Week 2 of the "Photo-a-Day" challenge created by Rethink Church challenged us to look at these words:
Evil
Defined for many by the events of September 11, 2001, evil was made visible in the events of that day, as well as others before it and since, whenever we have cried "never again". This photo is from TIME Pictures:
Love
While, undoubtedly, the context for speaking of love during Lent is the inexhaustible love of God for us, the picture was what still comes to mind first for me: one from our wedding day in 1993.
Spirit
The Spirit of God is ever in the wind or the whisper. Many images I saw on the day of this word were of cemeteries, recalling the spirits of all the saints who have gone before us. This glass sculpture was in my grandparents' dining room during their lifetimes, and if you squint, you can almost see the branches sway.
Live
Daily, we're reminded to live life fully because it is a gift. With my family, I try to live with laughter and joy.
Cover
Last Sunday's Gospel text (Luke 13:31-35) spoke of the mother hen covering her brood, protecting them from the assault of the world around them. This image is from a chapel above Jerusalem that tradition says is where Jesus proclaimed his lament over the city. (Mt. 23:37)
For the rest of the week's reflections on "Vision" and "Lift", I have to rely on the Pinterest images collected by the folks at Rethink Church. The daily text and blog post give a short introduction to where they've drawn the word from, and sometimes, I read that before I find an image, while other times, I don't read it until later, and it's fun to see where our thoughts diverged.
What are you seeing differently this Lent?
My sermons and reflections. I am a pastor in the ELCA. Posts before June 2014 are reflections on life during my theological education and internship (2008-2013). Posts from June 2014 - January 2022 are my sermons from Ascension Lutheran Church in Shelby, NC. I began serving at Grace Lutheran Church in Hendersonville, NC in February 2022 and began leading and preaching in Spanish in April 2023.
Friday, March 1, 2013
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Opening My Eyes During Lent
For Lent, part of my practice is participating in a "Photo-a-Day" challenge created by Rethink Church, sponsored by the United Methodist Church. Rethink Church posts a blog every day with a longer narrative and Scripture to fully explain the theme, and, with lots of other folks, I take a photo that, for me, reflects the theme for the day. Using the lens of the day's word, I am asking every day, "Where do I see God in my life today?
Here are the ones I posted during the first week:
Who Am I
A child of God, a wife, mother, student.
Return
Does returning to God mean returning to God through the red doors? What are alternatives?
See Injustice
No image for these two days because the days' work got in the way, but the reflection of where I "see injustice" is found in the bus stops on the south end of town, where the jobs are, but the buses don't run on Sundays. Can we open our eyes to see the ways people with less privilege than we have experience life?
Settle
To where have I followed God (Va., Pa., W.Va., NC, MN) and to where is God calling me next?
World
We cannot experience the world through packages; we have to meet living, breathing people.
Wonder
I expressed wonder that "What you see depends largely on where you sit." The axiom is true in life, as well as in art. This photo of a window in Duke Chapel was posted on their Facebook page.
Want to try it? Visit Rethink Church. You can get daily reminders via email, share on Twitter with #rethinkchurch and #40days, post photos on their Facebook wall or on their Pinterest. There are lots of ways to connect, and more importantly, to be in conversation with others who are listening for God in their lives every day, too.
Here are the ones I posted during the first week:
Who Am I
A child of God, a wife, mother, student.
Return
Does returning to God mean returning to God through the red doors? What are alternatives?
See Injustice
No image for these two days because the days' work got in the way, but the reflection of where I "see injustice" is found in the bus stops on the south end of town, where the jobs are, but the buses don't run on Sundays. Can we open our eyes to see the ways people with less privilege than we have experience life?
Settle
To where have I followed God (Va., Pa., W.Va., NC, MN) and to where is God calling me next?
World
We cannot experience the world through packages; we have to meet living, breathing people.
Wonder
I expressed wonder that "What you see depends largely on where you sit." The axiom is true in life, as well as in art. This photo of a window in Duke Chapel was posted on their Facebook page.
