Thursday, March 31, 2011

Spotlight on Service: The Soldiers' Project

At Pasadena Presbyterian Church, we aim to be a "sacred space for the city," and for that reason, we desire to learn about opportunities for service in Pasadena and to support and celebrate what non-profits, ministries, and charities are doing right in our midst.

And so this week, we honor The Soldiers Project.

On their website, The Soldiers Project is described as "a private, non-profit, independent group of volunteer licensed mental health professionals including psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, registered nurses, and marriage and family therapists."

The Soldiers Project exists to provide free and confidential mental health services for military service members who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan or who expect to serve in these conflicts. Mental health services are also provided for families and loved ones of service members. Counseling and support is available to active duty, activated Reserve, and Guard United members. The Soldiers Project "provides help to service members and families struggling with issues related to the overwhelming trauma of war including the cycle from pre-deployment to deployment to homecoming and re-entry to civilian life."

The Soldiers Project is independent and does to report to any government agency.

We want to support what The Soldiers Project is doing in the Pasadena community. Most of all, we want to support military service members as they struggle through trauma and transitions. If you would like to make a donation to the organization, you can do so here.

We are grateful for all that The Soldiers Project is doing!

Check Yes? Trust Yes!

Romans 5:1-11


Therefore, since we are justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have obtained access to this grace in which we stand; and we boast in our hope of sharing the glory of God. . .


Martin Luther's experience is still very alive.


None of us has met him. None of us has had a conversation with him. Distanced in time from us by about 465 years, none of us has walked down to the local Starbucks to meet up with him and see how his week is going, or in his case, walked down to the closest place that brewed beer. (Beer was his favorite). If we know anything about him, it's most likely from a history book, or old church sermons, or perhaps from the movie, Luther, the 2003 film about Martin Luther's life.


We've never met Martin Luther.

But Martin Luther's experience is still very alive.


Martin Luther lived as a monk at the turn of the century - specifically the end of the 15th century into the beginning of the 16th. He was a dedicated monk. Some would say absurdly dedicated. By dedicated, I don't necessarily mean that he was putting in hours and hours of work (though that was probably true also). I mean that he was absolutely dedicated to outward forms of spirituality, striving to perfect himself, to be good enough to be safe with God. And he needed this desperately because the God Martin Luther believed in was rather scary. . . This God was ready to punish, destroy, and smite at a moment's notice - if not in this life then certainly in the life to come. As a monk, the young Martin engaged in hours upon hours of confession, fasting, prayer, and pilgrimage all to try to make it right, all to make himself acceptable.


And it got be an absurd amount of dedication. At least, that's what Martin's superior monk, Johann von Staupitz, came to believe. He believed that Martin's "dedication" was destroying him, causing him a great deal of distress and heartache. Because he believed it would help him, Johann von Staupitz sent Martin to Wittenberg to begin an academic career there in the university. In 1507, he was ordained to the priesthood, and in 1508, Martin began teaching theology at the University of Wittenberg.


And Martin's 'Aha' moment came at an odd time. I imagine that a lot of thoughts, emotions, and spiritual questions were already at work in him, but the precise 'Aha' moment probably came exactly when he wasn't expecting it. If you will permit to me to be rather crude, I'll simply state what happened, without trying to clean it up or make it prettier than it is. I think it shows us that 'Aha' moments can happen at any time! Martin Luther went to use the bathroom. We went to the latrine, but while he did, he did something most of us probably don't do. He brought his Bible with him and opened it up. He opened it to the beginning of Romans, to words that theApostle Paul sent to the church at Rome many centuries before:


"For I am not ashamed of the gospel; it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who has faith, to the Jew first and also to theGreek. For in it the righteousness of God is revealed through faith to faith; as it is written, 'The one who is righteous will live by faith."


'It is the power of God'. . . 'For in it the righteousness of God is revealed through faith to faith'. . . 'The one who is righteous will live by faith'. . .


