First United Methodist Church

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Children’s Home Devotion

Over the last two days, I have embedded myself in the diligent work of the Board of Trustees for the Florida United Methodist Children’s Home. I am honored to do this work and to serve alongside talented staff, pastors, and lay leaders. I have served on this Board for four years now and each time I leave the meetings I am overwhelmed by God’s grace through the Home and how God is constantly working in the lives of these children and youth through restoration.

I am also reminded once again how lucky I have been to grow up in a family that loved and provided for me. For two parents that remained married and faithful to each other. I never had to wonder if I was wanted or appreciated, and I had a church home that supported me too. I often see the world through my privileged lens and assume it is the same for others, but that is not the reality for all. That sadness hits me when I hear the stories about what these young children and teens walkthrough.

The Florida United Methodist Children’s Home was established in 1908 by the Methodist Episcopal Church and it has been changing lives ever sense. Right now, there are two campuses in Enterprise and Madison, as well as Resident Homes and Shelters in three other counties. A banner that hangs in their main hall has these words on them that are attributed to Abraham Lincoln:

No man stands so tall as when he stoops to help a child.”

And I think Jesus would agree. Over and over again we see Jesus stoop down to help the most vulnerable: children, the blind, the paralyzed, the deaf, the bleeding woman, and the outcasts of society. When I think about the legacy of those who follow Jesus, I hope we can look back on our lives and say that we also stooped down to help the most vulnerable.

I leave you with some statistics from this last year of ministry through the Florida United Methodist Children’s Home and I hope they bring you as much joy in reading them as I had in hearing them.

In 2021, the Florida United Methodist Children is served…

  • 333 children in residential and shelter care programs
  • 134 children in Foster Care
  • 38 young adults with our independent care
  • Roughly 2,000 children received counseling through Circle of Friends

I give God praise not for the numbers, but for the lives that have been transformed or the families that have been restored. As you digest this information and our calling to serve the vulnerable, would you hug extra tight the children in your lives? Would you make sure that there isn’t anything left unsaid or unresolved between you? Would you tell those you love that you are proud of them and that you see a bright future for them? And if you are lucky enough to still love on your parents, would you thank them for all they have done for you?

May God add God’s blessing to the reading and meditation of these words. AMEN

January 2022 Financial Report

Lenten Devotion from Pastor Rachel

Here we are, one week into the Lenten Journey and I want to encourage those of you that are starting new practices, or giving up something, or maybe still deciding. It is not too late to start something new or even to join a Lenten Small Group as there are a few still open. But Lent is about the Journey, not winning the “Best Attendance” award. Meaning, God is not scoring points on you and on your performance over these next 5 weeks. God just wants you to know God on a deeper level and to come to know yourself and others in a more authentic way.

I thought it would be helpful if I shared what I have taken on and given up this season. My Lenten Small Group that meets on Thursday afternoons already knows this, but I have chosen to give up “the need to control.” Notice I didn’t say, Control. As a Mom, Wife, Pastor and Friend, there will be things I still need to control for safety, health and boundary reasons. But my NEED TO CONTROL comes from something deep within me that does not go with the flow as much as I could. I worry about my reputation or how others will see me, and quite possibly judge me if I lose control over a situation. I realize that those feelings come from my ego and aren’t necessarily God-honoring.

What I have taken on this year is a bit more measurable. I heard this from a Clergy friend of mine and completely stole it, but it is to take a walk outside every day. There is no time limit on it, but so far, one week in, this has been a wonderful practice for me. One day, I was able to walk a beautiful path to and from Lake Howell at a retreat center (see pictures below) and I read Scripture along the way. I have also enjoyed walking my kids to our neighborhood park now that they are both avid bike riders. One afternoon I took a walk down Park Ave. on some important church business and last night, I chatted with a friend I hadn’t seen in almost 8 years as we walked in the rain together.

