Sermons in Text
- December 24 – “Christmas Eve” by Jason Byassee
- December 21– “Heaven Comes Down IV – God’s House” by Jeff McClain
- December 14– “Heaven Come Down III” by Jason Byassee
- December 7– “Heaven Come Down II” by Jason Byassee
- November 30– “Heaven Comes Down” by Jason Byassee at Blackburn Chapel
- November 30– “Heaven Comes Down – Listen” by Jeff McClain
- November 23 – “What Child Is This?” by Jason Byassee
- November 16 – “Youth Wasted?” by Jason Byassee
- November 9 – “When Small is BIG” by Brandon Wrencher
- November 2 – “Maturity” by Jason Byassee
- October 26 – “Legacy Years” by Jaylynn Byassee
- October 19 – “Cycle of Life” by Jason Byassee
- October 12– “God Will Provide” by Jeff McClain
- October 5 – “Cheerful Giver” by Jason Byassee
- September 28 – “A Sign” by Jason Byassee
- September 21 – “More Hard Questions” by Jason Byassee
- September 14 – Hard Questions: “God’s Tears” by Jason Byassee
- September 7 – God’s Faithfulness “Amidst Tragedy” by Jason Byassee
- August 31 – God’s Faithfulness “In Times of Want” by Jeff McClain
- August 18 – God’s Faithfulness “In Transition” by Jason Byassee
- August 10 – God’s Faithfulness “Give Us Lord, Our Daily Bread” by Ryan LaRock
- August 3 – God’s Faithfulness “Despite our Unfaithfulness” by Jason Byassee
- July 27 – God’s Faithfulness “God is Faithful” by Jason Byassee
- July 20 – Signs of Life: Scripture “Invite/Invest” by Jason Byassee
- July 20 – “Testimony by Amy Odom“
- July 13 – Signs of Life: Scripture “Prayer Changes Things” by Jeff McClain
- July 6 – Signs of Life: Scripture “Do What?” by Jason Byassee
- June 29 – Signs of Life: Scripture “Where to?” by Jason Byassee
- June 22 – Signs of Life: Alongside “Some One Different” by Jason Byassee
- June 15 – Signs of Life: Community “And One” by Jason Byassee
- June 8 – “Bones ” by Jason Byassee
- May 25 – “God Struck Me Dead” by Jason Byassee
- Confirmation Sunday, May 18 – “Grappling and Letting Go” by Jason Byassee
- Mother’s Day, May 11 – “Encountering Resurrection: Emmaus Disciples” by Jason Byassee
- May 4 – “Encountering Resurrection: Thomas” by Jeff McClain
- April 20 – “Easter Sunday: Practice Resurrection” by Jason Byassee
- April 20 – “Easter Morning: Sunrise Service” by Jason Byassee
- April 13 – “Palm Sunday: Strange King” by Jason Byassee
- April 6 – “Treasure Series: Everything” by Jason Byassee
- March 30 – “Treasure Series: Seek” by Jeff McClain
- March 30, Preached in Crossroads – “Treasure Series: Seek” by Jason Byassee
- March 23 – “Treasure Series: Heart” by Jason Byassee
- March 16 – “Treasure Series: Alone” by Jason Byassee
- March 2 – “Spiritual Strength” by Jaylynn Byassee
- February 23 – “Whatever” by Jason Byassee
- February 16 – “Straining Forward” by Jason Byassee
- February 9 – “Knowing Christ” by Jeff McClain
- February 2 – “Shine Like Stars” by Jason Byassee
- January 26 – “Arriving in Unity” by Brandon Wrencher
- January 19 – “The Gospel at the Edges” by Jason Byassee
- January 12 – “Arriving” by Jason Byassee
- January 5 – “The World’s King” by Jason Byassee
- December 29 – “Savior in Distress ” by Jeff McClain
- December 24 – “Christmas Eve, 11 pm service ” by Jason Byassee
- December 24 – “Christmas Eve, 8 pm Lessons and Carols Message ” by Jeff McClain
- December 22 – “In Excess” by Jason Byassee
- December 15 – “Full of Grace” by Jason Byassee
- December 8 – “Step-father to God” by Jason Byassee
- December 1 – “Are You Serious?” by Jason Byassee
- November 24 – “Christ the King” by Lindsey Long
- November 17 – “Define Infinity” by Jason Byassee
- November 10 – “What Really Counts” by Jason Byassee
- November 3 – “The Communion of the Saints” by Jason Byassee
- October 27 – “Let’s Eat” by Luke Edwards
- October 20 – “What’s In a Name” by Jeff McClain
- October 13 – “What Really Matters” by Jason Byassee
- October 6 – “Ask Hard Questions” by Jason Byassee
- September 29 – “Enjoy One Another” by Jason Byassee
- September 22 – “Live to Make a Difference” by Jason Byassee
- September 15 – “Next Generation Now” by Jason Byassee
- September 8 – “Be Ready to do Something ” by Jason Byassee
