June 17, 2018

Pentecost: Society


I give you a new commandment that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another,” says Jesus. It is not easy to live fully into this commandment. Yet, as Br. Luke Ditewig of the Society of St. John Evangelist, notes, “life is being restored, through love, as Jesus loves, no matter what.”

Laurie Brock states in her 50 Days post, “embodying this love will almost always cause us to run aground on the qualities the social culture values. Like Peter, Paul, and the early followers of Jesus, if we're loving right, we will find ourselves at odds with those who preach affluence at all cost, caring for the poor and needy only if they deserve it, and rhetoric that dehumanizes those people.”

Throughout these early weeks of Pentecost we have been considering the radical call of the Holy Spirit to a different kind of discipleship and to growth. We may have to change the way we live. We may find ourselves pushed to speak up for the disenfranchised. We may even find our comfortable and well-ordered lives turned upside down. It happened to the first disciples.

How do we start to live so that the world knows we are a follower of Jesus? In Acts 4:13, we read, “When [the Jewish leaders] saw the courage of Peter and John and realized that they were unschooled, ordinary men, they were astonished and they took note that these men had been with Jesus.

Remember Peter and John had been arrested for teaching and healing in Jesus’ name. They are questioned by “Annas the high priest, Caiaphas, John, and Alexander, and all who were of the high-priestly family…‘By what power or by what name did you do this?’” (Acts 4:6-7)

The same Peter who was cowering in the upper room not so many days previously and who had denied Jesus in the courtyard of Caiaphas a couple months earlier, finds his voice. His response had nothing cowardly or quavering about it. “Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit, said to them, ‘Rulers of the people and elders, if we are questioned today because of a good deed done to someone who was sick and are asked how this man has been healed, let it be known to all of you, and to all the people of Israel, that this man is standing before you in good health by the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom you crucified, whom God raised from the dead. This Jesus is ‘the stone that was rejected by you, the builders; it has become the cornerstone.’ There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among mortals by which we must be saved.” (Acts 4:8-12)

Surely something has happened to turn Peter from the fear-filled, turn-tail who denied Jesus to someone who will tell that same man that he ‘rejected the cornerstone’. That same Someone is at work transforming our fear-filled lives so that we, too, can stand up to authorities and say ‘that is wrong’ and ‘there is no other name under heaven’.

Peter’s courageous response causes the leaders to decide they cannot punish Peter and John. Instead, “to keep it from spreading further among the people, let us warn them to speak no more to anyone in this name.” (Acts 4:17) Rather than obeying, “Peter and John answered them, ‘Whether it is right in God’s sight to listen to you rather than to God, you must judge; for we cannot keep from speaking about what we have seen and heard.’ After threatening them again, they let them go, finding no way to punish them because of the people, for all of them praised God for what had happened. For the man on whom this sign of healing had been performed was more than forty years old.” (Acts 4:19-22)

Jesus promises that when “they will hand you over to councils and flog you in their synagogues; and you will be dragged before governors and kings because of me, as a testimony to them and the Gentiles. When they hand you over, do not worry about how you are to speak or what you are to say; for what you are to say will be given to you at that time; for it is not you who speak, but the Spirit of your Father speaking through you.” (Matthew 10:17-20)

Does that mean that we all should be participating in protests and trying to find a ‘cause’? Perhaps, perhaps not. If that is your call and where your heart says, ‘I must speak out about this injustice’, then yes, go and take a stand!. However, there is also need for small candles of love. A little light in the darkness can be just as important. Josh Wilson, in his new contemporary Christian song Dream Small points to all the little things we do that are part of the Kingdom.

He sings of “a momma singing songs about the Lord…a daddy spending family time the world said he cannot afford… It's visiting the widow down the street or dancing on a Friday with your friend with special needs. These simple moments change the world.” The chorus summarizes, “So dream small/Don't bother like you've gotta do it all/Just let Jesus use you where you are/One day at a time/Live well/Loving God and others as yourself/Find little ways where only you can help/With His great love/A tiny rock can make a giant fall/So dream small.”
We may be called before ‘councils and governors’, or we may just have to ‘dance with your friend with special needs’. Both are ways to stand up to the society that marginalizes and separates. God’s love calls to unity and to one Body and to love.

