BARNETT MEMORIAL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
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Blisters on the heels of my Feet

8/2/2020

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During this COVID-19 pandemic, it can become easy to forget how fortunate we are in the midst of how our lives have changed with social distancing, trying to keep one another safe by wearing a mask, and with so many large social gatherings being put on hold. For many of us, we can start to grumble and complain and start to feel sorry for ourselves. However, through this challenging time in all our lives, I believe that God is challenging us to look deeper within ourselves and our own faith journey. To see how we can grow closer to Christ during this time when we all have a cross we must bare. Part of the area of growth for me has been in my appreciation for the blessings in my life. I think I do a decent job of thanking God for what I have in my life and that I value the opportunities that I have. However, there are times when I learn a new lesson and sometimes, those lessons are painful.
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Many weeks ago, I needed to get some work done on my car. It was a beautiful morning and my house was only about three miles away from the mechanics garage who was doing the repairs, so I just decided to walk home. I knew that my car was going to be at the mechanic’s garage all day and I would just have one of my kids drive me there in the afternoon once my car was repaired and ready.

I was about halfway home when I realized that my loafers that I had just slipped on before leaving the house earlier in the morning were not the best walking shoes. Before long, I noticed my heels were starting to hurt. And with about a mile to go, I finally realized that my heels were sore. I stopped and took my shoes off only to be shocked to see that both of my heels were bleeding. I had rubbed the skin raw off of my heels not realizing that the pain I was feeling was there for a reason and that I should have taken a look at my feet a lot sooner than I did!

As I continued my journey, I pushed down the back of the shoes so that my heels would not touch them and started walking on my shoes like “make-shift flip flops”.  I finally made it home and immediately went into my bathroom and dressed my wounds and then got a large glass of water and relaxed in my recliner and turned on mindless television. As I sat there for a while, with my heels still hurting, I thought about the homeless guys that I had seen many times around the community and the greater Orlando area. I wondered how many of those guys had rubbed their feet raw from bad shoes as they were out walking all day and all week. I wondered, “Where do they get their medicine and Band-Aid’s for their feet… for their heels?” As I thought about this situation, I started to get just a brief glimpse of what these guys must go through every day. As my heels were hurting, at least I had different shoes to put on and I had medicine on my wounds as well as a nice comfortable recliner and air conditioning around me.

During this week:
--I invite you to find a quiet place each day and thank God for something specific in your life.
--I invite you to reach out to someone by phone, email, text, or social media, and let them know how thankful you are for them.
--And I invite you to remember when you are out in the community with your daily activities, to try and understand what it is like to walk in the shoes of someone else.


As we each continue to live through this time in our history with COVID-19, political divisiveness, financial stress, and other uncertainties, I pray that God will continue to open our eyes to the needs of others. I pray that the heels on my feet, or your feet, will always be a reminder, of what it says in Matthew 25:35-40, “For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you clothed me, I was sick and you visited me, I was in prison and you came to me.’ Then the righteous will answer him, saying, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you drink? And when did we see you a stranger and welcome you, or naked and clothe you? And when did we see you sick or in prison and visit you?’ And the King will answer them, ‘Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me.” Amen.

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    Pastor Kevin & Carla Evers

    A Follower of Jesus who is a Husband, Father, Pastor, creative communicator, drummer, Truth Seeker, and all around coffee drinking beach lover!

    "We are not human beings having a spiritual experience; we are spiritual beings having a human experience."
    - Pierre Teilhard de Chardin

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    STAFF:
    Pastor:
    Kevin D. Evers

    Visitation Pastor:
    Carla J. Evers

    Music Leader:
    Len Larson

    Co-Youth Directors:
    Stephen Butler
    Chad Evers


    Admin Assistant:
    Marlene Wright

    Treasurer:
    Tammy Foster



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  • Home
  • About Us
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  • Sequoia Youth Group
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  • Meet our Pastor & Sermons
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  • COVID-19