Monday, February 26, 2007

Meditative Scripture for Week of Feb. 26



Hey all. We hope in the midst of the snow fun this weekend you were able to give some thought to your Lent fast and feast. Here are some refining verses that may help you on your journey this week. Remember to look at the prayer guide for how you can focus you prayer time this week.

Malachi 3:3 "He will sit as a refiner and purifier of silver"

Zechariah 13:9 "This third I will bring into the fire; I will refine them like silver and test them like gold. They will call on my name and I will answer them; I will say 'they are my people', and they will say 'the Lord is our God'".

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Direction for weekly prayer




Your feasting time every week may include a renewed commitment to prayer. Here are some ways you can focus your prayer time in different ways throughout the week. Journaling your experience can be an important way of hearing with your heart the work God is refining in you. Get those pens out as you pray.







  • Monday let's focus on surrendering all we are and do to God. What better way for you to start the school/work week than letting go of "the steering wheel" of your life.



  • Tuesday try concentrating on God's presence. This might include extended silence, Lectio Divina, or just meditating on the "bigness" and "closeness" of God.



  • Wednesday is a good day to say thank you. Thank God for all he has done in and around you. Thank God for who he is.



  • Thursday think about what God is doing in the world around you and the part he is calling you to play. Traditionally, the fasting of Lent includes acts of service. How are you joining the work of God in the world. This is a "do" day as much as a "consider" day.



  • Friday take some time to confess. We all fall short of the life God's wants for us, and the world he wants to repair through us. Take some time to admit this and depend anew on his forgiveness as you turn in the other direction.



  • Saturday consider your need for your heavenly Father. Consider how you can depend on Him more and more.



  • Sunday is the day to receive from God the rest of Sabbath. As you join your church in worship you may rest in God as you prepare to surrender again and begin another week.
(Based on /Daily Prayer, A prayer journal produced by Mars Hill Church; Grand Rapids, MI. 2006)


"May you know God's love as you enter the refiner's fire."


Scott

Service thoughts and Refiner reading script



Hey All,





Last night was an awesome service! The students involved in the service did an incredible job of painting the picture of the refiners fire and leading us into the Lent season.

So, have you started fasting yet? Use this site as a chance to relate what God is teaching you or what you are discovering. The next post will give your first set of ideas of how you might spend your feasting prayer time over the next 40 days. Remember, this refining happens in community! Let a trusted friend or mentor in on your fast so that they might be a part of the journey.

Here is the text from the reader's theater last night. Thought you might like to to read it through again.


Come, let me take you back to a Judean village in ancient days.

Inside a small, walled courtyard under a blue and blazing sky, there stands a refiner of metals. In his hands, gnarled with age, he is rolling and fingering a lump of ore. He watches the sun play on the streaks and veins of lead and other minerals running through this bit of rock chiseled from the bowels of the earth.

His experienced eye knows that, intermingled within this ore, there is silver.

He lays the ore on his worktable then builds his fire with care and the wisdom of years. Soon the flames are rising in the pit situated against the courtyard’s stone wall.

At the worktable he picks up his hammer and begins crushing the lump into smaller pieces.

He pauses occasionally to stare at the fire, as if in study. From time to time he places more fuel upon the already-blazing coals and works his bellows until the flames are in a frenzy.

When the fire is right, he gathers the hammered bits of ore from the place of their crushing and lays them in a small, sturdy container of tempered pottery – his crucible.

He places the crucible in the fire and sits down beside it. A long day is before him, and this is where he will stay for as long as the metal is subject to the flames. Silver is too precious to be forsaken in the furnace, too valuable to be ruined through inattention.

Carefully he watches the fire. It must be maintained at exactly the right temperature for the right duration of time to accomplish its purpose. Slowly the ore softens. The silver, with its greater density and lower melting point, liquefies first, hissing and bubbling as oxygen is released. The still-solid impurities rise to the top of the molten metal. This is the dross, and the refiner skims it off.

Now he adds bits of charcoal inside the crucible. He knows this will enhance the sheen of the silver. The carbon of the charcoal will keep the refined metal from reabsorbing oxygen from the air, which would only dull its finish.

He tends the fire, adds more fuel, and applies more air from the bellows.

Amid the relentless heat surrounding the crucible, more dull impurities, newly revealed, rise to the surface of the mixture.

Again the refiner carefully skims away the murky, smudgy metal floating at the top of the crucible. Gazing down upon the molten surface, the refiner sees at best but a dim reflection of himself.

The refiner works and watches and waits. The heat and its effect continue. More impurities rise to the surface, and again he skims them off.

He never leaves the crucible unattended, never steps away from the fire he has formed to do its work. The finished product he cherishes demands this process. Only his guided and guarded refinement will yield the promised and precious metal.

And he is not yet satisfied.

He lets the fire cool. Eventually he sets the crucible aside.

Then once again he builds up the fire, and the process begins all over. This time the skilled refiner makes the fire hotter. Within the crucible, new impurities are released, brought to the surface, exposed for what they are, then skimmed off.

Finally his leathery face breaks into a smile, for now as he gazes into the liquid silver his reflection is apparent – not yet sharp, but more distinct than before.

More hours pass as he perseveres in his anxious and delicate work.

And then…once more he bends over the crucible, and this time he catches his breath. There it is! In the silver he sees what he has waited for so patiently: a clear image of himself, distinct and sharp.

Delight banishes his frown. His task is done. The impurities are gone. The silver is refined.

He has his treasure.

He has “choice” silver, the most lustrous of all metals, beautiful and highly valued. It’s as pale and shining as the wings of a dove, as brilliant and splendid as the moon, worthy to become coin or trumpet or ornament, worthy to grace the king’s table or to reflect sunlight in a crown upon his head.

The refiner has taken what was impure and made it pure.

He has taken what was dull and made it beautiful.

Potential value has become actual value.

And the fire – the guarded, guided, relentless fire – made the difference. The fire allowed ordinary ore from the earth to be transformed into treasure.

All under the refiner’s watchful care, for all the while he never left it unattended.


Arthur, Kay. As Silver Refined. Colorado Springs: Waterbrook Press, 1997.


With Love,

Scott

Monday, February 19, 2007

Welcome to the Consuming Fire!


We're so glad you are joining us on the journey of fasting and feasting in the season of Lent this year. As we said in our Ash Wednesday service, we are entering the refiners fire together in order to be made more like Christ. It is a difficult and sometimes painful journey, but if we stick together and depend on the work the Holy Spirit has already started in our lives, we can see Christ being formed in us.