Mission Moment 12.4.24

Co’Relous Bryant 
Senior Pastor, United Church of Lincoln, Vt.

When the logic of this world fails to offer a cogent explanation of what the heck is going on. I turn to divine interrogatories for relief. I have developed a bold posture of asking God to provide answers for the growing incongruence of how things are and how they ought to be. I do this under the guise of seeking wisdom, but between you and me, it’s my chance to cross-examine the One who has the whole world in His hands. This unabashed, childlike “but why?” approach is saving my spiritual life right now. Because whether in God’s wisdom or humor—God, on occasion, responds. 

As a young boy, my mother warned me not to question God. At that age, I would be complaining about not being able to go out and play because of the clockwork summer afternoon thunderstorm in northeast Florida. Every afternoon in the summer, between 4 and 4:30 p.m., the skies would darken and open and suspend every child’s daily recreation dreams. I would suck my teeth and stomp my feet and ask, “Why does God have to make it rain right now? Why, God, why?” My southern mother would snap back almost reflexively, “Child, don’t you question God.” Since childhood, I have carried a real complex about questioning the Creator.

Imagine my surprise and delight when years later in seminary I come across Genesis 32. Jacob wrestling with God. Wrestling!? I was so hung up on making God an interlocutor and here was this patriarch of our faith in a literal tussle with the Almighty. And if you read the passage carefully, you see that Jacob not only wrestles, but then he demands a blessing, and then he, wait for it, asks a question about God’s name. The audacity to inquire! The nerve! So now friends—I keep a running tally of holy questions. 

But I have also discovered that my mama was right—as always. She was right to tell me to be careful about questioning and demanding things from the Ancient of Days. More often than not, when I pose a question to God in the mirror, the answer to that question is staring me back in the face. Remember, friends, many biblical scholars believe that Jacob was actually just wrestling with himself. So be careful. It’s okay to question, wrestle even, but God’s solution might just be you. 

Wondering where God may be in the midst of serious poverty? God may be wondering where you are. Wondering where God may be in the treatment of our neighbors and refugees? God may be wondering where you are. Wondering where God may be in the everchanging brokenness of our world? God may be wondering….

So, friends: question, interrogate, cross-examine—wrestle. But when God has a question for you, be just as faithful in the answering as you are in the questioning. 

Pray, Practice, Ponder
Reflect on a time when you have wrestled with God. How did this change your faith and your life? Consider this: Are you prepared to be the answer to your own prayer?

Pray. . .Give. . .Go.

Women’s Fall Bible Study

Monday, December 2 at 10:00 a.m.

Women’s Fall Bible Study will continue Monday, December 2 at 10:00 a.m. in the Gathering Place Room.  We will be studying “Jesus In Me” by Anne Graham Lotz.  Books are available in the church office.

*Please note that—in Monday's email—we accidentally stated that this Bible study would resume on December 9. This was in error. December 2 is the correct date. We apologize for the incorrect information.

Giving the Jesus Way

United Christian Ministries requests that we temporarily suspend providing supplies and instead provide monetary donations.  Given the current situation with Hurricane Helene’s suppliers, the needs of clients are changing daily.  A monetary donation will allow them to purchase specifically what is needed at any point in time.  To donate, please drop off a check at 191 Skyland Drive or mail it to PO Box 188, Sylva, NC 28779.  Thank you!

A Way You Can Help

The relief needs are changing daily. The immediate needs at this time are: heaters, basement dehumidifiers, Visa cards, cash, and prayers. We do not need any more clothing or cleaning supplies donated for the time being.

That said, there are so many great ways to help our WNC neighbors in need. May I offer what I heard folks saying they needed to better serve hard hit areas like Mitchell and Yancey Counties? HEAT!!! 

Please consider this as a possible way to honor a family member or loved one for early birthday or Christmas present. 

You can ask that it be shipped to: Helene Recovery Coalition, 2002 Riverside Drive, Asheville, NC 28804 (or you may also leave donations in the Loving Kindness Room at the church). This is the staging warehouse serving WNC counties.  Thank you!

Misson Moment 11.17.24

Mary 
CBF Field Personnel, Southeast Asia

What is saving my life right now? Well, in a word, God. I truly don’t mean to be flippant or dismissive, but it really is the first response that comes to mind every time I try to reflect on this question. Then my mind wanders in more directions than I can track.  How do I encapsulate what it means to have an ongoing awareness of the presence of God in my life moment-to-moment or the myriad ways God keeps me attuned to that presence? Therein lies my challenge. Perhaps it’s because I have a short attention span; but God’s revelatory processes, like God’s mercies, are new every morning.  More accurately, God creates new combinations each day.  

In recent months, I have found myself less distracted by the frustrations of the limits of the people we read about in Scripture and more engaged with the God who honors the struggles of those determined to be in relationship with God. God’s interactions with each of us are unique because our stories are unique; I marvel at God’s love, tenacity and understanding. While I see God in a different light in Scripture, the seeming paradoxes of life and faith rest more comfortably within me. What we sometimes identify as contradictory experiences or emotions are complementary, with God shaping them into something beautifully compelling. Human relationships, spiritual disciplines, nature, art, music, movement, tragedy, laughter, science, literature, conflict—the list is inexhaustible. God uses combinations of all of these in wondrous variety to transform me, to transform us. God is always available and at work to draw us closer. As we offer ourselves to God’s nurture, we are made new.

Pray, Practice, Ponder
Merciful God, thank you for honoring the struggles of your children throughout the ages, and for honoring the struggles in which we find ourselves today. Be with us when we grow weary of our own humanity. Remind us that your mercies are new every morning. Help us to trust that the combinations you create in our lives each day arrive to transform, strengthen and nurture us to become more like you. Amen.

Pray. . .Give. . .Go.