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Friday, July 6, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 7-6-12

Thanks be to Jesus our Lord for this day. America the Beautiful has celebrated Independence Day. Many have put their lives into vacation gear. Praise the Lord for the good land the Lord has given us. On July fourth we drove around the Lake District through some of the rolling hillls full of corn fields, (which were knee high by the fourth of July), and by some of the vineyards of New York. I often wonder why we who live in the United States of America and have life so good, seem to be so discontent at the same time. How can we have so much of this life’s goods and pleasures, freedoms and privileges, resources and comforts, and yet be so miserable? Perhaps we have too much.
One of the stories the Bible tells us is the necessity of gratitude, if life is going to be meaningful. We read of Job being tempted to curse God and give up because of the suffering in his life. He was, however, a man who continued to trust God with his life and his future. That is radical gratitude. We read about King David, who faced with a mountain of problems in trying to lead his nation, yet continued to look to God and wrote a whole book of songs praising God. We read about Paul, who was persecuted, beaten, jailed, and left for dead, who could say: “Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ” (Ephesians 1:3). Despite all his difficulties, he said, “We are hard pressed on every side, but not crushed; perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not abandoned; struck down, but not destroyed” (2 Corinthians 4:8-9).
I have been reading Psalm 100, which we will be using as the "Call to Worship" this coming Sunday. I have also been listening to the tune, "The Old 100th" in various renditions. It is both powerful and joyful.
Douglas Coupland wrote a book entitled "Girlfriend in a Coma". In the book, a young woman comes out of a coma that she has been in since ‘79. After she is out of the coma for awhile, someone asks about her impressions of people who live in the ‘90s. She says, “A lack. A lack of convictions, of beliefs, of wisdom, or even of good old badness. No sorrow, no nothing. The people I knew when I came back, they only, well, existed. It was so sad.” But what would you expect from people who have crammed their lives with everything but God?
In the Bible we read about a God who created a world and called it good. It tells of a God who loves the world and has loved its people into existence. It demonstrates that he came to redeem people even if it meant dying for them. It claims he came to show us that death has no power over us, and that this world is not all there is. The Bible’s story is that history is headed somewhere and that there is a divine purpose to our lives and the world. It’s message is that there can even be meaning in suffering.

Corrie Ten Boom, a survivor of the holocaust, spoke about the goodness of God even in and through the terrible circumstances she faced. She wrote in her book, "The Hiding Place", “Often I have heard people say, ‘How good God is! We prayed that it would not rain for our church picnic, and look at the lovely weather!’ Yes, God is good when He sends good weather. But God was also good when He allowed my sister, Betsie, to starve to death before my eyes in a German concentration camp. I remember one occasion when I was very discouraged there. Everything around us was dark, and there was darkness in my heart. I remember telling Betsie that I thought God had forgotten us. ‘No, Corrie,’ said Betsie, ‘He has not forgotten us. Remember His Word: “For as the heavens are high above the earth, so great is His steadfast love toward those who fear Him.”’” Corrie concluded, “There is an ocean of God’s love available — there is plenty for everyone.

May God grant you never to doubt that victorious love — whatever the circumstances.” The Psalmist tells us: “Enter his gates with thanksgiving and his courts with praise; give thanks to him and praise his name” (Psalm 100:4).
Another message of the Bible is that we cannot be grateful until we believe with all our heart that life is good. Even some Christians I know spend the majority of the time speaking and thinking about how terrible the world is. There is so much sin and evil, and the idea is that the world is so horrible that we just can’t wait until Jesus comes again. Somehow in all of this we have missed out on what the Psalmist understood: that life is good and God’s wish is that we would revel in it. Life is not to be endured, it is meant to be enjoyed. What’s the purpose in making a good world if no one is going to enjoy it? How can we hate the world when God loves the world?
At the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C. there is a large wooden altar from a Jewish synagogue. It was vandalized by Nazi soldiers who had come to remove all Jews from their city. The soldiers had tried to destroy the altar. The hack marks of their axes are yet to be seen, but still decipherable across the altar is a single phrase of Hebrew carved deeply into the wood. Though the axes of man attempted to delete the words, the phrase is still reads: “Know before Whom you stand.” The problem with our pagan culture is that we do not know before whom we stand; therefore we do not understand the value and purpose of life. For this reason, we cannot stand at all. Is it any wonder that we have such a low view of the world and life itself? It is no surprise that we miss the clues about how good and wonderful life is because we try to erase the fact that we are to live before God in this life.
Life is good even when there are difficulties and sufferings. Dr. Dale Robbins writes, “I used to think people complained because they had a lot of problems. But I have come to realize that they have problems because they complain. The Psalmist knew God, and therefore understood the world and what life was to be like in the world. He said, “Shout for joy to the Lord, all the earth. Worship the Lord with gladness; come before him with joyful songs. Know that the Lord is God. It is he who made us, and we are his; we are his people, the sheep of his pasture” (Psalm 100:1-3).
“For the Lord is good and his love endures forever; his faithfulness continues through all generations” (Psalm 100:5).


