Episode 5: Willing to Wait (Part 1)

Mama and the Rev (SPUMCColumbus)
Mama and the Rev (SPUMCColumbus)
Episode 5: Willing to Wait (Part 1)
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Join Emily Trotter and John Fugh, Jr for a study on the significance of the Holy Spirit in our lives today.

In This Episode

Scripture References: Philippians 2:5-11 | Psalm 27:13 | 2 Corinthians 1:20 | Genesis 12:1-3 | Psalm 46:10 | 1 John 3:1 | Acts 1:6-8 | Isaiah 40:28-31 | Psalm 143:10 | Ephesians 3:20-21

Truth Spring Academy (https://www.truthspring.org)

Waiting for the Lord is not just killing time.

Doubt has a negative effect on our confidence.

When God asks us to wait, we take it as an invitation that wants us to do something on our own. While we’re waiting and idle, it doesn’t mean that God is idle.

If you are waiting on God, you are watching for God.

In the midst of waiting, God becomes our sustenance.

Waiting makes us so vulnerable. It requires us to be dependent upon someone else.

Our faith and confidence in God is dependent upon our willingness to trust and wait on God.

Waiting reminds us that we are not the center, and there’s not a thing we can do about it.

Waiting reveals to others something about us. Waiting reveals to us something about God.

Unfortunately, we are convinced that our identity directly comes from what we do. In our relationship with God, there’s something about embracing and remembering who we are as children of God.

Rest assured in the time of waiting that the Lord your God is the everlasting God.

Waiting is not killing time. Waiting is looking around and looking for the God who spoke and creation leapt into existence.

Waiting is not sitting around and not doing anything. Waiting is the active anticipation of what’s next.

Carlos Whitaker: “The way to catch up to the voice of God is not speeding up but slowing down.”

God graciously makes His vitality available to our fallen world with only one condition: Wait on God.

To wait on God is to admit that we have no other help in ourselves or any other person or thing. Waiting on the Lord is a constant declaration of our confidence in Him.

Waiting on God is our confidence expectation in God.

September 6, 2020 | Life Disruptions

Worship (SPUMCColumbus)
Worship (SPUMCColumbus)
September 6, 2020 | Life Disruptions
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This Week’s Service

Prelude: “Cantabile” (Jeanne Martz, Flute & Wayne Martz, Harpsichord | by A. Besozzi)
Welcome / Announcements / Prayer with Lord’s Prayer (Logan Ogletree)
Hymn: “O Thou Who This Mysterious Bread”
Giving of Bibles to Third Graders
Apostles’ Creed (Regan, Ashley, and Brad Coppedge)
Sacrament of Baptism: Lucille Collier Ezell (Daughter of Clark and Collier Ezell)
Reading of Scripture (Nancy, Christopher, Jack, and Brent Wright)
Children Sermon (Caroline Green)
Anthem: “Because You Are God’s Chosen Ones” (Wayne and Jeanne Martz)
Sermon: “Life Disruptions” (Rev. Dr. P. Shane Green with Emily Trotter)
Hymn: “For the Bread Which You Have Broken”
Holy Communion
Benediction (Rev. Dr. P. Shane Green)
Postlude: “Ayre” (Wayne Martz, Harpsichord & Jeanne Martz, Flute | by G. P. Telemann)

First Steps – September 7, 2020

“We always thank God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, when we pray for you, because we have heard of your faith in Christ Jesus and of the love you have for all God’s people— the faith and love that spring from the hope stored up for you in heaven and about which you have already heard in the true message of the gospel that has come to you. In the same way, the gospel is bearing fruit and growing throughout the whole world—just as it has been doing among you since the day you heard it and truly understood God’s grace” (Col 1:3-6a).

Paul highlights three particular traits in the Colossian believers:  Faith, Love, and Hope.  Wherever we see these traits, like Paul, we should give thanks to God.  It is noteworthy that Paul informs the reader that faith and love arise, spring out of hope (see italics).  The gospel promises a certain hope and that hope transforms.

I mention this today, because of the increased conflict, anger, and despair due to a pandemic, so that we will be reminded on the hope of heaven. Setting our hope on heaven puts everything in a proper perspective. Jonathan Edwards, the great Puritan preacher, called heaven “a world of love.”  Our heavenly hope inspires us to see as God sees, to love as Jesus loves, and to know that this too shall pass.  This week, fix your gaze on God’s gift of heaven and allow His presence to saturate you with peace.


This Week’s Readings:
  • Monday – Acts 2
  • Tuesday – Acts 3
  • Wednesday – Acts 4
  • Thursday – Acts 5
  • Friday – Acts 6
Please Pray for:
  • Our ministers and their families.
  • Friends and family members battling illness.
  • Those seeking to find their way.
  • Teachers and students as they transition.
  • The United Methodist Church family.
  • The Covid-19 Pandemic.
  • Our nation and our leaders.

“Don’t worry about anything; instead, pray about everything. Tell God what you need and thank him for all he has done.” – Philippians 4:6