Friday, September 29

Almost Weekly Update

But surely, God is my helper; the Lord is the upholder of my life.
-Psalm 54:4


As this fall begins, I find myself consumed with work and the demands of friends and family. All of these demands are blessings to be certain, but they are demands no less and at times I find them all taxing. Then I am reminded of God's promises. God is my helper. Our vocations of work, family and friendship are often challenging, but God aids us in our times of need. God upholds our lives.

But Joan Chittister reminds us of the other side of the coin.

The God-life, Benedict is telling us, is a never-ending, unremitting, totally absorbing enterprise. God is intent on it; so must we be. The Hebrew poet Moses Ibn Ezra writes: "Those who persist in knocking will succeed in entering." Benedict thinks no less. It is not perfection that leads us to God; it is perseverance." p. 65 "The Rule of Benedict: Insight for the Ages


We are upheld in this work. As we persevere, as we knock, God desires nothing more than our fulfillment. In this way are we upheld when weary. In this way are we upheld when burdened.

May God uphold you as you knock. May you find God's blessing and peace in your lives.

Announcements:

Our Bible study continues this coming Tuesday! Come one. Come all. We will be working through Acts and reading the Rule of Saint Benedict using a book that has daily readings from the rule with a brief reflection by Joan Chittister. Our hope is that in the 14 weeks of the bible Study that we will take these reading up as a daily devotional. All are also invited to join the community of the Holy Trinity in their evening prayer service at 7pm before the Bible study.

We are holding a "kitchen goods" drive for Sarah's Circle. North Shore Baptist and the Community Church of Wilmette are helping us collect essential kitchen items such as small appliances, pots and pans for Sarah's Circle. For more information, please contact Jeremy John.

Believe it or not, the holiday season is approaching. As you all find out, please let the pastoral team know if you will be in town over Thanksgiving and Christmas. We are making plans with Immanuel about shared worship once again and we want to know your availability so we may make appropriate plans.


Tripp Hudgins

The Pastoral Team
The Church of Jesus Christ, Reconciler

Friday, September 22

Weekly Update

Truth is not uncommonly brushed aside, or at least there is in our society a skepticism about truth claims. In some sense palate's question to Jesus "What is truth?" May not only be the question our culture asks but a question we ask ourselves but may not articulate, perhaps especially in our church communities. This is unfortunate for it is in church in coming together before Christ that like Pilate we confront truth, and can be puzzled by who we find.

For us as Christians Jesus Christ is the truth. This means that belief, faith, doctrine are always as much about relationship as they are about propositions. What is often misunderstood about Christian faith by Christians and non-Christians alike is that for true Christian faith matters of the heart are always matters of the head and we believe certain propositions because we have a certain relationship with God. Ultimately, we believe because God revealed God's self to us out of love for us. Right belief about God then isn't about being right or righteous but about being in relationship with God. For Christian faith head,heart, body belong always together because if one is out of cynic with the others we cannot have a complete or good relationship to God. We may relate to God, while believing something untrue about God, but a false believe will hinder that relationship. Certainly there is something to feeling close to God, or feeling spiritual, but if there is a reality to that feeling then it means being in relationship to a God, who is someone, who we must encounter and thus believe certain things about, and about whom we can either believe true or false things.

In the end we can not say as Christians that we are "spiritual" but not care about whether or not what we believe about being spiritual is true or false. For the Christian to be "spiritual" is to be in relationship with God who is spirit, to be filled with the person of the Holy Spirit, of whom there are true and false things, and of whom ultimately we must say is the truth. We know the truth not because we know certain propositions, but we know the one who is true and about whom certain things are true.
May Pilate's question lead us not to skepticism but to embrace the one who is the Way the Truth and the Life.

Announcements-
This Sunday we meet for worship a half hour early at 5:30 PM. Normal meeting time resumes Sunday October 2nd.

This Sunday we also welcome Rev. Laura Gottardi-Littell as our preacher. Keep her and the search committee in your prayers as we continue to discern a common call. If you have any questions about the search process, please contact Will Swanson.

