Tuesday, December 30, 2014

After Christmas We Still Can Seek Christ

Well, we have come through yet another Christmas celebration and once again we proclaim the Good News of God With Us.

So what next?
Usually it seems that the 'next' is waiting until Easter for the next big church celebration.  Not that there is anything wrong with celebrating Easter - it is the day for the Christian faith.  But between Christmas and Easter there was quite a bit more to the story of Jesus.

In particular Jesus came to bear witness to the kind of person God would have us to be.  He was the model - the example for all of us.  So I think it would behoove us to pay particular attention to the character of Jesus.  After all, we are proclaiming that we are disciples of Christ.  Therefore, the more we take time to learn about Jesus' teachings, actions, and messages the more fully we become stronger disciples.

So in the month of January, I want to focus on the person of Christ.  Who was he?  What did he say?  What were his larger examples to the world and what does that mean for us?
To that end I will be focusing on the following topics.

1.  Starting Over With Scars.
It is the first of a new year, and for many there is something symbolic about January 1st.  We often talk about it as a clean slate for a new year.  There is something to that, I think.  But I think as Christians, we have to think seriously about what it means to start a new year in Christ.  And we have to acknowledge that as many 'new' years as we have, we all have our histories to deal with.  So on our first Sunday in the new year, I want to focus on the idea of starting over with Christ.

2.  Christ Beginnings
The first story in the Gospel of Mark is the story of Jesus' baptism.  It is a tremendously powerful story that tells us quite a bit about both Mark's understanding of Jesus as well as what Jesus proclaimed as his mission.  As we begin to look at the person of Jesus, this story is the best place for us to begin to examine who it is we claim to follow.

3.  Christ Revealed
One of the greatest stories about the character of Jesus is found in the Gospel of John - the story of the woman caught in adultery.  It provides quite a window on the nature, demeanor, and disposition of Jesus.

4.  Christ's Words
Looking particularly at the Gospel of Luke and one of the more famous of Jesus' parables, the story of the prodigal son, we will listen closely to what Jesus has to say to those who hear about God, the Kingdom, and how they relate to you and me.  I know it is one of the most often preached passages in the Gospel of Luke, and you may have heard it to death, but I invite you to listen with new ears to what Jesus has to say to those who would seek to be disciples.

Come and join us as we continue to seek the one whose birth we just celebrated.
- Grace and Peace,
Pastor Charles

Thursday, December 11, 2014

The Longest Night Service

One of the services we are going to offer this year is on December 21st at 7:00.  It is called "The Longest Night," and it isn't your typical service.  Frankly, it won't be for everyone.  So allow me to offer this explanation.

During December, the nights get longer and the daylight far shorter.  Then, when we hit the 21st, we find ourselves at the shortest day and the longest ‘night’ of the year.

The name of this special service takes its cues from that fact.  But more than that, it also applies to the feeling that a number of us have about this season.  It is a time of joy for most, but for many this time of year is difficult.  The 21st in particular is the longest night, perhaps the longest night in a symbolic way that catches hold of the difficulty this season brings for many.  It is a season when memories of past experiences, the pain of present experience, and worries of the future can become overwhelming.

For some, this time of year is the most difficult time of all.  To be honest, not everyone can understand or appreciate that.  This service, though, is meant for those who do understand that feeling all too well.

This service is specially designed for those persons for whom this time of year is not especially joyful.  We gather to remember that we are still called to be in community with one another in good times and in times of difficulty.  More importantly, we gather to remember that God continues to be with us no matter where we are in our journey in life.

So at this service, we will sing.  Those songs might bring tears.  They might cause emotion to well up within you.  We will hear passages from Scripture that might bring feelings of pain or strong emotion.  We invite you to recognize the pain these words might bring and offer that pain to Christ our Lord, who comes to offer comfort.

Most of all, we want you to know that as long as this night might be, you are not alone.  We welcome you, we cry with you, and we offer all we have to give, which is one another through the grace of Christ our Lord.


The Longest Night
December 21st, 2014 at 7:00 pm

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Advent 2014

Despite what the stores and the television commercials would have you believe, it isn't Christmas yet.  In fact, the Christmas season doesn't begin until December 25th.  We are, instead, in the season of Advent. 

