Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Out Of Chaos...Hope

Below is the text of a sermon I delivered at Grace First Presbyterian Church, Long Beach, CA on September 29, 2009.

Audio of the sermon can be found at www.gracefirst.org. Click on worship. Scroll to bottom of page for sermons. Then scroll to September 29, 2009.

The sermon is based on two Bible readings cited below.

Deuteronomy 30:15-19

See, I have set before you today life and prosperity, death and adversity. If you obey the commandments of the Lord your God that I am commanding you today, by loving the Lord your God, walking in his ways, and observing his commandments, decrees and ordinances, then you shall live and become numerous and the Lord your God will bless you in the land you are entering to possess. But if your heart turns away and you do not hear, but are led astray to bow down to other gods and serve them, I declare that you shall perish; you shall not live long in the land that you are crossing the Jordan to enter and possess. I call heaven and earth to witness against you today that I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Choose life so that you and your descendants may live.

Romans 5:1-5

Therefore, since we are justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have obtained access to this grace in which we stand; and we boast in our hope of sharing the glory of God. And not only that, but we also boast in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not disappoint us, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us.

Prayer of St. Francis of Assisi

Hymn 525 Here I am Lord


OUT OF CHAOS, HOPE

Good Morning! What a joy to be here. Thank you for inviting me.

I’m happy to be the one to represent all the lives this congregation has impacted over the years. Very happy indeed. Who wouldn’t want a trip to southern California to visit friends, stay in a condo on the beach and tell stories of hope? It’s nice work if you can get it, eh?

I’ve been planning this sermon for months, but I didn’t put the finishing touches on it until last night. I have been practicing what my mother would call “creative avoidance.”

I have tremendous respect for Steve and other pastors who do this every week. Those of you who know me, know that I have no problem speaking, but “preaching” always feels completely different.

I was here on the first anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, three years ago, giving the Minute for Mission. I thanked you for helping Westminster Church hire Karen Bullock after ourpastor left and for all the ways you had guided us through the chaos of that first year.

I told you then, that we could feel your presence in the pew beside us during worship in Mississippi, and I hardly even knew most of you. Now, we have so many shared experiences that I feel like not only a member of your congregation, but even a part of some of some of your families.

You have helped us sift through the chaos, literally and figuratively.

You held us when we cried; listened to our stories; celebrated

milestones; and even sang in our choir. Bill Saul, Tim Jackert and Don and Joyce Clark have been at Westminster and Barean Church so often that both Stewardship Committees have decided to send them pledge cards this year!

We just passed the 4th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. It’s hard to believe…four years… Some days, just knowing that not everyone has forgotten us; that you all are here, still cheering us on; interested in our progress; still sending volunteer teams and financial support

Often that’s a big part of what keeps us going.

I’m here today because faith CAN move mountains, and I have SEEN people of faith move mountains…mountains of debris …and construction supplies. I am witness to God’s hope and presence in the chaos of the hurricane recovery and … in my own life.

I’m also here today because our God, the God who calls us to greatness, is an awesome God, and “We all know that all things work together for good for them who love God, who are called according to His purpose.”

I am also here today because the people of this church responded to God’s call when disaster struck thousands of miles away. Y’all didn’t just, “Tsk. Tsk.” about how SOMEONE should do something. Instead, you said, “I am someone. We are children of God and we will DO something.”

You have shared God’s love and blessings with people you will never know, never meet. Today’s reading from Romans, “and we boast in our hope of sharing the glory of God.”

The actions your church has taken have impacted not only the lives of hundreds of gulf coast families, but also the volunteers who have stayed at Grace House. You’ve kept the faith for those who’ve lost it, while inspiring others to “walk the walk” of their faith.

To paraphrase a conversation between Jesus and my namesake Martha (John chapter 11) where Jesus acknowledges to her that He IS the resurrection and the life, and she responds,

“Yes, Lord, I believe that You are the Messiah.”

I want you to know that this Martha-Lee believes that you and the thousands of faith-based recovery volunteers are the resurrection and the life to the people of the Gulf Coast. I thank you!

You HAVE done something. You made a commitment; built relationships - restored hope - kept the faith.

For four years, I’ve been working with Westminster Church and the Presbytery of MS, welcoming and directing the thousands of faith-based volunteers who have come to help. I’ve had the amazing blessing of getting to know brothers and sisters in faith from all over the U.S.

Like my Grace First church family, these new friends have invited me to their homes and their churches. In the last few years, I have visited over two dozen churches and Presbyteries - sharing funny stories; sad stories; stories of coincidence; and stories of the hope that can be found in the midst of chaos, “because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us.”

