A Deep Dive Into the Gospel Of Mark with Rev. Karen Bruins

 

Welcome to “Running with Mark,” a 16-week deep dive into the Gospel of Mark.

This series will ask the question that is central to Mark’s Gospel, “Who do people say I am?” (Mark 8:27).  Hopefully after spending these next few months discovering Jesus, his life, ministry, teaching and miracles, you will be able to answer that question for yourself.

 

There are daily readings that begin December 29. Pick up a bookmark at church of the daily readings or download one here.  Each week’s readings include the reading for Sunday, plus some supplemental reading in the Psalms or other books from the Hebrew (Old Testament) Bible. The Psalms are a collection of prayers in the Hebrew Scriptures. Jesus, as a first century Jew, was deeply steeped in the Psalms and we hear him quoting and interpreting the Psalms throughout the Gospels. 

Each day I will post a reflection on the assigned passage of the day. It may be a written reflection, a video, a piece of art or poetry. There will be places for you to interact with me and with the Bible text in the comments section. Please note that the comments section will be monitored to ensure positive and productive conversation, and to ensure no trolls take over the site.

 

Here are tools and resources to make your study of Mark more impactful:

1. A good Study Bible. If you are still using the Bible you received in 3rd grade, or you’ve never had a good study Bible, consider making this important investment. Study Bibles typically include maps, a concordance, topical index and commentary. It’s important to remember that the commentary is just one author’s or authors’ perspective on the Bible. Commentators are all along the spectrum from very conservative to very progressive in their theological interpretation of Scripture.

Here are a few options to consider:

Wesley Study Bible

New Revised Standard Version ©2017 Abingdon Press

Joel B. Green, (Editor) and William Willimon, (Editor)

 

CEB Women’s Study Bible

©2016 Common English Bible, publisher

Jaime Clark-Soles (Editor), Judy Fentress-Williams (Editor), Ginger Gaines-Cirelli (Editor), Christine Chakoian (Editor), Rachel Baughman (Editor)

 

2. Bible Dictionary is an alphabetical listing of major topics, people, and places found in the Bible. Here are two helpful dictionaries:

Crazy Book: A Not-So-Stuffy Dictionary of Biblical Terms

The New Unger’s Bible Dictionary

 

This book has maps and color illustrations.

 

Nan Merrill has re-written the Psalms into prayers in contemporary language. This is a great tool for personal devotions.

 

You may wish to purchase a new notebook or journal to record your thoughts and reflections on the daily readings, sermons, group discussions etc. 

 

I look forward to beginning this journey with you!

 

Grace and peace,

Pastor Karen Bruins

 

Running with Mark 53

Day Fifty-Three – February 19, 2020  

 

Read:

Mark 8:14-21 New Revised Standard Version

The disciples had forgotten to bring any bread and had only one loaf of bread in the boat. 

Even though they had witnessed miracles of Jesus multiplying loaves and fish, it sounds like they were still worried about not having enough bread.
 
Jesus says to them, “Watch out—beware of the yeast of the Pharisees and the yeast of Herod.”  He is not talking about literal yeast (I always wonder how people who claim they take the Bible literally understand passages like this.). What do you think he meant by the yeast of the Pharisees and the yeast of Herod?
 
Here’s what I think he may have meant.  The Pharisees were religious leaders who sometimes got stuck on the interpretation of the law, rather than the spirit and the people behind it.  They also had a tendency toward judging others.  Herod, as the Roman King of Judea represents power and oppression.  Both the Pharisees and Herod missed opportunities to show love, to demonstrate compassion, to show grace. 

 

I also wonder if Jesus meant that the thinking and the attitudes of the Pharisees and Herod are like bad yeast that can get into us.  Bad yeast can slowly dissolve our values and beliefs.  Bad yeast can make us hard hearted.  Bad yeast can make us judgmental. 

Anytime we put someone above God we are committing idolatry.  Bad yeast means the bread will not rise.  Beware of the yeast of the Pharisees and the yeast of Herod. 
 
Jesus said to them, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.” (John 6:35) For today, make a conscious choice to feast on the bread of life.  Read Scriptures that fill you with comfort.  Sing songs that bring you hope.  See if feasting on these things prevent you from being distracted by the yeast of the Pharisees and the yeast of Herod.

