Wednesday, May 31, 2017
The Green Hill House
This is the time of year when the people called Methodists come together for their annual gathering that they call Annual Conference. They will come together for a combination of worship, business, and celebration of pastors retiring and pastors starting on their journey of ministry. While many know that the Methodist Church was founded at Christmas 1784 in Baltimore Maryland, what is less known is that the first Annual Conference took place in North Carolina back in April 1785 north of Raleigh near the current town of Louisburg at the Green Hill House. Back in the 1980's, I was in the Louisburg area providing leadership for a youth event. My friend Steve and I knew the Green Hill House was nearby, so during a break we found the house and knocked on the door not realizing it was a private home. The homeowner warmly greeted us and graciously showed us the upstairs room where less than 20 Methodist pastors attended the first Annual Conference. For just a moment, I thought about that gathering of long ago and the stories those pastors must have told during those days in that room about their endeavors to spread scriptural holiness across this new land called America.
While that first Annual Conference had a total attendance of less than two dozen people, those who gather for Annual Conference in these days will number in hundreds if not thousands. While the first Annual Conference had only pastors present, today pastors and laity will attend. While Annual Conferences today meet in large cities and retreat centers, that first Annual Conference took place in an area that was quite rural. The roots of Methodism are in small groups and rural places like that place called the Green Hill House.
Jesus set a very low bar for God to show up for such occasions. Why, Jesus said that wherever only two of three gather, I am there in your midst. God not only shows in small groups , but he also shows up in rural places as well as urban places. Our God is not limited to a quorum of a large group of people nor is God limited to only show up in large metropolitan places. Romans 8 tells us the truth that nothing can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus. Thanks be to God. Have a joy-filled week.- Pastor Randy Wall
Prayer: Praise be to you, O God, that you are everywhere and with every one. Give us a heart open to your presence; through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Wednesday, May 24, 2017
Aware or Unaware?
Last Wednesday, I was in a meeting with some area
pastors. One of our group did a program
about substance abuse in our county.
Statistics show that in the year 2016 there were 163 confirmed heroin
overdoses and 20 heroin deaths in our county.
While these numbers may be commonplace in the place where you live what
shocked me the most was that this is a 600% increase over 2015. Our presenter went on to say that they are
expecting the number of confirmed heroin related overdoses and deaths to be
even worse in 2017 from what the first months of 2017 show.
On Thursday, my
wife shared with me that a man that we knew was now living in a tent in our
county and needed some food. He is
camping in the tent not because he wants to enjoy the out of doors, but because
that is the only home he has. So, we took
time to make a visit to a local grocery store and get some food so this man
could have something to eat.
I was not aware that heroin abuse was such a serious
problem in our county. I was not aware
that Mike (as I will call him) was homeless and hungry. My suspicion is that many other people in
our county are not aware that heroin abuse is such a problem and that most
people are not aware of the many homeless and hungry people that are around them every day. I did not know.
We hear an interesting story in Luke 8:40-56. As Jesus makes his way to the home of a man
named Jairus to heal his daughter, Jesus goes through a crowd of folk. While he is going through the crowd, the hem
of Jesus’ garment is touched by a woman who had been ill for over a decade. In that crowd of people, Jesus is surrounded
by countless people. Yet, only Jesus is
aware that this sick woman has touched him.
While the disciples are next to him, they are not aware of this woman or her need. Only Jesus is aware.
So many times, I go through life more like those
disciples than like Jesus. Too often, I
am unaware of the need (such as substance abuse, homelessness, and hunger) that
is around me. While substance abuse and
homelessness are often issues as complicated as people are, that does not mean
that I should be oblivious to know or to care. Like the priest and levite in the story of
Luke’s parable of the good Samaritan, many of us go on our way down the road of
life even if we see the need around us.
God give us awareness of the people and needs around us, and the wisdom
and compassion to care. Have a joy-filled
week.- Pastor Randy Wall
Prayer: Lord and God, give us eyes and hearts to see
the needs and the people around us. Help
us to reach out to them with love and compassion as your hands in the world;
through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Wednesday, May 17, 2017
The Tide Comes In, The Tide Goes Out
One of the places where my wife Ann and I make a
regular pilgrimage is to the coast. It
is a place that provides rest and renewal as we enjoy lazy days, afternoon
naps, beach walks, and water views. I
found myself thinking about the tides along the shore a few weeks ago. The tide comes in to give us high tide, and
the tide goes out to give us low tide.
Day after day, the tides comes in and the tide goes out.
As the tide
comes and the tide goes, such is a way of life for many of us. Day after day, workers come to work and go
home. Children come home from college
for the weekend, and then go back to their institution of higher learning. Special occasions like birthdays, holidays,
and the like take place and family and friends come together to celebrate and
then go back to their homes and regular routines. Like the tide coming in and going out, so we
come and go as we move and have our being.
As the tide comes in and the tide goes out, so we that
are a part of the family of faith go
about our life as disciples of Christ Jesus.