I sometimes offer a Minute for Mission” or the Children’s sermon; a workshop or Bible study and more recently I’ve been a guest in the pulpit delivering the sermon.

But I’ll tell you if you had told me years ago, that one day I would be standing here preaching, I would have laughed. Me? Please!

Although I come to you from Mississippi, and I have a double name, y’all have probably noticed that I don’t sound like a southerner. That’s because, as many of you know, I’m originally a New Yorker.

I was raised Presbyterian in suburban New York. We’re supposed to be “God’s Frozen Chosen.” We don’t evangelize or talk about religion, much less “witness” whatever that means. And Mississippi? Why would I ever want to live in Mississippi?

And then, a man asked me to marry him. We met at the First International Laughter Symposium in Orlando, Florida in May of 2003. I was there presenting a film, “Praise Ha!” about the healing power of laughter. He was a retired Navy nurse who had been to Clown School and was an aspiring stand-up comedian.

During the question and answer period after the film, this man, wearing a chicken hat, stood up and asked me to marry him.

At lunch he told me he was serious and presented me with a ring, an onion ring. He won my heart. A year later we were married at my home church in New York.

Meeting Matt, taking a leap of faith, falling in love, getting married - it was an exciting whirlwind. I was floating on happiness. It was like a fairy tale. The fairy tale abruptly ended on my wedding night -- when my new husband, unexpectedly, tragically, suffered a massive heart attack and died. [PAUSE] He was dead before the ambulance even arrived. Twelve hours from bride to widow. It was surreal.

“Oh God!” I thought. “How could you do this to me? What happened?!”

What happened? I walked through the valley of the shadow of death and was cared for. God sent angels. Family and friends were glimmers of light in the darkness.

(PAUSE) Less than a year later, Hurricane Katrina washed five feet of flood water through my home.

Our reading from Deuteronomy says, “I have set before you today life and prosperity, death and adversity.”

We all know how true that is. Death, divorce, illness, financial ruin, they are all gifts from God that we have a tough time appreciating.

Mother Teresa once said, “God only gives us as much as we can handle. I just wish he didn’t have so much confidence in me.”

Well, He does have a great deal of confidence in all of us! and with faith, we can live up to His best hopes for what we can be.

After months of wrestling with my grief and arguing with God, Hurricane Katrina turned out to be a something of blessing to me. I found truth in the Romans passage, “…we also boast in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not disappoint us.”

I was able to focus on something beyond myself. Thousands of people were suffering. I could no longer allow myself the “luxury” of wallowing in self-pity. I realized that I didn’t die when my husband did, and that I have God-given skills and abilities to offer in the midst of chaos.

Deuteronomy says, “Choose life, so that you and your descendants may live!” I found my purpose. I decided that God brought me to Mississippi to serve others.

With that decision, everything changed. Family and friends saw a young widow facing one more impossible tragedy. I saw a calling, a homework assignment from God.

Once again, God sent angels. Within days of the storm, a truck loaded with chain saws, generators and water from Presbyterian Disaster Assistance arrived at the church (our One Great Hour of Sharing dollars at work). Westminster church and so many others along the Gulf coast became disaster recovery centers without the benefit of committees to examine the problem and decide what to do.

As the Director of Youth Ministries, I was there with the teenagers when volunteers started showing up offering help even before phone lines were working. We became camp hosts for the church dispatching volunteers to help families “muck out” their homes.

It was 100 degrees with 90 percent humidity for weeks after the Hurricane. Debris piles were everywhere; Street signs were down; Fabric hung from trees, neighborhoods were empty.

Mosquitoes, rotten smells, dead animals, flies, all those refrigerators, spoiled food, dead fish, stickiness, unclean water… It was an assault on the senses. I’ll never forget that smell.

Volunteers kept coming. They removed debris, cut down trees cleared roads and driveways, hauled out refrigerators … anything that was needed. We all worked together – Rich and poor; young and old. Every day was survival. Everyone did what they could.

Engineers and architects checked structural integrity of churches, homes and government buildings; Presbyterian Women made casseroles; teenagers hauled debris; knitting circles sent prayer shawls; contractors taught us how to roof.

The Fellowship Hall filled up with donated supplies – bleach, mops, towels, toiletries, blankets, Bibles, you name it.

After the first 6 months we asked all volunteer teams not to bring donated items without speaking with me first. The church had become overwhelmed with generosity and was not prepared to distribute all the donations.