Through the ‘new commandment’ to love God, love neighbor, love self; we discover as Br Luke says, “life is being restored, through love.”

Where can you ‘Dream Small’ to make a difference?

In what ways and places are you called to, as Laurie Brock says, “embody this love [that] will almost always cause us to run aground on the qualities the social culture values”?

Next time, we’ll look at what kind of courage it takes to live into God’s call to love. 

June 10, 2018

Pentecost: Love is Work


Last time we noted that God is asking us to step out of the security of our safe ‘boats’, built of our expectations and plans. The Spirit that blew through the upper room at Pentecost still blows through our lives and asks us to respond by letting go.

At the beginning of this series we encountered Laurie Brock’s words about Loving the Violent Wind [of the Spirit]. She warns, “The love of Jesus rocks the ships of our own schemes, running them aground and forcing us to enter new communities, to open ourselves and souls to new insights, and to act boldly to serve all in the name of Jesus. Walking, preaching, living, this love is work.”

I don’t know about you, but I really don’t like the idea that ‘Jesus rocks the ships of our schemes, running them aground’. I prefer to think that I have everything neatly figured out. I’m perfectly happy with the status quo (mostly). As noted last week, we can get trapped in our own expectations and plans. We may be willing to call on God when things really get out of control, but not before.

The country-Western song Jesus Take the Wheel epitomizes our attitude toward letting God take over. Carrie Underwood sings, “Before she knew it she was spinning on a thin black sheet of glass/She saw both their lives flash before her eyes/She didn't even have time to cry/She was so scared/She threw her hands up in the air/Jesus take the wheel/Take it from my hands/Cause I can't do this on my own/I'm letting go/So give me one more chance/Save me from this road I'm on/Jesus take the wheel.” Only when we are really stuck do we call out and say, ‘Jesus take the wheel’. 

When we realize we aren’t in control, we hear Jesus say, ‘I give you a new commandment that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another’ (John 13:34) This new commandment turns our plans and worlds upside down. We can no longer view anyone as ‘other’ or mark them ‘different’ for we are called to Love one another, as I have loved you.
The quote from Desmond Tutu, below, puts this kind of love in perspective, "God loves you! And God's love is so great, God loves your enemies too."
Br. Luke Ditewig of the Society of St. John Evangelist, notes we are called to have Agape Love for one another. “This is tough love, not a feeling of the heart but a resolve of the will. It’s the love God has for all of us, love no matter what. It’s the love Jesus had for his disciples and what Jesus speaks of [in John 13:34].”

Brother Luke agrees with Laurie Brock. “Love though it’s really hard work. Following Jesus is not easy.” Then he notes, “Yet Jesus always acts first. We give out of presence not absence. Having been blessed abundantly, we bless everyone. Having been loved abundantly, we love everyone.”

How can we possibly love everyone? Br. Luke asks readers to remember “how it all began, how Jesus invited you into relationship. Remember people who have been Jesus in the flesh for you…Remember how Jesus has loved you no matter what…Jesus doesn’t suggest or invite. He commands. Love one another. Love though you don’t like.”

Did you notice that last sentence? “Love though you don’t like.” We aren’t asked to LIKE everyone, or to tolerate differences. We are to LOVE one another! And that is indeed hard soul work. 

Love happens when we allow the Spirit to ‘take the wheel’. As Brock says God calls us to “new communities, to open ourselves and souls to new insights, and to act boldly.” I wonder what new insights we are closing our eyes to by not being open to God’s charge to LOVE. There are probably communities of new friends that we don’t know yet. And infinite ways to serve one another that we haven’t yet thought of. That is when, as Brock suggests, ‘love [can be] work’.

Br. Luke closes by stating, “The way is we love others no matter what.
The truth is Jesus loves us no matter what.
The life is being restored, through love, as Jesus loves, no matter what.”

