Saturday, August 20, 2022

Which Race?

What are our goals in life?  What does it take to succeed in life?  If life is a race or a series of races, what does it take to cross our finish lines?


I will never forget the story my brother told me about his high school gym class.  Many freshman in high school throughout the country have to take gym, and in the high school we attended there were three gym teachers to choose from.  On the first day of the semester everyone came to the gymnasium and picked a gym instructor.  Each was a little different.  One of the gym teachers was notoriously soft.  In that class they played a lot of low impact games.  Another one of the gym teachers was the baseball coach, and he played all the fun games.  Most people wanted to be in his class.  It was just fun.  Finally there was the football coach's class.  He was not an all that friendly kind of guy.  His class was for the football players, the serious athletes who wanted to run and work out hard, and those poor souls who got stuck in the back of the line.  When my brother was a freshman in high school he decided he wanted to run with the big football players.  He wanted to prove something, so he signed up for the football coach's class.  


For 18 weeks my brother learned what it was like to run and work out with the big dogs, at least the big dogs of high school.  It was very difficult to get an A in this class.  There were a few ways one could assure that they would receive at least an A.  One was if you could run a mile in under six minutes.  My brother wanted an A.  He wanted everyone to know he could do it, and most importantly he wanted to prove to himself that he could do it.  As the semester went on he got better at running the mile.  He got closer and closer to that six minute mark.  With two chances left he ran a 6:08.  He gave it all he had and he had one more try.  His last chance came on a beautiful morning.  He started out well.  He kept pace with those who ran under six minutes.  He was feeling good and on pace as he finished the third lap.  With half a lap to go, however, he started to slow down.  His legs started to feel really heavy. He started gasping for air.  He tried reaching for a new store of energy.  As my brother struggled, one of our neighbors who was a senior football player that year and helping Coach run the class, saw my brother start to slow.  He ran across the infield.  My brother saw him and thought he was running over to cheer him on, to give him some words of encouragemen.  However the big huge defensive lineman, who would actually go on to be an all big ten nose tackle and later play in the NFL, had a different kind of motivation in mind.  This big huge football player started yelling at my brother and physically chased him across the finish line.  My brother ran that last half of a lap in shier terror.  He crossed the tape in 5:57, eternally grateful to the huge nose tackle who had scared him into finishing the race and accomplishing his goal.


What are our goals in life?  What does it take to succeed in life?  If life is a race or a series of races, what does it take to cross our finish lines?  


In this morning’s epistle from Hebrews we hear about endurance.  The writer uses the image of a race to encourage others to persevere and endure.  However, instead of being concerned with worldly races and worldly success, the writer of Hebrews is concerned with a more important race.  That is the spiritual marathon that it takes to be a child of God.  It takes a different kind of endurance, for this is a different kind of race.  In life we may be pushed to succeed in many different ways.  However, in our spiritual life we are reminded today that Jesus is the perfecter of our faith.  That he helps us endure the most important race of all, which is running a marathon as a faithful servant of God.


There were a few phrases in particular that stood out to me in this famous passage from Hebrews.  The first is, “Since we are surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses…"  What a beautiful image this is.  One can just close their eyes and picture this scene can’t you?  Under a bright blue sky and a few lofted clouds, we run the race of life in a big majestic stadium.  With thousands and maybe millions cheering us on.  Maybe our friends and family are there?  When we feel spiritually down or feel like we have stumbled we can take comfort in this image.  We can take comfort in this idea.


To the writer of Hebrews, however, this is more than just an idea.  It is more than just an image to give us hope in our dark times.  No.  What is written is not, “Well maybe we have this cloud of witnesses watching us…”  What is written is not, “Well perhaps there are others rooting us on.”  Instead, he writes, “Since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses.”  Many saints have gone before us.  On a spiritual level they are there for us.  It is difficult to put this into words.  It is hard for us to understand just how this all works.  On a spiritual level we are surrounded by a cloud of witnesses.  All those who have gone before and struggled spiritually to live into their calling as a child of God are there for us.  What they did matters?  How they lived their life matters and helps us, and how we claim our lives as children of God will matter to many others who run the race after us.  This is more than just a nice image.  It is an assertion that through the grace of God all our lives are linked together.  