Advent is something of an unusual time.  On the one hand it is the time of preparation for Christmas and the stories of the nativity, Joseph, Mary, Jesus’ birth and so forth.  On the other hand, Advent is a time of reflection and hope for the second Advent, or the second coming of Christ.  In that respect it is a time of not merely remembering Christmas, but looking forward in hope for the fully realized Kingdom of God.

In the middle of those two understandings of Advent, there is the tension of seeking to encounter the present reality of Christ.  In other words, we continue to seek the presence of Christ in our own lives, not merely looking back at what was and hoping for the future.  Advent is when we stop to reflect on the reality of the unfolding Advent of Christ in our own lives. 

Since Advent is such a tremendously important time in the life of the Church, I hope that you will take advantage of as many opportunities as possible to ‘drink in’ the season to its fullest. 

Over the next four weeks, we will be exploring and encountering Advent through words and music.  This morning, I wish to offer a challenge to us as to how we think about this time of year and what it could mean (vs. what it seems to have come to mean).

The next two Sundays, I want us to listen closer to the stories of Joseph and Mary.  We often assume we know them – their stories are short in the Gospel narratives, and we think we have it down pat in our minds.  But there is always more information available should we seek it out. 

Then, on the fourth Sunday, we will be blessed to hear and watch a recounting of the Christmas story in a pageant put together by our own J.C. Smith.

Also on that Sunday, we will be having a special service, “The Longest Night,” which is not a traditional service of worship, but is designed to be a service for those who find this season a very difficult time emotionally.

Finally, on Christmas Eve, we will be holding our Christmas Eve Communion and Candle Light service at 6:30 pm.

Advent is a tremendous time in the life of the church.  It is full of joy, expectation, and life.  It is also a time to reflect and remember that the reason we even gather at all on Sunday is because of the story that begins today.


Come and be a part of the life of the church, and let the church be a part of your life.

Friday, November 14, 2014

Towards Christ the King

The next two weeks I am going to be building off the theme of Christ the King, which is to be recognized on November 23rd.  

Christ the King Sunday is the end of the Christian Year and November 30th begins Advent which also signals the beginning of a new Christian Year.  

But Christ the King Sunday is one that can slip below the radar if we aren't paying attention.  That has to do with the fact that it is overwhelmed by the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays.  It is nonetheless an important day in the life of the church.

That has to do mostly with the phrase "Christ the King." Christ the King Sunday sets up the dual nature of Advent: we look towards the celebration of his birth, but also to the celebration of his second advent. 

But there is something else to it, besides celebration.  Christ the King.  Can you hear the subversion?  Can you sense the defiance and the difference those words make?  Maybe, maybe not.  But in the context of the culture in which the Gospels were written, you might very well be able to hear it.

In Roman writings, we find that the Emperor is referred to as the savior, the bringer of peace.  The Emperor was called ‘Lord’; The Emperor was called “The Son of God.”  Caesar is Lord.  In fact, there is an inscription that was written about Caesar that began with these words: “The beginning of the good news to the world on his account.”  This is an inscription written about Caesar.  Caesar the king, the Lord, the Son of the gods (which is how Caesar was often viewed in the Roman Empire).

But here comes the subversive part.  The oldest Gospel, the Gospel of Mark, begins with the words, “The beginning of the good news of Jesus the Christ, the Son of God.”  The early Christians were saying and writing, “Jesus is Lord.”  Not Caesar.  Are you beginning to see the trouble the church was making?  Can you hear the subversive message?  Caesar is Lord.  No.  Jesus is Lord.

As such, when we talk about the judgment of the king, or the Day of the Lord (sometimes called judgment day) we are talking about the judgment of both God and Christ the King.

I would propose the idea that we cannot understand the judgment of the King until we begin to understand what the demands of the King are, and who we are supposed to be in the Kingdom of God.  Only when we begin to understand the Kingdom can we work to be citizens, and then we more clearly understand the judgment of the King.  

