Category Archives: Mission Viejo

A Note From Jeff Maguire

MessageFrom-MV2

Think about this. Wrap your minds around it. This is serious business, rebels. Take it to heart. Remember your history, your long and rich history. I am God, the only God you’ve had or ever will have —  incomparable, irreplaceable…
ISAIAH 46:8-9 (MSG)

Try this brief thought experiment: Think about your earliest memory. What’s that thing you remember that precedes any other memory? Where does your own history begin its first-person narrative? Give yourself 10 seconds. Go.

You gave up after 2 seconds, didn’t you? Pretty tough to do, right? Even with more time, you’d probably not do all that much better. I don’t know how anyone is supposed to do this kind of thing. Unless there was something either epiphanal or catastrophic about your first memory, the odds that you remember it outright are likely to be pretty low. Memory apparently requires some kind of stimulus to access it. We need cues. We need a kind of spark to untether the bits of our storied past held within our minds.

Try it this way: What is the fondest memory you have of your grandfather? Describe the first wedding you ever attended. Whenever you needed to escape, where did you go? What was your first trip on a rollercoaster like? In a time of crisis, who was the first person you would turn to as a child? These questions are complicated, but they’re answerable. Most memories need prompts. In many cases, they need the help of other people to get the mental ball rolling.

If I started to tell you about my grandfather, for example, your own image of your grandfather would almost instantly materialize from out of the cloudiness of your own memory: I can recall how he whistled in nearly every story he told. He used a little toothy s-sounding high pitched tone in much the same way a written word might be underlined or bolded. So if something was amazing or unique, he’d say, “How ‘bout that!?” followed by his trademark downward sliding tooth-whistle tone. He always called me “chief.” He talked about tackling any of life’s challenges using the same expression he’d use to describe the joy of eating something delicious: “That’ll put hair on your teeth!” (This was his variation on the idea of hair sprouting on my young chest. I guess he liked whales with their “hairy” baleen filter-laden mouths and felt hairy teeth to be an apt marker of manhood). Now, think about your grandfather. Positive or negative, he is already taking shape in your mind.

This is why some stories need to be shared publicly. We talk about our histories because, as one writer put it, “in our most individual, we are our most universal.” God is constantly inviting his people to recall their history. He tells them, time and time again, to not let slip from their collective memories, the story of His rescue. He tells them that there is a reason to be thankful. Circumstances might overwhelm us. People are bound to let us down. We’re bound to let them down, too. We get sick. We get better. We get sick again. In the end, we discover the one “incomparable, irreplaceable” is God himself.

Tonight, Wednesday night (11/26) at 6:30p, at our Thanksgiving [Eve] service, we’ll share about our gratitude for the work of God in our lives. People will speak into a microphone and in 30 seconds, they’ll give voice to a piece of their history — our history. Even the most hardened of us will hear the stories of other people and their reasons for finding thankfulness. In their story we’ll remember “the only God [we’ve] ever had.” We’ll find hope in their words. Eventually, their gratitude can become ours, and our gratitude can become theirs. Come and celebrate together.

See you tonight,
Jeff

A Note From Jeff Maguire

MessageFrom-MV2

Enter his gates with thanksgiving and his courts with praise; give thanks to him and praise his name. PSALM 100:4

Everything requires a password. Now, we’re being asked to utilize a “pass-phrase.” Presumably, the pass phrase gives us all another layer of security. We’re supposed to frequently change our passwords. I do (allegedly). Experts tell us not to use the same one in different places. We’re told that every password (or pass-phrase) ought to be memorable, but not predictable. So we create lists (old fashioned-written-on-a-post-it and taped to the underside of a desk kind of lists) of pen and pencil to help us remember how we gain entry into the cyber-vault holding our most valuable stuff.

I forget my passwords all the time. My passwords are neither memorable, nor predictable. I spend a disproportionate amount of time trying to gain access to my things, rather than actually interacting with them. The greatest and most valuable things are always insulated by passwords. God is no different.

The password into God’s presence — beyond “his gates” and into “his courts” is memorable and not predictable. It has the power to turn the wanderer’s heart back home. It’s a phrase we use often. We say it to the barista, the anonymous door-holder, and to dear friends. We wave it to strangers who let us merge in traffic.  We try to mean it when we say it… mostly. We expect to hear it from other people. We tell people to “lighten up” with they don’t hear it from us. We demand it from our kids and apologize for them when they don’t deliver under the pressure of our watchful eyes. While there’s no room for magic in following Jesus, this phrase gets pretty close to having surprising soul-impacting and mystical properties.

Thank you.

Entering into God’s presence — that inexplicable nearness of God necessitates a password. Put another way, it is our ability to give thanks that not only grants us access, but ushers us into God’s presence.

We’ll gather this coming week and we’ll make a point of being grateful. Sure, Thanksgiving is in danger of being subsumed by the shopping melee that follows it. But, we’ll be glad we paused and said “thanks.” Somehow we know it. Thankfulness matters. Gratefulness to God repairs our broken-down soul.

This week, as we wrap up our OBSESSED series, we’ll spend some time orienting our hearts toward gratitude. For the beleaguered and tired, for the lonely and lost, for the bitter and exasperated, for the close to Jesus and the far from Him, and for the joyful and the generous, we could all use a refresher on thankfulness.

