And just like that it’s July


I’d gotten behind in reading the Bible through in 90 days. I thought about actually picking the Bible up and reading, but I felt committed to listening my way through.

Then I had a long road trip–back and forth to my mother’s farm for the Fourth of July. That got me through Kings and nearly through Chronicles. With my walking partner on vacation, I’m taking the Bible as my walking companion. Then I got through Ezra this morning peeling and freezing peaches. Just like that (well, not really), I’m back on track.
Listening this morning to the story of the returning Exiles and the conflict between them and those who stayed behind has given me pause. The men gathering and repenting of marrying foreign wives and leaving those wives and children is most troubling. Of course, as God provided for Hagar and Ishmael, God can provide for those abandoned wives and children. But what was God’s will in this? I am reminded that I must take care interpreting the stories of the First Testament especially when I use them to discern God’s take on any given contemporary issue. It seems that finding the meaning behind the meaning is critical.
Listening to these stories in consecutive order over a short period of time is shaping me, and the best preparation I can think of for whatever God has next in store for me.

Prayers back and forth

In one of our back and forth emails, the president of the Standing Committee of the Diocese of Springfield closed with these words: We will keep you, and the Parish Family of St. Mary’s, Cypress, Texas in our prayers in the days and weeks ahead.

I love thinking about the Diocese of Springfield not only praying for me as a nominee but that they are also praying for St. Mary’s, too. I particularly appreciate this because after I was announced as one of the nominees, we (at St. Mary’s) added the Diocese of Springfield to our list of daily intercessions.
No matter what happens with the election, I can’t help but think that God is delighted to see two groups of people connected with another through their prayers. It reminds me of one of my favorite hymns:

As Christ breaks bread and bids us share,
each proud division ends.
That love that made us makes us one,
and strangers now are friends.

Luke 1. 37


So I’ve got a second blog going. Actually, it’s not my blog but one for the parish where I serve. It’s just that right now I’m the one tending it.

The parish is beginning The Bible in 90 Days Challenge this Sunday. We created the blog as another way to encourage the parish in this great summer activity. A group of us started on Wednesday (though the official kick-off is June 6). We’re having great fun with it and Sunday, on what has become known as our “commitment wall” in the nave, all of us who have accepted the challenge to read the Bible through this summer will sign our commitment.
I decided that listening was going to work better for me, so I’ve decided to download the week’s readings at audible.com. I started Wednesday and simply by listening while driving between parish tasks I’m to Day Four already. I’m trying to get ahead because I figure sooner or later I’ll get behind.
I’ve read the Bible through before. I did a year reading plan through my parents’ church a long time back. I reckoned that it was time I do it in one sitting (0ver 90 days) again.
Oh, and the title of the parish blog? Luke 1. 37. Read the verse for yourself and see if you can figure out why this seemed the perfect title for a blog encouraging our walk with Christ.

Whilst on the way to pray

The last two Sundays I’ve preached on the passages from Acts 16. I love those stories about the earliest days of the Church. I found especially intriguing the detour that Paul and Silas had on their way to pray (by the river? in Lydia’s home?) where they did indeed pray, but not in anyway they could have imagined when they got up that morning.

Of course, I talked about those places God takes us when we think we’ve got our day well-planned. Of course, because I preached about those surprising detours, that before I’d even signed the parish register after the 5:30 PM Eucharist, my plan of home for dinner and a little tv after a full day of work was not to happen. A friend of a parish family had suddenly died, and they had no church home. Could we help? Of course we could.

Thus the week was full with rearranging schedules, meetings with the man’s extended and estranged family, coordinating lay volunteers, and doing one of those funerals that I like to call “evangelism funerals”. I call them evangelism funerals not because we have an altar call or come-to-Jesus-moment, but because people who would never be in church, are. It’s a great opportunity to share Christ’s hospitality, love, and comfort. The parish does these funerals for strangers so very well. The Daughters of the King (our women’s prayer group) provides wonderful hospitality, and many others in the parish do their part in living Matthew 24. 34–36, “I was a stranger and you welcomed me.”

I’m in the midst of another “whilst on the way to pray” moment in my personal life. Things are full of joy in the parish, and I’ve never been happier at St. Mary’s. I’m off to Portland next month for my first grandson’s baby shower, and my daughter has just quit her day job to work full time on her book.

But during Lent a couple of people approached me about being in another bishop search. I was not in any hurry to go through the process again, and was ready to say no, when Holy Spirit twists and turns ended up with a conversation on Maundy Thursday (of all days) that led me to know that I had to say yes. I was most hesitant because I did not want to put the parish through a search process again, but it appeared that all would be very private until right before the final candidates were named in August, and the election would be held soon after that in September. If I were not made a candidate, there would be no stress at all to the parish.

But it turned out not to be so private. Today the diocese posted on the diocesan website the names of the 15 priests who have been nominated by a member of the clergy and a lay person, have written nine papers, and submitted videos of those responses being made orally. The process is to be all public from the very beginning.

So here I am again in another bishop search. I know the process in Connecticut was the most challenging thing I’d ever done in ministry and one of the very best, too. I know how much I’ve grown and changed in the past year from being in the Connecticut episcopal election. I know that being part of this process is once again being obedient to God–being willing to change the direction of my life in order to serve God.