Guilford Park Presbyterian Church
2100 FERNWOOD DRIVE
​GREENSBORO, NC 27408
CHURCH: 336-288-5452
PRESCHOOL 336-282-6697


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"The Good News Is...So Good It Catches Us By Surprise"

2/22/2026

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Lent often begins with the wilderness, but today we begin with a wedding and a seed. That shift matters. A wedding at Cana reframes the first word about Jesus as joy, abundance, and holy surprise. The host runs out of wine; the party should end; yet jars fill to the brim and the celebration expands. Pair that with the mustard seed, the smallest start that grows into generous shelter, and a pattern emerges: God’s work often arrives small, ordinary, and playful, yet it changes the room. Many of us live tuned to scarcity—time, money, attention, hope—so we miss the holy moving right beside us. The invitation is simple and demanding: pay attention, be astonished, and tell about it.

That practice took on flesh in a family moment shared from the pulpit: a five-year-old, mid-argument, suddenly switches from English to Spanish. The room that felt tense breaks into laughter and wonder. Nothing “religious” happened, yet everything holy did. A child claimed language that welcomes millions of neighbors; parents glimpsed grace sneaking through frustration; a household learned that the kingdom of God does not have one official tongue. Stories like this are not spiritual garnish; they are the curriculum. They train us to notice seeds in the soil, laughter in the hallway, and the way love loosens the knots in our chest. When our blood pressure rises, grace often arrives sideways, tugging our attention back to what is real and renewing.

Cana’s abundance undercuts the myth that joy is naive or selfish. Joy is not denial; it does not erase grief or ignore injustice. Joy is a renewable resource that equips faithful work, steadies courage, and expands imagination. Evil is predictable—divide, hoard, threaten, repeat. Joy is the plot twist that keeps ruining evil’s script. Where the world says not enough, Jesus says there is room at the table. Where power says might makes right, Jesus hands us a seed. Where fear says hide, Jesus says stay for the celebration. Practicing joy forms us into people who can labor for justice without becoming mirrors of the cruelty we oppose.

This is why humor in scripture matters. Mary nudges Jesus without issuing a command. He resists, then over-delivers. A raucous party keeps dancing while only a few know the secret source of the vintage. Playfulness does not trivialize holiness; it reveals it. The gospel’s surprises do not entertain as much as they unseat the old order. A savior revealed at a small-town wedding endangers the status quo, because joy is stubbornly public, refuses gatekeeping, and multiplies when shared. If pain isolates, joy gathers. Every act of gathering turns neighbors into guests and strangers into kin.

To live this way during Lent is countercultural. While the world markets exhaustion as virtue and rest as luxury, discipleship names joy and rest as gifts to steward. We fill the jars we have, we plant the seeds we hold, and we trust the growth we cannot stage-manage. Some days the miracle looks like policy change or public courage. Other days it looks like a child’s joke, a bilingual tantrum, a shared meal, or a garden bed sprouting after frost. None of this erases sorrow. It does, however, refuse to surrender the final word to it. The good news keeps arriving in ordinary rooms: kitchens, classrooms, pews, sidewalks.

So here is a practical rule of life for the week. Pay attention to the jars—your calendar, your pantry, your patience—and ask where they are quietly filling. Pay attention to the seeds—new friendships, fresh questions, small risks—and protect them from cynicism. When laughter breaks into a heavy day, treat it as liturgy, a call-and-response between your longing and God’s delight. Then tell about it. Testify in small ways: at the table, in a text, on a walk. The telling trains your memory to expect abundance again. When the world whispers hoard, harden, despair, remember Cana’s secret: goodness overflows. And when you feel too small, remember the mustard seed: small is not the same as powerless.
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"The Good News Is...All Are Invited"

2/22/2026

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Lent often arrives like a hush, a season of gray skies and quieter hearts. We mark ourselves with ashes and remember our limits, then try to subtract a habit or two in search of space for God. But what if subtraction is only half the story? In this conversation, we reframe Lent around invitation rather than austerity. Luke 14’s Great Banquet takes center stage: a host prepares a feast, the honored guests decline with flimsy excuses, and the invitation rushes outward to the poor, the disabled, and the overlooked. The shock is not that a party is thrown; it’s that the table expands without apology. Grace breaks the seating chart and teaches us to see abundance where we were trained to expect scarcity.

The parable’s force grows when we notice its setting. Jesus speaks at a Pharisee’s table after healing on the Sabbath and calling out the scramble for status. He flips the logic of honor by telling guests to choose the low place and trust the host. Then the story escalates: those who cling to status miss the moment, while the streets fill with laughter and bread. Here Lent becomes less about grim resolve and more about receiving what we could never buy. The feast does not wait for us to be impressive. It opens for those who admit hunger, who can say yes without bargaining. That is good news in a bruised world, where fear trains us to hoard and hierarchy teaches us to measure our worth.

