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Devotion: Wesley Study Tour (Part 2)

This week I want to take you on a tour of the conversion experience of the Wesley brothers. Conversion, Salvation, Saved, Inviting Jesus into your heart…these words all mean the same thing but how they are understood as people who call themselves Methodists is worth noting. When we are saved, or we have our conversion experience, we have it not because we are trying to avoid what we assume hell will be like, but because in the life we live now, it is hell in the here and now without Jesus. When we are far from God, we experience our own personal hell that Jesus came to eradicate.  

If you grew up a Methodist, no doubt you have heard about the three means of grace.

  1. Prevenient
  2. Justifying
  3. Sanctifying

If you grew up as something other than Methodist, these three graces are distinct in what separates us from other denominations and faith traditions. Prevenient Grace is the gift of God that goes before we even know or can name God. It is the grace lived out for us by our parents, grandparents, neighbors, Sunday School teachers and church leaders. This is why we baptize babies because while they can’t choose Jesus for themselves, YET, they see God’s grace lived out by those that surround them. The hope is that they are so drawn to the life and teachings of Jesus because of how their community lives it out that they come to “choose Jesus for themselves.”

Justifying Grace is the grace that convicts and justifies. This is the grace that lets us know how broken, hurt, sinful and beyond perfection we really are. This is the grace that reaches down and pulls us up because we have realized that no matter how educated, wealthy, well-connected or privileged we are, we cannot save ourselves. The punishment for sin has always and will always be death and because we are all, each of us, sinful beings, we can’t save ourselves. We need a Savior, someone that gives themselves up for us, to justify our sinful selves in the presence of a Holy and Just God. When we realize how far we have fallen, we reach up and God is always there reaching down.

 

Sanctifying Grace is the grace that I think is most distinct about the Wesleyan Way of Faith. Our goal in this life of following Jesus isn’t to be saved from hell, but to become Perfect in Love. We may never be perfect beings, but we can become perfect in our love of God, love of neighbor and love of self. This is the goal and the new rule of life for the disciples of Jesus called Methodists. In our faith community, the phrase, “You haven’t changed a bit” isn’t a compliment. Because if we have really met Jesus, when you see a friend that you haven’t seen in a few years, they should be commenting on how much you have changed. If we have really met Jesus we should be hearing comments like…

You have gotten your anger under control.
I can’t believe how patient you have become.
Wow, you sure are generous.
You are less critical, more disciplined, less petty and a whole lot more LOVING!

These and more are all qualities of someone growing in Sanctifying Grace.

And John and Charles Wesley wrote about this new rule of life extensively after they had their conversion experiences in May of 1738. Charles was the first one converted when he attended a Moravian Society meeting and was processing all that he learned and how they spoke with such joy and conviction about their faith; it amazed him. Charles then invited his brother John to join him and four days later, while walking down Aldersgate Street, John Wesley had his own conversion story.

When you watch the video below you will hear about my own salvation story, the time when I chose God for myself and invited Jesus to chisel away at all of the broken parts of me. As I tell my story and as you see Aldersgate Street in London, where John and Charles had their hearts strangely warmed, I hope you will think about your own faith journey. I leave you with this way of wrapping your mind around conversion. When someone asks you when you were saved, the proper Wesleyan response is this. “I was saved over 2,000 years ago, by Jesus Christ, while he willingly died on a cross, on a hill called Calvary. I accepted that sacrifice when I was ____ years old and now I will never be the same.”

Our salvation story was never about us anyways, it was always about God’s Holy Spirit living and working through sanctifying grace to make other disciples and to transform this world.

Take a look and enjoy the tour!

 

Vlogs from Aldersgate Street

Devotion: Wesley Study Tour (Part 1)

Brothers and Sisters, this Sunday we will hear a sermon from Rev. Gary Mason from Northern Ireland. If you have been listening to the presentations from the past Northern Ireland Pilgrimage groups, you know that we will be talking about things that aren’t always comfortable to sit with. Pay attention to that feeling because that is the Holy Spirit speaking. This Sunday, Gary will be preaching about being a disciple in Challenging Times.

What could be more appropriate?! Are we or are we not living in challenging times and how do we face a divisive future unafraid?

As we prepare our hearts for what Gary might preach and what the Holy Spirit might whisper into our hearts, I thought I would use a piece of my Wesley Study Tour to set the stage. Over the next three weeks, you will receive three devotions with videos connected to them. These videos I recorded in the places that are formidable to our faith. I realize that many of you will never get the opportunity to visit these places in person so let me be your tour guide.

