Ephesians 1:3-14
It
is one thing to be chosen but being chosen by God before the beginning of time
is on a completely different scale. Truth is it doesn't get much better than
that. Of course a good number of people who identify with these passages have
been familiar with first choice status most of their lives myself included. But
these passages were first penned to those who had little choice about anything in
their life as they were slaves and women within the Roman Empire. Of course
there were some exceptions but the vast majority of Christians in the first
century would have heard these words as a stark contrast to their everyday
lives of institutional servitude. The history books claim that Constantine saw
the sign of the cross that would conquer and made the choice for Christianity
but the truth is the women and slaves had come to believe their first choice
status no matter what the empire said and maybe Constantine just recognized the
handwriting was on wall. In a sad twist of fate his choosing to make
Christianity the religion of the empire meant that those who were first in the
radical faith of Christianity went back to being last in the official faith of
the Empire. I don’t know for sure but I’m thinking the second time that Jesus
wept was when Constantine conquered the cross by painting it on his soldier’s shields.
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Christmas 2 B - Psalm 147:12-20
Psalm 147:12-20
The law of the Lord was a gift to Jacob and Israel even if they failed to abide by all its decrees. We tend to think of laws as restrictions that limit freedom even if some limit to freedom is a good thing. But the people of Israel thought of the law in terms of relationship. “I will be your God and you will be my people.” Set free from bondage in Egypt God gave them the law as an identity that made them unique among the nations and set them apart as a treasured possession of the Most High. If the law was God’s gift to the children of Israel then the children of Israel were the gift that God got. Perhaps God is not so unlike us in that respect. God desires the intimacy of human relationship that is freely given and received. Of course it was not all love and kisses as on more than one occasion God grew tired of the people called God’s own. “What can I do with you, Ephraim? What can I do with you, Judah? Your love is like the morning mist…” (Hosea 6:4) But as much as the law and decrees kept the people of Israel connected to God it was God’s promise to Abraham that kept God in the game. Even if they were children who misbehaved they remained God’s children. And so it is with us whose identity is found in the law of Christ which is the law of love. Love God. Love Neighbor. We might fail on both accounts but God’s love endures forever.
The law of the Lord was a gift to Jacob and Israel even if they failed to abide by all its decrees. We tend to think of laws as restrictions that limit freedom even if some limit to freedom is a good thing. But the people of Israel thought of the law in terms of relationship. “I will be your God and you will be my people.” Set free from bondage in Egypt God gave them the law as an identity that made them unique among the nations and set them apart as a treasured possession of the Most High. If the law was God’s gift to the children of Israel then the children of Israel were the gift that God got. Perhaps God is not so unlike us in that respect. God desires the intimacy of human relationship that is freely given and received. Of course it was not all love and kisses as on more than one occasion God grew tired of the people called God’s own. “What can I do with you, Ephraim? What can I do with you, Judah? Your love is like the morning mist…” (Hosea 6:4) But as much as the law and decrees kept the people of Israel connected to God it was God’s promise to Abraham that kept God in the game. Even if they were children who misbehaved they remained God’s children. And so it is with us whose identity is found in the law of Christ which is the law of love. Love God. Love Neighbor. We might fail on both accounts but God’s love endures forever.
