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Friday, September 28, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 9-28-12

Praise the Lord for this last Friday of September. It has been raining early this morning, a vigorous and refreshing rain. We read in the Book of Joel about the Autumn rain.

We heard from Sunita yesterday. The Lord is blessing her times and days in Rumania. She said that she gets to visit some of the splendid countryside of Rumania, meeting people who have been gracious and very hospitable to her. Praise the Lord that He has His people everywhere in this world who love Him and serve Him.

I read the story sometime ago of a freak accident which happened on a lake in New York on June 18, 1956. A speeding motorboat bounced on a wave and ejected into the water two of its passengers, a 50-year old man and a little girl. To keep her from drowning, the man held her head above water while the boat circled back. They rescued the girl, but the man sank and drowned. That’s how Dawson Trotman, the founder of the Navigators,died. Navigators is an international discipleship ministry. ( I was recruited by the Navigators to work in Indonesia in 1974.) Somebody wrote, “He lived to save others. His death was just the way he would have planned it.” I read somewhere that his obituary reads like this: “Dawson Trotman, always lifting someone up.”
One passage was shared with me by our friend Warren Ayer many years ago. I read that passage from time to time. It is recorded in Hebrews 10. This is a wonderful legacy. We are called live to save others. We are called and sent out to lift someone up. We are called to be sons and daughters of encouragement. It is written in Hebrews 10:24-25… “And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds. Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one another—and all the more as you see the Day approaching.”
In the Greek, the word “encourage” means “to call to one’s side, to comfort, to console, to strengthen.” Basically, it is to put courage in. It is interesting to note that the Greek word for “encourage” is the one used for the name “Comforter” of the Holy Spirit. People usually equate the works of the Spirit with signs and wonders. But, when we encourage one another, we show that the Spirit really dwells among us. Encouragement, I believe, is the best indicator that the Spirit is working in and through our lives.
The word “encourage” is in the present tense. It means a habit or a way of life. In fact, Hebrews commands us to “encourage one another daily, as long as it is called Today”. It is also in the active voice. It means we don’t wait for others to encourage us, but we take the initiative. We must encourage even if others could not, even if others would not. Note that we are to “encourage one another”.
William Barclay wrote, “It is easy to laugh at men’s ideals; it is easy to discourage others. The world is full of discouragers. We have a Christian duty to encourage one another. Many a time a word of praise or thanks or appreciation or cheer has kept a man on his feet. Blessed is the man who speaks such a word.”



Friday September 28.2012

Television Outreach

7 PM Time Warner Cable Channel 4.

http://youtu.be/BIxSQK8TEhE
A Special Evening of Praise and Worship
Saturday, September 29, 2012
At First United Methodist Church
53 McKinley Avenue, Endicott, NY
Sponsored by Union Center United Methodist Church.
5:30 PM Community Dinner
6:30 PM Praise and Worship
Special Music by: "Treasure" Praise and worship band
Soloist: Emma Brunson
Preacher: Pastor Marshall Sorber



October Festival, with Fellowship, Food, Hymn Sing, and Times of Testimony

Saturday October 6.2012

5.30 PM Wesley United Methodist church .1000 Day Hollow Road, Endicott


Annual Praise and Prayer Conference

Friday- Sunday October 12-14,2012



  • Opening worship: Friday 7 PM at Union Center United Methodist Church, 128 Maple Drive, Endicott
  • Saturday 10 am - 1 PM We will gather at the sanctuary of the Union Center Methodist Church for a concert of prayer.
  • Prayer teams will be available to pray. We will anointing with oil and will pray for emotional, physical, and spiritual healing. We will be praying for deliverance and restoration.
  • 6 PM First United Methodist Church, 53 McKinley Ave., Endicott. We will gather for NEW YORK PIZZA Party
  • 6:30 PM praise and worship. There will be time for prayer. There will be anointing with oil. We will be praying for miracles of healing, deliverance, salvation, restoration. We will also be serving Communion at the Altar.
  • Sunday October 14, 2012, Morning worship will be at 9:30 AM at Wesley United Methodist Church, 1000 Day Hollow Road
  • 8:30 and 11:00 Worship services will be held at the Union Center United Methodist Church; 9:50 - Sunday School Hour
  • 12:30 PM Prayer Banquet with international foods

Leaders for the prayer conference are:

Kelly Johnson from Memphis, TN

Andy and Sunita Groth, Rob Krech, Meredith Watson, and Amanda (all from Washington, DC).

