Today's Daily Lesson comes from Exodus chapter 1 verses 15 through 19:
Thursday, March 31, 2022
Daily Lesson for March 31, 2022
Wednesday, March 30, 2022
Daily Lesson for March 30, 2022
Today's Daily Lesson comes from Genesis chapter 50 verses 15 through 20:
Tuesday, March 29, 2022
Daily Lesson for March 29, 2022
Today's Daily Lesson comes from Genesis chapter 50 verses 4 and 5:
4 When the days of weeping for him were past, Joseph addressed the household of Pharaoh, ‘If now I have found favour with you, please speak to Pharaoh as follows: 5My father made me swear an oath; he said, “I am about to die. In the tomb that I hewed out for myself in the land of Canaan, there you shall bury me.” Now therefore let me go up, so that I may bury my father; then I will return.’
Genesis chapter 50 is a touching scene of a family coming to terms with the loss of their beloved father.
It is a long process. There is the initial shock and sadness -- the "days of weeping". Then, aided by the Egyptian process of embalming, there is also the long journey back from Egypt to the Promised Land, where the father is laid to rest.
There is more grief and wailing there too. Burial doesn't happen in a day.
I know many who are on the long journey of grief. There is the initial period of intense sadness and grief. There is is the period where everything must be tended to. But then also, there is the long road back to life.
Many friends have had to move their elderly parents with them to where they resided during COVID. Some of these parents have passed. Their ashes are being returned to their homestead. The children gather once more to say goodbye at the homeplace before returning to their own Egypt. None of it is easy.
Beloved ones, I hold you in prayer this morning as you make the sacred journey. Do not rush it. Be gentle with yourself, and remember the journey is long and necessary.
Ryon Price is Senior Pastor of Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas.
Friday, March 25, 2022
Daily Lesson for March 25, 2022
Today’s Daily Lesson comes from Psalm 95 verses 1 through 4:
1 Come, let us sing to the Lord; *
let us shout for joy to the Rock of our salvation.
2 Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving *
and raise a loud shout to him with psalms.
3 For the Lord is a great God, *
and a great King above all gods.
4 In his hand are the caverns of the earth, *
and the heights of the hills are his also.
God is not only Lord of of the hills, but the caverns belong to God also.
This means God is Lord of the heights and the depths, the days where we stand tall and proud, and the nights when we crouch and hide. God is Lord when there is victory and defeat, hope and sorrow, life and death, love and loss.
Dear ones, I don’t know how your week has been. Perhaps you’ve hit both highs and lows, or maybe you are living in the spiritual stratosphere, or perhaps your soul has hit a new depth.
Regardless, remember that God sees all, knows all, is with all, and is — somehow — in all.
So be kind, be hopeful, be not dismayed, and know, as Julian of Norwich said, “all things shall be well; and all manner of things shall be well.”
Ryon Price is Senior Pastor of Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas.
Thursday, March 24, 2022
Daily Lesson for March 23, 2022
Today’s Daily Lesson comes from Psalms 119 verses 97 through 104:
97 Oh, how I love your law! *
all the day long it is in my mind.
98 Your commandment has made me wiser than my enemies, *
and it is always with me.
99 I have more understanding than all my teachers, *
for your decrees are my study.
100 I am wiser than the elders, *
because I observe your commandments.
101 I restrain my feet from every evil way, *
that I may keep your word.
102 I do not shrink from your judgments, *
because you yourself have taught me.
103 How sweet are your words to my taste! *
they are sweeter than honey to my mouth.
104 Through your commandments I gain understanding; *
therefore I hate every lying way.
A great and grace disservice has been done to Judaism by Christianity through its over-done contrast of Law and Gospel.
For too long (centuries), Christianity painted Judaism out to be a religion of cold and dogmatic legalism while (at least since the Reformation) underscoring for itself grace and mercy — and the absence of import in the law.
Not so!
There is grace and mercy in Judaism. There is also law (and must be) in Christianity.
