Alive in Him, Our Living Head
Tucked away in our church's history is a College Church pastor's personal story of grief and a sermon preached seventy-five years ago on Romans 8:28--Pastor Moody's text for this weekend. (The following is from A History of College Church by Edith L. Blumhofer.)
Between Christmas and New Year's Eve, 1941, [Pastor] Evan and Evangeline Welsh drove to Indiana for a brief family visit. As they traveld home in the early morning hours of December 31, their car hit a patch of ice, Evan Welsh lost control of the vehicle, and they skidded in the path of an oncoming pickup truck. His wife died instantly, and her mother had to be cut from the vehicle by emergency responders. Evan Welsh and those in the truck were injured less severely. That morning, the headline in the Wheaton Daily Journal read, "Wheaton Pastor's Wife Dies." The city's population hovered around 8,500, and the community shared the congregation's shocked sense of loss.
College Church members gathered as usual for the Watch Night service but cancelled the annual New Year's dinner. Evan Welsh returned to Wheaton on January 2, and on Saturday, January 3, Moody Church pastor Harry Ironside conducted Evangeline Welsh's funeral. The Welshes had two daughters, Joan and Mary, nine and five years old. The next day was Sunday, and the morning sermon at College Church by the Rev. ThomasLindsay addressed the topic "All things work together for good." The next week, Evan Welsh returned to his pulpit to preach "This Is the Victory." He called his evening sermon "New Lives for Old." (In April 1966, another College Church pastor's wife, Jane McClenny, died in an automobile accident. Jane and Dexter McClenny were en route from Wheaton to Kentucky to visit a high school missions team when he lost control of the vehicle on a wet road.)
Full of Life and Hope and Heart
Evgeniy with two of his children.
The Isaev family enjoys a rather unusual notoriety in their home country of Ukraine: they are the first family to ever adopt an HIV positive child. The family is now asking prayer for the father—Evgeniy, who was admitted to hospital with heart failure and is awaiting coronary bypass surgery (scheduled for Tuesday, March 8).
Evgeniy and his wife, Svetlana, are now part of the movement of Christians to adopt children within their own country, but at one time, Soviet Ukraine was almost totally closed to adoption, even of healthy children, who were left in State-run institutions. For children with special needs, hospitals took the place of homes, leaving these children with little or no hope for homes of their own.
Evgeniy and Svetlana opened their homes and hearts to as many children as they could house. They are parents to 11 children—two biological children and nine children adopted or in foster care.
Sasha, happy at home.
Sasha, their most recently adopted child, spent eight years in an orphanage for special needs children. Sasha’s mother left him at the hospital after he was born premature and weighed just two pounds at birth. Sasha’s mother suffered from HIV (after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Ukraine had one of the highest rates of HIV infections) and passed the virus on to him. Little Sasha spent the next eight years in the orphanage until the Isaevs adopted him this past Christmas.
The Ukraine Without Orphans movement has spread to more than 30 other countries through the World Without Orphans (WWO) movement. Anita Deyneka, one of College Church’s missionaries, is a part of the expanding WWO Movement, which recently hosted a forum in Thailand. In which participants from 70 countries attended.
College Church missionary Anita Deyneka and some of her young Ukrainian friends.
“Evgeniy and Svetlana’s example is helping to inspire Christians and churches all over the world to care for the fatherless,” says Anita. “Our prayers for this family will help sustain them as Evgeniy undergoes surgery in just a few days. Globally, not only the orphans, but many watching are seeing the hands of Jesus as Christians embrace orphaned or abandoned children in their own countries through sacrificial people like Evgeniy and Svetlana.”
Let’s pray for Evgeniy during his heart surgery on March 8 as well as for the many Christians around the world who are reaching out to these millions of forgotten children.
Cleave to Breathe
by Alyssa Carlburg
Alone, I cannot breathe.
I cannot find reprieve.
I can only weep and grieve,
Because, to You, I refuse to cleave.
With you, I am still and know
How you desire me to grow.
My tears no longer flow,
And my heart is aglow.
Alone, fear grips and seizes.
Hope flits away on wayward breezes.
Sin ravages and rends as it pleases.
And, nothing I do calms or eases.
With you, I am still so I can go
To share Your love to and fro.
When I am brought low,
Then Your Kingdom can grow.
With You I can freely breathe.
I find my soul’s reprieve.
I have no reason to grieve,
And to You, my soul cleaves.
Even the Meadows Reach
Art and Meditations by Sean Shimmel
In his short piece, The Hunger of the Wilderness, Pastor A.W. Tozer likens the moral bent of the soul as the encroachment of nature upon order and calls the Christian to vigilance of the heart: “Every farmer knows the hunger of the wilderness, that hunger which no modern farm machinery, no improved agricultural methods, can ever quite destroy. No matter how well prepared the soil, how well kept the fences, how carefully painted the buildings, let the owner neglect for a while his prized and valued acres and they will revert again to the wild and be swallowed up by the jungle or the wasteland. The bias of nature is toward the wilderness, never toward the fruitful field. That, we repeat, every farmer knows.”