Our Bible study continues this coming Tuesday! Come one. Come all. We will be working through acts and reading the Rule of Saint Benedict using a book that has daily readings from the rule with a brief reflection by. Our hope is that in the 14 weeks of the bible Study that we will take these reading up as a daily devotional. The devotional is now here. Pick it up at the back table. All are also invited to join the community of the Holy Trinity in their evening prayer service at 7 PM before the Bible study.

We are holding a "kitchen goods" drive for Sarah's Circle. North Shore Baptist and the Community Church of Wilmette are helping us collect essential kitchen items such as small appliances, pots and pans for Sarah's Circle. For more information, please contact Jeremy John.

In Christ,
Larry Kamphausen

Monday, September 18

Sermon September 17 Proper 19

Learning How Not to Speak
Have you ever said something and then wished you could take back what you said? Or have you ever promised I will do such and such and then failed to follow through? Or have you ever said something that deeply hurt another person even a close friend? Have you ever speak a word that cheered someone up? Or have you found your words to turn someone’s life around for the better? Have you ever had someone tell you that your words meant a great deal to him or her? I know I have experienced all of these, and if you can relate to any of the above situation or all of them then you know the power of words and of the tongue, as James says. And our Gospel today gives us an example of what James is talking about. We can all I think sympathize with Peter in our Gospel.

Today I would like to talk about learning how not to Speak, about learning to be silent before God. In our Epistle reading today James presents us with a problem, a problem that is often at the center of issues in our churches and in or own individual lives and relationships, problem that is highlight by the above questions. Our speech can one moment be used to build things up and the next moment tear things apart. We can be destructive when we hope to speak the truth, and when we seek to calm a situation and avoid saying what actually needs to be said.

This week I worked in a show room at the Merchandise Mart for the Casual Furniture Market. I was there to keep the show room looking clean and always set properly. So, I basically wandered the show room all day picking up trash left behind arranging pillows and making sure chairs were in their proper place. This meant that I was in a position to over hear the conversations of the company’s reps to the buyers they were showing the furniture. The show room is a noisy place, not only was there the constant din of Reps selling the furniture, but there was also the music that seems to be nearly ever present in our culture- walk into any shop or restaurant or cafĂ© and there will be music. We are without silence in our culture. Not only that I noticed that most reps as they took buyers through the show room spoke continually during the whole show pausing at key moments to make sure that the buyer did not have a question about this or that piece or line of furniture. This need to talk continually became even more evident as lunch was served each day and certain reps would stay with the buyers as they ate lunch and would talk to the buyers the whole time. It was clear that this was a tactic even if an implicit one: the buyer was preferably not to be given time to reflect on what was presented and what was said about the furniture, most of which was empty things like “It is no longer enough to have a four chairs and a table rather now you need a large coordinated set.” Or “ The attitude of fine outdoor living is well accepted by consumers…” And other less intelligible phrases that I cannot remember. I noticed that the Rep who failed to talk through out the entire time often was followed by buyers who when he or she was not looking would roll their eyes and give each other meaningful looks, while those who talked incessantly were followed by compliant buyers nodding their heads and asking equally inane questions and usually ended up signing a contract for orders by the end of the tour of the show room. Silence and reflection had no place in the show room, in fact to allow the buyer to stop and think was to loose the contract, to loose the sale. Now admittedly the best reps, talked in such away to ensure that they would find out what the buyer wanted and needed, and clearly some reps had long term relationships with the buyers, but the relationship was built upon this speech filled game that was ever shifting and without reflection or silence. The tongue was allowed to run wild and say ridiculous things for the sake of a sale. This is not a new observation but we live in a noisy world and a world full of words and speech, a world of careless pointless weightless words.

