PLEASANT VIEW CHURCH
  • Home
  • New to Pleasant View
  • Announcements
  • Church Calendar & Newsletter
  • Missions
    • Maize for Malawi
    • Dzaleka Refugee Camp, Malawi
  • Church Online
  • Ministries
    • Pre-school
    • Children's Ministry
    • Youth Ministry
    • Adult Ministries >
      • JOY Fellowship - Senior Adults
    • Bible Studies
    • Music Ministry
    • Hispanic Ministry - Manantial de Vida
    • Prayer Ministry
    • Helping Hands
    • Food Pantry & New Hope Outreach
  • Online Giving
  • Pastor's Blog
  • From the Second Chair
  • Our Team
  • Contact
​Guilt
I stood staring at the scales in disbelief. I was in the Doctor’s office, weighing on the same scales I’ve stood on for five years. Somehow, in four weeks’ time, I had gained 17 pounds.
 
I was left in the exam room to deal with my demons. “You idiot! How could you have gained that much weight that fast?” “Your fifth-grade teacher told you that you would always be fat, because you can’t control yourself!” “Remember what Coach Hobbs said? He said you loved food more than football, and that if you loved football enough, you’d shed the extra pounds.” “Remember Dr. Smith? He told you years ago that you’d better start eating right, or you would be a really heavy man someday.”
 
I’m really good at guilt. Person after person, and scene after scene from my past all joined in chorus in that exam room: “you’ve always been fat, and you will always be fat!”
 
The only thing that ended the self-shaming was when the Doctor walked into the room. “Mr. Gilbert, we’ve messed up your medication. All that weight you’ve gained has got to be from that.” By the time I removed my shoes and socks, it was evident where all that extra weight was residing: in my feet and around my ankles. Fluid retention. It could all be fixed by changing me back to the medication they had discontinued. She reassured me that all my lab reports looked good. My diabetes remains well-controlled. It was just a medication change that didn’t go as planned.
 
I’ll say it again: I’m really good at guilt. It’s likely that you are, too. Voices from our past, and demons we see every time we look in the mirror try to convince us that we’re no good, and we’ll never be any good. Some carry guilt for past behaviors. Some carry guilt for past failures. Some carry guilt for not living up to their potential. Yet, the stain of guilt sticks out in our souls like black ink spilled on a white garment. We’re so good at messing up, and even better at reminding ourselves of how bad we are. “If anybody really knew how bad I am…”
 
The Bible doesn’t hide the reality of our wrongdoings, but it does offer the rest of the story. Jesus died on a Roman cross, a righteous, sinless man giving his life to pay my penalty. I don’t have to listen to the messages from my demons. Instead, I hear the words of a loving Savior, “All is forgiven.”
 
We’ve been singing these words each Sunday during Lent: No guilt in Life, no fear in death. This is the power of Christ in me.
 
It’s time to get off the guilt train. Fire your demons. Love your Savior. Then, you can love yourself. No guilt. No guilt. No guilt.
 
Welcome to worship. What we do here matters.
 

See You at the table

9/4/2018

0 Comments

 
On September 11, 2001, the Chattanooga District Clergy had their monthly meeting at 10 AM.  I was one of the clergy members there for the meeting.  Most of us had our radios on in our cars, and shortly before most of us arrived for the meeting, we were hearing news bulletins that hijacked airplanes had just crashed into the World Trade Center, and also at the Pentagon.  We would hear shortly after that of another hijacked plane crashed in Pennsylvania.  It was a day that most of us will never forget.
 
We pastors gathered around a small screen at Brainerd United Methodist Church, trying to make sense out of what had happened.  There was fear in the room, and there was anger in the room.  Only later would we fully realize the devastation that had taken place in the attack.  So many deaths, and so many injuries, and for a long time, so many questions with few answers.
 
Suddenly, whatever we had planned to discuss that day paled in comparison to our need to be amongst our people during such a pivotal moment.  There would be no regular clergy meeting that day.  However, before we left and headed back to our churches, we observed Holy Communion.  It served to calm my nerves before I went back to my congregation, where people filed into the church to pray, to strengthen each other, and just to talk.
 
Today, we observe Holy Communion together.  I certainly pray that no disaster comes our way.  But if it should, we come to a table, to receive grace and help in time of need.  Here, we are reminded that our Savior was a real flesh-and-blood human being.  He saw humanity at its worst, and still, He overcame.
 
See you at the Table.  What we do here matters.
0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    ​Pastor Dale

    Dale has been in ministry for over forty years. He's a teacher, singer, and story teller.

    Archives

    April 2021
    March 2021
    August 2020
    March 2020
    October 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Home
  • New to Pleasant View
  • Announcements
  • Church Calendar & Newsletter
  • Missions
    • Maize for Malawi
    • Dzaleka Refugee Camp, Malawi
  • Church Online
  • Ministries
    • Pre-school
    • Children's Ministry
    • Youth Ministry
    • Adult Ministries >
      • JOY Fellowship - Senior Adults
    • Bible Studies
    • Music Ministry
    • Hispanic Ministry - Manantial de Vida
    • Prayer Ministry
    • Helping Hands
    • Food Pantry & New Hope Outreach
  • Online Giving
  • Pastor's Blog
  • From the Second Chair
  • Our Team
  • Contact