Special Board Meeting

At our January Board meeting Brian Bigelow, Rick Petry, Gary Gross, and Sandy Bigelow asked questions about and discussed the structure and roles of the Board of Directors of CSF. Through the course of that discussion they thought it wise to call a special meeting on May 8th for the sole purpose of discussing possible refinements that would protect and enhance the future of CSF.


The meeting will be scheduled for Saturday May 8th, 12:00 pm at CSF.

 

[from the April 2010 Newsletter, which can be downloaded here]

We made it!

We made it to New Orleans safe and sound. We start working early tomorrow morning. Keep an eye on this blog and our Twitter page for updates throughout the week. Thanks to everyone who supported us for the trip and keep the prayers coming!

You trust what's in that pocket?

Proverbs 3:5

"Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make your paths straight."

Yeah that's cute and is in like zillions of pictures and frames. But seriously, do we trust what God has in His pocket?  As we look at Christ's walk to the cross we see how easy it is to miss what trusting in God is like.

Jews were still reeling over the Romans.  A hundred years before Jesus Jews had enjoyed some freedom and autonomy.  Historical accounts outside of scripture tell us that Romans gained control of the territory, beseiged Jerusalem, and even killed priests in the Temple. That's the equivalent of murdering servants in a church. That kind of atrocity against deep and ancient roots of tradition and Godly worship isn't easily forgotten. And they're reminded of it every day via tax collectors, Roman officials, gaurds, politicians, etc. Then Jesus comes. He's got thousands of people following Him. The crowds love Him, He's a great speaker, organizer, and instills energy in His followers.  If anyone could do something about this situation He could do it. He has the sway, He has the power.  He's claiming to be the annointed one, the Messiah, so surely the time is now (and He even said *that* too!). 

But He doesn't deliver. The disciples probably bail on Him because of that tension - knowing His plans weren't what the majority wanted. God's pocket isn't about doing our bidding. What is in God's pocket isn't what the crowds want. It's not their ideal. It's not in alignment with where they think things are headed and it doesn't solve their immediate needs. 

I've been there.  I am there.  I sometimes wonder and have questions and want certain things to happen and want to see things change. Am I willing to trust God? Am I sitting back waiting on Him to follow through? Am I willing or waiting? Am I sitting around waiting for God to do something or willingly and actively engaged in Him and others?

I see the truth of God in that crazy fraternity that Katy, Lauren, Matt and those other jokers are in. Or 4H too. Those jokers are intense about their friends. They "trust" in those friendships.  They value that community. Because that's how God made this world, that's how it's wired. We long for community, intense, real and raw community. And these places touch a part of that truth by having that. The church should be leading the way in being real, honest, growing, maturing, and nurturing an environment of trusting God that looks like that - loving Him and loving others. If we're not doing that - we don't trust God. And that's hard to do these days - money, poltics, business, success, networking, careers, notoriety, one-up on everyone else - that's what makes progress. Loving God and people is what He wants us to trust.

Trust God, seriously trust Him. Let us not wait for "church" to happen, or the right bible study, event, preacher, or person to motivate us...God's pocket is bigger than that and I need to remember that every single day.

Sunday Illustrations from the Daily Athenaeum

Isaiah 58 talks about fasting..sort of. Isaiah has strong words for what we *do* for God. Our assemblies, sacrifices, and what we do for God can make Him sick. God and Jesus seem to share those sentiments with religious leaders fairly often, check out the "Woe to you" verses in Luke 11 directed at religious leaders (who fasted twice a week). Hmmm, that has my attention.....

Isaiah 1:

Stop bringing me meaningless offerings 
Your incense is detestable to me
Your Sabbaths and convocations - I can not bear your evil assemblies
Your festivals and feasts my soul hates
Your actions towards me have become a burden
God is weary of bearing them
God is not listening to their prayers

Isaiah 58 declares that they can't expect to be heard because of their fasting.

This might cause some of us to furrow brows and wonder. It may cause an uneasy feeling. Others might find this very refreshing and have some encouragement in the face of past hurtful experiences associated with church or Christians. Or something in between.

Have you ever felt like God didn't hear? He's not available?  He's checked out? You've wondered? You've questioned?  Been confused?

It's not about eating or not eating. It's not about tradition or sacrifice. Isaiah 58 brings home a much deeper and more important message. It's really very simple. An urgent awareness of God and people. I like those words because the word "love", while really neat, also has some very ambiguous and meaningless attritubes to it in English. "I love McDonald's french fries" doesn't convey a very meaningful and deep connection, as hard as that is for me to say because I really do like them. Okay, that tangent aside, let us explore the DA.  We talked on Sunday about fasting and the first fast being in the Garden of Eden where they were instructed to not eat from a particular tree.  Well the very next day, on Monday, Renee Hogmire brought to my attention the crossword puzzle in the Daily Athenaeum.  Cool stuff, thank you Renee for picking up on that, God is indeed around us all the time!!

 

 

 

That's awesome!!!  What are the chances of that?

You don't even need to focus on fasting....because it's not about that. Fasting is about the physical - which is so tangible and real to us - pointing to something that we don't always see so clearly. God.  People.  Love.  Urgency.  Awareness.  How do you know, feel, and get passioante about those things? Have you grown in those areas of life? Heart, soul, mind...how do you reach, challenge, and grow that? It can be hard to define, but fasting puts it into prospective by bringing home a very physical, real, and tangible thing that points to these other less tangible things. It helps us connect less tangible needs to more tangible ones. In different ways for all of us it's a pointer that uses some of the most basic, daily, necessary things in life to point to other areas we forget or loose touch of.

Insert into the Isaiah message any other word like prayer, fasting, fellowship, meditating, retreats, church, scripture...all of these things should create an urgent awareness of God.

Everything we do for God should be causing us to grow in our urgency and grow in our awareness of God. Grow in our urgency and awareness of the people and needs around us. This isn't about looking for "chains" and "yokes", of course you're not going to find that. It's about being engaged and caring enough about people to know what's going on in their lives and making a difference about it. Caring enough to invest, engage, follow through...an urgent awareness of God and people. Can you do that? Have you done that? How do you view the folks around you? Do you care?  Have you grown in your ability to care? Love God, love others, thank you Jesus for keeping us focused!