• audio-thumbnail

    Fairhaven Sermon 11 26 2023
    0:00

    /1004.094666

    This weeks sermon by Rev. Dylan Parson focuses on a significant shift in the portrayal of British royalty, specifically the transition from Queen Elizabeth II to King Charles. Rev. Parson notes the Royal Canadian Mint’s new dollar coins featuring King Charles, emphasizing the notable absence of a crown in his portrait. This contrasts starkly with the consistent depiction of Queen Elizabeth with a crown throughout her reign.

    Rev. Parson reflects on this change as more than a mere alteration in imagery. He observes that King Charles’ portrait lacks any traditional indicators of royalty, such as royal robes or regalia. The sermon likely uses this observation as a metaphor or starting point for deeper discussions, possibly exploring themes of leadership, identity, and the evolving nature of symbols in society. The choice to focus on the absence of the crown and other royal symbols in King Charles’ portrait might serve as an allegory or prompt for a broader spiritual or philosophical exploration in the sermon.

    Transcript

    I saw this past week that over a year after the death of Queen Elizabeth II, the Royal Canadian Mint has begun to release its first dollar coins bearing the image of the new king, King Charles. So after over 70 years now of Canadian coins bearing the image of Queen Elizabeth, with a crown on her head, always, alongside dozens of other countries around the world, not just the UK but all the former Commonwealth countries, a new face will be seen on coins and bills. And the image that’s come out of the Mint of how they’re going to do it, it’s notable I think that King Charles’ portrait will not include a crown. This is a really major departure from the way that his mother was portrayed.

    Queen Elizabeth from her youngest years, whenever she was first coronet, coroneted? Have always had a crown, but nothing in King Charles’ portrait really gives you indication that he’s even a king, if you didn’t know. He’s not wearing royal robes, not that you know the furs, anything like that. Instead he’s just shown in a suit and a tie. He could be any well-dressed businessman, lawyer, if you don’t know who you’re looking at, it’s just a guy in a nice suit.

    But surrounding the edge of the portrait is a caption that has been on every British coin for a very long time, and it’s in Latin, a phrase that makes his office very clear. And it says, Charles III, D.G. Rex, which is short for the Latin, Dei Gratia Rex, which means King by the grace of God.

    And I tell you what, nothing makes me feel more like a patriotic American than monarchy. King by the grace of God is just super gross to me. It’s quite the claim, one that I would never dare make about any American president, no matter how much I liked him. Don’t tell Peg, but I know that many, many, many Americans love the pageantry and the drama surrounding Buckingham Palace, but I can’t help it, to me it’s goofy.

    This guy is king because he happened to be born first among his siblings, because of the unique configuration of who his ancestors strategically married among other nobility, all kinds of maneuvering that went on by rich people in long-dead European empires. That to me is not the same thing as King by the grace of God. There’s a lot of other stuff that went into that whole thing. I think it’s a bizarre way to get your face on dozens of nations’ coins, gain control over tens of billions of dollars’ worth of land, and the religious elements of the thing.

    Some people like this the best, but it mortifies me the most. The king or queen of the UK, as you may or may not know, serves as defender of the faith in their capacity. They’re supreme governor of the Church of England, which is why there are all sorts of prayers and anointings and so on during the coronation. The king is involved with the appointment of bishops in the Church of England, all that sort of thing.

    I just don’t like it. No matter how much it’s been reformed, no matter how much it’s just ceremonial now, I’m too American. I’m too deeply steeped in the idea of democracy. I think that’s genuinely a good thing.

    And honestly, my commitment to democracy is not just in the political realm. The United Methodist Church, democratically governed, the whole thing, top to bottom. Our bishops are elected. And at the bottom, you know, the nominations committee, church council, church conference, our whole system means that if you’re a member of the United Methodist Church, you have a say over the whole thing.

    So while Great Britain is used to an unelected king, the Roman Catholic Church is used to a pope and bishops whom they have no control over, this American Methodist is used to neither of those things. And so today, Christ the King Sunday, where we focus on Jesus as king, kind of rough for me. I and I suspect you because you’re as American as I am, deep down, just don’t get what a king is, what a king is for. We’re supposed to elect the people in charge of us.

    We’re supposed to have a say in how we’re ruled. We might make bad decisions, but that’s all right. But that is not the case in the kingdom of God. God sits enthroned over all things.

    This is an image you see over and over in the Psalms, especially God sits enthroned over creation. God is the first and the last, the final authority, the great judge, the one with the power to create and destroy. The difference, unlike for every human monarch in history, is that God is unfailingly good. Hear those words from our Psalm this morning, Psalm 100.

    Know that the Lord is God. It is he that made us and we are his. We are his people and the sheep of his pasture. Enter his gates with thanksgiving and his courts with praise.

    Give thanks to him, bless his name, for the Lord is good. His steadfast love endures forever and his faithfulness to all generations. So to some great extent, understanding or really getting a king like King Charles or Louis XVI or Kaiser Wilhelm or something doesn’t really help us understand what it means that Christ is our king at all. We’re dealing with a different kind of king here, a different kind of kingdom.

    And so it makes sense that on this day that we celebrate Jesus being king, our scripture readings, and this is kind of surprising, but it makes sense. They spend very little time talking about his throne, his glory, his royal court, all of those things come up, but there are plenty of passages in scripture where we could really dig into this kind of grandeur of God’s rule. Instead, as we celebrate Christ the king, we hear from the prophet Ezekiel in our first reading about how he’s a shepherd gathering his lost sheep together into a flock, feeding them, taking care of them, sorting them. And from Matthew’s gospel, our second reading, we hear about how Jesus, the king, is poor.

    Stranger, imprisoned, sick. And these are not the classic examples that come to mind when we think about human royalty. King Charles III of his coronation sat in a grand throne wearing a crown that consisted of five pounds of gold and jewels. That crown’s barely ever broken out because you can’t realistically wear that much gold on your head without hurting your neck for very long.

    That’s just one piece of a royal collection that’s gathered in large part from colonies conquered all around the world. It’s impossible to miss the point of what those jewels are supposed to demonstrate. The British empire itself, all that power, all that grandeur is conveyed by these jewels. That’s why they go all out.

    King Jesus though, Jesus says you’re pretty much guaranteed not to see him. You’re pretty much guaranteed not to notice him in front of your face. And so this entire passage here in Matthew 25 functions both as a grace and as a warning, a spiritual checkup to see if you are prepared when you meet your king, prepared to even recognize him. We’re given a vision here in Matthew 25.

    This isn’t a parable so much as a vision. We’re given a vision of the final judgment where the human one, the son of man, is sitting on his throne. He’s surrounded by the angelic court. He’s surrounded by all the angels.

    We see this heavenly throne room here. And he, the king, is doing something that a shepherd would do, not necessarily a king. He’s separating the sheep, his flock, from the goats who are these disobedient creatures. They’ll be sent to eternal punishment, what some translators call the chastening or the pruning is a good rendition of the Greek there.

    And Jesus gives us the criteria for how this judgment’s going to go down. To those he calls the sheep, the king says in Jesus’s vision, Inherit the kingdom that was prepared for you before the world began. Why? Why did they get that? Well, the king says, I was hungry and you gave me food to eat. I was thirsty and you gave me a drink.

    I was a stranger and you welcomed me. I was naked and you gave me clothes to wear. I was sick and you took care of me. I was in prison and you visited me.

    And the sheep here don’t just say, Woo, yeah, great. They’re confused. Despite ending up on the right side of things, they’re completely confused. They don’t understand what they did to get all this.

    When did we do that? When did we see you? You know, we think we’d have noticed if the king of the universe was standing right in front of us, especially if we fed you or offered you a drink or gave you clothes to wear or visited you while you were sick or in prison. We don’t remember any of that. Ah, the king replies, It’s not quite so simple. I assure you that when you have done it for the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you have done it for me.

    And the goats, of course, ask the same question when the king points out they did nothing for him. When did we even see you? We don’t remember that. We don’t remember this challenge. And again, the king says, I assure you that when you haven’t done it for the least of these, you haven’t done it for me.

    How easy would it be to be generous and helpful and gracious if we knew that Jesus himself, the king, was standing in front of us in need of help? That’s not so hard, right? It’s another thing entirely to love other people whom Jesus calls his brothers and his sisters. Put it in terms of modern royalty, right? If for whatever reason Prince Charles wandered into church today, King Charles wandered into church today, or some American equivalent of royalty, I don’t know, that’s like Taylor Swift, Joe Biden, Elon Musk, it’d be easy for us to roll out the red carpet, doing our absolute best to impress them, to welcome them into our space. Another story maybe if it’s just some random person from Moorbrook, especially if they’re visibly different, income, race, disability, age. Are we able to muster up that same hospitality and grace to somebody who doesn’t look like a king at all? Jesus is revealing a great mystery for us here, and one he wants to make sure that we recognize because it’s a life or death issue for him.

