Monday, February 26, 2018

February 25 2018 "Love Commits?"



February 25  2018 Romans 4.13-25 *Genesis 17.1-7, 15-16 “Love Commits” Pastor Jacqueline Hines

A father told the story about his two children who were fighting like kids often do. [slide # 1 kids fighting] He concluded they both had something to do with the problem so he took them aside separately and asked “Your sister is terribly wrong, what should her punishment be.” And the child would suggest the greatest punishment they could think of. Then the father took the other child aside and said quietly “Your brother did not do the right thing. How do you think he should be punished?” The second child also angrily suggested harsh punishment. The father then brought the two children together and offered them each the punishment that they had demanded for the other, in which case they both argued how unfair the punishment was. They were beginning to learn to appreciate sharing mercy to others that they wanted for themselves.
So it is for this Lenten season. We are aware of our shortcomings and the shortcomings of our neighbors. We are learning to be merciful because God is merciful to us.
In God’s great mercy, God appeared to Abraham when Abraham was 99 years old. [slide # 2 God appears to Abraham ]  When you are ninety–nine years old, you have experienced a whole lot of water going under the bridge. However, God may appear to us at any age. In fact, throughout our lives, God appears to us many times in many different ways and for many different reasons.
We are made in God’s image, so we can understand God’s motives for coming to us, just as we have motives for coming to God and coming to one another. Sometimes we appear for political reasons; we have a wonderful cause that we want to encourage and advertise. We want to spread the word about our mission or our bible study or our elevator project or our community meal or our bake sale. God appears to us, too, like a well-dressed politician smiling nicely and shaking hands so that we can appreciate the many things that need to be done in order to do God’s good will.
Sometimes we appear to God and to one another in order to fix something, to work on a problem or to prevent a problem. God appears to us with step by step directions and solutions that help us in the short run as well as the long run.
Sometimes we appear to God and to one another with gifts and pleasantries and opportunities that delight us and unite us, that encourage us to support one another, keep in touch with one another and stay in relationship with one another.
This day, according to Genesis 17, God appeared to Abraham, as God had appeared to Abraham many times. God appeared with a gift, a promise, a covenant to multiply the good in his life.
The longer we keep the faith, the more we appreciate those who work alongside us doing good deeds because no one is an island. An octogenarian came to Bethel a few months ago. He looked around the building and rejoiced that all the many years he had worked in the church were appreciated and continued by many faithful believers who had come after him. We all rejoice when our efforts are carried on by the next generation, carefully and faithfully. It is very rewarding to see the good we have done last for years and maintained for the benefit of others.
“ ‘Walk before me,” God says to Abraham. “and be blameless 2And I will make my covenant between me and you, and will make you exceedingly numerous.’” God invites Abraham and his companion Sarah to make a commitment to God – to walk with God and to be blameless, to make room for the great blessings God wanted to pour into their lives.
Last week I went to the store with a gift card I received for Christmas gave me for Christmas. It did not go through. Already my Lenten journey has included an invitation from God to receive more patience than I have because finding out that the card was not processed correctly has taken a lot of time on the phone. I also have an invitation from God to receive more readiness to forgive the goofball giver and to receive more acceptance of myself as one who is not 100% patient or willing to forgive a debt. Sometimes a grudge feels sooo good, or a grudge gets stuck comfortably in our craw and we are slow to remove it on our own. Lent is a time when God invites us to deal with our grudges and any other grime we have gotten used to.
You wonder if Abraham and Sarah had to think twice before taking God up on God’s offer. Like any of us, every invitation we get is not necessarily one that we want to take. [slide # 3 invitation] Every party is not one you want to attend. Not every picnic is a picnic for you.