See you Sunday,
Jeff

A Note From Jeff Maguire

MessageFrom-MV2

God’s in charge—always.  Psalm 146:10 [MSG]

Last Friday, a friend of ours celebrated her 40th birthday. Amanda helped to decorate the party. She themed it around two seminal decades of our youth: the 70’s and the 80’s. There were hits from the BeeGee’s and KC and the Sunshine Band in one room. In another room, classics from Duran Duran and the Psychedelic Furs took us back to big hair, leg warmers, and Michael Knight. We made fun of ourselves. We also lamented a new reality: that the classic oldies radio station to which our parents listened when we were kids – that station playing tired songs from before we existed; that station that featured songs that made our eyes roll into the back of our heads –  is now playing the songs from OUR own childhood.

Of course the challenge for us who as we listened to the songs that defined us (I’m not sure, exactly, how the song “Funky Town” by Lipps Inc. did much defining. But, that isn’t really the point.) is trying to remember the lyrics with confidence. We would all look at each other with great enthusiasm attempting to recall the words that meant so much to us from so long ago. Yet, at least for me, I really only remember the chorus and a few lines in between. I can tell you specific memories about where I was when “King of Pain” by the Police came on the radio. But, basically all I remember of the song lyrics, other than the chorus, is: “There’s a little black spot on the sun today…” After that, I’m making it up, counting on my super-rad dance moves to be a distraction from what I clearly can’t recall.

Consider this question: What is the central, dominating lyric of the Hebrew Bible (the Old Testament: the only Bible Jesus ever read)? If you could only recall one thing – that “hook” in the chorus that made it stick – what would it be? The answer, I think, looks something like: “God’s in charge – always” or “The Lord reigns forever” (NIV). It is in that statement that we’re confronted by a reality that may enable us to experience great hope and concurrently cause us some degree of lament:

There is a God. I’m not Him.

Join us this Sunday as we continue in our series, OBSESSED. Doug Fields will be back again, teaching here at Mariners MV. Be sure to invite someone who, among other things, hasn’t smiled at a church service in a long time.

See you Sunday,
Jeff

A Note From Jeff Maguire

MessageFrom-MV2

Investigate my life, O God, find out everything about me; Cross-examine and test me, get a clear picture of what I’m about; See for yourself whether I’ve done anything wrong—then guide me on the road to eternal life. – PSALM 139:23-24

Halloween is over. It was fun. We’re throwing out all our candy remnants tomorrow. Sorry kids. We’re looking at pictures and sharing stories. But, as we start the month of November, I feel like a sprinter in a starting block. I’m tense. My blood is coursing with adrenaline. I’m focused on steadying my breathing. Suddenly, I’m at odds with the world. It almost feels like people next to me are hoping to instigate a false start, enabling them to find some kind of unseen advantage in an unwelcome race in which we’re all expected to be psyching ourselves up.

I saw an ad today (from what is clearly a “race sponsor”) who mentioned that we ought to “Beat the holiday crowds for the pre-Black Friday sales.” Oh no. Has the race started? Did we not hear the starter’s pistol? With messages like this, a looming feeling of being somehow behind the proverbial pack starts sneaking up on all of us. What we discover during these months isn’t really all that surprising anymore: there’s only a limited amount of stuff out there and an army of people with endless appetite for acquiring it. So, we better start running. Right?

Let’s consider a shocking thought: this material race to better and greater stuff IS NOT a corrupting factor in us. You read that right. The constant bombardment of advertising and price-slashing deals that are “going fast” is NOT the issue. What if all of that nonsense is merely a litmus test for what’s already within us? How much anxiety we feel, how much money we’re willing to spend, how many people we’re willing to trample — all of that stuff — is already within us. Which means: WE might be the issue we’re trying to solve. Our culture is one blinded by an obsession with, as one scholar described it, “acquisitiveness.” Ask anyone and they’ll tell you: this isn’t the kind of life they intended to live, nor, the kind of person they ever intended to be.

People are looking for a different kind of life than the one that can be bought in a holiday rush. They want a life where they’re able to give ample time to the people they love. They want to live generously. They want to move from selfishness to selflessness. But, as a people, we don’t really know (or we often forget) how.  This Sunday, Doug Fields will start us off on a new series called, OBSESSED. It will be a great series to invite friends who are looking, like all of us, for how to make sense of a world gone crazy with it’s obsessions.

See you Sunday,
Jeff

Safe Families Orientation

Outreach-ProvidingHope

When a crisis strikes, many of us rely on relatives and friends for support. But for some families, there is no safety net. Join us in response to our Outreach Weekend ask for you learn more about becoming a Host Family or Family Friend (providing support for a Host Family) and how to get your Live Scan completed. For more info, contact Maher.

Sunday, November 9, 12:45-2p, Upper Room, Lunch provided

Mexico One-Day Faith Adventure

Outreach-EngagingAGlobalMovt

We recently broke ground on the new church campus part of the Lo Mejor Del Trigo network, partnering with Pastor Manuel Vargas and his family as they begin building a church for the community of Union Antorchista. Come and be a part of this awesome community as we work with our hands in the drywall phase and build great relationship! For more info contact Derek or visit the website.

Saturday, November 15, 6a-9p
Antorchista, Mexico, $40 adults/$20 under 16 yrs