We had become focused primarily on construction. Nonetheless, a little more than a year after the storm as a team was settling in on Sunday night, the pastor asked me, “What should I do with the hundred pair of shoes I have in the car?” I didn’t know what to say.

Overwhelmed with along list of things to do, I said nothing hoping he was pulling my leg. When he repeated it saying that they were brand new children’s shoes, I knew he was serious.

I called a church member who is an elementary school teacher and told her about the shoes. She responded, “Oh my God, Martha-Lee. You are an answer to prayers. I’ve been sitting here praying for shoes!”

Working at a low-income elementary school, she manages the “clothing closet” donations for the kids. On Friday, a barefoot boy had come to her asking for shoes.

She had no shoes, but she promised him she’d have a pair for him on Monday. It was Sunday night, and she had no shoes for him. I told her to please stop praying!

Wow! Just when something seemed like an unexpected burden, it turns out we were all just a part of God’s answer to someone’s prayer! And God keeps sending volunteers to help.

More than four years since Katrina, we have hundreds of volunteers scheduled over the next six months. The recovery operation

has evolved from helping church members muck out homes and repair roofs to BUILDING homes from the ground up.

The Presbytery of MS acts as a “labor partner,” in collaboration with case management agencies and funding partners, yet at our peak we had less than 10 employees. When we make a commitment to build a home, it is with the confidence that we DO have a labor force - One that “loves their neighbor as themselves” and that is powered by the Holy Spirit!

In Fall 2007, Presbytery of MS Disaster Recovery made a commitment to be the labor partner – essentially the general contractor – on 17 new home constructions for families who owned a home before Katrina. Our case-management partners had screened these cases and had gotten grants to fund the construction.

We were enthusiastic and got the first four homes rolling right away. We partnered with an Amish construction company that shipped pre-fabricated frames and trusses to us at cost. Before long, however we began to have doubts that we could keep our commitment.

Volunteer counts in December and January were very low. The learning process was slow. We talked about it and prayed about it. In November, we received a call from folks who organize Amish, Mennonite and Brethren mission trips.

They had heard about what we were doing from an employee at the Amish construction company. With a few phone calls, suddenly we had volunteers scheduled not only in December and January, but through the winter. With their help, and the help of many others’ … we were able to build those seventeen homes we’d promised… and more!

The following spring twenty-four families moved into their new homes! At the dedication ceremony, a homeowner, an elderly black woman pulled me aside and said, “Y’all have made me ask God for forgiveness.”

I asked, “Why? What did you do?”

She responded, “All my life I had no use for white people or Yankees, and it’s been nuthin’ but white people and Yankees done built my house.” I guess no matter how old we are, God has new lessons to teach us every day.

Mississippi families are still struggling with housing – a few hundred still live in FEMA trailers or a borrowed trailer; in unfinished, damaged, homes or on friends’ couches.

Some have received a small amount from insurance or loan or grant money, but it doesn’t all add up to a new home until we add in volunteer labor and God’s help.

Last year Hurricanes Gustav and Ike came through the Gulf and flooded low-lying areas, once again. An elderly couple, George and Betty Lou Reyer, had been living in a FEMA trailer on their property for over three years since Katrina, as they slowly rebuilt their home.

Zoning changes required homes in some areas to be built as much as 20-feet off the ground. A contractor poured the foundation and framed their house 22-feet off the ground before taking off with the rest of their money.

Hurricane Gustav flooded their FEMA trailer, and FEMA refused to give them a new one. Having spent their insurance money, savings and home equity loan, they had no choice but to move into their unfinished house.

They never gave up hope. They said they prayed and kept working a little at a time. The house had no insulation, plumbing or electricity, but they were grateful for the roof over their head and blankets to keep warm.

Last November when nighttime temperatures dropped into the low 40’s, a case manager friend told me about the Reyers and asked if I could find some help.

Miracles are still happening every day. Imagine the frustration and desperation of paying for a mortgage on a house you can’t live in. One more day dawns with no hope in sight, until neighbors, church members, out-of-state volunteers, and even “Yankees” show up at your door ready to work. Bringing hope made real…

Presbyterian volunteers put their backs into the work, and Grace First stepped up once again with funding for essentials like a plumber, an electrician and a refrigerator. Within a few months, the Reyers received their certificate of occupancy and were comfortably settled into their new home.

The God who calls us to greatness makes His presence known in so many ways every day. He sends angels to walk beside us when we’re lost, and He uses us as instruments of His peace when others need us.

There are hundreds of “coincidences” of God’s presence in the midst of chaos. You cannot serve as the “hands and feet of Christ” and not come away changed and strengthened in faith.

