my cup runneth over
Blog Tools
Edit your Blog
Build a Blog
RSS Feed
View Profile
« May 2009 »
S M T W T F S
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31
You are not logged in. Log in
Entries by Topic
All topics  «
Church & Culture
Church Planting
Lectionary
Life In The Kingdom
Neo Liturgical Praxis
News Items
Sound Bites
Taberncale Services
Worship
Sunday, 10 May 2009
What is happening when God forgives our sins?

What do you think happens when God forgives our sin? Is it God changing and suddenly, reassessing us? Is it God deciding to waive some eternal and required punishment? No! Nothing happens in God. God is a perfect given-ness, totally and always given, literally fore-given, ahead of time, before our act of receptivity.

God does not change; we change. Here is what’s happening in the experience of forgiveness: When God’s arms are tight enough around us, when for a moment we can believe in love, when we let God gaze into your eyes deeply enough and are ready to believe it, than we’re able to let God rob us of our sins! God pulls them out of our pocket while holding us in an intimate and intense gaze. It is the only time we are quite happy to be robbed!

From Radical Grace: Daily Meditations, p. 294, day 307
(Source: Days of Renewal)


Posted by Pastor Kork at 12:34 PM EDT
Share This Post Share This Post
Post Comment | Permalink
Thursday, 23 April 2009
Who are the children of God?
Topic: Life In The Kingdom
We cannot achieve our inherent dignity—our divine sonship and our divine daughterhood. All we can do is awaken to it and start drawing upon it, appreciating it, reveling in it. We know we live in an inherent dignity, a dignity that no one has given to us and no one can take from us. -Fr Richard Rohr


Posted by Pastor Kork at 9:16 AM EDT
Share This Post Share This Post
Post Comment | Permalink
Sunday, 22 March 2009
Lent 4 - Tabernacle Service
Topic: Taberncale Services

Lent 4 Message is up at: http://www.besidestillwaters.net/ppt.html

Interested in comments not controvery... Very interesting time, leading up to Holy Week.


Posted by Pastor Kork at 12:01 AM EDT
Share This Post Share This Post
Post Comment | Permalink
Tuesday, 10 March 2009
SUFFERING
Topic: Sound Bites
Suffering is the necessary feeling of evil. If we don’t feel evil we stand antiseptically apart from it, numb. We can’t understand evil by thinking about it. The sin of much of our world is that we stand apart from pain; we buy our way out of the pain of being human. 

Jesus did not numb himself or withhold from pain. Suffering is the necessary pain so that we know evil, so that we can name evil and confront it. Otherwise we somehow dance through this world and never really feel what is happening.  

Brothers and sisters, the irony is not that God should feel so fiercely; it’s that his creatures feel so feebly. If there is nothing in your life to cry about, if there is nothing in your life to complain about, if there is nothing in your life to yell about, you must be out of touch. We must all feel and know the pain of humanity. The free space that God leads us into is to feel the full spectrum, from great exaltation and joy, to the pain of mourning and dying and suffering. It’s called the Paschal Mystery.  

The totally free person is one who can feel all of it and not be afraid of any of it.Fr Richard Rohr, from Radical Grace: Daily Meditations, p. 209, day 218


Posted by Pastor Kork at 10:40 AM EDT
Updated: Tuesday, 10 March 2009 10:43 AM EDT
Share This Post Share This Post
Post Comment | Permalink
Friday, 6 March 2009
Tent fire destroys homeless couple?s shelter
Topic: Life In The Kingdom
Our friends, Bernie & Rhonda, had a fire. They are safe and in a room now. This article discusses our shelter, the struggle to “call in” our tent city friends, and our struggle with North Coventry Township’s bigotry toward those with less. Have a read, and don’t forget to comment…
KM

POTTSTOWN: Officials said two people who were living in a makeshift tent in the woods behind a Verizon building on Robinson Street lost all of their belongings Wednesday in a fire. For more of this story, click on or type the URL below:

http://pottsmerc.com/articles/2009/03/06/news/doc49b11ddba8d75818895654.txt


Posted by Pastor Kork at 12:01 AM EST
Updated: Monday, 9 March 2009 8:30 AM EDT
Share This Post Share This Post
Post Comment | Permalink
Monday, 5 January 2009
Not Knowing = Faith
Topic: Church & Culture
Your great spiritual teachers always had to balance knowing with not knowing and knowing that you don’t know. This has been almost totally lost. Even the Christian churches largely define faith as knowing, when in fact; biblically it means exactly the opposite.  Faith is being willing not to know, and still being content, because God knows. Now that’s a gift from God—to be able to live with the freedom not to know.--Fr Richard Rohr


Posted by Pastor Kork at 11:20 AM EST
Share This Post Share This Post
Post Comment | Permalink
Tuesday, 16 December 2008
A Very Difficult Circumstance... At Christmas
Topic: News Items
A dear friend runs a very compassionate shelter. I’ve watched her pour her very life into the hardships of others for years as God’s instrument of peace. Her shelter and ours, work very closely together, and in fact our MAIN Street shelter exists, in all too many way, because of her and her compassionate vision.

At the beginning of December, and very good man named Pastor Paul arrived from Kenya. He was here to do some speaking engagements at some local churches that are friends of his, trying to raise money for his very poor church, and at their invitation. He is poor and his ministry is to the poor and handicapped back home. When he came here, he had a host, or so he thought.

He needs our help.

Click to read his story: http://www.besidestillwaters.net/stories.html


Posted by Pastor Kork at 8:12 AM EST
Share This Post Share This Post
Post Comment | Permalink
Friday, 12 December 2008
Pro-Life & And In Favor Of Keeping Abortion Legal
Topic: Church & Culture

Fresh Air from WHYY, December 9, 2008

Frank Schaeffer's parents, Francis and Edith, were best-selling authors who were instrumental in linking the evangelical community with the anti-abortion movement.

