The School of US-Week 1 // Inviting All // Pastor Kate Murphy

Scripture: Matthew 3:1-17

Dear Church,

This Sunday we are looking at another one of those rare stories that appears in all four gospels, the baptism of Jesus.  If you have even the most rudimentary understanding of baptism–or of Jesus, this is a moment that does not make sense. 

I don’t know about you, but I was taught that baptism was for the forgiveness of sins, and I was also taught that Jesus didn’t have any sins.  So, what’s Jesus doing being baptized? If you are wondering this, you are in good company because Jesus’ baptism really confused and offended John the Baptizer as well.  When Jesus came before him to be baptized, John refused to do it saying, ‘I need to be baptized by you, why are you coming to me?’  It makes it look like Jesus is confused about who he is and what’s going on here.

But of course, Jesus isn’t confused–we are.  And that’s his answer to John, ‘it needs to be this way now, this is what will fulfill all righteousness.’  What seems right and righteous to us doesn’t to Jesus.  In fact, the righteousness of Jesus is often unrecognizable to us.

Friends, there was nobody more all in and fully committed to Jesus than John.  The man ate bugs, for God’s sake.  Literally.  But when John actually came face to face with Jesus,  when John encountered not an idea about Jesus or a ministry task for Jesus, but Jesus in his flesh–Jesus made him uncomfortable.  Jesus challenged John’s expectations and his ministry practice and his faith.  The righteousness of Jesus wasn’t what he expected.  He couldn’t recognize it as holy. 

Every January we spend a season examining and reclaiming our mission as a church, together as a community.  I hope you’ll join us as we learn how John’s encounter with the Lord and the higher righteousness displayed in the baptism of Jesus can guide and shape us as we recommit to the first part of our mission, inviting all people to share in the goodness we’ve found in Jesus and one another.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

Want to chat about what you have heard? Click here: https://www.thegrovecharlotte.org/connect-with-us

New Year-Epiphany // My Gifts // Pastor Kate Murphy

Scripture: Matthew 2:1-12

Dear Church,

The world has moved on from Christmas, but we are still wrapped up in wonder, joy and celebration of Jesus.  I hope you are still savoring the astonishing words of the angel who announced the birth to the shepherds, who were still working hard in the dark of a cold night, ‘Do not be afraid,  I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all people.  Today, in the town of David a savior has been born to you; he is the messiah, the Lord.’

The world has rushed on to gawk at the New Year, promising us that if we plot resolutions and self-improvement plans we can change everything for ourselves and finally be happy.  But the Spirit invites us to imagine a different kind of life, one that does not ask us to lose weight, get organized, work harder, save more money or do anything else to become acceptable in our own sight.  The Spirit finds us in our dark nights and whispers that although Jesus was born long ago, he was born for us too, he is our messiah-savior-the-one-we’ve-been-waiting-for, he will be Lord of the lives we already have.  There is peace, there is wholeness, there is freedom for us here and now, in him.  The one who has changed everything does not require us to change before he loves and accepts us.  In him, we find the abundant life the self-help-industrial-complex promises us.

This New Year’s Day we will continue to keep Christmas as we celebrate Epiphany, the story of the wise ones who followed a strange star that led them to Jesus and the revelation that the child born King of the Jews was also born the redeemer of all creation.  From the very beginning, the circle of salvation was widening to include those who are strangers to us but known as beloved to God.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

Want to chat about what you have heard? Click here:
https://www.thegrovecharlotte.org/connect-with-us

Born Among Us-Christmas Eve // God’s Marginless Love // Pastor Kate Murphy

Tonight we gather to worship on Christmas Eve, the most sacred night of the year, to rejoice in the marginless nature of God’s love and salvation.  Come and hear. Rejoice in the good news: our God has come to bring us boundless love, forgiveness, peace, and joy.

Want to chat about what you have heard? Click here: https://www.thegrovecharlotte.org/connect-with-us

Born Among Us-Week 4 // Love // Pastor Kate Murphy

Scripture: Luke 1:26-38

This Sunday we light the fourth Advent candle for love and turn to the story at the heart of this season.  I know everyone focuses on the babe in the manger, the shepherds, and angels and all the glorious details of the birth, but hidden in the quiet months of waiting before the birth there was a conversation that changed everything.  Scholars, artists, and poets call that moment the annunciation–the time an angel of the Lord appeared to an ordinary young girl and told her who she was in the eyes of the Lord and asked her to yield her life, her very flesh, to the Holy Spirit and bear the Christ child into the world.

Before there was the birth, there was a moment when God asked a question and waited for an answer and the story of salvation hinged on her reply.

