Bethlehem Connect January/February 2019 | Page 2

Choosing a Resolution Upcoming Sermon Series: by Pastor Kris Tostengard Michel Will you be making a New Year’s resolution this year? A quick Google search tells me that about 40% of Americans will. Of those, 46% will still be with it six months down the road. The odds that any of us will be thinking about a New Year’s resolution by the middle of summer are not high. I don’t make resolutions most years. It takes discipline to carry them out, and I often forget to follow through. Some years, I think I’ve just not come up with an interesting enough goal. They tend to be similar from year to year: Exercise more. Sleep more. Pray more. Truth be told, I’d like to be able to check a box and say I’ve done it. This fall, Eugene Peterson died. He was the author of “The Message” Bible, a translation that put the words of Scripture into everyday language. He was a wise man, so I read with interest the tributes written to him "Maybe a and followed a link to an article he wrote in 2003. I’m pretty sure this article will give me food for thought for a New Year’s long time. He talked of living transparent lives in which resolution there’s congruence between what we say and who we are, between what we do and the way we do it. For him, ...isn’t a box to the words that kept this in focus were Jesus’ words, “I am be checked, the way, the truth and the life” (John 14:6). The Christian but is instead life maturely lived, he says, is a life in which Jesus is taken seriously as the way to live and the truth to be a renewed lived. It’s not easy to do this. It’s a long, slow and patient focus to process of formation to live the Christ life in the Christ way, to come to the place where the means by which purposeful we live are congruent with the ends for which we live. living." That got me to thinking, maybe a New Year’s resolution doesn’t have to be new every year and isn’t a box to be checked, but is instead a renewed focus to purposeful living. We’re beginning a new sermon series in January called, [Extra]ordinary Life. We’ll be reading stories of Jesus in Luke’s Gospel, and we’ll spend several weeks in Paul’s letter to the Corinthians in which he talks about the church and the multiple gifts that come together for the work of the whole. I’m thankful to be part of this community, for the gifts you bring, for the ways we’ll grow together this year as we seek to live the Christ life in the Christ way with all the challenges and peculiarities that 2019 will bring. So I encourage you to join me in choosing a resolution for 2019, a discipline that will be life-giving to you and those around you, one that helps you grow in the Christ way, and that in the process, you’ll find extraordinary blessing in ordinary days. Blessed New Year! All that's ordinary holds space for the extraordinary. Jesus makes it so. Jan. 6: Epiphany Matthew 2:1-12 Jan. 13: Baptism Isaiah 43:1-7 Luke 3:15-17, 21-22 Jan. 20: Spiritual Gifts 1 Cor. 12:1-11 Jan. 27: One Body 1 Cor. 12:12-31a Feb. 3: Love 1 Cor. 13:1-13 Feb.10: Calling the Disciples Luke 5:1-11 Feb. 17: Jesus Teaches & Heals Luke 6:17-26 Feb. 24: Love for Enemies Luke 6:27-38 Mar. 3: Transfiguration Luke 9:28-36 Luke 9:37-43 Next CONNECT deadline for the March/April issue: February 10, 2018 The format is bi-monthly. Submissions can be sent to Whitney Stofflet, wstofflet@ bethlehem-church.org. CONNECT newsletter online bethlehem-church.org 2