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St. Patrick and COVID 19 From FLGA District

St. Patrick’s Day celebrations this year will be very different. While many will still enjoy a green (or amber) beer, there will be no parades, no rowdy gatherings at a neighborhood bar, restaurants will serve far fewer corned beef and cabbage meals to celebrating patrons.

St. Patrick and COVID 19

St. Patrick’s Day celebrations this year will be very different. While many will still enjoy a green (or amber) beer, there will be no parades, no rowdy gatherings at a neighborhood bar, restaurants will serve far fewer corned beef and cabbage meals to celebrating patrons.

The COVID 19 pandemic has changed everything.

Whether you celebrate St. Patrick’s Day or not, St. Patrick does have something to teach us as we learn to keep our social distance. St. Patrick’s evangelistic methodology may serve our time and context well.

I’ll let you google St. Patrick’s history – the story of his kidnapping, conversion and subsequent return to Ireland to share the Gospel message with the Irish barbarians who had enslaved him. It’s quite a story. What really interests me, however is how he created a Christian movement within local communities. These days especially, I wonder if God has prepared His church – us – for such a time as this.

Patrick understood that the spiritual life and ministry call were not to be lived alone. There were no large (or small) churches to which he could invite the barbarians. He did not work to convert individuals, but through his missional vocation, his way of life, he invited others to observe, live, and practice a life of discipleship with him. Through this lifestyle evangelism, the Holy Spirit converted many to Christianity.

The lesson for us today – as churches are closed for worship, children are sent home for on-line schooling, meetings are cancelled and travel is curtailed – is simple. While we may not gather in large groups, how could our church leaders resource members to have “house churches,” to gather very small groups in their homes or yards, where neighbors could observe the Christian faith in action and hear the Christian Gospel? Could it be that some or even many of these neighbors will become participants, rather than observers? How many will the Holy Spirit bring to faith and Christian confession in the context of these micro-communities or “house churches?”

This was Patrick’s method. But it wasn’t new with Patrick. The believers in the early Christian Church practiced the same (see Acts 2:42-47 and Acts 4). These believers were called “Christians” (Acts 11) because they lived a Christ-life and because they talked about Christ all the time. Something was different as they practiced hospitality and lived godly lives and as they invited their neighbors to live this life with them. Their neighbors took notice. In fact, these “Christians” were especially noticed in the darkest of times. Plague, persecution and famine gave Christians opportunity to demonstrate Jesus’ love as they served their neighbors in His name.

COVID 19 and the suggested – or enforced – precautions to “flatten the curve” offer us, as the church, the opportunity to be the church in fearful and challenging times. We have the opportunity to live life (even in quarantine) on mission, and to share Good News at a time when the news on TV isn’t so good.

I appreciated James Emery White’s statement in his March 16 post, Why We Cancelled Our Weekend Service…And Why You Should Too. He says, “Just because a church takes a break from physically gathering together doesn’t mean it ceases to be the church! We all know that a church is more than bricks and mortar, and while called to gather for worship it is vastly more than the weekend services… At this moment, our culture needs something it doesn’t have. Not simply more test kits, but the peace that surpasses understanding.” How can you share that peace with your neighbors? White says, “By closing a physical door, we may just be opening a spiritual one.”

St. Patrick gave us so much more than green beer – although you might consider having one with your neighbors and sharing the real story of Patrick with them as a starting point for spiritual conversation.

I think he would appreciate that.

Rev. Dr. Peter Meier, FLGA District
Executive Director of Missions and Outreach

For Consideration and Sharing:

As you prepare pastoral letters and communications to the people of your congregation and school, consider how you might use them to highlight the missional opportunities God is giving.
• How could you gather and share faith stories that take place in the midst of the pandemic?
• What scriptures are you sharing to give courage and hope, pointing people to God’s promises?
• What “best practices” are you promoting to involve God’s people in caring for their neighbors?
• Consider sharing any of the above with us as a means of helping and encouraging others!

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Daily Grace Email 1

Changes to the Wednesday this week and watching for Sunday.

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The world is shutting down, and people are hoarding toilet paper and hand sanitizer. But when the end is near, Peter reminds us that we are people who have been saved by the ending, the cross and death of God. And because we are people of God, we love like God. 

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Questions for the Week

  1. In the big Hollywood disaster movies, how do people respond when they know that “the end is near?"

  2. Read 1 Peter 4:7:-11.  How does Peter tell us we should live knowing that the end is near?  Do you agree with this? Why or why not?

  3. What enables us to live in the way that Peter calls us to live?

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Jesus is Lord of the Church, and we are called to be His disciples. This value guides us as we face the difficult challenge of responding to the coronavirus (COVID-19), which the World Health Organization declared a pandemic on Wednesday.

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Questions for the Week

  1. Who is a celebrity who has died where you felt great loss?  Why do you think you felt so much loss?

  2. Read 1 Peter 1:3-5.  According to Peter, what is our defining story made up of?

  3. What about this story is contrary to what the world finds value in?

  4. What do you find valuable about Peter’s words in 1 Peter 1:3-5, as you live out your life and faith?

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Naaman is the best ever. He is second to the king and a virtually undefeated war general, but he just discovered he has leprosy. So he grabs every bit of wealth and power and goes to visit the only one he knows who can heal him. Will Elisha accept his gifts to heal this gentile power?

Questions for the Week

  1. Who is the most prideful person you know?  What about them makes them prideful?

  2. Read 2 Kings 5;1-7.  What is Naaman prideful about?  What is he trusting in most? When are times that we trust in similar things?

  3. Read 2 Kings 5:8-14.  Describe how Naaman is healed.  How have you seen God work in the humble and small things?

  4. Read 2 Kings 5:15-19.  Now that Naaman has seen the true God, what is his problem with his job of serving the foreign king?  What does Elisha tell him to do?

  5. What is your first response when you find yourself in a situation where someone makes it difficult for you to live out your faith? How can you follow Elisha’s advice and simply “go in peace” knowing you are forgiven and God is with you in those times? 

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Elijah just had a huge win against the prophets of Baal; however, he leaves scared because Jezebel is threatening his life.  He runs into the wilderness to the very mountain of God to hide from his sure defeat. But God, in a still, small voice asks him, “Why are you Here?”

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This season can seem so overwhelming. This party, that shopping, those friends; it can seem like there is so much you have to do that it is just overwhelming. Think about Mary the mother of Jesus. How overwhelming would her life be here with so much pressure? Yet in feeling all of her pressure, she sits in humility and sings a song of excitement.

Questions for the Week

  1. A week before Christmas how do you normally feel?  Excited? Anxious? Overwhelmed? Something else? Why do you feel this way?

  2. Read Luke 1: 46-56.  This is Mary’s song of praise.  What themes do Mary highlight? Where do you see Jesus living out these themes in his life and ministry?

  3. In our gospel lesson we see both Mary and Elizabeth covered in excitement as God has come to the unworthy and humble.  What are some ways you can get wrapped up in this true excitement of Christmas this week?

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