“Mortal,
can these bones live?” is a question in a dream sequence so it would be a
mistake to imagine a valley of bones literally putting on flesh and blood even though
we certainly hope our dry bones will one day be resurrected in whatever valley
they eventually come to rest. But for the first readers of these words the
literal interpretation was that their figurative dry bones held captive in the
valley of Babylon would one day put on the sinews and flesh and blood that would finally breathe
freedom in the land of promise. In a real sense “by the waters of Babylon we sat and wept”
(Psalm 137) would experience “the ransomed of Lord will return unto Zion with
singing…” (Isaiah 35:10) That may have been the dream sequence that inspired James
Weldon Johnson (1871 – 1938) to pen “Dem Dry Bones” anticipating the day when “I
have a dream” (Dr. Martin Luther King) was spoken in the place of power and “Let
Freedom Ring” animated the dry bones of an oppressed people to demand equality in
the “home of the brave and the land of the free.”
Monday, March 31, 2014
Thursday, March 27, 2014
Lent 4 A - John 9:1-41
John 9:1-41
The disciples ask Jesus to name the blame for the man’s
blindness even though the way they understand it the burden fell fully on the
man’s parents. Bad things happen to
people who do bad things and Psalm 51 notwithstanding “Behold, I was sinner
from my birth” it is difficult to find a sin that can be done in utero. Jesus
chooses the third way and blames God. I mean if we push his response to its
cynical conclusion the man’s blindness affords Jesus the opportunity to heal
him so that God’s work might be revealed in him; though I bet the man would
have preferred God gifted sight a little earlier in life. But maybe Jesus’ response
rejects sin as cause and effect for the way the world works without making it a
show and tell for God either. It is what it is. People are born blind and no
one can clearly see a connection. So while it appears as if the physical
healing is the place where “God’s works are revealed in him” it is actually in
the transformation of the man who had endured years of condemning comments whispered
within earshot that the real miracle of sight takes place. For the first time the
question, “whose fault was it?” doesn’t matter to him and he sees God up close
and personal in “the man Jesus”. The respectable rabbis revile him because the
way he received his sight doesn’t fit their view of the world even though they
know “if this man was not from God he could do nothing.” The more tragic "sin" in the story is that the man's parents having endured the blame for his blindness
all these years cannot give thanks for the miracle in front of their very eyes
and in their response “he is of age ask him” shut their eyes to their son for
fear of losing even their back seat in the synagogue. The seeing man born blind
with nowhere else to go finds the only one who will welcome him and in his
confession “Lord, I believe” God’s work is revealed within him.
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
Lent 4 A - Ephesians 5:8-14
Ephesians 5:8-14
The trouble with “find out what is pleasing to the Lord” is
that well-meaning “children of the light” have conflicting Bible based visions as
to what the Lord likes and dislikes and without the proverbial lightning strike
the Lord is not so clear as to which voice we should obey. It was easier to
figure out what side God was on before Einstein muddied the waters with relativity.
As long as there was a clear distinction, black and white so to speak, you
could live as children of the light and justify something as shameful as slavery
without the cover of darkness. But if we begin and end with the light that is
the event of the cross – that is – what does it mean for God to enter the reality
of our existence through the person of Jesus – we come to see that personal piety
(do not do shameful things in the dark) is inextricably tied to social responsibility
(do not do unjust things in the light). Sleeper (i.e. church) Awake!
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
Psalm 23
Psalm 23
In twenty plus years of ministry I can’t remember a funeral that
did not include the congregation speaking the 23rd psalm in the 1611
version approved by King James. It’s the only passage of scripture I prefer in
the King James Version because there is something about the Lord “maketh me, leadeth
me, restoreth me, yea though I walk… thou preparest for me…” that makes the ancient
language a present comfort in times of sorrow. It may be generational and in
the future any version of the psalm will do (as a good number of young people
who seem to have no dog in this hunt have told me) but I can’t help but think
there are some times that the present life and loss calls for ancient poetry because
the reality of death does not change from one generation to another even as the
hope of the words penned by David evoke the eternal – “Surely goodness and mercy
shall follow me all the days of my life and I will dwell in the house of the
Lord forever”.