Yet if I am tempted to think as a preacher and pastor that this noisy careless speech is new our Gospel today should disabuse me and us of such a notion. What we find in our culture is simply an expression of a humanity that is always speaking about what it knows little or nothing about, we talk to convince ourselves we know what is what. This is what is happening in our Gospel, Jesus acknowledges that there is much noise about him; the news wires are a buzz with the latest headlines about this crazy Galilean who has large crowds follow him all over Palestine. We are at the turning point in the ministry of Jesus, he is turning to Jerusalem and the Cross, he needs to prepare as much as is possible his disciples for the true meaning of all this noise. So he asks a report on what are the current opinions, knowing his disciples are as much caught up in the buzz that is around Jesus as everyone else. Then He asks the disciples; well then you my followers who do you say that I am. You’ve got to love Peter I imagine he is kind of like the kid in Sunday school always ready to answer with the good answer, always the first one to raise her hand, the one the teacher has to say now let someone else answer. Peter like that kid gets it right. Now here is the strange thing Jesus says shh, to his disciples in the midst of all the noise about Jesus, now that they know the truth, they are not to speak of it, they are to be quiet to sit with the truth, their not supposed to sell it, to put the truth out there in the market place of ideas as if it’s simply a competing view among all the other words about Jesus. But Peter like ourselves I think can’t quite keep quiet, he’s got it figured out, and when Jesus continues to speak, about his death, Peter knows the Sunday School answer and is quite sure the Messiah doesn’t die like that, and he rattle’s off to Jesus all the reasons why what Jesus just said isn’t true. Jesus not being a Sunday school teacher, Says that not only is Peter speaking what is not true but is in fact speaking for Satan. Peter’s mind is still with the human noise about Jesus, the buzz, the glamour of celebrity, and not the truth he spoke perhaps just moments before. It’s as though Jesus looks to Peter and says “didn’t I tell you to be quiet, listen for a change, set your mind on God, not on what will sell, what looks good to the crowds.” So Jesus then speaks further to all and says, “ Look, as long as you try to look good keep up an image with all those words you will loose your life, give up yourself. What does it really matter in the end if you could create all the noise and buzz in the world so that you have all you want but in the end loose you’re very self. Listen to my words, be quiet loose yourself in me, and then you will know true life. Stop for a moment, remove yourself from your words that can acclaim me as messiah whom I am and then deny what God intends in the next breath!”

Peter so clearly shows us ourselves. He is so eager to speak and so easily speaking out of both sides of his mouth. We all, like Peter, are far too ready to speak, as James so clearly points out to us in today’s text. It appears though that James gives us a clear sense of our problem and a clear sense of what should be and what perfection is but no clear solution to our predicament when it comes to our words. Upon hearing James words we are left with the question: how do we control our tongues, how do we speak truly and consistently? How do we avoid the pitfall of Peter? How do we avoid our speech being both an instrument of God and of Satan? Careful attention to James reveals that in stating the problem he has given us the solution. James offers these clues to the problem of our tongue. First if possible we are to avoid being in a position where we must speak, in his exhortation to avoid being in a position of the teacher. Second perfect speech is to have our whole selves body and spirit in check, like a tamed horse, like a ship with a functioning rudder and pilot at the wheel. Third control of our tongue is possible. Fourth we must recognize the power of our words and be aware of this power at all times. Lastly we cannot control our tongue and this reality is what leads us into a contradiction so that our own speech betrays us. To borrow a phrase from Derrida the trick is learning “how not to speak!”

Benedict in his monastic rule warns against idle chatter, and he is not alone in this exhortation. Various commentators throughout the history of the Church have seen James exhortation on the tongue and speech as an exhortation to keep silent. We might ask why has there been, throughout the historic Christian tradition, this advice not to speak? (quotes from commentary pp 37 and 38: pg 37 Cyril of Alexandria, Hilary of Arles, pg 38 Bede.) We see from these three quotes that it is not speech itself, or our tongue, but speech that is not aligned with the will of God. In a sense we have the sort of reversal found in Jesus words about losing and gaining our life: to learn how to speak we must first learn how not to speak, that is how to keep silent. The reason for this is that it is ultimately only God who can provide us with the pure heart and the pure source of our speech.

So, how do we learn not to speak so that our speech can be true speech in line with our life in God? First we must admit we don’t always know how to speak and that at times our words harm when we intend them to heal. Peter did not intend to counter God’s will in confronting Jesus, and yet his words were of Satan. Second we need to recognize that learning not to speak is seeking discernment in what to say and when to say it, through submitting our speech to God. This discernment according to the long tradition of the church comes in silence. We learn to speak in the practice of being still before the Lord, as the Psalm enjoins us. Third we must become acquainted with the practices of keeping silent, known as meditation or attentive prayer. The point of these prayer practices is not to speak to God but to listen, to attend to the presence of God. This is done by seeking to be alone and quiet, to practice letting go of our own thoughts that run through our heads, and escape the noisy market place of the world.

