Crushed!

People get crushed in all kinds of ways, God has nothing to do with it!

by Michael Danner

Epistle Reading: Luke 13:1-9

For Sunday, March 3, 2013; Year C—Lent 3

Two observations and an initial question…

Observation #1: Good things happen and bad things happen.

Observation #2: Some people are good and some people are bad.

How are these two observations connected, if at all?

It’s only fair

In spite of the book of Job, the most common way people connect them, both then and now, goes like this: Good things happen to good people and bad things happen to bad people. [Read more...]

You Are What You Eat

Does Jesus want us to become God?

by Russell Rathbun

Gospel Reading: John 6:51-58

For Sunday, August 19, 2012—Ordinary 20

A friend of mine who studies traditional foods from tribal cultures told me that the notion that you are what you eat is common across many Native American and eastern traditional peoples. If you eat a lot of chicken, you have chicken energy. You move around quickly in a scattered state. If you eat a lot of beef you have heifer energy. You move slowly, powerfully and deliberately.

[Read more...]

Is “Jesus Bread” Gluten Free?

If Jesus is the Bread of Life why is it so hard to take a bite?

by Roy M. Terry IV

Gospel Reading:  John 6:35, 41-51

For Sunday, August 12, 2012:  Year B − Ordinary 19

I have a good friend who just found out he has a gluten allergy. Now when we go to a restaurant he is always asking, “Do you have a gluten free menu?” The real struggle my friend has is that he LOVES bread!

I can remember him telling me on numerous occasions, “I don’t care what the scripture says – I could live on bread alone!” He also mentions frequently that he can tell if a restaurant is any good simply by the bread they bring out before the meal. Sticking to a gluten free diet is driving him crazy!

[Read more...]

Look, But Don’t Touch?

What about anointing the body?

by Unvirtuous Abbey

Gospel Reading: Mark 16: 1-8

For Sunday, April 9, 2012: Year B – Easter Sunday

The most hopeful woman I know has a head full of brain tumours. Yet, naturally, she is filled with fear. It’s a dual existence for her: anticipating the wedding of her first born child in July, while not being sure that she will live long enough to see it.

Anointing the Body

Mark’s Gospel records that Mary Magdalene and Salome (meaning, “peace.” In the Secret Gospel of Mark, Salome is named as a disciple of Jesus) went to the tomb of Jesus, where his body rested, to anoint him with spices.

In today’s culture, in which we often “celebrate the life of” rather than “mourn the death of” a person, we have little or no concept of anointing a body. Or do we?

Acts of Mourning

Before her radiation treatments began, my friend shaved her head. Because the treatments, though palliative, cause minor burns to her skin, a nurse covers the affected area with cream to ease the irritation. Because she objects to narcotics, her doctor has prescribed medicinal marijuana and Extra Strength Tylenol to ease the pain in her system.

Sometimes anointing happens before we die. It’s about our care for, and respect of, the body so that the soul may still rest there for a time. Anointing is an act of mourning, but it is also an act of love in the face of the fear of death and dying.

Don’t be Afraid?

Rabbi Harold Kushner says that the most repeated phrase in the Bible are the words, “Don’t be afraid!” sometimes translated as “Fear not!” They are the words spoken to Mary by an angel about Jesus’ conception; they are the words spoken to shepherds by an angel about Jesus’ birth. And now, these words are spoken to the women at the tomb about Jesus’ death and resurrection.

That’s easy to say if you’re an angel; however, it’s not so easy to do for a human. So often we are incapacitated by our fear. So often ministry is about going where angels fear to tread. It becomes a mantra as a person walks down the hall in a hospital, or walks into a home where people are in unspeakable pain:  “Don’t be afraid.” Throughout his ministry, Jesus challenged those around him to have faith instead of fear.

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Nic at Night

Does the Gospel include God’s past deeds being exposed to the light as well our own?

by Russell Rathbun

Gospel Reading:  John 3:14-21

For Sunday, March 18, 2012—Lent 4

The state of humanity is snake bit. The poison of the serpent has entered our collective blood stream, a metallic taste in our mouth, our whole body going numb, it attacks our nervous system, and it is getting hard to breath.

Address the Elephant?

The deep evangelical groves in my brain keep pulling me to address the elephant in this verse—John 3:16—but my need to debunk the narrow interpretations of ye must be born again, are more easily resisted, perhaps as a result of years since those battles were heated for me.