There is a commercial with 4 or five people gathered in a living room, each on their smart phone or tablet. The announcer says “You can do this …or you can just talk to each other.” and everyone stops texting and scrolling and they all laugh out loud as if to say, “Talk to each other rather than text… what a ridiculous idea.” [slide # 4 eople on cell phones at table]
We have come to value our technology. Yes, we often take time to talk with one another, but we are also absorbed with internet technology -  from smart phones to smart televisions to dumb criminals putting their crimes on Facebook with selfies. Last Saturday, we were able to live stream of our service so family and friends around the country and in Europe were grateful to watch the service first-hand.
When we do talk to one another, we have a lot to say because we have been exposed to the 48 hours of YouTube video that is uploaded every minute, to the 269 billion emails and 8.6 trillion text messages sent daily around the world each day, not to mention countless news channels, cable dramas, docudramas, judge shows, and entertainment series, my favorites being the Residents, The Good Doctor, MacGyver, Wonder Woman, Touched by an Angel, Matlock, and Bull.
We sink ourselves down in an easy chair enjoying those moments when with one press of the remote or a mere swipe of the screen we can go a thousand miles away and find something that gives us whatever we want in that moment whether it is to laugh or cry or buy or learn or squirm or rally or dally. It is all there completely under our control. [slide # 5 man on sofa with remote]
We need some leisure in our lives. We need easy ways and lazy days sometimes because life can be stressful. At other times we must search diligently for God’s way and wisdom and we must get off of our rusty dusty and do God’s will with all our heart, all our mind, all our strength. There are times that sitting down in our spiritual easy chairs has to be replaced with taking a strong stand to protect the poor and innocent and working up a sweat running away from temptation.
God is as easily seen everywhere as all the stuff we see through modern technology, and if our eyes are open, we do not miss God appearing to us with a wonderful opportunity to commit to God in ways that will bring many blessings.
With one word or whisper of prayer we connect to God with ease. [slide # 6 prayer] That prayer may be a prayer we have repeated for decades. That prayer that connects us to God may be a song we have sung again and again – for those who know it best, seem hungering and thirsting to hear it like the rest. Our prayer may be from words from family and friends have said that resonate with our inner thoughts and ring irresistibly true in our hearts. That prayer may be down to earth and deeply personal, it may be long or short; prayer can be spoken from memory, written, read, recited, silent or as Romans 8 says loaded with sighs too deep for words. Prayer may be strategically poetic and liturgically strong like the hundreds of prayers we find in the psalms and the gospels and the epistles.
The question is do we trust that connecting to God in prayer will lead to something more blessed than what we can create on our own. Though prayer is no more a guarantee, no more magical than a mortgage or a marriage, do we think this whole faith in God thing is worthy of our time and attention? Would our hearts get as restless for prayer as our fingers do without texting? Would we feel as lost without prayer as we do without our television or computer screens in front of us or do we avoid prayer as if it were a scam designed to diminish us in some way or another? [slide # 7     two children praying]
After the Florida shooting, I heard that there were many people trying to scam others, asking for money for so-called victims. Others with too much time on their hands to do mischief started sending out fake news stories about the students who witnessed the shooting. The stories were lies, but they seduced hundreds of thousands of people into thinking that they were true.
Getting scammed is easy. I’ve been scammed a couple times. Perhaps you have been too. There is one scam organization these days that calls people up saying your grandson or friend is in jail or kidnapped and needs you to send them money or something bad will happen. Another scam says you won a large amount of money and if you send in a few hundred dollars in processing fees within 24 hours they will send you a big check. They have gotten over 10 million dollars over the years. I heard of a woman this week named Gladys who was scammed for a fortune and left with only $69 dollars in her bank account.
God’s ways of holiness are not designed to scam us, we learn this as we walk this Lenten journey. We learn the truth that sets us free from paths of destruction as we connect to God in prayer. [slide # 8  truth sets us…] God appears to us, no matter our age or stage in life. As often as the sun rises, God appears to us with an invitation to commit to God’s will that lights the way to more blessings than we can count for ourselves and the world around us. Let us all commit to walk in the light.  [slide # 9 man bowed humbly] Amen. [slide # 10 Mother Theresa quote]






