Let the words of my mouth and the meditations of all our hearts be acceptable in your sight, O Lord, our strength and our redeemer (Psalm 19:14).

Monday, April 24, 2017

The Second Sunday of Easter - April 23

In This Room
John 20:19-31


All or most of you have received the letter I mailed this week saying that I will be moving to Montana.  If the Post Office sent yours to Nebraska or you recycled it without opening it, as I do with much of my mail, there are copies on the information tables.  The decision to go was both a very easy decision and a very hard decision.  Easy because there is no question it is the right thing for me at this time.  Hard, because it means leaving all of you.

My last Sunday here will be June 18.  So we have 8 weeks to reflect and share stories together.  Clergy in the church, apparently, have found that that is the “right” amount of time.

I’ve already been reflecting.  And I want to share one statistic with you.  A statistic, a number.  In my mind, at least, it’s connected to today’s Gospel reading.

We heard the familiar story from John’s Gospel of doubting Thomas.  The day of Jesus’ resurrection, the disciples were huddled together in fear in a room with the doors locked.  Jesus came to them to be with them in that room.  Never mind the locked doors.  Thomas wasn’t there and was reluctant to believe the other disciples’ story.  John tells us that a week later the disciples were again (still?) hiding in a locked room.  Thomas was with them.  And again Jesus came to with them in that room.

The statistic I want to share with you is the number of times since I have been here that we have gathered in this room to celebrate communion:  2,265.  I didn’t count each one.  We average about 170/year these days, multiplied by 13 ¼ years.  We have gathered in this room to celebrate the Holy Eucharist 2,265 times.

And Jesus has come to be with us in this room each and every one of those times.

This is not the only place that Jesus meets of course.  Nor is Communion the only occasion when we know him.

But, as Christians in a sacramental tradition, we affirm that he is always here in the breaking of the bread.  Always.  In this room when we gather around his table to break the bread and share the cup, he is with us.  Always.  When we participate in the sacrament of the New Covenant he shares himself with us.

In John’s account, Jesus walking through walls or Thomas touching his wounds is usually taken as “proof” of his resurrection and resurrected presence.

But for us today, I’m more interested in the walls and locked door as a metaphor.  Jesus came to be with the disciples despite the barriers they had put up.  Why were they hiding behind locked doors?  John says they were afraid.  Afraid that the situation that crucified Jesus was also a threat to them.  Were they maybe also trying to keep Jesus out?  Afraid of what his presence with them might mean for their lives?  In John, being enclosed and in darkness is a symbol for turning away from God. 

Regardless of why they were afraid, they put up what they hoped or imagined were impenetrable barriers.  And Jesus walked right through and came to them anyway.  Bringing light and life and peace.

We put up all sorts of barriers to keep Jesus out of our hearts and our lives.  And Jesus walks right through and comes to us anyway.

David Lose writes:  we gather so that we might…   be encountered by the Risen Christ one more time and be caught up in faith so that we may experience God’s abundant life.  We gather in this room at this table to be encountered by the Risen Christ.  Today for the 2,266 and 2,267th times.

He comes to be with us in this room, bringing abundant life and peace, oblivious to any barriers we may have put up.  He brings peace.  He says it over and over and over again.  Peace be with you.  My own peace I leave with you.

Thomas models for us the faithful response.  My Lord and My God!

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Easter Day - April 16

More Than Enough


Some of you may know the poem or story, “I wish you enough”.  With just a quick search on the internet, it’s hard to figure out its true origin.  I first saw it fairly recently on Facebook, where it was set within the context of a parent and child saying goodbye at the airport for what they knew would be the final time.  There is a book I Wish You Enough published in 2009 (Bob Perks), but I’m not sure if the book or the poem came first.  The poem goes like this:

I wish you enough…
I wish you enough sun to keep your attitude bright no matter how grey the day may appear.
I wish you enough rain to appreciate the sun even more.
I wish you enough happiness to keep your spirit alive and everlasting.
I wish you enough pain so that even the smallest of joys in life may appear bigger.
I wish you enough gain to satisfy your wanting.
I wish you enough loss to appreciate all that you possess.
I wish you enough hellos to get you through the final good-bye.

It is touching and heart felt.  But it came to mind for me today because it is so NOT Easter.  The sentiment “I wish you enough” is SO not Easter.  It is the best we can do without Easter.

I think people find it meaningful because it seems to teach contentment and appreciation for life’s gifts.  It is offered as somewhat of an antidote to the voracious striving for more of our culture and society.  So many people today never feel like they have enough of anything…

I have no quarrel at all with those messages…

BUT, “I wish you enough” is so NOT the Christian message of Easter.