Also the phrase, “looking to Jesus, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross…”  If one looks at the Greek the best way to translate the first part of this phrase is to say, “looking away to Jesus.”. Now that is a beautiful phrase.  When we run the race of life, what is the carrot that is in front of us?  What do we look to run after?  The writer of Hebrews reminds us that to run the marathon as a child of God, we need to look away from the carrots that often dominate our pursuits (success, money, fame or comfort).  Look away from them.  Look away to Jesus.  That takes discipline, endurance, perseverance.  It is hard not to get sidetracked in life to chase after fortune and glory.  It takes true effort to make our agenda a part of God’s and not God a part of our agenda.  


The second part of the phrase is truly wonderful, “looking to Jesus, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross…”  Deep down the thing that we need to keep in mind is that out of a great joy Jesus is the perfecter of our faith.  God came and humbled God’s self.  As a result, we are able to claim our identity as children of God.  Jesus did not come to suffer just for the sake of suffering.  It was out of a deep joy.  When we are off in life, when we are missing the mark, I would argue that deep down we know it.  But when we are following God’s will for our life, when we struggle to endure down the path to realize who we are as a child of God, I would further argue that we are met there with a deep sense of joy.  God deeply, joyfully wants to guide us.  Will we let him?


In the 1992 Olympics Derek Redmond ran a race.  He ran a race, and his Father and he gave us one of the greatest Olympic moments ever.  The day of the race father and son talk about what it took for Derek to get to the olympics.  They talk about ignoring past heartbreaks and failures.  They agree that if anything bad happens, no matter what it is, Derek has to finish the race.  The top four finishers in each of the two semifinal heats automatically qualify for the Olympic final. As the race approaches for the semifinal 400 heat, Jim, Derek's father, heads up to his seat in Olympic Stadium.  The stadium is packed with 65,000 fans, bracing themselves for one of sport's greatest and most exciting spectacles.  Millions are watching around the world.  The race begins and Derek breaks from the pack and quickly seizes the lead. "Keep it up, keep it up," Jim says to himself.  Down the backstretch, only 150 meters away from finishing, Redmond is sure to make the finals.  Suddenly, he hears a pop in his right hamstring. He pulls up lame.  "Oh, no," Jim says to himself. His shoulders shrink and his face turns pale.  His leg quivering, Redmond begins hopping on one leg, then slows down and falls to the track.  As he lays on the track, clutching his right hamstring, a medical unit runs toward him.  At the same time, Jim Redmond, seeing his son in trouble, races down from the stands, sidestepping people, bumping into others. He has no credential to be on the track, but all he thinks about is getting to his son.  On the track, Redmond realizes his dream of an Olympic medal is gone.  Tears run down his face. "All I could think was, 'I'm out of the Olympics, again,'" he would say.  As the medical crew arrives with a stretcher, Redmond tells them, "No, there's no way I'm getting on that stretcher. I'm going to finish my race."  Then, in a moment that will live forever in the minds of millions, Derek lifts himself to his feet, ever so slowly, and starts hobbling down the track.  The other runners have finished the race.  Suddenly, everyone realizes that Derek isn't dropping out of the race. No, he is actually continuing on one leg.  All by himself. All in the name of pride and heart.  Slowly, the crowd, in total disbelief, rises and begins to roar.  The roar gets louder and louder.  Through the searing pain, Derek hears the cheers, but "I wasn't doing it for the crowd," he would later say. "I was doing it for me. Whether people thought I was an idiot or a hero, I wanted to finish the race.  I'm the one who has to live with it."  One painful step at a time, each one a little slower and more painful than the one before, and the crowd, many in tears, cheer him on.  Suddenly, Jim finally gets to the bottom of the stands, leaps over the railing, avoids a security guard, and runs out to his son.  With Derek refusing to surrender and painfully limping along the track, Jim reaches his son at the final curve, and wraps his arm around his waist.  "I'm here, son," Jim says softly, hugging his boy. "We'll finish together."  Derek puts his arms around his father's shoulders and sobs.  Together, arm in arm, father and son, with 65,000 people cheering and millions watching, clapping and crying, they finish the race just as they vowed they would.


