Category: sports
08/07/07 10:02 - 76ºF - ID#40432
Football?
Permalink: Football_.html
Words: 22
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: elmwood
08/07/07 11:29 - 76ºF - ID#40421
Elmood Village Celebration of Community
Right now I am thinking some spiritual, but not religious music. Some readings from different traditions, a time to say "thank you" and a time to ask for help. Hopefully, the whole thing will be 30-45 minutes.
Permalink: Elmood_Village_Celebration_of_Community.html
Words: 93
Location: Buffalo, NY
08/06/07 07:41 - 73ºF - ID#40400
Highs and lows
My sweet dog now has diarrhea, and bugged me (and my wife) to let him about about every two hours last night.
I've got a lot of work that I can do from home today, which will allow me to cook some rice and nurse him back to health, as soon as I say good bye to my parents.
Yes, my dog waited until my family was here to stink up the entire house. Thanks, Buckly.
Permalink: Highs_and_lows.html
Words: 121
Location: Buffalo, NY
08/05/07 12:03 - 78ºF - ID#40388
Tonight
Tomorrow I get breakfast with my family before they go. I think they've already done Pano's. Anyone have another breakfast place to recommend?
Should be fun. We even get to host my Grammy overnight.
Permalink: Tonight.html
Words: 50
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: cars
08/03/07 01:35 - 86ºF - ID#40369
What would Jesus Drive?
Permalink: What_would_Jesus_Drive_.html
Words: 70
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: homeless
08/01/07 01:39 - 88ºF - ID#40342
Homeless story
Permalink: Homeless_story.html
Words: 7
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: church
07/31/07 04:14 - 86ºF - ID#40329
Fun stuff coming up . . .
In addition to the regular goings on at my church (like worship with sermons from yours truly, every Sunday at 10am), there are three special events this month.
1. My "installation." Ok. I will be the first to say that installations for people are weird. Dishwashers get installed, not people. But the rules say that I have to be "installed," so that's what we are doing. Which basically means that friends and people from other churches join in having a celebration that thanks God that I am the pastor at the church. So it's the closest thing to a "Drew party," that I will ever let the church have. Still, there is a guest speaker and a reception with gourmet mini-pizzas afterwards. Special music, too. It happens this Sunday at 7pm.
2. Vacation Bible School. Wow. You thought "installation" was badly named. Why would kids want to go to school on vacation? Bible school at that? Still, its better than it sounds. Lots of fun for the kids, and I will have a special class for the grown ups. Why is that fun? Because the kids are studying old testament stories and I am teaching the "adult" versions of them--and they are pretty darn intriguing. Plus, everybody gets a free dinner. Gotta like that, right?
3. The Elmwood Village celebration of Community. This is on the 25th, right after the last act on the Saturday night of the Elmwood Arts Fest. It's not just my church, but lots of different communities from around the Elmwood strip thanking God/a higher power/whoever/each other for the nice things about this place and asking God/whoever/etc. to help us in the ways that we fall short. We're going to sing some happy uplifting songs, too. All that, and the it will be quick enough to let everyone get on with their Saturday Night celebration. What could be better?
Good stuff going on at Lafayette Church. Hope to see you there. Shameless plug over.
Permalink: Fun_stuff_coming_up_.html
Words: 354
Location: Buffalo, NY
07/29/07 09:06 - 78ºF - ID#40302
been a while . . .
I also took a quick sample of the garden walk. Also nice.
It inspired me. I will have a nice water garden next year.
Permalink: been_a_while_.html
Words: 36
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: sermons
07/17/07 04:33 - 78ºF - ID#40147
Another sermon: My addiction
Hi. My name is Drew, and I am addicted to being right.
I discovered that I was addicted to being right when I realized that I would always try for the last word in any discussion. This would lead to fights over the smallest things. But I am not only addicted to being right in the small things. I want to be right when it comes to politics and religion. My addiction to being right has cost me friendships, and it has also hurt my relationship with God.
I never thought that it would hurt my relationship with God, because it always seemed like the people that talked the most about God WERE always right. People that talk about God talk about God with conviction, and they live their lives with conviction. They say things like, "if God is for us, who can be against us?"
Which means that church enabled my addiction to being right all the time, at least for a while. It was a place where I met other addicts, and it was a place where we got our fix of being right, every time we compared ourselves to the wrong people that didn't go to church, or went to the wrong church.
Come to think of it, while some Christians re- enforced my beliefs, others indulged my addiction by believing different things. Church life gave me a whole new list of things to argue about. I could argue theology, soteriology, eschatology, worship style, stewardship, hymn selection, the color scheme of the sanctuary, clothing choices, what kind of car a person ought to drive, what kind of food that we serve--anything at all, it seemed, could be turned into a "spiritual issuse," with a "right" and a "wrong," and I would always be on the right side.
My faith turned into an exercise in making sure that I was right. I wasn't alone. So many Christians in this country spend so much time focusing on being right that they never get around to doing right.
