Author Archives: Bill

June 18 – Day of Prayer, Evening of Prayer

Throughout the Day as God leads
 7:00 p.m. in the Chapel

LPC Family,

I am calling our family of faith into a day of prayer today. Specifically, I call each of us individually to prayer throughout the day and then, as you are able, to join us at 7:00 p.m. in the Chapel for a time of corporate prayer. Specifically:
  • For Brenda Clabbers. Brenda will undergo a sophisticated surgical procedure today at a hospital in Denver. Please pray throughout the day that God might use the work of the surgeons and others for Brenda’s healing. Pray, too, the God’s peace that passes understanding would guard Rein and Brenda, heart and mind, in Christ Jesus.
  • For Bret Lynn, his wife Amy and their children. And for Doris and Dylan and Eva and Brian.  Many of you know that Bret was stabbed last evening by an apparent vandal outside Ridge Auto where he and Dylan have worked for so many years. The wound was significant and recovery will take some time. Pray for continued healing for Bret and comfort and assurance for all his family.
Praying that this will be a day of healing for Bret and Brenda;
A day of comfort for those who love them. 
 
Pastor Bill
Psalm 103:1-3
 
Bless the Lord, O my soul,
and all that is within me,
bless his holy name!
Bless the Lord, O my soul,
and forget not all his benefits,
who  forgives all you iniquity,
who heals all your diseases.

June 13 – The View From the Mountain

black mountainI have spent the week away from Langhorne, one of two weeks allotted for study leave each year. I am in the southern part of the Blue Ridge Mountains near Black Mountain, North Carolina. We are a seminar group fo the Foundation for Reformed Theology, six of us who gather for a week once a year to read and discuss around a variety of topics in Reformed Theology. Five of the six of us graduated from Union Seminary in Richmond, Virginia, twenty years ago this month.

This year’s topic is Forgiveness and Reconciliation and our reading has included the writing of Miroslav Volf, who reflects on the possibilities and necessity of forgiveness between his native Croats and the Serbians whose slaughter of each other marred the last decade of the Twentieth Century. We have also read Duke Divinity School’s Gregory Jones whose “Embodying Forgiveness has prompted some deep conversation among us. Continue reading

June 7 – 10,000 Reasons for My Heart to Find

2013.03.31.10.53.58.1Earlier this week I asked for some help in preparing for Sunday’s worship service. I reminded you that we’d be celebrating LPC’s 125th Anniversary and that worship would be centered on Psalm 103 and its refrain, “Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless his holy name!”  We’ll also be introducing the immensely popular “10,000 Reasons” to our 8:30 and 9:45 services (already well known at the 11:30 service).

So, the question was, In what way has your life at LPC given you reason to sing God’s praise? Continue reading

May 31 – “It broked” – Learning the Language of Faith

photo (2)Becky and I spent a long Memorial Day weekend in Michigan with two of our three children, their spouses and our two grandchildren. It was wonderful.

At fifteen months, our granddaughter is communicating so well and developing a vocabulary to go along with hands-out “pick me up” and pursed lips “I don’t want to eat that.” Our grandson will be three years old in August and offers a running commentary on life. Both children exercise complete dominion over their grandparents.

Poets and pathologists, studied experts and loving parents marvel at the phenomena of human language. Language is one of our good God’s greatest gifts to humanity and one of its greatest responsibilities. Both tablets of the Law speak to the responsible use of language – prohibitions against using language about God in a vain way and against using language about our neighbor in a false way. Continue reading

May 17 – True Confessions – Grace in a One-Click-And-You’re-Gone World

DeleteI am serving on a committee of the Presbytery of Philadelphia that is, by all accounts, a very important committee in the life and mission of the presbytery. The outcome of our work is going to make a difference; for good or for ill it is going to be consequential.

There are nine of us on the committee. We are well led and the work is hard, but the camaraderie is good. We’ve been meeting regularly for about four months and we may finish our work in another four. Maybe. Continue reading