Happy Spring! - Ready For New Church Day?

Dear Friends:

With New Church Day around the corner and a period of transition in front of us as a congregation, I thought it would be good this month to talk about how we can invite the Lord into the challenges we face in our lives. When we’re in the midst of temptation is often the time we feel most distant from God, and yet its when He’s the closest. How do we connect to that sense of His presence, draw strength from it, and move forward?

In a portion of this sermon, I explore what it takes to have a truly intimate relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ that we can reflect in the lives of those around us:

‘And repent [of the evil] against Your people’ means having mercy on them. This is clear from the meaning of ‘repenting,’ when it has reference to Jehovah, as having mercy. The reason why ‘repenting’ means having mercy is that Jehovah does not ever repent, since He foresees and makes provision for all things from eternity. Repentance is a reaction that can only take place in someone who has no knowledge of the future and who sees, as events unfold, that he has made a mistake. (AC 10441: 2)

If we are to be receptive of the mercy of God, we have to being with honest examination of our own lives - not in order to demonstrate how worthless and evil we are (since evil doesn’t come from us but from hell), but to recognize our mistakes, acknowledge them as sins - and ask God to inspire in our hearts a new beginning where we have sinned. We need to ask Him to allow our repentance and good decision making to redefine what we care about and move aside past mistakes, instead of allowing them to define our future. This is the beginning of true intimacy - the beginning of a true relationship to the Lord.

And we can apply these same behaviors wherever we’re facing a fear of intimacy in our lives. In our relationships with friends and family, or with our spouse for that matter - are we using our relationships as leverage, threatenting a lack of intimacy where there isn’t complete agreement? If God did that, we wouldn’t have anything left to lean on in life, would we? Where we’re willing to admit mistakes with our friends and neighbors (and most of all with our Lord), beginning again from a living acknowledgement of God, true intimacy becomes a deeper possibility. Not that we’ll achieve the same kind of intimacy with others that we do with God - but an intimacy that does seek to reflect His relationship to us from love.

The Israelitish church wasn’t, because they didn’t get that what builds a church isn’t rules and regulations, but relationships. Instead of our Lord - a God we can know and love - a God we can know and love - they had only the most remote and general presence of God to interact with on a daily basis. A God they didn’t know or love, but obeyed largely out of fear - a fear of intimacy based on their worldly perspective.

Rather than an intimate relationship with God, the Children of Israel chose an introspective and selfish life that distanced them from Jehovah. So Jehovah took on our struggles and overcame them as Jesus Christ. This is a lesson to us. How are we thinking of the Lord in everyday life? Are we asking Him to lift us up in our daily struggles? Are we inviting Him into our secret battles against sin that seem overwhelming? Are we believing that its really possible for Him to change our perspective, reorder our priorities, and change our lives?

May we, through a living approach to the Lord in His Word open our minds to His truth, our hearts to His love, and dedicate our steps to faith in Him and the life that leads to heaven.

Wishing you a peaceful and happy Spring!

Your Friend,
Pastor Ethan

Preparing for Easter

In some ways, it might seem too early to start thinking about it. Here are some thoughts (from this February’s newsletter) on spiritual preparation that can lead us to the Easter Season -

Dear Friends:

Here we are at February, and soon our hosting of the Lenten Dinner Series will begin in Freeport. As I was thinking about what to write this morning, I found a sermon that I preached for that series during my second year here (which you’ll recognize when you see the name “Bill” – referring to Bill Heilman and his family). I was struck with how much of that same talk still applies today, and so I offer it as a way of “focusing” our minds and hearts on the self examination necessary for us to be truly receptive of the Easter message. After all, any time we can be reminded of the need to focus on preparation for heaven through the choices we make in this life, it’s a testament to our believe in the Lord’s purpose for creation – that there be a heaven from the human race (DP 27).

We speak tonight about the whole purpose of Lent itself. In the beginning, it was three days of fasting signifying the three days of Jesus in the tomb before the resurrection. It was a simple reminder. Eventually, it became 40 days of fasting, mirroring not just this, but Jesus’ temptation in the wilderness. And what is it now? In some respects, Lent’s become pretty commercial hasn’t it? I kid you not, but I drove by a billboard at Taco Bell the other day advertising bean burritos on sale for Lent. Is this what Jesus wants? I don’t know. I’m just asking the question. These days, people have trouble giving up a Snickers bar for Lent, don’t they? And the point: is that what Lent’s really all about? Or is it something deeper. Is it a time to pause and reflect on an internal level about the nature of our relationship with the Lord. About the ways in which He is leading us each day to know Him a little more and love Him a little better – if we would only open our minds and hearts to Him.