We'd rather argue than work.
We'd rather try to change another persons mind than change our own heart.
I'm addicted to being right. Fortunately, I know that I have this addiction, and I am working on it, so I guess I am a recovering addict, but I know that I will always be addicted.
Would you please stand up if you would like to admit being addicted to being right.
Here's the good news for those of us who are standing. While churches sometimes feed this addiction, especially when they aren't healthy, the church also breaks us of this addiction.
Confessing our sins is one of the practices that we do to fight this addiction. Every week, together (and hopefully every day, on our own), we look at ourselves and ask: "How have I been wrong? How I have I fallen short?" We admit, again and again, that we cannot be good enough without the grace of God.
And the stories like the ones we hear today are great for breaking our addiction.
Lets look at our Gospel lesson for today.
The lawyer in this story had an encounter Jesus, God in flesh. During that encounter, Jesus gave him a mission--it wasn't new, it was something that had been part of the Jewish tradition for ages, but it was a clear and concise. Jesus said, "if you love God, and love your neighbor, you will have life."
What more could he want? He found the meaning of life. Jesus gave him purpose. Jesus gave him a job.
but then there's that one phrase that is a hinge that turns the whole story. "But wanting to justify himself, he asked Jesus . . ."
The lawyer shared our addiction.
Following God's mission wasn't enough. He wanted to be right. He wanted the last word.
Can I give a piece of advice? Don't try to have the last word with God.
That's what King Jeraboam wanted to do in our first reading.
The King of Israel thought he deserved the last word with Amos. After all, he was the King, ruling in God's place. And Amos came and told him he was wrong.
This is when Israel and Judah were separate nations. The King was King over Israel, and Amos was from Judah.
Worse than that, Amos was not a professional prophet. He was a shepherd from another nation that came and told the King that he wasn't doing the right thing.
This King, by the way, was good for the religious community at the time. Everybody made their sacrifices. Everybody went to church.
They made a big show of how much they loved God, but they ripped off their neighbors. They didn't care about justice.
And Amos told the King that they were not being faithful.
And the King didn't want to hear it.
The King didn't want to hear it from anybody, but why especially should he listen to a foreigner, an uneducated shepherd, a nobody with no credentials?
When we don't like to admit that we are wrong, we especially don't like to admit that an outsider is right.
But God likes to use outsiders.
The king was wrong. Amos was right.
And it gets even worse when Jesus tells his story.
Jesus flipped the script in his story.
I could imagine the story being told. The stage is set with the man getting attacked by robbers.
But! says Jesus, "along came a Priest,"
and the crowd cheers,
"but the Priest walked past"
but soon a Levite, another church leader came by
and the crowd cheers again
The priest was limited by his rules and duties, but Levite was a good guy that was bound by less rules. He could have done something. The crowd knows that he can be the hero.
but the levite walked past.
And then the Samaritan comes around the corner
The hated minority comes around the corner
The religious heretic comes around the corner
The illegal alien comes around the corner
The enemy comes around the corner
The outsider comes around the corner (PAUSE!!!)
That's what people heard when Jesus said, "Samaritan."
and that man becomes the hero of the story.
The supposed good guys were actually the bad guys. The bad guy ended up being the good guy.
This story is still relevant today.
People see us church folk just as this story shows the Priests and the Levites to be.
We worry about appearances, and we ignore those that suffer.
We say that we're the good guys, but we act like the bad guys.
And who shows mercy?
People come to church and they feel judged. They are more likely to find mercy at the bar. Or the gay pride festival. Do you know why the Unitarian church is full? It's not because of their theology--it's because they show mercy.
The people that are supposed to be our enemies are, in reality, our examples.
The supposed enemies of our faith practice it better than we do.
The story of the Good Samaritan is hard therapy for people that are addicted to being right.
But our addiction will kill us.
And in loving God and loving our neighbor, in showing mercy, in breaking our prejudice against Samaritins, we find life.
Dueteronomy 31 says it. It was our call to worship:
God has placed in front of us Life and Good, Death and Evil.
We can imitate the Samartains and live, or blame them and die.
When I was being controlled by addiction, I thought that I could only find life in being right.
But real life came when I let God be right.
Are you trying to justify yourself? I'm inviting you to quit. Cold Turkey. Let it go. How will you do that?
Find your Samaritan--an outsider that shows mercy--and imitate him or her.
Life is available to you in these four words:
"Go and do likewise."
Permalink: Another_sermon_My_addiction.html
Words: 1609
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: religion
07/11/07 10:33 - 68ºF - ID#40064
Just one more pope thought
Now, I don't believe that this is true at all, but lets pretend for a second that it is.
Why not share? If you get to choose who gets to heaven, do us a favor and spread it around already! Jesus earned it, not you--so why hog it!? There's plenty to go around!
Permalink: Just_one_more_pope_thought.html
Words: 77
Location: Buffalo, NY
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