Eureka! The 'Aha' moment changed everything. Perhaps it seems simple. (It certainly seems like an odd setting for such an 'Aha' moment!) And perhaps we've heard these words before too, and they've never quite washed over us in the same way.


But Martin heard amazing news for himself and for the world. He heard that salvation - personal healing, restoration of relationship with God, the love of God, the working of God, the promise of life together with God, both in this life and in the life to come - was precisely that, God's work. It isn't up to us! God gives this. God wants to give us this!


We don't have to seal the deal on anything to make those realities real, real for us and real for the world! For in the gospel, the righteousness of God is revealed. . . We don't have to earn God's gift of love and salvation. We don't have to perform - to work hard and harder and harder to be righteous enough to earn it. We don't have the seal the deal on anything! We are given unearned righteousness. We are given the unearned righteousness of God, and as righteous people - those who have been clothed and gifted with such righteousness, we are called to live by faith. We're called to live as though this is true!


We can see why this was such an 'Aha' for Martin Luther. He never felt secure with God. He was constantly looking for a way to be acceptable, to be safe, to be loved, but as dedicated as his actions were, they never seemed to be enough. How could he know when he had done enough? And what if he blew it all - messing up again and putting himself outside of God's love and care?


The 'Aha' changed everything. God gives us righteousness. God gives us love. God claims us and makes us God's own. It isn't up to us. There's nothing we can do to earn that righteousness and love. And as God's gift, there is nothing we can do to nullify God's love for us. Nothing. Nothing!


Wow.


That's incredible. And while that understanding can bring us to awe and wonder, it can also make us uncomfortable. Why? It means that we aren't in control. . . It isn't up to us to secure God's love and favor. God's love and favor is a gift, and that means we are invited to trust it. But for some reason, it's easier for us to put the pressure on ourselves (or assume that we can 'seal the deal' with a particular set of actions) than to simply trust and rest in God's amazing love for us and this world.


And our scripture passage above continues along the lines of this amazing 'Aha.' 'Since we are justified by faith'. . . .'Jesus Christ, through whom we have obtained access to this grace in which we stand'. . . 'God's love has been poured into our hearts through theHoly Spirit that has been given to us'. . . 'God proves his love for us in that while we were still sinners Christ died for us'. . . 'For if while we were enemies, we were reconciled to God through the death of his Son, much more surely, having been reconciled, will we be saved by his life. . . '


God gives us righteousness. God names us and claims us as human beings who are endlessly loved. We can't earn righteousness. We can't earn God's love. We don't need to seal the deal. God is the free giver, giving us a free gift.


And upon that 'Aha,' a Reformation was born in the church. Martin Luther and others preached this free gift of God. Righteousnessdoesn't come through a laundry list of deeds. It is a gift by faith.

It is a gift by faith.


An amazing message. But sadly, Martin Luther's early experience and early understanding is still very alive. His pre-'Aha' thinking continues to plague our understanding of God and our understanding of ourselves.


And why is this? We've taken a particular understanding of 'faith,' and we've plugged it into this very same way of thinking. The Protestant tradition and conviction is strong in many of us: We are not justified by works, but by faith! That's a good conviction. The problem is that we've come to understand faith in such a way that it still requires us to justify ourselves. We still need to seal the deal.



For many, it works like this: God is very angry. God is angry with our sin and our misdeeds. But God is also loving, and since we have earned destruction through our thoughts and deeds, God has made a way of salvation possible. God sent Jesus - the very Son of God - to die for our sins, and if we will only accept him - if we will only receive the gift - we have a way to avoid this immanent destruction. We don't have to engage in a laundry list of works to earn this gift. We can receive the gift and be saved if we will onlybelieve, that is, have faith that this way of making salvation possible is true.


That's a dominant form of Christian theology in our American faith context. And even if that's not the sort of language I would use to describe salvation (and I'll be honest, it's not the language I tend to use) I don't want to knock it completely. It does acknowledge that we've lived in ways that aren't true to who we've been called to be, and it does honor Jesus' love for us. It also unburdens us from that laundry list of works.


