Thursday, April 27, 2017

Towards Sunday, April 30, 2017

Reading:  Luke 24:13-35

On the third day after his execution and on the day Jesus is raised from the dead, but before he has yet appeared to the disciples, two of his disciples are on the way from Jerusalem to Emmaus -- a village said to be about 10 kms away.  They are discouraged and tired, and feel empty and hopeless.  Along the way they are joined by a stranger, who listens to their discouragement and then relates what happened with Jesus to what the scriptures say always happens with servants and prophets of God in the world.  When they reach a stopping-place for the night and they invite the stranger to stay with them, as the stranger breaks the bread for the evening meal they suddenly recognize him as Jesus risen from the dead -- at which point he disappears and they immediately rush back to Jerusalem to tell the others.

I looked up Emmaus on-line (good "old" Wikipedia!) and found out there is no record of an ancient village matching the one the story describes.  There are several candidates, but none completely fits the story as it's been told.

It's suggested the story is metaphoric, rather than literal.

Which makes me wonder, if Emmaus is a state of mind -- a particular state of faith and of response to the message and promise of the kingdom of God, what kind of state of mind is it?

If Jerusalem -- at least for the disciples when they first travelled there with Jesus (remember Palm Sunday?), was a place of deep faith, undying commitment and high expectation of God's good will being done in and for the world, then is Emmaus -- after the defeat and demise of Jesus, a place of shaken faith, questioning, weakened commitment, and retreat to a more limited view of what Earth is to be, and of our role in it?

And isn't that the road we are on these days?  At one end, deep faith in, and high commitment to the kingdom of God on Earth.  At the other, doubt, weakened commitment and retreat to something less.  And all of us moving one way or the other between the two?

And if we're not happy with the way we're going at the moment, how do we turn it around?  What does the story say about that?  And how do we find our way into it?


And...if you want an extra thing to think about ...... something else I found out!  

There are in antiquity at least two other examples of "vanishing hitch-hiker" legends.  The first is older than this story of Jesus and concerns Romulus, one of the twins who with his brother, Remus, was officially revered as founding the City of Rome.  In the story Proculus (meaning "Proclaimer" in ancient Latin) is journeying from Alba Longa to Rome at the time Rome is an uproar because Romulus has been killed and his body has vanished.  On the journey, Proculus is joined by a stranger who, unknown to him, is the resurrected Romulus, and who in the course of their conversation explains to Proculus the secrets of his kingdom, and how to conquer and rule the world.  Then Romulus ascends to heaven.  Proculus recognizes then who the stranger was, and he goes on to proclaim to others all that Romulus explained to him.

The Romans who read Luke's Gospel would surely have known this story from their own folklore and official imperial mythology.  The fact that Cleopas (one of the two disciples in the story of the resurrected Jesus) also means "Proclaimer" in Greek would have only sealed the deal.


What strikes me as significant here is not only how the two stories are similar, but also how they are different -- like whatever difference we can imagine between what the imperial-city-building Romulus and what the crucified servant Jesus would have had to say to distraught followers about how to continue making the world the way it's meant to be.





Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Sermon from Sunday, April 23, 2017

Reading: John 20:19-31
Theme:  Piercings -- love's wounds ever heal?

Among the variety of resurrection stories in the Gospels, this one focuses on how the risen Jesus is known by his wounds.


Piercings.

That’s how Jesus – the risen Jesus, is known to his disciples.  It’s how he shows himself to them, and how they recognize him – how they know he is still with them.

I think we need to imagine this.  When Jesus appears and has to convince his disciples that it’s really him, when those who see him then try to tell Thomas, and when Thomas says what it will take to convince him that it really is Jesus raised from the dead and still with them, there is no mention at all of Jesus’ height or weight, his hair colour or style, the colour of his eyes, that little mole maybe on his neck, the way he might bend his head towards you when he speaks to you to show that he’s really listening, or the little finger maybe of his left hand that was broken as a child when he tried to stop a bully from picking on a smaller boy and that ever since then was kind of bent and out of line with the others.

