Collecting Supplies Related to the Okefenokee Fires

In the days of the early church, there was a famine in Jerusalem, and the new churches responded, taking up a collection for those who were suffering.  We have an opportunity to do something similar, to help with supplies needed for those who are fighting the fire, those who have been evacuated, and those providing relief.  If you can help out, please bring any of the items from the list below to our worship gathering on Saturday night (6:30 at Faith Community Church.) One of Kent Wehmeier’s colleagues is involved in relief efforts.  Kent has agreed to take our donations and make sure they get in the right hands to be delivered.

If you want more information, you can get in touch with Kent, who is copied on this email.  Here’s the list:

Items that are most needed include such things as:

  • Gator Aid
  • Bottled Water
  • Packaged snacks (chips, crackers, cookies)
  • Artificial tears
  • Baby Wipes
  • Lip Gloss
  • Men’s socks
  • Deoderant
  • Pop Tarts
  • Pancake Mix
  • Syrup
  • Donuts
  • Soda
  • Lightweight work gloves
  • saline nasal spray
  • OTC sinus spray
  • toilet paper
  • body powder
  • Germ X
  • AA batteries
  • inexpensive sunglasses
  • inexpensive flipflops
  • Men’s boxer shorts (all sizes)
  • Bug spray

No perishable items please.

The Lord loves a cheerful giver.  See you Saturday!

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Worship Gathering This Saturday

Just getting the word out.

This Saturday, Love First Coast will be gathering for worship.  And no, not at the beach.  That was from our Good Friday gathering.  This Saturday, we’ll be in the St. Johns Room at Faith Community Church (3450 CR210, 32259) at 6:30pm.  It’s our last Saturday night worship gathering (sniff, sniff).

Not to worry: we’re moving to Sunday nights beginning in June.  More on that later.

Hope to see you Saturday!

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Broken Hearts and Wounded Healers

Wounded people are all around.  It’s almost universal.  Living long enough means experiencing physical pain, injury, and disease.  But sometimes worse are the emotional and spiritual pains associated with deferred hope, failure, loss, abuse, affliction, desertion, betrayal, etc.  The things that happen can be pretty awful.  Broken hearts, broken spirits, shattered lives: they are all around us.   And sometimes, that’s who we are.

The shear amount of pain and suffering in the world has led some to abandon belief in God – which is not irrational, especially if you believe one of God’s jobs is to blot out suffering.  I have heard such notions preached, but you won’t find that in scripture.

I’ve been around wounded people this week.  What can a missional community or small Christian community offer?

First, the fellowship of fellow sufferers.  We can, as Romans 12 teaches, “mourn with those who mourn.”  I’ve noticed that as God brings people together, you can often find a thread of connection.  It was uncanny how many people in the first church I pastored had tragically lost children.  The families in my next congregation had experienced a remarkable amount of suicide and divorce.   I spend time these days with people who know what it’s like to be hurt by church factions.  Pretty much every large church offers groups for grief, addiction, divorce, and illness.  They bring people together around pain.  Missional communities are small and focused.   We don’t put up a sign in the lobby or run an announcement.  We gather a community around a particular mission.

Second, we can listen well.  Because we are intent on allowing the Holy Spirit to form and guide our community, we can take the time to really listen to one another.  When I received training for healing prayer, I was told that 75% of healing can happen when we listen carefully to one another.  It’s so rare that people get to really tell their stories to people that care.  It takes patience and energy to listen, but it does so much to bring restoration.   Just telling the story is powerful and helpful, but when we tell it in a redemptive, hope-giving environment, even more can happen.  I think it was in a psychology class that I learned that people take all the complex data in their lives and turn them into stories.  A caring, redemptive community can help to reshape the stories of pain.  Even our sinful actions can be redeemed.  James 5 teaches that if we confess our sins to one another, we can be healed.  And it’s true.  As a young adult, I was blessed to have a friend listen carefully and without condemnation as I shared some things I was deeply ashamed of.  And then I heard that brother say, “Jesse, God forgives you.  In the name of Jesus Christ, you are forgiven.”  It was such a powerful moment that I can still picture his face and room where we were sitting.  And that moment reshaped my story and my life.  (I’d like to say I haven’t needed forgiveness since then, but then I’d have to confess to the sin of lying.)