Still, invitation can sting. Many of us were formed to think righteousness is a solo project, a private ledger carefully balanced. C.S. Lewis’s The Great Divorce helps expose this illusion. In it, heaven and hell are directions, not destinations assigned at random. The border is drawn by our resistance to joy. One character would rather be damned than accept “the bleeding charity,” because charity offends his self-made record. That line lands hard. Grace is not a payment we make after a decent life; it is the life, the table, the welcome, the laughter we cannot earn. To accept it is to surrender the story that says we are what we prove. To refuse it is to cling to a smaller world that finally shuts us out.

Ashes speak the same truth with quiet power. You are dust can sound like a verdict; it can also sound like liberation. If we are dust, then we do not have to outrun one another to belong. We can trade the scramble for seats for the freedom to notice who is still standing. The banquet vision pushes us there: go to the streets, the lanes, the far roads. Make room for the neighbor whose sign irks you, the worker juggling two jobs, the refugee with no map, the person whose body tells a different story than yours. This is not sentiment. It is the disruptive shape of God’s kingdom. When we bless the overlooked, we are not being nice; we are aligning with reality as Jesus names it.

What, then, does a Lenten practice look like inside this invitation? Begin by resting. Rest in the truth that your place is given, not achieved. Let the table reset your inner economy. From that rest, practice a concrete widening of welcome: set an extra plate, learn a name, forgive a debt, move one seat down so another can sit. Let your schedule show that people matter more than polish. Refuse excuses that protect status but starve love. Notice the grapes on the floor, the laughter that spills, the choice wine shared where no one expected it. If the feast is real, then the world’s harsh math is not final. The kingdom breaks in as we say yes, again and again, to the host who keeps making room.
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"You Were Built for the Road"

2/16/2026

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From a sermon preached by GPPC Elder and Youth, Owen Beale.

Unity is not a slogan; it is a system. The readings from Romans 12 and 1 Corinthians 12 frame a vivid picture: many parts, one body, each gifted by grace for a shared mission. Owen Beale takes that vision off the page and onto the road with a simple but rich metaphor—a car. Purpose begins with design. Just as engineers sketch vehicles for speed, load, or terrain, God crafts people for distinct callings. Expecting a compact to pull a semi is absurd; so is asking every believer to carry the same role. We mistake difference for deficiency when it is actually direction, and comparison drains the joy that design intends to release.


Design alone cannot carry a life forward. A gleaming machine without fuel is a driveway ornament. Owen names the fuels that move a soul: prayer, Scripture, worship, and the presence of the Holy Spirit. We often try to run on applause, effort, or image, then stall when resistance rises. Checking the tank becomes a daily discipline, not an emergency measure. The goal is not performance but power, the quiet strength that comes when inner life matches outer calling. As Galatians urges, walking by the Spirit aligns desire with direction. Without it, drift sets in and the road grows cloudy.

Even fueled cars need a driver. Control is the illusion that keeps us anxious and hurried, gripping the wheel and second-guessing every turn. Proverbs 3 gently reorients the route: trust, acknowledge, and let God direct the path. Owen reframes surrender not as passivity but as wisdom—yielding to the only One who sees the map, traffic, detours, and destination at once. Under that leadership, even delays gain meaning. Pauses become preparation, not punishment. The pace shifts from frantic to faithful, and steering shifts from self-made stress to Christ-centered steadiness.

Maintenance matters because small neglect becomes large failure. Engines seize when oil is ignored; hearts harden when bitterness and pride accumulate. Regular repentance is spiritual upkeep, the honest check-in that clears corrosion before it fractures relationships or callings. Psalm 51 becomes a service manual for the soul, teaching us to bring wear and tear to God promptly. Healthy cars run longer; healthy believers endure stronger. The work is not glamorous, but it is freeing—an ongoing reset that keeps gifts useful and lives responsive.

Then comes hope for the parked and the dented. Many assume their season has passed, that mistakes or years have mothballed their purpose. Owen counters with the Manufacturer’s warranty of grace. God restores engines, rewires motives, and repaints shame. The point is not to pretend the damage never happened but to let a better Craftsman do the work we cannot. Restoration is not nostalgia; it is renewal for the next mile. Your past may explain you, but it does not define your destination.

