Ten Minutes for Teachers
Apr.
22, 2007
Vol. 8, Issue 4
Worship
Texts: Revelation 5:11-14; Ps. 30; John 21:1-19
Worship
Theme: Back At It Again
Other
Texts: Acts 9:1-20
Bluegrass Music & Earth Day:
This Sunday is recognized as Earth Day by the Presbyterian
Church (USA). Appropriately, our 10:30 worship this week will have a rather
“earthy” flavor to it as our choir will be accompanied by a bluegrass
band.
Devotion:
It’s interesting that in our day and age, we transform ourselves by
going to malls to buy new clothes, to classes to get some extra credentials, or
to seminars to get a few new tips for success or security. The change
our culture encourages is a change that occurs from being in the right
place at the right time or having the right things from the right places. Success and transformation is dependent upon
being …
At the right job …
In the right school …
With the right people.
Our main story for Sunday school this week (and a similar
story from John’s Gospel) challenges the notion that good things only occur by
being with the right people in the right place at the right time. Take a few minutes to read John 21:1-14 and
Acts 9:1-9. In these two stories of
transformation – of encountering the Risen Christ – change occurs in the most
subtle of places …
By the sea …
On the road to …
Around the fire.
This is the beauty of the Risen Christ who is on the prowl,
moving in and through the world, seeking to bring a moment of glory and grace
to us when we are least expecting it.
For two of the main characters in Acts 9:1-9 (Saul/Paul) and
John 21:1-19 (Peter), God’s willingness to interrupt a journey and a workday
led to forgiveness and new life. It
provided a completely different journey and a completely different work. And God’s interruption was precisely what was
needed for these two persons. Saul
needed to encounter his own hatred and inner-blindness. Peter needed to encounter his own guilt and
shame.
We all need to encounter the grace of our Risen Lord. Sometimes we get that encounter on the way …
in the middle of a project … when we least expect it or deserve it. And that’s what makes it so transformative,
so clearly a work of God’s redemptive love.
Something
to Chew On:
The Augsburg
material asks us this week, “In what ways, and through what persons, have you
encountered Jesus? What trust is
required for you to risk changing, especially in your places of brokenness, so
that God’s Spirit may work renewal and restoration?”
Prayer
for the day:
”We meet you, O Christ, in the ebb and flow of our lives. We hear you in another’s words. We trust you in our need for healing. We walk with you in times of life’s
turning. May your Spirit help us to hear
your voice, trust your call, and walk with others in your Way. Amen.” - Seasons
of the Spirit: Ages 15-18. Pg. 51.