Sunday, February 18, 2018

February 18 2918 “Love Cleanses”

February 18th  2018 2 Corinthians 5.20b-6.10 *Psalm 51.1-17  “Love Cleanses” first Sunday in Lent Pastor Jacqueline Hines
If you have ever gotten a blood transfusion or [slide # 1 blood transfusion] had any type of heart procedure or surgery, then you know what it is to get a new start with a clean heart. [slide #  2 heart surgery] Psalm 51 is King David’s prayer for a clean heart because he knew he definitely needed one. [slide # 3 ...clean heart…] 
The heart is the only muscle that never stops working. It can beat over 4,000 times per hour, pumping 2,000 gallons. What a working machine we have, and with every job comes some trash that has to be eliminated. Our spiritual hearts need to be cleaned and cared for in the same ways as our physical hearts do.
Sometimes our hearts need - what advertisers are now calling - a heart-healthy diet. The heart is healthier when we eat a substantial amount of vegetables and decrease our intake of sugar to 28 grams a day and salt to 1500 milligrams per day. [slide # 4 healthy hear foods]
At all times our hearts are hungry for 150 minutes of exercise a week or for a solution to hurry up and come to fix a hard problem or some help to come and help us carry the heavy load [slide # 5 heavy load] of some heartache or heartbreak that has become our cross to bear.
The Lenten season is a time to examine our hearts [slide # 6 heart in eye] and ask God to show us something that we need to do or say to make our heart healthier. A healthy heart makes a healthy life. The Lenten season is a time to open our hearts and wait quietly for God to fill us with whatever God sees we need to be filled with. [slide # 7 glass filling]
We may come to God ready to receive one or two things that are very, very important to us. We may come wondering if we will leave empty-handed, though God never leaves us empty-handed. Still, during the Lenten season we need to come for God’s sake if for no other reason! [slide # 8 Grow in love with God]
In verse 4 of Psalm 51 David confesses his sins. He comes clean about his wrongdoing. He admits that he needs a change of heart. So, he takes the first step to becoming spiritually healthy. He confesses his sins, his limits, his weaknesses. Confession also effects his physical and emotional health.
King David chooses the best way to deal with an issue, which is to acknowledge that an issue exists. It takes most of us many years and many tears before we can admit to ourselves that we have an issue that may from time to time gnaw at our hearts and tear our guts out.
David confesses, and confession is good for the soul. Healing of hearts begins with confession to ourselves and to God. Like a child who has been caught with frosting all over its face when asked did you eat the cake, we have a choice to confess or to deny. [slide #  9 frosting face] God already sees the evidence against us, still it is good for us to confess and build good character instead of bad character.
Confession is an important part of prayer. [slide # 10 don’t be afraid….confession…] Would we really expect to have a good relationship with God when we are holding on willfully to some evil we are doing that breaks God’s heart or makes God mad?
Every family and every church gives some thought as to what is good character and what is bad character. Every family and every church winks at wrong or pretends not to see certain misbehavior. Most Christians do not keep a spotlight on each other’s sins. We leave that to the evening news. When we talk about each other, we want to do it in order to remain aware of our strengths and weakness so that the church can become as strong as we can be. When we speak, our motivation is to carefully build one another up, to speak for God -  words that are encouraging, comforting, and uplifting. When we begin to sound rough, contemptuous, bullyish, or resentful, we need to back up and let God fill us with gentleness and calm.
Sometimes, we do not want to talk about people because we say they are not our business. But, if the person claims to be a Christian, it is our business to take care of Christian business. Sometimes, we do not say anything because a person might act angry and bitter or cold-hearted toward us. They may try to get revenge and do something to us that is unpleasant or threatening.
Still, we cannot get away with ignoring our issues or the issues of other Christians. [slide # 11 hands on ears] According to Corinthians 5.12, God will handle non-Christians, but we are to make wise judgments regarding Christians. If we ask, God will provide the answers as to what we are to do. [slide # 12 never give up…] Wise counselors say that relationships stay stronger when we speak or gesture 9 times more positive communication than negative. That is a tall order without depending on the Holy Spirit.    
Sometimes more than others, we are glad when God’s answers seem to be slow in coming because we may not want to do anything anyway because we do not want to experience negative fallout. In the end, though, doing what God tells us to do regarding Christian misbehavior leads to good results. Proverbs 10:10 (NLT) says, “People who wink at wrong cause trouble, but a bold reproof promotes peace.” Lent is a time to rededicate ourselves to being peacemakers instead of troublemakers. [slide # 13 …peacemaker…]
The Lenten season is the 40 days [slide #  14 ..return to God] we set aside to ask God to show us [Slide # 15 God reveals] whatever we need to see in order to get our hearts right with God and right with each other. It is a time to clean house, for cleanliness is next to Godliness, which is one of those relevant sayings that is not found in the bible.
Lent is a good time to deal with any issues, problems, bad habits, fears, anxieties. It is a time to take heart and take initiative for things which matter most to God, for they matter to us more than we know.
What a privilege it is to go before the God of the universe and get a loving consultation and strong support in our journey to change. [slide # 16  hugged by Jesus]  It is so good to get a cleansing blood transfusion or heart surgery to jump start our way to a healthier heart. [slide # 17 happy heart]