That was a true story from the 1992 Olympics.  Derek went from a race for athletic success to a race of spiritual endurance.  It reminds me that many of us start out concerned about worldly success, but not everything goes to plan.  However, if we are aware we will see the more important spiritual race of life.  The true question for each of us is, do we allow God to embrace us as our loving parent and guide us across the finish line.  AMEN.


Saturday, June 11, 2022

The Triune God is love in motion reaching out to us.

Who is God?  If someone asks you who God is, what do you say?  Is God some ancient man with a long white beard sitting on a throne in the clouds?  Frederick Buechner wrote, “Trying to explain God to humans is like trying to explain Einstein to a clam.”  In other words we can know of God, but we can never completely understand God.  I think this is true.  Children sometimes have great thoughts about God.  I recently read where a seven year old wished that someone would take a picture of God or perhaps God could take a “Selfie” and post it.


Today is Trinity Sunday.  It is the day when we celebrate how God has been revealed to us as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  We have experienced God as creator, redeemer, and sustainer.  Perhaps God is more complex than God has revealed to us.  Perhaps we have made God more complicated than we should.  As for me, I tend to think about God in two ways.  God is relational and God has to be experienced.


First, God is relational.  Now this is not to say that God is only relational, but God is relationship.  God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit continually relating in perfect love that spills out to the whole world.  If you think about it, all life is about relationships.  God’s creation is in constant relationship.  Further, I would argue, every subject is about relationships.  Biology is about how life relates with other life.  Sociology is about how people relate in societies.  Economics is about how people financially relate to each other.  Money is in fact promissory notes that help us relate to one another by way of goods and services.  When we are relating well together, then we are all better for it.  Heck even Math is about how numbers relate and can represent things in relationship to other things.  All life is about relationships because God is relational.  The essence and nature of creation reflects the essence and nature of God the creator.  Moreover, God is concerned with healthy relationships, healing relationships, loving relationships, compassionate relationships.  Sin is, in fact, broken relationship between God and humanity, God and creation, humans and fellow humans, and humans and creation.  The work of God is healing and reconciling those relationships in healthy ways.


Second, I think God has to be experienced.  It is often said that, “God can’t be explained only experienced.”  When I was in college I tried to get a minor in religious studies.  The religious studies department where I went was agnostic at best.  I remember taking a course on Philosophy of Religion.  We talked about God as omnipotent, God as omniscient, God as omnipresent, and God as the only non-contingent being.  We philosophized soo much… that I lost God in the process.  Learning to define God is good to a degree, but one can never fully understand God.  We are limited beings with limited understanding, always.  No matter how smart we think we are.  God, by nature, is limitless.  Once we try to put God into words, we are limiting the limitless.  When we spend too much time trying to intellectually understand God, then we can miss out on appreciating the loving experience of God.  That is why Jesus teaches the way He does.  He says, "The Kingdom of God is like…"  Jesus never sits down and explains the Trinity to the disciples or why everything happens.  Instead Jesus wants us to experience life and the love of God.  I learned the hard way that one can get lost in the intellectual understanding of God.  In fact, it can lead to some scary and dry places.  Not that it is wrong to question and to learn more about God, but never at the expense of experiencing the presence of the love of God.  Distraught, I sought a priest in the area.  He told me that whenever he felt lost and dry he always found his way back… in community.  God is to be experienced in loving and healing relationships in creation and with others in community.