This is a story we return to year after year, because it is not just Mary’s story.  Because the story of every believer includes an annunciation.  God comes to each of us–man, woman and child–to tell us who we are in the eyes of the Lord and to invite us to yield our whole selves to the power of the Holy Spirit so that we too can bear Christ into the world.  Jesus is still born among us when we say yes to the impossible invitation of incarnation.

I hope you will join me as we listen deeply to Mary’s annunciation in order to hear our own.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

Want to chat about what you have heard? Click here: https://www.thegrovecharlotte.org/connect-with-us

Born Among Us-Week 3 // Joy // Christmas Cantata

Scripture: Zephaniah 3:17

Dear Church,

This Sunday we light the candle for Joy on the Advent wreath–and we will hear the words the prophet Zephaniah speaks over us:

The Lord your God in your midst, The Mighty One, will save;

He will rejoice over you with gladness, He will quiet you with His love,

He will rejoice over you with singing.

Come and hear the song of comfort and love God is singing over you, over us, this Sunday.  I hope you will join me for our Christmas Cantata.  There will be singing and dancing, scripture and psalm and so, so–so–much joy. 

Peace,

Pastor Kate

Want to chat about what you have heard? Click here:

https://www.thegrovecharlotte.org/connect-with-us

Born Among Us-Week 2 // Hope // Pastor Kate Murphy

Scripture: Matthew 3:1-12 & Matthew 12:15-24

Dear Church,

The prophet Isaiah foretold the coming of the messiah and described to the people the one they were waiting for:

he will proclaim justice to the nations.
He will not quarrel or cry out;
No one will hear his voice in the streets.
A bruised reed he will not break,
and a smoldering wick he will not snuff out,
till he has brought justice through to victory.
In his name the nations will put their hope

There is a lot about Jesus that confuses and offends us.  He refuses to meet our expectations.  He consistently does the very opposite of what we expect.  Instead of saving us by erasing what is weak and imperfect, instead of tearing out bruised reeds and smashing smoldering wicks, instead of destroying our enemies, Jesus saves…tenderly.

It is the tenderness of Jesus that redeems us.  It is in the tenderness of Jesus that we have hope.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

Want to chat about what you have heard? Click here:
https://www.thegrovecharlotte.org/connect-with-us

Born Among Us-Week 1 // Peace // Pastor Kate Murphy

Scripture: Isaiah 2:1-5; 11:1-10

Dear Church,

‘There is no avoiding the fact that we live at the mercy of our ideas.  This is never more true than with our ideas about God.”

These words, from one of Dallas Willard’s books on prayer, leapt out at me this week.  They weren’t the main point, but I couldn’t move past them.  I was stunned by how true they are.  We are at the mercy of our ideas about God.  And oftentimes our ideas about God are more formed by our experience in the world, our wounds & triumphs, our fears and desires than by the revelation of scripture and our experience of God.  If we think that God is angry or tired of us, if we think that the world is so disfigured by sin that it is only worthy for destruction, if we think God isn’t able or interested in helping or knowing us, then our lives will be shackled and shaped by those thoughts.  Truly, we will be at the mercy of our most merciless thoughts.

I don’t share this to challenge you to control your thoughts or give you permission to beat yourself up.  I’m sharing them with you as an invitation into the season of Advent that begins this Sunday.  Because all the good news of scripture could be summed up in this one simple statement: God is not who we expect.  A life of freedom and wholeness begins when we replace our thinking about God with the revelation of scripture.  During Advent, we prepare for the coming of the Lord.  We prepare for the birth of our savior, yes.  But that is only the beginning.  We also prepare and wait and hope for the end of the story–and the end is not what we expect.  It’s not destruction, it’s renewal.  It’s not rejection, it’s redemption.  It’s not suffering, it’s comfort.

We need to replace our ideas about God with the promises of God: weapons into tools of harvest, wolves playing with lambs, desert lands blossoming into life, gladness and joy overtaking us as sorrow and sighing run away.  These are not our ideas.  No human heart could conceive this goodness.  The revelation of God’s truth frees us from merciless ideas and brings us unspeakable peace.