Monday, March 24, 2014
Lent 4 A - 1 Samuel 16:1-13
1 Samuel 16:1-13
The
Lord does not judge by outward appearance or the height of one’s stature even though
Samuel feels compelled to tell us Jesse’s youngest son was ruddy and handsome
and had beautiful eyes. Maybe his GQ good looks led David the shepherd to
wander despite the desires of the heart only God could see. He doesn’t suffer
Saul’s fate but handsome David, consumed by his passions, doesn’t get away scot
free. The sword of conflict never leaves his house and he will have as many
enemies within his own palace as without. So what is it that makes David a man
after God’s own heart? Most will quote Psalm 51, his act of poetic contrition
after Nathan nails him with a story of rich man who steals a poor man’s perfect
lamb. “You are the man!” David, like so many of us, is capable of self
deception on a grand scale until confronted by the truth from which no one can hide.
“Create in me a clean heart, O God” is as much an appeal to God’s own heart as
it is David’s desperate desire for his heart to return to the relationship he
had with God before his weak will threatened to ruin it all. And therein lies
our hope. In the cross of Christ we have every reason to trust that God’s heart
is inextricably bound to ours and that with or without ruddy good looks our
wandering ways cannot separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our
Lord.
Friday, March 21, 2014
Lent 3 A - John 4:5-42
Nicodemus, hiding
from prying eyes, seeking answers, looks for Jesus at night. The Samaritan woman,
hiding from judgmental eyes, seeking water, is found by Jesus in the heat of
the day. Nicodemus, the teacher of Israel, doesn't step out into the open until
Jesus is dead. The unnamed woman at the well gains the courage to be exposed as
a believer in a single encounter. Of course Nicodemus had a lot to lose while
the woman at the well never had anything to begin with. Even so she is just as
confused over the meaning of living water as the teacher of Israel was with
being born again. But where Nicodemus goes away perplexed everything comes into
focus for her when Jesus tells her, “I am he.” She says she came to believe
because “he told me everything I had ever done” but I imagine the people of Sychar
kept track of her history and reminded her of it on a regular basis. It must be
that Jesus told her story differently than the people she was avoiding in Sychar. Jesus knew all the things that labeled her as less than respectable
but spoke to her as if none of that mattered. Without knowing it she was
drinking deeply at the well of living water. When she realized her thirst was
quenched she did what Jesus did. He did not hold her history against her and
she did not hold their hatred against them but went to find those who made her
draw water in the heat of the day with the good news, “everyone who drinks of
this water will never thirst again.” No doubt she went back to the man who
wasn't her husband. There were not many options in the first century for a
woman married five times. But then the woman who went to the well at noon was
not the same woman who came home that night and one hopes the city of Sychar noticing the difference was changed as well.
Thursday, March 20, 2014
Lent 3 A - Romans 5:1-11
Romans 5:1-11
Since it is God’s love that is proved in the death of Christ
whatever Paul means by being “saved from the wrath of God” cannot be understood
as an angry God needing to be appeased or there would be hell to pay. It just doesn’t
follow that a wrathful God initiates the action to be reconciled to us
(humanity) while we were weak, while we were sinners, while we were God’s
enemies, as if God needed to kill something in order to settle down and spare humanity
from a whole world of hurt. To be sure there are those who still hold to a classic
doctrine of atonement where God’s holiness does not allow for mercy without
payment due but that would mean God's mercy is in bondage to human understanding (even if you claim your understanding is God's understanding). Again
if it is God’s love that is proved surely God is free to forgive with or
without the cross. So what is the purpose of Jesus death on the cross? I affirm
it is for the forgiveness of sins but not to appease a wrathful God but rather for a beyond belief merciful God to
transform us so that what Paul preaches in Romans might be accomplished. Peace
with God means we no longer live as God’s enemies but instead our love for God
is proved when we boast not in our strength or our piety but in our hope. That
hope is not illusory but tested by suffering, proved by enduring, confirmed by character and is the way we live the faith that justifies and in the end is the only hope
of peace for the humanity God loves.
