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Showing posts from August, 2020

The Trading Deadline

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The baseball trading deadline is fast approaching, and in a normal season, that date would be right about now. Will there be a flurry of trades?  I’m an avid baseball fan. A # Cubbie  fan. Diehard. The Cubs are currently in 1st place, but barely. Hope maybe on the horizon.  Will the Cubbies improve with a trade or two?  Teams optimistic about making the playoffs are looking to acquire just the right player(s) to put them into post-season contention.   This has been a highly unusual 60-game season. Play as been interrupted by weather, Covid, social unrest and political commentary . Even with the  shorten 2020 season, underperforming teams are looking to off-load tradable talent or those players bound for free agency next year.  I’ve observed that many churches trade attenders like baseball players headed to the free agent market. Not intentionally, mind you, but it’s true. If you attend church regularly and meet someone new, the conversation often includes ‘I use to go to church X or Y

Comfortably Numb 🎶

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🎶 When I was a child I caught a fleeting glimpse Out of the corner of my eye I turned to look but it was gone I cannot put my finger on it now The child is grown The dream is gone I have become comfortably numb  🎶   Comfortably Numb is a song by the English rock band Pink Floyd, released on their eleventh album,  The Wall . Originally it was   a single with "Hey You" as the B-side. "Comfortably Numb" is one of Pink Floyd's most famous songs, renowned for its two guitar solos. (checkout the second, which David Gilmour begins at about the 4:40 minute mark) The hit song ranked number 314th on  Rolling Stone  Magazine's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.   Often the word “numb” is often used to describe a physical sensation - my fingers or toes are numb from the cold. The word “empty” commonly applies to physical objects, such as, “This basket is empty.” Most people don’t give much attention to the feeling of being emotionally numb. Psychologists ha

Hey Jude

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Join us for a virtual Zoom study of Jude,  Wednesday August 19th @ 7pm A picture is worth a 1,000 words or so says the old adage. Imagery is a great way to convey a message quickly to an audience without them reading through a lot of text. And so it is with this week's text from the Epistle of Jude. He reminds his readers that false teachers are like natural phenomenas:  They are clouds without rain; Trees without fruit; Wild waves and wandering stars...Metaphor upon metaphor Jude speaks to conditions that exist in the church, promises and leadership that produce nothing. Consider the iconography of Jude - now ask yourself:  How are you nurtured by your place of worship?  Share your thoughts on our  FB Page .    Facebook   Twitter   Instagram   Home   Office[at]minm.church   #MininstryinMotion   #pkes  

How Do You Mend a Broken Heart?

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How can you mend a broken heart ? / How can you stop the rain falling down?  We've all been there with our broken, fractured hearts. We limp along, wondering how we ended up here and if we'll ever make it to the other side of the pain.     A broken heart is one of those experiences we all share, yet we weren’t meant to experience it alone.  David, a man after God’s own heart, suffered many heartbreaking circumstances. Each time, he recovered and was made an even stronger man of God. He wrote in Psalm 34:   “ The Lord is near to the brokenhearted…”   So  how do you mend a broken heart?  The son of Jesse’s remedy for dealing with a broken heart was to worship .  “ So David arose from the ground, washed, anointed himself, and changed his garments. Then he entered the house of the Lord and worshipped”   I like what Oswald Chamber wrote: “ Leave the broken, irreversible past in God’s hands, and step out into the invincible future with Him.”    #minmchurch May the peace and love of t

Sacred Curiosity

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How curious would it be to consider others as you would contemplate a good poem, a glass of wine, or a painting at a museum. To speed through lines of poetry or to breeze past a work of art, to gulp a fine vino, is to miss the mystery that beckons us to pause, to look and to listen.  When we have the opportunity to interact with someone we disagree with - or someone who is different than us in culture, gender, background, personality, experience, etc - let's first lean in with a curious desire to learn rather than default to skepticism, assessing, judging and correcting.   Having been both the perpetrator and the recipient of poisonous behavior and words I’m left to ask myself:  Wouldn’t our world be more whole if we were to contemplate people with a sacred curiosity? “...Do nothing from selfishness or empty conceit, but with humility of mind regard one another as more important than yourselves...” NASB   Facebook   Twitter   Instagram   Home   Office[at]minm.church   #pkes   #Min