Monday, December 8, 2008

Creating the Creation Story: Love Talk #2

Genesis Project

(Please Read Aloud)
You have just opened the envelope that I handed to you in the room you were just in. You are on the right track so far! What you are about to read will help you with your particular group task, Recreating the Creation Story.

As just mentioned, your task as a group is to take the next 25-30 minutes to read over your particular Genesis text and recreate what is being told. You become actors, artists, mimes to the story that started all stories. Your goal is to use whatever you can to retell the story in 5-10 minutes.

In the grab bag that is in the middle of the room (if there is no grab-bag send someone to find Adam) there are items for you to use. Be creative as you read the story. You may use other Bible translations (like a Bible from the youth room) to help you gain a better understanding as to what is going on.

Recommendations:
Read the story 4 times. The first time to familiarize yourselves with it, the 2nd time read it as if it is the first time you have ever heard it, the 3rd time read it as if you were the writer and then finally, read it again as if you are re-telling it.

Once you have done this, begin to re-tell the story by the objects in the grab-bag. How will you show that light and day were created or that water and land were separated? How would you show that man was created? How will you make the story come alive? How did you incorporate the 5 senses?

Again I can’t help but to stress, BE CREATIVE! It can be funny, it can be silly, it can be serious, it can be enlightening, whatever direction you choose to take, I encourage you and ask that you think about and put yourself in God’s shoes.

Remember you only have 30 minutes to do this. Have fun with it.

P.S. You might need a narrator to help lead us through the interpretation!

P.S.S. There will be questions asked, a reward for the group that works together the best.

P.S.S.S. EVERYONE MUST HAVE A PART IN THE SKIT!

Love Began in the Garden: Love Discussion #2

“Where Love Began”
First Presbyterian Youth Group
December 7th, 2008
Director of Youth Ministries Adam R. Quine

And so in the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. A few more things were created and when God stepped back to take a look at what he did, God was happy and saw that it was good!

What you just did was recreated or re-told the story of Creation, the beginning of time. For the past few minutes you familiarized yourself with the story as well as you could and then as a group you used resources to make the story come alive.

I encouraged you to think about using your five senses, to put yourself in God’s shoes, to make it silly, serious, funny or dramatic. You for a half hour were in charge of telling how things came to be.

Tell me now, what was it like creating this scenario? How easy or difficult was it for you and your team to make this come alive, to think about how all of it will come together?
What was your favorite part of the story? Why?

Genesis is where love begins and it is for this very reason why we did this exercise. I wanted you guys to get a hands-on experience as to what it would be like to create the world, to create plants and animals and to create God’s beloved, man. As you know, there are some differences in the stories which you retold. (We will not get into this now but we shall on Tuesday night!) I wanted you to use your imagination about how you think it all went down. I wanted you to get your hands dirty (perhaps literally) and see how uniquely created everything is. Above all I wanted you to hear the importance of how God created man.

The Imago Dei
Then God said, “Let us make humankind in our image according to our likeness…so God created humankind in his image, in the image of God he created them, male and female he created them.

He formed them from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils and the man became a living being.

Then when talking about the Garden of Eden it says that he put the man in charge of the garden, the man whom he had formed!

Created in God’s image—formed by God—breathed on by God.

Genesis begins with God creating the world and then creating people “in his own image.” Friends, that is you, me and the guy sitting next to you. Yet what does the writer of the story mean by his own image? Does God have 5 fingers and toes? Is God old or young? Is God a he or she? Is God cute? Let me explain it a little better for you.

There is a Hebrew word being used here in regards to image which is tselem, and it has a specific cultural meaning. What we need to realize about the stories we just read, the Creation story, is that it started back in the Middle East. Around this time the ancient Near Eastern cultures believed that kings would rule in the image of a particular god. How many of you have heard of King Tut (King Tutankhamen). His name translated is “the living image of [the god] Amon). The king then was seen as the embodiment of a particular god on earth. So if you wanted to see what a particular god looked like, you looked at that god’s king. (Sex God pg. 19)

If you take a look at the story of Genesis and how things were created, one would see that the writer makes it clear that in all of the things created there is something about humans. We aren’t God and we will never be God but we do reflect what God is like and who God is. A divine spark resides in every single human being! Everybody, everywhere are bearers of the divine image!

Now this may seem like it is a little off subject but how many of you have either participated or know what I am talking about when you hear, hot or not? That is when you rate people on how good looking they are or are not.

Again I ask another question, it may be too embarrassing to ask or it may to personal but I ask it anyway. How many of you have either whistled at someone attractive, make a comment on how hot(t) someone is or have been on the receiving end on a whistle or comment? If you don’t mind, how did that make you feel?

