Sunlight at Sunshine

…I am the light of the world. If any man will follow me, he will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of light.” John 8:12 ESV

On Saturday we had a wonderful meeting at Sunshine Christian Village. The folks who came were a mix of residents in the assisted living building as well as others from the independent living apartments. What is unique about Sunshine is the extent of responsibility that the residents take in spiritual matters. Whether it is their weekly chapel meetings on Sunday afternoon or the monthly prayer and praise meetings which I help out with, the people themselves set the agenda. No matter health issues, or small doctrinal differences, they are commited to serving Jesus and others. How I wish I could see that in other places. The song which I opened with this week was “Sunlight -Sunlight” and it has been a favorite of mine for years. “No matter how dark the world may be there’s sunlight in my soul!” I hope that this far less than professionally recorded hymn will shine a ray of sunlight on your path today!

In Season and Out of Season Advice

Preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and exhort, with complete patience and teaching. 2 Timothy 4:2 ESV

I am grateful that this afternoon, we will have not one, but two new volunteers helping at our meeting in Sunshine Village. We originally began holding this outdoors, during the covid-19 situation, but the residents enjoyed it so much that we continue to meet once a month. Having these two precious ladies who have been eagerly helping out at various meetings over the last few months, I began reviewing what advice I could pass to help them when the going gets tough. Whether you are involved in nursing home ministry or not, you just might find that Paul’s words to Timothy could be a message for you as well.

“Preach the word” In nursing home ministry, we aren’t simply called to hold hands, push wheelchairs and encourage people to smile. Though we should be doing all of those things, the primary purpose of our calling is to share the message of the gospel. We have to remind ourselves that every doorway we are invited into, is God’s opportunity to reach someone with the hope of Jesus Christ. It is His calling, not the church, not our friends, not our family or the administration of the facility that will give us grace to go on through thick and thin. Be prepared for tears along with laughter, misunderstandings along with folks saying thank you, and making the most of our small place in a schedule filled with treatments, reports and weariness, that keeps our visits short.

“Be ready in season and out of season.” Jumping into nursing home ministry is different than volunteering at Sunday school, singing on the worship team or going on a mission trip. Those are all vital and often demanding places of service; but you will discover that in nursing home outreach you are going it alone most of the time. We cannot show videos at church of the faces of the people we serve. There won’t be smiling children performing Christmas pageants, while adoring parents watch. There will be no brief moment in the spotlight, as we close the service with a well-loved new song. Being prepared in and out of season, means being content that God has called us to serve, no matter who else knows.

“With Complete Patience” Might mean, putting aside disappointment, when nothing goes according to plan. Patience is smiling when you find out that half the people left to go to a movie and most of the other half will be late because they are finishing up at the ice cream social. Patience is realizing that someone you were looking forward to seeing is in the hospital, had a family member take them out for lunch or is still sleeping because the overworked staff didn’t have time to get them ready. Patience is begging for people to come sing Christmas carols, printing out the song sheets and making sure we get on the schedule months in advance. It is coming regularly till you are part of the furniture at the facility, making friends with people who might only live for a short time and then pouring it all out to God in prayer, when things don’t work out the way you hoped.

Yes, nursing home ministry is not rainbows and puppy dogs. You will never be a social media influencer, a local celebrity or a rock star. But if God has called and you say yes, then buckle your seat belts, because He has a depth of His love in Christ to show you and a peace that goes way beyond your understanding to give you. The small weariness, the few tears and the light difficulties that we share will be nothing compared to all that God has in store, and of which the old song tells us, “The half has never yet been told!”

Jesus Friend of Sinners

For John came neither eating nor drinking, and they say, ‘He has a demon.’ The Son of Man came eating and drinking, and they say, ‘Look, a glutton and a winebibber, a friend of tax collectors and sinners!’ But wisdom is justified by her children.” Matthew 11:18-19 NKJV

We had a beautiful time yesterday, worshipping together at Watermark Assisted Living. With many new people coming recently for our Sunday afternoon sessions, it is almost hard to remember a few years ago when only one or two would show up. “Jesus What a Friend for Sinners”, written by John Chapman and published in 1910, is an older hymn that not all of my friends were familiar with, but I have grown to love singing it both because of its honest message and its hauntingly beautiful melody. The song reminds me of what John Newton is reported to have said in his old age, ““Although my memory’s fading, I remember two things very clearly: I am a great sinner and Christ is a great Savior.”