Finally, motion reveals calling. Waiting for perfect clarity, confidence, or timing freezes growth. James reminds us that faith breathes best when it acts. Start the engine: serve, risk, learn, obey. God steers a moving vehicle far more readily than a polished, silent showpiece. As the body of Christ, we do not race alone. Hidden parts matter. Seen parts must not boast. Each role threads into a shared road toward God’s glory. Stop comparing. Refill the tank. Yield the wheel. Do the maintenance. Then move, because the route is not random and the Designer knows exactly where you are meant to go.
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What If Dominion Means Devotion

2/9/2026

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We open with a quiet prayer and two bold texts: Genesis 2 and Revelation 21. Between them stretches the whole drama of creation and renewal, a story that names our purpose with startling clarity. In Eden, humanity is placed, not as conquerors, but as caretakers who till and keep the garden. In the vision of Revelation, tears dry and a new city descends, pulsing with life and clean water. Holding these bookends together reshapes how we live now. If the beginning gives us a vocation and the end gives us hope, then the middle—our present—demands faithful work that honors both.

That work often begins in small places. A seminary walk, headphones on, wind through trees that watched a child grow, a lyric that lands like a benediction: so glad you made it. Survival stories matter, but staying there can trap us in scarcity. The deeper call is to move from relief to responsibility. Gratitude becomes action. Awe matures into duty. The trees are not background; they are neighbors. When we remember that we were placed in the garden for a reason, we feel the weight of naming, tending, and restraint. To keep a place is to know its limits and to guard its gifts so others may live.

“Dominion” is a word that has done real damage when torn from its context. In Genesis 2, the verbs are agricultural and pastoral: till, keep, serve, guard. Dominion without care is a theft; with care, it becomes service. A story about a frail kitten in The Little Monk exposes our tangled loyalties. Even the smallest creature bears the ache of our choices. We cannot absolve ourselves with slogans, but we can convert luxury into restraint, indifference into attention. If only humans have sinned and yet all creation suffers, then repentance must be ecological: a turn toward repair that touches soil, water, air, and kin.

Hope does not excuse us from labor; it equips us for it. Revelation’s promise that God makes all things new is not permission to waste the old; it is power to renew what we can while we wait. Baptismal waters train us to see every stream as sacrament. Bread and cup root us in fields and vines, reminding us that grace arrives through ecosystems. To receive these gifts is to pledge ourselves to the web that bears them. The church’s table asks hard questions: how was this grown, who was harmed, what was healed? Worship spills into watershed ethics, consumer choices, and the patient art of mending.

So where do we begin? With two honest moves: delight and duty. We practice delight by naming the goodness that still thrums through creation—the birds that return, the soil that breathes after rain, the neighbor who plants a tree they will not sit under. We practice duty by taking only what we need, reducing what we waste, and restoring what we have broken. Parents know creation’s peril and wonder; congregations promise to shield the vulnerable at baptism. That vow widens to rivers and pollinators, to workers and future children. Until Christ returns, our work is to keep the garden livable, beautiful, and shared.

Repentance is not shame; it is momentum. By hyssop we are cleansed, by oil we are set apart, by water we are reborn into a family that includes every living thing. The Creator who formed life from dust can form a new people from our scattered habits. If we listen, the old song becomes a commission: so glad you made it—and now, help it flourish. Begin with your place: learn its names, heal its wounds, honor its cycles. Let prayer lead to planting, confession to compost, communion to community. Hope is not passive. It is a practiced ecology of love.
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From Doomscrolling To Discipleship: Keeping Our Eyes On The Path

2/9/2026

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We open with two ancient voices—Philippians and Proverbs—that speak with startling clarity to our tangled relationship with technology. Paul counsels prayer over panic and a mind set on what is true, honorable, and life-giving. Proverbs urges a steady gaze and straight paths. Those lines become the scaffolding for a playful, serious experiment: a mock trial putting social media and artificial intelligence under scrutiny. Not to score points or preach fear, but to ask whether our habits pull our hearts off the path of peace. We weigh the costs of distraction against the grace of connection, searching for the kind of attention that nourishes discipleship rather than draining it.

The prosecution takes the floor first. Their case is simple and sharp: our devices scatter our gaze. Design nudges keep us swerving—away from the person in front of us, away from silence, away from prayer. Infinite scroll turns moments of rest into loops of comparison and outrage, spiking anxiety while starving contemplation. Notifications fragment time into shards too small for depth, yet somehow large enough for fear. The result is familiar: a heart on edge, a mind buzzing, a life that feels always online but seldom present. If the measure is Philippians’ peace that surpasses understanding, the prosecution says our daily feed fails the test more often than we admit.

Then the defense stands with stories that matter. Homebound members worship through livestreams. Prayer circles mobilize in minutes. Pastoral care crosses distance with tenderness because a message can arrive when a visit cannot. Clergy across states gather on Zoom to share best practices and pray for cities under stress, coordinating help for immigrant and refugee neighbors who fear stepping outside. The defense does not deny the risks; it reframes the tools. A hammer can build or break. The question is whether technology serves prayer and love or replaces them. When it serves, it stretches the church’s reach, lifts lonely voices, and multiplies acts of mercy.