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Lent 3 A - Psalm 95
Psalm 95
Those of us who were born into Lutheran Church Missouri
Synod pews some fifty years ago will remember Psalm 95 as the Venite in the Order
of Matins. It was printed on pages 33 and 34 of The Lutheran Hymnal in such a
way that one had to flip back and forth throughout the singing of it. We
frowned on user friendly worship in those days. Venite is Latin for “Come” and
served as the call to worship, though if I remember correctly we left out the
threats at the end where God loathing the “they do not regard my ways” people
swore to lead them in circles until every last one of them died in the desert. There
is no doubt that the hardening of the heart leads to spiritual cardiac arrest
but I have difficulty imagining that God loathes those on spiritual life support.
The consequence we suffer for not listening to the Lord’s voice is that we are
on our own. That does not mean we suffer the hatred of God who in anger despises
the “people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand” who don’t stay in the pen.
Rather for the sake of “a people whose hearts go astray” the shepherd who leaves the ninety-nine in search of the one (Matthew 18:12) “was led
like a lamb to the slaughter…” (Isaiah 53:7) O come let us worship and bow down
for the Lord was put to the test and the proof of God’s intention for every
generation of hardened hearts is the cross.
Monday, March 17, 2014
Lent 3 A - Exodus 17:1-7
Exodus 17:1-7
The
congregation of the Israelites is a pain in the Lord’s you know what. And
poor Moses standing between this quarrelsome people and God (who when push
comes to shove is not to be trifled with) no doubt regrets the day he listened
to a burning bush. To be fair dying of thirst in the desert drives people to do
all sorts of crazy things including provoking the Lord Almighty with
complaints. Even in their desperation they had good reason to trust the Lord
for when they complained of hunger manna and quail arrived in time for dinner.
But these people have a short memory, forgetting the Lord’s faithfulness in the
past in light of their present pressing need. We tend to be more polite in our
relationship with the Almighty predicating our “demands” with please but
whether one complains or pleads ultimately the question is the same. “Is the
Lord among us or not?” Our dry times of trouble call for patient trust so that
our present pressing need does not speak more loudly than the memory of
deliverance when in the past “the Lord among us” was like water from the
rock.
Friday, March 14, 2014
Lent 2 A - John 3:1-17
John 3:1-17
Some
of us familiar with faith, comfortable in the pew of our choice, are more like
Nicodemus than we care to admit. Not ready to come out of the church closet
where we wonder if our concrete answers rest on shaky ground we do our seeking at
night, so to speak, so as not to be exposed as doubters. But the same Spirit
that drove Nicodemus to risk his standing in the Sanhedrin drives us. There is
something more to Jesus than our catechisms can contain or explain. So in the
same way that the teacher of Israel seeks out the peasant preacher at night to
ask the question most on his mind, “who are you?” we come with our own
questions. Jesus, who is not one to give an easy answer, is surprisingly
straight forward. “God so loved the world…” is all one needs to know. That is the
same world (cosmos) that loving the darkness “knew him not”. The same world
that John tells us hated Jesus, the world in which one will have troubles, the
world from which disciples will need to be protected, etc. etc. The feel good
John 3:16 on coffee cups and t-shirts and banners in the end zone cannot be
fully appreciated without recognizing that the world God loves is hell bent on destruction and not interested in anything God has to offer. It is for that reason that God allowed the
world to do its worst so that in his dying the world might receive life whether
it wants it or not. But isn't there a choice to make? Of course there is and
God was the one who made it. We live God’s choice when loving God we love the
world. It takes some time but eventually the love of God in Nicodemus sees the
light of day and he risks everything to ask Pilate for the body of the
crucified Christ. What he didn't know then, but of course knows now, is that
Jesus (God saves) made Nicodemus (the people’s victory) possible.
Thursday, March 13, 2014
Lent 2 A - Romans 4:1-5, 13-17
Romans 4:1-5, 13-17
I wonder what Abraham would think of the three children that name him father? All three claim first born rights that exclude the others even though one child was adopted and the other was born to Abram’s slave Hagar. Is this what God had in mind? That the many nations fathered would include Judaism, Christianity and Islam? And how in the world did a small fortress city at the crossroads of empires (the El Paso of the Middle East as a Texan born and bred once said to me) come to be the center of the spiritual universe? I know Paul does not state it explicitly in chapter four but it would seem to follow that God would desire peace between father Abraham’s children in the city named Yerushalayim (abode of peace). I’m not making any predictions as to how that might happen as the only way I even entertain the hope is because I believe the One who suffered a violent end in the abode of peace can “make all things new”. Therefore what has to be let go for peace to last, even within the adopted child’s immediate family, is the notion that whatever God gives us is wages owed for work done. Our temptation is to move faith from the credit column to the debit side of the ledger so that even when we are not doing anything we can claim we did something to guarantee the adopted child is the only sibling that will receive the inheritance. Faith lets the promise rest on grace is what Paul writes to the Romans so let’s leave it there and trust that the God who brings life to the dead and calls into existence things that do not exist will work out the details.