 

Music:

One Bread, One Body

Eat This Bread – Taize

 

Prayer Focus:

Take a few moments today to eat a piece of bread.  Savor each bite.  Ask God to be as real to you as that slice of bread.

 

Grace and peace,
Pastor Karen Bruins


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Running with Mark 52

 

Day Fifty-Two – February 18, 2020  

 

Read:

Mark 8:11-13

 

I asked Siri on my Iphone, “Is God real?”  Siri replied, “It’s all a mystery”.  I wondered if Alexa, my smart speaker, might indeed be smarter.  “Alexa, is God real?”. She said, “People all have their own views on religion.”

It feels like that’s what the Pharisees are doing with Jesus.  “Give us a sign Jesus.  Show us you are real.”  They (and we often) look for a God they can codify, define, dissect and observe under a microscope, a God who will fit neatly in a box.

 

I like what Blaise Pascal said,  “Faith is different from proof; the latter is human, the former is a gift from God.”  I think he is right.  Faith is a gift from God.  “Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen” says Hebrews 11:1.

 

What if, for today, we focused not on proof of God, but in trust of God?

 

Author Brennan Manning, in his book Ruthless Trust writes:

Ruthless trust is an unerring sense, way deep down, that beneath the surface agitation, boredom, and insecurity of life, it’s gonna be all right.  Ill winds may blow, more character defects may surface, sickness may visit, and friends will surely die; but a stubborn, irrefutable certainty persists that God is with us and loves us in our struggle to be faithful.  A nonrational, absolutely true intuition perdures that there is something unfathomably big in the universe, something that points to Someone who is filled with peace and power, love and undreamed-of creativity – Someone who inevitably will reconcile all things in himself.”[1]

Maybe all we can do is keep walking down the road, trusting in God.

  • “In the absence of any other proof, the thumb alone would convince me of God’s existence.” Isaac Newton

 

Music:

Herod’s Song from Jesus Christ Superstar

Trust in You by Lauren Daigle

Prayer Focus:

Trusting in God

 

Grace and peace,
Pastor Karen Bruins

[1] Manning, Brennan. Ruthless Trust: the Ragamuffins Path to God. New York: HarperCollins e-books, 2010. p.180

 


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Running With Mark 51

Day Fifty-One – February 17, 2020  

 

Read:

Mark 8:1-10 New Revised Standard Version

This story is also found in Matthew 15:32-39.

Another day, another miraculous feeding, this time of 4000, with seven baskets of food left over. 

The feeding of the 4000 is important because of where it took place.  The feeding of the 5000 took place near Bethsaida, on the north side of the Sea of Galilee.  This is the Jewish side.  The feeding of the 4000 took place near Decapolis on the south side of the Sea of Galilee.  This was the Gentile side. 

In the feeding of the 5000, there were twelve baskets of food leftover.  Twelve represented the twelve tribes of Israel.  In the feeding of the 4000, there were seven baskets leftover.  In Judaism seven is the number of “completeness” or perfection.  In the creation poem found in Genesis, God creates the world in seven days.

I’m hungry .

Have you ever known hunger?  Not the, “I haven’t had a snack since breakfast and it’s 11:00 am hunger”.  Have you experienced that deep hunger that makes it hard to concentrate? A hunger that can leave you without energy?

At any given time, approximately 9.7% of Minnesota households are experiencing food insecurity.   “If all Minnesotans struggling with food insecurity lived in one place, they’d nearly replace the populations of the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul combined!”[1]  That statistic is staggering and really puts the problem of hunger into terms we can understand. 

Spend a little time learning about food scarcity in Minnesota.  Here are a few websites:

http://www.hungersolutions.org/

https://www.2harvest.org/our-impact/hunger-facts/

https://www.thesheridanstory.org

https://www.joyceuptownfoodshelf.org/

 

How are you being led to help fight hunger and food insecurity in Minnesota?