The leaders and members of the Binghamton House of prayer will be joining for this conference Event. Laureen Naik will be leading in worship music. Come expecting a miracle.


In Christ,

Brown

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 9-27-12

Praise the Lord for this new day. The Lord blessed us with a wonderful Wednesday gathering for food, fellowship, and study. During the evening I received a telephone call regarding the sudden death of Christodas Tandi, my brother-in-law Hemant Tandi's older brother in Orissa India. We were all shocked and saddened on his sudden death. Our family here had spoken to him just day before. He was doing well. He loved Jesus and served Him with great joy and zeal. He labored tireless in His Kingdom. John Wesley used say, "Our people die well". Indeed who those love Jesus and serve Him die well and enter in to the Joy their Master and Lord.

One of the most exciting Christian writers of our day is N. T. Wright, a bishop in the Church of England who has retired recently. I love to read his books. Since the 1990’s, he has taken on in public debates and in books those who question the historical reality and ultimate importance of Jesus rising from the dead. He has challenged the lies some of the phony scholars who are interviewed on The History Channel and on the PBS program Religion and Ethics. (Bishop Wright will be speaking at Princeton later in October. I am planning to attend his lectures.) Bishop Wright wants Christians to challenge the general godless world view in Britain and North America that distorts the message of Resurrection. The resurrection of a believer is absolutely about believers participating in the New Life in the Resurrected Lord Jesus. Bishop Wright’s book, Surprised by Hope, helps us refocus to emphasize that heaven can be experienced now in this life as well as after death. Jesus’s Resurrection is not only about eternal life with the Risen Lord after death, but it is about joy and hope now!


Here are some quotes from Bishop Wright to challenge and encourage us:

"Jesus's resurrection is the beginning of God's new project not to snatch people away from earth to heaven but to colonize earth with the life of heaven. That, after all, is what the Lord's Prayer is about when it proclaims ‘May Your Kingdom come, Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.’
What we have at the moment isn't, as the old liturgies used to say, 'the sure and certain hope of the resurrection of the dead,' but a fuzzy optimism that somehow things may work out in the end. The Resurrection completes Jesus bold announcement of the inauguration of God's kingdom NOW in and through Jesus. It is the decisive event demonstrating that God's kingdom really has been launched on earth as it is in heaven. The message of Easter is that God's new world has been unveiled in His Son, Jesus Christ and that you're now invited to belong to it.
The point of the resurrection is that the present bodily life is not valueless just because it will die; what you do with your body in the present matters because God has a great future in store for it. What you do in the present—by painting, preaching, singing, sewing, praying, teaching, building hospitals, digging wells, campaigning for justice, writing poems, caring for the needy, loving your neighbor as yourself—will last into God's future. These activities are not simply ways of making the present life a little less ugly or a little more bearable. They are part of what we may call building for God's kingdom."
May we all be infused by the Resurrection realty and hope in Christ and may we all be propelled live day by day in confidence, knowing that Jesus came, He saw, and He conquered. Blessed be His Name.
Brown
http://youtu.be/CYTQ6gpcuYA

A Special Saturday Evening of Praise and Worship
Saturday September 29, 2012
Location: First United Methodist Church,
53 McKinley Avenue, Endicott, NY
Sponsored by Union Center United Methodist Church.
5:30 PM Community Dinner
6:30 PM Praise and Worship
Special Music by: "Treasure" Praise and worship band
Soloist: Emma Brunson
Preacher: Pastor Marshall Sorber

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 9-26-12


Praise the Lord for this new day. Praise the Lord for His fresh grace which is sufficient for every need we have and every circumstance we might face. He is our ever present and our eternal contemporary.

I took a two mile walk late yesterday evening. The breeze was gentle. The surroundings were serene. I saw four deer freely and fearlessly frolicking with jubilant feet. My heart was infused with gratitude and joy. Praise the Lord for the refreshing rest that He offers us in the night. Praise the Lord for the world that our Lord fills with His beauty and grace.