Nor is there any mention of anything like an aura around him, or a halo, or that his clothes are dazzling white.  Nothing about a strange tingling feeling of power in his presence, or a sense that great miracles are just waiting to break out any minute he walks into the room.

None of that is part of this picture.  None of those things are part of this story of his rising, and his continued presence.

What the disciples see, what Jesus takes the time to show them, and what Thomas needs to see for himself are the piercings – the wounds that Jesus suffered at the hands of the enemies, when he confronted and stood in there against the power of evil and injustice, when for love of others and in his own loving way he let himself be pierced, wounded, and even put to death, for love of all the world.

He suffers the wounds in the course of his life.  And it turns out when he is raised, that the wounds remain as the single most significant identifying feature of who he is, and how he is known.

It seems he who healed others could not, or would not heal himself.  It seems that even though, and when God raises him from the dead – breathes life anew into his body, God does not bother to heal the wounds, or to close up the piercings.

Is that perhaps because this actually is the way of God, and the way God is known?   To not only take on, but literally take in the sorrows of the other?  To be weakened, to be pierced and wounded by the other’s brokenness as a state of being?  To be run through, impaled on the pain of the world, and to let one’s own blood flow for love, and for the life of others? 

Father Richard Rohr, a Franciscan of our time, commented recently that weakness is not a trait we like to be associated with.

We are in a new ballpark here, [he says].  Let’s admit that we admire strength and importance.  We admire self-sufficiency, autonomy, the self-made person, the person with the answers to solve and to fix the problems and make them go away.  That surely the American [maybe more generally, the Western] way.

But the Bible – the Gospels and the apostle Paul especially, describe no less than God as having weakness, and choosing to be weak.  In fact, Paul says, “God’s weakness of greater than human strength.”  And how can this be?  How can God be weak? 

This weakness of God, as Paul calls it, is not something we admire or want to imitate. We like control; God, it seems, loves vulnerability.  Yet how many Christian prayers begin with some form of “Almighty God”?  If we are truly immersed in the mystery of God as it has been revealed to us, we must equally say “All-Vulnerable God,” too!

There’s a story I’ve told here before at different times from up in Bruce County of a good old Scottish Presbyterian man who was admitted to hospital for surgery.  He was glad for the surgery, but upset that the hospital where he would be was a Catholic institution.  The last thing he needed, he said, while he was dealing with surgery and recovery from it, was all the Catholic crucifixes and statues of Mary that there would be all around the place.  He said he wanted to be able to pray to almighty God in his own good Presbyterian way, without all that other stuff around. 

So he asked that the crucifix be removed from whatever room he would be placed in after the surgery.  It wasn’t, though.  Which meant that when after his surgery when he woke up to begin dealing with the pain of recovery, the first thing he saw when he opened his eyes was a statue of the crucified Jesus hanging on the wall directly at the foot of his bed.  And, as he said later that day to astonished visitors, there was no sight more welcome, more encouraging and more healing for him than an image of the wounded hands of God reaching out to him to gather him in and hold him close.

The truth of that experience and the tension we feel around it in our lives is experienced in all kinds of ways and all kinds of levels – both small and seemingly insignificant, and large and world-shaping.

One small, but telling incident in my first marriage is the day the throw rug in the front hall of our house got muddy.  The rug – a kind of lightly-coloured, long runner through the front hall, was one my wife especially loved, and one day when she came home and in the front door she was distraught to see that some mud had been tracked upon it.  Trying to be helpful, my immediate response was that, “Well, I’m sure we can wash it.  We can get it clean.”  Which only made her angrier – this time at me.  “I know we can, and I would have got there,” she said, “I guess I just needed to know that you felt bad about it, too.”