 

Music:

I Am the Bread of Life – Notre Dame Folk Choir

Let Us Be Bread – sung by children

 

 

Prayer Focus:

  • Those who are hungry

 

Grace and peace,
Pastor Karen Bruins

[1] http://www.hungersolutions.org/data-posts/2017-usda-food-insecurity-data/

 


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Running with Mark 50

 

Day Fifty – February 16, 2020  

 

Read:

Mark 7:1-23 New Revised Standard Version

 

Check out this video clip.  Address the Mess

 

I’m sure there are lots of us who have garages that are so full of stuff there is no room for a car.  The thought of cleaning out all of the junk can be so overwhelming that we just close the door. 

Do you have a junk drawer?  Do you know everything that is in it?

 

The Pharisees and some of the teachers of the law who had come from Jerusalem gathered around Jesus.  They observed that some of his disciples did not wash their hands and were eating with “unclean” hands.  This isn’t a story about hygiene.  There was no understanding of germs back then.  The handwashing they are talking about was a ceremonial one.  It involved just a small bit of water poured onto the hands. 

 

Jesus receives their criticism and responds by quoting Isaiah, “These people honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me.”  His critique is that they are doing what looks “right” on the outside, but not paying attention to what is going on inside.  They are like the stuffed-to-the-rafters-garage or the overflowing junk drawer.  From the outside everything looks neat and clean, but inside it’s a mess.

 

Jesus tells them that have let go of the commands of God and are holding onto the traditions of people instead.  That can sure happen in people and in churches.  We can hang on so tightly to our traditions, that we forget why we do them or what the meaning behind them originally was. An older friend of mine grew up in a family where she was not allowed to dance, but she was allowed to do square dancing, which they referred to as “social games”.  Did you grow up with religious rules and traditions? 

 

Lots of religions have traditions about alcohol, or eating pork, or gambling, etc. 

  • Why do you think those traditions were begun?
  • What is the meaning behind them?
  • How do we know when a tradition has become an idol?
  • How do we know when to let go of a religious tradition?
  • Are there any traditions at Lake Harriet UMC that have become idols?
  • Do a gut check. What kind of junk is going on inside of you?

 

Prayer of Confession

God of Sarah and Abraham, God of Rebecca and Isaac,

God of Rachel and Jacob, Heavenly Parent of Jesus the Christ,

we come before you to confess that our world and our lives are like that special night long ago when there was no room.

We have rejected your life because our home space is full of unnecessary furnishings, and so we are cluttered and confused.

We have rejected your love by filling our heart space with thoughts and feelings that have no room in your inn.

We have rejected your Son by living in church space that is confined and shortsighted.

We have rejected each other because we had no room in our lives for anyone else but ourselves.

Hear us, we ask, and fill us full of room for you, your Son, your Spirit and all the world’s people.
Words of Assurance

Do not be afraid, God says, for I am sending you to do my work.

Do not be afraid, God says, go forth and serve. Feed the hungry, house the homeless, heal the sick, and visit the lonely.

Do not be afraid, God says, for I am always with you.

 

Music:

Lord, I Need You

Come Ye Sinners, Poor and Needy

 

Prayer Focus:

 

Grace and peace,
Pastor Karen Bruins


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Running with Mark 49

 

Day Forty-Nine – February 15, 2020  

 

Read:

Mark 7:31-37 New Revised Standard Version

 

Ephphatha – be opened

Our son Michael is 25, almost 26 now.  When he was in kindergarten we discovered he was having hearing difficulties.  At first we chalked it up to ear infections and hoped it would resolve, but it did not.  So we began a journey that many of you have taken, of working with an audiologist and an ENT doctor.  Michael’s hearing loss is caused by both a conductive issue (bone problem) and a neurological problem. He has had some surgery on his “bad” ear.  When he was in elementary school the audiologist discovered that he had a hole in his “good” ear drum.  It was surgically repaired, and sadly a hole remained.  Michael needed yet another surgery.

 

Michael has always had a good sense of humor about his hearing loss.  We would joke that he was the only teenager who could truthfully say, “Mom, I didn’t hear you tell me to take out the trash!”.  He was always given a choice of what color his ear mold would be for his hearing aid.  When he was young he always chose wild colors, or school colors and proudly showed them off. 

