• Even Nature Obeys
    Oct 28 2022

    Mark 4:35-41
    Imagine yourself as one of the disciples in the  boat with Jesus in the midst of the storm. What would you be feeling as each wave pounds the boat?  Would you be afraid? What would you say to Jesus as he slept in back of the boat?

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    20 mins
  • Healing Hands
    Oct 3 2022

    Pastor Mark Klaisner presents his second Sermon from the series "Meeting Jesus".  October 2, 2022

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    21 mins
  • Formula for Personal Growth It’s not enough to hear God’s Word—we must apply it in our life.
    3 mins
  • Jesus the Artist of Reconciliation (Episode 4)
    May 4 2022

    Vincent van Gogh first wanted to be a minister of the Gospel, but he was rejected by the church though he was very popular with the people he served. Even with this disappointment Vincent never lost his faith in the creative power of Christ to transform lives. What happened was that Van Gogh made a conversion from the religion of his parents to an understanding that the Divine was found to beauty of creation and in the humble circumstances of the poor and marginalized.

     

    Vincent defined this as true piety, which he called "the white ray of light." The work of the peasant painter Millet, he noted in an 1883 letter, has a gospel and "this white light." 

    For van Gogh, to believe in God now meant not that one should believe all the sermons of the clergymen or "the arguments of the bigoted, genteel prudes," but rather that there was a God, "not dead or stuffed, but alive, urging us to love, with irresistible force." 

    Van Gogh pursued his art with his former religious zeal and mission, claiming, "Our purpose is self-reform by means of a handicraft and of intercourse with Nature -- our aim is walking with God."

    Today, we are going to look at his first great masterpiece called the “Potato Eaters”

     This painting exemplified Vincent’s newfound faith in God and in Creation. What you observe in this painting is a family crowded around a small table, sharing a simple meal of potatoes and coffee by the dim light of an overhead lamp. In some respects, the painting might seem rather unorganized but for its one unifying element: the lamp, with its warm glow piercing the isolation. The lamp was van Gogh’s symbol of love and recalls the light of the gospel which he once brought into the huts of the peasants and miners.

    The act of sharing in any meal can be a stark reminder of how inclusion, forgiveness, and reconciliation can be incorporated in the life of an individual, a family and community as a means of grace.

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    19 mins
  • The Good Methodist - Reconciliation and God's Plan
    Apr 26 2022

    I am blessed to share in this podcast with my dear friend Rev. Craig Duke. 
    Leviticus 18:32-33 
    Craig and I talk about God's plan for forgiveness, and guess what, it doesn't involve judgement or shame! We need to experience true reconciliation with family, friends, faith etc.  Can be accomplished with surrogates.

    Even before the incarnation, (Jesus)  God was moving people to reconcile with each other.

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    27 mins
  • Transformation: "Finding Light in the Darkness"
    Feb 3 2022

    Pastor Mark Klaisner delivers his message from the Sunday Worship Service on January 30, 2022

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    22 mins
  • "Joseph and the Power of Adapting"
    Dec 26 2021

    Pastor Mark Klaisner delivers his message from the Sunday Worship Service on December 26, 2021

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    22 mins
  • "A Bridge Over Troubled Waters"
    Dec 26 2021

    Pastor Mark Klaisner delivers his message from the Christmas Eve Worship Service on  December 24, 2021

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    12 mins