What Is God Doing?

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By Larry Short, Elder Chair

A key challenge you and I frequently experience is the temptation to try and align God with what WE are doing. We pray, “God, I’d really like for such and such to happen or to do thus and thus. Can you please make that happen?”

But the truth is (and this is a key purpose of prayer), we will be blessed when we seek instead to align ourselves with what GOD is doing. Amen?

The purpose of this message is to highlight a few key things we as leaders feel God is doing at Elim right now and to encourage you to get fully on board!

Pandemic Rebuilding and Recovery

This week the state of Washington announced our in-service worship capacity can be doubled! This means we can have 106 people at any given event on our campus. Here are some details:

  • Face coverings and social distancing (6 feet) are still required. For those who still will not be able to join us, we will continue livestreaming so everyone can participate.
  • Moving forward we will (for the time being) continue having a single service, at 10 a.m. Enter through the front door (west side) and exit through the fellowship room entrance (north door).
  • We encourage you to come 10 or 15 minutes before service to greet new people and find a seat. If you want to hang out outside (weather permitting) afterward to fellowship, that’s fine, just keep the face coverings and social distancing going.
  • Registration is required. If you register but then can’t make it, please either go back on and unregister or contact Lori Cantu for help.
  • If you register and are told the service is full, you will be placed on a waiting list. However, you can still come on Sunday! Check with the usher at the front door. If the service is full, he or she can tap on a group of volunteers who have agreed to move out of the main sanctuary and take the service via livestream instead. We don’t want anyone to be turned away from worship!

Upcoming Special Events

This weekend, Bruce Martin, the Northwest District Superintendent for the Evangelical Free Church, will be with us to deliver a challenge. Don’t miss that! After he speaks, we will officially install (and pray over) Ryan as our next Lead Pastor!

(If you haven’t yet registered for this Palm Sunday service, don’t hesitate! It’s already over two-thirds full.)

The first service Ryan will lead is our Good Friday service, at 7:00 on April 2. A very special time is planned, so please register! (Also over two-thirds full, so don’t delay!)

Then his first Sunday worship service as our new pastor will be on Easter Sunday at 10:00 a.m.! Join us as this promises to be a wonderful time of celebrating Jesus’s resurrection and ascension.

A Highway in the Desert (Isaiah 40:1-5): Rebuilding the On-Ramps!

Do you realize that right now, we have more people requesting membership and more people volunteering to use their gifts and skills in ministry than during any time in recent memory? God is doing something special at Elim. If you are not yet a member but would like to consider it, please reach out to Lori Cantu for an application packet. And give me a call or send me an email if you’d like to talk about where you could plug into what God is doing here. Thank you!

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Taking up the Mantle

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By Larry Short, Elder Chair

While listening to Steve’s final sermon Sunday on the fascinating transition of prophetic leadership from Elijah to Elisha, I was reminded of something I wrote in my blog 13 months ago. And I realized that God used the story of the Elijah-Elisha transition then to help me prepare for what was coming.

I’m just going to quote some of the salient points. If you’d like to read the blog in its entirety (realizing it was written more than a year ago), click here. Otherwise, for an updated summary, keep reading.

We have been undergoing a “pastoral transition.” That’s a rather pleasant-sounding way to describe a lot of work and emotional trauma. In early 2019 our senior pastor of 25 years resigned and took up a new career (for which he is well-suited) as a chaplain. Some months later, our long-term (18 years) associate pastor also resigned so he could take up a senior pastorate at a church in Colorado.

That’s a lot of transition for a smallish church. Of course when anybody leaves, it’s emotionally difficult. We hired an interim pastor who is a transition specialist, and the good news is that Pastor Steve has now done his job, with prayers and sweat of a lot of Elim’s faithful leaders thrown in. Our new lead pastor, Ryan White, arrives with his family THIS WEEKEND and is on the job in April, and we are all VERY excited about what God has in store!

But when I first learned of our pastoral transitions back in 2019, I was distraught. I liked our church the way it was! Stepping into an uncertain future can fill one with foreboding.

And then there’s all the extra work. Darlene and I retired in 2019 and had happy plans for our new life. But suddenly the need to invest large quantities of time and energy in “keeping the plates spinning” at Elim began pressing down on us.

And then of course COVID-19 hit, with all its shutdowns and isolation and social distancing. Following hot on the heels of that disaster was the recurring trauma of the results of centuries of racial injustice. And we as a church struggled (as nearly all churches were doing) to resolve diverse opinions on all of these controversial topics and to figure out (with a lot of halting steps) how to move forward in the love and unity of purpose that our Head calls us to demonstrate as His Body.

In a men’s group last February we were studying aspects of leadership, and one of our studies focused on 2 Kings 2. Elijah was mentoring Elisha when it came time for a huge transition to occur. (That’s one thing we can always count on: change!)

Elijah gave Elisha several opportunities to withdraw, but Elisha insisted he would follow. He followed Elijah first to Bethel, then to Jericho, then to the edge of the Jordan River. Also in the entourage were 50 “lesser prophets,” local prophets in Israel.

Once at the river, Elijah removed and rolled up his mantle (or cloak, the symbol of his prophetic authority) and smote the river Jordan with it. Just as the waters parted before both Moses (at the Red Sea) and Joshua (also at the Jordan), so they split before Elijah, and he and Elisha continued on across, leaving the rest of the prophets behind.

