I know I'm supposed to be against fog machines in church. But it's almost Transfiguration Sunday. And what's so bad about experiencing worship? Don't ask what got into me, but I wrote Sunday's sermon on Monday morning. That's the upcoming Sunday on the previous Monday, not the other way around. As I was reading and writing, I kept thinking about the cloud that covered Jesus and his disciples. I've seen pastors use cheap mountain top backdrops. Some bring ladders to worship to talk about mountain-top experiences. And I know the preaching world if full of corny mountain-climbing illustrations. So, what's wrong with a fog machine? I mean, if I was Catholic or Eastern Orthodox, wouldn't I be used to smoke in worship? Stay blessed...john
James 1:2-4 Listen to today's devotional The book of James says something that sounds almost irresponsible at first: “Whenever you face various trials, consider it all joy” Wow! He didn't say after the trial. Not once it all makes sense. But when you’re in the thick of it. I don't imagine most people struggle with faith when things are easy. It's when faith gets tested that things begin to get shaky. It's when there remain unanswered prayers, slow healing, or seasons when things just don't seem to work out at all. James doesn’t deny the pain of those moments. But there is necessary reframing to better understand how we walk through them. What if we think of trials not as interruptions to God’s work? After all, the Lord is not overwhelmed by pressing matters. So, how does seeing our trials as part of the means of God's work change our perspective? James reminds us that testing produces perseverance, and perseverance is shaping something deeper than our comf...