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Monday, April 2, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 4-2-12

Good morning,

Thanks be to Jesus for this new day. The Lord blessed us with a bountiful weekend of worship, fellowship, and celebration. The Saturday Evening worship, led by the "Binghamton House of Prayer " was a great blessing. Yesterday, Palm Sunday, the time of worship at Union Center and Wesley was a great blessing. We had a special time for children and an Easter banquet after the worship time. The Gospel Reading for yesterday was taken from Mark 11: 1-11, the account of our Lord's entry to Jerusalem on the first Palm Sunday.

Christian author Philip Yancey, in his book "The Jesus I Never Knew", described Palm Sunday this way, “The triumphal entry has about it an aura of ambivalence, and as I read all the accounts together, what stands out to me now is the slapstick nature of the affair. I imagine a Roman officer galloping up to check on the disturbance. He has attended processions in Rome, where they do it right. The conquering general sits in a chariot of gold, with stallions straining at the reins and wheel spikes flashing in the sunlight. Behind him officers in polished armor display banners captured from vanquished armies. At the rear comes a ragtag procession of slaves and prisoners in chains, living proof of what happens to those who defy Rome.
“In Jesus’ triumphal entry, the adoring crowd makes up the ragtag procession: the lame, the blind, the children, the peasants from Galilee and Bethany. When the officer looks for the object of their attention he spies a forlorn figure, weeping, riding on no stallion or chariot but on the back of a baby donkey, a borrowed coat draped across its backbone serving as his saddle.”
I have been reflecting on the owner of the donkey. The Lord needed the donkey that belonged to this unknown man. Jesus asked for the use of the donkey. God does not always ask for big things. God will not ask us to give what we don’t have. We may not feel we have anything significant to give, but God sometimes takes simple things and uses them in great ways, as He did with the donkey.
Moses was asked to give his walking stick. Rahab gave a corner of her roof to hide the spies. David gave his sling shot. The widow at Zarephath gave the last of her oil and flour to make a meal for Elijah. The Shunammite woman gave a room of her home to Elisha. The widow that Jesus praised gave her two cents. The young boy gave his five loaves and two fish. The early church shared their possessions with those who had a need. The Bible is full of people who gave what they had, to be used by the Lord.
Everything we have has been given to us as a gift from the Lord. I wonder what God thinks when He sees us wasting what He has given us, or worse, when He sees us squandering the good gifts He has entrusted to us? Max Lucado’s wrote, “Sometimes I get the impression that God wants me to give him something and sometimes I don’t give it because I don’t know for sure, and then I feel bad because I’ve missed my chance. Other times I know he wants something but I don’t give it because I’m too selfish. And other times, too few times, I hear him and I obey him and feel honored that a gift of mine would be used to carry Jesus to another place. And still other times I wonder if my little deeds today will make a difference in the long haul.”
Each of us has a donkey. You and I each have something in our lives which, if given back to God, could, like the donkey, move Jesus and his story further down the road. Our gifts are his and the donkey was his. God has given us many things: our talents, our resources, our time, our children, our jobs, and our interests. They belong to Him. God has given them to us as a gift. They are ours to use, but He can ask for them back at any time. At any time He can request that what He has given be returned in some fashion. He can do this because He is the true owner; we are trustees.
The true believer knows that the value of what we have is multiplied when it is placed in the Lord’s hands. The man gave his donkey, even though it was valuable to him. Consider, however, how much more valuable it became when placed in the hands of Jesus. His donkey played a role in the fulfillment of a prophecy. His donkey transported the Lord of All Creation. The donkey and its owner have been remembered for over two thousand years because of this simple act. None of this would have been possible if the man had refused to give what he had. If we talked to the man he might very well have said, "Hey, it was no big deal." Yet, it really was a very big deal. What we place in the Lord’s hands is used is remarkable ways.
The person who gives his time to read to or visit with people in a nursing home may feel like he is doing little, but he will be surprised when he gets to Heaven. The Sunday School teacher who labors week after week faithfully giving of herself to her students while no one notices will be surprised at how God has used her service to mold the next generation of believers. The person who gets alone with God and fervently prays for the saints may feel like his prayers accomplish nothing, not seeing how God is changing hearts and circumstances in response to those prayers. The persons who faithfully puts their check in the plate week after week may feel that their tithe is insignificant. They may not see that God is using their faithfulness to make it possible not only to have good facilities in which to teach and worship, but God is using those funds to reach people in our community and literally around the world.
The persons who takes the time to jot a note, to make a call, or to stop by and visit may feel that they don’t have much to offer, but by then they give what they have God may be using their efforts to encourage someone who is weary, to comfort someone who thought they were alone, or to reach someone who was drifting away.
What we have is never more valuable than when we place these things in the capable and strong hands of Jesus. Jesus declares Himself to be the long-awaited King that will redeem those who trust Him. The declaration remains the same and so does the choice. Will we receive Him as King and Savior or will we simply stand on the sidelines? As we can see, it is really not about a man’s donkey at all, but it is about a person’s heart.