But. . . I believe it burdens us too with an understanding of 'faith' that isn't ultimately what the scriptures describe or personally freeing for our lives together. We've taken a particular understanding of 'faith' - a cultural one - and we've plugged it into a pre-'Aha'-Martin Luther type of thinking.


What is that cultural understanding?


In our context, we tend to define faith as belief, and by belief we mean an intellectual assent to propositional truths. Do you believe in God? If you think there is a God - that a God exists, you then 'believe' - you intellectually assent to that proposition. "I believe in God." - Check YES! Do you believe in heaven? Check YES! Do you believe in the Trinity? Check YES! Do you believe in evolution? Check YES! (Or for many, NO). These propositions don't even have to come from religious lines of questioning. Do you believe in aliens? Check YES!


This is unfortunately how we tend to understand faith - as an act of 'belief,' and by belief we mean 'the act of intellectually assenting to a particular proposition.'


And from this way of understanding 'faith,' Martin Luther's experience is very much alive.


We are saved by faith. And since we understand 'faith' in a particular cultural way, we must intellectually assent to a list of propositions - in this case, theological convictions of the Christian tradition. And as we intellectually assent, as we say 'yes' to God and to these convictions, we are saved.


But this is a problem. It still makes God's favor of us up to us! Like Martin Luther, if we have to get it 'right,' it's all up to ourunderstanding and our affirmation of theological convictions. We are the ones who seal the deal on salvation! In this way of thinking, God has made salvation possible, but God is waiting on us to solidify what has been made possible. It's all based on our 'yes.' God is just waiting for us to say 'yes.' And if we don't say 'yes', God is going to destroy us. How can we trust a God who ultimately wants to destroy us?


And can you imagine how this affects us? On one hand, it can make us terrified. After all, if we're Christians, and we begin to have questions about faith, particularly if we have tough questions with no easy answers, we might begin to feel extremely afraid. Maybe God will be angry with us if we give voice to our questions, even if we acknowledge them inwardly within ourselves. Maybe we will begin to fear that our salvation isn't secure. Perhaps like Martin Luther, we will fear that personal healing, the love of God, and promise of life together with God now and in the future can be thrown away by us - even just by asking questions! We might never feel grounded.


Of course, the opposite extreme is true as well. Since we've sealed the deal on salvation and since we've done what we're supposed to do by saying 'yes' to these theological convictions and positions, we might feel entirely too sure of ourselves. We might begin to think that we have all the answers, that we're called to go to people with our answers and try to convince them to say 'yes' too - to intellectually assent to what we already know is true. And when we see that others have different convictions, or when we see that others have tough questions, we may begin to despise them. These people may begin to seem like the opposite of who we are. We're saved. They're the enemies of God.


Both types of reactions to 'seal the deal' theology - both fear and arrogance - seem extreme, and yet, I imagine that you and I both know people who are affected in these ways. Perhaps we've been affected in these ways too. Perhaps we are even now.


But here is some good news. Here is some profoundly good news. A 'check yes,' you-must-intellectually-asset-or-else understanding of faith is not the scriptural understanding of faith. Let me say that again. This understanding of 'faith' is cultural. It is not scriptural. Jesus was convicted, more convicted than most of us probably are, but where do you read that he was walking around trying to convince people to say 'yes' to particular propositions, to make sure that they had their theology right so they could seal the deal on salvation? I just don't see that.


Jesus does care about what we think. Jesus does care about how we conceptualize God. But why is that? Faith isn't about intellectual assent. Faith is about trust! Who is God, and how can we trust that very God - this God who loves us when we are enemies, this God who nurtures us and gives us grace even when we aren't looking for it, this God who is constantly taking our convictions and our questions and using both to form us and nurture us into who we're called to be?


