I find it difficult to calm my brain and to slow down enough to do these things. Often, when I do slow down, I choose to tune out to my Facebook feed or the word game on my phone. And then when I turn to focus on prayer? I fall asleep.
Here is where I’m missing the mark. Our relationship with God isn’t always going to be a mountaintop experience. I heard Pastor Scott talk about this, nodded my head and thought: “Right. God is always with me. I don’t have to go on a hike to be in relationship with Him.” What I think I missed though, was the message that even in and through life's busyness, God is with me. I don’t have to hear his audible voice or experience those “Holy Spirit” goosebumps or have an extraordinary feeling of shalom wash over me to know He is with me. I simply need to say “Hello!” and invite Him to join me in my ordinary, everyday life.
Here is what I am going to try--if you’re struggling in this area I invite you to try it along with me: When I’m driving to pick up my daughter from play rehearsal, I am going to talk to God about her – tell him about the show and pray for her, for her friends in the cast and the director. After dropping off my other daughter at Rezlife youth group, I am going to tell God about how Rezlife is shaping her, and thank him for the leaders and for His part in stirring in her heart the desire to be a part of this group. On my way to work, I’ll tell God about what I set out to do today, ask him to guide my day and thank him for my co-workers and ask for his blessings over their lives. It seems l spend a lot of time in my car going from place to place. God can absolutely sit in the passenger seat and we can talk along the way. He already does this! It’s up to me to notice he is there and engage him.
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"Elijah found God in the quiet"
Thursday, 19 October 2017
1 Kings 19:9 There he went into a cave and spent the night. Then the word of Adonai came to him; he said to him, “What are you doing here, Eliyahu?” 10 He answered, “I have been very zealous for Adonai the God of armies, because the people of Isra’el have abandoned your covenant, broken down your altars and killed your prophets with the sword. Now I’m the only one left, and they’re coming after me to kill me too.” 11 He said, “Go outside, and stand on the mountain before Adonai”; and right then and there, Adonai went past. A mighty blast of wind tore the mountains apart and broke the rocks in pieces before Adonai, but Adonai was not in the wind. After the wind came an earthquake, but Adonai was not in the earthquake. 12 After the earthquake, fire broke out; but Adonai was not in the fire. And after the fire came a quiet, subdued voice. 13 When Eliyahu heard it, he covered his face with his cloak, stepped out and stood at the entrance to the cave. Then a voice came to him and said, “What are you doing here, Eliyahu?”
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God gave Elijah a great public victory (cf. 1 Kings 18:1-39). But Queen Jezebel was still in power. Angry about her “god” Baal’s defeat, she threatened to kill Elijah. Her defiance of him and God was too much for the “successful” prophet, the bold man of action. Tired, depressed and afraid, he ran. God cared gently for Elijah’s physical and mental fatigue. Then God spoke again to Elijah in his wilderness experience—perhaps in the way Elijah least expected.
Ø Archeologists have found Canaanite figurines showing Baal with fists full of thunderbolts. God had sent fire on Mt. Carmel, but not here. Scholar John Bimson said, “‘A gentle whisper’ and ‘a still small voice’ (RSV) do not do full justice to the enigmatic Hebrew, which may be better rendered ‘a brief sound of silence.’…it implies God was at last passing in the silence after the storm.” * When have you sensed God, not in sound and spectacle, but in small, quiet ways?
• Elijah didn’t just wander aimlessly in the wilderness. He went to Mount Horeb, also known as Mount Sinai—the very place where God made a covenant with the people of Israel in Moses’ day (cf. Deuteronomy 5:2). Are there sacred places that form the “fixed points” in your life’s journey with God? Do you ever return to any of them in times when difficulty or pain make you hungry for God’s presence?
Prayer: Lord God, this is a very noisy world. Guide me to the outer and inner places of silence that I sometimes need in order to hear your quiet, sustaining voice. Amen.
* John Bimson, comment on 1 Kings 19:12 in The New Bible Commentary, 21st Century Edition. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1994.
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“Examine yourselves…test yourselves”
Friday, 20 October 2017
2 Corinthians 13:3 since you are looking for proof of the Messiah speaking in me. He is not weak in dealing with you, but he is powerful among you. 4 For although he was executed on a stake in weakness, now he lives by God’s power. And we too are weak in union with him, but in dealing with you we will live with him by God’s power.
