Pastoral Notes for Sunday, March 14, 2021

Dear Cornerstone Family,

As hard as it is to believe, today marks a year of COVID-19 disruption to our congregational life at Cornerstone. It was on Sunday, March 15, 2020, when we cancelled in-person Sunday morning services due to COVID-19. On that first Sunday, we sent out via email a modified worship liturgy for home use and a video sermon I preached several years earlier at another church. At the time, we thought the virus may affect us for a few weeks, maybe a month. We couldn’t have been more wrong.

As news reports about the deadliness of the virus spread, including projections of death tolls in the tens of millions, we began to realize that a “new normal” was taking shape. While virus numbers in Williamson County climbed quickly, a number of Cornerstone staff and members jumped into action exploring livestream worship. Within a few days, we built a make-shift livestream platform from scratch in order to worship online together.

On Sunday, March 22, our first livestream worship service happened. Though it went smoothly on the church end, we had trouble with the internet bandwidth that morning. Many of you suffered through the frustrations of a stop-and-start buffered worship service. It was so bad for others of you that you had to wait for the recording to be available later that day. But praise be to God, through fits and spurts, the first livestream-only worship service of Cornerstone was in the books.

Though livestream worship is not, in the truest biblical sense, corporate worship, under the circumstances we believed that utilizing a technological platform to “gather together” where the Word could be read and preached, prayers prayed, songs sung, etc. was critical to the spiritual health of the congregation. Though none of us were sure how long this stop gap measure was going to be needed, we felt a deep sense of gratefulness that we could share together even technologically in the forms of worship and continue to encourage one another in the faith during a time of great trial and turmoil.

I went back to the video archives and viewed part of that first livestream worship service. Boy, it made me grateful for Anneke Seely, the Steffens family, Maxwill Shell, Ethan Vroom, and others who stepped up and served early and often during the lockdown. I’m also very grateful for Greg Wilbur, Ken Carpenter, Charlie Lico, and Jeremy Steffens in helping us think through and troubleshoot matters related to livestream and filming. It was a steep learning curve, but with the help of these friends (and a lot of grace), we pulled it off.

The first livestream sermon text was Luke 7:11-17, the story of the widow of Nain. Returning to my notes this week, I was struck by this paragraph:

“If you just want COVID-19 to go away so you can get back to feeling like you’re in control of your life, then know this: God is not interested in that for you. If you’re a child of God today, then know that this crisis is nothing but the loving hand of your heavenly Father tearing you away from the things of this world; the things you tend to look to for life, stability, strength, joy, a sense of self-worth, etc. in order that all your trust will be in Him. In order that in Jesus Christ alone you would find life.”

I need to hear that again this week. Who am I kidding? I need to hear that every week! As virus numbers fall and as vaccines spread (and praise God for that!), may we not lose sight of the spiritual lessons God has been teaching us through the pandemic. Chief among those lessons—that our life is found in Jesus Christ. Let’s approach worship today with this in mind.

Your servant,

Nate signature.jpg