August 17, 2008

Baptisms at the Pilgrimage

Img_6559I love when we do baptisms at Jacob's Well.  In addition to all the baptisms, we also had several dedications and annointings.  We pray this prayer over each person baptized, dedicated or annointed. 

Together, we pray that ___________’s minds will know Your wisdom.
Their eyes will see Your glory.
Their ears will hear Your words.
Their mouths will speak Your truth.
Their hearts will be Jesus’ home.
Their hands will do Your work.
That their knees would bow only before You, the Lord Our God.
And that ________'s feet would follow You in the way of Jesus all the days of their life.
Amen.

Img_6566 To conclude our time of Baptism and Dedications I invited everyone gathered to Remember their Baptism.  Martin Luther, the Father of the Reformation, consistently spoke of the importance of "Remembering our Baptism."  This remembering is a deep remembering which invites us to recommit, repent, worship, celebrate and much more.  We remember in a Kairos way instead of a Chronos way.  Baptism is a Sacrament.  This means that Baptism is multi-dimensional and layered with significance.  We Remember our Baptism not only as individuals but as a community.  Water has deep implications Img_6593for life, creation, restoration, and resurrection.  We truly are a community of people called to be defined by our relationship with God.  We are identified with Christ, who died, was buried and arose to new life.  Remembering our Baptism reminds us that we have life and our destined to be resurrection people. 

I closed the service by instructing everyone gathered to scoop up a handful of water and pour it over their head or make the sign of the cross on their forehead, letting the water run down their face.  In this way we Remembered our Baptism as a community of  pilgrims.

"As often as we fall away, we ought to recall the memory of our baptism and fortify our minds with it, that we may always be sure and  confident of the forgiveness of sins." John Calvin, (Institutes, 4, xv, 3)

Sunday morning at the Pilgrimage

Img_6526 After morning prayer, breakfast and an hour break, the bells sounded for all to come to church.  I love bells.  It doesn't get much better than to walk to church when the bells call.  Mike Crawford and gang led some great music and Deth led us on a look at Psalm 24.

Img_6530 The earth is the LORD'S and all it holds, the world and those who live there.  For God founded it on the seas, established it over the rivers.  Who may go up the mountain of the LORD? Who can stand in his holy place?  "The clean of hand and pure of heart, who are not devoted to idols, who have not sworn falsely.  They will receive blessings from the LORD, and justice from their saving God.  Such are the people that love the LORD, that seek the face of the God of Jacob." Selah.  Lift up your heads, O gates; rise up, you ancient portals, that the king of glory may enter.  Who is this king of glory?  The LORD, a mighty warrior, the LORD, mighty in battle.   Lift up your heads, O gates; rise up, you ancient portals, that the king of glory may enter.  Who is this king of glory? The LORD of hosts is the king of glory. Selah.  Psalm 24
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Wanderings at the Pilgrimage

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On Saturday night all of us pilgrims on the Jacob's Well Pilgrimage leaned into and re-enacted aspects of the wanderings of Israel in the wilderness and walked through a replica of the Tabernacle God instructed the Israelites to build.  This worship and learning experience turned into an amazing worship and transformational time for all of us.  The weather couldn't have been more perfect for this night.  The stars came out and the full moon slowly emerged over the trees in the Eastern Img_6492 sky.  This was a time for our community to imagine what it means to be the people of God.  God's instructions to Moses and the Israelites concerning the Tabernacle was for the purpose of reconstituting for the Hebrew people what it meant to be the people of a Holy God.  The Hebrews who had spent centuries in Egypt and had forgotten who they were and who they belonged to.  One of the prayer exercises that we engaged in was to use clay to shape a representation of what our idols are.  After sharing what the idols were in our lives we destroyed them together.  We truly want to be the people of God who are following faithfully in the way of Jesus.
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Random Pilgrimage Moments

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August 16, 2008

Pilgrimage Tent Villages

While most of us prefer to pilgrimage in cabins, many have chosen to take advantage of this wonderful fall like weather by joining a tent village.
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Pilgrimage Pool Party

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Pilrimage Day One

After some last minute set-up and preparation at Youthfront South for theImg_6419_2 Pilgrimage, our staff of Jacob's Well enjoyed an afternoon of beautiful weather and fun in the pool.   Several staff kids pleaded for me to go down the waterslide with them.  I couldn't turn them down until I realized that I might die if I had to walk back up the hill one more time.  I caught my breath in time to engage in an intense 4 on 4 water basketball game.  I still want to play like a 25 year old.  Today I'm really sore and I can't imagine what I will feel like tomorrow.  Around 5:00 the Pilgrims started arriving.  It is beautiful here.  The August brown down never happened this summer and the property is green and lush. 

As pilgrims arrived at the entrance they were greeted by a team who prayed with them in their vehicles.

O God, our heavenly Father, whose glory fills the whole creation: May this Pilgrimage be a time of refreshment and peace.  By your Holy Spirit, restore our bodies, renew our minds, and open our hearts to the goodness of your creation; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

I shared about the concept of Pilgrimage at dinner...

The practice of pilgrimage in some form is nearly universal.  There seems to be something naturally in the hearts of human beings that encourages the desire to pursue pilgrimage.  We see some manner of pilgrimage in every culture and religion throughout the world.  We take a pilgrimage not because it helps us arrive at a new destination of spiritual enlightenment.  We embrace the concept of pilgrimage to lean into the reality that we are on a life-long journey with the Holy Spirit as our guide who teaches us how to discover full life with God in the way of Jesus Christ.  Pilgrimage helps us synthesize our inward journey with our outward journey. 

Img_6445 After dinner we celebrated with a square dance on the outdoor basketball court and a pool party.





Blessed are those whose strength is in you, who have set their hearts on pilgrimage.  Psalm 84:5

August 05, 2008

This girl is falling for her church

This is a cool post from Danielle who is falling in love with her church.  Read

April 14, 2008

I am living in painful Disorientation

We are in a series at church on Psalms. Tim Keel is using Walter Brueggemann's categories of Orientation, Disorientation and Reorientation. Today we focused on Psalm 88, obviously a Psalm of Disorientation. I was pretty much a mess. I wrote in my book Presence Centered Youth Ministry about the reality that we cannot have good faith without good doubt. The Psalmist of this chapter is definitely wrestling with doubt and abandonment. Psalm 88 always messes with me deeply because I associate it to Jesus imprisonment in the High Priest Caiaphas's Prison on the night before his crucifixion. In the excavations of Caiaphas' palace, next to St. Peter's in Gallacantu, you can see the places where Jewish prisoners were kept. There is a pit in which Jesus was likely detained for the night until he could be escorted to the Antonia Fortress to stand before Pontius Pilate. I have spent hours in this pit meditating on Psalm 88 and it is hard for me not to imagine that this Psalm was on Jesus mind during this dark night of the soul.

"O LORD, the God who saves me, day and night I cry out before you. May my prayer come before you; turn your ear to my cry. For my soul is full of trouble and my life draws near the grave. I am counted among those who go down to the pit; I am like a man without strength... You have put me in the lowest pit, in the darkest depths. You have taken from me my closest friends and have made me repulsive to them. I am confined and cannot escape; my eyes are dim with grief. I call to you, O LORD, every day; I spread out my hands to you... Why, O LORD, do you reject me and hide your face from me? From my youth I have been afflicted and close to death; I have suffered your terrors and am in despair. Your wrath has swept over me; your terrors have destroyed me. All day long they surround me like a flood; they have completely engulfed me. You have taken my companions and loved ones from me; the darkness is my closest friend.

So Tim's message hit hard. Tim, Deth Im and I have gone through some discussions lately about our strengths and weaknesses using StrengthFinders. One of my strengths is Achievement. I love to get things done. However, I feel overcome and often controlled by this strength, like it possesses and drives me. Lately, I've wondered if this strength has the potential to do me in. God save me from myself. Anyway, what I'm trying to say is I have been feeling quite disoriented these days. Additionally, there are a few relationships in my life that are broken and I've lost hope that they will be healed. Disorientation... yes, I can relate to the Psalmist... I feel trapped wondering if I can break free. And yet, I grasp on to faith... I choose to believe that God will restore and heal... that God can help me be more human by embracing my strengths without letting them strangle me... I hope, I pray, I call to you, O Lord, come to my assistance.

So, as I prepared to retire to sleep (also something that I don't do so well) I saw the following video (thanks to my friend Rustin Smith). It is a video featuring my favorite Coldplay song Fix You performed by Young@Heart. Being so disoriented you would think that this video would push me into full blown depression, but it stirred up faith and hope in me. Try to keep your composure while watching Bob sing this song. It was supposed to be a duet but his singing partner allegedly died a couple weeks before this was performed. If you want to hear Tim's message go here.

After you watch this... pray the prayer under the video.

Today I believe

Lord, you have always given Bread for the coming day, And though I am poor, Today I believe. Lord, you have always given Strength for the coming day, And though I am weak, Today I believe. Lord, you have always given Peace for the coming day, And though of anxious heart, Today I believe. Lord, you have always kept Me safe in trials, And now, tried as I am, Today I believe. Lord, you have always marked The road for the coming day, And though it may be hidden, Today I believe. Lord you have always lightened This darkness of mine, And though the night is here, Today I believe. Lord, you have always spoken When time was ripe, And though you be silent now, Today I believe.

April 03, 2008

Congregational Prayer for our children

Together, we pray that our children’s minds will know Your wisdom. Their eyes will see Your Glory. Their ears will hear Your words. Their mouths will speak Your truth. Their hearts will be Jesus’ home. Their hands will do Your work.  That their knees would bow only before You, the Lord Our God. And that their feet would follow You in the way of Jesus all the days of their life.  Amen.

I usually have a hard time making it through this prayer without losing it emotionally.  On Sunday, I did a pretty good job of maintaining my composure.  Although, having Zoe Reynolds baptised made it very difficult.  Zoe is the daughter of Eric and Rachel Reynolds.  Rachel was in my youth group.

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August 2008

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