Scripture becomes the final judge and refuses a neat verdict. The ancient call is not to smash our devices, nor to sanctify them. It is to keep the gaze set straight, to let our requests be known to God, and to think on whatever is true and commendable. That standard exposes the heart of the matter: attention. Money feels scarce, but attention is scarcer and more equal—we each have only so much to give. Where attention goes, formation follows. Aim it at fear and you grow fear. Aim it at prayer, people, and purpose and you grow peace. The task is not withdrawal; it is intention. We can design our days to limit compulsive inputs and widen space for presence.

Practical steps help. One host “bricks” the phone after 9 p.m., blocking news and social apps unless a deliberate tap at a fridge magnet unlocks them. The friction is small yet decisive: doomscrolling loses its grip when a warm bed competes with a cold kitchen trip. Others batch news into set windows, remove social icons from the home screen, or convert the phone to grayscale to sap novelty. Churches can do the same at scale: make livestreams easy to find, but keep worship unhurried; use email digests over push alerts; schedule digital fasts during Lent; teach digital examen—What fed my soul online today? What frayed it? Attention, like any budget, needs honest accounting.

Finally, the invitation is wide and gentle. Pay attention, be astonished, tell about it. That Mary Oliver triad names the arc of Christian formation in a digital age: unhurried noticing, wonder that melts cynicism, and courageous sharing that blesses neighbors. Close the apps for a while. Look straight ahead. Find something that sparks gratitude or grief that leads to action. Then speak, serve, and organize with the same tools—now in service to peace. When technology is a servant, it amplifies love. When it becomes a master, it taxes the soul. Choose your master by choosing your gaze.
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Finding Faith And Calm Through Mary Oliver’s Poetry

2/9/2026

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The storm forced us to cancel gathering in the sanctuary, yet the spirit of worship found a home in living rooms, kitchens, and bundled porches. We named safety first, held space for those without heat or shelter, and blessed the helpers who keep roads clear and lights on. From this quieter place, we returned to our series on attention and technology, asking how faith can steady us when social media stirs anxiety and news cycles fray our nerves. Poetry became our doorway. Mary Oliver’s “The Summer Day” invited us to pause, to kneel in the grass of our days, and to reckon with the piercing question that follows: what will we do with our one wild and precious life?

From there, “Wild Geese” loosened the knots of shame and striving. The poem insists we do not have to be good in the punishing, performative sense, that the world offers itself to our imagination even when loneliness presses in. Hearing those lines beside a winter window reframed our screens: attention becomes prayer, not through perfect words, but through honest presence. Faith here is not escape; it is a practice of noticing. When we notice, we recover our place in the family of things. We can bless our tired bodies, slow our scroll, and step back into community with cleaner eyes and a kinder heart.

Oliver’s “When Death Comes” widened the lens again. Mortality showed up not as dread, but as urgency to live awake. The images are stark—icebergs and hungry bears—yet the vow is tender: to be married to amazement, to take the world into our arms. That vow speaks to digital life, too. We can passively visit this world, collecting hot takes and half-truths, or we can inhabit it fully, where presence guides our choices and compassion shapes our speech. That choice affects how we respond to storms, to neighbors in need, to the ache of distance on a screen. Wonder is not a luxury; it is a discipline that changes how we spend our hours.

Scripture met poetry as Psalm 27 voiced courage: whom shall we fear when the Holy shelters us? The psalm does not deny enemies, confusion, or grief. It promises a rock underfoot and a song on the tongue. We prayed for leaders, for the sick, for those searching for work, and for families mourning beloved names. Naming people aloud stitched the body back together. Intercession is a counter‑scroll: we focus on real lives, not abstractions, and our attention becomes care. In a week of closures and cold, that practice felt like heat—steady, shared, and enough for one more step.

Finally, “I Worried” offered a simple turning. The poem catalogs our spirals—rivers, gardens, purpose—until the speaker sees that worry has delivered nothing. So they take their old body into the morning and sing. That move is available to all of us. We can choose a small act of trust: checking on a neighbor, brewing tea without the phone, stepping outside to feel the air we actually inhabit. Then the charge: do justice now, love kindness now, walk humbly now. We are not required to finish the work, yet we are not free to abandon it. Between the glow of a screen and the glow of a lamp in a storm, we pick the light that helps us see each other.
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    Rev. Dr. Stephen M. Fearing

    Rev. Dr. Stephen M. Fearing is the Head of Staff of Guilford Park Presbyterian Church.

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