CitySalt Church

Celebrate Goodness
  • Upcoming
  • About
    • Services
    • Directions
    • CS Staff
    • What is Co-Pastoring
    • Contact
    • History
    • Affiliation
  • Media
    • Sunday Sermon Library
    • Salt Blog
    • Facebook
  • Ministries
    • Kids
    • Prayer
    • Kindness Fund
    • Serving
  • Give
  • Facility Rental
  • Upcoming
    • Services
    • Directions
    • CS Staff
    • What is Co-Pastoring
    • Contact
    • History
    • Affiliation
    • Sunday Sermon Library
    • Salt Blog
    • Facebook
    • Kids
    • Prayer
    • Kindness Fund
    • Serving
  • Give
  • Facility Rental

Salt Blog

  • Sunday Sermon Library
  • Salt Blog
  • Facebook
  • All
  • Aaron Friesen
  • Allie Hymas
  • Betty Fletcher
  • BibleProject
  • Britni D'Eliso
  • Chris Carter
  • Darla Beardsley
  • Denise Jubber
  • Dusty Johnson
  • Isaac Komolafe
  • Jessie Carter
  • Jessie Johnson
  • John Rice
  • Joseph Scheyer
  • Kayla Erickson
  • Kaylee Luna
  • Kim Phelps
  • Laura Rice
  • Lauren Watson
  • Lee Schnabel
  • Leona Abrahao
  • Mark Beardsley
  • Mike D'Eliso
  • Mike Wilday
  • Mollie Havens
  • Music
  • Pam Sand
  • Randi Nelson
  • Resources
  • Ruth Vettrus
  • Sara Gore
  • Sara-Etha Schnieder
  • Sarah Moorhead
  • Sarah Withrow King
  • Shelby Tucker
  • Special Announcement
  • Steve Mickel
  • Sunday Service
  • Tenisha Tinsley
  • Terry Sheldon
  • Ursula Crawford
  • Zeke Wilday

Resilient | The Resilience of Resurrection

Sara Gore May 21, 2021

I recently re-watched the action movie Captain Marvel and found this gem of a spiritual lesson:

Due to a jet-plane crash and the resulting explosion, US Air Force Pilot Carol Danvers absorbs super-human powers. These powers enable her to fly, shoot photon blasts from her hands, and to be mostly indestructible.

But she does not know she has these powers until the final conflict of the film. She is fighting the Kree military, who she thought were her teammates, but were actually her kidnappers and captors. As she fights to escape the force field that restrains her, the supreme leader of the Kree race taunts her with lies.


Kree Leader: “We found you. Embraced you as our own.”

Carol Danvers: “You stole me from my home, my family, my friends.”

Kree Leader: “But remember, without us you’re weak. You’re flawed. Helpless. We saved you.
Without us, you’re only human.”

Carol Danvers: “You’re right. I’m only human.”


This statement from the main character, Carol, is said sarcastically.

And at this point, the movie shows a montage of memories from Carol’s childhood, young adulthood, and military basic training.


Baseball Teammate:     “Give it up, Carol! This ain’t a game for little girls.”
“You’re too emotional and too weak.”

Playground Bully:     (After being roughed up and pushed to the ground by the bully.
“Stay down!”

Air Force Cadet:     “You don’t belong out here. They’ll never let you fly.”

Air Force Officer:    (After she falls from the top of a very tall, wooden climbing wall.)
“Are you trying to kill yourself?”
“You won’t last a week, Danvers.”


Whatever lies they used to discourage her into giving up, they couldn’t take away her God-given ability to get up and try again. They couldn’t take away her hopeful expectation.

This truth empowers me to reject situations that would try to deceive me into thinking I am anything less than a child of God--with an eternal future containing His fulfilled promises for me.

And each time she stood up again, she stood taller and stronger. She had a greater sense of who God made her to be. She was more determined to try again and succeed.

I get goosebumps every time I watch this part of the movie. And I thought, what could make a person be that resilient? I found my answer in Isaiah 53:

Isaiah 53:2,3 NLT:
“My servant grew up in the Lord’s presence like a tender green shoot, like a root in dry ground. There was nothing beautiful or majestic about his appearance, nothing to attract us to Him.
...He was despised and rejected – a man of sorrows and acquainted with deepest grief. We turned our backs on Him and looked the other way. He was despised, and we did not care.”

Isaiah: 53:7 NLT
“He was oppressed and treated harshly, yet he never said a word.”

These verses help me remember that Jesus faced tremendous adversity and rejection, through-out his entire life, not just at the end.

Isaiah 53:10,11 NLT
“But it was the Lord’s good plan to crush Him, and cause Him grief…And because of His experience, my righteous servant will make it possible for many to be counted righteous, for He will bear all their sins.”