We can think of Lent as a spiritual spa, a wondrous time of refreshment, [slide #  18   I will refresh….] dinner out with royalty, a vacation from sin. In any case, it is good for us as Christians to think and not just emote, to reflect and not just react, to pray and not just stay where we are, but to grow more spiritually healthy. May this Lenten season be a blessing to you and all those around you. Amen. [slide # 19 Make Lent…]

Friday, February 16, 2018

February 11, 2018 Mark 9.2-9 “Love Shines” (Scout Sunday)

February 11, 2018 Mark 9.2-9 “Love Shines” (Scout Sunday) Pastor Jacqueline Hines

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Today is Transfiguration Sunday and it is also scout Sunday! There is always a lot to celebrate in the house of God. God always has a reason to have a party.
The word transfiguration is from the Greek word Metamorphoo (met-am-or-fo'-o ). [slide # 1 metamorphoo ] It means to transform, to change. [slide # 2 transform, change] On this Transfiguration Sunday we celebrate Jesus’ transformation, for even Jesus was changed when he went up on a mountain top with his bffs – Peter, James and John. [slide # 3 Jesus and the 3] They felt closer to God in the beauty and serenity of the mountaintop. They felt the awe-inspiring peace of God. Have YOU ever felt God’s presence while standing on a mountain top [slide # 4 girl on mountain] or sitting in a flower garden [slide # 5 boy on laptop in garden] or walking along a sandy beach? [slide # 6 beach]
We often hear God’s love for us very clearly in the woods and everywhere in nature where birds sing their melodies [slide # 7 birds singing] and wolves howl at the moon, [slide # 8 wolf /moon] where fallen leaves crunch beneath our feet and a warm fire glows just right for our hotdogs and marshmallow treats. God’s presence fills us with those good feelings that help transform us into good, even great, boys and girls, men and women.
Like Jesus, [slide # 9 Jesus multicolors].  We are changed right before the eyes of those who see us. Those who have eyes to see notice that we have changed for the better and that we are overflowing with light and love, and motivation. Those who have spiritual eyes and insight can appreciate that we have been changed and we have the wisdom to know certain things that make this world a better place. We have the power to use our God-given gifts to be a blessing, to save lives and rescue those who are in dire need and great distress. [slide # 10 girl sad in corner] We ourselves may be in trouble or maybe it is a stranger or someone close to us that we love and care about that may be in trouble. [slide # 11 man with head down]
It has been said that when young people have at least three adults that they trust and can talk to, they are stronger than so many others that are having a hard time. Young people have confessed that they sometimes feel concern because they believe they are addicted to their phones and computers. These are things to pray about and ask God’s help.
Jesus was changed on that mountain. Verse 3 says his clothes suddenly looked dazzling white. [slide # 12 Jesus surrounded by light] It was a brightness that was not like the brightness they had seen before. It was a brightness that was heavenly. It was supernatural.
What is supernatural? I do not have a good definition for supernatural anymore. In my experience, everything that we call natural no longer seems ordinary or common to me. Every breath we take, [slide # 13 taking breaths] every star that shines, [slide # 14 star] every wind that blows, [slide # 15 wind blown tree] [slide # 16  wind blown dog] and every seed that grows [slide # 17 seeds] are unfathomable to me. It seems EVERYTHING is above and beyond my comprehension and therefore, I find myself always looking up toward God as the power that is higher than anything and anyone. [slide # 18 child looking up in prayer]
Jesus’ clothes turned brighter than day. In that bright spiritual light, they saw something sort of weird. They could see two ancestors who lived hundreds of years ago. They saw Elijah and Moses talking to Jesus [ slide # 19 …talking with Jesus] .
