Join us this Sunday!
8:30 in Cox Chapel (Traditional)
9:30 Sunday School in Education Bldg.
11:00 in Sanctuary (Blended)

Phone: 214-352-4889
Fax: 214-352-6649
Email: office@cochranchapel.org
Location:9027 Midway Road Dallas, Texas 75209

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Pastor's Blog

March 09, 2010

Silence in the Desert

Suzanne and I just recently returned from leading two "silent directed retreats" at Casa de la Rosa Retreat Center in Marfa, Texas.  This extraordinary place is also called "The Threshold" and that is very apt for it is a sacred place of liminal space; a threshold when you are not in the old place and not yet in the new.  It is a place to leave behind the anxieties and demands of our everyday world and "be" in the presence of the Holy One, who holds us in love, extends to us mercy and grants us peace everlasting.

Like the prophet Elijah of old I went there expecting to hear God speak in new ways to my heart.  Just like Elijah I looked for him in the powerful dust storm that obscurred our view, but he wasn't there.  Then I looked again for him to move in the mighty (70 mph) wind that blew across the desert, still he was quiet.  When the rain blew through and the mountains were left covered in snow, I thought surely God was there, but still he hid. 

And then the bell rang that called us to the Chapel for prayer four times each day and like Elijah, I recognized His Presence in the sound of the bell.  And, I remembered all of those years in my past, when the "vox Dei", voice of God, called me to prayer and silence through the sound of the bell and I knew that I was at home.  Home once again in the loving arms of a most merciful and faithful Father; home again sitting at the table with my selfless and obedient Brother Jesus; home again wrapped in the embrace of the Spirit. 

In the silence, there was peace!

Posted March 09, 2010    |    View

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January 26, 2010

Dallas' Best Kept Secret

If you are reading this blog you have found Dallas' Best Kept Secret.  Recently it was reported in the paper that Dallas could be considered the "Vatican City" of the "prosperity gospel".  That is not shocking to me but it does make me sad.  Our city is blessed with so very many churches of every denomination and every size but I find nothing in the Gospel of Jesus Christ that offers us "prosperity" if we are those who are the followers of the Lord Jesus.

Cochran Chapel stands onthe corner of Northwest Hwy and Midway Rd here in Dallas as a beacon of light reflecting the "good news".  We are not a large membership congregation but we are are large congregation.  Large being defined by our active participation in worship, our strong commitment to missional outreach and social justice, our ever-deepening desire to grow spiritually, our on-going dialogue of the important issues we face as Christians and our inclusive hospitality that allows room for all of God's children.

We most definitely find ourselves outside the walls of the prosperity gospel but we believe that we are firmly entrenched on the ever challenging road of following in the foot steps of the One who stood with the least and the last and the lost; in the footsteps of Him who prayed to discern the will of His Father and then offered us His Spirit to walk where He would lead.

I am biased, yes, because I am privileged to serve as the Pastor of this historic congregation which is not willing to rest on its 166 year past but continues to find the ways to grow into the future.  In the vast number of wonderful Christian churches in the city of Dallas........you have found Dallas' Best Kept Secret.  Come give us a visit, you'll want to come back and we would love to have you journey with us. 

Posted January 26, 2010    |    View

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December 10, 2009

Come Home for Christmas

It was back in December of 1982 that I first asked a member of my parish if we could put out a sign in front of the Church inviting persons who had fallen away from attendance to "Come Home for Christmas".  And so we created a large sign painted with holly and berries and placed it where everyone in town would see it as they drove bye.  It was the very first sign of that kind that I had ever seen.  Now almost every church denomination has at one time or another chosen the theme of "coming home for Christmas."

Maybe it has become trite or maybe since 1982 it has been over-used but the sentiment holds.  Christmas is a time that calls us back to family, home, traditions and for us as Christians, church.  What we celebrate is not some romantic or sentimental idea of a baby, although who can not be moved by a baby; but the very real Incarnation of God coming to dwell among us as human beings.  It is a love so great, so overwhelming that God chooses to send forth Jesus from the Godhead and humbly walk among us as humans to show us the reality of the "kingdom of God".

Love that wonderful is more powerful than family, home, traditions or churches.  So this year, I invite you to "Come Home to God".  Whatever your reason for neglecting your relationship with God, God has never withdrawn God's self from relationship with you.  You are beloved of God.

Our Christmas Cantata will be Sunday, December 20th at 8:30 and 11:00 a.m in the Sanctuary.  On Christmas Eve we will hold a Candlelight Communion Service at 6:00 p.m. in the Sanctuary.  I invite you to "Come Home".

Posted December 10, 2009    |    View

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November 24, 2009

Pastor's Blog

And so it starts! The holiday season is upon us even if not yet official; it officially begins on the day after Thanksgiving. I am quite aware that many stores have begun their advertising and their stores are already decorated for Christmas. The usual radio stations have begun their Christmas music weeks ago and of course will end at midnight on Christmas day. All of that makes me crazy. But, I am a liturgist and love the cycle of the church year with all of its wonderful opportunites for waiting and watching and preparing prior to celebrating.

This week we will gather to celebrate Thanksgiving. And while our culture might try to rush the season and push us beyond this holiday; I urge you to take the time to just stop and remember and give thanks! There is so very much for us to be grateful for and we fall so short of expressing our gratitude to God or to the ones we love and gather with this week. Give thanks with a grateful heart......give thanks!