If people ask me what I love to do most as a priest, it is being in small groups talking about the love of God in their lives.  Further, how people experienced the love of God in the stories in the Bible.  There is nothing better than honest seekers gathered around the Holy scriptures.  I love journeying with and experiencing God with others.  In addition to worshipping God, that is what the church is all about.  The church is the community of God where we can come and talk about our lives and experiences.  That is why the community of God (aka the church) is so important.  It is not just something to do on a Sunday morning.  It is a blessing and great joy to gather with other seekers and lovers of God.


If someone asks me, “Who is God?”  I say, “God is love in motion reaching out to us.”


Saturday, May 28, 2022

Jesus Ascends to heaven. God is about fulfillment and promise…

Why did Jesus ascend into heaven?  What was the purpose?  Why did He have to leave us?  Did He leave us?  We are often sad when someone leaves us, especially if that person is important to us.  We don’t want to see them go.  We ask God why does this person need to go away?  


Some of you may know that I am a Star Wars fan.  I do not necessarily like all the high tech stuff, but I love the story.  I love the development of characters like Luke Skywalker.  In one of the saddest scenes in the trilogy, Luke loses his mentor Obi-Wan Kenobi.  Sadly he sees Darth Vader destroy him.  It always seems that the mentor figures in our lives need to move on.  Luke shouts out, “Nooo” as Obi-wan dies, but then something amazing happens.  Luke can still hear his mentor guiding and directing him.  In fact, in many ways, he is actually more present to Luke.  I always get chills when Obi-Wan tells Luke to trust the Force and to reach out with his feelings.  It is ok, I know I am a geek.


Now I am not saying that I equate Obi-Wan with Jesus, nor do I think that what happened with Obi-Wan is just like Jesus’ ascension. The force is not equal to God, and there is no parallel to Jesus in the Star Wars universe (no matter who was born how).  However there are a few themes that are similar.  First, Obi-Wan appears to leave Luke, but does not really leave him.  In the same way Jesus appears to have left us at the Ascension, but He is with us in a new and powerful way.  Second, Luke finds out that the force will be with him always.  Similarly, Jesus fulfills His promise to His disciples and us.  That is what Ascension Day is about to me.  It is not about loss or sadness, but about fulfillment and promise.  


First, it is about fulfillment.  Jesus said to them, “This is what I told you while I was still with you: Everything must be fulfilled that is written about me in the Law of Moses, the Prophets and the Psalms.” (Luke 24:44)  Much of what the ascension is about is fulfillment.  Jesus came to be one of us.  The Word became flesh and dwelt among us. (John 1:14)   God loves us so much He felt compelled to become one of us.  Then after He has experienced all that human beings go through, even death, Jesus fully brings that experience into heaven with God the Father.  In other words God experiences death as Jesus to redeem us and transform the Divine/ Human relationship.  By way of the Ascension, He unites that experience fully and forever with the fullness of God.  God is fulfilling all that God said God would do.  So in many ways we can rejoice that the process of Jesus’ life, death and resurrection is fulfilled.  Having now been fully redeemed Jesus can also be present to us in a new way.  He therefore sends the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost (but more on that next Sunday).  Jesus’ ascension is thus a completion, but not an end.


Jesus Ascension is also about promise.  God will come again.  I love the scene in Acts chapter 1.  As the disciples are looking up to heaven to marvel at Jesus’ ascension, these two men in dazzling white clothes basically tell them not to stare.  They said, "Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking up towards heaven? This Jesus, who has been taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you saw him go into heaven." (Acts 1: 9-11)  They tell them that Jesus will come again the same way He left, miraculously.  In other words we won’t miss it.  Thus Jesus’ ascension is about fulfillment, but also promise.  Christ has died, Christ is Risen, Christ will come again!  Jesus is not left in some tomb somewhere.  God is very much awake, alive, active and moving throughout creation and in our lives.