5 Examine yourselves to see whether you are living the life of trust. Test yourselves. Don’t you realize that Yeshua the Messiah is in you? — unless you fail to pass the test.
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The apostle Paul learned, with sadness, that some Corinthian Christians, people he had personally brought to faith in Jesus, now thought badly of him and his message. A group of “super apostles” had turned their hearts and their faith in a different direction (cf. 2 Corinthians 11:4-6). Verse 3 in today’s passage showed their desire to “test” Paul. But he asked them to take a hard look at themselves, to make sure their motives and attitudes were in tune with Christ’s.
• Scholar N. T. Wright suggested some self-test questions that may supplement those you received in church. “When you look at yourself in the mirror, do you see someone in whom King Jesus is living and active, or someone who once knew him but now seems not to? When you listen to the sort of things you yourself say, does it sound like words that might have come from King Jesus himself, or are you simply talking the same way everyone else does?” *
• Wright went on, “And when you settle down and quieten your mind and heart, to pray and wait for God, do you know and sense the presence, the life and the love of King Jesus close to you, within you, warming and sustaining, guarding and guiding, checking and directing you? These are searching tests, but they are the kind of thing Paul has in mind.” *
Prayer: King Jesus, it’s rather scary to search my life and heart. Give me the courage to test myself, to find the good you’ve already grown in my life, and to discover what is still missing that you wish to give me. Amen.
* N. T. Wright, Paul for Everyone: 2 Corinthians. Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2004, page 144.
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“Each person should test their own work”
Saturday, 21 October 2017
Galatians 6:1 Brothers, suppose someone is caught doing something wrong. You who have the Spirit should set him right, but in a spirit of humility, keeping an eye on yourselves so that you won’t be tempted too. 2 Bear one another’s burdens — in this way you will be fulfilling the Torah’s true meaning, which the Messiah upholds. 3 For if anyone thinks he is something when he is really nothing, he is fooling himself. 4 So let each of you scrutinize his own actions. Then if you do find something to boast about, at least the boasting will be based on what you have actually done and not merely on a judgment that you are better than someone else; 5 for each person will carry his own load.
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The apostle Paul pictured lots of interdependence and interaction when he described the living Christian community to the Christians in Galatia. But even as he called them (and us) to support, and even correct, one another, one of the most common ways of reacting to others was specifically ruled out: “not compare themselves with others,” said verse 4. As we grow in the discipline of examining ourselves each day, one unhelpful answer is, “Well, I’m better than ____________________.”
Ø What inner factors tempt you to compare yourself with others? How does God’s love and grace empower you to gradually erode the negative, competitive, comparative patterns taught by a culture whose values are not the same as God’s? What steps can you take toward living into the freedom to which God invites you, basking in the light of God’s favor and approval without fearing what others will think or how your path will “stack up” against someone else’s? 
Prayer: Lord Jesus, teach me how to be happy with doing a good job without worrying about how my life and work compare with someone else’s. Remind me that you, and only you, are the master and Lord I ultimately aim to please. Amen.
Family Activity: This simple activity may help even smaller children begin forming the habit of examining their way of life. Read Matthew 7:12(Matthew 7:“Always treat others as you would like them to treat you; that sums up the teaching of the Torah and the Prophets.), the Golden Rule. Give each person in your family an index card. Have each person write, “I did or said something kind” on one side of the card. On the other side write, “I did or said something hurtful.” Ask each person to pay attention to their words and actions each day. Encourage them to place a mark on the appropriate side of the card each time they do something kind or hurtful. No one else needs to see the cards. These are for each individual and God. Each day, work towards having fewer marks on the “hurtful” side and more marks on the “kind” side. Pray for God’s help to treat others kindly.
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Prayer Requests – cor.org/prayer Prayers for Peace & Comfort for:
• Larry and Sharon Forbach and family on the death of their son Rick Heinitz, 10/10
• Janine McPhee and family on the death of her sister Judy Jackson, 10/10
• Christine Polo and family on the death of her husband Joe Polo, 10/6
• Loryn and Sydney Polo on the death of their father Joe Polo, 10/6
•Patsy Shipley and family on the death of her mother Mary Stockard, 10/5
• Christal Heier and family on the death of her grandmother Mary Stockard, 10/5
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The United Methodist Church of the Resurrection
13720 Roe Avenue
Leawood, Kansas 66224, United States
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