So for the next two weeks, I want to offer some observations on what it means to talk of the judgment of the King - Christ the King.  Because when we speak of the King, we move directly into Advent which once again sets the stage for Christians to talk of whom it is we encounter in the person of Jesus.

Come and join us.

Grace and Peace,
Pastor Charles


Tuesday, October 28, 2014

The Monsters are Coming (Conclusion)

This is a short excursis (which is a discussion of a particular point in a book, usually in an appendix - or can sometimes be defined as a digression) in which I wish to offer further thoughts on one or more of the ideas I offered on Sunday.

I utilized the idea of monsters because they provide a representation of so many other things.  The Mummy, vampires, zombies, and Jekyll and Hyde - they are scary in and of themselves, but they also point to larger realities. 

A few years ago, I was in a conversation with a friend and mentioned a particular video game that I enjoyed.  In explaining what I enjoyed about it, I said that I liked the clarity of tasks it offered.  I knew my choices and I saw their ramifications.  I also enjoyed fighting monsters.

They asked, "Why don't you do that in real life?"  I answered, "Because zombies don't exist."
"Not like that, but there are real monsters to face."
I have pondered that for a long time.  I think they were correct, too.  There are plenty of monsters out there - many of our own creation.  And we need to be able to face them, because if we don't, they will get the best of us.

When I was very young, my parents read a story to me called (to the best of my recollection) "The Whatsits."  If that wasn't the name of the story, it was the name of the characters.  It was a story of a young child who was afraid to go into a dark basement because of the monsters he believed were down there - the Whatsits.  

The artist depicted them as giant creatures.  But as the story progressed and the child learned to face his fears, the Whatsits got smaller and smaller until he was no longer even able to see them.  My father used to let me know when my fears were getting the best of me by saying "You're letting the Whatsits get bigger."  Perhaps as those who seek to do the will of God, we might also find ourselves letting our fears get too big to face.

One of the great songs of the church is "How Firm a Foundation."  I would use the second and fourth verse to close this series out:
"Fear not, I am with thee, O be not dismayed, for I am thy God and will still give the aid; I'll strengthen and help thee, and cause thee to stand upheld by my righteous, omnipotent hand."

"When through fiery trials thy pathways shall lie, my grace, all sufficient, shall be thy supply; the flame shall not hurt thee; I only design thy dross to consume, and thy gold to refine."

Grace and Peace,
Pastor Charles

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

The Monsters are Coming - The Offer of the Vampire (appendix)

This is a short excursis (which is a discussion of a particular point in a book, usually in an appendix - or can sometimes be defined as a digression) in which I wish to offer further thoughts on one or more of the ideas I offered on Sunday.

I briefly mentioned in the sermon just how much depictions of vampires have changed over the years - in particular on film.  Dracula (made most popular by Bella Lugosi) used to have to wear a cape and formal wear.  Before that, though, in the 1922 movie Nosferatu, the vampire was a very scary, shadow dwelling creature (that movie, by the way, was an adaptation of Bram Stoker's novel Dracula, but the names had to be changed due to copyright issues).  Even the far from scary Count from Sesame Street dressed like the stereotypical vampire - and so does Count Chocula (remember that cereal?).  Now, though, vampires dress very much like teens of today, because many vampires are presented as late teens, early twenties.  That says something.

There is an effort to 'modernize' characters (look at Batman, for example) to make them have some kind of relevance to the intended audience.

Hmmm.  That sounds very much like something the church struggles with on a regular basis - how do we maintain our relevance.  If vampires get a makeover and, in the process, gain soaring popularity, what is it that the church needs to consider to bring our witness into the hearts and minds of the current generation?

This is an issue that we are going to be dealing with here at Harrison in early 2015.  Until then, I would draw your attention to the following titles:
You Lost Me by David Kinnaman
The Answer to Bad Religion is not No Religion by Martin Thielen
Adventures in Missing the Point by Tony Campolo and Brian McLaren

The deal with the issues facing mainline churches today.  What do we need to do to not be seen as a caricature of ourselves, but as a vital and engaging congregation?