Can you ‘let Jesus take the wheel’ and be open to new things in your life?

Will you allow the Spirit to act, and offer Agape love to others, no matter what?

How can we make loving, as we are commanded to do, a work of joy?

Next time, we’ll consider how loving in this way puts us at odds with society.  

June 3, 2018

Pentecost: Expectations



Last time I offered the suggestion that although the season of Pentecost is often called “Ordinary Time” it really isn’t ordinary at all. It is a time for growth and change in the natural world; and should be in our lives as well as we allow the Holy Spirit of Pentecost to invade our lives.

Laurie Brock, as noted last time, stated, “Comfort keeps us locked in the rooms of our own expectations.” I think that is an interesting comment. What does it mean to you?

For me, it is a reminder that I can want things to be a certain way, and that makes me resistant to change. It’s a normal human response. We like things to run smoothly and easily and don’t like to have a lot of turmoil in our lives; so we create a list of expectations of how life is going to be.

We might have the expectation that Christmas will be a fun, family time where everyone gets exactly what they want. That may or may not be the reality.

We could have the expectation that when we graduate we’ll find a perfect job and stay there for our entire career. More and more often, job change, is the norm.

We may have the expectation that we’ll meet the perfect person and live together in ‘good old-fashioned Leave it to Beaver’ style. Lives today are a little more complex than portrayed on TV.

We sometimes have the expectation that God will respond to our every prayer with a smooth-running life. God isn’t a fairy godmother to grant our every wish.

If all our carefully crafted expectations don’t create the comfortable serenity we desire, we can get discouraged and depressed. Yet we still live as though our expectations are going to happen. Every Christmas, we hope it will be better. Every relationship or job will be ‘the one’.

Where does God enter this equation of wanting to have a smooth, comfortable life that fulfils our own expectations of the perfect life? As we’ve seen in the lives of several men and women of God during the Easterseason, God is all about change and creating something new. God isn’t about maintaining the status quo or making us all comfy and cozy.

The wind of the Spirit of God blows through our expectations and brings about something much better. It’s not always obvious what God is doing in a situation, and it can be terribly uncomfortable. God may be bringing about healing in relationships by the interactions at holidays. God is helping us grow each time we have a new job or meet someone new. God doesn’t wave a magic wand and make everything smooth. God invites us to step out onto the waves of life and grow in our trust in God.

In the Gospels (Matthew 14:22-33) we hear about the disciples out in a boat on the Sea of Galilee. Jesus is not with them because he stayed behind to pray. When a storm comes up they are terrified and then they see Jesus walking on the water. He invites Peter to come to him on the waves.

“Then Peter got down out of the boat, walked on the water and came toward Jesus. But when he saw the wind, he was afraid and, beginning to sink, cried out, ‘Lord, save me!’” (Matthew 14:29-30) Peter found himself trapped by his own expectations based on previous experiences. He did not expect the water to support him. He was unable to see past his own expectations of what happens when you are in and on the water.

Jesus, “caught him.” Jesus catches each of us when we allow our expectations to trap us into thinking that something won’t change, or a situation couldn’t possibly work out. To Peter and to us Jesus says, “You of little faith,” he said, “why did you doubt?”

You’ll notice in the story in Matthew, “when they climbed into the boat, the wind died down.” Once we are able to release our personal expectations and let God act, we very often discover that the gales of our fearfulness die down as well.

That is what God is always asking us to do. We are invited out of the comfort created by our own expectations. We are encouraged to let go of the fear that keeps us trapped in those expectations, simply because we don’t know what’s on the other side, or what might happen. We are invited to step out in faith and walk to and with Jesus in a great adventure.

What are your expectations of living as a Christian?
Are you ready to step out of the boat?

May 27, 2018

Pentecost: Discipleship


Here we are in the Season of Pentecost. It’s the longest season of the church year, lasting until Advent. Sometimes called ‘Ordinary time’, we settle into these weeks as summer starts and the pace of life changes. No more getting the kids off to school and finding heavy coats. Instead there are plans for vacation and looking forward to sitting in the sun after work and relaxing.