More critically, the issue comes up these days around Japhia’s illness and the times she struggles to get through a day.  It must make such a difference, if I’m able to be there in the moment with her – really just present to what is going on, just sharing and feeling the sorrow and the fear sometimes of what she is going through.  Or am I there always at a little remove, at a little distance – in the same room, but only as problem-solver, as fixer, as analyser, as organizer and director of what needs to be done.  All good and necessary things, in their time and place.  But what a difference it makes – both to her and to me, when I am able just to be with her in the pain and the struggle.

On a bigger scale Japhia talks still of the different American presidential responses to 9-11.  In the days immediately following the attack on the Towers, as America and the world struggled to absorb the impact of the event, both George Bush – sitting president, and Bill Clinto – former president, visited Ground Zero to be with the people there.  We all know George Bush’s response – how defiantly and imperiously he stood his ground, put on the strong face of American resolve, and declared that America would surely seek revenge, would fix the problem, and all the world would have to decide if they were with him or against him.  Bill Clinton, on the other hand, won Japhia’s heart forever, as he stood in the same scene of devastation, put all thoughts of past and future out of his mind, and for that moment simply stood and embraced and wept with the people there – taking into his own heart and mind and body, the pain that was inflicted on them. 

And we can only wonder how things might have been different – how things might still be different, if sitting and not just former world leaders, were really able to do this – take the time and make the space for it, and then act from that holy centre?

But I’m not telling you anything you don’t already know. 

You know how hard it is to just sit with someone and with their pain or sorrow.  We so easily flee from the present to the past – searching out reasons for the pain, needing to find fault and assign blame.  We also so quickly run away to the future – devising solutions and fixes, se we won’t have to face what’s so hard to face in the present moment.

But you also know the holiness of sitting with someone – a friend, a parent, a partner, who is ill and weak, who is in pain, who is dying, ands simply sharing and taking into yourself what they feel, and what they fear.  And doing no more – and no less than that, at least for the moment.  You do this so often, and so lovingly. 

In your own experience, and out of love for others around you, you know the sacrament of shared pain and weakness.  In your own life, you live that image of God that is stronger than any human strength – the image of the pierced and wounded Jesus, the image of the One who stands with and for others against the pain and injustice of this life, and lets himself be wounded and broken by it. 

And we can only wonder, if we and others were able to live out this image, to live in this way of God more openly and more consistently, what would it mean for all the world?  What would it mean for the world’s understanding of God?  What would it mean for the world’s life and healing?

Thursday, April 20, 2017

A little closer to Sunday, April 23

Reading: John 20:19-31 
Focus:  The wounds of real love: do they ever heal?


Wolverine is one of the X-Men -- comic-book mutants who save the world by fighting evil.  Each of the X-Men (and yes, they are called "men" even though not all are male) bears a different mutation, and Wolverine's is that of instantaneous or accelerated healing which allows him to fight fearlessly almost to death (even seeming death), and then recover (with his wounds healed completely) to fight again.  Plus, he has those vicious cool claws that come out when he needs them.



Jesus is not one of the X-Men.  And not like Wolverine.  No cool claws to come out at the critical moment, and according to John's Gospel his wounds do not heal.  In his confrontation with evil for love of others, he is pierced deeply in his hands and side, and even when he is raised from the dead those wounds are still there.  His pierced hands and side are the way his friends recognize him, and know for sure he is still with them.

Two different kinds of hero.  

One a mutant, an X-Man (ex-human?) because of the way he so quickly gets over the wounds he suffers for others.

The other, sometimes called the True Man (restored, or fully realized human?) who is pierced through for love of others, and never really gets over it.

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Towards Sunday, April 23, 2017

Reading: John 20:19-31


Key Verse:  "Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands ... I will not believe."

We call him Doubting Thomas.  

When Jesus appears to his disciples on the day of his resurrection, Thomas is not with the others.  When they tell him they have seen the Lord, he famously says, "Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands, and can touch the mark of the nails in his hands and side, I will not believe."

Is this doubt?  

