Red Letter Prayers




I hope this new series - Red Letter Prayers encourages your prayer life.  We at FBC Waco have begun offering take home spiritual formation guides to accompany each Sunday morning message. Jamie McCallum, our Associate Pastor for Congregational Life, is writing them for us. Enjoy.


Walking with Christ: A Guide for Weekly Scripture Reading and Prayer



What is this?

We are busy people. Our days are jam-packed with noise, demands, and obligations. Most of us long to be closer to Christ and to each other, but we frankly don’t know where to start. We want our families to spend quality time praying and reading Scripture together, but our days are hectic and evening comes before we’re ready.  As a church staff, we love to see the people of God connecting with the heart of God.  And, thus, we will provide you a simple tool to carry home each Sunday.  This guide will help you slow down, remember the message you heard, and engage the biblical texts in a deeper way.  It will remind you to pray and reflect on God’s presence in your life each day. And all the while, you will be on this journey with others in the FBC family!  Together we can strive to be a people who not only hear God’s word but allow it to take root and transform our lives every single day. 



What do I do with it?

Each week the guide will be divided into three points.  You can do all three in one sitting or work through one a day throughout the week. The guides can be used for personal reflection or as a tool to use with your family or friends around the dinner table or before bed.  There will be room to take notes and record your own thoughts and reflections.  Since you will receive a new sheet each week, you are encouraged to purchase a notebook so you can keep the materials in one place. Each session will conclude with a children’s challenge.  This will give parents several ideas to help bring the passage to life for the whole family. Use this in whichever way you feel it will be most effective in your life and in the lives of your family and/or friends. 



August 5-11, 2012

John 17:20-24

To begin each exercise, spend a moment in prayer, quieting your mind and asking God to speak through God’s Word. Read John 17:20-24 slowly and as many times as you need to, in order to really hear what is being said.



1. John 17 allows us to overhear Jesus’ final request before his arrest. There is something significant about “finals.” When long-time television hosts retire they usually have a final show with a farewell speech.  When someone knows their time on earth is almost done, they often offer a final word to loved ones. If you had a final prayer to offer on behalf of your loved ones or for this world what might your prayer include?





What does it mean that Jesus’ final prayer on earth was a prayer for us?







Today, what would it look like for your life to serve as at least part of the Father’s answer to Christ’s final prayer?





2. In this passage, Jesus is speaking to God about us.  We are not really invited into the conversation except as eavesdroppers.  Thus, it seems that what Jesus asks the Father is not something we can make happen on our own initiative.  We can simply be open to God’s movement in our lives. When believers comes together in one accord, and when the light flows from us and touches a hurting world we must remember that we are not the ones doing this. God is. We are simply called to let God reign fully so God can move freely in and through us.  



How do you feel when someone prays for you?





How does the fact that Jesus spent some of his last moments praying for us and not with us challenge you in your pursuit of holiness today?







3. All of Jesus’ final requests are still waiting for fulfillment. The people of God do not yet live as one. Our sins, fears, and failures keep us from really being with the Father as the Son was with the Father. When the world looks at us, more times than not, they do not think twice about a loving God who sent himself to be with them. And for all of us who are still waiting for that day when God’s Kingdom will come in full, we have yet to really see the glory of Christ but in a tiny glimpse here and there.  Jesus prayed a prayer that was not immediately fulfilled. Jesus prayed a prayer that two thousand years later has yet to be fulfilled. And yet, Jesus prayed a prayer.



What prayers have you prayed again and again that remain unfulfilled? 







How does Jesus’ final prayer give you hope to pray your prayer once again?





Children’s Challenge:

·         Share with your children the ways you pray for them when they are not listening.  Explain why you ask God for these things. 

·         Tell your child about a time someone prayed for you and how it made you feel.  Ask your child if you can pray for him or her, and then ask your child how it feels to have someone pray for you.

Explain to them that Jesus prayed specifically for them in this passage, and that he still prays for them today.

·         Ask your child, “If you could ask for anything, what would you ask God for?” Help him or her turn this longing into a prayer and discuss how we continue praying even when the answer doesn’t seem to come.

·         Let your child know about something you have prayed for, for a long time. Explain how Jesus’ prayer gives you hope to keep praying each day.

Red Letter Prayers

We begin a new message series at FBC Waco this Sunday. The title of the series is Red Letter Prayers. It will include four expository sermons on some of the prayers Jesus prayed. I believe these texts will shape us in powerful ways.





