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Pastor's Ponderings desert mountains saguaro cactus

Good morning my dear friends.


I think that it’s time to pray for our thirsty desert. While the rest of the country seems to be getting flooded out, even our neighbors to the east in New Mexico are battling floods in their mountain communities, while my trees and flowers in the yard seem to be wilting away. We keep holding off with the watering, hoping that nice heavy monsoon rain will come in our part of town. Today we continue in an interesting first step for the Apostle's, which is the choice of someone to replace Judas as a member of their group. I must admit, I am unsure of why they thought this was necessary, but I suspect that they were working hard to maintain the size of the group which Christ found most helpful. So now we are moving into today's reading.


In this passage we have a window into the process which the disciples used, seeking guidance from God, as the choice was made. In many ways it holds many similarities in how a congregation selects a new pastor when their previous pastor, note that I did not say OLD pastor, leaves of their own volition for a new call, retires,  is asked to leave, or is removed from the roster of ordained clergy for some inappropriate act during the time of their ordained ministry.  While we have oversight by our Bishop of the synod when these changes take place, the disciples were the lead/head group in the new Christian church in Israel. It is they who set the tone for the many calls that will occur during the 2000 + years of the Church, praying for the Spirit's help as the process unfolds before them. In this case there were two possible candidates for this "open” position, which may have included managing the money of the Apostles, just as Judas had been doing. One would think that job would have naturally gone to Matthew, the tax collector. He had all kinds of experience dealing the money and transactions which would have been needed to manage the finances of the Apostle's. Moving on, the disciples’ action, guided through prayer by the Spirit, was to select Matthias, who would be included in the original group. This must certainly mean that Matthias had been with them, and around the ministry of Jesus for quite some time, personally knew Jesus, and had been a witness to the Resurrection of Christ. Our obvious first thought here is why didn't we hear of him before now? The door that opens for LORD and that now we get to know that there were certainly others, in addition to the 12 disciples, who were also close to the inner circle of the LORD, and shared in much of what we read about in the Gospels.  We must always remember that the living Christ is in, with, and around us all the time. He resides in our hearts and minds constantly, calling us to pray, encouraging our holy actions and words, and that He is not just with us during that hour we spend at church on Sunday morning, but present in our lives in every one of even what we consider to be the most insignificant details of our living.  Is it any wonder that you and I are called to daily confession? I am certain that your life is just like mine, I slip every day, and, even if it is for only a brief time, I move away from His Presence frequently and must be called to confess the times I can identify, and even the ones that I can't, as those "fall aways" took place.  But here is the wonderful and amazing thing, Christ is always prepared to hear our confessions, and by the Spirit, to call us back into the fold with loving forgiveness. Remember, the promise of Jesus is that He is with us until the end of time! Always with us, never departing from us, so we should not be treating Him as some character we read about, some historic figure who set the Church in motion, and then left it to make its own way in the world. Jesus is Real, He is Now, He is always with us every moment of this life, and on into the next life in eternity with Him!


The presence of the Holy Spirit, this wondrous gift from Christ, sent to guide all who love the Savior, is here to guide us and gives us the gift of faith itself. So, Pentecost, which kind of loses its place in the celebrations of the Church, unlike His Birth, and His Resurrection, is a truly important celebration in the life of the faithful. The book of the Acts of the Apostles is literally filled with the action of the Holy Spirit. She is the One who makes it all possible, and She is both fully God and fully Spirit, all at the same time. We confess Her in the Apostle's Creed every Sunday and understand that She even brings us to worship and the celebration of the Sacrament every week. She is the voice in our head and heart on Sunday morning when we thought we might forego worship and church on a Sunday morning, who calls us to know that the worship and praise of God, the Father, God, the Son, and God, the Holy Spirit is really where we need to be,  and that other stuff we had in mind can wait.  When we don't go to church and worship, that is the time when we have rejected Her appeal to Her Higher Knowledge and gone our own way. Here we are at confession once again. We must always remember that She has been present in creation itself, where She is the Breath of God creating all things. In the Hebrew, She is God's Ruach. (feminine for God's breath) When Christ gifts the Holy Spirit to the disciples, it is She who comes to always be present in faith, works, and words that carry God's Truth in them. In the first 14 chapters of the Acts of the Apostles, She is mentioned 40 times! It is by Her Presence that everything needed for the Church to move forward is with the faithful in Jerusalem and in those communities in Asia Minor where the Christ of God took hold of so many with its Love, Grace, Forgiveness, Hope, and, even more, its promise.


Thanks for being with me today as we are now prepared to move on to see the result of the Work of the Holy Spirit in the lives and ministries of the disciples in Jerusalem, and through Paul in Asia Minor.


With the Love of Christ, Pastor Kim

 
 
 

July 25, 2025:  Thursday Bible Study on Old Testament of Psalm 24


Good morning and God's blessings be with you on this beautiful blue-sky day!


In Monday’s bible study that I sent out, I misspelled two words. Navajo and Kayenta. I guess my brain was on hold when I did the proof reading for the study. Please remember that this Sunday we have a donut and coffee hour before worship. It will take place at 9AM in the parish Hall. After church, since this Sunday has been designated as Christmas in July for our worship, I am asking that you bring a batch of your favorite Christmas cookies to share after the service.  Melody and I will be bringing Loretta Olson's Oatmeal Butter cookies which have become a favorite in our home for Christmas. We will also have bags for you to use as you collect your samples of everyone's favorite Christmas recipe. You might also bring your recipe card so that folks can take a screen shot of it for their own use. Thanks so much.