It is a difficult question, and one that is easily ignored and overlooked because the church is notorious for fighting and fending off the idea of change.  And we may continue to fight and fend, but we might fight and fend off change and push ourselves right out of the minds of the next generation of people who won't hear the good news because the see the church as an irrelevant building that has no bearing on the lives of the people on its outside.

So, the changing vampire might be an interesting study to point out that what was old can still be relevant.  Give it some thought.

Grace and Peace,
Pastor Charles

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

The Monsters Are Coming

When I was in 1st grade, Lincoln Elementary had a story teller come to entertain we children.  The story teller was Jackie Torrence.  She was, at least in my recollection, a stellar story teller.  And she told some ghost stories that still make me shudder - mostly because I remember her letting out one of the scariest cackles I had ever heard.

She told the stories well, and they stuck with me.  Usually around October, I find myself thinking of that afternoon, sitting around this woman as she told my classmates and I ghost stories and legends.  And, usually around late September, the stores start stocking their shelves with costumes, decorations, and (of course) candy.  And ghost stories start popping up on television, radio (I know..."Radio?  What's that?"), even on the Internet.

I have to admit that I have some strange fascination with ghost stories.  I love to hear them in broad daylight, but later at night I wish I hadn't!

So I began to think about the idea of ghost stories and monster stories.  Some of the finest ones aren't really monster stories at all, but are instead a commentary on the world, on the time, or on some aspect of life.  I also began to think about what kind of monsters we find ourselves facing in life - not the Hollywood kinds, but the monsters that steal our lives, that put us in danger, or beckon to us alluringly.

This month I decided to talk about monsters (I would encourage you to read the newsletter article to learn more about it).  But I am talking about them only to use them as lenses through which we can see larger issues.  Here is a brief summary of the next four Sundays.

October 5th - Jekyll and Hyde - We all have a dark side.  Actually, we all have multi-faceted personalities.  How does that enhance or diminish who we are and how we relate to God?  The scripture for this week is Mark 8:27-33
October 12th - Zombies - With the tremendous popularity with zombies in our country at the moment, what is it that they represent?  Are the a critique of corporate America, lifeless faith, the absence of critical thinking, or the devaluing of human life?  The scripture reading for this week is 1st John 2:7-14.
October 19th - Vampires - What is it that steals our life?  What offer looks so good that we give ourselves over to it, only to find that the consequences are far greater than we thought?  The scripture for this week is Luke 4:1-13.
October 26th - The Mummy - What happens when we seek to live in the past?  Does turning back the clock advance the Kingdom of God, or just prevent us from having to deal with the present?  The scripture reading for this week is Numbers 11:1-6.

I will offer some additional observations here on this blog as the weeks go by during this month - to add a little more to the ideas I am going to be sharing on Sundays.  I look forward to it, and I hope you will come and join us during the month of October for the series, "The Monsters Are Coming."

Grace and Peace
- Oa

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Galatians (an introduction)

During the month of September I am going to be drawing our attention to Paul's letter to the Galatians.  Of all the letters attributed to Paul, this is perhaps the most passionate.  So I would offer in this blog post a short introduction to the letter to the Galatians.

The letter to the Galatians is an extremely defining letter when it comes to understanding the theology and person of Paul.  To begin with, Galatians is a letter where Paul’s teachings concerning Christ, as well as his view on earliest Christianity are laid out.  Paul makes it clear that though the law could not provide salvation, its moral and ethical dimensions were not diminished in the face of the message of the Christ.[1]

Galatians is also a tremendous indication of divergent theologies.  It is evident from the content of Galatians that by the time of the letter, Christianity was already developing factions and divisions.  These factions and these other opinions that were apparently contrary to Paul’s understandings are what have forced Paul to write a response.  In the letter to the Galatians, Paul appears to be attempting to not only legitimate his claims to his message and his apostleship, but also to discredit the words of his unnamed opponents.  “As we have said before, so now I say again, if any one is preaching to you a gospel contrary to that which you received, let him be accursed.”[2]

The issue of the apostleship of Paul, the fact of the divisions, and the claims of the Pauline opponents are the setting for the message of the letter itself; a message that centers itself on ones justification in the sight of God.  Justification in the sight of God, according to Paul, comes through an acceptance of the free gift of God’s grace and love as demonstrated through the death of Christ on the cross.[3]

