The Mountain View-Week 3 // Secret, Sacred Time with God // Pastor Kate Murphy

NOTE: We only have the last nine minutes of this week’s message.

Dear Church,

Remember the time Jesus climbed up a mountain and told us, ‘“You are the light of the world. A town built on a hill cannot be hidden. Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl. Instead, they put it on its stand, and it gives light to everyone in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven.‘ (Matthew 5:13-16)

Me too. 

This Sunday as we continue to savor the sermon on the mount, we come to these words: ‘Be careful not to practice your righteousness in front of others to be seen by them. So, when you give to the needy, do not announce it with trumpets, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and on the streets, to be honored by others. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward in full. But when you give to the needy, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, so that your giving may be in secret.’  (Matthew 6:1-4) If you keep reading, He says something similar about praying and fasting.  Do it–but don’t let anybody see you, don’t let anybody know, don’t let anybody guess. 

You are the light of the world, shine your light so everyone can see–but practice your faith in secret, so only God can see.  Well, which is it, Jesus?  Surely you aren’t asking us to be visible and hidden at the same time? Are you?

I hope you can join me as we listen deeply to the words of our Savior and seek the Spirit for revelation.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

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Mountain View-Week 2 // We Know the Future // Pastor Kate Murphy

Scripture: Matthew 5:17-48 (NIV), John 1:1-4, 14, Ezekiel 36:25-28, Jeremiah 31: 31-34

Dear Church,

There is a lot of frantic speculation going on these days about whether the U.S. economy will enter into recession.  People are desperate to know if it will happen, when it will happen, how long it will last and how bad it will be.  We feel like we need this information to know how to plan for the future–and there is no shortage of experts willing to provide advice and prognostication.  Most people agree that knowing what’s coming is a distinct advantage.  We choose differently, we plan differently, we live differently based on what we think is happening next.

Obviously, I don’t know whether we are headed into a recession.  But I know that, for us, it doesn’t matter.  Because we know the future.  The Kingdom of God, already here in the midst of us, is coming to renew, restore and reconcile all of creation.  Our hope does not lie in an expanding economy.  It is not dimmed or threatened by a recessing one.   Either way the Kingdom of God is coming.  And knowing that future means we choose differently, we plan differently, we live differently.

The trouble is–most of us, me most definitely included–have a better idea of the implications of a coming recession than the coming Kingdom.  That’s why we are spending these weeks on the mountain with Jesus, listening deeply as he teaches us about the Kingdom–letting his revelation shape the way we see reality, creation, our lives and the future.  I hope you’ll join me for worship this Sunday at 10am, in the sanctuary or on the livestream. 

Peace,

Pastor Kate

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

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The Mountain View-Week 1 // Beatitudes // Pastor Kate Murphy

Scripture: Matthew 5:1-16

Dear Church,

Now when he saw the crowds, he went up on a mountainside and sat down.  His disciples came to him and he began to teach them. (Matthew 5:1-2)

A lot of people around here are into nature and hiking.  I don’t understand, but I love them anyway.  Why risk the ticks and bears and skunks and poison ivy, why do you want to go to all that trouble? They tell me that making it up to the top of a mountain is worth it because once you get to the top and look out, you see things differently.  It’s beautiful up there, and the view from the mountaintop changes your perspective.  The things you see every day up-close look different from up there–they are sanctified.   And that changes the way you look at things, even when you come back down.

Many of Jesus’ teachings are gathered together in the gospel of Matthew in what has become known as the sermon on the mount.  We are going to spend the next few weeks looking out from the perspective of that mountain top sermon.  Because we believe our faith in Jesus should be shaped more deeply by his words about us than our words about him.  The view from the mountain is challenging, but the way the vast beauty of Christ’s words is sanctifying.  

Jesus’ words will challenge us–and the challenge will change us.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

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

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Rule of Life // Alive in Christ // Pastor Ron McClelland

Scripture: Romans 12:1-2, John 15:4-5

Dear Church,

So, it’s going to be a really special day at the Grove on Sunday (I know, I know–I say that a lot), Pastor Ron McClelland will be preaching a message on how we can live our whole lives with the Lord.  Afterwards, he will lead the first of a series of five workshops on creating a rule of life during an extended second hour (with lunch provided).  I’ve been looking forward to this for more than 3 years, so I really hope you’ll join us.  If you’ve ever worried and wondered why your faith in Jesus wasn’t transforming your daily life, this is for you.