Technology changed with each new set of hearing aids he received.  This photo was taken on the day he received new hearing aids.  I remember him making sounds “ssss”, “ffff”,  “ppppp”.  He would say to me, “Can you heart that?” He was hearing those sounds for the first time.  I hadn’t understood what he was missing.  He also received a wireless FM unit that allowed him to  hear his ipod through his hearing aid, and also hear phone calls.  He was talking to his dad on the way home from the audiologist.  He kept saying, “Dad, I can hear you on the phone for the first time in my bad ear.”  Ephphatha – be opened. Technology allowed Michael’s ears to be opened and it was miraculous for us. 

In the story from Mark the man is unable to hear and his speech is difficult to understand, which makes sense because it’s hard to know how to make the word “sounds” when you cannot hear them.  After Jesus heals him, the people can’t help but tell the story of the miracle, even after Jesus tells them not to tell.

 

Ephphata – be opened.

Our hard-of-hearing-ness isn’t always a physical issue.  Sometimes we are hard of hearing because we are just too busy.  We may be caught up in our own lives and miss the opportunity to really listen to another.  There are so many people who are lonely and aching for someone to spend time with them and listen to their stories. 

 

Ephphata – be opened.

Sometimes our ears are closed to the message God has for us.  Some are so bound up in shame, that they cannot hear God’s message of love and grace.  Some are so prideful that they miss the call to repentance and humility.  There could be a sin, usually an unconfessed sin, that we want to cling to, a sin we want to keep committing.  When this happens, we plug our ears with our fingers like a little child trying to ignore their parents.

 

Ephphata – be opened.

This could be a powerful prayer.  Ephphata – be opened.  Open my ears to hear your voice O God. Open my heart to feel your love.  Open my mind to the new things you would teach me.  Open my hands to the ways you are calling me to serve.  Open my feet to walk the road of discipleship.

 

This week, challenge yourself to be more of a listener than a talker.  Allow others to speak first.  Don’t jump in quickly when there is a moment of silence.  Allow those who are more introverted to speak without being rushed or talked over.  Consider going out of your way to spend time with someone who may be lonely and need a friend.  Pray that you would be opened!

 

Music:

Word of God Speak

Speak to Me (from the Color Purple) sung by the Argentina Gospel Choir

 

Prayer Focus:

Ephphatha – be opened.

 

Grace and peace,
Pastor Karen Bruins


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Running With Mark 48

 

Day Forty-Eight – February 14, 2020  

 

Read:

Mark 7:24-30 New Revised Standard Version

There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free,

there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus”.

Galatians 3:28

 

 

Here’s some background to give context to the passage.
 
  • Tyre was a major city. In this city God answered Elijah’s prayer to heal a woman’s child (1 Kings 17:9-24).  Jesus is in this Gentile city, trying to go unnoticed, but of course he is spotted right away.  There was no time off for Jesus.
  • This story is really more about politics than it is about healing. Pay attention to the descriptors used about the woman.
  • Syrophoenician woman – Mark calls her a Syrophoenician. Matthew calls her a Canaanite.  It refers to her political background.  She was Greek.  The Greeks were the ruling class in the republics of Tyre and Sidon.
  • Children’s Food/Children’s Bread – The Greeks of Tyre and Sidon did well economically, even as those who lived outside of the city suffered. 
  • Some scholars suggest that, in a sense, she belonged to a class that had been taking bread that Jews and Gentiles in the outlying region could have used to feed their children.
  • Dogs – is a reference to Gentiles. It was a harsh insult, but keep in mind that Gentiles had equally harsh and uncomplimentary slang names for the Jews. 
  • Jesus however, was not degrading the woman when he used this term. His is trying to explain to her God’s plan to present God’s message first to the Jews.  Jesus wants the Jewish people to see that their long-awaited deliverer, their messiah has come.  This was his primary task.
  • Jesus had just been teaching about cleanness and uncleanness. The old ideas about who was “clean” or “unclean” were no longer important.
  • In healing the woman’s daughter, Jesus is living out that he is the Messiah, not just for the Jews, but for the whole world.
  • Her differing faith, her differing politics, her differing identity do not keep her from approaching Jesus in faith. She presses on, willing to kneel at the feet of Jesus, even if others from her “group” would disapprove. 
  • This is another miracle where Jesus does not have to touch, or even be physically present with the ill person.
 