In the end all things find their completion in Christ Jesus who loves us, became one of us, and lovingly fulfills all promises.  Jesus said, "If I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, so that where I am, there you may be also." (John 14:3)

Saturday, May 7, 2022

Happy Mother's Day! Underneath it all is the Love of God!!

When Jesus saw (from the cross) his mother and the disciple whom he loved standing beside her, he said to his mother, ‘Woman, here is your son.’  Then he said to the disciple, ‘Here is your mother.’ And from that hour the disciple took her into his own home.  (John 19:  26 - 27)


My dad was the smartest man in the entire world.  He knew how to answer all of my most difficult questions.  Whenever I asked him the most challenging questions in life he would wisely respond, "Go ask your mother!"


Nothing is quite as wonderful, nurturing, and important as a good mom.  Moms are amazing!  Moms sing us to sleep and cuddle us as babies.  They fix boo-boos and read stories when we are toddlers.  Moms correct and challenge us as teenagers.  They encourage us and pass on wisdom as we age.  Moms are not perfect, but can know more than most the importance of sacrificial love.


There is no greater example of motherhood than Jesus' mother, Mary.  She understood that her relationship with her son is grounded in her love for God.  She is not perfect either, but she does know what all good parents do.  If you want to be a great parent and have a special relationship with your kids, then first ground your own life as a servant of God.


The gospel scenes of Mary and Jesus point to a nurturing, faithful, complex, sometimes even baffling relationship.  However, underneath it all is the sacrificial love of God.


At the annunciation Mary responds to the angel Gabriel's proclamation by saying, “Here I am, the servant of the Lord, let it be with me according to your word.” (Luke 1:38)  This after initially wondering how this could be.  Next, Mary goes to visit her relative Elizabeth who is great with child as well.  After John the Baptist leapt in Elizabeth’s womb, Mary shouts out the Magnificat.  “My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord, my Spirit rejoices in God my savior…”  (Luke 1: 46, 47)  Mary’s faithful and joyful response to motherhood is an inspiration for all, not to mention some of the greatest poetry in the entire Bible.  Mary also marvels when the shepherd's visit at Jesus' birth, “she treasured all these things and pondered them in her heart.”  (Luke 2:19)  Mary is a shining example of the importance of a human, warm, loving relationship.  She is joyful and humble.  She knows her child is a gift from God.    


Moreover, Mary is not just the cute, placid, innocent girl we see in Christmas pageants.  Mary can be stern in her own way.  She says to the boy Jesus, after frantically searching for him for three days and finding him in the Temple, “Child, why have you treated us like this?” (Luke 2: 48)O  ne is left to wonder about the entirety of their relationship while Jesus was a boy.  Did she discipline him often or very much at all?  Did she need to discipline him?  We will never know, and perhaps we shouldn’t.  In any case, Mary was a very caring and nurturing mother.  


However, it is her relationship with Jesus when he is an adult that intrigues the most.  Mary strongly hinted that Jesus turn water into wine at the wedding in Cana.  Jesus says, “Woman, what concern is that to you and me?  My hour has not yet come.” (John 2:4)  Mary then tells the servants to do as Jesus commands.  Jesus dutifully orders the large jars to be filled with water.  When the water is drawn out it becomes fine wine.  It is one of the most curious encounters in the entire Bible.  Did Jesus give in to his mother?  Was she right?  How did they feel toward each other in that moment?  The text never really answers these questions and we are left to wonder.  Another curious scene between Mary and Jesus is found in Mark chapter 3.  Many think Jesus is ‘out of his mind.’  The text says that some of his family went to restrain him.  Was his mother part of that group?  Did she want to overly protect her son?  Later Jesus is told that his mother, brothers, and sisters are outside looking for him.  Jesus responds that his mother and brothers and sisters are those who do the will of God.  Now I am not suggesting that Jesus and Mary had an antagonistic relationship when Jesus was an adult, but you have to wonder how their relationship truly progressed.  There were obvious strains, but that is true of all relationships grounded in love.