What this practice is teaching me, is to notice the details. To pay attention to what I would normally drive by or not notice in my rush. What this practice is teaching me is that my body is a Temple and that walking is good for my Temple and that there are many people for whom walking for 20 minutes straight is out of the question and so I give God thanks that my body can do that kind of activity. Lastly, this practice is about the deep breathing that happens when I am not reading emails, checking social media, making calls and in “work” mode. I am just listening and walking and paying attention to my breath. And that is helping me slowdown in this busy season and to appreciate all the good that God has given me. I use the time to pray for our world, to pray that my children won’t go too fast on their bikes or at least remember how to stop when they do, I pray for my neighbors and for our church.

This is simply what has worked for me over this last week. But I encourage you to find your own practice, your own rhythm, your own journey, then let us know how we can encourage you in it.

I invite you to pray a new prayer with me this week as you focus on the Journey of loving God and loving yourself more.

Oh God, help me believe the truth about myself, no matter how beautiful it is!

            Prayer by Macrina Weiderkehr

Lenten Devotion: If Jesus is the Bread of Life, then who is the early church?

Learn more about the Lenten season below!

Ash Wednesday 2022

Ash Wednesday begins the Christian season of Lent. We will spend the coming days journeying with Jesus toward the cross; toward the death that ultimately brings resurrection life. Many of us will spend these coming days practicing a new spiritual discipline or giving up something that seems to be getting in the way of the life we long to live.

We come together to acknowledge our sin, to acknowledge our mortality. We come to glimpse the Christ who offers forgiveness and who offers everlasting life.

Ashes have been used in Christian churches to mark the beginning of Lent since the 10th Century, and ashes are mentioned in Scripture as a symbol of purification and repentance. Today, the imposition of ashes are a physical reminder of our mortality and sin; an assurance of God’s forgiveness and salvation.  

Ash Wednesday Prayer:

Holy, holy, holy God
We place ourselves in your presence; we rest in the promise of your grace.
Our minds and our spirits are cluttered with many thoughts and feelings that threaten to pull our attention away from you. 

Let us unclench our fists and release these things:
We release all that we have done today–whether for good or for ill.
We release all that we feel like we should have done today, but did not do.
We release all that we need to do tomorrow.
We release our fear. We release our anxiety. We release our impatience. We release our pride.
All of the thoughts, all of the feelings that pull us away from you, O God, we release.
Fill us now with the joy and the peace of your deep, abiding presence.
We offer all of ourselves to you, our One God, Creator, Redeemer, Sustainer.
AMEN

Scripture Reading: Joel 2:1-2, 12-17

Prayer of Confession:

O God of life, we confess the ways we turn away from the fullness of life that you offer.
God of love, we confess the hatred we hold in our hearts.
God of compassion, we confess our indifference.
God of justice, we confess that our lives are linked to oppressive systems.
God of peace, we confess the violent movements of our hearts, the violent realities of our world.
Holy God, we confess our sins to you.
AMEN                                                          

Spacious Faith, March 2011

Learn more about Lent!

Click the link below to learn more about our upcoming sermon series, small groups, and the purpose of the Lenten season.

Join a Lenten Small Group!

Learn more and sign up for a Lenten Small Group today!

Welcome Jared Tucker, our new Director of Student Ministry

Jared holds a Bachelor of Arts in Pastoral Ministry with a Youth Ministry Minor from Mount Vernon Nazarene University and a Master of Divinity and a Certificate in Christian Theology from Nazarene Theological Seminary. He has eleven years of ministry experience, nine of them being in youth ministry. Jared is passionate about youth ministry and equipping students and their families with resources and opportunities to encounter Christ and Christ’s love. His favorite aspects of youth ministry are empowering students for leadership and ministry and discussing difficult questions about life and faith.

Jared and Lauren have been married for six and half years and have a son (Asher 10 months). Jared enjoys exploring with Lauren and Asher, reading theology, making and drinking coffee, watching Netflix, playing basketball, listening to podcasts, and working out. He is excited to become part of the community at FUMCWP and to live in a warm climate.

Jared will be here on campus starting on March 21st and our teens will have their first opportunity to get to know Jared at Elevate on March 27th (6-8PM). We are so excited to welcome the Tuckers into our church family and begin this new era of Student Ministry.

Worship Conversation with Pastor David & Chevalier Lovett!