- September 1 – “Hospitality” by J. Warren Smith
- August 25 – “Everyone Everywhere Matters ” by Jason Byassee
- August 18 – Combined Worship Service
“Pay Attention” by Jason Byassee
“On and Off the Mountain” by Vern Collins
- August 11 – “Don’t Worry. Be Ready! ” by Jeff McClain
- August 4 – “Live to Make a Difference ” by Jason Byassee
- July 28 – “UMW Sunday” by Lindsey Long
- July 21 – “One Thing ” by Jason Byassee
- July 14 – “Life in Christ” by Colette Krontz
- July 7 – “Active Faith ” by Jason Byassee
- June 30 – “Face Like Flint ” by Jason Byassee
- June 23 – “The Problems and Possibilities of Healing” by Bishop Ken Carter
- June 16 – “God and Fathers ” by Jason Byassee
- June 9 – “Rise! ” by Jeff McClain
- June 2 – “A Lived Faith” by Jaylynn Byassee
- May 26 – “Immortal, Invisible ” by Jason Byassee
- May 19 – “Pentecost ” by Jason Byassee and Vern Collins
- May 12 – “The Church for a Mother ” by Jason Byassee
- May 5 – “One Maddening Way ” by Jason Byassee
- April 28 – “An Eruption of Thanksgiving ” by Jason Byassee
- April 21 – Beyond ME, a New WE by Chris Heuertz
- Saturday, April 20 – Missions Celebration with Luke Edwards, Norival Trindade and Chris Heuertz
- April 14 – “Annointing, 8:45 am Confirmation Service, ” by Jason Byassee
- April 14 – “Annointing 11am Service ” by Jason Byassee
- April 7 – “Wounds Transfigured, ” by Jason Byassee
by Jason Byassee
Jason Byassee
It’s been said that Jesus eats his way through the gospels. Open up any page of the gospels and Jesus is usually there eating and drinking. It’s no wonder he uses eating and drinking in communion to make us part of his body.
We have some changes to the way we eat and drink together that have been a long time in coming. As always, these will require feedback and patience with one another.
Our kitchen is a sort of crown jewel of our campus. Our leaders wisely built an ambitious commercial kitchen with which to host events for us and our broader community. We have had remarkable volunteer leaders there–Jan Niblick, Denise Stanley, Mary Carolyn Abernathy, Tamera Holshouser. With their encouragement, SPRC saw the need, and Finance found the money to hire a kitchen coordinator. Lynn Rollins is working for us part-time in that capacity and she is a wonder with her expertise and professionalism and grace.
With Lynn’s hire, we have an opportunity to get serious about the kitchen policies that have existed on paper for some time, but haven’t been followed as uniformly as necessary. For example, groups have to clean up after themselves when they use the kitchen. This is not only common courtesy of a sort that roommates and spouses have to master on day 1; it’s also necessary to keep people volunteering. If you have to clean up for two hours (I exaggerate not) before you can cook, you’ll think twice about volunteering. We also cannot leave dirty dishes or food out for basic sanitary reasons. It’s gross at home, but unsanitary and discourteous in a common kitchen.
What else will this mean? Outside groups will pay a deposit. We will almost certainly change the locks and limit the access non-staff have to the kitchen. We will need to require donations or approximately $3-5 each for meals. These (nd probably other changes) will be for our good, and we’ll be proud of the results.
One other change is to how we serve coffee on Sunday mornings. Chuck Eyler has helped us all see that drinking coffee together in the chapel is a great use of that space and time…especially in welcoming new people and getting to know folks who aren’t in our normal Sunday routine. This has been wonderful…but Chuck needs help. Folks who have made coffee down the Sunday School wing for years have had their routine disrupted, but I hope y’all will join Chuck in this new coffee-making routine. We’re going to begin selling our own Boone United Methodist blend courtesy of Uijin Park and Espresso News shortly with a tithe of proceeds going to mission. While this time together in our most beautiful room is wonderful. We will work hard to incorporate the 11am worship folks and Crossroads folks into that community time?