Want to try it? Visit Rethink Church. You can get daily reminders via email, share on Twitter with #rethinkchurch and #40days, post photos on their Facebook wall or on their Pinterest. There are lots of ways to connect, and more importantly, to be in conversation with others who are listening for God in their lives every day, too.
Monday, February 11, 2013
Fingerpainting
Someone once said that when I was small I liked to finger-paint with brushes so I wouldn't get messy. Lent - a season of fasting, repentance and prayer - begins on Wednesday, and I'll be content using my fingers to paint crosses onto the foreheads of people who come to my internship congregation for the Imposition of the Ashes.
As we prepare to follow Christ to the cross, people are marking the season and reflecting on its meaning in varied and awe-inspiring ways. Here are some of my favorites. What are you doing?
(1) On her blog, Worshiping with Children, Carolyn Brown offers 3 Reasons to Include Children in Ash Wednesday but what really captured my imagination was this photo from Blue Ridge Presbyterian Church where the table covering was signed with crosses by worshipers of all ages. It's a palpable way for the people of God to participate as the priesthood of all believers, and to demystify the imposition of ashes.
(2) Jan Richardson, who illustrates the lectionary texts in her Painted Prayerbook offered this reflection. For other reflections, blessings, and art for Ash Wednesday, also see Jan's posts The Memory of Ashes, Upon the Ashes (which features the indomitable Sojourner Truth), The Artful Ashes, and Ash Wednesday, Almost.
(3) House for All Sinners and Saints (HFASS) in Denver, founded by Rev. Nadia Bolz-Weber, offers their own take on 40 ways to make this a holy season.
(4) Rethink Church, sponsored by the United Methodist Church, has produced a gameplan for a photo-a-day challenge that asks us to be more attentive to the world around us and to notice where God is in these forty days.
(5) As part of their Vibrant Congregations Project, Luther Seminary professor David J. Lose collaborated with folks and edited Renew 52, a collection of short essays about revitalizing church. Download your free e-book for Kindle, iPad or Nook, or downlaod the .PDF file now.Spending time during Lent reading and thinking about the ideas they share opens my imagination for what is possible for our congregations.
As we prepare to follow Christ to the cross, people are marking the season and reflecting on its meaning in varied and awe-inspiring ways. Here are some of my favorites. What are you doing?
(1) On her blog, Worshiping with Children, Carolyn Brown offers 3 Reasons to Include Children in Ash Wednesday but what really captured my imagination was this photo from Blue Ridge Presbyterian Church where the table covering was signed with crosses by worshipers of all ages. It's a palpable way for the people of God to participate as the priesthood of all believers, and to demystify the imposition of ashes.
(2) Jan Richardson, who illustrates the lectionary texts in her Painted Prayerbook offered this reflection. For other reflections, blessings, and art for Ash Wednesday, also see Jan's posts The Memory of Ashes, Upon the Ashes (which features the indomitable Sojourner Truth), The Artful Ashes, and Ash Wednesday, Almost.
(3) House for All Sinners and Saints (HFASS) in Denver, founded by Rev. Nadia Bolz-Weber, offers their own take on 40 ways to make this a holy season.
(4) Rethink Church, sponsored by the United Methodist Church, has produced a gameplan for a photo-a-day challenge that asks us to be more attentive to the world around us and to notice where God is in these forty days.
(5) As part of their Vibrant Congregations Project, Luther Seminary professor David J. Lose collaborated with folks and edited Renew 52, a collection of short essays about revitalizing church. Download your free e-book for Kindle, iPad or Nook, or downlaod the .PDF file now.Spending time during Lent reading and thinking about the ideas they share opens my imagination for what is possible for our congregations.
Whatever you do, be intentional about this season. Maybe you aren't interested in finding a church on Wednesday, or because of your schedule, you can't get to a church. Don't be surprised if God shows up anyway. Watch for ministers coming to the streets, bringing "Ashes To Go" to commuter rail stations, city street corners, placing an ashen cross on your forehead, and praying, "Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return."
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Alleluia, Voices Raise
Quickly, before we begin a season of fasting, repentance and prayer on Ash Wednesday this week, and bury the Alleluias until Easter morning, let me say, "Alleluia!" for rich and varied voices from the pulpit.