It is a good thing to connect with our ancestors who have gone before us. (It is good that Troop 4 is celebrating 50 years of scouting at Bethel. They are looking back to the dedicated men and women who served and sacrificed in order to maintain values that were honorable and worthy to be called Christian.) Moses appeared on the mountain with Jesus, though he was born 1500 years before Jesus. Moses’ job was to inspire any lawbreakers to become promise keepers. He gave us the Ten Commandments to help us.     
Peter, James, and John not only saw Moses talking to Jesus, they saw the greatest prophet of all times, Elijah. Elijah was born 800 year before Jesus. Elijah was a great prophet who spoke strong and forceful words on God’s behalf. Elijah’s words were sharper than a double-edged sword. They cut right to the point of everything that mattered to God.
As James, Peter, and John watched Jesus talking to Moses and Elijah, they were trembling with fear, they looked as if they were seeing a ghost and in some sense, they were! The memories of these two greats in the faith brought were shining with extraordinary spiritual light. In the bible, people in heaven who have helped us accomplish great things are called a “cloud of witnesses.” They have been first-hand witnesses of God’s wonderful ways and they look on us from above and smile when they see the good that we are accomplishing! We should remind ourselves often that they are the ones God used to get us where we are today [slide # 20 Jesus talking  (brown background) ] We do not want to be blind to their existence because they do matter.
Sometimes the world is an upside down place. Still, even the smallest good we do makes more of a difference than we can imagine. God gives all of us something that has the power to transform the world! [slide # 21 hands on globe]
We all know that even one smile can light up an entire room, [ slide #22  children smiling] [slide # 23 cat smiling] that a little laughter is contagious, [slide # 24 child laughing]that it feels good to receive a blessing and it feels good to pay it forward. [slide # 25 pay it…]
There is great power in all the good we do, so we do well to do all the good we can in order to change the atmosphere and make the world a better place.
Someone who visited Philadelphia last week noticed that the city was filled with happiness, and unity, and laughter that was refreshing. The city had high hopes of becoming a city of champions. Hope had them dancing in the streets. Hope did not disappoint them, even though there were some very, very tense moments. Like that last touchdown.
Slide # 26 video
[video- ttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6cqhUvawoL0   - show first 57 minutes]
Carson Wentz  [slide # 27 Wentz ],  has led the Eagles team in prayer [ 28 slide # Eagles huddled in prayer] and when given the chance to speak after the game, players and coaches gave thanks and credit to God. Nick Foles, Jay Ajayi, Zach Ertz, Corey Clement among others are names that won’t be forgotten for a long time. They may not all claim to be Christians, but they were all in the prayer huddle as far as I know. They are in the light, even if the light is not all the way in them. Praying and giving God thanks is light that leads to positive changes in the atmosphere.
Prayer may not seem to make a difference at all, but we know better. Some of us may be like the man who fell off of a cliff. He was hanging on to a branch and he decided to pray. He looked up to the Heavens and yelled. Is anybody up there? Can you help me? He heard a voice say, “Jump! Just Jump!” The man, looking up again and yelled “Is there anybody else up there?” Finally, he jumped and realized he was only two feet from the ground. Prayer makes a world of difference. Try it for 30 days and see for yourself. Try it for 10 days. Try it for 5 days.
As Christians we shine just like Jesus. [Slide # 29 dazzling light…] Our spiritual disciplines of prayer and doing good help us shine as champions. We fervently love the God who made us.  We love those upon whose shoulders we stand. We make a difference in this world. As champions of the faith we work hard and play hard to win so that others too can shine with the light of God’s love. [slide # 30 Jesus hug] We work hard so that everyone can celebrate the brilliant light that makes life good, for isn’t it a terrible thing to live this life, without the light that shines from above? Amen. [slide # 31 Lord….(prayer)]  [slide # 32 Eagle player] [slide # 33 Touchdown]