I think, friends, that this is the true message of Lent. Its about our spiritual rebirth as people. Its about our ability to see beyond the temporary wants and desires of the natural world, to let them die, for the eternity of heaven and the love of our Lord Jesus Christ. And that’s what God taught me through my relationship with Bill and his family. That’s where my focus needed to be – on the life of heaven. And that’s what we can teach each other every day as followers of Him. That’s the simple truth that Martha didn’t get.
So, as we go out today to live our lives that are really just the preparation lap for eternity in the eyes of the Lord, what will we choose? Will we “be still” and listen for God’s voice in our daily decisions, or will we decide that the world’s values – social and societal convention - are what matter. Yes, by the world’s standard, Mary did the wrong thing on the surface. But we all must remember and cherish what Jesus said to Martha, and says equally to each of us:

And Jesus answered and said to her, “Martha, Martha, you are worried and troubled about many things. But one thing is needed, and Mary has chosen that good part, which will not be taken away from her.” (Luke 10: 41-42)

May you, through a love of what is true and a willingness to do what is good, gain a “Mary” heart in a “Martha” world.

Your Friend, Pastor Ethan

Merry Christmas!

I wanted to share with you this month one of my favorites: a children’s talk on the Christmas story by my grandfather, Rev. Fred Schnarr. In it, we’re told about the greatest gift of all to focus on at Christmas time – the gift of our Lord Jesus Christ, God in His Divine Humanity. He was born into the world that we might be freed from the grips of the hells (a life of selfish and worldly thinking) to focus on the visible God and the life that leads to heaven.

“Have you ever looked up at the starry sky on a clear night? Doesn’t the great universe above us give us a strange feeling of wonder and delight at such a time?

There are so many stars we get dizzy trying to count them. And when we think how far away they are, we feel very little and insignificant. The space out there is so very large. We learn of a star being hundreds or thousands of light years away, and our minds cannot even imagine such a great distance. But still, we love to look at the stars. Especially at Christmas we think of the Lord and how stars have always been especially connected to His birth on earth.

Over a thousand years before the Lord was born, the prophet Balaam spoke of how there would come a Star out of Jacob and a Scepter would rise out of Israel (Numbers 24:17).

Only a few wise men knew that this was a prophecy that the Lord would someday be born into the world. And, as we know, it was such wise men who saw the star the night the Lord was born, and followed it.

One of the amazing things the Writings tell us about stars is that there are stars in heaven and that they are even brighter and more wonderful than here. Whole societies of angels, especially those who like to think about the Lord, are often seen in that world at a distance like a beautiful star. Sometimes an angel or a good spirit actually sparkles and shines like a bright star when he is in a special state of charity and faith.

And there are many more amazing things told us about stars in heaven. For example, sometimes the Word that is in a heavenly church, on the altar, will suddenly shine like a great star.

Or, sometimes angels, when they are writing or doing their work with newcomers to the spiritual world, will seem to have a band of little stars about their heads.

Angels love stars because they know that stars represent truths that are filled with love. They know, too, that the most important truths are about the Lord God. So, when they see a star, they think of Him. Some of the angels, for this reason, love to paint stars on the ceilings of their homes, and others embroider them even into their clothes.

In the last few verses of the Sacred Scriptures, the Lord calls Himself the bright and morning Star. He does this because He is speaking of how He will give to His New Church a new and wonderful idea of God - a new knowledge filled with light and wisdom. And the new knowledge is that there is one God, who is the Lord Jesus Christ, and that He reveals Himself to us as a God of love and mercy, In human form. The human form, the Divine Human, is the gift that the Lord gave to us by His birth and His life on earth.

This is the morning Star: the one great truth through which we can see all truth, the star that was promised from ancient times, and burst from heaven as a light to lead the wise men.

When we look at the starry sky this Christmas, or when we put a star on our Christmas tree, or hang a star in our window, or make a star for our representation to lead the wise men and to show where the baby Jesus is, let us pray that the starlight about us is matched by the starlight within us. And it is, whenever we invite the Lord into our minds and our hearts. This is the Lord’s whole desire for us, when we remember His birthday, and why Christmas, and His Christmas star, will be with us forever to light the way to heaven.”

This is what we celebrate at Christmas time, that we might say even as the angels did to the shepherds keeping watch over their flock by night so long ago:

“For there is born to you this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord..” (Luke 2: 11)

May His Love fill your hearts and homes this Christmas.

Your Friend,
Pastor Ethan