In the New Testament, the Greek word for 'faith' is often followed by a simple proposition that rarely makes it into our translations. That proposition is 'into.' We are called to a life of faith that leans 'into.' That is, we're called to trust this very God who is saving us apart from ourselves. Faith is trust. It involves leaning, putting our weight on what we can trust - and that trust is ultimately in a WHO and not in a theological proposition, which is ultimately a 'what'.


And here is some more good news: In stepping away from a seal the deal type theology, we are in no way saying that theological convictions don't matter, or that we need to move in the opposite direction where theology and ideas about God become willy-nilly or insignificant. No, they're powerfully and meaningfully significant! They allow us to learn and play and discover and rest in the very God who loves us before we can ever seal the deal on it. Instead of using our theology and convictions as tools to bolster our safety or as weapons to secure the destruction of others, we can let them shape us and become the occasion for celebration of a truth which needs no intellectual asset to be true: We are held securely and firmly and lovingly in the arms of a God who won't let go of us, in the arms of a God who is not threatened by our questions.


And since we're not going to fall, what are we waiting for? Let's revel in the faith we've been given as a gift. Let's trust. Let's rest. Let's be saved. Let's become. Let's voice those convictions. Let's ask those questions!


Renee Roederer

Director of Young Adult Ministries

PPC L.I.F.T.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

L.I.F.T. Lenten Group!

During this season of Lent, L.I.F.T. is offering a weekly opportunity for fellowship and study. Our Lenten Study Group meets every Sunday night from 6-8pm in various homes of young adults and members of PPC.

We invite everyone to bring a dish to share for a potluck dinner, and we laugh a lot while we enjoy our meal! And for the last hour, we have a Bible Study. During this season, we are particularly hoping to bring our multicultural identities and traditions to the conversation.

We'd love for you to join us!

If you'd like some more information, please e-mail Renee Roederer at renee.roederer@yahoo.com.

Hope to see you soon!

Monday, March 28, 2011

Young Adults in the News!

As a young adult community, we want to stay aware of the particular gifts that young adults bring to our world as well as the particular challenges that young adults face. We are also curious to learn about culture and trends among young adults.


Here are some recent stories that concern young adults:

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Celebrating Latino/as in the United States!

The Associated Press publicó un artículo esta mañana, señalando que la población de latinos y latinas en los Estados Unidos pronto llegará a 50 millones de personas. Esta información se obtuvo de la reciente Censo del 2010.

Esta noticia se está convirtiendo en público, y hay mucho entusiasmo entre los latinos/as. Según el informe, Brad Gentry, de 48 años, de Houston, Missouri, dice, "Esto es poner de relieve en una esquina del mundo que no recibe mucha atención. La mayoría de los residentes están orgullosos de nuestra región y les gusta la idea para la gente para conocer nuestra historia a través de este reconocimiento. "

En una congregación de latinos/as, celebramos esta noticia junto a todos los hispanos en los Estados Unidos!



The Associated Press posted a story this morning noting that the population of Latino/as in the United States will soon reach 50 million people. This information was gathered from the recent 2010 Census.

As this news is becoming public, there is a lot of excitement among Latino/as. According to the news story, Brad Gentry, 48, of Houston, Mo. says, "It is putting a spotlight on a corner of the world that doesn't get much attention. Most residents are proud of our region and like the idea that others will learn our story through this recognition."

As a congregation of Latino/as, we celebrate this news alongside all Hispanic people in the United States!

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Spotlight on Service: Culture Shock

At Pasadena Presbyterian Church, we aim to be a "sacred space for the city," and for that reason, we desire to learn about opportunities for service in Pasadena and to support and celebrate what non-profits, ministries, and charities are doing right in our midst.

And so. . . this week we honor Culture Shock, a four-day workshop that aims to curb violence among Pasadena's teenagers, promoting understanding and strengthening conflict management skills.