What Paul also seeks to elucidate (perhaps again to the original readers, but perhaps also with more force) is that the distinctiveness Judaism once claimed through the Law was not removed through Christ.  Likewise, the promises of God, once reserved for the Jews, now applied universally.[4]

Now before faith came, we were confined under the law, kept under restraint until faith should be revealed.  So that the law was our custodian until Christ came, that we might be justified by faith.  But now that faith has come, we are no longer under a custodian, for in Christ Jesus you are all sons of God, through faith.[5]

Newness of life is through Christ for, as Paul writes, “neither circumcision counts for anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new creation.”[6]

Galatians is also an attempt at a revision of Israel’s history, by explaining in its third and fourth chapters how Abraham’s faith presupposed Christ as well as offering allegorical interpretations of Abraham’s wives.[7]  Paul writes this in order to lead the readers to the conclusions he is proposing – that salvation is through faith, like Abraham had, and in that faith one might have life in the Spirit.  Also, no longer being bound by the law, the reader is to understand that the old self has died to sin, and it is now Christ who lives in them.

Yet while Galatians should be understood as a critical recapitulation of the basic Pauline themes, there are also pastoral concerns being addressed as well.  Too critical an approach tends to miss the deep concern Paul had for the Galatian church.  Not only was he apparently being discredited, the people he had worked for and with to develop a community of faith were moving away from him.  It should not be overlooked that the letter to the Galatians is a letter of anger, reproach, and heartbreak from the spiritual father of the Galatian church. 

While Paul is certainly writing to convince, he is also writing to remind the Galatian readers of that which he has already proclaimed to them.[8]  Galatians begins with Paul asking the remarkable question of who had caused the people to turn away from that which he proclaimed.[9]




[1] White p. 125; Hunter p. 10; Rogerson p. 102; Borg p. 252; Betz p. 30
[2] Galatians 1:9
[3] White p. 125; Duncan p. xv
[4] Ibid
[5] Galatians 3:23-26    
[6] Galatians 6:15
[7]  See Galatians 4:27-31.  Mack states not only that this is what Paul is doing, but that this may well be the first instance of this reinterpretation of Jewish scriptures and traditions in the New Testament(pp. 115-116).  This would not be the first biblical instance.  For example, Chronicles sets out to retell the story of David and some of the Kings from a very different theological standpoint than was found in the books of Samuel and Kings.
[8]  It should be noted here that the term, “the Galatian readers” I utilized is, at best, ambiguous.  Hans Dieter Betz, in his commentary on Galatians, goes to some length to explain that the location of the Galatian churches is "scarce" (p. 3).  Duncan also explains that in the time in which the letter to the Galatians was written, the province known as Galatia included the old kingdom of Galatia as well as parts of Lycaonia, Pisidia, and Phrygia (Duncan p. xix).  So to whom is he writing?  While Duncan presents the arguments well, I would draw the reader’s attention to Betz for a very detailed discussion as well as Richard N. Longenecker (p. LVI) for a tremendous referencing of the discussion to which there appears to be no consensus.
[9]  Galatians 1:6-9; 3:1-4;  This eye-opening problem provides us with tremendous insight into the tumultuous beginnings of Christianity.  While the book of Acts provides us with a very clean, centrist portrayal of early church development, the letter to the Galatians implies (rather overtly) that all was not without difficulty and division.  The fact that Paul feels the need to reiterate his argument lets the reader know that there were other messages being proclaimed, possibly in the name of Christ as well, that were not only drawing adherents, but were drawing Paul’s converts away from him.

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Facing the Dilemma of Evil

This Sunday I am offering something of a follow up to the series on God I just concluded.  I found that after my sermon on the idea of God being love and that our example as Christians should be that of loving people, I was asked by no fewer than three different people on three different occasions to respond to the horrific actions of ISIS.  The questions usually revolved around the idea of how do we love them or should we even love them?

