Monday, November 30, 2009

2009.11.30 Monday Morning!

Greetings and best wishes from Pilgrim Presbyterian Church, located in the heart of Vinita, Oklahoma.

Have you ever taken time to draw up a list of all those things which you have and could lose?  This is an exercise that will provide you with endless reasons to be thankful!

Rather than think about things you yearn to acquire, give some thoughts for your assets.  How seldom most of us express thanks for our vision, our limbs, our sanity, our ability to speak, our ability to eat.

It often takes a serious threat to the blessing we have to make us aware of them, let alone to be thankful for them.

Value those blessings

Monday, November 23, 2009

2009.11.23 Monday Morning!

Top of the morning from Pilgrim Presbyterian Church, located in the heart of beautiful Vinita, Oklahoma.

As our national Thanksgiving Day approaches, I think of a courageous group of people who withstood discouragement to bravely venture to the shores of a new land. They were strong enough to resist defeatism.

I hope you are not among the many who fear defeatism and resist new duties and new adventures. All of us, I suspect, run away from certain challenges because we have little confidence in our ability. Then, in the aftermath of an event, or a great emergency, we are surprised to find ourselves equal to heavy demands placed upon us.

Have you ever heard yourself say, "I didn't know I had it in me!"

Don't underestimate yourself!


Fond regards,
Richard

Monday, November 9, 2009

2009.11.09 Monday Morning!

Top of the morning from Pilgrim Presbyterian Church in Vinita, Oklahoma.

November 1, 2009 was All Saints Day. Half way through our worship in the sanctuary, we carpooled and went to Pheasant Hill Cemetery, about seven miles out of town.. There, in a beautiful site where founders of our Church are buried, we celebrated the Lord's Supper.

Those early pioneer Presbyterian missionaries, who had to know loneliness, privations, illness and discouragement, persevered in their work and gathered a congregation for worship in 1882.

My question to the present Pilgrim congregation is why did those missionaries - there were four of them - continue their work? Certainly they recognized the strategic importance of this territory, proving their foresight and wisdom. But that was not all. I suggested in a brief Communion meditation that the words of the Apostle Paul (2 Corinthians 5:14) may be the key to the essence of their labor:

"For the love of Christ compels us..."

Christ's love is forceful, compelling. It is discovered when one lives and moves under the Banner of the Cross. May that love free you from dragging lethargy, from indifference, from drowsiness of spirit as you journey in this speedy world.

For the love of Christ, what are you compelled to do?


Fond regards,
Richard

Monday, November 2, 2009

2009.11.02 Monday Morning!

Greetings and best wishes from Pilgrim Presbyterian Church, Vinita, Oklahoma.

This morning my thoughts go back in time when I was in a Contemporary Literature Class at the University of Wisconsin. We were discussing the life and work of the great Russian author, Tolstoy.

Tolstoy was exalted by his peers and biographers, but for some reason or other I remember more distinctly than anything words of his wife. Though I can't quote her, this is the gist of what she said:

His many good works are prompted by his principles, not by the warmth of his heart. Never has he given me five minutes help carrying water, nor sitting for five minutes alongside the bedside of our sick son.

A lot of us are at our best in society and at our worst at home.

A pearl of value: An act of loving kindness is a humane response to human need, and it should begin at home, with a warm heart.


Richard