Monday, December 29, 2014
Christmas 2 B - Jeremiah 31:7-14
Jeremiah 31:7-14
Jeremiah, the weeping prophet, proclaims a different sort of
weeping for the “great company” destined to return to Zion by brooks of water along
straight paths of no stumbling. I’ve always felt badly for Jeremiah as one who
was destined to be a bearer of bad tidings. If I had my druthers I’d choose to
be Second Isaiah who gets mostly good bits even if he is writing from
captivity in a Babylonian garden. But even if most of Jeremiah’s book is grim, as
was his lot, there are these wonderfully bright bits of promise that must have
given the prophet a reason to be glad, if only for a moment. “The young women
rejoice in the dance and the young men and old shall be merry.” Our troubles pale
in comparison to what Jeremiah’s people endured but because all troubles are
personal I believe comparisons have little value. There will always be someone
who has it worse than we do until at some point we stand at the end of the line
and look to the left (or right) and realize we are at the end of the line. So
this word of promise speaks to every life scattered by circumstances beyond one’s
control, put down by hands too strong to resist, languishing in prisons of sorrow
and suffering. It may be that we have more mourning to endure before sorrow is
turned into joy but if we believe the promise then God is always waiting on the
other side of whatever troubles us to tend to us as a shepherd gathers sheep
or comfort us as a parent embraces a child. Point is the God beyond knowing
knows our plight and in the Word Made Flesh did something about it. Emmanuel. God with us.
Saturday, December 27, 2014
Christmas 1 B - Luke 2:22-40
This is another Biblical story I learned through the Lutheran liturgy even before
I could read. We sang the “Nunc Dimittis”
(Latin for “Now Dismiss”) after communion (once a month in those days). Of
course the most important thing about "Now Dismiss" was to be dismissed from the church service which was all the salvation I was waiting to see. Even so it was
a story that captured my imagination. In my mind Simeon was an old man waiting
his whole life for this moment and he died as soon as the song left his lips. But
it wasn’t a sad story to me. He got what he wanted. Dismissed in peace having
seen what he longed for as his life came to the hoped for conclusion. I am not
so sure I know what I hope to be the conclusion of my life and finding myself
in the difficult just past the “middle years” I can’t imagine my passing at
this point would look anything like peace. But then Simeon’s ending is Jesus’
beginning and Jesus’ ending will turn out to be the beginning for Simeon. Maybe
that is why he could depart in peace and we will as well, no matter when our last
song is sung.
Friday, December 26, 2014
Christmas 1 B - Galatians 4:4-7
Galatians 4:4-7
When my time had fully come at 3 AM on December 24 the flu put me out
for the count. 48 hours of wracking cough, aches and pains, fever, and fitful
sleep. Not good timing when my plan that morning was to make omelets to order
for our homeless ministry Room in the Inn guests (including a lobster option no
less – thank you to the cooking crew that covered for me) and then four
services that night (thank you to the pastor crew that covered for me). I
foolishly thought if my fever broke I could still preach at 11 PM and even
worked out a way I could use the flu to talk about the incarnation which I will
do for you now so as not to let my drug induced imagination go to waste. (Take
that Pastor Ethan – even on Nyquil I can rock the pulpit) When the time had
fully come Jesus was born into a body like mine. No, not my size, shape or color
but born into a body that could be laid low by a microscopic virus. Born into a
body that was susceptible to the elements, to hunger, to thirst, to lack of sleep, to all manner
of physical maladies. But more than that;
born into a body wracked by grief (Jesus wept). Born into a body that ached for
the lonely and the lost (he had compassion on them because they were like sheep
without a shepherd) Born into a body that felt the pain of a creation gone horribly
wrong (he came to that which was his own but they knew him not) But unlike my
time in the crucible of the flu Jesus body did not recover from what was done to
him. He was sent to those who were under the law to redeem them but they treated
him with cruel contempt, mocking him in his suffering and ultimately robbing
him of his life by stripping him naked and nailing him to wood. Not a Merry Christmas story but then I’m jacked up on Nyquil (just
kidding) and what I need is a Savior who can defeat the virus of my sin not a
no crying he makes baby in a manger. The latter is our fairy tale. The former
is God’s plan. When the time had fully come God put on our flesh, died our
death and then kicked it in the butt so that we would never, ever be laid low
by death. Merry Christmas.