As a counterpoint to Tozer’s portrayal, I imagine nature as reaching for God, insistent upon worship. The meadow blooms, creeps and sways past the impassive, breathless idol sitting in fungal decay towards the Glad Maker. While art is best experienced rather than dutifully explained, here are some thoughts and impressions that went into this piece.
• Acts 17:24-28: Paul to the Athenians and their Unknown God, “The God who made the world and everything in it is the Lord of heaven and earth and does not live in temples built by human hands. And he is not served by human hands, as if he needed anything. Rather, he himself gives everyone life and breath and everything else. From one man he made all the nations, that they should inhabit the whole earth; and he marked out their appointed times in history and the boundaries of their lands. God did this so that they would seek him and perhaps reach out for him and find him, though he is not far from any one of us. ‘For in him we live and move and have our being.’ As some of your own poets have said, ‘We are his offspring.’
• Luke 19:40: Jesus during his Triumphal Entry, defying the caustic Pharisees, “I tell you,” he replied, “if they keep quiet, the stones will cry out.”
• Pencil: I thought of a light watercolor wash to finish the drawing, but decided instead to employ the simplicity of pencil alone in two ways: to emphasize the lifelessness of the unknown idol and to focus on the sheer life and movement via the stroke work.
• Wind: Like God breathing life into Adam. And Aslan in The Magician’s Nephew singing creation into being.
• Irony: living vines strangle lifeless form; swaying grass ignores and reaches past the ignoble stone. Flowers and berries burst into beauty within the seeming chaos. Form within freedom.
The mountains and hills will burst into song before you, and all the trees of the field will clap their hands.(Isaiah 55:12)
Sleep in Somewhat Heavenly Peace
by Steve Krogh
“That’s the last wire I need to attach to your skull. Have a good night. Sleep and breathe well, Mr. Krogh.” With those words, Curt, the technician at the St. Mary’s Sleep Disorder Clinic, turned out the lights and shut the door. I laid my head on the pillow, knowing that Curt was watching my every move via infrared camera, listening via a microphone, monitoring my breathing lungs, beating heart, twitching eyes, and soon-to-be snoring nose.
Before he shut the door he said reassuring things like: “You need to have 20 sleep events in the next two hours to get a passing score on the sleep apnea study. You will know you passed if I wake you up in the middle of the night and put a mask over your face.”
Well, aren’t those cheery thoughts? I had always done well in school, but how exactly do you pass this test, when you are supposed to be unconscious? Let’s see. First, I need to get to sleep. Not that easy with 20 wires hanging from your head, face, index finger, chest and legs. Second, I must sleep on my back, not my side or stomach. Third, it’s hot in here. Fourth, I can hear people talking in the hallway. Fifth, why isn’t my wife asleep next to me? Oh, that’s right, she was the one who got me committed to this clinic in the first place. Something about my snoring keeping her awake. Well, wait till she hears the results of this study. Something like, “Mrs. Krogh, your husband doesn’t snore. In fact, he never went to sleep!”
So, how do I get to sleep knowing that Curt is probably reading my mind through those wires? What if I fail this test and my sleeping privileges are forever revoked? I pray for each member of my family, pray for those in our church with physical needs, those with spiritual needs. I recite the Lord’s Prayer, not too loud, lest Curt hear me. On second thought, maybe it would be good for Curt. I recite some memory verses, including Proverbs 6:4 (a fitting verse for this sleep center; look it up). I think about riding my motorcycle through winding roads in Wisconsin. I think about our daughter having a baby in March, which makes me remember our son Luke being born right here at St. Mary’s hospital, which makes me think of . . . how I am not sleeping!
Next thing I know, Curt is saying, “Congratulations, you passed. It's 12:30 a.m., let me put this mask over your face.” I wasn’t this relieved to pass a test since the final exam in second year Hebrew in seminary. Next thing I know, the bodiless voice of Curt intones through the speaker “Good morning, Steve. It's 5:30 and you can go home as soon as I disconnect your wires.”
Sleep. Breathe. Something we take for granted. Sleep is mentioned in the Bible 129 times, slumber, eleven times. Paul twice mentions sleepless nights (2 Cor 6:5; 11:27), which had nothing to do with Curt and everything to do with being persecuted for the gospel.
King Solomon said sleep was “sweet” (Ecclesiastes 5:12). He said God “gives to his beloved even in
his sleep” (Psalm 127:2). Imagine that! God gives and blesses his people whom he loves even as we sleep! Even while you were sleeping last night, God was ruling the world with a sovereign hand. His eyes were watching over his people, from dirt-floored huts in Cameroon to snow-covered homes in West Chicago. While you were sleeping, God was alert, graciously giving to you and blessing you.
Sleep. Something we need in order to survive. We are creatures. Weak. Fragile. Frail. Clay. Dependent.
Sleep. Something God does not need. He survives without it. He is the Creator. Powerful. Strong. Never tiring. Firm. Constant.
Sleep. We need it, and God gives it.
Next time you can’t sleep, or when you awake from a night of God-blessed sleep, think over these words of Psalm 121:
My help comes from the LORD,
who makes heaven and earth.
He will not let your foot be moved;
He who keeps you will not slumber.