I hope you’ll join me for worship this Sunday at 10 am, in the sanctuary or on the livestream, as we worship and receive the first gift of this season–the peace that comes from replacing our ideas about God with the truth of Christ.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

Want to chat about what you have heard? Click here:
https://www.thegrovecharlotte.org/connect-with-us

The Mountain View-Week 7 // The Narrow Gate // Pastor Kate Murphy

Scripture: Matthew 7:13-29 (NIV & The Message)

It’s not like what came before was easy, but I find the last words of the sermon on the mount the most startling:

knowing the correct password–saying ‘Master, Master,’ for instance–isn’t’ going to get you anywhere with me.  What is required is serious obedience–doing what my Father wills.  I can see it now–at the Final Judgment, thousands strutting up to me and saying, ‘Master, we preached the Message, we bashed the demons, our God-sponsored projects had everyone talking.’ And do you know what I am going to say? ‘You missed the boat. All you did was use me to make yourselves important.  You don’t impress me one bit.  You’re out of here.’ (Mt. 7:21-23, The Message)

Just a few verses ago, Jesus told us to ask, seek, knock and the door would fling wide open–but now he seems to be saying that some people (a lot of people!) think they are on the way, but they aren’t at all.  How can this be? And could it be us?

Sometimes the words of Jesus aren’t meant to reassure us.  Sometimes they are meant to startle us awake.  People responded to Jesus in wildly different ways.  Some loved him, some were offended.  Some followed, some persecuted.  Some were amazed, some were offended.  But all were surprised.  Jesus is not who we expect God to be.  We have to worship who Jesus is, not who we’d prefer him to be.  Jesus says wide is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it.  But small is the gate and narrow the way that leads to life and only a few find it.’ (Mt. 7:13-14, NIV).  Only a few find it…But Jesus is the way…and the truth…and the life. 

And when we are lost in sin, The Way finds us.

I hope you will join me as we worship the one who has found us, has called us, and is teaching us the way to live free and full in him.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

Want to chat about what you have heard? Click here:
https://www.thegrovecharlotte.org/connect-with-us

The Mountain View-Week 6 // Ask, Seek, Knock // Intern Allison Tibe

Scripture: Matthew 7:7-12

Hello Grove Friends:

First, I am incredibly thankful that God placed me at The Grove Church as a supervised ministry intern! Thank you for welcoming me so wildly and so warmly; thank you for mentoring and supporting me in ways you may not even realize; and thank you for showing me what it means to be a congregation that radiates God’s love and shines Christ’s light into the world.

It is an honor for me to deliver the sermon this week and I’m really excited for this opportunity. We continue this week to situate ourselves on the hillside at the feet of Jesus, we hear these words:

“Ask, and it will be given you; search, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened for you. For everyone who asks receives, and everyone who searches finds, and for everyone who knocks, the door will be opened. Is there anyone among you who, if your child asks for bread, will give a stone? Or if the child asks for a fish, will give a snake? If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give good things to those who ask him. In EVERYTHING, do to others as you would have them do to you; for this is the law and the prophets. (Matthew 7:7-12 NRSV)

Jesus teaches us the way of vulnerability and childlike trust as we seek to place our lives, our fears, and our hopes into God’s care. It may sound simple, but it has proven difficult because deep down we fear this level of trust and surrender to anything…even God’s unconditional love.

In Christ,

Allison Tibe
Seminary Intern at The Grove

Want to chat about what you have heard? Click here:
https://www.thegrovecharlotte.org/connect-with-us

The Mountain View-Week 5 // Do not judge… // Pastor Kate Murphy

Scripture: Matthew 7:1-6

Dear Church,

Last week we heard Jesus’ teaching about wealth which many consider the most challenging and troubling pieces of scripture.  I think those folks may not have considered the full implications of the next thing Jesus says.  In my opinion, it’s far more difficult:

Do not judge, or you too will be judged, for in the same way you judge others, you will be judged and with the measure you use, it will be measured to you.  Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother’s eye and pay. no attention to the plank in your own eye? How can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when all the time there is a plank in your own eye?  You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your own eye and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye. (Matthew 7:1-4)

I get it, Jesus, I get it.  Pastor Nadia Bolz Weber says that Americans’ drug of choice is looking down on other people–and that’s an accurate observation, especially for Christians.  There is nothing that makes us feel closer to God than feeling superior to other people. 

But of course, that’s not true.  Jesus is our source of holy and healing love and intimacy with God, not separation or superiority.  And life in the body of Christ requires wisdom and discernment that leads to reconciliation and transformation, not judgement.  In Christ there is no condemnation–but there sure is a lot of it in our churches. 

Even at the Grove.  We have this extraordinary calling to be a community of salt and light–a healthy and holy multi-ethnic community that bears witness to the power of the love of Jesus Christ. And, friends, we–all of us, most especially starting with me, have some growing up and healing to do if we are to live fully into that call.  I hope you’ll join me as we seek the truth that sets us free in this portion of Jesus’ sermon on the mount.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

Want to chat about what you have heard? Click here:

https://www.thegrovecharlotte.org/connect-with-us