Tuesday, December 23, 2014
Christmas 1 B - Psalm 148
Psalm 148
Psalm 148 is an all inclusive “Praise the Lord!” song but
unless “Sweet Jesus!” or some other less than pastor- like expletive counts as
praise I've not appreciated the tempestuous wind doing God’s will on Mustang
Island, TX. But maybe that’s the point the psalmist wants to make. Even the
things we think of as less than praiseworthy when they address us – fire, hail,
creepy things, sea monsters – have to bend the knee, albeit a fin in the case
of sea monsters, to the LORD GOD ALMIGHTY. Sun, moon, stars, mountains, hills, all
creatures great and small, all of creation praises God because “the Lord has raised
up strength for the people.” But here’s the thing even the creative psalmist
could not imagine. God’s strength would be made manifest in weakness. The praise
of the sovereigns of the earth, at least a Roman governor named Pilate and a
Jewish high priest named Annas, was to silence God’s strength by nailing Jesus
to a tree but surprise (!) even the grave was compelled to praise the
one it could not hold. We too are compelled to praise the One we cannot
contain or confine in our holy houses of wood and stone, theologies and
rituals. That’s because God is always coming to us in new and surprising ways not
unlike a tempestuous wind that long ago blew through a house in Jerusalem depositing
fire on the heads of young men and maidens so they could praise God in
languages they had never learned. So praise the Lord in whatever way you can
which means that even the song of sea monsters is pleasing to the one who
“created the Leviathan for the sport of it.”
Monday, December 22, 2014
Christmas 2 B - Isaiah 61:10 - 62:3
Isaiah 61:10 - 62:3
The ransomed of the Lord’s “return unto Zion with singing” (Isaiah 35:10) song was stilled when they saw the ruins of their beloved Jerusalem. That is what makes the words of the prophet so powerful. We tend to keep silent in times of suffering – stiff upper lip and all that - but Isaiah sings with his whole being of what will be in the midst of what is. Not for his own sake but for the sake of those who cannot sing, who have no hope, who lament of life itself and long for the grave, if only to swallow up their sorrow. But Isaiah’s faith has the audacity to believe the ruins will be rebuilt, the city that is a byword among the nations will be made great and the whole world will be blessed by the beauty of their story. Their story is our story for once we were no people, condemned and cut off, but now we are God’s own people, holy and dearly loved. So do not be silent but in the midst of difficult days sing the sing of salvation in such a way that others will be compelled to join the song or at least hum along.
The ransomed of the Lord’s “return unto Zion with singing” (Isaiah 35:10) song was stilled when they saw the ruins of their beloved Jerusalem. That is what makes the words of the prophet so powerful. We tend to keep silent in times of suffering – stiff upper lip and all that - but Isaiah sings with his whole being of what will be in the midst of what is. Not for his own sake but for the sake of those who cannot sing, who have no hope, who lament of life itself and long for the grave, if only to swallow up their sorrow. But Isaiah’s faith has the audacity to believe the ruins will be rebuilt, the city that is a byword among the nations will be made great and the whole world will be blessed by the beauty of their story. Their story is our story for once we were no people, condemned and cut off, but now we are God’s own people, holy and dearly loved. So do not be silent but in the midst of difficult days sing the sing of salvation in such a way that others will be compelled to join the song or at least hum along.
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Advent 4 B - Luke 1:26-38
Luke 1:26-38
“How can this be?” There are many who will say
“it can’t” or “it wasn’t” but then Mary is the only one who can say for sure.