 

Imagine that this scene took place today.  Who might the Syrophoenician woman be?  Might she be a Muslim? A person of another race or culture?  The people of Jesus’ own faith tradition did not recognize him as Messiah, yet she did.  How do you suppose that is?

What does it mean to you that Jesus’ message is for all people, not just those who are like you?  Do you think Jesus already understood that his mission was for more than just the Jewish people? Or did this event change his thinking?  Does it make a difference to you either way?

 

What does Galatians 3:28 mean to you?  What would the world be like without the divisions of Jew/Greek, Slave/Free, Male/Female?  For we are all one in Christ Jesus.  How would you re-write this verse for today?

 

Music:

We Are One in the Spirit

Christ Has Broken Every Wall

Draw the Circle Wide

 

Prayer Focus:

Unity

 

 

Grace and peace,
Pastor Karen Bruins

 


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Running With Mark 47

 
Praying at Gethsemane by He Qi.

 

Day Forty-Seven – February 13, 2020  

 

Read:

Mark 6:53-56 New Revised Standard Version

The Sea of Galilee was also called Lake of Gennesaret. 

This section of Scripture reminds us that it is impossible for Jesus to go anywhere and not be recognized.  Jesus gets out of the boat and people start rushing to reach him.  People from the whole region came to Jesus, carrying people on mats, so that he might heal them.  Word must have spread about the healing of the woman with the bleeding, because now they are asking to touch Jesus, or even touch the fringe of his cloak.

 

It is interesting that there are no physical descriptions of what Jesus looked like in any of the gospels.  We have no idea if he was tall or short.  Did he have any unusual features like a big nose or scars on his body?  Think of the disciples Peter, Andrew, James and John, who met him while they were working their fishing boats.  They had never seen him before.  Now people on the plains near Gennesaret recognize him, without having met him.

 

For today use your imagination.  How do you see Jesus? 

Pinterest – Jesus Around the World   The Pinterest link shows lots of images of Jesus from around the world.  Check it out.  Which images do you resonate with?  Why?

Music:

Some Children See HIm – Six Pence version

Some Children See Him Lily White – James Taylor

 

Prayer Focus:

Use your imagination in prayer.  Picture Jesus sitting across the table from you.  What does he look like?  What is his facial expression?  What would you say to him?  What do you suppose he would say to you?

 

 

Grace and peace,
Pastor Karen Bruins

 


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Running With Mark 46

 

 

Day Forty-Six – February 12, 2020  

 

Read:

Mark 6:45-52 New Revised Standard Version

This familiar story comes immediately after the feeding of the 5000.  “Immediately” (there’s that familiar word in Mark again), they get in a boat and head across the Sea of Galilee to Bethsaida.  Bethsaida was a fishing village.  It literally means “House of Fishing” in Hebrew. 

 

After they arrived in Bethsaida, Jesus went up on the mountain to pray.  Jesus continues to model, for the disciples and for us, the need for prayer. While Jesus is praying, the disciples head back out on the Sea of Galilee to do some fishing. 

 

Jesus spent much time in Bethsaida.  Peter, Andrew and Philip were all from Bethsaida.  Even though he performed many miracles there, the village was cursed for their lack of faith. (Mark 6:51-53, Mark 8:1-26, Luke 10:13-15)

A storm popped up and the disciples were straining against the wind and the waves.  Suddenly Jesus appears to them, walking across the water.  Did you notice this sentence? He intended to pass them by. (Mark 6:48).  Why do you think he intended to walk past them? 

 

The disciples see him and think he is a ghost.  They are terrified.  Jesus tells them not to be afraid and then climbs into the boat with them.  The wind stopped.

“And they were utterly astounded, for they did not understand about the loaves,

but their hearts were hardened.” Mark 6:51-52

 

Can you imagine being one of the disciples?  You see Jesus performing miracles, feeding crowds, calming the sea, even walking on water.  Mark says that they did not understand about the loaves and now their hearts were hardened.  For the remainder of Mark, this theme of the people not understanding, and having hardened hearts, will be repeated over and over again. 