When we do this, what happens to the way we view someone? If we look at a girl and see only physical attribute and we only see how good-looking a guy is, what are we doing? Do we tarnish the image of God in which they bear? All of the hooting and hollering may seem innocent and harmless until what? That’s right, you are the girl or the guy and then it hurts. You feel degraded. You feel violated. It does something to a person’s soul. It is a very bad thing when a person becomes a “that”.

Jesus says something in the Gospel Matthew about one of God’s children, an image-bearer, becomes a “that”. Jesus says, “that anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart.” Isn’t it interesting how Jesus connects our eyes and our intentions and our thoughts with the state of our hearts? But if you keep reading it sort of gets violent and gross. Jesus says that, “if your right eyes causes you to stumble, gouge it out and throw it away.”

Painful huh? Think about society. How many of us would be walking around with only one eye or perhaps, no eyes. Jesus however is not saying that blind people don’t lust yet what we can conclude is that Jesus is using the “it’s merely a flesh wound” picture to point us to something else. If you read on Jesus then says that, “It is better for you to lose one part of your body than for your whole body to go into hell.”

It seems like there is one extreme to another. Either cut body parts off or go to hell. What exactly is Jesus getting at here, huh? He’s stretching this whole lusting thing a bit, isn’t he?

Jesus makes his connections this way because of the understanding of the 1st century Jewish understanding of heaven. Heaven is not a fixed, unchanging geographical location somewhere other than this world. Heaven is the realm where things are as God intends them to be and a place where things are under the rule and reign of God. And that place can be anywhere, anytime and with anybody. To aid us in this discussion we can turn to the Psalms where it says, “The Lord has established his throne in heaven and his kingdom over all.”

Also in the Psalms it is said that “the highest heavens belong to the Lord and the earth he has given to humankind.” That is us, we are the human kinds. God has heaven, if you will, where things are the way God wants them and then there is the earth where God allows temporary existence of another kingdom; other realms of authority, kings, presidents, etc. So we are left then with how we view the earth, how we rule earth, with two options: what do you think they are?
A. Live under the rule and reign of God or
B. We can choose to rebel against God and live some other way

Now think about this. If there is a realm where God reigns and rules the way God intends them to and there has to be an opposite place right? There has to be a place where the rulers are image-bearers but treat one another not as humans, you know, how do you rate “that” as we look at someone with ill-intentions. There has to be a place where the rulers aren’t going according to God’s will. This place is called hell.

When we think of hell what comes to mind? Fire, the devil with pointy ears and pitchfork, a place that is not beautiful and lonely or scary. How many of you have heard the expressions “living hell” or “for the hell of it”. Often times these things are being said because a decision is being made for no apparent reason. It was pointless or random with no meaning. These go against what God is right? Purpose, meaning and beauty.

War zones, working conditions, divorces, families are often times referred to as hell on earth.

You see, every time you view someone not as an image-bearer but someone who has no soul or divine spark, you are making a choice that goes against the kingdom. That is Jesus’ point too about the whole “gouging out your eye” teaching. His point isn’t that you should mutilate your body if you find yourself lusting after someone. His point is that something serious—sometimes hellish—happens when people are treated as objects, and we should resist it at all costs.

Tonight, we retold a story, trying to recreate it in 30 minutes. We then looked at what it means to be made in the “image of God”. Realizing that there is more to it than whether we can prove God has 5 fingers or 5 toes. We discussed how inside each and everyone one of us is a divine spark that resides and that every time we begin to wonder away from this and begin to see people no-longer as humans, we prevent God’s reign on earth. There is more to people than their physical attributes/features and we have the ability to either edify or to degrade them. Jesus suggests that at all cost, whatever it takes, we must never get to that point in life where we are asking our friends to rate someone based on their looks. That once and if we get there, then we have no longer seen heaven on earth, rather we are the ones who bring hell itself to this place.

We are crated in the image of God. Uniquely made, shaped, formed and breathed on. With something inside us that makes us beloved and we reflect what God is like and who God is. You, I and still that same guy sitting next to you are bearers of the divine image!

God loves me this I know, for he breathed in me and made me in God’s image!

Thursday, November 20, 2008

December 2008 Article: Advent 2008


Remembering, Waiting, Imagining, Hoping

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God and the word was God. He was in the beginning with God. ~John 1.1,2


What in the world am I going to do? I mean there is no way this is possible. How can she be, pregnant? We are not even married yet, there is no way that this can be happening to me.

There is nothing else for me to do. I mean, what will this say about me as a person and more importantly, what will it say about her? I don’t want to disgrace her. Then that is what I shall do, I will pack my things and leave. It is nothing against her but I know these circumstances, nothing good can come from this.

