Friday, July 31, 2020

August 2 2020 "Jesus Said, ' You Give Them Something to Eat'"


August 2, 2020  Matthew 14.13-21 “Jesus Said, ‘Give Them Something to Eat’ ” Pastor Jacqueline Hines
After 18 weeks of the pandemic, surely we have heard God’s voice in small and great ways, reminding us of God’s love for us, reminding us of the blessing of loving our neighbor as we love ourselves. Whether we have had more time to do certain things or less time to do certain things, because God is God, we can be a walking praise, a neon sign that says God is good, and God’s mercy endures forever. 
Let’s look to the gospel of Matthew chapter 14 for the telling of Jesus feeding 5,000 people. 
Matthew tells us that Jesus went away to a deserted place after hearing that John the Baptist had died. He took a boat ride to a deserted place perhaps to mourn.  Verse 13 tells us  13Now when Jesus heard this, he withdrew from there in a boat to a deserted place by himself. But when the crowds heard it, they followed him on foot from the towns. 
Sounds like Jesus was taking time to have the peace and quiet which is a blessing that we all need from time to time!
On his way back to shore, Jesus could see that a crowd was waiting for him. Verse 14 says  14When he went ashore, he saw a great crowd; and he had compassion for them and cured their sick. 
Perhaps you have looked up and seen a crowd waiting for you. Once I planned a meeting with a group of clergy women. It was in the days before cell phones. I was waylaid with an urgency with one of my Germantown parishioners and by the time I arrived, I expected that they would all be gone. What a nice surprise it was to see them sitting on the floor in front of my apartment door, waiting patiently for me.
Another time, on a rainy day, my tires were getting bald and as I was attempting to stop at a four way intersection, my car continued through the red light. No one blew their horn or screamed obscenities out of their window or gave me the sparrow…All those strangers in their cars waited patiently as I backed up out of their way.  
Jesus saw a crowd waiting for him. One can imagine that it was a crowd that cared, a crowd that was waiting patiently, waiting knowing that God is good and something good is always happening and something good is always coming our way and something good is always worth waiting for.
The crowd had found Jesus and was waiting for him. Matthew reminds us that there are times when we must go where Jesus is. We must find him and wait for him.
Even today there are large crowds that look for Jesus. We may have seen such a crowd in a stadium listening to Joyce Meyer teach in Missouri or listening to Rick Warren at Saddleback church, the sixth largest megachurch in the US.
Scholars tell us that every crowd is not the same. We have seen most every type of crowd in the last few months with various types of purposes. Crowds can be conventional, casual, and passive like an audience at a concert, a church service or sidewalk dining. Others crowds are expressive, gathering to demonstrate and make a particular point. Other crowds form during a time of panic to escape a fire or a mass shooter. Some crowds are acquisitive when resources are limited. They may become emotionally intense, growing into mobs. We know there are all kinds of crowds and all kinds of people in each crowd.
There had to be all types of people in that crowd waiting for Jesus. No matter what type of crowd it was, at some point, it is safe to say that some in the crowd were hungry, some were tired, frustrated or angry. There were those in the crowd who were hopeful and optimistic and some who were hurting with enough heartache, aches, pains and ailments that needed healing and help.
How did Jesus feel about this crowd? Did he want to run the other way and not be bothered? Did he feel more important than they were? No. He felt compassion for them. 
Compassion is defined as a feeling of deep sympathy and sorrow for someone who has a problem. To feel compassion is to feel a strong desire to alleviate the suffering. 
Are you like Jesus? Is there a certain person in a particular situation that stirs your feelings of compassion? Do you feel compassion when you see those Covenant House commercials of homeless teenagers telling how they slept on park benches, or those St. Jude commercials of children with terminal diseases, or those ads on milk cartons of missing toddlers, or those documentaries of families starving in third world or widows weeping behind the still iron curtain? Perhaps there is a family member or neighbor that breaks your heart every time you think of them and you tear up and find every way you can think of to take away their suffering and make them smile.
Jesus felt compassion for the crowd. His heart was stirred to be kind, to show mercy, and tenderness. We are like Jesus when we feel feelings of compassion.
Still, as Christians, we may, from time to time, find ourselves praying that Jesus would fill our hearts with feelings of compassion because we feel so empty. We may pray to be purged of our craving for vengeance, of our hate, hard heartedness, and ferociousness. There is enough in every life for which to praise God every hour and repent every day.
Jesus had compassion. We are like Jesus. We pray to be more and more like Jesus.
Jesus not only had compassion on the crowd that day, but he cured the sick. We think about our health a lot. We often need healing for one situation or another. We worry about our health a lot, and we are so very grateful when our health and the health of our loved ones is restored. Jesus has compassion on those who are in need of healing.
When was the last time you went to Jesus about your health? Do it today! Do it today! Jesus loves us, feels compassion for us. Jesus is for us, not against us. Nothing is impossible and when things are not yet what we want them to be, just know that God has a purpose and a plan and everything is going to be alright!
The crowd waited for Jesus. They were sick, they were tired, they were happy, and they were sad. Whatever they were, Jesus had compassion on them, healed them – to one degree or another – as he does today, and when it was getting late and the disciples wanted to send the crowd away so they could get something to eat, Jesus said, they do not need to go away, you give them something to eat. Verse 15 says  15When it was evening, the disciples came to him and said, “This is a deserted place, and the hour is now late; send the crowds away so that they may go into the villages and buy food for themselves.”    16Jesus said to them, “They need not go away; you give them something to eat.” 17They replied, “We have nothing here but five loaves and two fish.” 
Isn’t that our call to feed one another, to nurture one another, to help share something so that others can taste and see that the Lord is good… to contribute to one another’s wellbeing, even to cure and heal each other in one degree or another? 
Isn’t that our call to receive the compassion that Jesus has and share it as the Spirit leads us? Isn’t Jesus calling us to be human toward those in front of us, when they are hungry, tired, sick, angry, optimistic, or pessimistic? Isn’t it our calling to trust that little becomes much when we put it in the hands of Jesus?
Think of that person or situation for which you feel the least compassion. Does that image appear on the evening news? Is he or she among your family or friends? Who is it? Where do they live? What do they think of you? How do they feel about you? What do you think of them? How do you feel about them?
Are you willing to receive from Jesus any compassion so that you can show that person that you care? Are you willing to give Jesus your hand and your heart so he can guide you to follow instructions that will help you to be more like him, blessing others – learning to care for those in spite of yourself.
Verse 8 tells us that he gave them specific directions.
19Then he ordered the crowds to sit down on the grass. Taking the five loaves and the two fish, he looked up to heaven, and blessed and broke the loaves, and gave them to the disciples, and the disciples gave them to the crowds. 