Monday, February 5, 2018

February 4 2018 Love Heals Mark 1.29-39

February 4 Isaiah 40.21-31   *Mark 1.29-39 “Love Heals” – (Super Bowl Sunday) Pastor Jacqueline Hines
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Our scripture this morning is packed with action everywhere you turn. Faithful worshippers are going into the synagogue. When they leave the synagogue they stay busy, sharing God’s word and healing people.
The first verse tells us “As soon as they left the synagogue, “they” -that is – Jesus and his disciples whom he had just called together earlier in chapter one – [slide # 1 two disciples with Jesus] “entered the house of Simon and Andrew, with James and John.” [slide # 2  two disciples together]
They left the house of worship and crossed the threshold into a Christian home. Two brothers lived in this house. They happened to be Simon and Andrew, disciples of Jesus. They were not the only ones who lived in the house. Simon’s mother-in-law lived there, too. We can assume that Simon’s wife lived there, too. It is reasonable to assume also that one could often hear the pitter patter of little feet and the squeals of happy children in the house with all the others. In a multifamily house it was no surprise that at least one of them was sick. [slide # 3 woman sick in bed]
When they told Jesus that his disciple’s mother-in-law was sick with a fever – it could have been the flu. There may have been an epidemic in the area like we are experiencing this winter - verse 31 tells us this happened: Jesus came to her, and that is what we do. When people are sick, we come to them. Then Jesus took her by the hand and that is what we have learned to do as we have followed Jesus. We touch the sick, with encouraging words, with warm hands, with hot meals, with beautiful flowers. Then Jesus lifted her up and that is what we do. [slide # 4 Jesus lifts her…] We lift one another up, we help each other in every way we can. We wash clothes, we do errands, we stir pots, we vacuum floors, we wash faces, we give hugs, and we pinch cheeks.
After Jesus did all that, verse 31 says, “Then the fever left her,…” when we do good things, good things happen. Healings happen, prosperity happens, favor happens. When we do good things, loneliness subsides, depression decreases, danger takes a dive. When we do good things, we reap the good we sow. The good we do and the good that is done in us and around us affects every area of our life – our mind, our body, our soul – which is our will and our spirit –which is our relationship with God.
That is why the scriptures tell us to worship in spirit and truth. We do not want to just show up as just another warm body and just go through the motions. We want to worship with our all our heart mind, soul and spirit. God wants a real relationship with us; we ought to be honest about how real a relationship we have with our God.
There is a special hip hop dance move called the wave [slide # 5 ] It resembles our connection to God; the Holy Spirit moves powerfully like a wave of electricity from one to the other and back again. That is what the Holy Spirit does with us. We are the conduit of God’s healing and helping power. [slide # 6 electric plug]
When the fever left Simon’s mother-in-law, she began to serve them. She was back to doing what she did best, serving the hungry crowd that gathered in her home.
Word got around that people were being healed because of Jesus. The next thing you know people were at Simon’s door, hoping to be healed, too. We do the same thing. We research the internet for which hospital has the most five-star reviews and which doctor has the most successes. There is always a reason for choosing the medical care we choose. It may be convenience or cost, reputation or referrals, friendly manner of the doctors or a fancy office. We have our reasons.
The crowd that came to Jesus had their reasons. He healed them. The word the gospel of Mark uses for “heal” is the Greek word “Therapeuo[slide # 7 therapeuo  =  therapy] which is kin to the words “therapeutic” and “therapy”.