We will meet for our Wednesday Evening Fellowship at 6 PM. There will be a very special meal prepared by a new chef who is new to our church family. Today is also "See You at the Pole" day around our nation, when high school students gather around the flagpole for prayer.

I am reading one of Lord's parables that is recorded in Mathew 20. The point of the parable is not the hard work of the laborers, but the generosity of the landowner. In the parable, God is the Landowner, for he owns the earth and everything in it. He hires laborers throughout the day, giving each the same pay at the end of the day. This is totally unfair according to human standards, but God does not work according to the world’s standards. God operates on the principles of grace and generosity. The parable reveals a surprising and disconcerting turn of events which may be disturbing to even us, but Jesus wants to introduce to them a man unlike any man they have known. Jesus was saying that the kingdom of God operates differently from the kingdom of this world and the way things normally work here. Jesus was also saying that we should serve the Landowner from the heart. There is always the danger of becoming angry at God because we think he is not treating us right. We think we should be rewarded for being a Christian and working for him. We think we should not have life so hard, and that he should be giving us more blessings. We may not understand why things always seem to be going wrong for us and why life is so hard. We complain to the Landowner that others have it so much easier than we do. Life does not seem fair, and we grumble and become bitter. We feel as if we have had to bear so many difficult things and others seem to have it so easy — even those who do not live for God. (See Psalm 73)
In our worldly mind set we are stunned that our Lord said that His Father “causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous” (Matthew 5:45). He sends his blessings on all, no matter how they treat him, which seems to us ultimately unfair. But God is a God of grace. He acts with generosity, even when it seems to us unfair. Sometimes those who live away from God seem to have life so much better than us, but that is the point — God operates from grace and is generous to all. We serve God from the heart, no matter what life brings us. It is not a matter of quid pro quo. We must not demand to be paid what we think is fair. He has promised to give us “whatever is right.” And in the day we stand before him, all things will be made right.
It is interesting in the parable that the workers hired at the beginning of the day have a contract. They agree with the landowner on a definite wage for a day’s work. The second group of workers work under an informal agreement, and are only told that their pay will be “what is right”. With the last group who only work one hour, and there is no mention of any kind of wage. They are only told that they can work in the vineyard. The only group that complains is the group who had agreed on a certain wage. When they agreed to the wage they thought it was good. By the end of it all they felt cheated and wanted to renegotiate. They grumbled and accused the landowner of unfair treatment. The point seems to be that these men carried a grudge as the other workers came alone with equal pay. They did not love the landowner; they only wanted what was due them, and then leave. In the end, they charged him with wrong. Still the landowner called them “friend” and gave them their wage, but he said to them, “Friend, I am not being unfair to you. Didn't you agree to work for a denarius? Take your pay and go.”

The heart if the Gospel is that our God revealed in the Person of Jesus Christ, does not give wages, he gives gifts, according to his grace and generosity. We cannot work our way into heaven. We do not deserve anything, but by his grace we have all received more than we deserve. And in the end we will receive eternal life in his everlasting kingdom of joy. So we should live and work with joy, knowing that our heavenly Father loves us and will do what he knows is best.

In Christ,

Brown

" Lord God, almighty and everlasting Father, you have
brought us in safety to this new day: Preserve us with your
mighty power, that we may not fall into sin, nor be overcome
by adversity; and in all we do, direct us to the fulfilling of
your purpose; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. "

Book of Common Prayer


A Special Saturday Evening of Praise and Worship
Saturday September 29, 2012
Location: First United Methodist Church,
53 McKinley Avenue, Endicott, NY
Sponsored by Union Center United Methodist Church.
5:30 PM Community Dinner
6:30 PM Praise and Worship
Special Music by: "Treasure" Praise and worship band
Soloist: Emma Brunson

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 9-25-12

Praise the Lord for the wonderful season of Autumn. I drove around yesterday afternoon, gazing at the beautiful brilliant fall colors. It is amazing how the Lord of the earth decorates His Earth for us to see the beauty and splendor all around. He orchestrates the transition of all seasons. He displays the colors in the Autumn leaves. He generates the wind-whispers and the beauty in our changing days. I was reminded of His bountiful and manifold blessings. Indeed, He bestows grace upon grace all the days of our lives and beyond this world. As I drove I saw few deer grazing unhurriedly and unafraid. The air was cool and refreshing. As the night covered the earth the Lord displayed the beautiful Fall Moon dispelling the darkness. I said, along with the poet, "A thing of beauty is a joy forever".