In Christ,

Brown


Join us for our weekly television outreach On Good Friday , April 6,2012 on Time Warner Cable Channel 4, at 7 PM.
Saturday Evening Worship Service:
Location: First United Methodist Church
53 McKinley Avenue
Endicott, NY
Sponsored by: Union Center United Methodist Church
Time: 6:00 PM gathering for Coffee Fellowship
6:30 PM Worship Service
Date: Saturday, April 7, 2012
will be a very special Easter Eve celebration. This will be held at the First United Methodist Church, Endicott. The service of worship and praise will include Hymns and songs both classic and contemporary. We are blessed to have Aric Phinney at the Grand Piano, and Yancey Moore at the Pipe Organ, Dave Berry as the song leader and soloist, along with special musicians Winnie Allen and Emma Brunson. Come, Share, and Rejoice.
APRIL 5 at 6:30 PM there will be a Maundy Thursday foot washing and communion service. We will gather in the Fellowship Hall for this special service.
APRIL 6 at 6:30 PM there will be a Good Friday Service at Union Center UMC –
"Simon Peter" will be presented by our brother Jim Geer and the team. Join us for this very special presentation on the life and witness of Simon Peter.
APRIL 7 at 6:30 PM APRIL 8 at 6:30 AM A Sunrise service will be held at the pavilion at Union Center
Christian Church, 950 Boswell Hill Road. Rev. Marshall Sorber will be preaching. We will have special music. Mr. Katchudurian will be presenting special Easter Music on his trumpet.
You are all welcome back to the Union Center Church Fellowship Hall for a special Easter Morning breakfast prepared and served by Jim Holmes and the team.
We will gather for Special Easter Celebration and worship at 8:30 and 11:00 AM
at the Union Center UMC. The Youth and children will be presenting a very special song for Easter morning at both services. The Adult Choir will also be singing at both services. Sunday School will meet at 9:50 AM. We will gather for Easter Morning Worship At Wesley at 9:30 AM. We have so much to celebrate. We have so much to sing about. We have so much to rejoice in. It is all About Jesus, who came, who saw, and who conquered. He is upon the Throne.

Friday, March 30, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 3-30-12

Good morning,

Praise the Lord for this Friday before Palm Sunday. Let us plan to be in the Lord's House this coming Palm Sunday. Let us praise Him and proclaim His Majesty. Let us shout and sing. We live in a Good Friday World but we proclaim Palm Sunday faith. Blessed is He who comes in the Name of the Lord. Jesus is the victor. He reigns in triumph and glory. Even though the world scene is bleak and frightening we serve under a captain who has never lost a battle.

I recall a fascinating part of John Bunyan’s book Pilgrims Progress, where Interpreter leads Christian into a place where there is a perplexing sight. He sees a fire burning beside a wall. It continues to burn under extraordinary circumstances. Someone stands beside the fire, continually throwing water on it in an attempt to extinguish it, but instead of the fire going out, it only burns brighter and hotter. Then Interpreter takes Christian behind the wall and shows him what he could not see before. Behind the wall another man is continually feeding the fire with oil. Christian cannot understand the whole thing until Interpreter explains to him that the man putting water on the fire represents the devil. He is always trying to dampen and extinguish the work of God in the world, but what he and the others on that side of the wall cannot see is the man on the other side of the wall who represents Christ. He is continually fueling the fire with the oil of his Spirit, and the forces of evil can never put it out.

The book of Revelation gives us a glimpse of what God had in mind, and the reality of what Christmas will mean in the end, “The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he will reign for ever and ever” (Revelation 11:15). In the end Jesus Christ will reign, and He will reconcile all things to Himself. God reveals his ultimate plan for us in the Scripture, saying, “And God raised us up with Christ and seated us with Him in the heavenly realms in Christ Jesus, in order that in the coming ages He might show the incomparable riches of his grace, expressed in His kindness to us in Christ Jesus” (Ephesians 2:6-7). That is a wonderful end to a wonderful story — and nothing can stop it. All of us saw the incredible pictures of Saddam Hussein after he was taken from his hole in the ground. We were astounded to see this once powerful man who terrorized his own country and people throughout the world. Yet, he looked dazed and confused as he was deloused. He was filthy and his hair and beard were unkempt. He looked pitiful instead of powerful. The same thing happened with Osama bin Laden as he met his end. Somehow, I think that is going to be the way it is at the end of the world, when the final battle is over. We will look at our enemy, the devil, after he has been deposed and his power taken away and say, “That was who we were afraid of? That is the one who terrorized the world? The frightening serpent turned out to be only a worm.” Then he will be thrown back into his pit.