A healer is one who attends therapeutically, who cares for someone in a therapeutic manner, who uses a variety of therapies to save someone from physical or emotional distress. A healer is a servant, even a slave, bound to the Hippocratic Oath to do no harm, which was inspired by God 400 years before the birth of Jesus. In one source, the Greek word for “therapy” is associated with the word “worship” and humble submission to God, which is also a way to get some healing.
Most of us have had some type of therapy. You may have had physical therapy, vitamin therapy, massage therapy, cognitive therapy, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, antibiotic therapy or other medical or behavioral therapy.
Being in therapy means to be in the process of getting healed, being served, being cared for. At times, whatever Jesus did or said made an immediate difference. At other times, the cure would come in stages. Jesus was known as a healer.
You remember a man who ran up to Jesus and asked for mercy. He was a believer. He had faith in Jesus as the son of God. That man got mercy and more. Jesus called him and asked him an awesome question, “What do you want me to do for you?” What more can anyone ask for? If Jesus called you aside and asked you, “What do you want me to do for you?,” what would YOUR answer be?   [slide #8  what do you want?]
Many came to Jesus for a healing touch, a therapeutic intervention. They did not all go away with a body that never got sick again, but I believe they were a whole lot better with Jesus than they would have been without him. I believe their faith was stirred and strengthened until they could see important ways to improve their health. I believe Jesus looked into their hearts and spoke a truth that served as a prescription for more satisfying relationships, more meaningful goals, and a healthier lifestyle.
One woman in the bible who had been traumatized and kidnapped by a bunch of men, was protected by Jesus. Protection healed her. Then he warned her, “go and sin no more.”
Speaking to another woman in the bible who was divorced five times, Jesus encouraged her to worship God, to show up, not only nonchalantly with her body in the pew but with an intention to have a pure relationship with the living God. The truth Jesus spoke to her set her free and she brought others to be healed and helped as well. Healing did not turn them into saints, but they did become followers, [slide # 9 lamb following Jesus] which means they were willing to learn and grow as Christians.
We do ourselves a disservice when we expect our healing of heart or body to be easy or perfect. We do ourselves a disservice when we doubt our worth because we are not as healthy as the perfect people those perfect commercials tell us we can be.
Jesus our healer, never promised perfect health on earth, and those who were healed and cured were just like you and me, living a life with ups and downs, with plenty of headaches and heartaches that they were wise to bring to Jesus who never left them empty-handed. We are never left empty-handed either.
Verse 34 says that Jesus not only healed people, he cast out demons, [slide # 10 Satan wrestling…] those evil influences, those messengers of Satan. The Jesus in us helps us to shut out and shut up the thoughts in our minds and the voices in our ears that seek to steal, kill, and destroy our blessings. Jesus takes the wind out of Satan’s sails. After a while, Satan does not even dare to whisper his negativity and doubt into our lives.
Sometimes the enemy is stronger than we are, but with time and a few doses of Jesus’ healing in our lives, we become stronger. [slide # 11  Jesus, Jesus, Jesus]
Dove Award winner, Natalie Grant [slide # 12 Natalie Grant] has a song that has captured my attention these days because it helps us Christians keep our perspective on healing.
Her song is a prayer: [slide # 13  pray (purple)]
 Help me want the Healer more than the healing
Help me want the Savior more than the saving
Help me want the Giver more than the giving
Oh Help me want you Jesus more than anything.

So, may this be our prayer, to want the healer more than the healing, to want Jesus more than anything. Amen. [slide # 14 Jesus still heals]