As I read further, I am reminded how He sacrificed Himself to give all people, including me, His resurrection life, to last us every day of our lives. I realize this gift of resurrection life from Christ is what enables me to stand up again in the face of adversity. I get right back up after a fall, to keep following Him and His example of a resilient life! I want to continue on the teachable path where Christ is leading me!

Philippians 3:10,11 TPT
“And I continually long to know the wonders of Jesus and to experience the overflowing power of His resurrection working in me. I will be one with Him in His sufferings and become like Him in His death. Only then will I be able to experience complete oneness with Him in His resurrection from the realm of death.”

My battles are already won! I will still experience difficult times, but I can be comforted in His assurance that He will be with me through all of my trials and tribulations. And He will protect me so that I will ultimately live with Him in His eternal Kingdom!

Christ and His resilient life-example is my hope and my salvation! I will continue to stand back up again to follow Him. Will you join me?


About the Author

Sara has attended CitySalt Church since 2004, the year it was founded. She studied Journalism, wrote for her college newspaper, and is a member of Oregon Christian Writers. Sara also enjoys singing hymns with friends: “there is a sermon in every hymn waiting to be discovered and enjoyed.”

In Sara Gore Tags Resilient, Lies, Resurrection, Hope, Child of God
1 Comment
forgivenesss.jpg

Forgiveness | You Do Not Have to Be Good

Sarah Withrow King August 10, 2018

You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
for a hundred miles through the desert repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.
Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.
Meanwhile the world goes on.
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
are moving across the landscapes,
over the prairies and the deep trees,
the mountains and the rivers.
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,
are heading home again.
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
the world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting -
over and over announcing your place
in the family of things.
~Mary Oliver, Wild Geese

I think this poem by Mary Oliver says a lot about forgiveness.

“You do not have to be good.”

How many hours have I wasted in existential agony, beating myself up because I’ve failed to meet a bar set too high, sometimes by my own hand? I can ask for forgiveness from God, and I can extend forgiveness to others, but can I accept forgiveness? And isn’t that a kind of sin itself, wallowing in my inadequacies, failures, shortcomings? “Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony.” Colossians 3:14

“Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.”

Hoarding our shames to ourselves allows them to grow. Can we take a courageous breath and share our shortcomings with another? And isn’t that a kind of grace, to give someone else the gift of our weakness, so that they can trust us enough to give us theirs? “Bear one another’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ.” Galatians 6:2

“... announcing your place in the family of things”

We are made in the image of God, called to community with the whole of creation, called to community with our neighbors, called to community with our family, called to community with our Creator. “If I take the wings of the morning and settle at the farthest limits of the sea, even there your hand shall lead me, and your right hand shall hold me fast.” Psalm 139:9-10

Instead of falling into the same old cycles of regret, despair, and self-flagellation, let me breathe these truths:

I am a child of God. A creature of the Creator, known and cherished.
Forgiven of my debts.
Rescued from the power of darkness.
Reconciled through Jesus.
More than my worst mistake.
Beloved.
Amen.


sarah_k.png

About the Author

Sarah is the author of Vegangelical: How Caring for Animals Can Shape Your Faith (Zondervan, 2016) and Animals Are Not Ours (No, Really, They’re Not): An Evangelical Animal Liberation Theology (Cascade Books, 2016). She spends her days working for Evangelicals for Social Action and CreatureKind, helping Christians put their faith into action. She lives in Eugene with her husband, son, and animal companions and enjoys action movies, black coffee, the daily crossword, and dreaming of her next international journey.

In Sarah Withrow King Tags Forgiveness, Child of God, Reconciled, Beloved
Comment

Sidebar Title (H3)

Morbi leo risus, porta ac consectetur ac, vestibulum at eros. Curabitur blandit tempus porttitor. Curabitur blandit tempus porttitor. Vestibulum id ligula porta felis euismod semper. Vivamus sagittis lacus vel augue laoreet rutrum faucibus dolor auctor. Fusce dapibus, tellus ac cursus commodo, tortor mauris condimentum nibh, ut fermentum massa justo sit amet risus.

*This sidebar is displayed on all blog pages. It will render on both the list and item views of each blog you create.

email facebook-unauth
  • Home
  • Directions
  • Sermon Library
  • Give
  • Volunteer Interest Form

CitySalt  | PO Box 40757 Eugene OR 97404 | (541) 632-4182 | info@citysalt.org

Copyright 2023, all rights reserved.

CitySalt Church

Celebrate Goodness

CitySalt Church | 661 East 19th Avenue, Eugene, OR, 97402, United States

email facebook-unauth