If Luke is half the historian my father is he will have checked his sources and
I don’t doubt Mary could have been one of them. Of course we don’t just talk
about the virgin birth we confess it and even though that might sound like the
same thing it isn’t. Confessions are not explained; they are confessed which is
to say, believed. Not like Santa Claus or the Tooth Fairy though some would say
the virgin birth is a fairytale. Confessions are not constitutions though some
would make them equally binding. But the Christian confession of faith ddoesn'tso much bind us to a set of beliefs as it identifies us as those who adhere to
a particular story of what God is about in our world. This is the story of “God
with us” which is “God for us” in every space and place and time from before
the beginning into the forever future. “Let it be to me according to your
word.” Mary entered the story in a time and place where people threw rocks at
unwed pregnant teenagers until they were dead. (God help us those places still
exist) She accepted what would likely lead to her death because she trusted her
life was in God’s hands. “Let it be to me according to your word.” There is no
greater statement of faith in the scriptures and though she is venerated as
“Theotokos” (God-bearer) her faith was worthy of praise even before the Spirit
overshadowed her and the little Lord Jesus lay asleep in her womb. Faith bears
God into the world even now so that you and I enter Mary’s story, which is
God’s story, whenever in the face of an uncertain future we say, “Let it be to
me according to your word.”
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Advent 4 B - Romans 16:22-27
Romans 16:25-27
The secret kept hidden for long ages but now
disclosed never-the-less remains a mystery. God in human flesh, not just as a
disguise for the Divine but the Holy “in, with and under” the profane;
"the immortal, invisible, God only wise" born into the little Lord
Jesus who cried for Mary’s milk before he fell asleep on the hay. A mystery,
yes, but not one beyond our ability to comprehend for it was love that came
down and graced our world with beauty and truth and wherever compassion and
mercy are made known God is fully present. But humans prefer gods of fire and
smoke, of rigid rules and regulations, and by that I mean gods who are more
predictable and in many ways more easily manipulated. This God brings about the
obedience of faith by entering our reality, the good, the bad and the mundane.
So that if we truly want to be about what God is about we have to be more
connected to each other and not just the ones who are like us. Touch the leper.
Eat with the tax collector. Welcome the sinner. The reverse is true as well as
Jesus let a woman scorned bathe his feet with tears and another quench his
thirst and still another clutch his robe. He called dim disciples to follow him
and deposited the kingdom into their hands expecting the mystery to be continually
revealed in and through them. And we who have been strengthened by the Gospel
they proclaimed are obedient to the faith whenever we reveal the mystery to the little
piece of the planet we inhabit.
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Advent 4 B - Luke 1:46-55
Luke 1:46-55
The “great
thing God has done for me” made Mary great with child without her betrothed’s
participation or consent. That is not normally a cause for rejoicing even if
the child hidden in her secret place was the Messiah. But let’s be clear. Mary
is not a member of the ruling class and the “servant Israel” of whom she sings
is hardly a significant player on the world’s stage. But Mary is naturally naïve
and believes in, or at least hopes for, the promise of God come true. And come
to think of it even the secular songs of this season seem wonderfully naïve in
a world so full of woe. “Chestnuts roasting on an open fire, Jack Frost nipping
at your nose…” There is more power in hope than in any other human emotion save
love although they are so closely related as to be the same thing. And miracles,
like songs that imagine God come down to lift up the lowly, do not need to be
fully realized to be more than true. When Mary’s boy was full grown the mighty
she imagined cast down from their thrones lifted him up on a cross until crying
out in agony he breathed his last. But the song she sung when he moved in her
womb could not be stilled and the refrain of His resurrection was just the
prelude to the chorus that is sung even now in eternity. God has done great
things indeed.
Monday, December 15, 2014
Advent 4 B - 2 Samuel 7:1-11, 16
David may believe his desire to upgrade God from tent to
temple is all about God but truth is David is embarrassed that Israel’s God is
housed in such a humble abode. More to the point, such a humbly housed God is a
poor reflection on the new king on the block which is why David needs God to
move uptown into a temple of gold and stone and cedar. We lust after bigger
buildings and consider churches that house ten thousand more significant than
"two or three gathered in my name" who love the Lord with their whole
lives. The church may be built to glorify God but it magnifies the power and
prestige of the humans that build it. If bigger is better why did God choose a
manger in a stable and an unwed teenage girl to birth the Messiah into a world
that would despise his teaching so much it would attempt to shut him up by
nailing him to wood? The upgrade God desires is not a church made of stone but
a permanent dwelling place in your heart.