Last night we participated in the Great Vigil of Easter.  It includes an ancient prayer called the Exsultat.  Exsultat.  Exaltation.

In the Exsultat we say or sing:
Rejoice and sing now, all the round earth,
bright with a glorious splendor,
for darkness has been vanquished by our eternal King.

Never mind “enough” sun to get through a gray day.  A glorious splendor has vanquished darkness.  The glorious splendor of our eternal King has vanquished darkness.

Easter is about abundance!  About God’s abundant love and life poured into our lives.  God’s abundant love and life.  Eternal.  Immeasurable.  Abundance.  Which by definition is way, way more than enough.

“Enough” will get you through life, maybe, barely.  But the abundant love and life given by Jesus’ resurrection offers so much more than getting through, even getting through difficult times.  Jesus’ historical resurrection came into the lives of people at the time who knew fear, uncertainty, grief, and violence. 

Jesus’ resurrection today comes when many people face fear, uncertainty, grief or violence.  And brings resurrection life.

God’s abundance life and love brings, not just “enough” to satisfy our wants, but mercy and grace, more than we could ever want or need.

Abundant resurrection life overcomes despair with hope. 
Resurrection life offers not just endurance, but joy. 
Into the midst of violence, resurrection life plants seeds of peace in our hearts.  Peace that surpasses human understanding. 
Wonder overcomes fear. 
Resurrection life gives not just enough hellos to get through the final good-bye, but eternal hallelujahs where life triumphs over death.

Around the year 400, St. John Chrysostom wrote an Easter sermon that describes hell’s reaction to Jesus’ death:

Hell is in an uproar
Hell took a body, and discovered God. 
It took earth, and encountered Heaven

Jesus’ resurrection takes our earthly bodies and lives and fills them with heaven.

So our Christian greeting this Easter season, or anytime is:  I wish you the abundant love and life of Jesus’ resurrection.

Good Friday - April 14

The Real Cross


We have all seen so many crosses.  In the church, in jewelry.  There are so many different kinds and different shapes.

But I’ve never seen a real cross.  A crucifixion cross.  I don’t mean something in the movies or even a replica.  A real cross actually used for crucifixion.  I’ve never seen a real cross.  Probably you have not, either.

A real cross.

Big, crude, covered with and smelling of God knows what.

With a dying man hanging on it.  And some other crosses with other condemned men hanging near by.

This day, Good Friday, challenges us to face, to experience, that cross.  To stand close enough to touch and feel it, to smell it.  To be so close that we really can’t see anything else around or beyond the cross.

And this service brings us there.  The Good Friday service brings us face to face with a real cross and Jesus crucified on it.

And THEN, standing there, we say:  We glory in your cross, O Lord, and praise and glorify your holy resurrection; for by virtue of your cross joy has come to the whole world.

This day brings us to the horror of the cross and then we proclaim glory and praise.  The challenge for us, as Christians today, is to see THAT cross as a source of joy.  To see the harsh, brutal, real cross as the source of joy for the whole world.

John’s Gospel, which we read on Good Friday, doesn’t describe what happened at the moment of Jesus’ death, but Matthew, whom we heard on Sunday says: The earth shook, and the rocks were split.  This service brings us close enough to feel the earth shake.  And then…

But just as the brutal cross is a source of joy, the earthquake is a source of renewal.  Easter renewal is not about the daffodils of spring; it is about the earthquake.

Today we stand close enough to the real cross to hear and see Jesus breath his last.  To die a real death.  Only then can we see new life triumph over death.

Maundy Thursday - April 13

God's Commitment


The reason we call this day Maundy Thursday is a bit of church trivia.   But it also helps us focus on part of the meaning of this day.

“Maundy” is a shortened, Anglicized version of the Latin mandatum, command.  It comes from Jesus’ words at the end of today’s Gospel reading from John:  A new commandment I give to you.  Mandatum novum.  A new commandment I give you:  That you love one another as I have loved you.  It’s associated with Jesus washing the feet of his disciples.

Love.  I’ve talked about this before, but it bears repeating.  When the Bible talks about love it doesn’t mean affection.  It means a way of acting.  Or, in a way I heard it described this week.  It’s a commitment.  Love in the Bible is not a feeling, it’s a commitment.

Bonhoffer describes that commitment:   love… is the will to enter into and to keep community with others.

Jesus’ command and the focus of this day inspire us to follow Jesus’ example.  But I want to focus on God’s commitment.  When we talk about God’s love for us, it is commitment we’re talking about.  That commitment is what the whole Triduum is about.  God acting out God’s commitment to us through Jesus.  So for at least a bit, let’s worry less  about what we should be doing and focus on what God actually does.