    You know, whenever we take communion, somehow that bread and that juice are transformed into the body and blood of Christ. We don’t understand it, but somehow it’s transformed. Here I think Jesus is saying exactly the same thing. I think he’s saying that that exact same thing occurs constantly as we live and move through the world.

    The least of these, my brothers and sisters of Jesus whom we encounter, especially if they’re in need, are in some way, literally Jesus Christ himself. Oh, but all those homeless people downtown, that guy who’s high and yelling on the sidewalk, teenage kid in prison for pulling a gun to rob another kid, they don’t look like Jesus. I certainly hope Jesus doesn’t look like those people, our king. So we ask, when did we see you, Lord? I don’t like this either.

    I don’t know how to get out of it. This is one of those passages I don’t know how to rework to get out of it. And this is one of those ones that makes you want to try. The more I think about this vision from Jesus in Matthew 25, the more it frightens me because how many times have I seen him and done nothing? How many more times will I do so in my lifetime? But we cannot say that we don’t know what the king looks like when he’s telling us flat out.

    We cannot say we don’t know. One preacher writes about this vision where the sheep and the goats are judged that salvation is something we discover when we least expect it. And clearly that’s absolutely correct, which should be obvious for those of us who worship an almighty God who let himself get crucified without putting up a fight. Salvation where we least expect it.

    And yet also Jesus is telling us exactly where to expect it. Even as we’ll never cease to be surprised by it, even as we might be resistant to the form salvation takes. By his own example, by stories like this, we see in Jesus what real kingship looks like. Humble, kind, obedient, even unto death on a cross in Paul’s words.

    More like a shepherd or even a sheep than any king we’ve ever seen in this world. And additionally, we see what the true eternal kingdom of God looks like. The first or last, different part of Matthew. Jesus for the suffering is finally served.

    And the least of these, the lowliest of people are in some supernatural way, the presence of the Lord himself. And all of this reveals the inevitable passing away of all earthly kings, all earthly rulers, all earthly nations, including our own, that don’t come close to measuring up to God’s eternal reign. And even as he’s a different kind of king, he’s still a king. In the end, whenever we get to this vision of the final judgment, the Lord is the only one who’s fully sovereign.

    He’s the one who’s sitting on that throne, the only one with final power. We don’t get a vote. Whether you’re a sheep or a goat, you don’t get a vote. God is God in the end, no one else.

    In the end, it is the one who is lamb and shepherd and king who sits on the holy throne, who divides the sheep from the goats, even as we struggle or even resist seeing him in the faces we see the moment we walk out of the store. Here are these words from the English priest and poet Malcolm Guy. He wrote this poem for Christ the King. Our king is calling from the hungry furrows while we are cruising through the aisles of plenty.

    Our hoarding screens us from the man of sorrows. Our soundtracks drown his murmur, I am thirsty. He stands in line to sign in as a stranger and seek a welcome from the world that he made. We see him only as a threat, a danger.

    He asks for clothes. We strip search him instead. And if he should fall sick, then we take care that he does not infect our private health. We lock him in the prisons of our fear, lest he unlock the prison of our wealth.

    But still on Sunday, we shall stand and sing the praises of our hidden Lord and King. May you see the Lord even as you go forth in this place, even as his face is hidden. Tells us where he’s going to be. Name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.

    Amen.

  • Living Stones Free Buffet Dinner at Fairhaven

    • Date and Time: November 26, starting at 4:30 pm
    • Location: Fairhaven
    • Details: Living Stones invites you to enjoy a complimentary buffet dinner and time with neighbors.

    Weekly Bible Study and Book Study Updates

    • Wednesday Night Bible Study: Continuing this week with a focus on 1 Corinthians, then pausing for Advent.
    • Book Study on “Just Mercy”: On hiatus until January.

    Advent Season Activities

    • Start of Advent: Next Sunday
    • Advent Worship Series: “How Does a Weary World Rejoice?”
      • Focus: Exploring the Gospel of Luke, the Nativity of Jesus, and significant figures such as Mary, Elizabeth, Zechariah, and John the Baptist.
      • Objective: Finding joy in God’s work amidst global weariness.

    Advent Prayer Services

    • Start Date: Wednesday, December 6
    • Time: Every Wednesday at 7 pm
    • Location: Spencer
    • Description: Weekly Advent prayer services.

