Monday, April 27, 2020

i thank You God for most this amazing




Good morning! I have a riot of orange blooms out front interspersed with the daffodils. The dog has felt the vigor in the air and has been anticipating a walk with more fervor than normal (or maybe he really needs to go pee). The past few years I have had a special place in my heart for the peacefulness of early winter and the settling of the earth into the season of Advent. Yet, one of the unexpected gifts that this quarantine has granted is the time necessary to really notice the glories of Spring. Over the past few years, the collection of Spring bulbs in the front planter has been a thing to notice as I backed the car out of the driveway or comment on briefly to my office mates. I didn’t necessarily need the crocuses to bloom or the ducklings to appear. This year--I do. 

i thank You God for most this amazing
day:for the leaping greenly spirits of trees
and a blue true dream of sky;and for everything
which is natural which is infinite which is yes
(i who have died am alive again today,
and this is the sun’s birthday;this is the birth
day of life and of love and wings:and of the gay
great happening illimitably earth)
how should tasting touching hearing seeing
breathing any—lifted from the no
of all nothing—human merely being
doubt unimaginable You?
(now the ears of my ears awake and
now the eyes of my eyes are opened)
-e.e. cummings.

Sunday, April 26, 2020

We need to stop running

The news is getting to me.  Yesterday,  I saw a study from the WHO that stated there is no conclusive evidence that people are immune after an initial infection with covid-19.  My Facebook feed is filled with gallows humor about the latest monstrous lie coming out of the White House (that we can use disinfectant on sick people's blood).  I have read many long-form articles about the Spanish Influenza pandemic of 1919 and, in particular, the virulent resurgence the following Fall and Winter.  Then there are the individual posts carping on State governments couched in familiar narratives of government overreach and "fake news."

I am also noting a thinning of posts about sour bread starters, inventive homeschool strategies, or poems about how the birds are singing again and nature is resting.

There are lots more people admitting that their kids are restless and unruly, that it is actually impossible to work and homeschool at the same time, and that people miss their grandchildren or grandparents.

Here in Ontario and in Michigan (where my attention habitually returns) there are indications that some of the social distancing rules will be lifted at the end of May.  That is still quite a ways off and we will still be encountering a near future where the summer festivals have been cancelled, where the baseball stadiums are silent, summer camps are offering online offerings, and it is even unclear whether we will be even able to enjoy the beaches or parks.

What should we do?

It reminds me a bit of a misadventure I had once when I was in living in London-- I went out for a jog and just as I thought that I was almost finished... I discovered that I was actually incredibly lost.  Right away I knew that I needed to stop running-- and it was a good thing that I did because I ended up being lost for three hours in the byzantine maze of post war suburban houses (too early in the morning to ask for directions).

I don't know what needs to be done right now, but I do know that we all need to stop running ...

... and maybe be a bit more creative than I was all those years ago in actually finding our collective bearings.










Saturday, April 25, 2020

Saving what we love: reflections on Star Wars and Pete Seeger

I, like a goodly percentage of human beings on this planet, love Star Wars. We were living in Chicago when The Force Awakens opened and somehow I—with very little foresight — scored tickets for the first showing on opening night. I tricked Simeon into thinking we were going Christmas shopping. I remember his forlorn face as we passed our usual movie theatre and as he watched the costumed twenty-somethings boarding the bus. What fun it was to show him the tickets. 

I cried actual tears when it was revealed that the hero of the story was a young woman. As they say, representation matters, and that is true even for middle-aged women! I had witnessed many women being brave in films—especially a  resilient bravery in gritty places: depression era farms, coal mines, concentration camps, diners, beauty salons. Yet I confess I enjoyed seeing one empowered by the FORCE, in charge of saving the universe, wielding a light saber.

The second film in the new trilogy, The Last Jedi, was even more an homage to women, and not surprisingly this angered some male super-fans. The one character that attracted the most ire was Rose—how dare an Asian woman be a brave and sturdy mechanic and not a willowy and exotic, scantily clad oracle of esoteric wisdom.