Here’s the thing–the world doesn’t need more people who believe in Jesus, think about Jesus or know about Jesus.  All creation is groaning and laboring and waiting for people who are more-than-believers, for followers of Jesus.  The world needs you–alive in Christ, not doing things for God but wholly and holy alive with God.  In his letter to the Colossians, the apostle Paul puts it like this, ‘You’ve received Christ Jesus, the Master; now live in him.  You’re deeply rooted in him.  You’re well-constructed upon him.  You know your way around the faith.  Now do what you’ve been taught.  School’s out; quit studying the subject and start living it! And let your living spill over into thanksgiving!’ (Col. 2:7, The Message)

If you are ready to start living your faith in Christ, this is for you.  You don’t have to figure it out alone.  You already have everything you need to be faithful to God in this season.  Together, Pastor Ron will lead us through a practical process of discernment to design a simple, powerful and personal rule of life.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

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

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

Again, Lord!-Week 4 // After the Revelation // Pastor Kate Murphy

Scripture: Judges 6:33-40

Dear Church,

When we meet Gideon, he is literally bent over, cowering in fear while hiding from his enemies.   And then an angel of the Lord appears to him with a series of stunning revelations: he is seen and known by God, he is called to a life of wonder beyond his wildest imagination and God will accompany and equip him every step of the way. 

Don’t we all want a message like that from God?  Don’t we all savor those moments when they come–a word or sign that shows us that God sees us, that God has a life of beauty and purpose for us, that God is with us and will provide for us always? Honestly, aren’t we all hoping for God to give us revelations like that every time we open our bibles or seat ourselves in the sanctuary?  I know I am.

But that moment–dazzling as it was–wasn’t the end of Gideon’s story.  It was the beginning.  That moment wasn’t the climax of Gideon’s life of faith–it was the catalyst.  Gideon had many other encounters with God, but that one was never repeated.  It didn’t need to be.  It served his purpose–it launched him on his journey.

I’ve been reading Paul’s letter to the Colossians every day lately, and I’m struck by how he tells the church they’ve got to move beyond knowing the revelation of Christ to living Christ:

You’ve received Christ Jesus, the Master: now live him.  You’re deeply rooted in him;  You’re well constructed upon him.  You know your way around the faith.  Now do what you’ve been taught.  School’s out; quit studying the subject and start living it!  And let your living spill over into thanksgiving. (Col. 2:6-7, The Message).

It’s a wonderful thing to receive revelation from God.  But the goodness and abundant life comes not in getting it or knowing it or even in believing it–the glory comes in the living and walking it out.  This Sunday we’re going to see what that looked like for Gideon and seek the Lord for what his story shows us about our own.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

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

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Again, Lord!-Week 3 // Idols & False Gods // Pastor Kate Murphy

Scripture: Judges 6:1-27

In the book of Judges we find the story of a man named Gideon, an Israelite who lived in dangerous and depressing times.  The country was under constant threat of enemy invasion, farms were frequently attacked and raided, the nation’s glory days seemed far behind them.  People believed that God had abandoned them and idol worship–always a problem–increased in fervor and frequency.  Gideon was an average every-day citizen, doing what he had to do to survive.  At the moment we meet him, that required stealthily harvesting grain while hiding in a winepress so that the cloud of dust didn’t attract robbers.

And then an angel of the Lord appeared to him and said, ‘Greetings, mighty warrior!’ and revealed that God had chosen him to deliver the people from their enemies.

There is a lot of similarity between Gideon’s age and our own. It is still far too easy for God’s people to be seduced by spirits of rage or despair.  Remembering the ways that God has rescued and redeemed our ancestors, we learn how to expectantly pray–Again, Lord.  We need Gideon’s story in this season. We need the reminder that God is no respecter of persons, that his anointed ones are found in the most unexpected places.  But even more importantly, Gideon’s story teaches us that the source of our suffering often isn’t where we think it is.  Gideon’s first task as the deliverer of his people wasn’t on a battlefield–but in his own backyard.  The same is often true of us.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

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

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Again, Lord!-Week 2 // Genesis 21 // Elder Nicole Thompson

Scripture: Genesis 21:1-21

One of the most painful things about being a follower of Jesus Christ is listening to folks who have been brutally wounded by the church.  I didn’t grow up in the church, but when I was a teenager, I was invited by a friend to come to youth group.  There I found both the love of God and the unconditional tender welcome of a whole multi-generational community.  The folks at Crestwood United Methodist Church claimed me as one of their own and surrounded me with love and belonging.

But many people have a tragically different story.  When they wandered into a worshipping community they were met with suspicion and hostility.  Or, perhaps worse, they were initially welcomed, claimed and included only to be blindsided later by hatred and rejection.  These stories are so hard to hear, but we must listen.

We’ll hear one of them in this Sunday’s scripture–Hagar and Ishmael.  God promised Abraham and his wife Sarah that they would have a son who would become the father of a mighty, holy and blessed nation.  But when years passed and the promised child did not come–Abraham and Sarah decided to include Hagar, their servant, into the promise.  It was common in that age for men to father children with many different women, so the couple decided Abraham would have a child with Hagar.  They named him Ishmael, claimed him and raised him as their legal and spiritual child, the carrier of the promise.  And then Sarah had a biological son, and no longer needed or wanted Ishmael.  She demanded that Abraham send Hagar and Ishmael out into the desert.  They were no longer part of the promise.  They were no longer chosen.