In Christ,




Friday 07/06/2012 Weekly Television Outreach

On Time Warner Cable Channel 4 at 7:00 PM


Summer Sunday Worship Services:

Union Center UMC

128 Maple Drive, Endicott, NY 13760

Adult Sunday School 9:00 AM

Worship 10:00 AM

International Missions Banquet 11:45 AM


Wesley UMC

1000 Day Hollow Road

Morning Worship 8:30 AM


VBS in the City

Location First United Methodist Church , Endicott, NY

53 McKinley Avenue

August 13-17, 2012, 6:00-8:30 PM

Sponsored by: Union Center UMC.


Annual Summer Carnival and Festival:

Saturday ,August 18,2012

Location: Union Center UMC

Faith, Family, Food, Fun/ Chicken BBQ

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 7-5-12

Praise the Lord for this July 4, when "America the Beautiful" celebrates its independence. The Lord of all nations blessed us with a glorious day yesterday. We drove up to Owasco Lake, one of the Fingers Lakes. Our Upper New York Conference of the United Methodist Church owns a beautiful camp and retreat center on the shores of this beautiful lake. This is one of the six such centers here in upper New York. Camp Casowasco is an amazing place with many beautiful facilities, including a beautiful modern Log Cabin given by one family to be used by pastors. A mansion, formerly belonging to Case family, has been given to the church to be used to make disciples for Jesus Christ. Nearly two hundred children come to the camp and retreat center every week throughout the summer to be blessed by the Lord. Praise the Lord for the way He has blessed the Church throughout the world with some of the best sites and centers. Jesus has the "Best View " wherever we go throughout the world. The Earth belongs to the Lord.

Many countries of the world celebrate their independence day or National day, with a parade of guns, tanks, weapons of mass destruction, and soldiers who march in a show of strength and music. Here in America we celebrate July 4 with family picnics, bands, concerts, mega-fireworks, and family gatherings. The liberty Bell is one of the most recognized symbols of freedom in the entire world. “Let freedom ring” is one of the most widely known phrases ever uttered by man! Our Founding Fathers understood that there is a powerful connection between faith and freedom, and there is a direct connection between government and God! "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."

No other document speaks as powerfully about rights and liberty as does the Declaration of Independence! Our Founding Fathers did their homework before signing their names to that document. For example, Benjamin Franklin said, “We have gone back to ancient history for models of government, and examined the different forms of Republics…and we have viewed modern states all around Europe.”
I love the word “unalienable”. The words “unalienable rights” have a very specific and unique point of origination for the Declaration of Independence . Unalienable rights are not the graces of government but gifts from God! “Unalienable” = non transferable to one another, but something that can only come from above.
James Madison used this word to say that freedom is not humanly designed or achieved by evolution – it’s divinely designed by our Creator! James Madison was also saying the key to maintaining freedom is to trust only in Almighty God – there’s no other way! The Declaration of Independence) is not just a simple secular statement of rebellion from a king but rather a spectacular spiritual statement of dependence on God!
Thomas Jefferson - the one who wrote most of this document - helps us to understand this better when he said, “The God who gave us life, gave us liberty at the same time.” Life and liberty cannot be separated or freedom is lost! Jefferson went on to say this, “Can the liberties of a nation be thought secure, when we have removed their only firm basis - a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are the gift of God.”
For this reason this country was never intended to be an atheistic country - our most powerful documents are great only because they are a beautiful reflection of an awesome God! That’s why Dwight D. Eisenhower said, “Without God, there can be no American form of government, nor an American way of life.”

In Christ,

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 7-3-12

Praise the Lord for another summer day which is going to be wonderfully and beautifully bright and pleasantly very warm. It will be almost cloudless. Tonight promises to be cloudless with a full moon. Alice and I walked for over 3 miles last night under the starry sky with the moon fully beaming down its gentle light. I love summer time.

I had a note from our friend Sue, from England, who wrote that it has been raining and cloudy there. It is Monsoon season in Orissa, India. Schools and colleges just re-opened for another year and are in full swing. When the monsoons arrive at full blast the fresh and clean water comes gushing from the hills and the mountains. Dry springs bring forth fresh waters profusely once again. The animal and plant kingdoms profoundly experience life afresh and anew. The hills and the mountains become lusciously green. The flocks graze in the pastures and the fields and valleys blossom again. Praise the Lord for the beauty of His earth.

Our senses tell us summer is here again when we see the sunset only just before bedtime, when we see fields of rippling clover and rising corn, when we smell the freshly-mown grass, and when we hear the chirping of crickets and songbirds and the unrestrained laughter of school children in the streets.