20And all ate and were filled; and they took up what was left over of the broken pieces, twelve baskets full. 
21And those who ate were about five thousand men, besides women and children.
Yes, we are called to do great things…to feed hungry souls who are hurting rather than send them away to fend for themselves, rather than be overwhelmed – thinking there is nothing God can do with us. It is our call to do our part to heal souls in need of healing and being treated like a human being.
At the very least we are called to pray for each other. It is not the easiest thing to pray for someone that you don’t care about, or someone you think does not deserve to be blessed, or someone who owes you. It is not easy to pray.
One thing that will help is for you to picture Jesus with his arms compassionately around you and that person every day. A picture is worth a thousand words. Picturing Jesus loving each of us is a prayer in itself. Prayer can make pain and many problems go away. May it be so for each of us today and always.
Let us pray: Merciful and compassionate God, use us as healing agents today. Thank you for the sympathy and tenderness you have shown us, for the way you have filled our life with abundant blessings. Help us not to withhold the good you have given us, but help us to be a blessing to everyone you guide us to, especially to those we need to show more care and compassion. We pray as you taught us to pray:  Our father who art in heaven. Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, they will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day, our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us, and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil, for thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen.
Next week we go to the 14th chapter of Matthew and the topic, “Jesus said, ‘Be encouraged’” 
If you would like to make your contribution to the ministry and mission of Bethel, the website is  Bethelumchurch.com 
Or you can send to 952 Bethel Church Road, Spring City, Pa. 19475. God bless you!
We are closing with Donna’s rendition of “What A Fellowship”   song – Donna Upson - What A Fellowship - available on youtube version of this message.




Friday, July 24, 2020

July 26, 2020 Psalm 90 Bishop Peggy Johnson "O God, Our Help In Ages Past"


July 26, 2020 Bishop Peggy Johnson preaching on ”O God, Our Help in Ages Past” Bethel UMC Pastor Jacqueline Hines

On this 17th week of our quarantine that has caused us to reflect, we still expect God to show up and even show off.

Our message today comes from our Bishop Peggy Johnson.


Bishop Peggy Johnson is the Resident Bishop of the Philadelphia Area, which includes the Eastern Pennsylvania and Peninsula-Delaware conferences in the Northeastern Jurisdiction of The United Methodist Church.
She was baptized and grew up in the Methodist Church in Baltimore, Maryland. She pursued a degree in Music Education at Lebanon Valley, a United Methodist-related college in Eastern Pennsylvania. She taught elementary vocal music in Baltimore County Public Schools for two years. During this time she felt a call to ministry, specifically with deaf people and people with disabilities. She left teaching and began to pursue a Master of Divinity degree at Asbury Theological Seminary. Peggy met her husband, Michael C. Johnson, at seminary and they graduated together.
Upon graduation they were offered appointments in the Baltimore Annual Conference.
++
Let us prepare our hearts for a word from our Bishop Peggy Johnson! 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_96WAz9jHJI

