Ken Pierpont's Blog, page 32

April 14, 2020

Follow the Money (Sermon) Audio

Follow the Money (Matthew 27:62-66; 28:11-15)

Bethel Church

Jackson, Michigan

Easter Sunday; April 12, 2020 AM

Pastor Ken Pierpont



https://kenpierpont.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/2020-04-12-143002-yebtfmkxnzjxrcppjdyy-audio-b2675s-e4872s-online-audio-converter.com_.mp3
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Published on April 14, 2020 07:36

April 8, 2020

Hard Times Make Good Telling


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Published on April 08, 2020 06:58

April 7, 2020

Bittersweet Farm Journal (Number 79) Three Waves of Hardship

Birdsongs and Sunshine


I’ve been walking a couple times a day since I’m working from home. Yesterday I noticed the forsythia will open in about one more day of sunshine. After that we can expect a few more cold days yet. According to farmer’s wisdom it will at least spit snow three more times before we will have the snow behind us. Morning and evening are noisy with birdsong these days and for a few days in a row we have felt the sun on our heads and gone out in shirtsleeves or a light jacket. Lois is working on making masks and restoring vintage decoratie pieces. We worked out in the yard together in the part of Bittersweet Farm I call the Walnut Grove, picking up windfall branches and burning them. Hope is making press-on nails available on etsy to make a little money while she is laid-off.


I’m doing as much leading and shepherding as I can with my phone and computer devices.Today I was able to use my lapboard across the arms of my rocker and write out on the porch. I make a video for the Bethel family every day. I do this “journal” about weekly. I create two or three story podcast episodes a week. I send an e-mail I call “See Ya’ Sunday” to the Bethel family. Sometimes I am able to encourage people by driving out to their homes and standing out in the yard 8 or 10 feet away and hollering encouragements. Everyone is impacted in some way by this virus, even out here on Bittersweet.


Three Waves of Hardship.


Here is a synopsis of my last three messages to the Bethel Church in short form: We are facing great hardship around the world. It is coming in three waves. A wave of fear, a wave of loss, and a wave of disease and death. When we face these great waves of hardship, Christ is our only answer. Christ is our hope against a wave of fear. Christ is our treasure in a wave of loss. Christ is our very life when we come face-to-face with death. We live among people who are dying and they are not ready to die. They are not ready to face God. They need to know that through Christ they can face fear and loss and death. I will include links the the messages at the end of this page.


Find the Loneliest Person in the Room


Don Carson, a well-known Christian leader, tells a story of his youth in a book about his father.


“When I was in my mid-teens and going through a phase when I wanted to pull away from meetings both local and regional because (I pouted) those who attend didn’t have my interest and all they care about was themselves, and much more of the same, my mother sitting quietly at her treadle sewing machine (for years she made most of our clothes). quietly quoted two or three proverbs, and then added; “He who would have friends must show himself friendly. At the next meeting, before you go into sulk, look around for the loneliest person in the room, and go and find out everything you can about that person. Then find the next loneliest person and do it again.” Inevitably I resented the advice, but I took her up on it and to my amazement was soon regarded as one of the region’s youth leaders.


Basically she was saying, “Think of others, especially the unlovely and listen to others. Care for them, don’t just try to get them to care for you.”


These message I have linked to below are not high-production, but I hope to speak directly to the concerns on the hearts of people these days. I have included links so you can share them with others who are concerned about fear, loss, disease and death.


Bittersweet Farm

April 7, 2020


Messages on Dealing With Fear, Loss, and Death.


When You Face Death and Disease


How to Face Loss



Three Ways to Deal With Fear



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Published on April 07, 2020 05:48

April 4, 2020

April 3, 2020

Peepers and Other Spring Things (Sermon) Video

Peepers and Other Spring Things

Bethel Church | Jackson, Michigan

Ken Pierpont, Lead Pastor

March 29, 2020 AM



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Published on April 03, 2020 21:39

March 29, 2020

Bittersweet Farm Journal (Number 78) What Will We Wish We Could Do Again?

At the Pace of a Steady Walk


My message to the Bethel folk this morning was called Peepers and Other Spring Things. In the message I mentioned something I read in David Kline’s book; The Round of a Country Year. (David is an Amish farmer and writer from Holmes County, Ohio). He wrote this: “They say peepers will be frozen to silence three times before spring is here to stay.” It reminds me of something an elderly widow in Ohio, Dorothy Hall, taught me: “There will be three more snows after the Forsythia bloom.” (Sorry to those of you who may have heard me say this before).


These old farmer sayings tell me one thing clearly. Human beings long for the return of spring, the last snow, the opening of the redbuds, the sound of peepers on a spring night. We all have ways of counting the days until we can feel the therapy of sunshine on our necks.


Jerry Dennis, a keen observer of nature and skilled Michigan writer, once wrote this: “They say spring advances fifteen miles a day, about the pace of a steady walk.” I’ve read in other places that Spring “walks” north at about two miles an hour, which is a steady pace for guy my age in my physical condition..


I noticed some unusual traffic on my website this evening. A few years ago I wrote an article “Why Are Redbuds Purple?” People must do a Google search with the question; “Why are redbuds purple,” and the search engine drives them to my site. I can always tell where the Redbuds are opening by seeing where the traffic is coming from. From the Carolinas, Kentucky, Tennessee, even deep in southern Illinois, I have hits on my article, which quickened my heartbeat with anticipation. I think in our part of Michigan the Redbuds begin to open about a week or ten days before the Dogwoods blossom. And the Dogwoods always seem to open in mid-May, about the time of my father’s birthday.


What Will We Wish We Could Do Again?


Having spent over sixty years on this planet and having paid close attention to my soul during that time, this I know. We will look back on this time with a certain fondness if we and those we love survive it. If we are wise we will ask; What will we wish we could do again when we not longer can? This is a good question to ask your soul regularly during this time when we are forced to slow down and stay home.