This didn’t mean Rose wasn’t wise. Indeed, I believe she was given the most important line in the new trilogy. In a climatic moment she stops Finn from making a desperate kamikaze run against the First Order. When she gets to him she says: “We win not by destroying what we hate, but by saving what we love.” I don’t have any desire to trade in gender essentialism, and yet, this is a lesson I have learned in so many different ways from women that I love. The great and profound social pressure on men in our world is to make themselves into cannon fodder for some great cause and to be willing to throw their bodies onto pikes to destroy what they hate. This instinct persists even when the tools are not militaristic. I think of Woody Guthrie’s guitar that famously was inscribed with the words “this machine kills fascists.” Yes, that is a complicated message—how and in what way does folk music “kill fascists?” There is a lot to consider there.

And yet the images, the metaphors, the imagination of death and killing is still there. I prefer Pete Seeger’s inscription on his banjo “This machine surrounds hate and forces it to surrender.” 

How do we save what we love instead of destroying what we hate? How do we never forget the sacred glimmers of what we love found even in our enemies?

So, my spiritual discipline today is to write a short list of the things I love. Maybe this is something that you would like to do as well.

Johanna, Simeon, Samuel, Doug, Jesus, Truth, Friendship, Community, Vulnerable Love, Daffodils, Spring, Easter, Advent, Reconciliation, Robins, Old Karl Barth, Paul’s Letter to the Corinthians, Ikiru, Curry, a Trip to Bountiful, my in-laws, 10 acres in Buckley Michigan, Church, Dogs that swim, Pussy Willows, Tomato Plants, Spotting a deer in the corner of the field, Words, breakfast, beers, coffee, ducklings, Preaching, Our Lady of Guadalupe, the opening paragraph of Cannery Row, the way it feels to turn a corner and see something new. 

As much as possible I will work to protect and save these things.  






Friday, April 24, 2020

Emmaus



The lectionary text for this coming Sunday is the story of the disciples walking with Jesus on the Emmaus Road. My friend Bryan has helped me to see how this story encapsulates the myriad ways we seek and are found by Jesus within our Christian Communities, the ways that Jesus becomes visible to us ... Discussing together, struggling with Scripture, struggling with recent events, hearing the story, breaking of bread. My friend Dave preached a sermon at NPTS that asked the listener to be curious about what was manifest when Jesus broke the bread, perhaps his wounded hands. 

It is also of course a story about the hiddenness of Christ:

As they talked and discussed these things with each other, Jesus himself came up and walked along with them; but they were kept from recognizing him. 

As soon as the disciples recognize Jesus, Jesus disappears.

The elusiveness of the resurrected Christ makes it hard for me at times to figure out what it means when we Christians confess that we are an Easter people. There is something conceptually simple in “following Jesus” even if it is existentially difficult. Yet, this vision of having Jesus with us, but often hidden, seems more ambiguous and complex. More searingly, Jesus didn’t make an appearance to everyone discussing the strange things that happened in Jerusalem, to every downcast or confused pilgrim on the road.

The story of Jesus appearing to them holds with my own experience: revelation as a kind of peek-a-boo. Look! Jesus is here! Clearly, fully. Look again and poof he is gone.

Today is the third anniversary of my Dad’s death. At times in the weeks and months after his passing his presence with me seemed palpable. I am not meaning to import this into these stories of the post-resurrection appearances as Marilyn Robinson does at the end of her book Housekeeping. There is no Christianity without the reality of the resurrection, or, at least it isn’t a Christianity that I am interested in—there isn’t enough joy to account for the suffering. I don’t believe in any calculations that tell us there is. The people that do these calculations count their own blessing more fully in the ledger than other people’s unmitigated sorrows.

And yet, Robinson is trying to account for the very existence of longings, longing so universal in our grief, so universal in our reception of the Easter promise .... Might not there be hidden in these longings a promise ? A promise of fulfillment and restitution and restoration. Jesus ever so present in absence....

But every memory is turned over and over again, every word, however chance, written in the heart in the hope that memory will fulfill itself, and become flesh, and that the wanderers will find a way home, and the perished, whose lack we always feel, will step through the door finally and stroke our hair with dreaming, habitual fondness, not having meant to keep us waiting long.


Sunday, April 19, 2020

Staying Power






The first sermon that I ever preached was based on today’s Gospel passage from John. I don’t remember much of what I said about this well-worn passage about the post-resurrection appearance of Jesus to Thomas. Other and better exegetes have pointed out that Thomas actually demonstrated a great deal of boldness and perseverance. Sacred history has been particularly unkind in giving him the moniker “Doubting Thomas.” 

Recently, I realized—with some relief—that I wasn’t undergoing a crises of faith. I thought that I might be. Today, I realize the burden that places on me. A burden to speak like someone with their hopes firmly in place. . . To speak like a person who knows that the powers are formidable and perhaps even unsurmountable, but they are not almighty. . . To speak like someone who knows the powers are bold and brazen, but they are not incapable of being shamed. 

Thomas had witnessed something unbelievably traumatizing. At that point he needed more than to hear a story of the glory of risen Jesus; Thomas needed to see glory apparent in wounds and scars. He needed to see glory apparent in this world that crucifies and devastates. Thomas needed to see that the resurrection was incarnational. That the resurrection has implications for his life on that day. 

The story of Thomas reminds me that even, and maybe especially, when we are trying to be faithful we need to interrogate our doubts: need to be bold in asking for signs, markers, theophanies, thin places where we can see God or hear God’s voice or feel God’s hand upon us. It was the boldness of faith which led Moses to ask to see the backend of God as God passed over and it is the boldness of faith that compelled Thomas to ask to touch those restored wounds. 

Thomas had staying power. 




Staying Power
JEANNE MURRAY WALKER
In appreciation of Maxim Gorky at the International Convention of Atheists, 1929


Like Gorky, I sometimes follow my doubts
outside to the yard and question the sky,
longing to have the fight settled, thinking
I can't go on like this, and finally I say

all right, it is improbable, all right, there
is no God. And then as if I'm focusing
a magnifying glass on dry leaves, God blazes up.
It's the attention, maybe, to what isn't there

that makes the emptiness flare like a forest fire
until I have to spend the afternoon dragging
the hose to put the smoldering thing out.
Even on an ordinary day when a friend calls,

tells me they've found melanoma,
complains that the hospital is cold, I say God.
God, I say as my heart turns inside out.
Pick up any language by the scruff of its neck,

wipe its face, set it down on the lawn,
and I bet it will toddle right into the godfire
again, which—though they say it doesn't
exist—can send you straight to the burn unit.

Oh, we have only so many words to think with.
Say God's not fire, say anything, say God's
a phone, maybe. You know you didn't order a phone,
but there it is. It rings. You don't know who it could be.

You don't want to talk, so you pull out
the plug. It rings. You smash it with a hammer
till it bleeds springs and coils and clobbery
metal bits. It rings again. You pick it up

and a voice you love whispers hello.

Saturday, April 18, 2020

Psalm 13








Long enough, God--
you've ignored me long enough.
I've looked at the back of your head
long enough. Long enough
I've carried this ton of trouble,
lived with a stomach full of pain.
Long enough my arrogant enemies
have looked down their noses at me.
Take a good look at me, God, my God:
I want to look life in the eye
so no enemy can get the best of me
or laugh when I fall on my face.
(from Psalm 13, 
The Message)

One summer I worked in the Grand Canyon National Park as a Server and volunteered with Christian Ministries in the National Parks. There was suppose to be a Seminary student assigned to lead our team, but he never showed. The team was very disorganized. One day I was assigned to give “the message” at one of the campgrounds and neither the liturgist or the musician showed up. In a moment of panic, I opened the Bible and because I am terrible at improvisation I found a totally random Psalm and began reading. It was Psalm 13. I was embarrassed. It was a little intense for a campground kumbaya service. 

When I was in Seminary, I was in a seminar with Stanley Hauerwas and someone made the statement: “Christian are not suppose to have enemies.” I readily agreed. It made sense to me as a budding Mennonite, but Hauerwas disagreed adamantly--you need to have enemies in order to love them. A few weeks ago, I wrote on how disarming it felt for the book of Lamentations to feel so relevant. It is even more unsettling when we are able to pray imprecatory Psalms without too much squirming. 

From the cross Jesus prayed “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.” Last year, I noted in a sermon on the last words of Christ that I found it interesting that Jesus didn’t say: “I forgive you because you do not know what you do.” I pondered whether this isn’t a recognition that forgiveness is a complicated process and not something that we can coerce into existence by our own force of will. It is a grace that God gives and requires the creation of new reality/world between people. Jesus prayed for his enemies. He didn’t pretend he didn’t have them. Jesus asked for mercy for his enemies. He didn’t pretend that what they were doing was excused simply by virtue of the fact that they “didn’t know what they were doing.” 

Intentional sinning is a drop in the ocean of the sinning that we do, and yet we are all responsible for the suppleness of our own hearts and our own receptivity to hearing the truth. So, I will end with what I find most disturbing about these Psalms. As denizens of the richest nations on the Earth, 90% of the world’s population could rightly pray these words about and against us. 

Thursday, April 16, 2020

Sabbath: Unessential work?



It turns out that much of our work has been unessential. Who knew? 

For many, many years Doug and I kept Sabbath together. He wanted to keep Sabbath on Saturday and it was a bone of endless contention. When I was a kid Saturday was for trips to the Woolworth’s. In the 80s in Traverse City, Michigan you could still have lunch at a Woolworth lunch counter on a Saturday. My parents were always a bit overprotective, but we knew all the Woolworth’s staff by their first names and the store was tiny. I could browse with my allowance unattended.

It is where I got my first tube of lipstick (red, if you are curious). 

I don't want to keep Sabbath on Saturday,  I like to buy junk and get a hamburger. However, Doug and I both agreed on the importance of the idea of Sabbath. Indeed, I kept Sabbath rigorously on Sunday during my first two years of college and organized my studying schedule accordingly. 

I was incredibly driven during college. In hindsight, the study schedule that I kept was ridiculous. I hadn’t been a very great student in high school and I think if I am honest that I likely have a couple learning disabilities. I just went into overdrive trying to compensate for this while I was in college. I was also attending Calvin College, and that whole Calvinist work ethic thing is no joke. This work schedule was manageable when I was keeping Sabbath, but it almost destroyed me when I stopped. I got a horrible, recurrent case of Mono that lasted for almost 9 months. 

I believe in Sabbath.

Yet, it certainly is beginning to feel like the proverbial month of Sundays around here. My typical Sabbath activities: walks, soup-making, novel reading, napping, watching television, knitting, are wearing thin. There is such a thing as too much of a good thing! 

I think part of the reason that I am enjoying this blog so much is that it feels a little like work. In the book of Genesis we learn that labor was cursed in the Fall, like childbirth. In a perfect world both kinds of “labor” would be easier, but labouring itself would still be part of a good creation. We need to be able to find good work during this time of Quarantine, even as we reflect on the fact that our labor is not as essential as we once thought that it was... 

Maybe this is a good time to reflect on the real meaning that we attach to both our work and our rest. 


Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Spiritual, but not religious: A random reflection on John Prine, Candy Land, the Incarnation.

I have sometimes joked that I am religious, but not spiritual. The joke is not original with me. I am sure that I overheard it from one of the theological rockstars in my broader Facebook social circle.
I really love church and church has always loved me back (for a more poetic rendering of this basic point read this sermon draft).

I also wrote awhile back that I feel like I am at some sort of crossroads.. I will just say that one small comfort is that I don’t feel my faith in Jesus wavering one bit. I do wonder if I might have found myself falling rather headlong into a spiritual, but not religious stage. If it wasn’t for this quarantine, I think I might be finally enjoying Sunday Morning brunch and novel reading. Unfortunately, this quarantine means that even that small rebellion isn’t possible. I confess that I haven’t attended a single Zoom church meeting (so there….I guess). 

Of course, I know that this isn’t sufficient for the long haul. If anything this time of Quarantine is reminding everyone of the importance of the embodied parts of our faith: the feel of others' songs reverberating in our ears, the smooth feeling of the pews, the din that arises when the service is over, the taste of bad church coffee, the touch of paper thin hands of the old and the sticky hands of kids. We need all that. We need all that especially because of who we believe Jesus is and how he did his work and lived his life: water for washing, wine and donkeys, the spray of the sea, rolling seeds between his fingers, scratching his toes. 

This embodied life isn’t all beauty. There was also the kiss on the cheek for Jesus and all the pain that unravelled his physical life. 

Yet, Jesus, claimed embodied life again, taking time after he rose from the dead to cook fish for his friends on a beach.

I think I have set up a false equivalence here, though. I have equated “the physical” with the religious and the religious with what happens in church. 

I have been really deep diving into the music of John Prine the last week. I really like it. Bob Dylan was said to call his songs Midwest, Proustian, mindtrips. I don’t know-- I have just been struck with his decency, hidden, sometimes in the bawdiness. The embrace of the materials of our lives and their surprising goodness.  The way that we can make things a little less impossible for each other if notice each other.  His songs remind me of my favorite passage in American literature. 

Cannery Row in Monterey in California is a poem, a stink, a grating noise, a quality of light, a tone, a habit, a nostalgia, a dream. Cannery Row is the gathered and scattered, tin and iron and rust and splintered wood, chipped pavement and weedy lots and junk heaps, sardine canneries of corrugated iron, honky tonks, restaurants and whore houses, and little crowded groceries, and laboratories and flophouses. Its inhabitant are, as the man once said, “whores, pimps, gambler and sons of bitches,” by which he meant Everybody. Had the man looked through another peephole he might have said, “Saints and angels and martyrs and holymen” and he would have meant the same thing.

For the time being, I can’t live out my faith in church or at some Cannery Row (although I can send Doug there). I need to iron it out with the strange materials of computer screens and dried beans and endless games of Candy Land.  I need to figure this out in the midst of dog vomit and never ending piles of dishes. I need to try and figure out how to hold on to Jesus and equanimity and love in the midst of cabin fever and the slow drip of an absolutely soul-crushing bureacratic process.

And what can I do? Cook breakfast, embrace the material world around and trust that Jesus is here too. 

(No fish for breakfast, though) 





Sunday, April 12, 2020

The Resurrecting Duck

One Spring morning my parents brought home a cardboard box filled with baby ducks, turkeys, and chickens. I was about Sam’s age (8) and I was mesmerized by them. I kept hiding the ducklings in my bathrobe pockets and sneaking them into my bedroom. There were two ducks —a big white duck who we named Daffy and a mallard we called Cute Quack.

Daffy, possibly because of all those trips to my bedroom, imprinted on me and followed me everywhere I went. Cute Quack followed Daffy. That summer I had two duck companions. This started to become a bit of a problem when school began again in the Fall. The ducks kept trying to get on the school bus with me. I developed a method for handling the problem. I would walk out my front door and begin to walk slowly around the front of the house. When I reached the second corner, I would break out in a dead run. The ducks were usually left in the backyard lost and a bit confused.

One day the big white duck was struck by a car. My dad buried him in our garden. I was disconsolate and prayed and prayed that my duck would come back to life. The little mallard was clearly as sad as I was and spent the rest of the day fruitlessly searching for Daffy.

That Saturday we went to the neighboring town for shopping. When we got home a familiar sight met our eyes—a big white duck waddling around the yard with a little mallard in tow.

I was ecstatic. God had answered my prayers! I was so certain that I even started to convince my Mom a little bit.

She questioned: “John, are you sure the duck was really dead?”

“There is no chance that the duck that I buried was anything but dead,” my father answered with great certainty.

I checked the grave. The dirt had not been disturbed.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Well, it turned out that a neighbor, upon seeing the dead duck by the side of the road, had brought over a new duck.

When I was a kid the world of the Bible felt very proximate. It was easy to inhabit a miraculous world where Lazarus rises out of his tomb, prayer could move mountains, and where God might just give me back my dead duck if I prayed hard enough.

The finality of road kill had not yet fully sunk in for me ... as it had for my Dad.

This morning I inhabit a world where the only type of resurrection in which I can habitually believe is metaphorical.

Daffy the duck doesn’t rise from the dead, but a kind neighbor might come on Saturday morning and bring a kid a new duck.

In the place of a God who undoes death and destruction, I have often relied on a belief in a good community of people who do justice and kindness.

And we are a resurrection people …


Through small acts of fidelity we work to make better futures possible for each other.


This isn’t adequate though.

Cute Quack could have told you that. After following the white Duck around for a couple hours he got disenchanted. He wasn’t ultimately fooled by the replacement duck. The next Fall, cute quack found her wings and caught flight.

This past week there was an article in Christianity Today entitled “If Easter is only a symbol, Then to hell with it.”

The author writes:

The truest fact of the universe this Eastertide is not death tolls, emptied sanctuaries, or overcrowded hospitals. The truest fact of the universe is an empty tomb. The Resurrection is the only evidence that love triumphs over death, weakness prevails over strength, and beauty outlives ashes. If Jesus is risen in actual history, with all the palpability of flesh, fingers, bone, and blood, there is hope that our mourning will be comforted and that death will not have the final word.

I am comparatively wealthy. I am anxious this Easter, but not about whether we will have dinner today.

I can settle (mostly) for a metaphorical Easter.

But what of those...

whose life is grinding poverty and unremitting pain.

Can they settle for a metaphor?

Whose whole lives are circumscribed, mining for metals for our phones?

Can they settle for a metaphor?

Who spend lives covered with pesticides so that we can have cheap strawberries and die young.

Can they settle for a metaphor?

Child soldier hopped up on drugs armed to kill?

Is a metaphorical resurrection enough?

Children who are trafficked for sex and die in lonely places with needles in their arms.

Will metaphor bring meaning to those lonely deaths?

Babies taken by bombs before they have plucked their first flower?

What hope is there in image of flowers in bulbs and apples in blossoms for them?

Generally speaking, we are people rich enough and connected enough that we can rely on ourselves and our family with a sprinkling of Easter metaphor to get by.

The only shallow graves we are apt to dig our for pet ducks.

Yet, not this Easter.

The shallow graves are being dug in Iran, Italy, and New York City.

Death stalks more boldly in the usual placesour long term care homes, prisons, homeless shelters — but death also stalks in grocery store lines and in our church sanctuaries.

There are some estimating that as many as 200,000 Americans could be dead by the beginning of May.

We do not need the Jesus of metaphorical Easter ducks this year!

We desperately need the risen Christ the harbinger of a new world.


I hope this year that we learn that we cannot settle for any Easter hope that leaves behind those who suffer meaningless death at the whims of capricious leaders. I hope that this year we learn that we cannot settle for any Easter hope that leaves behind those who die alone.
This could become us. It always could have become us.
It is 5:57 on Easter Sunday, 2020.
The only hope in this world lies here:
Now on the first day of the week Mary Magdalene came to the tomb early, while it was still dark, and saw that the stone had been taken away from the tomb.




Friday, April 10, 2020

Perfect love drives out fear


I used to listen to a call-in “helpline” advice show on Christian radio when I was a teenager. I haven’t thought about this show in a long time. It was called Dawson McAllister Live. Perhaps it is still on the air. Frequently teens would call in who had been sexually abused or raped. He always started with the same statement: When Jesus was nailed to the cross he was naked — sexual abuse and sexual shaming was part of the torture of Roman crucifixion. There is every evidence in historical documents that the sexual degradation of crucifixion extended far beyond just a naked death. 

I have forgotten much of the advice from that show, but this point has stuck with me through the years. When I taught on the problem of evil in theology class I had several students come to my office struggling to understand the absence of God when they had been sexually molested as children. They had not been sexually harmed by Pastors or Priests, but the effect was the same. They had been made to feel abandoned by God. 

There was nothing even close to adequate to say except that God, in Christ, has been there too. 

Jesus died naked. Torture and abuse had rendered his body a monstrosity. Part of the insidious power of abuse and degradation is that it makes people feel ashamed and abandoned. Most of Jesus friends abandoned him. Part of the insidious power of abuse and degradation is its capacity to make the victim feel like God is on the abuser’s side. Jesus cried out from the cross—God? Why have you abandoned me? 

The cross was spectacle. 

Its purpose to drive fear into the hearts of anyone who would dare call into question those in power. There was no shade in the shadow of the cross and to stand beside someone on the cross was to be rendered visible and vulnerable yourself.

In the Gospel of John we learn that standing beside him on the cross were his Mother, his Aunt, Mary Magadalene, and the disciple that Jesus loved (usually believed to be John). What allowed them not to turn their faces away from Jesus? 

Love.

Crazy, crazy love. The crazy love of old women. The crazy love of Mary who had been forgiven much. The crazy love of John who basically can’t write a sentence in any of his epistles without veering back into writing about love, love, love. 

It was love that kept Jesus on the cross and it was strange love that kept his mother, aunt, and his two dearly beloved disciples adamantly standing at the foot of his cross. 

Or as John would later write: 

There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear.



Thursday, April 9, 2020

My God, My God

I have been feeling a bit sheepish about posting old sermons. I don't have time to suitably adapt them for print.In general my preaching text is in 16 pt font and weirdly spaced and punctuated.


I decided to post a link to an audio recording of a sermon that I preached last year on one of Jesus' last words fromthe cross: "My God, My God, Why hast thou forsaken me?"  I suspect that I cried. I almost always cry,

I hope that everyone has a meaningful Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday. I hope to have a blog post up by Easter morning.


Sermon: My God, My God, Why has thou forsaken me?

Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Holy Wednesday; Spy Wednesday


Today the church has traditionally remembered Judas’ betrayal of Jesus. One of the most disturbing ways that power operates in our world is by tempting us to betray each other. The powerful do this by making us afraid, or angry, or distracted, or apathetic, or self-righteous, or concerned with protecting our own, or desirous of power. C.S. Lewis gives another account of why we so often betray one another--it is because we want to gain entrance into an “inner ring.” He describes the Inner Ring in the following way:

There are no formal admissions or expulsions. People think they are in it after they have in fact been pushed out of it, or before they have been allowed in: this provides great amusement for those who are really inside. It has no fixed name. The only certain rule is that the insiders and outsiders call it by different names. From inside it may be designated, in simple cases, by mere enumeration: it may be called “You and Tony and me.” When it is very secure and comparatively stable in membership it calls itself “we.” When it has to be expanded to meet a particular emergency it calls itself “all the sensible people at this place.” From outside, if you have despaired of getting into it, you call it “That gang” or “they” or “So-and-so and his set” or “The Caucus” or “The Inner Ring.”

Lewis goes on to suggest that such groups are inevitable and in and of themselves are not wicked, but he asks his reader to contemplate the following question:

In the whole of your life as you now remember it, has the desire to be on the right side of that invisible line ever prompted you to any act or word on which, in the cold small hours of a wakeful night, you can look back with satisfaction? If so, your case is more fortunate than most.

This desire to be part of an inner circle is a most human desire, but it is also the well-spring of any number of unethical actions.

For nine out of ten of you the choice which could lead to scoundrelism will come, when it does come, in no very dramatic colours. Obviously bad men, obviously threatening or bribing, will almost certainly not appear. Over a drink, or a cup of coffee, disguised as triviality and sandwiched between two jokes, from the lips of a man, or woman, whom you have recently been getting to know rather better and whom you hope to know better still—just at the moment when you are most anxious not to appear crude, or naïf or a prig—the hint will come. It will be the hint of something which the public, the ignorant, romantic public, would never understand: something which even the outsiders in your own profession are apt to make a fuss about: but something, says your new friend, which “we”—and at the word “we” you try not to blush for mere pleasure—something “we always do.”

I cannot say that Judas betrayed Jesus because he wanted to be part of an inner circle. Judas’ actual motives are somewhat murky-- he has been presented as a thief, an unhappy revolutionary, at times his actions explained enigmatically by the phrase “Satan entered into him” or by the theological explanation that he was “predestined to betray Jesus.” I am uncertain about Judas' motives, but I know my own. When I have betrayed people in my life it has almost always been because I wanted to be part of some inner circle. When we betray someone it is very hard to forgive ourselves. There is great moral peril as we risk becoming hardened by our actions. When we betray someone we often demonize them in our minds to justify what we have done.  There is nothing more dangerous to our souls than this process of dehumanization.

There is hope for us betrayers though...

There is a very powerful poem by Luci Shaw that reminds us that Judas was not the only disciple who betrayed Jesus and I will end with it this morning.

"Judas, Peter”

because we are all
betrayers, taking
silver and eating
body and blood and asking
(guilty) is it I and hearing
him say yes
it would be simple for us all
to rush out
and hang ourselves
but if we find grace
to cry and wait
after the voice of morning
has crowed in our ears
clearly enough
to break our hearts
he will be there
to ask us each again
do you love me?
-Luci Shaw



Tuesday, April 7, 2020

(non)Lessons from the Pandemic

There are no lessons, but we should be open to learning. This pandemic has no purpose, but we should still be attentive to God’s leading.  I admit that I sometimes get frustrated when people grasp for easy moral lessons from misfortune. In the early days of social isolations such memes were circulating everywhere.  I saw one meme suggesting that Mother Nature was sending us all to our room to think about our carbon footprint. A lot of people are saying that this is a time to think about what is truly essential. I might have even written something similar yesterday. 

Searching for moral lessons is one of the ways we deal with the problem of pain, but it not a method that I extract much comfort from.  


I believe that the good news of Jesus Christ 
can be summarized in the Angel’s proclamation: God is with us! God accompanies us in our sufferings and, in Christ, God has suffered with us.  We are not left alone.  


The question of purpose begins with this miracle of incarnation and presence.  

The song that I had on repeat three years ago when my dearly beloved Dad was dying was Leonard Cohen’ Come Healing. I even convinced some people to sing it for Easter Sunday. Leonard Cohen’s own spirituality is an admixture of Kaballah, Buddhism, and Jesus. Yet, I think this song really resonates with a theology of Gregory of Nazianzen summarized by his statement: What has not been assumed has not been healed.” Gregory was reflecting on the mystery that all things will be redeemed in and through Christ.  God is reconciling all things through Christ.  

I wasn’t hoping for physical healing for my Father, but I was longing for healing. 






Cohen leads with the line:

O gather up the brokenness/ And bring it to me now/ The fragrance of those promises/You never dared to vow/ The splinters that you carry/The cross you left behind/ Come healing of the body/ Come healing of the mind.

I was hoping that my Dad would find a complex reconcilation in his last days and fittingly Cohen beacon his listeners to:

Behold the gates of mercy/In arbitrary space/And none of us deserving/ The cruelty or the grace

Cohen song speaks to so many situations that require resolution.  What does it mean for healing to come to our world?  Our communities?  Ourselves?  Cohen words remind me that even as we long for justice, or, to get “what we deserve” we so often don’t.  Our lives are lived bouncing between  undeserved cruelty and undeserved grace. Some people get more cruelty... other more grace.   I have received more grace and it has made the difference in my life.  I am a debtor.  This grounds me even when I personally feel the sting of injustice or undeserved cruelty.  


The name of Jesus has always been  shorthand for me when I have tried to name my undeserved graces. It is through the lens of Jesus that I hear the following line from Cohen:  
O troubled dust concealing/An undivided love/The heart beneath is teaching/To the broken heart above
I think that there are things we might learn from this pandemic, but I suspect that these lessons might all echo what Paul tells us in Ephesians--nothing, no nothing, can separate us from the love of God that we find in and through Jesus Christ. We might find purpose in these dark times, but I contend that purpose is best charted out as we listen for the sound of Jesus’ steps by our side.  This being with Jesus is the purpose, to have our lives hidden in God through Christ is the purpose. . .