The Gospel Says Come!

The power of the Gospel lies in its beauty—a beauty that reflects the unwavering, relentless, and unconditional love of the Triune God. It is a Gospel of rescue and reconciliation, of invitation and inclusionEveryone was made for the Beautiful Gospel!

Jesus Christ, fully God and fully man, is at the center of the Gospel. He is the complete revelation of God, full of mystery and wonder. He has always existed beyond all time and space yet chose to enter our world to bring about the cosmic shift that began––and continues––to change everything.

This is the Gospel that Jesus proclaimed, lived and died for. By His resurrection, the restoration of all of creation began. It is a bigger and deeper Gospel than we have understood.

The Gospel tradition is long and wide; forming the church into a rich mosaic. Come because you hunger to know more of Jesus Christ. The gospel is a story — the story of  Israel culminating in the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
The gospel is not a formula or a set of spiritual laws or an explanation of how to go to heaven or a particular politics.
 
It’s a story.
 
When we reduce the gospel to tidy explanations or cartoon tracts or narrow religious dogma or political activism or self-improvement techniques or wellness practices or anything other than the story that crescendos with Easter, we strip it of its power to fascinate and illuminate.
 
Come because you long to be with others who are on a similar journey. Come because you long to experience the wonder of sacred space and intimacy with Jesus.

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation

 

Anita Sorenson
Easter

The Holy Sepulchre 
 
The exotic waft of incense
The chill of cold marble
A thousand lamps shining on gilded crucifixes
Pious pilgrims performing prostrations
Bored tourists in idle conversations
Beeswax candles and cellphone cameras
Priests wearing habits
Pilgrims toting backpacks
Cueing worshipers and churlish monks
Lonely planet boys and girls
Climbing up to Golgotha
Stooping down into an empty tomb
Is this where death was undone?
It may be, but there is no proof
It feels more like an arcane shrine
Curated by competing religious orders
Than where an angel rolled back the stone
And yet…
I come back year after year
More at home each time
And though I understand why many might be
I am not disappointed
And after all, what did the angel say?—
He is risen! He is not here
HE IS NOT HERE
And what did the apostle say?—
He ascended to fill all things
TO FILL ALL THINGS
Where is the empty tomb?
It’s right here—
In a world where death is but a door
Leading to the One who went before
To prepare a place for us
In the Father’s house of love
Morning has broken
 
Brian Zahnd

 
Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Palm Sunday

Palm Sunday 

Now to the gate of my Jerusalem,
The seething holy city of my heart,
The saviour comes. But will I welcome him?
Oh crowds of easy feelings make a start;
They raise their hands, get caught up in the singing,
And think the battle won. Too soon they’ll find
The challenge, the reversal he is bringing
Changes their tune. I know what lies behind
The surface flourish that so quickly fades;
Self-interest, and fearful guardedness,
The hardness of the heart, its barricades,
And at the core, the dreadful emptiness
Of a perverted temple. Jesus come
Break my resistance and make me your home.

                Malcolm Guite
 
Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation



Anita Sorenson
Praying the Stations of the cross

In the last year I’ve wanted to get to know Jesus more deeply by focusing on the many trials he experienced at the end of his life. So, I began applying a variation of the Examen—a reflective devotional exercise described in St. Ignatius’s Spiritual Exercises—to the Stations of the Cross. I make it a 15-day exercise (I always add the Resurrection to the 14 Stations), focusing on just one Station a day, Monday through Friday. This adds up to a three-week exercise, and it has helped me not only to decompress at the end of the day, but to engage in my relationship with Jesus in new ways. Oh, and to make sure I remember to do this exercise, I set an alarm on my phone as a reminder!

I invite you to do the same. You can approach this reflection at any time in your day, before or after work or dropping off the kids, wherever you are in your life’s journey. Here are five simple steps, derived from the Examen, to help you unlock the Stations of the Cross in a practical, contemplative, and reflective way.

Step 1: Choose a Station. Let’s say we’re focusing on Jesus taking up his Cross. You can read a passage from the Bible that correlates to that scene or simply picture an image in your mind. Then take a few deep breaths and ask God to help you quiet your head and open your heart. Often, we only try to focus on getting rid of all the mental chatter inside of us, but it’s also important to place our attention on the waves of emotions and feelings inside us. Something in you might resist focusing—you may feel tired, nervous, or angry, but that’s okay. Allow yourself to find a level of openness that is true to you.