Elijah then tells Elisha—both knowing that his time is short—“Ask what I shall do for you, before I am taken from you,” and Elisha responds brazenly, “Please let there be a double portion of your spirit on me.”

Elijah replies, “You have asked a hard thing; yet, if you see me as I am being taken from you, it shall be so for you, but if you do not see me, it shall not be so.” But sure enough, chariots of fire soon separate Elijah and Elisha, then Elisha sees Elijah taken up into heaven in a whirlwind.

At this point Elisha rightly grieves for what once was, just as I shed tears at the early-2019 meeting when our former senior pastor announced he was leaving. Elisha tears his garment in a sign of mourning for Elijah’s departure. But then something amazing happens. Elijah’s prophetic mantle comes fluttering down, and Elisha picks it up. He turns his back on the scene and heads back toward the Jordan. Then he does something extraordinary and incredibly risky.

Elisha takes Elijah’s mantle, rolls it up just as Elijah had done, and cries aloud (in the hearing of the prophets who are watching from the other side), “Where is the Lord, the God of Elijah?” He then strikes the waters with Elijah’s mantle. What an enormous act of faith! Sure enough, the waters part. God shows up! His back to the departed Elijah, Elisha walks across (alone) on dry ground, and rejoins the prophets

As a result, the prophets now are compelled to acknowledge that “the spirit of Elijah has rested on Elisha!” (Duh! Right?) Yet these lesser prophets still remain focused on the glory of the past. They want to launch a search mission to try to find Elijah! “It may be that the Spirit of the Lord has caught him up to cast him onto some mountain or in some valley!” They are not yet willing to let go.

But Elisha has already let go. He seeks to convince them of the new normal: Elijah is departed! But they persist, and he finally relents. They search for Elijah for three days, to no avail. “Didn’t I tell you?” Elisha challenges them. The past is behind, the transition has occurred, and the future is now upon us.

So as he approaches that challenging and uncertain future, Elisha has chosen to leave Elijah in the past and seek the ever-living LORD of the past, present, and future. New days and new challenges lie ahead!

Through His Word, God challenged me in my grief: “Are you going to be like one of those lesser prophets, refusing to let go of days gone by? Or are you going to be like Elisha, who was prepared to meet the future, who moved forward from the past and headed out in faith and anticipation toward the river and whatever lay ahead?”

Yes, transition is uncomfortable. It is emotionally challenging, risky, and a lot of work. But so is this task to which Jesus has called us: “Take up your cross, and follow Me.” And elsewhere, “No one who puts his hand to the plough and looks back is fit for the Kingdom of God.”

Yes, God is changing us! We are to learn from the past, thanking Him for it, but not to live in it. He calls us to move forward at this present moment, in faith, with hope for what He will do in whatever future He has in store for us. So, let’s roll up the mantle and move forward!

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Caution

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 By Jeff Foerster

In recent days we’ve heard words of encouragement and hope, Pastor Steve having offered these as we prepare for entry to the next season of Elim. On Sunday, he spoke of caution. Caution is a well-timed admonition because there are no seasons of safety in the Christian experience.

There may be periods of time where tumult subsides and temporal peace seems to take its place. A time such as this invites us into complacency, to let our guard down. Yet we are at war. To be alive upon the earth is to have trouble. Our trouble comes from the world’s system, sin, and Satan.

The world’s system invites me to “go along to get along” and to make my home here and aim for my best life now. It encourages me to participate in Christianized versions of worldly activity and focus. Sin. It crouches at my door, waiting for an opportune moment to strike. For the Christian, sin need not have control, but it is a dangerous foe, nonetheless. Finally, Satan prowls around like a roaring lion seeking someone to devour.

Know your foes, but know your Savior all the better. Know where the pitfalls lie and how to avoid them, but don’t stare deeply or you’ll risk falling in from disorientation. Instead, spend time with the One who redeemed you, who has conquered the world, has power over sin, and has made Satan a defeated foe. Then go, love others as He has first loved us.

“These things I have spoken to you so that in Me you may have peace. In the world you have tribulation, but take courage; I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33)

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Where to Begin

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By Lars Passic

This Sunday, Interim Pastor Steve McCoy preached on “how to pray up a storm.” He left us with three reminders for when we pray:

  • Pray earnestly
    • With your heart
    • “Lord, this is what I ask you to do.”
  • Pray expectantly
    • “Lord, I believe you’re going to answer.”
  • Pray effectively
    • According to God’s will

Earlier this week, I told someone how we have been searching for a pastor during the entirety of the COVID-19 pandemic, and these two realities have put an immense pressure on the people of Elim. Pastor Steve’s sermon reminds us of how important it is to pray earnestly, with our heart.

Right now, my heart is tired, confused, broken, and overwhelmed. There is so much anger, need, and hurt in the world. I don’t even know where to begin.

I am encouraged by Romans 8:26-27:

26 Likewise the Spirit helps us in our weakness. For we do not know what to pray for as we ought, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words. 27 And he who searches hearts knows what is the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the will of God.

God, you know the pain that we have gone through in the last few years. You know our heartbreak more than anyone. God, in Your Word you tell us that You have given us Your Spirit who knows what we need to pray for and prays for us. Please hear our prayer when we do not know where to begin. Please meet us where we are right now, heal our hearts, and forgive us for hurting each other. Thank you so much for being with us.

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