Our Connection with God
by Pastor Joe Schiren

Last week, I wrote about my connection to the world around and how it fills me with wonder. I hope you make time in your life to observe and react to the world around you. God, in his grace, did not place us in a dull, boring environment, but one full of marvels.

Expanding the idea of connections, I think about my connection to God. This connection fills me with hope and peace. Think for a moment about your connection with God.  Our connections to God are very personal and private realities. While we may proclaim them publicly, and celebrate them in a collective setting (church), and even experience them through other people, our connections to him take place in the deepest cores of our being. For me, I speak to God in the silence of the night and from that place within me that no one else ever sees. A line from the Psalms seems appropriate here: “On my bed I remember you; I think of you through the watches of the night. Because you are my help, I sing in the shadow of your wings. My soul clings to you; your right hand upholds me” (Psalm 63:6-8). Much of my connection to God I experience privately and very deeply. In that private connection I know that no matter what happens around me, and no matter whether I succeed or fail, God will never leave me nor forsake me. “Oh no, you never let go,” is part of a song we sing in church, and that truth gives me hope and peace.

What is the core of your connection with God? Where and how do you experience him the most? What does this connection do for you? Add your comment below and join the conversation.

Pastor Joe Schiren is the Worship and Connections Pastor at the Potsdam Church of the Nazarene.

The Wonder of Connections
by Pastor Joe Schiren

We live in a world of connections. Invisible lines of contact, influence, inspiration, interaction, cause and effect, and even control radiate out from each of us to entwine and bind us all together. For instance, my decision to buy, or to not buy, a cup of coffee has ramifications not only for the coffee shop owner, but also for the employees, the landlord, the coffee distributor, the employees of the company that makes the cups, the children of the people who invested in the company that makes the plastic used to manufacture the lids, and so forth. Closer to home, and a bit less esoteric, my family and friends are affected by my attitude and actions, and they affect me because we are connected.



The dictionary defines connection as the act or state of being united, joined, linked, related, or associated. I want to think about our connections, how we unite, join, link, relate, and associate with one another, with God, and with the universe. As a follower of Jesus, I think of my life in this way: My life consists of three sets of connections: my connection to the universe around me, my connection to God, and my connections to other people.  


My connection to the universe in which we live is a connection of wonder and amazement. Whether I’m looking up, and back in time, at the starry sky above, or looking at the beautiful Adirondack scenery around me, I delight in the truth that I am part of all this complexity and power. I can sing with the ancient psalmist: “The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands” (Psalm 19:1). I’m fascinated, not just with the wonders of nature, but the creations of humanity. I marvel at systems, and procedures, and collections. Just the other night I was talking with my friend Peter about the process of offset printing and how a photograph can be separated into 4 colors and then printed onto paper with magnificently complex machines. Stuff like that just makes me giddy. I marvel at flowers, trees, mountains, stars, galaxies, cities, families, factories, music, color, networks, mathematics, trains, cookies, and countless other things around me. I am 53 years old and haven’t lost my childhood sense of wonder of it all. I pray I never do.   

My connection to the universe around me fills me with a great sense of joy and a deep sense of responsibility. What does your connection to the universe mean to you? Feel free to gives some feedback below, and let’s have a conversation. 

Pastor Joe Schiren is the Worship and Connections Pastor at the Potsdam Church of the Nazarene.