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All that space

If you haven’t heard of Family Promise , a national organization that supports families with children who are experiencing homelessness, I think you’d be inspired by their work. This morning I read a story from Family Promise of Irving about a family who had just “graduated” from the program. That means moving from housing insecurity into stable living. It immediately took me back to 2010, when the congregation we served there was part of a core group of thirteen churches partnering with Family Promise. The organization does many things to support families, but one of the most powerful pieces is how they work with churches in a creative, practical way. So many congregations have space that sits unused most of the week (sound familiar?). Host churches open their buildings to vetted families for a week at a time, offering a safe place to sleep. Other churches serve as “buddy churches,” providing meals, supplies, and volunteers to support those weeks of hosting. I remember that in our c...
Recent posts

Pushing back chaos

  Psalm 74:12-17 Listen to today's devotional Many of us grow up hearing the creation story as a simple fact. God made the world. End of discussion. As a result, Genesis 1 becomes something we accept rather than something we wrestle with. Reading the Bible, then, becomes like reading the fine print of a rulebook. But Scripture invites us into something deeper than memorization. It invites us into wonder, struggle, and hope. Biblical scholar Jon Levenson reminds us that creation is not only about God speaking the world into existence, but about God continually bringing order out of chaos. In Genesis, God doesn’t create in a peaceful vacuum. God speaks into darkness, confusion, and formlessness. When God does, life begins to take shape. In that sense, creation is not just a moment in the past; it is God’s ongoing work in a broken world. When you memorize Bible verses, do so as a way to give your soul language to recognize the chaos we still face. In our world, there is suffering...

Soup's on

 I've been at Kelsey for more than ten years.  In all that time, I've never made a soup for the youth's Souper Bowl. I think I've thought about it several times, but never made it happen. Well, this year will be the same. I just wanted to remind you that if you're going to bring a soup, it better be homemade ;) Stay blessed...john

Saturday's texts

I am trying something new. Not anything innovate or ground breaking, but a shift from what I've done for a while now. I've been sending daily text messages to people for about twelve years. Monday through Friday the message centers around some aspect of faith. It's meant to be an encouragement. On Saturday, I send a psalm reading. I joke that I don't send a message on Sunday because you should go to church to hear one. This week, instead of sending a psalm reading for the weekend, I'm going to choose a reading from Proverbs. We'll see if there's any feedback from that. At our church, we recite a psalm pretty much every week. So, go to church for the message and psalm 😆  Stay blessed...john

A formed life

  Psalm 112:1-9 Listen to today's devotional Passages like Psalm 112 confuse me. Not because they're hard to understand, but because they seem to describe a reality that doesn’t always match what we experience. For example, the psalm says those who fear the Lord will have “wealth and riches,” that “it is well” with them, that they will never be shaken or afraid. And yet, I’ve known faithful people who never had much money and other believers who experienced seasons that were anything but well. So, maybe the issue isn’t the psalm but how we’re reading it. Perhaps we need to rethink what “wealth,” “riches,” blessing, and stability mean. Our definitions might be shaped more by culture than by Scripture. It's also possible the psalmist had something deeper in mind than comfort or financial success. But what if Psalm 112 isn’t making guarantees about outcomes at all? Like much of wisdom literature, it’s not a contract God signs with us. It’s a picture of a path God invites us to...

The ChatGPT me

I got on the social media trend this week and asked ChatGPT to create an image of me based on everything it knew about me. My Eagles affiliation didn't come through! Maybe ChatGPT roots for another NFC East team? Now, I've written hundreds of sermons, over 1,500 daily devotionals, and thousands more text messages. If I had created my own picture, I don't know I would have made justice an important part of it. In this picture, it appears twice. There's the "Justice and Jesus" nameplate that might become a new t-shirt and the scales of justice in the background. That got me wondering about what we pay attention to in other people. How do we view others and how much is what we see different from what they see?  And vice versa.  And then an old high school friend gave me the idea to make these. Stay blessed...john

The kids

  Psalm 37:7-17 Listen to today's devotional Somehow we keep allowing injustice to be called “politics.” I wonder if that's so we don’t have to call it sin. But sin doesn’t hide behind political jargon or even ballot boxes. Our overly personalized view of sin numbs us to the reality of how it impacts real lives. Epstein files. Broken and biased systems. Greed at the top. Children left behind. God help us not forget that when we shrug and say, “That’s just politics,” someone else is paying the price. A cartoon brought tears to my eyes this week. The cartoon has a group of children holding signs that say, “Pleez Stop herting us!” and “Violence against children not nice.” The children have bandages over their heads, arms and legs. One child doesn't have legs. There looks to be an explosion behind them and a group of adults beside them. The adults have this to say: "Poor kids just don't understand politics." How we would like to think that is only a cartoon. Our c...