    Blue Christmas Service

    • Date: Thursday, December 14
    • Time: 7 pm
    • Location: Fairhaven
    • Purpose: Creating a supportive space for those facing loss, difficulty, or loneliness during the holiday season.
  • Using Our Gifts

    The point is that we all have a small fortune to work with. So what are we going to do with it? And then taking the story one step beyond that, we also have a group of people here who have talents and gifts. And we’re all together in this church, and our talents become a collage of personalities and skills. And we begin to see that our talents come together in ways that meet the needs of people in our community.

     That’s what Jesus is getting at. We are far more wealthy than we know, both as individuals and as a church. And investing who we are in the lives of the people around us is a joy because we are being and becoming exactly who and what we were created to be by God.

    Women Leaders in the Bible

    So what’s remarkable about this particular passage though is that this time the nation’s rescue was brought about mainly by two women, which is a foretaste, a prophecy of the two women in the New Testament who will bring about our rescue, namely Elizabeth and Mary, the mother of Jesus. In the book of Judges, the two women’s names are Deborah, who was the judge at the time, and J.L., a Kenite woman.

     Deborah was the leader of Israel at that time, and this is important for a number of reasons. There are many, many Christian churches today, even today, that will not allow or recognize female leadership, and many of them say the reason is because God never appointed any female leaders in the Bible. This passage proves otherwise. Deborah’s role was both religious and civil.

     She was a prophetess, and she was the judge of all Israel, and she was the commander-in-chief of Israel’s army, all rolled into one.

  • audio-thumbnail

    Fairhaven Sermon 11 19 2023
    0:00

    /897.912

    This weeks sermon begins with a discussion of Judges chapter 4, which describes the deliverance of Israel from oppression by Sisera and the Canaanites. This was accomplished largely through the leadership of two women – Deborah, who was the judge and commander of Israel at the time, and Jael, who killed the enemy commander Sisera. This shows that God has appointed women to positions of leadership in biblical history.

    The main scripture passage discussed is the Parable of the Talents from Matthew 25. In this parable, a rich man entrusts his servants with large sums of money to manage while he is away on a journey. Upon his return, two servants have doubled the money through wise investments, but a third buried his share and made no return. Just as the servants were entrusted with the master’s fortune, we are given gifts of time, talents and treasures by God. We are called to make the most of what we’ve been given, investing wisely so that God’s kingdom may increase. This brings joy to the Master. As we live generously and fruitfully, we experience a foretaste of God’s coming joy.

    Transcript

    Well, it is hard to believe it, but this is the last Sunday of Pentecost, the last of our non-holiday services for the year. I mean, this afternoon we have Thanksgiving up at Spencer, I hope you’ll be able to come to that, followed by dinner, and then next Sunday is Christ the King’s Sunday, and then we’re in Advent. Before you know it, it’s going to be next year. As we head into the holiday season, we also head into a time in the spiritual year that is sort of thoughtful and reflective.

     In Advent, a time when we get ready emotionally and mentally and spiritually for the arrival of our Lord Jesus. And as always, this is both getting ready for Jesus’ birth and also looking forward to Jesus’ return. And with both of these events in mind, our calling is to be doing the Lord’s work while we wait. So as we look at today’s scripture readings, all of them reflect on these thoughts in one way or another of God’s arrival and our getting ready.

     And to that end, we will be looking mostly at our gospel reading this morning from Matthew. But before I go there, I want to take a short detour. Most of us know that the lectionary gives us three readings every Sunday, of which we usually read two. The third one for today from the Old Testament Book of Judges is completely off topic, which is why we didn’t read it today, but it’s a passage that I want to mention because it only comes around once every three years and it gives us some important bits of history that I think we need to know.

     So for those of you who are writing up the summary of this sermon, skip the next bit. I’ll tell you where we’re actually going to start the message. Okay. But this is just a major side note over here.

     The passage I’m referring to is Judges chapter four. And if you feel like it, feel free to open up a pew Bible and take a look at Judges four. The reading describes a time in ancient Israel when the people of Israel have abandoned God and started worshiping idols. So God allowed the nation to be conquered by the Canaanites who were led by an army whose commander was named Sisera.

     Now, back in those days, Israel did not have a king. The nation was led by judges. And so the nation of Israel, like the nations around them, was more like a collection of tribes than the kind of nation states that we’re used to today. And the judges were regional leaders, either prophets or prophetesses, who were both civic and religious leaders.

     And the people would come to them for advice or to settle disputes. Well, there’s a certain strength in this kind of system, and that is that there was a great deal of personal freedom. Many of the twelve tribes of Israel could depend on the other tribes for help if they needed it, but there was no central government, and therefore there was no conscription into an army, and there were no taxes, if you can imagine that. And the only laws that they had were the laws of Moses.