It is midnight, I suppose I should sleep a bit before I start packing my things and leave in the middle of the night.

“Joseph, son of David, do not be afraid…” said the stranger
What do you mean do not be afraid? What are you? Who are you? Why are you here? Please, don’t hurt me; I’m just a poor carpenter, in this peasant style home. What I am saying then is I have no money for you to take, so please leave me alone!

“No no, Joseph you got me all wrong. You see I am an angel of the Lord and I am hear to tell you this, do not be afraid to take Mary as your wife, for the child conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit. She will bear a son, and you are to name him Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins,” the Angel said before it slipped away.

Joseph then fell asleep again. Awaking only to scratch his head and wonder what happened was a dream or if it was real. After thinking about it, he decided to do what the angel of the Lord told him to do. Together, Joseph and Mary welcomed a baby boy into the world and named him Jesus.

Often times we hear a lot about Mary and the pressures it must have been upon this young teenage girl. Yet I want us to focus on Joseph. Imagine what he must have felt like discovering his wife was pregnant with someone else’s child. Then after constructing a plan to get the heck out of dodge, have it picked a part by an angel. Only then to be left waking up scratching his head trying to remember what just happened. Reading on in the story, we see that King Herod had a plot to kill all infants, think about Joseph, Mary and Jesus waiting for the right time to escape. Finally, after the dust has settled, Joseph and Mary breathe a little bit and I can bet you, they were hoping the best for this child.

Remembering. Waiting. Imagining. Hoping. That is what Advent is all about. This is the season we are in friends. We find ourselves remembering where it was we just came from, waiting for this next year to begin, imagining what it will entail and then hoping for the year to be a great one!

This Advent let us together remember God’s promises to us as a people. Through this let’s begin discussion Christ’s return and what that will entail for us. Clinging tightly to the promises that God made through Christ, lets imagine what it would be like if we begin to live out the world that God had dreamed of. Together then we can begin to hope for a new world, become a picture of the Christ-life for the world and bring the Kingdom of Heaven to this place which is broken and is waiting for a healing.

What are God’s promises to us? What has God promised to his people? As we read these stories of Jesus’ birth and how God became flesh through Christ, let us engage in the reality that God did not die when Christ was crucified, but God is still alive and that God had come and that God is coming still! Let’s remember this, wait for Christ’s coming again, imagining what this will look like and then hope for the renewal God’s creation and for the life of the world to come.

Friends, this Advent season let us live in hope, as we remember God’s love for us, let us imagine what some may say is impossible such as peace and love for all and then let us do the good work of God, waiting for the moment when we will encounter Christ and his return! This is when God came to us. This is when we remember that God is coming to us again!

O God, fill us with a holy longing for the coming of your Son, Jesus, to brighten our dark and dreary world.

(Remembering, waiting, imagining, and hoping is the theme for FPC Owensboro this Advent season. Highlighted words is to recognize where it comes from, Jonathan E. Carroll.)

L O V E--Is Coming

And so it begins. It's time to talk about the 'L' word. You know, the one that we "hear" too much but never really listen to it.

You know what I mean, right? Love.

We'll tell our parents, grandparents, brothers and sisters, friends that we love them and in the same breath, we'll talk about how much we love a new car or a certain pair of jeans.

I mean, I love my parents, and I also love UK basketball?

Have we lost the meaning of love within our culture? Have we failed to remember how sacred a word it really is and how sacred we are as humans?

Love. What does it mean? What is it good for?

What does the Bible have to say about it?

Jesus loves me this I know, for the Bible tells me so...but where though?

[Love] is called Agape in the New Testament to distinguish from Eros [sexual love], Storge [family affection], and Philia [friendship]. So there are four kinds of love, all good in their proper place, but Agape is the best because it is the kind God has for us and is good in all circumstances.
~C.S. Lewis, Letters of C.S. Lewis

Monday, November 17, 2008

Operation Christmas Child 2008 Photos




Here are some pictures of our students putting together the Operation Christmas Child boxes. I do apologize for the poor picture quality.



















Here are some pictures of our students putting together the Operation Christmas Child boxes. I do apologize for the poor picture quality.

Operation Christmas Child 2008

“You Silly Kids”

Operation Christmas Child Devotion

November 16th, 2008

Director of Youth Ministry Adam Quine

I want you all to think of your favorite gift that you ever gotten. Now I want you to think when was the last time you played, seen or even thought about that gift. What about your most favorite toy? What have been some of your most favorite toys?



