Monday, April 30, 2018

Sermon: Roots and Shade

Sermon Notes
Jeremiah 29:1-14
Ben Loos
First Sunday in the New Building!

Circumstances

We did not choose
We do not like
We cannot change

God says stay.
All around, the world, says we should not be content, that we should rebel against our circumstances.
Why shouldn't we?

It is for our good. God is giving us a future and a hope, but this is part of his plan. Movement is not always progress. When we stop and are quite we can better discern the will of God for our circumstances. Until we do we will never learn how to just be in light of who God is in relations to us. There are things we can only learn in exile.

How do you develop character unless you are in a situation that is shitty enough to actually require you to have it? How do you learn steadfast love unless you are somewhere long enough to have your rose colored classes crushed? We, often, must stay somewhere that is hard so that it can be the stone on which we finally break our masks.

 Learning dependence on God and growing in delight happens in the purest way when we are in situations that we have no other hope. God is with us in exile.

God has rooted us and we are to be shade for those around us. God uses us to bless that nations and people around us. Either we go willingly or God will plant us where he wants us.

God so values that people are rooted and bless the community they are in that he spent 30 years in a podunk town. THE CREATOR GOD OF THE UNIVERSE TOOK ON FLESH AND SPENT 30 YEARS IN A SMALL TOWN. It is possible to be everywhere and nowhere. Big goals aren't bad, but sometimes the goal can be so big that we aren't able to do anything.

When we are rooted in a neighborhood and have a healthy sense of responsibility we are able to change the world one neighbor at a time. God has placed us where we are so that we can have ordinary interactions for the sake of the gospel and people's eternal souls.

With limits come focus and boundaries come directions. For the whole world to be reached 16th and A has to be reached. Someone has to engage with that calling.

Sunday, April 15, 2018

Sermon: What God's Looking for in a Building (Fig-ure of Speech)

Sermon Notes
Mark 11:11-26
Ben Loos

The fig that Jesus walks by has the leafy green appearance of health, but it is sick and not bearing fruit. The temple is the tree, the people of God are the tree. It looks good and healthy but it is a den of sin and secularism.

The outer court of the temple; the court of the Gentiles, the one place that the nations could learn about the one true God was a marketplace. A marketplace similar to our trading floors and add in livestock. The quiet place of reflection where the nations can seek the Father has been turned into a place of exploitation and a den of robbers.

We are meant to align our actions and desires with the owner of the house. The temple should be a place for God to feel at home. Are his comforts our comforts? The house of God should feel like home. A place of restoration and refuge for the weary and the weak. God wants us to come home and live with him.

It isn't home until we go through hard and beautiful things. Moments of pure joy and moments of sheer heartbreak. Warm conversations and spilled coffee. Hot tears and uncertain outcomes. Times when we feel God in every nerve in our body and times we feel alone in the world. Through it all coming together in love as family. Then it will be home.

Jesus invites the rich and poor alike. We are all equally undeserving of the great grace of God. God only receives the poor, because that is all he sees. Even our poorest offerings ( money, time, devotion) God will take it and multiply it.

We are the Gentiles, Jesus was knocking over the tables for us. We were the ones being excluded. We are the ends of the earth, not the center. The gulf Jesus overcame for us is so much larger than any we will have to overcome. We are the temple, we are the house of God. Where we meet, heaven and earth meet.