While I wasn't on the regular preaching schedule in January at my internship site, I preached at a chapel service and a funeral before traveling to St. Paul Minnesota for my final 2-week learning intensive on campus at Luther Seminary, and then resumed preaching with another chapel service before the month was finished. The sermon below was my first in St. Mark's since Christmas Eve when I told the story of The Littlest Angel by Charles Tazewell.
February 3, 2013
4th Sunday after the Epiphany (Year C)
Jeremiah 1:4-10Psalm 71:1-6
1 Corinthians 13:1-13
Luke 4:21-30

Listen Now
Having been welcomed so graciously into the pulpit at my home congregation, at the retirement community and again during internship, I am grateful for the opportunities I've been given to proclaim the Gospel in different settings and to different audiences. I'm also delighted when someone else is preaching because I get to hear their voices and interpretations of the text, and hear how they heard God's word for us. Throughout Lent and this 90th anniversary year for St. Mark's we are inviting former pastors and sons and daughters of the congregation to return to St. Mark's to preach - what a joy it will be to hear the Gospel from so many different voices. Recordings from St. Mark's are on the church's website.
While I wasn't on the regular preaching schedule in January at my internship site, I preached at a chapel service and a funeral before traveling to St. Paul Minnesota for my final 2-week learning intensive on campus at Luther Seminary, and then resumed preaching with another chapel service before the month was finished. The sermon below was my first in St. Mark's since Christmas Eve when I told the story of The Littlest Angel by Charles Tazewell.
February 3, 2013
4th Sunday after the Epiphany (Year C)
Jeremiah 1:4-10Psalm 71:1-6
1 Corinthians 13:1-13
Luke 4:21-30

Listen Now
Having been welcomed so graciously into the pulpit at my home congregation, at the retirement community and again during internship, I am grateful for the opportunities I've been given to proclaim the Gospel in different settings and to different audiences. I'm also delighted when someone else is preaching because I get to hear their voices and interpretations of the text, and hear how they heard God's word for us. Throughout Lent and this 90th anniversary year for St. Mark's we are inviting former pastors and sons and daughters of the congregation to return to St. Mark's to preach - what a joy it will be to hear the Gospel from so many different voices. Recordings from St. Mark's are on the church's website.
Saturday, January 19, 2013
What’s your next Good Read?
Newspapers deliver news, and at
least the hard news stories give us the facts that will become the stuff of
history. Magazines tell us something about a subject we want to explore in more
depth. Stories open our imagination to an alternate world. Poetry helps us
engage all our senses. Nonfiction, like biographies and Wikis, teach us who
people were and how things came to be, and what makes them work, answering the
questions of “Who?”, “Why?” and “How?” that lay behind what we see happening in
the world around us. The written word in its many different genres and forms
shapes our understanding of ourselves and the world around us.
But, when we talk about reading
the Bible, suddenly the written Word becomes more intimidating. We imagine that
there is a “right” way, and consequently, a “Wrong” way, to read the Bible
because its text is, after all, the Holy Scripture of Christianity. It stares
at us weightily from our bookshelf, like Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment, Shakespeare’s Collected Works, or Carl
Sandburg’s Abraham Lincoln’s War Years
(which is actually 4 tomes). Challenging and intellectual and unfamiliar. And,
there’s so much of it – 66 books, in fact! Or perhaps, someone has given us
their version and their interpretation does nothing to recommend it to us. But suppose
we do open it, or download and open a Bible app, depending on where is falls
open or which translation we read, the language sounds awkward, repetitive and
formal. And if we stay in the text, we run headlong into stories of deception,
like the king killing the husband of the woman he lusted for, or violence, like
the rape of the king’s daughter. With the number of heartbreaking and
terrorizing stories in our neighborhoods and cities, why would you invite more?
Why read the Bible?