Pastoral Message “Our God, Our Help in Ages Past”
Psalm 90:1-2
“Lord, you have been our dwelling place in all generations.  Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever you had formed the earth and the world, from everlasting to everlasting you are God.”
1.     I bid you grace and peace in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ.  Know that I am praying for you during this national health crisis.  I appreciate your many prayers as we navigate this fluid time.
2.     Today I want to remind you about our ultimate hope in all of this: God.  Psalm 90 reminds us: “from everlasting to everlasting you are God.”  We know that God is with us now as we journey through this ever-flowing stream of time.
3.     The words of the hymn, “O God Our Help in Ages Past,” were penned by the prolific English poet, Isaac Watts.  Born in 1674, he began writing poetry and particularly religious poetry at the age of 7 and in his lifetime he is credited for composing more than 6,000 hymns, about the same as our Charles Wesley.  “Joy to the World” and “When I Survey the Wondrous Cross” are among Isaac Watt’s “greatest hits.”
4.     Watts was a preacher for a time but mostly spent his life writing hymns and he was known as the “Father of English Hymnody.” 
5.     The hymn: “O God Our Help in Ages Past” has endured through the years and is known as the “Second National Anthem of England. It is sung at all official remembrance services in England and Canada.
6.     John Wesley included many of Isaac’s hymns in his hymnbooks and even tweaked the words from time to time.
7.     For example, “O God Our Help in Ages Past” was originally penned “Our God our help in Ages Past.”   Wesley took out the “our” and changed it to “O.” Though grammatically smoother with the “O,” I think that Watts left it in there on purpose.  “Our God our help in ages past, our hope for years to come, our shelter from the stormy blast and our eternal home.”  In one small stanza Watts included the word “our” 5 times.  Could it be a message here?
8.     God is OUR God.  The one we trust, the one we worship, the one who saves and sanctifies us and delivers us from adversity. 
9.     If he is OUR God, then we, his children, are brothers and sisters in this family of humanity.  This means with God as our God, our heavenly parent, our supreme source of strength, we must be in loving relationship with all of our entire human family.
10.So treat all people like family during this Covid-19 crisis.  A crisis always brings with it an opportunity.  Isaac Watts’ own father was imprisoned for being a Dissenter, who challenged the theology of the Church of England.  Watts experienced suffering in his young life. But I think he used his hymns to call us to our better selves.  So during this crisis:

a)     Call on those who don’t have family or friends to support them.
b)     Invite new people to be on your live-streamed worship services for inspiration and comfort.
c)     Start up a prayer meeting using a Free Conference call number and pray for all the needs that are happening around us. Prayer changes things!
d)     Give of your means to those who will be in financial difficulty because of job losses.
e)     Volunteer to watch some children, if your situation permits, so that parents can go to work.
f)       Send a letter of support and encouragement to our health care professionals, our first responders and news media who are working overtime right now for our health concerns, protection and information.
g)     Don’t blame anyone for this disease. This kind of virus is a phenomena that occurs from time to time in human history.  Accusations of neglect or mal-intent are not helpful. Be gentle with one another and if there are signs of poor judgement, call folks to accountability with an attitude of love.
11.Remember, God is our dwelling place, not our homes made with human hands, or even this present crisis.  Keep your eyes on your neighbors and friends and celebrate the “Our God” in every way you can.



Lord, we have come into this place to worship you! Thank you that it is as well with us as it is. Thank you that you never leave us nor forsake us, that you always, always bless us in more ways than we could ever count. We pray your mercy upon those who need you most urgently – the hopeless, the helpless, the heedless, the leaderless, and the scattered. Bless our bishop and all the preachers, teachers, leaders, and missionaries of every nation and station. We pray as you taught the disciples-
Our Father, Who art in heaven, 
Hallowed be Thy Name. 
Thy Kingdom come. 
Thy Will be done, 
on earth as it is in Heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread. 
And forgive us our trespasses, 
as we forgive those who trespass against us. 
And lead us not into temptation, 
but deliver us from evil. Amen.
Next week join us as we celebrate communion and the confirmation of two youth at 11 a.m. in the pavilion.
If you would like to make your contribution to the ministry and mission of Bethel, the website is Bethelumchurch.com
Or you can send to 952 Bethel Church Road, Spring City, Pa. 19475. God bless you! 
We are closing with a musical selection entitled Spirit of Gentleness.  God bless you.  