Step 2: Remind yourself that God is all around you. He’s inside you and outside you and his heart beats in yours. Try to feel that reality as best as you can. Then take the picture of Jesus carrying his Cross and imagine placing the image inside you. Let it take root in you.

Step 3: Ask the Holy Spirit to rise up inside you and give you the wisdom to acknowledge God in your life. Ask the Spirit to help you meditate on the scene inside you. How do you think Jesus felt when this was happening? What was he thinking? What is your cross to bear? How heavy is it? How does it affect your relationship with God?

Step 4: Review your day. Where did your cross feel the heaviest today? Where did you encounter the cross on the shoulders of others at work, on the news, or in the streets? Where is God in these encounters? Ask God to make you more aware and compassionate of others and yourself.

Step 5: Give thanks to God for the opportunity to know Jesus better and ask God to help you to become more aware of the crosses that everyone carries in life.
 
Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
"as you help us by your prayers"

"He has delivered us from such a deadly peril, and will deliver us again. On him we have set our hope that he will continue to deliver us, as you help us by your prayers. Then many will give thanks on our behalf for the gracious favor granted us in answer to the prayers of many." 2 Corinthians 1:10-11
 
While I reflected on prayer this week, I focused on intercessory prayer. What I noticed when I read this the other day is the word "as" at the beginning of verse 11. Paul directly connects his hope in God continuing to deliver him from the trial he is facing to the prayers for him offered up by others. As pastor and author J. Hampton Keathley says, "God has chosen to use our prayers to accomplish his purpose." This elevates the need to be faithful in intercessory prayer. It also elevates the need to make sure that we are bringing others into our needs and struggles, so that they can pray for us and appeal to God on our behalf. 
 
The text says "so that thanks may be given by many persons on our behalf".  The Greek word used here for persons is "prosopon"; it literally means face.  So, we have the image of many faces lifted up toward God in prayer. What a great picture of intercessory prayer! 

In light of this and the Russian invasion of Ukraine that we are watching so uneasily, I am struck by God's deliverance coming "as" we help others by our prayers. May we bring comfort and be comforted as we turn our faces to God in prayer on behalf of others.

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Pope Francis prayer

Lord God of peace, hear our prayer!

We have tried so many times and over so many years

To resolve our conflicts by our own powers and by the force of our arms. 

How many moments of hostility and darkness have we experienced?

How much blood has been shed? 

How many lives have been shattered? 

How many hopes have been buried?

But our efforts have been in vain.

 

Now Lord, come to our aid!

Grant us peace, teach us peace;

Guide our steps in the way of peace.

Open our eyes and our hearts,

And give us the courage to say:

“Never again war!”; “With war everything is lost”. 

Instill in our hearts the courage to take concrete steps to achieve peace.

 

Lord, God of Abraham, God of the Prophets, God of Love, 

You created us and you call us to live as brothers and sisters. 

Give us the strength daily to be instruments of peace; 

enable us to see everyone who crosses our path as our brother and sister. 

Make us sensitive to the pleas of our citizens who entreat us to turn our weapons of war

Into instruments of peace, 

Our trepidation into confident trust, 

And our quarrelling into forgiveness.

Keep alive within us the flame of hope,

So that with patience and perseverance 

we may opt for dialogue and reconciliation.

In this way may peace triumph at last,

 and may the words “division,”, “hatred,” and “war” 

be banished from the heart of all humankind. 

 

Lord, defuse the violence of our tongues and our hands,

Renew our hearts and minds, 

So that the word which always beings us together will be “brother,”

And our way of life will always be that of 

Shalom, Peace, Salaam!

 

Pope Francis

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson

Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
I pray for miracles

I No Longer Pray For Peace

On the edge of war, one foot already in,
I no longer pray for peace:
I pray for miracles.
I pray that stone hearts will turn
to tenderheartedness,
and evil intentions will turn
to mercifulness,
and all the soldiers already deployed
will be snatched out of harm's way,
and the whole world will be
astounded onto its knees.
I pray that all the "God talk"
will take bones,
and stand up and shed
its cloak of faithlessness,
and walk again in its powerful truth.
I pray that the whole world might
sit down together and share
its bread and its wine.
Some say there is no hope,
but then I've always applauded the holy fools
who never seem to give up on
the scandalousness of our faith:
that we are loved by God......
that we can truly love one another.
I no longer pray for peace:
I pray for miracles.