We gather to worship, and then scatter to serve. We come together to study and glorify God,
and then we go into the world to share the love of Christ with so many to whom
love is a stranger. A boat is not built
to only stay in the harbor. No, it can only fulfill its purpose when it launches
out to new horizons before it. The church gathers and it scatters to
serve: that is when followers of Christ
Jesus and the church are at its best.
Like the tide, we come and we go knowing that the One that made the seas
always goes with us. Have a joy-filled
week.- Pastor Randy Wall
Prayer: O God of sea and sky, ocean waves and ocean
depths: we thank you for the rhythymns
of life and faith created in your awesome way and will In our comings and goings, grant that we
gather to glorify your name and have the courage to go and serve you; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Thursday, May 11, 2017
Things I Wish Mom Told Me
Mother’s Day is only a few days away. While I celebrate the Mother that my wife,
Ann, is and the mothers that 3 of our daughters are and the host of other
mothers I have encountered through the years,
there is a hollowness this and every Mother’s Day for me knowing that my
own Mother has gone on to her eternal rest.
My Mom (as I called her) died in
August,2001.
There are many folks that have regrets about things
that did not say or do after someone they loved dies. They wish they had done this or said
that. Often, it seems to hang around
their necks weighing them down as they swim in the river of their life. I have had no regrets about what I said or
did after my Mom died. I had the chance
to visit with her the day before she died.
I talked to her only hours before she died. My final words to her in that phone call
were: “I love you, Mom.” I am grateful for those memories.
What I do regret and miss are the things that Mom told
me. When my birthday rolled around
every year, she would tell me again the
story about how she spent 7 months of her pregnancy with me in bed and that the
doctors had told her that I would probably be born dead or deformed. That story reminded me how much I was
wanted and how precious my life was. I
miss hearing Mom tell me that she loved
me. While those words were often said when we said our goodbyes over the phone
or in person, they were said with sincerity and not uttered lightly. These are the things I miss most of all that
Mom told me. There are many others. And yet, I know that Mom was only an
instrument to mirror what Someone tells me every day of my life. Every day, God tells me that I am wanted and
precious and I am loved. All I have to
do is look within me, around me, and look in that book called the Bible. As Mothers Day comes again, if you have a
Mom or mother figure still living tell her and show her that you love her and
how precious she is. You never know
when it might be the last time to do that.
Have a joy-filled week.- Pastor
Randy Wall
Prayer: New every day, O God, you tell us and show us
how loved and precious in your sight we are.
Thank you for your love, and thank you for the people you place in our
lives you use as messengers of your love;
through Christ our Lord.
Amen.
Tuesday, May 2, 2017
A Note to a New Grandson
Dear Ezra Worth-
I write this
note to you with such joy in your birth on April 21. I am so glad you are born and give thanks
that you are a healthy boy. I have
been praying for the same months before you were born. I write this knowing that it will be years
before you can read or you can understand what I share here. Yet, I
write because my heart is full.
First, let me tell you about your name. Ezra was the name of a leader of the
Israelites. He was a priest who led the
Israelites back from their captivity in Babylon. Let that Ezra influence who you are in your
life. As Ezra your namesake, give
faith a chance in your life. Let it mold
you and in times of weakness hold you.
Also, like Ezra of old, be a leader and not a follower. Lead those around you to making this world a
better place. Worth was the middle name
of my maternal grandfather, Leland Worth Perry, and my uncle, Donald Worth
Perry. Leland Worth was a part time
farmer and a part time mill worker. Even
though he died in 1965, I still remember his love for base ball and his kind
spirit. Donald Worth, his oldest son,
was a World War II veteran and came back from war starting a construction
business. Most of his business was in
commercial construction. Perhaps some
time I can show you some of the buildings his company built. Let the lives of Leland Worth and Donald
Worth form who you are in your life. As
those were dear people to me, so you are already dear to the heart of me.
Secondly, I have
some important things to share with you and with not just your sisters, but all
of my grandchildren. I want you to know that you have a family that loves you and
wants the best for you. You have a
wonderful mother and father. I know
there will come a time when you will think that don’t know anything and want to
stifle your life. Know that they love
you and want the best for you. Be
gracious and forgiving of your parents even as I hope they are gracious and
forgiving of you. It is a hard job
being a parent and children do not come with an operations manual. Don’t forget that you have grandparents,
sisters, aunts, uncles, and cousins who also love you. They are as close as a phone call or a
visit. Let all of your family be blessed
by sharing life with you and you will be blessed by them. Don’t ever forget that God has a plan and
purpose for your life. I know not what
that plan and purpose is, but I am certain it will not be like my own or
exactly like your parents. Earnestly
seek to discover that plan and purpose and live it out. Finally,
make this world a better place. As a
boy scout, I was taught to leave a place where I camped better than I found
it. I have let that lesson instruct how
I have lived my life hoping that I made
the little part of the world I lived better than I originally found it. I hope that you will do the same. I look forward seeing what life offers to you
in the years to come and sharing time with you.
-- Love, Randy Wall AKA
“Grandpa”, “Pop Pop”
Prayer:
O God, thank you for
children. Bless them and help them be a
blessing. Amen.
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