There are many techniques for doing this and some like Thomas Merton concerned with the attitude more than the technique wont even speak to the how of Christian meditation, for unlike Buddhism and some forms of Hinduism the technique is secondary and is never to be our focus. But keeping in mind the possibility that concern for technique can be a form of noise that keeps us from true silence, I want to before I conclude this evening with present two ways of being silent, which themselves can be combined if one wishes. The first is the practice of controlled breathing. It is important to sit in a place where you can have an object of focus, a candle and icon or cross or crucifix, or if you have neither of these have a candle and choose a word of theological significance, like Jesus, Christ, God, Love, Trinity, etc. Sit upright in a chair with your legs on the floor before the candle and Icon or Cross or crucifix (you could also stand to do this). Focusing on candle and Icon or crucifix begin to breath deeply and exhale, let your thoughts simply role over you, let them pass by as if you are a rock and they are a rushing stream, do not chase after them, let the presence of the light and the icon or the word direct you to be open to God’s presence. The aim is for your thoughts to cease and for you to be filled with the Spirit of God. A word of warning this is more difficult than it appears. If you have never attempted this exercise before you will probably find that still your mind is nearly impossible when you begin that it takes long practice of this exercise before you attain true silence before God. But remember we live in a noisy world we are taught to expect noise and that silence is a sign of something being wrong, and as being something of discomfort, we are implicitly taught to never be still and silent.
The second technique I want to offer to you is the contemplative repetition of what is known as the Jesus prayer “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner”, again say this prayer slowly, before a candle and Icon or cross or crucifix and let these words sink in to the depths of your soul passing by all thoughts and concerns, focus on these basic words let them wash over you like water in a gently flowing stream washing you, carrying you on their current into the presence of God. This prayer can be combined with breathing meditation.

When undertaking these practices one should remember that we are learning how not to speak meaning we are leaning how to be in the presence of God, so that we may live in him and speak truly in our relationships and in the world. The point is to become one with Christ that our speech is no longer our own. We are seeking to place our speech under the guidance of God the Spirit. If you have other ways of attaining this end there is nothing in the faith that says you must do this technique of prayer and meditation, but we are all called to have the mind of Christ to allow God to be in our speech and to have control of our tongues, we are all called to be in some way silent before God, to still ourselves and our thoughts. Also, I encourage you not to attempt this alone, if you have never attempted any such practices before. Let Tripp and I know that you are attempting this for the first time, let someone you trust also do it along side you. The reason for this is that as we come into the presence of God we also face our true selves and the sin and flesh that even though we have committed ourselves to Christ hangs on. We need help in facing ourselves before God. Tripp and I do this by meeting regularly with a Spiritual Director. Talk to us about having a Spiritual director, none of this is intended to remain outside of relationship and the Church. We are on the journey together even as we seek to meet God in Solitude.

Ultimately for the Christian, for the one who is in Christ we are to give up ourselves, our opinions our desire to speak and make our mark in the world, in order to be transformed by Christ and conformed to the image of God, which is Jesus Christ. If you find that I hesitate to stand before you and simply give you my opinion this is why, my opinion can be widely varied and over time even contradictory. When I sit here before you and preach I come to you as a teacher of God’s ways not my own. As such preaching is the practice of learning not to speak ones opinion, so that what I say may truly be fresh water to this congregation. Our worship here should be an aid to your learning not to speak, a place where you can sit in the presence of God. What is spoken, what we sing, the music we use should not be so much noise of opinion, but should be the practice of being in the presence of God, at God’s very throne where angels and Archangels and elders ever sing God’s praise. This is the holy silence, that speech that is filled with the power and presence of God, where we loose ourselves so that we may gain our true self, which is in Christ. If our worship is simply noisy, if it seems to be mere words we should examine our worship! So much that passes for Christian worship is full of sound and words and power, but little of the still small voice, of that silence that calls us to give up ourselves to God, so that we may be truly God’s. Our speech our tongue, our opinions our prayers of our own making can as often as not get in the way of our being in Christ, of our practicing the presence of God which should form and guide all we do and say.