However, in nature, the Season of Pentecost is a time of growth and new life. Look at abundance in the flowers and fields all around. Nests have little chicks and all sorts of baby critters are starting to frolic in the wilderness. Farmers are hard at work cultivating their crops. Some early harvests have already happened. Over the next weeks and months more and more crops will ripen and be gathered in. Fresh produce will show up at Grower’s Markets.

What about us? Is Pentecost a time of growth and change for us? It could be, it should be.

Last time I offered the questions, “How will the Holy Spirit act in your life this Pentecost season? What is God whispering in your ear and calling you to do? Is there a change of heart, outlook, mission or something else the Holy Spirit is urging you toward?”

Laurie Brock, in the final post of the Easter series 50 Days, responds to these questions when she states, “We – all of us who claim the faith of Jesus – are called to preach, to live, and to embody this radical, merciful, and eternal love. Each day, not just on Sundays.”

During the next few weeks we’ll be looking at what that sort of discipleship might mean as we look at what the Spirit may do to our expectations, our comfort, our commitments, even our whole lives.

Brock continues, “Make no mistake, this love is rarely comfortable. Comfort keeps us locked in the rooms of our own expectations. The love of Jesus rocks the ships of our own schemes, running them aground and forcing us to enter new communities, to open ourselves and souls to new insights, and to act boldly to serve all in the name of Jesus. Walking, preaching, living, this love is work, and embodying this love will almost always cause us to run aground on the qualities the social culture values. Like Peter, Paul, and the early followers of Jesus, if we're loving right, we will find ourselves at odds with those who preach affluence at all cost, caring for the poor and needy only if they deserve it, and rhetoric that dehumanizes those people. Living Jesus' love requires commitment, courage, and work.”
Symbolism by Estella Canziani
On the first Pentecost, the disciples were assaulted by a ‘mighty wind’ and ‘tongues of fire’, as dramatically portrayed in the watercolor by Estella Canziani. As the Rev. Dan Webster noted in his Pentecost sermon, “if that happened here, today, most of us would run for the exits.” Yet, if we believe Jesus when he said, “I will send you an Advocate”, we should be expecting to have our worlds shaken, our perceptions transformed, and our lives changed.

If we seriously take to heart the commandment to “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your mind, all your strength and your neighbor as yourself,” we will discover that we are going to become a different sort of person. We will find ourselves seeing Christ in the homeless pilgrim or the desperate drug addict or someone whose viewpoint we cannot understand as well as our good friend and those who think and look like we do. We may find our heart moved in new and strange ways to respond in new and strange ways.

Brock says this is “Work Jesus is convinced we can do.” She asks, “Will we make mistakes as we strive to live this love of Jesus? Yes, as did the disciples as we’ve read in Acts.” Further, “Will we all agree on exactly how we live this love of Jesus? No, and neither did the disciples, as we’ve read in Acts.” Finally, “Will being blown forward by the Spirit into this love lead us to new and extraordinary places, especially places far outside our personal comfort zones? Yes, as it did to the disciples, as we’ve read in Acts.”

Are you ready to be blown outside your comfort zone? Is the Spirit of the Living God burning inside you with a zeal for loving ministry in the Name of Christ?

Our discipleship is based in answering that call and responding to that wind. Who knows where that may take you or me? 

May 20, 2018

Pentecost: Change the World


Since Easter we’ve been looking at the various kinds of Change required by Easter. The Resurrection of Jesus changed the paradigm of the world, even though few noticed. Hearts and outlooks were renewed. The vision of mission was redefined. Last week we heard Jesus tell his followers to stay in Jerusalem until the coming of the Holy Spirit. On Pentecost we celebrate that amazing event. The Holy Spirit didn’t just ‘happen’ at Pentecost. The Holy Spirit has been active since the beginning. “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters.” (Genesis 1:1-2)