God goes to extraordinary efforts to be with us.  To enter into and keep community with us.  To be close to us.  Think about the foot washing!  Knowing what he knows, Jesus chooses to wash the feet of his disciples, including Judas.  God knows what Jesus felt at that time, but it’s hard to image that it was affection.  But he touched.  Cleansed.  Served.  Because he was committed.

This is what commitment in action looks like. 

And the Eucharist, of course, is God’s ongoing commitment to be in community/communion with us.  On Maundy Thursday we also always hear about Jesus establishing the New Covenant, setting in motion a way to keep God’s commitment to us after Jesus’ death.  Jesus creates a holy, mystical, eternal community shared with God, and invites us into it.

We give thanks for that community in the prayer we say after the Eucharist;

Eternal God, heavenly Father,
you have graciously accepted us as living members
of your Son our Savior Jesus Christ…

Remember, God’s love for us isn’t a feeling.  It isn’t affection that we must earn or live up to.  It is a commitment.  An unswerving commitment.  To us.  To be with us.  To do more for us than we can ask or imagine.  Nothing WE can do will shake God’s commitment to us.  God has shown us that.  Again.  And again.  And again…

Monday, April 10, 2017

Palm Sunday - April 9


Palm Sunday Processions
Matthew 21:1-11

We just heard the story of Jesus’ passion:  his so-called trial and crucifixion.  It’s a powerful story.  And for us as Christians entering into Holy Week, the events of Jesus passion lie just ahead.  We can see the cross on the horizon.  On Friday we will be at the foot of the cross.

But today is also Palm Sunday, the day on which we remember Jesus’ festive and triumphal entry into Jerusalem.  We heard that portion of Matthew’s Gospel as we began our own Palm Sunday procession at the outdoor altar.

From Matthew:  The disciples went and did as Jesus had directed them; they brought the donkey and the colt, and put their cloaks on them, and he sat on them. A very large crowd spread their cloaks on the road, and others cut branches from the trees and spread them on the road. The crowds that went ahead of him and that followed were shouting, "Hosanna to the Son of David!  Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord!  Hosanna in the highest heaven!"  When he entered Jerusalem, the whole city was in turmoil, asking, "Who is this?" The crowds were saying, "This is the prophet Jesus from Nazareth in Galilee."

The other Gospel writers give similar accounts of a great and festive event with large crowds cheering Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem.

I want to share with you one Biblical scholar’s commentary on Matthew’s account of the triumphal entry (Douglas R. A. Hare, Interpretation Commentary):

It is improbable that Jesus’ arrival in Jerusalem manifested as open a claim to kingship as Matthew’s account suggests.  Had a large crowd publicly acclaimed Jesus as their king, the Roman garrison would have promptly cooled the messianic ardor.  Moreover, there would have been no difficulty in securing witnesses for a Jewish trial.  This does not mean that we must consider the incident as created (rather than interpreted) [by the gospel writer].  It is probable, however, that the demonstration was on such a small scale that it failed to attract public attention.

Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem was on such a small scale that it failed to attract public attention.  Jesus’ actual procession into Jerusalem was probably more like our Palm Sunday procession, than like the grand event we usually picture.  It was small, quiet.  Basically unnoticed.  The participants were just a few of his most devoted followers.

Jerusalem at the time was busy, preoccupied with other things.

Years ago I read a clever essay about Jesus’ birth titled: “Not in the news.”  It is written in the style of a newspaper account and describes all of the things that were going on at the time of Jesus’ birth.  Jesus’ birth did not make the news.  Similarly, Jesus’ trial and death weren’t even a blip in the news of the day.  Other than later Christian writings, and a brief, passing reference in Josephus, there is no mention of Jesus’ death in the historical record.  It failed to attract public attention.

Matthew, and the other gospel writers, describe how it should have been when the Messiah entered the holy city Jerusalem.  They describe what should have happened when the King came into his own.  Great crowds should have dropped everything to gather in exuberant, joyful acclaim.  Hosanna! All glory, laud and honor to thee redeemer king, to whom the lips of children make sweet hosannas ring.

It’s Holy Week.  Jesus is coming again.  What sort of Palm Sunday will it be for you?

Are you too busy?  Preoccupied with other important things?  Indifferent to the Messiah’s arrival?

Or will you drop everything to sing and shout for joy?  Will you lay aside other activities to join the crowd that cheers and follows Jesus?