One of the readings for Palm Sunday is taken from Philippians 2, “Jesus. . . Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death—even death on a cross! Therefore God exalted him to the highest place and gave him the name that is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father” (Philippians 2:5-11). In the end, every knee will bow — the knees of those who despised him, rejected him, and ignored him, along with those who loved and served Him.

In Christ,

Brown



Join us for our weekly television outreach tonight on Time Warner Cable Channel 4, at 7 PM.



Saturday Evening Worship Service:
Location: First United Methodist Church
53 McKinley Avenue
Endicott, NY
Sponsored by: Union Center United Methodist Church
Time: 6:00 PM gathering for Coffee Fellowship
6:30 PM Worship Service
Date: Saturday, March 31, 2012
The Binghamton House of Prayer team will lead in music and Word.
"The Binghamton House of Prayer" is an Interdenominational and international ministry of prayer that is engaged in prayer for our region. This group meets weekly for prayer ministry.
There will be a very special time for prayer for healing and blessing.
Special Music by Laureen Naik


This coming Sunday will be our Palm Sunday celebration. Come and join us. Invite your friends and family to join us in worship, praise, and celebration. Following the second service there will be an Easter egg hunt for the children, coordinated by Shannan Meilunas and Tegan Kraus. There will also be an Easter banquet for one and all, prepared with much love by Rodney Haines and Kathy Dence.



APRIL 5 at 6:30 PM there will be a Maundy Thursday foot washing and communion service. We will gather in the Fellowship Hall for this special service.
APRIL 6 at 6:30 PM there will be a Good Friday Service at Union Center UMC –
"Simon Peter" will be presented by our brother Jim Geer and the team. Join us for this very special presentation on the life and witness of Simon Peter.
APRIL 7 at 6:30 PM will be a very special Easter Eve celebration. This will be held at the First United Methodist Church, Endicott. The service of worship and praise will include Hymns and songs both classic and contemporary. We are blessed to have Aric Phinney at the Grand Piano, and Yancey Moore at the Pipe Organ, Dave Berry as the song leader and soloist, along with special musicians Winnie Allen and Emma Brunson. Come, Share, and Rejoice.
APRIL 8 at 6:30 AM A Sunrise service will be held at the pavilion at Union Center
Christian Church, 950 Boswell Hill Road. Rev. Marshall Sorber will be preaching. We will have special music. Mr. Katchudurian will be presenting special Easter Music on his trumpet.

You are all welcome back to the Union Center Church Fellowship Hall for a special Easter Morning breakfast prepared and served by Jim Holmes and the team.

We will gather for Special Easter Celebration and worship at 8:30 and 11:00 AM

at the Union Center UMC. The Youth and children will be presenting a very special song for Easter morning at both services. The Adult Choir will also be singing at both services. Sunday School will meet at 9:50 AM. We will gather for Easter Morning Worship At Wesley at 9:30 AM. We have so much to celebrate. We have so much to sing about. We have so much to rejoice in. It is all About Jesus, who came, who saw, and who conquered. He is upon the Throne.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 3-29-12

Good morning,

Praise the Lord for this Thursday, one week before Maundy Thursday. The Lord blessed us with a wonderful Wednesday Evening gathering for food, fellowship, and study in His Word. It is always a thrill to study the Word of the Lord in the setting of a group that is inquisitive participatory.