Saturday, July 18, 2020

July 19, 2020 Matthew 13.24-30, 36-43 Leaders: Weeding


July 19 2020 Matthew 13.24-30, 36-43 “Leaders: Weeding” Pastor Jacqueline Hines
==
Week number 16 and God is still on the throne of the universe, and we trust God to rule and reign in our hearts as well.
+++
During a recent Adult Sunday School Class, the question was posed, “Should we reject people who are sinners? After all, aren’t we are all sinners?” That question goes along with Jesus’ parable in Matthew’s gospel today about people who are as welcome as weeds. 
Though we have all sinned and come short of glorifying God, sometimes, as humans, we cross a line to being evil, telling the world that we no longer care and perhaps that we never did care. As humans, we are prone to wander and we can feel it, as the songwriter Robert Robinson wrote in 1758 when he was only 22 years old in England. He was, as we all can be, “Prone to leave the God we love.”
Robinson was about 8 years old when his father died. He and his mom were left with no means of support. The government in England was no help to orphans and widows at that time. By age 15, Robert was working as a barber’s apprentice. He was also quite the hooligan during those years. He accosted a fortune teller along with some of his so-called friends. One thing led to another and Robinson came to his senses, He went to church and was convicted through a sermon by Rev. George Whitefield.
You may recall that George Whitefield came to our Chester County on one of his 7 mission trips from England to America. His words had their own unavoidable political slant and anti-slavery rhetoric along with a little fire and brimstone. He gained some converts and a not a few death threats when he prepared to preach among a particular group of furnace workers who were making iron that would be used to make stoves, tools, cannons, and guns. The furnace owner – and a founder of Coventry UMC, Anna Rutter Nutt (whom Nutt Road is named after) and her daughter -protected Rev. Whitefield, with the help of their rifles aimed in the direction of those perched to persecute, (so says our Bethel Historian) Interestingly, the Joanna Furnace, named after the wife of Mr. Potts – as in Pottstown - was located in woods so dense it was used by the Underground Railroad.
Songwriter Robert Robinson heard Whitefield’s preaching, became a Methodist at one point, but still found himself wandering, his love for God cooling down as is not so unusual in this Christian journey. There are many distractions and temptations that we have to weed out of our lives. So his song tells us. 
Jesus tells us a story of good wheat growing along with weeds that are unwelcome because they are unhelpful. Matthew 13 beginning at verse 24 says, Jesus put before them another parable: “The kingdom of heaven may be compared to someone who sowed good seed in his field;   25 but while everybody was asleep, an enemy came and sowed weeds among the wheat, and then went away. 26So when the plants came up and bore grain, then the weeds appeared as well.
Gardeners talk all the time about how much they enjoy gardening. They enjoy the ripe fruit, nutritious vegetables and the lovely flowers, but weeding is such a nuisance and something they wish they did not have to do the weeding. I am sure gardeners wish the deer and the rabbits would eat all the weeds instead of the bulbs, vegetables, and berries!
In Jesus parable, one of the workers asks the question in verse 27.  ‘Master, did you not sow good seed in your field? Where, then, did these weeds come from? The answer was in verse 28, “An enemy has done this.” 
If you live long enough, you will from time to time come across an enemy, seen or unseen. The enemy comes when we are sleeping and sows unwelcome and unhelpful weeds among the most wonderful wheat.
In the bible, sleeping can be synonymous with prayerlessness. We are vulnerable to our enemies when we are not praying. When someone says, you haven’t got a prayer, it means you haven’t got a chance. Prayer gives us a chance for better results. Prayer changes everything. I could tell you story after story about miracles on Azusa Street in Los Angeles in 1908 or a the 1950’s revival in Argentina written about in Cry for Me Argentina, my own personal life changing moment in 2018 or so on labor day weekend during a Church of God in Christ Convention service at the Hilton in King of Prussia.
God is on the move and no matter who we are, where we are from, or where we are going, if we try God for ourselves, if we trust God enough to pray, to keep that conversation going, we will have our own story to tell.
It is no small thing that our Church’s focus for the year is prayer. We know there is power in prayer. Bishop Desmund Tutu, Nobel Peace Prize Winner and South African Episcopalian Priest, said that prayer was like a wall of fire that stands between us and our enemies.


There may be enemies in your life right now that are sowing seeds of anger that turn into unwanted and unwelcome weeds. The enemy may be sowing seeds of despair, helplessness, greed, fear, argumentativeness, ill health, poverty, addiction or aversion that steal, kill, and destroy parts of your life. The enemy may have sown seeds for weeds that bring miserable relationships, obnoxious neighbors, confusion about what to do when witnessing someone being abused, or paralyzation when it is time to do justice and love mercy.
The weeds eat away at our fruitfulness. Weeds separate us from the goodness and mercy that are trying to follow us all the days of our lives.
So when our children ask where the unwelcome, unhelpful weeds came from, we can tell them that an enemy brings them in the dark of night. Everybody is not our friend. We must teach our children some measure of stranger danger. We must teach our children that we can lock our spiritual doors through prayer.
So what are we supposed to do about those weeds?  The parable asks, “Master, do you want us to go and gather them? Do you want us to weed them out?” “No,” the master said in verse 29, “for in gathering the weeds you would uproot the wheat along with them. 30Let both of them grow together until the harvest.” In other words, there will come a time when God is going to deal with the weeds. It is not in our hands. God is in charge of the harvest. God will reveal when it is time to uproot a weed.
The master said, “I will tell the reapers.” When we are talking to God about persons and situations that are unwelcome and unhelpful, within ourselves or outside of ourselves, we cannot assume that we are the ones chosen to do the weeding. Neither can we assume that we are not the ones to do the weeding. Verse 30 says, God will tell the reapers when to pluck up the weeds and bundle them up and burn them, destroying them. Of course, there will always be more weeds.
And, questions will always arise. Who did this? What are we supposed to do about it? The same answers apply. This is the work of an enemy. Talk to God about it and do what God tells you to do!
Rev. Dr. Grace Pak 
a coach and trainer from the General Council on Religion and Race who has trained a diversity team in this Eastern Pennsylvania Conference said this about Jesus’ parable about how to deal with the weeds that grow alongside the wheat:
“Both wheat and weeds are allowed to grow side by side until the harvest. 
  At harvest, wheat and weeds are separated by their fruit: the ripe golden wheat or the lack of it. The wheat separates the followers of the kingdom from the followers of the evil one. 
The golden grain feeds the hungry and nurtures life. The wheat provide sustenance and nutrition. The followers of the kingdom are a source of blessing for the world.
May we be a blessing to this world, no matter what is going on the world!
Let us pray: 
God, you never promised us a rose garden. But, you have made so many beautiful people and so many amazing and wonderful moments for us to enjoy as we build your Kin-dom. Thank you. Forgive us when we grumble about the weeds or neglect our responsibilities to them, for we know you have a divine purpose and plan even for weeds that are unwelcome and unhelpful. We pray as you taught us:
 Our father who art in heaven. Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day, our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us, and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil, for thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen. 
Benediction: Pray about everything and watch God work!
Next week our message will be coming from our own Bishop Peggy Johnson who is sharing from Psalm 90 – “O God, Our Help in Ages Past” 
If you would like to make your contribution to the ministry and mission of Bethel, the website is 
Or you can send to 952 Bethel Church Road, Spring City, Pa. 19475. 