Shakespeare wrote "A Midsummer Night's Dream", in which he noted "summers in a sea of glory!" He reckoned no tune to be as "sweet as summer." Robert Browning observed, "Wanting is what? (It's) summer." Jesus described how life for His followers would be watching for the sign that "summer is nigh!" What's so entrancing about summer? For one thing, there's summer sunshine.

When Noah's flood was over, the Lord God pledged that "while the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease" (Genesis 8:22). The psalmist (74.17) thanked God, "Thou hast set all the borders of the earth; thou hast made summer and winter." Solomon said, "As snow in summer ... (so) honour is not seemly for a fool" (Proverbs 26:1). In contrast, Isaiah (28:4) figured that only a fool would eat "the first ripe fruit before the summer." Whereas snow and cold characterize winter, sunshine and ripe fruit are ensigns of summer!

Shakespeare suggested we endure "December snow by thinking on fantastic summer." Chaucer hailed, "Welcome, summer, with thy sun. (Thou didst) winter's weather overtake." Poet Emily Dickinson confessed, "When I count it all ... the sun. the summer, then the heaven of God -- and then the list is done."

We who are believers on the Lord Jesus Christ will daily scan our skies to see the Son "of righteousness rise with healing in His wings." Ever and always we're looking for Jesus. Look to the Son and the shadows of life will all fall behind.

I heard of a man who loved sunshine so much that he built his house with three huge windows: one facing east from the kitchen, where he'd eat breakfast; one to the south, where he'd eat lunch; and one to the west, where he'd eat dinner. He reveled in the sunshine. E. Stanley Jones, that great Methodist, missionary to India, would often tell of two newly born-again college girls. Exclaimed one, "I've swallowed sunshine"; and the other, "I've got a big smile down inside!" Peter, James, and John would never be the same again, after, on the mountaintop, beholding Jesus transfigured before them in resplendent celestial light. Moreover, Saul of Tarsus was transformed into Paul the Apostle in a midday encounter with Christ, the Light, whose Sonshine that noonday made the sun in the sky fade into a flicker by comparison.

Jesus said that when terminal war threatens to exterminate man, when famine, earthquakes, plagues - -- wickedness and antichrists become ubiquitous, believers are to "lift up your heads and look, for your redemption draweth nigh." Eternal summertime is the Christian's future.

In Christ,

Brown

Monday, July 2, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 7-2-12

Praise the Lord for this new month and praise the Lord for these hot summer days. The Lord blessed us with a beautiful and bountiful weekend of celebration and worship. Saturday afternoon Alice and I attended a high school graduation party for Chelsea, our young friend. I was there the day Chelsea was born. It was a great treat to attend her high school graduation celebration.
It was also a great blessing to attend our summer music celebration Saturday evening at the First United Methodist Church. Aric Phinney, Yancey Moore, Dianne Glann, Dave Berry, and Emma Brunson, the sweet singers and anointed musicians of Jesus, presented beautiful and joyful music unto the Lord.

Yesterday, the Lord blessed us with a beautiful day of worship at Wesley and Union Center. Following the worship service, Alice went to Hamilton, NY to join in celebrating the 40th wedding anniversary of her brother and sister-in-law, Gordon and Darla Maynard. It was a great day for a party! In another part of the world our friends, Kirk and Jayne Flanagan, celebrated their 23rd anniversary.

Alice and I started our 23rd year ministry here in Union Center. We moved to Union Center on Tuesday, June 25, 1990, and I preached my first sermon here in Union Center on Sunday the first of July, 1990. Our youngest daughter, Jessica, celebrated her birthday yesterday, and she celebrated her 6th birthday on my first day preaching in Union Center. Janice had just finished her 8th grade. Sunita had finished fifth, and Laureen had just finished 3rd grade. I still had my pitch dark hair intact back then.

We praise the Lord for the church family here in Union Center. We have been loved, blessed and cared for. This is the place we have spent the longest time than any other place in our lives. The Church has just broken ground for a new addition to the Church building last month. It is to be a two story building, and it is coming together before our very eyes. We are excited and thrilled in serving the Lord. The Lord has blessed us to be part of what He is doing around the corner and around the globe.

We praise the Lord for "America the Beautiful", the great place on earth to live. We praise the Lord for the Church of Jesus Christ around the corner and around the globe. The Lord has used the church to bless this great nation. In all seasons and at all times Jesus reigns. He is the King of kings and the Lord of lords. He is the Prince of Peace.

French writer Alexis de Tocqueville, after visiting America in 1831, said, "I sought for the greatness of the United States in her commodious harbors, her ample rivers, her fertile fields, and boundless forests--and it was not there. I sought for it in her rich mines, her vast world commerce, her public school system, and in her institutions of higher learning--and it was not there. I looked for it in her democratic Congress and her matchless Constitution--and it was not there. Not until I went into the churches of America and heard her pulpits flame with righteousness did I understand the secret of her genius and power. America is great because America is good, and if America ever ceases to be good, America will cease to be great!"

In Jesus Christ In Him alone we have true liberty.

Brown