And then there’s prayer.  One of the things we work on regularly is healing prayer.  Our tool for that is called “Listen-Love-and-Pray.”   I have found that it is very helpful to spend time praising God for who he is in times of healing prayer.  There is something about praise that puts our suffering in perspective.  Our God is one who has taken suffering and death into himself – swallowed it up in victory, we rush to say.  But our God is one who knows what it is to suffer.  He is simply the victorious God over sin and death, he is also the wounded healer, the suffering God who knows our pain and the sovereign God who holds our future and redeems our past.  AND He is the Great Physician who heals our diseases, hurts, and wounds.

And when we call on him, he shows up.  And oh my, our God is a healer!

So, another term for the church is “the Body of Christ.”  When we gather as a community of disciples of Jesus Christ, the things that Jesus did become possible as we allow the Holy Spirit to work.  One of the great privileges and joys of following Jesus is that he lets us be a part of this amazing work.

So today, if you are suffering and hurting, may the Lord bring healing to you.  May he lead you into a community of healing where He can work through others to bring restoration to your body, heart, and soul.

May you experience his healing touch.

And then, may the Lord bring healing through you!

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Worship Report – Micropost

Just a brief word about Easter weekend.

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Good Friday – Just Before Sunrise

Starting with sunrise on Good Friday set the pace.   Unlike Easter sunrise services, on Good Friday, there aren’t many people on the beach.  We had a small group – about twenty in all on a very large beach.   The gathering had a feeling of solitude to it and that is very appropriate – because on the first Good Friday, Christ was isolated.  If the disciples did gather that day, they were few in number and confused.  We are less confused and much more grateful.  The gathering allowed us to help one another remember all that Jesus has done and continues to do for us.  His mercies are new every morning.

And it was a beautiful morning.

Easter weekend is a holiday for many.  A number of our folks were scattered around the country, but we enjoyed another gathering on Easter Eve at Nichol’s barn.  It has become a special place to us – a place of prayer, healing, fellowship and celebration.  This time, it became a place of hope!  Unlike the gathering at the beach, the barn felt wonderfully full. The weather was beautiful, comfortable with a gentle breeze.  We thought about faith, hope, and love from 1 Corinthians 13, but we emphasized the greatness the hope.  Hope is a shear gift of the resurrection!

Easter morning, many of us attended different services around town.   My friend Marina shared this picture of sunrise at the beach.  Countless worshipers up and down the beaches of the First Coast enjoyed it.  I worshiped with two crowds – first at Sawgrass Chapel (which met at it’s usual time and place – early at the beach) and later at Mandarin Presbyterian Church.  Hope, and again, hope!

easter

Easter Sunrise at Sawgrass Chapel. 

The Lord is good!

The Lord is risen!

Sin is defeated.

Death is no longer the victor.

Jesus is Lord of all!

Hope – and I’ll say it again – hope!

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Easter Eve Gathering

What do you do the night before Easter?

This Saturday, we’ll hold our April worship gathering on Easter Eve.  I’m pretty excited to report that we’ll be gathering at Nicholl’s barn (3455 SR13, 32259).  Simply put, it’s a special place for our church.  Our service starts at 6:30pm.  (No dinner this time.  Eat before you arrive.)  For those who can stick around afterward, we’re making plans to watch the Passion of the Christ.

On Friday this week, we’ll also be gathering at the beach before sunrise for our Good Friday tradition.  Being together with good friends, watching the night turn to day, celebrating the grace and love of Jesus poured out for us on that day – well, I wouldn’t miss it for the world.  If you’d like to join us, I recommend showing up at least a half-hour before sunrise.  If you can, bring a breakfast and enough to share.

If you are reading this know that you will be welcome and you are invited to be with us! But more importantly, I pray that this week you are reminded of the grace and love of God for you!  May the Lord speak to your heart and remind you that you are loved and precious in his sight.

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