Where the church is in a pandemic
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Ways to be missional in a pandemic:
 
*Prayer walk your neighborhood, praying for each household.
*Pray generally for those infected, those in high risk categories, and for politicians, health professionals, epidemiologists and decision makers.
*Offer to pray for your neighbors. Get to know them all by name and inquire about their wellbeing regularly.
*Host a front yard prayer meeting (appropriately distanced).
*Write encouraging messages on the sidewalk in chalk.
*Set up a chalkboard in front of your house and write fun and encouraging messages. Leave chalk for others to add their own thoughts.
*Deliver gifts and provisions to meet known needs (and to surprise others with a kind act).
* Invite someone new to your Growth Group and expand your network of support.
*Talk to neighbors as you walk (keeping your required distance).
*If you are musical, hold a driveway concert.
*Join a front window bear hunt for local kids.
*Support the USPS and send snail mail cards or letters of encouragement.
*Host a virtual dinner party using Zoom.
*Set up a little pantry outside your home and fill it with toilet paper and non-perishables.
*Clean up trash from streets and parks.
*Raise funds for a cause using an online donations platform. Initiate generosity.
*Begin to anticipate what might be needed in the transition from shelter-at-home and partner with others to create caring circles to assist those with food and financial insecurity. 
 
Other ideas? 
 
Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
He is Risen!

Those final few days of His life may have been like this:
the sky oppressive with storm clouds,
the shouldered burden too painful,
His soul weighed down, discouraged, disheartened.
Each step brought Him closer
to a desperate loneliness borne of betrayal and rejection.
But the end of that dark walk was just the beginning
of a journey into new covenant:
He is anointed from the broken jar,
His aching joints covered in perfume
by one who believes 
and wants to help bear His burden.
Instead of rain, the clouds bear light,
flooding the pathway so we too can come together to lift the load.
Instead of loneliness, now arises a community like no other.
Instead of stillness, there is declaration of His glory to the heavens.
Instead of discouragement, He embodies hope for all hearts.

His promise fulfilled spills over our path, our feet, our heads.
We too are drenched in gratitude, flooded with grace.
 
 He is Risen!

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Don't worry

This week I have been reading through Matthew 6:25-34 repeatedly, the one where Jesus tells his disciples “Don’t worry.” We all know that when someone is worried, “Don’t worry” is about the worst thing you can say. Not only does it imply that not worrying is something we can simply stop through willpower, but it can also come with a certain amount of shame. Really, Jesus? To worry is human. There is no way Jesus could simply expect us not to worry.
 
But if you are like me, I’d actually like not to worry so much at a time like this, to trust, to have faith. And this is not just related to the pandemic, but about the world in general, the safety and health of my family and friends, future, retirement, etc. 
 
So, I’ve been thinking about this phrase from Jesus, “Don’t worry.” It got me thinking about Buddhism, that begins with the recognition that all of life is suffering. And the key to managing the suffering is not to become attached to the things you think you need. Nonattachment is the Buddhist way to not worry. But Jesus says in this passage something different: he says “Don’t worry, because your heavenly Father has got you.” The way of Jesus, in worry is not to detach; it is actually to attach more deeply to the One who knows what we need before we even ask. 
 
Jesus says, “Don’t worry” and then “Look at the birds” and “consider the lilies.” When you are worried, look and consider. It is not an answer, but it is a way. Don’t worry, dear ones, instead look at God’s creation, consider his goodness and maybe, just maybe, when we look and consider we become able to seek his Kingdom. As Jesus said in John 16, “In this world you will have trouble, but take heart for I have overcome the world.” When you are worried, look, consider and seek. Amen.
Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Prayer for people facing great uncertainty

 "God of the present moment, God who in Jesus stills the storm and soothes the frantic heart; bring hope and courage to all who wait or work in uncertainty.

Bring hope that you will make them the equal of whatever lies ahead. Bring them courage to endure what cannot be avoided, for your will is health and wholeness; you are God, and we need you."

- Adapted from A New Zealand Prayer Book

Our sermon text this week is Jonah 3, his road to the unexpected. Seems incredibly timely...

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
God loves your enemies

We are diving into Jonah for the next month as a church in our new sermon series, and through Steve Stuckey's artwork and reflections. 

Are you okay with the fact that God loves your enemies? The book of Jonah holds a mirror up to the one who reads it. In Jonah, we see the worst parts of our own character magnified, which should generate humility and gratitude that God would love his enemies and put up with the Jonah in all of us. This strange story (which comes to a close abruptly with no clear ending) becomes a message of good news of God's mercy that ought to challenge us to the core. 

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Jonah Lenten retreat

For Lent this year, we are inviting the whole congregation to be on retreat with Jonah! In a collaborative effort with Steve Stuckey, our talented artist in residence, we are asking you to dedicate yourselves to times of prayer and reflection on the themes from the book of Jonah. Steve has curated a gallery exhibit in the prayer room off the lobby, an interactive series of paintings and images designed to lead you deeper into the mysteries of life with our determined God. There will be weekly contemplative materials available for you to take home for further reflection during the week, four in all. There are also Visio Divina cards, reproductions of art images with a meditative prompt to nudge you with provocative questions.