Pentecost isn’t a celebration that is the creation of the Christian church. Like many of our feasts, it has its roots in Judaism. The Jewish feast of Pentecost/Shavuot came 50 days (pente means 50) after Passover. It celebrates the giving of the Torah to Moses on Mt. Sinai; and is also linked to the agricultural heritage by celebrating the ‘first fruits’ of the fields. A Jewish explanation of Shavuot (Pentecost) notes that it is the GIVING of the Torah to Moses and the people that is celebrated. “giving of the Torah on Shavu'ot redeemed us spiritually from our bondage to idolatry and immorality…We are constantly in the process of receiving the Torah, that we receive it every day, but it was first given at this time. Thus it is the giving, not the receiving, that makes this holiday significant.”

In Acts 2 we learn, “When the day of Pentecost had come, they were all together in one place. And suddenly from heaven there came a sound like the rush of a violent wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting. Divided tongues, as of fire, appeared among them, and a tongue rested on each of them. All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages, as the Spirit gave them ability.

The Jewish celebration of Shavu’ot reminds the Jewish people that they are constantly receiving the Torah-the word of God. Pentecost, likewise reminds us that the Holy Spirit is continually being given to each of us. We are inspired and encouraged and empowered by the Spirit of the Living God. Jesus promised, “If you love me, you will keep my commandments. And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate, to be with you for ever. This is the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it neither sees him nor knows him. You know him, because he abides with you, and he will be in you. (John 14:15-17)

The Holy Spirit, as Paul later says, “helps us in our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as we ought, but that very Spirit intercedes with sighs too deep for words. And God, who searches the heart, knows what is the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the will of God.” (Romans 8:26-27)
The coming of the Holy Spirit was not a one-time, dramatic occurrence that only those in the Upper Room in Jerusalem experienced. The Holy Spirit is ongoing and always with us. We just have to be aware and willing to let the Spirit of God act.

How will the Holy Spirit act in your life this Pentecost season? What is God whispering in your ear and calling you to do? Is there a change of heart, outlook, mission or something else the Holy Spirit is urging you toward?

May 13, 2018

Change of Mission


Change has been our topic during the Season of Easter, which is the 50 days between Easter Sunday and Pentecost Sunday. It is a time to think about the direction of our lives as individual Christians, and as a corporate body.

At the very beginning of the Book of Acts, the author summarizes Jesus’ appearances after the Resurrection. “After his suffering he presented himself alive to them by many convincing proofs, appearing to them over the course of forty days and speaking about the kingdom of God. While staying with them, he ordered them not to leave Jerusalem, but to wait there for the promise of the Father. ‘This’, he said, ‘is what you have heard from me; for John baptized with water, but you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days from now.’” (Acts 1:3-5)

The disciples must have wondered about what being ‘baptized with the Holy Spirit’ might mean. As usual, they seem to have been confused, thinking that Jesus is going to do the work. They ask, “Lord, is this the time when you will restore the kingdom to Israel?” Jesus sets them straight. “It is not for you to know the times or periods that the Father has set by his own authority. But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” (Acts 1:6-8)

Jesus tells his followers that they are the ones who will tell the story and change the world and even bring about the kingdom of God. Imagine the change of their definition of mission those words must have required. Instead of just following along as Jesus did things, the faithful men and women were now asked to act on behalf of God. Those who had been with Jesus throughout his ministry in Galilee and Judea were not ‘movers and shakers’ of the 1st Century world. They were fishermen, shopkeepers, wives, husbands-just regular folks.

The hymn I Sing a Song of the Saints of God is one I learned in Sunday School. It was written by Lesbia Scott, a young mother who composed several children’s hymns. She published them in 1929 as Everyday Hymns for Little Children. Scott’s hymn says, “And one was a doctor, and one was a queen,/And one was a shepherdess on the green…And one was a soldier, and one was a priest,/And one was slain by a fierce wild beast…” She goes on to note, “You can meet them in school, or in lanes, or at sea,/In church, or in trains, or in shops, or at tea,/For the saints of God are folk just like me,/And I mean to be one too.”
Like the first disciples, we are to be “witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” Like the first disciples we are ordinary women and men who are to live out a life different than the one outlined by the world in general.

