Golden wedding

Sixty-Fifth Wedding Anniversary

Don and Rogena Allison celebrate 65 years of marriage on August 1. You are invited to a celebration reception on Thursday, August 1, from 2:00 to 4:00 pm at Larksfield Place, 7373 East 29th Street, North, in the Clark Enrichment Center. Enter off 29th Street and enter the building from the entrance by the parking lot. Please come and help us celebrate!

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A Word From Our Interim Pastor: The Rev. Dr. Steven M. Marsh

It’s All About Jesus! 

Jesus has existed from the beginning and is the Living Word. This Jesus was born of a virgin and his conception was supernatural. Jesus is God incarnate. Jesus is our Savior. He is fully man and fully God. As F.F. Bruce notes, “’A Saviour not quite God’, said Bishop Handley Moule, ‘is a bridge broken at the farther end.’ With equal truth it must be said that a Saviour-and an Exemplar-not quite man is a bridge broken at the nearer end.” This Jesus is the redeemer of the world, and all things will be reconciled in him.

This Jesus was tempted in all ways as we and he did not sin. That means whenever we are tested to misuse our authority in Jesus to be selfish as opposed to sacrificial, we can claim his victory over the devil’s temptation and trust the Father to sustain us. Jesus challenged the religious leaders to renounce their legalism and discover grace from the one whom Isaiah promised would set the prisoner free and give sight to the blind. This Jesus challenged the rich to give it all away to the poor. This Jesus served the outcast, the marginalized, the ostracized, the sinner, and the lost.

Jesus was a provocative teacher, sacred friend, truthful revealer, extreme forgiver, authentic leader, compassionate healer, relentless lover and supreme conqueror. Jesus promised his followers that they would change the world.

Believing in Jesus and loving him is one thing. Being transformed by Jesus is another. Transformation, a life-long process, is a work of the Holy Spirit in our lives and the fruit of obedience.

As one in the company of Jesus, continue to focus your attention on him.

On the journey of Christian discipleship and spiritual formation with you, I remain faithfully yours,

 

Steve

The Rev. Dr. Steven M. Marsh

Interim Pastor

 

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The Journey of One Race and One Blood Isn’t Easy

Series: “Jesus’ Message: You Are a Participant in the Dream”

“The Journey of One Race and One Blood Isn’t Easy”

2 Samuel 1:1, 17-27

Mark 5:21-43

Next week we celebrate our 248th anniversary of independence as a country. 1776 was an important year. And then eleven years later, in 1787, our government’s system of democracy was established. As a country, we value the idealism of the Declaration of Independence and the pragmatism of the Constitution.

Democracy is a modern idea that is transformative. A democratic form of government is freeing and challenging…distributive and collective. Louis Menand writes, “It is a remarkable fact about the United States that it fought a civil war without undergoing a change in its form of government. The Constitution was not abandoned during the American Civil War; elections were not suspended; there was no coup d’état. The war was fought to preserve the system of government that had been established at the nation’s founding-to prove, in fact, that the system was worth preserving, that the idea of democracy had not failed.”[1] And now, our country is once again caught in a struggle of what democracy is and is not.

Christians have a parallel journey to that of our country’s journey on what democracy is and isn’t. We are on an ongoing conversion from a life which was lost without Jesus to one which is more and more informed by the way Jesus’ words and deeds which encourages our words and deeds to be more like his. In all aspects of life we must take measured steps of making the necessary changes in character and attitude to be fully functioning human beings. Yes, this journey requires each one of us to examine our Christian beliefs. It also requires us to examine our convictions on race, privilege, gender identity, LGBTQ+ rights, human equality, sexual orientation, and gender equity.

Jesus had returned to his home town. He taught in the synagogues and the people were shocked. Notice the words of Mark 5:25, “Now there was a woman who had been suffering from hemorrhages for twelve years. She had endured much under many physicians, and spent all that she had; and she was no better, but rather grew worse. She had heard about Jesus, and came up behind him in the crowd and touched his clothes, for she said, ‘If I but touch his clothes, I will be made well.’” Jesus and his initial band of followers were committed to inclusion of all. In this case, this woman was not recognized as human, much like the lepers and blind.

In Mark 5:21-43 along with Jesus, we acknowledge that being at odds with others on non-essentials is normal. However, a most significant part of the journey is to rally around our unity on the essentials. The authority of Jesus was challenged because it expressed itself in powerlessness, dependency, and relationships. Jesus did not place limitations on those who could accomplish God’s purposes. The marginalized and disenfranchised embraced Jesus, but those who held power and position rejected him. Mark 5:35 reads, “While he [Jesus] was still speaking, some people came from the leader’s house to say, ‘Your daughter is dead. Why trouble the teacher any further?’ But overhearing what they said, Jesus said to the leader of the synagogue, ‘Do not fear, only believe.’” Jesus’ way of speaking and doing his ministry was difficult to embrace because it did not align with conventional expectations or values.[2]

Friends there is one race with one blood. There are women and men. There are those with different gender identities, ethnicities, and sexual orientations. Followers of Jesus understand that we are committed to a journey of building life for all people, as intended by God. We are committed to a journey that all humans are created in the image of God and deserve the same rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness as the Constitution asserts. Crawford W. Loritts Jr. writes, “We will have to repent in this generation not merely for the handful of words and actions of the bad people but the appalling silence of the good people.”[3] In the citation just read, it is clear that the cry for holy impatience at the beginning of our country has been the same cry throughout the centuries. And it is the same is true today. Equality is still lacking. Jesus was not silent. Like Jesus, Christians are to speak up for justice and kindness.