I remember when I was your age I enjoyed this time of year. I always was excited for Sunday’s and when the latest JC Penny magazine arrived in the mail. You see, I would get excited because I would sit down with my pencil and notebook and I would go through each of the pages carefully, looking for what I wanted for Christmas. I would arrange them ads in order of how importance. For instance, how many of you have ever gone into the store Kohl’s with your parents or for you older adults, have shopped there? What sort of things does Kohl’s sell? Clothes, that is right. Now how many of you have ever been in the store, Toys-R-Us? What do they sell? Obviously toys are sold there.



What I would do is I would arrange the store ads by stores like Kohl’s first because I was not interested in clothes, then it would lead into a Wal-Mart, then Target, then a video-game store add, and finally, Toys-R-Us. I would search every page, up and down looking for the toys that I NEEDED! The ones that I must have or I would DIE or at least not be excited come Christmas morning. I would compile this list and I even remember one year, sitting at a type writer and typing it out so that when my mom and dad when shopping, they would have no question as to what I wanted. What I NEEDED!



How many of you here make a Christmas list? How many of you get EVERYTHING you ask for? How many of you get ½ of what you ask for? How many of you get nothing of what you asked for?



One time a young man came to Jesus with a list. You see, his parents were going to give his brother everything that they owned and he did not think it was very fair. So he went us to Jesus and he says, “Tell my big brother to give me some of that stuff that is on this list my parents made.” Jesus says, I’m not the one that can do that but what I can do is tell you a story about a rich farmer who was a fool. This farmer had a lots and lots of farm land and it would produce lots and lots of crops right. (Like Reid’s but much, much bigger.) He had so many crops he decided to tear down the barns that he had and replace them with bigger barns. So he tears them down and fills them with all of these extra food/crops. After he did this he looked at his barn that looks like it could explode at any moment and says, “This is cool. I don’t have to do anything else. I have what I wanted and now I can worry about me and my things.”



Well God shows up right, and God took this greedy farmer by the ear and said, “FOOL! Tonight you are going to exist no more. And your barn full of goods—who gets it?

Finally Jesus says, “That is what happens when you fill your barn with Self and not with God.”



Greed had consumed this farmer. He was so focused on his stuff, all of his corn, beans, carrots, etc. he had missed the big picture of what God wants us to be concerned of. What could the farmer have done with all that food/crops/goods? What about us? Think about all the cool toys you got? Think about all your video games, talking robot toys and what not. Now, how many of them collect a good amount of dust? Often times we can allow our desires for lots of things, toys, basketballs, movies, video games, get in the way of what God is calling us to do. We feel as if we need to stay up to date with the latest fashions, have all the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle toys and if we don’t then it is not fair. How many of you have asked for something and not gotten it? Are you still here today?



Radical acts of unselfishness are perhaps what we are called to do for God and that is exactly what we will be doing tonight. We are participating in a ministry that puts the needs of others before our own. We will be impacting children across the worlds that have no toys. All they have potentially are the toys that we gave them last year. We do this to help us remember that we are called to love the poor, to serve them and to love them the way that God loves us. We are to be concerned for the poor, loving them and caring for them.



When we consume our lives with getting all the stuff we WANT (not needing) and bigger and better things (like the farmer’s barns), we could miss the opportunity to love others. When it was all said and done, the farmer had nothing left when he died and it went no where. Tonight, I want us to take a deliberate action to allowing our heart to be where the treasure is, the Kingdom of God.

Everybody grab a piece of paper and share from this crayon box. Quietly while this video is playing I want everyone to draw their favorite toy. It does not have to be perfect or something extravagant, it simply needs to be your favorite toy.



After drawing it, I want you to take it and lay it on this ____________, to symbolize the choice that tonight we are going to become more intentional about the way we think about material goods. We are going to lay down these toys, realizing that if we did not have them, that it would be ok. We will then become mindful of how many around the world do not have the same opportunities as we do and that some have nothing like the brother who asked Jesus to have his older brother share with all the things he had. These people who have nothing often times have no one to share with them until this night.



We will put together boxes and send them to lands over seas where God’s love will be spread through our actions. By laying this picture down, you are making a promise to yourself and God that you will share with others all that you can, that you will not ask for more than what you need and what you have is enough of all you need, and that you will strive to bring the Kingdom of God to earth by loving one another.



That is what tonight is all about friends. Our actions tonight will indeed see people as us being fools, not because we have greedy thoughts, but because we are becoming fools for Jesus, giving things to the poor and loving them when no one else will!

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Camp Loucon Pictures #5










Camp Loucon Pictures #4










Camp Loucon Pictures #3

Here are our senior high gearing up for the high ropes course. The first couple of pictures are our youth gaining instructions about what to do while they prepare and when they are eventually on the high-ropes course.