In a 32-page booklet released in 2004, Meet the Friends, Paul Anderson includes a short essay on worship in which he identifies a "double priority" in the early Friends' "attempt to recover 'basic Christianity.'" That double priority? "Love God and love people (Matthew 22:37-40)." Paul writes that "Friends minimize all else for the sake of throwing all energies in these two directions: worship and ministry."
What happens in worship, according to Paul, is that God's love for us disarms us, changes us, magnifies our own ability to love. "This love is powerful enough to embrace the unlovely, and this oneness of mind often transcends differences of opinion." I think it's this result of worship that makes worship, for Friends, "the means and end of all we do."
As far as I can tell, that also is why we need worship. Paul writes that "worship is the loving interaction between God and the people of God who are the Church." And Paul offers this quotation from The Richmond Declaration of Faith: "Worship is the adoring response of the heart and mind to the influence of the Spirit of God. It stands neither in forms nor in the formal disuse of forms . . . it must be in spirit and in truth (John 4:24)."
It's that phrase from Paul's essay, though, "Love God and love people," that has been turning in me for more than a week now. It might keep turning for awhile. It sounds simple. But my experience suggests it is not, and I'm not sure what to do with that. For now, I am praying that God might help me to love him better and that more of my love for God might leak into my interactions with people. And I am praying that God might help us here at Barclay Press to invest our resources and our "energies in these two directions."
Eric Muhr
Your will be done
In this morning's Fruit of the Vine, Nancy Almquist offers a reflection on Matthew 26:39-42, a reflection in which she considers what it has meant to celebrate the marriages of her two oldest sons and "send them across the country to settle into their new homes." It is, in Nancy's words, "completely new territory. . . . The truth is, I was afraid I was going to lose them; afraid that because we weren't in each other's space at least once a week we would grow distant."
Nancy writes of her pride in what her children have accomplished, of where they are going, of the choices they've made. She also writes of her fear.
In the passage from Matthew, Jesus prays in the face of his grief that "if this cannot pass unless I drink it, your will be done."
Nancy offers a different prayer: "Lord, in what ways have I allowed fear and anxiety to cripple my journey or the journey of another?"
For much of our history as Friends of Jesus, we have used questions or series of questions to guide our worship together, to prompt personal reflection, as spiritual challenge. We call these questions queries. In Nancy's prayer, this morning, I recognize a query. And over the course of these next few days, I'll be asking God to reveal to me the ways in which my fears are obstacles to this journey to which he has called me, this journey that we're on together.
For "the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak."
Eric Muhr
Both their human condition and the risen Christ
In this morning's Fruit of the Vine, Scott Wagoner reminds us that even though the joy of Easter focuses on an empty tomb and a living Christ, there's more to the story than we sometimes take time to notice. In this week's devotional journey, Scott intends to take us along the road to Emmaus, a road where "the lives of two men were transformed," a road on which those men "encountered both their human condition and the risen Christ," a road that was a physical journey for them but that, for us, "can also be a spiritual journey."
Last week, I was in a Mexican border town, San Luis Rio Colorado. There's a Baptist church there that for more than two decades now has been walking alongside families in crisis. This little church works with the local government to identify these families and each year assigns a care team to a handful of these families, visiting them once a month or more. Every year, a group of us from Oregon travel down to Mexico to join the members of this Baptist church in the work that they're doing. One year, we helped a young man negotiate a maze of government offices so that he might get the papers he needed for legal employment. Another time, we helped a single mother sort out proof of ownership for the home where she was living with her children. We stocked a clothes closet. We provided volunteer helpers for a vacation Bible school. For many of these families, we've helped build new homes.
Each year, we go on a physical journey, driving thousands of miles to be with our friends in San Luis. Each year, we also go on a spiritual journey, a pilgrimage of sorts. And just like he did for the men on the road to Emmaus, Jesus joins us. He breaks bread with us. He prays with us and over us. When we get to Mexico, surprisingly, we often find that Jesus is already there, walking alongside families in crisis, ready to welcome us into the work that he's already doing.
Here's the thing, according to Scott: "Jesus doesn't just rise from the dead, he also walks with us along life's journey and in real time." And just as Jesus rose again, we find "new life when we recognize his presence with us." Our lives are transformed, and the lives of the people we walk alongside - they're transformed too.
Eric Muhr