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Mar |
Help assemble meals for hungry kids and adults |
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I rarely get hungry without eating something within minutes. I don't think I've ever gotten hungry and not had the option of eating. Life's not like that for everyone. In a few weeks our church will host a family-friendly event to assemble 103,000 meals for hungry people (mostly children), and I'd like your help.
Donate to Purchase Food and Volunteer to Package Food
Throughout the day on Sunday, April 23rd, members of FUMCR will form assembly lines in the Bartula Family Life Center gym at church. We'll seal dried veggies, soy, and rice into packages for delivery to children and adults around the world. The organization Stop Hunger Now has helped us do this for several years and always does a great job of involving everyone from kids to seniors at all levels of physical ability.
The food itself costs about $30,000, so we need financial support to purchase the food and volunteer support to assemble the meals.
My family has participated every year we've done this. It's fun, makes a huge impact on people's lives, and if you've ever wished you had more selfies while wearing a hair net, this is your chance! I hope you'll join us.
I also hope you'll join us for Access worship this Sunday at 11:00. We'll take a break from the craziness of life to re-center on God, worshipping with music, giving, prayer, scripture, and a sermon that looks at the "Holy Ground" of decision. Don't forget to invite friends and neighbors to come with you too!
In Christ,
Rich
Rich Rindfuss
Access Pastor
First United Methodist Church Richardson
Mar |
Help for forgiving and seeking forgiveness |
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This past Sunday I preached about forgiveness. Seeking or offering it can feel like having a huge weight lifted. Jesus said both are connected to our relationship to God. Yet, doing either can be very difficult. For all those reasons I want to recap a few of the insights and tips I shared on Sunday and add a few notes.
When Jesus' disciples asked him to teach them to pray he gave them the words to what we today call The Lord's Prayer. That prayer includes a phrase asking God to forgive us as we forgive others. Matthew's gospel goes on to quote Jesus as saying, "For if you forgive others their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you; but if you do not forgive others, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses" (Matthew 6:14-15). These verses highlight the possibility and the problem with forgiveness: I can receive it from God for whatever I've done (a life-altering possibility), but I have to offer it to others (a potentially paralyzing problem).
Recognizing what forgiveness is and isn't sometimes helps reduce the challenge.
Forgiving Isn't:
Forgiving Is:
Sometimes we need to seek forgiveness from others. David Augsburger, a professor and Mennonite pastor that writes about forgiveness, says apologizing well helps open another person to forgiving. He gives these suggestions for a really good apology:
The Bible teaches that our wrong actions against others ultimately are sins against God. Psalm 51 provides a great model for acknowledging one's need for forgiveness from God and seeking it.
Finally, I'll leave you with 1 John 1:9: "If we confess our sins, he who is faithful and just will forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness." This promises that God will forgive us if we acknowledge our need for forgiveness, and "cleanse us from all unrighteousness" is a promise that includes helping us to forgive others.
I hope you'll join us for Access worship on Sunday where we'll explore the "holy ground" of healing.
In Christ,
Rich
Rich Rindfuss
Access Pastor
First United Methodist Church Richardson
Mar |
Ignore me if you want to live |
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In a classic scene from the movie Terminator, the protagonist proclaims to a woman being hunted by a deadly Arnold Schwarzenegger character, "Come with me if you want to live." I couldn't help but think of that line as I read one of this week's spiritual meditations from the book, Pauses for Lent. Only, the message I heard was, "Ignore me if you want to live."
Pauses for Lent gives me a word each day to focus on and a simple spiritual discipline to practice. Monday's word was "still" and the practice was not to listen to anything in the car. Psalm 46:10 inspired it: "Be still, and know that I am God!" Of course, 1 Kings 19 could have also inspired it. There, Elijah doesn't encounter God until he encounters silence. Or, Luke 4 could also have inspired it. It says Jesus spent 40 days alone in the wilderness preparing for his ministry. There's also Luke 5:16 that says Jesus would "withdraw to deserted places and pray." Certain encounters with God require silence.
I hated turning off my radio and audio book and podcasts on Monday while I drove. I like distractions, entertainment, and learning new things. Yet sure enough I found myself far more open to the presence of God without those distractions.
And God is the source of life (John 1:4), the one through whom we live forever (1 John 5:11), and the one who gives us a full and abundant life here and now (John 10:10).
If I want true life, I need silence. I need to see in my imagination or maybe in real life a Post-It note on my cell phone that says, "Ignore me if you want to live." I need one on my laptop that says, "Ignore me if you want to live." I need a reminder on my car radio that says, "Ignore me if you want to live." How about you? What distractions surround you that need a reminder, "Ignore me if you want to live"?
Take a moment or two right now and ignore me. Put down whatever you're reading this on and open yourself to the presence of God.
I encourage you to find other ways this weekend and in the coming week intentionally to ignore things that demand attention and crowd out the silence where you can encounter God.
On Sunday at Access we'll lean a bit more towards filling the silence than creating it, but that's ok, because God also has special ways of meeting us in worship that we don't find elsewhere. This Sunday I'll be preaching about the "holy ground" of forgiveness. Think of someone that's struggling to forgive someone or to forgive themselves, and invite them to worship with you. I'll offer encouragement and some practical tips around forgiveness.
See you Sunday!
Rich
Rich Rindfuss
Access Pastor
First United Methodist Church Richardson