This morning I am looking at Luke 19. We have the record of our Lord's encounter with Zaccheus in Jericho , the oldest city on earth. Luke 19:1-10 "Then Jesus entered and passed through Jericho." Everything Jesus did had a purpose, and in Luke 19, we will find that although Jesus was heading to the cross in Jerusalem, (Luke 18:36) He made a detour through Jericho, a longer route. In Joshua 6 we find that Jericho was the first city Israel came to after they crossed the River Jordan and entered the Promised Land.
Jericho was the gateway to Canaan or in New Testament terms the stronghold or things that hold us back from appropriating the promises of God! The people of Israel were given a set of instructions for following God in order to see the city fall. The obedience of Israel to follow those instructions and see this obstacle, Jericho, destroyed was an act of faith. Hebrews 11:30 "By faith the walls of Jericho fell down after they were encircled for seven days." Today our strongholds come down and the promises of God are appropriated when by faith we obey God's Word.
Jesus, our true Joshua, had to pass through Jericho because it represented Satan’s Stronghold of unbelief, disobedience, and doubt. Jesus had to see these spiritual walls demolished and prove that even in the midst of the situation there He could save the worst sinner.
To say that Zaccheus was not living by faith was a gross understatement. Our passage tells us he had a reputation of being a sinner and was, in fact, the Chief Tax Collector. He was one who impoverished the people, and who mistreated and stole from them as was the custom of the day. He worked for the Romans, who represent a type of the world. So our “son of faith” was not living by faith; he was living and controlled by his senses and as such was a prisoner of Satan. Jesus was on His way to His ultimate confrontation with Satan, on His way to destroy the kingdom of Satan.
Zaccheus, who had but one obsession in life, was moved by the Spirit of Jesus Christ to desire to see the Rabbi from Nazareth. Zaccheus chose a quiet spot above the people from which to observe the Lord more closely; he climbed that sycamore tree. When Jesus passed under the particular tree in which the curious tax collector was perched, He made a point of looking up and speaking to the man in the tree. Jesus knew where Zaccheus was, knew the man’s name, and knew that Zaccheus had a house. Jesus commanded: "Zaccheus make haste and come down; for I must stay at your house today." Jesus declares that it was necessary for Him to stay, and to spend time in this city of unbelief, in the house of Zaccheus the chief tax collector. He took that hardened sinner, Zaccheus, and rescued him from Satan’s clutches, and granted him new birth, new life. Luke 19:8-10, "Then Zacchaeus stood and said to the Lord, 'Look, Lord, I give half of my goods to the poor; and if I have taken anything from anyone by false accusation, I restore fourfold.'"
And Jesus said to him, "Today salvation has come to this house, because he also is a son of Abraham; “for the Son of Man has come to seek and to save that which was lost."
Zacchaeus had strong walls that needed to come down in his life, much as we do ourselves. But rather than have us try to scale these walls ourselves, God has placed the victory before us in and through Jesus Christ. Ephesians 2:14, "For He Himself is our peace, who has made both one, and has broken down the middle wall of separation."
We have plenty of walls in our lives: the wall of sin, the wall of unbelief, the wall of doubt, the wall of slavery to other things, the walls of rejection, the walls of apathy. In a way, we are living in Jericho. Many people, upon receiving Christ's salvation, destroy their walls of Jericho and start to walk in the promises of God, but over time tend to rebuild those walls again. It is then that we pause and wonder where our promise is. Let Jesus reenter our personal Jericho and pull those walls down once again.



In Christ,

Brown
Join us for our weekly television outreach on Friday evening, Time Warner Cable Channel 4, at 7 PM.
Saturday Evening Worship Service:
Location: First United Methodist Church
53 McKinley Avenue
Endicott, NY
Sponsored by: Union Center United Methodist Church
Time: 6:00 PM gathering for Coffee Fellowship
6:30 PM Worship Service
Date: Saturday, March 31, 2012
The Binghamton House of Prayer team will lead in music and Word.
"The Binghamton House of Prayer" is an Interdenominational and international ministry of prayer that is engaged in prayer for our region. This group meets weekly for prayer ministry.
There will be a very special time for prayer for healing and blessing.
Special Music by Laureen Naik

This coming Sunday will be our Palm Sunday celebration. Come and join us. Invite your friends and family to join us in worship, praise, and celebration. Following the second service there will be an Easter egg hunt for the children, coordinated by Shannan Meilunas and Tegan Kraus. There will also be an Easter banquet for one and all, prepared with much love by Rodney Haines and Kathy Dence.
APRIL 5 at 6:30 PM there will be a Maundy Thursday foot washing and communion service. We will gather in the Fellowship Hall for this special service.
APRIL 6 at 6:30 PM there will be a Good Friday Service at Union Center UMC –
"Simon Peter" will be presented by our brother Jim Geer and the team. Join us for this very special presentation on the life and witness of Simon Peter.
APRIL 7 at 6:30 PM will be a very special Easter Eve celebration. This will be held at the First United Methodist Church, Endicott. The service of worship and praise will include Hymns and songs both classic and contemporary. We are blessed to have Aric Phinney at the Grand Piano, and Yancey Moore at the Pipe Organ, Dave Berry as the song leader and soloist, along with special musicians Winnie Allen and Emma Brunson. Come, Share, and Rejoice.
APRIL 8 at 6:30 AM A Sunrise service will be held at the pavilion at Union Center
Christian Church, 950 Boswell Hill Road. Rev. Marshall Sorber will be preaching. We will have special music. Mr. Katchudurian will be presenting special Easter Music on his trumpet.
You are all welcome back to the Union Center Church Fellowship Hall for a special Easter Morning breakfast prepared and served by Jim Holmes and the team.
We will gather for Special Easter Celebration and worship at 8:30 and 11:00 AM
at the Union Center UMC. The Youth and children will be presenting a very special song for Easter morning at both services. The Adult Choir will also be singing at both services. Sunday School will meet at 9:50 AM. We will gather for Easter Morning Worship At Wesley at 9:30 AM. We have so much to celebrate. We have so much to sing about. We have so much to rejoice in. It is all About Jesus, who came, who saw, and who conquered. He is upon the Throne.