Mercy prayers

Here’s a gem from the gospel of Luke (Message version): "God had overwhelmed her with mercy."

May it be so for each of us.

If you don't know how to pray for another person, pray that they be under God's mercy, overwhelmed with God's mercy. Even if you think you know how to pray for another person, pray that God's mercy covers them. If you don't know how to pray for yourself, pray for God's mercy in your life. When you read the word mercy, think love.

Hope flows from the mercy of God.

Grace and Peace,

Anita Sorenson

Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Breathe


Spirit of God,
           breathe in me.
Be my breathing,
           that I may breathe deeply of life.
Breathing in, may the wind of your earth enter me
           and become me,
the gift of life
           transformed into my cells.
Breathing out may I breathe
           your grace and your peace.
In your grace
           breathe me out into the world.
Breathe in my speaking,
           that I may speak truth.
Breathe in my singing
           that I may sing joy.
Breathe in my silence,
           that I may listen deeply.
Breathe in my walking,
           that I may go in peace.
Breathe in my dying,
           that I myself may be your breath
breathed out into the Mystery,
           in peace, breathing peace.

__________________
Steve Garnaas-Holmes
Unfolding Light

Grace and Peace,

Anita Sorenson

Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Shout for joy

Beach observations in late September

 
“Wah-hoo,” cries the ecstatic kid as he rides yet another wave to shore. He’s grinning from ear to ear, shouting with joy, along with the dozen or so kids riding their boogie boards at the Santa Monica shore. There are adults out there, too. Clearly having a good time, but none of them are screaming with delight. 
 
Adults, me included, can be wary of joy. Worried that it makes us seem undignified. So, we tuck it in our pockets rather than wrap it round ourselves, we walk it back rather than dance with it. We offer a wan smile while inwardly jumping for joy. But as multiple writers have said, “joy is the surest sign of the presence of God.” If our dignity stems from being created in the image and likeness of God — we ought to be clothed in joy, it ought to trail behind us like a sparkling train!  We ought to shout and leap and grin madly in the presence of our God. Who is before us, behind us, beneath us, within us. And in every wave that carries us to shore. For we are all worthy of joy!
 
Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation


Anita Sorenson
Keeping things light

The end of summer can be a seismic shift for many. We go from days with nothing at all on the calendar to days that are end-to-end meetings and classes. There is no happy medium. It can be chaotic, and it always takes us a bit of time to find our rhythms.

This year it feels a bit like making meringue, as I gently try to fold my summer schedule into the coming year. When you fold egg whites into a batter you need to be gentle, and slow. Use too much force, beat them too fast, and the whole project utterly collapses.

These are good lessons for life as well. Be gentle. Don't rush. Let the lightness balance out the moments that feel overwhelming and heavy. Sometimes it's enough to get things basically combined, but if one tries too hard for perfect uniformity, one can lose some of the spaces to breathe. 

As fall arrives, keep trying to keep some of summer's pockets of air folded in. The goal is to let the summer leaven the year, and to avoid collapsing the whole cake…

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Fellowship, Formation, Mission

Many of us tend to think that the focus of the gospel is solely on the individual: Jesus came to save individuals from sin and bring them to personal salvation. This is incomplete. Jesus came to rescue us and restore us into relationship with God as Father and to one another as siblings. Jesus came to redeem his people collectively. Through faith in Christ’s death and resurrection, we are reconciled into the community of faith, the family of God, his people, the church. Look at how this is expressed in Scripture:

“But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light. Once you were not a people, but now you are God’s people; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.”  1 Peter 2:9-10 

Understanding that God has saved “a people for his own possession” is the foundation for strong, authentic, loving community in the church. At PasCov, we come together with three commitments in all of our Small Communities:

FELLOWSHIP  “Let us hold tightly without wavering to the hope we affirm, for God can be trusted to keep His promise. Let us think of ways to motivate one another to acts of love and good works. And let us not neglect our meeting together, as some people do, but encourage one another, especially now that the day of His return is drawing near.”  Hebrews 10:23-25
 
FORMATION  “Let the message about Christ, in all its richness, fill your lives.a Teach and counsel each other with all the wisdom He gives. Sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs to God with thankful hearts.”  Colossians 3:16
 
MISSION  “God has given each of you a gift from His great variety of spiritual gifts. Use them well to serve one another.”
1 Peter 4:10  
 
We hope to see many of you tomorrow at our Rekindle forum from 10-12 in the sanctuary, where we will encourage each other and be equipped to serve our Good God!
 
Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Spiritually transforming community

Instead of measuring a church by its attendance and budget, here’s another idea:
Let’s assess it by the quality of community life that disciples people to love well: a culture that equips individuals to have a 1st hand life with God and commitment to release people in their gifts.
Rich Villodas
 
Ruth Haley Barton notes that community is the most ‘overpromised and underdelivered’ aspect of the church today. There is something about human beings trying to get together and function together over the long haul that is difficult. What about you? How many have joined a church in hopes of experiencing care, connection and belonging, only to be disappointed? Or have been deeply involved with the church but were not being transformed at the deepest levels of your being?