Behold, He who keeps Israel
will neither slumber nor sleep.
The LORD is your keeper;
the LORD is your shade on your right hand.
The sun shall not strike you by day,
nor the moon by night.
The LORD will keep you from all evil;
He will keep your life.
The LORD will keep your going out and your coming in
from this time forth and forevermore.
Thank you, Lord, that you who needs no rest, graciously gives to us who do need rest. Thank you, Lord, that you are our keeper. You give us breath. Today, tonight and for all eternity.
A Sabbath Breath
by Virginia Hughes
The Spirit of God has made me, and the breath of the Almighty gives me life. Job 33:4
"Breathe in and hold, hold, hold; and…Breathe out."
I am in the MRI scanner. I breathe and hold on cue. The audio instructs, "breathe, breathe and hold." A live woman's voice interrupts occasionally to chastise me for not following the tape. "Follow the tape!" I am in trouble for breathing? Or not breathing?
It's funny. I want to laugh, but am sedated, and can't remember how to laugh. I've been strapped to the table, in a dark tunnel for a very long time. The live voice again, "Are you going to follow the tape or do we need to start over?" I do not know the answer to the questions. I am so tired. Now I'm being chastised for falling asleep. "Just breathe when you're told to, but do not sleep!" The live voice cuts in again. "Please breathe according to plan," the voice demands, but it's her plan not mine.
His plan not ours. Adam's beginning was earth's miry clay. A mud form God breathed into being. We are miraculous breathing machines, but we forget important things. We get sedated by activity. We get lost. We get overwhelmed. We get far away from the most obvious things like sabbath rest. We are commanded to rest. Worship is our breath. Connecting to our creator and allowing him to revive us again In my parents' home, the eight of us children were forbidden to do anything on Sundays except go to church, help Mom with meals, read our Bibles and take a long nap in the afternoon.
Or we could go witnessing with Dad. My dad was tenacious about sharing the gospel.
Witnessing meant go up to a house and knock on the door. If anyone answered, Dad would ask to come in and talk about salvation. He would read the Bible, pray and invite everyone in the home to the church where he pastored. Sometimes one or two of us children accompanied Dad.
There was an unlikable man in our neighborhood who didn't want the pastor nosing around. But one of his children let us in one Sunday afternoon, and Dad had me read the Bible verses. Then we prayed until their angry dad stormed in ordering us to leave because he didn't want to hear any hellfire and damnation sermons in his own house. Dad invited the angry man and his family to our home or church anytime. He gave a Bible to the wife and ended with "God loves you." And the man uttered a bunch of words I'd never heard before and threw the Bible in our direction while we were descending the porch steps. It landed in the shrubs. I asked Dad why visit such a bad man? Dad said he wanted the family to know who he was and where he lived. “I think they will need help someday. And when they come, I can direct their attention to God's saving grace.”
The day came when there was a phone call from the wife. My dad yelled, "Call the police!" and ran down the street to the house with the bad man. Dad arrived before the police and went right into the house. I was watching from our second story window.
The police came and the man was taken away. Later, Dad said the man had been drinking, went on a rampage, hit his wife and had been taken to jail. Dad visited the man in jail. No one else did. It was discovered that he was wanted for other crimes and was transferred to a prison farther away. Dad gave him a Bible. He didn't throw it this time.
His wife came to our house one day and thanked Dad for saving her life. She and her children were moving back to her home town. She said, "I can breathe again. By God's grace I can breathe again."
We are commanded to remember the Sabbath and keep it holy. The fact that we require a commandment to remember who made us says a lot about us doesn't it? Worship is our breath. It is personal. Connecting to our Creator and allowing him to revive us again every day is a privilege. He intentionally breathed us into being. We must intentionally breathe him in to have our best being. We must breathe at the beginning, breathe in the middle, breathe at the end. Don't forget to . . .
Crackers and Minnows
Lord Jesus,
You needed me?
In this crowded mountain field,
You called me?
Because I only have a little food here.
Five barley loaves and two fish.
Crackers, really, and minnows.
Tiny, broken, and limp.
You asked where to buy bread,
That the people may eat.
Andrew noticed I had a little.
So now I bring it to you.
Sorry it took me awhile.
I hesitated at first,
And then I tripped a few times on the way.
But here I am.
But I’m a little unsure.
Will I have still something to eat?
This is all I have,
And it wasn’t much.
Others are watching me.
Some with scorn, for I am small.
Some with curiosity, for I am just a boy.
Some with interest, for they are hungry.
But most indifferent.
Oblivious to what I carry.
Or even more,
What you might do with it.
Here you go. Take it all.
Can I watch?
You say you will feed many?
How can that be, with only my little lunch?
For what do you thank God
Before He even acts?
For what do you need helpers
To distribute so little?
From where does this all come?
How can this be?
The food multiplies before my eyes.
There is enough for the thousands.
And leftovers even?
In abundance?
Twelve baskets full?
Who are you, Lord?
Lord Jesus,
I gave you the little I had.
And you did more than I can imagine.
To feed your flock.
I praise you.
I trust you.
For with you,
I am full.
Take my crackers and minnows again, Lord.
And show me what you can do.
by Cheryce Berg