I wonder what Abraham would think of the three children that name him father? All three claim first born rights that exclude the others even though one child was adopted and the other was born to Abram’s slave Hagar. Is this what God had in mind? That the many nations fathered would include Judaism, Christianity and Islam? And how in the world did a small fortress city at the crossroads of empires (the El Paso of the Middle East as a Texan born and bred once said to me) come to be the center of the spiritual universe? I know Paul does not state it explicitly in chapter four but it would seem to follow that God would desire peace between father Abraham’s children in the city named Yerushalayim (abode of peace). I’m not making any predictions as to how that might happen as the only way I even entertain the hope is because I believe the One who suffered a violent end in the abode of peace can “make all things new”. Therefore what has to be let go for peace to last, even within the adopted child’s immediate family, is the notion that whatever God gives us is wages owed for work done. Our temptation is to move faith from the credit column to the debit side of the ledger so that even when we are not doing anything we can claim we did something to guarantee the adopted child is the only sibling that will receive the inheritance. Faith lets the promise rest on grace is what Paul writes to the Romans so let’s leave it there and trust that the God who brings life to the dead and calls into existence things that do not exist will work out the details.
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Lent 2 A - Psalm 121
Psalm 121
Psalm 121 is read at graveside services even though it would
seem help from the hills is a little late in arriving. But then funerals are
for the living not the dead. It is the living who struggle to hold onto to “my
help comes from the Lord” in the sight of loved ones laid to rest, even when death
is a welcome release. To speak of our God who neither slumbers nor sleeps In
the face of life’s inevitable end denies death the last word for the deceased
as well as those who mourn. There are times, of course, when the ancient words
alone fail to help, when desperate prayer is spoken into deafening silence,
when the Lord awake seems absent. It is
for those trying times that God gifts us with help closer to home than the
hills. Speaking the ancient words of faith together, even with weeping eye and
through clenched teeth, keeps us from the evil of hopelessness and in the life
of the community our lives are kept. All
of which remembers the help that came from the holy hill of Calvary when the
Lord who neither slumbers nor sleeps slept in death and three days later rose
again so that our final “going out” would be our forever “coming in”.
Monday, March 10, 2014
Lent 2 A - Genesis 4:1-4
This is the story of ultimate faith, though to be fair I
imagine the opportunity for advancement was limited for Semitic septuagenarians
in the land of the Chaldeans. Even so it took a leap of faith for Abram to go
home and tell Sari to pack the bags and load the camel because God told him he
was destined for favored nation status in a “God only knows where” land. So
while it is the promised pot of gold at the end of the rainbow that makes the
offer tempting it is ultimately Abraham’s trust that God can deliver the goods that gets
him to leave the center of civilization to wander in the wilderness. Whether Abraham
knew it or not God blessed him to be a blessing (even with the caveat about the
cursed) since “all peoples will be blessed” would not be “all” without everyone
being included. When you read the rest of the Abraham story his trust was less
than trustworthy and he did as much maneuvering as faithful following. Of
course we do the same and before leaving country, people and home we generally “trust
but verify”. In the very end Abraham put his trust where his heart was when with
the seed of the promise on the altar of sacrifice and his hand raised to do the
unthinkable God intervened and spared the only son. For us it is not a ram but
the God of promises who is caught like a ram in the thicket on Calvary’s hill and the only
Son not spared is cursed so that we might be blessed to be a blessing.