 

  • What kind of storms (thunderstorms, personal storms, spiritual storms, health storms) cause you to panic?
  • Why do you think the disciples “did not understand the loaves”?
  • In the midst of your storm, can you hear Jesus saying, “Take heart, it is I; do not be afraid.” (Mark 6:50) If you can’t hear him, why do you think that is?
  • It is one thing to not understand Jesus’, he was after all performing miracles, and turning the social conventions upside down. We get why this was confusing.  But why do you think their hearts were hardened?
  • How can you tell when your heart is becoming hardened against someone? I think of people with whom we have strong disagreement during this political season.  It is very easy for my heart to become hardened against them.  I need to guard against this.
 
 

Has your heart ever been hardened toward God? 

Read these words of hope from Ezekiel 36:26 A new heart I will give you, and a new spirit I will put within you; and I will remove from your body the heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh.

 

Music:

Change My Heart O God

Whole Heart (Hold Me Now) by Hillsong

 

 

Prayer Focus:

Pray to have a soft and pliable heart that God will touch.

 

Grace and peace,
Pastor Karen Bruins

 


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Running With Mark 45

 
 

 

Day Forty-Five – February 11, 2020  

 

Read:

I have spent many years working in children’s ministry.  Music is a great way to teach children the Bible and the faith.  The only problem is that those songs get stuck in my head.  During VBS week, I will wake up in the middle of the night with  that year’s theme song running through my head.

 

Music has always been a powerful way for me to memorize Scripture.  I learned the Books of the Bible by singing a song, so if you ever see me at the front of a sanctuary, turning pages in the big Bible, chances are good I am singing the Books of the Bible song to help me find the right page.

 

A simple song that I use with preschoolers contains big Biblical truths.  You can see the silly pastor singing it here – 2 Fish, 5 Loaves

 

What did it take to feed 5000?  Well, probably many, many more than 5000, since 5000 was the number of males who were fed.  With the women and children included the number would have been much, much higher.

 

It was late and the people were getting hungry. The disciples came to Jesus telling him to send the people back to their homes, but Jesus tells them to give them something to eat.  Right away the disciples started listing all the reasons they couldn’t feed them.  It would cost so much money Jesus!  Jesus says, “How much bread do you have?”.  In John’s version of the story John 6:1-15 the disciple Philip says, “Six months wages wouldn’t be enough to feed them.” 

 

Andrew chimes in, “There is a boy who here who has five barley loaves and two fish.”  This detail about the kind of bread is very revealing.  Barley bread was the bread of the poorest of the poor.  2 Kings 4:42-44 tells the story of a man who brought twenty loaves of barley, as an offering of the first fruit, to the prophet Elisha.  Those twenty loaves fed over 100 people and there was food left over.  Would the disciples think of this story when the boy gave Andrew his two fish and five loaves of bread?

 

Jesus tells the people to sit down, and they do in groups of fifties and hundreds.  He looks up to heaven, blessed and broke the bread (are you seeing another Bible story here?).  The food was passed around and all ate to their fill. There were twelve baskets of food left over. 

 

  • If you were the little boy, would you have shared your lunch? Why?
  • What is the significance of the boy being poor (as evident in the barley bread)?
  • Do you think it is harder for a rich person to give or for a poor person? Why?

 

Some people are called to work systemically to eliminate poverty, homelessness and hunger.  Others are called to provide direct relief by serving meals, working at shelters, etc.  Which are you called to do?  Why?

 

Challenge: Consider fasting for one meal, or one day this week.  Give the money you would have used on food to an agency that provides hunger relief.

In Minneapolis, please consider giving to the Joyce Uptown Foodshelf.

If you are outstate, check for local agencies that are providing hunger relief.

National and international groups to check out include:

Feeding America.org

Bread for the World

 

Music:

God of Justice by Tim Hughes

 

Prayer Focus:

On the day you choose to fast, when you begin to feel hunger pains, or your stomach growls, turn to God in prayer. 

 

Grace and peace,
Pastor Karen Bruins


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Running With Mark 44

 

Day Forty-Four – February 10, 2020  

Read:

Psalm 122

 My spirit soared when a Voice

                        spoke to me:

            “Come, come to the Heart

                        of Love!”

How long I had stood within the

                        house of fear

            yearning to enter the gates

                        of Love!