Friday, December 12, 2014
Advent 3 B - John 1:6-8;
If the Pharisees were playing a game of hangman with John they’d
be losing but truth is they don’t care about his answers as long as they can hang
him. A voice crying in the wilderness always means trouble for those who color their
religion within the lines and questions like “who are you?” are a set up for a
take down. But John doesn't care about their questions because he knows he is pointing
to something greater than anyone can imagine. And if we believe Matthew’s
account of John’s question for Jesus (are you the one or should we look for
another?) even the voice in the wilderness wondered if he got it right. That’s
because John was also in the dark even though he was tasked with pointing to
the light. He thought himself unworthy of untying Jesus’ sandals while Jesus
considered washing his disciple’s feet the true measure of a master. That’s not
to say John and Jesus weren't on the same page when it came to calling out the
Pharisees and teachers of the law – You
brood of vipers – but Jesus does something John could not imagine the Messiah
would do. He dies. But the light of Jesus was not extinguished by death rather
it lit up hell like a Christmas tree and banished the power of darkness and
death once and for all.
Thursday, December 11, 2014
Advent 3 B - 1 Thessalonians 5:16-24
1 Thessalonians 5:16-24
I don’t know about you but there very few things I do that
can be followed by “always” or “unceasing” or “in all circumstances”; except
sin, of course, but maybe that doesn't count because it comes so naturally. I’m
actually a little suspicious of those who claim to live this text and that
behind all the smiles and the God is so good alleluias are lives of utter
desperation wrapped in praise the Lord pastels. (BTW this is not an
autobiographical post. I look best in Advent blue.) Rejoice always and give
thanks in all circumstances. Really? Isn't that called denial? There are times when
the most faithful response is a lament that curses the darkness. Which is why
God’s will cannot be that we manage this on our own but rather depend fully on
the One who sanctifies and keeps us sound in every and all circumstances. So
rejoicing can happen even when we have every reason to weep and giving thanks
can take place even when we have every reason to lament and prayers can happen
always because the “Spirit intercedes for us with groans words cannot express.”
(Romans 8:26) Not denial but acceptance that even in the worst of times the
promise of God to be present is more than enough reason to give thanks.
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
Advent 3 B - Psalm 126
The first four
verses of Psalm 126 remember the dream come true as exiles returned home and
mouths were filled with laughter and tongues tingled with joy. When the memory
of the moment is recounted the psalmist is glad indeed. But apparently those
fortunes have been spent and in the same way that the dry wadis of the Negev
wait for the spring rain the psalmist asks that the past be repeated in the
present. Restore our fortunes like the watercourses of the Negev so that tears
sown in sorrow will reap joyful songs. Faith remembers the joy of the past to
endure the pain of the present by hoping in the promise of the future. You
might be in a time of waiting and if so need to remember the times when
rejoicing came easily and if you cannot perhaps there is someone who can. Which
is why if you are so gifted as to be in a laughter tongue tingling time of being glad indeed give thanks to the Lord and do what you can to share your
sheaves of joy with those who weep.
Monday, December 8, 2014
Advent 3 B - Isaiah 61:1-4, 8-11
Isaiah 61:1-4, 8-11
Isaiah
61 is the measure of whether one has been anointed by the spirit of the Lord or
not. Good news for the oppressed not narrow views that suppress life and love; healing
words that bind up the broken hearted not harsh speech that hurts; liberating
words that free one from the fear that God is not ultimately and completely “for
us.” It does not mean there are no words
of correction or constraint. Just the opposite. Right behavior flows from right
relationship and right relationship is established by unconditional love. Or as
Jesus said, “Perfect love casts out all fear” When we live more fully into the
unconditional love of God we are less likely to withhold love from others and
ourselves which may actually be the harder of the two. The brokenhearted healed,
the ones who mourn comforted, the faint of spirit made strong, all are signs of
the Spirit whose speech blesses the world with light and love and liberty so
that good news for the oppressed is just as good for the oppressor as freedom
for the captive is ultimately freedom for the captor.