I encourage you to learn the discipline of silence, to wait on the Lord, to be still, to listen to God, rather than always trying to speak to God, or trying to assert your opinion about God or the faith. This being silent this letting ourselves go in the presence of God is the only way according to the tradition to have our tongue controlled. James and the church tell us that if we wish to speak consistently and without contradiction, we must first learn how not to speak.
Amen

Friday, September 15

Almost Weekly Update

"Paul, in his letter to the Corinthians, defends his ministry to a small, struggling band of Christians. They were on the margins too. Their relationship to the world around them was more similar to ours today, that that of mainline Christianity in its glorious heyday. The Corinthian church lived as a mission outpost in the midst of a host of belief systems, including unbelief, and so do we." - Rev Carol McVetty

Rev. Carol McVetty shared this thought with us in the sermon she preached at the Installation Service at Community Church last Sunday. I have been thinking a lot about these words since then and I believe that Carol speaks rightly. At Reconciler we may have much to offer many congregations who find themselves "returning" to an "outpost" way of being. Why? Well, Reconciler has known nothing else. Our institutional memory is different. Perhaps this is an overstatement, but I have been wondering if the Church should always think of itself as an outpost...as each Christian is a missionary, so too must each church be an outpost.

Lord have mercy. That is a powerful call, brothers and sisters.

Announcements:

Our Bible study begins this coming Tuesday! Come one. Come all. We will be working through acts and reading the Rule of Saint benedict using a book that has daily readings from the rule with a brief reflection by. Our hope is that in the 14 weeks of the bible Study that we will take these reading up as a daily devotional.

Rev. Laura Gottardi-Littell will be joining us again on September 24th as our preacher. Please make an effort to come and hear our Episcopal pastor candidate preach. Also, please note that on September 24 there is another change in our worship schedule. We will be meeting for worship at 5:30 PM in the chapel instead of 6PM due to a concert that is scheduled in the main Sanctuary that evening.

We are holding a "kitchen goods" drive for Sarah's Circle. North Shore Baptist and the Community Church of Wilmette are helping us collect essential kitchen items such as small appliances, pots and pans for Sarah's Circle. For more information, please contact Jeremy John.


-Tripp Hudgins

Thursday, September 14

Stir What Ya Got!

Stir What Ya Got!
2 Corinthians 4:1-12
September 10, 2006
Service of Installation for Rev. Tripp Hudgins and Community Church of Wilmette

Grace and peace to you in the name of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. I bring you greetings from North Shore Baptist Church, though I am far from the only representative from North Shore here tonight. (Ask NSBC folks to raise hands.) Tripp, it is hard to overstate the joy of this moment for me and Doug. To watch God use North Shore to awaken your call and form your pastoral identity, and to be engaged in lively reflection with you throughout that process, has been one of the most gratifying experiences of my ministry. You are a child of North Shore; you’ll never escape it!

But we have this treasure in clay jars, so that it may be made clear that this extraordinary power belongs to God and does not come from us. 2 Cor. 4:7

I think Tripp would agree with me that Southerners are the best story-tellers. One of the elderly saints at the First Baptist Church of Detroit during the time we were pastors there was Red Lundsford. He was from Georgia. He told many wonderful stories, but one in particular he told to me over and over again. And it was a very strange story. He said: “Me and my friends were playin’ church down by the ole farm pond. It was time to have a baptism. So we grabbed us an ole cat and tried to dunk it. Well that durn thing was a-squirmin’ and a-hissin’. It like to tore my arms to pieces. So I said ‘Aw, jes sprinkle it like the Methodists do an’ let it go to hell!”

I told you it was a strange story; an embarrassing one even. It took me several years to figure out the point of the story and why he kept telling it to me. I believe that Red was trying to put his finger on a fundamental difference between his past (in the beginning decades of the 20th century) and his present. He was describing a time when church was central to everyone’s life. So much so that little boys would play “church” the way they play soccer or video games today; a time when theological differences among the various brands of Christians were considered life or death issues; a time when churches held a premier place of authority for the culture at large. Red looked around Detroit of the 1980’s and 1990’s and knew he was living his Christian life in a profoundly different era.