Finally, the most powerful scene between Jesus and his mother is the scene at the cross.  On the cross Jesus looks down and sees the most important people in his earthly life.  Two of which are his mother and the ‘beloved’ disciple.  The ‘beloved’ disciple (often thought to be John) can be symbolic of all beloved disciples of Jesus.  It is an incredible literary device used by the writer of John’s gospel.  It is a way to say to the reader that, “You too can be a beloved disciple.”  Jesus says, “Woman, here is your son,’ and to the beloved disciple, “Here is your mother.” (John 19:26, 27)  Notice, he does not say, “Here you two be friends.”  No, Jesus is very specific about setting up the mother/ child relationship.  Especially at the cross, Jesus and his mother Mary know the importance of a loving relationship grounded in God.


Nothing is quite as wonderful, nurturing, and important as a good mom.  I pray you take some time today to give thanks for mother's everywhere.  Remember those who have had a difficult mother/ child relationship.   Remember all those who have functioned as special moms for others.  Remember the special moments with your mom!  Remember her joys.  Remember her challenges.  Remember her heartache.  Remember her faithfulness.  Remember her love!  


Thank You Moms!  Happy Mother's Day!  Underneath it all is the Love of God!!


Saturday, April 16, 2022

Easter. A Joyous and Beautiful Gift!

At this, Mary Magdalene turned around and saw Jesus standing there, but she did not realize that it was Jesus.  He asked her, “Woman, why are you crying?  Who is it you are looking for?”  Thinking he was the gardener, she said, “Sir, if you have carried him away, tell me where you have put him, and I will get him.”

Jesus said to her, “Mary.”  She turned toward him and cried out in Aramaic, “Rabboni!” (which means “Teacher”).  Jesus said, “Do not hold on to me, for I have not yet ascended to the Father.  Go instead to my brothers and tell them, ‘I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.’” (John 20:14-17)


Good morning and Happy Easter!  What does Easter mean?  What does it mean to you?


My first Easter memory was as a five year old.  I will never forget it because I will never forget the Easter outfits my mom got for my brother and me.  My outfit consisted of little green shorts and a striped green shirt.  My brother had on the same new outfit only his was blue.  We looked like a couple of live Easter eggs.  My mom must have gotten them at a two for one sale.  Anyway, we looked ridiculous.  Everyone said we looked so cute, and many wondered if we were twins.  I, on the other hand, could not wait to get back home to take off this funny embarrassing outfit.  Besides, I wanted to eat all the chocolate bunnies in my Easter basket.  Overall it seemed like a good holiday.  I wondered, “is this what Easter is all about?  Is it about new things, new clothes, new candy?”  “Well as long as I got chocolate,” I thought.


Fast Forward to Easter Sunday my Junior year in college.  I was working part-time as a youth minister at an urban church in Columbus Ohio.  Our priest had a crack of dawn service at a local park.  Six or seven of us showed up in this park right before sun-up.  When the Sun came up we had a nice little sunrise Easter service.  Then we each received a kite and were invited to fly our kites through the park, shouting out Alleluia, if we felt so moved.  Overall it was a good Easter holiday.  I wondered, “is this what Easter is all about?  Is Easter about night turning into day, winter turning into spring, rebirth, or new life?”  “Where is the chocolate?!” I thought.


Fast forward to Easter of my last year in seminary.  I was finishing up my masters degree.  I was armed with all of this theological information.  I knew we were going back to Ohio to start a new life.  My first child was on the way.  I went to the National Cathedral that morning.  The place was packed and full of pretty flowers.  The music was spectacular.  The sermon was not so good, at least not to my new higher standards (please note the sarcasm).  Overall it was a good Easter holiday.  I wondered, “is this what Easter is all about?  Is Easter about new knowledge, new beginnings, new life?”  “Where is that darn chocolate?!” I thought.


What does Easter mean? What does it mean to you? 