Or is it rather a firm commitment not to give himself now, after all that he has come to see, to anything but the real Jesus?  The Jesus who was crucified.  The lord who lived and died for love of others, love of all humanity, love of all Earth.  The son of God who so immersed himself in the holy work of caring for and healing the life of Earth, that his hands got dirty, his body got broken, and his life got spent.

If that is the Jesus who the others saw raised from the dead, he would be all in.  But if the Jesus they saw was all clean and healed and sparkly white, Thomas probably then would have doubted.  Because that wasn't his Jesus.  And he probably would have walked.

The fact that he stayed, tells us what the risen Jesus is like and what he's still about.  And blessed is the world when this is the Jesus we still see and follow today.

What is our image of the risen Jesus?  How do we picture him?

Do we see, hear or feel Jesus in the world today?  If so, where?  Or when?

How do we follow him, and share his presence with others?

Sunday is also Earth Sunday.  Is there any connection between it being both Earth Sunday and the Second Sunday of Easter?




Monday, April 17, 2017

Sermon from Easter Sunday, April 16, 2017

Reading:  John 20:1-18
Theme:  Three Ways to Easter



Easter is easy.  In one way.  It comes every year.  Whether we like it or not.  Are ready for it or not.  It’s as regular as sunrise every morning. 

Of course, it comes at a different time every year.  It’s on a calendar calculated by cycles of the moon, and set in accord with the ancient Jewish practice of Passover – the feast of liberation from bondage to the pain and powers of this world.  Both the timing and the meaning of the feast reminding us that God is not bound to the patterns of this world, and God’s calendar and timing are a little different sometimes than ours.

And that’s one of the things that can make Easter difficult – that its gift of hope and its promise of new life don’t always come in the way we expect or are ready to accept or are able at first to understand.

On that first morning when Jesus was raised, it was dark and all that Mary Magdalene, John the beloved disciple, and Peter were able to see was the empty tomb.

Does the world seem dark, still?  Or maybe, dark again?

Politically and economically, the world seems a darker, more anxious place to many.  And I heard of something new this week – that the American Psychiatric Association has officially labelled a new kind of depression disorder, called eco-anxiety – a clinically diagnosable debilitating anxiety about the degradation of Earth.  In Canada, our sesquicentennial celebrations happen under the shadow of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.  And even at home town in our daily news we wonder if there is any light at the end of the tunnel of higher taxes, fatal accidents on the Linc and the Red Hill Expressway, and the LRT debate.

We go to the old familiar places for answers, and the cupboard seems bare.  The familiar temples of wisdom, of leadership, and of inspired and inspiring answers seem empty.

And personally – do things pile up?  Is life increasingly hard?  This week I’ve come to know a woman in her 90’s in the process of dying, wanting to see her twin sister to be able to go in peace and it probably won’t happen.  I visit people I’ve always loved talking with, who now find it hard to converse at all.  At home, Japhia’s health is not good – day by day we are never sure what to expect, or how to respond sometimes to what does come.  And you face a lot of things too that throw shadows across your days – big questions, new anxieties, regrets and guilt, new limits and fears, and unfamiliar – or maybe all-too-familiar, hard-to-deal-with feelings.

Where do we go?  Is there light?

The church struggles.  The Spec last week had a front-page story about Mount Hope United closing next month to merge with Barton Stone, hoping that closing one church will create a new one out of two.  We struggle here, with both Sunday offering and people available to manage the front yard for the spring sale down from last year.  And like everyone else we struggle to know what religion, faith, prayer and faithful action really mean these days.
The places we are used to going to for answers often seem empty.  Things we have clung to seem to be gone – to have been taken away from us.  The stone has been rolled away, the doors have been blown open, what we loved is gone, and all that’s left are the discarded wrappings.  And like Mary Magdalene, John the beloved disciple, and Peter, we’re not always sure what to do next.

Yet, Easter comes and new life comes.  And their confusion, their not-knowing, and their anxiety become part of the story of the coming of new life.  How does that happen?  For them?  And for us?