Last evening Sunita flew to Rumania via Germany. She will be visiting some her colleagues in Rumania and the ministry of the Gospel in which they are involved. She will also be visiting some of her friends from her college days in Boston .


I have been looking at Philippians chapter 1. It is written, “conduct yourselves in a manner worthy of the gospel of Christ”. We are to live as a citizen of heaven while we are called and propelled to live as sojourners and pilgrims here on earth. This is vastly important for Christians now, at the beginning of the 21st century, because the surrounding culture has become increasingly hostile to Biblical truth. This is a call for nothing less than aggressive Christianity. We need this because the world is full of Christians in retreat. We have retreated when we ought to advance. Too many believers have been intimidated and have left the battlefield to the enemy.



Christ's word to the church is always "Go Forward!" As far as I know, the Lord never told his people to retreat—not ever. Jesus said, “Go and preach the gospel” (Mark 16:15). He called us to “Go and make disciples” (Mathew 28:19). In one of his books, Methodist evangelist E. Stanley Jones commented that the first Christians did not wring their hands in despair and say, “Look what the world has come to.” Instead, with great delight they declared, “Look what has come to the world.” It’s never been easy to be a Christian. It wasn’t then and it isn’t now. Blessed are they who are so excited about Jesus that they simply can’t keep quiet about it.


In Christ,

Brown





A Special Saturday Evening of Praise and Worship
Saturday September 29, 2012
Location: First United Methodist Church,
53 McKinley Avenue, Endicott, NY
Sponsored by Union Center United Methodist Church.
5:30 PM Community Dinner
6:30 PM Praise and Worship
Special Music by: Praise and worship band
Soloist: Emma Brunson
Preacher: Pastor Marshall Sorber



A Morning Prayer by John Baillie

Here am I, O God,
of little power and of mean estate,
yet lifting up heart and voice to Thee
before whom all created things are as dust and a vapour.
Thou art hidden behind the curtain of sense,
incomprehensible in Thy greatness,
mysterious in Thine almighty power;
yet here I speak with Thee familiarly
as child to parent, as friend to friend.
If I could not thus speak to Thee,
then were I indeed without hope in the world.
For it is little that I have power to do or to ordain.
Not of my own will am I here,
not of my own will shall I soon pass hence.
Of all that shall come to me this day,
very little will be such as I have chosen for myself.
It is Thou, O hidden One, who dost appoint my lot
and determine the bounds of my habitation.
It is Thou who hast put power in my hand to do one work
and hast withheld the skill to do another.
It is Thou who dost keep in Thy grasp the threads of this day's life
and who alone knowest what lies before me to do or to suffer.
But because Thou art my Father, I am not afraid.
Because it is Thine own Spirit that stirs
within my spirit's inmost room,
I know that all is well.
What I desire for myself I cannot attain,
but what Thou desirest in me Thou canst attain for me.
The good that I would I do not,
but the good that Thou willest in me,
that Thou canst give me power to do.

Dear Father, take this day's life into Thine own keeping.
Control all my thoughts and feelings.
Direct all my energies.
Instruct my mind.
Sustain my will.
Take my hands and make them skillful to serve Thee.
Take my feet and make them swift to do Thy bidding.
Take my eyes and keep them fixed upon Thine everlasting beauty.
Take my mouth and make it eloquent in testimony to Thy love.
Make this day a day of obedience,
a day of spiritual joy and peace.
Make this day's work a little part
of the work of the Kingdom of my Lord Christ,
in whose name these my prayers are said,
Amen.

Monday, September 24, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 9-24-12


Praise the Lord for the good gifts that He gives to us with so much generosity and grace. Praise the Lord for the wonderful Good News of His salvation, redemption, and freedom. He blessed us with a beautiful weekend. Our church participated in Annual Apple Festival that is held in Endicott. New York Apples are some of the best in the world. The Lord blessed us with a Joyful Lord's Day, a day of worship and celebration.

One Christian theologian said, "I go to church on Sunday, not for the sermon, not for the music, but to witness to the fact that Jesus is Risen. Indeed we join His saints and servants around the corner and around the globe every Sunday because Jesus is Risen from the grave. Our Savior reigns.