Yes; it is true that perhaps the law cannot save a soul. But let us remember what Dr. King said to those who said about the enforcement of laws of integration would never bring true reconciliation in to the souls of this country, “The law may not change a man’s heart; but it can keep him from killing me.”
Nobody wants to live in a lawless society where there are no rules. Only the strong would survive!
Yes, humanity was not given for the law; law was given for humanity. So let’s live the law in humanity.
I like what Ratzinger said about Joseph the husband of Mary, “He lived the law as if it were Gospel.”
Let us respect and thank God for the grace of the law, which protects the weak and cares for the vulnerable. And let us remember that the greatest law of all is the law of love, without which no man-made is really law at all.
Ryon Price is Senior Pastor of Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas.
Wednesday, March 23, 2022
Tom McGovern
On Monday I lost a good friend, and the earth lost a great and gentle soul. Tom McGovern, former Roman Catholic priest turned counselor, teacher, ethicist, and champion for all human grace and dignity, died. He was 85.
Tom grew up in County Cork, Ireland. He came to West Texas as part of a wave of Irish priests sent as missionaries to Texas; and he soon made his mark as a representative of a new, ecumenically-open, and social-engaged Vatican II church spirit. Each week, Tom could be seen going in and out of my home church, Second Baptist, as well as St. John’s Methodist and other liberal Protestant churches in Lubbock; Protestant and Catholic clergy in the community had found common cause to work together on issues of civil and humanitarian rights.
Legend has it that in 1967, in fact, that when the pastor of Second Baptist resigned, Tom was so often seen at Second B that rumor spread it was going to be calling a Catholic priest as its next minister. That would have been interesting!
I came to know Tom much later, after I was called to pastor Second B in 2010. Halfway through my seven years there, mutual friends introduced us and soon six or seven of us began a weekly meeting of what came to be called the “Safe and Serious Group.”
If we were indeed at times serious, it wasn’t Tom’s fault. He never failed to bring smiles to our hearts with his wonderful stories told in Irish lilt and with light in his eyes.
And his eyes were everything.
In our time together, we celebrated the 40th anniversary of Tom’s sobriety date. He was 80 at the time, and he talked about having been given a whole second life to live in sobriety. He was especially poignant when he told the story of the first time his mother in Ireland saw him after he had given up drinking. “Tom,” she told him, “you have the light in your eyes again.”
The light took him down a whole new path. He left the priesthood,married his beloved and spirited wife, Toni, became a parent to his brilliant daughter, Lexi, and began a career as counselor and clinician, before ultimately becoming Professor Emeritus in Psychiatry at Texas Tech University School of Medicine. It was in this capacity that Tom literally helped tens of thousands find their way to hope.
One of these he helped was my dad, whose sobriety is in part attributed to Tom, his tenderness, and his connections.
And it was Tom’s ability to connect that made him so special. It is often said alcoholism is a “terminally unique” disease. In other words, it is a disease of loneliness and isolation. Part of the path towards sobriety is the recovery of relationship and connection.
Tom was always connecting. He was always embracing. Witty, yet tender, he invited everyone into himself. Every encounter with Tom was a kind of confessional moment, an opportunity to come near to the holy, and share with another your secret. And the secret was always that we are human.
Tom accepted that. He accepted it about himself and about us; and he always embraced it. He embraced the fullness of humanity in himself and in others.
That meant that while he wasn’t always serious, he was always safe. And we trusted him so much with lives.
Tom always reminded me of an older version of Claude Laydu, who gave one of the greatest performances in film history playing the title role in the film based on Georges Bernanos’s novel “Diary of a Country Priest.” Though Tom refused to let us call him Father — “I’m Tom. Thank you. Please. Tom.” — he was a priest and confessor to us all, Protestant and Catholic alike. And the Gospel he imparted to us can be summarized near the end of Bernanos’s book when, struggling with the trials and griefs of life and the admission of his own faults and failures, the priest says, “Faced with the ordeals which await me, my first task is surely to become reconciled to myself.”