The answer I offered was yes, we should love them.  However, we also have to move to protect the people that they are threatening because we are to love our neighbors.  ISIS is a neighbor we are to love, but we also have to recognize that there comes a point when there is no conversation, no compromise, no reasoning with them.  At that point, it becomes our duty to our neighbors to protect them from the advancement of such brutality.

This is not to be entered into lightly.  There are always consequences for actions, and actions that necessitate violence are most especially not to be taken quickly or without consideration for their ramifications.  So how does that stack up against the teachings of Jesus?  It doesn't.  Jesus did not teach, use, or advocate violence.  What we have to wrestle with is the ambiguity of life in that there are those times in which we have to take up arms - contrary to the teachings of Christ.

So this week, I will focus on the dilemma of combating evil.  It is a daunting subject, and one that I find is constrained by time.  It merits further discussion, and I hope to provide only a catalyst for thought.

I would encourage you to take time in your private reflections to read some of the writings of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a Lutheran pastor who was arrested by the Nazis for attempting to assassinate Hitler.  Bonhoeffer was ultimately killed by the Nazis, but not before writing some extraordinary observations for Christians to ponder.  In particular I would draw your attention to his works "The Cost of Discipleship" and "Letters and Papers from Prison."

ISIS is an example of a group that seemingly will not be stopped by anything other than violence.  How do we approach that in terms of our Christian witness?  Carefully, to say the least.

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Talking About God

Talking about God isn’t something at which Christians are always proficient.  In many ways, we have learned to talk around the subject of God, but not so much about God.  And that is too bad.  I have long believed that the church should be the place where we can voice our thoughts as well as our doubts and questions without fear of reproach or reprisal and therefore it should be the place where we can talk about God freely and openly.

That isn’t always the case.  Again, that is too bad.

This week I begin a series on God.  The overall series, entitled “God of the Ages” is designed to offer some foundational ideas about God.  The reason is that talking about God is difficult.  Part of the problem in talking about God is that our source of information on God, the Bible, isn’t always as clear as we would wish.  In some places God is described as a person walking in a garden.  In other places, God is a pillar of fire, the power that leads us beside still waters or, as the book of Daniel names God, “the Ancient of Days.”

A bit complicated.

Perhaps it is complicated because the nature of God is so vast and beyond description and comprehension that we will struggle with the concept of God by default.  But there are some signposts along the way that can provide a framework in which we can begin to understand the Biblical witness about God.

The first idea is to think of God as light.  While we hear that God creates light in Genesis, we also can think of God as light in that God seeks to be illuminating.

The second idea is that God is boundless.  While that might not sound like much of an idea, we need to recognize that in the Bible, the idea of God as having no boundaries was radical.  God was limited, or so it was believed, to a particular geographic region.  However, by the end of the book of Exodus, the ancient theologians had begun to think of God quite differently: boundless.

The third idea is that God is love.  This idea is perhaps the most easy to comprehend, but the most disturbing and distressing to all involved.  What does it mean to have a God described by the word ‘love’?  We will think about that together.


I hope that you will be with us in our community of faith as we talk about the subject that is so foundational for our existence – God of the Ages.

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Growing Up in the Faith

For the next two Sundays, I am going to focus on the idea of growing up in the faith.  As easy as that phrase might sound, it involves two particular aspects that are not easy:  Christian maturity and discipleship.

Maturity is difficult enough.  Christian maturity is something that is also quite difficult. In the United Methodist tradition, one of the goals for the church community (collectively and individually) is to continue to grow into the likeness of Christ.  It is a lifetime journey and each step along that journey is a step into Christian maturity.

It should be said, though, that the journey is not an easy one.  If it were, I wouldn't have books on my shelves called "Seeing Gray in a World of Black and White", "Barriers to Christian Belief", and "Finding Our Way Again."  It seems easy enough, but it takes a level of discipline and discipline takes deliberate choices.

The journey of faith is a journey where we attempt to grow in Christian and spiritual maturity.  We call that "Discipleship."  Christian Discipleship is the way of living that follows the life and teachings of Christ.  A disciple is one who follows and learns from a teacher.  So if we consider ourselves disciples of Christ, then it is Christ who is our teacher.  That also means that we would be those who seek to emulate Christ in who we are and what we do.