 

The New Jerusalem, the Holy City,

            is bound firmly together;

All who seek the Heart of Love,

            those who have faced their fears,

Enter the gates in peace and with

                        great joy,

            singing songs of thanksgiving.

There, in harmony with the cosmos,

            the community gathers united

                        in love.

 

Pray for the peace of the world!

            May all nations prosper as one!

May peace reign among all peoples,

            and integrity dwell within

                        every heart!

Then will friends and neighbors, and

                        former enemies as well,

            cry out, “Peace be within you!”

For the good of the universe and

            in gratitude to the Beloved,

Let us serve the Holy One,

                        of all nations

                        with glad hearts.

 

From Psalms for Praying © 2007 Nan C. Merrill

Continuum International Publishing Group

www.PsalmsForPraying.com

 

Jerusalem was the site of the first temple and referred to as the “holy city”.   In Matthew 23:37 Jesus lamented over Jerusalem saying, “Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often have I desired to gather your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you were not willing!”
 
 

The image of Jesus as mother hen is a tender one.  How Jesus longs to gather all of God’s children under her wing, but we are unwilling.  Yet Jesus will over and over again in the gospels, set his sights on Jerusalem, knowing what was in store for him there.

 

What does it mean to you that Christ would choose to go to Jerusalem?

 

How does the image of Jesus as a mother hen speak to you?

 

Music:

The Holy City sung by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir

Made to Worship by Chris Tomlin

 

Prayer Focus:

Pray to God as a mother hen covering you with wings of love and grace.

 

Grace and peace,
Pastor Karen Bruins

 


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Running With Mark 43

 

Day Forty-Three – February 9, 2020  

 

Read:

Mark 6:1-29 Common English Bible

  • The Herod in this passage is not the same Herod who was ruling at the time Jesus was born, that was Herod the Great. This is one of his sons who is known as Herod Antipas.  This Herod’s territory is only one-fourth the size of his father’s. 
  • John had gotten under Herod’s skin by telling him he should not be married to his brother Philip’s wife Herodias’
  • Did you catch that Herod feared John the Baptist. Why do you suppose that is?  Herod also listened to the words of John.
  • Herod has a birthday party at which his daughter Herodias danced. She was such a hit that Herod said he’d do for her whatever she wanted, and what she wanted was to have John the Baptist killed.  A guard kills John and brings his head on a platter into the birthday party.  What an unbelievably violent act has been committed on such an innocent man.
  • John’s disciples take his body away to be buried

 

What do we do with such a gruesome story?  As I read the story this time, I have been thinking about how John was a person who told others the truth about themselves, even when they did not want to see it.  He was known as the prophet in the wilderness calling people to a baptism of repentance.

Do you have someone you really trust in your life who will tell you the truth?   Who holds a mirror up for you to see yourself?

 

Be honest with yourself, how often has your doctor suggested that you need to lose a little weight or exercise a little more?  Even when you know the doctor is telling you the truth, have you acted on it?

 

Sometimes a boss may need to give some feedback to an employee about their performance.  It can be hard, but necessary, to hear the ways in which we are being coached to improve our job performance. 

 

It can be hard to hear some things, and we may be tempted to lash out at the truth teller, like Herodias did with John. 

 

Think about a time when someone told you a difficult truth that you truly needed to hear.  Was it a parent? A coach? A boss? A friend?  What did you do with the truth they told you?  Did you act on it?

 

Sometimes when we have gotten off track, we need someone to remind us who we are, holy and beloved children of God.  Who can you count on to remind you of this?

 

Buddha said, “Three things cannot be hidden: the sun, the moon and the truth”. 

 

The hymn, “Open My Eyes that I May See” has powerful lyrics about bringing ourselves fully to God, with all of our failings and foibles.  As you read the words and listen to the hymn, meditate on the line that says, “place in my hands the wonderful key that shall unlock and set me free”. Click on the link to listen to the hymn Open My Eyes that I May See

Open my eyes, that I may see
glimpses of truth you have for me;
place in my hands the wonderful key
that shall unlock and set me free.
Silently now, on bended knee,
ready I wait your will to see;
open my eyes, illumine me,
Spirit divine!