8.5.12 - The Lord's Prayer, John 17:20-24

8.12.12 - The Model Prayer, Matthew 6:9-13

8.19.12 - The Garden Prayer, Luke 22:39-46

8.26.12 - The Cross Prayer, Luke 23:34


I have enjoyed preaching through our root values this summer. One of the most interesting parts of our congregational DNA is our colorfulness. This is the root that may need the most explanation. We are a church of strong personalities. FBC Waco has a large number of passionate leaders. When I drew the tree illustration for one of my mentors (and FBC Waco member) he laughed as I explained the colorful root and said, “Yes, that’s true.” This root is a blessing that requires a certain spiritual and emotional depth. Untended, our colorfulness is a liability. Strong leadership must be wed to civility, wisdom, and forgiveness.
            Martin Marty once observed, “One of the real problems in modern life is that the people who are good at being civil often lack strong convictions and the people who have strong convictions often lack civility.” We need to be passionate and civil. Kindness and gentleness are fruit of the Spirit. If we live in the Spirit of Jesus we will be civil. Church conflicts often occur because Christians think bluntness should have been listed as spiritual fruit. It was not.
            Civil behavior is born of wisdom. We can measure this by judging the words we use. R.T. Kendall once encouraged his congregants at Westminster Chapel to use an acrostic to help them decide when and how to speak to each other. The acrostic was NEED. N – Is it necessary? E- Does it emancipate? E- Does it energize? D – Does it dignify? These questions help strong people remain strong and stay out of trouble.
            When we bump into one another in our attempts to do the Lord’s work we need to be quick to apologize and quick to forgive. Forgiveness is God’s gift and plan for a broken world. Jesus modeled it and has called us to follow in his steps.
            I am grateful for the strong personalities in FBC Waco. We are not a boring group of folks. We have members that know how to be great in a legion of areas. This means we have a special obligation to be good.
           
               





Lent

I grew up in a warm hearted, Jesus saves, first second and last stanza Baptist church. We weren’t given to smells or bells. We raised our hands if we had a question. We only shouted during the softball games against the Assembly of Goders. Our spiritualty was simple. I’m still pretty much like that but I am grateful for the larger church and the gifts stewarded by Christians from all over the Pentecostal /Episcopal spectrum. Lent is one of the things I really like


Lent is a season focused on simple actions that draw us closer to God. The Holy Spirit dwells within us and is envious of every idol that draws our attention away from God (James 4:5). The Spirit desires to shower grace on us, enabling us to experience the joy of our salvation. We are invited to experience more of God through humility and repentance. Drawing near to God and resisting the Devil is a painful turn toward deep pleasure. The season of Lent serves as a communal reminder that we all need grace and that we can pursue it together. If you come from my tribe and are still are a bit new to Lent let me give you a few ideas that may help your 40 day journey to the empty tomb.



• Simplify your life. Do a little spring cleaning. Bring some order to your chaos. Give stuff away.

• Sacrifice something. This is the part of Lent that is most familiar to new folks. Lenten disciplines are designed to prompt us to pray and seek God. I once gave up the car radio. Every time I reached for the nob out of habit I was able to pray. Last year I gave up eating meat. I replaced it with prayer. Pick something that is a regular part of your life and fill it with intentional time with God.

• Say grace, a bunch. We often bless our food at family meal times. Begin saying little silent prayers over the rest of your life. “God thank you for this job, church, breath, etc.

• Invest in someone.

• Repent and repent some more.

• Enjoy God again.

Congregational Asset Survey FBC Waco

"Now there are varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit. And there are varieties of ministries, and the same Lord. And there who works all things in all persons. But to each one is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good." Paul continues on in 1 Corinthians 12 to describe the church, the body of believers, as many, yet one. Each member with a purpose; no purpose greater than the other. Each given the same Spirit for the common good.



As our congregation continues to ask the angel of the Lord questions, where have we been and where are we going, it becomes important to take an inventory. Like the spies in Numbers 13 who were sent out to inventory the land of Canaan, their hope and promise, so we want to inventory our congregation’s gifts, talents, assets and strengths.



Please take 10-15 minutes to thoughtfully fill out this inventory. Answers will be recorded in a database and used to help further our congregation’s involvement in holistic ministry to our members, neighborhood and larger community.
https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/MDG9S6B

3:16 - Love is the Theme

I believe that our congregation exists to lead generations of Christians to love God, one another, and the world in the Spirit of Jesus. Love is the reason for our being and the theme of our faith. I want us to explore this grand theme again during three services in February. I am challenging us to memorize and meditate on three climatic verses of scripture that celebrate God the church and the world. Here they are:
We love God because he loves us.

For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. John 3:16 (KJV)

We love one another because he loves us.

We know love by this,that he laid down his life for us – and we ought to lay down our lives for one another. 1 John 3:16 (NRSV)

We love to world because he loves the world and us. This is the mystery of our religion.

Without any doubt, the mystery of our religion is great: He was revealed in the flesh, vindicated in spirit, seen by angels, proclaimed among Gentiles, believed in throughout the world, taken up in glory. 1 Timothy 3:16 (NRSV)

Enjoy these verses and let them wash your brain. Spring is coming on. Let’s wake up to love.
 
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