Now I don’t need to engage—I think we should all be born again, what ever you mean by it, rock on—I am more interested in the snake on a stick.

Light/Dark Magic

While I literally have eaten snake on a stick at both the Minnesota State Fair and the Beijing Night Market, this is something else entirely. There is some kind of dark/light magic going on in this verse. Nicodemus comes at night looking for something, but Jesus doesn’t give him a chance to say what it is.

Jesus either senses what he wants or knows what he needs. He tells Nicodemus, no one sees the kingdom of God with out being born from above. Nic takes the bait and goes into his, how can anyone be born after growing old line. Jesus fleshes out the metaphor, throws in the Spirit, water, wind. Nic’s head is reeling. “How can these things be,” he asks? Jesus says, “You are a teacher of the law, you know your Bible, and you should be able to understand.” Then Jesus provides this learned man a deep track from the scriptures.

Just As?

Just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the son of Man be lifted up, that whoever believes in him hay have eternal life.

Is Jesus messing with him? He didn’t get the born again metaphor, so Jesus moves on to this allusion to a crazy story in Numbers (see my post on the OT reading for the back story)? It is true that this lifting up of the serpent on a pole seems to be a clear reference to Jesus being lifted up on the cross, but aside from both Jesus and the serpent being lifted up on wooden things what else do they have to do with each other?

At the end of this book Jesus will be raised up on a cross where he will die and it is through that death and resurrection that all is reconciled, real and eternal life is possible. In Numbers 21 Moses makes a bronze serpent and places it on a stick and raises it high above his head. All of the people, who had been bitten by poisonous, fiery serpents, need only look up at it and they will have life.  There is a clear correlation for sure, except for one glaring fact—God is the one who sent the poisonous, fiery serpents to bite and kill the Israelites. God provides Moses with a fix to save the people from the gruesome death God had inflicted on them.

[Read more...]

I’m Sorry, Did You Say Something?

The adventure of listening for God in the midst the sounds of world.

by Bruce Reyes-Chow

 Gospel Reading:  Matthew 11:16-19,25-30

For Sunday, July 3, 2011: Year A – Ordinary 14

I am notorious for allowing myself to get distracted by shiny things. Be it some wonderful conversation on twitter or a good mystery I can get unexpectedly drawn into my own world for hours at a time. When there is room in my life to do this, these things can be wonderful. I gain new insights, I disengage from stressful situations and I become more balanced.

Shiny Things

But when there is something that I must focus on, these shiny things are all of a sudden not so good for me. As often as I can experience grace in these clarion calls to engage in something unexpected, I can also be drawn AWAY from projects and people that I need to pay more attention to.  I listen, I am drawn in and five hours later—I have moved from a space of unexpected discovery in to blatant irresponsibility. I allow myself to listen to the wrong rhythm and song in my life.

We do the same thing as a people and a society. We lose the ability to listen for where and how God is calling our attention. We develop patterns in our life that create blinders to what we are supposed to be doing in exchange for doing what we WANT to be doing.

[Read more...]

But Can You Trust Him?

What do I do when my experience contradicts what Jesus says?

by Russell Rathbun

Gospel Reading: John 10:1-10

For Sunday, May 15 , 2011: Year A – Easter 4

Jesus says the sheep will recognize the voice of the shepherd.

Jesus says we will recognize the voice of God speaking to us in the world.

That God will be with us.

Jesus says the sheep will run from the voice of a stranger.

Jesus says we will run from the voice of the bandits in the world.

Jesus says we will not listen to the thieves and the bandits.

Jesus says the thief comes only to steal, kill, and destroy.

Jesus says he comes that we my have life.

Real life.

Big life.

That we will be fully alive.

Not True?

I say this is not true. I say there are people begging to hear the voice of God, calling them to come through the gate, to the pasture, but they don’t. Maybe can’t? I say I cannot hear Jesus’ voice calling me and that I have listened to the thieves and the bandits so many times, felt like I was being ripped off, that I was dying, being destroyed.

[Read more...]

Preaching In The Key of Life

Does our preaching really speak to the real-life struggles of those to whom we preach?

by Stephen G. Marsh

Old Testament Reading: Isaiah 50:4-9a

For Sunday, April 17, 2011: Year A – Passion Sunday

Aside from a few breaks here and there – for which I have been exceedingly grateful – I have attended church fairly regularly for the past fifty years.  In that time, I have heard a lot of sermons.  Some of them have even been mine.