The community of my childhood was much like this one. It was a genteel, well-groomed suburb of Detroit. Even there, even then (in the 50’s and 60’s) the church had a central place as a legitimizing, meaning-making institution. We lived in “Christendom.” There was nothing to do on Sunday but go to church. Everything else was closed! I can remember my father saying that young men entering the auto companies would be subtly told that to get ahead, they must be active in a church. And so, the churches were full. All you had to do was open the doors and people came. They came for worship, they came for Sunday School, they came for potlucks, they came for choir. If you don’t remember that time here at Community Church, I’m sure you’ve been told about it. But you don’t need to be told, Community Church and Tripp, that you are beginning your journey together as pastor and people in a different day, in a different time. Our Christian identity is no longer at the center of culture. It has been relegated to the margins.

Paul, in his letter to the Corinthians, defends his ministry to a small, struggling band of Christians. They were on the margins too. Their relationship to the world around them was more similar to ours today, that that of mainline Christianity in its glorious heyday. The Corinthian church lived as a mission outpost in the midst of a host of belief systems, including unbelief, and so do we.

Paul was speaking of his own ministry when he said we are persecuted, but not forsaken; struck down, but not destroyed. He was talking about himself when he said “we have this treasure in clay jars…” But it’s not just Paul. If every believer has gifts and responsibility for ministry (as Paul himself says)… if we affirm the Baptist principle of the priesthood of all believers…then we can find ourselves in these words. I invite especially you Community Church folks and your new pastor to put yourselves in Paul’s “we” this evening. “We have this treasure in clay jars.”

Let’s face it. To the majority of residents of Wilmette, your building, your organization, your programs are like so many mason jars in my grandmother’s cellar: quaint, but rather pointless. Never have our jars of clay seemed so fragile. We are afflicted… with empty pews, shrinking budgets, flooding basements. We are perplexed…we wonder what happened. Did we do something wrong? “But we have this treasure in clay jars, so that it may be made clear that this extraordinary power belongs to God and does not come from us.” We are afflicted…but not crushed! We are perplexed…but not driven to despair! To wring our hands over the fragility of our jars is to overlook the treasure. The treasure is “the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ.” The treasure, sisters and brothers, is the good news of God’s saving love in Christ Jesus. And that Good News is anything but quaint or pointless.

As I said, Southerners tell the best stories. This one is from a Biblical scholar and college president, who also apparently has a sweet tooth. Traveling late on a Sunday night, he stopped at a roadside diner in Texas hill country for a cup of coffee. As was his habit, he quickly used up all the sugar packets the waitress had left on the table for him. As she passed by he said, “Excuse me, may I have some more sugar, please?” Being a no-nonsense all-night diner waitress, she put her hands on her hips, leaned over him and said, “Stir what ya’ got!”

You all may be clay jars….but you’ve got treasure. “Stir what ya’ got!”

--It’s no use sitting around wishing for something more, or something else, for some gimmick or magic trick to bring back the good old days.
--It’s no use waiting for more people, more money, more influence. You’ve already got what you need: the Gospel of God’s redemptive love. “Stir what ya’ got!”
--It’s no use trying to attract people by being like every other group in Willmette… “See, we’re just nice people, look what good friends we are.” When that’s your main message, you let your treasure sink down to the bottom of the cup. “Stir what ya’ got!” Stir it up for all to see. Tripp, I’ve heard you say “We’ve got the best story anywhere. Why aren’t we telling it?” When newcomers walk through that door, they’re not taking that risk, they’re not venturing into a new place, just to find friends. They’re coming seeking an encounter with the redemptive power of God. And that power is among you, no matter how frail you feel. “Stir what ya’ got!”

And it’s no use looking to Tripp to be your Savior. We have only one Savior. And his name sure as heck isn’t “George”! No, Tripp’s job is not to save this church. Tripp’s job is to keep on handing out spoons so you all can “Stir what ya’ got!” And while I’m at it, saving this church is not the point. The point is to live as a mission outpost, a Christ-like community with a call from God. That’s what I mean when I say “Stir what ya’ got.” By God’s grace you already have everything you need to be effective from the margins.
You have the Gospel.
You have the power of God’s Holy Spirit.
You have a God-given mission.