John, for his part, when he sees for sure that Jesus really is no more where he used to be, immediately and intuitively knows – just believes that God in Christ is now on his way to being somewhere else, doing some new kind of thing that if he is patient and open enough, he will come to see and be part of.  There is something about John’s heart, his openness to relationship with others and with God, and his ability to dwell in the presence of others and of God that makes him both the deeply beloved and the intuitively believing disciple. 

Sometimes do we have that kind of faith – to meet loss, change and the end of what we knew, with simple faith that if GFod is no longer here in this thing and in this way, it just means that a new thing is afoot, and a new way is being prepared, and that we’ll be led into it in God’s own time? 

Peter, on the other hand, has a harder time.  He sees the empty tomb, the discarded wrappings, the absence of Jesus where he thought he would be, and he goes away in confusion, anxiety, maybe anger at who or what took away what he loved, maybe fear at the prospect of there being nothing to believe in any more.  He goes home heavy-hearted, his more impulsive faith overshadowed by all kinds of un-faith, and it will take a little time, a little process and a little pastoral care for him to find his way forward. 

At times are we like that, and in need of that kind of care? 

And then there is Mary -- Mary Magdalene.  Not the Virgin Mary who first brought Jesus into the world, but the more questionable and mysterious Mary whose life was changed in relationship with Jesus.  Her faith is not intuitive and instinctive like John’s; nor impulsive and mercurial like Peter’s; hers is harder-won, more earned by experience and the school of hard spiritual knocks, more won by real and deep-down change in who she has been.

She stays at the tomb.  She doesn’t go home either in simple faith or terrible doubt.  She stays at the only place she knows to be at the moment, and lets herself cry – to express and share her grief at the loss of what she had come to count on.  She’s not afraid of her tears and what she feels.  Nor is she afraid to poke around, to look into corners, to ask the difficult questions, to not settle for simple answers – and as she does that, it is she, alone of the three who comes to see angels.  It is she, of all of them, who is the first to hear the voice of her beloved and God’s Beloved, speaking directly to her and reaching her heart.  It is she, of all of us, who is the first to be changed once again, led by the living Christ into new life once more beyond the death of what she had and what she has been.

Perhaps sometimes we are like her.  At if not, at the very least we can, like the other disciples, take courage and take heart from what she and others have to tell us.

And isn’t that the promise of Easter?  That when the temples we know become tombs, when the things we cling to for hope and reassurance disappear or are taken from us, that God in Christ is not absent, not gone, not dead – but only beginning to do some new thing, wanting to meet us in some new way, waiting to lead us into an even deeper life and way of life with God. 

It happens, of course, in God’s own time.  The promise of new life doesn’t come in the way we expect, or at first are even able to understand.

But we all shall come to see it, each in our own way because God in Christ is not dead.  He is risen.  He is alive and coming to us in and beyond the darkness.
 

Sunday, April 09, 2017

Sermon from Sunday, April 9, 2017

Reading:  Mark 10:46 - 11:11


For five weeks we have been reading the story of Jesus healing a blind man named Bartimaeus.  Each week we have focused on a different element of the story, to help us look closely at different elements of our relationship with Jesus, and of our life of faith as a community gathered around him.  Today we read the story one more time – just to find our place within it, and then we read on to see what comes next.  

 


"Those who went ahead and those who followed were shouting:
      
     Hosanna!
     Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord!
     Blessing is the coming kingdom of our ancestor David!
     Hosanna in the highest heaven!

"Then he entered Jerusalem and went into the temple; and when he had looked around at everything, as it was already late, he went out to Bethany with the twelve."

The ending seems somewhat anticlimactic.

Like being a lakeside or seashore, watching a great wave coming in to the shore.  The wind is blowing, the waves are up, and you see them coming in one by one to shore.  You see them on their way in -- rising and falling, rising again and falling as they make their way towards land.