That is what Tom helped us to do. He helped us to find reconciliation within ourselves.
When it became time for me to leave Lubbock, Tom was the confessor I reached out to. Aside from my wife, Irie, he was the very first person I told that I was considering coming to Fort Worth. Immediately he blessed the call, recognizing perhaps out of his own experience the largeness of the world and the importance of leaving home.
“It is good,” he told me. “It is time. Give yourself permission to go. Home will always be with you in the heart.”
The last time I was with Tom was on a Sunday when I was back in Lubbock not too long before COVID. Though he had left the priesthood, Tom never left the church. He was faithful and obedient, hopeful in those days when the church moved in the open and ecumenical winds of Vatican II, and long-suffering when it did not. In any case, Tom saw the wideness in God’s mercy, always.
That last Sunday we went to mass and sat together. Being the respectful Baptist visitor, I remained seated while the faithful went forward to receive the elements of grace. Tom left. But when he returned, he took his seat, turned to me, then opened his hand which revealed the hidden host. “This bread is for you, too,” he whispered in his joyous and mischievous lilt. Then he broke it, and we shared it together. I will never forget that moment.
Not too long before I left Lubbock, Tom took over a local NPR radio program called “Faith Matters” which Monsignor David Cruz, Methodist minister Ted Dotts, and I formerly hosted. It was an honor to be associated with so great a group of gracious, kind, and open-minded clergy.
Often I would listen to the program from Fort Worth, taking comfort from afar in Tom’s familiar voice, warm wisdom, and good humor. It was safe; and just serious enough. I especially enjoyed it when Tom would conclude the program with these wonderful words of Irish blessing:
“May the road rise up to meet you.
May the wind be always at your back.
May the sun shine warm upon your face;
the rains fall soft upon your fields and until we meet again, may God hold you in the palm of His hand.”
You blessed us so much, Tom McGovern. Thank you for sharing with the us your bread, and the light in your eyes.
Now, may God hold you also, until we meet again . . .
Ryon Price is Senior Pastor of Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas.
Tuesday, March 22, 2022
Daily Lesson for March 22, 2022
Today’s Daily Lesson comes from Mark chapter 6 verses 6 through 13:
Then he went about among the villages teaching. 7He called the twelve and began to send them out two by two, and gave them authority over the unclean spirits. 8He ordered them to take nothing for their journey except a staff; no bread, no bag, no money in their belts; 9but to wear sandals and not to put on two tunics. 10He said to them, ‘Wherever you enter a house, stay there until you leave the place. 11If any place will not welcome you and they refuse to hear you, as you leave, shake off the dust that is on your feet as a testimony against them.’ 12So they went out and proclaimed that all should repent. 13They cast out many demons, and anointed with oil many who were sick and cured them.
Recently, I’ve been reading Courtney Pace’s biography of Prathia Hall, one of the unsung heroes of the civil rights movement who is credited with inspiring Dr. King with the phrase “I have a Dream” in words she offered at a prayer vigil for a bombed church in southern Georgia in 1963.
The book recounts how much courage was exhibited by Hall and so many others as they came down into southern Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi trying to register blacks to vote.
They found little open welcome because what they were doing was so dangerous. They relied on the courage and smarts of the local residents who risked so much to help them in the cause. They had to be ready to leave at the drop of a hat when things got too dangerous for them or for the homes they were staying in.
Meanwhile, the bombs kept coming; and the only thing that put a stop to them was federal protection through the Civil and Voting Rights bills.
Friends, so many sacrificed so much. Register to vote — now. Go and vote the next time you are able. And, please, please, advocate and demand that the voter suppression laws which are being passed around the country be dismantled and a new Voting Rights Act be passed.
It’s the only way to do this great cloud of witnesses justice. And it’s the only way to live out Prathia Hall’s and Dr. King’s Dream.
Ryon Price is Senior Pastor of Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas.