Thursday, April 24, 2014

Believing is seeing... I believe, Lord, help my unbelief...

Scripture: Acts 2:14a, 22-32  • Psalm 16  • 1 Peter 1:3-9  • John 20:19-31

This second Sunday of the Easter season we consider the gospel of John's account of  the "doubting" of the disciple Thomas. We are told that Jesus first appeared to the disciples in a room where Thomas was not present. When told of this, Thomas, with a mindset not unlike the empirical bias of our present times, said that he must see and put his fingers in the scars of Jesus' hand and his hand in Jesus' side, which was pierced. In other words, seeing is believing. What is going on here with Thomas? Where did Jesus make his appearance? What does Jesus say? What does Thomas do, (or not do), and say? For insight into this , and in dealing with grief, loss and disappointment see "Picking Up the Pieces," by John Jewell.

In an imagined conversation between Thomas and his grandson in Thomas' waning years, The Rev. Dr. Laura Mendenhall, in "Dealing with Mystery,"shows us how Jesus turned "seeing is believing" into "believing is seeing." Notice where this is likely to occur. I look forward to seeing you, and believing with you, Sunday!



Friday, April 18, 2014

Tell them I will meet them in Galilee...


 
Because of Easter, we are able to ask "Where will Jesus meet us?" Just as Jesus told Mary to tell the disciples that he was going ahead to Galilee, and he would meet them there, we are also invited to meet Jesus. Where, and what are the Galilees of our lives? Think about what happened in Galilee during Jesus' ministry. Will we recognize him? See Sister Kym Harris' "This Sunday's Exposition." 
 
This is a time to reflect on how we are blessed. Consider Jesus' sermon on the mount (or plain, depending on which gospel account you read), and Sister Harris' Reflection. Notice who carries Jesus' message to the disciples.
 
Finally, Barbara Brown Taylor has some thoughts on where Jesus turns up. See her " Escape from the Tomb." The living one's business is with the living. He is among the living. Taylor reminds us not to be so focused on the tomb that we forget to speak with the gardener.
 
May you have a blessed Easter, and a blessed life. He lives! 
 
 

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Love Divine, All Loves Excelling


Scripture: Psalm 118:1-2, 19-29  • Matthew 21:1-11   • Philippians 2:5-11

We  are invited this week to see things as God sees them. Jesus' triumphant entry into David's City riding on a donkey and young colt over coats and cut palm branches contrast with the martial display of occupying Caesar's troops. A contrast in power.

More importantly , we see love as we have never seen it before. The very nature and essence of God is made manifest for all to see through the sacrifice, passion and death of his beloved Son. Sister Kym Harris, in her Exposition, contrasts the delights we see and experience in romantic love with the love of God through the sacrifice and death of Jesus, an unselfish gift of love, seeing us, and despite all of our weakness, flaws and sin.

The Rev. Kate Huey cites several authors, in her Passion Amidst Palms, who say that Jesus' death changed everything, especially how we see and experience God's love. Barbara Brown Taylor says that God brought divine love to life in the gift of God's Son, the one thing God had to give more precious to God than God himself. God said we no longer had to come to him - to the temple any more. God loves us so much that he now comes to us, wherever we are and whatever we are experiencing in our lives. In the passion of Christ we see that God loves us even in acts of betrayal, fear, weakness, denial and desertion.

In "Palm Sunday or Passion Sunday," Sara Miles tells us that Jesus willingly faced and absorbed all the hard truths of human violence, pride and weakness, and to love and stay with us anyway so that sin and death will have no more power over us. With her, let us pray that we may see how much we have in common with all of Jesus' beloved people. May we face the beauty and sadness of humanity, and not turn away. And that we may love and forgive in face of every hurt, betrayal, pain, sickness, mistake and failure. May we be Christ, be his love, to the world.










 
 

Thursday, April 3, 2014

What is Resurrected Life?

Scripture: Ezekiel 37:1-14  • Psalm 130  • Romans 8:6-11  • John 11:1-45

From Ezekiel's valley of "dry bones," to St. Paul's testimony of the life giving Spirit which raised Christ, to this week's gospel account in John of the raising of Lazarus, and as Jesus makes his way to Jerusalem and the cross, we learn something of resurrected life. Jesus tells us that he, who is the bread of life and whose blood is the cup of salvation from which all who drink will never thirst again, is "the resurrection and the life, and that all who believe in [him], even though they die, will live."

What is the resurrected life? See "Resurrected Hopes," by Craig Barnes.  Dee also "This Sunday's Reflection" by Sister Kym Harris.

Thanks to Alan Rezek for leading our discussion this Sunday while I am out of town!