In a letter from a Nazi concentration camp, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a German pastor and theologian, stated “[it is] through the resurrection of Christ that a new and purifying wind can blow through our present world...If a few people really believed that and acted on it in their daily lives, a great deal would be changed. To live in the light of the resurrection — that is what Easter means.”
Scott sings, “They loved their Lord so dear, so dear,/And his love made them strong;/And they followed the right, for Jesus's sake,/The whole of their good lives long… They lived not only in ages past,/There are hundreds of thousands still/The world is bright with the joyous saints/Who love to do Jesus' will.”

How can we ‘live in the light of the resurrection’?

In what way can we live as if we believe God’s ‘love made them strong’?

Is there something you can do today or this week to be a ‘joyous saint’ who lives as if the ‘purifying wind’ of the resurrected Christ is actually blowing through the world? 

May 6, 2018

Change of Vision


Last time we noted that God sometimes doesn’t act like we expect. Sometimes, in fact, we may not even recognize that God is acting in a situation. It is only in hindsight that we begin to see that God was present and brought about a change of heart or mind.

As the disciples worked to come to terms with the dramatic changes in their lives, they spent a lot of time in prayer. The first chapter of the Book of Acts says that after Jesus ascended they were in the “upstairs room where they were staying…constantly in prayer.” (Acts 1:13-14) Before long, they were led to reevaluate their vision of their life and mission.

Peter “stood up among the believers (a group numbering about a hundred and twenty) and said, “Brothers and sisters, the Scripture had to be fulfilled in which the Holy Spirit spoke long ago through David concerning Judas, who served as guide for those who arrested Jesus. He was one of our number and shared in our ministry… it is written in the Book of Psalms: ‘May another take his place of leadership.’ Therefore, it is necessary to choose one of the men who have been with us the whole time the Lord Jesus was living among us, beginning from John’s baptism to the time when Jesus was taken up from us. For one of these must become a witness with us of his resurrection.” (Acts 1:15-21)

Apparently, there was agreement because “they nominated two men: Joseph called Barsabbas (also known as Justus) and Matthias. Then they prayed, “Lord, you know everyone’s heart. Show us which of these two you have chosen to take over this apostolic ministry, which Judas left to go where he belongs.” Then they cast lots, and the lot fell to Matthias; so he was added to the eleven apostles.” (Acts 1:23-26)

The disciples felt that they needed to keep the continuity of ministry with someone who had ‘been with us the whole time’. This implies that beyond the listed 12 apostles there were many others who also followed Jesus around Galilee. Peter, on the one hand seems to be trying to keep the original number of select apostles, while being open to the possibility of a need for more workers in the vineyard, as Jesus had once promised. (Matthew 9:38)

While it may seem odd that gambling (casting lots) was used to determine which man would serve, it is an ancient tradition dating back to the time of the early Levitical priesthood. It was then that the Urim and Thummim were attached to the priest’s ephod (breastplate) and used to reveal the will of God. (Exodus 28:30 and 1 Samuel)

There is nothing in the Bible about what Matthias ultimately did. Greek tradition says he founded churches in Cappadocia (Turkey) and along the Caspian Sea. Other traditions say he preached in Judea and later in modern day Georgia (Russia, not USA). There is even a marker at Apsaros in Georgia claiming to be his burial site. Still another tradition has him going south to Ethiopia or was stoned and/or beheaded in Jerusalem. The point of the story in Acts is not what Matthias did, but that God guided the fledgling church to call new leadership.

How do we determine what our vision of service is going to be? Do we cast lots, or like Gideon throw down a fleece with a challenge to God? (Judges 6:36-40) Do we pray and consult others, like Peter and the disciples? Do we just sit around and wait for something to show us the way?

What is your current vision of what God wants you to do? Where are you called to lead? Who can help you discern the path?
Next time we’ll explore the church’s call to mission, and what change God might require in me and you to follow that call.