Monday, April 3, 2017

The Fifth Sunday in Lent - April 2


A Few Things to Say About Death
Ezekiel 37:1-14
John 11:1-45

Writing about today’s readings another preacher says:

We Christians have some very distinctive, and some very special, things to say about death—about both real, physical death and about the other deaths, the little deaths, the endings and changes and losses that we seem constantly to be experiencing. In fact, we say much the same thing about both types of death. What that is can be found in both Ezekiel and John.  (The Rev. James Liggett, HERE.)

We just heard the reading from Ezekiel and from John’s Gospel.  Death is front and center in both readings.  Ezekiel tells the story of the valley of the dry bones and the Gospel is about the death and raising of Lazarus.

From Ezekiel:  The hand of the Lord came upon me, and he brought me out by the spirit of the Lord and set me down in the middle of a valley; it was full of bones. He led me all around them; there were very many lying in the valley, and they were very dry.

They were very dry.  We are meant to understand that they are long dead.  There is absolutely no remnant of flesh or life within them.  Even the bones convey their powerlessness:  our hope is lost.

In the reading from Ezekiel we look upon the reality and power of death.

It’s a similar perspective in the Gospel.  Lazarus is dead.  Jesus’ delay ensures that we know Lazarus is dead.  After Jesus heard that his friend Lazarus was sick did Jesus’ really intentionally delay so that Lazarus would die and Jesus could then perform the miracle?  Maybe, although I certainly have trouble with that picture.  Maybe this is all on John.  Lazarus did die before Jesus arrived.  And maybe the way John tells the story has to do with John’s intense focus on Jesus’ work.  John wants to shine the spotlight brightly and solely on Jesus’ “sign.”  For John these signs are even more than miracles that prove Jesus’ power.  They point to God, revealing God’s presence in Jesus and the nature of God’s care for people.

In any case, Jesus arrives the fourth day after Lazarus died.  In the Bible after three days, hope is lost.  Jewish spirituality of the time taught that the soul lingered for three days near the body, but now it is gone.  Decay has begun.  Lazarus is dead.

To introduce a touch of levity, I’m reminded of the early scene in the Wizard of Oz when Dorothy’s house has landed on the witch.  The munchkin coroner sings:

As Coroner I must aver,
I thoroughly examined her.
And she's not only merely dead,
she's really most sincerely dead.

In John’s Gospel we are meant to understand that Lazarus is not only merely dead, he’s really most sincerely dead.

These readings show us death in all of its inescapable power.  They do not brush death away as insignificant or of no concern to people of faith.  Death is real.  And it is powerful.  More powerful than we are.

We Christians have some very distinctive, and some very special, things to say about death.  And the first thing we say is that death is real and it is powerful.

But the second thing we say is that the breath and the word of God are more powerful than death.  God breathes life even into death.

God’s breath, through the prophet Ezekiel, breathes life into the very dry bones of Israel.  Into bones long, long dead and without hope.

And Jesus’ words bring life again to Lazarus.

We Christians have some very distinctive, and some very special, things to say about death.  Death is stronger than we are.  God is stronger than death. 

And we say these things both about real, physical death and about the other deaths, the little deaths, the endings and changes and losses that we seem constantly to be experiencing.  God brings resurrection after physical death.  God also brings life after all of the other real, significant deaths we face and experience throughout our lives.

When Jesus in today’s Gospel says, I am the resurrection and I am the life, maybe that’s not just two ways of saying the same thing.  Maybe Jesus is saying two related, but different things.  I am resurrection after physical death.  And I am life, now, after the spiritual and personal deaths we experience in our daily lives. 

In all of these stories we’ve been hearing from John’s Gospel, Jesus is speaking on several levels.  When he talks with Nicodemus about being born again, he means being born again spiritually.  When Jesus talks about being the bread of life, he’s talking about spiritual sustenance.  When Jesus tells the woman at the well that he is living water, he means that he can quench the yearnings of our soul.  And today he is not just talking about life after physical death, he is also (perhaps even more importantly) talking about spiritual life.

Jesus is talking about renewing life after the little deaths, the endings and changes and losses that afflict us all.  Jesus is talking about restoring our soul when sin—pride or greed has killed our soul within.  Grief.  Jesus brings new life to all of  the pockets of darkness and death within us that keep us from knowing the abundant life that is God’s hope for us in this life.

So as we look at those places of darkness and death within us, let us pray the words of the hymn:  Breathe on me, breath of God.  Fill me with life anew.

Remembering Lazarus, let us cry to Jesus:  Unbind me.  Let me go.

We Christians have some very distinctive, and some very special, things to say about death.  Death is stronger than we are.  But God is stronger than death.  And God’s breath, Jesus’ word speak life even into death.