I spoke to our grand daughter Ada this past Saturday for over 7 minutes. She is only 20 months old. It was a treat. Alice baked Peach pie and Blueberry pie for dessert for Sunday dinner yesterday. It was indeed a great day of celebration.

Sunita is flying to Romania today for two weeks with her work. Once again, I had a great Birthday celebration last week. I praise the Lord for so many of you who sent me Birthday wishes from around the corner and around the globe. I am so blessed.

I praise the Lord for Allan Crab. Allan conducted Handel's Messiah with the Downtown Singers for the last 28 years. I attended the performances almost every year, missing only one or two performances. Alan died two weeks ago.

I woke up early this morning, at 3:00 AM, and started listening to Handel's Messiah. I get blessed and refreshed. We are just three months away from Christmas Eve, 2012. Praise the Lord for artists and musicians who proclaime Jesus Christ as Lord.

C. S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia — The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe features four children, Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy. Lucy, the youngest of the children, stumbles through a wardrobe into a frozen world of Narnia, a place where it is always winter and never Christmas. The other children at first disbelieve her, but eventually they follow her through the wardrobe and into Narnia. The creatures there gasp as they see them and treat them as though they are very special. At first they are surprised, thinking there has to be some kind of mistake. Then they are not sure they want this kind of responsibility, in spite of how flattering it is. But then they meet Aslan — a lion who is the Christ-figure in the story. He eventually calls them by new names,: King Peter the Magnificent, King Edmund the Just, Queen Lucy the Valiant, Queen Susan the Gentle. They are also given gifts to help them accomplish their calling. They begin their wonderful journey of fulfilling their calling – a calling that was planned for them before the world began - and as they do, Narnia’s winter begins to break. The snow melts and summer’s warmth begins.
In the midst of chaos an confusion around the world, the Church of Jesus Christ declares and proclaims the Jesus who has ushered in His Kingdom on earth. The gates of hell cannot prevail against it. The snow is melting and summer is near. It is summer always somewhere on this wonderful world.
In his book "What Good Is God", Phillip Yancey tells of a group of American high school students who went on a mission trip to Afghanistan. They had great success and saw many people come to Christ as a result of their ministry. Dr. J. Christy Wilson (I had met Dr. Wilson in Boston in May, 1982) was their host while they were there. Wilson, born of missionary parents, took them to an unusual tourist site, the only cemetery in Afghanistan where ‘infidels’ could be buried. He walked to the first, ancient gravestone, pitted with age. ‘This man worked here thirty years and translated the Bible into the Afghan language,’ he said. ‘Not a single convert. And in this grave next to him lies the man who replaced him, along with his children who died here. He toiled for twenty-five years, and baptized the first Afghan Christian.’ As they strolled among the gravestones, he recounted the stories of early missionaries and their fates.
At the end of the row he stopped, turned, and looked the teenagers straight in the eye. ‘For thirty years, one man moved rocks. That’s all he did, move rocks. Then came his replacement, who did nothing but dig furrows. There came another who planted seeds, and another who watered. And now you kids — you kids — are bringing in the harvest.’
The group leader said, ‘It was one of the great moments of my life. I watched their faces as it suddenly dawned on these exuberant American teenagers that the amazing spiritual awakening they had witnessed was but the last step in a long line of faithful service stretching back over many decades. I’ll never forget that scene.’”
Perhaps at times we feel like all we do is move rocks — but we do it for Jesus, and we do it faithfully. Some day someone will come along and build on what we have done – and there will be a harvest. The Bible says, “Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.” Galatians 6:9
The Bible also says, “Therefore, my brothers (and sisters), be all the more eager to make your calling and election sure. For if you do these things, you will never fall, and you will receive a rich welcome into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.” 2 Peter 1:10-11


In Christ,

Brown
http://youtu.be/X-LEVmxL5Y8

A Special Saturday Evening of Praise and Worship
Saturday September 29, 2012
Location: First United Methodist Church,
53 McKinley Avenue, Endicott, NY
Sponsored by Union Center United Methodist Church.
5:30 PM Community Dinner
6:30 PM Praise and Worship
Special Music by: "Treasure" Praise and worship band
Soloist: Emma Brunson
Preacher: Pastor Marshall Sorber