Villages Along Route 60


In the Village of Concord, where the North Branch of the Kalamazoo River widens into a mill pond is a little BBQ joint. Hope and I drove there the other night to carry out some Brunswick Stew. Driving into the little village I felt a mild melancholy tug on my soul.


The first Sunday in March my Dad and Mom retired from pastoral ministry at 86 years of age. The next Friday we moved them to Kalamazoo. I didn’t really anticipate the sadness I would feel at the thought of it. For the last ten years they lived in the tidy parsonage on the grounds of the South Litchfield Baptist Church at the corner of Sterling and Hadley Road. Mom and Dad lived in the parsonage for ten years. They lived there in Hillsdale County for most of the last 25 years. Now I would never have a reason to take that trip again.


There were so many times that trip was good for my soul—so many times a return trip from the little parsonage was a personal revival. For most of the time they lived there we lived in the Detroit Downriver and the drive to my parents home would inevitably move me to tears at the simple open beauty of the countryside. All along the last 30 minutes of the trip were field and wood, streams and open sky, wildflowers and trees, birds and grazing cows, deer and turkey vultures. It was peaceful.


Once I drove away and had to pull the car over to the side of the road and weep… One night traveling through a dark betrayal I even believe I received special direction from God for what I was about to pass through.


That night I drove away from the little house at dusk. Wild turkeys crossed the road and I slowed to a respectful speed and had a strong sense of the voice of the Spirit in it. He knows my soul. Within a half hour I would receive a call and pull to the bottom of the ramp off I-94 at Race Road to take it. It would change my life in a dramatic way, which that night seemed nothing but bad, but within a year it would allow us to move into our home in the neighboring county about four quaint villages away from my parent’s home. It was a smiling providence I often imagined but I could never have arranged. But now I will never be able to make that drive again or visit that little parsonage and have my soul restored or be reminded of the things these precious people labored so hard to form in me.


An Unexpected Visitor


Saturday afternoon I was enjoying the luxury of an hour or two reading a thick volume on the life and work of C. S. Lewis. Hope was on the couch next to my chair curled up with her Kindle, Hazzard was sleeping on the rug at my feet, when there came a sharp knock at the door. Dad was there. I didn’t expect him. He wanted to give me his tools. He would not need them anymore. Oddly we carried the tools I had seen him use for years into our Carriage House and leave them. A lump formed in my throat.


I coaxed him into the house and we fell into easy conversation. Lois arrived home and they warmly greeted each other. She sat with us and Dad began to tell us stories of his childhood and the hardships of the Great Depression and World War II. We sat in silence and listened. He told of his family and how they had all come to Christ and how empty things had been before. He spoke of how Christ had so changed his family. We all wept and and prayed. I walked him to his car and stood waving until it disappeared over the hill to the west.  I knew then that when this hardship passes and visits are possible, though I cannot sit with them in the old parsonage again, I will set aside other things and savor long conversation in their little apartment in Kalamazoo.


My grandmother Shipley would sometimes sweetly remind us when we were young and didn’t really understand, “Grandpa and I won’t be here forever you know.” And she was right.


As one who loves God, I am of the conviction that when God allows something bad to happen to you He is doing something good. When he calls you to endure something bitter there will be a sweetness in it. And in this great hardship that has forced a busy almost frantic culture to slow down and go home and stay home for a while, maybe that is the good thing, that is the sweetness we will wish for when it is not longer possible. The goodness of time with those we love. The sweetness of unhurried conversation. The deep thanksgiving at the awareness of how Christ can come in and transform a great sadness to joy and a great evil to good and even a killing world-wide plague to life eternal.








I Wonder 
Someday this horrible plague will wane but will the acts of warm humanity that have come with it continue?


Will people still say with meaning, looking in your eyes, “Hey, take care of yourself.”


Will they ask their neighbors, “Is there anything I can do for you?”


Will people still cheer for nurses at the change of shifts?


Will godly elders till weep and pray and plead with God for a revived church?


Will we still, at home with those we love, sit and listen and laugh and cry and pray and sing when evening falls.


I wonder.

Bittersweet Farm


March 29, 2020


 


PS; Here are a couple paragraphs from Jerry Dennis to hook you on reading his stuff:



“One morning I stepped from my friend’s cabin on Lake Superior and was met by the first warm wind of the season.  A familiar call sounded high overhead and I looked up to see a loon hurtling past, bound for Canada. Then came another, and another, each trailing its ululating warble.


It was the clarion announcement, the emblem of the wild north, a song that stirs primordial urges in many of us who cherish unspoiled places. It’s the music of mist-shrouded lakes deep in the spruce forest, a boreal timelessness that is perhaps best heard from a canoe. Coming from the sky above Superior it was this and more: the sound of wildness in transit, winging north with the lengthening days of this season of hope.” –Jerry Bridges from The North Shore.



 


 


 


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Published on March 29, 2020 19:59

March 24, 2020

Rude People (Story Podcast)



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Published on March 24, 2020 09:47

March 23, 2020

please visit often. the door is open

Bittersweet Farm


Bittersweet Farm from the Norththe door is open here.

i hope you visit often.

i’ll share my tea or coffee or lemonade with you.

we can sit on the porch.

it’s a small house but there are two of them.

or we can walk in the field.

they don’t belong to me past the north meadow, but i’ve neighbored with those who are willing and i have permission to saunter afield as i wish.

we could walk.

do come visit this site and often.

i try to write new things without charge or obligation and i have done so freely for over twenty years now–for any and all who come to read.

i imagine you will laugh or cry or think or sigh. welcome to this space. i hope you visit often.


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Published on March 23, 2020 15:29