Holiness & Wholeness | Devotion from Pastor Rachel

As we continue to wrestle with the story of Nehemiah and the way in which his witness effects the renovation of our faith, we were asked this weekend to think through the unforeseen problem. That problem, as was unpacked in the Sermon, was all about Nehemiah’s understanding of HOLINESS. As Pastor David rightly acknowledged, we could do an entire sermon series on HOLINESS because we have all learned something about this in our faith traditions growing up and in our own practice and pursuit of it as we work to center ourselves on loving God and loving neighbor.

In one way of understanding HOLINESS, it is a journey and a process. HOLINESS is done in community and in connection with others and lastly it is prophetic and stands in contrast with the current culture. Pastor Philip lead us through a devotion yesterday about our role as Holy Ambassadors in the world to come; and I love that way of thinking about it as well. Today, I share another way of thinking through HOLINESS as WHOLENESS. I love that word and yet I’m confused by it. I feel whole when I eat too much pizza or when my calendar is bursting at the seams. I feel Wholeness after a good night’s sleep, or a sacred moment with my children or a date night with my husband. But Spiritual WHOLENESS can be tied back to the passage that has become my life verse.

Luke 10:25-28 NRSV

25 Just then a lawyer stood up to test Jesus. “Teacher,” he said, “what must I do to inherit eternal life?” 26 He said to him, “What is written in the law? What do you read there?” 27 He answered, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and your neighbor as yourself.” 28 And he said to him, “You have given the right answer; do this, and you will live.”

In leading up to the well-known Parable of the Good Samaritan, Jesus is cornered by this Lawyer who has bitten off more than he can chew. How I interpret this final line, verse 28, is that Jesus is both affirming his answer and challenging him to wholeness. Because in this connection, the Law of the Prophets was foundational for Jewish Holiness. But was we heard Sunday, Jesus came to interrupt the intent of the Law and not the letter of the Law. And so I find it beautiful that Jesus ties following the Law into the ability to “truly live.” And while being Law-abiding Jews in those days didn’t make one necessarily holy, the law, as interrupted by Jesus can lead to it.

Here’s what I mean.

What if our unforeseen problem is our misunderstanding of love? What if we have always understood loving God with heart, soul, mind and strength as a fundamental deprivation of ourselves and not a connection to it. Said another way, if I don’t love myself, how in the world can I love God? I am made in God’s image, am I not? I am a masterpiece, made and loved and redeemed by God, as affirmed over and over in Scripture. But if I don’t love myself, spend time knowing myself in connection with the Redeemer, re-creating myself with the great Artist and deeply forgiving myself with the Great Spirit, how then can I love the God that made me?

As I look at Wholeness and Holiness as two sides of the same coin, I have to think seriously about how my love of neighbor may actually increase my own self-love. As I get to know a stranger and learn from them, aren’t I getting to know a deeper part of me? As I reach out to my neighbor, aren’t I using the gifts that God has given me to enrich someone else’s life? For me, HOLINESS comes down to seeing love the way God sees love and then letting that love transform us.

You know by now that I read a lot of Father Richard Rohr and so he used the writings of Thomas Keating, a Catholic Monk and Priest that wrote prolifically throughout his life to unpack this further. From the book that Keating wrote, “Heartfulness: Transformation in Christ,” Rohr shares these words.

God looks at us and always sees Christ, and God thus finds us always and entirely lovable. God fixes God’s gaze intently where we refuse to look, on our shared, divine nature as God’s children (1 John 3:2). And one day our gaze will match God’s gaze. We will find God entirely lovable and ourselves fully lovable in the same moment. Why? Because it is the same set of eyes that is doing the looking. “All of us, gazing with unveiled face on the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, as from the Lord who is the Spirit” (2 Corinthians 3:18).

And so my question for you to ponder this week, as you pursue a deeper understanding of Holiness is, have you received God’s gaze? Meaning, are you looking at yourself and others with the eyes of God? Are you able to love yourself through your love of God and in so doing come to understand a deeper sense of wholeness?

I pray these words encourage, protect and spur you on to love your neighbor more!

AMEN

A Devotion on Holiness | Pastor Philip Allred


Click here to view the blog post from Brian Zahnd referred to during today’s devotion.