Community Church of Wilmette and Tripp, pastor and people, there’s treasure in your old mason jars. Stir it up. Stir it up until you are grabbed by that unique part of God’s great mission that is yours…
…and carried by the power of God into the future.
Amen.

Thursday, September 7

Weekly Update

Psalm 37:3-7, 34-40
Trust in the Lord, and do good;
so you will live in the land, and enjoy security.
Take delight in the Lord,
and he will give you the desires of your heart.
Commit your way to the Lord;
trust in him, and he will act.
He will make your vindication shine like the light,
and the justice of your cause like the noonday.
Be still before the Lord, and wait patiently for him;
do not fret over those who prosper in their way,
over those who carry out evil devices.
Wait for the Lord, and keep to his way,
and he will exalt you to inherit the land;
you will look on the destruction of the wicked.
I have seen the wicked oppressing,
and towering like a cedar of Lebanon.*
Again I* passed by, and they were no more;
though I sought them, they could not be found.
Mark the blameless, and behold the upright,
for there is posterity for the peaceable.
But transgressors shall be altogether destroyed;
the posterity of the wicked shall be cut off.
The salvation of the righteous is from the Lord;
he is their refuge in the time of trouble.
The Lord helps them and rescues them;
he rescues them from the wicked, and saves them,
because they take refuge in him.

I encourage you to read the whole of Psalm 37. I have excerpted above the portions of the Psalm that jumped out at me today as we prayed the Psalm. On a superficial level this psalm could be read as a simple comparison of the Righteous and the Wicked as defined by their deeds. This reading would fail thought to pay attention to the exhortation to be still before God and to wait upon God.

In these exhortations the deep distinction between the wicked and the righteous is revealed as whether or not on is being in God. The deeds of the righteous have their source in the quite still place of meeting God so that God can teach God's way.It is possible to infer from this that what defines the wicked and leads to their practice of violence and injustice is a failure to sit in the presence of God and submit to God's way.

Our weekly Sunday liturgy is intended to be part of this discipline of being still and waiting and learning from God God's way. What we do together in worship on Sunday should also lead us to seek to do so separately.

As we finish up ordinary time and enter into Advent I encourage us to consider what disciplines of being still and waiting on God we have in our day to day life. I encourage this so that w e may be more prepared to learn form God and be conform to the image of Christ as we gather together each Sunday. If we are not doing this my concern is that as we seek as a congregation and as individuals to serve in our community and witness to the Gospel of Christ that we will attempt to do some very good thing from our own strength or sense of what is right and wise and in the end be ill prepared for some of those who God might be sending our way. But if we are practicing the presence of God, seeking to be empowered by the Spirit, and to be conformed to the image of Christ both individual and corporately, we will find ourselves living from the proper place connected to the source of our strength, able to walk in the ways God has for us.

Announcements-
This Sunday September 10th, is Tripps installation as Pastor of the Community Church of Wilmette at 5PM, we are worshiping with the Community Church on this evening. There will be no worship service at Immanuel Lutheran Church. Members of the Congregation are meeting at 4:15 PM to car pool. If you need directions to the Community Church of Wilmette contact Tripp or Larry.
Our next Bible Study begins September 19th. We will be working through acts and reading the Rule of Saint benedict using a book that has daily readings from the rule with a brief reflection by. Our hope is that in the 14 weeks of the bible Study that we will take these reading up as a daily devotional.
My (Larry's) office hours will change starting the week of the 18th: I will be at Metropolis Cafe on Wednesday evenings (instead of Tuesdays) from 6PM to 8PM.
Next week we have a council meeting Monday 11th at 7:30 PM at the Community of the Holy Trinity.
Wednesday the 13 is a Pastoral Relations Committee meeting at 7:30 PM at the Community of the Holy Trinity.
On September 24 there is another change in our worship schedule. We will be meeting for worship at 5:30 PM in the chapel instead of 6PM due to a concert that is scheduled in the main Sanctuary that evening.

In Christ,
Larry Kamphausen