Let us rewind about 2000 years ago, shall we?  In John chapter 20 we read about the most emotional encounter anybody ever had!  Mary Magdalene is totally despondent. She thinks that somebody has stolen the body of her Lord and friend from the grave.  She can not even properly mourn her loss.  Her only connection has been robbed from her.  She feels an unbearable pain of complete and forever separation from Jesus.  Tragedy has been punctuated by utter catastrophe.  She is so upset she probably doesn’t even realize that two angels just spoke with her.  She is so distraught she doesn't even recognize Jesus through her tears.  Jesus asks her, “why are you weeping?”  “Sir, if you have taken him away, then tell me where you have laid him,” she replies.  Jesus calls her by name, “Mary.”  She shrieks with pure joy,”Rabboni!”  Which means my beloved teacher.  Jesus then tells her not to hold onto him because all is not complete.


It is impossible to comprehend the Resurrection or resurrected life.  It is not just being raised from the dead and given earthly life back again.   Although there are multiple stories in the Bible about people being raised from the dead, they eventually die again.  Resurrected life is new eternal life with God.  The Resurrection appearances give us a slightly fuller picture.  Those encounters witness Jesus in a similar but new spiritual and physical body.  He can be experienced in a new way, but never contained. Nor should He be.  God always teaches us how to be in right and loving relationship, not how to understand everything.  So the Resurrection is beyond our intellectual grasp.  However, it is a truth we can experience and engage.  This encounter between Jesus and Mary teaches us much.


First, the Resurrection is about eternal joy.  It is about healed and renewed relationships.  The Resurrection is the joy of love triumphing over death.  Resurrected life means loving beginning after sad end.  Jesus says, “Why are you weeping?”  Resurrected life is not about sadness.  It is about everlasting joy and peace.  This does not mean that we will not experience sadness in this life. We will, and we should.  Sadness helps us grow in this life.  It reminds us of what truly matters, and it reminds us that we are not in control.  However, sadness is not a part of eternal life. Things do not end with sadness and the grave.  God’s resurrected life always wins. God calls out each of our names inviting us into this eternal joy and peace!  Will we recognize the great shepherd’s voice?


Second, the Resurrection is about trusting and moving forward into a beautiful unknown.  Jesus tells Mary, “Do not hold onto me, for I have not ascended to my Father.”  Mary wants to hold on to this joyful moment.  She would prefer to embrace Jesus there next to the tomb forever.  Who wouldn’t?  However, Jesus knows that the process is not complete.  He will have multiple resurrection appearances to many.  Then, he will finally ascend to complete the salvation process.  Jesus moves into the beautiful unknown, and invites us to follow. His resurrection points to a new reality beyond this earthly life.  One that has us let go of the sad wisdom of this world.  We are called to let go of pride, greed, and fear.  Instead, we are invited by the Risen Christ to an unknown scary yet safer place.  We are invited to remember that the kingdom of God is like a forgiving father. It is like searching for treasure in a field.  It is like a shepherd who leaves everything behind to seek us out when we are lost.  We are all invited to an eternal place of mystery, wonder, faith, joy, peace, hope, and love.  A place we can not possibly fathom, but intuitively trust.  Let us follow the Resurrected Christ into a beautiful unknown.  I pray we might!  Alleluia!  Christ is Risen!!


"Pass the chocolate!!"

Thursday, April 14, 2022

What is so good about Good Friday?

Jesus says three things form the Cross in John’s gospel.  First he joins his mother and the beloved disciple.  “Woman, behold your son, behold your mother.”  Next He says “I am thirsty.”  Finally he says, “It is Finished.”  So what is Jesus telling us at this most critical time?  What are we to make of his words from the cross?


“Woman, behold your son…behold your mother.”  Even on the cross Jesus is taking care of the ones He loves.  With these words he is binding together His mother and the beloved disciple.  The beloved disciple is now not just a disciple, but an intimate part of Jesus' family, God’s family.  Of course we know the beloved disciple to be the disciple John.  Throughout the gospel attributed to John, the writer never says John.  It is always the beloved disciple.  It is a possible literary technique to draw the reader into the story.  In many ways it is saying that you can be like the beloved disciple.  You too can have such experiences with our Lord.  In a way, Jesus is drawing all “beloved disciples” into his family.  Jesus is always deepening our relationship with God.