The Bible tells us who God is. If you are curious about a culture
or a language or a people, you go to Fodor’s or Lonely Planet and you read
about it. So engage your curiosity, learn the language of God as it’s expressed
in the Bible, discover the less known God than the one that you may have heard
shouted through a bullhorn, and meet God. God is a creator, an active, vibrant,
attentive God who gets angry, who grieves, and who rejoices. God’s character is
expressed in many names for God that identify particular aspects, or point us
to specific promises that God has made. In the same way that a biography might
give you glimpses into a person, the stories of the Bible reveal God’s
character.
The Bible describes the covenant or relationship that God made and what
promises are part of that. God designs us to be in relationship with each
other and with God’s own self. This relationship is the ground for our
understanding of who we are as community and what it means to be called into
life together. Learning the promises of God helps us know how we can live into
the hope of those promises and how one faithful response to those promises is
to be in relationship with our neighbors and the world around us.
The Bible tells us how ancient Israel - the ancestors of Christian
faith - understood God and what was important to shaping their tradition. Jesus
was born in Israel and practiced Judaism. The stories he was taught and the
instruction or Torah he was given are the foundation for his own teaching and
ministry in the world where he lived. Reading the Bible opens his world to us
and connects us to a story that is thousands of years old.
The Bible shows us what a follower of Jesus looks like. It doesn’t prescribe what Jesus’ followers
look like, and it doesn’t issue a secret handshake, or uniforms or nametags,
but it talks about the people who traveled with Jesus during his ministry and
those who witnessed his teaching and his miracles, his death and his
resurrection. While we don’t always resemble followers of Jesus too closely,
these stories provide us with a plumb line, so we know what true discipleship
looks like.
The Bible is not an archival
document that serves us better by kept under glass or locked away in pristine
condition; neither is it written to sit unopened and gathering dust. It is a
Living Word that invites us into its stories, asks us to listen to the stories
of the arrogant little brother whose siblings trade him in, the man who
wrestles God in the desert, the stories of betrayal and injustice righted. It
invites us to walk alongside the Psalm writer who cries out in pain and
provides us for a place to go when we are worn out, too. It invites us into the
anticipation in the air at Elizabeth’s house when Mary, mother of Jesus, comes
to see her during her pregnancy. It invites us into the courtyard where the
disciple Peter lives out the struggle to tell people about Jesus and filled
with fear and shame, denies him three times. It invites us to see how God uses
unexpected people in unexpected places and in unexpected ways to share the Word
of God’s love and forgiveness with the world.
When we read or listen to the
stories we can begin to recognize God’s activity in each one, and we can begin
to imagine how those stories from thousands of years ago are played out in our
lives, and then, we can begin to see how our lives and stories connect and
intersect with the biblical narrative, the story told through the texts of the
books of the Bible. Like any good story, whether it’s your favorite movie or
t.v. show, every new hearing, or reading, opens your eyes to see new details
and prompts you to ask new questions.
As you read, or listen to it, the
stories become more familiar until you can begin to complete the narrative from
memory and the language seeps into your own vocabulary. And you learn how the
books were written and why some were chosen to be held together in one
collection as the canon; what is factual and what is allegorical; what is
narrative and what is poetry; how a temple would have been constructed and what
a Passover Seder meal may have looked like; you discover who the kings were,
and what role the judges played, and you meet the men and women who were leaders
in the early Christian church. And through all these different genres and
forms, the Bible shapes our understanding of ourselves and the world around us.
So perhaps it doesn’t need to be so unfamiliar or challenging, but instead
inviting.
Pick one up and read!
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Saturday, December 29, 2012
Resolutions - Tasks or Relationships?
Have you begun thinking about New Year Resolutions?
I used to resolve to remember better my family's birthdays, but with my aunt, my grandmother, my father-in-law and my step-father all having birthdays in the first three weeks of the year, I always failed miserably. After all, I'm one of the the people who have trouble remembering to take down the Christmas tree even as its needles lay a fir carpet in our living room. How was I going to remember to do something in January when I was still thinking it was December? I was sunk before I ever began!
So, these days, I don't think too much about making resolutions; after all, most resolutions get broken before January ends - why invite disappointment?