Margaret Mead once said, “Never doubt that a small group of committed citizens can change the world. In fact, nothing else ever has.”

Thanks be to God!

Monday, August 30, 2010

Five years goes quickly when you're busy!

The Storm that came ashore on August 29th was one more wave of a storm that began in my life on October 24, 2004 when my husband died. Both events not only changed my life (so cliche), but changed my perspective on life.
God is good all the time.
A woman in her 40's, widowed on her wedding night, wiped out by Katrina, I am truly blessed.

Friday, January 8, 2010

An interview with Martha-Lee

Notes from an interview with Martha-Lee Bohn:

Martha-Lee Bohn
Originally a New Yorker, Martha-Lee Bohn moved to Mississippi in 2003 after she met a man, fell in love and got married. Her Gulfport home flooded like thousands of others along the Gulf Coast.
Bohn works with Presbyterian Disaster Assistance in the wake of the 2005 Hurricane season. Four years since Katrina, volunteers continue to help families who have lost hope. For more information or to offer help: Mississippi InterFaith Disaster Task Force www.msidtf.org
1.
How did you get started writing?
I’ve been journaling off and on since I was a preteen. In college, I was on the newspaper. Aside from letters and email, most of my writing since then has been political junk mail, fund raising appeals and church newsletter articles.
2.
What do you do when you are not writing?
I love to cook. I have a special diet – gluten-free – which has made me learn more about food and my health.
I travel. My work with Presbyterian Disaster Assistance involves visiting churches that have sent volunteers, sharing stories of hope and inspiring others to help a neighbor.
I work/play with the teen youth group at church.
3.
What would readers like to know about you?
I’m a transplanted New Yorker (NYC suburbs) living in south Mississippi.
For ten years I organized political campaigns in NY State, and I served one term as a Member of the Pelham, NY Town Council.
I’ve been to all 50 U.S. states, Canada, a half dozen Western European countries, as well as Egypt.
4.
What inspired you to be a contributing author in Overcomers, Inc.,
I told a group of friends I’d like to be published by the end of the year. A friend sent me the link to an April web broadcast of Kathleen Gage, Lynne Klippel and Marlene Oulton. When I heard them give the book title, I knew I had a story to offer.
5.
Why is the topic of Overcoming important to you?
I have seen people survive and keep faith in impossible situations. When I faced multiple disasters in my life, friends saw me facing another tragedy; I saw a homework assignment from God.
6.
Why are you specially qualified to write about this topic?
I walked through the valley and found that there is nothing to fear. Through life’s challenges I’ve found how truly blessed I am.
7.
How do you manage to keep yourself focused and on track when you’re writing a book?
That is one of the biggest challenges. Best tip for getting started is: two pages a day. Write two pages a day on any topic. Get in the habit of writing. Set up a space that is separate to minimize distraction and give the feeling of “going to work.”
8.
Do you write to make money, for the love of writing or both?
Neither. Both. Other… I love to tell stories of hope and inspiration. I tell stories in emails, letters and church newsletters; to friends and strangers. I’ve delivered sermons and workshops to hundreds of people. Writing and publishing my stories allows me to share the stories of my brain and my heart with an even larger audience.
9.
What makes you proud about your involvement with Overcomers, Inc.?
I am a published author for the first time! I’m thrilled to have my story included with so many others who kept on walking when they were going through Hell.
I believe in Divine Intervention. I sent in my story fully a month late. Lynne Klippel responded enthusiastically, asking only if I could work quickly to catch up.
10.
Will you write more books?
Yes. I have a series of stories of coincidence, as well as a longer version of my Overcomers, Inc. chapter. I’m also working on book about my theatrical agent, former Vaudevillian grandmother’s descent into Alzheimer’s disease.
11.
What do you have in the works now?
Funding and volunteers for the Katrina recovery effort are ending. I’m praying for discernment about what is next for me. I plan to continue public speaking and leading workshops while I polish what I’ve written and get more stories out of my head and onto the page.
12.
What does the future hold for you and your books?
I have more chapters and stories in progress. Working on this book has been a great learning experience. People tell me my Overcomers story sounds like a made for TV movie. Maybe it will be.
13.
What sparks your creativity? Any tips to help others spark their own creativity?
Listening to snippets of stories in public places. People-watching and then making up names and stories for the people you are watching. Laughter. Stimulating conversation. Word association.
14.
What do you think motivates people to become authors? What motivated you to get into this unusual industry?
Scratch the surface and we all have a story to tell – a story about their life or their dreams. In January, I declared I would be published this year. People always say they’re going to write a book, but intention, coincidence, a good story and the help of Kathleen, Lynne, and Marlene made it happen.
15.
If a potential reader thinks that your book wouldn't interest them, what would you say to convince them to buy? I'm thinking something better than "Its the greatest book ever." Give me something more specific :)
There are 38 stories to choose from. Pick one and see if it speaks to you.
For my chapter, I’d say, “It will make you laugh and cry. It might even raise the hairs on the back of your neck.”
16.
What is your final message to our readers?
This is one of my favorite quotes: From Nelson Mandela’s 1994 Inaugural speech, “Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our Light, not our Darkness, that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you NOT to be? You are a child of GOD. Your playing small does not serve the World. There is nothing enlightening about shrinking so that other people won't feel unsure around you. We were born to make
manifest the glory of GOD that is within us. It is not just in some of us; is is in everyone. As we let our own Light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.