“It is finished.”  Why do we call it Good Friday?  I often feel weird on Good Friday.  I am sad that Jesus has died, but it is by the grace of the cross that we are saved.  On the cross Jesus experiences death and thus is fully able to bridge the divine and human experiences together.  “It is finished.”  His hour is finished.  All is complete!  This of course is what makes it Good Friday.  Only Jesus on the cross (fully human/ fully God) can bring all things together.  Praise God that He did!

Maundy Thursday. The real presents/ presence in Holy Communion is the sacrificial love of Christ.

“Take, eat, this is my body…  Drink this all of you, this is my blood of the new covenant which is shed for you and for many.”  

Every Sunday many churches offer Holy Communion, also known as the Lord’s Supper.  We receive it, but do we really reflect on what it truly means?

Today is Maundy Thursday.  The word “Maundy” comes from the latin Mandatum Novum.  Jesus says, “I give you a new commandment that you love one another as I loved you.”  (John 13:34)  Jesus says this at his Last (perhaps first true) Supper with his disciples.  They celebrate it right before Jesus is to go to the Garden of Gethsemane.  There he will be arrested to be crucified.  Maundy Thursday therefore begs two enormous questions we each must answer.

First, do we really understand what it means to receive Holy Communion?  Of course to answer this question we need to remember the context of what really took place.  Jesus is celebrating the Passover feast with His disciples.  That is, he is celebrating the remembrance of the exodus from Egypt when God passed over the first born Hebrew children so they lived.  However, God winds up not sparing God's own Son from experiencing brutal torture and death.  In the process, Jesus becomes the new Paschal lamb.  He redefines the Passover meal to eternally benefit all who will receive it.  Thus, to receive Holy Communion is to ingest Christ's sacrificial love.  Jesus is always truly and mysteriously present in Holy Communion.  Over the centuries Christians have argued about what becomes what and when while celebrating Holy Communion.  This is a futile argument, and it can actually wrongly shift the focus away from how Christ is actually present.  Receiving Holy Communion is not about mental gymnastics, but about rejoicing in true life-giving grace.  Further, the truth of Christ's presence is experienced in the heart of the believer.  “Take, eat, this is my body…  Drink this all of you, this is my blood of the new covenant which is shed for you and for many.”  My heart always feels lovingly blessed every Sunday afternoon after I have received Holy Communion.  It is more than just having a small piece of bread and a sip of wine in my stomach.  Holy Communion is, “food for the heart and soul." It can only be this because of the real eternal presence of Christ's sacrificial love.

Second, do we realize our hunger for what Jesus truly offers?  A few years ago I was fortunate to volunteer with a youth group at a community food bank to pass out food on a Saturday morning.  There was a huge long line that kept going and going and going.  I passed out more potato bags than I can count.  It was a gift to participate in serving others.  There are many hungry people in the world, and we all need to be physically fed.  However, there are even more people who are spiritually hungry.  Everyone has a deep hunger for God.  Of course there are many ways to try and understand God in our world.  Moses transmits God's law.  Muhammad teaches submision to God.  Confucius offers wisdom.  The Buddha points to Nirvana.  These are not bad paths to take.  However, Jesus invites everyone into a deeper intimate relationship of love with God.  This invitation is received by being caught up in Christ's way, truth, and life through the gift and grace of His sacrificial love.  At his last earthly supper with his disciples, Jesus called them friends.  He said, “I give you a new commandment that you love one another as I loved you.”  He exclaimed that, "no one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends."  Are we really hungry for the depth of this kind of love?  Do we really receive this invitation from a God who sacrifices all?  I pray we might!  Amen.