Saturday, December 6, 2014
Advent 2 B - Mark 1:1-8
Mark 1:1-18
The beginning of Jesus’ story anticipates the end of our
story which because of Jesus will not be as final as it otherwise might have
been. And like the messenger who prepared Jesus’ way through the wilderness
Jesus makes straight our crooked paths so that our crying out will be shouts of
victory and not cries of lament. But the end of our salvation story does not deny
the hard path walked by John or Jesus. Both paid dearly for their proclamation
of the truth and while resurrection is certainly a happy ending to what would
have been a tragic tale the marks of suffering remain to remind us that it was
the baptism of His death that forgave our sin. So we who benefit from John’s
prophecy and by virtue of our baptism by the Holy Spirit are joined to Jesus’
death walk on paths that are sometimes as hard and unyielding as the ones they
walked but because the Good News begun has walked all the world’s paths we
never walk them alone.
Wednesday, December 3, 2014
Advent 2 B - 2 Peter 3:8-15
2 Peter 3:8-15
So how are we to “regard the patience of the Lord as
salvation” while worrying about “the rest of the world is toast thief in the
night day of the Lord?” Even if we are confident of our own reserved seat in the
forever future we can hardly sit still when it comes to those for whom God’s
infinite patience will one day run out. Lives of holiness and godliness are
only holy and godly in so much as they are lived for the sake of those who do
not know the peace and patience of God. And so God’s desire that none perish
may dove tail with our own – at least for the “none” that we know – which is
why waiting patiently is not the same as waiting passively.
Tuesday, December 2, 2014
Advent 2 B - Psalm 85:1-2, 8-13
Psalm 85
We could use a
long embrace with steadfast love and faithfulness and more public displays of
affection between righteousness and peace. That’s because when God’s people
live as “sin blotted out” forgiven folk, fortunes are restored, hearts rejoice
and the land itself yields an increase. But when envy kisses bitter strife and
hatred and selfish ambition embrace everyone suffers. And so God speaks peace
by forgiving sin to turn hearts towards the pathway prepared by righteousness,
which is always an attitude before it shows up as behavior. It would be a
lovely thing if the church could fall madly in love with righteousness and peace
and act like a school girl or boy giddy with the first blush of young love. Imagine
what we could accomplish by throwing caution to the wind and recklessly
engaging in PDA of the sort that would make those outside the faith long for
the same sort of relationship we have with each other and the God who whispers,
"Peace."
Monday, December 1, 2014
Advent 2 B - Isaiah 40:1-11
Isaiah 40:1-11
“Comfort,
comfort” is a doubly welcome word when it feels like you’ve paid double for
whatever it was that required you to pay a penalty in the first place. In the
same way being fed and gathered and carried and gently led is welcome relief to
those who like grass and flowers wither and fade. More often than not we are
fully responsible for the painful predicament produced by our sin but there is
also a good bit of life’s consequences that operate outside the boundaries of
cause and effect. I imagine there were a good number of those carted off to
captivity in Babylon that could not trace a clear line between what they had
done and what was being done to them. So in the middle of the captivity, when
the memory of Jerusalem was fading, or worse when the memory of its destruction
was like a recurring nightmare, the prophet speaks God’s words of hope and
healing. “Comfort, comfort” is what was needed to endure the everyday abuse of
captors who mockingly demanded, “sing us songs of Zion” as if joyful songs
could be conjured up like some cheap parlor trick. God visits us in the worst
of times to remind us that the best of times can be experienced when
anticipated through hope. The valley of despair will be lifted; the mountain of
desperation will be brought low, the uneven and rough places of sorrow and
suffering will be made smooth because the word of the Lord is consistent.
“Comfort, comfort.”
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