Sunday, February 8, our regular 5 pm worship service at Leawood will begin at 4 pm.
Scheduled programming has resumed for Thursday, February 13 at all Resurrection locations.
13 Therefore, once you have your minds ready for action and you are thinking clearly, place your hope completely on the grace that will be brought to you when Jesus Christ is revealed. 14 Don’t be conformed to your former desires, those that shaped you when you were ignorant. But, as obedient children, 15 you must be holy in every aspect of your lives, just as the one who called you is holy. 16 It is written, You will be holy, because I am holy [Leviticus 19:2].
An inner hunger for holiness was the guiding flame that illuminated all of John Wesley’s life and teaching. Holiness is a broad Bible word, taking in all of God’s vast love and goodness (cf. Isaiah 6:3), and all the good things God desires us to be. (It does not suggest the kind of stuffiness or judgmental pickiness that some people associate with it.) Peter invited his Christian readers to “let yourselves be pulled into a way of life shaped by God’s life, a life energetic and blazing with holiness.” * That call shaped John Wesley’s life and ministry. “At Oxford, the small band of Christians Wesley was mentoring shared his longing for holiness. For Wesley and his friends, holiness included a complete yielding of one’s life to God, a desire to become like Christ in heart and actions, acts of compassion for others, and a resolution to live one’s life for God’s glory.” **
God, you called John Wesley, and you call me, to give up comfort for greatness, to give up easy anonymity by being different, set apart to live for you. By your grace and your power, I commit myself to answer your call to be different by being holy. Amen.
Nick Ransom, Kids Ministries Director at the Leawood location, joined the Resurrection staff in 2005, working with elementary students on weekends, Wednesdays and special events. He loves getting to teach and experience Jesus in creative ways with kids! Prior to his job at Resurrection, he attended Messiah College and served as Director of Children's Ministries at a church in Michigan. In his free time, Nick likes to hang with his cool wife and four awesome kids. He also likes to watch Netflix!
Any board game fans out there?
I love a good board game, but I’ll admit—those games that take forever to finish aren’t always my first pick. You know the ones I’m talking about—the marathon games that go on for hours. They require serious commitment… and a solid snack strategy.
As I read today’s Scripture and GPS the word holy (or holiness) stood out to me, and it made me think of board games and the book title from Eugene Peterson: A long obedience in the same direction. Our Scripture today calls us to be holy, but becoming holy seems to be like a long board game. There are ups and downs, grit to finish the game, times when you fail or get frustrated, but when you finish there is excitement. It seems to me the journey to holiness looks the same way. It is a long journey, takes some determination to get there, and times you fail.
But here’s where the metaphor starts to fall apart: board games have an end. Holiness, on the other hand, is a journey we never fully complete. I’m not sure we ever reach the level of holiness God calls us to be because the more we move towards holiness the more we realize there is more to be learned and more to be done. I admire the idea of never reaching the level of holiness God is calling us to as this allows room for humility in our lives. We realize we have never arrived, and it keeps our dependence on God.
I think holiness mixed with humility is something the world needs more of and in the end sets us apart just the way 1 Peter describes.
Now back to my board game! :)
* 1 Peter 3:15 in Peterson, Eugene H., The Message Numbered Edition Hardback. Navpress. Kindle Edition.
** Hamilton, Adam, Revival: Faith as Wesley Lived It (p. 49). Abingdon Press. Kindle Edition.
*** William Barclay, The Letters of James and Peter (Revised Edition). Westminster John Knox Press, p. 188.