Friday, March 7, 2014
Lent 1 A - Matthew 4:1-11
It is right after Jesus’ baptism when The Voice from heaven declared “You are my beloved Son” that the Spirit led him into the wilderness for the time of testing. Famished after fasting, the tempter’s first attempt appeals to Jesus’ stomach. “Turn theses stones into bread” is an appetizing option after forty days and nights without food. But Jesus is well fed on the word of God and trusting The Voice that declared him The Beloved he is not as hungry as the devil thought. The consummate con man changes tactics and using “every word that proceeds from the mouth of God” tempts Jesus to give a demonstration of his trust. This temptation is trickier than it appears because proof negates trust but Jesus knows that testing The Voice denies the truth that he is The Beloved. Believing the third time’s the charm the devil goes back to the basics and uses the temptation that worked so well in the garden. It is a temptation to take power from The Voice who called him The Beloved, even though it appears in bowing down Jesus would have to give power away. But the devil is offering an option, a discount if you will. Bow down on a high mountain or climb a hill to the place called the skull. It’s your choice, Jesus, and don’t let some Voice tell you different. To which Jesus replied, “Nice try.” And the devil said, “damn you” and left knowing he’d have to meet Jesus on the hill and there wasn’t a chance in hell he was going to fool the Beloved there. And the angels came smiling, laughing, rejoicing, as Jesus breathed a sigh of relief and rested in their arms.
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Lent 1 A - Romans 5:12-19
Romans 5:12-19
“But the free gift is not like the trespass.” If we take that
statement and run with it then the trespass is not nearly as universal as is the
free gift of grace. That is not explicitly stated, but (and granted this is a
big but) if the free gift is greater than the one trespass by which “all have
sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23) then “how much more”
must mean just that. The effect of the “one act obedience” means the free gift
is greater than the trespass as God in Christ was “reconciling the world to himself
not counting people’s sins against them…” (2 Corinthians 5:19) Of course some
argue that the one act of obedience only makes up for the one act of
disobedience (original sin) and that everything else that you or I have done or
left undone still has a “payment due” attached to it. That’s not such a free
gift good deal if you ask me and so I going to trust that in the end God is
going to pick up my tab. Does that mean we party hardy and order a round of sin
for everyone? Of course not. Have you ever received a free gift you know you didn't deserve and couldn't possibly pay for even if you wanted to? The only
thing you can do when that happens is hug the one who gave you the free gift
and say thank you, thank you, thank you and then try to live in the light of
such an act of unconditional love. Oh, yes, and there’s usually crying involved
but it’s not required.
Tuesday, March 4, 2014
Lent 1 A - Psalm 32
Psalm 32
The Lord’s hand “heavy upon me” day and night is a blessing and not a
curse for we are more adept at self-deceit than we care to admit. It is a sad
truth that our strength to bear our sin silently often has to be dried up as by
the heat of summer as the body of our reasonable rationalizations has to waste away until
someone hears (or sees) our day and night groaning and invites us to “fess up.”
When we finally give voice to the inner monologue and
truthfully tell another the burdens we bear silently the “happy are those” is experienced
like a breath of fresh air in the stale rooms of our lives. It would be nice if
“I will confess my transgressions to the Lord” could happen without a third
party but silent confession is still… well, silent. So find someone you trust
and spill your guts because silence is never golden when it comes to what’s
good for the soul.
Monday, March 3, 2014
Lent 1 A - Genesis 2:15-17; 3:1-7
Genesis 2:15-17; 3:1-7
“Did God say….” is the crafty question that
gets Adam and Eve to doubt God’s goodness despite the fact that they live in
paradise. On the other hand you could read the story as the ultimate set up.
What was God thinking? You don’t populate paradise with naive naked people, a
“crafty” serpent and a tree in the middle of the garden that was “good for
food, a delight to the eyes and desired for making one wise” that btw you can’t
touch. But if you read the story after the fact (as I do) you are not as concerned
with the details as you are with the truth it tells. Given paradise we would
want a little bit more. Maybe that is the fatal flaw of creation. In the
beginning it is God who is not satisfied. Moving through the shapeless void
God’s spirit sweeps over the darkness of the deep and out of God’s infinite
imagination God calls forth creation culminating in a creature that is equally
restless. “In the image of God humankind was created…” (Genesis 1:27) So does
God touch the untouchable by eating the forbidden fruit by creating creatures
capable of breathtaking beauty and equally breath-stealing cruelty? Maybe I've
told too much of the truth that I see in this story but then I think that God
is willing to know us better than we are willing to know ourselves. Given
paradise God would give it up to touch us.
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