Sunday, July 12, 2020


July 12 2020 Matthew 13.1-9, 18-23 “Leaders: Working the Crowd” Pastor Hines


It’s been 15 weeks and we continue to believe that together we can overcome this contagious coronavirus. Together we can do great things. God has not forsaken us nor forgotten us. Are you blessed in spite of it all today? Yes! Yes! Yes! A thousand times, Yes! We are blessed. Let us turn our hearts to the message of the day.
It is nice to be popular. Have you gotten your 15 minutes of fame that supposedly everyone in this world gets? Some people enjoy popularity more than others. Can you imagine being a singer or actor, people chasing after you to get a closer look, to be with the real thing as opposed to the glimpse you get in the movies or from the internet? 

They want your autograph while you’re having dinner in a restaurant or they want to take a selfie or take home the cup you drank out of as a souvenir forever.
If you were famous, would you drop your fur coat on the floor of the stage like Aretha franklin or smile for the cameras until your cheeks hurt?
You may have been popular enough in middle school or high school not having to worry about a date to the prom or being picked last for team sports. Popularity is just one reason we may want to be with someone.
Sometimes we want to be with one another just because we are Christians, we share wholesome values and expect to uphold high standards and to be treated with love and respect at all times.
The 13th chapter of Matthew tells us that Jesus left his house and went to the beach and such a great crowd gathered around him that he made space for himself, got into a boat and sat there, while the whole crowd stood on the beach. It is safe to assume that at least two of the disciples were with him acting as security guards.
Jesus worked the crowd. He used his popularity to share the word of life to those who appreciated him.
 
Rev. Dr. James Forbes, Senior Minister Emeritus of the Riverside Church, a multicultural, interdenominational church on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, New York City, served there 18 years. During that time, I heard him preach a sermon that I will never forget. It was entitled “Use What You Got.” He taught that we should use our gifts, our talents, our gender, our opportunities and whatever we have in order to draw people to the God in us!