How does a whole church go on retreat for 40 days until Easter? By coming early or staying late after worship to tour the gallery and immerse yourselves in the story of Jonah's journey with his God. By praying and reflecting, through journaling or making your own creative responses to the weekly sessions at home. And by finding ways as a family to grasp and speak of the relationship between Jonah and a God on mission--read the Scripture out loud together, talk about the story during the week. 

40 days. Just imagine what God can do in 40 days with people who are surrendered to the Spirit and eager to be transformed!

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson

Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Ash Wednesday

Beloved of God, every year at the time of Easter, the Christian Passover, we celebrate our redemption through the death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. We begin this holy season of Lent by remembering our need for repentance, and for the mercy and forgiveness proclaimed in the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

We begin our journey to Easter on Ash Wednesday (February 26) with the sign of ashes, an ancient sign, speaking of the frailty and uncertainty of human life, and marking the penitence of the community as a whole. The sanctuary will be open from 6-8 AM, 12-1 PM and 5-7 PM for meditation and reflection and the imposition of ashes.

Blessing the Dust – A Blessing for Ash Wednesday— by Jan RIchardson

All those days
you felt like dust,
like dirt,
as if all you had to do
was turn your face
toward the wind
and be scattered
to the four corners

or swept away
by the smallest breath
as insubstantial –

did you not know
what the Holy One
can do with dust?

This is the day
we freely say
we are scorched.

This is the hour
we are marked
by what has made it
through the burning.

This is the moment
we ask for the blessing
that lives within
the ancient ashes,
that makes its home
inside the soil of
this sacred earth.

So let us be marked
not for sorrow.
And let us be marked
not for shame.
Let us be marked
not for false humility
or for thinking
we are less
than we are

but for claiming
what God can do
within the dust,
within the dirt,
within the stuff
of which the world
is made
and the stars that blaze
in our bones
and the galaxies that spiral
inside the smudge
we bear.

 Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson

Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Help us love with your love

Amazing and merciful God, how easy it is for us to forget that we are your delight. You rejoice when we follow your holy ways and envision a future of goodness and grace for all your people. We blame you for divisions and strife. We justify our wars by saying that you are on our side. We rationalize the abuse of our enemies by telling ourselves that they are not your people, that their sinfulness exceeds your tolerance. In truth, you have told us that we are to love our neighbors indiscriminately. Moreover, we are to love those with the greatest need more fiercely and more immediately. Shower us with your mercy, O God, until we live by the plumb line you have repeatedly dropped in our midst.

Patient and steadfast God, you continuously call us to live in peace, leaving none behind. We hear your call. We know that your love endures forever. What you ask of us is not beyond our reach; it is not higher than the heavens or on the outer edges of the sea. For all of Creation to live in justice is not an impossibility you hold up to tease us with what we cannot have. If we trust you, it is possible for us to turn aside from our human ways. It is possible for us to love with your love. Enter our lives anew, Holy One, silence our fears and smother our distrust that we may live in harmony with all.

God of wonder and mystery, you love us still. You love us when we are filled with fear. You love us when we are filled with hate. You love us when we are filled with judgment. You love us when we think we are better than our neighbors. You love us when we think our neighbors are better than us. You love us when we blame others for creating the chaos that flows through the world. You love us when we abdicate responsibility for engaging in justice work. You love us through all our foolishness. However, you delight in us when we act with love and seek to bring your realm into the here and now. Flood every corner of our being with the strength of your Spirit that we may have the courage to love with your love, always!

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson

Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Hard prayers

Some weeks when we as staff pray through the congregational prayer requests, we are especially burdened by the weight of sorrow and loss in our beloved community. This was a hard week--many reasons for tears, anguish, uncertainty, anxiety, discouragement and grief.  John 1:5 “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.”

In the Gospel of John, Jesus uses a lot descriptive language and associates God with light as “In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind” (John 1:4) and “While I am in the world, I am the light of the world” (John 9:5), and He most certainly was. 

But, until the light shines again for those whom we love and pray for,  A Blessing for Traveling in the Dark:

Go slow if you can. Slower. More slowly still. Friendly dark or fearsome, this is no place to break your neck by rushing, by running, by crashing into what you cannot see. Then again, it is true: different darks have different tasks, and if you have arrived here unawares, if you have come in peril or in pain, this might be no place you should dawdle. I do not know what these shadows ask of you, what they might hold that means you good or ill. It is not for me to reckon whether you should linger or you should leave. But this is what I can ask for you: That in the darkness there be a blessing. That in the shadows there be a welcome. That in the night you be encompassed by the Love that knows your name.

from Jan Richardson

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson

Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson