Sunday, August 2, 2020
Sunday, July 26, 2020
Sunday, July 19, 2020
Tuesday, July 14, 2020
Sunday, April 12, 2020
The Good News!!
I always start preparing my Easter Sermon months in advance.
I start thinking about the theme of
the sermon and what I want to say to all of you.
This year was no different.
But then we found ourselves in a
pandemic.
And I will be honest I totally forgot
all the things I was going to say.
And this sermon is very different
from the one I was going to give.
The story of course is the same.
The women show up at the tomb that
day expecting death, and they find life.
They are told not to be afraid.
They are told to go and tell others what is happening.
They are told to go and tell others what is happening.
Jesus meets them on the road.
Jesus is alive.
The meaning of this story is deep and
rich.
And since the first Easter we have
been figuring out what it means for us and our lives.
This is the story that we turn to
when life is hard or tragic.
But I would offer this morning that
the meaning changes for us depending on where we find ourselves.
The sermon I was going to give was
great for the time before the pandemic.
But I believe the reason I forgot it
was because it wasn't good for where we are now.
And where we are now is in the middle
of this thing.
And the best case scenario is that we
will still be in this spot for a least another three weeks.
And every week seems to take a long
time in this new place.
So we have to ask ourselves how does
this story of resurrection talk to us now?
Here in the place we find ourselves
this morning.
Let me suggest this morning that this
story is more important to us this morning.
We need this story really bad today.
(Well…I can't speak for you, but I
need it today.)
I need Jesus to tell me, "Don't
be afraid"
I need an angel to show up and tell
me that Jesus is not in the tomb!
I need that feeling of joy that the
women experience when they are told that Jesus is not in the tomb.
Recently, John Krasinski the actor, who played Jim on the television show "The office", started a youtube show called "Some Good News".
In the show John shows clips of good
things that are happening in this pandemic.
Everything from fathers making crazy
golf shots, to people cheering on medical personal as they return from their
shifts.
It is really a wonderful thing.
I encourage you to check it out on
youtube.
It will lift your spirits.
It will show you that there is so
much good in the world.
When I watch this I cry.
I am moved because I need this good
news so badly.
And that is what we receive this
morning.
We are not just receiving some good
news, but THE GOOD NEWS!
The best news that we could get.
Jesus lives and so do we!
Even among death and sin Jesus lives!
He is not in the tomb.
Go with Joy and tell this to
everyone.
I am wondering if you ever had that
feeling.
The one where you get some good news
and you can't wait to tell others, and at the same time you are a little
nervous to tell others.
In my first years or so of High
school I didn't do so well.
There were lots of reasons for this,
but I wasn't a good student.
I remember the first time I made the
honor roll.
I couldn't wait to tell my parents.
But I was also a little afraid.
Afraid because now it meant I was
really capable of doing the work.
Afraid because what I had believed
about myself wasn't true.
I was capable, I was smart, I was
good enough.
Before this I had given up.
I imagine that is what it was like on
that first Easter.
Jesus' followers had given up.
They believed that the bad things of the world had won.
They believed that the bad things of the world had won.
They believed that all the things
Jesus had said and done were not true.
That they should be afraid, because
the Romans and religious leaders were too powerful.
That love wasn't enough.
And the good news that the women hear
changes all of that.
Everything that Jesus said is true!
Good news does win!
Jesus is not in the tomb!
In our congregation we have seen lots
of this.
I am amazed at the ways we are
staying connected even though we are not meeting in person.
One of those ways was through this
project that we done by one of our members Andi Kelleher.
She asked the congregation to all send in a
cut-out or picture of their hand with their name on it and one word reflecting
something they are doing while in this distancing time.
Then she made it into this wonderful collage of
our hands.
I want to share what Andi wrote about this
project.
"We are together, united in Christ.
God with us!
We are parents and children, family and
friends.
We work, we play, we serve, we pray.
We were given life, breath, mind, spirit.
And as Jesus teaches us, we use it all for
God's purpose.
We use our hands to boost each other.
And we lift our hands to God in praise
Who made us all-united-in God's love.
So though we are part- the spirit is here--
Connecting us -
To each other and to so many more
And to God, our wondrous Lord."
That is what it is to believe in this story,
this miraculous wondrous story.
It is to believe that even when death is around
us Jesus is alive in us.
Even when we are not physically together we are
connected to each other through the Holy Spirit!
Even though the world is out of control, and we
are not sure what it all means, we trust God will use our hands to boost each
other up.
You see this Easter the meaning is even more
clear.
That not even a pandemic can stop God from
working.
A pandemic cannot stop our faith.
It cannot stop of our love for each other.
It cannot stop of our love for each other.
It cannot crush our spirit.
It cannot stop us from being connected to each
other.
It cannot stop us from having joy and awe!
That is what we celebrate this Easter!
That is what we remember this Easter!
That the tomb that was sealed and guarded
cannot contain God!
And because of that we are not afraid.
Jesus is alive and so are we!
Because Jesus is alive we have hope, faith, and
love!
And that is the good news that we cling to now
and always.
He Is Risen!!
He Is Risen Indeed, Alleluia!!
Saturday, April 11, 2020
Alone
Alone.
That is what
you are alone.
The adoring
crowds shouting your name have left.
Your friend
betrayed you.
Your closest
disciple denied you.
The rest
fled from you.
They ran
from this sight.
Maybe they
couldn't stand to watch.
Maybe they
were afraid that they would be arrested next.
Maybe they
just didn't understand what you were going through.
But there
you are alone.
There are
people watching, but they are deriding you.
They are
mocking you.
"I
thought you were king of the Jews"
"Save
yourself"
No one
believes in you anymore.
All of the
teaching you did.
All of the
healing.
All of the
miracles.
It all seems
such a waste.
It ends here
on the cross with you alone.
You don't
even know that God is with you.
"My God
my God why did you abandoned me."
We feel this
way too.
We feel
alone.
We feel that
people betray our trust.
That people
deny our existence.
That people
Leave us.
We feel that
God is not present when we suffer.
We feel
alone right now.
We feel the
pain of not being together, of having to isolate ourselves.
We wonder
why would God allow this.
Why would God
allows any of it.
You are the
Son of God and even you feel it.
Even you
know what it is to be alone.
Is that the
point?
If God can
know our pain then we are never alone in it.
We are not alone.
Here in our
pain
In our loss
In our hurt
that is where God is.
God is not
going to magically make it all go away.
This is what
it is to be human.
To be divine
is to be human, and to be human is to be divine.
To sit here
alone is the point.
Because this
is where God is.
This is
where our savior is.
This is
where God finds us.
And we learn
a truth revealed to us by Jesus on the cross…
We are not
alone.
Even when we
feel that way.
Even when
things are at their worst God is there.
God is in
that moment of our betrayal.
God is in
the moment of our denial.
God is in
the moment of abandonment.
God is on
the cross.
Because of this
night we can know that God is with us in all things.
We can know
that we are never alone.
Amen
Sunday, April 5, 2020
Hosanna in the Highest!!!
Hosanna in the Highest!!!
I don't know what the crowds were
expecting that day.
I don't know what Jesus' disciples
were expecting.
Maybe they were hoping that this was
the time when Jesus would finally take over and rule the world.
Maybe they thought this was a
revolution.
However, one thing that the crowds
got right was that they needed saving.
The word Hosanna literally means,
"Save us".
It wasn't so much that the crowd was
cheering on Jesus.
It was more of a cry of anguish.
A cry from a people that had felt the
crushing blow of being an occupied people.
A people who felt that the Romans had
treated them unjustly.
A people who knew that life was not
fair and good.
A people that experienced the
randomness of life.
And a people that needed saving.