To get your own copy of Overcomers, Inc.,True Stories of Hope, Courage and Inspiring AND enjoy dozens of wonderful gifts with your purchase go to http://overcomersinc.com/booklaunch
OR CONTACT ME DIRECTLY for an autographed copy. :)

Long time coming

A whole season has passed since last I've written.
The heat of September, a trip to CA
Back to NY, out west for a friend's birthday
A drive to Virginia and PA to deliver sermons and pray
Then again to NY to be with a friend making a huge change
A new chapter for her and a chapter published for me
Overcomers, Inc became a best-seller for all to see
My "story" in print giving hope to others in the dark
Thanksgiving with friends in a Georgia vacation park
An early Christmas in NY with brothers, sister and Mom
Then home in Gulfport with my Westminster family
For bell-ringing, caroling and Christmas Eve services
To Oregon for New Years and home again
I am blessed with abundance, family and friends
Book-signings, workshops, travel ahead
What will unfold in 2010
Check with me in 12 months
I'll tell you then

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Be Nice

I have a confession to make. Sometimes I don’t like my behavior.

I was with a friend today at the car dealership picking up his tire. We parked and walked into the service desk area. There was no one at the desk. There was a window for parts and a window for payments, and no one was there either.

We waited a minute or so, and another man came in. He looked around, waited a moment and poked his head into the cashier window, and asked for help. Promptly, a man appeared in the parts window to help him. They started talking, and my friend joined in the conversation. They joked and laughed.

When the exchange was over, I said to my friend sarcastically, “I guess we can wait. We’ll just stay here and entertain everyone. Both staff people quickly apologized and customer service staff was helping us in seconds. Boy did I that pull me up short. My rudeness was showing.

Sarcasm is a form of humor that uses sharp, cutting remarks or language intended to mock, wound, or subject to contempt or ridicule. It comes from an ancient Greek word meaning, “to tear flesh.”(according to Wikipedia).

Southerners have not struck me as a sarcastic lot. They’ll charm the pants off you before they’d be rude or cutting. There is something to be learned in that common place courtesy. It was a mirror reflecting back my bad behavior.

Graciousness, service and courtesy can overcome rudeness and change a situation. I also learned from the man who asked for help that it is a lot nicer to just ask for what you need than to complain. I learned from my friend to simply “be” in the moment.

Most of us we taught in childhood to ask nicely for what we want. Sometimes, we need reminders of that, at least I do.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Independence Day

4th of July. Independence Day. BBQ's and fireworks. Summertime, family and friends.

What else does it mean?
It means I could go to church this morning, gathering with friends to sing and worship God free from fear and persecution. Free to write a letter to the editor and speak up at local government meetings protesting topics that are important to me.

It means that I am free to make lots of choices about my life. Some are difficult choices, and I make mistakes, but they're mine to make.

I know that millions of people don't have the choices I do. I am truly blessed to have been born in this place and time.

Happy Independence Day


Freedom from fear...we all have things we're afraid of - snakes, speaking in public, financial ruin, injury - but most everyone I know enjoys comforts of food, clothing and shelter.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Tooting my own horn

I've told some of you my exciting news, but... now I'll took my own horn to everyone! I am involved in a book project! I will be one of 34 authors featured in Overcomers, Inc., True Stories of Hope, Courage and Inspiration to be released in fall, 2009. Wow!

We have a FB Fan Page, and I'd love for you to be a part of it. If you becom a fan you will receive updates, free offers and announcements of special events.
Click this link http://tinyurl.com/lvkry6 and click the flag to become a Fan.

Hurray!