     But there was also a weakness in this system, and that was they had a great deal of personal freedom, and that included the ability to disregard God’s laws and build altars and manufacture their own gods. And the people of Israel did just that over and over and over, and we see that throughout most of the Old Testament. They would be conquered, and then they would cry out to God, and God would send a rescuer, and they would be set free, and they would celebrate that freedom, and before you know it, they’re back over here worshipping idols again, and the whole cycle starts again. So we talk about church history looking like this, like Israel’s kind of the same way back then.

     It’s really nothing new. What’s remarkable about this particular passage, though, is that this time, the nation’s rescue was brought about mainly by two women, which is a foretaste, a prophecy of the two women in the New Testament who will bring about our rescue, namely Elizabeth and Mary, the mother of Jesus. In the book of Judges, the two women’s names are Deborah, who was the judge at the time, and Jael, a Kenite woman. Deborah was the leader of Israel at that time, and this is important for a number of reasons.

     There are many, many Christian churches today, even today, that will not allow or recognize female leadership, and many of them say the reason is because God never appointed any female leaders in the Bible. This passage proves otherwise. Deborah’s role was both religious and civil. She was a prophetess, and she was the judge of all Israel, and she was the commander-in-chief of Israel’s army, all rolled into one.

     The other woman in the story is Jael, and she was a foreigner who we know very little about, but her loyalty was to Israel’s God. And during the battle to defend Israel, which Israel was winning, by the way, the leader of the Canaanite army, Sisera, deserted, ran away from the battlefield, and came to rest outside the tent of Jael. And he asked her for water, and she said, Oh, come on in, have some milk. And she gave him all the milk that he wanted to drink, and he lay down to rest and fell asleep, at which point Jael took a tent peg and a hammer, drove it through his head, thereby winning the war.

     So the attacking general was dead, Israel’s victory was brought about by two women. I take no joy in violence whatsoever, but I can’t let these two women go by in our lectionary without pointing them out and saying, These were bold leaders at a time when bold leadership was hard to find. And on top of that, this story also reminds us to pray for the peace of Jerusalem and pray for the peace of Israel. The politics of today’s situation is beyond my grasp, but I know this much, that Jesus wept over Jerusalem and prayed for the city’s well-being, and so should we.

     So please keep on keeping this region in your prayers. So with all that said, it’s a very long prelude. Now we head into today’s scriptures. Now for those of you who are taking notes on the sermon, it starts now.

     And we begin with our scripture reading from Matthew. In the book of Matthew, this is the second parable in a series of three parables that Jesus is sharing with His disciples. The first one being about the ten bridesmaids and their oil lamps, which we heard last week, I believe. And then the third one being about the separating of the sheep and the goats at the last judgment.

     So this is sort of the meat inside the two pieces of bread there on that sandwich. And all three of these parables contain warnings against complacency and encourage the disciples to be prepared and to live mindfully and generously as they follow Jesus. So the parable for today talks about a master who is a very rich man, who decides to go on a journey, and he gives some of his wealth to his servants to take care of or to manage while he’s gone. And he gives five talents to one and two talents to another and one talent to a third, according to their skills.

     Now one of the things that’s really remarkable about this story is the enormous amounts of money that Jesus is talking about. Depending on which Bible scholar you read, a talent was worth about five years’ wages for the average worker. So in today’s terms, approximately $300,000 to $500,000 per talent. So the man with five talents had somewhere between $1.

    5 and $2.5 million handed to him. And the man with two, somewhere between $600,000 and $1 million. And of course, the man with the one had between $3,000 and $5,000 handed to him.

     Now if you’re anything like me, at this point you’re probably thinking, I wish somebody would drop that kind of talents right here, you know? Bring on the talents. If someone did, if someone dropped a million or two in my lap or yours, what would you do with it? What would, think about, how would you invest this for God? Anybody have any thoughts on this? There you go, good. Anybody else? One of my first thoughts was take some of this down to this inner city schools and find the top, best five students and put them through med school, all the way through school. You know? Something like that.

     All kinds of possibilities that you could, when you sit and think about it, it’s like, Oh, we could do this. Anyway, not to pour cold water on all these plans, but years ago I worked for a company who had a business manager who called large sums of money like this a pain in the neck amount of money. A pain in the neck. Why? He said, Because $1 million is not going to change the world.