I can think of nothing better for us
to talk about today than our need to be saved.
We do feel that very strongly now.
We feel that this world wide pandemic
is overtaking our lives.
That we are powerless to stop it.
That we are losing so much of
ourselves.
We are losing economically and
psychologically.
We do need saving.
On Facebook I saw that someone I went to high school with
Father died.
And he couldn't be there with him in
that time.
He couldn't be with his sister or
brother to properly mourn this death.
I have heard that story a bunch of
different times.
And that is the part of the toll of
this pandemic.
We are not even able to be together
in tragedy.
What are we to do?
In these times when so much is up in
the air.
In these times when we have lost so
much.
In these times when life is so
fragile and uncertain.
What are we to do?
I have actually lived long enough now
to have seen some things.
Lots of things actually.
And lots of them not so good.
I have seen war and violence.
I have seen injustice.
I have seen death and destruction.
I have seen inhumanity.
I have seen this latest trial and
tribulation.
And the thing is that we do in this
time what we always do.
We look to the heavens and pray
"Hosanna".
We plead with God to save us.
And then what?
It doesn't seem to be enough right?
Shouldn't there be more.
The thing about Jesus is that there
is always more and it is often just lost on us.
Because the crowd is shouting
"Hosanna", or "Save us".
What they don't know is the way in
which that will actually happen.
They don't know that it will be
through death on a cross that Jesus will save them.
They don't know how God will choose
to save them.
And then when it happens it is
actually not even believable.
Kings don't die on crosses.
Especially if you are the King of the
universe.
Especially if you could calm storms
with only a word.
Especially if you could cure the
lame, make the blind see.
Especially if you could cast our
demons.
Especially if you talked to Elijah
and Moses.
Especially if you are transformed,
and a heavenly voice declares you the
son of God.
But God chose what was foolish in the
world to prove God's glory.
And that is where we miss the boat.
We are waiting for the big thing to
happen.
We are waiting for the miraculous
thing to happen.
And right in front of us God is at
work.
In the way we didn't expect.
I know one thing about that first
palm Sunday.
They were not practicing physical
distancing.
In fact, we know that the streets of
Jerusalem were packed with people.
People who were going to the temple
for Passover.
People who were doing what they always
did that time of year.
People who were comforted by the
ritual.
And then Jesus showed up…and things
got turned around.
That week became something else
entirely.
I know that coming to worship
together is a great comfort to many of us.
It provides structure and gives us a
way to thank God.
It provides for us so much.
But today as we begin Holy Week I am
wondering what is it that God is saying to us spiritually.
This is a different experience for
us.
But this morning in the calm of this
day, in the beauty of this day, in the wonder of this day, God's grace is here.
God through Jesus Christ has come to
save us.
And that is the message of Palm
Sunday.
We are being saved, we just can't
seem to see it.
We can't see it because it is in
front of us and we miss it.
We can't see it because it is under
the strange ways of God.
All I can do is accept in faith that
God is at work.
To those who are losing someone they
can't be with right now know that God is at work.
To those who are suffering because of
the Coronavirus know that God is at work.
To those who are afraid, unsure, or
just really fed up know that God is at work.
In faith we turn to God in times like
these and pray, "Hosanna".
That God might come and save us.
It is not in the big public
celebration, but in our hearts that Jesus comes to rein.
It is not with violence and terror
that God comes, but on a donkey offering us peace.
Peace..Shalom…wholeness…
This morning take a moment and breath
it in.
Do you hear it there in the distance.
"Hosanna"!
Save us.
Today we have much to be saved from.
Today I hope you know that Jesus has
come to save you.
That Jesus is saving you.
Today I wish for all of you that
peace that surpasses understanding.
The peace that rests in our hearts.
The peace that comes from knowing
that even when we can't see it our faith tells us that God is at work.
Peace to you all this morning who are
being saved through Jesus Christ!
Amen
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