You see one bigger than the others.  It's the biggest so far, and it gets bigger and bigger with each rise and fall as it draws nearer the shore.  It's so much bigger -- the biggest yet, and bigger with each rise and fall.  Surely when it hits the shore, it will make something happen.  The shore will be different because of it.

But when it does -- when it finally makes its way to shore and crashes to land, is anything really different?  Is anything changed as the wave breaks with a crash, the water surges -- yes, it does surge a little higher up the beach than before, and then ... goes back, back into the lake, the sea, the ocean from which it came?

Like Jesus coming into Jerusalem -- at the head of a wave that's been building for some time -- all the way from Galilee, from Nazareth and Capernaum and so many other towns and provinces where Jesus has been -- all the teaching and healing, the feeding and forgiving and gathering of new community.  A wave that with each rise and fall grows bigger, the nearer and nearer it draws to Jerusalem.

Expectations are high.  Excitement is great.  All kinds of people line the path that he walks and then rides as he comes into the city.  Singing an ancient hymn of hope that their parents and grand-parents and grand-parents before them have been singing for generations:

     Hosanna!
     Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord!
     Blessing is the coming kingdom of our ancestor David!
     Hosanna in the highest heaven!

Then when Jesus does enter Jerusalem, he looks around ... and because it's late ... he leaves and goes back to Bethany with the twelve.

Bethany is a little town on the outskirts of Jerusalem.  Jesus has friends there -- Mary and her sister Martha and their brother Lazarus.  He's often spent time at their home.  It's a kind of refuge or safe space for him.  So what the story is saying is that when Jesus comes to the city, he makes a big splash, and then because it's late (!), goes back to his friends' home on the edge of the city, to have a quiet supper with his disciples.

On one hand, the procession was important.  The excitement of the crowd, the waving of the palms, thee song of a new day coming -- all of these things were important as a challenge to Jerusalem and its corrupt ruling elite, and as a challenge to Rome as well -- to the governor and army, and to its idea of how the world should be run, and for whose benefit.

It was important to say in as public a way as possible that there is a new way coming into the world, a new way that the world is longing for, that people are hungry for, and that surely will come.

But on the other hand, the way the new world comes, the way the world is changed, the way the Earth is redeemed is not the way the world usually expects, or hopes for, or is afraid of.

The new world -- the kingdom of God, doesn't come with the grand gesture, with sweeping and overwhelming victory, with the great hero.

Rather, it comes through the twelve -- through the gathered few -- through the little communities and gatherings of new life on the edge of the city -- through the little pockets and clusters of people whose lives have been changed from within -- whose hearts have been changed -- and who because of it are able and willing to live in the world as little grains of salt, little bits of yeast, little pin-pricks of light -- who are willing to be sown as seed in the life of the world, buried in the ground of living, just dying for new life to be brought forth from what they offer.

You see ... when Jesus came into Jerusalem and raised such a stir, caused such a commotion, the people whose cart he was upsetting were afraid of him, and that's why they did away with him -- very quickly, in fact.  It wasn't hard.

But it's not him -- or just him, that they should have feared.  It was also his disciples -- thee twelve who he'd gathered and taught -- and the others around them who also caught the vision, whose hearts were touched by what they saw and heard and felt, whose lives and ways of living would never be the same, and who would not let the life of the world around them be the same again -- who would, wave by wave after wave, be the coming and the appearing of the kingdom of God, over and over again -- changing the way the world works, making a difference for good, redeeming Earth by their persistent, God-driven, God-inspired pressure upon it.

The Gospel -- the good news of God in Jesus is really the Gospel -- the good news of God in Jesus and those who believe in him.

By the time we get to the end of the story, the crowds of Palm Sunday have gone.  It's just Jesus and the twelve -- just Jesus and his closest followers who share the Passover meal, who are together for the last supper.  And that's okay, because it's not the grand gesture, not the sweeping victory, not the great hero that changes, saves and redeems the world -- but the little community on the edge of the city, that gathers around him, remembers his way, and lets themselves be changed from within by him, and by what they remember of him.