 

Music:

Remind Me Who I Am by Jason Grey

 

 

Prayer Focus:

Ask God to prepare your heart to receive the truth.

Offer thanks for the people in your life who will tell you the truth because they love you.

 

Grace and peace,
Pastor Karen Bruins

 


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Running With Mark 42

Day Forty-Two – February 8, 2020  

Read:

Luke 17:10-20 New Revised Standard Version

Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn Drawings and illustrations, 1655

What would you do if you knew you were going to die?

I think I would like to spend as much time with my family as possible.  I’d love to be in the mountains with them, reveling in God’s creation.

 

During his 3 years of ministry, Jesus knew what the outcome would be.  He knew he would lose his life for loving the world as he did.

 

The gospel writer Luke often uses this phrase: “he set his face” to go to Jerusalem.  (Luke 9:51, Luke 9:53).  Jesus visibly and consciously chooses to walk the path that was ahead of him.

 

“On the way to Jerusalem” (v. 11a).  Earlier Luke introduced Jesus’ journey to Jerusalem with these words: “When the days drew near for (Jesus) to be taken up, he set his face to go to Jerusalem” (9:51).  Jerusalem, of course, is where Jesus will die in accord with God’s plan.  Luke reminds us periodically that Jesus is on this journey (9:53; 13:22; 17:11; 18:31; 19:11), which will end when he arrives at Jerusalem in 19:28.  With each reminder of Jerusalem, we who know the rest of the story see the cross looming in the distance.[1]

 

Yet, even though he knows what is ahead of him, Jesus is still fully in the present, preaching, teaching and healing.  On the way to Jerusalem, he heals ten lepers of their disease.  Only one returns to say, “thank you”.  Yet Jesus pressed on. 

 

In many ways Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. reminds me of Jesus having his face set to Jerusalem.  Dr. King’s face was set toward the vision of civil rights and dignity for all.  Dr. King was also a pacifist and spoke out strongly against the war in Vietnam.

 

King said this of his belief in non-violent, pacifism:

“True pacifism,” or “nonviolent resistance,” is “a courageous confrontation of evil by the power of love” (King, Stride, 80).

 

Dr. King had been the recipient of hateful messages and death threats toward himself and his family. He had endured wrongful, shameful treatment.  He had witnessed his fellow civil rights activists being beaten, attacked with firehoses and billy clubs.  Many of us would have stopped.  We would have retreated home.  We would abandon the cause, not because we no longer believed in it, but because we were afraid for our lives.  Yet, Dr. King, like Jesus heading toward Jerusalem, chose to press on. 

 

Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered a powerful message that has come to be known as “I’ve Been to the Mountaintop”.  To watch the video, click on this link:

Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr – I’ve Been to the Mountaintop

 

He preached it on April 3, 1968, the day before he would be assassinated. In his sermon, he said this:

Now, it doesn’t matter, now. It really doesn’t matter what happens now. I left Atlanta this morning, and as we got started on the plane, there were six of us. The pilot said over the public address system, “We are sorry for the delay, but we have Dr. Martin Luther King on the plane. And to be sure that all of the bags were checked, and to be sure that nothing would be wrong with on the plane, we had to check out everything carefully. And we’ve had the plane protected and guarded all night.”

And then I got into Memphis. And some began to say the threats or talk about the threats that were out. What would happen to me from some of our sick white brothers?

Well, I don’t know what will happen now. We’ve got some difficult days ahead. But it really doesn’t matter with me now, because I’ve been to the mountaintop.

And I don’t mind.

Like anybody, I would like to live a long life. Longevity has its place. But I’m not concerned about that now. I just want to do God’s will. And He’s allowed me to go up to the mountain. And I’ve looked over. And I’ve seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land!

And so I’m happy, tonight.

I’m not worried about anything.

I’m not fearing any man!

Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord!!

 

How are you engaged in works of justice?

Have you paused to thank God for your life?

 

Music:

Because of Your Love

Let All Things Now Living

 

 

Prayer Focus:

Pray that you, like Jesus and Dr. King, will be “a courageous confrontation of evil by the power of love”

 

Grace and peace,
Pastor Karen Bruins

[1] https://sermonwriter.com/biblical-commentary/new-testament-luke-1711-19/

 

 


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