Jesus took advantage of the moment as the crowd was happily gathering to tell them many things in parables. We are like Jesus. We all have attractive gifts and talents, and we all have wonderful opportunities that we can take to share the word of God through our testimony and the good example of our lifestyle.
Our lifestyle bears fruit and many notice that fruit. Many are nurtured by our fruitfulness, particularly those who are hungry and thirsty for righteousness. Part of being a Christian is growing in Christ. We grow with the help of each other’s fruitfulness.
When it comes to spiritual fruit, the more the merrier! In our Monday Meditations, the question was raised as to whether churches are experiencing the power of the resurrection.
 If not, what can we do to experience more of the power to heal and to overcome evil with good? Of course, the answer is to surrender our lives daily to the King of kings and the Lord of lords.
Sometimes we do not care about whether God approves of what we say and do. 
There are many examples in scripture where it was said of nice people, that they loved the praises of men and women, more than the praises of God. We live for the praise and popularity that our friends and family shower on us. 
First and foremost, we need God’s approval, and we know God has our best interest at heart.
When we share our love and our lives with others, we are also planting seeds that, with love and care, will help others to grow and prosper. When we plant seeds, we always hope to get a lot for our efforts. At the same time, we know as verse 21 tells us,  some of our best efforts never take root, and some of our greatest achievements that have taken years to come to fruition, may not last nearly as long as we want them to or think they should.
We need to pause and take that reality in…. Some of our best efforts never take root, and some of our greatest achievements that have taken years to come to fruition, may not last nearly as long as we want them to or think they should.
We plant seeds, we nurture them, but we are not in charge of all the results. That is a hard reality to accept. There are so many factors involved in how things turn out. It is impossible for us to control them all. If we all do the good we are supposed to do, the chances of results that are good and holy increase.
A young mother sent me a video exemplifying the power of our good example. The video shows a mother saying to her son, “Make a circle with your fingers and put it on your chin, like this.” Again and again, she said, Make a circle with your fingers and put it on your chin.” Again and again, the little boy did exactly what she did but not what she said. The lesson was so clear. Children pay more attention to what we do than to what we say. The quality of our care makes a difference in how seeds grow and mature.
It is not easy to be good. Sometime we even have to spend time thinking and praying about what the good and right thing to do is. It is not always obvious.
There are many temptations along the way that can distract us. The Wall Street Journal had an article about how scientists are trying to understand how the coronavirus gets us off guard. When they set the coronavirus to music they see a pattern in how it moves to trap us.
All matter, whether dead or alive has a vibration. Scientists assign each vibration in the virus to a musical note that is long or short, high or low. Each virus makes a different song. You can go online and hear the sound that the coronavirus makes. It is a sweet, alluring sound that draws you in, invites you to come closer and closer. It tempts you with a pleasant, intriguing layer of sound with a plan to destroy you and satisfy itself.
Hearing the patterns of coronavirus as sound gives scientists insight into some options that can be developed when the virus pauses or spikes. This scientific methods reminds us of times when darkness does not allow us to see, so we rely on the patterns of what we hear or feel in order to maneuver our way to success.
Beautiful sounds and beautiful things invite us, and tempt us. Still, we need to be mindful of the patterns of the behavior behind them. Some of the most popular songs and voices may not lead us to places we need to be. We need to know what the deal is. One multicultural trainer in our conference reminded us that there are times when, as she says, “We choose not to know.” It is then that we know we have given in to a certain temptation. We choose not to know that something is not right.
We learn what is right when we keep our conversation going with God. We are work I progress. We have to think as well as pray. We won’t get it right every time. That is why it is good to seek the Lord diligently, serve God faithfully, and obey quickly. We do well to praise God every hour and repent every day in order to stay on track.
That is how we become that good soil Jesus talks about in verse 23. That is how we become one who hears the word and understands it, who indeed bears fruit and yields, in one case a hundredfold, in another sixty, and in another thirty.”  We are not in charge of the increase, but we can do our best to be good, and for that we need the power of the Lord to help us.
Let us pray: 
God, you call us “Dear Ones” for that is who we are to you. Thank you for loving us and helping us. We come with hearts open and ready to receive the power we need to love you and to love each other with all our heart, and all our mind, and all our strength! For, we know that there is nothing greater than love. We pray as you taught the disciples.
 Our father who art in heaven. Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day, our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us, and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil, for thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen. 
Benediction: No prayer, no power. Little prayer, little power. Much prayer, much power.
Next week we continue our focus on leaders and the concept of weeding in Matthew 13.
If you would like to make your contribution to the ministry and mission of Bethel, the website is  Bethelumchurch.com 
Or you can send to 952 Bethel Church Road, Spring City, Pa. 19475. God bless you! 
We are closing with a selection of  Closer Walk with Thee  by Donna Pick]

Saturday, July 4, 2020

July 5 2020 Communion Meditation outdoors in the pavillion during the pandemic


July 5 2020 Communion Meditation
Pastor Jacqueline Hines - Bethel UMC Shick Shack
As we come faithfully to be together, we are inviting the Holy Spirit to move within us and through us and around us. In times like these we need a special touch from God, especially since we are being careful about who and what we touch. We used to use touch as a way to show love, affection, and positive regard; now those pleasantries are withheld as a matter of life and death!
Dr. Fauci our infectious disease specialist hopes that we would give up our custom of handshaking forever. Can you imagine that? One expert said recently that handshaking is critical to our interpersonal communication because in just one touch of the hands, we communicate tiny bits of information about our positive regard and care for one another. The electro-chemical reactions in our skin and our nonverbal signals, from our grip alone, speak volumes in one moment that would otherwise take weeks to communicate to each other. At the same time, some educators are even saying that it is worth the low risk to send our children back to school in spite of the virus, not only for the sake of a better education, but for their psychological wellbeing.
In order to make up for the lack of tactile stimulation, a therapist says we should massage our ear lobes. The earlobes have nerve endings that extend throughout the whole body. So when we rub our earlobes we release lots of stress, and less stress means a calmer mind and healthier life.