As Jesus and the disciples ate and drank their way through the gospels, they had their own complications. Who pays? (some women leaders, one verse tells us–see Luke 8:3). Who gets how much (handy when he can always make more)? More locally now–how do we navigate the different sort of volunteer we’re getting these days? More households are two-income. Fewer stay-at-home parents are ready to volunteer oceans of time to church. Folks in my generation are much more inclined to pay than to do the work ourselves. These changes are neither good nor bad, they just are. What do they mean in terms of how we share our kitchen? I don’t know. I just know Jesus will be faithful as we try to figure it out together.
And that he’ll meet us as we eat and drink at his table.
by Jason Byassee
Jason Byassee
We’re so excited about this weekend! This Saturday night at 6:30 pm (note the time–chosen to be friendly to those who are cautious about driving at night) and Sunday at 11:00 am we will gather for a combined worship and to hear from Leighton Ford, one of the most significant leaders in the church for more than seven decades since he went to work for his brother-in-law Billy Graham at age 15, 71 years ago. I’m honored to call him a friend, and to introduce him to you, my friends of Boone United Methodist. This would be a perfect event to which to bring a friend.
Saturday night at 6:30 pm will include worship by local group Battle Victorious. They’re terrific in a concert venue, but this is church, and we’ll sing with them, and Leighton will preach. Sunday we will worship in the sanctuary at 11:00 am in a combined service with our wonderful praise team and Leighton preaching once more. He is only allowed to preach twice in twelve hours these days, so our combined service honors that need from our guest. We will eat together after in our Family Life Center. We will also have mission displays in our chapel Saturday evening and Sunday morning with local mission efforts showing us what they’re up to and encouraging our involvement. We will have our own mission projects on Saturday at 9:00 am. Please sign up for mission projects and for child care on Saturday night. I’m so proud of our mission committee, chaired by Dale Williams and guided by Rev. Laura Beach as well as Tamera Holshouser and Sarah Strickland of the Family Life Committee.
This weekend we will make a wager on God once more. Faith Promise is not a second ask, like for a building fund. It’s a step out in faith. We imagine that God will bless a certain sized gift separate from our normal Sunday offering. Then, if God is faithful and provides that money over the next July-June year, we give it to missions. If not, we don’t. We find that the more faith we have, the more God provides. The result of this over the past decade is a dramatic, sometimes 10-fold increase in our mission budget, allowing us to support local work like the Wesley Foundation, Circles of the High Country, Boone Area Missions, and international work like Guatemala, Zoe in Rwanda and India, and the Justices in Germany. We’re proud of our Faith Promise work and want to invite you to partner with us.
Sometimes the Sunday after Easter is called Low Sunday–the people aren’t there, the musicians aren’t there, hey even the ministers aren’t there. Not here. Easter is only the beginning. It’s that way with God and the church, and so it is in our midst here. See you Saturday evening at 6:30 pm and Sunday at 11:00 am.
by Jason Byassee
Jason Byassee
Folks sometimes commiserate with me around Easter or Christmas: “You must be really busy.” I’m tempted to respond, “I’d pay y’all to do this.” Don’t tell the Staff-Parish Relations Committee. . . Worship is the reason we preachers get into this work. So the weeks to come are full of delights.
First, Holy Week. We’ll kick off this Palm Sunday with a big and thumpy processional led by Cassie the Haas family . . . donkey. We’ll receive new members at the sanctuary services and fete them with a reception in the chapel between services. Then the service will take a turn from Palm to Passion Sunday as we read the narrative of Jesus’ betrayal, arrest, suffering, and death. We’ll leave in quiet.
Then Holy Week will see a Footwashing service on Wednesday night, April 1, at 7 pm, at which I will preach and which the Revs. Vern Collins and Laura Beach will help me lead. We pastors will wash your feet (or hands if you prefer). Our choir and musicians will lead some gorgeous music. I really beg you to come to this, odd as it may seem, as part of your week of following Jesus to his cross. Thursday, April 2, at 7 pm we will have our traditional Maundy Thursday reenactment with communion and stripping of the altar following. Friday, April 3, at 7 pm we will have a Seven Last Words service with our pastoral staff preaching (Jeff, Vern, Colette, Laura, Patti, Luke). Each will have 3 minutes with which to wonder at the mystery of Christ’s saving work by attending to one of his sayings from his cross. Our choir and congregation will sing some of our greatest songs and we will conclude with Tenebrae and a haunting sounding of 33 bells to remember each year of Christ’s life.
As Christ explodes from his tomb on Sunday, our church will explode into worship on Easter, April 5th. We will worship as usual in our sanctuary and Crossroads services, plus a 6:30 am sunrise service that will begin in our courtyard around a fire and will include song by Abby Bryant (if you heard her in our sanctuary services last week, you know you’ll be amazed).