Today we are in the 24th Psalm of David. Just a note. If you are using the Psalms as they are printed in the front of the hymns in the ELW, you may notice some differences. That is because the Psalms in our hymnal were composed to be sung.


The phrase, "Who can Ascend the Mountain of the LORD?", gives us a broad hint about the content of this Psalm. In other words, who is right with God to do this, and who is not right with God and should not be doing it! In all our lives there are holy places which demand a certain amount of trust and faith in the LORD of Hosts to be there. I have only been in the cathedral on the campus of the University of Chicago a couple of times, but it is a worship space with great beauty meant to honor and give praise to God. Or, even when you walk into the Dove of the Desert on Tucson's south side on the Tohono reservation.  Upon entering San Javier Mission, there is no doubt about the lives of the faithful who have come there over centuries to worship the Holy One of Heaven. When I have been there, it is like the powerful quiet of all of the faithful who have preceded me over the Mission's history are still there surrounding everyone who comes, causing a quiet of the heart and mind, brining to focus the One True God and His love for all of His Children.  I can only imagine Moses on Sinai, or doing a pilgrimage to that holiest of places, and how it would bestow upon each person of faith an awe for God's unsearchable splendor.


In the first part of this Psalm, David begins with words of Praise for the Power and willingness of God to shelter the faithful who are at war with His constant presence and care. In verse 4 we discover what it takes to be received into God's protective presence. Just a note. (I know that this all sounds very heavily militaristic. But we must understand that is where David found himself so many times in his life as he tried to defend the Promised Land against tribes and nations who came to threaten David's people and land.)  So, what does it take to come into God's presence? Verse 4 tells us.


"The person who has been clean of hands and pure of mind" will be able to come before the LORD. They are the ones who welcome the LORD-of-all-creation into their midst. However, there is another part to this. It is possible to lock God out! You and I know how that happens in life. Imagine in times of war that the army of Israel might choose to forget its place before the Lord of Hosts. And when that happens, the Lord's Armies will not be with David's earthly army. In some ways this Psalm, which may be a liturgy in worship, is a deeply rooted reminder, that if you want what the 23rd Psalm offers, then you must live in this relationship with the Living God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, giving Him Praise, and living your life filled with goodness and mercy, and God's justice, being careful to not claim His Justice when it  becomes obvious that God was no part of what was taking place by the unfaithful.  We hear it constantly in our lives today. The leaders of our nation speak the words, without God's truth guiding their lives! I am definitely uncertain about the LORD's support for our leaders who want to claim him as a badge of presence in, with, and around them, yet do not have clean hands or hearts, and are definitely not pure of mind, speaking and acting with the Living LORD directing their lives and guiding them to compassion, grace, kindness, gentleness, and humility before God.


So, what about you and me today? Our worthiness comes through the suffering, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. It is His merit that shelters us from keeping God out of our lives. But just being able to say the words of the faithful may not be enough. The faithful must also live lives of faith. So how are you and I doing with all of this? Not too good. We are always failing to invite Christ in, but He came that our failing behavior could be overcome by His own faithfulness and perfect living. This is why you and I are able to look forward to that day when we stand before the judgement seat in heaven, because it is the merit of our Savior that takes the place of our failures to not always welcome God into our own lives, to not always live faithfully in our relationship with God.  For David, and the people of his time, it was still faithfulness that was reconned before God and brought God's care in this life with heavenly armies of support, and the promise of God's favor.


Thanks for being with me this morning. Live faithfully, Love generously, Praise God regularly. With the Love of our Savior, Pastor Kim

 
 
 
  • Writer: Rev. Kim Taylor
    Rev. Kim Taylor
  • Jul 23, 2025
  • 2 min read

July 23, 2025: Prayer list for this week


Dear friends in Christ, here is the prayer list for today.


  • Pray for Peace in the middle east between Israel and her Moslem neighbors in the Gaza, the West Bank, Syria, Iraq.  That Israel might display and provide with humane compassion for the innocents who are praying a hard price for the radicals in their midst.  In the 21st century war mongering must come to an end.

  • Pray for a cease fire, and peace, between the Ukraine and Russia. 

  • As we teeter on the possibility of a world atomic weapon war, and the end of life as we know it on this planet, let us pray for calmer thoughtful dialogue between nations.

  • Pray for the victims of the fighter jet crash in Bangladesh this past week.  Lives changed in an instant, with so much loss for families of students who died in this crash.

  • Pray for our congregation and her outreach with the Gospel of Jesus Christ. 

  • Pray for your congregation’s staff members… for me (Pastor), for Debbie, for Melissa, for Tiffany, and for our church council.  Sharyn: President, Camille: Vice President, Robert: Property, Holly: Education, Joanna: Social Concerns, Gail: Evangelism, Sarah: Member-At-Large, Sue:  Worship and Music, Debbie: Treasurer, Tricia: Recording Secretary, and for our members who are counters of the offerings from week to week.

  • Pray for our most senior member - Della who now lives at the Cascades.

  • Pray for victims of cancer who may be in remission or under current care and treatment, Tricia, Camille, Pastor Kim, Steve, Pastor Ron, Itai, and for those who we may not know to be battling this insidious illness.

  • Pray for people who are impacted by the loss of support and/or medical care from the most recent bill which makes these cuts in these social outreach programs of our government.

  • For our nation’s citizens, as grocery bills continue to climb, with thanksgiving for less expensive gasoline, and for hope that the economy in our country will finally balance out.

  • Finally, with thanksgiving for the loving, grace-filled gift of Jesus Christ our Savior.

 
 
 
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