Patience is a virtue, and it is important in our journey of conversion. But and this is a vulnerable, yet authentic but, silence is a form of unholy patience, and when Christians are silent, the journey of Christian discipleship presses pause. The statement by Jesus that he is the way, the truth and the life is paused in the silence. And so it is for the teachings of the Greatest Commandment, the Sermon on the Mount and Matthew 25. Yet the journey is not to be pressed on pause. We are called to press play. 2 Samuel 1:25 and 27 read “How the mighty have fallen in the midst of the battle…How the mighty have fallen in the midst of the battle.” Saul, Jonathan, and David spoke up and led the Israelites into battle with the more powerful and mighty Philistines.

The freedoms we have in our country should bring us together to accomplish a common vision that is inclusive, not exclusive. Crawford W. Loritts Jr., the father of Bryan Loritts, writes, “Until we come to the place where we see ethnic diversity as more than a strategy, emphasis, or an occasional feature in our e-magazines, we will always be playing catch-up.”[4] The integrity of the gospel demands that the visible transformation Christ provides be demonstrated and modeled by the unity of the one Body of Christ.[5] The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution are loud voices and rightly so!

Exercise holy impatience in the journey of being one race and one blood. Claim the integrity of the gospel in your life. Demonstrate and model the unity of the Body of Christ in your words and actions. There is one Body, one Spirit, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, and one God and Father of all. Do not remain silent. Amen.

This sermon was preached the Sixth Sunday after Pentecost on Sunday, 30 June 2024

by the Rev. Dr. Steven M. Marsh in the Great Room and Sanctuary

at Grace Presbyterian Church in Wichita, Kansas 

Copyright 2024

Steven M. Marsh

All rights reserved.

[1]Louis Menand, The Metaphysical Club New York, (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2001), ix.

[2]In the two paragraphs of textual analysis above, I have benefited from the thinking of Mark McEntire, Wyndy Corbin Reuschling, Anna George Traynham, Zaida Maldonado Perez, William Yoo, Matthew L. Skinner and Richard W. Voelz in Joel B. Green, Thomas G. Long, Luke A. Powery, Cynthia L. Rigby and Carolyn J. Sharp, editors, Connections, Year B, Volume 3 (Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press, 2020), 108-111, 111-112, 113-116, 117-119, 119-121, 122-124 and 124-126.

[3]Bryan Loritts, ed., Letters To A Birmingham Jail: A Response To The Words And Dreams Of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (Chicago, Illinois: Moody Publishers, 2014), 76.

[4]Bryan Loritts, ed., Letters To A Birmingham Jail: A Response To The Words And Dreams Of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., 85.

[5]Some ideas in this paragraph adapted from Bryan Loritts, ed., Letters To A Birmingham Jail: A Response To The Words And Dreams Of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., 74-92.

 

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Beginnings!

The apostle John begins his gospel with these very familiar words: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God.” The Word is Jesus. He was with the Father and the Spirit from the beginning. This is important, because historic, orthodox, and apostolic Christianity affirms the preexistence of Christ. That Jesus, the Son of God, like the Father and the Holy Spirit, has been and always will be. No other world religion claims such a truth for its God or prophets. Christianity stands alone. All that has begun had its beginning in and through Jesus Christ. And familiar words from John’s gospel continue,  “All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing was made. What has come into being in him was life, and the life was the light of all people.” Christianity stands alone, because it is a journey about a relationship with God and one another.

Beginnings are important. Whether we trace the beginning of a particular trip or the birth of a child, we remember beginnings. Such is true when it comes to the beginning of one’s journey as a Christian. In my particular case, I remember accepting Jesus Christ as my Savior and Lord during Communicant’s class in the seventh grade. I also remember when I began my dating relationship with Janet. It was Saturday, December 4, 1976. We went to the Spaghetti Factory in Fresno California for dinner and then to a production of “Godspell”. I remember many beginnings from my ordination to the ministry of Word and Sacrament August 15, 1982, to the Session asking me to serve as Grace’s Interim Pastor beginning January 15, 2024. Beginnings are markers.

Janet and I are thrilled to be in relationship with you and our Interim Pastor Journey. On Monday evening, July 15, 2024, the Session approved a process titled, The Proposed Timeframe. From Interim Pastor to Pastor. The Proposed Timeframe. From Interim Pastor to Pastor is a new beginning document and is now on its way to the Church Order Ministry Team (COMT) of the Presbytery of Southern Kansas (PSK) for its action.

Do not press Session members for answers. Know that God is in this and at the Annual Meeting on Sunday, February 23, 2025, the Strategic Plan (Mission Study) will be presented and the election of the Pastor Nominating Committee (PNC) members will occur.

It is true! A new beginning is emerging for Grace Presbyterian Church. Continue to pray as I know you have been doing.

On the journey of Christian discipleship and spiritual formation with you, I remain faithfully yours,

Steve

The Rev. Dr. Steven M. Marsh

Interim Pastor