In the church, the goal of discipleship is to form people into the image of Christ and to "let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus (Philippians 2:5).  And it is more than just "Jesus and Me."  It is about being a member of a community of disciples.

I hope that you will join us these next two weeks as we look at growing up in the faith and what it means to live a life that demonstrates Christ to those whom we encounter.

- Grace and Peace,
Rev. Charles Ensminger

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Who We Are: Covenant and Grace

One of the great challenges facing most churches is that of identity.   With churches seemingly on every corner of every block, people on the outside might wonder what the difference is from one church building to another.  And, as we live in a time where churches are defined more by that which they are against than what they do or hold as sacred, we also find that the people inside the churches sometimes wonder what the differences are from one building to another.

Last week and this week, I wanted to take some time to focus on what it means to be a people who not only believe in the Good News of the grace and mercy of God shown in the person of Jesus, but also what it means to be a particular people: United Methodists.  To do that,  I am going to briefly focus on the distinctiveness of the United Methodist Church, our structure, and how it hinges on two particular ideas:

Covenant relationships
God’s great grace

We begin with the idea of covenant relationships.
A covenant is a formal agreement between two parties in which each assumes particular responsibilities.  Our church has at its heart these kinds of relationships.  These are not to be overlooked or taken lightly, as they define our relationships to one another, to the larger community of faith, and in how we work to respond to God’s grace. 

Our denomination is one that builds much of its understanding of our congregational relationship and structure on the idea of upholding our covenants, our vows, and our words.  It may not sound like a big deal, but if we approach the idea of discipleship with this in mind we quickly see how binding these can be on our life, our thinking, and our actions.

We continue with the idea of God’s grace.

Whereas a covenant is the relationship we establish with God and one another, grace is that on which covenants are built.  Grace is also a gift given by God and by you and I to one another.  And as much as we might over-utilize the word in church, grace is one of those things we simply can't do without.

In the United Methodist Church, we have very particular understandings of grace.  So what are our understandings of grace?
They are threefold.
1.      Prevenient Grace:  Prevenient Grace (preventing grace): the divine love that surrounds all humanity and precedes any and all of our conscious impulses.  Prevenient Grace also awakens us towards repentance and faith. 

The United Methodist Book of Discipline (2004) defines prevenient grace as "...the divine love that surrounds all humanity and precedes any and all of our conscious impulses. This grace prompts our first wish to please God, our first glimmer of understanding concerning God's will, and our 'first slight transient conviction' of having sinned against God. God's grace also awakens in us an earnest longing for deliverance from sin and death and moves us toward repentance and faith."

2.      Justifying Grace:  God reaching out to the believer with accepting and pardoning love.  A change of heart can and does occur under the prompting of grace and the guidance of the Holy Spirit.  (conversion and assurance)

3.      Sanctifying Grace:  draws us on towards Christian perfection, which Wesley described as a heart “habitually filled with the love of God ad neighbor” and “having the mind of Christ and walking as he walked.”

This coming Sunday, I will be talking about that particular understanding of grace.  I hope you will come and be with us!

- Grace and Peace
Rev. Charles Ensminger

Welcome and Introduction

Greetings!
Let me introduce this blog.  It is a place where I will be sharing some thoughts and observations from time to time, but most importantly, it is where I will be sharing the direction of the sermons for the coming weeks.  Some pastors are pretty free-form in their sermons (and some tend to come up with what they are going to say as they say it!), while others follow a strict pattern.  Others utilize the idea of series sermons and still others are straight lectionary preachers.
(For those of you who don't know what "lectionary" means, let me explain.  A lectionary is a listing of scripture readings that have been decided upon by the larger Christian church that follow the Christian Year.  In other words, the lectionary is a list of scriptures for each Sunday and special holiday.)
I tend to preach from a mix of lectionary and series.  And this blog will keep you posted as to what those sermons are going to be.
I hope that you will check back on a regular basis, as I will keep this page updated as the series and/or sermons change.

As always, you are invited to come and be a part of our worship service at Harrison United Methodist Church beginning on Sunday mornings at 10:55.

Grace and Peace,
Rev. Charles Ensminger