The point of Holy Week is to walk with Jesus to his cross, on the way to be astounded by him again at his resurrection.
The week to follow is sometimes called Low Sunday in the church–the pews are more empty, the ministers are away too. I love those Sundays–they show the “reward” for worship on a big festival day is . . . more worship, with less spectacle. But will there ever be spectacle on April 11-12! We will have our Mission Celebration weekend highlighted by preaching from Leighton Ford on Saturday night April 11 at 6:30 pm and in one combined service on April 12 at 11:00 am. Leighton is one of the most significant evangelists of the 20th and now 21st centuries. He worked alongside his brother-in-law Billy Graham for years. He led the Lausanne movement for world evangelization, and recently has devoted his time in his 80’s to mentoring younger leaders. He’s still the best preacher I’ve ever heard. We will celebrate our time together Sunday with a meal put on by our Family Life Committee (thank you Tamera Holshouser and Sarah Strickland!). The Saturday evening service on April 11, will include song led by the local blue grass and Americana group Battle Victorious.
In advance of April 11-12 we’d like you to be in prayer about how our church serves in mission here and around the world. We raise some $70,000 a year via Faith Promise with which we bless mission work near and far. This is money we commit on faith to God. If God provides, we give. If God doesn’t, we don’t. We are convinced that the more we step out in faith in our promise to give the more God blesses us, as a church and individually. Please consider how you might partner with God’s redeeming work in the world as we hear from one of God’s great partners in recent decades in Leighton.
So much to look forward to. What a gift to be the church together in this town. Lent’s “bright sadness” is nearly over. We’re about ready to say, “Christ is . . .”.
by Jason Byassee
Jason Byassee
Dear Church,
I am often staggered by the gifts on our staff. And I often wonder how to let others in on what I see. So in response to a good suggestion (thanks Dave Rowe!) I’d like to use this space to interview them, starting with our newest pastoral hire, the Rev. Laura Beach. Laura is a graduate of Davidson College and Duke Divinity School and is working for us two days a week in Luke Edwards’ old role as mission coordinator. When she is not working for us, she is helping coordinate the Circles anti-poverty initiative in which Boone Methodist is also invested. Her job for us is not to do all the mission work (who could?!) but to coordinate each of our efforts to offer ourselves in response to God’s calling on our lives.
What made you decide to be a Christian?
Because God’s grace went before me and drew me in. I’m in love with a God who had the power to create everything out of nothing, but who was willing to set aside that power to come live among us in the most vulnerable way–as a frail human baby. I am compelled to follow a God who had such great love for us wayward people that Jesus was willing to call us “friends,” and to die the most painful death at our hands without resorting to violence in return. I find joy in knowing Jesus and meeting him anew in the most unlikely people. I love that Jesus forms into one body people who would normally have little reason to connect. I want to be like the saints, who have such faith that they are willing to give up their whole lives following the One who showed us what it means to be truly human.
What made you decide to be a minister?
Since middle school I have wanted to serve people, especially society’s voiceless and powerless. I thought I would do that as a public servant. In college I studied international development with a focus on sustainable agriculture. I thought I would serve in a non-profit development agency. But during a summer internship at Maggie Valley UMC, I began to see how God might want to use my gifts and passion for serving to equip the church to be in relationship and ministry with those who are often overlooked by the church. In the years that followed, God kept affirming that I was called to minister to and through God’s set apart people–the Body of Christ.
What’s your deepest hope for your job?
I am delighted that in my role here at Boone UMC I am able to combine some of my background in development and my love for people to help us as a church engage the community to work towards creating an environment where all people can flourish. My deepest hope is that we would so authentically engage and love the community that those we meet would become family who say “This is my church!”, whether we meet them through our firewood ministry, the community garden, Circles of the High Country, our work at the Hospitality House, or in local schools and agencies. On the flip side, my hope is that through these relationships–as well as through our international partnerships –Jesus will continue to make us holier.
What’s something most people don’t know about you?
Most people know pretty quickly when they meet me that I’m strange. You’ll see me riding my bike when it’s cold,bringing my own plate and utensils everywhere so I don’t have to use disposables, being adamant about recycling, eating food that would otherwise be wasted, and in general insisting that we think about the impact various decisions have on our more vulnerable neighbors–human and non-human. What most people do not know is that all these strange things I do come from deep convictions about what it means to follow Jesus, to love God and neighbor, and to be faithful and grateful stewards of all the gifts God has given us. So, if you see me doing something strange, and think, “Why is she doing that?” I’d love to have a conversation about it!