It can be stressful trying to find things to do when we can’t do what we want to, or we have to learn new things like Zoom. We are exhausted and even depressed and anxious by having to make new and different decisions all day long because of the pandemic. Mental hygiene has becomes just as important as handwashing.
God has blessed America. We are the land of the freer than many and the home of the brave. We can worship. We can be the CHURCH. Someone asked this week, “Do we have to have communion?” I answered, “No, we don’t have to have communion. We want to have communion.” Thank you Jean D. for suggesting that we do it every month in the Shick Shack.
As we commune at the table and beyond, we find hope and help and healing. We receive God’s touch on our lives and we develop ways to touch one another’s lives as the Spirit gives us wisdom and opportunity.
As you commune this morning, in a moment of silence, give thanks to God for the many ways God has been able to use you to touch someone’s life, to bring about a good change, to lend a helping hand, to heal a heart, to comfort a soul, to forgive, to make someone smile. (Moment of silence)
Now, are you ready for God to touch your life? What is it that you need? That you desire? Name it silently in your heart now, whether it be understanding someone or something that makes no sense to you, or you need justice, or you want wisdom to make an important decision. You may need one of the fruit of the Spirit – love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness-generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, or self-control. Whatever you need, whatever you want, you can find it in the house of God, among the family of God, just take a moment to talk to God as we feast in God’s presence and in the presence of God’s children. God hears you! God loves you! (Moment of silence)
Scripture Reading – *Matthew 26.26-30 Trish Richards
The table is set!
Let us pray: Oh God in whom we put our trust, thank you for wrapping your arms around us, for guiding us to this moment to remember that we are your children and a part of the family of Christians all around this world, and around this communion table.
Bless us now as we remember that Jesus took bread and broke it saying, “Take and eat. This is my body broken for you.”  He took the cup and told the disciples to “Drink all of this. This is my blood poured out for the forgiveness of sins.”
Thank you that you came to save us from our sins even when so many could care less. You forgave them and us and all who did not know that they needed to be saved and delivered from evils within and without.
**Joan Spiece and Trish Richards – Communion Stewards
(Confirmands Jackson and Lucas and brother Max Starner are available to help as needed)
We receive the body of Christ broken that everyone would find healing.
We receive the blood of Christ poured out that we would find not only life, but abundant life.
We pray as you taught the disciples:
Our father who art in heaven. Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day, our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us, and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil, for thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen. 
++
Benediction: Once again, we have been touched by God. Go and touch the world!

+++++++++++





July 5 2020 "Leaders - Gentle and Humble"


July 5, 2020  Matthew 11.16-19, 25-30 “Leaders: Gentle and Humble” Pastor Jacqueline Hines
++
After 14 weeks of quarantine we are grateful for an opportunity to have communion, to remember that God so loved the world that he gave us his only son.  
And, whoever believes in him will not perish but have everlasting life. We believe in him. We study his word.  We talk the talk. We walk the walk by God’s grace. We share the good news and invite others, welcoming them as part of the Kin-dom of God. We anticipate Heaven and eternal life, though with just a few glances into the future, we can only imagine what Heaven will be like. I John chapter 3 verse 2 says, “What we will be has not yet been made known. But we know that when Christ appears, we shall be like him.

Though we are not gathering face to face, we are still remembering, we are still communing with the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit and with one another. We are still the Church. We are still the beloved community. We are still bringing our financial offerings to continue the mission and ministry. We are still offering ourselves daily as a living and holy sacrifice, pleasing to God.
On this communion Sunday, whether or not the table is physically set, we are, as always, feasting in the awesome presence of the Lord. We remain connected to one another, united as one body in Christ. Isn’t that awesome!
Let’s listen to Donna’s rendition of Just A Closer Walk with Thee. (on YouTube version if not here)
The Christian life means we are all one family in God. 


We gather together in order to encourage one another, support one another, bless one another. We want to keep one another on the right paths, comfort one another in times of sorrow, heal each other’s broken hearts and wounded bodies. We are here to exchange pleasantries, share spiritual gifts and offer words of appreciation. As the family of God, we build one another up because daily life can wear us out and break us down.  

We come together as often as we can in every way we can – phone, email, snail mail, Zoom, Facetime, and texts. Some have even gathered in their cars in parking lots!
We expect something good and positive when two or three of us gather to fulfill God’s purpose and plan. Our founding father John Wesley had a good and positive experience when he decided to keep the faith.  



John Wesley, his brother Charles, and a couple other guys boarded a ship on its way to America to spread the gospel in Georgia October 14, 1735. If planes were available in the 1700’s he probably would have taken a plane instead. It must have been a long and tedious nearly 4 month trip, but what made it worse was that the two years he spent on the Georgian mission field was not a success at all, according to what was expected.
There were lots of conflicts and few converts to show for their efforts. His brother Charles was so disappointed and distracted and spent so much time being sick that he went back home in 6 months. John began to feel that his relationship with God was very shallow. He became so discouraged and depressed. He felt ashamed and humiliated in the presence of the Moravian Christians whose faith was fervent and genuine. They were calm and singing God’s praises even when the ship was being tossed in a terrible storm and they didn’t know if they would live through it. 


During those two years in mission, John also fell in love with Sophy Hopkey but she married someone else, which left a bitter taste in the preacher’s mouth. Somewhere along the way, she came for communion and he was brought up on charges because he refused to serve her.
In spite of setbacks, Wesley eventually inspired revivals in England and may have even raised the social consciousness to such a level that England was spared the riotous revolution that the French went through. 