- Poem by Ann Weems

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson

Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Do not fear

Salvation Oracles on Reading Isaiah 43:1-5

There is a long list of threats around us:
     terror,
     cancer,
     falling markets,
     killing,
     others unlike us in all their variety,
     loneliness,
     shame,
     death--
     the list goes on and we know it well.
And in the midst of threat of every kind,
     you appear among us in your full power,
          in your deep fidelity,
          in your amazing compassion.
     You speak among us the one word that could matter:
               "Do not fear."
And we, in our several fearfulnesses, are jarred by your utterance.
     On a good day, we know that your sovereign word is true.
     So, give us good days by your rule,
          free enough to rejoice,
          open enough to change,
          trusting enough to move out of new obedience,
          grace enough to be forgiven and then to forgive.
We live by your word.  Speak it to us through the night,
     that we may have many good days through your gift.
 
~Walter Brueggemann
     from Prayers for a Privileged People

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation



Anita Sorenson
Lent begins

I resonate with what W. David O. Taylor has to say in this Christianity Today article: "Each year, around the latter part of winter, Lent arrives. It nearly always surprises me. Here it is, once again, summoning me to change how I typically live." Some years, Lent sneaks up on me and I find myself ill-prepared. Other years, my life is colored by deep grief, and I can't imagine giving something up when it feels like my life is already barren. And still other years, I approach Lent with enough interior space to wonder about God's invitations for me in this important season of preparation.
 
I'm grateful that, whatever my participation (or disengagement) in Lent, each year brings a new opportunity. My appreciation for the church calendar and the rhythms of worship continues to grow each year. Even if I miss some of the richness of the season in a given year, I know that I will have another opportunity the next year. His mercies are new every morning—and every year! 

Like many things in the church, the church calendar is meant to help order our affections towards God. It doesn't mean that we somehow earn favor or special standing. It does not make us better or change our justification. However, these practices shape us, too — not in order to earn favor with God but as a way to be God's apprentices and follow how He says life works best. Dallas Willard reminds us: 

"We should not only want to be merciful, kind, unassuming, and patient persons but also be making plans to become so." (The Divine Omission, 29). 

Lent helps us make plans towards becoming more like Jesus.

This year, I find myself ready to engage in the season of Lent, which starts on March 2nd. I'm planning to read through Sister Wendy Beckett's lovely book, The Art of Lent. She describes and interprets forty full-color paintings for each day of Lent. Some friends of mine are committing to engage in an act of service each day as a family: picking up trash, bringing food to a neighbor, offering to help with yard work, etc. What does God have for you to do and experience this Lent?
 
Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation



Anita Sorenson
Family liturgies

The family is God’s primary spiritual formation plan. It is in our households that we are taught what is most and least important and we begin to understand how we fit in this world that God has made. Parents, do you know the book Habits of the Household, by Justin Whitmel Earley? Earley is convinced that ordinary routines are extraordinary opportunities to live out the love of God in profound ways. He encourages families to reimagine and establish new habits and intentional rhythms (i.e. liturgies) around everyday routines in the daily chaos of raising kids. 

 

I was introduced to Earley’s ideas in The Common Rule, on developing holy rhythms of life that help us live more deeply rooted in God’s lifegiving Kingdom. We show what we love and value by our daily habits and we can place ourselves in a position to be transformed when we intentionally practice habits in our friendship with Jesus, individually and with others. Habits of the Household roots these ideas in the heart of the family. 

 

Can you think of our families as little “schools of love,” places where we have one vocation, one calling: to form all who live here into lovers of God and neighbor? In the many habits of a household, including waking, mealtimes, screentime, work, play, bedtime and conversation, we have the opportunity to “live liturgically” and practice the story of God over and over again. Deeply formed lives start in the family. We all need spiritual companions to help us to implement our desire to see our kids come to know, follow and love Jesus. Check out Habits of the Household.

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson

Pastor for Spiritual Formation

 

 

Anita Sorenson