Culture Shock happens annually in our city, and it began in 2008 as teens and adults alike recognized the high levels of violence and stereotyping that are happening in Pasadena high schools. Culture Shock is a four-day workshop that teaches teenagers from ages 14-18 about diversity and identity. It gives teenagers a life-altering opportunity to work and converse with peers from various ethnic and economic backgrounds.


"Teens Work Toward Peace in Pasadena's 'Culture Shock' Program," an article written by Margaret T. Simpson from HealthyCal.org gives details about the transforming workshop.

And "Culture Shock 2008 - Pasadena, CA," a youtube video, also shares some highlights.

Please join us in celebrating and supporting all that Culture Shock is doing for teens and schools in Pasadena!

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Young Adults in the News!


As a young adult community, we want to stay aware of the particular gifts that young adults bring to our world as well as the particular challenges that young adults face. We are also curious to learn about culture and trends among young adults.

Here are some recent stories that concern young adults:

Monday, March 21, 2011

The Paradox of Shoes

Genesis 12:1-9


Now the LORD said to Abram, 'Go from your country and your kindred and you father's house to the land that I will show you. . . So Abram went as the LORD had told him. . .


We don’t know how the call came. . . Did it involve sleepless nights? Did a friend make a run-of-the-mill statement only for it to be infused with meaning as it reached Abram’s ears? Did Sarai express a longing to travel beyond what was comfortable? Or did Terah, Abram’s father, offer words of vision upon his own deathbed? Did he inspire his son to act upon a call from God? We don’t know how the call came.


But Terah, Abram’s father, had planned to travel to the land of Canaan himself. We learn this in the previous chapter of Genesis, just before our scripture text begins. And we know even less about that. Details are sparse. We only know that Terah took his family and left their home, Ur of the Chaldeans. The family had planned to go onto Canaan, but at some point they stopped in Haran, pitched their tents, and stayed there. And incidentally, Haran is an interesting name for that place. Haran was the brother of Abram and the father of Lot, and at some point, Haran died in Ur before the larger family set out. Terah, Abram’s father, had planned to go to Canaan, but seems as though he cut his journey short for some reason we can’t really know. Perhaps grief-stricken, he put away all thoughts of traveling into Canaan. Or perhaps struck by scenic beauty or the potential for prosperity, he chose to stay in a place they discovered along the way. Perhaps remembering the child he lost in Ur, he decided to name this place Haran after his son. We don’t really know.


And we don’t know all the details of how the call came to Abram and Sarai either, but it did come, and it came strongly. Abram and Sarai heard God’s voice speaking to them, calling them and some of those closest to them to leave everything that was comfortable. That call came, and it must have shaken up everything they knew, their external world – the comfort and security of their larger family, the economic resources and routines to which they were accustomed, familiar voices of friends that sustained them, scenic views of Haran, and even tastes and smells. It must have shaken up everything. And perhaps even deeper, it must have shaken up their internal world as well– their sense of what could be easily anticipated, the security they felt in their relationships, their fears about loss and grief, and a new, flooding sense of anxiety must have arrived on the scene, anxiety about what was ahead, about everything they couldn’t yet see.


The call came. It came strongly: “Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the land I will show you.” Now that’s not a lot of detail to hang your hat on. But however the call came, Abram sensed and believed that blessing would follow. He heard God’s love and blessing loud and clear – love and blessing for him, for his family, for others, people he couldn’t even begin to anticipate. “I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you, and I will make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. . . In you all families of the earth shall be blessed.”


Wow. The details of the move – this great uprooting of human lives – could not be fully anticipated. But also, the blessing, the great scope of it, and the particularity of how it would come to be could also not be fully anticipated. It could only be trusted. It could only be hoped for. It could only be leaned into, only experienced one step at a time, looking ahead, putting weight on the words of the call. It had to be stepped into. It had to be lived.


And Abram and Sarai and Lot and others did it. They trusted the promise, though they had no idea where it would lead. They didn’t even have a mental picture of this land of Canaan. They couldn’t simply check out Canaan’s Wikipedia page, let alone have an idea of how to speak the language or engage the local customs. They just had a call. They had a promise. They had a vision.


The text says it simply and powerfully, “So Abram went.” Abram and his family let this crazy-yet-beautiful call disrupt their lives. At age 75 Abram packed up all that he owned and said goodbye to all he had known. And he journeyed to a place he could not foresee.


Just as we have few details about what came before their journey, we also have few details about what happened during the journey. More sleepless nights, perhaps? Sore, dusty feet? Arguments out of frustration and exhaustion? Differences of opinion as to how to act in the different cultural contexts they were encountering?


Again, we don’t know. But our text tells that they arrived. And that process wasn’t general or vague after all. Just like our lives, just like our own day-to-day experiences, Abram, Sarai, and Lot witnessed particular sights, tasted tangible flavors, and breathed in specific air with a variety of scents. There was a place called Shechem. There was a tree called Moreh. There were new neighbors with names, with families.


And in all these particularities, Abram gave thanks. He remembered Who had given him the call. He remembered Who spoke the holy words, “To your offspring, I will give this land.” Abram gave thanks. Abraham worshipped. Abram built an altar to the Lord, the God who would build his name and his future.


But just because they arrived, the journey wasn’t over. Not all was clear. The blessing they were to experience was an unfolding blessing. It seems as though Abram and Sarai were called to pay attention to ongoing calls – to walk day by day in faith to let the larger call emerge and encompass their very lives. It seems as though they were called into a paradox, a paradox of resting into what has been promised while also remaining primed and posed to act, to step out in faith again and again.


I’ll tell you a story from my own life. I was raised in the church, quite literally in fact. My pastor growing up, David Roth, was very much a father to me. Though our connection wasn't biological, he and his wife Amy adopted me into their lives, and always considered me to be their "fourth child", including me alongside their three, grown children.

After I moved from Indiana (where I grew up) to Austin, Texas, David and I would often have meaningful moments as we were wrapping up phone conversations. Those moments - those conversations - often vacillated between the humorous and the profound, and they still sustain me today.

Once, during David's two-year struggle with the cancer that would eventually take his life, he and I had a conversation just like that: Humorous and then ultimately profound. We were wrapping up our time on the telephone, and as we did, he said, "It's been great to talk to you. Now I hope that you have a good week. And remember. . . keep your shoes on!"


There was a pause, and then we both burst into laughter. I had no idea what he was saying, and neither did he! Neither one of us had any idea what that meant.


"What do you mean?" I asked. "I don't know!" he said, roaring with laughter back at me. It was just something he felt the need to say. Who knows why he chose those words?

But as I've reflected upon that silly moment a couple of years later, I've realized that this strangely-worded metaphor has great meaning for me and for all of us.

"Keep your shoes on." Yes, that's how we're called to live. We're called to be primed and posed and postured to follow God's dreams for our lives. We're called to be ready. We're called to listen intentionally and to discern how we might be called to move or to act in any moment. Today. Tomorrow. And a host of day-by-day tomorrows as they emerge for us. We're called to keep our shoes on, ready to follow where God leads, even if the details are sparse, even if God is asking us to take one step at a time and to follow into a land that God will show us.


But this is just one side of the paradox. We're also called to "take our shoes off." Taking our shoes off, of course, is a reference to several scriptural stories, particularly to Moses who was told to take off his sandals, for he was standing in the presence of God on holy ground. Like Abram, who built an altar in an unforeseen land, we're called to see the sacred holiness of what and who is around us - right now! It's not just about the then - the "what's ahead." It's about this moment. It's about the realization that God has taken our yesterdays and brought us here. God is using this place, this moment, this community, this world to form and fashion us so that we can walk ahead, step by step, from faith to faith.


That's our paradox. Keep your shoes on! Take your shoes off. . . That's the picture of the Christian life.


I was a campus minister in Austin for five years, and I had the sacred privilege to walk alongside students from the University of Texas. One of those people is Libby, and in a similar way that David and Amy Roth adopted me into their family, Ian and I have adopted Libby into ours. She recently shared with me that she's looking for what's next in her life, curious to know how God is calling her in this moment. And just as David and I wrapped up our conversations with humor and at times, strange-depth, Libby and I did the same.


After telling her the same story I've just told you, I suggested that at some point in the day, she should just wear one shoe around the house. We laughed about it. But it was a way to embody this beautiful paradox of the life of faith. Later in the day, I did it myself. And you know what? It made me giggle. It also makes me grateful.


I suggest that you take some time today to do the same thing. Let's play in this paradox together.


Where is God calling you - right now, in this moment? Where is God calling us together - right now, in this moment? Maybe we can help each other keep our shoes on. Maybe we can help each other take our shoes off. With the risk of giving us all an image of dirty, smelly feet - (After all, we are fine upstanding Presbyterians and we like things "decently and in order") I might also add that Jesus washed the feet of his own disciples, teaching us humility and servanthood.


Maybe keeping our shoes on means that we pay attention to the mundane moments in our lives. . . Perhaps God is speaking in them. Maybe it means that we remember that it's not only okay, but powerful to be human beings who ask tough questions. . . Maybe it means acting on dreams we've long forgotten. . . Maybe it means stepping out in faith, moving physically across the world. . . certainly it means moving outside our comfort zone.


Maybe taking our shoes off means that we look around us - perhaps we look into the eyes of those who surround us in this moment, and we give thanks. Maybe it means recognizing and remembering that in our life together, we are called to be a congregation that welcomes the outcasts, a congregation that builds a holy place where young and old alike can be nurtured, a family of faith that steps back in awe as we hear God's remarkable gift of music here, a context where multiculturalism teaches us and teaches the world.

So let's do it.

Keep your shoes on!

Take your shoes off. . .

Thanks be to God.

Amen.


-Renee Roederer

Director of Young Adult Ministries

PPC L.I.F.T.


Sunday, March 20, 2011

Prayers of the People

Loving God,


We come to you in joy. We come to you in concern. We come to you, voicing many prayers and remembering the struggles of those who surround us - people in our church, people in our city, people who seem a world away. We ask that your blessing would touch the lives of all people, and we pray that we can be a part of that very blessing.


We pray for those who feel forgotten – for people who live on the street, for children living in abusive homes, for men and women in hospitals and nursing homes, and for soldiers who imagine that no one could possibly understand their pain.


We pray for those who are grappling with uncertainty – for individuals and families who are experiencing death and grief, for those who have lost their jobs this week or perhaps years ago, for those who have no idea of how or where to get their next meal, for those who are afraid of when the next wave of anxiety will come, for those walking through recovery one day at a time.


We pray for those who feel as though they’re walking on unstable ground – for people who cannot seem to come up for air in this economy, for people living in the midst of natural disasters, for people who have seemed to lose their faith, struggling with doubts that overtake their minds and hearts.


Remind them, and remind us, O God, that no question – no seeming loss of faith – can separate us from you, for you hold us fast in yourfaith. You are the stable ground for which we long. In confidence of your love – even in the midst of doubts or unbelief – we pray people who are struggling in particular ways.


. . . For the members of this fellowship who are in need of your special care.


. . . For the city of Pasadena and for the greater Los Angeles area.


. . . For people and nations in the Middle East and North Africa who are struggling for justice and for safety.


. . . For the people of Japan, whose lives have been shattered, uprooted, and filled with pain.


Be with us Lord as we step out in faith. Be with us as we journey into the struggles of others. May we bring your love. May we bring your blessing.


And now, as your beloved children, we are blessed again to pray the words that Jesus taught us, saying. . .


Our Father, who art in heaven,

Hallowed be Thy Name.

Thy kingdom come,

Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.

Give us this day our daily bread.

And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors.

And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil -

for thine is the kingdom, the power, and the glory forever.

Amen.