A Plethora of Voices

I have heard sermons preached by Lutheran preachers, Catholic preachers, Methodist preachers, Presbyterian preachers, Pentecostal preachers, Baptist preachers, Episcopal preachers (including African Methodist Episcopal preachers), non-denominational preachers, Seventh Day Adventist preachers, Jewish preachers, black preachers, white preachers, male preachers, female preachers, gay preachers, lesbian preachers, excellent preachers, good preachers, fair preachers, and horrible preachers.

I have heard sermons preached by people who had been trained in seminary and had attained multiple advanced degrees.  I have also heard sermons preached by people who were unlettered and untrained by any seminary, who could preach the socks off of many of those who had attained multiple advanced degrees!

I have heard sermons that have made me glad.  I have heard sermons that have made me sad. I have even heard sermons that have made me mad.

By and large, the sermons that have meant the most to me – no matter who was preaching them – have been those sermons which have spoken to my real life situation.  Those sermons that spoke to the agonies, pains, confusions and sorrows that were a part of my everyday life.  Those sermons that sung the Word of God in a key that spoke to the dissonance in my life.

[Read more...]

Circuitous Story

Isn’t it wiser to accept the inevitable? 

by Mike Stavlund 

Gospel Reading:  John 11:1-45

For Sunday, Apr. 10, 2011:  Year A - Lent 5  

I’ve always been a Matthew Man. My beloved Gospel writer is practical and straightforward. Slightly metaphorical, with some Messianic overtones. More leisurely than Mark, and without all the clinical rigor from Dr. Luke. But John is just too much. Too “spiritual” (whatever that means, and whatever that helps). 

I imagine John’s Jesus with perfectly blow-dried and coiffed hair, moving about with his feet barely touching the ground and with stilted characters standing around him. It reads like a bad high school play, with the lead actor staring at the lights and all of the supporting actors delivering their lines as mini-monologues. In this week’s passage, even Jesus is enacting obfuscation with euphemisms, and then delivering stage-whispers to God: “I’m only saying this so they’ll hear me, Father.”

High-eyebrowed Expectation

Had I never read this before, I wonder if the conclusion would be as obvious as it is to me now. Everyone is leaning toward Jesus, offering pedantic dialogue about ephemeral matters, hoping for all their breath that John will write their words down on his scroll for posterity. Allusions, foreshadowing,  and high-eyebrowed expectation that Jesus is about to do the impossible.    

And it’s so circuitous − so long! The words stretch down the page, and yet the conclusion is quite abrupt. Lazarus finally comes out, and everyone gives everyone else a high-five. Everyone, that is, except the stunned Lazarus.  We don’t hear anything else from him. 

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Foreshadowing

Is our flesh so bad?

by Mike Stavlund 

Epistle Reading:  Romans 8:6-11

For Sunday, Apr. 10, 2011:  Year A - Lent 5  

Resurrection is everywhere this week. Lazarus rises, the Psalmist cries out from the depths, and Ezekiel sees a vision of a massive restoration of a pile of dry bones. Everyone seems to be making the reflexive move to “choose life” and push back death.

Escaping our Mortal Coil

With resurrection on our minds (and right around the Lenten corner), it’s no surprise that our faithful Lectionarians reach for Paul’s intriguing mix of flesh, death, and resurrection. But why does Paul seem to hate his body so much? And must we follow suit?

I understand that Paul is extending the typology of “flesh” and “spirit” that he begins exploring in chapter 7, and leading his way toward the embodied activism of chapters 12 and 13. But I wonder if we’re all straining our necks to see around elephant that’s sitting in middle of the family room: Uncle Paul has issues.

My body is no prize. I’m certainly not in love with it. It works fine, but no one is asking to make a closer examination of it, that’s for sure. But it’s hard to hate it, too. Believe me, I’ve tried. But it’s exhausting. Why? Because it’s always there!

Stating the Obvious

Paul’s assertion is so forceful that it’s hard to argue with it: “You’re not in the flesh.” Really? Because it sure seems like that’s exactly where I am. I mean, I know that Paul wants to differentiate between our flesh (ick) and our spirit (cue angelic voices) to implore us to ignore our fleshly pitfalls and to rise above.

[Read more...]