We are blessed to be the United Methodist Church today because he paved the way, even though it was a very difficult journey. Some days, it is still a very difficult journey. Yet, there are always victories to celebrate.
During his spiritual crisis, John Wesley confessed his need to be converted, even while he was trying to convert others. He was so disturbed by his lack of spiritual depth that he was going to give up preaching forever. He spoke to his Moravian friend Peter Böhler who talked him out of giving up. Peter’s mission in Georgia with black slaves, Native Americans as well as whites took a different turn from the Wesley’s. The Moravians were put out of Georgia, but they traveled to Pennsylvania, forming Moravian communities in Nazareth and Bethlehem. Our own Amy and Carl have roots in the Moravian churches and they share rich memories.
The Moravian encouragement worked out well because John Wesley went forward and shared the gospel with a prisoner and the prisoner was instantly converted. That one soul built John’s confidence and he began to search the scriptures in a new way. He boarded a ship back to England on December 2, 1737. 
Though he was still feeling the sting of not doing great things in his ministry, he went to church in Aldersgate England on what we now call Aldersgate Sunday, May 24th, 1738. 


Roman gates were built there around the year 200. Gates bring to mind the Watergate and Sheep Gates that surrounded the city of Jerusalem. Ancient gates were walls that designated political territory and wards like townships with politicians in charge. The gates walled off protection and directed the population where to go and not to go for certain purposes.
Aldersgate was also the name of the street where the Bishop’s chapel was located. It was there when listening to a reading from the book of Romans that John had a deeply spiritual experience. He said his heart was strangely warmed. He felt the blessed assurance that his sins were mercifully forgiven and Jesus would save him.
He got that experience when communing with other Christians as we are today – whether or not we have actual bread and grape juice. It was customary for Wesley to actually have communion at every worship service possible and Wesley did the same in America. Our Bishop encouraged it a few years ago, but culturally, it has not caught on for most of our United Methodist Churches.
It takes a certain humility and gentleness to remain a part of the family of God. When we are down, we gently lift each other up. When we are hurting we humbly care for one another. We rejoice with one another and we weep with one another. We shine our light when someone is in a dark place. 


We want our hearts to light the way for ourselves, our families, our neighbors, our world. We want to remain as fervent as a flame 


We want to be on fire for Jesus. We gather to rekindle hopes and dreams and godly desires, to satisfy our hunger and thirst for righteousness – for living right, to submit and surrender to the work of the Holy Spirit helping us to bear much fruit of the Spirit – love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness (generosity) , faithfulness, and self-control. In order to overcome any evil in this world, we come together to be filled again and again with goodness and mercy, to be aflame 

for God’s sake.
You would think that everybody and anybody would want to be a part of the wonderful family of God. Not so. Jesus described his generation like children on a playground. Not everyone wants to play. Not everyone wants to play on a certain team. In verse 17 he says “We played the flute for you, and you did not dance…”
Not everyone shows compassion when you fall and skin your knee on the playground. “We wailed, and you did not mourn.As children of God, we learn who is with us and who is against us. Our Creator reveals the truth to our humble hearts and we do well to treat the truth and to treat one another gently. That is not always easy to do when we are having uncontrollable spasms of hate and fear or when we have gone apoplectic with greed or guilt. Remember, the most important reason to gather and feast in the presence of our wonderful God is to be more like Jesus, to be purged of attitudes and ideas that are not like him, to have our cold hearts warmed again.
So instead of doing what we want to do, we take on the yoke of Jesus, like cattle when they are plowing a field for harvest. For his yoke is easy and his burden is light. The clergy collar we sometime wear is a symbol of that yoke, that commitment do go where we are led. Not every Christian needs to wear a clergy collar, but we all need to symbolically wear the yoke.
If we have allowed ourselves to be yoked, we experienced the truth that Jesus is humble and gentle as he says in verse 29 for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 30For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”
In our best moments, we yield ourselves to Jesus, we humble ourselves, we gently approach one another, offering ourselves as an offering, giving ourselves over as a sacrifice for the sake of those to whom God sends us.
Someone shared a story of gentleness and humility that they heard on Fox News. 


Politics aside, the niece of Martin Luther King, Alveda King, trained in peaceful protests, told how her home was bombed and burned. A restless crowd gathered wanting revenge and rioting. Alveda’s father jumped on top of his car and cried out to the people, “If you want to hit somebody, hit me. I am safe, my family is safe…go home.” They were trained to put their troubles in God’s hands.
It takes supernatural humility and gentleness to let go and let God fight our battles, give us justice, and help us in our time of trouble. Sometime we do have to speak up with a loud voice, for often silence is violence. Sometimes the Holy Spirit does call us to fight, not each other but the enemy, and the first enemy we pray about is the one “en e me.”
As you commune together, with a gentle and humble heart, you will know what time it is. Amen.
Let us pray – God give us gentle and humble hearts that we might have peace when the storms of life come our way. We pray as you taught the disciples.
 Our father who art in heaven. Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day, our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us, and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil, for thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen. 
Benediction – This is the day the Lord has made, go forth and put all the humility and gentleness in it that you possibly can.
Next week  
If you would like to make your contribution to the ministry and mission of Bethel, the website is  Bethelumchurch.com 
Or you can send to 952 Bethel Church Road, Spring City, Pa. 19475. God bless you!