But I admit, I am intrigued by a thesis made by Charles Duhigg in his book The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do in Life and Business. Duhigg's book is the first of several on my reading list for JTerm classes that I'll travel to Luther Seminary for next month. He argues that habits consist of a loop that begin with a cue, a routine and a reward. He suggests that habits can be created by creating new cues or rewards, and changed by inserting different routines into the loop. Eventually, when a habit is formed, the cue triggers a routine and delivers a reward semi-automatically.
What intrigues me though is how his presentation parallels a way of thinking about discipleship that is promoted by Mike Breen of 3DM. Breen acknowledges borrowing this form from the business world thirty years ago, but it is durable. Using the shape of a square,Breen suggests that discipleship involves 4 movements that begin with teaching people in safe spaces where they can watch how things are done (1), and then, they can help (2). Eventually, being coached, they take a leadership role (3), and finally, fully equipped, they lead (4).
Correlating the square and the habit loop helps me understand that short-term bursts of activity are likely less to create or change habits than sustained relationships. I'll have to think about what that means in practice, but maybe it changes the ways I resolve to live differently in 2013.
What about you?
I used to resolve to remember better my family's birthdays, but with my aunt, my grandmother, my father-in-law and my step-father all having birthdays in the first three weeks of the year, I always failed miserably. After all, I'm one of the the people who have trouble remembering to take down the Christmas tree even as its needles lay a fir carpet in our living room. How was I going to remember to do something in January when I was still thinking it was December? I was sunk before I ever began!
So, these days, I don't think too much about making resolutions; after all, most resolutions get broken before January ends - why invite disappointment?
But I admit, I am intrigued by a thesis made by Charles Duhigg in his book The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do in Life and Business. Duhigg's book is the first of several on my reading list for JTerm classes that I'll travel to Luther Seminary for next month. He argues that habits consist of a loop that begin with a cue, a routine and a reward. He suggests that habits can be created by creating new cues or rewards, and changed by inserting different routines into the loop. Eventually, when a habit is formed, the cue triggers a routine and delivers a reward semi-automatically.
What intrigues me though is how his presentation parallels a way of thinking about discipleship that is promoted by Mike Breen of 3DM. Breen acknowledges borrowing this form from the business world thirty years ago, but it is durable. Using the shape of a square,Breen suggests that discipleship involves 4 movements that begin with teaching people in safe spaces where they can watch how things are done (1), and then, they can help (2). Eventually, being coached, they take a leadership role (3), and finally, fully equipped, they lead (4).
Correlating the square and the habit loop helps me understand that short-term bursts of activity are likely less to create or change habits than sustained relationships. I'll have to think about what that means in practice, but maybe it changes the ways I resolve to live differently in 2013.
What about you?
Friday, December 28, 2012
Conspiracy in the Preacher's Corner
Conspiring to hold Jesus at the center of all of our Christmas preparation and expectation, St. Mark's joined neighborhood churches in participating in the Advent Conspiracy [AC] for Advent. Four churches, four preachers, four worship styles but united as one Body of Christ around the table and the Word - pretty extraordinary.
On Sundays at St. Mark's, we returned to the prophets' words and heard the promise of a Messiah. I preached the first and last Sundays of Advent.
December 2, 2012
1st Sunday in Advent (Year C)
Jeremiah 33:14-16
Psalm 25:1-10
1 Thessalonians 3:9-13
Luke 21:25-36
Listen Now
December 23, 2012
4th Sunday in Advent (Year C)
Micah 5:2-5a
Psalm 80:1-7
Hebrews 10:5-10
Luke 1:39-45, (46-55)
Listen Now
On Sundays at St. Mark's, we returned to the prophets' words and heard the promise of a Messiah. I preached the first and last Sundays of Advent.
December 2, 2012
1st Sunday in Advent (Year C)
Jeremiah 33:14-16
Psalm 25:1-10
1 Thessalonians 3:9-13
Luke 21:25-36
Listen Now
December 23, 2012
4th Sunday in Advent (Year C)
Micah 5:2-5a
Psalm 80:1-7
Hebrews 10:5-10
Luke 1:39-45, (46-55)
Listen Now
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