     It will not end world hunger. It will not end a war. It will not fix the entropy in Washington, D.C.

     It will not put an end to gun violence or any number of the social problems that we would love to take care of. A million dollars is not enough to accomplish any of these things. Oddly enough, as I was writing this sermon this past week, I got an email from the Pittsburgh Symphony, one of those tell us how you’re doing surveys that you get a thousand times a week. And I usually delete them, but for some reason I did not delete this one.

     First off, because it was addressed to the symphony’s donors. Now, I am a subscriber. I have a one-quarter season subscription, but my donations are so tiny and so irregular that I’m amazed they even noticed. I was on that list somehow, and they wanted to know what we as donors think they should do with their money.

     What would our priorities be if we were in charge of the symphony? And one of the questions on the survey was this, If you had $100,000 to donate to the symphony, how would you designate it? Again, bring on the $100,000. What they were really asking, what they were asking was, Would we use the money for things like educational outreach, or for paying for guest soloists, or for composers to write original works for the orchestra, or to do repairs on Heinz Hall? I mean, you get the idea. There’s all these worthy things that you could use money for. What would we choose and why? I told them I would underwrite the orchestra’s next European tour if they let me tag along.

     [laughs] But getting back to Jesus’s parable here, a talent being worth a million dollars is not going to change the world. But it is an amount too big to be lazy about. It needs to be taken care of. It needs to be kept safe.

     It needs to have plans made for it. And if we’re wise, we invest it somehow so that it will still be around years from now, still doing good, still multiplying to support family and loved ones and people outside the family as well. And one thing is for sure, Jesus had the full attention of his listeners, and he also gave them a promise of something even better. Jesus says that this master, this mortal human being in this story, invites his servants to enter into his joy after they made wise decisions and investments.

     How much more, Jesus says, will our good and perfect God invite us to share God’s joy? The real surprise in Jesus’s story is the one guy who goes and buries his talent in the ground. Now, this may not seem quite as strange back then as it does today. I mean, there were, there’s very little on the way of banks in those days. There were no investment companies.

     So when people needed to keep something safe, burying it was a common thing to do, actually. And the thing is, we’re talking about almost a half a million dollars or more here. Who would bury that much money? I mean, wouldn’t you at least go shopping first? You know, I mean, this third servant could have done something with some of it, but instead he makes excuses and refuses to take responsibility. So the meaning of the story, of course, is that God has given each of us fortunes to work with.

     We are all owners of fortunes, fortunes of time, fortunes of abilities, fortunes of relationships. And the amount of fortune is different from person to person. Some have more than others, some have less. Some of us have specific gifts in art, music, science, math, business, working with people, working with analysts, so many possibilities.

     The point is that we all have a small fortune to work with. So what are we going to do with it? And then taking the story one step beyond that, we also have a group of people here who have talents and gifts. And we’re all together in this church, and our talents become a collage of personalities and skills. And we begin to see that our talents come together in ways that meet the needs of people in our community.

     That’s what Jesus is getting at. We are far more wealthy than we know, both as individuals and as a church. And investing who we are in the lives of the people around us is a joy because we are being and becoming exactly who and what we were created to be by God. One more thing about this parable, and that is that the Master’s return is delayed.

     And we don’t know why, and we don’t know for how long. But this parable tells us not to worry about that too much. We just need to get down to business, investing those talents. And when the Master returns, we will enter into his joy.

     So where does that leave us today? We are holding in our hands a fortune greater than we know. We are being challenged to be creative and fruitful and bold. Not reckless, but daring as wisdom allows. And the investments we make are a foretaste of God’s coming kingdom.

     They are for our joy, for all of us. Amen. Thank you.

  • Bible Study

    • Join us for our Wednesday night Bible study on 1 Corinthians, which is ongoing and open to anyone who wants to learn more about God’s word. Contact either pastor or Dave Smoyer to join in for Bible study!

    Free Buffet Dinner

    • Next Sunday, November 26, Living Stones will host a free buffet dinner at Fairhaven, starting at 4:30pm. Come and enjoy a delicious meal and fellowship with your neighbors!

    Donations and Blessing Bags

    • We are grateful for your generous donations to our church. You can drop your donation in the chest at the front of the church. Those contributions go to maintaining our building and supporting our ministries.
    • We have some blessing bags at the bottom of the stairs that you can take with you and give to someone in need that you encounter in your daily walk. These bags contain some essential items and a message of hope and love.

    Gala

    • Thank you to everyone who attended or contributed to the gala. It was a great success and a lot of fun.