But after coming of age as an evangelist and helping to organize religious fundamentalists politically, Schaeffer had a crisis of faith: Though he is pro-life, he decided that abortion should remain legal.

Very interesting interview: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=97998654


Posted by Pastor Kork at 8:57 AM EST
Updated: Friday, 12 December 2008 8:59 AM EST
Share This Post Share This Post
Post Comment | Permalink
Thursday, 20 November 2008
A Prayer
Topic: Life In The Kingdom

We have a friend who loves us the way that she can.  I feel honored when she is free enough to confide the most horrific episodes of her life to me.

  

She lived in a box in New York City for more years than she can remember, with her husband. Her life, as early as she could remember, was filled with the most disturbing kind of abuses you ever heard.  I am nauseated and repulsed by the extreme pain she was forced to endure. This stuff makes people react very differently, to every circumstance, than what you or I would consider normal; a type of primitive self preservation. Her moods swing from elation to abject fear in one instance.  Her impulses are more in control than her conscience. A word can conjure up the worst memories that become real to her within.  She is more like a wild animal than civilized; more like a child than an adult.

  

Her church experience has been people becoming exhausted in helping her, with comments like, “she just keeps making bad decisions,” and “why can’t she just act right?” She has 48 years of trying to survive in the most primitive ways.  She can’t.

  

Another good friend rescued her. She took her into her home, managed an arsenal of drugs that would boggle the mind and keeps her alive, navigated doctor appointments, HIV treatments, and put up with the most difficult rejections of God’s mercy and impulses that I’ve ever seen; and working tirelessly as Christ’s representative in an 83 year old container.

  

We’ve needed to help to modify things for them, but we must not allow either of them to feel as though their great gains amount to loss.  We must work to keep our dear friends connected to each other and us.  We trust God that the strides that they made together, will move her ever closer to Christ’s healing.

  How much love will help her?  How much inconvenience will we need to endure to comfort her?  How much love will be needed to assure her of Christ’s love? Isn’t this who HE is?  Isn’t this who we must become?


Posted by Pastor Kork at 12:53 PM EST
Share This Post Share This Post
Post Comment | Permalink
Kork Moyer's --- Believe It or NOT
Topic: Life In The Kingdom

I just visited juvenile court again this month.  I needed to put a friend (one of our single mothers), at ease while we drove to an uncomfortable appointment.

  

This is a true story that I told her, and unfortunately, it is normal for us. (Please don’t read this if you are faint of heart or prudish.)

  I told her;

The last time I was at Juvenile Court I thought that I was going to jail myself.

  

I was bringing another person to her son’s hearing.  I was just concerned for her and trying to comfort her, thinking and acting all spiritual, and zealously wanting to know the right “God words” for every question.  Such a giant for God...

  

We walked through the Court door (I’m not sure how my mind works, or what woke me up to a horrible fact), and must have visibly turned white as the blood drained from my head in horror.

  

You see, we held a church service at the Mental Health Association’s Peer Resource Center here in town.  On any given evening, we would have 2 to 20 people.  Often, Big John and I would sit there and twiddle our thumbs out of boredom.  We’d create games like counting down to when certain people would explode certain expletives while playing pool in the other room, and what each individual’s expletive of choice was; we’d guess at where convoluted discussions would go, that we would eves drop on... Stuff like that. It is those boring times, that rest you, for when the circus comes to town—if you know what I mean.

  

Folks began to come in that Thursday, and we knew it was time to get serious. It was a decent size group. We solved the mysteries of life and enjoyed spirited conversation, but Randy was wide-eyed and quiet—scary quiet!  I was reading, with my nose buried in my bible (unaware of the rest of the world), when a really big hand slams down on my bible in front of me, shocking me out of holy space.  It was Randy, and he screamed, “take this *%#@^&-ing thing away from me, It’s killing me!!”

  

Under his hand was his crack pipe.

  

We hugged and prayed.  The whole room joined us and we made some big promises to each other.  Incidentally, Randy’s openness and vulnerability led others to share terrible stuff too.  It was Christ. I told Randy that I’d dispose of the contraband later that night. The meeting ended, and I went home.

  

I used to be the house parent for a very difficult person. He is mentally retarded, with a narcissistic personality disorder (totally serious), and unbelievably addicted to rough gay porn.  I made a deal with him that I didn’t want to see it, as his landlord didn’t either, nor the other folks from his agency, nor the plumber, nor... you get the picture.  He had a huge amount, and also had this habit of leaving it out in the open, and the deal was what ever was left out when I showed up, I would confiscate and toss in the trash.  Earlier that day, that was the case.  Playing cards.  Right there for everyone and God to see.  I flipped them into my bag.

  

Here we are... Friday morning...  walking up to the Juvenile Court door...  Where I know there are metal detectors, and BAG SERCHES!!  You guessed it...  I slid the pipe into my man-bag with the porn cards!  I can only tell you that I broke into a sweat that made my shoes slosh, and I could see no way out as my blood pressure dropped!

  

Realizing my slight miscalculation, I pulled the officer aside.

  

 “Sir,” I said, “Do you believe in God?”

  

“Would you believe that I am a pastor?” 

  

His sincere look was worrying.  “Yes,” he said. 

  

“I’ve got a story for you.”

  

I can only believe that he hadn’t laughed in years and was making up for lost time. 

   (A note to all in ministry, always, always, always carry your Pastoral Credentials with you!!)  

I think my friend forgot her troubles temporarily, and I am the poster child for “Don’t let this happen to you!”


Posted by Pastor Kork at 12:52 PM EST
Share This Post Share This Post
Post Comment | Permalink

Newer | Latest | Older