In-person programs have been canceled until Wednesday at 5 PM at each of the church’s locations, with the exception of recovery meetings, backpack stuffing for school partners, and the food pantry at Overland Park, which will each continue as scheduled.
The church will reopen on Wednesday at 5 pm for all scheduled programs.
Micah 6
6 With what should I approach the LORD
and bow down before God on high?
Should I come before him with entirely burned offerings,
with year-old calves?
7 Will the LORD be pleased with thousands of rams,
with many torrents of oil?
Should I give my oldest child for my crime;
the fruit of my body for the sin of my spirit?
8 He has told you, human one, what is good and
what the LORD requires from you:
to do justice, embrace faithful love, and walk humbly with your God.
John 15
4 Remain in me, and I will remain in you. A branch can’t produce fruit by itself, but must remain in the vine. Likewise, you can’t produce fruit unless you remain in me. 5 I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, then you will produce much fruit. Without me, you can’t do anything. 6 If you don’t remain in me, you will be like a branch that is thrown out and dries up. Those branches are gathered up, thrown into a fire, and burned.
8 My Father is glorified when you produce much fruit and in this way prove that you are my disciples.
More extremes—full to empty, all things to nothing. The key words in this part of the prayer, the phrase that sums up the inner meaning of praying all these nearly unreachable ends of life’s spectrum, is “I freely and heartily yield all things.” The Covenant Prayer is a way of saying, “I do not serve God for the sake of external rewards, material or psychological. I serve God because I know serving and worshiping God is the only fitting response of a created being like me.”
Creator God, may my life be marked by abandonment of my own interests and measured by my submission to you, and simple, faithful generosity toward others. Amen.
Janelle Gregory serves on the Resurrection staff as Human Resources Lead Director. Janelle finds that her heart is constantly wrestling with the truth that she needs a Savior, and the times when she's at her very best are when she's just too tired to put up a fight.
One of my favorite shows growing up was “MacGyver”. If you’re not familiar with the show, Angus MacGyver (simply known as MacGyver) was a secret agent for the United States. With a background in physics, MacGyver was famous for his ability to take everyday objects and turn them into extraordinary devices that saved the day. For example, he once made a telescope out of a magnifying lens, a watch crystal, and a newspaper. Brilliant! Another time he used jumper cables, a generator, and quarters to create a welding tool. Amazing! Just when you’d think that there was no way that MacGyver would get out of a tricky situation, he’d find some way to use anything and everything in sight to devise a solution.
I loved MacGyver’s ability to think outside of the box. You never knew what he was going to come up with. When all hope seemed lost, there he was with his trusty pocketknife and duct tape to save the day.
I find this kind of thinking helpful when I consider what God might use to save the day, to bring hope. God can, and does, use our time and our financial resources. I think most of us get that. But I believe we’re being too limiting if that’s where our thinking stops. Is God not more creative, more crafty, more brilliant than MacGyver?! I think anything and everything can be used for God’s purposes, or as Wesley prayed “I freely and heartily yield all things to thy pleasure and disposal.” Maybe you’ve got a spare room in your house and know someone who could use a place to stay while they get their feet on the ground. That’s freely and heartily yielding all things. Perhaps your expertise could help others. I know of volunteer opportunities all across the church, even in areas you might not even think of such as Facilities, Finance, Risk Management, or even Human Resources! * That’s freely and heartily yielding all things. Or maybe you’ve walked through great darkness in your life and experienced the overwhelming light and love of a redeemer. Your story might help someone navigate their own dark path. That’s freely and heartily yielding all things.
Our God is bigger than what our tiny imaginations might perceive. We shouldn’t restrict God’s plans by our lack of creativity. My hope is that we’ll be generously open and wildly innovative as we pray to freely and heartily use all things to God’s pleasure and disposal. God can take our time, our resources, our expertise, our story, or anything and everything we have to bring hope and light to our broken world.
* If you think God might be nudging you to serve in any of these areas, simply call the church (913.897.0120) and ask to speak to the Director of the department.
* Folmsbee, Chris. The Wesley Prayer Challenge Participant Book (p. 100). Abingdon Press. Kindle Edition.