The promise that we can become like Christ is one of the great promises of the gospel (Galatians 4:19). Spiritual transformation is central to the message of the gospel and therefore central to the mission of the church
 
At PasCov we are committed to create opportunities for community in which spiritual transformation takes place. Our transformation takes place ‘in and through the Trinity, as God transforms us into the image of Christ through the real presence of the Holy Spirit’ (Barton, Life Together in Christ). Some of our transformation takes place in solitude with God and also by choosing to walk together where certain kinds of growth, attention and support can be cultivated for the purpose of deep change into the image of Jesus. 
 
Lord Jesus, may we be known as a community that disciples people to love well, that invites everyone to a transformed shared life!
 
Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation


I

Anita Sorenson
Being in the city

“I am going to speak to you simply as a pastor, as one who, together with his people, has been learning the beautiful but harsh truth that the Christian faith does not cut us off from the world but immerses us in it; the church is not a fortress set apart from the city. 
The church follows Jesus, who lived, worked, struggled and died in the midst of a city, in the polis.”
—Archbishop Oscar Romero, shortly before his assassination in 1980
 
We build community and connection within the church so that we can reach out beyond the church and share the love of Christ to the world around us. We embed our presence in the places we find our lives and rely on the Spirit to lead us to seek and share God. And as a whole church body, we partner with those who have a reach into our community and meet needs and build bridges, do justice and seek the shalom of the city. 

That peace
will rise like bread
we can always hope.

That justice 
will flow like wine
we can always hope

That the Table 
will make strangers kin
we can always hope.

That our hope
will rise like bread
we can always pray.

-Jan Richardson

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson

Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Baptism life

This weekend we will again celebrate and witness several baptisms in our worship service! What does this mean?

Baptism tells us that we are beloved. It invites us to hear the affirming voice of God as he whispers his ongoing love for us. To be baptized is to enter a particular, life-giving, life-altering script or story, the biblical story. N T Wright writes that baptism encapsulates the entire Bible, starting in Genesis with creation and ending with Revelation's closing image of the river of life flowing through the city of God. In between is a life-shaping thread of baptism stories: Noah and the ark (Gen. 6), Moses and the Israelites escape through the Red Sea (Ex. 14), Joshua and the crossing of the Jordan River (Josh.3), Jonah swallowed by the huge fish (Jon. 1-2), and the prophet Ezekiel sprinkling people as they receive new hearts (Ezek. 36), to name a few. 

To be baptized is to renounce every other alternative script of our culture and to enter fully into the story of grace. What if baptism is designed not to be an event but the deepest part of our identity, the central, guiding reality that defines our lives? What does your baptism mean to you? What if you had not been baptized? What difference would that make? Can we see baptism as a lifelong invitation to "switch stories" and to winsomely follow Jesus, "further up and further in"? How can we encourage one another to live our baptisms as a reality that shapes our identity and all our decision-making? Our baptism summons us to put aside the self-centered clothes of our own making and to "put on" Christ and his virtue; Jesus has stripped death from us and clothed us with his life. 

Let us learn together how to live baptized lives.

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson

Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Come to me

BE STILL AND KNOW THAT I AM GOD;
I WILL BE EXALTED AMONG THE NATIONS,
I WILL BE EXALTED IN THE EARTH.

-PSALM 46:10


 
Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest.
Walk with me and work with me - watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace.
I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.

-Matthew 11:28-30 The Message

Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson

Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson
Spiritual transformation

"Spiritual transformation into Christlikeness is a process of forming the inner world of the human self in such a way that it takes on the character of the inner being of Jesus himself, The result is that the outer life of the individual increasingly becomes a natural expression of the inner reality of Jesus and his teachings. Doing what he said and did increasingly becomes a part of who we are."

Dallas Willard, Renovation of the Heart.

 

Being a Christ-follower means that we are on a life-long journey in the process of growing more and more like Christ. The Apostle Paul wrote to the Galatian church, "My dear children, for whom I am again in the pains of childbirth until Christ is formed in you..." Galatians 4:19

To the Ephesians he stated the goal this way, "to become mature, attaining to the whole measure the fullness of Christ" and "we will in all things grow up into him who is the Head, that is, Christ." Ephesians 4:13 & 15 

To the Romans he wrote, "For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the likenessof his Son..." Romans 8:29

To the Corinthians he said, "We, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord's glory, are being transformed into his likeness, with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit." 2 Corinthians 3:18

Williard explains that "The human spirit is an inescapable, fundamental aspect of every human being; and it takes on whichever character it has from the experiences and the choices that we have lived through or made in the past. That is what it means to be 'formed'." He goes on to say, "That spiritual place within us [the heart] from which outlook, choices, and actions come from has been formed by a world away from God. Now it must be transformed...as our spiritual dimension has been formed, so it also must be transformed."

As we grow in the knowledge of who Christ is, how He lived, who He calls us to be, how He calls us to imitate His life, then we become increasingly formed into His likeness. But it is a lifelong process making those who are in Christ lifelong learners. It requires of us a dedication to reading and studying the Word of God. But, thankfully, it is not solely dependent on us alone. This is the great mystery of God; "Christ in you." (Colossian 1:27). God gave us His Spirit. "For it is God who works in you to will and to act according to his good purpose." (Philippians 2:13) The Spirit of God works in us and in conjunction with our will. It's a holy partnership!

 Grace and peace,

Anita Sorenson

Pastor for Spiritual Formation

Anita Sorenson