This is a brutally common story–chosen people choosing to reject those they see as threatening or unnecessary. Chosen people who believe God only cares for those they care for.  Chosen people who think that being chosen gives them the right to choose.   Abraham and Sarah sent Hagar and her son out into the desert to die.  They didn’t need them anymore, so they didn’t want them anymore.

But God did.  God heard the cries of a suffering mother and child and sent an angel to comfort them and to guide them to water. Then the angel announced that the chosen people were wrong, that God still chose Hagar and Ishmael–that they were forever a part of God’s plan and God’s promise and no one could take that from them.

We are surrounded by people who only know church as the community that used and abused, hated and rejected them, people who believe that since they weren’t chosen by God’s people, they aren’t chosen by God.  God hears their cries and send messengers to find, comfort, serve and include them.  As we move deeper into our worship series ‘Again, Lord,’ we rejoice that God still seeks out and heals those suffering wounds of rejection.  We pray that the Grove will be a source of living water where everyone discovers that they are chosen.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

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

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Again, Lord!-Week 1 // God’s Call // Pastor Kate Murphy

Scripture: Acts 10:1-23

Peter had been through a season of intense transformation–a call to leave all things behind and follow Jesus, a new name, receiving the keys to the kingdom and the announcement that he’d be the rock of the church, being called Satan by Jesus, confidently declaring his allegiance to the Lord and then deserting and denying him, watching his savior die, wondering at the empty tomb, being restored to faithfulness on the beach, preaching the gospel for the first time, being filled by the Spirit, watching the explosion of new disciples streaming to God. 

Peter’s world had been turned upside down so frequently and dramatically since meeting Jesus, he didn’t know which way was up anymore.  Like many of us, He’d been through so much he probably thought he couldn’t be surprised by God anymore.  He thought he had arrived, he thought he understood the vast newness of God’s grace.

He was wrong.  One day, Jesus spoke a new word and gave a fresh vision that, even after all he’d been through, was beyond Peter’s wildest expectations.  Even after all they’d been through, Jesus still had a new word for Peter.

And Jesus still has a new word for us.

We will never grow beyond being surprised by God’s call.  No matter how far we’ve come, how much we’ve changed, until we see God ‘face to face’ on the other side of eternity, we will never be able to comprehend how wide, how far, how vast and how deep the Father’s love for the world is.  We cannot let our delight in God’s past faithfulness satisfy our hunger for God in the present.  I hope you’ll join me as we begin a new worship series.  In this new season, we look to the past and cry out ‘Again, Lord!,’  seeking more of the fullness of God in these present days.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

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

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A Kingdom Legacy-5 // Understanding God’s Heart // Pastor Kate Murphy

Scripture: Luke 7:36-50

Many of us are moving into a new season, new work, new responsibilities–shifting from the rhythms of summer into the increased demands of the fall.  At this hinge between ending and beginning, it is right that we gather to think one more time about our Kingdom legacy.  It is easy to get so caught up in all we have to do that we lose focus on who we are becoming.  Centering on God and his Kingdom over the demands of this world will often appear disruptive, inappropriate, and wasteful–even to those who have dedicated their lives to the work of the Lord.  In Luke chapter seven, we find the story of a woman who interrupted a meal honoring Jesus at a Pharisees house.  She came uninvited, weeping and wailing, and poured an absence amount of precious oil on Jesus’ feet after kissing them and wiping them with her hair.  The holy people were offended–that she created a scene, that she wasted valuable oil, that she disturbed then in their serious work of thinking about following Jesus.  She appeared to be an inappropriate mess.

But in that holy crowd, only she and Jesus understood God’s heart and true holiness.  And all the agendas and concerns and tasks that consumed the hearts and minds of the Pharisees that day have long been forgotten, but we still remember and ponder the power and significance of her act. We don’t know her name, but we are blessed by her legacy.

As we move into another frantic season of doing, I hope you will join me, as together we will seek the Spirit’s wisdom and guidance on how to create a Kingdom legacy that will honor God and point to his Kingdom for generations to come.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

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

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A Kingdom Legacy-4 // Korah’s Rebellion // Pastor Cedric Lundy

Scripture: Numbers 16

Dear Church,

This Sunday we welcome a Grove favorite to the pulpit – Pastor Cedric Lundy. He will be preaching the message “Korah’s Rebellion” from the book of Numbers. Cedric is the director of Urban Promise and an adjunct teaching pastor at Watershed church.  Previously, he served Charlotte churches as pastor of mission and justice and middle school ministry pastor.  Cedric’s faith is characterized by his passion for justice, heart for young people and zeal for the Lord.  He and his wife Emma (a native of Scotland) share a daughter Isla.  In his free time, he co-hosts a wonderful podcast called Token Confessions, runs a small coffee-roasting business and enjoys making pasta and bread from scratch.

I hope you’ll join us for worship this Sunday.

Peace,

Pastor Kate

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

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