And then the great church season of Advent begins on Sunday. It is a time for waiting and watching and preparing. In the midst of the hurry and the muchness of the next few weeks, Advent affords us the chance to stop and wait; knowing that something wonderful is coming. The Christ who came in history is coming anew into our hearts on this Christmas day 2009. The promise of a world of peace and justice, a world of goodwill for all of God's children, is renewed in each of us. We carry that hope and that promise to a New Year: "thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth..."

It is my prayer for each of you that this holiday season is filled with great gratitude, enormous hope and overflowing joy for the wonders that God has done, will do and is doing for you and those you love.

Posted November 24, 2009    |    View

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August 19, 2009

Pastor's Blog

Dallas in the month of August is almost unbearable. It is usually the hottest time of the summer. So who would think that going to far west Texas in August would be such a renewing experience? Suzanne and I planned a "silent retreat" for ourselves at Casa de la Rosa, a retreat center between Marfa and Ft. Davis, Texas. It is a small yet beautiful Center of prayer and quiet under the wide-opened spaces of the Texas sky.

The men who run the retreat center are lay affiliates of a community of monks who are part of the Episcopalian church. They stop all activity four times a day to pray and they observe the "great silence" from eight o'clock at night until eight o'clock in the morning. They eat simple yet very nourishing food and do their daily work and life without the distraction of radio or television.

It is a long way to drive from Dallas to Marfa; however, it is an important drive for those who wish to reap the benefits of the prayer and silence. For as you leave the noise and much ness and many ness of the city, you gradually settle into the vastly different environment to which God is calling you. Little by little you speak more softly, fill your mind with less radio chatter, and view the glorious beauty of God's nature and not the clutter of buildings of glass and stone.

In the midst of the quiet and peace of Casa you can once again allow your soul to settle into the peace of God's presence and hear once again the still small voice within that lets you know that indeed you are "beloved of God". The nights were cool and the days at 5000 feet not as oppressive as Dallas. The coyotes sang us to sleep each night and the birds woke us up each morning with a song.

The time away and the time of silence allowed us to get back in touch with the great chain of being that our gracious God has created. And once again we could see and feel that indeed God is in everything, even in us and even in the honey bees that came to draw nectar from the flowers in the garden.

We have returned home to the duties and responsibilites of everyday life. Our souls have been renewed and our relationship with God has been nurtured. Our peace is restored and we are living in gratitude.

Dallas is still oppressive in August. There are way too many cars, buildings and people rushing around in a hurry to have more and more of whatever it is we think will satisfy us. And, eating out in a restaurant the other night was so noisy. But then I remember that I believe that God is in everything . . . yes, even Dallas.

Posted August 19, 2009    |    View    |   View Comments (1)

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May 22, 2009

Pastor's Blog

Kingdom Progress

Several years ago at Annual Conference all of the African-American ministers stood in the front of the Conference and by their word and presence proclaimed their inequality in our Conference. I was surprised and ashamed, believing that so much of the inequality of segregation was fading away as we got further and further from the 1960’s. I had memories from my childhood and the kind of separation that we all lived with here in the South. At the same time the memories of my black friends and persons I have known came back to assure me we were making progress.

To my great joy, last year I connected with Rev. Elzie Odom, the Pastor of St. Paul United Methodist Church. As we talked about our historic churches, we decided to have a joint worship service the Sunday before Thanksgiving with both congregations sharing praise and thanksgiving. It was a glorious event! Not long after that Cochran Chapel invited St. Paul to share our campus during the renovation and remodel of their own campus facility.

As we shared a common fellowship meal the last Sunday of March, I overheard one of the men from St. Paul’s congregation speaking to one of the men from Cochran Chapel and saying, “You know, it was not too long ago this never could have happened.” It may not have been too long ago, but it is happening now on this corner of holy ground; and not just happening but flourishing.

The last Saturday of May, we again are going to share a common fellowship meal. But this time instead of just Cochran Chapel and St. Paul, we have invited Christ Foundry, an Hispanic congregation to join us. Three churches, three cultures, three different peoples…..but one common bond: all beloved sons and daughters of a loving God.

Maybe, perhaps just maybe, the Kingdom of God is coming among us afterall.

Posted May 22, 2009    |    View

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March 30, 2009

Pastor’s Blog

Wonderful things are happening here on the corner of Northwest Hwy and Midway Road. Having just returned from a church Conference in Albuquerque, I am more and more aware of our growth and participation in the exciting movement of the Holy Spirit that is being referred to as the Emerging Church. It is thrilling to be part of a church community that is so committed to the Lord Jesus and so welcoming of all who come through our doors as we reach out in service to the world around us.

Our Sanctuary was remodeled last year and we just this month completed the remodel of our Fellowship Hall. Life in the Trinity Ministry has built their Micah Center on our campus and joins us in reaching out to others. Now we are turning our sights on our historic Cochran House as we seek the ways and means to restore it to its original splendor for future use.

Cochran Chapel is Dallas’ oldest deeded church property and we like to think of ourselves as the oldest Methodist church in the area. Recently our sister church St. Paul United Methodist, Dallas’ oldest African-American church, has been invited to share our campus while they are in the midst of remodeling their own church facility downtown. We are so excited about the common fellowship of these two very historic churches of Dallas.

Cochran Chapel is steadily growing toward the future while standing on the shoulders of the saints who have gone before us. What a great time to be part of this vibrant and active church family.

Posted March 30, 2009    |    View

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