The first few videos (that you see linked below) take you on a tour of Wesley’s New Room in Bristol, England. The videos go on to explain that John and Charles Wesley built this meeting room in 1739 and it was a place of worship, learning, service and rioting. Yes, I said rioting. You will notice in the videos that there are no windows on the first floor. This was strategic. Because in those days, the message that the Wesley’s and their visiting pastors were preaching was a radical one. Radical because they were preaching to the undereducated, the working class, the poor, the tradesmen and the coal miners. They preached about the love of God, not the judgment of God. They preached about the wideness of God’s grace and that anyone could come as they are without fitting a mold or acting pious because Jesus came to save sinners.

This angered those in power, those that wanted to keep the poor, poor and keep the education and power in the hands of the wealthy and ruling classes. There were mobs and riots that took place in Bristol at The New Room because of the preaching and the hospitality of this new movement. There was one door into The New Room, and only one staircase to get to the preacher on the second level, and mobs had tried to come in and shut down their worship services and so the removal of windows on the first floor was for safety of the worshippers and for the removal of distractions for those trying to pay attention inside. Charles and John Wesley hosted worship services every weekday at 5am so that those working in the coal mines and fields could come to worship before starting their workday. They would conclude their hard days labor sometimes by coming back and having Communion at the end of the work day. The New Room could hold 1000 people in the pews and it was not uncommon for the space to be filled.

Please take a few minutes and watch the videos of this holy place and ask yourself how you might be called to afflict the comfort and comfort the afflicted as you live out your faith in these challenging times.

May God’s love enfold you and give you peace. AMEN.

Vlogs from Wesley’s New Room

Devotion: Knock, Knock…

When was the last time you had a good laugh? I’m talking a deep belly laugh that is distracting and hard to muffle. The kind of laugh when your partner looks over at you and wonders if you are okay or has to pause the TV because you are giggling so loudly.

Over the last few weeks, I have laughed more. I just needed to. It began when our kids started watching AFV, America’s Funniest Videos together in the evening. Usually after dinner and bath there is this lull time that could really go either way. Either the kids could play and get all wound up again, or they could slow down, sit down and then comes those magic words that every parent loves to see…settle down. Our kids started watching a few of these episodes with my parents when Ryan and I were away in England and it has continued since we got back.

What I like most about it, is that for these 15 to 20 minutes, all five of us can sit together and laugh. Our kids are now old enough to comprehend, if only a little bit, what is happening on screen. Sure, there are dishes to clean and laundry to fold, but laughter and connection are happening instead and I am the first to tell you that I have to remind myself that this is good. You see, I often move toward the task, the list, the job and save the “fun” for after but lately, I have tried to change my thinking and begin to see the laughter as part of the work.

I don’t have to tell you that we are living in difficult times as we look at a nation divided in the final months of election season, a culture that has moved away from seeking out faith traditions and the busyness of all of our lives that cuts at the core of our family and relationships. And while all of that is true and I am sure you feel it too, we often can’t control what is happening around us, but we can control how we respond. And I encourage you to do two things:

  1. Laugh
  2. And Laugh in Community

I don’t know if Jesus laughed a lot, I picture that he did, however we don’t have a lot of Scriptural proof of that. But if the phrase “Do not fear!” is the command mentioned more than any other phrase in the Bible, I imagine that instead of fear there was laughter. Because following Jesus and being on this adventure with God is a joy, unexpected and challenging yes, but full of abundant joy. God often reminds me to take God seriously and take myself less seriously and when I do that, I laugh more. I look at life as a gift, not a do to list or a burden.

I want to leave you with a short paragraph from 1 Peter, a letter that I admit I haven’t spent much time studying. But I hope as you read it you can see how it says all that I have been feeling lately about letting Jesus bring you joy and laughing more because we are free to not take life so seriously. I hope it speaks a word to you this morning too that encourages you for the week ahead. And if I can encourage anything in your family, in your work, in your relationships…is to laugh more.

Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In his great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, and into an inheritance that can never perish, spoil or fade. This inheritance is kept in heaven for you, who through faith are shielded by God’s power until the coming of the salvation that is ready to be revealed in the last time. In all this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. These have come so that the proven genuineness of your faith—of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire—may result in praise, glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed. Though you have not seen him, you love him; and even though you do not see him now, you believe in him and are filled with an inexpressible and glorious joy, for you are receiving the end result of your faith, the salvation of your souls. 1 Peter 1:3-9

AMEN